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WO1983001829A1 - Heating system - Google Patents

Heating system Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1983001829A1
WO1983001829A1 PCT/SE1982/000380 SE8200380W WO8301829A1 WO 1983001829 A1 WO1983001829 A1 WO 1983001829A1 SE 8200380 W SE8200380 W SE 8200380W WO 8301829 A1 WO8301829 A1 WO 8301829A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
radiators
storage tank
heating
water
valve
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
PCT/SE1982/000380
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Skaneverken Ab
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to FI832510A priority Critical patent/FI832510A7/en
Publication of WO1983001829A1 publication Critical patent/WO1983001829A1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24DDOMESTIC- OR SPACE-HEATING SYSTEMS, e.g. CENTRAL HEATING SYSTEMS; DOMESTIC HOT-WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS; ELEMENTS OR COMPONENTS THEREFOR
    • F24D11/00Central heating systems using heat accumulated in storage masses
    • F24D11/002Central heating systems using heat accumulated in storage masses water heating system

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a heating system for buildings, said system comprising a storage tank for a heating medium, preferably water, a heating means connected thereto, a plurality of radiators, and a pipeline system conveying the heating medium and extendin between the storage tank and the radiators.
  • Present-day heating systems for buildings in which heated water is conveyed in a pipeline system from a boiler, hot-water heater or heat exchanger to a number of radiators in different parts of the building, in particular an apartment building, and in which use is made of a water storage tank, may be defined as a pressure system because of the static excess pressure developed by a column of water extending from an expan- sion vessel in the highest part of the system to the water storage tank.
  • the construction of the water storage tank therefore is subject to safety regulations.
  • the main object of the present invention is to provide a heating system which does not operate with a static excess pressure in the water storage tank, deriving from the water columns in the pipeline system, but uses a circulation pump to maintain the requisite
  • a further object of this invention is to provide a heating system in which an existing fuel oil tank or the like can be used for the storage of water.
  • Figs. 1 and 2 illustrate diagrammatically a first and a second embodiment of the heating system according, to the present invention.
  • a tank 1 (Figs. 1 and 2) of any suitable form can be used for the storage of water because the tank need not satisfy the standard specification for pressure vessels.
  • the tank is connected by two schematically shown connections 14 to a heating means ⁇ not shown) , such as an electric heating cartridge, an oil burner, a wood burner, an open fireplace etc.
  • the tank preferably is positioned at the very bottom of the building or in the same plane as the heating means. However, it is also possible to provide the heating means above the tank and vice versa.
  • the drawings also illustrate schematically a number of radiators 2 located in different parts of the building. Extending between the tank and the radiators are a pipeline 3 which conveys heated water to the radiators, and a pipeline 4 which conveys water from the radiators. Pipelines 5 connect the radiators 2 to the pipelines 3 and 4. Connected in the pipeline 3 are a pressure gage 11, a thermometer 10 and a circulation pump 9, said circulation pump being located below the water level
  • a shunt line 6 connects the pipeline 4 with a shunt valve 8 which is connected in the pipeline 3 and by means of which it is possible to control, in known manner, the temperature of the water conveyed in the pipeline 3, by controlling the intake of heated water from the tank.
  • a throttle valve 20 is connected in the pipeline
  • a hot-water heater 16 is suspended from the roof of the tank or mounted therein in some other suitable manner.
  • a tap line 17 extends from the hot-water heater to different tapping points in the building.
  • the hot-water heater is connected to an incoming cold-water line 22 via a valve pipe 21 comprising non-return, vacuum and safety valves.
  • the valve pipe 21 senses the pressure reduction in the heater and gradually replenishes the cold-water volume via the cold-water line 22.
  • a tempera ⁇ ture limiter 23 in the line 17 is connected, via a line 24, to the valve pipe 21.
  • a filling line 19 extends between the pipeline 4 and the cold-water line 22, and a filling valve 7 is connected in the filling line for filling water into the tank 1, the pipelines 3, 4 and the radiators 2.
  • the tank also com ⁇ prises means (not shown) in its lower part for draining the tank.
  • the essential feature of the invention resides in that the pipeline system is closed and without com ⁇ munication with the surroundings during operation.
  • the pipeline system comprises a valve which is adapted to vent the system of air when the system is filled with water.
  • the pipeline system being vented of air and closed, the water in the system, because of the siphon principle, will not produce any static excess pressure within the tank. Consequently, the tank cannot be regarded as a pressure vessel and therefore need not satisfy the standard specifications for such vessels.
  • the valve 13 is self-controlled and combined with a balance vessel 12.
  • the valve is disposed in the uppermost part of the heating system, and the balance vessel is connected to the pipeline 3.
  • the valve acts as a non-return valve and is adapted to vent the radiators 2 and the pipelines 3, 4, 5 of air when the heating system is filled with water, and to prevent air from entering the pipeline 3.
  • the valve is so adjusted that it does not let out any water which, during normal operation, is circulated in the pipelines and the radiators.
  • the valve 13 acts as a safety valve and lets out water from the balance vessel 12 which is adapted to take up the slight lowering of the water level which occurs when the pipelines and the radiators are filled with water and connected to the tank, as will be described in detail below.
  • a double-bent pipe 15 connects the interior of the tank 1 with the surroundings and acts as a safety valve against excess pressure within the tank.
  • the pipe 15 is partly filled with water.
  • the function of the heating system according to the invention and an arrangement where the tank remains unaffected by any static excess pressure from water columns in the pipeline system will appear from the following description of the water-filling operation.
  • the system in the embodiment shown in Fig. 1, the system is filled with water in the following manner.
  • the valves 7, 8 and 20 are opened, and the tank 1 is filled via the line 22 up to the level 18.
  • the valve 20 is then closed, and the shunt valve 8 is so adjusted that the ' water can flow only upwardly in the pipeline 3.
  • the pipelines 3, 4 are now filled in parallel with water, and the water continues upwardly via the radiators 2 and the balance vessel 12 to the valve 13.
  • the air in the pipelines, the radiators and the balance vessel is pressed out through the valve 13, and filling is interrupted by closing the valve 7 when water begins to escape through the valve 13.
  • the valve 20 is opened, and the shunt valve 8 is. so controlled that a free passage is obtained from the pipeline 3 both to the shunt line 6 and directly to the tank 1.
  • the level in the balance vessel is slightly lowered until balance has been established.
  • the pressure gage 11 now indicates that the pressure within the pipeline 3 is zero.
  • the valve 20 is slightly throttled during operation,
  • the circulation pump 9 then increases the pump pressure in the pipeline 3 and in the radiators, whereby the water is prevented from becoming thinner and forming steam at high temperatures.
  • Fig. 2 shows another embodiment in which the air-venting valve which in Fig. 2 is designated 13', has been placed in the pipeline 3 adjacent to the tank 1.
  • the valve 13" is opened and closed manually.
  • the embodiments shown in Figs. 1 and 2 are identical.
  • the system shown in Fig. 2 is filled in the fol ⁇ lowing manner.
  • the tank 1 is filled up to the level 18 in the manner described in connection with Fig. 1, whereupon the valves 20 and 8 are closed and the venting valve 13* is opened so that the water can flow upwardly within the pipeline 4 and press out the air in the pipelines 3, 4 and the radiators 2 through the valve 13'.
  • this valve is closed, and the valve 7, 8 and 20 can now be opened and the circulation pump 9 can be started.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Steam Or Hot-Water Central Heating Systems (AREA)
  • Sorption Type Refrigeration Machines (AREA)
  • Central Heating Systems (AREA)

Abstract

Un système de chauffage pour des immeubles comprend un réservoir de stockage (1) contenant un milieu de chauffage, de préférence de l'eau, un moyen de chauffage (14) connecté à ce réservoir de stockage, une pluralité de radiateurs (2), un système de canalisations (3, 4, 5) s'étendant entre ce réservoir de stockage et les radiateurs pour acheminer le milieu de chauffage, au moins quelques-uns de ces radiateurs et/ou une partie du système de canalisations se trouvant à un niveau supérieur que le réservoir de stockage (1), et un dispositif de soupape (13, 13') disposé dans ce système de canalisations (3) et adapté pour mettre à l'évent le système de canalisations et les radiateurs lorsqu'ils sont remplis du milieu chauffant. Le système de canalisations est fermé et, pendant le fonctionnement du système de chauffage, ne communique pas avec le milieu environnant, de sorte que le réservoir de stockage n'est pas affecté par une éventuelle pression excessive statique provenant de la partie du milieu chauffant qui est contenue dans les radiateurs et de la partie du système de canalisations qui se trouve au-dessus du réservoir de stockage.A heating system for buildings comprises a storage tank (1) containing a heating medium, preferably water, a heating means (14) connected to this storage tank, a plurality of radiators (2), a piping system (3, 4, 5) extending between this storage tank and the radiators for conveying the heating medium, at least some of these radiators and / or part of the piping system being at a higher level than the storage tank (1), and a valve device (13, 13 ') arranged in this piping system (3) and adapted to vent the piping system and the radiators when they are filled with heating medium. The piping system is closed and, during the operation of the heating system, does not communicate with the surrounding environment, so that the storage tank is not affected by any excessive static pressure from the part of the heating medium which is contained in the radiators and the part of the piping system that is above the storage tank.

Description

HEATING SYSTEM
The present invention relates to a heating system for buildings, said system comprising a storage tank for a heating medium, preferably water, a heating means connected thereto, a plurality of radiators, and a pipeline system conveying the heating medium and extendin between the storage tank and the radiators.
Present-day heating systems for buildings, in which heated water is conveyed in a pipeline system from a boiler, hot-water heater or heat exchanger to a number of radiators in different parts of the building, in particular an apartment building, and in which use is made of a water storage tank, may be defined as a pressure system because of the static excess pressure developed by a column of water extending from an expan- sion vessel in the highest part of the system to the water storage tank. The construction of the water storage tank therefore is subject to safety regulations.
With the rapid increase in oil prices, so-called "indirect" electric heating, i.e. the heating of water by means of cartridge type heaters, has become an in¬ creasingly common alternative to oil firing. A change-over from oil firing to indirect electric heating implies that the fuel oil tank is scrapped and that an electric heating cartridge is mounted in the oil burner, or a heating cartridge with built-in water storage tank is installed. The fuel oil tank which, in itself, would be an excellent water storage tank, cannot be used as such because it does not satisfy standard speci¬ fications for pressure vessels.
The main object of the present invention is to provide a heating system which does not operate with a static excess pressure in the water storage tank, deriving from the water columns in the pipeline system, but uses a circulation pump to maintain the requisite
^5^ pump pressure in the radiators and pipelines during operation.
A further object of this invention is to provide a heating system in which an existing fuel oil tank or the like can be used for the storage of water.
According to the invention, these objects are achieved by means of a heating system whose charac¬ teristic features will appear from the characterising clauses of the appended claims. The invention will be described in more detail below, reference being had to the accompanying drawings illustrating two embodiments of the invention. In the drawings:
Figs. 1 and 2 illustrate diagrammatically a first and a second embodiment of the heating system according, to the present invention.
A tank 1 (Figs. 1 and 2) of any suitable form can be used for the storage of water because the tank need not satisfy the standard specification for pressure vessels. The tank is connected by two schematically shown connections 14 to a heating means {not shown) , such as an electric heating cartridge, an oil burner, a wood burner, an open fireplace etc. The tank preferably is positioned at the very bottom of the building or in the same plane as the heating means. However, it is also possible to provide the heating means above the tank and vice versa.
The drawings also illustrate schematically a number of radiators 2 located in different parts of the building. Extending between the tank and the radiators are a pipeline 3 which conveys heated water to the radiators, and a pipeline 4 which conveys water from the radiators. Pipelines 5 connect the radiators 2 to the pipelines 3 and 4. Connected in the pipeline 3 are a pressure gage 11, a thermometer 10 and a circulation pump 9, said circulation pump being located below the water level
( QM * WIP in the tank. The function of these components is the same as in prior art heating systems, for which reason these components will not be described in detail.
A shunt line 6 connects the pipeline 4 with a shunt valve 8 which is connected in the pipeline 3 and by means of which it is possible to control, in known manner, the temperature of the water conveyed in the pipeline 3, by controlling the intake of heated water from the tank. A throttle valve 20 is connected in the pipeline
4 and is used upon filling of the heating system according to the invention, as will be described in more detali below.
A hot-water heater 16 is suspended from the roof of the tank or mounted therein in some other suitable manner. A tap line 17 extends from the hot-water heater to different tapping points in the building. The hot-water heater is connected to an incoming cold-water line 22 via a valve pipe 21 comprising non-return, vacuum and safety valves. When hot water is tapped from the hot-water heater, the valve pipe 21 senses the pressure reduction in the heater and gradually replenishes the cold-water volume via the cold-water line 22. A tempera¬ ture limiter 23 in the line 17 is connected, via a line 24, to the valve pipe 21.
A filling line 19 extends between the pipeline 4 and the cold-water line 22, and a filling valve 7 is connected in the filling line for filling water into the tank 1, the pipelines 3, 4 and the radiators 2.
It should be pointed out that the tank also com¬ prises means (not shown) in its lower part for draining the tank.
The essential feature of the invention resides in that the pipeline system is closed and without com¬ munication with the surroundings during operation. The pipeline system comprises a valve which is adapted to vent the system of air when the system is filled with water. The pipeline system being vented of air and closed, the water in the system, because of the siphon principle, will not produce any static excess pressure within the tank. Consequently, the tank cannot be regarded as a pressure vessel and therefore need not satisfy the standard specifications for such vessels. In Fig. 1, the valve 13 is self-controlled and combined with a balance vessel 12. In this embodiment, the valve is disposed in the uppermost part of the heating system, and the balance vessel is connected to the pipeline 3. The valve acts as a non-return valve and is adapted to vent the radiators 2 and the pipelines 3, 4, 5 of air when the heating system is filled with water, and to prevent air from entering the pipeline 3. The valve is so adjusted that it does not let out any water which, during normal operation, is circulated in the pipelines and the radiators. At excess pressure, the valve 13 acts as a safety valve and lets out water from the balance vessel 12 which is adapted to take up the slight lowering of the water level which occurs when the pipelines and the radiators are filled with water and connected to the tank, as will be described in detail below. A double-bent pipe 15 connects the interior of the tank 1 with the surroundings and acts as a safety valve against excess pressure within the tank. To pre¬ vent evaporation from the tank, the pipe 15 is partly filled with water. The function of the heating system according to the invention and an arrangement where the tank remains unaffected by any static excess pressure from water columns in the pipeline system will appear from the following description of the water-filling operation. in the embodiment shown in Fig. 1, the system is filled with water in the following manner. The valves 7, 8 and 20 are opened, and the tank 1 is filled via the line 22 up to the level 18. The valve 20 is then closed, and the shunt valve 8 is so adjusted that the ' water can flow only upwardly in the pipeline 3. The pipelines 3, 4 are now filled in parallel with water, and the water continues upwardly via the radiators 2 and the balance vessel 12 to the valve 13. The air in the pipelines, the radiators and the balance vessel is pressed out through the valve 13, and filling is interrupted by closing the valve 7 when water begins to escape through the valve 13. The valve 20 is opened, and the shunt valve 8 is. so controlled that a free passage is obtained from the pipeline 3 both to the shunt line 6 and directly to the tank 1. The level in the balance vessel is slightly lowered until balance has been established. The pressure gage 11 now indicates that the pressure within the pipeline 3 is zero.
The valve 20 is slightly throttled during operation, The circulation pump 9 then increases the pump pressure in the pipeline 3 and in the radiators, whereby the water is prevented from becoming thinner and forming steam at high temperatures.
Fig. 2 shows another embodiment in which the air-venting valve which in Fig. 2 is designated 13', has been placed in the pipeline 3 adjacent to the tank 1. The valve 13" is opened and closed manually. In all other respects, the embodiments shown in Figs. 1 and 2 are identical.
The system shown in Fig. 2 is filled in the fol¬ lowing manner. The tank 1 is filled up to the level 18 in the manner described in connection with Fig. 1, whereupon the valves 20 and 8 are closed and the venting valve 13* is opened so that the water can flow upwardly within the pipeline 4 and press out the air in the pipelines 3, 4 and the radiators 2 through the valve 13'. When water begins to escape through the valve 13', this valve is closed, and the valve 7, 8 and 20 can now be opened and the circulation pump 9 can be started.
Considerable advantages are obtained by using a tank which need not satisfy the standard specifica¬ tions for pressure vessels. Thus, the space required for such a tank is less than the space taken up by a pressure vessel, and furthermore the tank can be produced at far lower cost than the pressure vessel.

Claims

1. A heating system for buildings, said system comprising a storage tank (1) for accommodating a heating medium, preferably water, a heating means (14) connected to said storage tank, a plurality of radiators (2) , a pipeline system (3, 4, 5) extending between said storage tank and radiators for conveying the heating medium, at least some of said radiators and/or a part of said pipeline system lying at a higher level than said storage tank (1), and a valve means (13, 13') disposed in said pipeline system (3) and adapted to vent said pipeline system and said radiators when these are filled with the heating medium, c h a r a c t e ¬ r i s e d in that said pipeline system is closed and, during operation of said heating system, does not communicate with the surroundings, whereby said storage tank is not affected by any static excess pressure deriving from that part of the heating medium which is contained in those radiators and that part of said pipeline system which are above said storage tank.
2. A system as claimed in claim 1, c h a r a c ¬ t e r i s e d in that said valve means comprises a non-return valve (13) .
3. A system as claimed in claim l or 2, c h a r a c t e r i s e d in that said valve means (12, 13) is located at the highest point of said pipeline system (3, 5).
4. A system as claimed in claim 3, c h a r a c ¬ t e r i s e d in that said valve means also comprises a balance vessel (12) interposed between said non-return valve (13) and said pipeline system (3, 4, 5) to take up the vacuum which is formed when balance is established after the system has been filled with the heating me¬ dium.
OMP
PCT/SE1982/000380 1981-11-11 1982-11-11 Heating system Ceased WO1983001829A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
FI832510A FI832510A7 (en) 1981-11-11 1982-11-11 Heating system.

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
SE8106671A SE8106671L (en) 1981-11-11 1981-11-11 UPPVERMNINGSANORDNING
SE8106671-4811111 1981-11-11

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1983001829A1 true WO1983001829A1 (en) 1983-05-26

Family

ID=20345007

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/SE1982/000380 Ceased WO1983001829A1 (en) 1981-11-11 1982-11-11 Heating system

Country Status (5)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0093756A1 (en)
FI (1) FI832510A7 (en)
NO (1) NO832502L (en)
SE (1) SE8106671L (en)
WO (1) WO1983001829A1 (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2376290A (en) * 2001-04-18 2002-12-11 Robert Glyn Jones A filling means for a pressurised fluid system such as a central heating system
US20160201943A1 (en) * 2015-01-09 2016-07-14 Terry Wayne Alsberg Heated Water Storage Tank with Integral Trapped Air to Mitigate Expansion/Contraction

Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR1566243A (en) * 1968-01-12 1969-05-09
SE339151B (en) * 1965-08-17 1971-09-27 Taco Heizungen Ag
DE2118618A1 (en) * 1971-04-16 1972-10-19 Wilms, Horst, 5419 Muscheid Surface-mounted heating cell for the modular construction of a heat generator
DE2341042A1 (en) * 1973-08-14 1975-03-06 Erich Gross Adaptable-fuel hot-water central heating - with tank usable either as liquid fuel store or for heat-carrier liquid
DE2441775A1 (en) * 1974-08-31 1976-03-11 Erich Gross STORAGE TANK FOR CENTRAL HEATING SYSTEMS
NO138891B (en) * 1974-04-17 1978-08-21 Anton Eder PRESSURE EQUALIZATION DEVICE FOR HEATING SYSTEMS
DE2911880A1 (en) * 1979-03-26 1980-10-02 Streuber Sulo Eisenwerk F HEAT STORAGE
FR2461207A1 (en) * 1979-07-09 1981-01-30 Caillau Robert Heat pump for production of boiling water - utilises source of low grade heat to heat water in evacuated boiler which feeds vapour to second boiler
US4248378A (en) * 1978-07-13 1981-02-03 Fleming Fabrications Limited Self priming devices for indirect domestic water heating systems
SE421953B (en) * 1981-01-20 1982-02-08 Vermeatervinning I Soderhamn A Arrangement related to a central heating system
SE8100827L (en) * 1981-02-05 1982-08-06 Hilding Brosenius EXPANDABLE LOW PRESSURE ACCUMULATOR SYSTEM FOR SMAHUS HEATING WITH ALTERNATIVE ENERGY FORMS

Patent Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
SE339151B (en) * 1965-08-17 1971-09-27 Taco Heizungen Ag
FR1566243A (en) * 1968-01-12 1969-05-09
DE2118618A1 (en) * 1971-04-16 1972-10-19 Wilms, Horst, 5419 Muscheid Surface-mounted heating cell for the modular construction of a heat generator
DE2341042A1 (en) * 1973-08-14 1975-03-06 Erich Gross Adaptable-fuel hot-water central heating - with tank usable either as liquid fuel store or for heat-carrier liquid
NO138891B (en) * 1974-04-17 1978-08-21 Anton Eder PRESSURE EQUALIZATION DEVICE FOR HEATING SYSTEMS
DE2441775A1 (en) * 1974-08-31 1976-03-11 Erich Gross STORAGE TANK FOR CENTRAL HEATING SYSTEMS
US4248378A (en) * 1978-07-13 1981-02-03 Fleming Fabrications Limited Self priming devices for indirect domestic water heating systems
DE2911880A1 (en) * 1979-03-26 1980-10-02 Streuber Sulo Eisenwerk F HEAT STORAGE
FR2461207A1 (en) * 1979-07-09 1981-01-30 Caillau Robert Heat pump for production of boiling water - utilises source of low grade heat to heat water in evacuated boiler which feeds vapour to second boiler
SE421953B (en) * 1981-01-20 1982-02-08 Vermeatervinning I Soderhamn A Arrangement related to a central heating system
SE8100827L (en) * 1981-02-05 1982-08-06 Hilding Brosenius EXPANDABLE LOW PRESSURE ACCUMULATOR SYSTEM FOR SMAHUS HEATING WITH ALTERNATIVE ENERGY FORMS

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2376290A (en) * 2001-04-18 2002-12-11 Robert Glyn Jones A filling means for a pressurised fluid system such as a central heating system
GB2376290B (en) * 2001-04-18 2004-08-18 Robert Glyn Jones Filling means
US20160201943A1 (en) * 2015-01-09 2016-07-14 Terry Wayne Alsberg Heated Water Storage Tank with Integral Trapped Air to Mitigate Expansion/Contraction

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
SE8106671L (en) 1983-05-12
FI832510A0 (en) 1983-07-08
FI832510L (en) 1983-07-08
FI832510A7 (en) 1983-07-08
NO832502L (en) 1983-07-08
EP0093756A1 (en) 1983-11-16

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