WO2016189500A1 - Thermostat for gas cooking appliances - Google Patents

Thermostat for gas cooking appliances Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2016189500A1
WO2016189500A1 PCT/IB2016/053109 IB2016053109W WO2016189500A1 WO 2016189500 A1 WO2016189500 A1 WO 2016189500A1 IB 2016053109 W IB2016053109 W IB 2016053109W WO 2016189500 A1 WO2016189500 A1 WO 2016189500A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
chamber
distributor
thermostat
valve
conduit
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/IB2016/053109
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Nicola GIOVENCO
Paolo LUCHETTA
Werner NOETH
Original Assignee
Defendi Italy S.R.L.
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 Defendi Italy S.R.L. filed Critical Defendi Italy S.R.L.
Priority to EP16734452.2A priority Critical patent/EP3303924B1/en
Priority to ES16734452T priority patent/ES2762900T3/en
Publication of WO2016189500A1 publication Critical patent/WO2016189500A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23NREGULATING OR CONTROLLING COMBUSTION
    • F23N1/00Regulating fuel supply
    • F23N1/007Regulating fuel supply using mechanical means
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23NREGULATING OR CONTROLLING COMBUSTION
    • F23N5/00Systems for controlling combustion
    • F23N5/02Systems for controlling combustion using devices responsive to thermal changes or to thermal expansion of a medium
    • F23N5/027Systems for controlling combustion using devices responsive to thermal changes or to thermal expansion of a medium using mechanical means
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24CDOMESTIC STOVES OR RANGES ; DETAILS OF DOMESTIC STOVES OR RANGES, OF GENERAL APPLICATION
    • F24C3/00Stoves or ranges for gaseous fuels
    • F24C3/12Arrangement or mounting of control or safety devices
    • F24C3/126Arrangement or mounting of control or safety devices on ranges
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23NREGULATING OR CONTROLLING COMBUSTION
    • F23N2235/00Valves, nozzles or pumps
    • F23N2235/12Fuel valves
    • F23N2235/16Fuel valves variable flow or proportional valves
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23NREGULATING OR CONTROLLING COMBUSTION
    • F23N2235/00Valves, nozzles or pumps
    • F23N2235/12Fuel valves
    • F23N2235/24Valve details
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23NREGULATING OR CONTROLLING COMBUSTION
    • F23N2237/00Controlling
    • F23N2237/02Controlling two or more burners
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23NREGULATING OR CONTROLLING COMBUSTION
    • F23N2237/00Controlling
    • F23N2237/20Controlling one or more bypass conduits
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23NREGULATING OR CONTROLLING COMBUSTION
    • F23N2241/00Applications
    • F23N2241/08Household apparatus

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a thermostat for gas cooking appliances.
  • Thermostats are known for application to gas cooking appliances, and in particular to gas ovens.
  • Their purpose is to regulate the flow of gas to the burner installed in the oven, such as to ensure that the temperature inside the oven is maintained around a desired value preset by an adjustment knob.
  • Their operating principle is such that they comprise a thermostatic bulb installed inside the oven and a temperature-sensitive fluid contained in the bulb and operationally connected to a valve disposed inside the thermostat body.
  • Thermostats with two exits are also known for feeding two different burners of the oven, namely the main burner and a secondary burner for the grill or the pilot flame of the main burner.
  • An object of the invention is to provide a two-exit thermostat which enables the gas delivery from both exits to be controlled by a single thermostatic bulb and by a single temperature-sensitive fluid, on the basis of the temperature measured inside the oven.
  • Another object of the invention is to be able to make this adjustment in a precise and reliable manner.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a thermostat of simple form at low cost.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a thermostat which, in the specific application to an oven with a double flame ring burner, enables a minimum temperature to be reached which is less than that reachable in ovens in which the burner is controlled by a traditional thermostat.
  • FIG 1 is a perspective view of a thermostat according to the invention
  • Figures 2a and 2b are plan views thereof without the cap
  • Figure 3 is a section therethrough on the line Ill-I ll of Figure 2a,
  • Figure 4 is a section therethrough on the line IV-IV of Figure 2a
  • Figure 5 is a section therethrough on the line V-V of Figure 2a
  • Figure 6 is a section therethrough on the line VI-VI of Figure 2a
  • Figure 7 is a section therethrough on the line VII-VII of Figure 2b,
  • Figure 8 is a section therethrough on the line VIM-VIM of Figure 2b,
  • Figure 9 is a schematic view thereof shown applied to two different burners of an oven
  • Figure 10 is a schematic view thereof shown applied to the inner flame ring and to the outer flame ring of a gas oven burner
  • Figure 1 1 shows a graph representing the variation in the temperature inside an oven cavity, with which a thermostat according to the invention is associated, as a function of the angular rotation of the thermostat knob.
  • the thermostat 1 comprises a body 2 shaped externally as an approximately irregular parallelepiped, overlaid by an approximately cylindrical cap 4, and provided with a plurality of chambers and passages which will be referred to during the course of the ensuing description.
  • three main chambers substantially defined by cylindrical cavities which are preferably parallel, and more precisely a pre-chamber 6, housing a safety valve 8 and its control rod 10, a first chamber 14, housing a slider valve 16 (i.e. a valve in which the slider acts as the valving element), and a second chamber 18 housing a distributor 20 comprising a control rod 22.
  • a pre-chamber 6 housing a safety valve 8 and its control rod 10
  • a first chamber 14 housing a slider valve 16 (i.e. a valve in which the slider acts as the valving element)
  • a distributor 20 comprising a control rod 22.
  • the first chamber 14 and the second chamber 18 are provided mutually side by side within the body 2, i.e. they are not concentric, with one chamber inside the other; in particular, this is particularly advantageous as it makes their mechanical construction extremely simple.
  • the purpose of the distributor 20 is to deviate, depending on its state, i.e. on the axial position of its control rod 22, the main gas stream, controlled by the slider valve 16, towards two different exits of the thermostat.
  • the body 2 is provided with two exits 24 and 26, of which the exit 24 is substantially positioned on the prolongation of the second chamber 18 of the distributor 20 and can be connected outside the thermostat to one of the two burners of a gas oven and, if the oven is provided with a burner with two flame rings, in particular with an inner flame ring 28 and an outer flame ring 30, it is connected to its inner flame ring 28 (see Figure 10).
  • the exit 26 is instead connectable to its outer flame ring 30 (see Figure 10) or to a second burner 30' which could for example be a burner which integrates the burner 28' which heats the oven inner cavity (see Figure 9) or the grill burner.
  • control rod 10 of the safety valve 8 and the upper end of the control rod 22 of the distributor 20 emerge from the upper base of the parallelepiped body 2, i.e. from the base opposite that in which the two exits 24 and 26 are present, and are housed within the cylindrical cavity 32 defined by the cap 4. They cooperate with different tracks of a control cam 34 which is also housed within the cylindrical cavity 32 and is rigid with a pin 36 which emerges from the base of the cap 4 and is intended to be inserted into a control and adjustment knob 38.
  • the pin 36 is rotationally rigid, but free in its axial movements, with respect to a pin 40 which rests on an expandable element 42 provided with an internal cavity communicating, via a capillary, with a bulb intended to be inserted in the oven cavity 44 and generally into that compartment, of which the inner temperature is to be controlled.
  • the expanding element 42, the capillary and the bulb contain in their interior a thermally expandable fluid, for example a diathermic oil, as described for example in WO2014/064605, the content of which is to be considered as entirely incorporated herein for reference.
  • the pin 40 which is rotationally rigid with the pin 36, is provided with a cylindrical axial cavity , in which there engages the cylindrical end of another pin 48, rigid with the expanding element 42.
  • the pin 40 has a threaded outer portion which engages in a thread provided in a sleeve 45, fixed with respect to the thermostat body 2. In this manner, the rotations of the knob 38 and of the pin 40 rigid with it, not only cause the control cam 34 to rotate, but also cause the pin 48 to undergo axial movements.
  • the expanding element 42 is also connected to the slider 16 by way of an interposed elastic element 50, as described in the said WO2014/064605.
  • the arrangement of the various parts is such that by rotating the knob 38, the rest position of the expanding element 42 is set, as is the rest position of the slider 16, whereas during operation, the expansions of said expanding element 42 enable the gas flow rate towards the burner to be modified by means of the movement of the slider 16, to control the temperature inside the compartment heated by this.
  • the thermostat body 2 is provided, on a lateral wall thereof, with a gas inlet 52 which, by way of a conduit 54 provided inside the body itself, opens into the bottom of the pre-chamber 6, upstream of the valving element 56 of the safety valve 8.
  • conduit 58 is also provided which connects that region of the pre-chamber 6 downstream of the valving element 56 to the first chamber 14 housing the slider valve 16.
  • This first chamber 14 also has a main outlet 60, which is closable by the slider 16 and communicates via a conduit 62 with the second chamber 18 of the distributor 20, in a region which can be intercepted by this latter.
  • the first chamber 14 is also provided on its lateral surface with another outlet 63, which cannot be closed by the slider 16 and which communicates, via a screw 65 with a sized hole and a conduit 64, with a region of the second chamber 18 of the distributor 20, which lies downstream of the distributor itself and therefore cannot be intercepted by this (see Figures 5 and 6).
  • the outlet 63, the holed screw 65 and the conduit 64 define a first bypass circuit.
  • the second chamber 18 is provided with two apertures and, depending on the axial position of the distributor 20, it communicates with either the first exit 24 of the thermostat body (see Figure 6) or, by way of a region 66, with the second exit 26 (see Figure 8).
  • the first chamber 14 is provided on its lateral surface with a third outlet 68, which cannot be closed by the slider 16 and which communicates, in sequence, with a conduit 70, with a screw 72 provided with a sized hole, and with a conduit 67.
  • passages 69 are provided which communicate with the conduit 67 and which, depending on the axial position of the control rod 22 of the distributor 20, can either be in fluidic communication or not be in fluidic communication with the region 66, which is directly connected to the second exit 26.
  • the outlet 68, the conduit 70, the holed screw 72, the portion 67, the passages 69 and the region 66 define a second bypass circuit, which is controlled by the axial position of the control rod 22 of the distributor 20.
  • the purpose of the cam 34 is to operate the control rod 10 of the safety valve 8 and the control rod 22 of the distributor 20. More particularly, the cam 34, when rotated, causes the rod 22 to undergo axial movements by virtue of the fact that its upper end rests on a first circumferential track 76, and, when moved axially, causes the rod 1 0 to undergo axial movements by virtue of the fact that its upper end rests on a second track 74, provided on the lower surface of the cam 34. It should be noted that the first track 76 is concentric with the second track 74.
  • control rod 22 is axially movable means that a particularly precise and flexible distributor 20 is achieved, in that in order to modify the angular position of the control knob 38, at which the distributor deviates the gas flow from the exit 24 to the exit 26, as apparent hereinafter, it is sufficient to suitably modify merely the track 76.
  • the means 40, 45 for modifying the position of the slider 16 and the means 34, 76 for shifting the distributor 20 are implemented by the same control member, i.e. by the knob 38.
  • the thermostat according to the invention operates in the following manner:
  • the knob When at rest, the knob is maintained in the 0° position, and the safety valve 8 is maintained with its valving element 56 in the closed position by a spring 80, and in this manner prevents the gas, which is present in the conduit 54, from passing through the pre-chamber 6, and reaching the first chamber 14 of the slider valve 16.
  • the user axially presses the knob 38 while at the same time rotates it to bring it to an angle between 52° and X°.
  • the rod 10 acts on the safety valve 8 to open it and cause the gas to pass towards the first chamber 14 of the slider valve 16 and from there, via the first bypass circuit (i.e. through the aperture 63, the holed screw 65 and the conduit 64), to the first exit 24.
  • a traditional ignition spark plug (not represented), positioned in proximity to the inner flame ring 28 of the burner, causes the spark to strike and generate the inner flame ring, which hits the thermocouple, also positioned in proximity to the burner inner flame ring 28, and in traditional manner maintains the safety valve 8 open even after releasing the knob 38.
  • the rotation of the knob 38 enables a spring 82, associated with the rod 22, to maintain the distributor 20, for the entire time of the angular excursion of the knob from 0° to the value X°, in a position such as to maintain the second chamber 18 closed towards the region 66, and hence towards the second exit 26, but open towards the first exit 24.
  • the second bypass circuit is closed, in that the distributor 20 lies in a position such as to interrupt the fluidic connection between the passages 69, provided in the upper portion with respect to the second chamber 18, and the region 66 connected to the second exit 26.
  • the angular position of the knob between 0° and X° determines the rest position of the slider valve 16 in its seat 14 relative to the main outlet aperture 60 of the seat itself, to hence ensure the outflow from the first thermostat aperture 24, of both the gas stream which passes through the main aperture 60 and the conduit 62, and the gas stream which passes through the first bypass circuit (i.e. through the aperture 63, the holed screw 65 and the conduit 64).
  • the result is that both a main stream controlled by the thermostat and a bypass stream not controlled by the thermostat reach the burner inner flame ring 28 or the burner 28'.
  • the track 76 maintains the rod 22 of the distributor 20 axially pushed such that it maintains the second chamber 18 open towards the region 66 and towards the second exit 26, and closes it towards the first exit 24. Consequently, in this condition, only the first bypass stream passing through the conduit 64 passes through the exit 24 connected to the burner inner flame ring 28 or to the burner 28', whereas the gas originating from the first chamber 14 passes through the second exit 26 and is controlled by the slider 16.
  • the gas stream also passes through the second bypass circuit, given that the axial position of the distributor 20 is such as to enable the fluid connection between the passages 69 and the region 66 connected to the second exit 26.
  • the gas emerging from the first chamber 14 through the aperture 68 passes in sequence through the conduit 70, the holed screw 72, the portion 67 and the passages 69, it reaches the region 66 and finally leaves from the exit 26 to equally feed the burner outer flame ring 30 or the burner 30'.
  • the temperature inside the oven continually increases by virtue of the flow of a gas stream controlled by the slider valve 16 which, together with the gas stream which passes through the first bypass circuit 64, feeds the burner inner flame ring 28.
  • the distributor 20 switches over to cause interruption of the feed to the burner inner flame ring 28 (or to the burner 28') by the gas stream controlled by the slide valve 16, while the feed by the first bypass circuit continues, and at the same time this causes opening of the second bypass circuit (defined by the path 68, 72, 70, 67, 69 and 66), which feeds the burner outer flame ring 30 via the second aperture 26.
  • the temperature inside the oven increases continuously by virtue of the flow of a gas stream, controlled by the slider valve 16, which feeds the outer burner flame ring 30 (or the burner 30'), together with the gas stream which passes through the second bypass circuit.
  • the inner flame ring 28 (or the burner 28') is in any event fed via the first bypass circuit, this enabling particularly high temperatures to be reached inside the oven cavity 44.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Feeding And Controlling Fuel (AREA)
  • Control Of Combustion (AREA)

Abstract

A thermostat (1) for gas cooking appliances, comprising a body (2) provided with an inlet (54) fluidically connectable to a gas feed source and with at least a first exit conduit (24) and a second exit conduit (26), and characterised by comprising, inside said body (2): - a first chamber (14) positioned in fluidic communication with said gas inlet (54) and provided with a main outlet aperture (60), - a second chamber (18) positioned downstream of said first chamber (14) and provided with an inlet aperture (59) in fluidic communication with said main outlet aperture (60) of said first chamber (14), - a valve (16) housed in said first chamber (14) and provided with a slider axially movable within this latter between a first position in which said main outlet aperture (60) is closed, and a second position in which this latter is totally open, - a temperature sensitive element (42) mechanically associated with said valve (16) to cause it to undergo its axial movements on the basis of the temperature measured by a bulb applicable to said cooking appliance and against the elastic reaction of elastic means acting in the sense of urging said valve (16) towards said open position, - means (38, 40, 45) for modifying the position of the slider of said valve (16) relative to the aperture of said main outlet (60) of said first chamber (14) to hence regulate the gas stream which leaves said first chamber (14) via the aperture of said main outlet (60), and enters said second chamber (18) via said inlet aperture (59), - a distributor (20) housed within said second chamber (18) and movable between a first position, in which said inlet aperture (59) of said second chamber (18) communicates with said first exit conduit (24) but not with said second exit conduit (26), and a second position, at which said inlet aperture (59) of said second chamber (18) communicates with said second exit conduit (26) but not with said first exit conduit (24), - means (38, 34, 76) for moving said distributor (20) between said first position and said second position, - at least one circuit (63, 64, 65; 68, 70, 72, 67, 69) which, by bypassing said second chamber (18), puts said first chamber (14) into fluidic communication with a region of one of said exit conduits (24, 26) positioned downstream of said distributor (20), and further characterised in that said means (40, 45) for modifying the position of the slider of said valve (16) and said means (34, 76) for moving said distributor (20) are implemented by the same control member (38).

Description

THERMOSTAT FOR GAS COOKING APPLIANCES
The present invention relates to a thermostat for gas cooking appliances.
Thermostats are known for application to gas cooking appliances, and in particular to gas ovens.
Their purpose is to regulate the flow of gas to the burner installed in the oven, such as to ensure that the temperature inside the oven is maintained around a desired value preset by an adjustment knob. Their operating principle is such that they comprise a thermostatic bulb installed inside the oven and a temperature-sensitive fluid contained in the bulb and operationally connected to a valve disposed inside the thermostat body.
Thermostats with two exits are also known for feeding two different burners of the oven, namely the main burner and a secondary burner for the grill or the pilot flame of the main burner.
The characteristic of these known two-exit thermostats is the fact that one of these exits is controlled, hence the flow rate of the delivered gas is variable on the basis of the temperature measured by a suitable sensor, while the other exit has a flow rate which is not temperature-controlled.
An object of the invention is to provide a two-exit thermostat which enables the gas delivery from both exits to be controlled by a single thermostatic bulb and by a single temperature-sensitive fluid, on the basis of the temperature measured inside the oven.
Another object of the invention is to be able to make this adjustment in a precise and reliable manner. Another object of the invention is to provide a thermostat of simple form at low cost.
Another object of the invention is to provide a thermostat which, in the specific application to an oven with a double flame ring burner, enables a minimum temperature to be reached which is less than that reachable in ovens in which the burner is controlled by a traditional thermostat.
All these and other objects which will be apparent from the ensuing description are attained according to the invention by a two-exit thermostat for gas cooking appliances in accordance with claim 1 .
The present invention is further clarified hereinafter in terms of a preferred embodiment thereof provided by way of non-limiting example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a perspective view of a thermostat according to the invention, Figures 2a and 2b are plan views thereof without the cap,
Figure 3 is a section therethrough on the line Ill-I ll of Figure 2a,
Figure 4 is a section therethrough on the line IV-IV of Figure 2a,
Figure 5 is a section therethrough on the line V-V of Figure 2a,
Figure 6 is a section therethrough on the line VI-VI of Figure 2a,
Figure 7 is a section therethrough on the line VII-VII of Figure 2b,
Figure 8 is a section therethrough on the line VIM-VIM of Figure 2b,
Figure 9 is a schematic view thereof shown applied to two different burners of an oven,
Figure 10 is a schematic view thereof shown applied to the inner flame ring and to the outer flame ring of a gas oven burner, Figure 1 1 shows a graph representing the variation in the temperature inside an oven cavity, with which a thermostat according to the invention is associated, as a function of the angular rotation of the thermostat knob.
As can be seen from the figures, the thermostat 1 according to the invention comprises a body 2 shaped externally as an approximately irregular parallelepiped, overlaid by an approximately cylindrical cap 4, and provided with a plurality of chambers and passages which will be referred to during the course of the ensuing description.
More particularly, inside the body 2 there are provided three main chambers, substantially defined by cylindrical cavities which are preferably parallel, and more precisely a pre-chamber 6, housing a safety valve 8 and its control rod 10, a first chamber 14, housing a slider valve 16 (i.e. a valve in which the slider acts as the valving element), and a second chamber 18 housing a distributor 20 comprising a control rod 22.
Preferably, the first chamber 14 and the second chamber 18 are provided mutually side by side within the body 2, i.e. they are not concentric, with one chamber inside the other; in particular, this is particularly advantageous as it makes their mechanical construction extremely simple.
As will be more apparent hereinafter, the purpose of the distributor 20 is to deviate, depending on its state, i.e. on the axial position of its control rod 22, the main gas stream, controlled by the slider valve 16, towards two different exits of the thermostat.
In this respect , the body 2 is provided with two exits 24 and 26, of which the exit 24 is substantially positioned on the prolongation of the second chamber 18 of the distributor 20 and can be connected outside the thermostat to one of the two burners of a gas oven and, if the oven is provided with a burner with two flame rings, in particular with an inner flame ring 28 and an outer flame ring 30, it is connected to its inner flame ring 28 (see Figure 10). The exit 26 is instead connectable to its outer flame ring 30 (see Figure 10) or to a second burner 30' which could for example be a burner which integrates the burner 28' which heats the oven inner cavity (see Figure 9) or the grill burner.
The upper end of the control rod 10 of the safety valve 8 and the upper end of the control rod 22 of the distributor 20 emerge from the upper base of the parallelepiped body 2, i.e. from the base opposite that in which the two exits 24 and 26 are present, and are housed within the cylindrical cavity 32 defined by the cap 4. They cooperate with different tracks of a control cam 34 which is also housed within the cylindrical cavity 32 and is rigid with a pin 36 which emerges from the base of the cap 4 and is intended to be inserted into a control and adjustment knob 38.
The pin 36 is rotationally rigid, but free in its axial movements, with respect to a pin 40 which rests on an expandable element 42 provided with an internal cavity communicating, via a capillary, with a bulb intended to be inserted in the oven cavity 44 and generally into that compartment, of which the inner temperature is to be controlled.
The expanding element 42, the capillary and the bulb contain in their interior a thermally expandable fluid, for example a diathermic oil, as described for example in WO2014/064605, the content of which is to be considered as entirely incorporated herein for reference. In greater detail, the pin 40, which is rotationally rigid with the pin 36, is provided with a cylindrical axial cavity , in which there engages the cylindrical end of another pin 48, rigid with the expanding element 42. The pin 40 has a threaded outer portion which engages in a thread provided in a sleeve 45, fixed with respect to the thermostat body 2. In this manner, the rotations of the knob 38 and of the pin 40 rigid with it, not only cause the control cam 34 to rotate, but also cause the pin 48 to undergo axial movements.
The expanding element 42 is also connected to the slider 16 by way of an interposed elastic element 50, as described in the said WO2014/064605. In particular, the arrangement of the various parts is such that by rotating the knob 38, the rest position of the expanding element 42 is set, as is the rest position of the slider 16, whereas during operation, the expansions of said expanding element 42 enable the gas flow rate towards the burner to be modified by means of the movement of the slider 16, to control the temperature inside the compartment heated by this.
The thermostat body 2 is provided, on a lateral wall thereof, with a gas inlet 52 which, by way of a conduit 54 provided inside the body itself, opens into the bottom of the pre-chamber 6, upstream of the valving element 56 of the safety valve 8.
Within the body 2 a further conduit 58 is also provided which connects that region of the pre-chamber 6 downstream of the valving element 56 to the first chamber 14 housing the slider valve 16.
This first chamber 14 also has a main outlet 60, which is closable by the slider 16 and communicates via a conduit 62 with the second chamber 18 of the distributor 20, in a region which can be intercepted by this latter. The first chamber 14 is also provided on its lateral surface with another outlet 63, which cannot be closed by the slider 16 and which communicates, via a screw 65 with a sized hole and a conduit 64, with a region of the second chamber 18 of the distributor 20, which lies downstream of the distributor itself and therefore cannot be intercepted by this (see Figures 5 and 6). In particular, the outlet 63, the holed screw 65 and the conduit 64 define a first bypass circuit.
The second chamber 18 is provided with two apertures and, depending on the axial position of the distributor 20, it communicates with either the first exit 24 of the thermostat body (see Figure 6) or, by way of a region 66, with the second exit 26 (see Figure 8).
Finally, the first chamber 14 is provided on its lateral surface with a third outlet 68, which cannot be closed by the slider 16 and which communicates, in sequence, with a conduit 70, with a screw 72 provided with a sized hole, and with a conduit 67. Moreover, in that portion of the body 2 which upperly bounds the second chamber 18, passages 69 are provided which communicate with the conduit 67 and which, depending on the axial position of the control rod 22 of the distributor 20, can either be in fluidic communication or not be in fluidic communication with the region 66, which is directly connected to the second exit 26. In particular, the outlet 68, the conduit 70, the holed screw 72, the portion 67, the passages 69 and the region 66 define a second bypass circuit, which is controlled by the axial position of the control rod 22 of the distributor 20.
In consideration of the fact that the flow/path of the gas which enters the body 2 through the inlet 54 and leaves from said body through the exit conduits 24 and 26, it is apparent that the second chamber 18 is positioned downstream of the first chamber 14, which in its turn is positioned downstream of the pre-chamber 6.
The purpose of the cam 34 is to operate the control rod 10 of the safety valve 8 and the control rod 22 of the distributor 20. More particularly, the cam 34, when rotated, causes the rod 22 to undergo axial movements by virtue of the fact that its upper end rests on a first circumferential track 76, and, when moved axially, causes the rod 1 0 to undergo axial movements by virtue of the fact that its upper end rests on a second track 74, provided on the lower surface of the cam 34. It should be noted that the first track 76 is concentric with the second track 74.
The fact that the control rod 22 is axially movable means that a particularly precise and flexible distributor 20 is achieved, in that in order to modify the angular position of the control knob 38, at which the distributor deviates the gas flow from the exit 24 to the exit 26, as apparent hereinafter, it is sufficient to suitably modify merely the track 76.
In the thermostat according to the present invention, the means 40, 45 for modifying the position of the slider 16 and the means 34, 76 for shifting the distributor 20 are implemented by the same control member, i.e. by the knob 38.
The thermostat according to the invention operates in the following manner:
When at rest, the knob is maintained in the 0° position, and the safety valve 8 is maintained with its valving element 56 in the closed position by a spring 80, and in this manner prevents the gas, which is present in the conduit 54, from passing through the pre-chamber 6, and reaching the first chamber 14 of the slider valve 16.
To light the burner 28' (see Figure 9), or its inner flame ring 28 (see Figure 10), the user axially presses the knob 38 while at the same time rotates it to bring it to an angle between 52° and X°. In this manner, the rod 10 acts on the safety valve 8 to open it and cause the gas to pass towards the first chamber 14 of the slider valve 16 and from there, via the first bypass circuit (i.e. through the aperture 63, the holed screw 65 and the conduit 64), to the first exit 24. At the same time, a traditional ignition spark plug (not represented), positioned in proximity to the inner flame ring 28 of the burner, causes the spark to strike and generate the inner flame ring, which hits the thermocouple, also positioned in proximity to the burner inner flame ring 28, and in traditional manner maintains the safety valve 8 open even after releasing the knob 38.
By virtue of the particular configuration of its track 76, the rotation of the knob 38 enables a spring 82, associated with the rod 22, to maintain the distributor 20, for the entire time of the angular excursion of the knob from 0° to the value X°, in a position such as to maintain the second chamber 18 closed towards the region 66, and hence towards the second exit 26, but open towards the first exit 24.
Moreover, in this situation, the second bypass circuit is closed, in that the distributor 20 lies in a position such as to interrupt the fluidic connection between the passages 69, provided in the upper portion with respect to the second chamber 18, and the region 66 connected to the second exit 26.
In this situation, the angular position of the knob between 0° and X° determines the rest position of the slider valve 16 in its seat 14 relative to the main outlet aperture 60 of the seat itself, to hence ensure the outflow from the first thermostat aperture 24, of both the gas stream which passes through the main aperture 60 and the conduit 62, and the gas stream which passes through the first bypass circuit (i.e. through the aperture 63, the holed screw 65 and the conduit 64). The result is that both a main stream controlled by the thermostat and a bypass stream not controlled by the thermostat reach the burner inner flame ring 28 or the burner 28'.
When the angular value X° of the knob 38 has been exceeded and until the limit value of Y°, the track 76 maintains the rod 22 of the distributor 20 axially pushed such that it maintains the second chamber 18 open towards the region 66 and towards the second exit 26, and closes it towards the first exit 24. Consequently, in this condition, only the first bypass stream passing through the conduit 64 passes through the exit 24 connected to the burner inner flame ring 28 or to the burner 28', whereas the gas originating from the first chamber 14 passes through the second exit 26 and is controlled by the slider 16.
In this condition, the gas stream also passes through the second bypass circuit, given that the axial position of the distributor 20 is such as to enable the fluid connection between the passages 69 and the region 66 connected to the second exit 26. In greater detail, the gas emerging from the first chamber 14 through the aperture 68 passes in sequence through the conduit 70, the holed screw 72, the portion 67 and the passages 69, it reaches the region 66 and finally leaves from the exit 26 to equally feed the burner outer flame ring 30 or the burner 30'.
Essentially, during the angular excursion X°-Y°, only the first bypass stream, which is not controlled by the temperature sensitive element 42, passes through the first exit 24, and feeds the inner flame ring 28 or the burner 28', while through the second exit 26 which feeds the outer flame ring 30 or the burner 30', there pass both the main gas stream, controlled by the slider valve 16 and hence by the temperature sensitive element 42, and the second bypass stream, which is not controlled by the temperature sensitive element, but is activated via the distributor 20.
To also represent graphically the temperature adjustment obtainable by the thermostat according to the invention, reference can be made to the graph of Figure 1 1 , in which the horizontal axis shows the values of the angular excursion of the adjustment knob 38 from the value 0° to the value Y°, while the vertical axis shows the corresponding temperature values inside the oven cavity 44. It can be seen that at the angular excursion value of the knob 38, generally equal to 52° and corresponding to the burner ignition position, there is minimum temperature inside the oven because only the inner flame ring 28 (or only the burner 28') is fed, namely by only the first bypass circuit defined by the path 63, 65 and 64. In the portion from 52° to the value X°, the temperature inside the oven continually increases by virtue of the flow of a gas stream controlled by the slider valve 16 which, together with the gas stream which passes through the first bypass circuit 64, feeds the burner inner flame ring 28. As soon as the position X° has been exceeded, the distributor 20 switches over to cause interruption of the feed to the burner inner flame ring 28 (or to the burner 28') by the gas stream controlled by the slide valve 16, while the feed by the first bypass circuit continues, and at the same time this causes opening of the second bypass circuit (defined by the path 68, 72, 70, 67, 69 and 66), which feeds the burner outer flame ring 30 via the second aperture 26. In the portion from X° to the value Y°, the temperature inside the oven increases continuously by virtue of the flow of a gas stream, controlled by the slider valve 16, which feeds the outer burner flame ring 30 (or the burner 30'), together with the gas stream which passes through the second bypass circuit. Advantageously, during the portion from X° to the value Y°, the inner flame ring 28 (or the burner 28') is in any event fed via the first bypass circuit, this enabling particularly high temperatures to be reached inside the oven cavity 44.
From the aforegoing it is apparent that the thermostat according to the invention is particularly advantageous in that:
- it enables both exits to be temperature regulated; in particular, this enables a considerable energy saving to be achieved, hence improving the energy rating of the oven in which the thermostat according to the invention is installed,
- it enables a gas flow to be controlled such as to provide a particularly high maximum power, related to the facility for activating one of the two main temperature regulated exits and both the bypass circuits,
- it enables the gas flow to be controlled in such a manner as to provide a particularly low minimum power, related to the facility for activating only the bypass circuit associated with the smaller burner (in the thermostat application to two separate burners) or to the inner flame ring of a burner having multiple flame rings (when applying the thermostat to the flame rings of one and the same burner).

Claims

C L A I M S
1 . A thermostat (1 ) for gas cooking appliances, comprising a body (2) provided with an inlet (54) fluidically connectable to a gas feed source and with at least a first exit conduit (24) and a second exit conduit (26), and characterised by comprising, inside said body (2):
- a first chamber (14) positioned in fluidic communication with said gas inlet (54) and provided with a main outlet aperture (60),
- a second chamber (1 8) positioned downstream of said first chamber (14) and provided with an inlet aperture (59) in fluidic communication with said main outlet aperture (60) of said first chamber (14),
- a valve (16) housed in said first chamber (14) and provided with a slider axially movable within this latter between a first position in which said main outlet aperture (60) is closed, and a second position in which this latter is totally open,
- a temperature sensitive element (42) mechanically associated with said valve (16) to cause it to undergo its axial movements on the basis of the temperature measured by a bulb applicable to said cooking appliance and against the elastic reaction of elastic means acting in the sense of urging said valve (16) towards said open position,
- means (38, 40, 45) for modifying the position of the slider of said valve (16) relative to the aperture of said main outlet (60) of said first chamber (14) to hence regulate the gas stream which leaves said first chamber (14) via the aperture of said main outlet (60), and enters said second chamber (18) via said inlet aperture (59), - a distributor (20) housed within said second chamber (18) and movable between a first position, in which said inlet aperture (59) of said second chamber (18) communicates with said first exit conduit (24) but not with said second exit conduit (26), and a second position, at which said inlet aperture (59) of said second chamber (18) communicates with said second exit conduit (26) but not with said first exit conduit (24),
- means (38, 34, 76) for moving said distributor (20) between said first position and said second position,
- at least one circuit (63, 64, 65; 68, 70, 72, 67, 69) which, by bypassing said second chamber (18), puts said first chamber (14) into fluidic communication with a region of one of said exit conduits (24, 26) positioned downstream of said distributor (20),
and further characterised in that said means (40, 45) for modifying the position of the slider of said valve (16) and said means (34, 76) for moving said distributor (20) are implemented by the same control member (38).
2. A thermostat as claimed in claim 1 , characterised in that said circuit (63, 64), which puts said first chamber (14) into fluidic communication with a downstream portion of said distributor (20) of said first conduit (24) or said second conduit (26), comprises at least one secondary outlet (63, 68) which is provided on the wall of said first chamber (14) and communicates, via a sequence of gas passages (65, 64; 70, 72, 67, 69), with a region of said first conduit (24) or said second conduit (26) which is positioned downstream of said distributor (20).
3. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that said at least one circuit (63, 64, 65; 68, 70, 72, 67, 69, 66), which puts said first chamber (14) into fluidic communication with a region of one of said exit conduits (24, 26) positioned downstream of said distributor (20), comprises means (38, 74, 22) for selectively causing interruption of said fluidic communication.
4. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that said first chamber (14) and said second chamber (1 8) comprise two corresponding side by side cavities provided inside said body (2).
5. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that said means (40, 45) for modifying the position of the slider of said valve (16) and means (34, 76) for moving said distributor (20) are implemented by the same control member (38), which comprises a control knob (38) which is rotatable about an axis and is axially movable along said axis.
6. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that said knob (38, 4) comprises screw means (40, 45) for transforming its rotation into axial movements of the slider of said valve (16) by way of said temperature sensitive element (42).
7. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that said distributor (20) comprises a control rod (22) axially movable between said first position and said second position.
8. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that said knob (38, 4) comprises a cam (34) with a first track (76) which cooperates with said distributor (20) to cause this latter to move between said first position and said second position.
9. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that said knob (38, 4) comprises a cam (34) which cooperates with the rod (22) of said distributor (20) to cause said rod (22) to move axially between said first position and said second position, and in that said knob (38, 4) is configured such that, by varying its angular position, the position of the slider of said valve (16) is modified.
10. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised by comprising a cavity (6) for housing a safety valve (8), said cavity (6) being fluidically interposed between said gas inlet (54) and said first chamber (14).
1 1 . A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that the cam (34) of said knob (38) comprises a second track (74) which cooperates with a rod associated with said safety valve (8) to cause this to open and close.
12. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that the first track (76) of said cam (34) cooperates with said distributor (20) to also selectively cause interruption of the fluidic communication within said circuit (68, 70, 72, 67, 69, 66) which connects said first chamber (14) to a region of one of said exit conduits (24, 26) which is positioned downstream of said distributor (20).
13. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that the cam (34) of said knob (38) is configured such that:
- a first step of rotation of the knob (38) from a position of 0° to X° causes the slider of said valve (16) to move axially from a position of closure of the main outlet aperture (60) of said first chamber (14) to a predetermined position of intermediate opening, and causes the distributor (20) to be positioned such as to put into fluidic communication the inlet aperture (59) of the second chamber (18) with the first exit conduit (24),
- a second step of further rotation of the knob (38) from X° to Y° causes the slider of said valve (16) to move axially from the position of intermediate opening to a position of maximum opening, and causes the distributor (20) to be positioned such as to put into fluidic communication the inlet aperture (59) of the second chamber (18) with the second exit conduit (26).
14. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that, both during the first and during the second step of rotation of the knob (38), said circuit (63, 64, 65) maintains said chamber (14) in fluidic communication with that region of said first conduit (24) positioned downstream of said distributor (20).
15. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that the cam (34) of said knob (38) is also configured such that, at a certain angular position of the knob (38), the valving element of said valve (16) causes total closure of the main outlet aperture (60) of said chamber (14), whereas said circuit (63, 64, 65) puts said first chamber (14) into fluidic communication with that region of said first conduit (24), or of said second conduit (26), positioned downstream of said distributor (20).
16. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that the cam (34) of said knob (38) is also configured such that, at a certain angular position of the knob (38), the valving element of said valve (16) causes total opening of the main outlet aperture (60) of said chamber (14), while said circuits (63, 64, 65; 70, 72, 67, 66), put said first chamber (14) into fluidic communication with both those regions of said first conduit (24) and said second conduit (26) positioned downstream of said distributor (20).
17. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that said first exit conduit (24) is fluidically connectable to a first flame ring of a burner (28), and that said second exit conduit (26) is fluidically connectable to a second flame ring (30) of said burner.
18. A thermostat as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, characterised in that said first exit conduit (24) is fluidically connectable to a first burner (28'), and that said second exit conduit (26) is fluidically connectable to a second burner (30').
PCT/IB2016/053109 2015-05-28 2016-05-27 Thermostat for gas cooking appliances WO2016189500A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP16734452.2A EP3303924B1 (en) 2015-05-28 2016-05-27 Thermostat for gas cooking appliances
ES16734452T ES2762900T3 (en) 2015-05-28 2016-05-27 Gas kitchen appliance thermostat

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
ITUB2015A001074 2015-05-28
ITUB2015A001074A ITUB20151074A1 (en) 2015-05-28 2015-05-28 Two-way thermostat for gas cooking appliances.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2016189500A1 true WO2016189500A1 (en) 2016-12-01

Family

ID=53836760

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/IB2016/053109 WO2016189500A1 (en) 2015-05-28 2016-05-27 Thermostat for gas cooking appliances

Country Status (4)

Country Link
EP (1) EP3303924B1 (en)
ES (1) ES2762900T3 (en)
IT (1) ITUB20151074A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2016189500A1 (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP3364107A1 (en) * 2017-02-17 2018-08-22 Tmc S.R.L. Thermostatic valve for gas stoves
WO2020094245A1 (en) * 2018-11-06 2020-05-14 Mertik Maxitrol Gmbh & Co. Kg Device for regulating a supply of gas

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2509679A (en) * 1946-01-11 1950-05-30 Grand Ind Inc Fluid fuel control device for multiple burners
FR2239650A1 (en) * 1973-08-03 1975-02-28 Copreci Ind Sci Gas thermostat with two regulating ranges - has a single sensor element and two regulating valves for two burners
DE7929097U1 (en) * 1979-10-13 1984-04-12 Paul Isphording Metallwerke GmbH & Co KG, 5952 Attendorn DEVICE FOR CONTROLLING THE GAS SUPPLY
AU681912B2 (en) * 1993-11-30 1997-09-11 Beckley Forge Pty Ltd A gas flow control device
GB2469091A (en) * 2009-04-01 2010-10-06 Diamond H Controls Ltd Thermostatic control device for gas appliances

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2509679A (en) * 1946-01-11 1950-05-30 Grand Ind Inc Fluid fuel control device for multiple burners
FR2239650A1 (en) * 1973-08-03 1975-02-28 Copreci Ind Sci Gas thermostat with two regulating ranges - has a single sensor element and two regulating valves for two burners
DE7929097U1 (en) * 1979-10-13 1984-04-12 Paul Isphording Metallwerke GmbH & Co KG, 5952 Attendorn DEVICE FOR CONTROLLING THE GAS SUPPLY
AU681912B2 (en) * 1993-11-30 1997-09-11 Beckley Forge Pty Ltd A gas flow control device
GB2469091A (en) * 2009-04-01 2010-10-06 Diamond H Controls Ltd Thermostatic control device for gas appliances

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP3364107A1 (en) * 2017-02-17 2018-08-22 Tmc S.R.L. Thermostatic valve for gas stoves
WO2020094245A1 (en) * 2018-11-06 2020-05-14 Mertik Maxitrol Gmbh & Co. Kg Device for regulating a supply of gas

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
ES2762900T3 (en) 2020-05-26
EP3303924B1 (en) 2019-09-18
ITUB20151074A1 (en) 2016-11-28
EP3303924A1 (en) 2018-04-11

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
CN110088531B (en) Gas cooking appliance
JP6278470B2 (en) Thermal power control device in gas stove
EP3303924B1 (en) Thermostat for gas cooking appliances
EP2904319B1 (en) Thermostic valve
KR101727156B1 (en) Gas Range
EP2912377B1 (en) Thermostatic valve
US3575542A (en) Fuel control system for a cooking apparatus or the like
ES1200311U (en) Temperature control system of a cooking appliance, and cooking appliance comprising said temperature control system (Machine-translation by Google Translate, not legally binding)
EP3440406B1 (en) Improved thermostat
US3288366A (en) Thermostatic gas regulator for baking and broiling
DK2976571T3 (en) Gas regulating valve
US4007907A (en) Fuel control system and control device therefore or the like
US5067651A (en) Fuel control device, fuel control system using the device and method of making the device
US4159800A (en) Fuel control system and control device therefor or the like
US4123036A (en) Fuel control system and control device therefor or the like
US3398890A (en) Fail-safe regulator for gas-oven burners
US4813596A (en) Fuel control device, fuel control system using the device and method of making the device
EP3401599B1 (en) Thermostatic gas valve
US4007872A (en) Fuel control system and control device therefor or the like
US4921161A (en) Fuel control device, fuel control system using the device and method of making the device
US3091395A (en) douglas
US3558250A (en) Fuel control system for a cooking apparatus or the like
US3344989A (en) Control device and parts therefor or the like
WO2023140815A1 (en) Gradual furnace tap without thermostat for gas-fired furnaces
JP3578534B2 (en) Heating equipment

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 16734452

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2016734452

Country of ref document: EP