1. Field of the Invention
The technology of the present application generally relates to a system for providing a connecting joint along adjacent joint edges of two building panels. More particularity, the technology provides new and improved connection joints that provide strength and use less material than existing connection joints. Thus, this technology is especially well suited for use in joining thin floor covering panels.
2. Description of Related Art
The subject matter discussed in the background section should not be assumed to be prior art merely as a result of its mention in the background section. Similarly, a problem mentioned in the background section or associated with the subject matter of the background section should not be assumed to have been previously recognized in the prior art. The subject matter in the background section merely represents different approaches, which in and of themselves may also correspond to implementations of the claimed technology. The term “plank” is used in a functional sense indicating a generally elongated structural member.
A common type of surface covering is wood flooring. Wood flooring may consist of a plurality of adjacent wooden floor planks affixed to a sub-floor.
Floor planks with tongue and groove connection joints require substantial thickness in order to form a strong joint and a large portion of each floor plank remains as residual waste when the floor plank is replaced. The top portion of the cross-sections of the floor planks in
To manufacture a thin floor plank with a tongue and groove connection joint either, one or more of the tongue, bottom portion of the groove, or top portion of the groove must be made thinner in order to reduce the overall thickness of the floor plank. It is more beneficial to reduce the thickness of the tongue and/or bottom portion of the groove to reduce overall plank thickness because reducing the top portion of the groove will reduce the thickness of the wear layer of the floor plank and therefore reduce the life span of the floor plank. Reducing the thickness of the tongue and/or bottom portion of the groove results in a connection joint that is not a mechanically strong joint because one or more of the tongue, or bottom portion of the groove will be too thin and will become flimsy and likely to crack or break if the joint is stressed. Therefore it is desirable to provide a connection joint that allows overall thickness of the board to be reduced while maintaining a large proportion of wear layer and maintaining a mechanically strong connection joint.
Surface coverings tend to be exposed to changes in temperature and humidity which may affect characteristics of the coverings. For example, wooden surface coverings in a high humidity climate may start to swell and cause cupping or even buckling problems. In a low humidity dry climate wooden floor planks may shrink. Shrinking may cause lateral movements perpendicular to the direction of the grain. Under this condition, in a nail-down application example the un-affixed side of a first plank may move away from an affixed side of a second plank, which results in a lateral separation between the planks. This lateral separation may cause loosening of an un-affixed side of a plank causing a hazard or damage to the floor covering. It is therefore desirable to provide a surface covering with a connection joint that reduces buckling and loosening caused by swelling and shrinking conditions.
The present technology relates to connection joints for surface coverings which includes but is not limited to floor coverings and building panels. Embodiments of the present technology include connection joints that are strong and allow for the use of less material than is needed for tongue and groove connection joints. In embodiments related to floor coverings, these advantages are accomplished by reducing total thickness of a floor plank while increasing the thickness of the wear layer relative to the overall thickness of the floor plank and still be able to maintain a structurally strong connection joint.
In embodiments the wear layer comprises a larger portion of the thickness of a plank than planks with tongue and groove connection joints. For example 30%-70% compared to ˜30% with tongue and groove. In embodiments the same thickness of wear layer may be provided with a thinner overall plank thickness. A thinner overall plank thickness significantly improves the log yield, the amount of area, e.g. square footage, of surface coverings that a single log can produce. Therefore embodiments of the technology may save thousands of trees per year. Further, because less volume of raw material is needed to produce the same square footage of surface covering products, manufacturing costs will be reduced, as well as transportation costs and drying process costs, which may allow manufacturers to be more competitive by offering consumers superior products at a lower costs than competitors, which is beneficial to both manufacturers and consumers.
The higher percentage of wear layer may also reduce the amount of residual waste because the amount of material left after the floor plank can no longer be refinished is significantly less. The higher percentage of wear layer may also be implemented to increase the lifetime of the plank by increasing the thickness of the wear layer without increasing the overall thickness of the plank.
These increases in wear layer thickness are accomplished with improved connection joints. Embodiments of connection joints provide equal or greater structural strength than existing connection joints, such as tongue and groove, while using less material. This advantage is achieved by using unique shapes that will be described in detail below. Embodiments further provide connection joints that maintain strength and surface evenness when conditions cause expansion (e.g. swelling) and contraction (e.g. shrinking) of the panels. This is achieved through unique shapes of connection joints which include gaps, swell reliefs, and one or more overlapping surfaces that will be described below.
Other aspects and advantages of the present invention can be seen on review of the drawings, the detailed description and the claims, which follow.
The following description of the technology will typically be with reference to specific structural embodiments and methods. It is to be understood that there is no intention to limit the invention to the specifically disclosed embodiments and methods but that the invention may be practiced using other features, elements, methods and embodiments. Embodiments are described to illustrate the present technology, not to limit the scope of the invention, which is defined by the claims. Those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize a variety of equivalent variations on the description that follows. Like elements in various embodiments are commonly referred to with like reference numerals.
The embodiments in
The wedge 300 shown in the embodiments in
In the embodiments the wedge 300 may include a protrusion on the outwardly angled side 316.
The wedge shaped slot 302 shown in the embodiments in
In the embodiment shown in
In embodiments, the angles between the plurality of sides of the wedge, cleat, cleft, and slot different than what is show in
The wedge 300 shown in the embodiments in
In embodiments, in order to form a gap between complementary sides of the wedge and slot the dimensions of other sides need to be set accordingly. For example, to create a vertical gap between the upwardly facing side 310 of the wedge of a first plank and the downward facing side 322 of the slot of a second plank the contact side 314 of the second plank is made shorter than the contact side 312 of the first plank as is shown in
A gap between inward angled side 324 and the outward angled side 316 is formed when the horizontal separation occurs as shown in
In the embodiment shown in
The surface coverings including embodiments of the connections joints may be installed in various ways. For example, floor planks can be installed using a fastener method as disclosed above, a glue-down method or a floating method. In a glue down method the planks may be glued down directly onto a subfloor, or the planks may be edge glued resulting in a glue-connected floating floor.
A method of installing floor planks 100 using a fastener method may include; nailing down a first row of planks along a guideline or straight wall with the wedge side facing the direction the floor covering is going to cover. Then either by face-nailing or nailing through the recess 332 of the wedge, fastening the first row of floor planks to a sub-floor 114. Then sliding the slot side of a plank in the second row of planks toward the wedge side of the first row of floor planks. The protruding tip 308 of the wedge 300 of a first row plank 100 may guide the slots 302 of a second row plank as the second row plank slides into place. The second row plank is in place when the slot 302 of the second row plank is received by the wedge 300 of the first row plank and the contact side 312 of a first plank abuts the contact side 314 of the second plank, and the upwardly facing side 310 with the outwardly angled side 316 and the downward facing side 322 with the inwardly angled side 324 are also fully engaged. In embodiments the vertical cleat side 318 and the horizontal cleat side 320 of cleat 304 and the vertical cleft side 328 and the horizontal cleft side 330 of cleft 306 are also fully engaged. During this sliding motion of the second row plank 100, the top side 102 of the second row plank is substantially on the same plane as the top side 102 of the first row plank 100. Once mated and before the second row plank 100 is affixed to the sub-floor 114 the plank is free to move in the horizontal direction away from the first row as the connection joint provides no resistance to movement in this direction. The second row plank 100 is then affixed to the sub-floor 114, in this example with a fastener 116. This process is repeated for each floor plank of additional rows.
Surface covering including embodiments of connection joints may be manufactured in a plurality of ways. For example, wooden floor planks with embodiments of connection joints may be manufactured using one or more milling processes to form wedges, slots, cleat, cleft, recesses, kerfs, bevels and swell reliefs.
While the present technology is disclosed by reference to the embodiments and examples detailed above, it is to be understood that these examples are intended in an illustrative rather than in a limiting sense. For example, while the present technology is particularly advantageous as use with floor coverings, embodiments of the connection joints may be used in other surface covering applications, including, but not limited to construction panels, such as housing indoor and outdoor frame panels, structural panels, subfloor panels, roofing panels, wall panels, ceiling panels, floor covering panels, decorative panels, decks and patio panels, furniture surfaces, shelving, partition panels, horizontal and vertical surfaces, table tops, counter tops, and other surface coverings or parts currently using tongue and groove connecting systems.
Further, while embodiments were disclosed in relation to a rectangular plank, such as the one shown in
Further, embodiments of connection joints have been described using cross-sections including what may be referred to as a male side (e.g. wedge) and a female side (e.g. slot) of connection joints. In embodiments, a surface covering panel may include a single male or female of a connection joint. Further, a surface covering panel may include any combination of male and female sides of a plurality of connection joints. For example, the two edges of a four side floor plank may include complementary connection joints (e.g. male and female), identical connection joints ( e.g. male and male), or different connection joints (e.g. male of first type of connection joint and female of second type of connection joint). Further one or more sides or edges of a panel may have no connection joints while other sides do include one or more connection joints.
Further, the embodiments of connection joints have been described using cross-sections to illustrate various functional aspects of different connection joints. The cross-sections may further include other functional or ornamental features of a plank. For example, the cross-section of a plank 100, may further include provides kerf cuts 334, along the bottom side 104, as shown in
The embodiments described and shown in the figures portray relative dimensions of cross sections of connection joints, however other embodiments may have different relative dimensions of the various components without departing from the scope of the technology.
Descriptions of embodiments of the present technology included wood as an example of a material that may be used to construct the connection joints. However, other materials and combinations of materials may alternatively be used including, metals, plastics, composites, bamboo, cork, fiberboard, coconut palm, particle board (e.g. MDF and HDF), and other natural, organic, recycled, or synthetic materials, or any other similar materials. Those in the art will understand that any suitable material, now known or hereafter developed, may be used in making the panels described herein. In embodiments including two or more layer engineered floors, the layers may be made from any combination of the conventional materials used in the surface covering product industry.
The following clauses describe aspects of various examples of connection joints for surface coverings such as floor coverings.
1. A floor plank comprising: a top side; a bottom side substantially parallel to the top side; a first edge extending from the top side to the bottom side comprising; a first contact side extending from the top side to a first terminal position between the top side and the bottom side; and a wedge shaped protrusion comprising; a first horizontal side extending from the first terminal position and substantially parallel to the top side; and a first angled side extending from the bottom side to the first horizontal side; wherein an angle formed between the bottom side and the first angled side is obtuse and an angle formed between the first horizontal side and the first angled side is acute; and wherein the first angled side includes a cleat locate along the first angled side and spaced apart from the bottom side and the first horizontal side.
2. The floor plank of clause 1, wherein the first contact side is substantially perpendicular to the top side and wherein the length of the first contact side is between 40% and 60% of the distance between the top side and bottom side.
3. The floor plank of clauses 1 or 2 wherein the cleat includes a horizontal cleat side substantially parallel to the first horizontal side.
4. The floor plank of clauses 1. 2. or 3 further comprising: a second edge extending from the top side to the bottom side comprising; a second contact side extending from the top side to a second terminal position between the top side and the bottom side; and a wedge shaped slot comprising; a second horizontal side extending from the second terminal position and substantially parallel to the top side; and a second angled side extending from the bottom side to the second horizontal side; wherein an angle formed between the bottom side and the second angled side is acute and the an angle formed between the second horizontal side and the second angled side is acute; wherein the second angled side includes a cleft located along the second angled side spaced apart from the bottom side and the second horizontal side.
5. The floor plank of clauses 1, 2, 3, or 4; wherein the cleft includes a horizontal cleft side substantially parallel to the second horizontal side.
6. The floor plank of clauses 4 or 5, wherein the first edge of the floor plank is complementary in shape to the second edge of the floor plank so that a second edge of a second floor plank having the same geometry as the floor plank is able to mate with the first edge of the floor plank and the top and bottom sides will align.
7. The floor plank of clauses 4, 5, or 6, wherein first edge of the floor plank is complementary in shape to the second edge of the floor plank so that a second edge of a second floor plank having the same geometry as the floor plank is able to mate with the first edge of the floor plank so that the first contact side of the first plank would abut the second contact side of the second plank and a gap would be formed between sides of the wedge shaped protrusion of the floor plank and sides of the wedge shaped slot of the second floor plank.
8. A floor plank comprising: a top side; a bottom side substantially parallel to the top side; a second edge extending from the top side to the bottom side comprising; a second contact side extending from the top side to a second terminal position between the top side and the bottom side; and a wedge shaped slot comprising; a second horizontal side extending from the second terminal position and substantially parallel to the top side; a second angled side extending from the bottom side to the second horizontal side; wherein an angle formed between the bottom side and the second angled side is acute and the an angle formed between the second horizontal side and the second angled side is acute; wherein the second angled side includes a cleft located along the second angled side spaced apart from the bottom side and the second horizontal side.
9. A method of forming a floor covering comprising; providing a first plank comprising; a first top side; a first bottom side substantially parallel to the first top side; a first edge extending from the first top side to the first bottom side comprising; a first contact side extending from the first top side to a first terminal position between the first top side and the first bottom side; and a wedge shaped protrusion comprising; a first horizontal side extending from the first terminal position and substantially parallel to the first top side; a first angled side extending from the first bottom side to the first horizontal side; wherein an angle formed between the first bottom side and the first angled side is obtuse and the an angle formed between the first horizontal side and the first angle side is acute; and wherein the first angled side includes a cleat located along the first angled side spaced apart from the bottom side and the first horizontal side; affixing the first plank to a sub-floor; providing a second plank comprising; a second top side; a second bottom side substantially parallel to the second top side; a second edge extending from the second top side toward the second bottom side; a second contact side extending from the second top side to a second terminal position between the second top side and the second bottom side; and a wedge shaped slot comprising; a second horizontal side extending from the second terminal position and substantially parallel to the second top side; a second angled side extending from the second bottom side to the second horizontal side; wherein an angle formed between the second bottom side and the second angled side is acute and the an angle formed between the second horizontal side and the second angled side is acute; and wherein the second angled side includes a cleft located along the second angled side spaced apart from the bottom side and the second horizontal side; and mating the first edge of the first plank with the second edge of the second plank so that the first and second contact sides abut.
10. The method of clause 9, wherein mating the first edge of the first plank with the second edge of the second plank comprises: placing the second plank on the sub-floor so that the second top side is on substantially a same plane as the first top side; and sliding the second plank toward the first plank.
11. The method of clauses 9 or 10, wherein the first contact side is substantially perpendicular to the first top side and wherein the length of the first contact side is between 40% and 60% of the distance between the top side and bottom side.
12. The method of clauses 9, 10 or 11, wherein the cleat is substantially triangular in shape and includes a horizontal cleat side substantially parallel to the first horizontal side; wherein the cleft includes a horizontal cleft side substantially parallel to the second horizontal side; and wherein the horizontal cleat and cleft sides overlap in a horizontal direction when the first and second contact sides abut.
13. The method of clauses 9,10, 11, or 12, wherein mating the first edge of the first plank with the second edge of the second plank comprises; forming a gap between sides of the wedge shaped protrusion and slot when the first and second contact sides abut.
14. A method of manufacturing a floor plank comprising: accessing a panel having a top side and a bottom side substantially parallel to the top side; forming a first edge extending from the top side to the bottom side, the first edge comprising; a first contact side extending from the top side to a first terminal position between the top side and the bottom side; and a wedge shaped protrusion comprising; a first horizontal side extending from the first terminal position and substantially parallel to the top side; and a first angled side extending from the bottom side to the first horizontal side; wherein an angle formed between the bottom side and the first angled side is obtuse and the an angle formed between the first horizontal side and the first angled side is acute; and wherein the first angled side includes a cleat locate along the first angled side and spaced apart from the bottom side and the first horizontal side.
15. The method of clause 14, wherein the first contact side is substantially perpendicular to the top side and wherein the length of the first contact side is between 40% and 60% of the distance between the top side and bottom side.
16. The method of clauses 14 or 15, wherein the cleat includes a horizontal cleat side substantially parallel to the first horizontal side.
17. The method of clauses 14, 15, or 16, further comprising: forming a second edge extending from the top side to the bottom side, the second edge comprising; a second contact side extending from the top side to a second terminal position between the top side and the bottom side; and a wedge shaped slot comprising; a second horizontal side extending from the second terminal position and substantially parallel to the top side; a second angled side extending from the bottom side to the second horizontal side; wherein an angle formed between the bottom side and the second angled side is acute and the an angle formed between the second horizontal side and the second angled side is acute; wherein the second angled side includes a cleft locate along the second angled side and spaced apart from the bottom side and the second horizontal side.
18. The method of clause 17; wherein the cleft includes a horizontal cleft side substantially parallel to the second horizontal side.
19. The method of clause 18, wherein the cleat includes a horizontal cleat side substantially parallel to the horizontal cleft side.
20. The method of clauses 17 of 18, wherein the wedge shaped protrusion and wedge shaped slot have complementary shapes.
21. The floor plank of clause 1, wherein the first contact side is substantially perpendicular to the top side and wherein the length of the first contact side is between 30% and 70% of the distance between the top side and bottom side.
It is contemplated that modifications and combinations will readily occur to those skilled in the art, which modifications and combinations will be within the spirit of the invention and the scope of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US14/55704 | 9/15/2014 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61960326 | Sep 2013 | US | |
61998281 | Jun 2014 | US |