US1340348A - Roof-shingle - Google Patents

Roof-shingle Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1340348A
US1340348A US347679A US34767919A US1340348A US 1340348 A US1340348 A US 1340348A US 347679 A US347679 A US 347679A US 34767919 A US34767919 A US 34767919A US 1340348 A US1340348 A US 1340348A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
shingle
shingles
row
strips
roof
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US347679A
Inventor
Chester E Rahr
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Flintkote Co
Original Assignee
Flintkote Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Flintkote Co filed Critical Flintkote Co
Priority to US347679A priority Critical patent/US1340348A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1340348A publication Critical patent/US1340348A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04DROOF COVERINGS; SKY-LIGHTS; GUTTERS; ROOF-WORKING TOOLS
    • E04D1/00Roof covering by making use of tiles, slates, shingles, or other small roofing elements
    • E04D1/12Roofing elements shaped as plain tiles or shingles, i.e. with flat outer surface
    • E04D1/20Roofing elements shaped as plain tiles or shingles, i.e. with flat outer surface of plastics; of asphalt; of fibrous materials
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04DROOF COVERINGS; SKY-LIGHTS; GUTTERS; ROOF-WORKING TOOLS
    • E04D1/00Roof covering by making use of tiles, slates, shingles, or other small roofing elements
    • E04D2001/005Roof covering by making use of tiles, slates, shingles, or other small roofing elements the roofing elements having a granulated surface

Definitions

  • This invention has relation to asphalt shingles, and moreparticularly to what are known commerciallyas wide space shingles.
  • Such shingles ordinarily are formed of roong felt impregnated with an asphaltic or bituminous composition and surfaced with crushed slate or other granular or iaky mineral material artially 'embedded in an asphalt coating.
  • uch shingles are more or less flexible, and may be'laid with wide spaces between them'to form a roof covering ias illustrated and described in -United States Letters Patent to Calvin Russell, No. 1,145,440, dated July 6, 1915, in which case each shingle, iny bridging two adjacent shingles in the same horizontal row,. sags yor bends downwardly more or less to fill the. gap or space between them.
  • the present invention has for its objectV v so to form thev shingles as to insure their gles.
  • Figure 1 illustrates a shingle embodying the invention.
  • Fig. 2 represents a cross section on the line 2--2 of IFig. 1.'
  • Fig. ⁇ 3 illustrates afportion of a roof covering consisting-of the said shingles.
  • .Y Fig. 4 represents' a section on the line 4-4of Fig. 3.
  • Fig. 5 shows one way of making thev shin- Rooing shinglesare customarily made of I absorbent paper, felt, which is flexible, and
  • shingles are provided with marginal portions along their side ⁇ edges which are not surfaced with lthe minerai material, such uncoated portions, however, terminating at a distance from the lower. edge of the shingle, so that the lower end of the shingle isA surfaced from one side edge to the other, with a band of the mineral material, all for a purpose to be explained.
  • -a ⁇ shingle is illustrated as consisting of a body of felt a impregnated with a suitable pitch lor bitumen, and'having a ,coating Z2 of highermelting-point pitch or bitumen.
  • a portion of theV face of the shingle is surfaced with a thick layer of crushed slate -or its equivalent as indicated at c. Thshinglethus formedis flexible and may bend without injury. Such shingles to be laid between them may, for example, in full size be approximately nine inches wide by fourteen inches long, though of course, they may be Amade in various sizes. It will be observed that ⁇ marginal strips or portions d d which ,are not provided with the surfacing material. These unsurfaced strips extend from the upper edge of ⁇ Jhe or example,
  • each unsurfaced strip may in such case be about one and one-half inches wide.
  • the surfaced portion of the shingle somewhat resembles an inverted T.
  • the width of the strips determines the extent to' which each shingle is laterally overlapped :bythe contiguous shingles o f the superimand the length of the posed horizontal row,
  • hns-the strips determine gaps or'spacesy and also the extent to which one horizontal row of shingles is overlap ed horizontal row. he inner end. and side e ges of each strip are marked by a' shoulder e formed vby the surthe width of the between the shingles of each facing material, and against which the coma plemental corners of the laterally overlappin shingles may be abutted.
  • Tv e shingles may beformed from a sheet as shown in Fig. 5. That is to say, when the sheet of felt 10 is being surfaced with the slate, certain portions or oblong areas as at 11, 12, may be left uncoated, and then the sheet may be slit longitudinally on the lines 13-13 and severed transversely on the lines le-1415-15, so that each shingle thus formed will have the uncoated strips CZ (Z as shown in Fig. 1.
  • the oblong unsurfaced areas are shown as arranged in transverse rows, and extend individually longitudinally of the sheet, those intermediate lthe edges being bisected between their ends and midway between their side edges.
  • each shingle laterally overlaps the strips d of vthe shingles of the first row, and is abutted against the shoulders e e-thereof which form a rentrant right angle complemental to the corner of the i shingle.
  • the 'third row 22 is similarly laid on the second row, with the result that, when the roof covering is finished, all of the unsurfaced areas are concealed, the
  • eachv row is properly ⁇ spaced, and each row of shingles overlaps the row on which it is superposed.
  • each one bridging a wide gap beY tween two shingles of the next lower row, it bends or sags' downwardly so as to make contact with 'the Shingle' immediately beneath it (i. e. the correspondingshingle of the second lower row) and closes the gap. Since each shingle laterally overlaps only the unsurfaced stripsd, the initial space, between itkand the shingle immediately beneath the gap bridged thereby, is greatly reduced, being much less than if'each shingle were entirely surfacedI with crushed slate.
  • the strips d will'be much wider, so as toleave between them only a narrow surfaced strip extending downwardly from the upper edge of the shingle and mergingin the broad horizontal bandof surfacing material, which crosses the entire lower end of the shingle.
  • a flexible asphalt shingle having a coating of asphalt and a surface layer of crushed mineral material partially embedded therein, and having, along its side edges, marginal lportions in which the. as-
  • phalt coating is exposed, said marginal portions terminating in a transverse line spaced from the bottom edge ofthe shingle.
  • a flexible asphalt shingle having ,a coating of, asphalt and a surface layer of crushed mineral material partially em ⁇ bedded therein, and'having oblong areas extending from the upper edge thereof along its side edges to a transverse line parallel 'to and spaced from the lower edge of the the sides of the shingle.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Architecture (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Roof Covering Using Slabs Or Stiff Sheets (AREA)

Description

C. E. RAHR."
ROOF SHINGLE.
APPLICATION FILED mm2?3 I9I9.
Patented May 18, 1920.
I iA-in.....gv.............n
UNITED; sTATEs PATENT OFFICE.
cHEsTErl E. u
comm, oE
nAHn, 0E EnooHLINE, MASSACHUSETTS, AssreNon To ATHE EEINTHOTE- BosToN, MASSACHUSETTS,
A C0 RPORtAZl-IONl 0F MASSACH'SETTS.
Hoor-SHINGLE.
To all wlwm itt/may concer/n:
Be it knownthat I, CHESTER E. RAHR, a citizen of the United States, residing at f Brookline in the county-of Norfolk and State of Massachusetts, have invented new and useful Improvements in Roof-Shingles, of which the following is a specication.
This invention has relation to asphalt shingles, and moreparticularly to what are known commerciallyas wide space shingles. Such shingles ordinarily are formed of roong felt impregnated with an asphaltic or bituminous composition and surfaced with crushed slate or other granular or iaky mineral material artially 'embedded in an asphalt coating. uch shingles are more or less flexible, and may be'laid with wide spaces between them'to form a roof covering ias illustrated and described in -United States Letters Patent to Calvin Russell, No. 1,145,440, dated July 6, 1915, in which case each shingle, iny bridging two adjacent shingles in the same horizontal row,. sags yor bends downwardly more or less to fill the. gap or space between them.
The present invention has for its objectV v so to form thev shingles as to insure their gles.
prevent being laid in proper relation by unskilledworkmen, and also to insure the contact-of each shingle, bridging a gap or space, with the shingle therebeneath.
On the accompanying drawing,- 1 ,Figure 1 illustrates a shingle embodying the invention. f i
Fig. 2 represents a cross section on the line 2--2 of IFig. 1.' A
Fig. `3 illustrates afportion of a roof covering consisting-of the said shingles.
.Y Fig. 4 represents' a section on the line 4-4of Fig. 3.
Fig. 5 shows one way of making thev shin- Rooing shinglesare customarily made of I absorbent paper, felt, which is flexible, and
which is saturated with any usualwaterhaving a relatively low melting p oint, but may .be otherwise made of a suitable brous-- material and a waterproof binder. A'sheet of the saturated@ felt or other lequivalent foundation, iscoated with asphalt or pitch having a melting point sufficiently high to its being unduly softened by solar heatand in the coating is-'partiallyem-V "each -shingle has side shingle to a transverse line which may,
be located about four inches morel, or less) fromv the lower edge of the shingle` .horizontal row,
jlbyV the next succeeding specificati@ of Letters Patent. Patented May-18, 1920, Application led December 27, 1919. Serial No, 347,679. .l
bedded a thik layer of flaky slate or other crushed mineral material of the desired however, such shingles are provided with marginal portions along their side` edges which are not surfaced with lthe minerai material, such uncoated portions, however, terminating at a distance from the lower. edge of the shingle, so that the lower end of the shingle isA surfaced from one side edge to the other, with a band of the mineral material, all for a purpose to be explained. Referring to the drawing,-a` shingle is illustrated as consisting of a body of felt a impregnated with a suitable pitch lor bitumen, and'having a ,coating Z2 of highermelting-point pitch or bitumen. "A portion of theV face of the shingle is surfaced with a thick layer of crushed slate -or its equivalent as indicated at c. Thshinglethus formedis flexible and may bend without injury. Such shingles to be laid between them may, for example, in full size be approximately nine inches wide by fourteen inches long, though of course, they may be Amade in various sizes. It will be observed that `marginal strips or portions d d which ,are not provided with the surfacing material. These unsurfaced strips extend from the upper edge of {Jhe or example,
and each unsurfaced strip may in such case be about one and one-half inches wide.
Thus the surfaced portion of the shingle somewhat resembles an inverted T. The width of the strips determines the extent to' which each shingle is laterally overlapped :bythe contiguous shingles o f the superimand the length of the posed horizontal row,
extent to which 'the strips determines the shingles of each Arow project below the shingles ofusaid superimposed horizontal row.
hns-the strips determine gaps or'spacesy and also the extent to which one horizontal row of shingles is overlap ed horizontal row. he inner end. and side e ges of each strip are marked by a' shoulder e formed vby the surthe width of the between the shingles of each facing material, and against which the coma plemental corners of the laterally overlappin shingles may be abutted.
Tv e shingles may beformed from a sheet as shown in Fig. 5. That is to say, when the sheet of felt 10 is being surfaced with the slate, certain portions or oblong areas as at 11, 12, may be left uncoated, and then the sheet may be slit longitudinally on the lines 13-13 and severed transversely on the lines le-1415-15, so that each shingle thus formed will have the uncoated strips CZ (Z as shown in Fig. 1. The oblong unsurfaced areas are shown as arranged in transverse rows, and extend individually longitudinally of the sheet, those intermediate lthe edges being bisected between their ends and midway between their side edges.
when the shingles are laid upon the roof,
they are arranged in horizont-al rows, and
in each row are spaced apart a distance equal to the width 'of the mineral facing on the upper end of the shingle as indicated at 20 in Fig. 3. When the second row 2l is laid, each shingle laterally overlaps the strips d of vthe shingles of the first row, and is abutted against the shoulders e e-thereof which form a rentrant right angle complemental to the corner of the i shingle. The 'third row 22 is similarly laid on the second row, with the result that, when the roof covering is finished, all of the unsurfaced areas are concealed, the
adjacent shingles of eachv row are properly` spaced, and each row of shingles overlaps the row on which it is superposed.
lVhen the shingles` have been laid with wide spaces between themas described,
with each one bridging a wide gap beY tween two shingles of the next lower row, it bends or sags' downwardly so as to make contact with 'the Shingle' immediately beneath it (i. e. the correspondingshingle of the second lower row) and closes the gap. Since each shingle laterally overlaps only the unsurfaced stripsd, the initial space, between itkand the shingle immediately beneath the gap bridged thereby, is greatly reduced, being much less than if'each shingle were entirely surfacedI with crushed slate.
While'I have described the shingle as the strips d, it is evident that substan` tially the same results maybe secured by initially 'surfacing these areas withcrushed slate, and then completely embedding the slate inA these areas so as to expose the black asphalt coating.v In each case, the exposed grit or slate is absent in these areas, and the asphalt coating is exposed. In each case, inaccuracies in laying the roofing are quickly shown by exposure of the black coating, for, when the shingles are properly laid, the black areas or strips d are entirely covered.
f If it be desired to lay the shingles with a space of, say, one-half inch between those in the same row, the strips d will'be much wider, so as toleave between them only a narrow surfaced strip extending downwardly from the upper edge of the shingle and mergingin the broad horizontal bandof surfacing material, which crosses the entire lower end of the shingle.
What I claim is z, .y
1. A flexible asphalt shingle, having a coating of asphalt and a surface layer of crushed mineral material partially embedded therein, and having, along its side edges, marginal lportions in which the. as-
phalt coating is exposed, said marginal portions terminating in a transverse line spaced from the bottom edge ofthe shingle.
' 2. A flexible asphalt shingle, having ,a coating of, asphalt and a surface layer of crushed mineral material partially em` bedded therein, and'having oblong areas extending from the upper edge thereof along its side edges to a transverse line parallel 'to and spaced from the lower edge of the the sides of the shingle..
In testimony whereof I have affixed my signature. t
CHESTER E. RAI-IP
US347679A 1919-12-27 1919-12-27 Roof-shingle Expired - Lifetime US1340348A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US347679A US1340348A (en) 1919-12-27 1919-12-27 Roof-shingle

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US347679A US1340348A (en) 1919-12-27 1919-12-27 Roof-shingle

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1340348A true US1340348A (en) 1920-05-18

Family

ID=23364776

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US347679A Expired - Lifetime US1340348A (en) 1919-12-27 1919-12-27 Roof-shingle

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1340348A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3079729A (en) * 1955-04-11 1963-03-05 Building Products Ltd Shingles
US8898963B1 (en) * 2011-11-03 2014-12-02 Certainteed Corporation Roofing shingles with reduced usage of conventional shingle material and having a combination vertical and lateral lap extension
US8898987B1 (en) 2011-11-03 2014-12-02 Certainteed Corporation Roofing shingles with reduced usage of conventional shingle material and having top lap extension
US8925272B1 (en) 2011-11-03 2015-01-06 Certainteed Corporation Roofing shingles with reduced usage of conventional shingle material having side lap extension

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3079729A (en) * 1955-04-11 1963-03-05 Building Products Ltd Shingles
US8898963B1 (en) * 2011-11-03 2014-12-02 Certainteed Corporation Roofing shingles with reduced usage of conventional shingle material and having a combination vertical and lateral lap extension
US8898987B1 (en) 2011-11-03 2014-12-02 Certainteed Corporation Roofing shingles with reduced usage of conventional shingle material and having top lap extension
US8925272B1 (en) 2011-11-03 2015-01-06 Certainteed Corporation Roofing shingles with reduced usage of conventional shingle material having side lap extension

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2099131A (en) Thick butt shingle
US2106396A (en) Roof construction
US1295360A (en) Roofing element.
US2196847A (en) Covering element
US1601735A (en) Roofing shingle
US2148167A (en) Roofing or siding material
US1978519A (en) Roofing construction
US1765796A (en) Sealed laminated roofing element
US2666402A (en) Self-sealing shingle
US1340348A (en) Roof-shingle
US2110579A (en) Roofing strip
US1848965A (en) Rooe covering
US1549263A (en) Shingle
US2097845A (en) Roofing
US1729212A (en) Oblique shingle slab
US2087595A (en) Shingle strip
US1799293A (en) Individual shingle
US1494788A (en) Roofing
US2019701A (en) Shingle
US1466077A (en) Roof covering
US1467779A (en) Roofing
US2201442A (en) Shingle
US1732229A (en) Roofing shingle
US1516238A (en) Method of cutting shingle strips
US1340347A (en) Roofing element