1. Technical Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to installation of heating, air conditioning, and ventilation (HVAC) systems, and more specifically to a method of retrofitting a zone control system to an existing structure such as a residence.
2. Background Art
Previously, retrofit of e.g. zone control systems to existing HVAC systems has required that the installer cut access holes through the HVAC system ductwork. This makes the installation more difficult, more expensive, and more damaging. The retrofit systems have also included electrical cables and the like, protruding from various undesirable locations, such as from the vent grilles, to provide power for motorized vent dampers and such.
What is needed is a method of installation which does not require cutting any holes through the ductwork, and which does not leave any undesirable components visible.
The invention will be understood more fully from the detailed description given below and from the accompanying drawings of embodiments of the invention which, however, should not be taken to limit the invention to the specific embodiments described, but are for explanation and understanding only.
The existing thermostat 21 is connected by a multi-conductor cable 73 to the existing HVAC controller 22 that switches power to the blower, furnace and air conditioner. The existing thermostat commands the blower and furnace or blower and air conditioner to provide conditioned air to cause the temperature at thermostat to move toward the temperature set at the existing thermostat.
A small air pump in air pump enclosure 50 provides a source of low-pressure (˜1 psi) compressed air and vacuum at a rate of e.g. ˜1.5 cubic feet per minute. The pressure air tube 51 connects the pressurized air to the air valves. The vacuum air tube 52 connects the vacuum to the air valves. The air pump enclosure also contains a 5V power supply and control circuit for the air pump. The AC power cord 54 connects the system to 110V AC power. The power and control cable 55 connect the 5V power supply to the control processor and servo controlled air valves and connect the control processor 60 to the circuit that controls the air pump. The control processor controls the air valve servos to set each air valve to one of two positions. The first position connects the compressed air to the air tube so that the bladder inflates. The second position connects the vacuum to the air tube so that the bladder deflates.
A wireless thermometer 70 is placed in each room in the house. All thermometers transmit, on a shared radio frequency of 433 MHz, packets of digital information that encode 32-bit digital messages. A digital message includes a unique thermometer identification number, the temperature, and command data. Two or more thermometers can transmit at the same time, causing errors in the data. To detect errors, the 32-bit digital message is encoded twice in the packet. The radio receiver 71 decodes the messages from all the thermometers, discards packets that have errors, and generates messages that are communicated by serial data link 72 to the control processor. The radio receiver can be located away from the shielding effects of the HVAC equipment if necessary, to ensure reception from all thermometers.
The control processor is connected to the existing HVAC controller 22 by the existing HVAC controller connection 74. The control processor interface circuit uses the same signals as the existing thermostat 21 to control the HVAC equipment.
The control processor controls the HVAC equipment and the airflow to each room according to the temperature reported for each room and according to an independent temperature schedule for each room. The temperature schedules specify a heat-when-below-temperature and a cool-when-above-temperature for each minute of a 24-hour day. A different temperature schedule can be specified for each day for each room.
A graphical display screen 95 with a touch sensitive surface replaces the original thermostat. The wires 73 originally used to connect the thermostat to the HVAC equipment are used to connect the display screen to the control processor. The occupants can view and specify temperature schedules using the display screen and the touch sensitive surface. Energy use data, maintenance requirements, and other aspects of the system can be viewed and controlled through the display screen.
The present invention can set the bladders so that all of the airflow goes to a single air vent, thereby conditioning the air in a single room. This could cause excessive air velocity and noise at the air vent and possibly damage the HVAC equipment. This is solved by connecting a bypass air duct 90 between the conditioned air plenum 15 and the return air plenum 11. A bladder 91 is installed in the bypass 90 and its air tube is connected to an air valve 40 so that the control processor can enable or disable the bypass. The bypass provides a path for the excess airflow and storage for conditioned air. The control processor is interfaced to a temperature sensor 61 located inside the conditioned air plenum. The control processor monitors the conditioned air temperature to ensure that the temperature in the plenum does not go above a preset temperature when heating or below a preset temperature when cooling, and ensures that the blower continues to run until all of the heating or cooling has been transferred to the rooms. This is important when bypass is used and only a portion of the heating or cooling capacity is needed, so the furnace or air conditioner is turned only for a short time. Some existing HVAC equipment has two or more heating or cooling speeds or capacities. When present, the control processor controls the speed control and selects the speed based on the number of air vents open. This capability can eliminate the need for the bypass.
A pressure sensor 62 is mounted inside the conditioned air plenum and interfaced to the control processor. The plenum pressure as a function of different bladder settings is used to deduce the airflow capacity of each air vent in the system and to predict the plenum pressure for any combination of air valve settings. The airflow to each room and the time spent heating or cooling each room is use to provide a relative measure of the energy used to condition each room. This information is reported to the house occupants via the graphical display screen 95.
This brief description of the components of the present invention installed in an existing residential HVAC system provides an understanding of how independent temperature schedules are applied to each room in the house, and the improvements provided by the present invention. The following discloses the details of each of the components and how the components work together to proved the claimed features.
The bladders for controlling airflow in rectangular ducts are also cylinders made by seaming together two circular shapes 321 and a rectangular shape 322. The cylinder is oriented so that the axis of the cylinder is parallel to the widest dimension of the duct. The height of the cylinder is about 110% of the wider dimension of the duct. The cylinder diameter is at least 110% of the narrower dimension of the duct, but can be as much as 200%. When inflated, the bladder accepts only enough air to fill the air duct.
All installation and assembly work is done in the room where the air vent is located. The air grill is removed and an air tube 32 is pulled from the air vent to the plenum 15. The air tube is secured to the mounting strap 401 and the proper size and shape bladder 30 is secured to the mounting strap. The inside surface 410 of the air vent or air duct is prepared by smoothing, cutting, or covering sharp edges and screws. In many cases, no preparation is required. This surface is chosen so it is close enough to the front of the air vent to provide convenient access for any surface preparation work. The mounting strap is inserted into the air vent and the mounting strap is bent and position so the inflated bladder meets the surface 410. The mounting strap is then secured to the inside of the air vent by one or two sheet metal screws. The air grill is then reinstalled. After installation, the bladder is hidden by the air grill, and there are no visible signs of installation. The installation requires no other modification to the air duct, air vent, or air grill, and no other access to the air duct is required.
The main enclosure base 1701 has a cutout sized and positioned to provide clearance for the valve header on the valve block and valve block. The servo controlled air valve 40 is mounted to the main enclosure base 1701. The main enclosure base also has cutouts for the pressure and temperature sensors to access the inside of the plenum and for the link connection to pass from the plenum to its connector on the PCB 1700. The PCB is mounted above the air valve blocks. Side 1703 also has cutouts for the pressure air tube 51 and vacuum air tube 52 connected to the air-feed tee.
The main enclosure top 1710 fits to the base 1701 to form a complete enclosure. Vent slots 1711 in the main enclosure top provide ventilation. A cutout 1712 in the main enclosure top matches the location of switch 1405 on PCB 1700 so that when the main enclosure top is in position, the switch 1405 can be manually switched to either position.
To install the present invention, a hole 1720 approximately 8″×8″ is cut in the side of the conditioned air plenum 15. The hole provides access for the process used to pull the air tubes 32 and to provide access when attaching the air tubes. The main enclosure base 1701 is approximately 9″×9″. The pressure and temperature sensors and the air tube headers are arranged to fit inside the 8″×8″ hole cut 1720 in the side of the plenum.
After all connections from inside the plenum are made, the main unit is attached to the plenum with sheet metal screws and sealant so as to cover and seal the hole 1720 in the side of the plenum.
The present invention is designed for easy installation in existing residential houses. Access is required only to the air vents and the central HVAC plenum. All required installation processes are known to those skilled in the art of HVAC installation with the exception of pulling the air tubes through the air ducts. The present invention includes a novel process for pulling the air tubes trough the air ducts. The description of the process refers to the views shown in
1. Referring to
2. Referring to
3. Referring to
4. A perspective view of an inflated parachute 2810 is shown in
5. Referring to
6. Referring to
7. The parachute is pulled through the air duct toward the blower 2801 in the conditioned air plenum 15 as the string 2815 is let out.
8. If the parachute snags, it can be freed by pulling the string back and forth. This temporarily collapses the parachute so that turbulence in the airflow helps find another path for the parachute.
9. When the parachute reaches the blower or the plenum, the blower is turned off, the flexible duct 2802 is removed from the blower, and the parachute is retrieved. A screen over the input 2804 (
10. Referring to
11. Referring to
12. Referring to
13. Referring to
14. Process steps 5 through 13 are repeated for each of the remaining air vents, in order of furthest to nearest to the plenum 15 or in any other suitable order.
15. After all of the air tubes are pulled, the flexible duct and seal are removed from the conditioned air plenum, the foam blocks are removed from the air vents, and the grills are replaced.
This process typically requires five to fifteen minutes per air tube. If obstructions in an air duct block the parachute, then other conventional and more time consuming methods are used. After the air tubes are pulled, the installation can proceed using standard techniques.
In another embodiment, the air tube could be directly pulled through by the parachute, without the intermediate steps of the parachute pulling a string and the string being used to pull the air tube.
Although a parachute is one very useful means for pulling the string or air tube through the ductwork, other tools are within the scope of this invention. For example, the blower could be used to blow or suck a ball through the ductwork. Or, the string could be attached to a “tumbleweed” or “porcupine” type of structure which has a large overall surface area made of smaller objects protruding from a central core, such as a rubber ball having a multitude of turkey feathers stuck into it at various angles. Another alternative is a wad of plastic bags or the like. The object will, ideally, exhibit (i) a large surface area for good wind resistance and thus good pulling force, (ii) sufficient flexibility to pass around the various corners and edges of the ductwork, (iii) the ability to adapt to the various diameters and shapes of ducts and trunks which it will encounter, (iv) a resistance to snagging, and (v) low cost.
Although the preferred installation method is to route the air tubes into the plenum, an installer could, alternatively, cut a hole through the primary trunk leaving the plenum, route the air tubes out this hole, seal the hole around the air tubes, and install the valve system and other central components at this location, rather than at the plenum. This still avoids any need for accessing the ducts, vents, and intermediate trunks, which will typically be more difficult to access than the primary trunk. In some building configurations, this less optimal installation may be preferred, such as if the plenum itself is hard to access, or if there are security concerns which require that the home automation controller and the valve system be located e.g. under the house rather than in the garage with the furnace and plenum.
Optionally, the installer may also perform diagnostic analyses on the HVAC system, before removing the installation equipment. It is known that blowers provide different air pressure at different rates of airflow. The less backpressure or obstruction that is placed on the blower's output, the higher the airflow and the lower the pressure will be; conversely, the more the output is obstructed, the lower the airflow and the higher the pressure will be. With all of the vents blocked, the installer turns on the blower and measures the pressure inside the duct trunk network (such as with a pressure gauge placed inside the duct trunk or extending through the flexible duct opening 2821). A pressure-versus-airflow chart, ideally one customized for that particular blower unit, will tell the installer how much airflow is escaping the system. Optionally, the installer may take into account the number of vents (which may not have absolutely airtight seals created by their foam blocks or other temporary sealing mechanisms), to determine an amount of leakage. Such leakage may be caused by, for example, ducts which have come loose from their trunks, duct or trunk joints which have come loose or whose duct tape has failed, and so forth.
Such failures are highly undesirable, not only because the heated or cooled conditioned air is not reaching one or more of the rooms, but also because it may be escaping the house altogether, such as where the failure occurs in a subfloor or attic crawlspace, in which case the conditioned air is venting to the outside of the house. The homeowner is paying to heat or cool the outdoors, finite natural resources are being wasted, and the residents are not as comfortable as they would otherwise be.
The installer may measure airflow through each individual vent in the same manner. The installer removes the foam or other seal from the vent, operates the blower, measures the pressure, and calculates the airflow. The installer can perform this operation for each successive vent. If any vent has an airflow calculation (or, in other words, pressure measurement) which is out of range with respect to the others, the installer may determine that there is an obstruction or other problem with that vent's duct, and may take appropriate corrective measures. By taking measurements with different sets of two or more vents unblocked at a time, the installer may deduce other problems, such as too many ducts run from a common trunk.
The system of this invention may be installed in old, existing residential or commercial buildings, or it may be installed in newly constructed buildings. In the latter case, the diagnostic analysis capabilities of this invention may be used to validate the quality of the work previously done by the installers of the basic HVAC system, to find and fix problems before construction continues (such as covering up ductwork by installing drywall), before signing off on or paying for the HVAC installation, and/or before the closing of the real estate transaction. In fact, the retrofit system of this invention could even be used to perform such analysis even if the retrofit system is not being permanently installed; it could be temporarily installed simply as a quality control means for the basic HVAC system.
Similar analyses may be performed by the home automation system itself, long after installation, by using the inflatable bladders to block the vents and by using the plenum pressure sensor 62 to measure the pressure. After installation, the controller could take a set of measurements, such as: pressure with all vents closed, pressure with each individual vent open by itself, pressure with each combination of two vents open, and so forth. The controller could save this set of measurements as a baseline, and then periodically re-run the diagnostic test set to see if any of the measurements has significantly diverged from its baseline, indicating that something has changed in the HVAC system, such as a duct coming loose from its trunk, or a child having thrown a stuffed animal down a duct, and the like.
Although the invention has been described with reference to a conventional HVAC system having common return air intake vents, it may also be used in a system in which some or all of the rooms have their own, individual return air vents. In either case, the installation may include installing air tubes and inflatable bladders into the return air vents or ducts, and the zone climate controller may individually operate the return air vents, to provide still greater performance improvements. For example, if each room has both a conditioned air vent and a return air vent, the controller can, with complete specificity, move air from one room to another room.
From the forgoing description, it will be apparent that there has been provided an improved forced-air zone climate control system for existing residential houses. Variation and modification of the described system will undoubtedly suggest themselves to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the forgoing description should be taken as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
When one component is said to be “adjacent” another component, it should not be interpreted to mean that there is absolutely nothing between the two components, only that they are in the order indicated. The various features illustrated in the figures may be combined in many ways, and should not be interpreted as though limited to the specific embodiments in which they were explained and shown. Those skilled in the art having the benefit of this disclosure will appreciate that many other variations from the foregoing description and drawings may be made within the scope of the present invention. Indeed, the invention is not limited to the details described above. Rather, it is the following claims including any amendments thereto that define the scope of the invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 10/249,198 entitled “An Improved Forced-Air Climate Control System for Existing Residential House” filed Mar. 21, 2003 by this inventor, which is incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein. This application is also related to application Ser. No. 10/249,196 entitled “A String to Tube or Cable Connector for Pulling Tubes or Cables through Ducts” filed Mar. 21, 2003 by this inventor.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4662269 | Tartaglino | May 1987 | A |
5170986 | Zelczer et al. | Dec 1992 | A |
6786473 | Alles | Sep 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040181921 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10249198 | Mar 2003 | US |
Child | 10717053 | US |