The present invention is related to the installation of panels on a wall, such as panels having a decorative function and mounted on the exterior surface of buildings.
Such decorative panels are often produced from fibre cement, and may be provided with a textured front surface for decorative purposes and a smooth back surface. The panels are mounted on an exterior wall with the requirement that no or very limited traces are observable of the attachment means applied to attach the panels. Attachment systems in use today include systems wherein hangers are fixed to the back surface of a panel, allowing the panel to be mounted on a framework of vertical and horizontal support profiles (also referred to as rails) mounted on the wall. While these systems are effective and show no outward trace of the attachment means, the use of vertical and horizontal rails represents an important material cost and increases the complexity of the installation procedure. The hangers are attached to the back of the panel by bolt connections or by clamping the hangers into horizontal grooves processed in the back surface of the panel. However, this makes the re-use of a panel difficult or impossible, as it may require drilling additional holes or processing additional grooves into the back of the panel. The hangers also represent fixation points which do not allow for expansion of the panel in the height direction, as a consequence of important temperature changes for example. This may cause excessive stress build-up in the panel, possibly leading to crack formation.
Some systems use only horizontal support profiles directly fixed to the wall, but this requires very accurate attachment of these profiles to the wall, which can easily lead to incorrect installations. Also, using only horizontal rails may restrict the dimensions of the cavity behind the panels, leading to problems in terms of the required airflow in such cavities.
The invention aims to provide solutions to the above problems. This aim is achieved by an attachment system and an installation method as disclosed in the appended claims.
The invention is in particular related to an attachment system comprising one or more panels provided with pairs of mutually parallel grooves through the back surface of the panels while not going through the full thickness of the panel, the system further comprising a plurality of support profiles and a plurality of support brackets. The support profiles comprise at least a portion having an L-shaped section comprising a first leg portion and a second leg portion, so that the support profiles may be attached vertically to a wall with the second leg portion oriented at a (non-zero) distance from the wall and parallel thereto.
In accordance with the invention, the support brackets each comprise an assembly of a first and a second bracket profile, each including a leg portion for fixation into a groove and a wall portion extending away from the leg portion and, after assembly, from the panel. At least two of the brackets attached to a panel are provided with elongated portions configured to extend beyond the upper edge of the panel, enabling the fixation of these brackets and thereby of the panel to the vertical support profiles attached to the wall.
The invention is related also to a support bracket, a method of mounting a panel using an attachment system as described above, as well as a cladding system comprising the support bracket, one or more panels and optionally the support profiles.
The attachment system requires only vertical support profiles fixed to a wall and thereby represents an improvement over many existing systems in terms of material cost and installation complexity. The grooves are oriented vertically when the panels are installed on a wall, making the exact positioning of the brackets in the height direction of the panel less critical. The mounting of a panel is straightforward, as the correct horizontal position is automatically reached when the leg portions of the support profiles become inserted into the half-closed spaces of the brackets when the panel is shifted horizontally with respect to the vertical support profiles.
In one embodiment, at least two support brackets comprise an elongated planar portion configured to extend beyond the upper edge of the panel and overlap the second leg portion of the L-section of at least two respective support profiles, when the brackets are mounted on the panel and the panel has been moved horizontally. This embodiment enables to fix the at least two elongated portions to the second leg portion of the L-section of said at least two respective support profiles.
In one further implementation, only the support brackets mounted near the upper edge of the panel are fixed, for example by screw connections, to the support profiles, while the lower brackets are not secured to said profiles in the vertical direction while still maintaining the panel at a fixed distance from the wall. This means that the panel is free to expand and retract in the height direction so that stress build-up and cracking is avoided.
Preferably, the wall portion of the second bracket profile is shorter than the wall portion of the first bracket profile as seen in a first main extension direction of the bracket profiles being perpendicular to the back side of the panel. In other words, the two bracket profiles mutually differ as to their top portion. This has been found effective to create the said half-closed space and to facilitate an aperture so that the second leg-portion of the support profile can slide in. Moreover
In one specific implementation the half-closed space is generated in that the transversal portion of the first bracket profile is a planar portion extending at an essentially right angle to the wall portion of the first bracket profile. Furthermore, the transversal portion of the second bracket profile comprises a first slanted planar portion extending at an obtuse angle with respect to the wall portion of the second bracket profile, and further a second planar portion that is essentially perpendicular to the wall portion of the second bracket profile, forming an acute angle with the slanted portion.
Preferably, the transversal planar portion of the first bracket profile and the second planar portion of the second bracket profile are at different height levels relative to a base plane corresponding to the back side of the panel after mounting the bracket thereto, so as to allow the second leg portion of the L-section of a support profile to slide between said planar portions, into said half-closed space.
In again a further implementation, the elongated planar portion of said at least two brackets is uniform with the transversal portion of the first bracket profile of said at least two brackets. Said elongated planar portion constitutes an extension of said transversal portion.
The grooves are preferably made significantly longer than the length of the brackets, providing much flexibility in terms of the positioning the brackets. This makes it also easier to re-use a panel as the re-positioning of brackets requires no additional processing of the panel.
The structure of the brackets allows for the brackets to be made sufficiently high so that the cavity behind the panels can be large enough to provide a required airflow.
The bracket profiles are preferably made by means of extrusion, and more preferably comprise a metal, so as to ensure sufficient strength. Aluminum is a preferred choice. However, it is not excluded that use is made of composites, such as matrix materials reinforced with particles and/or fibers. Alternatively manufacturing techniques such as insert molding, transfer molding and 3D-printing are not excluded.
Any of the embodiments that are discussed hereinabove and/or hereinafter and/or defined in the dependent claims in relation to one aspect of the invention, such as the attachment system, are also applicable and deemed disclosed to the other aspects of the invention, such as the bracket, the method and the cladding systems.
The figures illustrate exemplary embodiments only and are not limiting the scope of the invention. Equal reference numerals in different figures refer to equal or corresponding parts.
As seen in
Before explaining how the panel 1 is mounted to the wall, the brackets 10 are described in more detail as well as the manner in which the brackets are assembled.
The bracket profiles 15, 16 further comprise transversal portions at the top of the wall portions 19 (i.e. at the side opposite the base portions 17). The first bracket profile 15 comprises a transversal portion 24 that is a rectangular plate element oriented essentially perpendicularly to the wall portion 19 of the first bracket profile 15. The second bracket profile 16 comprises a transversal portion comprising a first plate portion 25 extending at an obtuse angle from the wall portion 19 of the second bracket profile 16, the latter wall portion being shorter (as seen in the direction perpendicular to the base portion 17) than the wall portion of the first bracket profile 15, and at the top of the angled portion 25 a planar portion 26 that is essentially perpendicular to the wall portions 19 of both bracket profiles 15 and 16 (i.e. essentially parallel to portion 24) and that forms an acute angle with the angled portion 25. The latter planar portion 26 of the second bracket profile 16 is located at a higher level from the base portions 17, compared to the transversal portion 24 of the first bracket profile 15 so that the transversal portions define a half-closed space 27 into which a planar plate element can be slidably inserted. The term ‘half-closed’ is applicable to the cross-section of the assembled bracket 10, as illustrated in the section view of
The width and height (in the direction perpendicular to the base portion 17) of the leg portions 18 are matched to the width and depth of the grooves 11 so that the leg portions 18 can be inserted manually in said grooves, preferably being able to be inserted fully in the grooves 11, so that the base portions 17 are lying against the back surface of the panel 1.
In the embodiment shown, the leg portions 18 of the profiles are provided with gripping teeth 30 extending along the full length of the leg portions 18, the teeth 30 being present on the mutually facing sidewalls of the leg portions 18. Still in the embodiment shown, said mutually facing sidewalls comprise a first portion 31 near the base portion 17 of the respective profiles, the first portion having no teeth produced thereon, followed by the three teeth 30. This way of producing the teeth 30 has been proven optimal in the case of a fibre-cement panel and represents a preferred embodiment of the teeth 30 on the leg portions 18. For a panel having a thickness of about 8 mm, it is preferable to provide three teeth as shown, wherein the width of each tooth is of the order of 1 mm. For thicker panels, the number of teeth having this same width may be increased. The invention is however not limited to this embodiment, and includes embodiments involving other configurations and dimensions of teeth or equivalent gripping aids, as well as leg portions that are not provided with gripping aids, and which are clamped mainly by friction between the leg portions 18 and the sidewalls of the grooves 11.
The assembly of the brackets 10 is illustrated in
As illustrated in
When the bracket profiles 15 and 16 are correctly positioned in the grooves 11, they are secured to each other by inserting rivets 23 into the matching holes 22, thereby pulling the profiles towards each other and clamping the leg portions 18 in the grooves 11, as shown in
In one advantageous embodiment, the bracket profiles 15, 16 are placed in such a way that part of the elongated portion 12 extends beyond the upper edge 13 of the panel 1 the length direction of the grooves 11 (as shown in
When all the brackets 10 are assembled and thereby attached to the back surface of the panel 1, a panel as shown in
As shown in
The transversal portions 24 of the brackets 10 are placed in contact with the second leg portions 5 of the support profiles 3, and then the panel is moved horizontally, until said leg portions 5 slide into the half-closed spaces 27 of the brackets 10, as illustrated in
The technician can then secure the panel 1 to the wall 2 by the connections 6 through said portions 12 and through said leg portions 5, as shown in
As indicated already in a number of instances, the invention is not limited to the embodiment shown in the drawings. The shape of the brackets may be different, within the boundaries of the characteristics included in the independent claims. For example, the transversal portions 24 and 25/32/26 of the bracket profiles 15 and 16 could have a different shape, while still allowing the second leg portion 5 of the support profiles to be inserted in the half-closed space 27 defined by said transversal portions. A few examples of such alternative shapes are shown in
The number of brackets 10 applied to a panel 1 may be different than four. More than four brackets may be required for attaching a large panel for example.
The panels 1 are preferably planar rectangular panels as shown, but they may include shapes other than rectangles, as well as panels with a certain curvature. Such panels may either be attached to similarly curved wall surfaces or the support brackets 10 may be adapted to the curvature of the panels, for example by orienting the leg portions 18 not perpendicularly to the base portions 17 but at an angle corresponding to the curvature of the panel at a given position.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 21172747.4 | May 2021 | EP | regional |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/EP2022/061144 | 4/27/2022 | WO |