The present invention relates to molded plastic structures comprised of interlocked rings, useful as risers and manhole chambers, for providing access to such as buried septic tanks and utility lines, or as sidewalls of plastic storage tanks.
A riser for a plastic or concrete septic tank used in wastewater treatment is one application for such tubular structures. Most commercially available risers are essentially short straight cylinders. Thus, they cannot be conveniently nested for economic shipment and storage.
The purpose of the riser is to provide a space which extends upwardly within soil, for example from the access port of a septic tank to, or near to, the surface of the soil in which the tank is buried. A riser desirably inhibits entry of surface water and soil into the tank. Risers have been sold commercially as separate rings which can be assembled as a riser assembly having a desired length (height). Often, there have been seals or other means aimed at preventing the passage of water at the joints between rings. . Most commercially available risers are essentially short straight cylinders. Thus, they cannot be conveniently nested for economic shipment and storage.
Similar requirements are presented in connection with a hole in earth that provides access to a sewer line or other buried things by means of a manhole. A casing or liner, sometimes referred to as a chimney, extends downwardly from a manhole opening at the surface of the earth. In the present description the term riser shall be construed to embrace structures which are of the nature of risers for septic tanks and the like, are for manhole casings, and are for structures which are of the nature of sidewalls of vertical tanks.
A riser for septic tank application should have a minimum diameter which is no less than the diameter of the access port on the top of a septic tank, which commonly is of about 60 cm. In the past such risers have been provided either as a one piece structure, or as a multiplicity of circular rings which are commonly screwed or bolted to each other to form the desired height assembly. Good fit and seal between the joints of the rings is desirable, along with minimum labor of assembly. A riser desirably presents an uppermost surface suitable for a lid with a good seal configuration, particularly under conditions where surrounding soil may be prone to intruding into the seal region, as can occur when a lid is removed for septic tank maintenance purposes. There is a further need for a means of connecting any new-configuration riser to the opening of existing-design septic tanks and the ends of large diameter pipe-ends.
In recent times, there has been heightened consideration on providing means to hinder the chance of a small person falling into the large diameter opening of a typical septic tank riser, for example if the riser lid is removed by a person who is not a tradesman skilled in the art. It is desirable of having the option of a safety grating within a riser, but as will be appreciated from the description herein, when risers have a considerable frusto-conical shape, a simple flat grating will not be readily or conveniently installable at the time when the installer is ready to put the lid on a completed septic tank installation and leave.
In another application for articles of the present invention, a generally cylindrical plastic tank for holding liquids or solids may have a vertical axis and sidewall configured in the same way as a riser for a septic tank; that is, the sidewall is comprised of connected-together rings.
An object of the invention claimed in this application is to provide a safety grating that is particularly useful with plastic risers that are comprised of interconnected frusto-conical riser segments, which riser has a lengthwise-undulating wall and varying inside diameter, and the grating is to be inserted through an upper end opening that is smaller in diameter than the diameter of the riser at the home position of the grating.
In accord with an invention, an exemplary grating for use within a riser comprises a hub and a multiplicity of arms attached to and extending radially outward from the hub. At least one of the arms, and optionally more than one arm, is hinged where it attaches to the hub, or at a location somewhat spaced apart along the length of the arm from the hub. Thus, the grating can be diminished in exterior dimension sufficient to enable the grating to fit through a smaller-opening end of a frusto-conical riser. When placed at its home position within the concavity of a riser having its frusto-conical wall facing upwardly, so the arms may be set upon a step or other engagement feature, and the grating will have an arch shape cross section.
Further in accord with the invention claimed in the parent application hereof, use may be made of individual risers and of assemblies of identical risers. Each riser has a tapered side wall; that is, the circumscribing wall is in the shape of a truncated hollow cone, and a riser assembly has a wall that is undulating in the lengthwise direction. Each riser has a first lengthwise end having a first diameter, and a second lengthwise end having a smaller second diameter. Each embodiment of riser end comprises a plurality of tabs circumferentially spaced apart by rim segments.
In embodiments of the invention, the riser like those just described comprises a wall having a circumferential step which preferably is closer in diameter to the smaller diameter second end than to the larger diameter first end, for receiving the legs of a grating.
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following description of preferred embodiments and accompanying drawings.
In the present invention molded plastic riser articles (sometimes referred to as rings) can be used individually or as assemblies. As will be seen, the type of risers disclosed herein have inward or outward tapering walls, also referred to as conical walls. (While the risers have a frusto-conical shape, for simplicity they are in short referred to as “conical.”) Also for simplicity of description, the risers and riser assemblies are often described herein using terminology applicable to cylindrical objects. While the invention is described in terms of circular rings/risers and associated safety gratings, the scope of the invention includes articles which have walls which are non-circular, e.g. oblong; and those shall be considered equivalents to the circular articles that are described.
The first part of this description concentrates on an exemplary product and application, namely a riser for a septic tank within which a safety grating may be used. A riser is an open ended structure which may be closed by a lid when positioned on a tank. In the present invention, a riser may be mated with one or more other risers to form a riser assembly. In the art, a riser assembly may be also referred to simply as a riser. In this description and elsewhere a single riser piece may be alternatively referred to as a ring.
The disclosures of commonly owned patent application Ser. No. 62/295,408, filed Feb. 15, 2016, entitled “Multi-ring plastic riser with tab connectors”, and patent number 10,442,617 entitled “Multi-ring plastic storage tanks and risers” (the '617 patent) are hereby incorporated by reference.
A riser assembly of the present invention may comprise two or more mated and latched-together articles. A riser assembly may sometimes be simply called a riser herein, particularly when the assembly is installed in a working position. When installed on a septic tank, a riser assembly is typically fastened to a fitting around the opening in the top of the tank and the assembly has a lid closure at its top. An exemplary lid closure is consistent with the lid shown in
An exemplary riser 20 may have a vertical height of about 15 cm (about 6 inch), a larger diameter end of about 69 cm (about 27 inch) and a smaller diameter end of about 58 cm (about 23 inch). Other risers may have heights in the range 2 to 18 inches (5 to 46 cm). Joints between several identical risers 20 are formed by tabs on one part that engage rim segments on the mating part by latching to them. An exemplary riser is preferably made of injection molded thermoplastic, such as polyethylene or polypropylene, with a wall thickness of about 4.5 mm (about 0.18 inches). Alternative plastic materials may be used.
Riser 20 has a lengthwise central axis L, around which is centered a wall 30 that generally has the shape of a truncated hollow cone. The wall of riser 20 has opposing ends 22, 32. End 22 has a larger diameter than does smaller end 32. The wall of an exemplary ring is preferably inclined at an about 7 degree angle to the lengthwise axis L, more generally, preferably within the range 5-20 degrees.
As best seen in
Referring to
When used, gaskets 50, 150 are preferably made of a rubber or elastomer material, for example EPDM having a Shore A hardness number of about 30. Optionally, where resistance to water passage through the joint is not important to the user, the risers can be assembled without the use of a gasket, and risers may be constructed without a channel 44. See
Exemplary riser 20 has ten tabs 26, 36 at each end. Preferably, the tabs at one end are aligned in the lengthwise direction with the tabs at the other end of the riser. In other embodiments of the invention, there may be fewer or more tabs; and there may be a different number of tabs at one end, compared to the other end.
With particular reference to
The combination of elements 48, 46 and local portion 130 of wall 30 defines circumferentially-running channel 47 (which has a length nominally equal to the tab width). Channel 47 provides an advantageous arrangement for the following reasons: When force is applied to the risers, to separate the risers from each other at the joint 42, a bending moment (represented by the curved vectors M) is created in web 46. That moment has the effect of thrusting section 48 and lip 52 radially inwardly, toward the central axis L of the riser, better to engage rim 28. That enhances the resistance of the joint to separation, compared to the resistance which the assembly would have if channel 47 and section 46 were not present, i.e., compared to the structure shown in
Once the mating features of the ends are engaged, the risers cannot conveniently be separated other than by use of tools which pull all tabs from engagement with the mating rims. It is not expected that a user will often seek to separate the risers once they are joined to each other.
Referring again to
With reference to
The following part of this description discloses a safety grating that is particularly useful with the foregoing types of risers. A grating of the present invention may be used with risers other than those described herein.
Often, an installer will want to wait until near the end of the installation process to install the grating, not wanting the impediment to access of inside the tank during installation. The risers described above have one end that is smaller than the other and an assembly has a lengthwise-undulating wall. So, if in an assembly of risers the small end of a riser is at the top, the grating has to pass through the small opening and in order to be set within a larger lower-down portion of the riser assembly.
The spaces between the arms and within the lattice work of an arm, and the opening in the hub, aim to be small enough to impede a small person, such as an ambulatory child, from falling through the riser, should the lid be left off the riser or should the lid be improperly removed when no installer is present. The opening in the hub upper end is part of a lengthwise passageway through the hub that may be large enough to enable a clean-out hose to be passed through the hub. In an alternative embodiment, the arms may be solid rather than lattice-like, although that disadvantageously would increase weight and cost.
In the grating embodiment 60, hub 64 has a pentagonal shape opening 13 and five arms. A grating within the scope of the present invention may have a hub with a center opening and passageway which are of a different shape, including circular, or there may be no opening. A grating within the scope of the present invention may have arms which differ in number from five. For example, 2, 3, 4, 6, or more arms may be used.
The lateral dimension of the hub 64 where the arms attach, and the lengths of the arms 62 including any hinge arm which is extended for use when the grating is in its home position within riser 20, provide grating 60 with arch shape in vertical plane cross section, when the grating is in place at its home position within the riser 20, as shown in
Preferably, there is a step 53 on the interior of the wall of the riser, as shown in
In an embodiment of grating, the arms are preferably separately molded from the hub; and an end of each arm 62 is fixedly attached to the hub by means such as pins or screws. Alternatively, except for the at least one hinged arm, the arms may be integral with or welded to the hub. The side elevation view of
For reference,
During the process of installing a grating, an exemplary hinged arm 62P is rotated about the hinge point as the hub and such fixed arms as are present are tilted. Rotating the one or more hinged arms downwardly from the hub reduces the exterior dimension of the grating locally. Then, as the grating is moved downwardly to the grating home position with riser 20, the hinged arm is rotated back, so all the arms extend the same distance from the hub and the hub length axis is aligned with the riser length axis L.
When a grating like grating 60 has four fixed arms and one arm is hinged to rotate in a vertical plane, the effect of rotating the one arm will be to decrease by about 10 percent (or about 35 degrees of arc) of the imaginary circle circumference which characterizes the terminal ends of all the arms of a grating when it is in its home-position, i.e., a circle having the diameter DB. The two spaces on either side of the hinged arm each will contribute an about 10 percent (about 35 degrees) more of useful decrease in circumferential dimension of the grating—for a total of about 30 percent (about 105 arc degrees). In short, when an at least one arm is rotated, the dimension of the grating is less than the imaginary circle dimension for about 10 to 30 percent of the circumference of the imaginary circle.
Springs (not shown) may be employed to bias a hinged arm in the outward, or most-extended, direction. For example, a torsion spring may be put around the pin at the hinge joint, or compressible elastic bumpers may be used to resist the inward or collapsing motion of the arms. When a grating has more than one hinged arm, the movement of one arm may be interlocked with the movement of an adjacent arm, to cause all the hinged arms to move radially outward or inward in coordination. Interlocking may be accomplished by a circumferentially extending tang affixed to an arm to slidingly engage an adjacent arm.
In another embodiment of the invention, illustrated by
The following paragraphs describe adapters which are particularly useful with the foregoing kinds of risers which have tapered walls, also referred to as conical walls.
Adapter 70 has a first larger end comprising flange 72 and a second end 78 comprising cylindrical section 76 which has a diameter smaller than the outside diameter of adapter flange 72. An intermediate size section 74 connects the section 76 with the flange. Within the bore of the first end flange is inward projecting ledge 80. Ledge 80 has an inside diameter and other dimension which preferably corresponds with the effective diameter of the rims 128 at the smaller end 32 of a riser 20.
When a septic tank has an opening with a top flange that has a suitable inward extending rim, the small end of a riser 20 of the present invention can be snapped onto the tank top flange, and the tabs will latch onto the rim. When the tank does not have such a suitable top flange, as illustrated by flange 77 of tank 75, the adapter flange 72 can be screwed or otherwise attached to the flange 77, as shown in the partial vertical cross section of
It is sometimes desired replace a portion of a prior art riser that is spaced apart from the tank, or to add to the length of a prior art riser.
Assembled structures embodying features of the present invention may be put to other uses including, for example, manhole sleeves for access to subterranean chambers. An open ended hollow article like a riser, made in accord with the invention, may be fitted with a bottom closure (and optionally a top also), thus making the article into a bucket or tank like vessel, suitable for storing water, other liquids, or solid items. A claim to a riser shall be construed as comprehending a structure which may be used for a manhole in the earth or other material, or for a structure which forms part of a vessel. For convenience of description, the invention has at least in part been described with respect to a particular orientation, and such terms as top, bottom, side, etc., that relate to orientation shall not be construed as limiting with respect to the claims.
The invention, with explicit and implicit variations and advantages, has been described and illustrated with respect to several embodiments. Those embodiments should be considered illustrative and not restrictive. Any use of words such as “preferred” and variations suggest a feature or combination which is desirable but which is not necessarily mandatory. Thus, embodiments lacking any such preferred feature or combination may be within the scope of the claims which follow. Persons skilled in the art may make various changes in form and detail of the invention embodiments which are described, without departing from the spirit and scope of the claimed invention.
This application is a continuation in part of patent application Ser. No. 15/432,780 filed Feb. 14, 2017, which claims benefit of provisional patent application Ser. No. 62/295,408 filed on Feb. 15, 2016.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62295408 | Feb 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 15432780 | Feb 2017 | US |
Child | 16814157 | US |