The present disclosure relates generally to tents and, more particularly, tents constructed of a low emissivity flat or molded polymer film having laminated reinforcing fibers, none, some or all being located along directions of principal stress.
This section provides background information related to the present disclosure which is not necessarily prior art.
A tent typically includes a water resistant, breathable canopy with an attached waterproof, non-breathable floor and a waterproof, non-breathable fly that covers the canopy while allowing an interstitial air space between the two. A system of pole sections is assembled to provide support for the canopy and fly. The poles often have internal shock cording or similar elastic material to interconnect each group of pole segments together and to aid in the assembly of the role segments. One or more poles are typically required to support the tent. Depending on the design, tents can use a combination of poles and guys to support the tent or, in some cases, multiple poles have been configured to allow the tent to be free-standing.
For backpacking, mountaineering and military applications, the lightest possible fabrics providing sufficient strength and protection are used for tents. Historically, the fabrics used for these tents include, but are not limited to, coated and uncoated woven nylons and polyesters. The tent usually has a series of peg loops that are provided near ground level around the periphery for the purpose of securing the tent to its mounting platform, albeit the earth, snow or any other suitable mounting surface. Often, the guy loops are attached at strategic locations on the outside of the tent to allow guy lines to be attached to the tent to further secure it to its mounting platform. Many older, simpler tents were made using water repellant cotton-based fabrics and or fabrics treated with waxes or chemicals to make an otherwise non-water repellant fabric, water repellant. These tents often had no floors. Waterproof flys were sometimes used in extreme, wet conditions.
More recently, there has been a growing trend toward single walled tents using only one layer of light-weight, waterproof material. This can be achieved by using the fly only, which now also becomes the canopy, without the inner tent or by using a light-weight waterproof material for the tent canopy, thus eliminating the fly. These single-walled tents have the advantage of being lighter in weight than those using both a canopy and a fly. However, these types of tents have two major disadvantages, the first being that waterproof materials do not breath, i.e., let air pass through them, and thus can present a suffocation hazard. This disadvantage can be addressed by providing sufficient adjustable openings for air ventilation. The second disadvantage is that once the temperature of the waterproof canopy drops below the dew point, moisture will start to condense out of the surrounding air onto the canopy. This can happen on both the inner and outer surfaces of the canopy and will depend primarily on the canopy material temperature and the humidity of the air near its surface. In a canopy-fly type of tent, such condensation can also occur but typically only on the fly. Since the canopy material is on the occupant side of the fly, the occupant does not come in contact with the condensation.
Accordingly, a need exists to advance the design and construction of light-weight and shape stable tents by the use of alternative materials, such as reinforced polymer films. To this end, the present disclosure describes how this technology can be used in the construction of backpacking and mountaineering tents to achieve very light weight yet strong tents.
It is an aspect of the present teachings to provide a tent that is lighter and stronger while overcoming the disadvantages of a single layer canopy tent design.
In accordance with this and other aspects, the present disclosure is directed to light-weight, single and double walled tents, with and without integral floors, which incorporate low emissivity fabric or film canopy materials. The present disclosure also is directed to such tents where the canopy is made from a flat or molded polymer film.
The present disclosure also is directed to such tents that also may incorporate additional fiber reinforcement into the polymer canopy wherein the reinforcing fibers are laminated into the film or fabric and/or added to the canopy by bonding in a tape like fashion along the lines of principal stress/load.
Further areas of applicability will become apparent from the description and claims herein. The description and specific examples in the disclosure and summary are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present invention.
The drawings described herein are for illustrative purposes only of selected exemplary embodiments and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure in any way. Similar or identical elements are given consistent reference numerals throughout the various figures.
Reference now will be made to the accompanying drawings in which:
The following exemplary embodiments and theoretical description are provided so that the present disclosure will be thorough and fully convey the scope to those skilled in the art.
Referring to
The upper part of the tent 10 is referred to as the canopy 17. The canopy 17 of the tent 10 shown in
In
Referring to
In
The following theoretical description is provided so that along with the additional exemplary embodiments that follow, the present disclosure will be thorough and fully convey the scope to those skilled in the art. Fundamental theoretical details and other numerous specific details are set forth such as examples of specific components, devices and schematic configurations to provide a thorough understanding of exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure. However, it will be apparent to those knowledgeable in the underlying theory and skilled in the art that these specific details need not be employed, that the exemplary embodiments may be embodied in many different forms, and that neither should be construed to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
As mentioned earlier, making the tent canopy of a waterproof material for eliminating the fly reduces weight but results in two major disadvantages, the first being that waterproof materials do not breath, i.e., let air pass through them, and thus can present a suffocation hazard. This disadvantage can be addressed by providing sufficient adjustable openings for ventilation. The second disadvantage is that when the temperature of the waterproof canopy drops below the dew point, moisture can condense out of the surrounding air onto the canopy. This can happen on both the inner and outer surfaces of the canopy and will depend on the canopy material temperature and the humidity of the air near its surface. In a canopy/fly type of tent, such condensation can also occur, but typically occurs only on the fly. Since the canopy material is on the occupant side of the fly, the occupant does not come in contact with this condensation.
Since condensation on the interior and/or exterior surface of the canopy is a result of the canopy dropping below the dew point, this disclosure teaches that this temperature drop can be minimized by constructing the canopy from materials that have a low emissivity. Since the canopy temperature will normally want to adjust to the temperature of the surrounding air, as would any inanimate object, by means of conduction and convection, the loss of heat that causes the canopy to drop below the ambient air temperature is due to heat transfer by radiation. It is a well know law of Physics that heat transfer by radiation is governed by the Stefan-Boltzmann Law,
Q=εσT4 Eq. 1
where Q is the heat transferred, ε the emissivity of the radiating body, σ the Stefan-Boltzmann Constant and T the absolute temperature (in Kelvin) of the object/space that is emitting or absorbing the radiation. In the case of a tent on a warm summer night with the air at 60° F., T would be equal to 288.6 K. If the tent were pitched in an open field and the sky were clear, the tent would be radiating to open space that has a temperature of approximately 4.2 K. The heat transfer from the warmer to the colder body is driven by the difference between the fourth power of the two temperatures. In this case the heat loss is significant. If the tent were under a tree, it would be radiating to the tree which would have a temperature near ambient. In this case, there would be very little if any heat lost from the canopy. From Eq. 1, it is readily understood that minimal heat transfer by radiation, even in the case where the tent surface is radiating to extremely low temperature bodies/spaces, can be achieved by using materials having low emissivities. The emissivity of a radiating body/space can have a value from 1 down to small values approaching zero. Black bodies exhibit emissivities near 1 while shiny metallic bodies exhibit low exissivities in the order of 0.1 or less. Thus, to achieve minimal heat loss, the tent canopy should be made of a material exhibiting the properties of a shiny metallic surface. Well known light materials that can achieve this result are metalized polymer films. This is the theory behind the well know space blanket technology. Preferably, a light-weight polymer film may be used in this tent construction application. It should be noted that polyester films are commercially available and are ideal materials for this application. One particular material well suited for construction of tents often goes by the trade name Mylar®.
Since use of a low emissivity material for the tent canopy will result in a tent having near infrared radiation signature suppression, a tent incorporating these teachings would be beneficial for use by the military.
Thin films that by themselves would not have sufficient strength for such tent applications may be strengthened by bonding reinforcing fibers to the film. For example, reinforced film materials are available today and have been used in sailboat sails. One brand of reinforced films adapted for use in such sailboat sail applications are manufactured by Cubic Tech Corp. The reinforced film products that are produced by Cubic Tech Corp. are designated CTF3. In the CTF3 reinforced films, the fibers are often laid in as a grid in two directions perpendicular to each other, often designated 0°/90°. This and other reinforced film materials are available where additional fibers of the grid are laid at 45° angles to the 0°/90° case which results in a 0°/90°/+45°/−45° configuration. Other fiber grid arrangements are also possible, including a completely random arrangement of the fibers, so as to result in a fabric having isotropic or equivalent strength in all directions within the plane of the film/fabric. However, in all cases, rows of parallel fibers or random fibers are laminated to the film on a single side or sandwiched between two film layers.
The teachings of the present disclosure address the use of low weight films, both with and without low emissivity treatments that have been pre-laminated with reinforcing fibers, as well as such films that have not been pre-laminated with reinforcing fibers. In some cases, it may be necessary to custom make the desired films by depositing low emissivity coatings on existing low weight films, if the appropriate weight coated film is not commercially available. When using pre-laminated films, the tent surface segments comprising the canopy and floor (if incorporated) are cut and assembled to the final shape by sewing, taping, or gluing or by some combination of these methods. Additional fibers may be applied to the tent surfaces either before of after assembly to achieve additional strength along lines of stress. These fibers may be in the form of tapes or may be laid onto the surface with other adhesive methods.
Since polyester is a thermoplastic, the polyester films that are reinforced (or ones that are reinforced with thermoplastic fibers) and can be preformed prior to assembly using heat. Two different methods will be described herein.
In accordance with a first method of manufacturing component portions of a tent or canopy, a mold or form 50, a representative example being shown in
In accordance with a second method, a mold 60, a representative example being shown in
A labyrinth of interconnected vacuum passages 64 (see
Once the mold 60 has been heated to the desired temperature, if required, the film 70 (with or without the thermoplastic reinforcing fibers) is attached to a holding frame 72 shown in
In accordance with both forming methods, once cooled the series of film segments (with or without internal reinforcement) may be assembled by using adhesives, sewing and/or tapes or any combination thereof.
Once the film segments (either with or without reinforcement) are assembled, to achieve the strongest tent possible for any weight film (whether reinforced or not), continuous fiber reinforcing tapes 80 are added along the lines of principal stress. A representative example of a tent 100 having a representative number of the reinforcing tapes 80 is shown in
This teaching further provides that In the future the process and teachings herein presented will be modified so that the continuous fiber reinforcing tapes along the lines of principal stress/load are laminated between the two polymer film layers, rather than being added externally. After forming large tent segments (the complete tent canopy if possible) of non-reinforced film by the heat-forming/thermoforming processes described herein the continuous fibers having a pre-coated heat activated adhesive are laid down upon the film while it was still on the mold. Over this a layer of finer fibers in the form of a scrim would be placed and then finally another layer of film. The soft surface ironing device would then be used to activate the adhesive, thus bonding all the layers together. If the tent were molded in more than one segment, the segments would then be joined by adhesive, sewing or tape or some combination thereof. The process thus described is used by North Sales in the construction of the previously referenced 3DL® sails. However, the more complex shape of the tent relative to the sails may impede the evolution of the process to this point.
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