US2780978A - Ventilator rain baffle for roof eaves - Google Patents

Ventilator rain baffle for roof eaves Download PDF

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US2780978A
US2780978A US381369A US38136953A US2780978A US 2780978 A US2780978 A US 2780978A US 381369 A US381369 A US 381369A US 38136953 A US38136953 A US 38136953A US 2780978 A US2780978 A US 2780978A
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sheet
ventilator
roof
sheets
nozzles
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US381369A
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Harold T Peirson
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04DROOF COVERINGS; SKY-LIGHTS; GUTTERS; ROOF-WORKING TOOLS
    • E04D13/00Special arrangements or devices in connection with roof coverings; Protection against birds; Roof drainage ; Sky-lights
    • E04D13/15Trimming strips; Edge strips; Fascias; Expansion joints for roofs
    • E04D13/152Trimming strips; Edge strips; Fascias; Expansion joints for roofs with ventilating means in soffits or fascias

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  • HIS A TOBNEY HA 0L0 T.
  • This invention relates to a rain water battle for roof eave ventilators.
  • Prior cave ventilators of which 1 am aware have hither to consisted of longitudinal rectangular openings left in the soifit members of conventional roof overhanging eaves to permit the circulation of air through roof spaces. These openings are usually covered with screen or mesh fabric to exclude insects and vermin from overhead roof or attic structures.
  • a disadvantage resulting from the foregoing vent construction is that wind-driven rains which impinge on the underside of the eaves are impelled through these openings into overhead roof spaces and cause damage to plaster ceilings, the fastenings imbedded therein, electric wiring and devices, non-conductor pipe covering, and house furnishings.
  • householders are known to board up these openings thereby increasing the hazards developing from vacuums resulting when air circulation through the roof openings becomes obstructed during high velocity wind and rainstorms without venting the roof spaces to atmosphere.
  • An object of the invention is to provide a bafiie for eave ventilators capable of excluding rain water driven by high velocity winds, without obstructing air circulation through roof spaces.
  • a further object is to provide ventilator construction of the character described which may be easy to install, is efficient in operation, capable of ready and economical manufacture, and is simple in assembly.
  • Fig. 1 a plan of the baflfle assembly
  • Fig. 3A a fractional sectional elevation through a modified form of the device
  • Fig. 4 a fractional sectional elevation through the nozzle passages
  • Fig. 5 a sectional elevation through the baffle installed in an eave sofiit
  • the rain bafiie (Figs. 1 and 3), comprises a pair of horizontally-disposed plates or sheets spaced apart vertically to form a top inner sheet 1 and a bottom outer or Weather sheet 2.
  • the inner sheet 1 may be bent along the side marginal edges thereof to provide a pair of opposed side walls 3. These side walls are adapted to embrace therebetween a complementary pair of side walls or flanges 4, formed by bendin the outer sheet 2 along its side marginal edges, the flanges 4 abutting the inner faces of the side walls 3 in clamped engagement therewith whereby the sheets 1 and 2 may be held in substantially fixed superposed relation.
  • These sheets may be formed out of any suitable 2,780,978 Patented Feb. 12, 1957 material conventional in the roofing art, such as sheet metal, painted over or galvanized, or out of any ofthe common industrial plastics possessing characteristics of rigidity and workability to permit the employment thereof 5 for the purpose of ductility hereinafter more specifically described.
  • the Sheets are each perforated to provide therein a plurality of orifices, therethrough as at 5 in the inner sheet 1, and at 6 in the outer sheet 2 (Fig. 1), the orifices in one sheet being ofiset in staggered relation to those of the other sheet.
  • nozzles which finish preferably conical in form, may be terminated at their extremities in serrated or jagged-edged peripheries, as at 9, Fig. 7. These serrations may be formed as the natural efiect of the punching operation to perforate the baflie sheets, the walls of the nozzles breaking about their peripheral or circumferential extremities at the bottom thereof as a result of drawing out the metal or material by the punching tool.
  • Fig. 5 Roof eaves framing of a conventional type is illustrated in Fig. 5, there being an eave space E defined by a roof covering R thereover and a sofiit member S therebelow.
  • the baffle is preferably constructed to sizes permitting its installation in the usual ventilator openings provided along the sofiit members S, these openings being heretofore merely covered with a screen sheeting for the exclusion of insects and vermin from the roof spaces overhead.
  • the side walls 3 may include a pair of out-turned retaining flanges 10 formed integrally therewith along the bottom edges thereof (Fig. 3), and the bafiie may be secured in place in the soffit member (Fig. 5), by suitable fastenings 11 attaching the baflle assembly thereto.
  • An insect screen member 12 is arranged along the bottom of the bafiie, the side marginal edge portions 13 of this screen being held between adjacent side walls 3 and 4.
  • the material from which the bafile is constructed should permit the bending thereof for the formation of the side walls, these walls coming together in substantial clamping relation to hold the bafile assembly and screen thereunder in structural assembly within the sofiit ventilator openings.
  • Other means will readily occur to those skilled in the art for securing the bafiie sheets .1 and 2 and the screen held thereunder, without departing from the spirit of the invention.
  • the invention will thus be seen to provide a baffle structure installable in roof eaves framing, capable of substantially preventing or minimizing the admission of wind-driven rain water through ventilator openings to overhead roof spaces.
  • water impelled by the high velocity winds common in storm and hurricane localities, and entering the nozzles 8, indicated by arrows in the course of its movement, is
  • nozzles may take various shapes with out departing from the spirit of my invention, a modification being illustrated in Fig. 6, in which the nozzle 14 is extended from a downwardly directed concavo-convex blister 15 formed in the upper sheet 1, for example.
  • rain i 3 V r Fig. 3A depicts a'rnodified arrangement ot the per forated sheets 1 and 2 wherein the wall flanges 4 of the bottom sheet are turned upwardly to space the sheets insuperposed? relationi 'In thistbir'n; the out-turned flanges 1fl"n1ay' be'lapped underltcj provide a clincher groove receiving the marginal""side-portions 13' of the filamentary screen 12 whereby to permit a relatively compactassembly otthe bathe unit.
  • T t f ' The device is'thus seen to be substantially free from maintenance demands and may be easily installed to the 7 regular dimensions'e'ncountered in the architectural and.
  • Airpass'a'ges through the nozzle structure convey vacuum'b'r'eaking'air to insure the complete venting of roof spacesto 'atmosphereduring tropical'storms and hurricanes 3 l V j V 5
  • the invention'is susceptible of various modiits practice, what-l claim as new and desire to secure'by Letters 'Patent, 'is: 7
  • orifices in one sheet being staggered in relation to those in the other sheet, a corresponding plurality of nozzles I formed integrally with said sheets and extending downwardly there'frornto define said orifices at the top of the nozzles, the bottom ends of said' nozzles in the upper sheet terminating in spaced relation to the sheet therebelow and the downward extension of said nozzles being not less than the greatest diameter therethrough, and

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  • Architecture (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Catching Or Destruction (AREA)

Description

Feb. 12, 1957 PElRsQN 2,780,9i8
VENTILATOR RAIN BAFFLE FOR ROOF EAVES Filed Sept. 21, 1953 2 Sheets-Sheet l INVENTOR.
HIS A TOBNEY HA 0L0 T. PEIRSON BY wlm 2,780,978 VENTlLATOR RAM RAFFLE FOR ROOF EAVES Harold T. Peirson, Miami, Fla.
Application September 21, 1953, Serial No. 381,369
4 Claims. (Cl. 98-37) This invention relates to a rain water battle for roof eave ventilators.
Prior cave ventilators of which 1 am aware have hither to consisted of longitudinal rectangular openings left in the soifit members of conventional roof overhanging eaves to permit the circulation of air through roof spaces. These openings are usually covered with screen or mesh fabric to exclude insects and vermin from overhead roof or attic structures.
A disadvantage resulting from the foregoing vent construction is that wind-driven rains which impinge on the underside of the eaves are impelled through these openings into overhead roof spaces and cause damage to plaster ceilings, the fastenings imbedded therein, electric wiring and devices, non-conductor pipe covering, and house furnishings. In tropical storm areas, householders are known to board up these openings thereby increasing the hazards developing from vacuums resulting when air circulation through the roof openings becomes obstructed during high velocity wind and rainstorms without venting the roof spaces to atmosphere.
An object of the invention is to provide a bafiie for eave ventilators capable of excluding rain water driven by high velocity winds, without obstructing air circulation through roof spaces.
A further object is to provide ventilator construction of the character described which may be easy to install, is efficient in operation, capable of ready and economical manufacture, and is simple in assembly.
Other advantages of the invention will be discernible from the detailed description thereof to be hereinafter set forth.
The invention is embodied in a baflie structure exemplified by the accompanying drawings in which the views are as follows, like reference numerals designating identical parts throughout the several views:
Fig. 1, a plan of the baflfle assembly;
Figs. 2 and 3, side and end elevations thereof;
Fig. 3A, a fractional sectional elevation through a modified form of the device;
Fig. 4, a fractional sectional elevation through the nozzle passages;
Fig. 5, a sectional elevation through the baffle installed in an eave sofiit; and
Figs. 6 and 7, modifications of nozzle forms employed with the baffle.
The rain bafiie (Figs. 1 and 3), comprises a pair of horizontally-disposed plates or sheets spaced apart vertically to form a top inner sheet 1 and a bottom outer or Weather sheet 2.
The inner sheet 1 may be bent along the side marginal edges thereof to provide a pair of opposed side walls 3. These side walls are adapted to embrace therebetween a complementary pair of side walls or flanges 4, formed by bendin the outer sheet 2 along its side marginal edges, the flanges 4 abutting the inner faces of the side walls 3 in clamped engagement therewith whereby the sheets 1 and 2 may be held in substantially fixed superposed relation. These sheets may be formed out of any suitable 2,780,978 Patented Feb. 12, 1957 material conventional in the roofing art, such as sheet metal, painted over or galvanized, or out of any ofthe common industrial plastics possessing characteristics of rigidity and workability to permit the employment thereof 5 for the purpose of ductility hereinafter more specifically described. c
The Sheets are each perforated to provide therein a plurality of orifices, therethrough as at 5 in the inner sheet 1, and at 6 in the outer sheet 2 (Fig. 1), the orifices in one sheet being ofiset in staggered relation to those of the other sheet.
by punching, the punched out material being drawn or extended from the orifices defining the same to form corresponding downwardly-directed nozzles as at 7 in the inner sheet 1, and at 8 in the outer sheet 2 (Fig. 4). The nozzles, which finish preferably conical in form, may be terminated at their extremities in serrated or jagged-edged peripheries, as at 9, Fig. 7. These serrations may be formed as the natural efiect of the punching operation to perforate the baflie sheets, the walls of the nozzles breaking about their peripheral or circumferential extremities at the bottom thereof as a result of drawing out the metal or material by the punching tool.
Roof eaves framing of a conventional type is illustrated in Fig. 5, there being an eave space E defined by a roof covering R thereover and a sofiit member S therebelow. The baffle is preferably constructed to sizes permitting its installation in the usual ventilator openings provided along the sofiit members S, these openings being heretofore merely covered with a screen sheeting for the exclusion of insects and vermin from the roof spaces overhead. The side walls 3 may include a pair of out-turned retaining flanges 10 formed integrally therewith along the bottom edges thereof (Fig. 3), and the bafiie may be secured in place in the soffit member (Fig. 5), by suitable fastenings 11 attaching the baflle assembly thereto. An insect screen member 12 is arranged along the bottom of the bafiie, the side marginal edge portions 13 of this screen being held between adjacent side walls 3 and 4. it will, of course, be understood that the material from which the bafile is constructed should permit the bending thereof for the formation of the side walls, these walls coming together in substantial clamping relation to hold the bafile assembly and screen thereunder in structural assembly within the sofiit ventilator openings. Other means will readily occur to those skilled in the art for securing the bafiie sheets .1 and 2 and the screen held thereunder, without departing from the spirit of the invention. p
The invention will thus be seen to provide a baffle structure installable in roof eaves framing, capable of substantially preventing or minimizing the admission of wind-driven rain water through ventilator openings to overhead roof spaces. water impelled by the high velocity winds common in storm and hurricane localities, and entering the nozzles 8, indicated by arrows in the course of its movement, is
deflected, by virtue of the staggered relation of nozzles 7 and 3, against wall surfaces of the nozzles 7 and the unperforated sheet surfaces therebetween, water then draining for example through orifices 6 and nozzles 8 without entering roof spaces overhead.
Again, when upwardly directed jets of rain water strike against the serrated, jagged-edged peripheral extremities 9, Fig. 7, these streams tend to fractionate into relatively smaller jets, impinging against non-perforate under surfaces of the upper sheet 1 and nozzle walls depending therefrom. .The nozzles may take various shapes with out departing from the spirit of my invention, a modification being illustrated in Fig. 6, in which the nozzle 14 is extended from a downwardly directed concavo-convex blister 15 formed in the upper sheet 1, for example.
These perforations may bev eifected in any suitable manner known in the art, as
As best shown in Fig. 4, rain i 3 V r Fig. 3A depicts a'rnodified arrangement ot the per forated sheets 1 and 2 wherein the wall flanges 4 of the bottom sheet are turned upwardly to space the sheets insuperposed? relationi 'In thistbir'n; the out-turned flanges 1fl"n1ay' be'lapped underltcj provide a clincher groove receiving the marginal""side-portions 13' of the filamentary screen 12 whereby to permit a relatively compactassembly otthe bathe unit. T t f 'The device is'thus seen to be substantially free from maintenance demands and may be easily installed to the 7 regular dimensions'e'ncountered in the architectural and.
' building arts.-
Airpass'a'ges through the nozzle structure convey vacuum'b'r'eaking'air to insure the complete venting of roof spacesto 'atmosphereduring tropical'storms and hurricanes 3 l V j V 5 Of course, the invention'is susceptible of various modiits practice, what-l claim as new and desire to secure'by Letters 'Patent, 'is: 7
Ina rainwater baflle for an eave ventilator opening frame, the combination therewith'of a pair of horizontally-disposed and vertically spaced superposed sheets meanssecuring sm'd sheets in vertically-spaced relation fic ations' 'and changes in design Without departing from j the scope thereof-as hereinafter claimed. V p Having thus described theinvention and the mode of v each having a pluralityof orifices formed therein, the
orifices in one sheet being staggered in relation to those in the other sheet, a corresponding plurality of nozzles I formed integrally with said sheets and extending downwardly there'frornto define said orifices at the top of the nozzles, the bottom ends of said' nozzles in the upper sheet terminating in spaced relation to the sheet therebelow and the downward extension of said nozzles being not less than the greatest diameter therethrough, and
' with said frame.
and in said ventilator opening frame.
2. The invention as defined in, claim 1, and: a horizontal filamentary screen arranged below said lower sheet and spaced thereunder and means securing said screen in said frame.
3. The invention as defined in claim 11, and: said nozzles terminating. at the bottomends thereof in peripheral 'serrated'edges, a filamentary screen associated with the baffle harmed by said sheets, in spaced relation thereto and therebeloiw, means securing said screen in assembly j 4. The invention as defined in claim '1, and: said sheets having sidemarginal wall fl anges formed integrally therewithcand the flanges of the upper sheet being adapted to embrace the flanges. of the lower sheet, said nozzles terminating. at their'tbottomends in; peripheral serrated edges, 2. filamentary screen associated with the baifie formed by said sheets in spaced relation thereto and therebelow, me ans securing said baflie tosaid opening frame. V 7
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS detai
US381369A 1953-09-21 1953-09-21 Ventilator rain baffle for roof eaves Expired - Lifetime US2780978A (en)

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Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2991709A (en) * 1958-07-17 1961-07-11 Donald V Haddix Ventilated soffit construction
US3051071A (en) * 1958-04-16 1962-08-28 Air Control Products Inc Soffit ventilated attics and ventilator members therefor
US3125942A (en) * 1964-03-24 Soffit ventilator
US3174421A (en) * 1962-10-08 1965-03-23 John J Gray Ventilated plastered soffit construction
US3188938A (en) * 1963-06-12 1965-06-15 Edward C Hallock Ventilating device
US3256654A (en) * 1962-04-26 1966-06-21 Jr Eustace B Pinckney Soffit supporting fitting
US3404619A (en) * 1966-05-18 1968-10-08 Topp Wilhelm Friedrich Roof ventilator with nozzled domed end
US11408179B2 (en) 2018-09-26 2022-08-09 James Robert Lyons Soffit vent

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1874083A (en) * 1927-11-16 1932-08-30 Clay Equipment Corp Ventilating device
US2408665A (en) * 1943-11-15 1946-10-01 Elmer R Lovely Chimney top
GB586341A (en) * 1942-12-19 1947-03-14 Svenska Flaektfabriken Ab Improvements in or relating to ventilation plants
GB599418A (en) * 1945-11-14 1948-03-11 Leonard Gordon Davies Improvements relating to ventilators
US2529462A (en) * 1947-07-11 1950-11-07 Painter Corp E Z Ventilator
CA498203A (en) * 1953-12-08 Campbell John Attic ventilation of buildings
US2676554A (en) * 1952-03-18 1954-04-27 Homer D Wenger Roof edge trim

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CA498203A (en) * 1953-12-08 Campbell John Attic ventilation of buildings
US1874083A (en) * 1927-11-16 1932-08-30 Clay Equipment Corp Ventilating device
GB586341A (en) * 1942-12-19 1947-03-14 Svenska Flaektfabriken Ab Improvements in or relating to ventilation plants
US2408665A (en) * 1943-11-15 1946-10-01 Elmer R Lovely Chimney top
GB599418A (en) * 1945-11-14 1948-03-11 Leonard Gordon Davies Improvements relating to ventilators
US2529462A (en) * 1947-07-11 1950-11-07 Painter Corp E Z Ventilator
US2676554A (en) * 1952-03-18 1954-04-27 Homer D Wenger Roof edge trim

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3125942A (en) * 1964-03-24 Soffit ventilator
US3051071A (en) * 1958-04-16 1962-08-28 Air Control Products Inc Soffit ventilated attics and ventilator members therefor
US2991709A (en) * 1958-07-17 1961-07-11 Donald V Haddix Ventilated soffit construction
US3256654A (en) * 1962-04-26 1966-06-21 Jr Eustace B Pinckney Soffit supporting fitting
US3174421A (en) * 1962-10-08 1965-03-23 John J Gray Ventilated plastered soffit construction
US3188938A (en) * 1963-06-12 1965-06-15 Edward C Hallock Ventilating device
US3404619A (en) * 1966-05-18 1968-10-08 Topp Wilhelm Friedrich Roof ventilator with nozzled domed end
US11408179B2 (en) 2018-09-26 2022-08-09 James Robert Lyons Soffit vent
US11885133B2 (en) 2018-09-26 2024-01-30 James Robert Lyons Soffit vent

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