SLOPED ROOF HEATING APPARATUS AND METHODS OF MAKING AND USE
20220307265 · 2022-09-29
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A roof ice melt system and method of making and use to reduce or eliminate water from puddling or not running down the ice melt system and off of the roof. One embodiment of the roof for the roof ice melt system can has a slope of between approximately 0.5/12 and approximately 2.5/12. The roof ice melt system has a heating element and heatable cover panel having a a primary heating element cover section, an upper roof contacting section, and an intermediate cover section extending between the primary heating element cover section and the upper roof contacting section. The intermediate cover section is sized so that it extends downwardly along the roof, rather than horizontally or higher, from the upper roof contacting section toward the primary heating element cover section.
Claims
1. A method of making a roof ice melt system for a roof having a slope of between approximately 0.5/12 and approximately 2.5/12 to provide: a heating element mountable to a roof, the heating element having (i) a bottom side mountable to an upper roof surface, (ii) a top side opposite the bottom side, and (iii) a height H between top side and bottom side; a heatable cover panel having a primary heating element cover section, an upper roof contacting section, and an intermediate cover section extending between at least a portion of the primary heating element cover section and the upper roof contacting section; the method comprising: selecting the heatable cover panel have a predetermined width W of the intermediate cover section extending between the primary heating element cover section and the upper roof contacting section so that, when the heating element of height H is mounted to the roof and the heatable cover panel is mounted with the heating element cover section covering the heating element and the upper roof contacting section abutting an upper roof section above the heating element, the intermediate section extends downwardly from upper roof section at an angle from the upper roof section below horizontal.
2. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 1 wherein intermediate cover section is planar.
3. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 1 wherein the upper roof contacting section is planar.
4. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 1 wherein the primary heating element cover section is planar.
5. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 2 wherein the heatable cover panel is a unitary bent metal sheet.
6. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 3 wherein the heatable cover panel is a unitary bent metal sheet.
7. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 4 wherein the heatable cover panel is a unitary bent metal sheet.
8. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 1 wherein the heating element height H is at least approximately 0.50 inches.
9. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 2 wherein the heating element height H is at least approximately 0.50 inches.
10. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 4 wherein the heating element height H is at least approximately 0.50 inches.
11. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 7 wherein the heating height H is at least 0.50 inches.
12. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 8 wherein the intermediate cover section width W is at least approximately 4.5 inches.
13. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 9 wherein the intermediate cover section width W is at least approximately 4.5 inches.
14. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 10 wherein the intermediate cover section width W is at least approximately 4.50 inches.
15. The method of making a roof ice melt system of claim 11 wherein the intermediate cover section width W is at least 4.5 inches.
16. A roof ice melt system mounted on a roof section having a slope of between approximately 0.5/12 and approximately 2.5/12, the roof ice melt system comprising: a heating element mounted to the roof section with the bottom side mounted to an upper roof surface on the roof section and a top side opposite the bottom side, the heating element having height H of at least 0.5 inches between top side and bottom side; a heatable cover panel having (i) a primary heating element cover section abutting the upper heating element side, (ii) an upper roof contacting section abutting an upper portion of the roof section above and spaced from the heating element, and (iii) an intermediate cover section extending between the primary heating element cover section and the upper roof contacting section; the heatable cover panel having a predetermined width W of the intermediate cover section extending between the primary heating element cover section and the upper roof contacting section is at least 4.5 inches; wherein the width W of the intermediate section is predetermined to extend downwardly from upper roof section to the primary heating element cover section at an angle from the upper roof section below horizontal.
17. The roof ice melt system of claim 16 wherein the heatable cover panel is a unitary bent metal sheet.
18. The roof ice melt system of claim 17 wherein the intermediate cover section is planar.
19. The roof ice melt system of claim 18 wherein the intermediate cover section is planar.
20. A roof ice melt system mounted on a roof section having a slope of between approximately 0.5/12 and approximately 2.5/12, the roof ice melt system comprising: a heating element mounted to the roof section with the bottom side mounted to an upper roof surface on the roof section and a top side opposite the bottom side, the heating element having height H of at least approximately 0.5 inches between top side and bottom side; a heatable cover panel having (i) a primary heating element cover section abutting the upper heating element side, (ii) an upper roof contacting section abutting an upper portion of the roof section above and spaced from the heating element, and (iii) an intermediate cover section extending between the primary heating element cover section and the upper roof contacting section; the heatable cover panel having a predetermined width W of the intermediate cover section extending between the primary heating element cover section and the upper roof contacting section so that the intermediate section extends downwardly from upper roof section to the primary heating element cover section at an angle from the upper roof section below horizontal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] Prior art and the applicant's preferred and other embodiments are shown in the accompanying drawings in which:
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF SOME EMBODIMENTS
[0020] With reference to
[0021] The ice melt system 300 of
[0022] With reference now to
[0023] For example, for a roof with a slope of 2/12, the width W1 can be 5 inches. When mounted to such a roof in fashion such as shown in
[0024] Thus, with reference to
[0025] With reference now to
[0026] The method of making the present ice melt system therefore can include predetermining the length of an intermediate cover section, e.g., 314 in
[0027] Again, alternatively, the length of the intermediate cover section 314 can be predetermined to be sufficiently long to slope downwardly on virtually any sloped roof, such as a 0.5/12 or 1/12 roof slope. Such a predetermined length would then similarly provide sufficient downward sloping along roofs having greater roof slopes, such as 2/12 or higher.
[0028] Embodiments the present apparatus and methods of making and use can eliminate or substantially reduce the problem of water becoming trapped in the exemplary prior art Pro® ice melt system and other ice melt systems presenting similar problems. By extending the length of certain otherwise upwardly sloped ice melt system structure with respect to horizontal when mounted to a given roof deck, the resulting extended length of the structure can then be downwardly sloping with respect to horizontal when mounted to the given roof deck.
[0029] In addition, in the accompanying
[0030] Similarly, the principles discussed above can be used in the method of making of one or more cover panels to reduce or eliminate non-water-puddling cover panels for one or more differently shaped heating elements (and related cooperative structure) presenting, in their one or more prior art or other forms, water puddling due to cover panel rise or spacing away from top side of an building roof section caused by having one or more heating elements intermediate the cover panel and top side of the underlying building roof section below the level of one or more upper portions of the cover panel extending upwardly along a roof. The present method of making takes that rise (for example, H-H with respect to prior art heating element 203 in
[0031] In this regard, while the cover panel shown in
[0032] The foregoing detailed description has described some specific embodiments. However, the illustrative discussions above are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in view of the above teachings. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to explain the principles of the present systems and methods and their practical applications, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the present systems, their components, and methods and various embodiments with various modifications as may be suited to the particular use contemplated.
[0033] Unless otherwise noted, the terms “a” or “an,” as used in the specification and claims, are to be construed as meaning “at least one of.” In addition, for ease of use, the words “including” and “having,” as used in the specification and claims, are interchangeable with and have the same meaning as the word “comprising.” In addition, the term “based on” as used in the specification and the claims is to be construed as meaning “based at least upon.” Also, as used herein, including in the claims, “or” as used in a list of items prefaced by “at least one of” indicates a disjunctive list such that, for example, a list of “at least one of A, B, or C” means A or B or C or AB or AC or BC or ABC (i.e., A and B and C).
[0034] All disclosed ranges are to be understood to encompass and provide support for claims that recite any and all subranges or any and all individual values subsumed by each range. For example, a stated range of 1 to 10 should be considered to include and provide support for claims that recite any and all subranges or individual values that are between and/or inclusive of the minimum value of 1 and the maximum value of 10; that is, all subranges beginning with a minimum value of 1 or more and ending with a maximum value of 10 or less (e.g., 5.5 to 10, 2.34 to 3.56, and so forth) or any values from 1 to 10 (e.g., 3, 5.8, 9.9994, and so forth).