Engraving apparatus and method

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6199545
  • Patent Number
    6,199,545
  • Date Filed
    Monday, April 19, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 13, 2001
    23 years ago
  • Inventors
  • Examiners
    • Banks; Derris H.
    • Wilson; Lee
    Agents
    • Kiewit; David
Abstract
Arrangements are taught for decoratively engraving a surface, such as hardened concrete or stone, particularly by engraving stencil-defined swaths into the surface with a tool of the type commonly called a needle scaler. The arrangements include methods of covering portions of the surface with a stencil made of material capable of withstanding a chisel blow, and then engraving exposed swaths by repeated chisel blows from one or more chisels having a restricted stroke. In some cases non-contiguous portions of a stencil are interconnected by bridge-line connectors selected to allow free access to the entire swath by a needle scaler or other chisel driving apparatus. In other cases a space-frame is placed atop a stencil and used to support discrete non-contiguous island portions of the stencil.
Description




CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS




Not Applicable




STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT




Not Applicable




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The invention relates to the art of engraving a surface, often for the purpose of providing a decorative design on a previously hardened concrete, asphalt or other workable surface.




2. Background Information




Many earlier inventors have taught methods of concrete decoration in which a stencil is laid on a concrete surface and wet, colored concrete materials are added to the pre-existing surface through holes in the stencil. Notable among teachings in this area are the following patents:




U.S. Pat. No. 5,792,511, wherein Oliver et al. show a stencil that remains embedded in the decorative coating.




U.S. Pat. No. 5,735,094, wherein Zember describes a coating process using specific materials and involving pulling a stencil out of the coating before it sets up.




U.S. Pat. No. 5,447,752, wherein Cobb describes a similar process using different materials.




U.S. Pat. No. 5,243,905, wherein Webber teaches a stencil comprising interlocking segments and used in a coating process.




U.S. Pat. No. 5,133,621, wherein Gonzales describes a way of putting isolated decorative figures in a wet concrete slab.




U.S. Pat. No. 5,038,714, Dye et al. teach an arrangement for spraying a dye, but not additional concrete, through a stencil having a gasket on the bottom thereof.




The inventor, in his U.S. Pat. No. 5,176,426 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,445,437, has taught method and apparatus for engraving decorative figures into a hardened concrete surface by guiding a cutting apparatus across the surface to be decorated. These arrangements have generally employed small wheeled carts carrying abrasive grinding wheels.




Apparatus of the sort generally referred to as “flux chippers” or “needle scalers” is also of interest. In these sorts of apparatus one or more impacting tools, retained for translational motion of a limited extent along a predetermined axis, are repeatedly driven into the surface to be engraved by impacts from a hammer that is conventionally pneumatically operated, but that could be electrically or hydraulically driven. A needle scaler typically uses ten to thirty pointed rods, called “needles”, as the impacting tools. Each of these needles may have a diameter of two to three millimeters and commonly has a nail-head end distal from the pointed or beveled work-impacting end that commonly projects outwardly from a nosepiece of the apparatus. A pneumatically driven hammer head strikes the array of needles and is returned to the beginning of its reciprocating stroke by a return spring. This arrangement provides several thousand blows per minute on the array of nail heads and thereby repeatedly drives the needles back and forth over a total stroke distance of some three centimeters. Needle scalers are generally used in a freehand mode and are made with a variety of grips and nose configuration to adapt them to differing applications. The uses for needle scalers include cleaning rust (e.g., mill scale) from iron and steel castings, peening welded joints, removing barnacles from marine apparatus, and chipping stone, concrete and brick.




In addition to the use of grinding wheels and of chisels, it is also known to engrave hard surfaces by sandblasting, shot peening and other such techniques in which impacting tools, comprising small particles of a hard material, are expelled from the nose or nozzle of a tool driving or dispensing means and energetically impact a surface being engraved. When used to make deep cuts in hardened concrete or other aggregate materials comprising segregated portions of differing hardness, sandblasting leads to an engraved region having a rough texture because the softer portions of the concrete are removed more easily than harder ones.




BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




A preferred embodiment of the invention provides apparatus for engraving a hardened surface of stone, concrete, asphalt, or the like. This apparatus may comprise one or more impacting tools, retained for translational motion of a limited extent along a predetermined axis; as well as an impact-absorbing stencil exposing those regions of the surface to be engraved while protecting adjacent regions from the impacting tools. In some embodiments, the apparatus comprises a plurality of impacting tools protruding outwardly of an aperture having a selectively alterable shape. This allows an operator to select a relatively elongated and narrow aperture when engraving a narrow swath and to select a relatively equi-axial aperture when engraving broader expanses.




In some embodiments, the apparatus of the invention comprises a stencil defining one or more relatively narrow swaths of exposed surface. In some cases, a swath is bordered by a stencil frame or by one of a plurality of non-contiguous “islands” covering portions of the surface that are not to be worked by the tool. In other cases, a swath may be exposed by a slit cut into a single sheet of material used for the stencil. In embodiments having islands, and in some embodiments having a plurality of long slits, bridge-like members may be used to connect adjacent portions of the stencil. In some embodiments these bridges allow engraving of the surface immediately beneath them. This is sometimes done by providing a clearance above the center of the respective exposed swath that is greater than the minimum diameter of the nose of a needle scaler, so that the scaler can be used to engrave that portion of the swath beneath the bridge. In other embodiments, stanchion portions of a bridge are hingedly connected to each of two non-contiguous portions of the stencil so that the bridge can be pivoted from side to side in order to provide an operator with access to the entire swath being engraved. In still other embodiments, one or more of the islands are connected to a space frame disposed on and extending outward from that side of the stencil distal from the engraved surface by connecting means preferably selected to allow a chiseling apparatus or needle scaler free access to all portions of the exposed swaths.




The invention provides methods for decoratively engraving a surface, such as hardened concrete or stone. In some embodiments the invention provides a method of engraving a surface by cutting stencil-defined swaths into the surface. This method may comprise the steps of covering portions of the surface with stencil material capable of withstanding a chisel blow, the spaces between adjacent stencil portions defining the swaths; and to then engrave the swaths by repeated chisel blows from one or more chisels having a restricted stroke. In some of these embodiments the method further comprises attaching non-contiguous portions of stencil material to each other by connecting means selected to allow free access to the entire swath by a needle scaler or other chisel driving apparatus.




Although it is believed that the foregoing recital of features and advantages may be of use to one who is skilled in the art and who wishes to learn how to practice the invention, it will be recognized that the foregoing recital is not intended to list all of the features and advantages of the invention. Moreover, it may be noted that various embodiments of the invention may provide various combinations of the hereinbefore recited features and advantages of the invention, and that less than all of the recited features and advantages may be provided by some embodiments.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING





FIG. 1

is a partly cut-away view of a pneumatic needle scaler engraving an exposed concrete swath between two portions of a stencil separately connected to a space frame attached to the side of the stencil distal from the concrete.





FIG. 2

is an exploded view of a two-legged stencil bridge of the invention





FIG. 3

is a partly sectional side view, similar to one taken along the line


3





3


of

FIG. 2

, of engraving apparatus being used with a bridged stencil.





FIG. 4

is a perspective view of a three-legged embodiment of a stencil bridge of the invention.





FIG. 5

is a side elevational view of a bridged stencil of the invention used on a curved surface.





FIG. 6

is an elevational view of a stencil usable for engraving near a vertical wall.





FIG. 7

is a cross sectional view, taken as indicated by


7





7


in

FIG. 6

, of the stencil of FIG.


6


.





FIG. 8

is a partial plan view of a stencil comprising means of adjusting a swath width.





FIG. 9

is a plan view of a stencil comprising a space frame supporting non-contiguous stencil islands.





FIG. 10

is a plan view of a stencil comprising three- and four-legged bridges.





FIG. 11

is an elevational view of a flexible nosepiece in a relaxed state.





FIG. 12

is an elevational view of the nosepiece of

FIG. 11

pinched into a narrow configuration.





FIG. 13

is a perspective view of a hinged nosepiece for a needle scaler.





FIG. 14

is a cross section taken perpendicular to a surface to be engraved and through a masking connector connecting two portions of a stencil.





FIG. 15

is a perspective view of a stencil of the invention comprising “needle squeeze” members on a narrowing portion thereof.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




Turning initially to

FIG. 1

, one finds preferred engraving apparatus


10


comprising a plurality of impacting tools


12


adapted to be repeatedly driven into a worked surface


14


by a hammer apparatus


16


that reciprocates the impacting tools


12


along a stroke having a predetermined length. The preferred apparatus


10


also comprises a stencil


18


used to define a swath


20


of the surface


14


to be chased or grooved in the engraving operation. The stencil


18


also protects other portions of the surface from being struck by a scaling needle


22


, chisel, or other impacting tool


12


. Particularly when a narrow swath


20


is to be chased, portions (which may be discrete portions, as will hereinafter be disclosed) of the preferred stencil


18


may have a beveled periphery


24


slanted so as to guide a reciprocating needle


22


onto the worked swath


20


. When a wider swath


20


is being cut a beveled edge


24


is less important because an operator can usually tilt the needles or other impacting tool


12


so as to work close to the edge of the stencil


18


. In many embodiments, portions of the stencil


18


adjacent the swath


20


are chosen to be of a material that can sustain repeated blows from a scaling needle


22


, pneumatically driven chisel, and the like. In various embodiments, resilient stencil portions may be cut from sheets of plywood, metal, or recycled plastic.




The engraving apparatus


10


may be used for forming surfaces simulative of brick or field stone surfaces by dyeing a concrete surface and then patterning the surface by cutting swaths, simulative of grout lines, to a depth greater than that of the dye penetration, as is indicated with the reference numeral


76


in FIG.


14


. Other methods of preparing such simulative surfaces have previously taught in my patents U.S. Pat. No. 5,176,426 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,445,437, the teachings of which are incorporated by reference herein. Thus, it is expected that in most cases the worked surface


14


will be a flat, most commonly horizontally disposed surface of a hardened concrete slab


26


, such as a driveway into which a brick-like pattern is to be engraved. The invention, however, is not limited to this case, and may also embrace engraving on curbs


28


, other curved surfaces, or on a wall or ceiling. Moreover, the worked surface


14


need not be an exposed surface of a body of pre-hardened concrete, but can be stone, asphalt, glass, or any other material that can be engraved by using an impacting tool to remove a selected portion of the surface thereof.




Turning now to

FIG. 5

, one finds a stencil


18


comprising two adjacent, non-contiguous masking elements


30


connected by a bridge


32


. The bridge


32


of

FIG. 5

comprises stanchions


34


fixedly attached to each of the masking elements and a linking member


36


pivotally connecting the stanchions


34


so as to allow the overall stencil


18


to conform to non-planar portions of the worked surface


14


. Although two hinged attachment points are depicted in

FIG. 3

, it may be noted that a single hinged connection point


33


, as depicted in

FIG. 2

, may well be adequate. Although most of the bridges illustrated in the drawing have two legs, in some cases one can profitably reduce the number of bridges


32


required for a stencil


18


by using a bridge having three or more legs


47


, as generally depicted in

FIGS. 4 and 10

.




When a brick or tile surface is being simulated by engraving pseudo-grout lines into a concrete surface, it is often desired that swaths be engraved up to a wall abutting the surface. In such cases one can employ a generally ell-shaped inside corner stencil


31


, as depicted in

FIGS. 6 and 7

. A preferred inside corner stencil


31


has a slot


41


cut through a leg thereof, with the width of the slot


41


selected to match the width of the swath to be engraved. The slot


41


terminates with an undercut beveled edge portion


42


that allows the scaler needles


22


to reach all the way to the wall without marking the wall. It will be understood to those skilled in the art that if one desires to carry a simulated grout line up along the vertical wall one could use an angled stencil (not shown) having two slotted legs and being similar in appearance to a corner bracket.




In some embodiments the stanchions


34


are selected to be tall enough so the portion of the swath


20


beneath the bridge


32


can be engraved by the impacting tools


12


. In these embodiments the clearance, as measured along a line perpendicular to the worked surface


14


, between the surface


14


and the bridge


32


is greater than a diameter of the nose


38


of the hammer apparatus


16


or other tool. In other embodiments the stanchions


34


are hingedly attached to a base


35


portion of the bridge


32


so that the bridge


32


can be pivoted out of the way of the hammer apparatus


16


, as depicted in FIG.


3


. Moreover, a bridge


32


may comprise stanchions


34


linked by a linking member


36


having a length-extensible portion


37


so as to allow for appropriate selection of the widths of swaths to be engraved.




Although the ability to engrave a shadowed portion of a swath disposed along a line running between the ends of by a bridge or other connecting member is important for some applications, this is not universally the case. In some cases it is necessary, or at least convenient, to attach the stencil


18


to a worked surface


14


, such as a vertical wall. When engraving to remove a dyed portion having a limited depth


76


, it is desirable to avoid marring the masked dyed portion. If one were to simply attach a stencil to a surface by making temporary mounting holes in masked regions, after the engraving was completed one would then have to both fill those holes and dye the filler material to match the surrounding surface. This commonly results in visually obvious and undesired marks on the surface. Hence a preferred approach is to attach a stencil


18


to a worked surface


14


by means of a plurality of screws


74


extending through respective throughholes formed in bridges


32


or in flat, shadowing, connecting members


72


. By using this approach, one assures that the subsequent mounting hole patches can be made without having to match dye coloration. In situations where a narrow, grout-line simulative, swath is cut, the resultant patched hole is nearly invisible.




The use of temporary mounting screws necessarily obscures part of the surface to be engraved. In some cases, e.g., when an engraved figure is substantially wider than the impacting tool


12


and when a tall enough bridge


32


is used so that only that portion of the surface immediately adjacent the mounting screw


74


is not worked while the bridge is in place, freehand engraving can be used to finish up around the patched mounting hole. When narrow swaths are being engraved, however, a separate single-slotted stencil having a slot width matching the swath width (such as that shown in

FIG. 6

) can be used to engrave shadowed regions. Alternately, one can provide a set of slots


78


in masking portions


30


of the stencil, where all of the slots


78


are located the same distance from a mounting hole so that after removing the mounting screws, an operator can translate the entire stencil to one side or another to align the slots


78


with the previously shadowed portions of the worked surface


14


.




In some embodiments the stencil


18


may comprise a frame portion


40


surrounding a portion of a surface


14


. This frame


40


comprises a large aperture


42


within which are disposed a plurality of non-contiguous masking elements


30


, each of which is separated from the frame


40


and from adjacent masking elements by a swath


20


wherefrom material is to removed from the surface


14


during the engraving operation. Because it is desirable to be able to select a variety of widths a swath


20


, some embodiments of the invention provide a length-adjustable connecting means


44


, such as the elongate metal loop


46


depicted in FIG.


8


. Moreover, because it is also desirable to simulate paving stones having a variety of sizes, some embodiments of the invention provide sets of multiple masking elements


30




a,




30




b,




30




c,




30




d


connected by length-adjustable connecting means


44


and shaped so that they can be drawn together or displaced some distance from each other. When spaced apart, these mask elements may be separated by a unused swath


20




a


that is not to be engraved.




A stencil comprising an unbroken outer frame


40


allows one to use a ganged support


48


to hold several non-contiguous masking elements


30


within the frame


40


. A ganged support


48


, as depicted in

FIGS. 1 and 9

, may comprise stanchions


34


extending outwards of the distal side of the frame (i.e., that side of the frame


40


distal from the worked surface


14


), and elongate supporting members


50


extending between the stanchions


34


. In some embodiments commercially available plumbing pipes are used for the elongate support members


50


and oversized plumbing tees


52


, retained in selected positions with set screws


54


, are used to suspend individual masking elements


30


on the end of additional short pieces of piping


56


. In other cases, a custom-fabricated screw-clamped fitting


53


may be used.




An additional advantage of a framed stencil is that one can select the shape of the aperture


42


so that after engraving a set of exposed swaths, the stencil


18


can be translated along the worked surface


14


and placed in a new position defining a second set of swaths, where the second set is aligned with respect to the first. For example, if one were to use a square aperture, the frame could be translated along orthogonal Cartesian axes so as to cover the worked surface with a square array of swaths. In simulating fieldstone paving, however, it has been found to be esthetically more pleasing to employ a frame


40


having a aperture


42


having four matching arcuate edges


58


that all have the same radius of curvature.




Many impacting tools


12


and tool driving means are suitable for engraving or chasing hard surfaces. These include manually and pneumatically driven single chisels, pneumatically driven sets of multiple small pointed rods or chisels of the sort commonly called “needles”, as well as sand or other abrasive material carried to the working surface by air or water. Manually chasing a concrete surface in order to define a decorative pattern is generally too laborious. Sandblasting, which may use some sort of stencil, is less laborious, but tends to create a undesirably rough groove in concrete because the impacting grains of sand preferentially remove softer cement while leaving harder chunks of aggregate material exposed. Grooving a concrete surface with a single pneumatically driven chisel is also known, but tends to leave recognizable tool marks in the grooves. Hence, the preferred embodiments of the invention employ a needle scaler


60


comprising a reciprocating pneumatic hammer apparatus simultaneously reciprocating a plurality of needle-like impacting tools


12


along a predetermined stroke so as to remove many small chips of material from the worked surface without simultaneously creating an undesired texture.




Most needle scalers employ a nose


38


having a round aperture, or one in which the range of diameters


62


is relatively small—i.e., in which the aspect ratio of length to width of the aperture is less than 2:1. Although the beveled edges


24


of the stencil


18


are useful for guiding needles into a swath


20


, it is nonetheless also advantageous to provide a means of forcing an array of needles into a nearly linear configuration in which the minimum width of the needle array is substantially narrower than a swath


20


. In one arrangement for controllably varying the minimum width of a nosepiece of a needle scaler between an expanded configuration, in which the minimum width of the nosepiece is greater than the width of a swath, and a contracted configuration in which the minimum width of the nosepiece is less than the width of the swath, a flexible nosepiece


64


provides a means of forming a narrow needle array. In another embodiment, a flap portion


66


of an otherwise conventional steel nosepiece


68


is attached to the balance of the nosepiece by a hinge


70


. With this apparatus, an operator can “pinch” the needle array into a narrow configuration, insert the nearly linear array into the swath between two neighboring masking elements and then begin chipping.




Local thickness variations in a stencil


18


are also useful for realigning an array of scaler needles


22


so that all the needles impact the worked surface


26


in a narrow swath


20


. For example, a locally thicker portion configured as a “squeeze chute”


84


can placed on the stencil


18


so that a bifurcating slit in the squeeze chute


84


is aligned over a portion of a swath


20


defined by a stencil


18


. The squeeze chute


84


may have a funnel-like end (as depicted in FIG.


15


), or may have a portion with beveled edges similar to the beveled stencil edge depicted in FIG.


1


. An operator can use a squeeze chute


84


having a funnel-like opening to get all of a set of needles


22


into the narrow swath by tilting the needle scaler slightly away from a vertical setting (e.g., by 15° or so), moving the array of needles into the chute


84


and then returning the scaler to a vertical setting. Similarly, a squeeze chute having beveled edges can be used to work an array of needles into a narrow swath by lowering the needle scaler through the squeeze chute until the needles contact the surface being worked. Although the squeeze chute


84


depicted in

FIG. 15

is clearly meant to be temporarily placed over a portion of the stencil when an operator wishes to work an array of needles into a narrow space, it should be noted that one could also provide squeeze chutes permanently attached to portions of the stencil. This latter approach is commonly less desirable because the increased local thickness of the stencil makes it difficult for the operator to bring the needles to bear on the edges of the swath—i.e., tilting a needle scaler away from the vertical along a line locally perpendicular to the swath is limited by the local height of the stencil.




Although the present invention has been described with respect to several preferred embodiments, many modifications and alterations can be made without departing from the invention. Accordingly, it is intended that all such modifications and alterations be considered as within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the attached claims.



Claims
  • 1. Engraving apparatus for engraving a first portion of a surface by driving at least one impacting tool thereinto, the engraving apparatus comprising:means for translationally reciprocating the at least one impacting tool along a stroke having a predetermined length; and a stencil adapted to sustain an impact from the at least one impacting tool, the stencil comprising two portions disposed on opposite sides of a swath, the stencil further comprising a connecting means having two ends, each of the two ends of the connecting means attached to a respective one of the two portions.
  • 2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein a portion of the connecting means comprises a variable length portion.
  • 3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein one of the two stencil portions comprises a frame surrounding the first portion of the surface and wherein the connecting means comprises a supporting member having two ends, each of the two ends respectively attached to the frame so that the supporting member extends across the first portion of the surface.
  • 4. Apparatus for engraving a worked surface by removing therefrom a swath of material, the apparatus comprisingtool driving apparatus adapted to drive an impacting tool into the worked surface, the tool-driving apparatus comprising a nose portion; a stencil comprising two non-contiguous stencil portions; a connecting means having two ends, each of the two ends attached to a respective one of the two non-contiguous stencil portions so that the two non-contiguous stencil portions are spaced apart from one another on the worked surface by a width of the swath, the connecting means adapted to permit the tool driving apparatus to drive the impacting tool into that portion of the swath intermediate the two ends of the connecting means.
  • 5. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein the connecting means extends outward from the worked surface by more than a width of the nose portion, whereby the nose portion may be inserted between the connecting means and the worked surface.
  • 6. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein the connecting means comprises two pieces of material pivotally connected to each other so that the two portions of the stencil are adapted to conform to a non-planar surface.
  • 7. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein the stencil further comprises a third portion spaced apart from the first and the second portions, the third portion connected to the first and to the second portions by a connecting means having three legs.
  • 8. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein each of the two ends of the connecting means is hingedly attached to the respective stencil portion, whereby a portion of the connecting means intermediate the two ends thereof is adapted to be hingedly moved to expose that portion of the swath intermediate the two ends of the connecting means to the impacting tool.
  • 9. Apparatus for engraving a portion of a worked surface by removing therefrom a swath of material, the apparatus comprisinga stencil comprising a frame portion disposed about the portion of the worked surface, the stencil further comprising a non-contiguous portion disposed so that the non-contiguous portion and the frame portion are disposed on respective sides of the swath; a supporting member having two ends fixedly attached to the frame so that the supporting member extends across the portion of the worked surface; connecting means for connecting the supporting member to the non-contiguous portion of the stencil; and an engraving means for removing the material from the swath.
  • 10. The apparatus of claim 9 wherein the connecting means pivotally attaches a non-contiguous portion of the stencil to the supporting member.
  • 11. A combination of a needle scaler and a stencil for engraving a surface, wherein:the stencil defines a swath having a selected swath width, and wherein the needle scaler comprises a plurality of needles extending outwardly through a nosepiece having a minimum width adapted to be controllably varied between an expanded configuration, wherein the minimum width of the nosepiece is greater than the swath width, and a contracted configuration wherein the minimum width of the nosepiece is less than the swath width.
  • 12. The apparatus of claim 11 wherein the nosepiece comprises a hinged flap.
  • 13. The apparatus of claim 11 wherein the nosepiece is flexible.
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Number Name Date Kind
3344868 Mikiya et al. Oct 1967
3915061 Stockman Oct 1975
4132151 Weber Jan 1979
4624609 Pickett Nov 1986
4954192 Dziekan Sep 1990
5038714 Dye et al. Aug 1991
5133621 Gonzales Jul 1992
5176426 Adamson Jan 1993
5243905 Webber Sep 1993
5445437 Adamson Aug 1995
5447752 Cobb Sep 1995
5735094 Zember Apr 1998
5792511 Oliver et al. Aug 1998
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Entry
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