The present invention relates to a novel drywall scoring device.
During typical drywall installation, when two drywall surfaces meet to form a corner, the person installing or “hanging” the drywall will intentionally hang each piece of drywall so that it runs past the other. This is done to permit the installer to score the backside of the drywall or “back-cut” it at the point where it runs past the other in order to “snap” the drywall off at the exact point of intersection to produce a “clean” corner.
However, in order to “snap” the drywall off at the exact point of intersection and produce a “clean” and “neat” corner that is ready for the next step in the finishing process, the drywall must run past the intersecting drywall by a distance of more than approximately two inches in order to have the leverage needed to “snap” off the drywall.
Many times an installer for several different reasons will run the drywall past the intersecting drywall surface at a distance of less than approximately two inches. This necessitates the very tedious process of removing the overhanging waste drywall. This process includes transferring the measurement from the backside point of intersection to the finish side at each end, snapping a chalk line and then cutting off the overhanging waste drywall by the use of a reciprocating saw, a drywall handsaw (or “meatsaw”) or by any other known means.
The object of the present invention is to provide a device capable of scoring the exterior side of drywall at a point where two drywall surfaces meet to form a corner (and one of the drywall surfaces runs past the other by a distance of approximately less than two inches) by using the intersecting surface as a guide.
The present invention achieves that object and comprises a monolithic structure that consists of a flat guide plate above a C-shaped open-ended mid-section with an approximately two inch by approximately one inch cavity with a cutting wheel (or any other means of cutting) that cuts along the same plane as the flat surface of the guide plate.
The present invention can be more fully understood by reference to the following description and accompanying drawings in which:
As used herein, the term “drywall” means sheetrock, denseglass, coreboard, backerboard, or any other construction surface materials known and unknown.
In addition, different embodiments of the present invention may be manufactured using a variety of media. Embodiments of the present invention may also be manufactured in a variety of sizes without departing from the spirit of the invention defined by the appended claims.
While the invention has been described with reference to certain embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that modifications or variations may be easily made without departing from the spirit of this invention defined by the appended claims.