The invention relates to pipe clamps/hangers for supporting coolant/refrigerant and heating fluid carrying pipes in thermally insulated condition.
It is anticipated that energy codes for buildings will soon require more strict measures to prevent energy loss. Additionally, for increased structural reliability, closer spacing of pipe clamps/hangers will be required. Currently, although the pipes themselves are thermally insulated, generally with R5 rated plastic foam, pipe clamps/hangers usually remain uninsulated so that the increase in the number of uninsulated hangers in any pipe run will result in a proportionally significantly increased loss of cooling/heating efficiency, a commensurate increase in icing and deleterious condensation/dripping at hanger locations.
Effective hanger insulation would therefore be even more desirable but, at the same time, for economy in applied cost, the increased number of hangers required for any job would also require that any increase in handling/manipulation time to insulate the pipe hanger/clamp be minimized or obviated.
According to one aspect, the invention provides a unitary, thermally pre-insulated pipe clamp/hanger assembly comprising: a supporting body having a mounting portion for attachment to a support and a C-section, channel portion for receiving a pipe therein; and, a lining strip of resiliently compressible, thermally insulating foam adhered in covering relation to an inner surface of the channel, the foam strip having opposite end portions with at least one end portion being free and protruding across a pipe-receiving mouth of the channel towards the opposite end portion of the foam, on an opposite side of the mouth, thereby at least partly restricting the mouth.
Pr-adhering the foam directly to the inner surface of the clamp body using a factory applied adhesive or bonding agent obviates need for any additional component possibly requiring additional storage and additional foam assembly (eg clamp wrapping) that would require substantial additional, time consuming manipulation by a user in the field.
The clamp assembly can contain a coolant/heating fluid pipe stuffed into the channel through the mouth essentially by manual pressure with only minor compression of the foam lining.
In some embodiments, pipe insertion brings the end portions of the insulating foam together in thermally insulating engagement to complete foam encirclement of the pipe.
In one embodiment of the invention, one channel wall, with which the mounting portion is integral, is longer (of greater height) than the other channel wall and, the one free end portion of foam extends from an upper free end of the other wall and is longer than the opposite end portion of foam which is located on an upper free end of the one channel wall, such that the free end portion of foam protrudes beyond the shorter wall and across at least a majority of the width of the channel mouth in strap-like fashion forming a hook-shape, resilient flap which overlaps the other end portion of insulating foam. The foam flap may be raised away from the mouth by engagement with a transversely extending pipe during initial insertion into the clamp, aided if needed, by a user's finger.
In constructing one version of the clamp assembly, a tube of thermally insulating foam is slit longitudinally and stuffed, with radial compression through the mouth into the channel and adhered thereto (by manufacturer's glue, pre-applied to either or both components) in axially extending covering relation to an interior surface thereof such that opposite slit edge portions of the insulating tube adhere to the opposite lips of the mouth adjacent each other.
In another embodiment, the foam insulation is formed as a continuous extrusion, (subsequently cut to suitable lengths), in which the free end portions progressively increase in thickness towards their tips and have end portions of complementary profile such that the free end tip of the shorter end portion fits against the overlapping inside surface of the flap-form end portion.
As the insulated clamp of the invention is provided as a unitary assembly, time consuming manipulation in the field of separate insulation and clamp body are avoided. Additionally, the receipt of the coolant/heat conveying pipe into the hanger with a clipping action, simply by application of transverse finger pressure, facilitate attachment of the hanger at any selected point along the pipe, (possibly between pre-insulated sections), as judged necessary or convenient in a particular application in the field.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
As shown particularly in
The insulating foam 4 is installed in the body by an uncompressed method which will then will permit a ½″ PEX tubing 6 to be inserted/received manually.
In the embodiment of
The foam is formed as an extrusion in which the free end portions 15,15′ progressively increase in thickness towards their tips and have complementary curved profiled surface portions 17,17′, such that the free end of the shorter end portion fits against the overlapping inside surface of the flap-form end portion of the foam lining, with the curved profiles of the free ends increasing the area of contact and therefore the thermal sealing,
The end portions are closed together in abutment both before and after pipe insertion.
Insertion of the pipe into the clamp occurs in two steps; the longer foam end portion, and the pipe are aligned as shown in
The clamps can be manufactured in many sizes to accommodate the construction industry and the color, curves and edges on clamp will be designed to be to be unique.
The foam insulation does not compact with age, but expands and contracts with changes in ambient temperature, maintaining the pipes completely covered, avoiding dripping from condensation on coolant carrying pipes.
In the region where the foam surrounds the pipe at the mouth, the foam self-seals thermally because the ends of the foam, corresponding to the edges of a slit foam tube, are subsequently shaped/angled to provide flat abutting surfaces, when the pipe is fully inserted.
This application claims priority from my provisional application 62/101,844 filed Jan. 9, 2015, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1315225 | Hughes | Sep 1919 | A |
2366041 | Morchouse | Dec 1944 | A |
2372683 | Archibald | Apr 1945 | A |
2373833 | Johnson | Apr 1945 | A |
2399899 | Tinnerman | May 1946 | A |
2404110 | Trafton | Jul 1946 | A |
2413772 | Morehouse | Jan 1947 | A |
2423222 | Berry | Jul 1947 | A |
2431379 | Ellinwood | Nov 1947 | A |
2455598 | Michalenko | Dec 1948 | A |
2456553 | Churchill | Dec 1948 | A |
2475172 | Benedict | Jul 1949 | A |
2692746 | Thomas | Oct 1954 | A |
2922733 | Henning | Jan 1960 | A |
2936982 | Cushenberry | May 1960 | A |
3015465 | Schmitt | Jan 1962 | A |
3084892 | Priestley | Apr 1963 | A |
3110465 | Sugarman | Nov 1963 | A |
3196535 | Crawford, Jr. | Jul 1965 | A |
3848839 | Tillman | Nov 1974 | A |
4338707 | Byerly | Jul 1982 | A |
5220710 | Laudan | Jun 1993 | A |
5947158 | Gross | Sep 1999 | A |
6198042 | Huston | Mar 2001 | B1 |
6318681 | Vitoorapakorn | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6641906 | Wittschen | Nov 2003 | B2 |
6732982 | Messinger | May 2004 | B1 |
8020814 | Geppert | Sep 2011 | B2 |
8038104 | Larkin | Oct 2011 | B1 |
8087425 | Railsback | Jan 2012 | B2 |
8161605 | Reichel | Apr 2012 | B2 |
8235332 | Cesarino | Aug 2012 | B2 |
8714496 | Blanchard | May 2014 | B2 |
9255521 | Parry-Jones | Feb 2016 | B2 |
20070120022 | Trotter | May 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62101844 | Jan 2015 | US |