Counterbalance systems for vertically movable window sash.
This invention improves on a locking shoe and mounting bracket usable with a curl spring window balance system such as explained in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,353,548, and 5,463,793. The invention adds convenience and reliability to the proposals of those patents.
The improvements made by this invention include a mounting bracket that can hold its position while being shipped with a shoe cassette holding a curl spring and yet can automatically disengage from the spring shoe when fastened to a sash jamb channel. The shoe cassettes are also preferably formed of identical halves that are unhanded so that a shoe cassette can be deployed on either side of a window sash. The cassette halves are preferably configured to resist relative rotation as they are splayed apart in response to cam action of a tilt lock cam contained within the shoe. The tilt lock cams can be configured to retain headed sash pins, or can have recesses or slots that allow a sash pin to extend more than half way through a locking cam. The improved system also allows locking pads to be inexpensively installed on the shoes to exert increased locking friction when a sash tilts and shoe cams lock the shoes in their channels.
Shoe cartridges or cassettes 10, such as illustrated in
An upper edge or top region 12 of shoe body 11 supports mounting bracket 50. A short length of curl spring 30 is uncurled from shoe body 11 and is attached to mounting bracket 50, which can hold the assembled shoe body 11, curl spring 30, and mounting bracket 50 together for assembly into a window or shipment to a window manufacturer.
Mounting bracket 50 improves on a simpler bracket suggested in the '548 and '793 patents. Bracket 50 is robust enough, and well enough braced and interlocked at the top 12 of shoe body 11, to hold itself and curl spring 30 in place in an assembled cassette 10 during shipment. This provides the convenience to a window manufacturer of shoe cassettes arriving assembled with mounting bracket 50 ready to secure each cartridge in a shoe channel of a window jamb. All that is necessary is to slide each cassette into a shoe channel to the mount position, and then drive in one or two fastening screws 51 to fasten mounting bracket 50 in place. Two fasteners or mounting screws 51 are preferred so that mounting bracket 50 can resist a torque or turning force applied by curl spring 30. In some jamb channels, mounting bracket 50 can be blocked from rotation by channel walls, making a single mounting screw 51 all that is necessary for securely holding mounting bracket 50 in place.
To accomplish its improvements, mounting bracket 50 preferably includes mounting wall 52, spring holding wall 53, and brace 55, as best shown in FIGS. 3,4 and 5. Mounting wall 52 is preferably flat so that it can be fastened snuggly against back wall 61 of shoe channel 60. Mounting wall 52 also includes a hole 56 or a hole 56 and a slot 57 to receive one or two mounting screws 51. Spring holding wall 53 includes a projection 54 oriented to fit into an opening 34 in curl spring 30, which exerts a downward pull on mounting bracket 50 to hold spring 30, mount 50, and body 11 in the assembled position illustrated in
The top or upper surface 12 of shoe body halves 11a and b preferably include headed ridge or “dog bone” shaped connectors 13 that hold shoe body halves 11a and b together in proper alignment. Connectors 13 also allow a superposed attachment of an additional curl spring container mounted on top of shoe body 11. The headed rail connectors also provide a sturdy interlock with mount 50, as shown in
Mounting wall 52 preferably has an opposed pair of projections 85 that extend under headed connectors 13 to prevent mounting bracket 50 from pivoting out of its position on the top 12 of body 11. The projection 85 that is farthest from spring holding wall 53 is especially well positioned to prevent this. Spring holding wall 53 has a downwardly extending projection 58 that overlaps with the adjacent dog bone connector 13. Brace 55 rests on top of a connector 13, and has a projection 59 (
Headed rail connectors 13 have end notches 14 that allow mounting wall projections 85 to escape from under connectors 13 when mounting wall 52 is fully attached flat against back wall 61 of shoe channel 60. In the position of mounting bracket 50 as illustrated in
Since mounting bracket 50 is preferably free to slide along top surface of shoe body 11 when fastened into a shoe channel, as described, it is desirable to allow relative movement between curl spring 30 and spring holding projection 54. Relative movement at the interconnection between spring 30 and projection 54 allows mounting bracket 50 to slide into mounted position without pulling spring 30 laterally out of its alignment with shoe body 11. A preferred way of accomplishing such relative movement is to make hole 34 in spring 30 an oval or oblong hole or slot, as best shown in
As best shown in
Each body part 11a and b preferably has a recess 72 formed above the end regions of cam 20. When a sash supported by cassettes 10 is tilted out of the window plane, cam 20 turns to a locking position that aligns its channel 25 or slots 22 with recesses 72. This allows the heads 73 of sash pin 70 to be raised upward from cam slots 22 or channel 25 and into recesses 72 to facilitate removing a tilted sash from a window.
Recesses 72 also facilitate replacing a removed sash, because recesses 72 allow extra room above cam 20 to receive sash pin 70 that can then be dropped down into cam slots 22 or 25. Recesses 72 also provide a somewhat larger area for maneuvering sash pins 70 into shoe bodies 11a and b before dropping downward into cam channels 25 or slots 22. The sash pins 70 can have heads 73 that interlock with cam edges 23 to prevent withdrawal of sash pin 70 from shoe cassettes 10 if a window is carried in a suitcase fashion before installation. Sash pins 70 can also be un-headed and long enough to extend deeply into cam 20 for improved wind resistance of a sash. The described arrangement of cam channels 22 and 25, recesses 72, and sash pins 70 also allows shoes 11 to be unhanded, so that any shoe can be installed on either side of a sash to be counterbalanced.
Mounting brackets 50, to the contrary, are preferably handed so that each bracket is arranged to be mounted on only one side of a sash. This preference is to assure that mounting brackets 50 do not interfere with tilt latches of a counter balanced sash.
Brace 55 of mounting bracket 50 is preferably mounted in an orientation that clears tilt latch 75 so that mounting bracket 50 does not interfere with vertical movement of tilt latch 75 past mounting bracket 50. The left- and right-handedness of mounting bracket 50 as identified by the A and B markings appearing on mounting brackets 50 in
Lower corners of body parts 11a and b preferably have molded recesses 82 that can receive locking pads 80 or 81 to increase a frictional locking effect when a balanced sash tilts to pivot cam 20 to a locking position. Locking pads 80 and 81 (schematically shown in
When locking cam 20 pivots with a tilted sash, its cam surface 21 slides in between lower edges of shoe bodies 11a and b to splay the shoe bodies apart and lock the shoe cassette in place in a jamb channel. This splaying apart of the lower regions of shoe bodies 11a and b also produces a force that tends to rotate the shoe bodies relative to each other as they are forced apart by cam surface 21. Such rotation would tend to diminish the splaying apart of the shoe body halves, and this tendency is overcome by projections 15 and corresponding recesses 16 that are formed in the lower region of each shoe half. As bodies 11a and b splay apart in response to rotation of cam surface 21, projections 15 remain engaged with recesses 16 to prevent any relative rotation between shoe halves 11a and 11b. Recesses 16 can be formed as inward facing parts of recesses 82 whose outward facing parts can receive locking pads 80 or 81. Projections 15 and recesses 16 are also preferably alternately formed on each body half 11a and b so that these halves remain identical to each other while providing a pair of mating recesses 16 and projections 15.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2732594 | Adams et al. | Jan 1956 | A |
5353548 | Westfall | Oct 1994 | A |
5463793 | Westfall | Nov 1995 | A |
5661927 | Polowinczak et al. | Sep 1997 | A |
6990710 | Kunz et al. | Jan 2006 | B2 |
20040163209 | Pettit | Aug 2004 | A1 |
20050229492 | Robertson | Oct 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11668112 | Jan 2007 | US |
Child | 13524003 | US |