Thermoplastic wall forming member with wiring channel

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6189269
  • Patent Number
    6,189,269
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, September 18, 1997
    27 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, February 20, 2001
    24 years ago
Abstract
A thermoplastic wall forming member is provided with rails for securing a wiring channel interiorly of a hollow structure to be formed by the wall forming member and other wall forming members.
Description




FIELD OF INVENTION




The present invention relates to the provision of novel structural system and structural components therefor, their method of manufacture, and structures formed therefrom. More particularly, the invention relates to the provision of novel interlocking thermoplastic structural components which can be mass produced at low cost and which can be quickly and easily interlocked together to erect a wide range of structures which will require minimal maintenance and will be safe from termites, corrosion, rust or rot and will be highly resistant to the effects of weathering.




Further, the invention relates to the provision of such novel structural components which include hollow components adapted to accept concrete or other material therein to enable a structure erected therefrom to be anchored to a base and converted into a permanent and essentially indestructible structure which will withstand earthquakes, tornadoes and other natural phenomena. The invention also relates to the method of producing such components.




While the structural components of the invention can be used in the erection of a wide range of structures, it is of particular note that their existence now enables low cost durable or permanent housing to be provided for the masses throughout the word regardless of the climatic conditions.




DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ART




While the use of plastic to form wall panels or the like for use in building construction has been proposed, such panels have not had the necessary load bearing or other structural requirements to form practical structures which could be mass produced at low cost and quickly easily assembled to erect durable low cost structures and, in particular, low cost housing.




U.S. Pat. No. 3,992,839, for instance, discloses a plastic panel fabricated from separate panel members, preferably formed of polyvinyl chloride which snap together to form a thin wall panel. The panels in turn are formed to snap together to provide a wall structure. Such fabricated panels are inherently weak and lack the strength and load bearing capacity to form adequate structural components for use for instance in the forming of the walls and roof of a practical durable building.




U.S. Pat. No. 3,662,507 discloses the use of tongue and grooved individually prefabricated panels said to be preferably of plastic which are bonded or glued together and used particularly for the forming of basement walls. Such panels do not permit of high speed production and are not capable of being quickly and easily interlocked together in the erection of a house or other structure.




U.S. Pat. No. 4,557,091 discloses a hollow panel member having a width of about one and one-half inches (1½″) and a complicated interior formed by pultrusion, a process involving drawing long glass strands and a plastic binding material forcefully through a die under heat to form the glass strands into a compacted glass mat bound together by the plastic material. Such a process is prohibitively slow and expensive and the panels themselves do not provide acceptable or practical structures for forming the walls and roofing of a housing system such as contemplated by the present invention.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention resides in one of its aspects in the providing of novel thermoplastic structural components which can be quickly and easily interconnected to erect a wide range of structures from simple walls, fences, and enclosures, to complete houses or buildings, said thermoplastic structural components incorporating a reinforcing constituent imparting structural strength and expansion control thereto and flowable with the thermoplastic material through an extrusion die, said components being extruded into an integral essentially rigid structural shape having the reinforcing constituent distributed throughout the thermoplastic material, said structural components being configured to present means for interconnection with adjoining structural components so that they can be easily and quickly locked together in the erection of the structure desired.




The structural components according to the invention include extruded hollow panels, extruded hollow panel box connectors or columns, extruded hollow beams and adapters, and extruded panel connectors, all of which are provided with integrally formed means to enable interlocking connection with adjoining structural components for quick and easy assembly into the structure being erected.




Also according to the invention, the hollow wall panels and columns have a structural strength to accept the pouring of concrete or the like therein without deformation to provide permanent essentially indestructible wall structures.




In the case of the erection of a house or building, it will be understood that with the walls of the house or building erected on a concrete pad with the wall panels and/or wall panel connecting columns of the invention anchored with concrete to the pad a permanent roof supporting wall structure resistant to tornadoes, earthquakes and other natural phenomena is provided.




In its preferred form, the invention resides in forming the structural thermoplastic components aforesaid by extruding such components to have a thermoplastic core or substrate having reinforcing glass fibers anchored in and distributed therethroughout imparting tensile strength and expansion control thereto while co-extruding a smooth thermoplastic skin on the exposed exterior surfaces of said core, the said skin embedding and interlocking with glass fiber portions that are exposed at the interface between said reinforced core and said skin




In accordance with the preferred form of the invention, the thermoplastic skin provides an attractive maintenance free smooth surface adding to the appearance and ease of handling and interlocking the structural components as well as providing an impact resistant surface protecting the glass fiber reinforced core and the embedded glass fibers against external shock. Moreover, the thermoplastic skin can be colored as desired and provided with appropriate ultra violet protective agents as will be understood to protect such color and prevent weathering.




The structural system of the invention has particular value in the housing field whereby a house or building may be constructed on a concrete pad and formed of interconnected extruded structural components including hollow wall and roof panels and connecting columns having thermoplastic substrates reinforced with glass fibers anchored thereto and dispersed there throughout, the substrates being covered with a smooth thermoplastic impact resistant skin. The wall panels are anchored to the concrete pad by concrete introduced internally into said hollow wall panels and/or connecting columns as desired. It will also be understood that if desired the house structure, including the walls and roof, can be clad with any decorative exterior as desired.




The invention further resides in the method of forming the structural components by coextruding the smooth thermoplastic and the reinforced thermoplastic substrate to facilitate extrusion and to effect the bonding therebetween.




These and other features of the invention will be understood from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.




According to an aspect of the invention, a thermoplastic wall forming member is provided with a pair of spaced apart rails for securing a wiring channel interiorly of a hollow wall structure which is formed by the wall forming member and other wall forming members. When the wiring channel is secured to the wall forming member, it provides an isolated compartment within the formed wall structure. The wall structure can then be filled with material such as concrete or the like outwardly around and without entering the wiring channel leaving an unobstructed wiring raceway within the wall structure.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a perspective view of a house constructed of extruded thermoplastic structural components in accordance with the invention.





FIG. 2

is a broken away view showing how the wall panels of the house sit on a concrete pad.





FIG. 3

is an enlarged perspective broken away view illustrating the seating of a wall panel on the concrete pad with the arrow indicating where anchoring and reinforcing concrete or the like can be introduced.





FIG. 4

is an enlarged broken away perspective view illustrating a pair of panel members and a joiner therefor ready to be assembled.





FIG. 5

is an enlarged end view illustrating the manner in which the joiner connects to adjacent panel components.





FIG. 6

is a broken away cross-sectional view illustrating the structure of a typical extruded structural component having a thermal plastic core or substrate incorporating reinforcing glass fibers with the exposed exterior surface covered with a smooth thermoplastic skin sealing the substrate surface and embedding the glass fibers to be anchored thereby to the substrate.





FIG. 7

is a cross-sectional view on line


7





7


of FIG.


6


.





FIG. 8

is a broken away perspective view illustrating the assemblage of the exterior wall panels and interior wall panel and the roof panels at the ridge of the house.





FIG. 9

is a broken away perspective view illustrating a wall joining box connector or column provided with interlocking means to receive a channel forming insert to carry electrical wiring internally of the wall.





FIGS. 10 and 11

illustrate other forms of panel box connectors or columns.





FIG. 12

is a broken away perspective view illustrating the mounting of the lower end of a roof panel on the wall structure and the capping for such lower end roof panel.





FIG. 13

is a broken away perspective view of a wall corner illustrating how the hollow wall panels and corner box connector or column constitute concrete forms to receive concrete or the like to anchor the wall structure to the concrete pad and to create an impregnable rigid wall structure of discrete concrete filled cells capable of withstanding earthquakes, tornadoes and other natural phenomena while at the same time providing effective insulation against heat and cold transfer.





FIG. 14

is a cross-sectional view illustrating a window installation using an adapter configured to interlock with the wall columns and supporting a standard window.





FIG. 15

is a top plan view of a wall which may be the wall of any structure as well as that of a house embodying the invention and illustrating the use of concrete only in the box connectors or columns.





FIG. 16

is a broken away top plan view illustrating a wall structure in which the individual cells of the panels themselves as well as the box connector or column joiner are filled with concrete for maximum wall strength.





FIG. 16



a


is a top view of a concrete pouring guide.





FIG. 16



b


is a top view of the concrete guide of

FIG. 15



a


fitted atop a wall panel used to provide the concrete filled wall structure of FIG.


16


.





FIG. 17

is broken away cross-sectional view illustrating one manner of connecting the roof panels to the house walls.





FIG. 18

is an enlarged broken away end view of a portion of a practical example of panel component or member embodying the invention and illustrating the relative thicknesses of the outer walls of the reinforced core and the internal connecting webs or walls and the bonded skin layer sealing the exposed external walls of the panel.





FIG. 19

is a broken away view illustrating an extruded reinforced wall panel embodying the invention having a decorative cladding applied to the exterior surface.





FIG. 20

is a view of a non load bearing interior wall panel in which the skin has been replaced by a coating such as paint.





FIG. 21

is an elevational view of a fence, wall, sound barrier or other similar structure embodying the invention and erected with structural panels and connectors of the invention.





FIG. 22

is a diagram illustrating an enclosure erected according to the invention with structural panels and connectors of the invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




The structural components of the invention have great utility in the erection of a wide range of structures but have special importance in the field of housing since there is a desperate need for low cost durable or permanent housing throughout the-world which efforts to date have not been able to resolve. The requirements of such housing are that they must be constructed from components that can be massed produced at low cost and quickly and easily assembled to form a durable or permanent structure by unskilled workman. Further the resulting structure must be such as to withstand wide variations in climatic conditions and be capable of withstanding the shock of earthquakes, tornadoes, wind, hail, rain and snowstorms, high humidity, wide temperature ranges, without corroding, rotting or rupturing. Such housing must also be impervious to termites and other insects. Additionally, to be truly and widely accepted, such housing must have a satisfactory aesthetic appeal.




The present invention in addition to its utility for erecting all kinds of other structures for the first time enables the provision of housing meeting all of the above criteria as will hereinafter appear.




With reference to

FIG. 1

, a typical house which the invention provides has walls


1


assembled from wall panels


2


and a roof


3


assembled from roof panels


4


as shown in FIG.


8


.




The wall and roof panels are configured to be connected into the housing structure by interlocking mating engagement with adjoining members so that they can be assembled without the use of tools as hereinafter more fully discussed.




As shown in

FIG. 2

, all that needs to be done to prepare the site of the house is to construct a concrete pad


5


, having a reduced thickness border flange


6


forming a ledge to receive the wall panels


2


, as shown particularly in FIG.


3


.




The wall panels


2


have spaced exterior and interior walls


7


and


8


connected by transverse webs


9


forming internal cells


10


into which concrete can be poured as illustrated by the arrow A as desired to provided an extremely strong permanent wall structure. Additionally, the concrete pad can be provided with anchor rods


11


as desired projecting up into the cells


10


to anchor the concrete poured into the cells and hence the wall panels to the pad. A runner


12


is provided to contain concrete from seeping out underneath the wall panel.




As can be seen if

FIG. 2

of the drawings, the walls of the house and the size of the concrete pad are dimensioned such that there is a very slight gap G to the inside of the walls at the thickened portion of the pad. This provides a tolerance to ensure that the walls will fit down around the thick part of the pad and rest on the thinner border flange


6


as again seen in FIG.


2


and as also shown in

FIG. 3

of the drawings.




When the concrete is poured into the walls, it does, as found in conventional concrete pouring methods, contain a certain amount of water. As can again be seen in

FIG. 3

of the drawings, the wall forming panels are left open at their lower ends where they seat atop the concrete pad flange


6


. This allows the water in the concrete to effectively drain cut the bottom of the wall panels and, although runner


12


does provide an effective guard against concrete seepage from beneath the wall panels, it is not a water guard and therefore allows any water from the concrete in the wall panels to drain off of the pad. The runner


12


further provides a guide assisting in alignment of the wall panels along the outer edge of the concrete pad.




As illustrated in

FIGS. 4 and 5

, adjoining panels are adapted to be connected by a joiner


13


and then, as shown in

FIG. 15

, the free end of the panels are interlocked with a vertical column


14


. Column


14


is a typical column for interlocking with adjoining interlocked panel pairs intermediate the length of the wall while column


15


is a corner column for interlocking adjoining walls which meet at a corner. As shown in

FIG. 15

, the columns


14


and


15


are filled with concrete


16


and are anchored to the concrete pad by the anchor rods


11


.

FIG. 15

illustrates the situation where only the connecting columns


14


and


15


receive concrete, whereas

FIG. 16

illustrates concrete in both the column


14


and the internal cells


10


of the wall panels


2


.




If the house structure is intended to be subsequently moved, sand can employed in place of concrete in the columns and/or internal wall panel cells as desired to give the structural strength and anchorage desired. Also, of course, the internal wall cells


10


and/or the locking wall columns


14


and


15


can be filled with material other than concrete including insulation material. Alternatively, the columns could be filled with concrete and the panels filled with insulation material or such other arrangements as desired.




To have the house of modular form, for convenience, the wall panels


2


, joiner


13


, and columns


14


and


15


have been dimensioned to provide a lateral distance from center line of column to center line of column of one meter. The thickness of the wall panels


2


from exterior wall


7


to interior wall


8


has been conveniently selected as four inches as a balance between cost and structural strength. Such walls, of course, may have a greater thickness but this adds to the cost while substantially thinner walls reduce wall strength and the amount of concrete that such walls can accept.




As illustrated in

FIG. 12

, the upper ends of the walls


1


are capped by a hollow wall cap beam


17


having flanges


18


embracing the exterior and interior walls of the wall panel to firmly seat thereon. This wall cap or beam is of a hollow configuration and has a sloping upper surface


19


to support the lower ends of the roof panels


4


.




As shown in

FIG. 17

, the means of securing the roof panels


4


to the sloping wall cap surface


19


may comprise a threaded rod


20


embedded in concrete in one of a wall column


14


or internal wall panel cells


10


and projecting up through wall cap


17


and a wedge clamp


21


secured by nut


22


and washer


23


threaded onto the upper end of rod


20


. Hollow end cap beam


24


with flanges


25


embracing the upper and lower surfaces of the roof panels closes off the lower ends of these panels but provide suitable drainable openings


26


which also allow air circulation through the hollow roof panels


4


.




As shown in

FIG. 8

, centrally of the depth of the house is a hollow ridge panel or beam


27


of similar construction to the wall panels


2


supported by a yolk


28


carried by a column


14


. Interlocked on the top of the ridge beam


27


is a roof panel ridge connector beam


29


having sloping roof panel supporting surfaces


30


which terminate in upwardly and rearwardly extending flanges or fingers


31


which project into the cells


32


of the roof panels


4


to overlie and hold the lower surfaces


33


of such cells, thereby anchoring the upper ends of the roof panels to the ridge beam


27


. A ridge vent


34


is provided to cover the spacing between the upper ends of the roof panels


4


and interlock therewith while allowing air to circulate through the ridge vent, the roof cells


27


and out the vent openings


26


in the end cap


24


. The roof panel ridge beam


27


is provided with closed hollow sections


35


underlying the support surfaces


30


to impart strength and rigidity thereto.




The roof panels


4


may have dimensions similar to those of the wall panels


2


but, where increased roof spans are required or heavy roof loads are anticipated, the depth of thickness of the roof panels that is the separation between the lower roof surfaces


33


and the upper roof surfaces


36


may be increased, for example to six inches and as well the glass fiber content may also be increased. Similarly, the depth or thickness and glass content of the ridge panel beam can be increased where heavy loading is to be expected.




In addition to the columns


14


, for joining straight wall sections and the corner columns


15


, as illustrated in

FIG. 11

, columns


37


are provided for connecting an internal wall panel


38


to the panels forming one of the external walls


1


.




It is highly desirable to conceal the electrical wiring to be used in the house internally within the walls. To this end, there is shown in

FIG. 9

a column corresponding to column


14


and designated as


14


′ which includes a pair of spaced fingers


39


which project interiorly of the column and are turned outwardly in opposite directions to provide slide guides for receiving a channel


40


having inturned flanges


41


which slidingly interlock behind the fingers


39


to provide a separate compartment


42


for receiving wiring


43


or other services.




This separate compartment


42


provided on assembly of the channel


40


within the column


14


′ can be closed off upon concrete being poured into column


14


′ to leave the channel open for the reception of the wiring


43


.





FIGS. 16



a


and


16




b


show features which enable loading of the concrete into the wall without exposing compartment


42


to the concrete. In particular,

FIG. 16



a


shows a concrete guide or jig generally indicated at


44


having a series of openings


45


provided therein. As shown in

FIG. 16



b,


the jig


44


is placed atop the wall structure and the openings in the jig align generally centrally with each of the cells or compartments


10


in the wall structure. Of particular interest, the opening through the jig over column


14


′ does not line up with the compartment


42


formed by the channel


40


engaged with the guides


39


which are protected by the body of the jig. Channel


40


and guides


29


are in abutting contact with the bottom of the jig and, therefore, when the concrete is poured through the jig, the compartment


42


is effectively sealed off from the concrete flow. The jig has the added benefit that it provides a top level to which the concrete is filled and, because of the smaller size of the openings in the jig relative to the compartment sizes, helps to prevent any overflow of concrete material from the wall structure.




It will be appreciated that to produce a stable, solid and permanent structure such as, for example, a house structure as described above requires the various components panels such as the wall panels, wall connecting columns and joiners, the roof panels, the wall beams such as the wall caps and the ridge beams to have the structural strength and load bearing capacity to perform their functions. At the same time, to be practical these components have to be capable of being produced in large quantities at low costs.




While ordinary thermoplastics such as vinyl chloride, eg. polyvinyl chloride (PVC), can be readily extruded to a desired shaped, the resulting product does not have sufficient strength to constitute a load bearing structural member adequate for the building of a substantial load withstanding or permanent structure. Further such a member has unacceptable dimensional changes with temperature. On the other hand, strengthening the plastic material in a manner which renders it uneconomical to produce product therefrom is equally unacceptable.




The structural components of the present invention are achieved by the use of a thermoplastic material reinforced in such a manner that the reinforced thermoplastic provides the requisite strength and expansion control yet is still flowable through an extrusion die. In this way the component can be continuously extruded with the reinforcing constituents distributed throughout the thermoplastic material and with the walls of the component being continuous and integral at their juncture.




While there are known thermoplastic reinforcing agents such as mineral or other fibers and known expansion controlling agents such as calcium carbonate, a reinforcing agent or constituent particularly useful for the present invention, comprises small glass fibers. These glass fibers when anchored in a thermoplastic material such as vinyl chloride, eg. a polyvinyl chloride (PVC), provide the requisite reinforcing and expansion controlling characteristics suitable in the various structural components of the invention.




A suitable material incorporating small glass fibers which can be used in the production of the structural components of the invention is available under the trade-mark FIBERLOC from the B.F. Goodrich Company of Akron, Ohio, such material being described in detail in B. F. Goodrich's U.S. Pat. No. 4,536,360 wherein very fine short glass fibers are bound within a composition of vinyl chloride resin.




The presence of glass fibers in the PVC or other thermoplastic material while providing tensile strength and expansion control to the material creates an extrusion problem and, if they are too large and too concentrated, it is not practical to extrude the material. Preferably such fibers should be of the order of a few microns in diameter and a few millimeters in length and in concentrations not greater than, and preferably substantially less than, about thirty-five percent by weight based upon the combined weight of glass fibers and vinyl chloride resins.




Also, the presence of the glass fibers creates a brittleness which makes a structure produced solely from a glass fiber reinforced plastic subject to potential fracture from impact. This potential increases with increased concentration of glass fibers.




According to the preferred form of the invention, the problems encountered with the use of the glass fibers as the reinforcing constituent while utilizing their beneficial reinforcing qualities have been resolved by co-extruding with the glass reinforced thermoplastic a smooth thermoplastic skin covering the external exposed surfaces of the various structural components.




The smooth plastic skin may be PVC, rigid PVC, semi-rigid PVC, ABS, polycarbonate. Suitable thermoplastics are available from G.E. under the trade-mark GELOY and NORYL.




Thus, according to the preferred form of the invention, the structural components having the characteristics desired, as shown particularly in the enlarged views FIGS.


6


. and


7


, comprises a core or substrate


46


comprising a glass fiber reinforced thermoplastic such as PVC and a co-extruded smooth outer skin


47


covering the exposed exterior surfaces of the structural component.




The skin


47


serves a number of useful purposes. Because of the presence of the glass fibers


48


in the core or substrate


46


, the substrate is somewhat brittle and its surfaces are rough and abrasive with portions of the glass fibers projecting through the surface of the substrate rendering the substrate somewhat porous and susceptible to the ingress of moisture which can adversely effect the bond between the glass fibers and the thermoplastic material.




The co-extrusion of the thermoplastic skin covers and seals the outer exposed surfaces of the structural component against the ingress of moisture thereby maintaining the integrity of the binding of the glass fibers to substrate plastic. Further, the outer skin


47


not only covers exposed glass fibers


48


but these exposed glass fibers become embedded in the thermoplastic material so the exterior surface of the component is totally smooth. The glass fibers in turn in becoming embedded in the outer skin lock the skin to the substrate so that the expansion and contraction of the outer skin is fixed to the expansion and contraction of the substrate which is controlled or limited by the presence of the incorporated glass fibers which have a much smaller coefficient of expansion than the plastic.




Another important function of the outer skin


47


is that the thermoplastic material selected for the skin can be formulated, as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, to include agents providing impact resistance. Thus the skin can provide an impact resistant or absorbing covering encasing the exposed surfaces of the structural component, thereby rendering the structural component impact resistant.




The outer skin


47


can also incorporate any desired coloring and can be made resistant to ultraviolet radiation so that it will not fade by the inclusion of a weathering agent as will be understood by those skilled in the art.




The combination of the coextruded substrate


46


and smooth skin


47


thus enables the provision of structural components which are essentially maintenance free, and impact resistant, and which will not corrode, rot or rust and which will be impervious to moisture, termites, and other insects.




As particularly illustrated in

FIG. 5

, the walls of the panels, whether wall panels


2


or roof panels


4


, make provision for interconnection into the house structure by being extruded to provide opposing slide channels or grooves


49


inwardly of the panel edge or side walls


50


.




The spacing between the exterior and interior surface of the panels at


51


and


52


extending from the grooves


49


to the panel edge or side walls


50


is reduced to accommodate the thickness of the ends or flanges


53


of the joiner


13


illustrated in

FIG. 5

or the projecting walls


54


of the various columns


14


,


15


and


31


illustrated in

FIGS. 9

,


10


and


11


. With this arrangement, the exposed surfaces of the panels are flush with the exposed surfaces of the joiners or columns to present smooth continuous exposed surfaces.




The joiners


13


have inturned flanges


55


adapted to slidingly engage and seat in the grooves


49


in the wall and roof panels to form an interlock therewith. Similarly, the box connectors or columns


14


,


15


and


37


have inturned flanges


56


adapted to slidingly engage and seat in such grooves


49


to effect quick and simple sliding interlocking assembly of the components without the use of tools.




To facilitate this sliding interlock the end or side walls


50


of the panels are slightly concaved as illustrated in FIG.


5


. This maintains the panel end


50


out of contact with the web


58


of the joiner which on assembly becomes interior of the wall. This web


58


of the joiner is not covered with the skin


47


and would therefore resist sliding against the panel end. Also this arrangement avoids any interference with the sliding interlock if the tolerances of the panel walls


50


and the joiner web


58


are exceeded. The joiners smooth skin


47


extends around the ends of the inturned flanges


55


so that they easily slide within the grooves


49


at the panel ends.




As noted with the panel and joiner components assembled the unskinned joiner webs


58


are contained internally within and protected by the wall or roof structure. In the same vein, the transverse walls


59


of the columns or box connectors


14


,


15


, and


39


are unskinned end, when assembled, are contained internally within and protected by the wall structure.




While the outer smooth plastic skin


47


presents a very attractive appearance which may be colored as desired, as shown in

FIG. 19

a decorative facing illustrated at


60


may be applied to the panels such as wall panel


2


. This decorative facing can take any desired form such as simulated brick, stone, clapboard and the like. It will also be appreciated that the roofing panels may also have a facing to simulate roof tiling, shingles, and the like, the facing being attached by any suitable means diagrammatically illustrated at


61


in FIG.


20


.




Where the wall panels are not required to have the same load bearing capacity as the wall panels previously described in the preferred embodiment for the outside walls of the house, that is for instance where the walls are to form interior walls, the thermoplastic material of these panels, such as the panel


62


in

FIG. 17

, may contain reinforcing agents other than glass fibers. Such other reinforcing agents indicated at


63


may comprise other fibers such as mineral fibers or non fibrous material such as calcium carbonate which would be readily flowable through an extrusion die. Further, the plastic outer skin may be omitted.




In such cases, the exposed surfaces of the panels can be decorated and covered or sealed by a layer of paint


64


as illustrated in

FIG. 20

or by wallpaper or decorative panelling and the like.




The method of forming the structural load bearing components comprising the panels


2


and


4


, the columns


14


,


15


and


31


, the joiners


13


and the wall caps or beams and the roof panel end caps, according to the invention involves coextruding the smooth thermoplastic material skin layer


47


simultaneously with the glass fiber reinforced substrate material


46


and utilizing such skin layer as a lubricant to facilitate the flow of the substrate material through the forming dies. By so coextruding the skin layer protects the surfaces of the forming dies contacted thereby, isolating same from the abrasion of the exposed fiber glass ends or portions of the substrate material.




In the structural components such as the panels


2


and


4


which have internal transverse webs such as webs


9


bridging between the wall forming portions, extrusion is facilitated by having the width or thickness of these webs somewhat less than the thickness of the wall portions


7


and


8


. As a practical example, with the thickness of the webs


9


chosen at 0.065 inches, the wall portions may have a thickness of 0.080 inches while the thickness of the skin


47


may be of the order of 0.015 inches, thus making the panel walls


7


and


8


0.030 inches thicker than the internal webs.




Structurally, the walls


8


and


9


of the panels can be looked at as the flanges of an I beam and the transverse webs


9


as the webs of the beam in considering loading capacity. Similarly, the ends of the joiners


13


can be looked at as the flanges of an I beam while the transverse web or wall


58


is the web of the beam. The columns


14


,


15


and


37


can be considered as box beams for structural purposes.




It will be appreciated that the example given is purely an example and the specific dimensions and proportions can readily be altered as appreciated by those skilled in the art.




The individual structural components of the invention are extruded in long continuous lengths and are cut off at the desired lengths required. In this connection, it will be appreciated that these components are capable of being sawn and notched without rupture to provided for door and window openings and the like to receive the windows


65


and doors


66


illustrated in FIG.


1


.




As shown in

FIG. 14

for example, the window


65


may be a conventional window having a standard plastic window frame


67


mounting the window sash


68


carrying the glass


69


. To mount the window, extruded hollow thermoplastic adapters


70


are provided which are formed with channels or grooves


71


which interlock, for example, with the inturned flanges


56


of one of the box columns, depending upon the position of the window, corner box column


15


being shown. The adaptors are proportioned so that with a window they span between two columns to maintain the chosen one meter modular format of the house. Thus, the window unit with adaptors


70


illustrated in

FIG. 14

it will extend between interlock with the corner column


15


and an intermediate column


15


.




The adapter


70


is provided with legs


72


which interengage with and carry the window frame


67


. It will be understood that the window unit including the adapters


70


can be simply slid into position or assembled in the same manner as the panels and connectors are assembled without requiring tools or other fastening means.




Similar arrangements can be provided for accommodating the doors


66


which also are readily available in plastic as will be readily appreciated.




While the use of the structural components of the invention to form a house or building is describe in detail

FIG. 21

shows the use of structural components according to the invention for producing a simple wall


73


such as a highway sound barrier, a fence or a divider. In this connection panels corresponding to panels


2


are provided and interlocked with joiners


13


or if desired box connectors and anchored by concrete poured therein to a concrete base


74


with anchor rods


75


. Such a wall will have exceptional permanency, strength, and weatherability with low cost materials and can be erected quickly and easily by simply sliding the components into interlocking engagement.

FIG. 22

shows in diagramatic form the use of panels


2


, formed into a simple enclosure


76


using corner box connectors or column


15


.




It will be understood from the foregoing that the invention provides structural components and a structural system for erecting structures from simple structures to complete buildings in which the structural components having the requisite load bearing and structural requirements can be mass produced at low cost and can be erected and locked together by simply sliding them into place so that erection can be effected rapidly and easily just by a pair of workmen.




In addition to their other advantages discussed above, the structural components have low heat retention, that is they form poor thermal sinks and do not readily transfer heat and cold. Thus, in using the structure for building enclosures the wall structures of the enclosure, particularly when filled with concrete, provide excellent insulation against the transfer of heat and cold.




Again, for the building of housing or other buildings, the fact that the roof panels are hollow and provide air circulation as well as having low thermal conductivity enables these panels to form excellent insulation against the transfer of heat and cold through to the interior of the building.




It should also be noted that the interlocking connections between the various structural components provides a tortuous path effectively blocking the ingress of moisture at these points of connection while, of course, the components themselves are impervious to moisture penetration.




Although various preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described herein in detail, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, that variations may be made thereto without departing from the spirit of the invention or the scope of the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A thermoplastic wall forming member having connectors which are adapted to join with further wall forming members to build a hollow wall for receiving filler material internally of the wall, said wall forming member having securing means thereon positioned away from the connectors thereof adapted to secure thereto a blocking member which does not extend across the width of the wall to block off a hollow area within the receiving region which area would otherwise be filled in by the filler material, said securing means comprising a pair of spaced apart projecting fingers adapted to interlock with the blocking member, and wherein each of said fingers has a securing flange, the flanges on the fingers being directed outwardly away from one another.
  • 2. A thermoplastic wall forming system including a wall forming member having connecting ends which join with further wall forming members to build a wall which has a hollow receiving region for filler material internally of the wall which extends between said connecting ends, a blocking member which does not extend across the width of the wall releasably interlocked with spaced apart projecting fingers provided on the wall forming member away from the connecting ends thereof, said blocking member blocking off a hollow area within the wall receiving region which area would otherwise be filled in by the filler material.
  • 3. A thermoplastic wall forming system as claimed in claim 2, wherein said spaced apart fingers have flanges thereon and wherein said blocking member comprises a channel member having flanges which releasably interlock with the flanges on said fingers.
  • 4. A thermoplastic wall forming system as claimed in claim 3, wherein the flanges on said fingers are directed outwardly away from one another and wherein the flanges on said channel member are directed inwardly towards one another and interlock outwardly over the flanges on said fingers.
  • 5. A thermoplastic wall forming member having a wall portion with ends which are adapted to interlock with ends of wall portions of other wall forming members to make a hollow wall structure, said wall portion being provided with securing means for securing a wiring channel interiorly of the hollow wall structure to be formed by said wall member and the other wall forming members, said securing means comprises a pair of spaced apart undercut rails on said wall portion away from said ends thereof.
  • 6. A construction made from a plurality of interlocked thermoplastic wall forming members, at least one of said wall forming members being provided with a pair of wiring channel securing rails located internally of said wall construction, a wiring channel slideably engaged by and connected internally of said wall construction solely to said rails and wherein said wall construction is loaded with concrete outwardly around said wiring channel, said wiring channel providing an isolated hollow compartment surrounded by the concrete within said wall construction.
  • 7. A thermoplastic wall forming system including a wall forming member having connecting ends which join with further wall forming members to build a wall which has a hollow receiving region for filler material internally of the wall, a blocking member releasably interlocked with spaced apart projecting fingers provided on the wall forming member away from the connecting ends thereof, said blocking member blocking off a hollow area within the receiving region which area would otherwise be filled in by the filler material wherein said spaced apart fingers have flanges thereon and wherein said blocking member comprises a channel member having flanges which releasably interlock with the flanges on said fingers, said flanges on said fingers being directed outwardly away from one another and said flanges on said channel member being directed inwardly towards one another and interlock outwardly over the flanges on said fingers.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
2070029 May 1992 CA
Parent Case Info

This is a Divisional Application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/338,605, filed Nov. 22, 1995, U.S. Pat. No. 5,706,620 which is a 371 of PCT/CA93/00226 filed May 27, 1993.

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