US606649A - Heater - Google Patents

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US606649A
US606649A US606649DA US606649A US 606649 A US606649 A US 606649A US 606649D A US606649D A US 606649DA US 606649 A US606649 A US 606649A
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flue
air
heater
heat
furnace
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    • 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

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  • My invention is an improvement in heating systcms,and has for its prim ary object the provision of simple and effective means for equalizing the distribution of heat from any suitable source, such as a furnace, and causing the heat therefrom to distribute itself throughout all parts, as desired, of the house or place being heated.
  • furnaces are very uncertain in their distribution of heat, sometimes heating one side of a house extremely and leav ing the other side cold, and also frequently shifting the heat from one part to another, so that some pipes of the heating system appear to be good conveyers of the heat on some days and poor conveyers thereof on otherdays. Accordingly I have devised the present invention for effectually removing this uncertainty and causing the flow of heat from the furnace to be uniform and evenly distributed in all directions, as may be desired.
  • the furnace or other heater A may be of any usual or preferred kind and construction, having a usual system of heat conveyers leading to registers B throughout the house in such places and relations as may be desirable and requisite for heating purposes.
  • I have shown herein two registers merely for convenience of illustration and description, although it will be understood that in this respect my invention is not limited.
  • the circulation of air thus set up compels a circulation of air to be established in the main pipe 0, tending to create a void therein,which the hot air from the furnace rushesin to fill, and thence goes on upwardly to the register B, as indicated by the arrows adjacent but outside of the equalizing-flue at the right of the figure.
  • a heating systeni the combination with a hot-air heater, of a heat-conveyin g pipe connected to the heater and open both at top and bottom, and a hot-air flue supported within said heat-conveying pipe at the lower end of the latter, said flue being of U shape, the upper ends thereof being open to provide a separate inlet and outlet for the air, said flue being closed at all other points and afiording conduits for the air separate from each other from the top to the bottom of the flue and connected together at the bottom only, said bottom being adjacent the heater, and so arranged relative to the heater as to have established therein an air-current,substantially as described.

Description

No. 606,649. Patented July 5, I898.
l. DEMAREST.
HEATER.
(Application filed Jan. 21, 1898.)
(No Model UNITED STATES PATENT [I JOHN DEMAREST, OF MAIJDEN, MASSACHUSETTS. I
H EATER.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 606,649, dated July 5, 1898.
Application filed January 2 l 1 89 8.
T0 at whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, JOHN DEMAREST, of Malden, county of Middlesex, State of Massachusetts, have invented an Improvement in Heaters, of which the following description,
. in connection with the accompanying drawing, is a specification, like letters on the drawing representing like parts.
My invention is an improvement in heating systcms,and has for its prim ary object the provision of simple and effective means for equalizing the distribution of heat from any suitable source, such as a furnace, and causing the heat therefrom to distribute itself throughout all parts, as desired, of the house or place being heated.
As is well known, furnaces are very uncertain in their distribution of heat, sometimes heating one side of a house extremely and leav ing the other side cold, and also frequently shifting the heat from one part to another, so that some pipes of the heating system appear to be good conveyers of the heat on some days and poor conveyers thereof on otherdays. Accordingly I have devised the present invention for effectually removing this uncertainty and causing the flow of heat from the furnace to be uniform and evenly distributed in all directions, as may be desired.
In the drawingI have shown a preferred embodiment of my invention, parts being broken away and in section in order to show the internal construction and arrangement thereof.
' The furnace or other heater A may be of any usual or preferred kind and construction, having a usual system of heat conveyers leading to registers B throughout the house in such places and relations as may be desirable and requisite for heating purposes. I have shown herein two registers merely for convenience of illustration and description, although it will be understood that in this respect my invention is not limited.
At 0, I have shown an ordinary heat-conveying pipe such as commonly found in connection with house-fnrnaces.- Within this pipe I place an equalizing-flue having an inlet D and an outlet D, separated from each Serial No. 667,415. (No model.)
let portions of the flue in any case being always connected substantially as shown, so as to provide a closed lower end or U-bend, as I have termed it, joining the two otherwise independent flues constituting the inlet and outlet mentioned.
7 The principle of my invention will be readily understood, viewing the figure and observing the arrows which indicate the directions of the currents of heated air.
By placing the equalizing-flue so that its closed end will come adjacent the furnace it will be apparent that a disturbance of the contained air must necessarily take place because of the unequal temperatures of the air within the flue at different points thereof, and the hot air next the furnace will necessarily rise and therebycause an outflowing current in the uppermost branch-D? of the pipe, and inasmuch as necessarily other air must take the place of that which has just left the lower part of the flue an inflowing current is established in the vlowerbranch D.
I preferto have the lower or closed end of the equalizing-flue rest directly on the dome or the hottest part of such heater as may be employed, in order that the flue may not only be warm or moderately heated, but may be maintained at an extreme heat and, if desired, kept red-hot. The circulation of air thus set up compels a circulation of air to be established in the main pipe 0, tending to create a void therein,which the hot air from the furnace rushesin to fill, and thence goes on upwardly to the register B, as indicated by the arrows adjacent but outside of the equalizing-flue at the right of the figure.
Various' modifications and substitutions may be resorted to without departing from the spirit and scope of my invention.
Having described my invention, what I claim, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
1. In a heating systeni,the combination with a hot-air heater, of a heat-conveyin g pipe connected to the heater and open both at top and bottom, and a hot-air flue supported within said heat-conveying pipe at the lower end of the latter, said flue being of U shape, the upper ends thereof being open to provide a separate inlet and outlet for the air, said flue being closed at all other points and afiording conduits for the air separate from each other from the top to the bottom of the flue and connected together at the bottom only, said bottom being adjacent the heater, and so arranged relative to the heater as to have established therein an air-current,substantially as described.
2. In a1ieatingsysten1,the combination with ahot-air heater, of aheat-conveying pipe, and a hot-air flue supported within and at the lower end of said heat-conveying pipe, the lower end of said flue resting in contact with the heater, said flue having a U shape and being closed throughout its extent excepting
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