Patent Document

THE FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     Public washrooms conventionally utilize flushometers to supply a measured amount of water to either a urinal or a water closet. Associated with such flushometers is a plumbing fitting designated as a control stop. This plumbing fitting connects the flushometer with the water supply and has a valve member biased toward a closing position. The bias upon the valve member is adjustable so as to control the water supply to the flushometer. Normally, the adjustment on the control stop is not utilized once the plumbing fitting has been installed except for those instances in which it is necessary to totally shut off the water supply to a flushometer. At such time maintenance personnel will remove the stop cap and close the valve member so that water is no longer supplied to the flushometer. 
     Stop caps as described are subject to constant thermal change resulting from the water which passes through the stop cap becoming warm during periods of no use and then being cooled during use. This thermal cycling has the effect of loosening the stop cap. This provides a stop cap which may be loosened to the point where it may be accidentally removed or removed by vandals. In either event, it is important to have a stop cap which will stay in place, be relatively difficult to accidentally remove, be of such a construction as to discourage vandalism, but yet be removable by maintenance personnel when so required. The present invention provides a cap assembly which addresses the above shortcomings, is reliable in use, easy to manufacture, and is easier to install than it is to remove. Specifically, the cap assembly includes the conventional cap which will be threadedly attached to the stop cap body and has added thereto a friction ring having a plurality of projections which face the stop cap body, with these projections enabling the stop cap to be attached or installed with less torque than it takes to remove the cap assembly from the control stop. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates to stop caps for plumbing fittings and particularly to a cap assembly for a control stop used in combination with a flushometer to provide water to a urinal or water closet. 
     A primary purpose of the invention is a cap assembly for a control stop which will not become loose during thermal cycling of the control stop. 
     Another purpose of the invention is to provide a cap assembly for the use described which requires less torque in application than it does for removal. 
     Another purpose of the invention is to provide a cap assembly as described which provides reduced torque acting on the control stop bonnet than on the stop cap itself. 
     Another purpose of the invention is to provide a stop cap assembly as described which includes an elastomeric friction ring having a plurality of circumferentially spaced projections which face the control stop bonnet and is applied when the stop cap is attached to the control stop. 
    
    
     Other purposes will appear in the ensuing specification, drawings and claims. 
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     The invention is illustrated diagrammatically in the following drawings wherein: 
     FIG. 1 is side view of a control stop, in part axial section, illustrating the cap assembly of the present invention; 
     FIG. 2 is a perspective view of the friction ring; 
     FIG. 3 is a top view of the friction ring; and 
     FIG. 4 is a section along plane  4 — 4  of FIG.  3 . 
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
     Control stops are conventionally used with flushometers in public washrooms and as the name implies, both control the flow of water to the flushometer and function as a stop when it is necessary to completely close the water supply to the flushometer for maintenance or removal. Control stops are well known in this art. Because it may be necessary to move the stop to a fully closed position, it is necessary that there be access to the stop for maintenance personnel. In the prior art, the access opening was covered by a cap which was threaded onto the body of the control stop. There are problems with such a construction. First, the constant cycling between hot and cold caused by the warm temperature of the room and the cold temperature of the water results in a cap which is loosely attached to the body. Little torque is required to remove it. A second problem is vandalism and the caps are both decorative and useful to vandals for other purposes. A cap which is loose is more subject to vandalism than normal. Once the cap has been removed, the exposed stop is an invitation to an individual to either close the stop, preventing the flow of water to the flushometer, or to back off the stop, possibly resulting in flooding a urinal or closet. The present invention provides a cap assembly which eliminates the above-described problems. 
     U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,497,802 and 5,558,120, both assigned to Sloan Valve Company of Franklin Park, Ill., the assignee of the present application, relate to earlier stop cap assemblies for the use described. The disclosure of both patents is herein incorporated by reference. 
     In the drawings, the body of the control stop is indicated at  10  and has a threaded inlet  12  and a threaded outlet  14 . The outlet will be connected to a flushometer and the inlet will be connected to the water supply. There is a valve seat  16  formed adjacent the inlet  12 , and a valve member or plug  18  is movable to close upon the valve seat, thus shutting off the flow of water between the inlet and the outlet. 
     The opening for the stop is indicated at  20  and a bonnet  22  is threadedly mounted in this opening. The bonnet  22  mounts a collar and sleeve assembly  24  which includes a collar  26  holding a movable adjusting sleeve  28  which threadedly mounts a stem  30 . An O-ring  32  forms a seal between the adjusting sleeve  28  and the interior of collar  26 . A coil spring  34  is seated upon a shoulder  36  of the adjusting sleeve and biases the plug  18  toward the closed position shown in the drawings. As is known in the art, rotation of the stem  30  will move the adjusting plug  28  toward or away from the plug  18 . This movement changes the bias applied by the spring  34  on the plug  18 , thus controlling the pressure required to move the plug away from the seat  16 , which movement takes place when the flushometer is operated. In order to completely close the control stop, the stem  30  will be turned through the use of the screwdriver slot  38  which will move the adjusting sleeve  28  to a position in which the plug  18  cannot be moved away from the seat  16  and will be fast upon the seat. In this position the control stop is functioning as a stop and no water can pass through it. 
     The cap assembly which covers the access opening  20  and thereby hides the stem  30  and its screwdriver adjusting slot  38 , comprises a metallic cap  40  and a friction ring  42 . The cap  40  will be threaded onto the exterior threaded portion  44  of the bonnet  22 . 
     The friction ring is illustrated in detail in FIGS. 2-4 and will be made of a suitable elastomeric material which allows the ring to be compressed and distorted during the application of the cap  40  to the bonnet. Such distortion permits the friction ring to avoid the problem of thermal cycling as well as insuring that the cap will be easier to install than it is to remove. The friction ring  42  has a body  46  with an outwardly facing surface  48  which will be directly adjacent and in contact with an interior surface  50  of the cap  40 . The outer edge of the friction ring  42  has a beveled surface  52  which will be facing toward the interior periphery of the cap  40 . The friction ring will be of a size to be slightly distorted when it is inserted into the recess of the cap, thereby insuring that the ring stays within the cap during assembly. 
     The friction ring has an interior opening  54  which is directly surrounded by a plurality of uniformly spaced projections or lugs  56  which extend toward a surface  58  on the. bonnet  22 . As shown in FIG. 1, these projections will be compressed against the surface  58  when the cap assembly is applied to the body  10 . 
     Each of the lugs  56  extend radially outwardly from the opening  54 , but terminate a radial distance less than that of the body  46  with the result that there is a greater surface of the friction ring in contact with the interior of the cap  40  than there is in contact with the surface  58  of the bonnet  22 . Thus, there is less torque applied to the bonnet than there is on the cap. Although the axial load is the same, the substantial difference in radii provide a difference in applied load. 
     Each lug includes a sloped surface  60  which faces the direction of rotation of the cap as it is applied to the bonnet. There is a more abrupt surface  62  on each lug, which abrupt surface, approaching the perpendicular, faces the direction of cap rotation when the cap is being removed. The sloped surface or ramp  60 , which faces the direction of cap rotation, provides a smooth transition as the stop cap is assembled on the body, allowing for easy installation of the cap assembly onto the body. In contrast, the more abrupt surface  62  which faces the direction of rotation during cap removal requires a slight increase in torque to loosen the stop cap. Thus, the cap is easier to put on than it is to take off. The slope side of each of the lugs provides a progressively increasing pad of elastomer for compression during cap assembly. In contrast, the abrupt surface  62  provides the opposite result during cap removal. The elastomer provides a friction ring having a relatively high coefficient of friction, a requirement during both removal and attachment. 
     During assembly, the friction ring will be positioned in the stop cap and the stop cap will be rotatably attached to the body. As the stop cap is so turned, the elastomer in the friction ring is progressively and increasingly compressed and distorted, but this is a smooth transition and requires no sudden increase in torque. In contrast, during removal, the abrupt surface requires a slight increase in torque over what is required in attachment. The result of the elastomeric friction ring and the configuration thereof allows the cap to resist thermal cycling and the cap remains firmly attached at all times. Further, the increased torque required for removal assists in the prevention of vandalism. 
     Whereas the preferred form of the invention has been shown and described herein, it should be realized that there may be many modifications, substitutions and alterations thereto.

Technology Category: f