The present invention is directed to a mica board electric resistance wire heater and, in particular to a heater that electrically isolates the mica boards from the heater frame without compromising the structural soundness of the frame.
In the prior art, mica board electric resistance wire heaters (mica board heaters) are well known. U.S. Pat. No. 6,884,974 to Howard et al. is one example of these types of heaters. This patent is incorporated in its entirety by reference. The mica board heater typically has a number of mica boards that are supported by a metal frame. The frame can be square or rectangular in shape and can be made of up elongated frame members that are attached to each other. The mica boards that support the resistance wires extend between two sides of the frame and are generally supported by the frame's elongated members, which are generally in the form of plates.
Heaters in the prior art in one case do not address the problem associated with unacceptable levels of current leakage resulting from moisture adsorption between the layers making up mica support boards. In the second case of the prior art, which addresses the problem of current leakage, the methods taught create a weakened support structure for the heater assembly itself.
The problem is that current leakage occurs between the live metallic heating element wire and ground (or earth) by traveling from this wire along the moist mica to the heater frame and eventually to the metallic frame of the unit using the heater, e.g., an air conditioning unit itself. This phenomenon occurs especially during the cooling season when a unit's cooling A/C coils create moist conditions and the heater is de-energized. Even when switched off, the heater element is electrically alive relative to ground as only one side of the electric circuit is broken to de-energize the element. Leakage current flow may be high enough to create corrosive conditions in the heater wire thus shortening the heater life.
In those prior art heaters that address the problem noted above, each metallic side support member that holds mica pieces in place are riveted to a mica plate that is in turn riveted to the metallic heater assembly main support frame. The resultant effect is that the integrity of the heater depends upon relatively strong metallic members being retained in place by weaker mica material. Consequently, the structural integrity of the heater is compromised.
The type of heater designed to overcome the current leakage problem is shown in
The problem with the
Thus, there is a need to improve mica board heaters such that current leakage is minimized but without compromising the frame structural stability.
The present invention solves this need by providing a mica board heater that isolates the mica boards but without compromising the structural soundness of the frame.
In satisfaction of the objects and advantages of the invention, an improved mica board electric resistance heating wire heater is provided. The heater comprises a frame and a plurality of mica boards, with each mica board supporting an electric resistance heating wire. Each of the mica boards has first and second opposing ends with each of the first and second opposing ends supported by the frame. The heater also includes first and second mica board support plates. Each of first mica board support plate supports a respective first end of the mica boards with the second mica board support plate supporting the other respective ends of the mica board. This configuration isolates the first and second opposing ends of the mica boards from the frame.
The heater also includes first and second mica board support plate holders. The holders are adapted to hold the first and second mica board support plates. The first and second mica board support plate holders can be either part of the frame or an additional support structure with the frame.
The first and second mica board support plates can have openings for receiving and supporting the first and second opposing ends of the mica boards. Each of the first and second mica board support plate holders can further comprise either a pair of elongated support members being adapted to hold the mica board support plate in position by supporting the first or second opposing ends of the mica board or a plate member being adapted to hold the mica board support plate in position to support the first or second opposing ends of the mica board. The pair of elongated support members or plate member can be part of the frame.
The frame can also comprise first opposing frame members and second opposing frame members. Each of the first opposing frame members can have at least one frame opening therein to receive the opposing ends of the mica boards. The first and second opposing frame members when attached together form the frame, wherein the first opposing frame members also support the first and second mica support plates. Each of the first and second mica support plates has openings aligned with the at least one frame opening to receive and support the opposing ends of the mica boards without the opposing ends contacting the first opposing frame members.
The invention also is an improvement in the method of heating using a mica board heater, wherein the improvement results in using the heater having the inventive features of the mica board support plates and plate holders described above.
The invention offers significant advantages in the field of mica board heaters. By practicing the invention, the problem of current leakage is minimized in mica board heaters while at the same time the soundness of the heater frame is maintained. This is done by not using mica board in constructing the frame support structure, but still using it for electrical isolation.
The invention is intended to present a unique method which may be used to combat or lower current leakage arising from dust, debris, moisture or any other means by which current may pass from the heating wire to ground. This method and invention is unique in that it allows the entire heating assembly to remain rigid while adding the means to further insulate the heating wire from current leakage to ground. In order to accomplish this, the main heater assembly metal structure remains intact while some metal material is removed or its shape is modified without removal of the strengthening characteristics of the frame. The metal that is removed is replaced with an isolative material which is used as a means to support the heater assembly element banks. The isolative material is further mounted in a manner which isolates the machined edge of the mica board material from contact with dust and debris as mentioned above. The overall impact of the invention is to further combat, insulate, and isolate leakage of current from the heater element wire to ground while maintaining a rigid structure for the entire heater assembly.
In one mode, the invention entails matched pairs of mica boards that have heater resistance wire coiled around them. Mica board support plates retain opposite ends of each mica board. The mica board support plate holders made of metal in turn retain the mica support plates. The metallic mica board support plate holders are designed such that ends of the mica boards are neither in contact with the metal mica board support plate holders nor are in close proximity to any metallic material. This creates sufficiently long over surface paths and resultant high resistance to current flow that leakage current is minimized or eliminated, and this results in little or no corrosion of the heater element wire.
The mica board support plate assembly includes a mica board support plate 33 that is designed to support the ends 29 of the mica boards 31. The mica board support plate 33 is supported by the frame member 23, which is modified from the normal frame members used in a mica board heater as described below.
The mica board support plate 33 has a number of openings 37, which are sized to receive the ends 29 of the mica boards 31, see
In the foreground of
It should be understood that any other type of frame configuration or means can be employed for supporting the mica board 33 so that it can hold the ends of the mica boards 31 of the heater. For example, the members 41 could have vertical supports running along the length of the members 41 for further structural rigidity for the frame member 23.
A plate with the appropriate sized openings could be used in substitution of the two members 41. In this plate embodiment, the openings in the plate would be larger than the openings in the mica board support plate 33 to ensure that the ends 29 of the mica board only contacts the support plate 33, not the frame 23.
While a pair of flanges are shown as part of the support plate assembly, other configurations as would be known in the art can be employed, e.g., the members 41 could terminate in a plate on one or both ends, with the plate being spot welded to the frame members 25. The members 41 could also be flat rather than l-shaped when receiving the mica board support plate 33.
Referring to the detail shown in
While the mica board heater is shown with a particular design of a metal frame with four sides and two sets of opposing frame members that are linked together, the concept of isolating the ends of the mica boards from a frame member could be used in other applications that did not involve the frame design as illustrated. For example, only two frame members could be used to support the mica boards and these frame members could be mounted to a structure other than other frame members. While the illustrated heaters have a frame made of metal members, the two mica board supporting frame members 23 could be mounted to structure other than the specific frame members 25. Here, the mica board support plate 33 could still be employed to isolate the mica boards 31 from the frame members 23 or 23′ that provide at least some of the structural support for the heater. For purposes of this application, the frame of the heater is considered the frame members 23 or 23′ and their supporting structure, whether it be other frame members or some other support which supports the members 23 or 23′.
As such, an invention has been disclosed in terms of preferred embodiments thereof which fulfills each and every one of the objects of the present invention as set forth above and provides a new and improved mica board heater and method of use. Of course, various changes, modifications and alterations from the teachings of the present invention may be contemplated by those skilled in the art without departing from the intended spirit and scope thereof. It is intended that the present invention only be limited by the terms of the appended claims.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C §119(e) based on application Ser. No. 61/202,953 filed on Apr. 22, 2009.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3912903 | Northrup et al. | Oct 1975 | A |
6884974 | Howard et al. | Apr 2005 | B2 |
7764873 | Panaghe | Jul 2010 | B2 |
20040182853 | Howard et al. | Sep 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100270287 A1 | Oct 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61202953 | Apr 2009 | US |