The invention relates generally to the technical field of locking systems for floorboards. The invention concerns on the one hand a locking system for floorboards which can be joined mechanically in different patterns and, on the other hand, floorboards provided with such a locking system and various methods of installation. The invention is particularly suited for use in mechanical locking systems integrated with the floorboard, for instance, of the types described and shown in WO94/26999, WO96/47834, WO96/27721, WO99/66151, WO99/66152, WO00/28171, SE0100100-7 and SE0100101-5 which are herewith incorporated by reference, but is also usable in other joint systems for joining of flooring.
More specifically, the invention relates above all to locking systems which enable laying of mainly floating floors in advanced patterns.
The present invention is particularly suited for use in floating wooden floors and laminate floors, such as massive wooden floors, parquet floors, laminate floors with a surface layer of high pressure laminate or direct laminate. Parquet floors frequently consist of a surface layer of wood, a core and a balancing layer and are formed as rectangular floorboards intended to be joined along both long sides and short sides. Laminate floors are manufactured by a surface layer and a balancing layer being applied to a core material consisting of wood fibres such as HDF. This application can take place by gluing an already manufactured decorative layer of high pressure laminate. This decorative layer is made in a separate operation where a plurality of impregnated sheets of paper are pressed together under high pressure and at high temperature. The currently most common method for making laminate floors, however, is direct lamination which is based on a more modern principle where both manufacture of the decorative laminate layer and the attachment to the fibreboard take place in one and the same manufacturing step. Impregnated sheets of paper are applied directly to the board and pressed together under pressure and heat without any gluing.
The following description of prior-art technique, problems of known systems as well as the object and features of the invention will therefore as non-limiting examples be aimed mainly at this field of application. However, it should be emphasised that the invention can be used in optional floorboards which are intended to be joined in different patterns by means of a mechanical joint system. The invention may thus also be applicable to floors with a surface of plastic, linoleum, cork, lacquered wood fibre surface, synthetic fibres and the like.
Traditional laminate and parquet floors are usually laid in a floating manner, i.e. without glue, on an existing subfloor which does not have to be quite smooth or plane. Any irregularities are eliminated by means of underlay material in the form of e.g. cardboard, cork or foam plastic which is laid between the floorboards and the subfloor. Floating floors of this kind are usually joined by means of glued tongue-and-groove joints, (i.e. joints with a tongue on one floorboard and a tongue groove on an adjoining floorboard) on long side and short side. In laying, the boards are joined horizontally, a projecting tongue along the joint edge of one board being inserted into a tongue groove along the joint edge of an adjoining board. The same method is used on long side as well as short side, and the boards are usually laid in parallel both long side against long side and short side against short side.
In addition to such traditional floors which are joined by means of glued tongue/tongue groove joints, floorboards have been developed in recent years, which do not require the use of glue but which are instead joined mechanically by means of so-called mechanical joint systems. These systems comprise locking means which lock the boards horizontally and vertically. The mechanical joint systems can be formed by machining the core of the board. Alternatively, parts of the locking system can be made of a separate material which is integrated with the floorboard, i.e. already joined with a floorboard in connection with the manufacture thereof at the factory. The floorboards are joined, i.e. interconnected or locked together, by various combinations of angling, snapping-in and insertion along the joint edge in the locked position. By interconnection is here meant that floorboards with connecting means are mechanically interconnected in one direction, for instance horizontally or vertically. By locking-together, however, is meant that the floorboards are locked both in the horizontal and in the vertical direction.
The principal advantages of floating floors with mechanical joint systems are that they can be laid quickly and easily by different combinations of inward angling and snapping-in. They can also easily be taken up again and be reused in some other place.
All currently existing mechanical joint systems and also floors intended to be joined by gluing have vertical locking means which lock the floorboards across the surface plane of the boards. The vertical locking means consist of a tongue which enters a groove in an adjoining floorboard. The boards thus cannot be joined groove against groove or tongue against tongue. Also the horizontal locking system as a rule consists of a locking element on one side which cooperates with a locking groove on the other side. Thus the boards cannot be joined locking element against locking element or locking groove against locking groove. This means that the laying is in practice restricted to parallel rows. Using this technique, it is thus not possible to lay traditional parquet patterns where the boards are joined long side against short side in “herringbone pattern” or in different forms of diamond patterns.
Such advanced patterns have originally been laid by a large number of wood blocks of a suitable size and shape being glued to a subfloor, according to a desired pattern, possibly followed by grinding to obtain an even floor surface and finishing in the form of e.g. varnish or oil. The wood blocks according to this technique have no locking means whatever, since they are fixed by gluing to the subfloor.
Another known method of laying advanced patterns implies that the wood blocks are formed with a groove along all edges of the block. When the wood blocks are then laid, tongues are inserted into the grooves in the positions required. This results in a floor where the wood blocks are locked in the vertical direction relative to each other by the tongue engaging in tongue grooves of two adjoining wood blocks. Optionally this method is supplemented with gluing to lock the floor in the horizontal directions and to lock the floor in the vertical direction relative to the subfloor.
U.S. Pat. No. 1,787,027 (Wasleff) discloses another system for laying a herringbone parquet floor. The system comprises a plurality of wood blocks which are laid on a subfloor to form a herringbone parquet floor. Each wood block is provided with a set of tongues and tongue grooves which extend over parts of each edge of the wood block. When the wood blocks are laid in a herringbone pattern, tongues and tongue grooves will cooperate with each other so that the wood blocks are locked together mechanically in both the vertical and the horizontal direction. The tongues and tongue grooves that are shown in Wasleff, however, are of a classical type, i.e. they cannot be snapped or angled together, and the locking effect is achieved only when a plurality of wood blocks are laid together to form a floor. The system according to Wasleff consists of two types of wood blocks, which are mirror inverted relative to each other as regards the location of tongues and tongue grooves. The design of the locking system is such that a shank-end mill is necessary to form the tongue grooves shown. This is a drawback since machining using a shank-end mill is a relatively slow manufacturing operation.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,426,820 (Terbrack) discloses that floorboards can be joined long side against short side if the floor consists of two different floorboards which a joint system which can be laid merely by inward angling, which is not displaceable in the locked position and in which floorboards cannot be joined by snapping-in. Moreover
U.S. Pat. No. 5,295,341 (Kajiwara) discloses snappable floorboards which have two different long sides. One part of the long side is formed with a groove part and another part with a tongue part. Nor are such floorboards displaceable in the locked position. The manufacture is complicated, and nor can they be used to provide the desired pattern.
“Boden Wand Decke”, Domotex, January 1997 shows a laminate floor where floorboards with different surfaces have been joined to form a floor having a simple pattern. It is also shown that floorboards have been joined long side against short side, but only in such a manner that all the short sides which are joined with a long side extend along a straight line. Consequently, this is an application of a prior-art system.
All known floors which are laid in a herringbone pattern usually have a surface of wood. It is not known that laminate floors can be laid in a herringbone pattern. Such a laminate floor has the same appearance as a real wooden floor but can be produced at a considerably lower cost and with better properties as regards durability and impact strength.
An object of the present invention is to provide floorboards, joint systems, methods of installation, methods of production and a method of disassembly, which make it possible to provide a floor which consists of rectangular floorboards which are joined mechanically in advanced patterns long side against short side and which can be disassembled and reused. Another object is to provide such floors at a lower cost than is possible today by efficient manufacture and installation of floorboards in advanced patterns. A specific object of one embodiment is to provide such floors with a surface layer of high pressure laminate or direct laminate. The terms long side and short side are used to facilitate understanding. The boards can also be square or alternatingly square and rectangular, and optionally also exhibit different patterns or other decorative features in different directions.
According to a first aspect, the present invention comprises a system for making a flooring which comprises quadrangular floorboards which are mechanically lockable, in which system the individual floorboards along their four edge portions have pairs of opposing connecting means for locking together similar, adjoining floorboards both vertically and horizontally (D1 and D2 respectively), and wherein the connecting means of the floorboards are designed so as to allow locking-together in a first direction in the plane of the floorboard by at least snapping-in and locking-together in a second direction in the plane of the floorboard by inward angling and/or snapping-in. Moreover the system comprises two different types of floorboard A and B respectively, the connecting means of one type of floorboard A along one pair of opposite edge portions being arranged in a mirror-inverted manner relative to the corresponding connecting means along the same pair of opposite edge portions of the other type of floorboard B.
An advantage of the present invention is that floorboards can be laid long side against short side in advanced patterns and that joining can be made quickly and easily in all the laying alternatives that may be used when laying in all four directions from a centre.
The mirror-inverted joint systems need not be identical to allow joining. Surfaces that are not active in the vertical and horizontal locking means may, for instance, have a deviating shape. For example, the outer part of the tongue and the inner part of the groove may be varied.
According to a second aspect, the present invention comprises a system for making a flooring, which comprises quadrangular floorboards which are mechanically lockable, in which system the individual floorboards along their four edge portions have pairs of opposing connecting means for joining together similar, adjoining floorboards at least vertically, and wherein the pairs of opposing connecting means of the floorboards at least in a first direction in the plane of the floorboard are designed so as to allow locking-together both horizontally and vertically by inward angling and/or snapping-in. Moreover also this system comprises two different types of floorboard, the connecting means of one type of floorboard along one pair of opposite edge portions being arranged in a mirror-inverted manner relative to the corresponding connecting means along the same pair of opposite edge portions of the other type of floorboard.
According to a third aspect, the present invention comprises a flooring, which is formed by means of one of the systems described above. According to a fourth aspect, the present invention comprises a set of floorboards for making such a flooring. Such a set may be advantageous in terms of distribution since a customer, by buying such a set, can obtain a set of floorboards which are adjusted to each other. This is particularly advantageous if variations may appear in the manufacturing process as regards, for instance, the colour of the surface or the tolerances of the connecting means.
According to a fifth aspect, the present invention comprises fitting pieces, which have at least one oblique edge and which along their edge portions have connecting means for cooperation with adjoining floorboards. Such fitting pieces may constitute an important aid in installation of a floor with an advanced pattern, such as a herringbone pattern, by the possibility of quickly and efficiently laying floorboards at an angle other than 90° with each other. Since also the fitting pieces are provided with connecting means, a herringbone flooring can be obtained, where both the frame and the actual herringbone pattern are mechanically locked together so that the entire floor is held together mechanically.
According to a sixth aspect, the invention comprises a locking strip for interconnecting floorboards provided with identical locking means. This can be an aid, for instance, in the cases where a fitting piece is not available or if one chooses to form all fitting pieces with identical connecting means all the way round, for instance with a view to reducing the number of variants of fitting pieces.
According to a seventh aspect, the present invention comprises a method for rational production of floorboards which have a system as described above.
An advantage of identical and mirror-inverted joint systems according to the invention is that the floorboards can be produced rationally although they consist of two different types, for instance boards of type A and boards of type B which have identical but mirror-inverted joint systems on long side and short side compared with the boards of type A. All long sides of A and B boards can be machined, for instance, in a first machine. Then the A boards proceed to another machine where the short sides are machined. The boards that are to be provided with mirror-inverted joint systems, for instance the B boards, are however rotated through 180° in the same plane before machining of the short sides. Thus the two types of board A and B can be manufactured using the same machines and the same set of tools.
According to an eighth aspect, the present invention comprises four alternative or supplementary methods for laying a flooring using the system above. Quick and efficient laying of a floor according to the present invention can be carried out by means of one of these methods.
According to a ninth and a tenth aspect, the present invention comprises a gripping tool as well as a method for disassembly of a flooring as described above.
According to an eleventh aspect, the present invention comprises a system for making a flooring, which comprises rectangular floorboards, joined in a herringbone pattern, with a surface layer of high pressure laminate or direct laminate, in which system the individual floorboards along their long sides have pairs of opposing mechanical connecting means for locking together similar, adjoining floorboards in both the vertical and the horizontal direction (D1 and D2 respectively). In this embodiment, the short sides need not have any locking means at all on the short sides since the floorboards are narrow and the short sides are held together by the long sides. The short sides may, however, have vertical and/or horizontal mechanical locking means as described above, and joining of the floor can also partly be made by means of glue which is applied to short sides and/or long sides or under the floorboards. The mechanical locking means on the long sides guide the floorboards and facilitate laying significantly also in the cases where glue is used.
If the length of the long side is a multiple of the length of the short side, for instance 1, 2, 3, 4 etc. times the length of the short side, symmetrical patterns can be produced. If the joint system can also be joined by angling, very quick installation can be carried out by, for instance, the long sides being laid by inward angling and the short sides by snapping-in.
The joint systems on long sides and short sides may consist of different materials or the same material having different properties, for instance wood or veneer of different wood materials or fibre directions or wood-based board materials such as HDF, MDF or different types of fibreboard. Also aluminium can be used in the joint system. This may result in lower production costs and better function as regards inward angling, insertion along the joint edge, snapping-in and durability.
The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying schematic drawings which by way of example illustrate currently preferred embodiments of the invention according to its different aspects.
a-e show prior-art joint systems.
a-e show a known floorboard which can be laid by angling and snapping-in.
a-b show laying in parallel rows according to prior-art technique.
a-b show a floorboard with a mirror-inverted joint system according to the invention.
a-b show laying of flooring according to the invention.
a-c show a first installation method according to the present invention.
a-b show a second installation method according to the present invention.
a-e show a third installation method according to the present invention.
a-e show fitting pieces for producing a herringbone pattern flooring according to the invention.
a-c show different laying patterns according to the invention.
a-d show how floorboards can be detached from each other.
a-d show how long sides can be joined with short sides according to the invention.
In the following description, the two types of floorboards according to embodiments of the invention will be designated A and B respectively. This aims merely at illustrating the cooperation between two types of floorboard. Which type of board is designated A and B respectively is immaterial.
a-e illustrate floorboards 1, 1′ with a surface 31, a core 30 and a rear side 32, whose joint edge portions are provided with prior-art mechanical joint systems. The vertical locking means comprise a groove 9 and a tongue 10. The horizontal locking means comprise locking elements 8 which cooperate with locking grooves 12. The joint systems according to
a-e show a known floorboard 1 with known mechanical joint systems which can be joined with another identical floorboard 1′ by angling, insertion along the joint edge (
a-b show a known installation method and a known laying pattern. In
a-4b show two rectangular floorboards which are of a first type A and a second type B according to the invention and whose long sides 4a and 4b in this embodiment are of a length which is 3 times the length of the short sides 5a, 5b. The floorboards have a first pair of vertical and horizontal locking means, also called connecting means, which cooperate with a second pair of vertical and horizontal locking means. The two types are in this embodiment identical except that the location of the locking means is mirror-inverted. The locking means 9, 10 allow joining of long side against short side when the first pair of locking means 9 is joined with the second pair of locking means. In this embodiment, joining can take place by both snapping-in and inward angling, but also insertion along the joint edge. Several variants may be used. The two types of floorboards need not be of the same format, and the locking means can also be of different shapes provided that, as stated above, they can be joined long side against short side. The connecting means can be made of the same material or different materials or be made of the same material but with different material properties. For example, the connecting means can be made of plastic or metal. They can also be made of the same material as the floorboard, but subjected to a property modifying treatment, such as impregnation or the like.
a-5b show a floor according to the invention which consists of floorboards according to
The invention is applicable to floorboards of many different sizes. For example, the floorboards may be approximately the same size as the wood blocks in a traditionally patterned parquet floor. The width may vary, for instance, between 7 and 9 cm and the length between 40 and 80 cm. However, it is also possible to apply the invention to floorboards of the size that is today frequent on the market for parquet or laminate floors. Other sizes are also conceivable. It is also possible that boards of different types (for instance A and B) be given different sizes for creating different types of pattern. Moreover, different materials can be used in different floorboards in the same flooring. Suitable combinations are e.g. wood-laminate, laminate-linoleum and wood-linoleum. Floating floorboards can also be manufactured by a surface of artificial fibres, such as needle felt, being applied to, for instance, a wood fibre-based board such as HDF. Wooden and laminate floors may then also be combined with such an artificial fibre floor. These combinations of materials are particularly advantageous if the floorboards have preferably the same thickness and joint systems which enable joining of the different floorboards. Such combinations of materials allow manufacture of floors which consist of parts with different properties as regards sound, durability etc. Materials with great durability can be used, for example, in passages. Of course, these combination floors can also be joined in the traditional manner.
b shows an alternative way of adding the third floorboard G3, in which case the floorboard G3 is first connected with its short side against the long side of the floorboard G1 and then displaced in the locked state along the floorboard G1 and connected or locked together by snapping together with the floorboard G2. The method according to
c shows how a further floorboard G4 is added in the same way as the floorboard G3 was added, i.e. either by the connecting sequence according to
a shows a second installation method. In
a shows how a plurality of floorboards G0, G1 and G3 are arranged and joined long side against long side, the short sides of the floorboards being displaced relative to each other. The displacement of the short side is preferably the same as the width of the floorboard G2. The displacement can be performed, for instance, by using fitting pieces as will be shown in more detail in
a shows how the long side of the floorboard G2 is first joined by inward angling, insertion or snapping-in with the short side of the floorboard G1. Then the floorboard G2 is displaced in the connected state along the short side of the floorboard G1 until the short side of the floorboard G2 is connected with the long side of the floorboard G3 by snapping-in.
b shows the second way of adding the floorboard G2, i.e. its short side is first connected with the long side of the floorboard G3 by inward angling, insertion or snapping-in and then in the connected state displaced along the same until the long side of the floorboard G2 is connected with the short side of the floorboard G1 by snapping-in.
c shows how a further floorboard G4 is added. First one long side of the floorboard G4 is connected with the long side of the floorboard G2. Subsequently the floorboard G4 is moved in between the floorboards G2 and G0 so that connection of the other long side of the floorboard G4 and the short side of the floorboard G0 takes place by a displacing motion, in which the connecting means of the floorboard G4 are linearly displaced into the connecting means on the short side of the floorboard G0, for the connecting means on the short side of the floorboard G4 to be connected with the long side of the floorboard G1 by snapping-in.
The adding of further floorboards takes place by repeating the steps according to
d and 8e show an alternative way of adding floorboards to an installed row of boards G0, G1, G3.
In
e shows the adding of a further floorboard G4. It is preferred for the long side of this floorboard first to be connected by inward angling, snapping-in or insertion with the floorboards G1 and G4, whose long side and short side respectively are aligned with each other and form a uniform continuous joint edge. Then the floorboard G4 is displaced along this joint edge until the short side of the floorboard G4 is joined with the long side of the floorboard G3 by snapping-in. Alternatively, the reverse joining sequence may be used, i.e. first the short side of the floorboard G4 is joined with the long side of the floorboard G3 by inward angling, insertion or snapping-in, and then the floorboard G4 is displaced in the connected state along the long side of the floorboard G3 until the long side of the floorboard G4 is connected with the short sides and long sides respectively of the floorboards G1 and G2.
The installation methods described above can be combined if required by the current installation situation. As a rule, when two joint edges are interconnected or locked together, that part of the joint edge which is active in the interconnection or locking-together of the joint edges may constitute a larger or smaller part of the joint edge. Interconnection or locking-together of two floorboards can thus take place even if only a small part of the joint edge of the respective floorboard is active.
a-e show different ways of terminating the floor along the walls. A simple method is just to cut the ends of the floorboards so that they obtain a shape that connects to the walls. After cutting, the cut-off edge may be covered with a baseboard in prior-art manner.
A second alternative may be to use a frame comprising one or more rows of floorboards which are laid along the walls and which may have a shape according to the numbered floorboards 1-13. With such laying, all floorboards in the frame except the floorboard A13 can be joined mechanically. The other floorboards can be cut off in conjunction with installation and be connected in a suitable manner using glue, or by making a tongue groove or tongue by means of, for instance, a hand-milling machine. Alternatively, a tongue groove and a loose tongue can be used as shown in
A third alternative is that the frame 1-13 is filled with 10 different factory-made fitting pieces 14-23, which are shown in
What is here said about designing of the connecting means on the floorboards is applicable in appropriate parts also to the fitting pieces.
If the fitting pieces are only provided with a groove 9 and if a loose tongue 10 is used as shown in
The loose tongue 10 shown in
Further a strip can be provided, which can be mounted on a cut-off edge of a floorboard and which is intended for cooperation, such as interconnection or locking-together, with locking means of adjoining floorboards. The strip can be made of a suitable material, such as wood, aluminium, plastic etc, and can be adapted to be fastened to a floorboard edge which, as a result of e.g. cutting off, does not have an integrated mechanical locking system. The strip is conveniently adjusted to the type of connecting means with which the other floorboards are provided, and it can be mounted with or without preceding milling. The strip can be provided by the meter to be cut off as required. Suitably the strip is fastened to the floorboard in a mechanical manner, such as by engagement in some kind of strip, recess or hole in the floorboard, but also glue, screws, nails, clips, adhesive tape or other fastening means are conceivable.
It is also possible to combine the embodiments so that both fitting pieces with factory-made connecting means on all edge portions and fitting pieces with other arrangements of connecting means are used in the same floor. For instance, the factory-made pieces can in such a case contribute to simplifying the fitting between the floorboards which constitute the frame and the floorboards which constitute the actual herringbone pattern. By means of this system, the frame can thus be laid along one or two walls, after which the herringbone pattern is connected to the frame by means of the fitting pieces, and the floor is laid starting from a first corner in the room. Adjustment for connection to the other walls can then take place using other types of connecting means or even in a conventional way, completely without connecting means.
a-c show laying in a diamond pattern. Also in this embodiment, displacement in the locked position and snapping-in can be used for rational laying.
a shows a pattern in which floorboards of two types A, B can be laid. The numbering in
b shows how floorboards of the two types A, B are joined short side against long side to form the pattern according to
c shows a method for facilitating laying of symmetrical patterns. The board A4 is laid offset to facilitate laying of the other A boards aligned with the short sides of the B boards. Then the board A4 may be pushed back to the correct position before continued laying, but it may also be centred between the A and B boards, and the diamonds can thus be laid in offset rows. The diamond pattern according to
After a first machining step 109 which produces the locking means on one pair of opposite edges of the floorboard, a second machining step 105 is carried out, which produces the locking means on the other pair of opposite edges of the floorboard. This second machining step 105 takes place, just as the first, by displacement of the set of tools and the floorboard blank relative to each other but in a second direction which preferably is perpendicular to the first direction. The machining steps 101, 105 take place in a manner known to those skilled in the art and the order between them may be varied within the scope of the present invention.
As a rule, production of large amounts of floorboards is fully automated. The floorboard is thus moved automatically between the two production steps, which can be arranged so that the floorboard blank is first moved in a first direction F1 in the longitudinal direction of the floorboard through a first machining device which comprises the first set of tools 109a, 110a and then in a direction F2 which is essentially perpendicular to the first direction through a second machining device which comprises the second set of tools 109b, 110b. The floorboards that are produced according to this method will all be of the same type, i.e. A or B according to the invention.
According to the invention, however, an existing production plant for production of floorboards of one type according to the invention can be adjusted for production of both types of floorboards using the same sets of tools. This takes place by a first type of floorboard (for instance A) being produced as described above, i.e. in two machining steps, while floorboard blanks which are to constitute a second type of floorboard (for instance B), after the first machining step 101 in step 104 is rotated half a turn in its plane. Subsequently the floorboard blank continues to the second machining step 105. As a result, the position of one pair of connecting means on the floorboard B will be reversed, compared with the floorboard A. The floorboard B will thus be mirror-inverted in relation to the floorboard A.
Control of which boards are to be rotated can take place based on information from a control system 103 which controls a rotating device 102 which rotates the floorboard blank after the first machining step 101 before it is transferred to the second production step 105.
When the floorboards A and B according to this preferred method are produced in the same line and with the same setting of tools, the two floorboards will have exactly the same length and width. This significantly facilitates symmetrical laying of patterns.
It is an advantage if the floorboards after installation can be taken up again and be relaid without the joint system being damaged. The take-up of a floorboard is conveniently made by a method which is essentially reversed compared with the installation method. One side, in most cases the short side, is released by the floorboard being pulled out horizontally so that the locking element 8 leaves the locking groove 12 by snapping-out. The other side, most conveniently the long side, can then be released by being pulled out along the joint edge, by upward angling or by snapping-out.
a-d show various alternatives of releasing floorboards. In
a-13d show how long sides and short sides can be formed according to another embodiment. The long sides 4a and 4b in
As illustrated in
The inventor has tested many different patterns which are all obvious, provided that floorboards of the same or different formats and with snappable and mirror-inverted joint systems are used in installation of flooring. Basically, the invention can be used to provide all the patterns that are known in connection with installation of parquet flooring with tongue and groove, but also parquet flooring which is laid by gluing or nailing to the base and which thus does not have a joint system which restricts the possibilities of joining optional sides. It is also possible to produce floorboards which have more than four sides and which can have a first pair of connecting means on 3, 4 or more sides and a second pair of connecting means on corresponding adjoining sides. Floorboards can also be made with more than two different pairs of cooperating locking means. It is possible to use all prior-art mechanical joint systems which can be snapped together.
Although the present invention has been described in connection with preferred embodiments thereof, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that additions, deletions, modifications, and substitutions not specifically described may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0103130 | Sep 2001 | SE | national |
The present application is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 11/380,578, filed Apr. 27, 2006, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Ser. No. 10/235,940, filed on Sep. 6, 2002, and U.S. Ser. No. 10/413,566, filed on Apr. 15, 2003, and claims the priority of SE 0103130-1, filed in Sweden on Sep. 20, 2001 and PCT International Application No. PCT/SE02/01731, filed on Sep. 20, 2002, and which designated the United States, and the present application also claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/372,082, filed in the United States on Apr. 15, 2002. PCT International Application No. PCT/SE02/01731 and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/372,082 were incorporated by reference into U.S. Ser. No. 10/413,566. U.S. Ser. No. 10/235,940; U.S. Ser. No. 10/413,566; SE 0103130-1; PCT/SE02/01731; and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/372,082 are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11380578 | Apr 2006 | US |
Child | 11822679 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10413566 | Apr 2003 | US |
Child | 11380578 | US | |
Parent | PCT/SE02/01731 | Sep 2002 | US |
Child | 10413566 | US | |
Parent | 10235940 | Sep 2002 | US |
Child | PCT/SE02/01731 | US |