The present invention is generally related to household heaters, and more specifically to portable electric heaters for most effectively and most efficiently providing heat to one or more portions of a room.
There is an ongoing need to obtain localized heating at home and in the work place. Portable electric heaters have become a common tool for providing heat to a room, to thereby avoid the expense and inefficiencies associated with heating an entire home. As energy costs rise and incomes fall in a declining economy, the need to obtain maximum comfort from each BTU of heat produced by such heaters is ever more important. Homes in which only certain rooms are typically used, and by only one or two persons, are particularly vulnerable to wasted energy and expense.
Certain electrical air heaters include the ability to focus heat toward a person and thereby minimize the waste of energy heating elsewhere when only one person is present. The Room Heater disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,051,820 and numerous similar radiant heaters since are such heaters which employ one or more quartz heating tubes each surrounded by a parabolic reflector to focus heat waves and direct them from the heating element into a narrow beam so that the energy produced by the element can be directed at a single user. However, such heaters are not capable of providing focused heat to multiple separated users or to multiple and variable locations in a room simultaneously. Neither are such heaters capable of independent control of a plurality of differently directed heating units.
Certain fan-forced electrical air heaters include the ability to direct heated airflows towards two areas. The Pivotable Heater disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,321,034, and numerous similar heaters since, includes two stacked heating units, one atop the other, sharing a common vertical pivot axis such that each unit may be directed independently, allowing one heating unit to aim its heated airflow in one direction and the other heating unit to aim its heated airflow in a second direction. However, such fan-forced heaters are not adapted to provide focused heating as would be most effective and efficient for heating two separated persons. The fan-forced airflow dispersed from each unit is turbulent and not focused. It is better adapted to heating an air space than a person. Even if such an arrangement was, hypothetically, somehow capable of focusing its two heat streams, the stacked configuration would cause the streams to aim at differing heights. One person's feet would be warmed while the other's head would be warmed, but neither person would realize an optimal heating experience.
There exists the need for a heating appliance which is capable of directing focused heating energy at either one or two persons, and such is an object of the present invention.
There exists the need for a heating appliance which is capable of directing focused heating energy at two persons along the same horizontal plane, and such is an object of the present invention.
There exists the need for a heating appliance which is capable of directing focused heating energy in a plurality of directions simultaneously, and such is an object of the present invention.
There exists the need for a heating appliance which is capable of directing a pair of focused heat streams separated by a selectably variable angle, and such is an object of the present invention.
There exists the need for such heating appliances having independent controllability, and such is an object of the invention.
Other needs and objects will become apparent upon a reading of the following disclosure in combination with the appended drawings.
The invention may be embodied in an electric heater having a pair of side-by-side heating units which are selectively adaptable to operate together as a single heater, both focusing their heat energy in the same direction, or as two independently operable heating units, each focusing its heat stream in a different direction along the same horizontal plane and each capable of independent operation and direction.
The invention may be practiced in an electrical heating apparatus having a stationary housing defining first and second parallel and horizontally spaced-apart vertical housing axes, a first heating unit engaging the housing and having a first pivot axis disposed coaxial with the first housing axis and pivotable thereabout, and a second heating unit engaging the housing and having a second pivot axis disposed coaxial with the second housing axis and pivotable thereabout.
The first heating unit may be pivotable independently of the second heating unit. The housing may have first and second direction controllers engaging and adapted to cause pivoting of the first and second heating units respectively. The housing may further include electrical control circuitry for controlling the heating operation of the first and second heating units. The electrical control circuitry may include power control circuitry for energizing and controlling a power level of operation of the first and second heating units.
The power control circuitry may include first and second switches for independently controlling the power level of operation of the first and second heating units respectively. The electrical control circuitry may include thermostatic control circuitry for selecting an ambient temperature range of operation of the first and second heating units.
The first and second heating units may each include a heating element and a reflector, each heating element adapted upon energization by the control circuitry to radiate heat, and each reflector disposed and adapted to reflect the radiated heat from the heating unit. The heating elements may be elongate quartz heating tubes. The quartz heating tubes may each be disposed coaxial with one of the first and second pivot axes.
The invention may also be practiced in an electrical heating apparatus having a stationary housing defining first and second parallel and horizontally spaced-apart vertical housing axes and an oscillation control, a first heating unit engaging the housing and having a first oscillation axis disposed coaxial with the first housing axis and oscillatable thereabout by the oscillation control, and a second heating unit engaging the housing and having a second oscillation axis disposed coaxial with the second housing axis and oscillatable thereabout by the oscillation control.
The first heating unit may be oscillatable independently of the second heating unit. The housing may include electrical control circuitry for controlling the heating operation of the first and second heating units. The electrical control circuitry may include power control circuitry for energizing and controlling a power level of operation of the first and second heating units.
The power control circuitry may include first and second switches for independently controlling the power level of operation of the first and second heating units respectively. The electrical control circuitry may include thermostatic control circuitry for selecting an ambient temperature range of operation of the first and second heating units.
The first and second heating units may each include a heating element and a reflector, each heating element adapted upon energization by the control circuitry to radiate heat, and each reflector disposed and adapted to reflect the radiated heat from the heating unit. The heating elements may be elongate quartz heating tubes. The quartz heating tubes may each be disposed coaxial with one of the first and second oscillation axes.
The invention may also be practiced in an electrical heating apparatus having a stationary housing with a lower base portion, an upper control portion, and a column portion extending from and rigidly connecting the base and control portions. The base and control portions may define first and second parallel and horizontally spaced-apart vertical housing axes, and the control portion may include control circuitry and first and second direction controllers. The apparatus may include a first heating unit comprising a first heating element and a first reflector, the first heating element adapted upon energization to radiate heat, and the first reflector disposed and adapted to reflect the radiated heat from the first heating unit, the first heating unit engaging the base and control portions of the housing, engaged by the first direction controller, and having a first pivot axis disposed coaxial with the first housing axis and pivotable thereabout. The apparatus may also include and a second heating unit comprising a second heating element and a second reflector, the second heating element adapted upon energization to radiate heat, and the second reflector disposed and adapted to reflect the radiated heat from the second heating unit, the second heating unit engaging the base and control portions of the housing, engaged by the second direction controller, and having a second pivot axis disposed coaxial with the second housing axis and pivotable thereabout.
Electrical control circuitry may be included within the control portion of the housing for controlling the heating operation of the first and second heating units, the circuitry including power control circuitry for energizing and independently controlling a power level of operation of the first and second heating units.
Further features and aspects of the invention are disclosed with more specificity in the Detailed Description and Drawings of an exemplary embodiment provided herein.
Many aspects of the invention can be better understood with reference to the following drawings showing the representative embodiment of the accompanying Detailed Description. The components in the drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon clearly illustrating the principles of the invention. Moreover, in the drawings, like reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the several views.
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First and second heating units 118L and 118R each include a tubular quartz radiant heating element 120 and a metallic reflector 122, the heating elements adapted upon energization to radiate heat, and the reflector disposed and adapted to reflect the radiated heat from the associated heating unit. The heating units each engage the base and control portions of the housing, at bottom pivots 124 and at the upper pivotable engagement to the associated direction controller. Each unit has a pivot axis 126 that is disposed coaxial with and pivotable about one of the housing axes.
The heating units are each electrically connected to and controlled by the control circuitry so that each heating element can be independently energized and its power level can be selectively adjusted according to the position of its associated control switch 128L or 128R. In an alternate embodiment not shown, an adjustable thermostatic control allows energization of both heating elements only when the ambient room temperature falls below a selected level.
Each heating unit includes a perforated protective front grill 130 to prevent persons or objects from inadvertently toughing the heating elements. The grills are sufficiently perforated to cause no substantial interference with heating energy from the unit.
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In another anticipated alternate embodiment of the invention not shown, the heating units are physically connected to the control portion through an oscillation mechanism including an oscillation motor. Energization of the oscillation motor causes the heating units to pivot back and forth in an oscillating motion to sweep their heating element across the room. The heating units may be connected to the oscillation motor by any common type of linkage or gearing. A clutch mechanism allows the user to forcibly pivot the heating units relative to each other and relative to the oscillation mechanism so that the synchronicity and starting/stopping angles of each heating unit may be altered. For instance, the right unit may be caused to point rightwardly whenever the left unit is pointing forwardly, and vice versa, or the both units may be caused to point simultaneously outwardly and simultaneously forwardly, according to the desired heating effect. Since such an oscillation mechanism and such a clutching system would be a matter of routine design, the invention is not to be limited by the specific structure of each.
While the invention has been shown and described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments, it should be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made thereto without sacrificing its material advantages. Various changes in form and detail may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, and the invention should therefore only be limited according to the following claims, including all equivalent interpretation to which they are entitled.
This application is a Continuation and Formalization of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/492,405 filed on Jun. 2, 2011, the entire teachings of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61492405 | Jun 2011 | US |