1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to ducting for heating, ventilating, and air conditioning HVAC systems and more particular to a sheet metal fitting for connecting a round branch line by tapping into a round main trunk line and it's fittings of many different sizes.
2. Description of the Related Art
Rectangular duct and fittings are widely used because they are easy to build and they can be easily sized to fit in tight spaces such as ceiling and walls.
But airflow is less than for equivalent round or flat oval pipe.
Rectangular trunk lines and their taps are easy to build.
One of the many problems with rectangular duct is it generally can be built in only 4 foot or 5 foot lengths.
As spiral round or oval can be made and hung in 20 foot lengths saving many connections, labor and material as well. Rectangular duct is weaker than round duct, it needs more support, costing even more. Also there are no corners on round or oval pipe therefore leaving more space and more available angles for saddle tap branch lines. Rectangular duct can be easily lined with insulation, but its costly and is subject to erosion into the air stream, which people breath. While round or oval trunk lines, saddle taps, fittings and branch lines can be easily and cheaply wrapped keeping the insulation problems to a minimum.
In the HVAC industry duct take off fittings are used at every branch line tap off the main line, the use of round duct usually available and generally preferred because it is less expensive and stronger and easier to install.
The problem using round pipe for main trunk lines is it is made up of size specific fittings. The size of the main line to the branch lines can vary greatly. These fittings tees and wyes can be supplied by the factory, but it takes a large quantity of various size fittings, that are expensive, complicated to fabricate, stock and ship.
A typical main trunk line enters in the building at a large size, example a 26 inch round travels a few feet then smaller branch lines are needed so a cross tee or wyes fitting such as a 26 inch to a 26 inch to an 8 inch branch would be installed in the main line to service the branch lines.
Then a few more feet of main line duct continues to the next fitting which could be the same size or with another cross tee or wyes installed or through the use of a reducer or fitting could reduce to a smaller size of a 20 inch pipe then a section of 20 inch pipe again a few feet to the next fitting this process would continue on to the next branch lines again and so on to the end of the main trunk line a 10 inch size This process contains a multitude of specific sized fittings which are expensive, have availability, storage and bulk shipping problems and costs.
Presently there are several methods of connecting round main lines to the round branch lines, although in most cases are expensive and size specific and complicated sheet metal pattern to fit the curvature of several sizes of trunk lines are necessary.
2. Description of Prior Art
Paoluccio U.S. Pat. No. 5,080,403-01/14/1992 has a bellows fitting
Is made of multiple materials, fabric and metal and many parts, expensive to make.
Needs interior liner for less turbulent air flow.
Needs brackets to brace or restrain fitting while in use.
Needs to be forced into angles off the main line which would bunch up the bellows fitting causing problems.
Exterior use of this fitting to sunlight would make it rot.
Has many seams to seal.
The use of the fabric bellows gives a foreign appearance with the metals that make up the main trunk line and branch line.
Fabric bellows very weak easily collapsible in or under concrete applications.
To flexible need hangar to support the discharge end to the branch line.
Wachter U.S. Pat. No. 4-147,382-04/03/1979
Has a long narrow slot and can not be nested.
The tap into the main line has to be long in order to have enough volume to supply the branch line it takes to much space.
Cutting in the long slot would weaken the main line.
The long flat sides of the fitting are weak and could collapse when used in concrete under floor applications.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,080,403—Paoluccio, John A—Jan. 14, 1992
U.S. Pat. No. 4,147,382—Wachter, Eric Apr. 3, 1979
U.S. Pat. No. 5,957,506—Stepp, Michael D.—Sep. 28, 1999
U.S. Pat. No. 5,328,213—Barth James T.—Jul. 12, 1994
U.S. Pat. No. 5,340,160—Meijers et al.—Aug. 23, 1994
U.S. Pat. No. 1,808,450—Paul Burgess Samuel—Jun. 2, 1931
U.S. Pat. No. 4,627,646—Kessel Bernhard—Dec. 9, 1986
U.S. Pat. No. 4,414,943—Nagase, Masscomi—Nov. 15, 1983
U.S. Pat. No. 2,482,558—Scaringella Vito V.—Sep. 20, 1949
U.S. Pat. No. 171,964—Syversen, A—Jan. 11, 1876
In view of the foregoing considerations it is an object of the present invention to provide a saddle tap fitting which is tightly adaptable to many sizes of main line round or the arcuate side of flat oval trunk line pipe and its fittings. Extract conditioned air through the tap and regulating the volume of said air through a plurality of degreed elbow gores. Then efficiently direct the conditioned air to a branch line at many different angles and compound angles.
A—With the use of one said tap will reduce the need for complicated specific size fittings and there manufacturing and availability problems.
B—Still another object—Is to tap the main line with a fitting that is naturally angled off the main line for a high volume smooth, less turbulent air flow.
C—Another object is to reduce stocking and availability problems.
D—Another object is—To have a saddle tap that appears to be specifically made for the duct or fitting it is attached to.
E—Another object is tap into short sections of scrap pipe saving resources and environment.
F—Still another object is its strength it can be buried in or under concrete floors won't collapse.
G—Yet another object under said floor application it would distribute air thru out conditioned space better saving energy.
H—Yet another it's small size will take up little space and can be installed in tight spaces and difficult situations.
I—Still another object of this saddle tap it is made up of one material galvanized sheet metal is preferred from. The use of one material saves time and expense. Gauges from 30 to 10 gauge.
J—Still another object is it easy to make not complicated.
K—Another object it can be used in abrasive situations, such as sawdust or dust
L—Another object is it can be made of stainless steel or other materials, PVC coated metals or plastic or etc for corrosive situations.
M—Another it can be deeply nested several sizes completely inside the successive next size saving freight and storage space.
N—Another object it can be soldered water tight.
O—Branch lines can be directed in many angles and compound angles.
P—Another object it can have an interior acoustic coating for sound reduction situations.
Q—A continuing object of the saddle tap fitting and its elbows have degree marks for like situations on body and both collars. The collars can be rotated to identical degree marks for successive saddle taps. When used with a plurality of fittings for consistency of installation and appearance in like exposed or non exposed situations, saving expensive time and labor.
R—Yet another interior air extractor flexibly adapts to the size trunk line it is attached to.
S—A continuing object extractor can be raised or lowered into multiple positions to extract more or less air.
T—Another object is the extractor has dual purpose multi position restraining and use indicator strap. Said strap can indicate to balance technician if this fitting can deliver more or less air as necessary.
U—Another object will reduce the need for complicated specific size fittings.
V—Another object is to reduce shipping expense.
W—A continuing object exterior is easy to clean for housekeeping purposes in exposed situations. Such as restaurants or shops.
X—The appearance is aesthetically pleasing.
These and other objects are met by the present inventions which in the first aspect provides a fitting for attaching an end of a duct section of a relatively small cross section to an arcuate surface of a duct section of a relatively large cross section.
The invention will be better understood by reference to accompanying drawings in which,
FIG. 1A—Is side view with the collars rotated to the extreme left position also with extractor strap partially shown with a securing hole in it. Also shown are 4 of the 6 attachment tabs with restraining holes in them. The rivet shown in the body of the fitting is one of two opposing rivets shown which secure as well let the extractor pivot down in to the air stream when attached to main line.
FIG. 1—Identical in position to
FIG. 2—Shows the two collars rotated to the extreme right when mounted on main line the difference from extreme left to extreme right is 107 degrees approx.
FIG. 3—Shows fitting rotated to 90 degrees position when mounted on main line.
FIG. 4—Shows exploded view of saddle tap fitting and various parts and accompanying reference numbers. Upper right 21 is the threaded wing nut 22 damper quadrant wrench 23 threaded damper quadrant hardware which is affixed to damper blade 24. 25 damper quadrant hardware affixed to damper blade 24. Upper left shows detail of inter locking rotatable collars. In detail space 26 refers to collar 26. In detail space 27 is the bead of collar 26. In detail space 29 is collar 29. In detail space 28 is the bead of 29. In detail space 30 is an additional bead of collar 29. In detail space 31 is the bead for detail 32 which is the upper body of the said fitting 32. The skirt of the fitting is 33. Hole 34 in collar 29 is the hole for damper quadrant 23. Hole 35 in collar 29 is the hole for damper quadrant hardware 25. Tab 36 is a part of the skirt 33, 36 which is an attachment tab for securing the skirt to the main line. 37 is the hole in tab 36. This combination of tabs and holes are typical at skirt base. Shown in detail lower right shows 36 attachment tab and 37 is its hole and 38 is the relief cut notch in the skirt on both sides of tab 36. On the skirt 39 is another attachment tab 40 is the hole in it. This tab and hole is duplicated on the opposite side which is not shown. 41 is one of two stiffening and sealing flanges for the skirt which is duplicated on the opposite side not shown. 42 is another attachment tab 43 is its hole. 44 is another attachment tab in the skirt and 45 is its hole, like tabs and holes are duplicated on the other side not shown. 46 and 47 are securing and pivoting holes in the saddle taps body for the extractor blade 50 which will be later installed inside the body. Hole 48 and 49 in the extractor blade 50 work in conjunction with 47 and 46 respectively. 51 is a crimped edge of extractor blade 50. 52 is the restraining, securing and indicator strap with adjusting and securing holes 5354 and 55 in it.
FIG. 5—Is an enlarged working view of
FIG. 6—Is a working view necessary for the layout of the fitting.
FIG. 7—Shows the layout of the fittings pattern, that anyone skilled in the art can understand and layout.
FIG. 8—Is nothing more than
FIG. 9—is the flat pattern of the saddle tap fitting. 50 is the extractor shown with its holes used for pivoting and securing extractor to the body of fitting The 3 holes shown in the extractor strap, to show various three positions the extractor can be adjusted to as well as securing the strap and accompanying extractor in the air stream.
FIG. 10—Is the working view of
FIG. 11—Is the working view of
FIG. 12—Is the flat pattern of collar 29 with the two interlocking beads shown.
FIG. 13—Is the flat pattern of collar 26 with only one interlocking bead needed shown.
Page 8 of 13—Shows the saddle tap fittings various flat pattern sheet metal parts cut out with the holes in them before being formed up. Number 26 and number 29 are the collars.
32 is the body of the fitting, 33 is the skirt which is the same piece. 50 is the extractor 51 a crimped edge for the extractor.
FIG. 14—Shows a large elbow with a saddle tap attached to it which shows versatility in some situations.
FIG. 17—Shows large pipe with a saddle tap attached and the two elbow gores have been manually rotated at a 90 degree angle off the large pipe.
FIG. 18—Shows small pipe with an inverted saddle tap attached and the two elbow gores have been manually rotated at a 90 degree angle off the small pipe. This also shows tight situations the fitting can adapt to.
FIG. 19—Shows a large reducer with three saddle taps and their elbow gores manually rotated to various angles again to show versatility.
Page 13a shows a large reducing trunk line with many saddle taps of the same size mounted on trunk line and rotated to different angles to show versatility of the saddle tap fitting.
While the present invention is open to various modification and alternative constructions, and uses in other industries, the preferred embodiment shown in the drawings will be described here in detail it is to be understood how ever there is no intention to limit the invention to the particular form disclosed. On the contrary it is intended that the invention cover all modifications, equivalences and alternative constructions falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims. The body and the two collars are interlocked in an easily rotatable permanent connection.
This HVAC saddle tap is a simple inexpensive effective method of taping a round branch line to round or arcuate sides of flat oval main trunk lines and their fittings of many different sizes at a small angle off the main line, which gives it a smooth, less turbulent air flow saving energy also the tap size at the main line is much larger than at the discharge to the branch line for a large volume of air. Collar 29 has a volume damper in it to regulate air. Said saddle tap has an interior air extractor for use in long or restricted branch lines which flexibly adapts to the main line or short section of pipe or fitting it is attached to.
The extractor has a multi position depth adjustable securing strap that also serves as a use or depth indicator which is very helpful for the air balance technician.
FIG. 4—Illustration shows in the upper left detail circle, collars 26 and 29 are rotatably attached to the upper body of the tap at bead 31 and can be manually adjustable to many angles as well as compound angles. The three parts have degree marks at their connecting bead lines which can be used for reference points when rotated so collars can have identical degrees or pitches when a multitude of them are installed on the same line, for ease of installation or visual effect in exposed or unexposed situations there by saving time.
The fitting has an interior extractor 50 there are two holes in the extractor blade 48 and 49 that aligns with 47 and 46, holes respectfully in the body of the fitting. The extractor has a restraining strap 52 which is attached to the upper edge of the extractor that has 3 holes in it 53-54 and 55 the extractor strap hangs down below extractor blade.
When the extractor is installed inside the fitting and is riveted thru holes 47 and 48 and 46 and 49. This attaches the extractor to the fitting, but still allows it to pivot on these points. The strap currently is bent so the holes 55 under tab 42 on the skirt aligns with hole 43 in the tab. This serves two purposes the attachment screw penetrates hole 43 and 55 when attached to the main line. In this position the extractor is secured out of the air stream. For more air said extractor 50 also it can be lowered prior to installation into the air stream.
By pulling the strap 52 down bending it out under tab 42 so hole 43 aligns with said hole 54 securing it is same procedure as before but this time it exposes more of the extractor strap between tab 42 and main line duct thus making it a multi purpose restraining and securing strap. The strap is also a multi position depth or use indicator. The detail in the upper left hand corner shows how the two collars 26 and 29 rotatably interlock with the upper body of the fitting 32.
Number 21 is a wing nut for the damper which secures 22 the wrench to 23 the damper quadrant is secured to 24 is the damper blade and 25 is secured to the damper blade it's use is to be able to penetrate hole 35 in collar 29 and 23 the damper quadrant is to penetrate hole 34 in the collar 29 when the damper blade is installed inside collar 29 and quadrant parts 23 and 25 protrude through holes 34 and 35 which gives pivoting and securing points for the damper blade 24 then the 22 the wrench is installed on 23 threads and the wing nut 21 secures 22 the wrench to 23 the damper quadrant which is standard sheet metal procedure. Detail in lower right hand corner shows attachment tab 36 with a hole and 37 in it. Number 38 shows the relief notch cut in the skirt so when tab 36 is bent out at an angle the tab will bend up in the skirt for a tighter fit to the main line. This is typical of the attachment tabs 41 is one of two stiffening and sealing flanges opposite side not shown which help, distorte the base of the saddle tap skirt to a some what of a tapering oval shape oblique to the main trunk line.
The saddle tap fitting is shipped in the
The saddle tap fitting is very useful and serves many functions by having the ability to tightly tap into new or existing HVAC main trunk lines of round or the arcuate sides of flat oval pipe and their associated fitting that make up said trunk lines. After a hole is cut in the main line and the saddle tap fitting is mounted over it and secured it will extract a large volume regulated conditioned air and efficiently direct it to a branch line at an angle or compound angles. The air flow can be in either direction supply return or exhaust. Another feature is its small size it makes it useful in very tight situations which exist in ceiling spaces attic's or crawl spaces. This saddle tap can be used in residential or commercial or industrial applications. With the use of this saddle tap fitting many sizes of dedicated wyes tees or prior art saddle taps can be eliminated or greatly reduced. The tight fitting saddle tap requires very little duct sealer.
This saddletap fitting has several features that are unobvious such as the attachment tabs have dual purpose holes in them which not only secure the skirt they are necessary to restrain the sharp screws needed when the large hole in the main line is cut and the saddletap at attachment time is mounted over the hole the sharp screws penetrate the tab hole and are tipped out at a slight angle away from the large hole in the main line. When the screws penetrate the main line this action stresses the skirt to adapt to the main line there by stressing and attaching the saddletap fitting to the main line. Another unobvious feature is the relief cut on both sides of the saddletaps tabs which is cut up in the skirt very slightly to allow the attachment tab to bend in the skirt its self instead of at the base of the skirt to ensure a tighter fit which saves leakage and duct sealer. Another unobvious feature attachment tab 42 and hole 43 they work in conjunction with extractor strap 52 and its adjusting and securing holes 535455. There by securing the saddletap and the extractor as well when the saddletap is mounted to the main line. An additional unobvious feature the collars 2629 are rotated at 90 degrees to the main line when shipped to allow the only access to tab 42 and hole 43 which is a necessary feature when attaching it to the main line to secure a tight fit. Another unobvious feature is its concealed extractor and its multi depth use indicator and securing strap.
Because of this saddletaps many features it will be a real asset to the HVAC industry in general. From the manufacturing companies who build it. The use of this saddle tap fitting will save the manufacturer the fabrication of complicated specific size fittings and the storage and inventory as well as the shipping of them. The capability for manufacturing one fitting for many sizes of applications and its nesting capabilities and storage will be a great asset to manufactures. The distributor can take advantage the capabilities as well plus the availability problems will be greatly reduced. The HVAC company can have the same advantage they won't have to stock a wide variety of fittings or hunt for them. These features will save the manufacturer the distributor and the HVAC company that installs them time and money which could be passed on to the consumer. The use of this saddle tap fitting will create jobs save resources use less energy and help the environment. With respect it maybe some what obvious that the saddle tap may fit a round surface it is unobvious that it will distort to tightly adapt too many sizes of round surfaces of pipe or round tapers or arcuate sides of flat oval pipe or oval to round tapers or round to oval tapers.
This saddle tap has many capabilities and uses. I have many working models of this saddle tap invention in various sizes.
Example one 4 inch diameter branch line saddle tap fitting will fit over fifty different applications or combinations of round and oval pipe and there associated fittings such as tapers reducers etc all of the features will make this saddle tap a real asset to the HVAC construction and other industries.
This application claims the benefit of priority of provisional patent application 61/192,904 the was filed on Sep. 23, 2008 and entitled “H.V.A.C. Saddle tap Fitting with Two Rotatable Elbow Gores and Adjustable Air Extractor”.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61192904 | Sep 2008 | US |