Claims
- 1. A wall course having first and second sections extending from each other, each section comprising a plurality of first blocks, each first block having side and end walls with one end wall provided with spaced parallel narrow vertical ribs and an opposite end wall provided with correspondingly spaced parallel narrow vertical grooves, and the wall course having an intersection block adapted to connect the first and second sections to enable them to extend at an angle to each other; the intersection block having rectangular end walls and side walls extending from top to bottom of the block, with parallel narrow vertical grooves in its rectangular end walls inwardly from the edges thereof, and in each side wall, that are spaced to receive the ribs on the first blocks, whereby the same intersection block may provide for the second wall portion to extend in line with, to the right, or to the left from the intersection block, or to all of them, and wherein the parts of the end of side walls that are not engaged by another wall section extend from top to bottom and side to side of the block, with the narrow grooves exposed.
- 2. In the wall of claim 1, the block having an inner portion and an outer portion; the outer portion having the parallel grooves in its side and end walls, and a bottom wall across at least one of the portions.
- 3. In the wall of claim 1, the block having weakening lines in its side walls to enable portions thereof to be knocked out to provide passages in said walls to admit reinforcing rods or the like.
- 4. A wall including a plurality of block courses of claim 1: one course on top of another to make a wall of two intersection sections; at least one of the said courses being a bond beam course wherein the adjacent walls of the several blocks all have means providing recesses extending down from their top edges to make saddles to receive reinforcing rods, and having metal reinforcing rods in said saddles extending horizontally along both portions of the wall, the blocks having bottom walls, grout or like material in the blocks engaging the rods; the saddles being sufficiently above the bottoms of the blocks and below the top to enable the grout to surround the blocks, the intersection blocks having means to provide openings in the bottom thereof, vertical reinforcing rods extending through a plurality of courses, and bent into said saddles, to extend horizontally, whereby with the course having horizontal rods, the vertical rods form a reinforcing frame for the wall.
- 5. A building block having a top, a bottom wall, side walls, end walls at the ends of the side walls, and a transverse wall between the end walls; the block having an opening extending downwardly from the top to the bottom wall between an end wall and the transverse wall; the transverse wall and the said one end wall having means therein providing saddles to extend downwardly from the top edges thereof to receive and support reinforcing rods, the other end wall being normally without any saddle, whereby to present a finished face to a wall; the opening of the block being adapted to receive and hold grout or the like confined by the bottom, side, end and transverse walls; the saddles being of an elevation to support rods above the bottom wall and below the top so that the rods may be surrounded by the grout, and the end wall saddle being of a size to enable grout in its block to unite with grout in an adjacent block, the top wall being provided at its outer edges with ridges and the bottom wall being provided at its outer edges with grooves of the spacing of the said ridges, to enable the blocks to be securely disposed one on top of another.
- 6. A rectangular masonry block having an inner half portion and an outer corner half portion each half being substantially square, the block having opposite side walls, one end wall for the inner half and one essentially flat end wall for the outer half portion,
- a web spanning between the side walls and separating the inner and outer half portions,
- the web having a recess extending down from its upper edge, to provide a saddle to receive horizontal reinforcing rods,
- the recess being deep enough to enable the rods to be completely surrounded by grout,
- the inner half portion having an open top and bottom wall closing its bottom to provide a receptacle for holding grout;
- the outer portion having an open top and an open bottom, to receive vertical rods;
- the saddles enabling the block to receive a vertical rod in the outer portion that has a horizontal part extending into the inner portion by way of the saddle in the web;
- the outside surfaces of both outer portion side walls, and the two end walls having, near, but spaced from, their edges, narrow vertical grooves adapted to receive correspondingly spaced narrow tongues of an adjacent block;
- the top edges of the inner portion of the block having narrow ridges extending upwardly adjacent their outer edges,
- the edges of the outer portion being free of such ridges;
- the bottom of the block in both portions having grooves adjacent its side edges, spaced apart the same as the ridges on the top edges,
- pairs of knock-out scores on the inside of the outer section side and end walls, extending down from the top edges to points above the bottoms of the walls to provide for optionally making saddles therein, the blocks, when at a corner turning either to right or to left, presenting exposed surfaces having narrow, outside grooves that are relatively inconspicuous.
- 7. The block of claim 6 wherein pairs of knock-out scores on the inside of the outer section side and end walls, extending down from the top edges to points above the bottoms of the walls to provide for optionally making saddles therein.
- 8. The block of claim 6 wherein the inner end wall also has a recess extending down from its upper edges, to provide a saddle to receive horizontal reinforcing rods, the recess being deep enough to enable the rods to be completely surrounded by the grout.
- 9. In a masonry wall, a plurality of superposed courses of rectangular blocks, the wall having a first branch, and a second branch at right angles to the first branch; each branch of each course incorporating a first type block having side walls and end walls and being about twice as long as it is wide, one of its end walls having two narrow vertical tongues, each one near but spaced from its side edge, and its other end having two narrow grooves, also each one near but spaced from a side edge, and each spaced and sized to receive the tongues of an adjacent block; each course having at its intersection between its branches a second type rectangular masonry block having an inner half portion and an outer corner half portion each half being substantially square, the block having opposite side walls, one end wall for the inner half and one essentially flat end wall for the outer half portion, a web spanning between the side walls and separating the inner and outer half portions, the web having a recess extending down from its upper edge, to provide a saddle to receive horizontal reinforcing rods, the recess being deep enough to enable the rods to be completely surrounded by grout, the inner half portion having an open top and bottom wall closing its bottom to provide a receptacle for holding grout; the outer portion having an open top and an open bottom, to receive vertical rods; the saddle enabling the block to receive a vertical rod in the outer portion that has a horizontal part extending into the inner portion by way of the saddle in the web; the outside surfaces of both outer portion side walls, and the two end walls having narrow vertical grooves near, but spaced from, their edges, the front type block having its correspondingly spaced narrow tongues engaged in the said vertical groove of the second type block; the top edges of the inner portion of the block having narrow ridges extending upwardly adjacent their outer edges, the edges of the outer portion being free of such ridges; the bottom of the block in both portions having grooves adjacent its side edges, spaced apart the same as the ridges on the top edges, the blocks, when at a corner turning either to right or to left, permitting exposed surfaces having narrow, outside grooves that are relatively inconspicuous, the vertical grooves on the second type block receiving the tongues of a first type block; the unridged tops of the second blocks enabling the second type block of one course being disposed to extend in one branch, and the second type block of the superposed course being disposed to extend in the other branch, a reinforcing rod rising vertically through the openings at the outer end of the superposed second type blocks, and being bent to extend horizontally across the upper one of the said second type blocks; and grout in the receptacle thereof covering the rod.
- 10. The wall of claim 9 wherein the inner end wall also has a recess extending down from its upper edges, to provide a saddle to receive horizontal reinforcing rods, and the rods extend horizontally therethrough and into the first type block, the recess being deep enough to enable the rods to be completely surrounded by the grout.
- 11. A wall of inter-locking rectangular blocks of an established depth, comprising at least two courses, one on top of the other,
- (A) full-length stretcher blocks having a pair of parallel vertical tongues at one of their ends and having at their opposite end a pair of vertical grooves at said tongue spacing, further having a pair of parallel horizontal ridges formed on their upper surfaces and a pair of parallel grooves on their lower surfaces whose spacing equals said ridge spacing,
- (B) shortened stretcher blocks whose length is substantially equal to the difference between the length of said stretcher blocks and the width of said stretcher blocks, said shortened blocks having a pair of parallel vertical tongues at one of their ends and having at their opposite ends a pair of vertical grooves at said tongue spacing, further having a pair of parallel horizontal ridges formed on their upper surfaces and a pair of parallel grooves on their lower surfaces, both at a spacing equal to said ridge spacing, and
- (C) general purpose intersection blocks of such established depth, each comprised of two portions, namely
- (i) an inner end portion having an inner end face and a pair of parallel grooves formed therein at said tongue spacing, further having a pair of parallel ridges formed on its upper surface at said ridge spacing and a pair of parallel grooves formed into its lower surface at the same spacing, and
- (ii) a corner end portion having an outer face and two opposite side faces and having upper and lower surfaces continuous with the upper and lower surfaces of said inner end portion, the upper surface of said corner end portion being without ridges and each of said two opposite side faces and said outer end face having formed therein a pair of grooves at said tongue spacing,
- the courses being superposed, so that the upper surface without ridges of the corner end portion of each intersection block accommodates the lower surface of the corner end portion of a similar intersection block of the next upper course positioned at right angles thereon, and the tongues of said stretcher blocks of a course are matingly inserted in the grooves of either or both of said opposite side faces and receive the tongues of said stretcher blocks in linear alignment therewith, thereby permitting intersection blocks of identical conformation to be used as both left and right corners and to provide both T-shaped and crossing-wall intersections.
- 12. For use as an educational toy, the system of interlocking rectangular blocks as defined in claim 10, wherein
- the rectangular blocks are of molded plastic, and wherein
- the corner end portions of said general purpose intersection blocks each have a hollow vertical core, in combination with
- corner posts of such cross-section as to press-fit within the cores of said intersection blocks,
- whereby on construction of a wall intersection said intersection blocks of alternate courses will be secured by said corner posts at right angles to each other.
- 13. For use in courses in a system using concrete rectangular blocks of an established depth, at least one generally I-shaped rectangular intersection block of such established depth, having side walls, an inner end wall, and an outer end wall, a bottom wall, and a transverse wall between its ends, the inner end wall having pairs of narrow vertical grooves, the transverse wall dividing the block into an inner end portion and an outer corner end portion, the two portions being of at least substantially equal length and width, the inner end portion having a channel hollow extending down between its side, end and transverse walls, to the bottom wall to provide a four-sided grout receiving compartment; the outer corner end portion having a vertical recess extending down from the top; spaced narrow vertical ribs along the lateral edges of the top of the inner portion, beside the channel hollow, the top of the outer end portion being free of such ribs; pairs of spaced narrow vertical grooves at the edges at the end wall of the corner portion, and equally spaced narrow grooves vertically disposed on each side of the corner portion, the grooves being thus capable of mating with equally spaced ribs on connecting blocks at the end or on either side, the the arrangement permitting the block to interfit on either side or either end with ribbed blocks, the grooves being small so that if exposed in a wall they are not excessively conspicuous.
- 14. The block of claim 13, wherein the recess in the outer corner portion extends vertically through the block.
- 15. Bond beam intersection blocks as defined in claim 14, reinforcing rod members, each having a substantially right-angle intermediate bend and rectilinear elongated portions extending therefrom in the same plane, said intermediate bend being accommodated within the corner end portion of an intersection block with one of its rectilinear portions extending horizontally in the bond beam course and its other rectilinear portion extending vertically through the hollow vertical openings of itself and those of vertically adjacent blocks.
- 16. Bond beam intersection blocks as defined in claim 13, wherein said corner end portion vertical walls have pairs of parallel vertical breakout score lines on the inner surfaces of both said side walls extending downward from the upper surface of said corner end portion between the narrow vertical grooves therein, ending upward of the lower surface of the corner end portion, whereby to permit the block side faces to be broken out between said breakout score lines for receiving and supporting, above the level of the lower surface of the block, the horizontal rodding from such adjacent channel blocks at right angles thereto.
- 17. Bond beam intersection blocks as defined in claim 16, wherein the end wall of said corner end portion vertical wall further has a pair of similar parallel vertical breakout score lines on the inside surface, whereby to permit linearly continuous rodding and grouting at both T-shaped and crossing-wall intersections.
- 18. Bond beam intersection blocks as defined in claim 13, wherein at least one side face of said corner end portion vertical wall has a pair of parallel vertical breakout score lines on its inside surface extending downward from the upper surface of said corner end portion, ending upward of the lower surface of the corner end portion, in combination with reinforcing rod members each having a substantially right-angle intermediate bend and rectilinear elongated portions extending therefrom in the same plane, thereby to permit passage to an adjacent channel block of one of said rectilinear portions while the right-angle bend is accommodated within said corner end portion of said intersection block and the other rectilinear portion extends through the inner end channel hollow of said intersection block to a channel block thereadjacent.
- 19. The bond beam intersection block as defined in claim 18, wherein both side faces of said corner end portion vertical wall have a pair of similar parallel vertical breakout score lines, whereby the outer end face may be broken away to so receive said right-angle reinforcing members at both T-shaped and crossing-wall intersections.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 101,484, filed December 10, 1979, which is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 912,520, filed June 5, 1978, both abandoned.
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Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
101484 |
Dec 1979 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
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912520 |
Jun 1978 |
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