Suspended ceilings, extensively used in commercial buildings, typically employ a rectangular grid system that supports lay-in ceiling panels or tiles. The grid is made up of regularly spaced runners intersecting at right angles. The runners are ordinarily in the form of inverted tees. The tees are normally suspended by wires and the ceiling panels or tiles rest on the flanges of the tees.
The suspended ceiling products industry has refined the design and manufacture of grid tees to a high degree. The continuous efforts for improvement have contributed to the high acceptance of these ceiling systems in the construction industry. Challenges have remained in creating improvements in the performance and in reducing the cost of the grid systems.
The invention provides an improved grid tee for suspended ceilings that, compared to prior art constructions can facilitate installation of lay-in tiles, can be produced with less material cost and can obtain greater strength and rigidity. The invention, in one design, utilizes a single strip of sheet metal folded on itself in such a manner that the bending and torsional stiffness as well as suspension wire breakout can be increased even while metal content can be decreased. The folded cross-section of the single strip design advantageously employs the visible face of the tee as a primary structural element so that the face serves to increase rigidity. Employing the face material as a structural element is particularly advantageous because the face material is at a location where it can be of maximum benefit as it contributes to the polar moment of inertia. The longitudinal edges of the strip are folded into mutual contact and are locked together both laterally and longitudinally, thereby significantly increasing the torsional stiffness of the tee.
Multiple layers of sheet material at the top of the inverted tee section permit suspension wires to be threaded through this area without the risk of low breakout strength. The multiple layer top edge surmounts a laterally extending reinforcing bulb. This geometry avoids the necessity of wrapping the bulb itself with a loop of suspension wire. As a result, the suspension wire loop can be smaller than the width of the bulb. Consequently, the ceiling tiles can be easily and quickly installed or removed without damage or difficulty from interference with what otherwise would be an oversize wire loop of suspension wire. As disclosed, the inventive feature of a narrow top wire receiving stem portion can be applied to other tee constructions.
A grid tee 10 is preferably formed of a sheet metal strip which can be galvanized or otherwise treated to resist corrosion. The tee 10 is made, preferably by roll-forming techniques known to those skilled in the art, into the cross section illustrated, for example, in
At an upper portion 24 of the web 16 above the bulb 22, the two web layers 19, 20 abut at or adjacent the imaginary central plane 18 for a vertical distance that, in the illustrated case, is the about the same as the vertical extent of the bulb 22. The layer 20 of one side of the web 16 is somewhat wider than the other side enabling an excess width part 26 to be folded over the other layer 19. As a result, the upper edge of the web 16 comprises three layers of sheet stock. The layers 19, 20 and 26 at this upper edge portion 24 of the web 16 are fixed relative to each other by lanced tabs 31 cut through the material of these layers with suitable punches. Each lanced tab 31 can be distorted to foreshorten it and then be set back partially into the plane of the web 16 but out of registration with its original layer so that it is locked against the edge of an adjacent layer thus locking such adjacent layers from moving in the longitudinal direction of the tee relative to each other as well as in any other direction relative to one another. In the illustrated example, the lanced tabs 31 are in groups of four, a pair on the right is displaced above the plane of the drawing of
The lower part of the web 16 is formed with longitudinally spaced slots 36 aligned through both layers 19, 20 for receiving end connectors of cross tees as is conventional. Holes or apertures 37 are punched or otherwise formed in the upper part 24 of the web 16 spaced along the length of the tee 10. These holes 37 are provided for suspending the tee 10 and ultimately the ceiling tiles supported on the tees, with wires such as that shown in
Various methods, besides the lanced tabs 31, can be used to lock the sheet metal layers 19, 20 and 26 at the upper region 24 of the web 16 together so that there is no longitudinal slippage of these layers relative to one another.
The ends of the tees 10 and 50 can be provided with standard connectors; typically the ends of the tee 50 are flattened by pressing the walls or sides 58 together to accommodate a standard connector.
A tee 85 depicted in
In each of the arrangements of
While the invention has been shown and described with respect to particular embodiments thereof, this is for the purpose of illustration rather than limitation, and other variations and modifications of the specific embodiments herein shown and described will be apparent to those skilled in the art all within the intended spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the upper edge region of the web can be formed with more than three layers of sheet metal by making additional folds. Accordingly, the patent is not to be limited in scope and effect to the specific embodiments herein shown and described nor in any other way that is inconsistent with the extent to which the progress in the art has been advanced by the invention.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/283,619, entitled “GRID TEE FOR SUSPENSION CEILING,” filed Nov. 21, 2005, hereby incorporated by reference. The invention relates to suspended ceiling systems and, in particular, to an improved grid tee.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11283619 | Nov 2005 | US |
Child | 12024263 | US |