US2178644A - Body construction and heating and ventilating system - Google Patents

Body construction and heating and ventilating system Download PDF

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Publication number
US2178644A
US2178644A US84732A US8473236A US2178644A US 2178644 A US2178644 A US 2178644A US 84732 A US84732 A US 84732A US 8473236 A US8473236 A US 8473236A US 2178644 A US2178644 A US 2178644A
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United States
Prior art keywords
air
heating
ducts
sills
ventilating system
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Expired - Lifetime
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US84732A
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Emil H Piron
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Transit Research Corp
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Transit Research Corp
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60HARRANGEMENTS OF HEATING, COOLING, VENTILATING OR OTHER AIR-TREATING DEVICES SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR PASSENGER OR GOODS SPACES OF VEHICLES
    • B60H1/00Heating, cooling or ventilating [HVAC] devices
    • B60H1/00357Air-conditioning arrangements specially adapted for particular vehicles
    • B60H1/00371Air-conditioning arrangements specially adapted for particular vehicles for vehicles carrying large numbers of passengers, e.g. buses
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60HARRANGEMENTS OF HEATING, COOLING, VENTILATING OR OTHER AIR-TREATING DEVICES SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR PASSENGER OR GOODS SPACES OF VEHICLES
    • B60H1/00Heating, cooling or ventilating [HVAC] devices
    • B60H1/00007Combined heating, ventilating, or cooling devices
    • B60H1/00207Combined heating, ventilating, or cooling devices characterised by the position of the HVAC devices with respect to the passenger compartment
    • B60H2001/00221Devices in the floor or side wall area of the passenger compartment

Definitions

  • This invention relates to vehicle bodies and has for its object to provide an improved Ventilating system therefor which will supply to the interior thereof an abundance of air which has been 5 heated in whole or in part and which is partially or Wholly composed of either fresh or re-circulated air. 4
  • Another ⁇ - object is to provide a body framework in the form of box-shaped members and to employ a number or'portion of these members as air ducts and air collecting means for collecting air either from the interior or exterior of the body, or as a combination of both, and for directing the air over a heating means for conditioning to the desired temperatures.
  • Another object is to use others or a remaining portion of the box-shaped members to direct the 'collected air to various suitable points of vantage for release into the car body, or in case all of it is not needed Awithin the body, to a point of eX- ternal release.
  • a further object is to provide suitable automatic means including thermostats and control motors for automatically regulating the quantity and condition of air collected and delivered to the interior of the car body.
  • a further and important object is to provide a Ventilating and air conditioning system for electrically driven cars in which the motor resistances are employed as an air heating means in the system, these resistances being supplemented by such other heating elements as may be necessary or desirable for extreme temperature conditions.
  • a further object incidental to the foregoing is to enclose these resistors together with other motor control equipment located beneath the fioor of the body, the enclosure constituting the air heating compartment, the construction of the en- 40- closure being such as to constitute a part of the oor underframe.
  • Figure 1 is a perspective view of a vehicle body 5 frame with heating and Ventilating equipment
  • Figure 2 is a horizontal section through the floor supports, taken along the horizontal plane 2 2 of Figure 1, A
  • Figures 3, 4 and 5 are vertical sections taken at l0 the line 3 3, 4-4 and 5-5 respectively of Figure 2, and
  • Figure 6 is a schematic iigure illustrating operation the corner posts being omitted.
  • I, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 1, 8 are pier 15 posts which support the roof 9 and which are hollow to constitute air ducts.
  • Fixedly secured to the lower portions of the pier posts are cross sills Ill, II, I2, I3 and side sills or girders I4, I5, I6, I'l,
  • the roof 9 has an inner' wall I9 forming a hollow space which serves as an air collecting chamber to supply the various ducts either from the interior of the body by Virtue of openings 20, or with a mixture of air within the body and air from the Iexterior thereof by means of the openings 2
  • may be equipped with fans 22 if desired.
  • the posts I, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 are each open to the air collecting chamber between theroof walls 9 and I9 and air travels downwardly through all of these posts into the cross and side sill members.
  • Duct I supplies the cross sill I3 where it encounters a downward flow through the duct 2 for joint flow into the side sill I4 where it encounters a downward iiow through the duct 3 for joint ilow into the space between the cross sills II and I2.
  • the air from the collecting chamber 40 is conducted through the duct 6 into the cross sill I0 where it encounters the ow through the post 5 for joint ow through the side sill I6 where the downward flow throughthe duct 4 joins it and this air also flows into the space between the 4:5v
  • the blower 3l blows the air through the partition 32 and in to the space 33 which contains heating elements 34.
  • These elements 34 may be the resistors for an electric mo- 50 tor 35.
  • the cross sills II and I2 are each open at 23 and 24 respectively to the space 34 and receive the ilow of air therefrom.
  • the dampers 25 and' 26 respectively which 56 It will be noted that the side sill I8 does not -communicate directly with the ducts I and I3 nor does the side sill I1 communicate with the ducts 6 and III.
  • the numeral 29 indicates the level of the floor 36. Since the warm air is inletted to the' body at only one side, it has been found advantageous to provide openings 28 in the opposite sill members Il, I5 and I6 whereby air from the' openings 21 is induced to travel across the floor of the car.
  • auxiliary heater coils 30 may be added so that they may be turned on thermostatically or manually when the elements 23 are giving insuiiicient heat. These elements 30 may be suitably placed in the ducts I1 and I8.
  • Figure 6 is a schematic drawing of my system and bears numerals corresponding to the numerals on the remaining iigures in order to illustrate operation.
  • a frame comprising side girders each of hollow construction, vertical air ducts leading from points adjacent the roof of the body into the girders along one side of said frame, a heating device, a blower for drawing air downwardly through said ducts and through said heating device, and means for conducting the air from said device into the side girders at the other side of said frame, said last named girders having outlets along the length thereof into the interior of said body.
  • a body frame comprising side girders and cross sills each of hollow construction, vertical air ducts in-the body open at their upper end and in communication with the interior of at least some of said cross sills and at least one of said side girders, a heating device, a blower for drawing air downwardly through said ducts, through the side girder and cross sills in communication therewith and through said heating device, and means for conducting the air from said heating device into the other of said side girders, said last named side girders having openings along the length thereof for emission of the air into said body adjacent the floor thereof.
  • a body frame comprising hollow side girders, a roof, hollow pier posts for supporting said roof from said side girders, hollow cross sills connecting said side girders, said pier posts being open at the top thereof and in communication at their bottom with some of said cross sills and at least one of said side girders, a heating device, and a blower for drawing air downwardly through said pier posts, through the cross sills and side girders in communication therewith and through said heating device, and means for conducting the air from said heating device through the other side girders, said other side girders having vents opening into the interior of said car body.
  • a vehicle body comprising longitudinal members and hollow cross sills near the center of the body connecting said members, a compartment, said sills constituting two walls of the compartment of equal depth therewith, electrical resistors in said compartment, one of said sills beingl open to said compartment and constituting an air inlet means, the other of said sills being open to said compartment and constituting an air outlet means, and means conducting the air from said outlet means to the interior of said body.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Air-Conditioning For Vehicles (AREA)

Description

E. H. PIRON Nov. 7, 1939.y
BODY CONSTRUCTION AND HEATING AND VENTILATING SYSTEM Filed June l1, 19256 2 Sheets-Sheet '1 BY fw.
ATTORNEY.
Nov. 7,y 1.939. 2.178.644
BODY coNs'rRuc'noN AND HEATING,y AND VENTILATING SYSTEM y Filed June 11, 195,6 ZKSIAeetS-Sheeil 2 N INVENTOR.
917/4 .AK 250A/ ATTORNEY.
Patented Nov. 7, 1939 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE BODY CONSTRUCTION AND HEATING AND VENTILATING SYSTEM Application June 11, 1936, Serial No. 84,732
4 Claims.
This invention relates to vehicle bodies and has for its object to provide an improved Ventilating system therefor which will supply to the interior thereof an abundance of air which has been 5 heated in whole or in part and which is partially or Wholly composed of either fresh or re-circulated air. 4
Another`- object is to provide a body framework in the form of box-shaped members and to employ a number or'portion of these members as air ducts and air collecting means for collecting air either from the interior or exterior of the body, or as a combination of both, and for directing the air over a heating means for conditioning to the desired temperatures.
Another object is to use others or a remaining portion of the box-shaped members to direct the 'collected air to various suitable points of vantage for release into the car body, or in case all of it is not needed Awithin the body, to a point of eX- ternal release.
A further object is to provide suitable automatic means including thermostats and control motors for automatically regulating the quantity and condition of air collected and delivered to the interior of the car body.
A further and important object is to provide a Ventilating and air conditioning system for electrically driven cars in which the motor resistances are employed as an air heating means in the system, these resistances being supplemented by such other heating elements as may be necessary or desirable for extreme temperature conditions.
A further object incidental to the foregoing is to enclose these resistors together with other motor control equipment located beneath the fioor of the body, the enclosure constituting the air heating compartment, the construction of the en- 40- closure being such as to constitute a part of the oor underframe.
It is customary to arrange the seats in a street car such that a center aisle is formed between two rows of double seats. One passenger in each double seat sits adjacent to and parallel with a window. Heating ducts necessarily consume a portion of the foot room of this passenger. It is therefore an object of this invention to reduce the encroachment on the passengers foot room to a minimumwithout sacrifice in size of the duct desired but rather with increased duct capacity and without sacrice of frame strength. This is accomplishcd by using the body side sills as ducts for conducting the conditioned air along the length of the body for release beneath. the seats.
Other objects and advantages will become hereinafter more fully apparent as reference is had to the accompanying drawings wherein `my invention is illustrated and in which,`
Figure 1 is a perspective view of a vehicle body 5 frame with heating and Ventilating equipment,
Figure 2 is a horizontal section through the floor supports, taken along the horizontal plane 2 2 of Figure 1, A
Figures 3, 4 and 5 are vertical sections taken at l0 the line 3 3, 4-4 and 5-5 respectively of Figure 2, and
Figure 6 is a schematic iigure illustrating operation the corner posts being omitted.
More particularly, I, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 1, 8 are pier 15 posts which support the roof 9 and which are hollow to constitute air ducts. Fixedly secured to the lower portions of the pier posts are cross sills Ill, II, I2, I3 and side sills or girders I4, I5, I6, I'l,
I8 which are also hollow to constitute air ducts except the posts 'I and 8 at the door, these two posts being unnecessary to the heating and ventilating system. The roof 9 has an inner' wall I9 forming a hollow space which serves as an air collecting chamber to supply the various ducts either from the interior of the body by Virtue of openings 20, or with a mixture of air within the body and air from the Iexterior thereof by means of the openings 2|. These openings 2| may be equipped with fans 22 if desired. 30
The posts I, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 are each open to the air collecting chamber between theroof walls 9 and I9 and air travels downwardly through all of these posts into the cross and side sill members. Duct I supplies the cross sill I3 where it encounters a downward flow through the duct 2 for joint flow into the side sill I4 where it encounters a downward iiow through the duct 3 for joint ilow into the space between the cross sills II and I2.
Similarly, the air from the collecting chamber 40 is conducted through the duct 6 into the cross sill I0 where it encounters the ow through the post 5 for joint ow through the side sill I6 where the downward flow throughthe duct 4 joins it and this air also flows into the space between the 4:5v
sills II and I2.
In this space, the blower 3l blows the air through the partition 32 and in to the space 33 which contains heating elements 34. These elements 34 may be the resistors for an electric mo- 50 tor 35.
The cross sills II and I2 are each open at 23 and 24 respectively to the space 34 and receive the ilow of air therefrom. Within the ducts II and I2 are.the dampers 25 and' 26 respectively which 56 It will be noted that the side sill I8 does not -communicate directly with the ducts I and I3 nor does the side sill I1 communicate with the ducts 6 and III.
The numeral 29 indicates the level of the floor 36. Since the warm air is inletted to the' body at only one side, it has been found advantageous to provide openings 28 in the opposite sill members Il, I5 and I6 whereby air from the' openings 21 is induced to travel across the floor of the car.
If desired, the auxiliary heater coils 30 may be added so that they may be turned on thermostatically or manually when the elements 23 are giving insuiiicient heat. These elements 30 may be suitably placed in the ducts I1 and I8.
Figure 6 is a schematic drawing of my system and bears numerals corresponding to the numerals on the remaining iigures in order to illustrate operation.
What I claim is:
1. In a vehicle body, a frame comprising side girders each of hollow construction, vertical air ducts leading from points adjacent the roof of the body into the girders along one side of said frame, a heating device, a blower for drawing air downwardly through said ducts and through said heating device, and means for conducting the air from said device into the side girders at the other side of said frame, said last named girders having outlets along the length thereof into the interior of said body.
2. In a vehicle body, a body frame comprising side girders and cross sills each of hollow construction, vertical air ducts in-the body open at their upper end and in communication with the interior of at least some of said cross sills and at least one of said side girders, a heating device, a blower for drawing air downwardly through said ducts, through the side girder and cross sills in communication therewith and through said heating device, and means for conducting the air from said heating device into the other of said side girders, said last named side girders having openings along the length thereof for emission of the air into said body adjacent the floor thereof.
3. In a vehicle body, a body frame comprising hollow side girders, a roof, hollow pier posts for supporting said roof from said side girders, hollow cross sills connecting said side girders, said pier posts being open at the top thereof and in communication at their bottom with some of said cross sills and at least one of said side girders, a heating device, and a blower for drawing air downwardly through said pier posts, through the cross sills and side girders in communication therewith and through said heating device, and means for conducting the air from said heating device through the other side girders, said other side girders having vents opening into the interior of said car body.
4. A vehicle body comprising longitudinal members and hollow cross sills near the center of the body connecting said members, a compartment, said sills constituting two walls of the compartment of equal depth therewith, electrical resistors in said compartment, one of said sills beingl open to said compartment and constituting an air inlet means, the other of said sills being open to said compartment and constituting an air outlet means, and means conducting the air from said outlet means to the interior of said body.
EMIL H. PIRON.
US84732A 1936-06-11 1936-06-11 Body construction and heating and ventilating system Expired - Lifetime US2178644A (en)

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Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2427649A (en) * 1939-12-01 1947-09-16 Budd Co Vehicle body, especially roof structure for busses
US2476368A (en) * 1946-08-03 1949-07-19 Marmon Herrington Co Inc Deflecting separator air scoop for ventilating closed vehicles
US2516666A (en) * 1946-06-03 1950-07-25 Lindsay M Applegate Heating system
US2593094A (en) * 1945-05-03 1952-04-15 Transit Res Corp Heating and ventilating system
US2640409A (en) * 1949-06-03 1953-06-02 Edmund E Hans Air freshening system
US2675998A (en) * 1950-06-10 1954-04-20 Budd Co Thermal conditioning means for enclosures
US2696774A (en) * 1950-01-12 1954-12-14 Gen Motors Corp Automobile heating and ventilating system
US2791670A (en) * 1955-12-22 1957-05-07 Honeywell Regulator Co Air-conditioning system
US3291026A (en) * 1964-03-23 1966-12-13 Dewane B Simpson Combination air distribution and structural support assembly for housing
US20090152934A1 (en) * 2007-12-13 2009-06-18 Devries Roelof Heated truck body

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2427649A (en) * 1939-12-01 1947-09-16 Budd Co Vehicle body, especially roof structure for busses
US2593094A (en) * 1945-05-03 1952-04-15 Transit Res Corp Heating and ventilating system
US2516666A (en) * 1946-06-03 1950-07-25 Lindsay M Applegate Heating system
US2476368A (en) * 1946-08-03 1949-07-19 Marmon Herrington Co Inc Deflecting separator air scoop for ventilating closed vehicles
US2640409A (en) * 1949-06-03 1953-06-02 Edmund E Hans Air freshening system
US2696774A (en) * 1950-01-12 1954-12-14 Gen Motors Corp Automobile heating and ventilating system
US2675998A (en) * 1950-06-10 1954-04-20 Budd Co Thermal conditioning means for enclosures
US2791670A (en) * 1955-12-22 1957-05-07 Honeywell Regulator Co Air-conditioning system
US3291026A (en) * 1964-03-23 1966-12-13 Dewane B Simpson Combination air distribution and structural support assembly for housing
US20090152934A1 (en) * 2007-12-13 2009-06-18 Devries Roelof Heated truck body

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