No cross reference is made to other applications.
No Federal Government support was received in the development of this Invention.
No sequence listing, table, or computer program is attached or accompanies this Application.
This Invention relates generally to wall coverings and more particularly to self-aligning plastic tiles made by injection molding.
Tiles are an ancient invention and the grouting necessary between them hardly younger. In a bathroom or other wet environment, planar tiles adhered to a wall using adhesive are then sealed by a pliable, water resistant grout, to prevent ingress of water beyond the tiles into the supporting wall and structure. Further, tiles are arranged in symmetrical patterns.
The material of choice for millennia of tile fabrication has been ceramic, owing to its low material cost, water resistance and acceptance of colorful, hard surface finishes. Disadvantages of ceramic tiles include those inefficiencies arising from the weight of the tiles, their brittleness and their thru-hardness. Heavy ceramic tiles are difficult and expensive to transport. Ceramic tiles require specialized equipment to cut, and in the process are prone to break and create hazardous airborne silica dust. In contrast, the fabrication of plastic tiles by injection molding allows for a tile that is light and is easily cut with conventional saws that would not cause it to crack. Further, plastic tiles can include integral aligning and spacing features that replace the T spacers used with ceramic tiles. For a plurality of reasons, tiling with injection mold tiles is desirable.
Design flaws have hindered the adoption of plastic tiles, both in fabrication and installation. Fabrication limitations include the inability to finish tiles, life cycle limitations of resins used, and maintenance of planarity of tiles. Technological advances in materials and processing since the first plastic tiles were introduced, have largely solved these challenges; indeed, the ability to introduce relief into the generally planar cosmetic face of the tiles provides texture and finishing opportunities not easily achievable in ceramic tiles.
Installation limitations arise from insufficient attention paid to the geometry of the tiling system, leading to sealing, assembly, and repair difficulties. Brown (U.S. Pat. No. 2,490,577: Dec. 6, 1949 and U.S. Pat. No. 2,490,577: Nov. 2, 1954) elaborated a system of either tongue and groove or pin and eye connectors for plastic tiles. These designs, widely installed, led to many problems. It was assumed that a tight fit between tiles was sufficiently waterproof to avoid water infiltration to the supporting wall. It was not. Unidirectional assembly for the tongue and groove design meant that traditional symmetries of tiling could not be achieved. This lead to tiling jobs that looked unbalanced. And repair of damaged tiles was not possible without damaging adjacent tiles in the pin and eye method of attachment, owing to a failure to foresee that a closed loop captured flush to the wall cannot be reversibly removed from a pin mate. The resulting failures destroyed the market for plastic wall tiles for decades. Masanek (U.S. Pat. App. No. 2013/0086861, Apr. 11, 2013) is essentially the same patent as Brown's U.S. Pat. No. 2,490,577. However, in the meantime, considerable development and commercialization of interlocking floor tiling systems has occurred. In all cases, the desired result of the interlocking connection was to have the tiles secured tightly together. With the exception of a dovetail interlock, which could not be rendered into a practical design for wall tiles within a narrow grout joint, no prior art disclosed a connection that allowed tiles to be assembled in all four directions from one fixed tile and ensured the tiles were tightly secured. Shirakawa (U.S. Pat. No. 5,972,655) disclosed a two-stage connection of which the first stage includes features that could appear to address this issue, but was not his stated intention, nor would it be possible in order to complete the second stage. His invention disclosed a hook feature on the side of a first decking that inserted into a receptacle on the underside of a second decking, by first passing through an opening in its lower side wall. He disclosed that the inclined upper surface of the hook facilitated insertion of the hook into the receptacle by having it remain in contact with a series of mating curved ribs on the inside wall above the opening in the second decking so as to guide it into the receptacle. Once fully assembled, the mating ribs increased the contact area with the inclined upper surface, which facilitated a tight engagement, and thus a tight and reliable connection between the two deckings. His full disclosure, including the secondary fixture to secure the deckings together, is consistent with having the second decking lifted slightly to allow the tip of the hook on the first decking to pass through the opening and then having the second decking pressed down lightly to allow the ribs to guide the hook into the receptacle. If one attempted to assemble the deckings by keeping the second decking fixed and angling the first decking to insert the tip of the hook into the opening in the second decking so as to rotate the first decking into position, the side walls of the two deckings would interfere with each other. Only by extending the length of the hook considerably could this be overcome. However, this extended hook would result in the undesirable outcome of the deckings being very loosely connected, confirming that his invention is not suitable for the assembly of deckings in all four directions from a fixed decking.
This Application overcomes the limitation of the previous patents by maintaining regular, parallel joints between the tiles in which grout may be applied, by provision of a multidirectional assembly system, and by provision for repair owing to a reversible connection system that does not involve a closed loop feature flush with the adhering wall being penetrated by a pin protruding to the adhering surface.
Accordingly, it is an objective of this invention to overcome the disadvantages of the prior art.
Reference is made in the title of this Application to “self-aligning plastic tiles”. Tiles adhered to a bathroom wall are required to be able to be assembled in a regular order in a plurality of directions effecting the desired symmetry of tile placement design. To achieve symmetry, the expert tile installer may need to start at a chosen line of symmetry and build outward left to right, right to left, and upward. The integral aligning and spacing mechanism used must enable said multidirectional assembly in a regularly spaced fashion. This Application describes a self-aligning plastic tile system that enables multidirectional assembly with regular spacing. Further, mistakes are made, and reversibility of assembly, that is, repair, is a critical advantage.
Said regular spacing further require interstitial sealing with a pliable, self-hardening substance, exemplified by grout, in order to resist the incursion of water past the tiles. Failure to resist water incursion can result in wall and structural failure. Conventional tiles require various secondary T spacers that are placed upon adhesion and removed prior to grouting, the application of sealing grout to the interstices. This Application describes tiles that are equipped with a combination of integral hooked spacers for aligning with integral notches, such that secondary, removable, spacers are not required when adhering said tiles to a wall.
In a preferred embodiment, a wall is prepared for application of wall tiles using adhesive, tiles applied in the desired symmetry, and then grouting for moisture resistance is done in the regular interstitial spaces, defined by the hooking of a plurality of integral hooked spacers with integral notches along the sides of adjacent tiles. The use of edge tiles and corner tiles with specific configurations of hooked spacers and notches permit clean edged installations on walls. Depending on the installation geometry, adjacent tiles may, on rare occasion, share adjacent side walls both of which sport notches only. For such instances a non-integral hooked spacer is provided that will assemble to both adjacent notches to maintain continuity of the tile alignment and it is affixed to the mounting wall by the adhesive. Similarly, on occasion a tile may sport hooked spacers where none are needed; these can be simply clipped off. Further, said tiles are manufactured using plastic injection, allowing the installer to simply saw tiles shorter to complete the wall covering on inner corner edges or create cut-out for plumbing fittings.
In this Utility, overcoming a number of installation disadvantages encountered in prior art are achieved. Prior art required the application of secondary spacing parts to maintain alignment in all instances, or, in the case of patents describing injection molded wall or floor tiles equipped with coupling, connecting or interlocking projections, had said projections organized in such a way that tiling could only be completed in two directions, not in all four.
In this Utility, repair of damaged tiles is enabled by the geometry of the tiles, allowing them to be reversibly disengaged from the adhesive and other tiles without damaging adjacent tiles.
While reference is made throughout this Utility to its application as wall tiles, clearly this Utility with its novel self-aligning system has applications as floor and ceiling tiles. Where reference is made to wall tiles being installed vertically in every direction, floor and ceiling tiles can be installed horizontally in every direction (left, right, forward, backward).
Finally, while reference is made throughout this Utility to tiles that are generally rectangular in shape, the injection molding process allows for a variety of tile shapes to be produced. The self-aligning system described in this Utility can be incorporated into many different tile shapes.
In the drawings, which illustrate embodiments of the invention:
The self-aligning standard tile described in this Utility is shown in front view in
An isometric view of the generally planar cosmetic face 2 of said tile is illustrated in
An assembly of self-aligning tiles is shown in
The manner in which tiles are assembled left to right is shown in
The manner in which tiles are assembled right to left is shown in
In order to better illustrate the alignment of the integral hooked spacer 1 and integral notch 9 in their final position,
The dedicated edge tile is shown in top view in
The dedicated corner tile is shown in top view in
The same installation view in a left isometric view as in
The same installation view in a right isometric view as in
A non-integral hooked spacer is shown in