US2428466A - Displacement electric water heater - Google Patents

Displacement electric water heater Download PDF

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Publication number
US2428466A
US2428466A US538163A US53816344A US2428466A US 2428466 A US2428466 A US 2428466A US 538163 A US538163 A US 538163A US 53816344 A US53816344 A US 53816344A US 2428466 A US2428466 A US 2428466A
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Prior art keywords
tank
water
casing
water heater
receptacle
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Expired - Lifetime
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US538163A
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Palm Frederick
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AO Smith Corp
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AO Smith Corp
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24HFLUID HEATERS, e.g. WATER OR AIR HEATERS, HAVING HEAT-GENERATING MEANS, e.g. HEAT PUMPS, IN GENERAL
    • F24H1/00Water heaters, e.g. boilers, continuous-flow heaters or water-storage heaters
    • F24H1/18Water-storage heaters
    • F24H1/20Water-storage heaters with immersed heating elements, e.g. electric elements or furnace tubes
    • F24H1/201Water-storage heaters with immersed heating elements, e.g. electric elements or furnace tubes using electric energy supply
    • F24H1/202Water-storage heaters with immersed heating elements, e.g. electric elements or furnace tubes using electric energy supply with resistances

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a water heater and more particularly to a water heater that is operable by gravity pressure to enable employment thereof in locations where pressure from water mains is not available.
  • One object of the invention is to provide a water heater that can be fabricated at low cost.
  • Another object is to provide a water heater that is readily portable from place to place.
  • a further object is to provide a water heater that is capable of withstanding hard use in serv-
  • the single figure of the drawing is a vertical sectional view of a gravity water heater constructed in accordance with the invention.
  • a water heater comprising in general a sheet metal storage tank I separated from an external casing 2 b insulation 3 to insulate against loss of heat.
  • Any suitable unit to heat the water in the tank may be disposed at or near the bottom of the tank.
  • the unit shown consists of an electric heating element 4 and thermostat 5.
  • the storage tank l is preferably of cylindrical contour and may be provided with spud 6 in the lower end ortion to receive the cold water inlet pipe 1 and with spud 8 in the upper end portion to receive the hot water outlet pipe 9.
  • Spuds 6 and 8 may if desired, be disposed in the side walls of the tank rather than in the respective ends thereof.
  • the tank is protected against corrosion from contained liquid by galvanizing or any other suit-- able lining, or it may be constructed of a noncorrosive alloy metal.
  • the casing 2 comprises a cylindrical body section I0, and a bottom II.
  • the casing bottom I! has a suitable opening to provide access to the electric heating unit, the thermostat 5 and a drain I2 which may be interposed in the inlet pipe I to drain the contents of tank l if desired.
  • a cover I3 provided for the casing 2 is of panshape having a body wall portion I4 projecting upwardly a substantial distance to provide a pan or receptacle to temporarily confine the feed water for tank I.
  • the pan-shaped cover I3 may be secured to the casing body section I in any suitable manner such as by a yielding slip joint I to thereby make the cover of the casing freely removable.
  • the casing cover I3 is provided with an outlet which in general comprises a tapered nipple I6 secured within a suitable opening in the bottom of the cover.
  • the nipple I6 is preferably located 2 at a position opposite the location of hot water outlet 9.
  • Nipple I6 is complementary to and fits within the upper flared end of inlet pipe I and a suitable seal between the pipe and nipple may be provided such as a rubber bushing I1. The seal employed permits ready removal of easing cover I3.
  • Inlet pipe 1 extends downward between tank I and easing 2 within insulation 3 from nipple I6 in cover I3 tospud 5, the latter being disposed in the lower end of the tank as illustrated or in the side of the tank adjacent the bottom or lower end thereof.
  • outlet pipe 9 which extends to the outside of the heater from spud 8 of tank I through insulation 3 and a suitable opening in casing 2.
  • the outer end of pipe 9 may be bent downwardly to siphon oii water from the top of the tank and provide a space for expansion while the water is being heated and thus prevent dripping from the outlet pipe when the hot water is not running out of the tank in service;
  • the tank I may be supported on bottom II by ring member I8 which also serves as an inner wall to define the insulation space.
  • the tank may be held in desired spaced relation to the casing I0 in any suitable manner such as by several spacer blocks I9.
  • the ring member I8 and the spacers I9 are preferably made of wood or other heat insulating material.
  • Legs 20 may be secured to the bottom I I to support the heater at a desired elevation from the floor and to provide access to the drain and thermostat adjustment.
  • the water heater of the invention is operated by first heating the water contained in tank I as by heating element 4. A quantity of cold water is then poured into the pan-shaped cover I3 of casing 2. Under the pressure of gravity the cold water in receptacle I3 and inlet pipe 1 flows into the bottom of tank I. The ingress of cold water into the bottom of the tank forces an egress of a similar quantity of hot water from the tank through outlet pipe 9. Similar subsequent discharges of hot water from outlet 9 may be obtained by pouring water into the panshaped cover I3 of easing 2 as described, the quantity of water poured into the cover determining the quantity of hot water discharged from pipe 9.
  • the water heater of the invention provides a low cost, light weight unit that finds ready employment, such as in the dairy industry and the like, where it is desirable to have a portable water heating unit that is inexpensive and capable of withstanding hard use in service.
  • a water heater comprising a substantially cylindrical water tank, an external casing spaced from said tank and disposed to confine insulating material therebetween, a freely removable Water receptacle provided as the top enclosure or cover for said casing, insulating material surrounding said tank inside said casing and overlying the topof the tank beneath said receptacle, and a water inlet pipe disposed in the insulating material between the spaced vertical walls of the tank and casing and secured at its lower end within an opening in the lower end portion of and connected by a slip joint at water receptacle to convey water from said receptacle to the bottom of said tank, said receptacle being freely removable from said casing and said inlet pipe for cleaning and leaving said insulation on the water tank to protect the latter from heat loss.
  • a water heater comprising a substantially cylindrical water tank, an external casing spaced therefrom and disposed to confine insulating material therebetween, a water receptacle of generally pan-shape provided as the top enclosure or cover for said casing, insulating material sur rounding said tank inside said casing and overlying the top of the tank beneath said receptacle, said receptacle being secured to said casing by a yielding slip joint for ready removal and having an outlet opening in the bottom thereof, near one side, a tapered nipple member disposed within said outlet opening and projecting downwardly, and a cold Water inlet pipe disposed in the insulating material between the spaced vertical walls of the tank and casing and secured at its lower end within an inlet opening at the bottom of the water tank and tapered at its upper end to receive said tapered nipple member to thereby removably connect said receptacle to said pipe without interfering with the free removal of said receptacle from the casing and the pipe.
  • a water heater comprising a substantially cylindrical water tank, an external casing spaced from said tank, insulating material disposed between the water tank and said casing, a removable cover for said casing comprising a water receptacle resting thereon, insulating material filling said casing over the top of said tank to insulate the latter from said receptacle, a heating unit provided at the bottom of said tank to heat the water contained in the tank, a hot water outlet pipe secured within an opening in the upper end portion of the water tank and extending through the casing wall, and a cold water inlet pipe disposed in the insulating material between the spaced vertical Walls of the casing and tank and extending from said water receptacle to the bottom of the tank to convey cold water from the receptacle to the bottom of the tank and effect discharge of hot water from the outlet pipe at the top of the tank, said receptacle being freely removable from said casing and inlet pipe for cleaning purposes Without disturbing the insulation on top of the tank.

Description

INVENTOR.
ATTORNEY.
Frederick Palm F. PALM Filed May 31, 1944 Oct. 7, 1947.
DISPLACEMENT ELECTRIC WATER HEATER of light weight construction Patented Oct. 7, 1947 2,428,466 DISPLACEMENT ELECTRIC WATER HEATER Frederick Palm, Shorewood, A. 0. Smith Corporation,
Wis., assignor to Milwaukee, Wis., a
corporation of New York Application May 31, 1944, Serial No. 538,163
3 Claims. 1
This invention relates to a water heater and more particularly to a water heater that is operable by gravity pressure to enable employment thereof in locations where pressure from water mains is not available.
One object of the invention is to provide a water heater that can be fabricated at low cost.
Another object is to provide a water heater that is readily portable from place to place.
A further object is to provide a water heater that is capable of withstanding hard use in serv- Other objects and advantages of the invention will appear in the following description and accompanying drawing illustrating an embodiment of the invention.
The single figure of the drawing is a vertical sectional view of a gravity water heater constructed in accordance with the invention.
Referring to the drawing there is illustrated a water heater comprising in general a sheet metal storage tank I separated from an external casing 2 b insulation 3 to insulate against loss of heat. Any suitable unit to heat the water in the tank may be disposed at or near the bottom of the tank. The unit shown consists of an electric heating element 4 and thermostat 5.
The storage tank l is preferably of cylindrical contour and may be provided with spud 6 in the lower end ortion to receive the cold water inlet pipe 1 and with spud 8 in the upper end portion to receive the hot water outlet pipe 9. Spuds 6 and 8 may if desired, be disposed in the side walls of the tank rather than in the respective ends thereof.
The tank is protected against corrosion from contained liquid by galvanizing or any other suit-- able lining, or it may be constructed of a noncorrosive alloy metal.
The casing 2 comprises a cylindrical body section I0, and a bottom II.
The casing bottom I! has a suitable opening to provide access to the electric heating unit, the thermostat 5 and a drain I2 which may be interposed in the inlet pipe I to drain the contents of tank l if desired.
A cover I3 provided for the casing 2 is of panshape having a body wall portion I4 projecting upwardly a substantial distance to provide a pan or receptacle to temporarily confine the feed water for tank I. The pan-shaped cover I3 may be secured to the casing body section I in any suitable manner such as by a yielding slip joint I to thereby make the cover of the casing freely removable.
The casing cover I3 is provided with an outlet which in general comprises a tapered nipple I6 secured within a suitable opening in the bottom of the cover. The nipple I6 is preferably located 2 at a position opposite the location of hot water outlet 9.
Nipple I6 is complementary to and fits within the upper flared end of inlet pipe I and a suitable seal between the pipe and nipple may be provided such as a rubber bushing I1. The seal employed permits ready removal of easing cover I3.
Inlet pipe 1 extends downward between tank I and easing 2 within insulation 3 from nipple I6 in cover I3 tospud 5, the latter being disposed in the lower end of the tank as illustrated or in the side of the tank adjacent the bottom or lower end thereof. By bringing the pipe into tank I in the manner described the inflowing cold water enters the coolest water at the bottom of the tank without flowing through a pipe passing through the hot water at the top of the tank. This results in little loss of heat due to conduction.
The discharge of hot water from the tank I is accomplished through outlet pipe 9 which extends to the outside of the heater from spud 8 of tank I through insulation 3 and a suitable opening in casing 2. The outer end of pipe 9 may be bent downwardly to siphon oii water from the top of the tank and provide a space for expansion while the water is being heated and thus prevent dripping from the outlet pipe when the hot water is not running out of the tank in service;
The tank I may be supported on bottom II by ring member I8 which also serves as an inner wall to define the insulation space. The tank may be held in desired spaced relation to the casing I0 in any suitable manner such as by several spacer blocks I9. The ring member I8 and the spacers I9 are preferably made of wood or other heat insulating material. Legs 20 may be secured to the bottom I I to support the heater at a desired elevation from the floor and to provide access to the drain and thermostat adjustment.
The water heater of the invention is operated by first heating the water contained in tank I as by heating element 4. A quantity of cold water is then poured into the pan-shaped cover I3 of casing 2. Under the pressure of gravity the cold water in receptacle I3 and inlet pipe 1 flows into the bottom of tank I. The ingress of cold water into the bottom of the tank forces an egress of a similar quantity of hot water from the tank through outlet pipe 9. Similar subsequent discharges of hot water from outlet 9 may be obtained by pouring water into the panshaped cover I3 of easing 2 as described, the quantity of water poured into the cover determining the quantity of hot water discharged from pipe 9.
The water heater of the invention provides a low cost, light weight unit that finds ready employment, such as in the dairy industry and the like, where it is desirable to have a portable water heating unit that is inexpensive and capable of withstanding hard use in service.
Various embodiments of the invention may be employed within the scope of the accompanying claims.
I claim:
1. A water heater comprising a substantially cylindrical water tank, an external casing spaced from said tank and disposed to confine insulating material therebetween, a freely removable Water receptacle provided as the top enclosure or cover for said casing, insulating material surrounding said tank inside said casing and overlying the topof the tank beneath said receptacle, and a water inlet pipe disposed in the insulating material between the spaced vertical walls of the tank and casing and secured at its lower end within an opening in the lower end portion of and connected by a slip joint at water receptacle to convey water from said receptacle to the bottom of said tank, said receptacle being freely removable from said casing and said inlet pipe for cleaning and leaving said insulation on the water tank to protect the latter from heat loss.
2. A water heater comprising a substantially cylindrical water tank, an external casing spaced therefrom and disposed to confine insulating material therebetween, a water receptacle of generally pan-shape provided as the top enclosure or cover for said casing, insulating material sur rounding said tank inside said casing and overlying the top of the tank beneath said receptacle, said receptacle being secured to said casing by a yielding slip joint for ready removal and having an outlet opening in the bottom thereof, near one side, a tapered nipple member disposed within said outlet opening and projecting downwardly, and a cold Water inlet pipe disposed in the insulating material between the spaced vertical walls of the tank and casing and secured at its lower end within an inlet opening at the bottom of the water tank and tapered at its upper end to receive said tapered nipple member to thereby removably connect said receptacle to said pipe without interfering with the free removal of said receptacle from the casing and the pipe.
3. A water heater comprising a substantially cylindrical water tank, an external casing spaced from said tank, insulating material disposed between the water tank and said casing, a removable cover for said casing comprising a water receptacle resting thereon, insulating material filling said casing over the top of said tank to insulate the latter from said receptacle, a heating unit provided at the bottom of said tank to heat the water contained in the tank, a hot water outlet pipe secured within an opening in the upper end portion of the water tank and extending through the casing wall, and a cold water inlet pipe disposed in the insulating material between the spaced vertical Walls of the casing and tank and extending from said water receptacle to the bottom of the tank to convey cold water from the receptacle to the bottom of the tank and effect discharge of hot water from the outlet pipe at the top of the tank, said receptacle being freely removable from said casing and inlet pipe for cleaning purposes Without disturbing the insulation on top of the tank.
FREDERICK PALM.
REFERENCES CITED l he following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 1,862,065 Rowe June '7, 1932 1,329,204 Patterson Jan. 27, 1920 1,542,703 Kirkham Jan. 16, 1925 2,269,448 Ferris Jan. 13, 1942 2,299,053 Ferris Oct. 13, 1942
US538163A 1944-05-31 1944-05-31 Displacement electric water heater Expired - Lifetime US2428466A (en)

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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3231713A (en) * 1966-01-25 Liquid heater for vehicles
US4477399A (en) * 1982-06-16 1984-10-16 Gsw Inc. Method and apparatus for manufacturing a foam insulated water heater
US5029605A (en) * 1989-10-20 1991-07-09 Dowling Donald C Fluid vessel overflow system
US5218667A (en) * 1991-01-22 1993-06-08 Bunn-O-Matic Corporation Low-wattage electric displacement water heating apparatus
US7013841B1 (en) 2005-02-01 2006-03-21 Rheem Manufacturing Company Differently configured fuel-fired water heaters constructed from identical production platforms

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1329204A (en) * 1920-01-27 Electrical water-heater
US1542703A (en) * 1924-05-29 1925-06-16 Kirkham Walter Joseph Water closet
US1862065A (en) * 1930-07-09 1932-06-07 Electro Matic Mfg Co Inc Electric water heater
US2269448A (en) * 1940-03-27 1942-01-13 Starline Water heater
US2299053A (en) * 1941-06-25 1942-10-13 Starline Water heater

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1329204A (en) * 1920-01-27 Electrical water-heater
US1542703A (en) * 1924-05-29 1925-06-16 Kirkham Walter Joseph Water closet
US1862065A (en) * 1930-07-09 1932-06-07 Electro Matic Mfg Co Inc Electric water heater
US2269448A (en) * 1940-03-27 1942-01-13 Starline Water heater
US2299053A (en) * 1941-06-25 1942-10-13 Starline Water heater

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3231713A (en) * 1966-01-25 Liquid heater for vehicles
US4477399A (en) * 1982-06-16 1984-10-16 Gsw Inc. Method and apparatus for manufacturing a foam insulated water heater
US5029605A (en) * 1989-10-20 1991-07-09 Dowling Donald C Fluid vessel overflow system
US5218667A (en) * 1991-01-22 1993-06-08 Bunn-O-Matic Corporation Low-wattage electric displacement water heating apparatus
US7013841B1 (en) 2005-02-01 2006-03-21 Rheem Manufacturing Company Differently configured fuel-fired water heaters constructed from identical production platforms

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