In the art of shingle manufacture, it was commonplace for many years that shingles were made of natural materials, such as slate, cedar shakes or made as tiles, from clay or like materials.
It has developed that natural-appearing shingles have been made by various molding and/or lamination processes whereby synthetic shingles have the appearance of natural slate shingles, natural wood shake shingles, or tiles.
Such synthetic shingles have a number of advantages, including the ability to build into the materials of construction of the shingle, various features, such as algae resistance, ultraviolet light resistance, color stabilizers and enhancers that are able to avoid discolorations by oxidation or other phenomena, heat reflectivity, and many other features.
When synthetic shingles are molded, the molding process allows one to provide surface irregularities that, while being intentionally planned and predetermined, yield in the final product the appearance of natural materials. For example, natural slate shingles do not generally haw completely uniform and smooth surfaces. Rather, they have minor depressions and irregularities. With the molding of synthetic shingles, such minor depressions and irregularities can be molded into the shingle.
The present invention is directed to treating a synthetic shingle, on its upper surface, to enhance the effect of depth or texture, by creating a scuffing, or abrading of the upper surfaces that would normally be weather-exposed in the installed condition of the shingle on a roof, leaving depressions and recessed portions of the upper surface unscuffed, or unabraded, or scuffed or abraded a lesser amount than non-recessed portions, such that the areas of the upper surface of the shingle that are abraded (or more abraded) become somewhat lightened, creating an appearance more like natural materials, and in the case of a simulated slate shingle, creating the appearance of a shingle that has been rubbed against the surface of another slate shingle during handling, to yield a more pronounced texture that looks more like real stone or slate.
The present invention is therefore directed to a process for treating a synthetic shingle, in which a portion of the upper surface of the synthetic shingle that would ordinarily be weather-exposed in the installed condition, and in which the upper surface thereof would have high zones and a plurality of depressions, and wherein the high zones are abraded at least in some portions of them, with the depressions not being abraded or abraded a lesser amount, such that the upper surface of the weather-exposed portion of the shingle has different visual appearances in the abraded and unabraded surface portions.
In accordance with the present invention, a synthetic shingle is also provided having abrasions on an upper weather-exposed surface thereof, with depressions in that upper surface being free of abrasions therein, to create different visual appearances in the abraded surface portions and the unabraded surface portions.
Accordingly, it is a primary object of this invention to provide a novel process for treating a synthetic shingle by abrading portions of an upper surface thereof while leaving unabraded other portions of the upper surface.
It is a further object, of this invention to produce a different texture in a shingle made in accordance with the process set forth above.
It is yet another object of this invention to provide a shingle made in accordance with the process described above.
It is a further object of this invention to practice the above processes, and make a shingle in accordance with those processes, wherein shingles are delivered along a generally horizontal path in which they are engaged by an abrading medium as they are delivered along that path.
It is yet another object of this invention to provide a shingle in accordance with the description above, wherein the portion of the shingle that is to be weather-exposed comprises a laminate of at least two layers, and wherein the abrading occurs on the upper, outermost layer.
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 the appended claims.
Referring now to
The shingle 10 includes a headlap portion 11, and a tab portion 12. The lower portion 12 of the shingle, below the separation line 13 comprises that portion of the shingle that would be mounted on a roof in such a way that it would be weather-exposed in the installed condition on a roof. A plurality of thinner shingle mounting zones 14 are shown, through which nails, staples, or other fasteners would be applied, to attach the shingle 10 to a surface of a roof.
The tab portion 12 of the shingle 10, is shown in transverse section in
The upper surface 20 of the capstock layer 16 will preferably have various irregularities molded into it, such as high zones 21 and depressions 22.
Right and left side edges 23 and 24 respectively, and lower edge 25 of the shingle 10 will likewise be chamfered as shown.
The high zones 21 are the zones that will receive abrasive treatment in accordance with this invention. The depressions 22 on the upper surface 20 of the shingle 10, are the portions of the upper surface of the shingle that will not be abraded, or will be abraded a lesser amount. Thus, as the shingle 10 is viewed, there will be some portions that have been abraded and some portions that are not abraded, or are abraded a lesser amount for the greater and lesser (or unabraded) portions, giving different visual appearances. These different visual appearances will preferably produce different apparent textures, such that the abraded or scuffed surface portions may appear lighter in color or contrast than the unabraded or unscuffed depressions, the latter of which will normally appear somewhat darker. This has the effect of accentuating the texture and giving the shingle a look of more depth or texture. Additionally, the areas that are lightened by being scuffed or abraded appear more like real stone or slate that, has been rubbed against the surface of another stone or slate during handling.
With reference to
It will be noted that the abrading roller 33 is shown in full lines in
It will further be understood that, while it is preferred that the shingles will be moved beneath a rotating abrading roller 33, it is also possible that the shingles could be maintained stationary and the relative motion between an abrading medium and the shingles could be accomplished by moving the abrading medium, such as a roller 33 or some other medium relative to the upper surfaces of the shingles 10.
With reference to
With reference to
With reference to
With reference to
It will thus be understood that in a preferred form of this invention, the shingles are delivered serially along a predetermined path, and that a rotating or stationary abrading medium of some form is engaged against the high surfaces of the shingles that are desired to be abraded, leaving the lower surface portions of the upper surface of the shingle that comprise the depressions, unabraded, such that abrading is avoided with respect to those depressions, so that they remain free of abrasions. It will further be understood that although cylindrical and disc type abrasion devices are depicted in figures, an abrasive pad such as a nonwoven abrading medium may be employed, and may operate like any of the mediums of
It will be apparent from the foregoing that various modifications may be made in the details of construction, as well as in the use and operation of the process of this invention, all within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This application claims priority from provisional application Ser. No. 60/908,718, filed Mar. 29. 2007. the complete disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60908718 | Mar 2007 | US |