The described systems and methods relate to several designs of a cover of an inspection chamber, which can be used for covering different devices and apparatuses built in walls, plasterboards, or soffits of buildings or other structures.
At present, for covering of inspection chambers which are formed in shafts, walls and soffits of buildings, behind which are various water and gas stop valves, checking and metering devices or other apparatuses to which has to be enabled easy access, are used various kinds of covers and doors which are procured with a peripheral frame and a door case. The profiles of the frames especially in bigger doors have a tendency to twist and therefore it may be necessary to attach them to the wall through variety of fixing elements or connecting material in the form of various foams and similar materials. The size stability in some profiles, for example aluminium ones, can be solved with additional steel angles which connect the frames in corners. An example of this design is the inspection door described in the file CZ 11976 U1, where the frame of the door and the door case are formed as a welded piece from aluminium profiles and the mass of the door is from a plasterboard board which is placed in the aluminium frame with which it is connected. A possible disadvantage of this design is assembly of outer frame and consequent locking of the frame. Further examples of design of covers of inspection chambers are known from the files EP 1961891, CZ 13312 U1, CZ 13432 U1 or CZ 17513 U1.
There are likewise known covers of inspection chambers that use systems of magnets fixed on an anchoring perforated metal sheet where the magnets are walled in and the metal sheet is glued to them. A disadvantage of this solution is that during the installment of the magnets these are not always walled in the right height or level and the metal sheet is consequently not glued to the facing in the way for a cover which covers the chamber to join evenly to surrounding surfaces of the facing. Likewise there are known covers which consist of a plastic frame which is procured with adjustable magnets, which is fixed into the anchoring openings by the help of steel anchoring elements which may be necessary to lodge in surrounding walls. A disadvantage of this solution is complicated assembly of the cover where it is necessary to let the anchoring elements solidify properly with fixed frame but this can create time delays. And there is known design of a cover for inspection chamber which is described in the file CZ 11397 U1, where the cover is formed with a magnetically conductive board which is procured on the face side with facing elements and with a frame with fixing elements with height adjustable magnets. The frame is formed with plastic profile elements and profile corners which are demountable connected. This design is relatively easy and fast for assembly, it enables use of various facing elements which can be glued on the magnetically conductive board whereas the joint between the cover and the frame does not have to be filled with any jointing material. A disadvantage of this solution is a difficult structure of the frame and from this resulting expensive production. Finally there is known design of covers of inspection chambers which contain height adjustable magnets which are fixed on fixtures made from a perforated metal sheet which are glued or otherwise fixed to brickwork or a wall. A disadvantage of this design is the fact that the magnets can interfere into the profile of the chamber reducing space for manipulation and furthermore there can come to damage of the fixtures or the magnets during repairs or adjustments of devices built in behind the chamber.
In accordance with some implementations, the aim of the presented technical solution is to offer and implement into use a cover of inspection chamber which would be simple from production point of view, usable into brickwork as well as into plasterboards and at the same time would not necessarily require any accurate placing into the chamber during the assembly.
Disclosed herein, in accordance with some embodiments, is a cover of an inspection chamber formed with a flat door which is made of a magnetically conductive material and with a set of at least two shaped fixtures made of a flat bar and shaped into the shape of an “L” letter and/or into the shape of a “U” letter where the essence of the invention is in the fact that the fixtures are procured on their face surface of a front arm with flat magnets whereas the door is procured with a ridge, lip, raised edge, protrusion, and/or other welt which is formed in the way that the distance of back wall of the door from its peripheral edge is, in some embodiments, equal to s sum of heights of the front arm of the fixture and the flat magnet.
In accordance with some embodiments, the side arms of the fixtures are formed in the way that their length is smaller or maximally equal to the thickness of the wall of the material in which the chamber is formed whereas in some implementations in which the fixtures are shaped substantially into the “U” letter shape, the length of the side arm between the front arm and the back arm is equal to thickness of the wall of the material of the chamber.
In accordance with some implementations, it can be advantageous when the welt of the door is formed perpendicularly to its front surface or with a slope, which can be about 45° anglewise, or in the form of rounding.
In accordance with some embodiments, the described design is easy to assemble, and usable for chambers formed in brickwork, plasterboards or tile covering, with easy repeated removability of the door.
Particular examples of the design are schematically illustrated in enclosed drawings where:
The drawings which illustrate the presented technical solution and consequently examples of particular designs do not in any case or in any manner limit the extent of the protection mentioned in definition, yet merely clarify some aspects of the described cover.
In accordance with some embodiments, a cover of an inspection chamber 1 is in its basic design formed with a flat door 2 which is produced from a magnetically conductive material, by way of non-limiting example a zinc-coated varnished metal sheet which is on its outer surface procured with a non-illustrated foil and a set of shaped fixtures 3. The fixtures 3 are formed from a flat bar and, in some embodiments, are either substantially “L” letter shaped as it is illustrated in
In some embodiments, during assembly of the cover, the fixtures 3 are fixed, for example glued, screwed, or otherwise connected, along the perimeter of the chamber 1 which is formed in the wall 5, then the chamber is covered with the door 2, which is by its back wall 23 fixed to the magnets 4 of the fixtures 3.
In accordance with some embodiments, the described cover can be designed in any other suitable manner besides those illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2015-31299 | Jul 2015 | CZ | national |
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11397 | Sep 2001 | CZ |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20170009502 A1 | Jan 2017 | US |