(a) Field of the Invention
This application relates to a system and method for installing and fastening faucets onto surfaces. More particularly, but not by way of limitation, to a system and method that uses a split-nut for engaging the valve stems and tightening the valve stems against the surface that supports the faucet.
(b) Discussion of Known Art
Common faucet systems used in household applications include a hot water valve assembly and a cold water valve assembly. An example of this type of faucet systems is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,946,746, incorporated herein in its entirety by reference. These types of faucet systems include a pair of valves, each with a valve body that includes a threaded valve stem, to which a water supply line is attached. The threaded valve stem is also used to accept wing nuts that are used to retain the valve body against the sink or the counter top to which the sink or faucet system is mounted.
The problem associated with faucet systems that use a pair of faucet bodies, each with its own valve assembly, is that they first require insertion of the threaded valve stem into the sink or counter top holes, then require the mounting of the wing nuts, and then the installation of the water supply line to the end of the valve stem. While this process is simple to describe, the actual installation requires that the person performing the installation crawl under the sink or counter, reach behind the sink and first align the valve stem with the wing nut before threading the wing nut, and then align the valve stem with the nut or threaded connector of the water supply lines, and then thread the supply line onto the end of the valve stem. This process is rather tedious, and often very frustrating due to the fact that the installer must often lie on his back while installing these components. The installer's position makes it difficult to properly align the components often results in damage to the threaded sections, further complicating the proper installation. To make matters worse, the valve stem is often made of metal, and the nut or threaded connector of the supply line is often made of a plastic, which again increases the possibility of thread damage during attempts at installing the faucet.
Split-nut unions are well known in the pluming trades. The Waterway Plastics Company of 2200 East Sturgis Road, Oxnard, Calif. 93030 sells an example of a well-known split-nut union as item number 400-5491 “Heater Union Nut”. A common use of the split-nut coupler is to connect a section of flared tubing to the threaded end of a pipe, and obviates the need to thread the coupling nut through the entire length of the flared tubing when joining the flared section the threaded end of the pipe. However, the use of these fittings is typically limited to low-pressure installations of a supply or drainage line to the end of a fitting.
Therefore, a review of known devices reveals that there remains a need for a device and method that facilitates the installation of faucet valve systems, and particularly there remains a need for a system that reduces or obviates the need to align the wing nut or the water supply line connector with the valve stem after the valve stem has been inserted through the installation apertures in the sink or counter top.
It has been discovered that the problems left unanswered by known art can be solved by providing a faucet installation system for use on faucets that include a valve stem that is adapted for insertion through an aperture such as the installation hole made through a sink or a counter for the installation of the faucet, a preferred example of the system including:
A valve having a valve stem, the valve stem having an external surface having engagement recesses; and
A retention nut, the retention nut including a pair of sections, each section having a concave inner surface and an outer surface, each of the inner surfaces having an engagement protrusion that has been adapted for engaging the engagement recesses in the external surface of the valve stem, the sections of the retention nut being adapted for connecting to one another, so that when the retention nut sections are connected to one another they provide support for biasing the engagement protrusion towards the external surface of the valve stem, and thus allow the engagement protrusion into the engagement recesses.
According to a highly preferred embodiment of the invention, the sections of the retaining nut are connected to one another through resilient connectors positioned at the ends of each of the sections. Thus, in a preferred embodiment, the retention nut is made up of two sections and the valve stem is generally cylindrical. In this embodiment each of the sections is adapted for extending over about 180 degrees of the perimeter of the external surface of the valve stem. This embodiment includes two types of resilient connectors, one of each type being mounted on each of the ends being joined. One type includes a female cylindrical portion mounted on one section, the female cylindrical portion cooperating with a male cylindrical portion mounted on the remaining section, so that female accepts the male portion to create a hinge at one of the ends being joined. The opposite end being joined includes a resilient tab with a barb on one of the sections. The other section includes an aperture with an edge adapted for accepting the resilient tab, so that pivoting the sections relative to one another about the hinge until the resilient tab is accepted in the aperture and the barb engages the edge adapted for accepting the resilient tab, and thus forming a closed nut that may be used to engage the recesses in the external surface of the valve stem.
To use the disclosed invention, it is contemplated that the user would first attach water supply lines to each of the valve stems, and then insert the water supply lines together with the valve stems into apertures that have been made in the surface for mounting the valve. Typically, this would include the apertures provided in a standard sink or countertop that supports the valve.
While it is contemplated that the disclosed system may be used with standard valve sets that require the attachment of a water supply line between the supply valve and the valve stems, it is also contemplated that the disclosed system will allow the fabrication of valve sets that have water supply hoses pre-connected by the manufacturer. This arrangement would eliminate, or greatly reduce, the possibility of leakage at the connection between the water supply line and the valve stem, and would provide the benefits of the simplified installation method disclosed here.
It will be understood that the disclosed valve installation method allows installation of a valve set in pre-made apertures for mounting valves, includes providing a valve set with water supply lines that have been connected to the valve stems, inserting the water supply lines through the pre-made apertures in the sink or countertop, while the supply lines remain connected to the valve stems. Then attaching a retaining nut to each of the valve stems, and tightening the retaining nuts against the lower surface of the sink or countertop to retain the valve set against the sink or countertop.
It should also be understood that while the above and other advantages and results of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description and accompanying drawings, showing the contemplated novel construction, combinations and elements as herein described, and more particularly defined by the appended claims, it should be clearly understood that changes in the precise embodiments of the herein disclosed invention are meant to be included within the scope of the claims, except insofar as they may be precluded by the prior art.
The accompanying drawings illustrate preferred embodiments of the present invention according to the best mode presently devised for making and using the instant invention, and in which:
While the invention will be described and disclosed here in connection with certain preferred embodiments, the description is not intended to limit the invention to the specific embodiments shown and described here, but rather the invention is intended to cover all alternative embodiments and modifications that fall within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the claims included herein as well as any equivalents of the disclosed and claimed invention.
Turning now to
Referring now to
It is important to note that the disclosed invention allows the user to install the water supply lines 52 to the valve stem 18 prior to installing the valve assembly 22 through the mounting apertures 16 in the sink or countertop. This will do away with the need for the installer to do both the operation of installing the water supply lines as well as the operation of installing the retention nuts from below the sink or countertop, and thus relieving the user of trying to contort his body to reach these connections from below the sink or countertop. Thus, the disclosed invention not only does away with the need to connect the water supply lines 52 from below the sink or countertop, but also provides a retention nut 34 that can be installed along the valve stem 18, instead of from the end of the valve stem 18, and thus reducing the amount of time and effort needed to tighten the retention nut 34 and the valve assembly 22 against the sink or countertop.
As can be understood from
As illustrated in
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, illustrated in detail in FIGS. 2 and 4A-4C, the resilient a second set of resilient connectors 62, which include a resilient tab 64, preferably with an engagement protrusion or barb 70. The resilient tab 64 is adapted for engaging an aperture 66, illustrated in
Turning to
Thus it can be appreciated that the above-described embodiments are illustrative of just a few of the numerous variations of arrangements of the disclosed elements used to carry out the disclosed invention. Moreover, while the invention has been particularly shown, described and illustrated in detail with reference to preferred embodiments and modifications thereof, it should be understood that the foregoing and other modifications are exemplary only, and that equivalent changes in form and detail may be made without departing from the true spirit and scope of the invention as claimed, except as precluded by the prior art.
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