The present invention relates to a connector for attaching the end of one member to the side of another, in particular for attaching a fence stringer or railing to a fence post.
There are a number of connectors suitable for attaching the end of an elongated member to the side of another structural member in general, as well as a number of patented connectors for making the particular attachment in a fence.
U.S. Pat. No. 1,089,878 which issued in 1914 to Alfred Steinhasuser teaches a connector that attaches a horizontally disposed brace to upright studs. The connector is designed to attach to the wood members with nail prongs rather than nails. The central portion of the connector is attached to the end of the horizontal brace with centrally located nail prongs and oppositely disposed nail prongs at the ends of the elongated connector are driven into the side face of the upright stud.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,833,201 which issued in 1974 to Joe E. Dill teaches a generally u-shaped connector that is suitable for attaching fence stringers to a round post. The central portion of the connector is attached to the end of the stringer with nails and the angled ends of the elongated connector are attached to the curved surface of the post with nails. Embossments are added to the different portions of the connector to strengthen the different portions. According to the patent, the central portion that connects to the end of the stringer can be formed with central tab extensions or tongues that according to the inventor create a larger bearing surface for the end of the stringer. Also according to the patent, the tongues make bending between the central attachment portion and the end attachment portions easier, because the tongues are formed in such a manner as to reduce the amount of material that needs to bend between the central attachment portion and the end attachment portion.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,280,686 which issued in 1981 to David T. Wick teaches an elongated connector that is suitable for attaching fence stringers to a post. The central portion of the connector is attached to the end of the stringer with nails and the ends of the elongated connector are attached to the post with nails. According to the patent, the material of the connector can be bent upon itself to form a ledge for supporting the stringer.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,616,950 which issued in 1986 to Tom C. Morris also teaches a generally U-shaped connector that is suitable for attaching fence stringers to a post. The upstanding sides of the generally u-shaped member engage the sides of the stringer, and additional channel shaped members overlay the sides of the generally u-shaped member. Extensions of the central portion of the u-shaped member attach the connector to the post.
United Kingdom Patent 2,401,616 which issued in 2004 teaches a connector that is similar to the generally u-shaped connector of U.S. Pat. No. 3,833,201; however, it differs from that patent in that the extending tongues from the central portion are used to attach the connector to the post and the end sections of the connector wrap around the stringer and are used to attach the connector to the stringer.
The present invention provides a uniquely shaped connector that is particularly suited for connections where the supported member and the supporting member are expected to shift their positions with respect to each other. Fence members are particularly prone to shifting either through shrinkage of the members, if they are made from wood, or through forces exerted on the fence, such as by the ground shifting or wind loading.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a connection between a fence stringer and a fence post whereby shrinkage and contraction of the fence stringer and/or the fence post will not weaken the connection between the two. This object is accomplished in part by forming the connector so that it can flex and bend between the area of attachment to the post and the area of attachment to the fence stringer.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a connector that is inexpensively made and easily attached to both the first and second members.
The present invention provides a connection between a supported member and a supporting member using a connector and a plurality of separate fasteners, wherein the supported member has an end face and the supporting member has a side face that is in generally abutting relation with the end face of the supported member, and the connector has a generally planar central attachment area bracketed by one or more generally planar peripheral attachment areas. The central attachment area of the connector is generally aligned with the peripheral attachment areas and the central attachment area interfaces with the end face of the supported member and the peripheral attachment areas interface with the side face of the supporting member. The plurality of separate fasteners are used to attach the connector to the supported and supporting members and they have elongated shanks and tips and are only either driven through the central attachment area and through the end face of the supported member with their tips embedded in the supported member, or they are driven through the peripheral attachment areas and through the side face of the supporting member with their tips embedded in the supporting member.
The connector is preferably an elongated member having a major axis, a minor axis, and a depth axis, and the connector is elongated with respect to the major axis such that the connector extends father along the major axis than it does along the minor axis, and the connector is relatively thin such that the connector extends farther along the minor axis than it does along the depth axis.
According to the present invention, the peripheral attachment areas extend away from the central attachment area sufficiently that they present exposed areas over which the end face of the supported member does not overlie and extend past the one or more longitudinal sides of the supported member.
According to the present invention, the central attachment area joins with the peripheral attachment areas at junctions, and the central attachment area has a selected cross-sectional area in a plane defined by the lateral axis and the depth axis at a selected location away from the junctions with the peripheral attachment areas, and the junctions where the peripheral attachment areas join with the central attachment area have cross-sectional areas in the plane defined by the lateral axis and the depth axis that are much less than that of the selected cross-sectional area of the central attachment area at the selected location away from the junctions with the peripheral attachment areas.
According to the present invention, the central attachment area and peripheral attachment areas of the connector are formed with one or more openings the plurality of separate fasteners, and preferably, the openings for receiving the plurality of separate fasteners are only provided in the central attachment area and the peripheral attachment areas.
According to the present invention, the central attachment area is formed with left and right side strengthening areas that are disposed laterally from each other on the lateral axis of the connector and the strengthening areas extend in the direction of the longitudinal axis. The left and right side strengthening areas can be formed with longitudinally extending embossments. The left and right side strengthening areas can be formed with longitudinally extending flanges that jut outwardly from the central attachment along the depth axis. The strengthening areas are formed with longitudinal ends and the longitudinal ends of the strengthening areas are disposed adjacent the peripheral attachment areas.
As shown in
The supporting member 2 is preferably an elongated member with a generally planar side face 7. The connector 3 preferably attaches to the side face 7 of the supporting member 2. The side face 7 of the supporting member 2 is in generally abutting relation with the end face 4 of the supported member 1, with the end face 4 of the supported member 1 disposed parallel to the side face 7 of the supporting member 2. While the end face 4 and the side face 7 are in a generally abutting relationship, there is sufficient space between the side face 7 and the end face 4 to place the connector 3 between them. Furthermore, the connector 3 of the present invention is specifically designed so that it can accommodate spreading movement between the end face 4 and the side face 7 or situations where the selected distance between the end face 4 and the side face 7 is larger than desired, as when the supported member 1 is cut too short. The connector 3 is designed to accommodate a ¼″ gap between the end face 4 and the side face 7.
As shown in
The connector 3 of the present invention has a central attachment area 11 for attaching to the supported member 1, and a plurality of peripheral attachment areas 12 for making the connection to the supporting member 2 at a plurality of different locations. The peripheral and central attachment areas 12 and 11 are generally aligned members. The peripheral attachment areas 12 preferably bracket the central attachment area 11 with the central attachment area 11 disposed in between the two peripheral attachment areas 12. When the central attachment area 11 is connected to the supported member 1, the peripheral attachment areas 12 should extent outwardly from the central attachment area 11 sufficiently that they present exposed area that can receive fasteners 13 there through when the peripheral attachment areas 12 interface with the side face 7 of the supporting member 2. While the central attachment area 11 and the peripheral attachment areas 12 may have some contours and bends and are not completely planar member, the central attachment area 11 and the peripheral attachment areas 12 generally lie in the generally planar interface between the planar end face 4 of the supported member 1 and the planar side face 7 of the supporting member 2.
The connector 3 of the present invention is preferably a unitary member, made from sheet steel.
Preferably, the cross-sectional area of the connector 3 in the plane defined by the lateral axis 9 and the depth axis 10 at the central attachment area 11 is relatively large and the junctions 14 where the peripheral attachment areas 12 meet the central attachment area 11 have cross-sectional areas that are much less than that of the central attachment area 11. This allows the connector 3 to bend and flex at the reduced cross-sectional areas at the junctions 14 between the peripheral attachment areas 12 and the central attachment area 11.
The central and peripheral attachment areas 11 and 12 of the connector 3 of the present invention are preferably formed with one or more openings 15 that are specifically located and designed to receive specified fasteners 13 to connect the central attachment area 11 to the supported member 1 and to connect the peripheral attachment areas 12 to the supporting member 2. The central attachment area 11 is preferably formed with a plurality of openings 15, in particular three openings 15, spaced from each other both longitudinally and laterally.
Openings 15 for receiving the fasteners 13 are only provided in the central and peripheral attachment areas 11 and 12, and the fasteners 13 are generally elongated members having elongated shanks 16 that define the longitudinal axes of the fasteners and end in tips 17. When the connection is made and the fasteners 13 are inserted through the openings 15 and into the supported and the supporting members 1 and 2, the elongated shanks 16 of the fasteners 13 extend generally along the depth axis 10 of the connector 3. The fasteners 13 have tips 17 that are driven first into the supported or supporting member 1 or 2. The tips 17 of the fasteners 13 that are driven through the peripheral attachment areas 12 and into the supporting member 2 are driven in the opposite direction along the depth axis 10 of the connector 3 from the tips 17 of the fasteners 13 that are driven through the central attachment area 11 and into the supported member 1.
As shown in
The central attachment area 11 is formed with left and right side strengthening areas 18 that are disposed laterally from each other on the lateral or minor axis 9 of the connector 3 and the strengthening areas 18 extend in the direction of the longitudinal or major axis 8. The strengthening areas 18 are connected to each other only through the central attachment area 11 disposed between them. The longitudinal ends 19 of the strengthening areas 18 are disposed adjacent but spaced away from the peripheral attachment areas 12 and in generally the same plane as the peripheral attachment areas 12. Preferably, the strengthening areas 18 of the central attachment area 11 are attached to the peripheral attachment areas 12 only through the junctures or junctions 14 between the central attachment area 11 and the peripheral attachment areas 12. As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In use, preferably, the connector 3 of the present invention is first attached to the end face 4 of the stringer or supported member 1 by driving screws 13 through the connector 3 into the end face 4 of the fence stringer 1, and then the stringer 1 with the attached connector 3 is positioned to interface on the post or supporting member 2, with the jutting peripheral attachment areas 12 of the connector 3 exposed and available for receiving fasteners 13 that will attach the connector 3 and the fence stringer 1 to the fence post 2.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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949075 | Hulett | Feb 1910 | A |
1089878 | Steinhauser | Mar 1914 | A |
1714814 | Plimpton | May 1929 | A |
2317125 | Barnett | Apr 1943 | A |
2364003 | Scruggs | Nov 1944 | A |
2425025 | Boisselier | Aug 1947 | A |
2638643 | Olson | May 1953 | A |
2666238 | Hagedorn | Jan 1954 | A |
2809405 | Frank | Oct 1957 | A |
3467418 | Redditt | Sep 1969 | A |
3669480 | Fugate | Jun 1972 | A |
3833201 | Dill | Sep 1974 | A |
4280686 | Wack | Jul 1981 | A |
4498801 | Gilb | Feb 1985 | A |
4526348 | Cammack | Jul 1985 | A |
4560301 | Glib | Dec 1985 | A |
4572695 | Glib | Feb 1986 | A |
4616950 | Morris | Oct 1986 | A |
4881844 | Tremblay | Nov 1989 | A |
4899991 | Brunkan | Feb 1990 | A |
5042136 | Tremblay | Aug 1991 | A |
5160211 | Gilb | Nov 1992 | A |
5173001 | Schunke | Dec 1992 | A |
5186571 | Hentzschel | Feb 1993 | A |
5190268 | Espiinueva | Mar 1993 | A |
5259685 | Gilb | Nov 1993 | A |
5274981 | Commins | Jan 1994 | A |
5328287 | Gilb | Jul 1994 | A |
5333435 | Leek | Aug 1994 | A |
5372448 | Gilb | Dec 1994 | A |
5380116 | Colonias | Jan 1995 | A |
5399044 | Gilb | Mar 1995 | A |
5402987 | Duyck | Apr 1995 | A |
5419649 | Gilb | May 1995 | A |
5439201 | Landreville | Aug 1995 | A |
5488810 | Horton | Feb 1996 | A |
5746535 | Kohler | May 1998 | A |
D399013 | Nguyen | Sep 1998 | S |
6022165 | Lin | Feb 2000 | A |
6543751 | Spruill | Apr 2003 | B1 |
6607086 | Gretz | Aug 2003 | B1 |
6712543 | Schmalzhofer | Mar 2004 | B1 |
6840020 | Leek | Jan 2005 | B2 |
7669836 | Trigg | Mar 2010 | B2 |
D744260 | Charette | Dec 2015 | S |
10415617 | Chen | Sep 2019 | B2 |
20070154258 | Knapp | Jul 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2151743 | Jul 1985 | GB |
2401616 | Nov 2004 | GB |
Entry |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180142496 A1 | May 2018 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62424970 | Nov 2016 | US |