Ventilator

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6558247
  • Patent Number
    6,558,247
  • Date Filed
    Monday, March 27, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, May 6, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
A ventilator (10) has a housing (12) including an apertured wall portion (14) an exterior weather hood (16) and a cover portion (18). A rotatable flap (42) is pivotally mounted to the apertured wall portion (24). The cover portion (18) contains a reticulated foam filter (120). The cover portion (18) is removable from the apertured wall portion (14) for servicing or replacement of the filter (120).
Description




The present invention relates to ventilators such as glazed-in or slot ventilators for use at windows or doors where it is desirable to provide ventilation without having to open the window or door.




This application is the National Stage of International Application No. PCT/GB98/02249, filed Jul. 28, 1998, which claims priority to UK Patent Application No. 9716000.6, filed Jul. 29 1997.




A known slot ventilator is described in GB11417751.




A known glazed-in ventilator is described in GB-A-2224826. The ventilator comprises a body which is adapted to be located adjacent a window at a ventilation path between two sides of the window. The ventilator has a body or housing which is adapted to be located in a gap left between the top edge of a pane of glass and a peripheral spar of a window frame, usually the upper spar of a rectangular frame. An upper edge of the housing has substantially the same thickness as the panel of glazing itself and the ventilator fills the substantially rectangular gap between the panel of glazing and the upper spar of the frame which may be a sash frame.




This ventilator and the slot ventilator referred to above perform well in many applications, but in some circumstances it is possible for exterior debris, such as dust, to be carried through these ventilators into the room which they serve.




The present invention aims to alleviate the problems of the prior art.




According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a ventilator comprising a body or housing which is adapted to be located adjacent a window or door at a ventilation path between two sides of the window or door, the body including a filter for filtering air passing through the ventilator. The ventilator is therefore advantageously able to provide ventilation of substantially cleaner air to a room since debris such as dust will be caught by the filter. Preferably the filter is removable from the body, preferably once the body is in situ in a window or door assembly.




Preferably, the body includes a chamber containing the filter, and at least part of the chamber is defined by a removable cover portion of the body, the filter being removable from the body once the cover has been removed or on removal of the cover portion. This enables the filter easily to be cleaned or replaced when servicing is desirable. This construction is considered to be particularly inventive. Previously, slot ventilators or glazed-in ventilators have been located as permanent fixtures in window or door assemblies and the incorporation of a cover portion and/or filter which may be removed from the body while the ventilator is in situ at a window or door assembly is considereda considerable advance.




According to a further aspect of the invention there is provided a ventilator comprising a body or housing which is adapted to be located adjacent a window or door at a ventilation path between two sides of the window or door, the body including a chamber which is adapted to contain a filter for filtering air passing through the ventilation path. Preferably, the chamber contains a filter, and at least part of the chamber is defined by a removable cover portion of the body or housing, the filter being removable from the body or housing on removal of the cover portion or once the cover portion has been removed. The advantages of this structure will be apparent from the above text, notably that the filter may be easily removed from the ventilator, while the ventilator is in situ, for servicing by cleaning or replacing the filter.




According to another aspect of the invention a ventilator (such as for use at a window door or wall) comprises a body and a filter in the region of the body for filtering air passing through the body.




A number of preferred features which are applicable to each of the above mentioned aspects of the invention will now be discussed.




Preferably, where the ventilator includes a said chamber with a said cover portion, the chamber is partly defined by an apertured wall portion of the body, the cover portion being removably mounted to the apertured wall portion, the ventilator being adapted to be mounted in a window or door assembly with the cover portion on an interior side of the window or door. Therefore, the cover portion and filter may conveniently be removed from the rest of the ventilator by a person on the inside of the window or door.




The body or housing may include a closure for controlling the level of ventilation through the ventilator. In this case, the closure may comprise a flap which is pivotally coupled to the apertured wall portion on one side thereof, the filter and cover portion being located on an opposite side thereof.




The ventilator may comprise a glazed-in ventilator for a window assembly, the ventilator being adapted to be located at an elongate rectangular gap between a pane of glazing and a peripheral spar of a window. Preferably, the body or housing is elongate. The body may include a weather hood and the ventilator may be adapted to be mounted at a window or door assembly with the weather hood on an exterior side of the window or door. The weather hood, apertured wall portion and cover portion of the housing, where such are provided, may each be formed as elongate extrusions. The ventilator may include an end cap at one or each end of the housing or body for securing parts of the body, e.g. the apertured wall portion and weather hood together. The end cap may include an end wall portion for forming an end wall of the chamber, partly defined by the cover portion, where such are provided.




When a filter is provided, it preferably comprises a reticulated foam filter. The filter may be provided as a brick or blocklike element of material.




The filter is preferably a foam filter which is substantially fully open celled, preferably at least 90% to 100% of the cells by number being opened. The foam may be a polyurethane foam.




The porosity of the foam of the filter, when it is a foam filter, may be between 7 and 100 pores per inch, one example having between 7 and 15 pores per inch and another about 10 pores per inch. A straight line through the foam may, on average, pass through between 7 and 100 pores per inch, e.g. 7 to 15 pores per inch or about 10 pores per inch. Therefore, the foam is relatively porous to air flow and does not substantially restrict mass flow rate through the ventilator. The average diameter of pores or cells in the foam filter may be about half to 5 mm, or 1 to 3 or 1 to 2 mm in diameter. The foam filter is preferably an unskinned foam.




The foam of the filter preferably has a density of about 20 to 40 kg per cubic metre, about 26 to 32 kg per cubic metre being employed in some applications.




When the filter is a reticulated foam, it is envisaged that the volume of foam ribs of the foam filter may be 1 to 10% or 2 to 5% and preferably about 3% of the overall volume of the foam filter.




The above discussed parameters of the foam filter may be contrasted with those of typical acoustic foams which are significantly denser or less porous, being more restrictive of air flow. However, the ventilator may incorporate acoustic foam, if desired, for improving the acoustic characteristics thereof.




In a preferred embodiment, the chamber is elongate and of substantially rectangular cross section, and the cover portion incorporates at least one ventilation aperture, preferably a series of ventilation apertures passing therethrough, e.g. for allowing air to pass into the interior of a space, e.g. a room or other interior space which the ventilator is adapted to service, and vice versa. In this case, the aperture or series of apertures are preferably on one side of the chamber and the apertured wall portion has at least one aperture, preferably a series of apertures spaced along the ventilator, on an opposite side of the chamber. In this case, the foam filter may be located between the aperture or apertures of the apertured wall portion and the aperture or apertures of the cover portion to filter air passing between these apertures. In this case, the thickness of the foam across the chamber from the aperture or apertures in the apertured wall portion to the aperture or apertures in the cover portion is preferably at least 10 mm, 15 to 30 mm being envisaged as typical, the value being 16 mm in one embodiment and 17 mm in another.




Preferably, the foam filter has porosity to air flow such that, at pressure differentials across the ventilator of less than or equal to 30 Pa, with the ventilation path fully blocked by a 17 mm thick section of the foam, the mass flow rate of air through the ventilator at standard atmospheric conditions is at least 60% of the mass flow rate through the ventilator that would result if the foam filter were removed and the ventilator was otherwise unchanged.




Where the ventilator includes an apertured wall portion and a flap pivotally mounted thereon, the ventilator preferably has snib means for operating the flap. Preferably, the ventilator is adapted to be located with the flap on an exterior side of the apertured wall portion and with the snib means providing a linkage to a manually operable snib to the interior side of the apertured wall portion and/or the ventilator or window or door assembly to which it may be mounted. The snib means may include one or more detents for locking the flap in a selected angular orientation relative to the apertured wall portion. The flap may be pivotally mounted at an upper edge thereof to the apertured wall portion and may include a seal at a lower edge thereof.




Another aspect of the invention provides a window or door assembly having a ventilator as set out in any of the above mentioned aspects of the invention mounted therein for providing ventilation from one side of the assembly to the other.




The assembly may comprise a window assembly having a first pane of window glazing which is surrounded by a peripheral sash frame the ventilator being a glazed-in ventilator which is located between an edge of the pane of window glazing and the peripheral sash frame. The assembly may include a second pane of window glazing which is surrounded by a second peripheral sash frame, the first and second peripheral sash frames being located inside a fixed frame, the first and second sash frames being planar, mutually parallel and offset from one another. Preferably, at least one of the sash frames is slidable in the sash frame to an open configuration of the window assembly. When the window assembly is located in situ on a building structure such as a wall of a space such as a room, the first sash frame may be located to the interior of the second sash frame and the ventilator may project in an exterior direction no further than the first sash frame (i.e. the ventilator is flush or sub-flush). In this case, at least one of the sash frames may be slidable in the fixed frame to an open configuration of the window assembly in which the ventilator is at least partly overlapped, when viewed in a direction orthogonal to the sash frames, with the second pane of window glazing. This structure, in which the ventilator has zero exterior projection therefore allows convenient sliding opening of the window assembly. If the ventilator were to project sufficiently to the exterior, it might adversely prevent or jam such sliding movement.











The present invention may be carried out in various ways and one preferred ventilator and window assembly incorporating the ventilator will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:





FIG. 1

is an isometric view of a preferred ventilator in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention from an exterior side thereof;





FIG. 2

is an isometric view of the ventilator from the interior side thereof;





FIG. 3

is a perspective view of the ventilator sectioned at a point approximately half way along the length thereof.





FIG. 4

is an exploded view of the sectioned part of the ventilator shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 5

is an end part-sectioned view of the ventilator glazed-in to a window assembly with a flap thereof in a first position;





FIG. 6

is a view corresponding to

FIG. 5

with the flap in a second position thereof;





FIG. 7

is an end section view of the ventilator corresponding to that of

FIG. 5

, but showing a foam filter thereof and schematically depicting a removal of the foam filter and a cover portion of the ventilator;





FIGS. 8A and 8B

are perspective views of an end cap of the ventilator;





FIGS. 9A and 9B

are, respectively, a perspective and sectioned view of an external manually operable snib of the ventilator; and





FIG. 10

is a perspective view of an internal operating snib of the ventilator; and





FIG. 11

is a schematic part-sectional view from above of the ventilator installed in a window assembly having horizontal sliding sashes.











Referring to the drawings, the exploded view of FIG.


4


and

FIGS. 1 and 2

show that a preferred ventilator


10


includes a housing


12


formed by an apertured wall portion


14


an exterior weather hood


16


and a cover portion


18


. The apertured wall portion


14


, weather hood


16


and cover portion


18


are elongate extrusions.




The apertured wall portion


14


includes a generally vertical barrier wall


20


which is perforated by a series of apertures


22


formed therethrough and distributed evenly along the length thereof. The apertured wall portion


14


also includes an upstanding flange


24


from which extend elongate diverging flanges


26


which are adapted to engage the weather hood


16


.




In addition, the apertured wall portion includes extruded elongate sockets


28


which are adapted to be engaged by screws (not shown) passing through fixing apertures


30


which pass through end caps


32


of the ventilator


10


.




In addition, the apertured wall portion


14


includes a lower channel portion


34


which is adapted to engage a lower glazing gasket


36


of the ventilator


10


.




The apertured wall portion


14


also includes, above the apertures


22


, a hinge socket


38


which is adapted to pivotally engage a part-cylindrical hinge portion of a rotatable flap


42


of the ventilator.




The rotatable flap


42


is an extrusion and, apart from the hinge portion


40


includes a generally downwardly extending wall part


44


which, in a closed orientation thereof, is located adjacent and blocks air flow through the apertures


22


. The wall part


44


includes an extruded snib socket


46


for engaging a tongue


48


of an interior snib element


50


. At a lower edge of the wall part


44


, the flap


42


includes a socket


52


for holding a gasket


54


.




The weather hood


16


includes a generally L-shaped hood portion


56


which includes an elongate horizontal flange


58


and a vertical flange


76


which extends down from the horizontal flange


58


, once the ventilator is assembled, down past and below the apertures


22


in the apertured wall portion


14


. A vertical flange


76


extends vertically upwards from midway across the horizontal flange


58


and terminates at a lateral flange


78


which extends from the vertical flange convergingly towards the flange


58


.




The cover portion


18


is generally C-shaped in cross section having horizontal upper and lower walls


62


,


64


joined together by a vertical wall


66


which is perforated by a series of ventilation apertures


68


arranged in a honeycomb distribution. The lower wall


64


includes an upwardly extending bead


70


which is adapted to removably snap fittingly clip to the apertured wall portion


14


along with a downwardly extending bead


72


of the upper wall


62


. An upwardly extending grip rail


74


extends up from the upper wall


62


of the cover portion


18


.




The end caps


32


are mirror images of each other. The end cap shown towards the left of

FIG. 4

is shown enlarged in

FIGS. 8A and 8B

. During assembly of the ventilator which will be described later, the end caps are attached to either end of the housing


12


of the ventilator


10


. The end cap


32


shown in

FIGS. 8A and 8B

includes a glazing bar


80


whose width D is 6 mm so that the ventilator is most suitable for use with 6 mm wide window glazing, e.g. single glazing. The width D may vary from embodiment to embodiment to match different thicknesses of glazing. Likewise, the width of the lower channel


34


of the apertured wall portion


14


may be varied, as may the gasket


36


and the flanges


26


,


78


to accommodate different widths of glazing, e.g. thicker widths for double glazing. In addition or alternatively spacing connectors may be employed between parts of the ventilator on opposite sides of the glazing.




On an exterior side


82


(i.e. a side adapted to be located on the exterior of a window or door assembly) thereof, the end cap


32


includes a channel


84


for engaging the weather hood


16


. To an interior side


86


of the glazing bar


80


the end cap includes a generally rectangular end wall


88


which forms an end wall of a filter chamber


90


(

FIG. 5

) of the ventilator. Towards an interior side


92


of the end wall


88


, the end wall


88


includes a cover stop flange


94


which is vertically extending and which is adapted to engage the vertical wall


66


of the cover portion


18


to locate the cover portion


18


in position on the ventilator


10


.




As shown in FIG.


4


and

FIGS. 8A and 8B

, the end cap


32


shown in these figures co-operates with the interior snib element


50


which is shown in FIG.


4


. The mirror image of this interior snib element is shown enlarged in

FIG. 10

from which it will be seen that the tongue


48


of the snib is connected to one arm


95


of a substantially L-shaped crank


96


of the snib element


50


. To the distal end


98


of the other arm


100


of the crank


96


there are attached a detent member


102


and an operating leg


104


which terminates at a slotted sprung arrowhead fixture


106


. The arrowhead fixture


106


is adapted to pass through an internal bore


108


of an exterior snib


110


which is shown in

FIGS. 9A and 9B

. As the arrowhead passes through the bore


108


, it is compressed and then springs back to a configuration in which the shoulders


112


prevent the exterior snib


110


from being removed from the interior snib


50


. It will be appreciated that the interior snib


50


shown in

FIG. 10

is, as a mirror image of the snib


50


shown in

FIG. 4

, suitable for use with the end cap at the other end of the ventilator to the end cap shown in

FIG. 4

, the two end caps also being mirror images of one another. In addition, it will be appreciated that the snib element


50


, once the tongue


48


has been inserted into the snib socket


46


of the flap


42


, is adapted to rotate about the hinge formed by the hinge portion


40


of the flap


42


and the hinge socket


38


of the apertured wall portion


14


. The end cap


32


also includes a recessed portion


97


including an end stop surface


99


for engagement with the arm


95


in a fully open configuration of the flap


42


.




The detent member


102


is adapted to engage selectively with a series of detents


114


of a detent portion


116


of the end cap


32


. The end cap also includes an arcuate slot


118


through which the operating leg


104


of the interior snib


50


passes. It will therefore be appreciated that once the ventilator is assembled the crank


96


of the interior snib and detent member


102


are inside the chamber


90


, the operating leg


104


passes through the slot


118


, and the arrowhead fixture


106


is outside the chamber


90


.




If it is desirable to have operating snibs at each end of the ventilator, they may be so provided, like in the present embodiment, as shown by the existence in

FIG. 2

of the two exterior operating snibs


110


. Alternatively, only one snib may be preferred. It may also be desirable to provide permanent ventilation in some circumstances, in which case both of the interior


50


and exterior


110


snibs be omitted at each end of the ventilator and so may the flap


42


to provide permanent ventilation. In addition to or as an alternative to snibs, the ventilator may incorporate one or more remote controls, such as a cord control.




The method of assembly of the ventilator will now be described. First, the apertured wall portion


14


and weather hood


16


are connected together by sliding the diverging flanges


26


of the apertured wall portion


14


along between the laterally extending flange


78


and horizontal flange


58


of the weather hood


16


. Next, the gasket


54


is pushed into the socket


52


at the bottom of the flap


42


and the hinge portion


40


of the flap


42


is longitudinally slid into the hinge socket


38


of the wall portion


14


. Next, the tongues


48


of the interior snibs


50


are inserted at either end of the flap


42


into the snib socket


46


. The end caps


32


are then attached to the wall portion


14


by screws (not shown) passing through the apertures


30


of the end caps


32


and into the extruded elongate sockets


28


. During this process, the arrowhead


106


of the interior snibs


50


and operating legs


104


thereof pass through the slots


118


of the end caps


32


and the detent members


102


engage with the detent portions


116


of the end caps


32


. The exterior snibs


110


are then snap-fitted on to the arrowhead fixtures


106


of the interior snibs


50


and the gasket


36


is inserted into the lower channel


34


. An elongate reticulated foam filter


120


having substantially the same length as the wall portion


14


weather hood


16


and flap


42


and having a substantially constant cross section (which is shown in

FIG. 7

) along the length thereof may then be inserted into the C-shaped cover portion


18


and the cover portion


18


may then be clipped to the wall portion


14


by first engaging the bead


70


below the socket


28


and then pushing the upper bead


72


over an upper horizontally extending ledge


124


of the wall portion


14


and into a detent


126


thereof. Simultaneously, the cover stops


94


engage the vertical wall


66


of the cover portion


18


and the cover portion is resiliently held in position.




In this configuration, the barrier wall


20


of the wall portion


14


and the C-shaped cover portion


18


form a filter chamber


128


(i.e. the chamber


90


), containing the filter


120


and closed at either end by the end walls


88


of the end caps


32


.




The assembled ventilator


10


may then be incorporated in a window assembly


130


as shown in FIGS.


5


,


6


and schematically in FIG.


11


.




In

FIG. 5

it will be seen that the ventilator


10


comprises and has been installed as a glazed-in ventilator by engaging the gasket


36


with the top edge


132


of a 6 mm wide single-glazed window


134


and by engaging the upstanding flange


24


of the wall portion


14


and vertical flange


76


of the hood


16


with a sash gasket


136


of an upper spar


138


of a rectangular sash frame


140


of the window assembly


130


. The sash


140


also includes a lower spar (not shown) and vertically extending side spars


142


which are shown in FIG.


11


.




In the configuration shown in FIG.


6


—the filter


120


is for clarity not shown in FIGS.


5


and


6


—the flap


42


is in a fully open position thereof. Air may flow into the housing


12


through an elongate slot


144


located below the hood


16


and above the channel portion


34


. The air flow may then continue through the apertures


22


and the filter chamber


128


, where it is filtered by the filter


120


, before exiting the ventilator through the apertures


68


of the cover


18


. If it is desirable to restrict the level of ventilation, one of the exterior snibs


110


may be moved up so that the detent


102


engages a higher one of the detents


114


. The flap


42


may be rotated a total angle E of 28° until the detent


102


engages the top one of the detents


114


to lock the flap


42


in the closed position shown in

FIG. 5

, in which the gasket


54


seals against the barrier wall


20


, below the apertures


22


. In this configuration, no ventilation may pass through the ventilator


10


from an exterior side


146


of the window assembly


130


to an interior side


148


thereof. In other embodiments, it may be desirable to provide a minimum ventilation configuration in which a certain minimum level of ventilation is guaranteed, such as by including fewer detents on the detent portion


116


of the end cap


32


.




Referring to

FIG. 11

, the window assembly


130


includes a second sash


150


having a second pane of glazing


152


. The sash


150


is rectangular and includes vertical side spars


154


and horizontal spars at the top and bottom thereof (not shown) and the sashes


140


,


150


are located inside a fixed outer frame


156


which is secured inside an aperture


158


formed through an exterior wall


160


of a building


162


. It will therefore be appreciated that the ventilator


10


, while the sashes


140


,


150


are in their closed positions shown in

FIG. 11

, controls or permits ventilation to pass between an exterior side


164


and an interior side


166


of the wall


160


, and vice versa.




If it is desirable to open the window assembly


130


, such as to provide significant ventilation or to clean the exterior of the glazing


134


,


152


while one is inside the building


162


, the sash


140


may be moved to the left as shown in

FIG. 11

or the sash


150


to the right. This opening is enabled by the extremely minimal forward projection of the hood


16


towards the exterior of the window assembly. In particular, the plane


168


of the exterior most parts of the ventilator


10


, i.e. the hood


16


or the part


170


(

FIG. 3

) of the end cap


32


which engages the hood


16


, is spaced to the interior of the plane


172


of the interior most parts of the sash


150


.




After a considerable period of service, it may be desirable to service the filter


120


, such as if it has become clogged with dust or other debris (not shown). In this case, the grip rail


74


may be gripped and pulled in the direction G shown in

FIG. 7

to rotate the cover portion


18


about the bead


70


to the position of the cover


18


shown on the left in

FIG. 7

, and the cover may then be totally removed from the wall portion


14


and the rest of the ventilator


10


to the position shown on the right in

FIG. 7

, taking with it, the filter


120


. The filter may then be removed from the cover


18


and cleaned for further service, or replaced. The cover


18


may simply be reattached to the wall portion


14


to form the chamber


128


again, containing the so cleaned or replaced filter


120


.




The particular foam filter used in this embodiment is a block of reticulated polyurethane foam available under the trade name BULPREN S 10. The foam has a thickness dimension H between the apertures


22


and apertures


68


of 16 millimetres and a height dimension


1


of 54 millimetres. The cellular network of the foam is substantially entirely open and the ribs


121


thereof have a volume of about 3% of the total foam volume. The density of the foam is from 26 to 32 kg per meter cubed and the porosity is nominally 10 pores per inch, being approximately between 7 and 15 pores per inch.




Alternatively, other BULPREN S foams with smaller pores may be employed, such as BULPREN S 20, S 30, S 45, S 80 or S 100, but it is anticipated that these will cause increasingly large losses of mass flow rate, due to the smaller pores. All of the BULPREN products mentioned above are available from Recticel Ltd., bluebell Close, Clover Nook Industrial Estate, Alfreton, Derbyshire, DE55 4RD, United Kingdom.




It is quite unexpected that a slot ventilator or glazing ventilator could provide sufficient ventilation with the air flow passing through a reticulated foam filter. However, tests carried out using a similar ventilator to that described above showed that a 17 millimetre thick reticulated foam caused less than 40% reduction in air flow through the ventilator at pressure differentials across the ventilator of less than 30 Pa.




The end caps


32


, interior snib elements


50


and exterior snibs


110


are moulded of plastics. The gaskets


36


,


54


are extruded of soft plastics materials. The flap


42


, apertured wall portion


14


, hood portion


16


, and cover portion


18


are extruded anodised or painted aluminium alloy. However, the uses of other materials for these components are envisaged. After extrusion, the apertured wall portion


14


and cover portion


18


are punched or drilled to form the apertures


22


,


68


.




The above description is of a preferred embodiment only. Many modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the invention which is defined by the accompanying claims in accordance with patent law.



Claims
  • 1. A ventilator comprising a body which is adapted to be located adjacent a window or door at a ventilation path between two sides of the window or door, the body including a chamber which is adapted to contain a filter for filtering air passing through the ventilation path;wherein the chamber contains a filter, and at least part of the chamber is defined by a removable cover portion of the body, the filter being removable from the body on removal of the cover portion.
  • 2. A ventilator comprising a body which is adapted to be located adjacent a window or door at a ventilation path between two sides of the window or door, the body including a filter for filtering air passing through the ventilator, in which the body includes a chamber containing the filter, and at least part of the chamber is defined by a removable cover portion of the body;wherein the chamber is partly defined by an apertured wall portion of the body, the cover portion being removably mounted to the apertured wall portion, the ventilator being adapted to be mounted in a window or door assembly with the cover portion on an interior side of the window or door.
  • 3. A ventilator as claimed in claim 2 in which the body includes a closure for controlling the level of ventilation through the ventilator.
  • 4. A ventilator as claimed in claim 3 in which the closure comprises a flap which is pivotally coupled to the apertured wall portion on one side thereof, the filter and cover portion being located on an opposite side thereof.
  • 5. A ventilator device comprising a window assembly having a ventilator mounted thereon, the ventilator comprising a body which is adapted to be located adjacent a window of the window assembly at a ventilation path between two sides of the window, the body including a filter for filtering air passing through the ventilator, the assembly having a first pane of a window glazing which is surrounded by a first peripheral sash frame, the ventilator being glazed-in and located between an edge of the pane of the window glazing and the first peripheral sash frame, further including a second pane of window glazing which is surrounded by a second peripheral sash frame, the first and second peripheral sash frames being located inside a fixed frame, the first and second sash frames being planar, mutually parallel and offset from one another in a direction orthogonal to their planar orientations;wherein the first sash frame is located to the interior of the second sash frame and the ventilator is flush or sub-flush relative to the forward most part of the first sash so that the sash frames are slidable in the fixed frame to an open configuration of the window assembly in which the ventilator is at least partially overlapped, when viewed in an exterior or interior direction orthogonal to the sash frames, with the second pane of window glazing.
  • 6. A ventilator comprising a body which is adapted to be located adjacent a window or door at a ventilation path between two sides of the window or door, the body including a chamber which is adapted to contain a filter for filtering air passing through the ventilation path;wherein the chamber contains a filter, and at least part of the chamber is defined by a removable cover portion of the body, the filter being removable from the body on removal of the cover portion; and wherein the chamber is partly defined by an apertured wall portion of the body, the cover portion being removably mounted to the apertured wall portion, the ventilator being adapted to be mounted in a window or door assembly with the cover portion on an interior side of the window or door.
  • 7. A ventilator as claimed in claim 6 in which the body includes a closure for controlling the level of ventilation through the ventilator.
  • 8. A ventilator as claimed in claim 7 in which the closure comprises a flap which is pivotally coupled to the apertured wall portion on one side thereof, the filter and cover portion being located on an opposite side thereof.
  • 9. A ventilator as claimed in claim 1 in which the filter comprises a reticulated foam filter.
  • 10. A ventilator as claimed in claim 9 in which the foam of the filter is substantially fully open celled.
  • 11. A ventilator as claimed in claim 9 in which the porosity of the foam of the filter is between 7 and 100 pores per inch.
  • 12. A ventilator as claimed in claim 11, in which the porosity of the foam of the filter is between 7 and 15 pores per inch.
  • 13. A ventilator as claimed in claim 9 in which the foam of the filter has a density of between 20 and 40 kilograms per cubic meter.
  • 14. A ventilator as claimed in claim 13, in which the foam of the filter has a density of between 26 and 32 kilograms per cubic meter.
  • 15. A ventilator as claimed in claim 9 in which volume of foam ribs of the foam filter is 1 to 10% of the overall volume of the foam filter.
  • 16. A ventilator as claimed in claim 15, in which volume of foam ribs of the foam filter is 2 to 5% of the overall volume of the foam filter.
  • 17. A ventilator as claimed in claim 16, in which volume of foam ribs of the foam filter is about 3% of the overall volume of the foam filter.
  • 18. A ventilator comprising a body which is adapted to be located adjacent a window or door at a ventilation path between two sides of the window or door, the body including a filter for filtering air passing through the ventilator, in which the body includes a chamber containing the filter, wherein the filter is removable from the chamber when the body is situated adjacent the window or door;wherein the chamber is partly defined by an apertured wall portion of the body, the cover portion being removably mounted to the apertured wall portion, the ventilator being adapted to be mounted in a window or door assembly with the cover portion on an interior side of the window or door.
  • 19. A ventilator as claimed in claim 18 in which the body includes a closure for controlling the level of ventilation through the ventilator.
  • 20. A ventilator as claimed in claim 19 in which the closure comprises a flap which is pivotally coupled to the apertured wall portion on one side thereof, the filter and cover portion being located on an opposite side thereof.
  • 21. A combination ventilator and window or door comprising a body which is located adjacent the window or door at a ventilation path between two sides of the window or door, the body including a filter for filtering air passing through the ventilator, in which the body includes a chamber containing the filter, and at least part of the chamber is defined by a removable cover portion of the body;wherein the chamber is partly defined by an apertured wall portion of the body, the cover portion being removably mounted to the apertured wall portion, the ventilator being mounted in the window or door with the cover portion on an interior side of the window or door.
  • 22. A ventilator as claimed in claim 21 in which the body includes a closure for controlling the level of ventilation through the ventilator.
  • 23. A ventilator as claimed in claim 22 in which the closure comprises a flap which is pivotally coupled to the apertured wall portion on one side thereof, the filter and cover portion being located on an opposite side thereof.
  • 24. A combination ventilator and window or door comprising a body which is located adjacent a window or door at a ventilation path between two sides of the window or door, the body including a filter for filtering air passing through the ventilator, in which the body includes a chamber containing the filter, wherein the filter is removable from the chamber;wherein the chamber is partly defined by an apertured wall portion of the body, the cover portion being removably mounted to the apertured wall portion, the ventilator being mounted in the window or door with the cover portion on an interior side of the window or door.
  • 25. A ventilator as claimed in claim 24 in which the body includes a closure for controlling the level of ventilation through the ventilator.
  • 26. A ventilator as claimed in claim 25 in which the closure comprises a flap which is pivotally coupled to the apertured wall portion on one side thereof, the filter and cover portion being located on an opposite side thereof.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
9716000 Jul 1997 GB
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/GB98/02249 WO 00
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO99/06775 2/11/1999 WO A
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Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry
Handout, “Bulpren S”, Date before Apr. 12, 1999, 4 pages.