The invention relates to drywall ceiling construction and, in particular, to a construction in which taped end joints between drywall sheets are easily concealed.
Drywall sheets are manufactured as rectangular panels with a standard width of four feet and with a regular series of lengths of 8, 10, 12, 14 and 16 feet or metric industry equivalents. The long edges or margins of the sheets are tapered at their face side. The tapered margins are provided to enable tape and joint compound to be received in a joint above the face plane of the ceiling being constructed. The ends of the sheets are not tapered because of limitations of the production process used to make the sheets. Joints between the ends of drywall sheets, sometimes called butt joints, are difficult to conceal because the thickness of the joint tape intrudes into the plane of the face of the ceiling. The butt joints in ceilings are particularly difficult to conceal, in part, because they are often highlighted by indirect lighting. Frequently, a drywall ceiling is heavily textured to mask the presence of butt joints. Texturing of a ceiling is not practical where a relatively smooth surface is specified and/or where the drywall has acoustical properties derived from a porous face. U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,578,107 and 8,898,986 illustrate examples of sheet metal strips or bars that can be used to suspend transverse sheet metal drywall grid tees. The strips or bars have regular keyhole-like slots along their length that capture the upper reinforcing bulbs of the tees. Drywall sheets are conventionally attached to the lower flange faces of the suspended grid tees with self-drilling screws.
The invention provides a grid structure for a suspended drywall ceiling that facilitates concealment of drywall butt joints. In the inventive structure, spaced parallel support bars carry transverse grid tees on regularly spaced centers. Drywall sheets are fastened to the lower faces of the grid tees. The grid is laid out so that certain grid tees will overlie the butt joints of the drywall panels. The support bars and the butt joint tees are configured so that the lower flange faces of the butt joint tees are slightly elevated from a plane established by the regularly spaced grid tees. The differential level of the butt tee flanges causes the butt ends of the drywall sheets to be drawn up by bending away from the face plane of the ceiling represented by the major surface areas of the drywall sheets. As a result, local areas of the drywall sheet butt ends provide a recess for completely receiving the thickness of joint tape and any joint compound necessary to conceal the tape.
Where, as disclosed, the butt joint tees are situated midway between the regular grid tee centers, the bending deformation of the drywall sheets is localized so as to be spanned by a taping trowel of limited width and to require only a relatively narrow band of joint compound to conceal the joint.
In the preferred embodiment, the differential height between the regularly spaced grid tees and the butt joint tees is obtained by using vertically shorter grid tees at the butt joints. In this instance, the support bars hold the upper portions of all of the grid tees at the same level so that the vertically shorter grid tees present their lower flanges slightly above the regularly spaced taller grid tees.
A suspended ceiling 10 is shown with full and half drywall sheets 11, 12, respectively, hung on conventional sheet metal grid tees 13. The grid tees are suspended from sheet metal bars or strips 14 of, for example, roll formed 0.032/0.036 inch gauge G40 hot dipped galvanized (HDG) steel stock. The bars or strips 14 are identical in detail and are typically suspended by wires 15 from superstructure such as floor or roof joists. Margins of the ceiling area illustrated in
With reference to
The slots 17, as seen most clearly in
Tees 13 are regularly assembled in alternate slots 17 so that they are on 16 inch centers. Tees 13 assembled on the 16 inch centers have a uniform profile and a height of, for example, 1⅝ inch. Drywall sheets 11, 12 are attached to lower faces 19 of flanges 20 of the tees 13 with self-drilling screws 25 in a known manner. The arrangement of the drywall sheets 11, 12 in
The mid-sections of
Preferably, the vertically shorter tees 21 are longer than the width of a sheet 11, 12 and the spacing between a pair of adjacent bars 14 so that the ends of the short tees are cantilevered over adjacent sheets 11, 12. This extension of the vertically short tees 21 allows an underlying local area of the adjacent sheet 11, 12 to be drawn upwardly from the plane 24 by one or more screws. This local deformation assures that the end of a joint tape 26 across a butt joint 28 can be concealed by joint compound even if it extends horizontally beyond the butted ends.
Referring to
The invention is particularly useful where a smooth finish is desired on a drywall ceiling and the butt joints of the ceiling cannot be concealed by texturing the ceiling. An example of an application of the invention is in acoustical monolithic drywall ceilings such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,770,345.
It should be evident that this disclosure is by way of example and that various changes may be made by adding, modifying or eliminating details without departing from the fair scope of the teaching contained in this disclosure. The invention is therefore not limited to particular details of this disclosure except to the extent that the following claims are necessarily so limited.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2814080 | Tvorik | Nov 1957 | A |
3675383 | Paoletti | Jul 1972 | A |
5799458 | Ferguson | Sep 1998 | A |
7578107 | Platt | Aug 2009 | B2 |
8770345 | Dugan et al. | Jul 2014 | B2 |
8898986 | Underkofler et al. | Dec 2014 | B1 |
20030154686 | Platt | Aug 2003 | A1 |
20050193668 | Hamilton | Sep 2005 | A1 |
20070277467 | Platt | Dec 2007 | A1 |
20080245018 | Miller | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20080245026 | Hamilton | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20100257807 | Raheel | Oct 2010 | A1 |