The present invention generally relates to a structural panel used in metal buildings, and more specifically to an end wall panel used in construction of arch-style steel buildings.
An end wall panel is commonly a component of an arch-style steel building. Arch-style steel buildings are generally formed of three primary cold-formed steel components: the arch panels, which make up the basic shell of the structure; the end walls, which close in the front and rear of the structure; and the curved angle assembly, which serves as the attachment-point for the front and rear end wall to connect to the arch panels. All connections throughout this particular type of building system are usually accomplished by standard sized nuts and bolts.
In order to fabricate an arch-style steel building that is suitable for installation in locations that often experience high wind speeds (i.e. wind speeds in excess of 90 mph) without an internal framework, the end wall panel of the building must be light-weight and able to withstand high shear and bending loads. A problem associated with arch-style steel buildings is that the end wall panels currently used in such buildings do not offer sufficient strength for high-wind applications unless an interior framework is in place behind the panels. Further, the present panels are expensive to manufacture and have a low strength to weight ratio.
The end wall panel design currently used in many arch-style steel buildings, depicted in
In addition, the end wall panel design currently employed in many arch style steel buildings is costly and difficult to manufacture. The present panel is made from a single sheet of metal, has a coverage of 1.5 feet in width and may be up to 191 inches in length (the length of the stock sheet panel) depending on the dimensions of the building. The total flat width of the sheet metal panel (i.e. the width prior to bending) required to create an end wall panel with 1.5 feet of coverage is 23 inches. The metal sheet used to create the panel is cut from a coil of sheet metal. A coil of sheet metal 23 inches wide, which is relatively narrow in width, is costly to manufacture because narrower and thinner coils of sheet metal are more expensive than wider and thicker coils. As such, the most cost effective way to create a 23 inch wide metal sheet is to slit a 46.5 inch wide coil of sheet metal in half. Slitting such a sheet metal coil in half requires outside processing and adds additional steps to the manufacturing process. Also, some material is lost every time a steel panel is slit or cut. A 33 inch wide coil is used to fabricate the arch panels commonly used in steel buildings. In order to reduce costs, it be would desirable to fabricate the end wall panel from a standard size 33 inch wide coil, which is less expensive than cutting a 46.5 inch coil in half. As such, an arch-style metal building manufacturer would only have to purchase a single coil size (33 inch wide) to fabricate the primary components of an arch-style steel building.
Another drawback of current end wall panels is their “coverage dimension.” Current end wall panels customarily have a coverage dimension of about 1.5 feet. This makes installation of the end wall panel into many standard sized arch-style steel buildings expensive and difficult. The difficulty arises from the size of industry standard entryways. Many standard end wall entryway (e.g. door) sizes do not correspond to the one and one-half feet coverage dimension of the commonly used end wall panel. Thus, filler panels must be installed to enable a flush fit for the entryway enclosure. For example, if a cutout is ten feet wide, six one and one-half feet wide end wall panels will cover nine feet of the end wall width above the cutout. This will not accommodate a standard size closure. When the closure is installed, a one foot gap will remain above the cutout, and a one foot wide filler panel must be fabricated and installed to fill in the gap. Fabricating and installing a custom sized filler panel increases the production cost of the building. In addition, the filler panels detract from the aesthetic quality of the arch-style steel building.
In the past, there have been several attempts to provide light-weight structural panels for steel buildings. One such building panel is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,873,008 of Ashman. The Ashman structural panels are fabricated from metal sheet and have a corrugated section (element 5 on Ashman FIGS. 1 and 2) and a wing section (element 6 on Ashman FIGS. 1 and 2). The corrugated section consists of a plurality of troughs of equal depth. The wing section is a flange extending from the outer side of an outermost trough of the corrugated section. The
Ashman panel would likely require additional framework installed behind the panels to meet high-wind requirements. The wing section also increases the amount of material required to fabricate a building resulting in a low strength to weight ratio.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,968,603 of Merson discloses a panel for prefabricated metal buildings. Merson discloses a U-shaped corrugated panel comprised of a bottom wall with a plurality of U-shaped ribs. The side walls, which form the outermost edges of the corrugated panel, are longer than the height of the U-shaped ribs of the corrugated panel and have crimped ends. The plurality of U-shaped ribs and side walls add weight to the panel without greatly increasing the panel's strength. As such, the panel has a low strength to weight ratio. In addition, the panels are U-shaped and cannot easily be installed overlapping one another to increase the stiffness of the end wall or arch section of the building.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,358,916 of Lacasse discloses a corrugated metal building structural unit. The structural unit is comprised of one or more longitudinally extending major waves with a plurality of interlinked longitudinally extending wave-like stiffeners superposed on each major wave. Due to the fact that the Lacasse panel has a high density of wave-like stiffeners, the panel requires excess material and has a low strength to weight ratio.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,308,596 of Cooper discloses a panel of one or two major corrugations with minor corrugations on each of the surfaces of the panel. Due to the high level of minor corrugations on each of the surfaces of the panel, the panel requires more material and as a result has a low strength to weight ratio.
It would be desirable to create an end wall panel that has adequate strength for high-wind applications, that would not require an internal framework and that has a higher strength to weight ratio than the prior art end wall panels. It would also be desirable to have an end wall panel that is inexpensive to manufacture and can easily be installed in arch-style steel buildings of varying dimension.
The present invention overcomes the drawbacks of the prior art structural panels by providing an end wall panel that is easy and inexpensive to manufacture and offers sufficient strength for installation in areas that experience high wind speeds, without the need for an internal frame. The end wall panel of the present invention is less expensive to fabricate because it is made from the same size steel coil as the arch panels used to construct other components of the arch-style building and is easier to assemble into a finished arch-style building compared to the existing structural panels because the width of the new end wall panel corresponds to the dimensions of many standard end wall entryway cutout sizes.
According to one aspect of the present invention, an end wall panel is formed from a metal sheet and includes an odd number of upper flanges spaced apart from one another and at least four web sections that extend at an angle from each side of the upper flanges. The end wall panel of the invention also has multiple lower flanges, each of the flanges being joined to adjacent upper flanges by a web section. In one preferred embodiment, the total number of lower flanges is one less than the number of upper flanges and one lower flange between each pair of adjacent upper flanges. The lower flange sections are generally wider than the upper flange sections.
In one preferred embodiment of the invention, the end wall panel comprises three upper flanges and two lower flanges.
In another embodiment of the invention, the end wall panel is formed from metal sheet and comprises multiple rib units serially arranged adjacent to one another. Each rib unit has an upper flange, a lower flange and a web portion. The web portions extend downward at an angle from each side of the upper flange surface. The lower flanges are each located between adjacent upper flanges and are joined to the adjacent upper flanges by a web portion. Flange stiffeners extend at an angle from the outer edge of the outermost upper flanges and do not extend to a lower flange. The flange stiffeners are shorter in length than the web portions connecting the upper and lower flanges.
In a further embodiment of the invention, the flange stiffeners extending from the outer edge of the outermost upper flanges are less than half the length of the web portions connecting the upper and lower flanges.
In a further embodiment of the invention, the ends of the end wall panel are shaped to match the contour of an arch-style metal building.
In a further embodiment of the invention, the outermost upper flanges of the end wall panel contain multiple holes arranged serially adjacent to one another along the length of the end wall panel.
The foregoing and other features of the present invention will be more readily apparent from the following detailed description and drawings of illustrative embodiments of the invention in which:
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Additionally, the end wall panel consisting of three upper flanges 12, is easier to bend from a flat sheet to its final shape than the prior art end wall panel 7, which has two upper flanges 8. The end wall panel is bent from a flat metal sheet to its final shape using the roll forming process. The more flanges required in a sheet metal part, the easier it is to control during the roll forming process. As such, the additional upper flange 12 and lower flange 14 allow more control during the roll forming process, thereby increasing manufacturing consistency and reducing manufacturing costs.
In addition, an end wall panel that provides twenty-four inches of coverage can be installed surrounding most standard size pre-cut entryways 19 without the use of filler panels. The end wall panels currently used to make arch-style steel buildings have a coverage dimension of 1.5 feet, which results in difficulty in assembling end walls with many standard entryway 19 sizes. The difficulty arises from installation of the end wall panels 18 above an entryway cutout 19 in the end wall. For example, if an entryway 19 cutout is ten feet wide, six one and one-half foot wide end wall panels 7 will cover 9 feet of the end wall width above the entryway 19. This cutout size does not correspond to the size of the standard size closures (e.g. doors) that are widely available and less expensive than custom sized doors. A one foot gap will remain above the door and a one foot wide filler panel must be fabricated and installed to fill in the gap. The end wall panel of the present invention has a coverage dimension of two feet. If an entryway cutout 19 is ten feet wide, five end wall panels of the present invention will cover 10 feet of the width above the door and no filler panels are required. Similarly, if an entryway cutout 19 is 11 feet wide, five end wall panels of the present invention will cover ten feet of the width. One additional end wall panel can be installed with two upper flanges overlapping the upper flanges of the adjacent end wall panel, as depicted in
In another embodiment of the present invention, the lower flanges 14 are wider than the upper flanges 12. In this embodiment, the lower flanges 14 are two and one-half inches wide while the upper flanges 12 are two inches wide. As such, the ratio of the width of the upper flanges 12 to the lower flanges 14 is 2:2.5. Because the panels are installed with the upper flanges 12 on the outside of the building, the end wall panel of the present invention can withstand higher wind suction loads (which apply their load on the panel towards the outside of the building) than wind pressure loads (which apply load on the panels towards the inside of the building). This is advantageous because wind suction loads are typically higher than wind pressure loads.
The angle between the upper flanges 12 and the web sections 13 is selected based on environmental load requirements and the dimensions of the building. The angle must be between 40 and 140 degrees to comply with the AISI requirement (NASPEC 2001 Section B4.2) for flange stiffeners. Preferably, the angle should be between 41 and 45 degrees to maintain the manufacturability of the design. In one especially preferred embodiment, the web sections 13 extend at an angle of approximately 43 degrees downward from the flat surface of the upper flanges 12. The end wall panel with web sections 13 extending at 43 degrees accommodates installation with arch panels 20 and curved angles 23 commonly used in the arch-style steel building industry.
The end wall panel 11 of the invention may be fabricated from high strength, low alloy sheet steel conforming to American Society of Testing Materials (ASTM) A792-02, Grade 50, Class 2, 50,000 ksi yield strength. The steel thickness in this embodiment ranges from 0.027 inches to 0.046 inches. The panel may also be fabricated from other grades of steel or steel alloys, or from aluminum or aluminum alloys, or from other metals or metal alloys customarily used in construction of metal buildings, including by way of example ASTM A792, Grade 50, Class 1, 50 ksi yield strength stainless steel or carbon steel. The end wall panel may be coated with zinc (galvanized), Galvalume, and/or paint for corrosion protection; however, other forms of corrosion protection such as passivation treatment, enameling, and powder coating may also be employed in manufacturing the end wall panels of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61117631 | Nov 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12609218 | Oct 2009 | US |
Child | 13828880 | US |