The present description relates to the supply of gas to a household cooking appliance provided with various top burners by way of a gas flow distribution assembly fitted with a number of rotary type regulating taps mounted on a manifold conduit, and to a constructional detail for the installation of the manifold assembly on an appliance wall.
Fuel gas distribution assemblies fitted with manual rotary type taps are already well known. They are installed on a panel of the cooking appliance frame with the tap drive shafts aligned on the front panel of the appliance or forming a square projecting above the horizontal cooking plane. The gas manifold assembly disclosed for instance in GB-2182429-A comprises a main round section distribution pipe or common rail on which a number of manual rotary taps are fitted in line. The manifold pipe or gas rail has its two ends sealed with plugs and each tap takes the gas flow from an individual hole in the manifold pipe. The taps are the type that has an arched mounting base with a built-in gas inlet. The tap is connected to the round gas rail by superimposing its arched base encircling the distribution pipe, with matching geometrical shapes, and secured to it with screws. The individual tap outlet pipes run in a direction at right angles to the front panel of the appliance.
In U.S. Pat. No 4,705,018-A a gas cooker appliance is disclosed provided with a gas distribution system, which comprises a round flat-surfaced manifold box, four individual taps mounted on the box for supplying a gas flow to four top burners, a gas feed nipple connected to the manifold box on the side opposite to the taps, and at least one support leg for anchoring to the frame of the appliance. On this manifold box the taps form a geometrical square with the drive shafts facing upwards. The gas outlet of the taps is oriented with an angle of inclination in relation to the front and side panels of the appliance, above the upper cooking plane of the appliance. This arrangement of the manifold assembly occupies a small surface area and the orientation of the outlet pipes crossing one another is used in cooking appliance with four control knobs positioned on the top surface of the appliance. This known distribution assembly has a structurally complex and economically expensive gas manifold box.
The object of the invention is a gas distribution assembly, fitted with a number of manual taps adapted for the supply of a flow of gas to the top burners of a cooking appliance, wherein the taps provided with a arched mounting base, are arranged on a manifold conduit oppositely superimposed in twos on the conduit, and the drive shafts of the taps being arranged on a small-sized geometrical area on the cooking top plane of the appliance.
The gas distribution assembly according to the invention is of simple configuration and economic construction adapted for the installation of an existing type of gas tap, with the mounting base arched. The gas manifold assembly comprises a straight manifold conduit, which has a central part wherein the gas feeder nipple is connected, and two tubular parts on each of which are fitted two oppositely superimposed taps, encircling the tubular part and secured to it by means of common screws.
To facilitate the connection and installation of the supply pipe to each cooking appliance burner, the gas distribution assembly also comprises an elbow-shaped gas flow connecting adapter in each tap outlet, whereby the connecting adapter changes the right-angle orientation to the front plane of the appliance, typical of the outlet body of the existing tap, to an outlet conduit oriented in a horizontal and radial direction with an acute angle of inclination in relation to this front plane.
In reference to
The manifold conduit 2 has a straight tubular shape, and is formed with a wide central part 2a for connecting the feeder nipple 3, and two narrower tubular parts 2b, one on either side, for fitting the taps C1-C4 in paired twos. The tubular parts 2b for mounting the taps are arched or round and are sealed by a plug at each end.
The taps C1-C4 have a mounting base 14 to be superimposed on the tubular part of the manifold conduit 2. As the number of appliance burners is preferably four, the two arched bases 14 of each pair of taps C1-C2 and C3-C4 are oppositely engaging on the round surface of the tubular part 2b, wholly encircling it between both, and they are fastened by means of a pair of common screws 10. Both taps C1-C2 and C3-C4 of each pair are connected directly to the manifold conduit 2 by way of a respective gas intake hole 15 in each of the tubular parts 2b.
The supporting leg 12 of the manifold assembly 1 is formed with an arched surface 12a on which the manifold conduit 2 is held, and two fastening wings 12b which are fixed to said structural base “SB” of the appliance, separated from each other by space width “W”. The four tap drive shafts 16 standing out from the cooking plane “CP” are spaced preferably the same length “D” apart between the two paired taps C1, C2 as between taps C1,C3 of different pair, for instance around 57 cm. The gas distribution assembly 1 installed in this way, occupies a cubic volume of height “H” and width “W” (
The gas feeder nipple 3 is rigid and connected to a central intake hole 4 in the manifold conduit 2. The free end 3a of the gas nipple 3 in order to be connected to a gas source, is extended below the supporting leg 12 and outside the cubic space “H×W” for housing the distribution assembly 1 within the cooking appliance.
The manifold assembly 1 uses four taps C1-C4 of an existing type, which are used previously mounted on manifold conduits aligned along on an appliance front panel. On the cooking appliance for which the gas distribution assembly 1 is adapted, the burners are located on the top cooking plane “CP”, in a position adjacent to the front plane “FP”. In order that the burner rigid tubes may run in a direction parallel to the front plane “FP”, each tap C1-C4 has an adapter 9 which is provided with an outlet pipe 9a, running horizontally on this structural base “SB” and oriented according to this radial direction with an acute angle of inclination “A” in relation to the front plane “FP”.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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U-200400511 | Mar 2004 | ES | national |