US2433137A - Apertured reflector fan-electric-heater - Google Patents

Apertured reflector fan-electric-heater Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2433137A
US2433137A US600566A US60056645A US2433137A US 2433137 A US2433137 A US 2433137A US 600566 A US600566 A US 600566A US 60056645 A US60056645 A US 60056645A US 2433137 A US2433137 A US 2433137A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
reflector
casing
air
fan
heater
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US600566A
Inventor
George M Marr
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US600566A priority Critical patent/US2433137A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2433137A publication Critical patent/US2433137A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24HFLUID HEATERS, e.g. WATER OR AIR HEATERS, HAVING HEAT-GENERATING MEANS, e.g. HEAT PUMPS, IN GENERAL
    • F24H3/00Air heaters
    • F24H3/02Air heaters with forced circulation
    • F24H3/04Air heaters with forced circulation the air being in direct contact with the heating medium, e.g. electric heating element
    • F24H3/0405Air heaters with forced circulation the air being in direct contact with the heating medium, e.g. electric heating element using electric energy supply, e.g. the heating medium being a resistive element; Heating by direct contact, i.e. with resistive elements, electrodes and fins being bonded together without additional element in-between
    • F24H3/0411Air heaters with forced circulation the air being in direct contact with the heating medium, e.g. electric heating element using electric energy supply, e.g. the heating medium being a resistive element; Heating by direct contact, i.e. with resistive elements, electrodes and fins being bonded together without additional element in-between for domestic or space-heating systems
    • F24H3/0417Air heaters with forced circulation the air being in direct contact with the heating medium, e.g. electric heating element using electric energy supply, e.g. the heating medium being a resistive element; Heating by direct contact, i.e. with resistive elements, electrodes and fins being bonded together without additional element in-between for domestic or space-heating systems portable or mobile

Definitions

  • This invention is directed to an electric heater preferably, but not necessarily, of the portable type wherein provision is made for heat distribution by convection, radiation and forced air circulation.
  • the primary object of the present invention is the provision of means of a simple compact nature wherein the heater may utilize heat dissipation by convection and radiant air currents or may selectively include heat dissipation by forced air currents.
  • Figure l is a front elevation partly broken away of the improved heater
  • Figure 2 is a section on line 2-2 of Figure 1;
  • Figure 3 is a perspective View of the reflector
  • Figure 4 is a diagrammatic view of the wiring diagram.
  • the improved heater includes a casing i, having spaced parallel side walls 2 and front and rear walls 3 and d merging into a curved top 5.
  • the front wall 3 is formed with an opening it of less width than the width of the casing and terminating in spaced relation to the bottom and to the top of the wall. This opening is preferably covered by a wire guard l of conventional construction which preferably extends throughout the full opening 5.
  • the casing which is open at the bottom and protected by a grill I admits cool air from the exterior of the casing.
  • a reflector 8 is arranged within the casing I being secured adjacent the lower edge of the opening 6 and then curving inwardly and upwardly on a gradual curve to near the top where it is given a more abrupt curve at 9 and secured to the casing in line at the upper edge of the opening 6.
  • This reflector has imperforate side walls it extending from the reflector proper B to the front of the casing so that the reflector 3 and side walls I form in effect, a closure within the casing i.
  • the reflector wall 3 is formed with openings H preferably though not necessarily, rectangular, formed by dividing the metal on three connected lines and deflecting the material thus cut inwardly of the reflector plate 8.
  • the material thus inwardly directed is throughout the lower series of openings H projected from the lower edge of the openings as at [2 while these portions of the upper series of openings are projected from the upper edge of the openings as at it.
  • the openings provide in the upper series a plurality of louvres opening upwardly and throughout the lower series of openings, louvres opening downwardly.
  • the reflector Within the reflector are arranged conventional heating elements i l and 15, supported at their ends in the side walls iii of the reflector, and preferably substantially coextensive with the transverse length of the reflector.
  • the upper heating element is arranged closer to the top of the reflector than is the lower heating element to the bottom of the reflector.
  • the casing I in the rear of the reflector is a motor it on the shaft of which is arranged an ordinary fan ll serving to direct air currents through the louvres of the reflector.
  • the front surface of the reflector plate 8 and the inner surfaces of the side walls iii of the reflector are highly polished for maximum reflection and serve with this function in preventing excessive heat fronr reaching the side walls of the casing I so that the reflector as a whole is exteriorly rather cool.
  • the rear wall of the reflector being formed with openings will permit cool air from the open bottom of the heater case to pass into and through the reflector by convection and further to permit air from the fan to circulate in a similar manner.
  • the heating element or elements raise the temperature of the surrounding air causing it to rise, thereby creating a vacuum. Cool air from the floor rushes into the casing, passes through the perforations in the reflector and in turn becomes heated.
  • Means are provided for a selective energize.- tion of one heating element or the other heating element combined withthe motor, the system being illustrated more particularly in Figure 4.
  • the service conductors l8 and !9 lead through a switch 2i) to the lower heating element to.
  • the upper heating element I l is in circuit with the fan through conductors El and 22 connected through extensions 23 and 2 4' to the service mains l8 and [9.
  • the extension 24 leads through a switch 25 and the guard i may be formed with particularly arranged openings 26 providing access to the switch operating means.
  • the fan motor may be independently controlled if desired, such being conventional and not necessary to illustrate.
  • the louvre openings may be in other than rectangular form if desired so long as they deflect the air from the fan in the desired direction.
  • the heat dissipation may be selectively controlled to convection and radiant heat distribution or convection, radiant heat and forced air current distribution.
  • the heat dissipation will be confined practically entirely to the interior of the reflector and the inner surfaces of the parts making up the reflector may be so finished as to insure the maximum reflection from such surfaces.
  • An electric heater comprising a casing, a reflector having rear and side walls mounted within the casing to provide a heating chamber in registry with an outlet opening in the front part of the casing, heating means mounted within said chamber, said rear wall of the reflector being provided with a multiplicity of air passages wherein air is drawn into the heating chamber from the bottom of the casing by convection, and means in the upper part of the casing immediately rearward of the reflector for forcing air through said reflector openings into said heating chamber and forwardly of the casing.
  • An electric heater comprising a casing, a reflector having rear and side walls mounted within the casing to provide a heating chamber in registry with an outlet opening in the front part of the casing, heating means mounted within said chamber, said rear wall of the reflector being provided with a multiplicity of air passages wherein air is drawn into the heating chamber from the bottom of the casing by convection, and means in the upper part of the casing immediately rearward of the reflector for forcing air through said heatin chamber and forwardly of the casing, said casing having an apertured bottom wall below the reflector, said rear wall of the reflector being provided with projections disposed to direct the forced air current through the heating chamber in a substantially horizontal direction.
  • An electric heater comprising a casing, a reflector having rear and side walls mounted within the casing to provide a heating chamber in registry with an outlet opening in the front part of the casing, heating means mounted within said chamber, said rear Wall of the reflector being provided with a multiplicity of air passages wherein air is drawn into the heating chamher from the bottom of the casing by convection, said casing having an apertured bottom wall below the reflector to allow the passage of replacement air into the bottom of said casing, and air forcing means mounted substantially above said bottom wall in the rear part of the casing to direct the rising convection air currents forwardly through said heating chamber and forwardly of the casing.
  • An electric heater comprising a casing, a. reflector, mounted in the upper part of said casing and having rear and side walls mounted within the casing to provide a heating chamber in registry with an outlet opening in the front part of the casing, heating means mounted within said chamber, said reflector being provided with a multiplicity of openings in said rear wall and throughout the area thereof to form air passages through which air is drawn by convection upwardly into the heating chamber from the bottom of the casing, and means in the rear part of said casing and rearward of the reflector for forcing air through said reflector openings into said heating chamber and forwardly through the outlet opening of the casing.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Electric Stoves And Ranges (AREA)

Description

. Dec. 23, 1947. G. M. MARR APERTURED REFLECTOR FAN-ELECTRIC-HEATER Filed June 20, 1945 '2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Dem 22% 1947. G. M. MARR APERTURED REFLECTOR FAN-ELECTRIC-HEATER Filed June 20, 1945 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTOK.
7 Z/a V' 197 T ORN E )1 Patented Dec. 23, 1947 UNITED STATES @ATENT OFFICE APERTURED REFLECTOR FAN-ELECTRIC- HEATER 4 Claims.
This invention is directed to an electric heater preferably, but not necessarily, of the portable type wherein provision is made for heat distribution by convection, radiation and forced air circulation.
The primary object of the present invention is the provision of means of a simple compact nature wherein the heater may utilize heat dissipation by convection and radiant air currents or may selectively include heat dissipation by forced air currents.
The invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure l is a front elevation partly broken away of the improved heater;
Figure 2 is a section on line 2-2 of Figure 1;
Figure 3 is a perspective View of the reflector;
Figure 4 is a diagrammatic view of the wiring diagram.
The improved heater includes a casing i, having spaced parallel side walls 2 and front and rear walls 3 and d merging into a curved top 5. The front wall 3 is formed with an opening it of less width than the width of the casing and terminating in spaced relation to the bottom and to the top of the wall. This opening is preferably covered by a wire guard l of conventional construction which preferably extends throughout the full opening 5. The casing which is open at the bottom and protected by a grill I admits cool air from the exterior of the casing.
A reflector 8 is arranged within the casing I being secured adjacent the lower edge of the opening 6 and then curving inwardly and upwardly on a gradual curve to near the top where it is given a more abrupt curve at 9 and secured to the casing in line at the upper edge of the opening 6. This reflector has imperforate side walls it extending from the reflector proper B to the front of the casing so that the reflector 3 and side walls I form in effect, a closure within the casing i. The reflector wall 3 is formed with openings H preferably though not necessarily, rectangular, formed by dividing the metal on three connected lines and deflecting the material thus cut inwardly of the reflector plate 8. The material thus inwardly directed is throughout the lower series of openings H projected from the lower edge of the openings as at [2 while these portions of the upper series of openings are projected from the upper edge of the openings as at it. Thus, the openings provide in the upper series a plurality of louvres opening upwardly and throughout the lower series of openings, louvres opening downwardly.
Within the reflector are arranged conventional heating elements i l and 15, supported at their ends in the side walls iii of the reflector, and preferably substantially coextensive with the transverse length of the reflector. The upper heating element is arranged closer to the top of the reflector than is the lower heating element to the bottom of the reflector.
In the casing I inthe rear of the reflector is a motor it on the shaft of which is arranged an ordinary fan ll serving to direct air currents through the louvres of the reflector. The front surface of the reflector plate 8 and the inner surfaces of the side walls iii of the reflector are highly polished for maximum reflection and serve with this function in preventing excessive heat fronr reaching the side walls of the casing I so that the reflector as a whole is exteriorly rather cool. The rear wall of the reflector being formed with openings will permit cool air from the open bottom of the heater case to pass into and through the reflector by convection and further to permit air from the fan to circulate in a similar manner.
The heating element or elements raise the temperature of the surrounding air causing it to rise, thereby creating a vacuum. Cool air from the floor rushes into the casing, passes through the perforations in the reflector and in turn becomes heated.
Means are provided for a selective energize.- tion of one heating element or the other heating element combined withthe motor, the system being illustrated more particularly in Figure 4. Here, the service conductors l8 and !9 lead through a switch 2i) to the lower heating element to. The upper heating element I l is in circuit with the fan through conductors El and 22 connected through extensions 23 and 2 4' to the service mains l8 and [9. The extension 24 leads through a switch 25 and the guard i may be formed with particularly arranged openings 26 providing access to the switch operating means.
Obviously, by closing switch 2c the lower heating element alone is energized while by closing switch 25 the upper heating element and the motor are energized driving the fan. By closing both switches, both heating elements and the fan are operated.
It will be quite obvious that on the energization of the lower heating element by closing switch 29, convection and radiant air currents only are set up for the dissipation of the heat while on closing switch 25, and thereby driving the fan, the heat dissipation is by radiance, convection and forced air currents. Both switches closed will, of course, increase the heat dissipation as will be evident.
The radical difference in the arrangement of the louvres tends to direct the air from the fan more effectively in contact with the heating elements. From Figure 2 it will be apparent that the air from the fan will be through upper louvres directed downwardly to the upper heating element, While the lower louvres will serve to direct the air from the fan upwardly toward the lower heating element.
Of course, the fan motor may be independently controlled if desired, such being conventional and not necessary to illustrate. The louvre openings may be in other than rectangular form if desired so long as they deflect the air from the fan in the desired direction.
It will be quite apparent that in the use of the improved heater the heat dissipation may be selectively controlled to convection and radiant heat distribution or convection, radiant heat and forced air current distribution. The heat dissipation will be confined practically entirely to the interior of the reflector and the inner surfaces of the parts making up the reflector may be so finished as to insure the maximum reflection from such surfaces.
I claim:
1. An electric heater comprising a casing, a reflector having rear and side walls mounted within the casing to provide a heating chamber in registry with an outlet opening in the front part of the casing, heating means mounted within said chamber, said rear wall of the reflector being provided with a multiplicity of air passages wherein air is drawn into the heating chamber from the bottom of the casing by convection, and means in the upper part of the casing immediately rearward of the reflector for forcing air through said reflector openings into said heating chamber and forwardly of the casing.
2. An electric heater comprising a casing, a reflector having rear and side walls mounted within the casing to provide a heating chamber in registry with an outlet opening in the front part of the casing, heating means mounted within said chamber, said rear wall of the reflector being provided with a multiplicity of air passages wherein air is drawn into the heating chamber from the bottom of the casing by convection, and means in the upper part of the casing immediately rearward of the reflector for forcing air through said heatin chamber and forwardly of the casing, said casing having an apertured bottom wall below the reflector, said rear wall of the reflector being provided with projections disposed to direct the forced air current through the heating chamber in a substantially horizontal direction.
3. An electric heater comprising a casing, a reflector having rear and side walls mounted within the casing to provide a heating chamber in registry with an outlet opening in the front part of the casing, heating means mounted within said chamber, said rear Wall of the reflector being provided with a multiplicity of air passages wherein air is drawn into the heating chamher from the bottom of the casing by convection, said casing having an apertured bottom wall below the reflector to allow the passage of replacement air into the bottom of said casing, and air forcing means mounted substantially above said bottom wall in the rear part of the casing to direct the rising convection air currents forwardly through said heating chamber and forwardly of the casing.
4. An electric heater comprising a casing, a. reflector, mounted in the upper part of said casing and having rear and side walls mounted within the casing to provide a heating chamber in registry with an outlet opening in the front part of the casing, heating means mounted within said chamber, said reflector being provided with a multiplicity of openings in said rear wall and throughout the area thereof to form air passages through which air is drawn by convection upwardly into the heating chamber from the bottom of the casing, and means in the rear part of said casing and rearward of the reflector for forcing air through said reflector openings into said heating chamber and forwardly through the outlet opening of the casing.
GEORGE M. MARR.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Theofilos Feb. 14, 1922
US600566A 1945-06-20 1945-06-20 Apertured reflector fan-electric-heater Expired - Lifetime US2433137A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US600566A US2433137A (en) 1945-06-20 1945-06-20 Apertured reflector fan-electric-heater

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US600566A US2433137A (en) 1945-06-20 1945-06-20 Apertured reflector fan-electric-heater

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2433137A true US2433137A (en) 1947-12-23

Family

ID=24404108

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US600566A Expired - Lifetime US2433137A (en) 1945-06-20 1945-06-20 Apertured reflector fan-electric-heater

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2433137A (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2984728A (en) * 1958-05-21 1961-05-16 Maxwell K Murphy Radiant heater
US3051820A (en) * 1958-06-16 1962-08-28 Mc Graw Edison Co Room heater
US5761377A (en) * 1995-09-28 1998-06-02 Holmes Products Corporation Tower type portable radiant heater
US5838878A (en) * 1995-01-31 1998-11-17 Honeywell Consumer Products Inc. Portable quartz heater
US6466737B1 (en) 2001-11-21 2002-10-15 Honeywell Consumer Products, Inc. Portable electric space heater
US7046921B1 (en) * 2000-01-10 2006-05-16 General Electric Company Radiant heating element reflective bracket with ventilation openings
CN102679445A (en) * 2012-05-16 2012-09-19 广东美的环境电器制造有限公司 Air guide pipe for warmer

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1406912A (en) * 1920-10-13 1922-02-14 Theofilos Nicholas Electric heater
US1942758A (en) * 1932-05-04 1934-01-09 Jessup George Leroy Electric heater
US1986350A (en) * 1931-10-01 1935-01-01 Markel Electric Products Inc Electric heater
US2131484A (en) * 1935-07-18 1938-09-27 Ringwald Clarence Heater
US2153239A (en) * 1938-03-21 1939-04-04 Curci Urbano Electric heater
US2353247A (en) * 1943-02-08 1944-07-11 John M Lawler Electric space heater

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1406912A (en) * 1920-10-13 1922-02-14 Theofilos Nicholas Electric heater
US1986350A (en) * 1931-10-01 1935-01-01 Markel Electric Products Inc Electric heater
US1942758A (en) * 1932-05-04 1934-01-09 Jessup George Leroy Electric heater
US2131484A (en) * 1935-07-18 1938-09-27 Ringwald Clarence Heater
US2153239A (en) * 1938-03-21 1939-04-04 Curci Urbano Electric heater
US2353247A (en) * 1943-02-08 1944-07-11 John M Lawler Electric space heater

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2984728A (en) * 1958-05-21 1961-05-16 Maxwell K Murphy Radiant heater
US3051820A (en) * 1958-06-16 1962-08-28 Mc Graw Edison Co Room heater
US5838878A (en) * 1995-01-31 1998-11-17 Honeywell Consumer Products Inc. Portable quartz heater
US5761377A (en) * 1995-09-28 1998-06-02 Holmes Products Corporation Tower type portable radiant heater
US7046921B1 (en) * 2000-01-10 2006-05-16 General Electric Company Radiant heating element reflective bracket with ventilation openings
US6466737B1 (en) 2001-11-21 2002-10-15 Honeywell Consumer Products, Inc. Portable electric space heater
CN102679445A (en) * 2012-05-16 2012-09-19 广东美的环境电器制造有限公司 Air guide pipe for warmer

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3586825A (en) Flush top cooking unit with ventilating means
US6344637B2 (en) Cooling system for built-in microwave oven
US2131484A (en) Heater
US2122168A (en) Air heating assembly
KR100672475B1 (en) Convection Oven Range having Multi-duct
US2433137A (en) Apertured reflector fan-electric-heater
GB2357413A (en) Fan-assisted oven with heating element in cooking chamber
US1986350A (en) Electric heater
US3636307A (en) Electric artificial fireplace
US3768549A (en) Baseboard electric heater shield
US2410211A (en) Portable electric heater
US2257342A (en) Heating and air circulating unit
US2445250A (en) Air-circulating heater
US2552470A (en) Air circulator and heater
US2565769A (en) Electric heater
US2459986A (en) Electric house furnace
US2583754A (en) Electric fan and heater
US2232492A (en) Electric heater
US2492248A (en) Electric space heater
US3175550A (en) Dual air heater
US7326883B2 (en) Low noise fan heater
US2562436A (en) Finned type heater
US1926537A (en) Electric heater
US2683796A (en) Electrical heating system
US2456781A (en) Blower type radiant heater