The invention is in the field of building facades and particularly glass facades.
Glass facades are desirable because glass is a relatively inexpensive material, requires low maintenance and gives a modern open appearance to a building. Particularly continuous frameless glass facades are desired that present a smooth clear surface and minimal obstruction of the view.
It is often desired to have an opening in a glass façade and therefore engineers have developed many forms of frameless glass doors and windows that can be opened and closed to allow access to a building, to let in air, or for exhaust fumes etc. Various opening modes are available. One highly desirable opening mode is sliding parallel to the building wall. Sliding windows and doors allow entrance and exit without projecting away from a wall.
Nevertheless conventional linear sliding windows and doors have two disadvantages. Firstly conventional linear sliding windows and doors require that the window not be in the plane of the wall, which destroys the continuity of a frameless glass façade. Also conventional linear sliding windows do not seal well and produce drafts and cause a loss of energy when trying to heat or cool a building.
Thus there have developed dual-movement windows and doors that first move out of the plane of the wall and then slide along the plane of the wall. Unfortunately, such dual-movement mountings also are prone to problems. When people try to manually open and close such openings the user often puts force in the wrong direction stressing and eventually breaking the mechanism. Alternatively, dual-motion, automatic doors and windows are subject to better controlled forces. Furthermore automatic openings can be mounted where manual access is impractical, for example sunroofs and windows in difficult to access locations. The problem with automatic two-motion openings is that conventional dual motion automatic mechanisms are generally bulky and expensive, and require compound tracks or multiple motors to produce movement in multiple directions. Also while, it is desirable to produce movement in perpendicular planes, many dual motion mechanism only produce angled sliding and not real perpendicular motion. Finally, in order to get tight fitting closures requires expensive precision installation. This is especially problematic for frameless glass closures where a small misalignment can cause significant imbalance of forces breaking delicate glass panes.
Therefore there is a need for a simple small mechanism that can cause terminal perpendicular motion of a frameless glass closure whose movement can easily adjusted after installation without a complex or bulky compound/curved track. The current invention fulfills this need.
According to the present invention there is provided a frameless window assembly for providing a contiguous frameless window façade, including: (a) a channel including: a rail and a bi-directional track; (b) a slotted plate operable to traverse the rail; and (c) a carriage operationally coupled to the slotted plate, the carriage being for mounting a window pane thereon and wherein the carriage is operable to traverse the track in a first direction and subsequently traverse the track in a second direction, at an obtuse angle, possibly perpendicular, to the first direction.
According to further features in preferred embodiments of the invention described below the slotted plate includes two sets of diagonal slots formed therein.
According to still further features in the described preferred embodiments the carriage is operationally coupled to the slotted plate by two sets of wheel pairs, wherein each wheel pair is coupled together via an axle traversing a first aperture in a first side of the carriage, further traversing one of the diagonal slots, and exiting a second aperture in a second side of the carriage.
According to still further features the bi-directional track includes a linear track and a track segment selected from the group including: (i) a Terminal Perpendicular Track segment, wherein the terminal perpendicular track segment extends perpendicular to the linear track, blocking the linear track; and (ii) a Drop Window Track segment, wherein a portion of the linear track is removed.
According to still further features the carriage is operationally coupled to the plate is operable to traverse the linear track segment in a first direction, and whereupon reaching the Perpendicular Track segment or Window Drop segment, the plate continuing to traverse the channel on the rail in the first direction, and wherein the axle traverses the diagonal slot, forcing the carriage to traverse the perpendicular track segment in a direction perpendicular to the first direction.
According to still further features the frameless window assembly is operable to be placed adjacent to a second frameless window assembly, providing an uninterrupted frameless window façade.
According to another embodiment a frameless window assembly thruster module is provided, including (a) a mounting bracket for clasping a frameless pane; (b) a carriage, the carriage having an angled track formed therein; and (c) a pin coupling the mounting bracket to the carriage, wherein the pin is fixedly attached to the mounting bracket and rides freely on the angled track formed within the carriage, such that when the carriage is travelling in a first direction and the mounting bracket is blocked from travelling in the first direction, the mounting bracket is operable to travel in a direction perpendicular to the first direction when the pin rides on the angled track.
According to further features, when the pin rides on the angled track in the perpendicular direction, the frameless pane, mounted on the mounting bracket, is propelled into an aperture located in a plane of a wall, where the wall may be a static frameless pane.
According to still further features, the carriage includes a mobile segment and an outer plate, wherein the mobile segment is fixedly attached to the outer plate, and wherein the angled track is formed in the outer plate.
Various embodiments are herein described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
a is a side view of a second embodiment of a thruster module in an open state;
b is a side view of a second embodiment of a thruster module in a closed state;
c is a top view of a second embodiment of a thruster module;
a is a side view of a simplified diagram of a thruster module in a closed state;
b is a side view of a simplified diagram of a thruster module in an open state;
a is a front view of a third embodiment of the invention in an open state;
b is a front view of a third embodiment of the invention in a closed state;
a is a side view of a third embodiment of the invention in an open state;
b is a side view of a third embodiment of the invention in an open state;
c is a side view of a third embodiment of the invention;
a is an exploded view of a third embodiment of the invention;
a is a partially exploded view of a third embodiment of the invention;
a is a side view of a forth embodiment of the invention in an open state;
b is a side view of a forth embodiment of the invention in an open state;
c is a side view of a forth embodiment of the invention in a closed state.
The principles and operation of a thruster module for a frameless glass façade according to the present invention may be better understood with reference to the drawings and the accompanying description.
A preferred embodiment of the current invention includes a thruster module that slides longitudinally along a conventional linear track. The thruster module includes a carriage that slides along the conventional linear track and a mounting bracket that grasps the pane of the closure. The mounting bracket is connected to the carriage by pin in a short angled track. When there is no outside force on the module, a spring pulls the mounting bracket, forcing the pin down the angled track so that the mounting bracket is held in the retracted position (towards the carriage). This retracts the pane of the closure out from plane of the wall freeing the closure to slide, longitudinally along the wall opening the aperture. The wall may be a static frames pane.
The aperture can be closed by pulling the module and sliding the pane of the closure over the aperture. When the closure is positioned over the aperture, the thruster module approaches the end of the conventional linear track, but the carriage continues to slide longitudinally while longitudinal movement of a window mounting bracket is obstructed. Further movement of the carriage along the conventional linear track forces the pin holding the mounting bracket to slide up the angled track and extends the mounting bracket away from the carriage in a direction perpendicular to the plane of the wall pushing the closure into the aperture and sealing the aperture.
Alternatively, the pin can hold the mounting bracket in the open (extended) position and the window can be sealed when the mounting bracket reaches the end of the track and is pushed into the closed position retracting the window pane into the aperture.
Referring now to the drawings,
In
b is a profile view of the second embodiment of a closure mechanism in horizontal orientation, where the mechanism is in a closed state. Parts are marked as in
c is a forward view of the second embodiment of a closure mechanism when viewed from the inside of the window. The closure mechanism is in horizontal orientation. Parts are marked as in
a is a side view of a simplified diagram of a closure mechanism in a closed state. In the figure a carriage 25e is traveling longitudinally (downward in the negative y-direction). The mobile window pane is mounted on mounting bracket 27e. Carriage 25e includes a short angled track 32e which is a diagonal slit. A mounting bracket 27e is rigidly connected to a pin 34d. In
As carriage 25e continues longitudinally (downward) towards terminal wall 50, mounting bracket 27e makes contact with wheel 54. Wheel 54 prevents further longitudinal (downward) movement of mounting bracket 27e but allows mounting bracket 27e to move laterally. Thus as carriage 25e continues moving longitudinally downward past adjustable stop 52b, pin 34d is forced up short angled track 32e extending spring 42b and pushing mounting bracket 27e is laterally outward (in the positive z-direction). Carriage 25e continues moving longitudinally downward until coming into contact with adjustable stop 52a which prevents longitudinal movement of carriage 25e and consequently prevents further lateral extension of mounting bracket 27e.
b is illustrates the simplified thruster module of
It will be understood that when the thruster module is in the extended open configuration of
It will be appreciated that the thruster module described herein is simple and requires no special track or installation. Therefore it can easily be retrofit to existing apertures and sliding windows.
It will be understood that many variations on the above examples are possible within the spirit of the invention. The mechanism holding the thruster module in a closed state may be a rubber band, or gravity or another mechanism rather than a spring. Similarly, rather than the mounting bracket sliding between two plates rigidly mounted to the carriage it is possible to make mounting bracket in a “U” shape that surrounds a single plate mounted rigidly to the carriage. Similarly, instead of the pin being rigidly mounted to the mounting bracket and the short angled track being rigidly mounted to the carriage it is possible the opposite that the pin is rigidly mounted to the carriage and the short angled track rigidly mounted to the mounting bracket. Similarly rather than a pin in a slot is possible to have a planar connector or a connecter with bearings. The short angular track may be a wedge.
Another possible configuration is shown in
In
In this embodiment, the conventional linear track 709 ends at a Terminal Perpendicular track segment 711 (there are Terminal Perpendicular track segments 711 for both the distal and proximal set of wheels 708). In the embodiment depicted in
a-10c depict a forth embodiment of the invention. In this embodiment a second embodiment of the innovative channel 702b having a Drop Window track segment 713 (there are Drop Window track segments for both the distal and proximal sets of wheels 708) is depicted. In
In a third possible embodiment of the innovative channel (not shown), it is not the axles and carriage that ride the diagonal slots of the plate but rather the wheels ride the conventional tracks whereas the plate and carriage ride up the slot. When in the closed state, the plate rests on the monorail at the base of the channel. When in the open state, the plate (and carriage) is blocked by an inset and therefore rises off the monorail while riding up the diagonal slot. The inset forces the plate to rise until the axle of the wheels reaches the lower edge of the diagonal slot. At this point the mounted mobile glass pane is in line with the static glass pane.
In all of the abovementioned embodiments on the invention, the frameless window panes can be arranged side by side, to provide an uninterrupted glass façade both vertically between the static and mobile panes as well as horizontally where two or more window assemblies of the current invention are placed side by side. This is possible due to the unique arrangement of the thrusting module behind the window pane, as opposed to being adjacent to the window pane. Conventionally, frameless window panes arranged side-by-side do not provide a contiguous glass façade, as the thruster modules are adjacent to the window pane in the same plane, not behind. The current invention, in the abovementioned embodiments, overcomes this drawback. Additionally, the embodiments support both small (e.g. car sun roofs) and large scale (building facades) window panes.
In the depicted embodiments, movement of the carriage can be effected by a cable on a spool and winch arrangement. Alternatively, any other applicable transportation arrangement, as is known in the art, can be used in place of the cable, spool and winch arrangement. Furthermore, the transportation medium may be manually actuated, semi automatic or fully automatic or some applicable combination thereof. Potentially, the set of proximal wheels can be replaced with a pair of proximal wheels and the set of distal wheels can be replaced with a pair of distal wheels. The replacement pair of wheels having a similar configuration to each of the existing pairs of wheels. The replacement wheel employ a larger pair of wheels to fill the height of the track, or alternatively, the track can be lowered in height to fit similar wheels as employed by the current embodiment. Any similar adjustments and modification, as know in the art, are included in the scope of the current invention.
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, it will be appreciated that many variations, modifications and other applications of the invention may be made. Therefore, the claimed invention as recited in the claims that follow is not limited to the embodiments described herein.
This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/312,680, filed Mar. 11, 2010
Number | Date | Country | |
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61312680 | Mar 2010 | US |