This disclosure relates generally to roofing and more particularly to metal roofing configured to mimic the appearance of traditional roofing products such as slate shingles and cedar shake shingles.
Metal roofing has long been used to cover roofs of homes and other buildings. Typical metal roofing includes, for instance, long metal panels that extend from a roof ridge all the way to the eves of a roof. These roofing panels may be connected together along their edges with standing seams or they may be attached to a roof deck with overlapping ridges along their edges. Either creates a barrier to water penetration along the connected edges of panels. In recent years, decorative metal roofing panels that, when assembled, resemble other traditional types of roofing have become popular. For example, decorative metal roofing panels that resemble cedar shakes, barrel shingles, or slate shingles are among the available choices for consumers. Although popular, decorative roofing panels have suffered from a variety of problems for installers and homeowners including difficult installation, susceptibility to wind and water penetration once installed, objectionable brakes in geometry, and ship lapped ends susceptible to water leakage. There is a need for a decorative roofing panel that addresses these and other problems and shortcomings of the prior art. It is to the satisfaction of this need and to provide other improvements and advantages that the roofing panels disclosed herein are primarily directed.
Briefly described, a decorative metal roofing panel is pressed or otherwise formed with an aesthetic geometry and an applied coating that mimics the look of a traditional architectural roofing product such as slate for example. A snap locking mechanism functions to lock the forward edge portion of a panel to the rear edge or headlap portion of a like panel in an installed lower course of panels. More particularly, a downwardly extending skirt with a return flange is formed along the forward edge of each panel and an upwardly open channel is formed along the rear or headlap portion of each panel. The upwardly open channel incorporates a locking tab that extends partially over the opening of the channel and a nailing flange extends rearwardly from the channel.
During installation, roofing panels according to the present invention are attached to previously installed panels in a lower course by pressing the forward edge skirt and return flange of each panel downwardly into the upwardly open channel of an installed panel or panels in the lower course. The locking tab of the channel engages the return flange causing it to bend or flex as the skirt is urged into the channel. As the return flange passes the locking tab, the return flange springs back underneath the locking tab and this locks the skirt of the panel into the channel of the previously installed panel. The panel can then be attached to the roof deck with nails or other fasteners driven through the nailing flange behind its own upwardly open headlap channel. The configurations of the skirt and the channel form walls that act as dams against penetration of wind and water and installation is simplified significantly and made more certain. Further, the “click” of the skirt locking into an upwardly open channel ensures an installer that a panel is correctly installed thereby simplifying installation.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the disclosed roofing panel will be better appreciated upon review of the detailed description set forth below taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing figures, which are briefly described as follows.
Reference will now be made to the attached drawing figures, wherein like reference numerals indicate like parts throughout the several views.
When installing the roofing panels of this invention, an installer attaches a lower course of roofing panels 25 in ship lapped end-to-end relationship along the roof deck. Roofing panels 26 of the next higher course are then installed above the lower course of panels. More specifically, each panel 26 of the next higher course is positioned with its return flange 37 aligned with the openings of channels 38 of the panels 25 in the lower course. Each panel of the upper course is then pressed downwardly by the installer toward the roof deck and generally with the direction of gravity as indicated by arrow 46. This action causes the return flange 37 and the locking tab 45 to deflect elastically to allow the return flange 37 to move into the open channel under the influence of the installer's downward force. The mere act of pressing downwardly rather than sliding up the roof as in the prior art greatly simplifies installation.
When the return flange 37 moves beyond the locking tab 45, the flange and locking tab snap back elastically until the return flange is mechanically captured beneath the locking tab 45 as shown. This results in a confirming “click” indicating to an installer that the panels are properly interlocked. The forward edge portion 32 of the roofing panel 26 in the next higher course thus becomes securely and mechanically interlocked within the upwardly open channel 38 of a panel or panels 25 in the next lower course. In addition, the “clicking” sensation provides the installer with a positive indication that the panel has been interlocked completely and correctly. The panel can then be fastened to the roof deck 27 with roofing nails 42 driven through its nailing flange and into the roof deck. In this regard, there is no need for an installer to hold the panel up and in its proper position manually while it is being nailed to the roof deck as with prior art panels. This is because the forward walls of the channel 38 of panels 25 in the lower course prevent the just installed panel 26 from slipping down the roof deck before or during being nailed in place. Installation continues in by attaching panels end-to-end to complete a course and installing successively higher courses until the roof deck is completely shingled. The end result is a metal roofing panel installation within which the panels are precisely aligned in each course and fastened securely to the roof deck.
In general, it is desired to create a roofing panel (which is metal in the preferred embodiment but that can be made of other materials such as plastics) that offers improvements in the installation, wind resistance, and water penetration resistance. Prior art roofing panels have several inherent problems and issues that the panel of the present invention addresses. For example, the unique clip interlocking geometry in the headlap area that receives the return flange and part of the skirt of a like panel offers improved installation as well as improved wind and water penetration resistance. Second, the invention includes end lap geometry that improves the water resistance in overlapped regions of end-to-end panels while facilitating a faster installation process.
As discussed briefly above, the snap locking feature secures the forward edge of each roofing panel into the upwardly open channel in the headlap portion of a roofing panel or panels in a next lower course of panels. The construction of the snap locking mechanism is such that the direction of interconnection is downwardly perpendicular to the roof deck instead of parallel to and up the roof deck as in prior art panels. In addition, the snap locking mechanism includes a vertical step to ensure that an installed panel (i.e. a panel with its forward edge pressed into the channel of a lower panel) does not slide down the roof under the influence of gravity and become cocked or misaligned between the time it is snapped to a lower panel and the time it is nailed to the roof deck along its nailing flange. As mentioned, this is a persistent problem with prior art designs such as that shown in
Additionally, since the interlocking connection between an upper and a lower panel is hidden or blocked from the wind by the forward edge of the upper panel, wind uplift resistance of interconnected panels on a roof deck is significantly improved. Further, the design of the locking mechanism hides the prismatic vertical face necessary for installation as illustrated in
The headlap portion in the region where two side-by-side panels are overlapped during installation is notched or cut as shown in
The invention has been described herein in terms of preferred embodiments and methodologies considered by the inventors to represent the best modes of carrying out the invention. It will be clear to the skilled artisan, however, that a wide range of additions, deletions, and modifications, both subtle and gross, might well be made to the exemplary embodiments presented herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention that they exemplify. For example, while the channel of the illustrated embodiments is upwardly open, it is contemplated that these channels may be formed to be open to the forward or rear side of the panel. With such a configuration, panels would be interlocked by sliding one panel up or down relative to a panel in a lower course until its skirt engaged and interlocked into the channel of the lower panel. In this and other ways, the invention is not limited in scope by the specific examples presented, but only by the claims hereof.
Priority is hereby claimed to the filing date of U.S. provisional patent application 62/083,615 entitled Roofing Panel with Interlocking Clipping System filed on Nov. 24, 2014, the entire contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160145872 A1 | May 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62083615 | Nov 2014 | US |