1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to building exterior roof tiles and specifically to an improved building roof tile that is lightweight, durable, has a high R-value providing insulation against heat and cold and is easily installed.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Exterior building roofs have used different materials for protecting a building from inclement weather such as rain, solar energy, heat, cold, snow, ice, and wind damage.
Typical roofs are made of plywood, tarpaper and shingles. Tiles are also used to cover the plywood and tarpaper. Tiles are made in small pieces and are often made of terra-cotta or other cementious material. Tiles create a great weight on the building structure requiring a more sturdy construction of the building. Installing tile is labor-intensive on roofs and requires hauling and lifting heavy loads of tile pieces and yards of cement for the setup work.
The present invention overcomes the problems of previously used tiles made of cement and clay materials by providing a lightweight poly based molded cut tile that is durable, has excellent R-value for insulation and is easy and inexpensive to install on a building exterior having a plywood or plank base roof.
A. Polyurethane based foams are the most insulating roofing systems available today. These products are only available on flat roofs because of limitations of fire resistance on pitched roofs and the surface cannot be satisfactorily finished. The invention will address this problem by molding and cutting “tiles” out of polyurethane, mineral fiber, or fiberglass high insulating core material creating the only highly energy efficient tiles for any sloped roof.
B. The flammability ratings of available coatings for existing urethane systems do not apply to any roof pitch over 2″ on 12″. The current configuration and manufacturing process solves this by utilizing a flame retardant resin with a flame retardant treatment, finished with a flame retardant gel coat mixture, acrylic, or silicone coating.
C. Solar systems penetrate roof systems thus requiring special flashings, create additional weight on structures, require separate installation, adds no insulation, and creates potential drafting and leak points in a roof surface. The invention solves these issues by incorporating a lightweight, high insulating roof panel with embedded solar cells or paintable solar coating. Individual tiles are easy to replace, and very affordable eliminating the need to ever replace any large solar panels.
D. Available tile roof systems need frequent maintenance and leak after a short service time. The invention solves this problem by overlapping the tiles in a manner which makes water penetration much more difficult if not altogether impossible.
E. Available pitched roof systems cannot hold up to category 4 hurricane winds. Huge numbers of buildings are in areas where catastrophic damage occurs. The invention solves this problem with its unique tile design. The tiles have been independently tested to withstand over 260 mph winds without suffering any damage.
F. Hail storms damage all roof systems often allowing major water penetration into the building and massive interior damage. The invention solves that problem because of its hardness, thickness and density. When struck, even if hard enough to crack or dent the tiles, water penetration is not immediately possible because of the characteristics of the tiles core. The tiles can be easily repaired or replaced as needed.
Concrete and terra cotta roof tiles are subject to degradation due to the composition of the products and the effect of the elements. This causes the tiles to become brittle and routinely fracture and break when basic maintenance is performed. The invention solves this problem by eliminating breakage due to its composition and unique design characteristics.
Typical Tile roof systems are highly material and labor intensive. The invention solves these problems because it is lightweight, has a more simplified installation, and requires only poly foam adhesive and caulking to install.
An array of pre-molded poly foam tiles configured to fit together to complete a building exterior roof covering that appears to be aesthetically a conventional tile, slate, or shake roof.
Each molded tile is configured for placement at a predetermined location on the roof structure such as the roof peaks or top, bottom rows of the roof and field tiles, which are installed between the bottom row of the roof and the peak or hip and ridge tiles.
The present invention uses poly foam or comparable material from which each of the tile pieces are made in separate molds. In one embodiment composition of the tile that is molded uses a complementary system of polymeric isocyanate “A”-component and a composite water-based (HCFC-245fa) blown “B”-component. Using these ingredients, the mixture produces a tile that has lightweight and excellent thermal insulation characteristics. Other compositions for specific roof applications involve modifications to the polyurethane A and B mix as well as mineral fiber and fiberglass cores. Additives for flame resistance and mold control are examples of modifications. Each tile can also include a finish coat that includes gelcoat and similar additives.
The tiles can utilize solar paint or embedded solar panels for partial or total solar coverage of the structure. There is a metal “Z” bar which is installed at the top of a completed bottom row of tile. These bars can comprise the “grid” for the solar option. Final connections to the panel can be made by a certified electrician.
There is a different mold for the field tile, a different mold for the bottom row tile and a different mold for the hip or ridge tile. All of the tile pieces for the roof are pre-molded and coated before being delivered to the building site where they are attached to the roof as described herein.
As an example a home or residential building may have a wooden frame with a plywood sheet roof. A substrate may be prepared and applied to the roof with a hot mop for granular type material or any other type of suitable substrate to which the tiles will be attached. Once a substrate has been installed, poly foam adhesive is used that is put on the substrate and to which the tiles are attached whether it be the hip tile, the field tile or the bottom row roof tile.
The field tiles and the roof bottom row tiles each have on their back sides recessed or grooved areas that are of a predetermined pattern that receives the poly foam adhesive that is applied to the roof substrate for attaching each tile to the roof permanently. The foam adhesive has a setup time. Each of the roof tiles manually receives the poly foam adhesive on the under side of each tile in the domed star shaped area of grooves which is then manually attached to the roof and roof substrate. During the process, the poly foam adhesive must setup and the poly foam adhesive is allowed to harden, firmly attaching the roof tiles to the poly foam adhesive and to the substrate. The roof tiles are installed manually from the bottom up on the roof in a conventional fashion. The first row is installed against the roof edge which contains the bottom row tiles. The field tiles are then overlapped row by row from bottom to top. At the very top of the roof the hip and ridge tiles are adhered to the roof using poly foam adhesive. Note that the field tiles and the bottom row tiles have additional side overlapped portions so that not only are they overlapped from top from bottom, they are also interlocked in a side-to-side fashion. The tiles are also staggered in a brick like format from row to row. Hip and ridge tiles will be installed over roof peaks and adjoining field tile areas.
It is an object of this invention to provide an improved molded roof tile made of poly foam, mineral fiber or fiberglass that includes polymeric isocyanate and a water-based blown component that is lightweight, has a high R-value for thermal insulation, is pre-molded into individual units, and is easy to install.
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Available tile roof systems need frequent maintenance and leak after a short service time. The invention solves this problem by overlapping the tiles in a manner which makes water penetration much more difficult if not altogether impossible.
The instant invention has been shown and described herein in what is considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiment. It is recognized, however, that departures may be made therefrom within the scope of the invention and that obvious modifications will occur to a person skilled in the art.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61255629 | Oct 2009 | US |