Any and all U.S. patents, U.S. patent applications, and other documents, hard copy or electronic, cited or referred to in this application are incorporated herein by reference and made a part of this application.
The words “comprising,” “having,” “containing,” and “including,” and other forms thereof, are intended to be equivalent in meaning and be open ended in that an item or items following any one of these words is not meant to be an exhaustive listing of such item or items, or meant to be limited to only the listed item or items.
Plumbing involves a large number of individual tasks relating to the assembly and testing of new and existing conduits. Such plumbing systems include pressurized fresh water systems, drainage systems, and waste/sewer systems found in new and existing residential and commercial construction, and typically include multiple riser conduits that may be vertically oriented. A typical plumbing task is the in-ground installation of new sewer lines, also referred to as soil or waste lines, for interconnection to existing main sewer lines or septic systems. The steps involved in a common installation include ground trenching, installation, assembly and connection of multiple pipe segments. The multiple pipe segments terminate at predetermined locations where they will ultimately be fitted with appropriate plumbing connections. These pipe segments are connected to various plumbing fixtures such as toilet outlets, sinks, and baths. Before the fixture can be connected and the dry wall build out completed, the plumbing system must be tested for leaks. To do this the plumbing system is filled with water, pressurized, and purged of entrapped air. The system is then inspected for leaks.
In one way of testing for leaks, the person conducting the test merely fills an input riser conduit with water until the water flows out of each riser. Subsequently, each riser conduit is capped. This method results in excess use of water that spills on the ground, creating a messy unsafe environment, is inefficient, and labor intensive. In an alternative method, a rubber or plastic seal is affixed to each riser conduit and water is introduced into the plumbing system. The user then inserts a nail or other sharp object into the seal to create a hole through which entrapped air in the riser conduit is released. When the air has been purged from the riser conduit and water begins to flow from the hole, the person conducting the test reinserts the nail into the hole to stop the flow. In U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/045,033, Pub. No. 2006/0162775, Drayer discloses a device that eliminates using a nail to puncture a hole in a seal.
Our valve device has one or more of the features depicted in the embodiment discussed in the section entitled “DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ONE ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENT.” The claims that follow define our device and method, distinguishing them from the prior art; however, without limiting the scope of our device and method as expressed by these claims, in general terms, one or more, but not necessarily all, of their features are:
One, our device includes a unitary elastomeric body that fits over an open end of a plumbing conduit. The body has a top wall, a circumferential wall connected to the top wall, and a housing extending from an interior surface of the top wall. The housing includes a pair of ports and defines an inside space (also referred to as a cavity), which may be oblong. A moveable closure element is within the inside space, and in one position it closes one port and in another position it closes the other port. One port may be an outer port terminating in the top wall, and the other port may be an inner port terminating at or near an inner end of the housing. The space provides a cavity having a volume substantially from 0.2 to 0.5 cubic inches.
Two, the moveable closure element may be a float disposed within the space. The cavity has a volume that is greater than that of the moveable closure element and is configured so the float initially closes the inner port. As fluid fills the cavity, the float rises to close the outer port. In this embodiment, our device is designed to be mounted on the end of a vertically oriented conduit terminating in an open end in the atmosphere that is closed during testing by the device. The cavity is vertically disposed when our device is so mounted with the ports directly opposed to each other along a longitudinal axis of our device. The ports each have predetermined diameters that typically are of different dimensions. For example, the inner port may have a diameter greater than the outer port. When the closure element is a float, it may be spherical and may have a diameter greater than the predetermined diameters of the ports, for example, the spherical float may have a diameter substantially from 0.3 to 0.6 inches. The longest dimension of the cavity is vertically oriented during use and is substantially longer than the diameter of the spherical float. The shorter dimension of the cavity is only slightly greater than the float's diameter. The body, and particularly the housing forming the cavity, are sufficiently elastic and resilient to enable the rigid, spherical float to be pushed through one port, with this one port expanding as the spherical float passes through it and then contracting when the float is within the cavity.
Three, the circumferential wall may include an outer wall and an inner wall connected to the top wall. The outer circumferential wall has a diameter greater than the inner circumferential wall. The circumferential may be cylindrical walls and they are spaced apart along the longitudinal axis and the longitudinal axis is the common and co-extensive longitudinal axis to each wall. The circumferential wall closest to the top wall has an internal diameter that is less than an internal diameter of the other circumferential wall. The circumferential walls may each have external edges that define a pair of spaced apart external annular channels. One of the channels may include an adjustable, detachable strap. Tightening the strap around the body fitted to the end of a conduit will make the fit very snug and water tight. The internal diameter of the circumferential wall closest to the top wall may be substantially from 1.9 to 6.7 inches, and the internal diameter of the other circumferential wall may be substantially from 2.2 to 7.4 inches. The circumferential walls may each have an internal end that abuts an internal annular ledge.
Our method of testing a plumbing system employs our device that includes the pair of circumferential walls. It comprises the steps of
(a) fitting the body member on the open end of the conduit with the open end being seated snugly within the inner circumferential wall when this open end has the first diameter and being seated snugly within the outer circumferential wall when the open end has the second diameter,
(b) filling the plumbing system with a fluid comprising liquid and gas so the closure element moves within the cavity to close the outer port to pressurize the plumbing system, and
(c) moving the closure element from the outer port to allow gas to escape through the outer port until essentially no more gas is present in the plumbing system.
These features are not listed in any rank order nor is this list intended to be exhaustive.
One embodiment of our valve device and testing method are discussed in detail in connection with the accompanying drawing, which is for illustrative purposes only. This drawing includes the following figures (Figs.), with like numerals indicating like parts:
Our valve device is generally designated by the numeral 10, and as best shown in
In the one embodiment depicted, the strap 16 is a conventional, detachable hose strap comprising a metal band B having a predetermined width w1 (
As illustrated in
The inner cylindrical wall section 29a is connected at one end E1 along an edge 30 of a top wall 28, and terminates at an end E2 in a ledge L. In this one embodiment, the top wall 28 is circular. The end E1 is offset inward slightly from the edge 30 to form an annular lip 31. The outer cylindrical wall section 29b is connected at one end E3 to the ledge L, is offset inward slightly from the ledge to form a central annular lip 32, and terminates at an open end E4. Another lip 33 surrounds the open end E4. As best depicted in
As best illustrated in
The closure element 14 may be a float, for example, a solid or hollow, rigid, spherical float member 14a having a density less than the liquid 38. The float member 14a has a diameter D3 substantially from 0.4 to 0.6 inches, which is greater than both the inner port diameter D4 and the outer port diameter D5. After forming the body 12, the float member 14a is pushed through the open inner port 22 into the cavity 18. The housing 20 is sufficiently elastic so the diameter of inner port 22 expands as the surrounding tapered wall structure 40a stretches. Once the float member 14a passes through the inner port 22, the surrounding tapered wall structure 40a is sufficiently resilient so it contracts to reduce the diameter of the inner port 22 to its original dimension. The internal cavity 18 of housing 20 provides sufficient interior space or volume so that the float member 14a may rise as the liquid 38 and any gas such as air 42 passes through inner port 22.
As shown in
Our valve device provides an efficient, low-cost and simple means for purging gas from a plumbing system and minimizes water flow out of the system during the process. In the one embodiment depicted, it may conveniently be used with conduits of different diameters, and the resilient, unitary body that may be molded at a low-cost. Our method is simple, cost effective, and reliable way to purge air from a plumbing system that does not result in excess use of water nor is labor intensive.
The above presents a description of the best mode we contemplate of carrying out our valve device and testing method and of the manner and process of making and using it, in such full, clear, concise, and exact terms as to enable any person skilled in the art to which it pertains to make and use our valve device and testing method. Our valve device and testing method is, however, susceptible to modifications and alternate constructions from the illustrative embodiment discussed above which are fully equivalent. Consequently, it is not the intention to limit our valve device and testing method to the particular embodiment disclosed. On the contrary, our intention is to cover all modifications and alternate constructions coming within the spirit and scope of our valve device and testing method as generally expressed by the following claims, which particularly point out and distinctly claim the subject matter of our invention.
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Entry |
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U.S. Appl. No. 29/305,936, filed Mar. 31, 2008, Vansell et al. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090230343 A1 | Sep 2009 | US |