1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to adhesive-free, interlocking tiles and, more specifically, to an improved interlock structure for interlocking an assemblage of contiguous floor tiles with uniformly straight edges.
2. Background Discussion
Adhesive-free, interlocking floor tiles are typically molded of substantially resilient, plastic material and utilize interlock elements formed in the tile edges for effecting connections with adjacent, similar tiles. Typically, the interlock elements are pairs of substantially identical alternating projections and slots of substantially dovetail shapes. The projections and slots are supported by the tile edges to effect mating interlocks with inverted, substantially identical slots and projections, respectively, on other tiles to effect a mating interference fit between contiguous tiles of an assemblage, such as, an assemblage of floor tiles.
The projections serve as the male interlock elements and are typically dovetailed shaped; that is, shaped as truncated triangles with rounded corners in plan view and disposed in alignment along each tile. The male projections are alternately spaced by contiguous slots of substantially the same size and shape as the male projections, but inverted to form the female interlocking elements. Typically therefore, the slots are of identical dovetail shape and those on at least two exposed elements support edges of the tile are joined at right angles. The slots extend completely through these edges to provide female counterparts to the male elements. Interlocking of contiguous floor tiles on-site is effected by vertically aligning the male and female interlock elements of one tile with respective inverted female and male interlock elements of contiguous tiles and then driving the interlocks into resilient interference engagements by means of, for example, a mallet. The integrated installation, when thusly installed over flooring substrates, such as concrete or plywood, requires no adhesives or fasteners, and is therefore often referred to as “adhesive-free.” The male-female element pairs form one set each of the interlock structures disposed along the tile edges so that there is a series of contiguous pairs of projections and slots joined by a common dovetail-shaped sidewall.
For certain floor tile applications it is preferred that the tiles have four edges with one pair thereof joining at right angles to provide one corner of the tile and two uniformly solid, straight edges which define two of the four or more square or rectangular side edges of a multi-sided tile, depending on the particular overall tile shape. The pair of solid edge portions serves as straight, overlying support edges for downwardly facing interlock elements when the tile is installed horizontally. The edges have top surfaces as flush extensions of the top surface of the tile body and provide flat, top surfaces with a pair of solid, straight top edges, thereby simulating a conventional ceramic tile assemblage with linear grout lines or wood flooring with grooves and flush, coplanar top surfaces. An oppositely disposed, and second, pair of edges intersect at right angles to form a second opposite corner of the tile. The second pair of edges are likewise provided with a sequence of male-female interlocks defined by sidewalls which extend completely through the tile edges perpendicular to the plane of the tile to mate with the downwardly-projecting respective female and male interlocks of contiguous, substantially identical tiles. Examples of tiles having such interlock arrangements are disclosed by U.S. Pat. No. 4,287,693 issued on Sep. 8, 1981 to R. E. Collette; U.S. Pat. No. 6,526,705, issued on Mar. 4, 2003 to K. M. MacDonald; and, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/884,638, filed Jun. 19, 2001 by T. E. Ricciardelli and assigned to the same assignee as the present invention; all of the references referred to above being incorporated by reference herein and made part hereof.
The extent to which each essentially identical pair of interlock elements can effectively function to prevent tile separations during usage is a function of tile composition and the design of the interlocks with various considerations as to tile resilience and the extent of surface area available for inter-mating surface-to-surface engagement between interlocks, and other relevant factors known to those in the art. Thus, with certain of the prior art interlock structures, the two sides of the tile opposite those with solid edge portions utilize the full tile edge thickness for at least the female cavity sidewalls by molding dovetail slots as through-slots into the tile edges. The resulting tile has a pair of top linear edge portions and a pair of opposite or bottom edge portions with alternating non-linear or undulating edges. Advantageously, the latter may be hidden from view after tile assemblage by the overlying straight and solid top edge portions of contiguous tiles, and therefore, the top surfaces of the final tile assemblages have the desired uniformly straight edge lines and flush, top edge surfaces.
For a given thickness of tile, the pair of flush solid support edges forming the periphery of the top surface account for a portion of the overall tile thickness and consequently reduce the surface areas available for mating engagements between the identical pairs of interlock elements. This is because the female cavities have a reduced depth as a result of being dead-ended on-their underlying solid support edges. The male projections are also limited in height because they cannot extend beyond the planes of the top or bottom surfaces of the tile. As a result, the surface areas available to effect inter-element mating engagements is reduced, which is disadvantageous from a connective integrity standpoint. Conversely, this advantageously results in a reduction in the impact forces required to drive the downwardly-facing interlocks on the top tile edges into mating engagements with upwardly-facing interlocks of adjoining tiles, and consequently reduces the effort required for on-site tile installation.
It would be advantageous to provide a generally planar tile with multiple sides and a top surface having an underlying interlock structure that is adapted to facilitate on-site assemblage and removal of individual tiles with matable interlock structures on contiguous tiles, and yet is resistant to separation of the assemblage during usage.
An embodiment of this invention is to provide an interlocking tile with planar top and bottom surfaces and at least two linear edges extending at right angles to one another having different sets of interlock elements underlying the top edge surfaces which are specifically designed to facilitate on-site installation and removal and replacement, if required, of individual tiles without significantly degrading the resistance to tile edge separations during usage.
Yet another embodiment is to provide an adhesive-free tile assemblage with an interlock structure comprised of multiple pairs of differently constructed interlocks providing acceptable connective interlock integrity while facilitating the ease by which on-site installation assemblage and replacement of individual tiles can be effected with mating tiles having substantially identical, inverted interlock structures thereon.
Yet another embodiment is to provide an edge interlock system for a resilient tile that facilitates the initial connections and aligned orientations between the interlocks of that tile and the interlocks of similarly constructed contiguous tiles.
These embodiments are achieved by the instant invention which provides a multi-sided, interlocking tile with a corresponding multi-sided, substantially planar central portion with first, second, third and fourth elongated interlock element support edges disposed in end-wise relationship and cantilevered from different sides of the central portion. The inner edge portions of the support edges are formed integral with the central portion and extend laterally outwardly therefrom with the free, outer edge portions thereof defining the tile periphery. The first and second interlock support edges have longitudinal axes intersecting at substantially right angles to provide a first pair of adjoining interlock support edges on two sides of the central portion having interlock support surfaces that face toward the plane of the top tile surface or “upwardly.” Similarly, the third and fourth interlock support edges intersect at right angles to provide a second pair of adjoining interlock support edges on another two sides of the central tile portion having interlock support surfaces that face toward the plane of the bottom tile surface or “downwardly.” With this inverted arrangement of interlock support edges, a flat, uniformly solid, top tile, surface is available for the application of a square cornered laminate decorative and/or wear resistant layer applied during or after the tile molding process.
There are series of two sets each of different, male-female interlock elements on each support edge and the two sets are disposed in longitudinal alignment and project from one surface of each support edge. The two sets of interlock elements are joined by a common sidewall that traverses the surface of the underlying support edge from substantially one end to the other. The sidewalls on the first pair of support edges project upwardly and the sidewalls on the second pair of support edges project downwardly. Both sets of the interlock elements are comprised of male walled structures; one of the structures being a lug-like element and the other being a section of a rib-like element with substantially parallel inner and outer spaced-apart sidewalls. The lug and laterally opposite outer sidewall of a rib section are laterally spaced to form an essentially U-shaped channel therebetween that bottoms on its respective support edge surface. The channel forms a female interlock portion for the first of the two interlock sets, whereas the adjacent lug forms the male interlock portion of that first interlock set.
The inner sidewall of the rib section forms an open-ended cavity also bottoming on it's enclosed support edge surface and this cavity forms the female interlock element for the second interlock set. Each of the rib sections projecting from its respective support surface is shaped to form the male interlock element for the second interlock set. The male and female elements of the two sets are shaped and sized as identical inverted counterparts of one another, so that adjacent tiles having substantially identical inverted first and second interlock sets can mesh and be matingly secured together without use of adhesives. The open-ended design of the interlocks and the tile resilience enables an installer to more readily replace individual tiles of the assembly by simply picking up one corner of the tile to effect initial separation between the interlocks. Additionally, the interlock sets on the corner ends of support edges are designed to mesh with less applied pressure and greater tolerances to initial misalignment than that required for other prior art sets of interlocks, thereby facilitating the initial interconnecting and alignments with similar interlocks of contiguous tiles and any subsequent removal of individual tiles.
The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
With reference to the drawings,
The tile 10 is preferably composed of substantially resilient materials, such as; polyvinyl chloride (PVC), polypropylene, polyethylene, and natural or synthetic rubber or mixtures thereof that provide the molded products with a somewhat cushiony surface desirable for floor coverings and the substantially resilient interlock structures desirable for tight-fitting, essentially resilient interlocks. Advantageously, the tile 10 may be composed of recycled waste carpet scraps, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,306,318 issued on Oct. 23, 2001, and assigned to the same assignee as the instant invention. As disclosed therein, a matrix of granulated waste polymeric carpet backing and carpet fibers and a suitable plasticizer, after being subjected to high heat and compressive forces in an injection molding machine, will produce a molded tile of PVC with embedded carpet fibers. As illustrated in
The tile 10 is shown in plan view in
As best seen in
The second pair of interlock support edges, designated 30A and 30B in
With reference to
The first interlock set of the series,
The sidewalls 40-1, 40-2 and 40-3 of the lugs 40 and adjoining portions of their respective strip surfaces 20A, 20B,
Each male lug 40,
The outer sidewalls of sections 50-1 of the ribs 50,
The lugs 40A and 40B are inverted relative to one another and are laterally spaced by a channel section 42A. The sections 42A are typically designed to be somewhat wider than the intermediate channels 42 to correspond with the greater width of their respective vertically aligned inverted male rib sections 50A, 50B of greater width. This is done to assist an installer in making alignments and the initial engagements between the corners of contiguous tiles by providing wider interlocks for initial meshing. Typically, the end rib sections 50A and 50B encircling a respective one of the endmost cavities 61 and 62 are typically about twice as wide as the intermediate ribs 50. Because the rib sections 50A and 50B are about twice as wide as the intervening rib sections 50 readily mesh with the correspondingly wider channels 42A and 42B by the installer aligning and then simply pressing and corner 24 or 34 of tile 10 with its rib sections 50A and 50B and cavities 61 and 62 facing downwards into the upwardly facing lugs 40A, 40B and wider channels 42A, 42B, respectively, of the inverted corresponding corner of a second and substantially identical tile. Once these initial engagements are made at the superimposed tile corners the remaining, intermediate interlocks of the overlapping tiles will be drawn into generally aligned in proper meshing relationships and their relatively tighter intermediate interlock engagements requiring greater forces may be affected by the installer with the use of a tool, such as a mallet. The wider and open-ended design of this initial pair of interlocks facilitates the ease by which individual tiles may be removed from the assemblage by the installer simply raising one corner of the tile to be removed to initiate separation of the contiguous interlocks.
The particular tile described herein is the preferred embodiment of the instant invention but it should be understood that modifications may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the following appended claims. This specification has disclosed all foreseeable equivalents. Terms such as “generally” and “substantially” and the like, as used herein, are to be accorded their ordinary and customary meaning.
This is a continuation application of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/074,103, filed on Feb. 29, 2008, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,676,995, which is a continuation application of U.S. Ser. No. 10/769,364, filed Jan. 30, 2004, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,340,865 the entirety of which being incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110061330 A1 | Mar 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12074103 | Feb 2008 | US |
Child | 12720379 | US | |
Parent | 10769364 | Jan 2004 | US |
Child | 12074103 | US |