The present invention is related generally to ridge vents for covering the opening of the roof ridge, and more particularly to rollable, baffle and ridge vent assemblies.
In the winter, household activities, such as cooking, showering and doing the laundry, generate moisture that can damage the attic insulation and building materials of the roof. In the summer, attic temperatures can rise to over 150° F., which can cause premature aging and cracking of wood and roofing materials. These elevated temperatures can also increase cooling costs for the home owner. In the construction of rooves, therefore, it is often desirable to provide a ventilation opening at the roof ridge and cover it with a vent. Ridge vents are passive ventilation systems which provide openings through which air can convectively flow to and from under the roof structure to provide ventilation.
Ridge vents typically cover any elongated opening, such as one that is formed in a roof and that extends along the peak of the roof, with the opening typically being in the range of about 10–20 cm in width and running along a substantial portion of the roof peak. Typical ridge vents include “shingle-over roof ridge vents” and exposed roof vents. See for example U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,361,434; 6,233,887; 6,450,882; 6,260,315 and published U.S. application 2002/0100232A1, all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Many ridge vents have been developed that are made of polymeric materials that are flexible along a longitudinal axis in order to permit the ridge vent to conform to the sloped sides of a roof to cover the ridge opening. These ridge vents typically include a plurality of vents and supporting structures that depend from a common panel and that serve both the functions of resisting entry of precipitation, insects, and foreign manner, while providing supportive structures that lift the panel away from the roof and provide crush resistance. It is further desirable that ridge vents have means to create a “Venturi effect” or air draft to draw hot air outwardly from the underlying attic.
Prior art roof ridge vents are known that can be rolled for compact packaging and transport to an installation site. However, to make these ridge vents rollable requires some sacrificing of thermal efficiency in drawing hot air from the underlying attic, or costly modifications to the baffle structure in order to allow the ridge vent to be rolled in a spiral form. See U.S. Pat. No. 6,233,887 col. lines 50–61 and col. to lines 45–55.
Accordingly, there remains a need for a ridge vent, and particularly a rollable roof ridge vent which can be made cost-effectively, and which efficiently assists convection of heat and moisture from beneath a roof.
Ridge vents and methods of their use are provided. In a first embodiment, the preferred ridge vent includes an elongated flexible member having a central panel portion, a pair of lateral edges and a pair of transverse ends. A pair of vent openings are disposed proximate to the lateral edges. The central panel portion includes a plurality of support ribs for supporting the central panel portion above the roof. A pair of baffles is disposed laterally from the vent openings and the lateral edges. Each of the baffles is oriented in a first direction relative to the central panel portion for at least a period of time prior to installation and is oriented in a second direction relative to the central panel portion after the installation.
In a preferred embodiments, the roof ridge vent can be molded such that the baffles become generally parallel with (e.g., ±30°) the central panel when rolled. The baffle are then orientated in a more vertical position with respect to the central panel portion during installation, either manually or naturally by the shape or design of the baffle itself.
In one embodiment, the baffles are pivotally coupled to the lateral edges of the central panel portion. The baffles can be locked in vertical orientation by the use of clips or other securing means. The baffles can also be vertically oriented externally by imposing stresses, or reinforcing ribs, for example, in the right locations during the molding or fabrication of the ridge vent. In this manner, the baffles can be oriented in a flattened position when the vent is rolled, and then they can spring back once the vent is unrolled. These stresses, and/or reinforced portions of the vent, can help insure that the baffle is always naturally in a vertical orientation once installed, thereby reducing instances of improper installation.
The accompany drawings illustrate preferred embodiments of the invention as well as other information pertinent to the disclosure, in which:
This invention provides ridge vents which can be used in shingle-over roof vent applications, roll-out shingle over roof ridge vent applications, and in the applications where shingles are not employed over the vent. In addition, methods of installing these ridge vents, and methods of manufacturing them are provided. The roof vents of this invention can be designed for ridge and hip roof applications, they can have a low profile for a minimum accented ridge line. The vent opening or louver openings are preferably designed to keep out insects and weather infiltration, and the external baffles are desirably structured to deflect wind and rain and create negative air pressure (“Venturi effect”). The air vents of this invention create a balanced system of intake and exhaust through the attic for provided greater airflow than conventional roof vents or turbine vents. The preferred external baffles are desirably molded into the roof vent in such a way that they can be readily rolled into a coil, laid out over an opening in a roof vent, and positioned in their final form easily, and without significant additional cost to the installer.
With respect to the drawings, and in particular,
The ridge vent 101 includes an elongated flexible member having a central panel portion 11, a pair of longitudinal side portions and a pair of transverse ends. The central panel portion 11 includes a plurality of support ribs 18 for supporting the central panel portion 11 above a roof. Each of the side portions contains a plurality of channels, e.g., formed by the support ribs 18, for directing air current, a vent opening, and a baffle 14 disposed laterally from the vent opening. The baffles 14 are originally disposed in a first direction, for example in a relatively flat position, or substantially parallel (±30°) with the proximate central panel portion 11 or roof, for at least a period of time prior to insulation, and are then oriented in a second direction, which is generally perpendicular to (±30°) or upright in relation to the roof or proximate central panel portion 11.
The ridge vent 101 embodiment of this invention is preferably constructed from a polymer material, such as polypropylene, polyvinylchloride, or polyethylene, and more preferably from high impact copolymer polypropylene. The ridge vent 101 laid over, or roll 100 can be unrolled over an opening in a roof ridge. The central panel portion 11 preferably includes a plurality of support ribs 18 which in the most preferred embodiment are about 1/16″ in thickness and about 2–4″ in length. Preferably, the ribs alternate in 2″ or 4″ lengths as shown in
The external baffles 14 are most desirably integrally formed with the ridge vent 101, and form a portion of the longitudinal side portions of the ridge vent 101. They are designed to deflect wind and rain and create negative air pressure, or a Venturi effect to draw hot air outwardly from within the underlying attic. In most rollable ridge vents, the baffle is a separate item which is inserted under the ridge vent during installation. In U.S. Pat. No. 6,361,434, a rollable baffle and ridge vent combination is disclosed. The ridge vent of the '434 patent includes a fixed baffle having a plurality of deformed triangles to permit it to collapse in accordion fashion upon itself during rolling. A similar undulated sidewall in the baffle to permit the vent to be rolled without significant distortion is disclosed in Smith, U.S. Pat. No. 6,260,315. In the preferred embodiment 101 of the present invention, the baffle is preferably manufactured with the vent in a one piece construction with the baffle oriented in a first direction, followed by maneuvering the baffle 14, either manually or naturally, into a second operable direction during the installation of the ridge vent on a roof ridge opening. This permits the roof vent to be rolled much more easily, and permits more cost-efficient manufacturing methods, such as index injection molding.
With respect to the details of
An alternative baffle design of ridge vent 201 is shown in
The ridge vents 101 of this invention are relatively easy to install in shingle over ridge vent or standard applications. In the preferred embodiment, the ridge vent 101 is unrolled and disposed over an opening of a roof ridge. The baffles 14 are flexed, or otherwise reoriented, from a first direction to a second direction relative to the central panel portion 11, the roof, or both, as shown in
In the shingle-over ridge vent installation methods of this invention, a plurality of shingles can be disposed over a portion of the ridge vent 201 and both the ridge vent and the shingles can be simultaneously nailed to a roof substrate, such as plywood, studs, tongue and groove planks, or the like, to secure both the roof vent 201 and shingles in place. In the installation shown in
This invention also contemplates a more efficient manufacturing process for making ridge vents, a shown in
A baffle 214 is pivotally connected to each lateral edge 204. As shown in
Regardless of the orientation direction of the baffles 214 once the rolled ridge vent is unrolled, because the baffles 214 are pivotally connected to the lateral edges 204 of the central panel portion 20, they can be pivoted into a desired more vertical second direction relative to the flat central panel portion for installation. If this preferred installation second direction is not the natural orientation that the baffles take once the ridge vent 201 is unrolled, or if more rigidity is desired, clips or other fasteners, such as described above in the embodiment of
In one embodiment, spaced clips or fasteners 220 can be disposed to clip onto an adjacent support rib 218 to secure the baffles 214 in the desired position. This embodiment is shown in the enlarged, partial bottom plan view of
In the embodiment of
The forming operation for forming the rollable ridge vent 201 can include injection molding, extrusion or compression molding, for example. In a preferred embodiment illustrated in
As shown in
As noted above, the material selection for the rollable ridge vent will effect the memory of the polymer, as a more flexible material will not have as much memory as a more rigid material, and thus the orientation of the baffles 214 once the ridge vent is unrolled. Still further, the forming process can also factor into the orientation that the baffles 214 will take once the ridge vent is unrolled. For example, the orientation of the baffles 214 during the formation process can factor into their orientation once cooled, and thus following rolling and unrolling of the ridge vent. Also, stresses can be induced into the polymer material forming the baffles 214, which could even cause the baffles to take an orientation that is greater than 90° relative to the central panel portion 202 once ejected from the mold process, and thus effecting the orientation of the baffles following rolling and unrolling of the ridge vent. One means of inducing these stresses is to cool the baffle portions 214 at a faster rate than, for example, the central panel portion 202. This induced cooling rate difference can be achieved by adding water or other coolant lines proximate to the baffle portions 214 in the mold.
In one embodiment, an internal filter is coupled to the rollable ridge vent. An exemplary filter may be made of an untreated, unwoven fiberglass mesh. The filter may be attached to the vent by a heat staking process by which the support ribs 218 are melted into the filter material along the full length of the product. An exemplary filter is described in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,149,517 to Hansen, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein. The filter, of fiberglass mesh construction or the like, is provided beneath the central panel portion 202, for filtering out insects, snow, rain, debris, etc., while allowing sufficient air flow therethrough to accomplish the purposes of the rollable ridge vent.
In one embodiment, the baffles 214 include weep holes (not shown) cut or otherwise formed therein proximate to bottom edges thereof, i.e., the edges that are oriented to rest on the roof shingles. The weep holes allow rainwater to pass through the baffles and drain down the sloped roof. In one embodiment, these weep holes are spaced about every four inches in the baffles 214 and are sized such that they remain open even if the baffles are oriented relative to the central panel portion at an angle less than 90°. In one embodiment, the weep holes are slots of about 0.2″ wide and 0.35″ high.
In a preferred embodiments, the roof ridge vent can be molded such that the baffles become generally parallel with (e.g., ±30°) the central panel when rolled. The baffles are then orientated in a more vertical position with respect to the central panel portion during installation, either manually or naturally by the shape or design of the baffle itself. Preferably, the baffles default to an installed position once the ridge vent is unrolled.
The baffles can be locked in vertical orientation by the use of clips, adhesive tape, or other securing means. The baffles can also be vertically oriented externally by imposing stresses, or reinforcing ribs, for example, in the right locations during the molding or fabrication of the ridge vent. In this manner, the baffles can be oriented in a flattened position when the vent is rolled, and then they can spring back once the vent is unrolled. These stresses, and/or reinforced portions of the vent, can help insure that the baffle is always naturally in a vertical orientation once installed, thereby reducing instances of improper installation.
In one embodiment, at least some of the support ridges are coupled to the baffles to help return the baffles to a desired orientation, such as perpendicular to the central panel portion, after the central panel is unrolled.
From the foregoing, it can be realized that this invention provides improved roof vents, methods of installation, and methods of manufacture. The roof vents of this invention have adjustable baffles, which can be laid flat for easier manufacturing and rolling, but which can be oriented in a vertical direction for providing negative pressure. Although various embodiments have been illustrated, this is for the purpose of describing, but not limiting the invention. Various modifications which will become apparent to one skilled in the art, are within the scope of this invention described in the attached claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/610,067 to Dustin Ciepliski and Jeff Hansen, entitled “Externally Baffled Ridge Vent and Methods of Manufacture and Use” filed Jun. 30, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,881,144, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
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Child | 10970302 | US |