1. Field
The present invention relates to a pivoting gutter assembly which in the upward position gathers rain water. In the downward position it can be easily cleaned and remains protected under the eaves from snow and ice sliding from the roof.
2. Prior Art
Several patents address the requirement for pivoting gutters that collect rain water in the upward position and are accessible for cleaning in the downward position. In a few cases the gutter in the downward position is also protected from snow and ice sliding from the roof.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,446,658 discloses a rain gutter made of flexible material. A mechanism is required to open the flexible gutter so that it can collect rain water, and fold it in winter to prevent it from accumulating snow and ice.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,146,718 covers a hinged support assembly for a rain gutter. It rotates about an axis close to the gutter's front edge, i.e. remote from the fascia, therefore exposed to snow and ice sliding from the roof.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,184,435 describes a bracket, attached to the wall, which is equipped with a hinge screwed to the rain gutter. This installation is feasible only if the gutter has an essentially trapezoidal cross-section that provides a flat interface between the hinge and the gutter. Figures of the gutter assembly reveal the following limitations: the gutter requires to be drilled in order to interface with the hinge; attaching the hinge to a gutter with a half-round cross-section would be mechanically complex; the hinge axis is distant from the fascia so that when the gutter is in the downward position it is exposed to snow and ice sliding from the roof.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,274,965 describes a gutter bracket assembly that includes a gutter bracket which rotates with respect to a fascia bracket by means of pivots located along the front edge of the gutter, distant from the fascia. The gutter is maintained in the upward rain-gathering position by a snap-fit mechanism. In the downward position, the gutter is exposed to snow and ice sliding from the roof.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,752,347 discloses a flexible trough maintained in the upward rain-gathering position by a locking mechanism which engages the front edge of the trough, distant from the fascia. The hook which mechanically engages this edge is part of a cantilever that crosses the trough. After the trough has been folded against the fascia board, the cantilever remains in the path of snow and ice sliding from the roof.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,896,706 describes a rotating gutter reinforced with multiple stabilizing rings. It is mechanically complicated because it requires the gutter to have sufficient axial rigidity to ensure uniform rotation over a typical length of 30 ft. The gutter remains exposed to snow and ice sliding from the roof.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,233,876 discloses a gutter suspended from hinges equipped with bearings. All bearings are interconnected by a shaft fitted with a worm gear. The gutter is pivoted by rotating the shaft by means of a worm gear either manually of with an electric motor. The system is mechanically complicated and costly.
The first six of seven pivoting gutter systems described in the quoted patents are maintained in the upward rain-gathering position by interlocking mechanisms that rely on friction and spring forces. Their installation requires an accurate alignment between the interlocking elements on the fascia and on one of the gutter edges. In the last five of these six systems the gutter rotates downward about the front gutter edge, distant from the fascia. Consequently, the gutter remains exposed to the snow and ice sliding from the roof.
The last two of the quoted seven systems rely on supporting the gutter on bearings and rotating it as a mechanical assembly comparable to a long shaft. This type of configuration requires very accurate installation procedures and is costly. None of the seven pivoting gutter systems described in the quoted patents are currently in production.
The present invention relates to a pivoting gutter assembly mounted on supporting brackets, each bracket is attached to a magnetic latch. The magnetic latch comprises a magnet within a steel cup, mounted on the rear wing of a steel hinge attached vertically to the fascia. The magnet attracts with considerable force the downward pivotable front wing of the hinge fastened to the supporting bracket. The steel cup acts as a magnetic flux concentrator and increases the attraction force on the front wing. The gutter is in the upward rain-gathering position when the front wing of the steel hinge is in close contact with the magnet and the magnetic latch is closed. In order to move the gutter from the upward to the downward position, it suffices to exert a pull on the gutter's front edge, starting at one end and progressing to the other end, by means of a hook mounted on a pole that is manipulated from the ground. In late fall, the gutter is stored in the downward position under the eaves and remains protected from snow and ice sliding from the roof. If the gutter is left in the upward position in the winter, snow sliding from the roof will push it to the downward position without damaging it. In the downward position, the gutter can also be cleaned with a water jet from a garden hose or a brush mounted on a pole. In spring, the gutter will revert to its upward rain gathering position by pushing it up with a U-shaped fork on the previously mentioned pole, starting at one end and progressing toward the other end. When the hinge's front wing is approximately 0.8 in. from the magnet on the rear wing, the attraction force takes over and locks the gutter in the upward position.
Rainwater collected by the disclosed gutter assembly flows through a downspout that is connected to the gutter and pivots with it. The disclosed gutter assembly provides two embodiments for directing rain water from the pivoting downspout to a drain pipe.
In the first embodiment, water flows from the gutter through the pivoting downspout and from there into a fixed downspout connected to the drain pipe.
In the second embodiment, water flows from the gutter through the pivoting downspout into a connecting flexible hose that slides freely in the drain pipe.
The configuration and the functional characteristics of the invention are illustrated in the following figures:
a shows the cross-section of the gutter and a metal module that combines the function of the latch closed by two magnets of opposite polarity and that of a hidden hanger supporting the upper part of a K-style gutter.
The installation of a pivoting gutter assembly on the fascia is illustrated in
Gutter 1 in the downward position stored under the eaves, is ready to be cleaned with a water jet and remains protected from sliding ice and snow, as shown in
Additional details of the invention are shown in
Gutter 1 can be pulled down from the upward to the downward position shown in
In an alternate embodiment of the invention shown in
The magnetic latch comprising steel hinge 3 with front wing 4 and rear wing 5, steel cup(s) 6 and magnet(s) 9 illustrated in
An alternate embodiment of the invention that supports the upper part of a K-style metal or plastic gutter is shown in
Water Drainage
A downspout that directs the flow of rain water to a drain pipe is located either at the lower end of the sloping gutter or at approximately its midpoint. It therefore pivots with the gutter. The invention includes two embodiments for ensuring that the pivoting downspout empties into the drain pipe when gutter 1 is in the upward rain-gathering position.
In the first embodiment illustrated in
In the second embodiment shown in
Additional Feature of the Pivoting Gutter
It is emphasized that even if the gutter assembly is left in the upward position during winter, it remains protected against sliding snow and ice. The magnetic latches act as mechanical safety switches. They open if the gutter assembly is struck by snow and ice sliding from the roof, and gutter 1 as well as pivoting downspout 14, are pushed to the downward position without being damaged.
The detailed description of the pivoting gutter assembly supported by magnetic latches highlights its following advantages:
The foregoing has constituted a description of specific embodiments showing how the invention may be applied and put into use. These embodiments are only exemplary. The invention in its broadest and more specific aspects is further described and defined in claims that follow the concluding statements.
These claims, and the language used therein, are to be understood in terms of the variants of the invention which have been described. They are not to be restricted to such variants, but are to be read as covering the full scope of the invention as is implicit within the invention and the disclosure that has been provided herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090229191 A1 | Sep 2009 | US |