The present disclosure generally relates to equipment pads, and more particularly relates to an equipment pad for supporting an HVAC unit and associated methods for making such.
My existing patents and their cited prior art provide the backstory.
There remains a need in the art for an improved equipment pad that better protects homeowner investment in HVAC systems and better enables installing technicians to provide that protection.
An equipment pad generally includes at least four risers and at least four channels. The at least four risers have riser tops that extend outwardly and broaden from a central portion of the equipment pad along at least portions of the at least four risers and turn to extend downwardly to form a perimeter side wall of the equipment pad, wherein the at least four risers comprise an equipment support surface. The at least four channels have channel beds and channel side walls that extend outwardly from the central portion of the equipment pad, wherein the at least four channels comprise a ground support surface. The channel side walls adjoin or merge into the perimeter side walls of the equipment pad to form channel openings that allow drainage (whether condensate or precipitation) to exit the at least four channels. The horizontal area of the channel beds comprises from about 20% to 50% of the total combined horizontal area of the channel beds and riser tops of the equipment pad. The ground support surface of the at least four channels supports the equipment pad on soil, and the equipment support surface of the at least four risers supports the equipment placed on the equipment pad.
In most embodiments, each channel is located between and shares side walls with two of the at least four risers, and each channel is wider at the channel opening than at the central portion of the equipment pad. The equipment pad may further comprise bends in the at least four risers or the at least four channels, a structural channel-spanning member, channel dam walls, a secondary riser that branches off of one of the at least four risers, or at least eight risers and at least eight channels.
In another configuration, an equipment support pad generally comprises a terrace that extends outward from a central portion of the support pad to form at least four legs that are broader at the perimeter of the pad than at the area where they extend from the central portion (the at least four legs support the equipment loaded thereon), a ground support surface that bears the equipment-loaded support pad on soil, channels disposed between the terrace and ground support surface (and comprising channel side walls, channel beds, and channel openings defined along the perimeter of the support pad), and perimeter side walls connecting the terrace and channels about the perimeter of the equipment pad and adjoining the channel openings. The channel openings together span from about 15% to 50% of the perimeter of the equipment pad.
In most embodiments, the terrace has a greater area than the area of the channel beds and the perimeter side walls extend from the channels to form corners having continuous side walls. The equipment pad may further comprise at least five to eight channels and at least five to eight legs of the terrace and have structural or other profiles on the terrace, ground support surface, channels, or perimeter side walls. A perimeter side wall on one side of the support pad may comprise two or more channel openings.
The equipment support pad may be shaped to be nestable with a similarly shaped pad, have at least one channel side wall that bends from a center portion of the equipment pad toward a perimeter side wall, or have a ground support surface comprising varying heights or curvatures along the channel beds. A geocomposite or sheet-like material may be attached to the perimeter side walls or the bottom surface of the pad. Incremental risers may be shaped for placement on the terrace or in the channels.
In another configuration, an equipment pad generally comprises a plurality of equipment-supporting plateaus extending from a central region of the equipment pad toward a perimeter of the equipment pad and flaring laterally, a plurality of channels comprising channel openings and formed by channel side walls and ground-contacting channel beds, and sidewalls comprising the channel sidewalls and perimeter sidewalls joining the plateaus and channels. The channel openings span sections of the pad where the channel sidewalls merge into the perimeter sidewalls. The equipment support pad has a polygonal shape with a plurality of corners that are defined by a corresponding one of the plateaus and that may have a combined length of at least 20% of the perimeter of the pad. The plateaus extend along a nonlinear path (which may be curved or otherwise bent) from the central region of the pad to the perimeter of the pad. The channel openings typically span from 15% to 50% of the perimeter of the pad, unless the channel side walls form a pocket between adjoining plateaus such that the channel openings span from 2% to 30% of the perimeter of the pad.
Other systems, devices, methods, features, and advantages of the disclosed product and methods for forming an equipment pad will be apparent or will become apparent to one with skill in the art upon examination of the following figures and detailed description. All such additional systems, devices, methods, features, and advantages are intended to be included within the description and to be protected by the accompanying claims.
The present disclosure may be better understood with reference to the following figures. Corresponding reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the figures, and components in the figures are not necessarily to scale.
It will be appreciated that the drawings are provided for illustrative purposes and that the invention is not limited to the illustrated embodiment. For clarity and in order to emphasize certain features, not all of the drawings depict all of the features that might be included with the depicted embodiment. The invention also encompasses embodiments that combine features illustrated in multiple different drawings; embodiments that omit, modify, or replace some of the features depicted; and embodiments that include features not illustrated in the drawings. Therefore, it should be understood that there is no restrictive one-to-one correspondence between any given embodiment of the invention and any of the drawings.
Any reference to “invention” within this document is a reference to an embodiment of a family of inventions, with no single embodiment including features that are necessarily included in all embodiments, unless otherwise stated. Furthermore, although there may be references to “advantages” provided by some embodiments, other embodiments may not include those same advantages, or may include different advantages. Any advantages described herein are not to be construed as limiting to any of the claims.
In describing preferred and alternate embodiments of the technology described herein, specific terminology is employed for the sake of clarity. Technology described herein, however, is not intended to be limited to the specific terminology so selected, and it is to be understood that each specific element includes all technical equivalents that operate in a similar manner to accomplish similar functions. Discussions pertaining to specific compositions of matter, if present, are presented as examples only and do not limit the applicability of other compositions of matter, especially other compositions of matter with similar properties, unless otherwise indicated.
An equipment pad 100 comprises a top surface 102 and a bottom surface 103 that generally defines the thickness of the material used to make the pad 100. As the pad 100 is usually thermoformed, injection molded, compression molded, or otherwise formed in the same vein and manufactured of plastics, carbon, fiber cement, or various composites, the material is relatively thin and the top and bottom surfaces 102, 103 are located near each other. Typically at least one profile 104 is located on the top or bottom surface 102, 103 to serve one or more functions.
In
Equipment pad 100 further comprises channels 130 having channel side wall(s) 136, channel bed 137 between channels side wall(s) 136, ground support surface 133, and a mouth, outlet, or channel opening 131 at the perimeter side wall(s) 116. Channel 130 functionality is at least threefold—to provide ground support, to allow drainage, and to provide structural strength to the entire equipment pad 100—and these functions must be balanced with competing requirements of pad design. A channel 130 originates at a channel head 139 proximate the central portion 119 of the pad 100 and extends outwardly to the channel opening 131. The riser top 112 turns downwardly to form the channel side wall(s) 136, which are equivalent to riser side walls. The channel side wall(s) 136 meet the perimeter side wall(s) 116 on or proximate the perimeter of the pad 100, whether the meeting portion of the side walls 116, 136 is clearly defined or is, for example, a curved portion or transition. (The “perimeter” of the pad 100 is the pad's 100 effective footprint, which typically is a convex polygonal boundary that most closely encloses the sides of the equipment pad 100. Thus, the perimeter of the pad 100 generally is also a convex polygonal boundary that extends tightly around the effective footprint. The perimeter of the pad 100 is not limited to a convex polygonal boundary, as the footprint may be non-convex. In practice, a common meaning would be understood by an ordinary person seeing “a pad.”) Channel openings 131 span sections of the pad 100 where the channel side walls 136 merge into the perimeter side walls 116.
As the channel 130 extends outwardly, a typically nonlinear (“not a straight line”) turn, curve, flare, or bend 138 in the channel 130 changes the shape or direction of the channel 130 and the respective riser 110, as the channel 130 and riser 110 share channel side walls 136. With or without a bend 138, both risers 110 and channels 130 generally grow wider toward the perimeter side walls 116 than their widths where they originate from the central portion 119 of the pad 100. The risers 110 and channels 130 may then narrow at one or more points unless otherwise specified. In a preferred embodiment, channels 130 do not narrow to the point of holding debris or restricting egress of drainage, and the channels 130 are wider at the channel openings 131 than at the central portion 119 of the pad 100. Bends 138 in a riser 110 extending to a side corner 125 typically turn an adjacent channel 130 away from that side corner 125 nearest the channel opening 131. This structure increases riser 110 and perimeter side wall 116 area and also directs some drainage away from downslope side corners 125. The underside (bottom surface 103) of the channel bed 137 provides the ground support surface 133, though the entirety of the underside of the channel bed 137 is not required to contact the soil 3 to be one ground support surface 133, especially given the fact that ground contact will change over the life of the installation. Likewise, the bottom surface 103 of the pad may or may not be synonymous with the ground support surface 133.
One leg or riser 110 typically extends to each side corner 125, and at least one riser 110 typically extends to each side of the pad 100 between side corners 125. Risers 110 to the side corners 125 are longer than risers 110 to the sides between side corners 125. As shown in the remaining drawings, the risers 110 are envisioned to cover designs of various shapes and number. Equipment pads 100 generally have at least four risers 110, and preferably at least eight, typically with a corresponding number of channels 130. In a preferred embodiment, the side corners 125 and a majority of the perimeter side walls 116 are monolithic or have a monolithic appearance, and the perimeter side walls 116 of the plurality of side corners 125 have a combined length of at least 30% of the perimeter of the pad 100 (range 25% to 55%, and preferably 30% to 45%). Stated numerically, the channel openings 131 together span from about 15% to 50% of the pad's 100 perimeter, and preferably from about 25% to 45%. In
In a preferred embodiment the shell-like structure of the equipment pad 100 forms a barrier to deter water from passing through to the underside of the pad 100, as the integrity of the installation relies on retention of soil 3 under the pad 100 in order to remain level. “Level” is a relative term, as most manufacturers actually prefer a slope of 2° or so to aid drainage of condensate, and equipment 10 does not require a perfectly level installation or perfectly level pad 100. The proportion and spacing of the channels 130 and risers 110 aid the installer in leveling the equipment pad 100 on soil 3. Contact of the pad 100 with the soil is uniform and substantial, yet the space under the risers 110 allows for excess or uneven soil 3 to shift or be positioned within the risers 110. A geocomposite or sheet-like material may be bonded to the bottom surface 103 of the pad 100 to provide flexible soil 3 support (
The equipment pad 100 of
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Where this specification describes a parameter as “about” some specific number or range of numbers, “about” means the specific number or range of numbers +/−10%.
It will be understood that many modifications could be made to the embodiments disclosed herein without departing from the spirit of the invention. Having thus described exemplary embodiments of the present invention, it should be noted that the disclosures contained in the drawings are exemplary only, and that various other alternatives, adaptations, and modifications may be made within the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the present invention is not limited to the specific embodiments illustrated herein, but is limited only by the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of my U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 63/295,720 filed Dec. 31, 2021, entitled “Fairly Distributed Plinth,” which is herein incorporated by reference and referred to herein as “the provisional application.”
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