US2651504A - Baseboard heating apparatus for rooms - Google Patents

Baseboard heating apparatus for rooms Download PDF

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Publication number
US2651504A
US2651504A US201002A US20100250A US2651504A US 2651504 A US2651504 A US 2651504A US 201002 A US201002 A US 201002A US 20100250 A US20100250 A US 20100250A US 2651504 A US2651504 A US 2651504A
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Prior art keywords
baseboard
hot water
strip
heating apparatus
rooms
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Expired - Lifetime
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US201002A
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Benedict P Gundrum
Edward D Mcelhaney
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MCELHANEY
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MCELHANEY
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24DDOMESTIC- OR SPACE-HEATING SYSTEMS, e.g. CENTRAL HEATING SYSTEMS; DOMESTIC HOT-WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS; ELEMENTS OR COMPONENTS THEREFOR
    • F24D19/00Details
    • F24D19/02Arrangement of mountings or supports for radiators
    • F24D19/04Arrangement of mountings or supports for radiators in skirtings

Definitions

  • Our invention relates to improvements in socalled baseboard heating apparatus for the rooms of dwellings, and other buildings.
  • the primary object of our invention is to provide for economically heating a room all around the base of all walls to uniformly and quickly heat a room so as to obviate cold. zones, particularly at outside walls, and hot zones such as are caused by conventional radiators and registers.
  • Another object is ta provide: apparatus for accomplishing the above which. is adapted to be easily and quickly installed in any room, and which is easy to take apart. and. maintain clean, and will simulate in. appearance the conventional baseboard.
  • Figure 1 is a view in horizontal section, partly broken away, and illustrating a room equipped with our improved baseboard heating apparatus in the preferred embodiment thereof;
  • Figure 2 is a fragmentary view'in front elevation, partly broken away, and shown in section and drawn to a larger scale;
  • Figure 3 is a view in vertical transverse section taken on a line 3+3. of Figure. 2 and drawn to a larger scale;
  • Figure 4 is a similarly enlarged, fragmentary view in perspective of. one end; of the apparatus;
  • Figure 5 is a fragmentary viewin horizontal section taken on a line. 5-5 of Figure 2 and drawn to a larger scale;
  • Figure 6 is a View in vertical transverse section taken on the line 66 of Figure 5 and drawn to the same scale as in Figured;
  • Figure '7 is a fragmentary v-iew in front-elevation of the hot water pipe drawn to a larger scale
  • Figure 8 is a view in front elevation of one of the brackets
  • Figure 9 is a fragmentary view in front elevation, partly in section, of the other end of the apparatus.
  • a simulated baseboard panel 1 preferably of sheet metal, is provided around the base of the wall structure 2 of a room 3 and which may be continuous or formed of sections having suitably connected bevel end, butt joints 4 at the corners of the room 3.
  • the baseboard panel a is of dished cross section and includes a longitudinal, forwardly extending, top ledge ii flaring rearwardly in cross section and hollow, and provided with a forwardly and upwardly inclined and arched heat deflector bottom t, said baseboard panel I further including a bottom cool air deflecting portion 7 concave and curving upwardly and rearwardly in cross section, a vertical, fiat longitudinal wall engaging back portion 8 intermediate said ledge 5 and bottom portion l, and a longitudinal horizontal shoulder a at the juncture of said bottom portion i and back portion 8.
  • the baseboard panel 5 is secured at its top to the wall structure 2 by means of a wooden molding strip it fitting on top of the ledge 5 against a longitudinal upstanding rear flange II on said ledge, said strip is being nailed, as at 12, to the wall structure 2 through the flange H.
  • the baseboard panel I is secured to the floor l3 by means of a sheet metal keeper strip i i coextensive with said baseboard I- and nailed, as at 5 to the iioor IS with a rearwardly opening, front edge channel it fitting over the edge of said bottom portion l.
  • the keeper strip is may be formed in one piece, or of sections, joined like the baseboard panel I- if made in sections.
  • a longitudinal, sheet metal, front strip l! or:- tends along the baseboard panel 1 at the front thereof and is mounted, by means presently de scribed, in spaced relation to the front edge of the ledge 5- and the bottom and back portions 1 and 8 to form with said ledge 5, bottom portion 7 and back portion 8 a longitudinal heating cham her, or recess, it in said baseboard panel I having a comparatively narrow, bottom air inlet slot 59- and a similar top air outlet slot 20.
  • the front strip I! is preferably formed in sections 2!
  • the sections 21 may be jointed at the corners of the wall structure 2 like the baseboard panel I.
  • the described baseboard panel i, and front strip l7 terminates at ends thereof at vertical boxes 32, 33 arranged at opposite sides of the doorway 34 and closing the ends of the heating chamber [8, said boxes having closed fronts 65 bulging outwardly to match the front strips 37.
  • a hot water pipe 36 with a spiral heat transfer fin 37 thereon extends around the room 3 to substantially the boxes 32, 33 and is clamped and supported by the brackets 24 in the heating chamber 18 directly behind the front strip 47.
  • a water control Valve 38 with a hand wheel 39 extending outwardly of the front strip 17 connects one end of the hot water pipe 36 to a hot water line 40 extending upwardly through the floor [3 into one box, for instance 32, from a suitable source of hot water, not shown.
  • the other end of the hot water pipe 36 is suitably connected in the other box 33 to a hot water return line 4
  • a water bypass line 42 is suitably connected at one end to said hot water pipe 36, between the control valve 39 and the hot water line 46, and
  • . 4 forms a heating chamber extending along the top of the baseboard panel 1.
  • Room heating apparatus comprising a simulated base board panel of dished form in cross section adapted to open forwardly of a wall of the room to provide a longitudinal recess in front of the wall coextensive with said panel, and having a back attachable to the wall, an upwardly and rearwardly curved integral bottom edge portion for directing air upwardly into said recess, and a forwardly and upwardly curved top edge portion for deflecting air out of said recess and completing the recess at its top, resilient forwardly extending brackets spaced longitudinally in said recess and secured to said back midway between said edge portions, a hot water pipe clamped by said brackets and extending longitudinally of said recess, and a longitudinally extending strip narrower than said recess and extending along the front of said recess in front of said pipe and brackets and forming with said edge portions longitudinal narrow top and bottom air outlet and inlet slots at the front of said recess, and longitudinal flexible edge channels on said strip fitting over said brackets with a
  • Room heating apparatus and a channeled edge keeper strip attachable to the floor and fitting over and under said bottom edge.

Description

Inventors 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 enedict I? undrum Edward 0 Mc E/haney y Attorneys Sept. 8, 1953 B. P. GUNDRUM ETAL BASE-BOARD HEATING APPARATUS FOR ROOMS Filed Dec. 15, 1950 5 g l F w A m H m m u a L i I. 3. u m A A. u A n A n a u 0 n a w W m n 1| w Sept. 8, 1953 B. P. GUNDRUM ETAL BASEBOARD HEATING APPARATUS FOR ROOMS 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Filed Dec. 15, 1950 Inventors Benedict I? Gundrum Edward 12 .Mc E/haney Patented Sept. 8, 1953 BASEBOARD HEATING APPARATUS FOR ROOMS Benedict P. Gundrum and Edward D. McElhaney, Dunkirk, N. Y. said Gundrum assignor to said McElhaney Application December 15, 1950, Serial No. 201,002"
2 Claims. 1
Our invention relates to improvements in socalled baseboard heating apparatus for the rooms of dwellings, and other buildings.
The primary object of our invention is to provide for economically heating a room all around the base of all walls to uniformly and quickly heat a room so as to obviate cold. zones, particularly at outside walls, and hot zones such as are caused by conventional radiators and registers.
Another object is ta provide: apparatus for accomplishing the above which. is adapted to be easily and quickly installed in any room, and which is easy to take apart. and. maintain clean, and will simulate in. appearance the conventional baseboard.
Other and ancillary ol'ije'ctsv together with the precise nature of our improvement will be readily understood when the succeeding description and claims are read With reference to the drawings accompanying and forming of this specification.
In said drawings:
Figure 1 is a view in horizontal section, partly broken away, and illustrating a room equipped with our improved baseboard heating apparatus in the preferred embodiment thereof;
Figure 2 is a fragmentary view'in front elevation, partly broken away, and shown in section and drawn to a larger scale;
Figure 3 is a view in vertical transverse section taken on a line 3+3. of Figure. 2 and drawn to a larger scale;
Figure 4 is a similarly enlarged, fragmentary view in perspective of. one end; of the apparatus;
Figure 5 is a fragmentary viewin horizontal section taken on a line. 5-5 of Figure 2 and drawn to a larger scale;
Figure 6 is a View in vertical transverse section taken on the line 66 of Figure 5 and drawn to the same scale as in Figured;
Figure '7 is a fragmentary v-iew in front-elevation of the hot water pipe drawn to a larger scale;
Figure 8 is a view in front elevation of one of the brackets;
Figure 9 is a fragmentary view in front elevation, partly in section, of the other end of the apparatus.
Referring to the drawings by numerals, according to our invention as illustrated, a simulated baseboard panel 1, preferably of sheet metal, is provided around the base of the wall structure 2 of a room 3 and which may be continuous or formed of sections having suitably connected bevel end, butt joints 4 at the corners of the room 3.
The baseboard panel a is of dished cross section and includes a longitudinal, forwardly extending, top ledge ii flaring rearwardly in cross section and hollow, and provided with a forwardly and upwardly inclined and arched heat deflector bottom t, said baseboard panel I further including a bottom cool air deflecting portion 7 concave and curving upwardly and rearwardly in cross section, a vertical, fiat longitudinal wall engaging back portion 8 intermediate said ledge 5 and bottom portion l, and a longitudinal horizontal shoulder a at the juncture of said bottom portion i and back portion 8. The baseboard panel 5 is secured at its top to the wall structure 2 by means of a wooden molding strip it fitting on top of the ledge 5 against a longitudinal upstanding rear flange II on said ledge, said strip is being nailed, as at 12, to the wall structure 2 through the flange H. At its bottom, the baseboard panel I is secured to the floor l3 by means of a sheet metal keeper strip i i coextensive with said baseboard I- and nailed, as at 5 to the iioor IS with a rearwardly opening, front edge channel it fitting over the edge of said bottom portion l. The keeper strip is may be formed in one piece, or of sections, joined like the baseboard panel I- if made in sections.
A longitudinal, sheet metal, front strip l! or:- tends along the baseboard panel 1 at the front thereof and is mounted, by means presently de scribed, in spaced relation to the front edge of the ledge 5- and the bottom and back portions 1 and 8 to form with said ledge 5, bottom portion 7 and back portion 8 a longitudinal heating cham her, or recess, it in said baseboard panel I having a comparatively narrow, bottom air inlet slot 59- and a similar top air outlet slot 20. The front strip I! is preferably formed in sections 2! arranged end to-end with butt joints 22 and with connecting sleeves 23 slidable thereon over said joints for connecting purposes and also sliclab'le clear of said joints for disconnecting said sections 2 l as occasion may require for detaching the sections and attaching the same in a manner presently seen. The sections 21 may be jointed at the corners of the wall structure 2 like the baseboard panel I.
The mounting for said front strip l7 comprises a plurality of forwardly extending, bifurcated resilient brackets 24 spaced longitudinally in the heating chamber l8, as desired, and having a straight back 25 secured to the back portion 8 of the baseboard panel I and to the wall structure 2 by wood screws 26, to anchor said brackets 24 in vertical position in the heating chamber I8. The sections 2| of the front strip I 7 are formed -with top and bottom channel edges 21, 28 and said sections 21 are formed of resilient metal and bowed outwardly, in cross section, so that the sections 2| may be flexed to snap said channel edges 27, 28 on and off of top and bottom lugs 29, 36 on the brackets 24, so that said sections 2| may be easily attached to and detached from said brackets. A bottom, rear depending lug 3| on each bracket 24 seats on the shoulder 9 to prevent said brackets 24 from sagging and to align the same horizontally.
The described baseboard panel i, and front strip l7 terminates at ends thereof at vertical boxes 32, 33 arranged at opposite sides of the doorway 34 and closing the ends of the heating chamber [8, said boxes having closed fronts 65 bulging outwardly to match the front strips 37.
A hot water pipe 36 with a spiral heat transfer fin 37 thereon extends around the room 3 to substantially the boxes 32, 33 and is clamped and supported by the brackets 24 in the heating chamber 18 directly behind the front strip 47. A water control Valve 38 with a hand wheel 39 extending outwardly of the front strip 17 connects one end of the hot water pipe 36 to a hot water line 40 extending upwardly through the floor [3 into one box, for instance 32, from a suitable source of hot water, not shown. The other end of the hot water pipe 36 is suitably connected in the other box 33 to a hot water return line 4| extending downwardly through the floor l3 to said source.
A water bypass line 42 is suitably connected at one end to said hot water pipe 36, between the control valve 39 and the hot water line 46, and
extends upwardly into the ledge and then along said ledge horizontally inside the same with a terminal end 43 extending downwardly to said pipe 46 adjacent the hot water return line 71.
Referring now to the operation of our invention, with the water control valve 36 open, hot water is circulated in the hot water pipe 36. The heated air in the heating chamber 16 rises and is deflected by the bottom 6 of the ledge 5 at the top of said chamber i8 forwardly and upwardly out of the outlet slot 26 to be replaced by cool air drawn into the bottom of the heating chamber 18 through the bottom inlet slot [9 and deflected upwardly to the hot water pipe 36 by the deflecting portion 7 of the baseboard I. Thus, uniformly heated air is discharged into the room 3 at the base of all walls to uniformly heat the room 3 and so that cold walls are obviated and both cold and hot zones prevented. If the valve 38 is closed, the hot water from the hot water line 40 is bypassed through the ledge 5 to the hot water return line 4i so that the heating capacity of the apparatus is reduced for low temperature heating by merely heating the ledge 5 which, because of its hollow construction,
. 4 forms a heating chamber extending along the top of the baseboard panel 1.
The foregoing will, it is believed, sufiice to impart a clear understanding of our invention, without further explanation.
Manifestly, the invention, as described, is susceptible of -modification, without departing from the inventive concept, and right is hereby reserved to such modifications as fall within the scope of the appended claims.
Having described our invention, what claimed as new is:
1. Room heating apparatus comprising a simulated base board panel of dished form in cross section adapted to open forwardly of a wall of the room to provide a longitudinal recess in front of the wall coextensive with said panel, and having a back attachable to the wall, an upwardly and rearwardly curved integral bottom edge portion for directing air upwardly into said recess, and a forwardly and upwardly curved top edge portion for deflecting air out of said recess and completing the recess at its top, resilient forwardly extending brackets spaced longitudinally in said recess and secured to said back midway between said edge portions, a hot water pipe clamped by said brackets and extending longitudinally of said recess, and a longitudinally extending strip narrower than said recess and extending along the front of said recess in front of said pipe and brackets and forming with said edge portions longitudinal narrow top and bottom air outlet and inlet slots at the front of said recess, and longitudinal flexible edge channels on said strip fitting over said brackets with a snap action for removably retaining said strip in place.
2. Room heating apparatus according to claim 1, and a channeled edge keeper strip attachable to the floor and fitting over and under said bottom edge.
BENEDICT P. GUNDRUM. EDWARD D. MCELHANEY.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 1,631,469 Chase June '7, 1927 1,664,171 Hicks Mar. 28, 1928 1,865,511 Frost July 5, 1932 1,898,327 Wayles Feb. 21, 1933 2,268,361 Walker et al. Dec. 30, 1941 2,477,824 Reiss Aug. 2, 1949 2,487,287 Weber et al. Nov. 8, 1949 FOREIGN PATENTS Number Country Date 12,778 Great Britain May 26, 1911
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Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2708569A (en) * 1953-01-19 1955-05-17 Columbia Boiler Co Baseboard convector enclosure
US2709576A (en) * 1952-05-05 1955-05-31 Harry N Marggraf Casing structure for baseboard heaters
US2722403A (en) * 1954-03-23 1955-11-01 Fedders Quigan Corp Convector heating surface with diffusing damper
US2733049A (en) * 1956-01-31 carter
US2845253A (en) * 1954-05-12 1958-07-29 Runte Egon Heating or cooling buildings
US2855185A (en) * 1953-06-08 1958-10-07 Runte Egon Heating of buildings
US2858077A (en) * 1954-11-10 1958-10-28 Bell & Gossett Co Building heating and cooling system
US2934320A (en) * 1957-01-11 1960-04-26 Crane Co End enclosures for baseboard radiator panels
US3086187A (en) * 1960-05-20 1963-04-16 American Radiator & Standard Electrical heating element
US3152241A (en) * 1962-10-10 1964-10-06 Wiegand Co Edwin L Electric heater assemblies
US3174539A (en) * 1962-12-27 1965-03-23 Gen Electric Air conditioning unit
US3448243A (en) * 1967-02-10 1969-06-03 Space Conditioning Inc Baseboard heater
US4086468A (en) * 1974-07-23 1978-04-25 Keldmann E C V Baseboard electric heating apparatus
US4149065A (en) * 1977-02-22 1979-04-10 Tennessee Plastics, Inc. (Tpi) Electric space heater unit
US10295198B1 (en) * 2015-03-25 2019-05-21 Curt M. Freedman Two-section wooden enclosure for a hydronic baseboard finned tube heater

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB191112778A (en) * 1911-05-26 1912-04-11 Benham & Sons Ltd Improvements in and connected with Heating or Temperature Regulating Systems for Rooms or Buildings.
US1631469A (en) * 1927-06-07 Heating apparatus
US1664171A (en) * 1925-12-17 1928-03-27 Hicks William Wesley Electrical baseboard heater
US1865511A (en) * 1928-08-02 1932-07-05 Frost Res Lab Inc Radiator
US1898327A (en) * 1930-03-24 1933-02-21 Edgar E Wayles Radiator
US2268361A (en) * 1941-08-11 1941-12-30 Fedders Mfg Co Inc Heat exchange apparatus
US2477824A (en) * 1948-08-02 1949-08-02 Rittling Corp Encased baseboard heating surface
US2487287A (en) * 1946-04-17 1949-11-08 Warren Webster & Co Radiator enclosure

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1631469A (en) * 1927-06-07 Heating apparatus
GB191112778A (en) * 1911-05-26 1912-04-11 Benham & Sons Ltd Improvements in and connected with Heating or Temperature Regulating Systems for Rooms or Buildings.
US1664171A (en) * 1925-12-17 1928-03-27 Hicks William Wesley Electrical baseboard heater
US1865511A (en) * 1928-08-02 1932-07-05 Frost Res Lab Inc Radiator
US1898327A (en) * 1930-03-24 1933-02-21 Edgar E Wayles Radiator
US2268361A (en) * 1941-08-11 1941-12-30 Fedders Mfg Co Inc Heat exchange apparatus
US2487287A (en) * 1946-04-17 1949-11-08 Warren Webster & Co Radiator enclosure
US2477824A (en) * 1948-08-02 1949-08-02 Rittling Corp Encased baseboard heating surface

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2733049A (en) * 1956-01-31 carter
US2709576A (en) * 1952-05-05 1955-05-31 Harry N Marggraf Casing structure for baseboard heaters
US2708569A (en) * 1953-01-19 1955-05-17 Columbia Boiler Co Baseboard convector enclosure
US2855185A (en) * 1953-06-08 1958-10-07 Runte Egon Heating of buildings
US2722403A (en) * 1954-03-23 1955-11-01 Fedders Quigan Corp Convector heating surface with diffusing damper
US2845253A (en) * 1954-05-12 1958-07-29 Runte Egon Heating or cooling buildings
US2858077A (en) * 1954-11-10 1958-10-28 Bell & Gossett Co Building heating and cooling system
US2934320A (en) * 1957-01-11 1960-04-26 Crane Co End enclosures for baseboard radiator panels
US3086187A (en) * 1960-05-20 1963-04-16 American Radiator & Standard Electrical heating element
US3152241A (en) * 1962-10-10 1964-10-06 Wiegand Co Edwin L Electric heater assemblies
US3174539A (en) * 1962-12-27 1965-03-23 Gen Electric Air conditioning unit
US3448243A (en) * 1967-02-10 1969-06-03 Space Conditioning Inc Baseboard heater
US4086468A (en) * 1974-07-23 1978-04-25 Keldmann E C V Baseboard electric heating apparatus
US4149065A (en) * 1977-02-22 1979-04-10 Tennessee Plastics, Inc. (Tpi) Electric space heater unit
US10295198B1 (en) * 2015-03-25 2019-05-21 Curt M. Freedman Two-section wooden enclosure for a hydronic baseboard finned tube heater

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