None.
The present invention relates to a prefabricated swimming pool made of metal, especially stainless steel, of plastic, of plastic with ceramic inlays, or of prefabricated concrete components, and is transported to the construction site either completely prefabricated or in factory-prefabricated parts that are assembled at the construction site. The swimming pool is characterized in that the pool floor is curved.
Swimming pools made of stainless steel or of plastic that are prefabricated at the factory and assembled at the site of their installation by crane, have been known for a long time. Analogous to the swimming pools made of formed blocks that are lined with watertight plastic, they have the disadvantage that the circulating water flow in the area of the floor corners and floor edges, in particular, is slowed down because of the shear force created between the pool water and the side walls or the pool floor. This favors the development of deposits in these areas and leads to a preferred accumulation of solid impurities whose removal requires additional cleaning effort.
In order to remedy this situation, at least to a large degree, the goal of the present invention is to configure the swimming pool such that at least in the area of one axis of the pool, preferably along its longitudinal axis, no increased shear forces occur.
It has already been attempted in the past to achieve this by rounding off the floor edges, but with insufficient success. Despite the rounding of the floor edges and floor corners, these areas still collect increased accumulations of solid impurities or allow easier algae formation than the other border areas of the pool. The reason is that the dimensions of the known roundings of the edges are much too small to be able to affect the shear forces. Conventional edge roundings usually have a side length of 10 centimeters. This small dimension of the edge rounding is knowingly accepted in conventional pools so as to not interfere with the optical impression of a flat pool floor.
The present invention solves the problem by configuring the pool floor in a curved manner, at least along its longitudinal axis, and at least in a wide enough area so that the shear forces are not increased in relation to the side surfaces near the pool edge.
This problem is solved by a curved configuration of the pool floor along at least one axis, with the curved surface covering at least 25%, preferably 50%, and particularly preferably 100% of the entire floor surface. The change in the optical appearance is knowingly accepted here. The curvature covers such a large area that it is optically clearly detectable.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the pool floor's curvature is barrel shaped with the radial section through the pool floor having the outline of a semicircle or a half ellipse. Of course, the advantage according to the invention may also be achieved with a pool floor whose radial section has the outline of a quarter circle or a quarter ellipse. This embodiment, however, again has the known disadvantages along a floor edge, but has the advantage of providing a larger area of appropriate depth for unimpaired swimming. The use of this embodiment variant is preferred where the available property area is rather limited.
An optimum embodiment is a pool floor whose cross section has the shape of a half ellipse and which has a continuous curvature along its lateral axis. Here, both longitudinal edges are broken up, and in the middle there is a wide area having sufficient swimming depth, i.e. the pool depth allows unimpaired breaststroke swimming without having to be afraid that the feet may make contact with the pool floor while swimming.
Various variants of this optimum embodiment are represented in the figures.
An optimum embodiment is a pool floor having a cross-section in the shape of a half ellipse and a continuous curvature along its lateral axis. Here both longitudinal edges are broken up with a wide area of sufficient swimming depth in the middle, i.e. the pool depth allows unimpaired breaststroke swimming without having to be afraid that the feet may make contact with the pool floor while swimming.
The embodiment according to
In the preferred embodiment variant according to
Of course, the pool according to the invention can be equipped with all known additional accessories such as skimmer 8 or overflow gutters 9, as shown in
Other embodiment variants are also possible such as the Roman stairs 10 shown in
It is also possible to configure the pool such that the curvature runs along the lateral axis as well as the longitudinal axis. Other variants of access stairs are also conceivable. They could also be installed in a corner area.
Various changes may be made to the configuration, size, relative proportions, and materials of construction of the different invention elements disclosed and described herein without departing from the scope, meaning, or intent of the claims which follow.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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GM 36/2005 | Jan 2005 | AT | national |