The present invention relates to a system for applying surface coatings to areas where two or more surfaces join each other, such as corners.
Conventional paint rollers are composed of two parts: a wire roller that freely spins on an axle as the roller move across a surface, and a roller cover, a fabric-covered cylinder which slips onto the wire roller. The wire roller has a handle for the user to grasp. When attached to the wire roller, the roller cover is made to absorb paint from a reservoir, such as a paint pan. This absorbed paint is then applied to a surface by a rolling action. Currently, applicators of liquid surface coating materials such as paints use a fabric covered roller to rapidly apply these coatings to surfaces. While these rollers work well on flat surfaces, they cannot be used to apply surface coatings into deep corners where two or more surfaces meet. These deep corners occur, for example, in a room where two walls meet, or where a ceiling and one or more walls come together. To overcome this limitation of conventional rollers or covers, corners had been coated using a brush or paint pad, which is a slow and tedious process. In painting a room with conventional rollers, painting of corners with a brush or painting pad is the limiting factor in the expeditious completion of the job.
As painting technology advanced, a number of corner-painting devices have been patented. These corner-painting rollers are of two basic types:
For corner-painting rollers which have the fabric solidly attached to the roller body, the roller is assembled with nuts and bolts. This assembly requires the use of wrenches, which are not always readily available during a coating operation, and which occasionally fail to work properly. The nuts and bolts of these rollers protrude from the device and will be covered with coating material during use of the roller. This results in a difficult and messy disassembly of these rollers, with fouling of hands and wrenches with the coating material. The protruding nuts and bolts of some of these corner-painting rollers can dig into the surface being coated, gouging the surface and marring the finish.
In the case of corner-painting rollers where the fabric is not firmly or permanently attached to the roller cover, the fabric fits over the body of the roller cover like a stocking, with no nuts and bolts required for assembly. The roller-cover fabric is slipped over the roller cover body which is attached to the axle of a roller. This assembly is a two-step process. Since the fabric of this roller cover is not permanently attached to the roller cover body mechanically or with adhesive, it is not anchored in place. When this roller is in use, the fabric may be warped, with a possible complete detachment of the fabric from the cover body. This inevitably leads to marring of the wall finish, messy cleanups, and optionally messy and time consuming reattachments of the paint fabric to the roller cover body. These problems are exacerbated when the roller is used quickly.
Accessories for loading rollers with paint or other coating materials must be efficient in filling rollers with coating materials. For adequately loading a roller with paint or other coating material, the device must provide the painter adequate space in the reservoir for manipulating the roller. This space requirement is, of course, somewhat dependent on the size of the roller, and is used to coat the roller evenly and to drop off excess paint into the paint reservoir.
Adequately sized painting accessories cannot fit into a paint can unless the roller is too small to be useful, because there would not be sufficient room to properly load the roller with paint.
It is an object of the present invention to overcome the aforementioned deficiencies in the prior art.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a system for applying coatings to corners.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a system for applying coatings to corners where two or more surfaces come together.
The system includes a corner-roller cover and an adapter. The corner-roller cover is designed to rapidly deliver coatings to corners where two or more surfaces come together, resulting in the complete covering of the space with an even-coating. The adapter works in conjunction with a conventional paint pan, and aids in loading the corner-roller cover with the surface coating (paint, etc.). Once the corner-roller cover is loaded with the surface coating material, the coating can be applied to the corner with great ease and speed.
For purposes of the present invention, the terms “paint” and “coating material” can be used interchangeably, without limiting the invention to either term.
The hollow body is overlaid with paint-roller fabric of various types. These fabrics can be of various nap thicknesses, pile heights, and texture to give the desired paint loading qualities and finish. The fabric is attached to the body of the cover with any type of adhering means, such as adhesives (e.g., epoxy or glue), VELCRO® fasteners, double-sided tape, and the like. The fabric used for the cover is cut into flat spindle-shaped pieces, which are then attached to the body of the roller cover with one piece closely abutting another around the entire circumference of the roller cover. These spindle-shaped pieces of fabric make it possible to construct the roller cover without forming puckers between the fabric and the body of the cover. Any shape of fabric which will cover the body of the roller cover without puckering can be used.
The dimensions given in
When loading the corner-roller cover with liquid surface coating such as paint, conventional paint pans are only marginally useful without the adapter. The roller has little or no traction in such pans, and the sliding action that results when the roller is dragged through the pan gives a very uneven loading of the roller with the liquid coating. Also, excess coating on the roller cannot be returned to the pan. This is all the result of the incompatibility of shapes of the spindle-shaped roller and a flat-bottomed paint pan. Flat-bottomed paint pans work well with conventional flat-surface roller covers. However, the spindle-shaped covers, which can apply paint in corners, require a shape in the paint pan that conforms to its own shape so that the roller can gain sufficient traction in the pan to acquire paint evenly on the roller cover. This traction allows it to roll in the pan rather that sliding in the pan. The roller cover must roll in the pan in order for it to be properly loaded with surface-coating material and to remove excess coating material from the roller. This is accomplished by providing the roller cover with a V-shaped bed to roll in while it collects coating or sheds excess coating, as shown in
Grille 21 is shaped to conform to the dimensions of the covered corner roller cover. That is, the angle of intersection of the two sides of the grille is made so that the covered corner roller cover conforms to the dimensions of the grille. The grille can be made of any suitable material that provides traction to the covered corner roller cover, including plastics, metals, etc.
The front of the adapter is composed of a solid sheet of plastic or other rigid material to give the structure rigidity and to wedge the adapter into the front part of the paint pan for stability (
Preferably, the adapter is sized such that it sits snugly into a conventional paint pan, the walls of which hold the adapter in place while the roller cover is being coated with surface coating. The adapter can be easily removed by lifting it out of the paint pan. After removal of the adapter, the paint pan can be used with a conventional cylindrical roller to continue the painting.
The adapter is designed such that when it is in place in a conventional paint pan, at least 50% of the surface of the adapter will not be submerged in paint when the reservoir of the paint pan is filled with paint. To achieve this, the paint-pan adapter is preferably inclined from front to back so that the back half of the adapter does not sit in the pan (
The adapter can be made to fit any paint pan larger than the standard-size pan and some sizes a little smaller than standard size pan. The paint pan adapter can be made to fit any spindle-shaped roller whose angle of taper is somewhat less than 90 degrees and less than 180 degrees. The adapter can be made of any rigid material which gives traction to the roller cover. It also must permit the paint from the reservoir of the paint pan to come into contact with the roller cover. It also must let excess paint on the roller cover flow back into the reservoir of the paint pan.
The corner roller system is used with two commercially available items: a wire roller, and a conventional paint pan. For purposes of illustration, the wire roller has a length of about four inches. However, longer or shorter wire rollers can be used, with the size of the paint pan and the adapter being adjusted to accommodate larger rollers where necessary. The paint pan is approximately fourteen inches long, eleven inches wide, and 2.5 inches deep. Typically, a paint roller consists of a wire roller and a cylindrical roller cover. However, this type of roller does not reach into the depth of a corner well enough to give the painted surface a finished look. However, the corner-roller with its spindle-shape design attached to a wire roller fits into the depth of a corner so that the entire corner can be coated. The spindle shape of the corner-roller cover makes it possible to paint in deep corners, including corners which meet at a ceiling. The V-shaped walls of the adapter have the same taper as the spindle shape of the corner-roller cover, as shown in
The corner roller-cover is most efficient when the angle between the two intersecting surfaces approximates 90 degrees. However, corner-roller covers can be made to accommodate angles of intersecting surfaces which are less than 180 degrees by changing the angle of taper of the roller cover so that it approximates these angles between the two surfaces. The width of the corner-roller covers having different angles of taper can be of any length that fits onto a wire roller. The most common wire roller for corners is approximately four inches long, although wire rollers and corner-roller covers of any length can be used.
The corner-roller cover can be fashioned to give different surface finishes by changing the thickness, composition and texture of the fabric used for the roller cover. This makes it possible to match exactly the corner finish with that achieved on the rest of the wall where flat rollers are used. This matching of finishes is rarely accomplished when the corner is painted with brush, spray, pad, or sponge and the remainder of the wall is painted with conventional rollers.
The V-shaped adapter can be altered to accommodate the angle of taper of the corner-roller cover by widening the V-shaped portion to fit the taper of the roller cover. The overall dimensions of the adapter can be enlarged to fit larger paint pans. The adapter can be made from a combination of plastic frame with a metal grille, or from any number of rigid materials which are resistant to chemical attack by the surface coating. These rigid materials must be perforated in some way to allow excess paint to flow back into the reservoir from the roller cover, and they must have a corrugated or roughened surface to provide needed traction to the roller cover so that it rolls when being loaded with coating material. The grille can have any desired configuration of openings through which paint can pass.
The covered spindle-shaped corner-roller cover, and a paint pan adapter comprise the present system. This is an effective, versatile, and rapid system for applying a liquid surface coating such as paint to corners, including concave corners, of adjoining surfaces. Because of the quick roller action, corners are quickly and evenly coated. The corner-roller cover delivers a high volume of paint to corner spaces because of the absorbent qualities of the paint roller fabric and the rolling action of the roller. Additionally, the corner-roller cover lays down a sufficiently wide layer of paint so that a smoother overlap with paint applied with a conventional roller on the flat part of the surfaces can be obtained.
The spindle-shaped roller cover is easily loaded with paint using the adapter provided. Because the corner roller cover is rolled along the grille of the adapter after being loaded with paint, excess paint drops off back into the paint pan, and there is minimal dripping. The corner roller cover is used with a conventional wire roller, so that a conventional extension can be attached to the roller, making use of a ladder unnecessary.
The corner roller cover can be made of inexpensive, lightweight materials to make it disposable. Alternatively, the corner roller cover can be made of more durable material so it can be cleaned and reused. If the corner roller cover is hollow, it is very light in weight. Different paint cover fabrics can be used for coverings. That is, the pile height, texture, and nap of the coverings are provided to produce a desired finish and to match the remainder of the room painted with a conventional cylindrical roller.
The angle of taper of the spindle-shaped corner roller cover can be designed to match the angle of two adjoining surfaces.
The paint-pan adapted makes it possible for the corner-roller cover to easily and rapidly load paint from a conventional paint pan. The adapter is lightweight yet sturdy and is easily portable. The construction of the grille in the adapter affords the corner roller cover traction and access to surface coating material in the paint pan reservoir. The durable construction of the adapter allows for reuse after cleaning, although the cost of construction makes it disposable if so desired. The adapter can easily be designed and manufactured to fit corner roller covers with angles of taper larger than 90 degrees.
Finally, this roller cover is easily assembled onto the wire roller without the use of nuts and bolts. It is also easily dissembled. Nothing protrudes from this roller to gouge a painted surface. There is no possibility of the paint fabric dislodging from the roller cover.
It is to be understood that the phraseology or terminology employed herein is for the purpose of description and not of limitation. The means and materials for carrying out various disclosed functions may take a variety of alternative forms without departing from the invention.
Thus, the expressions “means to . . . ” and “means for . . . ” as may be found in the specification above and/or in the claims below, followed by a functional statement, are intended to define and cover whatever structural, physical, chemical, or electrical element or structures which may now or in the future exist for carrying out the recited function, whether or nor precisely equivalent to the embodiment or embodiments disclosed in the specification above. It is intended that such-expressions be given their broadest interpretation.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070271721 A1 | Nov 2007 | US |