The present invention relates to rain gutters and in particular to diverters for diverting a flow of water into the gutters which otherwise might overshoot the gutters.
Rain gutters are often attached to lower edges of roofs to catch and control runoff during rain storms. Such gutters are very effective along straight roof edges. However, at locations where rain runoff is concentrated, the flow of water often overshoots the gutter, and results in a stream of water shooting off the roof. Compounding the problem, roof lines often include a meeting of two roof portions near an entry to the house. When such meeting forms a “V”, the flow of rain runoff is concentrated in the “V” and may easily overshoot the gutter and produce a waterfall off of the roof. When this occurs near an entry, the result may be both annoying and produce a slippery walkway.
The present invention addresses the above and other needs by providing a rain gutter diverter which includes a body and a diverter wall. The body includes a roof and side walls to capture water running down a valley between roof sections. The diverted wall forms a vertical splitter and directs the captured flow into the gutter.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, there is provided a rain gutter diverter. The rain gutter diverter comprising a diverter body and a diverter wall. The diverter body includes a body roof, a body right side wall, a body left side wall, a body centerline, a mouth end, and a diverter end. The body right side wall extends downward from a roof right edge, and the body left side wall extending downward from a roof left edge. The diverter wall is attached to the diverter end of the diverter body and comprising a right diverter wall, a left diverter wall and a vertical splitter separating the right diverter wall from the left diverter wall. The vertical splitter forms a “V” pointed toward the mouth end of the diverter body. The body roof meets and is substantially sealed to top edges of the right diverter wall and the left diverter wall. The body right side wall meets and is substantially sealed to a right edge of the right divert wall. The body left side wall meets and is substantially sealed to a left edge of the left diverter wall.
The above and other aspects, features and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent from the following more particular description thereof, presented in conjunction with the following drawings wherein:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding components throughout the several views of the drawings.
The following description is of the best mode presently contemplated for carrying out the invention. This description is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but is made merely for the purpose of describing one or more preferred embodiments of the invention. The scope of the invention should be determined with reference to the claims.
A house 10 having a prior art rain gutter system having two gutter sections 16a and 16b are shown in
A house 10 with a rain gutter system including a rain gutter diverter 20 according to the present invention is shown in
A perspective view of the rain gutter diverter 20 is shown in
A front view of the rain gutter diverter 20 is shown in
The vertical splitter 46 forms a “V” pointed toward the mouth end 44 of the diverter body 20a. The body roof 24 meets and is substantially sealed to top edges of the right diverter wall 28a and the left diverter wall 28b, whereby most or all of the water captured by the rain gutter diverter 20 is directed into the gutter sections 16a and 16b, wherein the escape of a small amount of water from the rain gutter diverter 20 is permissible. The body right side wall 26a meets and is substantially sealed to a right edge of the right divert wall 28a, and the body left side wall 26b meets and is substantially sealed to a left edge of the left diverter wall 28b. Such sealing may be accomplished using a common sealant, and is preferably accomplished using a silicone sealant or a plastic roof cement.
The diverter wall 20b is an approximately vertical wall, and the divert body 20a is attached to the diverter wall to extend upwardly away from the diverter wall 20b at between approximately 12 degrees and approximately 25 degrees and is preferably approximately 17 degrees or corresponding to the slope of the valley 17. The rain gutter diverter 20 preferably straddles the valley 17 and resides against the roof sections 14a and 14b when mounted.
The diverter wall has a full height H1 which is preferably approximately five inches, and a lower portion height H2 which extends below the side walls 26a and 26b is preferably approximately 2.5 inches. The length L of the roof 24 is preferably approximately 8.5 inches and the width W of the roof 24 is preferably approximately six inches.
A front view of a diverter body 20a according to the present invention is shown in
A front view of a diverter wall 20b according to the present invention of the rain gutter diverter 20 is shown in
The diverter wall 20b further includes roof tabs 34a and 34b, and wall tabs 36a and 36b. The rain gutter diverter 20 is preferably constructed by attaching the diverter wall 20b to the diverter body 20a using the tabs 34a, 34b, 36a, and 36b. The roof tabs are attached to the roof 24 by, for example, spot welding of or pop riveting, and sealed to the roof 24 by a sealant, preferably silicone or plastic roof cement, and the wall tabs are preferably similarly attached to the walls 26a and 26b.
The rain gutter diverter 20 is preferably constructed from sheet metal, and more preferably from galvanized sheet metal. However, the rain gutter diverter 20 may also be constructed from any metal or plastic (for example aluminum, galvanized steel, stainless steel, painted or plated steel, copper, brass, or vinyl) and a rain gutter diverter 20 comprising a diverter body and a diverter wall as described herein and made from any material is intended to come within the scope of the present invention.
While the invention herein disclosed has been described by means of specific embodiments and applications thereof, numerous modifications and variations could be made thereto by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention set forth in the claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070209289 A1 | Sep 2007 | US |