1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to swimming pool and spa floor drain assemblies, and more particularly to pool floor drain assemblies having an outlet coupled to a water return line which transfers water from a pool or spa to a pump.
2. Description of the Prior Art
U.S. Pat. No. 3,940,807 (Baker) discloses a safety suction outlet for pools and utilizes radially extending tubes to inhibit drain flow blockage.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,115,878 (Johnson) discloses a spa safety drain having a conventional grating or cover protecting a chamber which includes a secondary bypass feature.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,658,449 (Martin) discloses a protective adaptor for a pool drain designed to be placed above a pool floor drain grating to define a raised screening surface for screening any water flowing into the drain to prevent whirl-pooling effect in the drain.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,268,096 (Robol) discloses a typical cavity style prior art pool floor drain having a perforated grating or cover, an underlying cylindrical chamber and a horizontally oriented suction line.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,341,523 (Barnes) discloses an anti-vortex drain which avoids the requirement for a grating by providing a circular cover in combination with a spaced apart circular lip placed above a cylindrical sump chamber having a horizontal suction line.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,734,999 (Nicholas) discloses a safety device for swimming pools which includes a floor drain grate having two or more water inlet systems one of which is spaced widely apart from the primary drain to reduce the probability of that a bather will block the floor drain assembly.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,753,112 (Barnes) discloses a main drain leaf removal system for swimming pools which includes a cylindrical inner chamber with an inlet port elevated above the swimming pool floor and a larger diameter concentrically disposed cylindrical outer chamber having an inlet system level with the pool floor. Separate suction pipes transfer water from the inner and outer chambers. The outer chamber is designed to serve as a leaf removal chamber.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,759,414 (Wilkes) discloses a swimming pool main drain assembly having a domed top including both water inlets as well as a centrally located water outlet.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,038,712 (Chalberg) discloses a safety suction assembly for use in whirlpool baths which includes a safety relief vent located in the center of the drain cover which is activated when the drain is blocked.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,088,842 (Barnett) discloses a drain assembly for preventing hair entanglement in a pool or hot tub and illustrates a slotted grate as well as other grate configurations all having tapered lower grate surfaces.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,230,337 (Barnett) discloses an anti-vacuum drain cover having an elevated grating as well as spoke-like water inlets located at the pool floor level, the openings of which are spaced apart from the central point of the pool floor drain.
Briefly stated, and in accord with one embodiment of the invention, a floor drain assembly for installation in the wall of a swimming pool or spa includes a drain body, a fluid deflecting plug and a support structure. The drain body includes a mouth positionable in proximity to the pool wall and serves as a fluid flow inlet. A spaced apart fluid flow outlet is positionable below the mouth of the drain body. The drain body further includes a sidewall which interconnects the mouth with the outlet to define a fluid flow chamber. The cross sectional area of the fluid flow chamber decreases from the mouth to the base. The fluid deflecting plug includes a comparatively large area top and a comparatively small area base. A sidewall interconnects the top and base to form the plug with a cross sectional area which deceases from the top to the base. The support structure positions the plug within the drain body such that at least a substantial portion of the sidewall is spaced apart from the drain body sidewall to define a fluid flow channel having a first comparatively larger cross sectional area in proximity to the drain body mouth and a second comparatively smaller cross sectional area in proximity to the drain body outlet. The variation in cross sectional area from the top portion to the bottom portion of the fluid flow channel provides a lower fluid flow velocity at the mouth than at the outlet when fluid is transferred from the pool through the floor drain assembly.
The pool floor drain of the present invention is adapted to receive, to compress and to transfer to the pump filter basket large, flexible debris such as leaves while simultaneously preventing accidental suction created mechanical entrapment of bathers. The pool floor drain assembly is provided with a structural configuration which functions to isolate the hydrostatic relief valve from the pool suction source. A secondary water circulation path is activated when the primary water circulation path becomes blocked. The floor drain assembly includes a separately removable access cover for accessing and servicing an optional hydrostatic pressure relief valve without impairing the safety features or operational characteristics of the drain even when the access cover has been removed. The floor drain inlet is joined with an elongated entrance path or channel formed with a sufficient length and with an appropriately tapered cross sectional configuration to minimize the possibility of mechanical entrapment of a bather's hand or fingers. The floor drain assembly may be configured as a dual drain system having at least two spaced apart suction inlets where high volume water circulation normally takes place through a primary suction inlet of a primary floor drain with substantially no flow volume through the suction inlet of a spaced apart secondary drain placed in either the pool wall or the pool floor unless the primary inlet has been at least partially blocked.
The invention is pointed out with particularity in the appended claims. However, other objects and advantages together with the operation of the invention may be better understood by reference to the following detailed description taken in connection with the following illustrations, wherein:
In order to better illustrate the advantages of the invention and its contributions to the art, a preferred embodiment of the invention will now be described in detail.
Referring now to
The bottom 34 of drain sump 32 includes an elongated, vertically oriented passageway 42. The
As illustrated by
As shown in
Referring now to
The swimming pool floor drain assembly 12 of the present invention also includes a fluid deflecting plug 72 in the form of a conical member which includes a V-shaped sidewall 74 dimensioned to fit within mouth 66 of funnel shaped drain body 64 as best illustrated in
As illustrated in
As best illustrated in
Support structure 84 may be configured as shown in
Various additional structural elements may be added to the basic embodiment of the pool floor drain assembly 12 to enable it to be coupled as illustrated in
The plurality of flow direction arrows depicted in the
As illustrated in
A plurality of ribs 104 projecting upward from the sidewall of funnel shaped drain body 64 may be provided to serve a number of different functions. First, ribs 104 will typically be located between adjacent fluid flow bypass slots 98 to maintain essentially laminar flow between the mouth 66 and neck 68 of funnel shaped drain body 64. Ribs 104 inherently provide enhanced structural rigidity which may be desirable in certain applications. The ribs are not necessary to the function of the present invention.
As illustrated in
The unique configuration of the pool floor drain assembly of the present invention, however, provides for a variable velocity fluid flow as the fluid passes between the inlet and outlet portions of funnel shaped drain body 64. For example, the inlet or mouth of the floor drain assembly 12 is configured as an unobstructed annular or ring shaped passageway having a comparatively large diameter and a comparatively large cross sectional area. Within the neck region 68 of the funnel shaped drain body 64, the diameter of the annular or ring shaped fluid flow passageway has been reduced to a minimum distance with a resulting substantial increase in the fluid flow velocity. This increased fluid flow velocity readily crushes, folds and otherwise deforms large debris such as leaves, thereby performing a function necessary to ensure the transfer of leaves from neck section 68 through water return line 16 to pump 14 where such leaf like debris can be extracted in the pump filter basket and periodically removed by the pool user.
One primary advantage of the pool floor drain assembly of the present invention is that it entirely avoids the prior art requirement for a floor drain grate assembly to filter out large size debris such as leaves. Grate assemblies are required to filter out large debris from prior art pool drain floor drain systems which are typically formed as a rectangular or circular cavity with a water return line extending either vertically downward and out of the floor drain bottom or horizontally out the side of the cavity style floor drain. In both cases, non uniform flow exists within the interior of the floor drain. Were a relatively small apertured grating not provided on the top of such prior art cavity style floor drain assemblies, large leaf like debris would be pulled into the interior of the pool drain cavity and over time would accumulate and fully obstruct the interior volume of the floor drain cavity, plug the water outlet and require activation of a secondary or alternate floor drain which, as illustrated in
An additional advantage of the annular, funnel shaped fluid flow channel formed between the funnel shaped drain body 64 and fluid deflecting plug 72 is that the safety code requirement for a relatively low 1.5 foot per second fluid flow rate at the pool floor drain mouth or inlet is readily achieved due to the substantially larger fluid flow channel area at the mouth of the funnel shaped floor drain in comparison to the substantially smaller cross sectional area of the neck 68 of the drain assembly.
The domed top 76 of fluid deflecting plug 72 forms an elevated surface relative to the pool floor which performs the additional function of elevating a bather's body above the mouth of the pool floor drain assembly, a feature which may render it more difficult for a bather to inadvertently obstruct either all or part of the mouth portion of the pool floor drain assembly.
Incorporation of the vertical to horizontal fluid flow transition element 46 as an integral element of the molded drain sump 32 substantially facilitates both the initial installation of the pool floor drain assembly of the present invention as well as installation related testing and subsequent maintenance. Transition element 46 by being integrally molded can as is illustrated in
Because flow transition element 46 allows for vertical access from above through vertical oriented inlet 50 in adaptor 58, pool installation personnel can readily screw in fluid pressure testing equipment to perform leak testing before completion of pool construction. As illustrated in
As illustrated in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the disclosed swimming pool or spa floor drain assembly may be modified in numerous ways and may assume many embodiments other than the preferred forms specifically set out and described above. For example, the transition from the relatively large diameter mouth of the floor drain assembly to the relatively small diameter neck of the funnel shaped drain body may be achieved by many other geometric configurations other than the parallel walled, double conical funnel configuration illustrated in the drawings. Specifically, the large diameter to small diameter transition could be made by means of various symmetric or asymmetric undulations transitioning from large diameter to small diameter or by a series of stepped diameter changes. In addition, it is not necessary that a constant spacing be maintained between the sidewalls forming the fluid flow pathway. In certain applications, it may be useful to vary the spacing between the sidewalls either by increasing the relative spacing, or by decreasing the relative spacing, both as a function of vertical position between the mouth and the neck of the system. Although the pool floor drain of the present invention has been described in a preferred form having a circular cross section, the present invention could readily be fabricated in an oval, rectangular or serpentine configuration without any substantial loss in the advantageous function of the present invention. For example, in a rectangular configuration, the opposed sidewalls of the funnel shared drain body and the fluid deflecting plug could be configured in a relatively parallel orientation along each rectangular sidewall segment. The pool floor drain assembly of the present invention could also be configured in the shape of a polygon such as a hexagon in addition to the other shapes described above.
The flow bypass function described above in connection with the utilization of a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart slots 98 in combination with independent fluid chamber 102 could alternatively be configured as one or more apertures disposed at one or more locations in the sidewall of the funnel shaped drain body connected directly to alternate water return line 30 rather than providing for flow between an intermediate fluid distribution chamber 102. Accordingly, it is intended by the appended claims to cover all such modifications of the invention which fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
The present application is a continuation of and claims priority to an application entitled POOL FLOOR DRAIN ASSEMBLY FOR A SUCTION-ACTIVATED WATER CIRCULATION SYSTEM, filed May 14, 2002, assigned Ser. No. 10/144,899 now U.S. No. 6,810,537, which application is directed to an invention made by the present inventors and assigned to the present assignee.
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1454310 | Booraem | May 1923 | A |
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5753112 | Barnes | May 1998 | A |
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5819328 | Lewis | Oct 1998 | A |
5822807 | Gallagher et al. | Oct 1998 | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050066435 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10144899 | May 2002 | US |
Child | 10931001 | US |