Grid-like building panel framework
A framework type building panel having opposed first and second sides is formed of primary and secondary structural members, each primary member having a web and a flange connected to form a T-shaped cross-section, and each secondary member being a flat board having parallel side surfaces. The panel includes a first series of the primary members which are parallel to each other with their flanges defining the first side of the panel, and a second series of the secondary members which extend transversely to the primary members and have outer side surfaces defining the second side of the panel, the primary members having their web outer edges attached to inner overlying surfaces of the secondary members. The panel further includes two additional flat boards forming the opposite ends of said panel and each connected to aligned ends of said primary members.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to building panels, particularly for the construction of houses. The invention is particularly concerned with a framework or skeleton panel which is formed as a grid of intersecting members, usually of wood-based material. The term “panel” will be used herein to include such a panel framework, and does not imply that this is a finished panel with insulation and/or facing sheets.
2. Prior Art
It is known to construct houses and other buildings from panels which are factory made, and which usually contain insulation. Examples of patents showing such panels are as follows:
- U.S. Pat. No. 4,671,032, which issued Jun. 9, 1987 to Reynolds;
- U.S. Pat. No. 4,765,105, which issued Aug. 23, 1988 to Tissington et al.;
- U.S. Pat. No. 4,894,974, which issued Jan. 23, 1990 to Mayhew et al.
- U.S. Pat. No. 5,157,892, issued Jun. 9, 1987 to Ryther; and
- U.S. Pat. No. 5,617,700, issued Apr. 8, 1997 to Wright et al.
Applicant has had considerable experience both with the panels of the last-mentioned '700 patent, of which he is co-inventor, and with those of the Tisssington et al. patent. Both these patents are concerned with factory made panels having a framework made of wood members, and insulated with rigid foam insulation injected between the wood members in the factory. In the last-mentioned patent, dimensional lumber is used to provide strength, while in the Tissington et al patent it is preferred to use board such as oriented strand board (OSB). OSB is cheaper than standard dimensional lumber and is more resistant to warping. These panels have been used to construct over one thousand buildings of many different types, with great success.
Panels of the type shown in the Tisssington et al. patent and in the '700 patent have great potential in export markets, since buildings can be erected with these panels using largely unskilled labor. However, it become apparent to Applicant that a serious drawback of these and similar panels, i.e panels fully assembled and insulated in the factory, is that the bulkiness of the insulation leads to high shipping costs which are disadvantageous for export markets.
The shipping costs can be much reduced by shipping a kit of structural members which can easily be assembled into a panel on site, without the need to ship the insulation. This led Applicant to design a new kind of panel, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,901,524, issued May 11, 1999 (corresponding to Can. Pat. Appln. No.2,245,299, filed Aug. 19, 1998), and which provides a series of notched T-pieces which can readily be assembled on site to form panels. The T-pieces can also be used to form composite structural beams, especially as described in Applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 6,343,453, issued Feb. 5, 2002, and in corresponding Can.Pat. Appln.No.2,298,292, filed Feb. 4, 2000. Panels in accordance with the U.S. '524 patent have been successfully used in constructing a number of houses.
The panels of the U.S. '524 patent are readily assembled in prescribed manner by fitting together the notched T-pieces, and openings for windows and doors can be provided in these panels by cutting through the wooden T-pieces. However, it has been realized that there are advantages in using T-pieces and other components which are un-notched, so that the panels can be assembled in a more flexible manner, and with less waste when window and door openings are to be provided. Avoiding notches in the members also has the advantage of making the strength of the framework more readily calculable and therefore more acceptable in relation to building codes.
The present invention accordingly is concerned with a panel in the form of a framework which can be shipped in disassembled form. The structural members of the panel are preferably un-notched, but can easily be assembled on site or in a factory by relatively unskilled workers by using a jig, to form a rigid panel framework. Insulation, and facing sheets for example of plywood, OSB, or many other materials, can be added in accordance with local requirements and availability.
Panels formed as grids of crossing, interlocking members, are not new per se, and the aforesaid Mayhew and Ryther patents, as well as Applicant's aforesaid U.S. '700 patent, show such panels. However, the present invention has advantages over those prior patents similar to those found in Applicant's U.S. '524 patent, namely that the grid forming members are wide enough to reliably receive nails for the facing sheets. Also, unlike in prior art panels, there is no need for edging members different from those of the basic panel itself.
As with the members used in the U.S. '524 patent, the T-pieces used in the panels can also be used to produce beams and joists needed for building a house. In fact it is possible to construct houses almost entirely from panels, joists and other parts produced from a few types of structural member, as will be described, along with facing sheets, and insulation if required, which can be obtained locally. This avoids the need to organise shipments of the many different structural members usually needed to make a house, and avoids problems which frequently occur if there is a shortage or breakage of one or two structural members of a specialized design.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIn accordance with one aspect of the invention, a building panel framework, having opposite first and second sides, is formed of a plurality of primary and secondary structural members of wood-based material, wherein each primary member has a web and a flange connected to form a T-shaped cross-section, the flanges being suitable for receiving nails, and wherein each said secondary member is in the form of a flat board having parallel side surfaces. The panel includes a first series of the primary members which are spaced apart and parallel to each other with their flanges defining the first side of the panel, and a second series of secondary members which are spaced apart and parallel to each other and extend transversely to the primary members and have outer side surfaces defining the second side of the panel, the primary members of the first series having their web outer edges attached to inner overlying surfaces of the secondary members.
The panel further includes two additional of the said secondary members forming first and second opposite ends of the panel, normally the top and bottom ends, and each additional secondary member is connected to aligned ends of the primary members.
The use of T-shaped structural members and boards allows each side of the panel to be constituted either by flanges or boards which can readily receive nails or other fixing means for facing sheets. Also, T-shaped structural members are more rigid than the flat members used in the panels of Mayhew and Ryther, referred to above.
The panel has first and second edges joining the first and second ends. Preferably the primary members include, at the first edge of the panel, an edge member which is parallel to and has the same dimensions as the primary members of the said series but which is rotated 90° about a longitudinal axis relative to the orientation of the primary members of the series, this edge member having its web directed inwardly of the panel and having an edge of its flange connected to inner surfaces of the secondary members, this flange thus comprising the first edge of the panel. Also, preferably the primary members are dimensioned so that the flange comprising this first edge of the panel is equivalent in width to the web of a primary member at the second edge of the panel and is suitable for fitting closely against the primary member web at the second edge of an adjacent similar panel.
Preferably also, the width of each secondary member is equivalent to the overall depth of the panel, which depth includes the width of the web and the thickness of the flange of each primary member, plus the thickness of the secondary members. Also, the primary member flanges and the secondary members preferably have the same thickness. Since the primary member flange and web have the same width, the overall depth of the panel may also be stated as the flange width plus twice the thickness of the flange. As will be explained below, these dimensional relationships allow the primary member T-pieces to be used in differing orientations while maintaining the same overall depth of the panel.
When, as is usual, these panels form are wall panels, the primary members, as the strongest members, will be vertical. Where additional strength is required for vertical members, especially at the sides of door or window openings, the panel may include one or more duplex primary members, each such duplex primary member having two of the T-shaped members each with a flange and a web and in which one side of a web is positioned at the centerline of the connected flange, the two T-shaped members being connected with oppositely directed webs overlapping and with their flange edges co-planar. These duplex primary members are arranged with their inner flange edges connected to the secondary members and with their webs parallel to the sides of the panel.
In an alternative construction of panel, all of the normally vertical primary members of a panel are duplex members as described. As before, each secondary member is in the form of a flat board having parallel side surfaces, and the duplex primary members have inner flange edges attached to inner overlying surfaces of the secondary members.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSPreferred embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which;
The panel P shown in
The panel also includes a second series of parallel secondary members 16 which are simple flat boards having width dimension of 5½ inches and a thickness “t” of {fraction (3/4)} inches, which is the same as the thickness of flange 12. These secondary members 16 are arranged perpendicularly to the primary members to form a grid, and are attached, by means of nails or screws, to the outer edges of the primary member webs as indicated in
The panels can readily be formed from factory produced primary and secondary members by relatively unskilled labor, using a jig to position the pieces. The assembled members provide a panel with good rigidity, even before facing sheets are applied.
The panel framework can be finished by applying insulation, if needed, electrical wiring, and facing sheets or siding may be nailed onto the flanges on the opposed sides. The insulation may be batts fitted in between the members. The facing sheets may be material obtained locally such as stucco grid or plywood sheets. Unlike in prior art patents showing grid construction, the facing sheets can readily be attached with nails, since these can be driven into the relatively wide flanges 12 and boards 16, and one does not have to rely on driving nails into the narrow edges of the OSB material. The panels produced as described are typically square and have a length and height of slightly over 8 feet; this allows standard 8 foot lengths of OSB boards 12,14,16, etc. to be used.
FIGS. 3 to 6 illustrate how a panel of the type described can be modified to form a panel with a doorway. These figures show what is normally the inside of the wall panel.
Firstly, a panel P′ is produced generally as described, except that the secondary member board 16 at the eventual top of the panel is omitted, as are the boards 16′ forming the top and bottom ends of the panel; this partly formed panel is shown in
In some circumstances it is preferred to make a panel in which all of the vertical primary members are the stronger duplex members 20 just described. This occurs for example where the panel must accommodate a large window, as with the panel shown in
In the window panel of
All of the panels described above, and the I-beam 30 of
Claims
1. A framework type rectangular building panel, having opposed first and second sides, first and second opposite ends and first and second opposite edges, said panel being formed of a plurality of primary and secondary structural members of wood based material,
- wherein each said primary member has a web and a flange connected to form a T-shaped cross-section, said flanges being suitable for receiving nails, and wherein each said secondary member is in the form of a flat board having parallel side surfaces,
- the panel including a first series of said primary members which are spaced apart and parallel to each other with their flanges defining the first side of the panel, and a second series of said secondary members which are spaced apart and parallel to each other and extend transversely to said primary members and have outer side surfaces defining the second side of the panel, the primary members of said first series having their web outer edges attached to inner overlying surfaces of the secondary members,
- the panel further including two additional said secondary members forming said opposite ends of said panel and each connected to aligned ends of said primary members.
2. A panel according to claim 1, wherein the primary members include an edge member which is parallel to, and has the same dimensions as, the primary members of said series but which is rotated 90° about a longitudinal axis relative to the primary members of said series, said edge member having its web directed inwardly of the panel and having an outer edge of its flange connected to said inner surfaces of the secondary members, said flange comprising a first outer edge of the panel,
- and wherein said primary members are dimensioned so that said flange comprising the first outer edge of the panel is equivalent in width to the web of a primary member at the second edge of the panel and is suitable for fitting closely against the second edge primary member web of an adjacent similar panel.
3. A panel according to claim 1, wherein the width of each secondary member is equivalent to the overall depth of the panel, which includes the width of the web and the thickness of the flange of each primary member, plus the thickness of the secondary members.
4. A panel according to claim 2, wherein the width of each secondary member is equivalent to the overall depth of the panel, which includes the width of the web and the thickness of the flange of each primary member, plus the thickness of the secondary members.
5. A panel according to claim 1, wherein said primary members are identical and are dimensioned so that each said flange has a width “A” equal to the width “B” of its web, and each flange is equal in thickness “t” to that of the secondary member, and wherein the overall depth of the panel is equivalent to the flange width “A” plus twice the thickness dimension “It”.
6. A panel according to claim 1, wherein both said primary and secondary members are free of notches.
7. A panel according to claim 2, wherein both said primary and secondary members are free of notches.
8. A panel according to claim 3, wherein both said primary and secondary members are free of notches.
9. A panel according to claim 4, wherein both said primary and secondary members are free of notches.
10. A panel according to claim 1, which also includes one or more duplex primary members, each such duplex primary member including two members each having a flange and a web connected to form a T-shaped cross-section and in which one side of a web is positioned at the centerline of the connected flange, said two members being connected with oppositely directed webs overlapping and with their flange edges co-planar,
- said duplex primary members being arranged with inner flange edges connected to overlying secondary members and with their webs parallel to the sides of the panel.
11. A framework type rectangular building panel, having opposed first and second sides, first and second opposite ends and first and second opposite edges, said panel being formed of a plurality of primary and secondary structural members of wood based material,
- wherein said primary members are duplex primary members, each such member including two T-shaped members, each said T-shaped member having a flange and a web connected to form a T-shaped cross-section and in which one side of a web is positioned at the centerline of the connected flange, said two T-shaped members being connected together with their webs oppositely directed and overlapping and connected, and with their flange edges co-planar, and wherein each said secondary member is in the form of a flat board having parallel side surfaces,
- the panel including a first series of said duplex primary members which are spaced apart and parallel to each other with their flanges edges adjacent to and parallel to the first side of the panel, and a second series of said secondary members which are spaced apart and parallel to each other and extend transversely to said duplex primary members and have outer side surfaces defining the second side of the panel, the duplex primary members of said first series having inner flange edges attached to inner overlying surfaces of the secondary members.
12. The panel according to claim 11, further including two additional said secondary members forming said opposite ends of said panel and each connected to aligned ends of said duplex primary members.
13. A panel according to claim 11, wherein said T-shaped members are identical and are dimensioned so that each said flange has a width “A” equal to the width “B” of its web, and each flange is equal in thickness “t” to that of the secondary members, and wherein the overall depth of the panel is equivalent to the flange width “A” plus twice the thickness dimension “t”.
Type: Application
Filed: Sep 3, 2004
Publication Date: Mar 10, 2005
Inventor: Jerauld Wright (Gloucester)
Application Number: 10/933,410