1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a gutter cover system such as is commonly used at the edge of a roof, and in particular to a seamless cover system with water pooling that may be installed over an existing mounted gutter and a method and machine for making seamless gutter covers.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Gutters are widely used on a variety of buildings to redirect water to a down pipe, which then directs the run-off to a more convenient disposal location. This avoids splashing, “trenching”, flooding, and other nuisances related to roof runoff. A common problem with such gutters is that they collect leaves, sticks, pine needles and other debris, which causes the gutters and/or down pipes to become blocked. As a result, water can back up and flood over the gutter edge and sometimes down the side of a building, negating the benefits of gutters. Gutters blocked by debris can also cause devastating consequences during the winter months if melting snow and ice cannot properly drain off the roofs of buildings. During melting and refreezing cycles, this blocked water can then refreeze and act as an ice dam, which can continue to melt and back up under the roof and/or leak into the interior of the building.
To cure this deficiency and alleviate the necessity for manually cleaning out gutters and/or down pipes, various systems have been devised. Such systems include screen devices that cover the gutter opening to deflect debris from going into the gutter. However, instead of deflecting the debris, such screen devices may instead cause an accumulation of debris, which still must be manually removed over a period of time. Other systems have been made to utilize surface tension to direct the water into the gutter, while the leaves and other debris carried by the water are jettisoned beyond the gutter. Earlier gutter devices utilizing the surface tension of water to separate water from leaves and other debris often fail at effectively directing the debris-free water into the gutter portion of the devices. However, it has been found that surface tension of the water is often not sufficient to contain the water flow against certain counter-forces, such as with large volumes of water that may occur in heavy rains. To cure this deficiency, systems have been devised to add measures for interrupting and/or slowing the flow of water, such as ribs, to the covers of gutters to slow the water, allowing the surface tension to direct debris-free water into the gutter. Although such measures do increase the effectiveness of surface tension, they may still fail to satisfactorily alleviate the above problem.
To overcome these deficiencies, a gutter and cover system was developed by Eastside Machine Company of Bismarck, N. Dak. This system deflects leaves and other debris while effectively capturing and retaining the debris-free water within the gutter portion of the system. Moreover, the system is seamless and the gutter and cover may be cut to length from coils of material with a machine that is transported to the jobsite on a dedicated trailer. The system has proven to be is very effective, but may not allow for making a seamless cover and installation on some existing mounted gutters.
There exists a need for a seamless cover system that provides pooling and may be cut to length and easily installed on existing mounted gutters. Such a gutter cover system should be structurally simple and easy to install on a variety of gutter styles and manufacture than the prior gutter devices. Moreover, the cover forming machine should be small and lightweight to be easily portable in a small truck, van or small trailer. The present invention addresses these as well as other problems associated with gutter covers.
The present invention is directed to a gutter and cover assembly and in particular to a cover that may be retrofitted to an existing mounted gutter as well as a machine and method for making the gutter cover.
According to a first aspect, a gutter and cover system such as is typically mounted to the edge of a roof includes a conventional gutter with a separate cover system that mounts over the gutter. The cover includes a pooling section that slows the water prior to flowing over an edge of the cover and then, due to surface tension, following the flange and lip and dripping into the gutter while debris is kept out of the gutter. The cover mounts directly to brackets spaced apart along the length of the gutter and cover. In one embodiment, the cover is a seamless cover that is made on site at the installation location and cut to the necessary length.
The brackets are preferably made in a conventional manner of a lightweight plastic or other inexpensive, weather resistant material. The brackets are generally mountable to gutters having different configurations and mount only to a rear wall of the gutter and or to the roof edge, wall or other substantially vertical mounting surface for the gutter. The bracket includes a rear portion and lateral reinforcement as well as an arcing reinforcement portion with widened sections providing rigidity and stability. The cover mounting portion is at a top of the bracket and includes a mounting surface configured for receiving mounting screws that mount through the cover to the bracket. The cover mounting section portion is also angled slightly toward the roof edge to ensure that the cover is maintained at a proper orientation to create a pooling portion. The outer edge of the cover mounting portion is configured for engaging and aligning the flange so that the cover portion is properly configured when installed. The bracket also includes complementary arcing alignment portions that form a horizontal bore therethrough when aligned, which receives a mounting screw and helps to position and hold the mounting screw while being screwed into a rear mounting portion of the bracket and to the mounting surface. It can be appreciated that the cover and bracket provides for simple mounting and easy manufacture as the cover member does not require a rear flange for mounting to the mounting surface of the gutter. Moreover, the bracket and cover are self-aligning to ensure that the cover member is oriented properly to provide the pooling and slow down the flow of water off the roof.
A second aspect of the present invention is a portable system for making the cover member. The portable system includes a frame and a feed system for supporting a continuous coil of material that is fed around an end tensioning drum. From the drum, material is fed through a series of forming rollers and bearings to deform the blank material to a profile having a flange and a lower lip. In addition to the forming rollers, upper and lower rollers provide for tension, drive and alignment. As only one edge of the blank material need to be deformed, material is aligned against a stationary alignment bar along the edge being deformed. The system may accommodate covers of different widths and includes a moveable alignment bar at an opposite edge of the blank material to maintain proper position. The drive rollers are driven by a motor to a transmission and a drive shaft of a middle roller in one embodiment. A series of sprockets and drive chains links to the other forming rollers and bearings to drive all drive rollers at the same speed.
The flange is formed by a first edge of the blank material engaging increasingly angled sets of forming bearings that bend the edge substantially downward. The material then engages a pair of forming rollers having ridges that impart the lip to the edge of the material. Following formation of the lip, the material passes through four more sets of rollers that continue to deform the material into the final shape of the flange. The system provides for reliable and continuous drive without slippage and for a consistent, repeatable flange and lip profiles. As only one edge of the material is deformed, the number of forming stations are decreased so that the system is lightweight and smaller than previous systems so the present system that may be fitted in a minivan, pickup truck bed or small trailer.
These features of novelty and various other advantages that characterize the invention are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed hereto and forming a part hereof. However, for a better understanding of the invention, its advantages, and the objects obtained by its use, reference should be made to the drawings that form a further part hereof, and to the accompanying descriptive matter, in which there is illustrated and described a preferred embodiment of the invention.
Referring now to the drawings and in particular to
A separate cover 1040 is configured to be retrofitted to an existing gutter. The cover 1040 includes a pooling portion 1042 leading to a front flange 1044 and a lip 1046 extending downward from the front flange 1044. The pooling portion 1042 is configured to extend at a slight angle downward away from an outer edge of the gutter 1020 and towards the edge of the roof to receive water flowing down the roof and slowing the water down before flowing off the cover 1020. The water then pools and drips over the front flange 1044 and due to surface tension, falls off the lip 1046 and into the gutter 1020. In a preferred embodiment, the cover 1040 is a seamless cover made from galvanized steel or other suitable material that is cut to the desired length through a portable forming machine, as described hereinafter.
To support and mount the cover 1040, brackets 1060 are utilized at spaced apart locations along the length of the gutter and cover 1000. The bracket 1060 is preferably formed of a lightweight plastic material and may be molded or otherwise formed by inexpensive conventional techniques. The bracket 1060 includes a riser portion 1062 extending at a rear portion of the bracket 1060. A rear rib 1064 extends up the back of the gutter 1000 and an arcing rib 1066 extends upward and outward toward the front portion of the bracket 1062. A cover support portion 1068 flares laterally and is configured for receiving the cover 1040 and angling the cover 1040 in a preferred orientation to create the pooling effect. The cover support portion 1068 forms a downward facing ledge 1076 that has a lip 1046 extending underneath a front extended end for easy alignment. The cover 1040 mounts to the brackets 1060 by use of conventional mounting screws 1082 that are drilled downward into the cover support portion 1068. The bracket 1060 mounts to the edge of the roof or building with a mounting screw 1080. To provide for easy and swift mounting, the bracket 1060 includes a front screw alignment portion 1070 and a complementary rear screw alignment portion 1072. The screw alignment portions 1070 and 1072 are complementary arcing portions that extend in opposite directions to form a horizontal bore when aligned so that the mounting screw 1080 may be inserted through the alignment portions and maintained and aligned for mounting to the building or roof. A screw receiving portion 1074 at the rear of the bracket receives the screw when mounted and has an orifice that receives the threaded portion of the screw 1080. In a preferred embodiment, the mounting screw 1080 is positioned to extend at an angle of approximately 2.5° above horizontal. This angle ensures that the lower portion of the bracket is pulled flush against the rear wall of the gutter 1022. The bracket 1060 is adaptable to a wide variety of gutter configurations as the bracket does not engage a front wall of the gutter.
The bracket 1060 and cover 1040 provide for faster and higher quality mounting as the bracket 1060 is configured for receiving the cover and has a geometry that aligns the cover 1040 due to engagement of the cover 1040 with the pooling portion 1042 and the support portion 1068 as well as the flange 1044 and lip 1046 engaging the front ledge 1076. The bracket 1060 maintains the pooling portion 1042 at a correct angle without requiring further adjustment.
Moreover, the bracket 1060 provides for easily aligning and attaching the screws 1080 into the edge of the roof. The configuration of the bracket cover eliminates having to mount a cover to the edge of the roof. In addition to eliminating the much more difficult mounting arrangement shown in the prior art, the manufacturing process is also simplified as a mounting flange is eliminated from the present cover 1040. The process provides for a bracket that is self aligning and easily mounted on a wide variety of gutter configurations. The cover 1040 is simply placed over the bracket 1060, which self-aligns the cover, and then mounted with conventional screws 1082 through the cover support portion 1068.
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The drive assembly 106 shown in
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The cover forming system 100 is adaptable to form covers for gutters typically ranging from four to seven inches wide. The blank material is aligned by a first alignment bar 140 shown most clearly in
The cover forming assembly 110 includes a series of spaced apart bottom drive rollers 150 and upper tensioning rollers 152. The bottom rollers 150 rotate on shafts that mount to the lower frame 112 and include the sprockets 126. The lower rollers 150 are driven and engage the blank material and feed it through the forming assembly 110. The upper rollers 152 mount to the press bars 116 and maintain the material between the rollers 150 and 152 at a continuous feed. The height of the upper rollers 152 is adjustable through the yokes 118 to maintain optimal spacing and proper tension.
The flange 1044 and lip 1046 of the cover 1040 are formed at forming stations 160, 170, 180, 190, 200, 210, 220 and 230. The forming stations bend and deform the blank metal material as it is fed through the cover forming system 100 in a continuous manner. Each station advances the bend slightly more to provide a continuous arc around the flange 1044 in a repeatable consistent profile.
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An eighth and final station 230 includes forming rollers 232 and 234. The final forming rollers 232 and 234 are opposed and rotate about a substantially horizontal axis and engage the lip portion at the edge of the cover material to place a final bend on the flange 1044 and have the lip 1046 of the cover 1040 extending substantially vertically downward.
Referring to
It can be appreciated that the resulting gutter cover 1040 is simple and easy to mount without requiring a rear flange for mounting. The forming system 100 forms consistent and repeatable flange and lip profiles of the cover 1040. Moreover, the cover forming system 100 has a smaller number of forming stations as compared to previous stations as there are no stations to form a mounting portion along the edge closest to the roof, as the mounting portion is not needed. Alignment and adjustment are easier as rollers do not need to be moved should different sized materials be used for making different width covers as the flange and lip profiles are always formed along a first edge of the aligned material.
It is also appreciated that the forming system 100 is lightweight and easily portable. The frame 102 is formed of aluminum in one embodiment while the cover 104 is formed of stainless steel. This construction decreases corrosion and rusting without requiring painting of the elements and eliminates problems over time due to paint flaking and interfering with a clean material feed. In the embodiment shown, the system 100 does not require its own separate trailer and may be placed in the back of a minivan or pickup truck bed. The system weighs approximately 320 pounds, allowing for loading and unloading from the van or pickup by a small siding team.
It is to be understood, however, that even though numerous characteristics and advantages of the present invention have been set forth in the foregoing description, together with details of the structure and function of the invention, the disclosure is illustrative only, and changes may be made in detail, especially in matters of shape, size and arrangement of parts within the principles of the invention to the full extent indicated by the broad general meaning of the terms in which the appended claims are expressed.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61247457 | Sep 2009 | US |