None
1. Field of Invention
A roadway marking tape applied to an upper surface of a roadway combines a continual upper reflective surface applied to the upper surface of the marking tape, incorporating a plurality of spaced elevated pavement markers having a white reflective front surface and a red reflective rear surface, the marking tape having an expandable adhesive material applied to a lower surface of the marking tape within which are embedded a plurality of contoured roadway spikes which are exposed from the lower surface through the adhesive material when pressure is applied to the upper surface when applying the roadway marking tape, the spikes permanently attaching the marking tape to the upper surface of the roadway with the adhesive material providing a permanent adhesive seal between the marking tape and the roadway surface.
2. Description of Prior Art
The following United States patents were discovered and are disclosed within this application for utility patent. All relate to either roadway markers or roadway tape.
The first category of prior art patents deal with reflective roadway marking tape. These type patents generally disclose an upper reflective surface and a lower adhesive. These patent include U.S. Pat. No. 3,399,607 to Eigenmann, U.S. Pat. No. 4,648,689 to May and U.S. Pat. No. 5,437,907 to Peil. U.S. patent to Rodli discloses a painting material that places a reflective material at certain predetermined location during application. In U.S. Pat. No. 1,661,242 to Truxal, flat material is to be attached to a roadway surface using what appears to be a bolt.
A second set of patent is disclosed that deal with reflective markers which are fastened to a roadway surface and are elevated above the roadway surface. Some of these have reflective and retro-reflective components which appear visible from a vertical perspective seen in a horizontal perspective. These patent include U.S. Pat. No. 3,427,933 to Taylor-Myers, RE 31,291 to Eigenmann, D470,787 to Kim and U.S. Pat. No. 6,776,555 to Kuo.
The last set of patents dealt with machines to apply roadway markers and material. These patents included U.S. Pat. No. 2,875,675 to Searight, U.S. Pat. No. 3,086,431 to Perry, U.S. Pat. No. 4,792,259 to Eigenmann, and U.S. Pat. No. 6,752,568 to Stone. A device similar to Stone would be suggested for application of the roadway tape which is the subject of the present invention, dispensing a reel of marking tape similar to the manner that is disclosed in the Eigenmann patent. An apparatus for applying an adhesive marking material, but to a vertical surface, is also disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,865,943 to Marty.
While disclosing similar individual elements as the present invention, none of the disclosed patents contain the combined elements of the present invention, especially in the presentation of the roadway spikes to the lower surface of the marking tape embedded within the expanded adhesive layer and the disclosed pavement markers attached within the upper surface of the tape.
As noted in the above section, roadway marking materials have been known in the art of roadway construction for several years. Most of these markers are intended to visibly indicate the boundaries of a lane, or to convey information to drivers as to roadway conditions during daylight hours with a pigment different from the roadway surface of a reflective component to be seen in one's headlights during hours of darkness. Some devices have included warning features that are audibly conveyed when a driver drives over them, either producing a noise when the tire drives over them periodically or in the manner of a washboard. This also conveys a tactile alert by either a bump when driving over the elevated device or a vibration felt as in warning devices on a roadway shoulder.
The problems addressed in the prior art patents and the industry deal with application of the roadway marking material, the durability of the markers or material used in the markers, and the ability to communicate multiple warning indicators within the marking material, especially to combine a visual, audible and tactile warning in the same device.
The present marking tape presents a continuous length of marking tape having a reflective upper surface to which is attached a plurality of spaced reflective roadway markers. Each roadway marker has a low angle inclined front section within which is placed a white reflective lens, an upper crest and an abrupt angle inclined rear section within which is placed a red reflective lens. A lower portion of the reflective roadway marker extends onto a lower surface of the marking tape. An anchored base portion of the contoured roadway spike attaches to the lower portion of the roadway marker, the roadway spike further defining a pointed tip and expanded portion, the pointed tip directed towards the roadway surface. An expandable adhesive material is provided along the lower surface of the marking tape. The roadway spike extending from the lower portion is presented embedded within the adhesive material prior to application.
When applied to a roadway surface, the marking tape is extended along the roadway surface where application is contemplated and pressure is applied to the upper surface of the marking tape and the upper crest of the roadway marker, driving the roadway spike through the adhesive material into the roadway surface to attach the roadway marker to the roadway surface, with a constant pressure along the upper surface of the marking tape forcing the adhesive material outward and providing a permanent seal of the marking tape to the roadway surface.
The marking tape may be provided in a rolled length or may be provided in a prefabricated pattern to indicate roadway warning signs or in letters to convey information, including turn arrows, school zones, safety zones, merge indicators, meridians, lane markers, no passing zones, or any other formed roadway sign or marking media.
The following drawings are submitted with this utility patent application.
A road surface marking tape 10 providing a multiple sensory means of delineating roadway margins and traffic information on a roadway surface 100, shown in
Application of the marking tape 10 would involve cleaning a roadway surface 100 from dirt, debris and roadway surface materials, placing the marking tape 10 upon the cleaned roadway surface 100, applying a downward force onto the upper crest 36 of the roadway marker 30 and the upper surface 20 of the marking tape 10, driving the pointed tip 42 of the roadway spike 40 into the roadway surface 100 and compressing the adhesive material 60 on the lower surface 38 of the marking tape 10 resulting in permanent adhesion of the adhesive material 60 and the lower surface 38 of the marking tape 10 to the roadway surface 100.
A soft surfaced weighted roller device, disclosed in prior art referenced previously in the specification, would be preferred for application of the marking tape 10. A hard surfaced weighted roller device would not be suitable, as the hard surface may cause damage to or crush the roadway marker 30 or the white or red reflective lenses 33, 35.
In a first embodiment,
In a second and third embodiment,
It is preferred that the white reflective lenses 33 would be facing the proper direction of travel, indicated by the arrows of
By combining the reflective upper surface 20, the white reflective lens 33 and the red reflective lens 35 on the roadway marker 30, and the first angle α and second angle β on the roadway markers 30, three human senses are stimulated as a vehicle drives along the roadway with this roadway marking tape 10. First, the marking tape 10 provides a dual visual stimulus to a driver at night by means of the reflective upper surface 20 and the reflective lenses 33, 35 in the roadway markers 30. The marking tape 10 would also provide a daytime visual stimulus if the upper surface 20 of the marking tape 10 were provided in a color which would be a stark contract color to the roadway surface 100, as is now seen on roadways as bright white or yellow. Second, the marking tape 10 and the reflective markers 30 provide an audible stimulus to a driver, by the tires of a vehicle making noise when they travel over the upper crest 36 of the roadway marker 30. When traveling over a repeating line of roadway markers 30, a hum or rapid bumping noise is produced. This is already presented in the art where multiple elevated roadway marking devices are applied in a line in a roadway. Third, a tactile vibration is produced when the vehicle tires travel over the roadway markers 30, felt by not only the driver, but by all those in the vehicle. Thus, if a driver is having a hard time staying awake at night and the marking tape 10 is applied to the lane margins in a roadway, the vibration felt would at least alert an occupant of the vehicle to the fact that the vehicle has crosses a lane boundary and that the driver may or may not be paying attention to the vehicle operation during travel in a safe manner.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1661242 | Truxal | Mar 1928 | A |
1736830 | McKee et al. | Nov 1929 | A |
1928447 | Cornell, Jr. | Sep 1933 | A |
2127233 | Older | Aug 1938 | A |
2268538 | Redli | Dec 1941 | A |
2875675 | Searight | Mar 1959 | A |
3086431 | Perry | Apr 1963 | A |
3179009 | Sheffield et al. | Apr 1965 | A |
3334554 | Adams | Aug 1967 | A |
3399607 | Elgenmann | Sep 1968 | A |
3427933 | Taylor-Myers | Feb 1969 | A |
3516337 | Gunther | Jun 1970 | A |
3879148 | Eigenmann | Apr 1975 | A |
4040760 | Wyckoff | Aug 1977 | A |
RE31291 | Eigenmann | Jun 1983 | E |
4648689 | May | Mar 1987 | A |
4687369 | McDonald | Aug 1987 | A |
4792259 | Eigenmann | Dec 1988 | A |
4993868 | Eigenmann | Feb 1991 | A |
5006010 | Duckett | Apr 1991 | A |
5242242 | Young | Sep 1993 | A |
5437907 | Peil | Aug 1995 | A |
5865943 | Marty | Feb 1999 | A |
D470787 | Kim | Feb 2003 | S |
6752568 | Stone | Jun 2004 | B1 |
6758567 | Attar | Jul 2004 | B1 |
6776555 | Kuo | Aug 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 299 386 | Jan 1989 | EP |
2 048 508 | Dec 1980 | GB |