FIRE PIT
20230221000 · 2023-07-13
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24B1/1915
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F24B1/191
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A fire pit has a tub with a hollow interior chamber for receiving ash-producing combustibles. The chamber has a perforated bottom portion. A support is adapted to attach to the tub and be removable therefrom without the use of tools. The support has an ash-collecting compartment disposed directly below the perforated bottom portion when the support is attached to the tub. The support is adapted to support the tub when attached thereto, and to receive hot ashes into the compartment which fall through the perforated bottom portion during combustion of the combustibles, so that the ashes can collect and cool within the compartment and then be transported with the removed support for remote disposal.
Claims
1. A fire pit comprising: a tub having a hollow interior chamber adapted for receiving ash-producing combustibles and having a perforated bottom portion; a support adapted to attach to the tub and be removable therefrom without the use of tools, and having an ash-collecting compartment disposed directly below the perforated bottom portion when the support is attached to the tub; wherein the support is adapted both to support the tub when attached thereto, and to receive hot ashes into the compartment which fall through the perforated bottom portion during combustion of the combustibles, so that the ashes can collect and cool within the compartment and then be transported with the removed support for remote disposal.
2. The fire pit of claim 1 wherein the perforated bottom portion prevents the combustibles from falling into the ash-collecting compartment while allowing ashes to fall into the ash-collecting compartment.
3. The fire pit of claim 2 wherein the tub comprises a downwardly depending cylindrical ring surrounding the bottom portion, which fits rotatably within the ash collecting compartment.
4. The fire pit of claim 3 wherein the downwardly depending cylindrical ring and the ash-collecting compartment comprise mating fasteners to selectively secure the tub to the support.
5. The fire pit of claim 4 wherein the mating fasteners comprise pins extending from one of the downwardly depending cylindrical ring and the ash collecting compartment and slots affixed to the other of the downwardly depending cylindrical ring and the ash collecting compartment, and wherein the slots are adapted to receive the pins and to secure the tub to the support during a first rotational relationship between the tub and the support, and the slots are adapted to not receive the pins and to not secure the tub to the support during a second rotational relationship between the tub and the support.
6. The fire pit of claim 5 wherein the pins extend from the downwardly depending cylindrical ring and the slots are affixed to the ash collecting compartment.
7. The fire pit of claim 6 wherein the tub has a periphery with a shape and size and the support has a footprint comprising approximately the shape and size.
8. The fire pit of claim 7 wherein the first periphery and the footprint are round and share a central axis.
9. The fire pit of claim 8 further comprising a dimensional center of the secured tub and support; wherein the secured support and tub in combination with an amount of combustibles sufficient to fill the interior chamber causes a center of gravity which is below the dimensional center.
10. The fire pit of claim 9 wherein the secured tub and support have a height and the dimensional center is vertically disposed approximately half of the height and is horizontally disposed approximately on the central axis.
11. An ash collecting and removing arrangement for an ash-producing appliance comprising: a support adapted to attach to a tub of the appliance and be removable therefrom without the use of tools, and having an ash-collecting compartment disposed directly below a perforated bottom portion of the tub when the support is attached to the tub; wherein the support is adapted both to support the tub when attached thereto, and to receive hot ashes into the compartment which fall through the perforated bottom portion during combustion of the combustibles, so that the ashes can collect and cool within the compartment and then be transported with the removed support for remote disposal.
12. The ash collecting and removing arrangement of claim 11 wherein the ash collecting compartment is adapted to rotationally receive a cylindrical ring depending downwardly from the tub and surrounding the bottom portion.
13. The ash collecting and removing arrangement of claim 12 wherein the ash collecting compartment comprises first fasteners adapted to selectively mate with second fasteners of the downwardly depending cylindrical ring to selectively secure the tub to the support.
14. The ash collecting and removing arrangement of claim 13 wherein the first fasteners comprise one of slots or pins affixed and the ash-collecting compartment adapted to selectively mate with the other of slots or pins affixed to the downwardly depending cylindrical ring and wherein the slots are adapted to receive the pins and to secure the tub to the support during a first rotational relationship between the tub and the support, and the slots are adapted to not receive the pins and to not secure the tub to the support during a second rotational relationship between the tub and the support.
15. The ash collecting and removing arrangement of claim 14 wherein the slots are affixed to the ash collecting compartment.
16. The ash collecting and removing arrangement of claim 15 wherein the support has a footprint approximating a shape and size of a periphery of the tub.
17. The ash collecting and removing arrangement of claim 16 wherein the footprint is round and shares a central axis with the periphery.
18. The ash collecting and removing arrangement of claim 17 further comprising a dimensional center of the secured tub and support; wherein the secured support and tub in combination with an amount of combustibles sufficient to fill the interior chamber causes a center of gravity which is below the dimensional center.
19. The ash collecting and removing arrangement of claim 18 wherein the secured tub and support have a height and the dimensional center is vertically disposed approximately half of the height and is horizontally disposed approximately on the central axis.
20. The ash collecting and removing arrangement of claim 19 in combination with the tub.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0026] Many aspects of the invention can be better understood with reference to the included Drawings showing an exemplary embodiment for practicing the invention which corresponds to the accompanying Detailed Description. The components in the Drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon clearly illustrating the principles of the invention. Moreover, like reference numerals in the Drawings designate corresponding parts throughout the several views.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF AN EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENT
[0039] An exemplary fire pit 100 is shown in
[0040] The support has an outer diameter of approximately twenty inches, approximately the same as the major diameter of the tub. The subassembly 109 of the tub and support has a height of approximately fifteen inches. This subassembly has a central vertical axis 131 equal to a shared imaginary vertical centerline of the tub and support. The subassembly has a dimensional center 132 horizontally located on the central axis and vertically located half (seven and one-half inches) of the fifteen inch height. This dimensional arrangement provides that the subassembly, when filled with a typical load of firewood 200 sufficient to fill the tub's hollow interior chamber 106, has a center of gravity 128 well below the dimensional center such that tip-over is prevented and stability is safely optimized.
[0041] It is anticipated and within the invention that such a stable arrangement may be provided in a fire pit of having any alternative outer shape than round, such oval, square, rectangular, hexagonal, octagonal, etc., provided that the footprint of the support approximates the shape and size of the periphery of the tub and the dimensional center has proportionately equivalent horizontal and vertical relationships to the center of gravity created.
[0042] The fire pit may be used without the collars and lid in the case where a more open “campfire” effect is desired, may be used with only the first collar when a more contained fire is desired, with both the first and send collars when a fire is desired with its embers and flames more contained, and with both collars and the lid when containment of any rising embers is desired and all flames are contained even at the expense of the otherwise-unobstructed view of the fire.
[0043] With the lid removed, the hollow interior chamber is adapted to receive ash-producing combustibles such as kindling and firewood 200 through the open top 113 of the second collar. With the lid and second collar removed, the hollow interior chamber is adapted to receive the ash-producing combustibles through the open top 111 of the first collar. And with the lid, second collar, and first collar removed, the hollow interior chamber is adapted to receive the ash-producing combustibles through the open top 119 of the tub.
[0044] The chamber has a perforated bottom portion 115. Holes 108 through the bottom portion are one-half inch in diameter. As best appreciated from
[0045] As best seen in
[0046] The tub is lowered onto/into the support such that the cylindrical ring falls into the space with the pins rotated away from and unaligned with the receivers. The tub is then rotated until the pins are received within the slots of the receivers and the tub and support are thereby attached in a manner that aligns the ash-collecting compartment directly under the holes of the perforated bottom portion. The kindling and firewood are then placed within the chamber and ignited. Ashes produced therefrom fall through the holes and into the ash-collecting compartment.
[0047] The support is thereby adapted both to support the tub and to receive hot ashes into the compartment which fall through the perforated bottom portion during combustion of the combustibles, so that the ashes can collect and cool within the compartment. The support is also adapted to be a removable and portable mechanism for transporting the ashes for remote disposal.
[0048] The rolled bottom edge 134 of support is comfortable and reliable for handling during ash emptying, far more so than is a tub with legs.
[0049] This supporting and ash-collecting arrangement is equally useful for other ash-producing appliances such as, but not limited to; charcoal-burning, wood-burning or pellet-burning BBQ grills, charcoal-burning, wood-burning or pellet-burning griddles, and charcoal-burning, wood-burning or pellet-burning smokers.
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[0052] Various changes in form and detail may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, so the invention should therefore only be considered according to the following claims, including all equivalent interpretation to which they are entitled.