Blower Assembly with Compensation for Vent Back Pressure
20170356675 · 2017-12-14
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24H15/242
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H15/35
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H1/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H9/2035
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H15/407
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H15/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H9/2007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A blower assembly is configured for use with a gas-operated heater having a burner and an exhaust port. The blower assembly has a blower and a sensor. The blower is configured to operate at two or more speeds and is configured to operatively connect to the burner in a manner to facilitate flow of combustion air into the burner and to facilitate flow of exhaust through the exhaust port. The sensor is configured to be sensitive to pressure of exhaust downstream of the blower. The sensor is operatively connected to the blower in a manner such that the blower will change speeds if said pressure exceeds a threshold pressure.
Claims
1. A draft inducer blower assembly for use with a gas-fueled heater having a burner and an exhaust port, the blower assembly comprising a blower and a sensor, the blower being configured and adapted to operate at least at a lower speed and a higher speed, the blower being configured to operatively connect to the heater in a manner to facilitate flow of combustion air into the burner and to facilitate flow of exhaust through the exhaust port, the sensor being configured to be sensitive to pressure of the exhaust downstream of the blower, the sensor being operatively connected to the blower in a manner such that the blower will switch from the lower speed to the higher speed if said pressure exceeds a threshold pressure.
2. The draft inducer blower assembly according to claim 1 where the blower is configured to operate at only the lower speed and the higher speed.
3. The draft inducer blower assembly according to claim 1 where the blower is configured to operate at only the lower speed, the higher speed and a medium speed between the lower speed and the higher speed.
4. A draft inducer blower assembly in accordance with claim 1 wherein the draft inducer blower assembly is an induction blower motor assembly.
5. A heat exchanger assembly comprising a burner, a blower, an exhaust port, and a sensor, the blower being configured and adapted to operate at two or more speeds, the blower being connected to the burner in a manner such that the blower can supply combustion air to the burner and such that exhaust can be vented from the heat exchanger via the exhaust port, the sensor being sensitive to the pressure of the exhaust downstream of the blower, the sensor being operatively connected to the blower in a manner such that the blower will change speeds if said pressure exceeds a threshold pressure.
6. A heat exchanger assembly in accordance with claim 5 wherein the exhaust port of the heat exchanger is configured and adapted to be operatively connected to different vent lines having different back pressures resulting from gaseous flow therethrough, and the pressure of the exhaust downstream of the blower is dependent upon said back pressures.
7. A heat exchanger assembly in accordance with claim 6 wherein the heat exchanger is a water heater and comprises a water vessel that is configured to hold water heated by the reaction products.
8. A heat exchanger assembly in accordance with claim 5 wherein the sensor comprises a pressure switch.
9. A heat exchanger assembly in accordance with claim 8 wherein the sensor comprises a double throw pressure switch.
10. A heat exchanger assembly in accordance with claim 8 wherein the blower is configured and adapted to operate at a first, a second, and at least a third speed, and the sensor is a triple throw pressure switch adapted to operate the blower at a lower speed, a medium speed, and a higher speed, the threshold pressure is a first threshold pressure, and the sensor is configured to operate the blower at the lower speed until the first threshold pressure is detected by the sensor and to thereafter trigger the blower to operate at the medium speed unless a second, higher, threshold pressure is detected by the sensor, at which point the sensor will trigger the blower to operate at the higher speed.
11. A heat exchanger assembly in accordance with claim 8 wherein the sensor is a single throw switch that is operatively connected to a relay switch that operatively controls the speed of the blower if said pressure exceeds the threshold pressure.
12. A heat exchanger assembly in accordance with claim 11 wherein the relay switch controls a double throw switch that powers the blower.
13. A heat exchanger assembly in accordance with claim 11 wherein the relay switch is uncharged unless the sensor detects that the threshold pressure has been met or exceeded.
14. A water heater assembly comprising a water vessel, a burner, a blower, an exhaust port, and a sensor, the blower being configured and adapted to operate at two or more speeds, the blower being connected to the burner in a manner such that the blower can supply combustion air to the burner and such that exhaust can be vented from the water heater via the exhaust port, the water vessel being configured to hold water heated by the reaction products, the sensor being sensitive to the pressure of the exhaust downstream of the blower, the sensor being operatively connected to the blower in a manner such that the blower will change speeds if said pressure exceeds a threshold pressure.
15. A blower assembly for use with a gas-operated water heater having a water vessel and a heat exchanger assembly comprising a burner and an exhaust port, the blower assembly comprising a blower and a sensor, the blower being configured and adapted to operate at two or more speeds, the blower being configured to operatively connect to the burner in a manner to facilitate flow of combustion air into the burner and to facilitate flow of exhaust through the exhaust port, the sensor being configured to be sensitive to pressure of the exhaust downstream of the blower, the sensor being operatively connected to the blower in a manner such that the blower will increase speed if said pressure exceeds a threshold pressure.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018] Reference numerals in the written specification and in the drawing figures indicate corresponding items.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0019]
[0020] An embodiment of a control system (32) in accordance with the invention for operating the blower motor (22) is shown in
[0021] In this embodiment of the invention, the pressure switch (34) is a single-pole double-throw switch. During operation, electrical power is supplied to the pressure switch (34) by a controller (38). The controller (38) is also connected to a vacuum switch (40) that is upstream of the blower (22) or is communicating with a zone within the blower where the vacuum reading is indicative of whether the burner has adequate flow to support combustion without excessive carbon monoxide.
[0022] When the heater (20) is initially activated, the controller (38), which is connected to an electrical source (L2), initially sends power to the pressure switch (34). The pressure switch (34) initially sends power to a lead (L3) on the blower motor (22) that operates the blower at a low speed. The pressure switch will then continue to send that power to the lead (L3) on the blower motor (22) that operates the blower at a low speed, unless the pressure sensor (36) detects pressure at or above a threshold pressure indicative of pressure downstream of the blower (22) (which is indicative of high back pressure in the exhaust vent line (30)). Upon detecting pressure at or above the threshold pressure, the pressure switch (34) will switch power to a lead (L4) on the blower motor (22) that operates the blower at a high speed. Upon operating a higher speed, the sensed pressure will be even greater. This prevents the blower motor (22) from short cycling between speeds. Assuming a sufficient vacuum is being drawn upstream of the blower, the vacuum switch (40) will have been triggered and the controller (38) will activate the igniter and fuel gas valve and will continue to send power to the pressure switch (34). However, if, after a brief delay, the vacuum switch (40) is not triggered by a sufficient drop in pressure upstream of the blower's (22) fan output, the controller (38) will not activate the igniter and fuel gas valve (not shown) of the burner (24) and will discontinue supplying power to the pressure switch (34).
[0023] It should be understood that the pressure tap for the pressure sensor (36) could be located at any location where the pressure measurement can be correlated to the back pressure and flow output through the exhaust vent line (30). Thus, the pressure sensed by the pressure sensor (36) needs not necessarily be an actual pressure measurement of pressure downstream of the blower assembly. For example, the pressure tap of the pressure sensor could be adjacent a fan of a blower, in a discharge passage of a blower housing, or in the exhaust vent line itself.
[0024] Another embodiment of a control system (32′) in accordance with the invention for operating the blower motor (22′) is shown in
[0025] Yet another embodiment of a control system (32″) in accordance with the invention for operating the blower motor (22) is shown in
[0026] In view of the foregoing, it should be appreciated that the invention has several advantages over the prior art.
[0027] As various modifications could be made in the constructions and methods herein described and illustrated without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the foregoing description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative rather than limiting. Thus, the breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims appended hereto and their equivalents.
[0028] It should also be understood that when introducing elements of the present invention in the claims or in the above description of exemplary embodiments of the invention, the terms “comprising,” “including,” and “having” are intended to be open-ended and mean that there may be additional elements other than the listed elements.
[0029] Additionally, the term “portion” should be construed as meaning some or all of the item or element that it qualifies. Moreover, use of identifiers such as first, second, and third should not be construed in a manner imposing any relative position or time sequence between limitations. Still further, the order in which the steps of any method claim that follows are presented should not be construed in a manner limiting the order in which such steps must be performed, unless such an order is inherent or explicit.