This invention relates to fixed construction particularly to pre-made corner covers to provide a clean finish for the installation and repairs of cove base at corners formed by intersecting walls.
The construction industry introduced cove base to provide an easily cleanable “baseboard” of a synthetic material that left no gap between a vinyl floor and a wall. It is generally made of vinyl, is provided in long, generally flat strips that have a curved feature along one of the long edges. When installed, the curved area provides a continuous transition from floor to wall. Cove base is convenient to install along a wall but in corners, it can be difficult to produce a clean, finished appearance. Installing cove base at intersecting corners can be very difficult and time-consuming. While outside corners are more troublesome, inside corners also present difficulties.
A common method for installing cove base at an outside corner is to wrap a continuous length of cove base around the corner. This process can be very frustrating and time-consuming taking many steps to accomplish the task. One of the steps in the procedure is reducing the material in the back by carving or gouging to reduce the thickness at the region of the cove base making the 90-degree turn around the corner. Nonetheless wrapping most often results with an undesirable appearance, with the bottom cove portion collapsing into itself. In addition, the tension produced often stresses the bottom contour to the point of eventually splitting, thereby creating a gap in an open upside down V shape. If too much material is taken out of the back, a hole is created on the front side forcing the installer to start over with a new piece. Although reducing material from the back is imperative in this method, it contributes to reduced integrity of the cove base at the corner's vertex.
Inside corners can be less troublesome. Nevertheless, they present other problems particularly when the wall is out of plumb. When bending a length of cove base to fit in an inside corner generally a slice of a small depth is made on the backside at the vertex and the bottom of the cove base is cut out at about a 45-degree angle creating an upside down V notch. If not done precisely and in the position that will fall at the exact corner, this can result in a ruined length of material and a need to repeat the procedure. Between the extra labor incurred and possible other complications associated with facilitating installations at intersecting corners, a better method has been sought.
Several approaches have been used and proposed to address some of these problems including a contribution of the present inventor U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/983,122 published as US 2009/0113840 A1 on May 7, 2009. That reference discloses a unitary corner cover that is adhered over the rough-cut ends of the two respective lengths of cove base.
Remaining problems include color matching to the wide variety of cove base material and holding a corner cover accurately in place while the adhesive sets up.
These teachings include a corner cover that goes over the rough-cut ends of two separate lengths of cove base that are each cut near a corner they both approach. An embodiment comprises an integrally formed cover for an external corner with an elongated midsection defining a pair of generally flat perpendicular faces. The faces intersect to form a front facing vertex and have rear surfaces. The rear surfaces are spaced away from a wall that the cover is abutted against. This consequence is due to the shape of the upper and lower extremities of the cover that provide the points of contact respectively between the wall and the cover and the floor and the cover. In this outer corner teaching, the 90-degree angle of the intersecting flat faces is oriented inward to the corner, of course. The space or gap between the cover and the wall accommodates the thickness of cove base. An inward curvature at the top of the corner cover hides the area where the two cove base lengths do not meet at the vertex of the corner. The outward curve of the lower portion provides for the gap to be curved and thereby provide room for the lower, cove shaped portion of the cove base to be behind the corner cover without a significant visible gap.
Other aspects of the teachings include corner covers for inside corners. In this case, the concave right angle of the two generally flat midsection areas faces outward. The upper portion is curved back towards the wall in an amount effective for causing a cove base shaped gap between the wall and the corner cover when the corner cover is generally parallel to, and abutted to, the wall.
These teachings also encompass a second, complementary mounting piece. It can be a wall adapter comprising a right-angled item of two thin flat surfaces with a mating structure at its exterior apex. In this teaching the corresponding corner cover can have a complementary mating structure on its inside apex.
A method of use can be to first adhere the wall adapter to the wall's corner. The cove base can be positioned and adhered on the left and the right of the corner, covering at least a portion of the wings of the wall adapter. A complementary corner cover can then be mechanically mated with the wall adapter. A variety of mating structures can be used.
In devices in accord with this aspect of the teachings, the corner cover may be hooked, snapped, friction fit, or otherwise held mechanically in place by the mating of the complementary structures at the external apex of the wall adapter and the internal apex of the corner cover. In some cases, this may provide the entire support for the corner cover. In others, it might only be retained sufficiently to hold the corner cover in place while an adhesive sets.
An embodiment of an outside corner cover of the present invention is illustrated in
The view of
The right side panel face 15 is flat and tapered round at its edge 17 in order to conform and blend in aesthetically as it engages with the cove base it overlaps. The lower portion has a curve 19 extending outwardly to the left and down in a contoured shape 2123 corresponding to that of the cove base 60 it covers.
In
The versions seen in
Wall Adapter Versions
Three-Tooth Version
In some embodiments, a corner cover can be a two-piece unit. In
With a wall adapter having a complementary mechanical mating structure, embodiments can be such as to not require any adhesive or other bonding. In alternate versions, the mechanical retention might serve a purpose of holding the device in place while a bonding sets up.
Rod and Hollow Cylinder Version
As will be understood by those skilled in the art a wide variety of complementary mechanical mating structures can be used to secure the described wall adapter to a corner cover—each with differing advantages and disadvantages. Three additional structures are shown and described herein.
Slot and Hanging Tab Version
Slide and Snap Version
A fourth interconnection version is seen in plan view in
Transparent or Translucent Versions
Some users might prefer a cover of a color matching the color of the cove base. Clear corner covers can appear to take on the color of the cove base installed beneath them and therefore can be considered for universal use. Certain embodiments have a secure enough retention between a cover and wall adapter to require no additional bonding. The rear of the cover can be free of adhesive. Therefore, a translucent cover would not have any foreign material between it and the underlying cove base that contributed to its color.
Adhesive Set-Up Time Savings
If no inherent mechanical retention is provided in a corner cover apparatus, there is generally a requirement for an adhesive to be applied and care to be taken for a period of time to either physically hold the parts in position while the adhesive sets up or at least to protect the area from accidental disturbance during that period. Further, it may be prudent to recheck each corner after a period of time to confirm that all are secured in place correctly. A system that provides a positive retention obviates these needs by either dispensing with adhesive or providing a secure mechanical connection while an adhesive is setting.
This application claims priority from and incorporates by reference in its entirety application Ser. No. 11/983,122 filed Nov. 7, 2007 and published as US2009/0113840 A1 on May 9, 2009. The present application is a Continuation-in-Part of that cited application.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110094174 A1 | Apr 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11983122 | Nov 2007 | US |
Child | 12977062 | US |