The present invention relates to roof gutter assemblies and more particularly to a pivotally mounted roof gutter assembly that allows pivoting of the gutter to position the open top downwardly for ease of discharge of leaves and other debris.
Cleaning leaves and other debris from roof gutters is a bothersome, and often a difficult and dangerous, but necessary, task. Conventionally, gutters are stationary and it is necessary to climb a ladder or crawl down a roof to the level of the gutter to gain access for cleaning, and repositioning along the gutter is required every few feet.
Various attempts have been made to alleviate this problem, such as covering gutters with perforated or slotted covers, which are not completely satisfactory as some water will flow over the covers without entering through the perforations or slots, especially when leaves or other debris become lodged on the covers. This problem of water flowing over the covers is particularly troublesome during heavy rain storms. Further, over time, roof materials and small debris eventually build up inside the gutters sufficiently to cause the need to remove the covers and clean out the gutters.
There have also been attempts to mount gutters so that they can be pivoted to position the open top of the gutter downwardly to discharge accumulated leaves and debris or allow cleaning of leaves and debris from below. However, none of these are known to have been commercially successful because they require significant modification of an existing gutter or involve positive manipulating mechanisms that add to the complexity and cost of installation and operation. Most of these involve hinging gutters for pivoting from either their bottom outer or inner corners, with the gutters simply hanging loosely from the bottom corners.
One known rotatable gutter system that does not involve pivoting from one of the bottom corners is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,357,719, issued Oct. 25, 1994 to Eric E. Lewis. As disclosed in this patent the gutter is mounted on a pivot rod located at or below the top of the gutter and in vertical alignment with the center of mass of the gutter. A cam is mounted on the pivot rod. A cable is attached to the cam and extends over a pulley and downwardly between the gutter and the adjacent building surface for manipulation from below. This arrangement of the pulley and cable requires undesirable spacing of the gutter from the building. Pulling on the cable causes the gutter to pivot until the front corner of the gutter is stopped against a bracket attached to and extending from the adjacent building surface. In this stopped position the open top of the gutter faces generally downwardly to discharge leaves and debris. Return of the gutter to its normal upright position is accomplished by releasing the cable, allowing the gutter to return to its upright position in which it hangs in balance by gravity without mechanical stops. Any uneven disposition of leaves and debris in the bottom of the gutter can result in a relocation of the center of mass with an undesirable displacement of the gutter from its normal upright position.
In contrast, the pivotable roof gutter assembly of the present invention utilizes an uncomplicated and inexpensive assembly for mounting a roof gutter for pivoting from a normal upright position to a downwardly facing discharge position with return to the upright position being facilitated by the weight distribution of the gutter, and with the weight distribution causing the gutter to be seated against a stop in the normal upright position.
In essence, the roof assembly of the present invention comprises a mounting over the rear wall of a gutter for pivoting the gutter about a pivot axis that is spaced rearwardly from the front-to-rear center of weight distribution so that the rear wall of the gutter is urged into a normal upright position against a stationary gutter support member, with the pivot axis also being located at a position so as to maintain clearance of the gutter from contact with the surface of the adjacent building as the rear of the gutter moves downwardly along the building surface when the gutter is pivoted to a downwardly facing discharge position. In one embodiment the weight distribution of the gutter in the discharge position is on the building side of the pivot axis, resulting in the gutter being urged and retained in the discharge position. The mounting for the gutter is attached to the side of the building. The gutter upright position stop is the stationary gutter support member, and the gutter discharge position stop may be the roof of the building.
Briefly described, the pivotable roof gutter assembly of the preferred embodiment of the present invention includes a gutter mounted below the bottom edge of a building roof. The gutter may be a conventional gutter having a bottom wall, a front wall extending upwardly from the bottom wall, a rear wall spaced from the front wall and extending upwardly from the bottom wall, with an open top extending between the front and rear walls. Optionally, the gutter may be of any other trough-like shape, such as, e.g., a segment of a circle. The gutter has a normal upright position with the open top facing upwardly for receiving water and debris runoff from the roof and a downwardly facing discharge position for discharge of leaves and other debris from the gutter
A stationary gutter support member is attachable to the side of a building for extending outwardly for support the gutter for pivoting about a pivot axis from a normal upright position to a downwardly facing discharge position. The pivot axis is spaced toward the rear wall from the center of the front-to-rear weight distribution of the gutter so that the gutter will be urged into its normal upright position by the greater weight outwardly of the pivot axis. The pivot axis also is located at a position with respect to the gutter at which the adjacent building surface does not interfere with the gutter when the gutter is pivoted from its normal upright position to its downwardly facing discharge position. The station gutter support member is engageable with the gutter to prevent pivoting of the gutter rear wall upwardly along the building wall beyond its normal upright position. Preferably, a gutter discharge position stop member, such as the roof of the adjacent building, is in a position for stopping pivoting of the gutter beyond the discharge position.
In one form of the preferred embodiment of the present invention a pivoting member is attached to the gutter and the mounting member is a stationary gutter support member that extends outwardly over the pivoting member when the gutter is in its normal upright position and is attached to the pivoting member on the gutter at a pivot connection. In one form of the invention, the pivoting member of the gutter extends upwardly to the pivot connection when the gutter is in its normal upright position to a level at which the greater weight of the gutter when the gutter is in its discharge position will urge the gutter against the discharge gutter position stop member, which may be the roof of the adjacent building, while allowing the gutter to be forcibly pivoted in the opposite direction to its normal upright position. The pivot connection may be in the form of a hinge connection having a hinge pin at the pivot axis and being connected to the stationary gutter support member and to the pivoting member thereby hingedly connecting the stationary gutter support member to the pivoting member.
The stationary gutter support member may be an L-shaped bracket having a vertical leg attached to the building and a projecting leg extending for attachment to the hinge connection, and the pivoting member on the gutter may be an L-shaped bracket having a leg secured to the rear wall of the gutter and a leg extending for attachment to the front of the gutter and upon which is the hinge connection to the stationary support member. The extending leg of the pivoting member extends under the extending leg of the stationary gutter support member and is in contact therewith when the gutter in its normal upstanding position. In this arrangement, the extending leg of the stationary gutter support member serves as the stop member.
Also preferably, the gutter assembly includes an engaging element projecting outwardly from the bottom wall of the gutter adjacent the rear wall for engagement by an operating implement for pivoting of the gutter between the normal upstanding position and the downwardly facing discharge position. To maintain the gutter in downwardly facing discharge position with the open top facing downwardly, the operating implement is of a length sufficient to extend downwardly for engagement and manipulation by a person located at a level below the gutter, with the length also being sufficient, or being extendable sufficiently, for the operating implement to be temporarily seated on a surface below the gutter to hold the gutter in position for cleaning of leaves and debris from the gutter. The engaging element may be generally L-shaped with a leg secured to and projecting downwardly from the bottom wall and a leg extending transversely from the projecting leg, and the operating implement may have an outer end formed with a transverse aperture for sliding onto and off the outer leg of the engaging element.
In the situation where the roof has an interior corner, the gutter assembly includes an upright corner member mounted on and extending upwardly from the roof in the interior corner and extending along the roof from the interior corner to deflect water and debris flowing down the roof interior angle into the open top of the gutter. Preferably this upright corner member has the shape of an inverted V.
In the situation where the roof has an exterior corner, the gutter extends in both directions from adjacent the exterior corner and has end walls adjacent the exterior corner and spaced from each other sufficiently to avoid interference when the gutter is pivoted to its downwardly facing discharge position. The gutter assembly includes a fixed corner member at the exterior corner and adjacent the end walls.
The preferred embodiment of the present invention is described herein in detail, with reference to the following figures, wherein:
The pivotable roof gutter system 10 of the preferred embodiment of the present invention, and as illustrated in the accompanying drawings, is attached to the fascia board F on a wall W of a building B under the overhang of a roof R.
The roof gutter system 10 includes a conventional gutter 12 having a flat bottom wall 14, a rear wall 16 extending upwardly from the bottom wall 14, a conventionally contoured front wall 18 extending upwardly from the bottom wall 14 at a spacing from the rear wall 16, and an open top 20 between the tops of the front and rear walls 18 and 16. Conventional reinforcing strips 22 extend between and are secured to the rear wall 16 and the front wall 18 at intervals along the gutter 12.
The gutter 12 is supported on the fascia board F by rigid stationary gutter support members in the form of L-shaped brackets 24 that have vertical legs 26 secured by screws or other attaching means to the fascia board F, and have horizontal legs 28 that extend outwardly from the fascia board F below the overhang of the roof R. Hinge connections 30 are mounted on top of the outer extents of the horizontal legs 28, with a hinge plate 32 of each hinge connection 30 secured to the top of the associated horizontal leg 28 and the other hinge plate 34 attached to the top of a gutter attaching member in the form of an outer gutter supporting plate 36 that is at the same level as the horizontal leg 28 of the stationary bracket 24 when the gutter is in its normal upright position as seen in
With this arrangement the gutter 12 is suspended from the hinge connections 30 and is pivotable about the hinge pins 44 of the hinge connections 30 for pivoting between a normal upright position (
The hinge connections 30 are spaced toward the gutter rear wall 16 from the center of the front-to-rear weight distribution of the gutter 12 so that the greater weight distribution outwardly will urge the gutter 12 to rotate in a direction upwardly along the building B (counterclockwise in
The weight distribution is such that forcible pivoting of the gutter 12 is required to pivot the gutter 12 from its normal upright position to a downwardly inclined discharge position and to retain it in its discharge position, although it may be possible, depending on the slant of the roof and the location of the hinge connection 30, to add sufficient weight to the outer extend of the gutter 12 so that when the gutter has been pivoted to its discharge position the greater weight distribution will be above and toward the roof from the hinge connection 30 sufficient for gravity to retain the gutter 12 in the discharge position.
To forcibly pivot the gutter 12 from its normal upright position to its discharge position, a generally L-shaped engaging element 46 is secured to the gutter bottom wall 14 adjacent the rear wall 16. This L-shaped engaging element 46 has a leg 48 secured to and projecting from the gutter bottom wall 14 and a leg 50 extending transversely from the projecting leg 48 with a free end portion for detachable sliding engagement thereon of a transverse aperture 52 at the end of an elongated operating implement, such as a rod 54, that is of a length to be manipulated by a person from below the gutter 12 to force the gutter to pivot from its normal upright position to its downwardly facing discharge position. While in the preferred embodiment illustrated the leg 48 is attached to the gutter 12 and the aperture 52 is on the end of the operating rod 54, the elements could be reversed with the engaging leg being on the rod and the aperture being on the engaging element that is attached to the gutter.
To maintain the gutter 12 in its pivoted discharge position, the elongated operating rod 54 is rigid and of a sufficient length that it can be temporarily seated on a surface, such as the ground G, below the gutter to maintain the gutter in its discharge position (
Instead of using L-shaped brackets and hinge connections, the stationary bracket can be a U-shaped bracket or similar form with a base secured to the building and having parallel arms extending outwardly for support of a pivot pin there between, on which pin the pivoting member is hung for pivoting of the gutter about the pivot axis.
When the pivotable gutter assembly 10 of the present invention is attached to a roof R that has an interior corner I (
When the pivotable gutter assembly 10 of the present invention is attached to a roof R that has an exterior corner E, the gutter 12 extends in both directions from adjacent the exterior corner E and has end walls 64, which are spaced apart sufficiently to avoid interference when pivoted to the discharge position. A fixed corner member 66 having a flat square top 68 is mounted in the corner adjacent the end walls 64 of the gutter 12.
as illustrated in
Another embodiment of the pivotable roof gutter assembly of the present invention is illustrated in
The location of the pivot pins 138 and corresponding pivot axes 152 rearwardly of the center of the front-to-rear weight distribution of the gutter results in the greater weight of the gutter 112 outwardly of the pivot axes 152 urging the gutter 112 to pivot against the facia board F to stop the gutter 112 in a normal upright position (
The elevated location of the pivot axes 152 results in the gutter 112 being elevated when pivoted to its discharge position (
Similar to the forced pivoting of the gutter 12 of the embodiment described in
In view of the aforesaid written description of the present invention it will be readily understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention is susceptible of broad utility and application in many embodiments and adaptations other than those herein described. Many variations and modifications will be apparent from or reasonably suggested by the present invention and foregoing description thereof without departing from the substance or scope of the present invention. Accordingly, while the present invention has been described herein in detail in relation to preferred embodiments it is to be understood that this disclosure is only illustrative of examples of the present invention made merely for purposes of providing a full and enabling disclosure of the invention. The foregoing disclosure is not intended nor is it to be construed to limit the present invention or otherwise exclude any other embodiment, adaptations, variations, modifications, and equivalent arrangements, the present invention being limited only by the scope of the claims appended hereto and equivalents thereof.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1141204 | Noce | Jun 1915 | A |
1442771 | Meunier | Jan 1923 | A |
2219953 | Fry | Oct 1940 | A |
3616582 | Walek et al. | Nov 1971 | A |
4014074 | Faye | Mar 1977 | A |
4019290 | Manty | Apr 1977 | A |
4199121 | Le Febvre | Apr 1980 | A |
4309792 | Faye | Jan 1982 | A |
4311292 | Deason | Jan 1982 | A |
4561616 | Robinson | Dec 1985 | A |
4669232 | Wyatt | Jun 1987 | A |
4705242 | Yost | Nov 1987 | A |
4745657 | Faye | May 1988 | A |
4813190 | Wittig | Mar 1989 | A |
4837987 | Fender | Jun 1989 | A |
5146718 | Baskett | Sep 1992 | A |
5184435 | Sherman | Feb 1993 | A |
5255477 | Goodspeed | Oct 1993 | A |
5274965 | Jackson | Jan 1994 | A |
5317843 | Sheehan | Jun 1994 | A |
5333417 | Demartini | Aug 1994 | A |
5335460 | Smith, Jr. | Aug 1994 | A |
5357719 | Lewis | Oct 1994 | A |
5649681 | Faye | Jul 1997 | A |
5752347 | Osborn | May 1998 | A |
5893239 | Leahy | Apr 1999 | A |
5896706 | Pike | Apr 1999 | A |
6219972 | Zusy | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6233876 | Obidniak | May 2001 | B1 |
6240679 | Smalara | Jun 2001 | B1 |
6412229 | Kuhns | Jul 2002 | B2 |
7581356 | Balkum et al. | Sep 2009 | B1 |
8215080 | McNeish et al. | Jul 2012 | B2 |
8234819 | Petrov | Aug 2012 | B2 |
20080289266 | Kennedy | Nov 2008 | A1 |