Faceted radius grid

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6751922
  • Patent Number
    6,751,922
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, February 25, 2003
    21 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, June 22, 2004
    20 years ago
Abstract
A straight roll formed beam for a curved suspended ceiling capable of being formed into a curve at the job site. The straight beam has cutouts that leave a segment of the bulb of the beam in place to give the straight beam rigidity after it is roll formed from metal strip. In the field, the bulb segment at a cutout is cut to permit the beam to be bent into a faceted curve. The bend at the cutout is fixed by a splice plate.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The present invention relates to a curved suspended ceiling having a grid of inverted T beams suspended from a structural ceiling, with drywall boards fastened to the grid.




2. Description of the Prior Art




Suspended ceilings in rooms are common. They have a grid of metallic beams that is suspended from an overhead structural ceiling, as by wires.




The metallic beams used in the grids of suspended ceilings are made in a continuous process, wherein a continuous strip of metal, usually steel, fed off a reel, is continuously and sequentially passed through a series of rolls that form the metal into an inverted T cross section having a web, a bulb at the top of the web, and horizontal flanges extending from the bottom of the web. Such beam construction is well-known.




A straight, finished beam continuously emerges from the roll forming operation, and is cut, on the run, into suitable lengths, of, for instance, 12 feet, or 4 feet, or 2 feet, with, for instance, a flying shear. Connectors are then formed at the ends of the straight beam lengths. The beams are then stacked and packaged for shipment to the job site for assembly into the grid of a flat, horizontal suspended ceiling. The beam cross section gives the beam rigidity throughout these operations.




The beams are formed into a grid at the job site, in the well-known prior art manner, by means of the connectors at the ends of the beam.




In a panel suspended ceiling, panels are laid in the grid openings and supported by the flanges of the beams. In a drywall suspended ceiling, drywall boards are attached to the beams of the grid by screws.




Both types of ceilings described above extend in a horizontal plane. Virtually all suspended ceilings are horizontal.




Occasionally, suspended ceilings that are curved are installed, particularly of the drywall type. In a curved drywall suspended ceiling, a grid of curved beams is suspended by wires from a structural ceiling, and drywall panels then are attached to the grid by screws, as in a horizontal drywall suspended ceiling. The faces of the drywall panels are wetted and then are bent to the desired shape prior to attachment to the grid.




In one form of curved drywall suspended ceiling, the grid is formed of straight beams that are curved into facets to form the desired radius, at the job site. This involves forming facets by slitting, as with shears, the bulb and web of each beam, normal to the length of the beam, at, for instance, 8 inch spaced intervals, resulting in 8 inch facets, at the job site, and bending the beam at each slit, between facets, to the desired radius. Clips are then affixed over the slits to fix the curve. This requires a custom operation at the job site that is time-consuming, since the slits are located and made, and the clips attached, individually. The work is done at the site since the beams, after being slit, and before the clips are attached, are very flimsy and cannot be handled in the traditional way of uncut, straight beams. Straight unslit beams are stacked, shipped, and installed, as relatively rigid pieces. In slitting the beams through the bulb and web, the beam effect is destroyed, not to be restored until the clips are installed.




Another form of curved drywall ceiling is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,047,512, wherein the grid beams are pre-formed and pre-engineered into true curves at the factory. Pre-engineered sections have integral webs that have no web cuts, but are curved at the factory into various radii. This requires an inventory of various sizes and shapes, which are custom assembled at the job site, or at the factory, in a time-consuming and intricate procedure.




SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT INVENTION




In the present invention, straight, inverted T beams are continuously roll formed from strip metal, at the factory, in the usual prior art way. Such beams are of inverted T cross section with a bulb at the top, a downward extending vertical web, and horizontal flanges extending from the bottom of the web. The two layers of the web are continuously stitched together.




The present invention permits the above prior art straight beams to be efficiently converted into curved beams. Cutouts in the beam, at spaced intervals along the beam, are made continuously and contemporaneously with the roll forming operations, in a portion of the web and a bulb. A segment of the bulb is left in place above the cutout to maintain the integrity of the straight beam. The cutouts do not impair the beams' integrity during handling and shipping to the job site. The cutouts are manually extended through the remaining segment of the bulb at the job site with a minimum of cutting and no need for measuring, and the beam is bent to the required radius, at the cutouts, between facets. Splice plates are applied over the extended cutouts at the bend to fix the beam at the desired faceted curve.




The cutouts are continuously and simultaneously made in the beam, for instance at 8, 16, or 24-inch intervals, as the beams are being continuously roll formed in the usual prior art roll forming operation. No manual effort is required in forming these cutouts. The preferred form of cutout has a V-shape at the bottom, with upwardly extending arms from the sides of the V. There is left a segment of the bulb, in the beam, at the top of the cutout, along with a portion of the web left at the bottom of the cutout, which is sufficient to maintain integrity of the straight beam during the cutting of the continuous moving beam into beam lengths, the forming of the connectors at the end of the lengths, the shipping to the job site, and the handling at the job site. At the job site, the bulb segment remaining in the beam above the cutouts, between facets, is snipped, for instance, with shears to permit the beam to be bent, between facets, into a faceted, convex or concave radius, and splice plates are applied at the cutouts by screws to fix the beam in this faceted radius.




The invention eliminates the need for an inventory of factory precurved beams, of different radii and different sized segments, that are subsequently assembled and fixed at the job site, as in one form of curved suspended ceiling in the prior art, or for time-consuming slitting, and fashioning, from an integral, straight beam, into a faceted curved beam, at the job site, as in another form of curved suspended ceiling in another form of prior art.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a block diagram showing figuratively the continuous production of a beam of the invention from a coil of strip metal.





FIG. 2

is a perspective view of the beam of the invention showing cutouts.





FIG. 3

is a side elevation of the beam of the invention.





FIG. 4

is an end elevation of the beam of FIG.


3


.





FIG. 5

is a perspective view similar to

FIG. 2

showing a bulb segment above a cutout severed and the beam bent to form a concave curve.





FIG. 6

shows a splice plate used to fix the bend in the beam of FIG.


5


.





FIG. 7

is a side elevation of a beam of the invention bent in a concave curve, with the splice plate of

FIG. 6

a fixed in place at one of the bends.





FIG. 8

is a transverse sectional view taken on the line


8





8


in FIG.


7


.





FIG. 9

is a perspective view similar to

FIGS. 2 and 5

showing a cutout severed by removing a segment of the bulb in a beam and the beam bent to form a convex curve.





FIG. 10

shows the beam of the invention bent into a convex curve at the cutouts, with the splice plate of

FIG. 6

affixed to one of the cutouts.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT




As seen figuratively in

FIG. 1

, a reel


10


of strip metal


11


, usually steel, is continuously unwound to feed the strip through a roll forming operation


12


.




There continuously emerges from such roll forming operation


12


a straight beam


20


of inverted T cross section having a bulb


21


, web


22


, and horizontal flanges


23


and


25


. Stitches


24


hold the layers of the web


22


together. Such roll forming operation


12


is well-known in the prior art.




As the straight, finished beam


20


continuously emerges from the roll forming operation


12


, it is continuously cut into suitable lengths, for instance 12 feet, or 4 feet, or 2 feet, as with a flying shear. Connectors, well-known in the art, are formed on the ends of the straight beams. The beams


20


are then stacked and packaged for shipment to the job site for assembly into the grid of a suspended ceiling.




The beam


20


cross section, in inverted T form, as it emerges from the roll forming operation


12


, gives the beam rigidity, which permits the beam


20


to be handled during further processing, packaging, shipment, and installation, without collapse. Beams of this type are well-known, and used extensively to form grids in suspended ceilings, that hang from structural ceilings by wires. Such grids are used primarily for panel suspended ceilings, where panels are laid in the grid openings, and supported on the beam flanges.




Beams of this type are also used, however, in drywall ceilings, where drywall panels are fastened to the beam flanges from below, by self-tapping screws that pass through the drywall into the flanges


23


and


25


of the beam. The beam


20


of the invention is particularly adapted to a drywall ceiling, although it can be used in a panel ceiling.




The above description is directed to the prior art.




In the beam


20


of the invention, cutouts


30


are continuously formed in the beam


20


as the beam


20


is continuously being roll formed in the roll forming operation


12


as described above. The cutouts


30


can be formed by passing the roll formed beam


20


through a set of two rolls at


31


, as seen figuratively in

FIG. 1

, wherein one of the rolls is a punch and the other is a die.




The cutout


30


itself, as seen particularly in

FIG. 3

, is generally a vertically disposed rectangle


32


with a V shaped bottom


33


. The cutout


30


leaves a segment


34


of the bulb


21


, and a web portion at the bottom of the cutout


30


, in place in the beam


20


to provide rigidity to the beam


20


at the cutout


30


.




By means of the bulb segment


34


, and the remaining web portion, the beam


20


maintains its rigidity for handling, including cutting the continuous beam


20


into lengths, as described above, forming connectors at the ends, packaging, shipping to the job site, and handling at the site.




The beam


20


with the cutouts


30


, is also of sufficient rigidity to be used as a straight beam where needed.




The cutout


30


can have representative dimensions of 0.625 inches in width and 1.337 inches in height, in a beam having an overall height of 1.696 inches, as shown in

FIGS. 3 and 4

.




The beams


20


of the invention are intended for use in a suspended curved drywall ceiling having concave, or convex, curves as viewed from below.




Where the beams


20


are intended for a concave curve in the ceiling, as viewed from below, selected cutouts


30


along the beam


20


, as seen in

FIG. 5

, are cut at the job site by simply slitting across bulb segment


34


, for instance, with shears, as seen in FIG.


5


. The beam


20


is then bent at


36


, as seen in

FIG. 5

, to the desired faceted concave curve


37


, as seen for instance in FIG.


7


. There is little resistance to such bend at


36


, and because of the cutout


30


shape, the bend at


36


occurs directly below the apex


38


of the V


33


, along a bend line transverse to the beam


20


length.




A splice plate


40


of the type shown in

FIG. 6

is then affixed over the cutout


30


at the bend at


36


to stabilize the faceted concave curve


37


. The plate


40


is S shaped in cross section to conform to the contour of the side of the beam


20


when affixed to the beam


20


at the bend at


36


, as seen in

FIGS. 7 and 8

. The plate


40


has holes


45


through which screws or rivets


46


affix the plate


40


to the beam


20


. Semi-circular openings


47


at the top and bottom of the plate


40


avoid interference with the bulb


21


, when the beam


20


is bent to form a convex curve


50


, when viewed from below, as now described.




When the beam


20


is used to form a convex curve


50


, a short piece


51


of the bulb segment


34


, above the cutout


30


, as seen in

FIG. 9

, is snipped away manually at the job site, at the desired cutout


30


. The beam


20


is then bent at


52


to the desired convex curve


50


radius, as seen in

FIGS. 9 and 10

, and a splice plate


40


attached with screws or rivets


46


.




As seen in

FIG. 10

, semi-circular openings


47


in the splice plate


40


eliminate any interference, at the top of the plate


40


, from the portion of the bulbs


23


that form the apex at the bend at


52


. The splice plates


40


are symmetrical vertically and horizontally, so there is always such an opening


47


at the top of the plate


40


.




After forming the beam


20


into a faceted concave or convex curve,


37


or


50


, as in

FIG. 7

or


10


, the beam


20


is suspended from a structural ceiling in the usual prior art way, as by hanger wires, and cross beams are inserted in the usual prior art way, to form the curved grid.




Drywall panels are then attached to the beam flanges


23


,


25


on the underside of the grid, in the usual prior art way, as by self tapping screws. In applying the drywall to the grid, the faces of the drywall panels are wetted, and then are bent to the desired shape to conform to the faceted grid, prior to attachment to the grid.



Claims
  • 1. In a straight beam (20) having an inverted T cross section, with a bulb (21) at the top, a vertical web (22), and horizontal flanges (23,25) extending from the bottom of the web (22), capable of being formed in the field into a faceted curved beam (37,50) for use in a curved suspended ceiling,the improvement comprisingcutouts (30) spaced along the beam with each of the cutouts (30) extending into the bulb (21) and the web (22) and leaving an intact segment (34) of the bulb (21) above each cutout (30); wherein the straight beam (20) is capable of being formed in the field into a faceted curved beam (37,50) by cutting the intact segment (34) of the bulb (21) of a cutout (30), bending the beam (20) at the cutout (30), and fixing the bend (36,52) at the cutout (30) by securing a splice plate (40) to the beam (20) at each cutout (30).
  • 2. The beam (20) of claim 1 wherein the beam (20) is capable of being formed into a concave faceted curved beam (37).
  • 3. The beam (20) of claim 1 wherein the beam (20) is capable of being formed into a convex faceted curved beam (50).
  • 4. The beam (20) of claim 1 made by the process ofa) passing a strip of metal (11) continuously through a roll forming operation (12) to form the strip (11) into a moving continuous straight beam (20), while b) simultaneously with the roll forming operation (12), punching the cutouts (30) into the moving continuous straight beam (20), c) cutting the moving continuous straight beam (20) into straight lengths, and d) forming the connectors at the end of each length of beam (20).
  • 5. The method of making the beam of claim 1 comprisinga) passing a strip of metal (11) continuously through a roll forming operation (12) to form the strip (11) into a moving continuous straight beam (20), while b) simultaneously with the roll forming operation (12), punching the cutouts (30) into the moving continuous straight beam (20), c) cutting the continuous straight beam (20) into straight lengths, and d) forming the connectors at the end of each length of beam (20).
US Referenced Citations (9)
Number Name Date Kind
3189139 Znamirowski et al. Jun 1965 A
4128978 Beynon Dec 1978 A
4783946 Boegle Nov 1988 A
4893444 Ollinger et al. Jan 1990 A
4932170 Spear Jun 1990 A
5088261 Mieyal et al. Feb 1992 A
6047512 Wendt et al. Apr 2000 A
6374564 Fletterick et al. Apr 2002 B1
6434908 Ferrante Aug 2002 B1
Non-Patent Literature Citations (7)
Entry
Armstrong Drywall Furring System Detail—Typ. Vaulted Ceiling; DW-20-02, 1 page.
Armstrong Drywall Furring System Detail/Furring Channel; DW-20-03, 1 page.
Armstrong Drywall Barrel Vault in Carousel Court; DW-23, 1 page.
Armstrong Drywall Barrel Vault in Carousel Court; DW-23-01, 1 page.
Armstrong Drywall Furring System Detail—Typ. Vaulted Ceiling; DW-20-01, 1 page.
Convex/Concave Radius Installation Steps, 1 page.
Four photographs (4 pages).