This application claims priority to Application Number 199 42 340.7 filed Sep. 6, 1999 in the German Patent Office.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a tap insert that is used to close or separate conduits.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Very frequently, manually operated shut-off valves are used in the distribution network of a water supply system, a heating system, or a solar heating system, for example in buildings or on building sites. These shut off valves have a handwheel, by means of which a valve head with a seal is displaced rectilinearly and perpendicularly to a valve seat in the conduit. One disadvantage of such shut off valves is that they are extremely vulnerable to wear. The number of turns that have to be completed by the handwheel in order that the valve head is sealed against the valve seat is not fixed. These means that valve can be tightened down so hard that the valve head seal becomes damaged, with the result that the valve no longer seals the conduit off as it should. The valve is particularly vulnerable to wear should the valve remain unopened for a protracted period of time, or should high water temperatures occur. This means that the valve inserts that are used in valve housing associated with the conduits have to be replace very frequently. If a number of shut off valves is defective in a building or on a building site, then the water will have to be drained of from part of the water supply network in order to replace the valve inserts. This entails considerable outlays of time and money.
In order to avoid these disadvantages, in many cases valves—in particular ball valves-are used in place of shut off valves in new buildings. These have a spherical or conical shut off body that incorporates a through channel, and the shut off body can be rotated through a predetermined angle, in most instances through 90°, by a lever. Taps of this kind are not prone to wear, but they do entail the disadvantage that they can be installed in existing conduits that already incorporate a shut off valve only at great cost. To this end, very frequently a whole section of conduit has to be removed. This is a serious disadvantage in the case of conduits that are routed through masonry.
In contrast to this, the tap insert having the inventive features entails the advantage that it can be screwed into a valve housing. To this end, there is an outside thread on the outside of the device to connect the tap insert to the housing. All that need be done to replace a valve insert with a tap insert of this kind is to screw the valve insert out of the conduit and then screw the tap insert into the existing receptacle. The valve body housing that encloses the shut off body of the tap insert has stop surfaces on its exterior, and these rest on the valve seat of the valve housing, which is provided for the valve head of a valve insert, so as to form a seal. If the shut off valve is in the closed position, the conduit is completely closed in the area of the tap insert. If the shut off body is in the open position, then the medium that is being conducted through the conduit can flow through the openings provided in the shut off valve housing and the through passageway in the shut off body. The conduit is thus opened in the area of the tap insert.
The tap insert is suitable—for instance— for Y-valves, free-flow valves, and straight-way valves. To this end, in each instance the shut off valve housing must be matched to the valve seat and the distance between the shut off valve housing and the connecting device must be matched to the particular valve body.
According to one advantageous configuration of the present invention, the shut off body housing is a sealing material. This means that the shut off body housing serves to close the through channel in the shut off body when in the closed position, to guide the shut off body in the shut off body housing, and seal the tap insert against the egress of liquid. In addition, the transition between the shut off body housing and the valve seat of the valve housing is also sealed. A separate seal is not needed in this case. Because of the fact that the shut off body has a smooth surface, and the sealing material is elastic, the shut off body can be guided in the shut off body without any frictional losses and thus without wearing. More advantageously, material that possesses good sealing properties, and within which the shut off body can be guided with very little friction, is selected for the seal. Teflon, polytetrafouroethylene (PTFE), is particularly suitable for this purpose. In most instances, the shut off body is of metal, for example, stainless steel, brass, or bronze, and has a polished surface.
According to another advantageous version of the present invention, the shut off body housing can be of metal or plastic. In this case, a seal will also be required between the shut off body and the shut off body housing, on the one hand, and between the shut off body housing and the valve seat, on the other.
According to another advantageous version of the present invention, the shut off body housing consists of two parts that are held together by a sleeve that encloses both parts form the outside, at least in part. In order to assemble the individual parts to form a tap insert, the two parts are positioned around the shut off body and fixed on the shut off body by the sleeve. These two parts have an inside shape that is matched to the shape of the shut off body. When assembled, the tap insert can be inserted into a valve housing as a complete unit. Because of its compact construction, the shut off valve housing is of a compact installed size and for this reason can be inserted into a valve housing that provides only a small installation depth.
It is preferred that the two parts of the shut off valve housing be of Teflon, and; the sleeve be of brass. Other materials are also possible.
According to another advantageous configuration of the present invention, a ball is used as the shut off body. In addition, the shut off body can be in the form of a cone or of a cylinder.
According to another advantageous configuration of the present invention, the length of the tap insert can be adjusted. This makes it possible to adjust the tap insert to the housing and with respect to the space between the valve seat and the thread that is used to screw the tap insert into place. Thus, the tap insert is extremely versatile and can be matched to each valve housing in an optimal manner. The length of the tap insert is adjusted and fixed when it is inserted into the valve housing. The length is not changed as long as the tap insert remains within the valve housing. The tap insert differs from a valve insert in this respect. In the latter, the space between the valve head and the thread that connects the valve insert with the valve housing changes each time the valve is opened or closed.
For example, a first sleeve that is guided in the connecting device can be provided to provide for length adjustment. A pin extends through this sleeve; at one end of this pin there is the shut off body and at the other end of the pin there is an actuating device. A second sleeve acts on the first sleeve and this is guided, on the end that extends from the valve housing, by a thread on the outside of the connecting device. The position of the first sleeve in the connecting device and thus the distance between the shut off housing and the connecting device can be varied by adjusting the position of the second sleeve on the connecting device.
Additional advantages and configurations of the present invention are set out in the description, the drawings, and the claims that follow.
FIG. 1: Valve housing with tap insert according to a first embodiment;
FIG. 2: Valve housing with tap insert according to a second embodiment;
FIG. 3: Tap insert in cross-section (third embodiment);
FIG. 4: Ball with ball pin of the tap insert as shown in
FIG. 5: Shut off body housing of the tap insert as shown in
FIG. 6: Connecting device with the valve housing for the tap insert shown in
FIG. 7: First sleeve of the tap insert as shown in
FIG. 8: Second sleeve of the tap insert as shown in
FIG. 9: A fourth embodiment of the tap insert, in cross section.
In
In
All of the features set out in the description, in the claims that follow, and in the drawings appended hereto are essential to the present invention, either singly or in any combination with each other.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
199 42 340 | Sep 1999 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCTDE00/03051 | 9/5/2000 | WO | 00 | 10/29/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO0118437 | 3/15/2001 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2757969 | Newell | Aug 1956 | A |
3133722 | McGuire et al. | May 1964 | A |
3236495 | Buchholz | Feb 1966 | A |
3576309 | Buchta et al. | Apr 1971 | A |
3735956 | Matousek | May 1973 | A |
3967811 | Keller | Jul 1976 | A |
4314581 | Schrock | Feb 1982 | A |
4535970 | MacAfee | Aug 1985 | A |
5950664 | Battaglia | Sep 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
827626 | Feb 1960 | GB |