This non-provisional application claims priority from U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/285,596 filed Dec. 11, 2009, the complete disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference.
In the prior art, it is known to produce laminated roofing shingles. Most particularly, it is known to produce laminated roofing shingles wherein the shingles are comprised of a fiber sheet or mat that is impregnated with a bituminous material, such as asphalt, and with granules applied on a surface of the shingles that are to be weather-exposed in the installed condition, and with generally smaller particles such as mica, sand or the like applied to the rear of the shingles, to prevent multiple shingles in a given stack or package from adhering to each other.
It is also known in the roofing art that laminated shingles may be made by cutting shingle material of the type described above, to have tabs, with spaces between the tabs, and wherein strips of additional shingle material are applied to the posterior surfaces of the shingle material having tabs thereon, to underlie the spaces between adjacent tabs. Generally such posterior-applied shingle material is of a shorter dimension than the anterior shingle layer, in that it need not extend from the lower ends of the tabs, up to the upper end of the headlap portion, although, such a full height posterior layer can be provided, if desired.
It is generally recognized that it is more economical to provide a posterior layer of shingle material that is slightly more than half the height of the anterior layer of shingle material, so that it extends from the lower ends of the tabs of the anterior layer, to just above the upper ends of the slots or cutouts, so that the slots between adjacent tabs are fully covered.
It has been recognized that highly desirable, aesthetic effects can be obtained by using an anterior layer of shingle material that has wide slots between adjacent tabs. Such an aesthetic effect is known as a “dragon's tooth” effect.
Examples of a dragon's tooth effect exist in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,044,608; 6,355,132 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,607,275, the complete disclosures of which are herein incorporated by reference.
It has been found that, when dragon's tooth type laminated shingles are laid up on a roof, if the shingles were produced on a production line with a continuous and repeating pattern cut into the shingle material by means of a pattern of blades on the circumference of a cutting cylinder, thereafter, when the shingles thus manufactured are laid up in courses on a roof, there may appear a pattern to the thus laid-up shingles that may not be desirable, such as, the appearance of the dragon's teeth in a generally straight line, often appearing as a sloped line of teeth, when the roof with shingles thus applied is viewed from ground level.
The present invention is directed to an apparatus and process for manufacturing laminated shingles of the type described above, wherein undesirable patterns of shingles are minimized, or at least reduced, when the shingles are laid up in courses on a roof, such that randomization of the shingles is achieved, avoiding undesirable patterns. Accordingly, the present invention is aimed at increasing the randomization of a laminated roofing shingle pattern cut design, so that when the cut design is incorporated into shingles and they are applied to a roof, such will minimize application patterning for multiple methods of application. The present invention is also directed to the shingles themselves and packages of such shingles.
The present invention provides a laminated roofing shingle cut pattern design that may or may not incorporate a mixing of production lanes of cut shingles, in the same bundle or package, such that, when shingles from a given package are installed on a roof, there will result a more random application and aesthetically pleasing appearance to the roof.
Accordingly, it is an object of this invention to provide a novel shingle cut pattern, for cutters in a shingle production line.
It is a further object of this invention to cut multiple shingles of a dragon's tooth type, on a single production line.
It is yet another object of this invention to provide novel shingles and a more random stacking of shingles that are cut from a single production line, in a given bundle or package, for application to a roof with an enhanced randomization, and less apparent patterning.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will be readily apparent upon a reading of the following brief descriptions of the drawing figures, the detailed descriptions of the preferred embodiments and appended claims.
Referring now to the drawings in detail, reference is first made to
As the shingle material 20 is moved along the generally horizontal path 21, it passes above or beneath a plurality of pattern cutters 22, 23, each of the generally cylindrical type.
The cutters 22, 23 are suitably shaft-mounted as shown in
The generally cylindrical pattern cutter 22 is mounted on a suitable rotating shaft 24, rotatable in a given direction as indicated by the arrow 25, and driven preferably by means of a motor 26.
The cutter 22 will preferably have an even number of cutting teeth 29 on each end 27, 28 thereof, with adjacent cutting teeth on each end 27 or 28 being spaced apart by a given center line distance 30, measured between the center lines of the cutting teeth on each end 27, or 28 of the cutter 22.
The shaft 24 may also carry and likewise drive, disk-like cutters 31, 32, 33, 34 and 35, for cutting a plurality of strips B′, D′, A′ and C′, between dragon's tooth shingle layers C and B, as shown.
Thus, the cutter 22 when rotated, will cut shingle layers with dragon's tooth type slots between what will become anterior shingle layers A and C.
Similarly, the cutter 23, carried on the shaft 40 for rotation therewith in the direction of the arrow 41, will have cutting teeth 42 on its outer cylindrical surface, for cutting dragon's tooth type cuts in the shingle layer disposed thereabove or therebeneath, to generate dragon's tooth cuts in what will become anterior shingle layers B and D of a laminated shingle, as shown at the lower end of
The cylindrical cutter 23 will preferably have its cutting edges 42 arranged thereon, to cut an uneven number of dragon's tooth cuts by means of the cylindrical cutter 23, preferably by at least 5% more cuts than will be cut by the cutter 22.
Thus, the cutter 23 will cut in the shingle material 20, a greater number of teeth 45, 46 per lineal yard, than will the cutter 22 cut a given number of lineal teeth 47, 48 per lineal yard.
Both cutters 22 and 23 cut against anvil rollers (not shown) with the shingle material 20 between the cutters 22, 23 and the anvil rollers.
The shaft 40 can be connected to be driven along with the shaft 24 by means of the motor 26, or, alternatively, can be driven by its own motor 50, shown in phantom in
Thus, the shingle cutting mechanism illustrated in
In between the dragon's tooth type layers B and C, there are provided partial height posterior shingle material layers B′, D′, A′ and C′ of shingle material, referred to as “shim” layers.
It will be understood that in some production lines, the dragon's tooth type layers of shingle material can be produced at other locations transversely of the production line, with (shim) layers of shorter height shingle material that are designed to be posterior layers of shingle material, disposed transversely outwardly, of the dragon's tooth type anterior layers of shingle material, or otherwise laterally disposed relative to the dragon's tooth type anterior layer of shingle material.
It is of significance that, in accordance with the present invention, the two pairs of lanes that make up the dragon's teeth layers; namely lanes A/C, and lanes B/D differ from each other. The differences can be having different numbers of teeth on the cutter 22 or 23 that cuts the dragon's tooth layers, or an even number of teeth on one of the cutters and an odd number of teeth on the other cutter. For example, one could have a much larger roller comprising one of the cutters 22 or 23, or the rollers for the cutters 22, 23 could both have even numbers or odd numbers, in a situation wherein both rollers have a much larger diameter. In such a case, both rollers 22, 23 could have an even number of cutting teeth, such as one with the ability to cut 8 teeth and the other with the ability to cut 10 teeth, or alternatively one with the ability to cut 9 teeth and the other with the ability to cut 11 teeth, all of which arrangements would produce a comparable effect, such that the cutters would differ from each other so that they produce two differently cut pairs of lanes of dragon's tooth shingle material.
Similarly, the dragon's tooth type layers of shingle material B and D can be produced from a different production line than that which produces the dragon's tooth type layers A and C from the cutter 22 of
With reference to
Similarly, the backing or shim layer C′ from
In
In
The backing layers A′, B′, C′ and D′, as shown in
It will be noted that the cutters 53, 55, 57 and 60 may be disposed at different linear locations, not aligned, as viewed in the collective illustrations of
It will thus be seen, with reference to
With respect to
The roller 64 can be raised or lowered by means of a variable tension loop provided by roller 64, with the tension being supplied by a suitable spring mechanism 65 or the like mounted at 66, which may be adjusted upwardly or downwardly as indicated by the double-headed arrow 67, such that the roller 64 can absorb or release different lineal amounts of shingle material 20 toward any of the cutters 53, 55, 57 or 60 as may be desired, for each of the laminated layers of shingle material shown in
With reference now to
An alternative arrangement for bundling or packaging adjacent shingles is illustrated in
In
In
While the various arrangements of
Other than the various combinations of backing or shim layers relative to dragon's tooth type layers illustrated in
It will also be apparent that other arrangements for varying the manner of stacking shingles can be effected, to further enhance the randomness of shingles in a stack, such that when a shingle installer takes shingles from a stack for application to a roof, the different orientations of the shingles in a stack, and the different orientations of shingles in multiple stacks or packages of shingles, will facilitate further avoidance of undesirable patterning as the shingles are installed on a roof.
In
With reference to
While the illustrations of this invention are addressed to a pair of cutting cylinders as illustrated in
In accordance with one aspect of this invention it will be understood that cylindrical cutters, when used with this invention will provide from one cutter, an even number of dragon's teeth, and with the other cutter, an uneven number of dragon's teeth when the cutting roller are of the same or similar diameter, for facilitating further randomization of dragon's teeth on the laminated shingles when they are installed on a roof.
As described above, for the cylindrical cutters, a given pattern cut may have a first center line spacing from tooth-to-tooth, and a different cutter may have a different centerline spacing, preferably with a difference in spacings of cutting teeth on cutters of 5% or greater in number.
The center line “tooth” spacings for the portions of the cutting rollers that cut the dragon's teeth could be an average spacing for the dragon's teeth cutters on any particular cutting roller. For example, usually not all of the dragon's teeth are exactly the same, with some being slightly larger and some being slightly smaller, such that the absolute center line distances from tooth to tooth would vary, whereby a given cutting roller would have an average center line spacing. A second roller for cutting other dragon's teeth could have a different average center line spacing, yet, from a given tooth to an adjacent tooth there could be some variation, but the second cutting roller would have a variation on a different scale. Thus, for two different cutting rollers, one could have a first average spacing between the means for cutting adjacent teeth, and the other roller could have a second, but different average spacing between adjacent cutting means thereon. Also, the cutting rollers could have the same number of teeth, but be of different diameters to provide different average-tooth centerline spacing.
Also, in accordance with this invention, a given pattern cut may be shorter or longer, or of different lengths and different lengths of repetition, with such different lengths being illustrated by the placement of cutters 53, 55, 57 and 60 as illustrated in
By cutting dragon's teeth in accordance with this invention, as well as by stacking shingles made in accordance with this invention in varying manners, multiple differences between shingles in a stack may be produced, so as to vary large and small differences for facilitating increased randomization of dragon's tooth presentations of the shingles when the shingles are installed on a roof.
It will be apparent from the above that in accordance with this invention, a pattern cut is presented as an uneven, uniform or non-uniform pattern that results in an interlaced design having distinct patterns after separation from the original sheet 20 of shingle material. The pattern cut locations along a path of travel 21, as illustrated in
Additionally, the shingles can be stacked in a given package in accordance with any of the arrangements of
It will be apparent from the foregoing that various modifications and alternatives to the arrangements discussed herein, as well as to the method and apparatus, may be employed, all within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
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