Retaining Clip
The invention provides a sheet material retaining clip 10 to hold sheet material 25 onto a structure having a panel 20 and a frame member 21 adjacent the panel. The clip has an elongate base portion 12 adapted to be located in a gap 22 between the panel and the frame member to hold the clip in place. A middle portion 14 connects to an end of the base portion and extends at approximately right angles away from the panel, and a spring arm 15 is connected to the outer end of the middle portion and extends at an acute angle therefrom on the opposite side to the base portion. This allows it to bear on the sheet material to hold it against the panel. The invention also provided for the use of such a clip to connect insulating material to the sides of an aboveground pool.
The present invention relates to a sheet material retaining clip and in particular to a sheet retaining clip for use when insulating above ground swimming pools.
Above ground swimming pools are popular due to their ease of installation and low set up cost compared to fully installed pools. Such above ground pools, whether directly heated or benefiting from solar heating, are subject to heat loss and it is therefore advantageous to provide insulation over the primary area of loss. This primary area of loss is through evaporation from the surface of the water which is tackled by providing an insulating cover over the top of the pool. The next largest loss of heat is through the side walls of the pool and it has been suggested that these should also be insulated. To this time however, with the exception of our co-pending application No GB05 15274.9, no convenient or cost effective mechanisms have been provided for the attachment of insulating material to the sides of such above ground pools, and the present invention aims to address this problem. It is also advantageous in many situations to connect planar material such as decorations to panels.
Therefore, according to the present invention there is provided a sheet material retaining clip to hold sheet material onto a structure having a panel and a frame member adjacent the panel, the clip having an elongate base portion adapted to be located in a gap between the panel and the frame member to hold the clip in place without separate fixing means, a middle portion having an inner and an outer end, the inner end being connected to an end of the base portion and extending at approximately right angles away from the panel, and a spring arm connected to the outer end of the middle portion and extending at an acute angle therefrom on the opposite side to the base portion whereby it bears on the sheet material to hold it against the panel.
The base portion is usually generally planar, but the spring arm may take many suitable shapes or forms. For example the spring arm may comprise an inner portion that is connected to the base portion, which inner portion generally extends away from the panel, and an outer portion that extends from the end of the inner portion back toward the panel. This helps to ensure that there is enough flex in the material to permit the spring arm to clasp sheet material of a wide range of thicknesses. The inner portion preferably extends at approximately 90° to the base portion to which it is attached.
The clip of the present invention may be retained between the frame member and the panel by any suitable mechanism or means, but usually the base portion is shaped and sized to fit snugly in the gap between them. The gap is often small or non-existent in normal use, but a degree of flexibility in the panel and/or frame member will allow the gap to open or widen slightly on insertion of the base portion. Usually insertion is achieved by a simple lateral sliding movement and removal by the reverse sliding movement. It is preferred, especially where the frame member is a hollow three sided section (as is often the case with the frame members of above ground pools), or where some form of widening of the gap occurs directly behind the frame member that an additional retaining mechanism be provided. To achieve this, the base portion may have a tang or other suitable detent that resists removal of the base portion from between the panel and frame member. This may take the form of a tongue cut from the base portion and subsequently bent out of the plane.
The raised frame members are often in the form of elongate bars, positioned on, or very close to the surface of the panel to be insulated. The panels and frame members on which the clip is used may be more closely attached as long as suitable gaps are available to locate the base portion of the clip.
The clip of the present invention can be used to attach planar or sheet-like insulating material to a variety of structures including in particular above ground swimming pools. Such above ground pools comprise an open topped tank with side walls, the side walls being generally flat but usually having raised vertical bars to provide reinforcement to the structure. The present invention may also be used to attach rigid or flexible sheet material to other appropriate structures such as greenhouses or conservatories. With greenhouses and conservatories the glass panels are connected to a support structure which often has raised bars between the panes. The clips may be located behind the raised bars to connect the sheet material.
Preferably, the clips are formed from a strip of metal bent to the correct profile. Moulded plastics material can also be used to form the clips. It is preferred that the base portion and spring arm are formed from a single strip of resilient material. The free end of the spring arm may be curled away from the panel, when located there against, as this aids positioning of the sheet material.
The present invention also provides the use of such a clip to connect sheet-like insulating material to an above ground pool.
As discussed above the clip may also be used for connecting sheet material to structures such as greenhouses and conservatories, but it has been found to be particularly advantageous for connecting insulating material to the sides of above ground pools. The clip may be used to attach a variety of flexible sheet material to structures. The term insulation material as used herein encompasses both material intended to keep heat in but also material to keep heat out. Such heat excluding materials could include shading material that (in particular on greenhouses and conservatories) is used to reduce internal heat build up caused by solar radiation. The sheet material may also panels or sheets whose function is purely decorative.
The clip of the present invention does not damage the structure to which it is attached, and by suitable pressure and manipulation it or the sheet material may be removed from the structure.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSIn order that it may be better understood, but by way of example only, two embodiments of the present invention will now be described in more details, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The first embodiment of clip generally indicated 10 is shown in perspective in
In
In the configuration shown in
As can be seen in
The present invention may be used in combination with the U-shaped clips forming the subject of our co-pending application No. 05 15274.9, to attach insulating material to an above ground pool or other structure. In particular the present invention can be used in combination with the clips of that application in situations where the U-shaped clips thereof are not effective—for example when the frame members are not of an appropriate shape to accommodate a clip therearound.
Claims
1. A sheet material retaining clip to hold sheet material onto a structure having a panel and a frame member adjacent the panel, the clip having an elongate base portion adapted to be located in a gap between the panel and the frame member to hold the clip in place without separate fixing means, a middle portion having an inner and an outer end, the inner end being connected to an end of the base portion and extending at approximately right angles away from the panel, and a spring arm connected to the outer end of the middle portion and extending at an acute angle therefrom on the opposite side to the base portion whereby the spring arm bears on the sheet material to hold it against the panel.
2. A sheet material retaining clip as claimed in claim 1, in which the base portion has a tang that resists removal of the base portion from between the panel and frame member.
3. A sheet material retaining clip as claimed in claim 1 which is adapted to hold sheet material to an above ground pool, greenhouse or conservatory.
4. A sheet material retaining clip as claimed in claim 1 in which the base portion, middle portion and spring arm are formed from a single strip of resilient material that has be appropriately shaped.
5. A sheet material retaining clip as claimed in claim 1 in which the spring arm has a free end that is curled round to aid positioning of the sheet material.
6. Use of a clip having an elongate base portion adapted to be located in a gap between a panel and a frame member to hold the clip in place, a middle portion having an inner and an outer end, the inner end being connected to an end of the base portion and extending at approximately right angles away from the panel, and a spring arm connected to the outer end of the middle portion and extending at an acute angle therefrom on the opposite side to the base portion whereby the spring arm bears on sheet like insulating material to connect it to an above ground pool.
Type: Application
Filed: Dec 20, 2006
Publication Date: Jun 28, 2007
Inventor: Christopher Brindle (Colchester)
Application Number: 11/613,662
International Classification: E04B 1/38 (20060101); E04B 2/00 (20060101);