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USPTO: us-12622365 · published 2026-05-12 · patents · A01G 9/24· F24F 7/007

Ventilator for plant cultivation

Pith reviewed 2026-05-16 08:01 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification patents A01G 9/24F24F 7/007
keywords ventilatorplant cultivationclamp assemblyhanging mountfan housingconnection shaft
0
0 comments X

The pith

A clamp sleeved around the fan housing and pinned by a shaft through its opening edges lets the ventilator hang from one mounting point.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The patent presents a ventilator for plant cultivation whose housing contains an internal fan and is suspended by a first hanging component joined through a dedicated connection assembly. The assembly consists of a clamp that fits over the housing and is locked by a shaft inserted through two connection portions located at the edges of the clamp opening. This geometry is intended to keep the unit stable while allowing positional adjustment during use in grow rooms. A reader would care because the design replaces multiple fasteners with a single shaft-and-clamp arrangement for quicker hanging installation.

Core claim

The ventilator comprises a housing with an internal fan, a first hanging mounting component, and a connection assembly in which a clamp is sleeved on the housing; two connection portions stand at the edges of an opening in the clamp, a connection shaft passes through both portions, and the hanging component is sleeved on that shaft.

What carries the argument

Clamp-and-shaft connection assembly: the clamp encircles the housing and is secured by a shaft passing through paired connection portions at the clamp opening, transferring the load from the hanging component to the housing.

Load-bearing premise

The clamp-and-shaft geometry will hold the housing weight and keep the fan stable under ordinary grow-room conditions without extra fasteners or bracing.

What would settle it

Hang the assembled ventilator from its mounting point, run the fan at maximum speed for several hours, and check whether the housing slips, tilts, or detaches from the clamp.

read the original abstract

1 . A ventilator for plant cultivation, comprising: a housing, wherein a fan is arranged inside the housing; a first hanging mounting component arranged outside the housing; and a connection assembly comprising a clamp, wherein the clamp is sleeved on the housing, and the first hanging mounting component is connected to the connection assembly; wherein the connection assembly further comprises a connection shaft, the clamp has at least one opening, two connection portions are arranged at two edges of an opening of the at least one opening respectively, the connection shaft is arranged to pass through the two connection portions, and the first hanging mounting component is sleeved on the connection shaft.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 0 minor

Summary. The manuscript describes a ventilator for plant cultivation comprising a housing containing an internal fan, a first hanging mounting component external to the housing, and a connection assembly. The assembly includes a clamp sleeved on the housing with at least one opening having two connection portions at its edges; a connection shaft passes through these portions, and the hanging component is sleeved on the shaft, enabling the unit to be suspended.

Significance. The described clamp-and-shaft geometry offers a compact, potentially adjustable hanging mechanism suitable for grow-room ventilation. If the assembly proves mechanically stable, the design could simplify installation without separate brackets, though no performance data or material specifications are provided to confirm this.

major comments (1)
  1. [Claim 1] Claim 1 (and corresponding description): the connection shaft is recited only as passing through the two connection portions of the clamp opening, with no threading, nut, cam, set-screw, or other tightening element specified. Without such a feature or accompanying dimensional tolerances, the geometry does not entail that the clamp will remain closed under the combined weight of the housing and fan vibration, directly affecting whether the assembly can reliably support the unit as implied by the hanging mounting component.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and the single substantive comment on Claim 1. We address the mechanical-stability concern directly below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Claim 1] Claim 1 (and corresponding description): the connection shaft is recited only as passing through the two connection portions of the clamp opening, with no threading, nut, cam, set-screw, or other tightening element specified. Without such a feature or accompanying dimensional tolerances, the geometry does not entail that the clamp will remain closed under the combined weight of the housing and fan vibration, directly affecting whether the assembly can reliably support the unit as implied by the hanging mounting component.

    Authors: We agree that the claim language does not recite an explicit tightening element. The recited geometry (clamp with opposed connection portions and a shaft passing through them) is intentionally general so that any conventional closure means—threaded shaft and nut, cam lever, set screw, or even a simple cotter pin—remains within the scope of the claim. Because the patent is directed to the novel hanging architecture rather than to a particular fastener, we elected not to limit the claim to one closure mechanism. The functional requirement that the clamp remain closed under load is therefore an implementation detail left to the skilled artisan, consistent with standard patent-drafting practice for mechanical assemblies. revision: no

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: purely structural patent claim with no derivations or predictions

full rationale

The document is a mechanical patent specification describing a ventilator housing, fan, clamp, and shaft assembly. No equations, fitted parameters, predictions, ansatzes, or self-citations appear anywhere in the text. The claim is a direct geometric description of components; nothing reduces to itself by construction or renames prior results. The reader's assessment of score 0.0 is therefore confirmed.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

No free parameters, mathematical axioms, or postulated entities are present; the document is a mechanical device description.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5411 in / 968 out tokens · 62409 ms · 2026-05-16T08:01:42.911448+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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