Quiet-acting valved vent
09915072 ยท 2018-03-13
Inventors
Cpc classification
E04D13/152
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
Abstract
An airflow-controlling valve is described for a soffit vent in which a one-piece valve member normally lies below a housing, both parts being deeply hill-and-valley deformed to give ample surface area for apertures essentially equal to the full area of the vent opening itself, allowing two-way venting flow unless and until inward-acting pressure reaches a certain strength, wherewith the valve is pushed up to close quietly against the housing to block flow; the valve falling opening again if the pressure differential reverses or simply subsides below that certain strength. An immediate need for the device is in ventilating houses and like building structures, and in particular in ventilating roof spaces such as attics to make the structures much more resistant to hurricane damage firstly by blocking ruinous rain entry while also harnessing the winds to prevent roof space pressurization, or even (given other openings are valved or closed off) to strongly depressurize the roof space by preventing inward airflow but allowing outward flow to wind-depressurized zones bounding the house.
Claims
1. An airflow control apparatus for a soffit vent, comprising: a housing adapted to be mounted over the soffit vent, the housing being a shallow-walled rectilinear box having a top piece but no bottom, the top piece including a plurality of hills and valleys having sloped sides, wherein half the sloped sides are materially whole while opposing sloped sides include apertures offering a net free area for airflow passage through the top piece about equal to the net free area of the soffit vent itself, the apertures arranged so that no aperture directly faces a neighboring aperture; a valve having an essentially identical pattern of hills and valleys as the housing's top piece, with apertures that are in a pattern that is reversed to the apertures of the housing, and wherein half the sloped sides are materially whole; whereby the valve rests within the housing and sufficiently below the housing's top piece so that the apertures allow air to flow freely downward and upward through the soffit vent unless sufficiently upward-acting wind pressure lifts the valve upward against the housing's top piece, whereby the materially whole sloped sides of the valve close over the apertures of the housing and the materially whole sloped sides of the housing close over the apertures of the valve, the closure blocking wind and rain entry into the roof space; when the airflow control apparatus is located on a wind-depressurized lee side of a structure, the apertures remain open so that the roof space is connected only to lee side air and is itself depressurized, reducing net outward acting air pressure from forcing apart the roof space envelope.
2. An airflow control apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the plurality of hills and valley's of the housing's top piece and the valve below are formed in accordion-fold fashion, and have all apertures in the housing's top piece facing in one direction and all apertures in the valve facing in the opposite direction; the design of the housing's sidewalls and/or the provision of vertical guide pins or hinged arms is such that the valve's movement upward and downward is guided vertically to help prevent jamming of the valve against the housing, despite the fact that upward air pressure acts against the valve's sloped materially whole sides to push the valve not only upward but horizontally in one direction.
3. An airflow control apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the plurality of hills and valley's of the housing's top piece and the valve below are formed in accordion-fold fashion, wherein a first half of the hills and valleys in the housing's top piece have their apertures facing one way while the remaining half have their apertures facing the opposite way, while the aperture pattern is reversed in the valve below, so that apertures face equally in both ways.
4. An airflow control apparatus according to claim 1, wherein both sloped sides of all hills and valleys are comprised of materially whole segments alternating with apertures of slightly shorter lengths than the materially whole segments, with the pattern of alternation being reversed from one sloped side to the next sloped side, and the pattern reversed again between the sloped sides of the housing's top piece and those of the valve below, so that apertures face equally in both ways, no aperture directly faces another aperture, and those apertures in the valve lie directly under the housing top piece's materially closed segments of sloped sides while the valve's materially closed segments of sloped sides lie rather directly under the apertures in the housing's top piece.
5. An airflow control apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the plurality of hills and valley's of the housing's top piece and the valve below are formed as pyramids adjoining each other at their bases, each pyramid having two opposing materially whole sloped sides and its other two sloped sides as apertures, and with each adjoining pyramid rotated in plan a quarter turn so that no aperture directly faces another aperture and an equal number and area of apertures face in each of four principal directions; the valve is almost identical in size and multi-pyramidal form as the housing's top piece except that its pyramid rotational pattern places the sloped materially whole sides of each valve pyramid directly under the aperture sides of the housing top piece's pyramid above it while the aperture sides of each the valve's pyramids lie directly under the sloped materially whole sides of the housing's top piece's pyramids, with all apertures being essentially identical in size and shape and slightly smaller than all sloped materially whole sides.
6. An airflow control apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the hills and valleys of the housing's top piece are formed as straight lengths describing squares or rectangles in plan, with a peripheral square or rectangle surrounding successively smaller ones, with each straight length of hill and valley in each square or rectangle having one sloped side materially whole and its opposing sloped side being largely apertures, and with these positions reversed in the next straight length of hill and valley in each square or rectangle, and so on, so that no aperture directly faces another aperture and the total aperture area facing a first principal direction equals the total aperture area facing the opposite way, and the total aperture area facing at right angles to that first principal direction equals the total aperture area facing the opposite way; the hills and valleys of the valve are almost identical in size and pattern to those of the housing's top piece but the valve's materially whole sloped sides lie directly under the sloped sides of the housing top piece having apertures, while the valve's sloped sides having apertures lie directly under the materially whole sloped sides of the housing's top piece.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
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(13) The valve 6 may be supported in the illustrated open position by an insect screen 9, incorporated into the fixed housing 1 or (as commonly done in such ventilation openings) into a grille which is affixed under the soffit to protect the valved vents opening. The accordion-folded configuration of the materially whole sides 2 and 8 and their respectively adjacent apertures 3 and 7 allows the apertures' total area to be about that of the full ventilation opening. The valved vent thereby offers almost free-flow ventilation in its open stance.
(14) This free-flow advantage configuration is important not only for normal ventilation reasons (where inward and outward air movements are pushed by rather slight pressure differentials due to breezes or just thermal convection) but for the hurricane protection reasons noted earlier. Sudden outdoor depressurizations caused by hurricane gusts will pull an outward burst of air, as indicated by the arrow 10 for just one example path. Ample openness allows the roof space pressure to drop quickly to about the lowest pressures outboard of the valved ventgiven of course that those valved vents facing net inward pressures close quickly. The roof space depressurization reduces or even nullifies net outward pressures, helping keep the roof space envelope intact.
(15) The valved vents' ability to quickly block inward flow is indeed even more important than their provision of free outward flow. Blocking ruinous rain entry is perhaps their most important function. Further, hurricane winds hitting broadside on some common vented roof configurations can cause roof space pressurization, adding significantly to the outward acting forces, but the valved soffit vents prevent that in practically any roofeven when air leaks and roof-top vents are left as is.
(16) The grille 11 helps direct inward-sweeping air 12 upward. As discussed below, if the valve's design is balanced so that net pressures on it are straight upward, then it can close quickly without any jamming tendency.
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(18) In
(19) In
(20) The valve's materially whole sloped sides 8 (not shown) can not snugly close the apertures 3 at the sides' ends but must leave small gaps there, since free movement of the valve 6 requires a loose fit. Therefore flanges or sidebars 15 may be beneficially provided in the housing 1 to help cover such gaps and also further support the sloped materially whole sides 8 against upward-acting air pressures in their closed position up against the housing 1.
(21) The whole valved vent assembly could be comprised of just two pieces (not counting the soffit vent itself, with its insect screen, grille and fasteners), the housing 1 being of relatively thick thermoplastic composition and the valve 6 being similarly constituted but suitably thin and light, both parts being one-piece injection molded or possibly stamped or even thermoformed. The materially whole could well be polypropylene, but where fire safety aspects are thought relevant a self-extinguishing polycarbonate, PVC or ABS could be used, for example. These would offer complete corrosion resistance for near-coastal areas such as along practically the whole hurricane belt (whereas common aluminums would not likely satisfy the anti-corrosion requirements, nor galvanized steel the valve lightness requirement).
(22) Unfortunately, this early design of
(23) Accordingly,
(24) Testing shows that accordion-fold valved vents, even if balanced, can still be a little balky in response: the ends of the valve hills are closed by small vertical walls, all fitting fairly snugly within the housing's vertical sidewalls, so that any side-to-side rocking of the vent can cause some jamming friction which can interfere with falling open and/or completely closing. The next two embodiments stay clear of this and all such drawbacks.
(25) In
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(27) While not crucial, the very openness of these valve designs does not encourage responsive closure: air can pass through very easily and so exert little lift. Therefore a further option (not shown), is to attach the insect screen 9 itself across the bottom of the valvenot to the grille or the soffit opening as typically doneso that the screen's resistance to airflow adds to the lift on the valve. Today's insect screens for soffit vents are light in weight and testing shows their incorporation with the valve can add appreciably to valve lift. Again, such incorporation is not crucial but there may be advantages.
(28) (Somewhat contrary to that idea, however: why not corrugate the insect screen 9 itselfthe one remaining choketo open it up further as well? Then perhaps it could even be made strong enough in its corrugated form to replace the usual grille, affixed across the housing, in a removable/replaceable way in case of damage. Not shown.)
(29) While this invention has been described and detailed with respect to certain tested embodiments thereof, it will be appreciated and understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail thereof may be made without departing from the spirit of the claimed invention. The rectilinear form could instead be circular or oval, for example, with the hills and valleys or like convolutions formed in concentric circles. While certain patterns of hills and valleys and apertures therein are separately claimed, there are advantages in combining one pattern with another in one apparatus to gain more openness and perhaps other advantages. And although the invention has been shown in an immediately needed usage as a horizontally disposed valved vent, particularly a valved soffit vent, it must be appreciated that other configurations and orientations can follow the same concept of hang open unless blown shut. A common gable vent could be similarly and beneficially controlled, with the valved vent disposed off-vertically and with the valve's weight keeping it normally open, or with a weighted lever, say, disposed to the same effect. Or, the invention could be arranged more or less upside down, for example, where desired to lie shut until blown open, like a common vent cap, and still provide relative quietness and unimpeded flow (one-way, in this instance), and cost advantages too. And the concept could be employed in controlling other gas or fluid flows, not just air.