The present invention relates a shower and, more particularly, a flexible, doorless shower for an aircraft.
With the growth of the aviation industry features have been added to aircrafts for the comfort of the passengers. While restrooms with toilets and laboratories were added to passenger aircraft years ago, in recent years showers have also been added to aircraft. However, showers create problems such as the following:
Showers have been designed for use in large aircraft in the past. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,602,709 assigned to the Boeing Company shows a shower with a foldable door and an expanding wall.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,407,512 assigned to Airbus Deutschland GmBH shows a shower for use in a passenger aircraft with rotating doors that may be closed when in use.
U.S. Publication No. US 2010/0101013 A1, published on Apr. 29, 2010 shows a modular shower cabin for aircraft that has a rotating door for closure.
Doorless showers for the home have been around for a long time as can be seen in U.S. Pat. No. 1,215,681 to Maury, et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 4,215,444 to Brown; and U.S. Pat. No. 3,060,453 to Shaw. However, the doorless showers in the home do not have to meet all the requirements that a shower in an aircraft would have meet, particularly, concerning flexibility.
It is the object of the present invention to provide a doorless shower for an aircraft.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a shower for an aircraft that will flex as the aircraft flexes during take-offs, landings and during flight.
It is yet a further object of the present invention to provide a lightweight structurally sound, yet flexible shower stall for installation on an aircraft.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a flexible, doorless shower stall for installation on an aircraft by using 2-core-2 material that is very lightweight yet strong.
It is still another object of the present invention to provide a shower stall that may be installed and removed from an aircraft as needed.
It is another object of the present to provide a lightweight, flexible, doorless shower stall for installation on an aircraft which shower stall is made in lightweight panels connected together upon installation in the aircraft. The shower stall is anchored to the ribs and cross beams of the aircrafts, and hence must flex as the aircraft flexes.
Referring now to
In the aircraft 14 as shown in
Restroom 28 is different from restroom 18 in that restroom 28 also has a shower stall 38 located therein.
Referring to
Within the shower stall 38 there is a stub wall 46 that extends inward a short distance in front of the doorless entrance opening 48. The stub wall 46 prevents water from the shower head 50 from being projected through the doorless entrance opening 48 when someone is taking a shower inside the shower stall 38. Within the shower stall 38 is located an amenities tower 52 that may include a soap holder 54 and hand grips 56. Also a foot rest 58 is provided on the side opposite the shower head 50. The bottom 42 slopes downward to the drain 60.
The shower stall 58 shown in
Referring to
Referring to the cross-sectional view shown in
Referring now to the side walls 44 that are made up by the front wall 62, rear wall 64, left 66 and right wall 68, the side walls 44 are made up of a sandwich panel typically having a Nomex honeycomb core with skins made up of plies of thermoset resin. These low density, lightweight cores between the skins dramatically increase the side wall stiffness with little added weight. The core functions like the connecting web of an I-beam, separating the face sheets at a uniform distance, while the skins themselves function as beam flanges. The panel bending stiffness is proportional to the core thickness.
The sandwich panels are cost effective because core material is less expensive and weighs less than the skin composite and can be cured and processed with the skins in a one shot operation. Usually, the core is faced with one or two skins of glass/phenolic prepreg for most ceilings and walls, and glass/epoxy or carbon/epoxy for panel floors, which require higher intentional strength. Because the side walls 44 normally have two layers of poly-setting resin over a honeycomb core, they are commonly referred to as “2-core-2.”
In making flat panels such as the side walls 44 (made up of front wall 62, rear wall 64, left wall 66, and right wall 68), the flat panels are typically processed with a flat press molding in which two lower skin prepregs, the honeycomb core and two upper skin prepegs are stacked onto a heated steel caul plate. A second, heated caul plate and a hydraulic press is lower onto the layout onto the laminate is held under pressure for a period of time ranging from 30 minutes to 100 minutes. A good discussion of this process is contained in Advanced Material for Aircraft Interiors: Composite World, November 2006, which is incorporated by reference.
The 2-core-2 compositions that make up the walls 44 of the shower stall 38 must be flexible enough to accommodate the flexing of the aircraft. The flexible nature may be up to five (5%) percent before the 2-core-2 material would start to fail. 2-core-2 sheets of flat composition panels can be ordered from Nordam.
The configuration of the shower stall 38 as is shown in
According to
The bottom 42 is formed on a mold which has a printed texture on top of the mold. The printed texture will be a resin film to give the texture to the bottom 42 where an individual stands in the shower. Under the textured pattern would be several additional layers formed from several plies of glass and/or liquid epoxy.
As can be seen in
The top of the bottom 42 will be the inside of a mold and will have whatever decorative pattern therein the mold creates. The unfinished portion of the bottom 42 will be the lower surface thereof, which is hidden from the view of the passengers.
Referring to
The bottom 42 and the top 40 will be connected to the side walls 44 by screws (not shown) connecting to fasteners (not shown) that are glued in the honeycomb panel. The screws will be inserted from the backside so they are not visible by the passengers.
Referring now to
As the aircraft 14 takes off, lands, and during flight, the shower stall 38 will flex as a result of the aircraft 14 flexing. The attachment brackets 70 and 78 will move, which will cause the shower stall 38 to flex as pictorially illustrated in