The present disclosure relates generally to window frames. More specifically, it relates to window frames that are designed for use in buildings in areas subject to storms and high winds.
Certain areas of the world are subject to storms with strong winds on a greater frequency than others, such as the eastern and southern coasts of the United States. Powerful storms, such as hurricanes, bring winds strong enough to lift debris into the air. Homeowners and business owners in these areas, when cautioned of an approaching storm, may install boards or other types of coverings over their windows to protect against damage from flying debris. Because the paths and intensities of storms are often uncertain, installation of these protective measures are often postponed to the last minute or, after installation, may turn out to have been an unnecessary chore when the storm follow a different trajectory, or perhaps remain unfinished when the homeowner or business owner needs to evacuate the area.
One common covering material for window frames is a sheet of plywood. There are also other covering materials such as strong fabrics and panels made of metal or of plastics such as a polycarbonate. Rigid coverings may be fastened to the house framing to protect the windowpanes from breakage. Fabrics may be fitted with grommets, and then secured to the house framing with anchoring screws driven through the grommet holes and into the framework of the residence.
A quicker and easier way to protect windows in the event of a storm would be an advantage. The amount of time, the difficulty and the inconvenience of attaching panels or other coverings over window frames in advance of a storm remain issues for homeowners and business owners.
According to its major aspects and briefly recited, the present device is a window frame for use in attaching windowpanes to a home or office building at the time of construction or renovation and that is also designed to receive a protective exterior panel over the glass panes of the window frame when a storm is approaching. The present device optionally may optionally receive an interior panel to protect the interior of the building in the event the window frame is not easily reachable from the outside for installation of a protective exterior panel.
A window frame, according to the present disclosure, includes an extruded lineal profile that may be made of a plastic, such as polyvinyl chloride. Portions of the lineal profile are used to construct the vertical framing for the window, and the remaining portions are for the head and sill of the window. The lineal profile of the present window frame system enables glazing to be carried by the window frame, and an exterior panel to be attached to the window frame, or a portion of it, such as the head and sill. The lineal profile also attachable to the underlying structural wood or masonry of the building at the opening surrounding the window frame. The window frame is thus formed using a lineal profile extruded to have the size specified for that window. Segments that comprise the window's framing, head, and sill are cut to length from the extruded profile for the particular window.
The present protective window frame system includes features that enable an interior protective panel to be installed on the inside of the window frame in order to provide supplemental protection for the interior of the home or building in the event of a storm.
A feature of the present window frame system is a chamber formed in the lineal profile with an opening dimensioned to receive an optionally-inserted second stacked screw boss. This chamber may initially be closed upon extrusion. When the present window frame is attached to the wall on a first floor opening in a building in a region not subject to winds that are particularly high, the chamber of the lineal profile may remain empty and closed. If the window frame is to be installed in a building where high winds are anticipated or the window receiving the present window frame is on the second floor, high off the ground, where it would be difficult to attach a protective panel from the outside the building, the second screw boss may be inserted into the end of the closed chamber prior to installation so that an interior panel may be secured to the inside of the window frame using the second screw boss to hold the interior panel securely against the inside of the window frame. Although the windowpane itself may suffer storm damage, the interior panel on the inside of the window frame may protect the interior of the home or building.
Another feature of the present window frame protection system is a sill riser that can be inserted into a channel formed in the lineal profile if design loadings on the windowpane require additional resistance to pressure on the windowpane.
These and other features of the disclosure and their advantages will be apparent to those skilled in the art of window frame manufacturing from a careful reading of the present disclosure, accompanied by the following drawings.
In the drawings,
The present disclosure describes a window frame protection system that requires a lineal profile for use is making a frame for a windowpane, particularly for the windowpane of a building in an area that may encounter high winds. A lineal profile, as that term is used herein, has a length and a depth and is made by forcing a moldable or malleable material through a die so that the extruded product has a cross-section that is uniform throughout its length and has the desired features for its intended purpose. The material to be extruded may be metal, plastic or a composite material, and may be conveniently made for window frames out of a thermosetting plastic such as vinyl, such as polyvinyl chloride. The length of the lineal profile is its long dimension; its width is perpendicular to its length which is, as lineal profile appears in
The lineal extrusion is cut into specified lengths for the height and width of a window frame. A window frame is made of the assembled head, sill, and two frames for the vertical members of the window frame. The structure of the building such as a home or office building may be made of wood or masonry. The lineal profile has features that enable it to be attached to the framing structure of the building in a conventional manner.
Lineal extrusions for window frames are designed to include functional features to facilitate attachment of the window frame to the building structure and may also include aesthetic or ornamental features, such as trim elements, to provide an agreeable external appearance and to conceal joints such as the connection between the lineal extrusion and the glazing elements of the window frame. See U.S. Pat. No. 8,864,452, which describes trim for mounting exterior coverings for windows, and which patent specification is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Referring now to
Window frame 10 is oriented so that the exterior surface of window frame 10 is at the top of
At left in
Window frame 10 has a groove 50 on its exterior surface that receives cap 14. If a storm is approaching, the resident may decide to apply a protective exterior panel 54 over window frame 10, as shown in
Anchoring screws 58 may be driven into lineal profile 18 to attach protective exterior panel 54 at any point along groove 50. For example, screws may be driven just into groove 50 of the head and sill or of the entire circumference of the window frame. Attaching protective exterior panel 54 to just head and sill permits attachment of a decorative shutter, for example.
The term “stacked screw boss” refers to a set of spaced-apart barriers through which an anchoring screw 58 may be driven to increase the hold of the anchoring screw 58. In
In
A chamber 94 is formed in window frame 10 that may be closer to the interior side of window frame 10, which is near the bottom of linear profile 10 as shown in
Interior panel 102 may be applied to the interior of window frame 10 as seen in
A second stacked screw boss 98 may be inserted at a manufacturing facility based on the specifications in the purchase order provided by the builder of the home or office.
Window frame 10 may include an outer sash support 118 and an inner sash support 120, as shown in
Inner sash support 120 is formed to have a channel 124, as best seen in
Those skilled in the art of window framing and frame design will appreciate that many changes and substitutions may be made to the foregoing description of features of the disclosure without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosed window frame 10.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62614644 | Jan 2018 | US |