Warp resistant fire door

3981102
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Inventors

Harwood, Frank Stuart
Dorst, Heinz Otto

Application #

490486

Filed

Jul-22-1974

Published

Sep-21-1976

Current US Class

049/409
049/501
052/232
052/784.12

International Classes

E06B 003/16; E06B 005/16

Field of Search

49/501 49/409 49/410 49/411 49/412 49/370 52/615 52/618 52/619 52/232

Assignee

Dover Corporation (New York, NY)

Examiners

Kannan; Philip C.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Brumbaugh, Graves, Donohue & Raymond

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A warp resistant fire door structure is disclosed, which includes a frame and a pair of front and back panels mounted thereon. The panels are secured permanently to the frame only at points adjacent their lateral edges. At other points, the panels are heat releasably bonded to the frame to be able to expand and contract relative to the frame in the presence of ambient temperature extremes.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A warp resistant fire door comprising a rigid frame structure defining at least one major side area and a pair of opposite minor side areas adjacent said major side area, a first outer skin portion susceptible of thermal expansion and contraction overlying the frame structure at each of the side areas and non-releasably secured to the frame structure at points other than those defining said major side area, portions of the skin between said points of securement and overlying said minor side areas being spaced apart from portions of the frame defining each of said minor side areas, and heat responsive means for attaching other portions of the skin to the frame structure to provide a rigid substantially vibration-free door panel in the presence of normal ambient temperatures, said heat responsive means releasing said other portions of the skin from the frame when the temperature of the skin reaches a predetermined level, thereby to minimize warping stresses induced on the frame by thermal expansion and contraction of the skin.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to fire doors and in particular to a fire door construction for use in elevators which is capable of withstanding ambient temperature extremes without destruction or undue warping of the door frame.

Heretofore, doors of this type have been constructed of front and back sheet paneling separated by metal frame spacers. The paneling is typically welded to each of the frame spacers.

Doors constructed in this fashion have heretofore been expensive since a considerable amount of labor time is required to fill and sand the welding blemishes on the door faces. In addition, such a rigid, essentially unitary, construction has been found to transmit an unacceptable level of background noise to the interior of the elevator.

Furthermore, under conditions of extreme ambient temperature changes, the unitary door structures, including the door frames, have been found to buckle severely thereby increasing the danger to elevator passengers. Such doors are frequently found to be commercially unacceptable during legally mandated testing procedures. The result is that the cost of doors which reach the market is higher than would otherwise be the case.
 
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