US3319384A - Construction for extruded reglets - Google Patents

Construction for extruded reglets Download PDF

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US3319384A
US3319384A US394857A US39485764A US3319384A US 3319384 A US3319384 A US 3319384A US 394857 A US394857 A US 394857A US 39485764 A US39485764 A US 39485764A US 3319384 A US3319384 A US 3319384A
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reglet
channel
concrete
wall
flanges
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Edward T Berg
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04FFINISHING WORK ON BUILDINGS, e.g. STAIRS, FLOORS
    • E04F19/00Other details of constructional parts for finishing work on buildings
    • E04F19/02Borders; Finishing strips, e.g. beadings; Light coves
    • E04F19/06Borders; Finishing strips, e.g. beadings; Light coves specially designed for securing panels or masking the edges of wall- or floor-covering elements
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04BGENERAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTIONS; WALLS, e.g. PARTITIONS; ROOFS; FLOORS; CEILINGS; INSULATION OR OTHER PROTECTION OF BUILDINGS
    • E04B1/00Constructions in general; Structures which are not restricted either to walls, e.g. partitions, or floors or ceilings or roofs
    • E04B1/38Connections for building structures in general
    • E04B1/41Connecting devices specially adapted for embedding in concrete or masonry
    • E04B1/4107Longitudinal elements having an open profile, with the opening parallel to the concrete or masonry surface, i.e. anchoring rails
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04DROOF COVERINGS; SKY-LIGHTS; GUTTERS; ROOF-WORKING TOOLS
    • E04D13/00Special arrangements or devices in connection with roof coverings; Protection against birds; Roof drainage; Sky-lights
    • E04D13/14Junctions of roof sheathings to chimneys or other parts extending above the roof
    • E04D13/1407Junctions of roof sheathings to chimneys or other parts extending above the roof for flat roofs
    • E04D13/1415Junctions to walls extending above the perimeter of the roof
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04GSCAFFOLDING; FORMS; SHUTTERING; BUILDING IMPLEMENTS OR AIDS, OR THEIR USE; HANDLING BUILDING MATERIALS ON THE SITE; REPAIRING, BREAKING-UP OR OTHER WORK ON EXISTING BUILDINGS
    • E04G15/00Forms or shutterings for making openings, cavities, slits, or channels
    • E04G15/06Forms or shutterings for making openings, cavities, slits, or channels for cavities or channels in walls of floors, e.g. for making chimneys
    • E04G15/061Non-reusable forms

Definitions

  • a mold or form When constructing a concrete wall, a mold or form is usually set up which comprises two transversely spaced walls that are made of wooden boards and which define the sides of the concrete wall to be constructed. Before concrete is poured into the space between the wooden walls, the reglets are secured in their appropriate positions to the form boards in such a manner that their openings are closed off by said boards. For this purpose the reglets are usually provided with flat lips, and said lips are held against the inner surfaces of the wooden boards, and nails are driven through the lips into said boards. Thereafter, the concrete is poured into the space between the walls of the mold.
  • Still another object of the invention is to provide a reglet construction that inhibits the seepage of moisture along the interstices between its outer surfaces and the concrete into the interior of the wall.
  • FIGURE 1 is a cross-section through a reglet embodying my invention
  • FIGURE 2 is a fragmentary cross-section through the mold for a concrete wall, with the reglet of the invention attached in its proper position to a Wall of the mold;
  • FIGURE 3 is a fragmentary perspective, partly in section, of the completed wall, with the reglet of the invention embedded therein;
  • FIGURE 4 is a fragmentary cross-section through the wall and the reglet with a flashing engaged in the reglet.
  • I provide the mouth of the reglet channel with an integral closure strip that is produced by the same extrusion operation as the reglet itself, and which prevents seepage of concrete into the interior of reglet channel during construction of the wall; and I provide grooves along the longitudinal edges of the closure strip so that the strip may readily be removed by unskilled labor upon completion of the wall when there is no longer any danger that concrete may seep into its interior.
  • I provide one of the channel flanges of the reglet with a lip which is of arched conformation, with its concave side facing the form board and with its far end edge so located that the junction area between the lip and the flange from which it depends, is initially withdrawn from the plane defined by said end edge and the free end edge of the other flange. In this manner.
  • the integral closure strip provides the added advantage of maintaining the flexible flanges of the reglet channel in their proper position in spite of the pressure exerted against them by the poured concrete, which might otherwise bring them closer to each other and might make insertion of a flashing difficult.
  • I provide the reglet channel in the region of its bight portion and along the free end edge of its lip with anchoring members that retain the reglet dependably in the finished wall and pro- ;tect it from being torn loose or deformed as the form boards are pulled away from the wall upon completion of the wall.
  • the reglet of my invention comprises a channel portion 10 having an upper flange 12 and a lower flange 14, and a bracket portion, for attachment to the form wall, which is formed by a lip 16 that depends from the end of the lower flange 14.
  • the upper and lower flanges 12 and 14 are connected by a bight portion 18, and on the opposite side they are arranged to form an opening or mouth 20 for the reception of a flashing or window frame as the case may be (FIGURES 3 and 4).
  • the present invention relates primarily to reglets which are made by extrusion processes and which consist of either extruded metals or plastics; and according to the invention the mouth of the reglet channel is initially closed by a wall or closure strip 22 which is produced as an integral part of the reglet channel by the same extrusion operation as the reglet.
  • said closure strip is defined against the ends of the upper and lower flanges by grooves 24 and 26, respectively, of wedge-shaped cross section to facilitate removal of the strip upon completion of the wall after the strip has served its purpose.
  • the outer end of the upper flange 12 increases in thickness as shown at 28 and presents to the outside a frontal surface 30 that commences with a sharp forwardly projected upper edge 32 and recedes rearwardly from said edge.
  • the lip 16 is of arched conformation and arranged to present its concave surface 34 to the form boards 36 to which it is to be nailed, and the arrangement is such that the upper end 38 of the concave surface 34 where the lip joins the outer end of the lower channel flange 14 is withdrawn a limited distance from the plane defined by the forwardly projected edge 32 of the upper flange 12 and the bottom edge 40 said concave surface 34.
  • the wall form When the wall form is disassembled after the concrete in the form has hardened, the wall boards 36 are pulled from the nails 46 and away from the reglet which remains embedded in the newly formed wall. This operation introduces the danger that the reglet, or a part thereof, may be torn loose from the wall.
  • the reglet is therefore provided with members that anchor it'securely in the newly formed wall. Having reference to the drawings, the "bottom end of lip 16 is turned rearwardly to form a U-shaped channel structure 48 on the side of its convex surface 42, and the upper flange 12 of the reglet channel carries above its bight portion 18 an upwardly directed ridge 50 that terminates with an end portion 52 which is tilted forwardly in the direction of the channel mouth 22.
  • the anchoring member 50/52 along the rear portion of the reglet channel provides the added advantage of acting as a water lock that limits capil ary seepage of Wind-driven moisture into the space between the upper flange 12 of the reglet channel 10 and the layer of concrete above said flange. Thus, moisture cannot reach the interior of the concrete Wall rearwardly of the reglet.
  • the closure strip 22 of the reg-let is fully exposed without concrete encrustations, and the workman simply grips one end edge 54 of said strip and peels it from the reglet, as shown in FIGURE 3.
  • the mouth 22 of the reglet is now open and ready for the reception of a flashing 56, without need to remove concrete deposits from the interior of the reglet in costly, cumbersome and time-consuming operations.
  • the mouth has its intended size even though the reglet may be made of a flexible plastic, because the presence of the closure strip prevented buckling of the channel flanges under the pressure of the concrete poured against them; and upon hardening of the concrete, the flanges of the reglet channel depend no longer upon the support provided by the closure strip for maintaining their position.
  • the flashing 56 may now readily be engaged into the reglet as shown in FIGURE 4.
  • the reglet of the invention is simple to manufacture. It requires but a single extrusion operation. It is immediately ready for installation. It is unnecesary to fill it first with a cement-excluding filler compound or to seal its mouth with a tape in special preparatory operations.
  • the uppermost edge 32 of the reglet channel and the lowermost edge 40 of the reglet bracket engage the form boards so tightly that there is little danger that the poured concrete rnay seep past said edges and form encrustations over the closure strip 22 and along the concave surface of the lip 16.
  • the closure strip 22 supports the channel flanges 12 and 14 and thus preserves the shape and width of the channel mouth 20.
  • the anchoring member 50/52 in the region of the bight portion 18 of the reglet channel and the anchoring member 48 along the bottom edge of the lip 16 hold the reglet securely in its embedded position within the newly formed wall.
  • the reglet is immediately ready to receive and hold a flashing; and for extended periods of time to come, the anchoring elements 50/52 prevent wind-driven moisture from reaching, and weakening, the interior of the concrete wall behind the reglet channel.
  • An extruded reglet comprising a bracket portion for attachment to a form wall, and unitary therewith a longitudinally extending channel portion for the reception of a flashing, said channel portion having relatively spaced flanges, a bight portion connectingsaid flanges on the side thereof opposite to the side whereat the flashing is to be received, and continuous with said flanges on the last mentioned side a strip arranged to close said last mentioned side during construction of the wall whereby said strip excludes fluid material from the interior of the channel portion during the pouring of the concrete, said strip having spaced longitudinally extending grooves approximately adjacent the flanges whereby said strip is readily separable after pouring of the concrete, by tearing along said grooves.
  • a reglet of extruded material comprising a channel for the reception of a flashing having an upper flange possessing a free outer end edge and spaced therefrom a lower flange, a bight portion connecting said flanges on the side opposite to the side Whereat the flashing is to be received, integral with said flanges on said last mentioned side a strip arranged to close the mouth of the flashing during construction of the wall and being defined against said flanges by longitudinally extending grooves to facilitate removal of the strip upon completion of the Wall; depending from said lower flange a lip for attachment of the reglet to a form wall, said lip being of arched conformation with its concave side facing in the same direction as the mouth of said channel and the junction area of said second flange and said lip being withdrawn from the plane defined by the free edge of said first flange and the bottom end of said lip, and means for anchoring the reglet in a wall including a longitudinal ridge projecting outwardly from said upper channel flange immediately above said

Description

y 1967 E. T. BERG CONSTRUCTION FUR EXTRUDED REGLETS Filed Sept. 8, 1964 INVENTOR. EDWARD T. BERG United States Patent Cfilice 3,319,384 Patented May 16, 1967 3,319,384 CONSTRUCTION FOR EXTRUDED REGLETS Edward T. Berg, 187 Fremoent St., San Francisco, Calif. 94105 Filed Sept. 8, 1964, Ser. No. 394,857 2 Claims. (Cl. 52-100) The present invention relates to the metal channels known as reglets" which are employed to support metal structures, such as flashings and window frames, in a seepage-tight manner from Walls, parapets or roofs.
When constructing a concrete wall, a mold or form is usually set up which comprises two transversely spaced walls that are made of wooden boards and which define the sides of the concrete wall to be constructed. Before concrete is poured into the space between the wooden walls, the reglets are secured in their appropriate positions to the form boards in such a manner that their openings are closed off by said boards. For this purpose the reglets are usually provided with flat lips, and said lips are held against the inner surfaces of the wooden boards, and nails are driven through the lips into said boards. Thereafter, the concrete is poured into the space between the walls of the mold. Previously, no matter when how tight the reglets-Were nailed against the boards, cement would invariably seep past the edges of the reglet opening and fill the interior of thereglets, or if the reglets had previously been filled with a moisture-excluding compound, would form crusts over the reglet openings; and after removal of the boards, upon completion of the concrete wall, the concrete crusts and/ or the concrete deposits in the interior of the reglet had to be removed by special cumbersome and costly operations before flashings could be installed into the reglets.
It is an object of the invention'to provide a reglet construction that may easily be secured so tightly to the form boards that concrete is not likely to seep past the edges of its mouth and fill its interior or formcrusts over its mouth.
It is another object of the invention to provide a reglet construction that keeps the interior of its channel free from the influx of concrete during the construction of a wall, and which may be produced by a single extrusion operation and is ready for attachment to a form wall without preparatory steps, such as filling its interior with moisture-excluding compounds or applying a special tape over its opening.
It is yet another object of the invention to provide a reglet which, though it may be made of plastic material, resists deformation and maintains its flashing-receiving opening at the proper size and in proper condition when the concrete is poured and afterward when the form boards are removed from the embedded reglet.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a reglet construction that inhibits the seepage of moisture along the interstices between its outer surfaces and the concrete into the interior of the wall.
These and other objects of may invention will be apparent from the following description of the accompanying drawings which illustrate a preferred embodiment thereof and wherein:
FIGURE 1 is a cross-section through a reglet embodying my invention;
FIGURE 2 is a fragmentary cross-section through the mold for a concrete wall, with the reglet of the invention attached in its proper position to a Wall of the mold;
FIGURE 3 is a fragmentary perspective, partly in section, of the completed wall, with the reglet of the invention embedded therein; and
FIGURE 4 is a fragmentary cross-section through the wall and the reglet with a flashing engaged in the reglet. In accordance with the invention I provide the mouth of the reglet channel with an integral closure strip that is produced by the same extrusion operation as the reglet itself, and which prevents seepage of concrete into the interior of reglet channel during construction of the wall; and I provide grooves along the longitudinal edges of the closure strip so that the strip may readily be removed by unskilled labor upon completion of the wall when there is no longer any danger that concrete may seep into its interior. In addition, for attachment to the form boards, I provide one of the channel flanges of the reglet with a lip which is of arched conformation, with its concave side facing the form board and with its far end edge so located that the junction area between the lip and the flange from which it depends, is initially withdrawn from the plane defined by said end edge and the free end edge of the other flange. In this manner. when securing the lip in its proper position to the form boards by means of nails driven through said lip at a level above the free end edge thereof to such a degree that the arched lip is flattened out, the free end edge of the other channel flange and the free end edge of the lip are urged so tightly against the form boards that there is no danger that concrete may seep past said edges into the space opposite the channel mouth and form crusts over the closure strip of the reglet channel or over the concave surface of the lip. The integral closure strip provides the added advantage of maintaining the flexible flanges of the reglet channel in their proper position in spite of the pressure exerted against them by the poured concrete, which might otherwise bring them closer to each other and might make insertion of a flashing difficult. Furthermore, I provide the reglet channel in the region of its bight portion and along the free end edge of its lip with anchoring members that retain the reglet dependably in the finished wall and pro- ;tect it from being torn loose or deformed as the form boards are pulled away from the wall upon completion of the wall.
Having first reference to FIGURE 1, the reglet of my invention comprises a channel portion 10 having an upper flange 12 and a lower flange 14, and a bracket portion, for attachment to the form wall, which is formed by a lip 16 that depends from the end of the lower flange 14. At one side the upper and lower flanges 12 and 14 are connected by a bight portion 18, and on the opposite side they are arranged to form an opening or mouth 20 for the reception of a flashing or window frame as the case may be (FIGURES 3 and 4).
The present invention relates primarily to reglets which are made by extrusion processes and which consist of either extruded metals or plastics; and according to the invention the mouth of the reglet channel is initially closed by a wall or closure strip 22 which is produced as an integral part of the reglet channel by the same extrusion operation as the reglet. As shown in both, FIG- URES l and 2, said closure strip is defined against the ends of the upper and lower flanges by grooves 24 and 26, respectively, of wedge-shaped cross section to facilitate removal of the strip upon completion of the wall after the strip has served its purpose.
The outer end of the upper flange 12 increases in thickness as shown at 28 and presents to the outside a frontal surface 30 that commences with a sharp forwardly projected upper edge 32 and recedes rearwardly from said edge. The lip 16 is of arched conformation and arranged to present its concave surface 34 to the form boards 36 to which it is to be nailed, and the arrangement is such that the upper end 38 of the concave surface 34 where the lip joins the outer end of the lower channel flange 14 is withdrawn a limited distance from the plane defined by the forwardly projected edge 32 of the upper flange 12 and the bottom edge 40 said concave surface 34.
When a reglet is placed against the inner surface of the form boards 36 in the position shown in FIGURE 2, and headed nails 46 are driven through the lip into the form boards to such an extent that the juncture line 38 between flange 14 and lip 16 touches the form boards, the forwardly projected edge 32 at the outer end of the upper channel flange 12 and the lower edge of the initially concave surface 34 are pressed so tightly against the form board that concrete is not likely to seep past these edges into space between the form boards and the adjacent surfaces of the reglet. Formerly, when the lip for attaching the reg-let to the Wall boards was flat, the end edge of the upper channel flange and the bottom edge of the lip tended to yield away from the form boards when the lip was nailed to the boards, and thus allowed concrete to seep across the front edges of the channel flanges and into the interior of the reglet'channel.
With the reglet secured to the form boards 36 in the described manner, concrete may now be poured into the form around the reglet without danger that it may seep into and fill the interior of the reglet channel due to the presence of the closure strip 22, and the cement is effectively prevented from seeping into the space in front of the closure strip 22 and the concave surface of the lip by the tight engagement of the edges 32 and 40 with the form boards, that is effected by the deformation of the initially arcuate lip 16; moreover the presence of the closure strip 22 supports the ends of the channel flanges against the pressure of the. concrete and thus prevents deformation of the reglet channel and maintains its mouth 20 at its proper size and in its proper shape for the reception of a flashing.
When the wall form is disassembled after the concrete in the form has hardened, the wall boards 36 are pulled from the nails 46 and away from the reglet which remains embedded in the newly formed wall. This operation introduces the danger that the reglet, or a part thereof, may be torn loose from the wall. In accordance with the invention, the reglet is therefore provided with members that anchor it'securely in the newly formed wall. Having reference to the drawings, the "bottom end of lip 16 is turned rearwardly to form a U-shaped channel structure 48 on the side of its convex surface 42, and the upper flange 12 of the reglet channel carries above its bight portion 18 an upwardly directed ridge 50 that terminates with an end portion 52 which is tilted forwardly in the direction of the channel mouth 22. With the described anchoring structures embedded in the hardened cement, it is impossible to tear the reglet from the newly formed wall when the form boards are dismantled. The anchoring member 50/52 along the rear portion of the reglet channel provides the added advantage of acting as a water lock that limits capil ary seepage of Wind-driven moisture into the space between the upper flange 12 of the reglet channel 10 and the layer of concrete above said flange. Thus, moisture cannot reach the interior of the concrete Wall rearwardly of the reglet.
After the Wall form has been dismantled, the closure strip 22 of the reg-let is fully exposed without concrete encrustations, and the workman simply grips one end edge 54 of said strip and peels it from the reglet, as shown in FIGURE 3. The mouth 22 of the reglet is now open and ready for the reception of a flashing 56, without need to remove concrete deposits from the interior of the reglet in costly, cumbersome and time-consuming operations. Moreover, the mouth has its intended size even though the reglet may be made of a flexible plastic, because the presence of the closure strip prevented buckling of the channel flanges under the pressure of the concrete poured against them; and upon hardening of the concrete, the flanges of the reglet channel depend no longer upon the support provided by the closure strip for maintaining their position. The flashing 56 may now readily be engaged into the reglet as shown in FIGURE 4.
The reglet of the invention is simple to manufacture. It requires but a single extrusion operation. It is immediately ready for installation. It is unnecesary to fill it first with a cement-excluding filler compound or to seal its mouth with a tape in special preparatory operations. When its lip 16 is nailed to the form boards 36, the uppermost edge 32 of the reglet channel and the lowermost edge 40 of the reglet bracket engage the form boards so tightly that there is little danger that the poured concrete rnay seep past said edges and form encrustations over the closure strip 22 and along the concave surface of the lip 16.
During the pouring of the concrete, the closure strip 22 supports the channel flanges 12 and 14 and thus preserves the shape and width of the channel mouth 20. As the wall form is dismantled, the anchoring member 50/52 in the region of the bight portion 18 of the reglet channel and the anchoring member 48 along the bottom edge of the lip 16 hold the reglet securely in its embedded position within the newly formed wall. After the wall form has been dismantled, it is a simple matter for any unskilled workman tocondition the reglet for immediate use. He merely peels the closure strip 22 from the mouth of the reglet along the grooves 24 and 26. There are no cement incrustations over the closure strip and the mouth of the reglet channel to hinder his work. There are no cement deposits within the reglet channel that would have to be cleared out by cumbersome and time-consuming opeartions before the reglet can be used. The reglet is immediately ready to receive and hold a flashing; and for extended periods of time to come, the anchoring elements 50/52 prevent wind-driven moisture from reaching, and weakening, the interior of the concrete wall behind the reglet channel.
While I have described my invention with the aid of an exemplary embodiment thereof, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to the specific constructional details shown and described by way of example, which may be departed from without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
I claim:
1. An extruded reglet comprising a bracket portion for attachment to a form wall, and unitary therewith a longitudinally extending channel portion for the reception of a flashing, said channel portion having relatively spaced flanges, a bight portion connectingsaid flanges on the side thereof opposite to the side whereat the flashing is to be received, and continuous with said flanges on the last mentioned side a strip arranged to close said last mentioned side during construction of the wall whereby said strip excludes fluid material from the interior of the channel portion during the pouring of the concrete, said strip having spaced longitudinally extending grooves approximately adjacent the flanges whereby said strip is readily separable after pouring of the concrete, by tearing along said grooves.
2. A reglet of extruded material comprising a channel for the reception of a flashing having an upper flange possessing a free outer end edge and spaced therefrom a lower flange, a bight portion connecting said flanges on the side opposite to the side Whereat the flashing is to be received, integral with said flanges on said last mentioned side a strip arranged to close the mouth of the flashing during construction of the wall and being defined against said flanges by longitudinally extending grooves to facilitate removal of the strip upon completion of the Wall; depending from said lower flange a lip for attachment of the reglet to a form wall, said lip being of arched conformation with its concave side facing in the same direction as the mouth of said channel and the junction area of said second flange and said lip being withdrawn from the plane defined by the free edge of said first flange and the bottom end of said lip, and means for anchoring the reglet in a wall including a longitudinal ridge projecting outwardly from said upper channel flange immediately above said bight portion, and terminating in an end portion tilted toward the channel mouth, and a U-shaped channel formed 1 by the bottom end of said lip on the convex side thereof.
FRANK L.
5 RICHARD W. COOKE, JR., Examiner.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 1/1917 Hunter 52-61 3/1937 Boettner 5299 11/1939 Reiland 52-710 1/1951 Fry 5Z61 4/1966 Eriksson 5260 X 6/1966 Weckerly et a1 5258 FOREIGN PATENTS 6/1963 France.
ABBOTT, Primary Examiner.
M. O. WARNECKE, Assistant Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. AN EXTRUDED REGLET COMPRISING A BRACKET PORTION FOR ATTACHMENT TO A FORM WALL, AND UNITARY THEREWITH A LONGITUDINALLY EXTENDING CHANNEL PORTION FOR THE RECEPTION OF A FLASHING, SAID CHANNEL PORTION HAVING RELATIVELY SPACED FLANGES, A BIGHT PORTION CONNECTING SAID FLANGES ON THE SIDE THEREOF OPPOSITE TO THE SIDE WHEREAT THE FLASHING IS TO BE RECEIVED, AND CONTINUOUS WITH SAID FLANGES ON THE LAST MEMTIONED SIDE A STRIP ARRANGED TO CLOSE SAID LAST MENTIONED SIDE DURING CONSTRUCTION OF THE WALL WHEREBY SAID STRIP EXCLUDES FLUID MATERIAL FROM THE INTERIOR OF THE CHANNEL PORTION DURING THE POURING OF THE CONCRETE, SAID STRIP HAVING SPACED LONGITUDINALLY EXTENDING GROOVES APPROXIMATELY ADJACENT THE FLANGES WHEREBY SAID STRIP IS READILY SEPARABLE AFTER POURING OF THE CONCRETE, BY TEARING ALONG SAID GROOVES.
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US3667174A (en) * 1970-02-13 1972-06-06 Robert W Arnett Expansible reveal with frontal tear strip for plaster walls
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US4322179A (en) * 1980-04-28 1982-03-30 Bethlehem Steel Corporation Open top drain
US4533278A (en) * 1983-07-25 1985-08-06 Corsover William L Expansion joint system
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FR2732708A1 (en) * 1995-04-04 1996-10-11 Meunier Jean Francis Galvanised metal profile for forming housings for watertight seals in poured concrete
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US20090031650A1 (en) * 2001-09-17 2009-02-05 Jeffrey Mariarz Stop bead for separating stucco material from a frame of a window or door
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US8011145B1 (en) * 2002-06-25 2011-09-06 Pacc Systems I.P., Llc Segmented joint for masonry construction
US20140202103A1 (en) * 2013-01-18 2014-07-24 Vance Campbell Membrane Interface for Building Apertures
US20150033649A1 (en) * 2013-08-02 2015-02-05 Jpcm Llc Deck drainage systems
US9062453B1 (en) 2013-03-15 2015-06-23 E-Z Bead Llc Expansion/control joint for stucco surfaces
US9976674B2 (en) * 2016-05-13 2018-05-22 Thomas & Betts International Llc Concrete insert channel assembly
US10017936B1 (en) * 2010-11-24 2018-07-10 Innovations & Ideas, Llc Casing bead control joint
GB2562492A (en) * 2017-05-16 2018-11-21 Thermo Precast Ltd Moisture-retarding weathering protection feature for inclusion in construction sandwich panels
US10358814B2 (en) 2017-01-10 2019-07-23 Ez Bead, Llc Expansion/control joint for stucco surfaces and related systems and methods
US10494818B2 (en) 2016-10-25 2019-12-03 E-Z Bead, Llc Vented stop bead apparatus, vented weep screed apparatus, and related systems and methods thereof
US10590662B2 (en) 2016-09-06 2020-03-17 Jim Peterson Deck drainage systems
US20200141108A1 (en) * 2018-11-05 2020-05-07 Pablo Remo Mazzola Vernengo Extruded shape inlaid into a concrete mass, for the construction of balcony railings and dividing panels
US10648184B2 (en) 2017-09-22 2020-05-12 E-Z Bead, Llc Stop bead for panel-based siding, and related methods and systems
US11091921B2 (en) 2017-09-22 2021-08-17 E-Z Bead, Llc Stop bead for panel-based siding, and related methods and systems
US11180922B2 (en) 2019-12-13 2021-11-23 E-Z Bead, Llc Bead stop for a wall having in interior cement board layer
US11629503B2 (en) 2019-12-13 2023-04-18 E-Z Bead, Llc Bead stop for a wall having interior cement board layer

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US2181740A (en) * 1938-08-13 1939-11-28 Frank D Reiland Insert for concrete constructions
US2538240A (en) * 1946-07-20 1951-01-16 Fry Reglet Company Counterflashing assembly
FR1333580A (en) * 1961-10-13 1963-07-26 Anchor profile suitable for embedding in concrete and similar purposes
US3256650A (en) * 1963-05-20 1966-06-21 Hugh A Weckerly Combination reglet and counter-flashing
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US3481572A (en) * 1967-07-20 1969-12-02 Agalite Bronson Co Panel mounting bracket
US3524290A (en) * 1968-06-18 1970-08-18 Standard Products Co Receiver for spline-type gaskets
US3512318A (en) * 1968-07-23 1970-05-19 Superior Concrete Accessories Window sash reglet section
US3667174A (en) * 1970-02-13 1972-06-06 Robert W Arnett Expansible reveal with frontal tear strip for plaster walls
US3964220A (en) * 1970-04-15 1976-06-22 National Gypsum Company Control joint with tear strip
US3708930A (en) * 1971-06-21 1973-01-09 W Stegmeier Swimming pool seal structure
JPS5340013B1 (en) * 1974-04-01 1978-10-25
US3981108A (en) * 1974-04-19 1976-09-21 Berg Edward T Reglet structure
EP0003720A2 (en) * 1978-02-13 1979-08-22 F. Kilcher Bauisolationen AG Method of making a crack-proof, impervious joint between an asphaltic surfacing and part of a structure, set of shaped elements for carrying out the method and structure built according to the method
EP0003720A3 (en) * 1978-02-13 1979-09-05 F. Kilcher Bauisolationen Ag Method of making a crack-proof, impervious joint between an asphaltic surfacing and part of a structure, set of shaped elements for carrying out the method and structure built according to the method
US4322179A (en) * 1980-04-28 1982-03-30 Bethlehem Steel Corporation Open top drain
US4621939A (en) * 1982-11-23 1986-11-11 Polydrain, Inc. Drainage channel
US4630962A (en) * 1982-11-23 1986-12-23 Roland Thomann Drainage channel with locking grate
USRE33439E (en) * 1982-11-23 1990-11-13 Abt, Inc. Drainage channel with locking grate
US4533278A (en) * 1983-07-25 1985-08-06 Corsover William L Expansion joint system
US4574017A (en) * 1984-10-18 1986-03-04 Stegmeier William J Method for securing concrete form board to pool and maintaining concrete from pool liner track
US4742655A (en) * 1985-03-29 1988-05-10 Kabe Industrier Ab Device in concrete structures
US4651488A (en) * 1986-02-03 1987-03-24 Nicholas John D Expansion joint for plaster walls
FR2641300A1 (en) * 1989-01-03 1990-07-06 Couvraneuf Fillet for the impervious flashing of a structure
EP0377366A1 (en) * 1989-01-03 1990-07-11 Couvraneuf Societe Anonyme Dite : Flashing connection strip
FR2653799A2 (en) * 1989-01-03 1991-05-03 Couvraneuf Fillet for impervious flashing of a structure
FR2732708A1 (en) * 1995-04-04 1996-10-11 Meunier Jean Francis Galvanised metal profile for forming housings for watertight seals in poured concrete
US5918427A (en) * 1996-10-04 1999-07-06 Vanderwerf; Pieter A. Termite shield for permeable sheathing
FR2759403A1 (en) * 1997-02-10 1998-08-14 Dixa Coffering for dripstone
US20090031650A1 (en) * 2001-09-17 2009-02-05 Jeffrey Mariarz Stop bead for separating stucco material from a frame of a window or door
US7874123B2 (en) * 2001-09-17 2011-01-25 E-Z Bead Llc Stop bead for separating stucco material from a frame of a window or door
US8615944B2 (en) 2001-09-17 2013-12-31 E-Z Bead Llc Stop bead for separating stucco material from a frame of a window or door
US20080263971A1 (en) * 2001-09-17 2008-10-30 Jeffrey Maziarz L-Bead: A leak prevention system for stucco surfaces
US8011145B1 (en) * 2002-06-25 2011-09-06 Pacc Systems I.P., Llc Segmented joint for masonry construction
EP1990477A3 (en) * 2007-05-08 2011-03-09 REHAU AG + Co Profile for a lightweight construction sheet and lightweight construction sheet with a profile
US10017936B1 (en) * 2010-11-24 2018-07-10 Innovations & Ideas, Llc Casing bead control joint
US20140202103A1 (en) * 2013-01-18 2014-07-24 Vance Campbell Membrane Interface for Building Apertures
US9062453B1 (en) 2013-03-15 2015-06-23 E-Z Bead Llc Expansion/control joint for stucco surfaces
US20150033649A1 (en) * 2013-08-02 2015-02-05 Jpcm Llc Deck drainage systems
US9353532B2 (en) * 2013-08-02 2016-05-31 Jpcm Llc Deck drainage systems
US9976674B2 (en) * 2016-05-13 2018-05-22 Thomas & Betts International Llc Concrete insert channel assembly
US10590662B2 (en) 2016-09-06 2020-03-17 Jim Peterson Deck drainage systems
US10988943B2 (en) 2016-09-06 2021-04-27 Jim Peterson Deck drainage systems
US11499323B2 (en) 2016-09-06 2022-11-15 Jim Peterson Deck drainage systems
US10494818B2 (en) 2016-10-25 2019-12-03 E-Z Bead, Llc Vented stop bead apparatus, vented weep screed apparatus, and related systems and methods thereof
US10358814B2 (en) 2017-01-10 2019-07-23 Ez Bead, Llc Expansion/control joint for stucco surfaces and related systems and methods
GB2562492A (en) * 2017-05-16 2018-11-21 Thermo Precast Ltd Moisture-retarding weathering protection feature for inclusion in construction sandwich panels
US10648184B2 (en) 2017-09-22 2020-05-12 E-Z Bead, Llc Stop bead for panel-based siding, and related methods and systems
US11091921B2 (en) 2017-09-22 2021-08-17 E-Z Bead, Llc Stop bead for panel-based siding, and related methods and systems
US20200141108A1 (en) * 2018-11-05 2020-05-07 Pablo Remo Mazzola Vernengo Extruded shape inlaid into a concrete mass, for the construction of balcony railings and dividing panels
US11180922B2 (en) 2019-12-13 2021-11-23 E-Z Bead, Llc Bead stop for a wall having in interior cement board layer
US11629503B2 (en) 2019-12-13 2023-04-18 E-Z Bead, Llc Bead stop for a wall having interior cement board layer

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