US3395884A - Concrete curb form construction - Google Patents

Concrete curb form construction Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3395884A
US3395884A US487506A US48750665A US3395884A US 3395884 A US3395884 A US 3395884A US 487506 A US487506 A US 487506A US 48750665 A US48750665 A US 48750665A US 3395884 A US3395884 A US 3395884A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
ribbon
ribbons
cross
apertures
concrete
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
US487506A
Inventor
Delvin E Laukala
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.)
Mardel Investment Co
Original Assignee
Mardel Investment 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 Mardel Investment Co filed Critical Mardel Investment Co
Priority to US487506A priority Critical patent/US3395884A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3395884A publication Critical patent/US3395884A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E01CONSTRUCTION OF ROADS, RAILWAYS, OR BRIDGES
    • E01CCONSTRUCTION OF, OR SURFACES FOR, ROADS, SPORTS GROUNDS, OR THE LIKE; MACHINES OR AUXILIARY TOOLS FOR CONSTRUCTION OR REPAIR
    • E01C19/00Machines, tools or auxiliary devices for preparing or distributing paving materials, for working the placed materials, or for forming, consolidating, or finishing the paving
    • E01C19/50Removable forms or shutterings for road-building purposes; Devices or arrangements for forming individual paving elements, e.g. kerbs, in situ
    • E01C19/502Removable forms or shutterings, e.g. side forms; Removable supporting or anchoring means therefor, e.g. stakes
    • E01C19/506Removable forms or shutterings, e.g. side forms; Removable supporting or anchoring means therefor, e.g. stakes for kerbs, gutters or similar structures, e.g. raised portions, median barriers
    • 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
    • E04G17/00Connecting or other auxiliary members for forms, falsework structures, or shutterings
    • E04G17/06Tying means; Spacers ; Devices for extracting or inserting wall ties
    • E04G2017/0646Tying means; Spacers ; Devices for extracting or inserting wall ties made of a flat strip, e.g. of metal

Definitions

  • the tie bar is held at its other end by engagement with a second notch, exactly spaced from the first notch the desired width of the curb and inserted into a slot formed in the staked side wall.
  • the tie bar is held in position by wedges forced between the slot wall and the tie bar and thereby prevents the forming walls from moving away from or toward one another.
  • This invention ⁇ concerns a form for use in pouring concrete curbs.
  • the form of this invention has other advantages.
  • certain wedges can be used to tighten the staked form to its stakes, and these wedges are so mounted that they cannot be detached and mislaid, yet allow adequate freedom of movement of the stakes when required.
  • FIGURE l is an isometric view of the form, largely in set-up condition.
  • FIGURE 2 is an end elevation of a section of the set-up form.
  • FIGURE 3 is a plan view of the same, partly broken away in section.
  • FIGURE 4 is an enlarged detail, in plan section, illustrating a cross-tie bar engaged with one ribbon of the form.
  • the back ribbon 1 is normally higher than the front or gutter ribbon 2, and the top surface of the curb between them may be sloped or curved in cross-section.
  • These ribbons preferably are made in predetermined lengths or sections that are intertted and abutted at their ends, and they should be stiifened longitudinally as well as veritcally.
  • Siilening flanges and 11 on the back ribbon and 3,395,884 Patented Aug. 6, 1968 ICC 20, 21 on the gutter ribbon serve to chanen them longitudinally, and a male projection 12 or 22 at one end of each section engages a female recess of corresponding shape at the adjoining end of the next section.
  • the female recess on one of two cooperating sections is at the same end as the male projection, 22, on the other 'cooperating section.
  • a 'box which constitutes a vertical stiifener, and having opposite upright side walls 13 and a top wall 14, is secured at intervals to the outside of ribbon 1, as by welding.
  • the top wall 14 is apertured to receive the stake, as is the stiffening flange 11 at the bottom, the stake passing through these aperures, and being driven into the ground G.
  • the stake is of a length to hold rmly, and it should be driven in until its upper end is below the upper stiifening ange 10. Thereby the curb-pouring machine can run along this ribbon 1 and its cooperating ribbon 2, as guiding rails.
  • a metal wedge 15 carefully chosen as to its dimensions, may pass through slots in the side walls 13, to wedge the stake tightly in place.
  • An enlargement 16 at the smaller end of the wedge prevents it from pulling out and becoming detached, just as its larger end is too large to pull it out in this direction.
  • the gutter ribbon 2 does not need to be staked, and preferably is not. Its construction is similar to that of the back ribbon 1, except that it is of less height, and while it may have boxes with upright side walls 23 and a top wall 24, these serve merely as vertical stiffeners, and the top wall need not be apertured for a stake, nor its lower flange 21.
  • the back ribbon 1 is first located and staked.
  • the gutter ribbon 2 is then rested upon the ground, upright and in approximate spaced relation to ribbon 1.
  • Cross-tie bars 3 are then used to space the ribbon 2 accurately from ribbon 1, and to insure that ribbon 2 is held upright.
  • the two cooperating ribbons each have narrow slots or apertures 17 and 27 at corresponding locations and intervals, preferably one near the upper edge of ribbon 2 and one near its lower end at each location. These slots 17, 27 are of a horizontal length to freely receive the ends of the cross-ties 3.
  • the cross-ties at their ends are notched, at 30, to straddle snugly the thickness of the ribbons 1 and 2, at the ends of their apertures 17 and 27.
  • the cross-ties 3 at top and bottom are inserted within corresponding apertures 17 and 27, and are then moved bodily sidewise-in the direction of the length of the ribbons-until their notches 30 interlock with the ends of apertures 17, 27.
  • the spacing between notches 30 at the opposite ends of the cross-tie bars 3 will, of course, correspond to the desired thickness of the concrete curb. A different set of bars will be used for a curb of different thickness.
  • cross-ties do not stay in place until the concrete hardens. Once the forms are set up and the concrete is poured, parts are left undisturbed until the concrete begins to set. Workmen then knock out the Wedges 31, if they have been used, and, striking the two projecting ends of each cross-tie 3 with a hammer, these cross-ties are displaced bodily until their notches no longer interlock with the ends of their apertures. Now each one can be tapped and moved endwise, and can be withdrawn from the concrete. It may be helpful to grease them in advance. The concrete, although not hardened, has set sufficiently by this time that the form ribbons will not bulge nor separate from the concrete. Later on they can be removed, rst the ribbon 2 and then the ribbon 1 and its stakes. All this can be done quickly and with a minimum of effort.
  • a form for concrete curbs and the like comprising a front and a back ribbon of a length corresponding to the desired length of the curb, means carried by one such ribbon whereby a stake driven into the ground at intervals alongside that ribbon will support the same in upright disposition, cross-tie bars extending at intervals from one ribbon to the other, said cross-tie bars including notches defined in the side edges of the ends of said bars transversely of t-he length of said bars, the ribbons defining loppositely positioned horizontally extending apertures through which said cross-tie bars are extended, said notches and apertures being complementally formed with said cross-ties being in snug engagement with said ribbons, to positively position said ribbons one from another as said notches snugly engage the edges of said apertures by bodily movement of the individual cross-ties in the direction lengthwise of the ribbons, whereby to support the ribbon opposite the staked ribbon in fixed upright and generally parallel relationship to the staked ribbon.
  • each ribbon is formed in sections joined at their ends, the front ribbon having male projections at one end interengageable with female recesses at the adjoining end of the next section, and the back ribbon at the corresponding ends having a female recess interengageable by a male projection at the adjoining end of the next section.
  • a form for concrete curbs and the like comprising a front and a back ribbon of a length corresponding to the desired length of the curb, stake-engaging means carried by one such ribbon whereby a stake driven into the ground at intervals alongside that ribbon will support t-he same in upright disposition, each ribbon having narrow apertures of given length extending horizontally at corresponding locations and intervals in its length, and crosstie bars each of a width to be received at its ends within and between the ends .of said apertures, each end of each cross-tie being notched transversely of its length with the width of the notches being slightly larger than the thickness of the ends of said apertures, for snug straddling en- 4 gagement with an end edge of its receiving apertures in the two ribbons by bodily movement of the cross-tie with respect to the ribbons, thereby to lock the ribbons in their upright, spaced-apart relationship.
  • the stake-engaging means comprises an upright box externally of the one ribbon apertured at its upper and lower ends, to receive a stake of a given size, and Wedge means guided in each such box for movement transversely of the extent of the stake, and engageable with the stake by such movement to lock the ribbon to the stake.
  • a concrete curb form comprising front and back ribbons adapted for parallel positioning on edge, one such ribbon having means thereon for xing the same to the ground in upright position thereof, and means for xing the other ribbon in parallel relationship with the tirst ribbon, including transversely aligned horizontally extending apertures in the respective ribbons and removable crosstie bars extending through corresponding aligned apertures in the respective ribbons, said cross-tie bars being slidably received in said apertures and having notches formed therein transversely of their lengths adapted to snugly accommodate the edges of the respective apertures by bodily movement of the cross-tie bars lengthwise of the ribbons, thereby to prevent relative separation or approach between such ribbons.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Architecture (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Road Paving Structures (AREA)

Description

United States Patent O 3,395,884 CONCRETE CURB FORM CONSTRUCTION Delvin E. Laukala, Auburn, Wash., assignor to Mardei Investment Company, Auburn, Wash., a corporation of Washington Fiied Sept. 15, 1965, Ser. No. 487,506 7 Claims. (Cl. 249-4) ABSTRACT F THE DISCLOSURE A concrete curb form system having vertical side forming walls held during the concrete pouring operation in an exact spa-ced position one from another by cross-tie bars. One forming wall is staked in position and the opposite side wall is held in position through engagement by a notch, adjacent one end of the tie bar, with a slot formed in the side wall. The tie bar is held at its other end by engagement with a second notch, exactly spaced from the first notch the desired width of the curb and inserted into a slot formed in the staked side wall. The tie bar is held in position by wedges forced between the slot wall and the tie bar and thereby prevents the forming walls from moving away from or toward one another.
This invention `concerns a form for use in pouring concrete curbs.
There are forms available for this use, but it is the object of this invention to devise such a form that is simpler and cheaper to make, and faster to install and remove. In particular, it can be securely held in set-up condition by the use of stakes at one side only, and not at both sides, with these stakes materially farther apart than is customary, even when stakes are used at both sides of the form. This result is achieved by spacing the forms apart in a special way and by special cross-tie bars, whereby the unstaked form wall is rmly held in relation to the staked form wall, against both approach and separation, yet with no detriment to the finished curb. Moreover, the form walls of this invention will serve admirably as rails whereon a curb-pouring machine can run, there being nothing about the forms to interfere with such a machine.
The form of this invention has other advantages. For example, certain wedges can be used to tighten the staked form to its stakes, and these wedges are so mounted that they cannot be detached and mislaid, yet allow adequate freedom of movement of the stakes when required.
A representative embodiment of the invention is illustrated in the drawing, and will be described herein, although it will be evident that it may be embodied in other forms.
FIGURE l is an isometric view of the form, largely in set-up condition.
FIGURE 2 is an end elevation of a section of the set-up form.
FIGURE 3 is a plan view of the same, partly broken away in section.
FIGURE 4 is an enlarged detail, in plan section, illustrating a cross-tie bar engaged with one ribbon of the form.
It will be convenient to refer to the individual sides or walls of the form as ribbons, for sections thereof are joined end to end to whatever length is required. The elements that join these ribbons at intervals in their length will be referred to as cross-tie bars.
There are two such ribbons 1 and 2 that make up the form. The back ribbon 1 is normally higher than the front or gutter ribbon 2, and the top surface of the curb between them may be sloped or curved in cross-section. These ribbons preferably are made in predetermined lengths or sections that are intertted and abutted at their ends, and they should be stiifened longitudinally as well as veritcally. Siilening flanges and 11 on the back ribbon and 3,395,884 Patented Aug. 6, 1968 ICC 20, 21 on the gutter ribbon serve to stiften them longitudinally, and a male projection 12 or 22 at one end of each section engages a female recess of corresponding shape at the adjoining end of the next section. Preferably the female recess on one of two cooperating sections, as at the left on ribbon 1 in FIGURE 1, is at the same end as the male projection, 22, on the other 'cooperating section. By interengaging the sections thus they are securely held, yet are easily taken down. As many sections are joined as is required for the length of the curb.
One only of the ribbons need be staked. Normally this would be the taller back ribbon 1. Few stakes are needed-fewer than are normally used-for the ribbons are supported each from the other, in a manner to be described shortly. To receive a stake S, a 'box which constitutes a vertical stiifener, and having opposite upright side walls 13 and a top wall 14, is secured at intervals to the outside of ribbon 1, as by welding. The top wall 14 is apertured to receive the stake, as is the stiffening flange 11 at the bottom, the stake passing through these aperures, and being driven into the ground G. Desirably the stake is of a length to hold rmly, and it should be driven in until its upper end is below the upper stiifening ange 10. Thereby the curb-pouring machine can run along this ribbon 1 and its cooperating ribbon 2, as guiding rails.
To insure that there is no looseness of the stake S in its hole in the upper wall 14, a metal wedge 15, carefully chosen as to its dimensions, may pass through slots in the side walls 13, to wedge the stake tightly in place. An enlargement 16 at the smaller end of the wedge prevents it from pulling out and becoming detached, just as its larger end is too large to pull it out in this direction.
The gutter ribbon 2 does not need to be staked, and preferably is not. Its construction is similar to that of the back ribbon 1, except that it is of less height, and while it may have boxes with upright side walls 23 and a top wall 24, these serve merely as vertical stiffeners, and the top wall need not be apertured for a stake, nor its lower flange 21.
The back ribbon 1 is first located and staked. The gutter ribbon 2 is then rested upon the ground, upright and in approximate spaced relation to ribbon 1. Cross-tie bars 3 are then used to space the ribbon 2 accurately from ribbon 1, and to insure that ribbon 2 is held upright. The two cooperating ribbons each have narrow slots or apertures 17 and 27 at corresponding locations and intervals, preferably one near the upper edge of ribbon 2 and one near its lower end at each location. These slots 17, 27 are of a horizontal length to freely receive the ends of the cross-ties 3. The cross-ties at their ends are notched, at 30, to straddle snugly the thickness of the ribbons 1 and 2, at the ends of their apertures 17 and 27. With the ribbon 1 set up and staked, the cross-ties 3 at top and bottom are inserted within corresponding apertures 17 and 27, and are then moved bodily sidewise-in the direction of the length of the ribbons-until their notches 30 interlock with the ends of apertures 17, 27. This holds the ribbon 2 upright, and -correctly spaced from ribbon 1 against approach or separation. If the concrete pour is in the direction such that it might shift the notches of the cross-tie bars 3 out of their interengagement with the ribbons, or if for any other reason greater security of interlock is desired, wedges 31 may be driven into the apertures behind the bars 3.
The spacing between notches 30 at the opposite ends of the cross-tie bars 3 will, of course, correspond to the desired thickness of the concrete curb. A different set of bars will be used for a curb of different thickness.
It has been found that the intervals longitudinally of the ribbons between cross-ties 3 can be rather long. Few of them are needed, for each ribbon section is reasonably stiff, and a few cross-ties at top and at bottom will hold the ribbon 2 securely set up, once the ribbon 1 is correct- 3 ly set up-particularly if the cross-ties are located near the vertical stiffeners 13 and 23.
The cross-ties do not stay in place until the concrete hardens. Once the forms are set up and the concrete is poured, parts are left undisturbed until the concrete begins to set. Workmen then knock out the Wedges 31, if they have been used, and, striking the two projecting ends of each cross-tie 3 with a hammer, these cross-ties are displaced bodily until their notches no longer interlock with the ends of their apertures. Now each one can be tapped and moved endwise, and can be withdrawn from the concrete. It may be helpful to grease them in advance. The concrete, although not hardened, has set sufficiently by this time that the form ribbons will not bulge nor separate from the concrete. Later on they can be removed, rst the ribbon 2 and then the ribbon 1 and its stakes. All this can be done quickly and with a minimum of effort.
I claim as my invention:
1. A form for concrete curbs and the like, comprising a front and a back ribbon of a length corresponding to the desired length of the curb, means carried by one such ribbon whereby a stake driven into the ground at intervals alongside that ribbon will support the same in upright disposition, cross-tie bars extending at intervals from one ribbon to the other, said cross-tie bars including notches defined in the side edges of the ends of said bars transversely of t-he length of said bars, the ribbons defining loppositely positioned horizontally extending apertures through which said cross-tie bars are extended, said notches and apertures being complementally formed with said cross-ties being in snug engagement with said ribbons, to positively position said ribbons one from another as said notches snugly engage the edges of said apertures by bodily movement of the individual cross-ties in the direction lengthwise of the ribbons, whereby to support the ribbon opposite the staked ribbon in fixed upright and generally parallel relationship to the staked ribbon.
2. A form as in claim 1, wherein each ribbon is formed in sections joined at their ends, the front ribbon having male projections at one end interengageable with female recesses at the adjoining end of the next section, and the back ribbon at the corresponding ends having a female recess interengageable by a male projection at the adjoining end of the next section.
3. A form for concrete curbs and the like, comprising a front and a back ribbon of a length corresponding to the desired length of the curb, stake-engaging means carried by one such ribbon whereby a stake driven into the ground at intervals alongside that ribbon will support t-he same in upright disposition, each ribbon having narrow apertures of given length extending horizontally at corresponding locations and intervals in its length, and crosstie bars each of a width to be received at its ends within and between the ends .of said apertures, each end of each cross-tie being notched transversely of its length with the width of the notches being slightly larger than the thickness of the ends of said apertures, for snug straddling en- 4 gagement with an end edge of its receiving apertures in the two ribbons by bodily movement of the cross-tie with respect to the ribbons, thereby to lock the ribbons in their upright, spaced-apart relationship.
4. A form as and for the purpose specified in claim 3, including wedge means receivable in the slots alongside the notched ends of the cross-ties, to urge the latter bodily into notched interengagement with their receiving apertures, and upon removal permitting removal of the crossties in the direction transverse to the planes of the ribbons.
5. A form as and for the purpose specified in claim 3, wherein the stake-engaging means comprises an upright box externally of the one ribbon apertured at its upper and lower ends, to receive a stake of a given size, and Wedge means guided in each such box for movement transversely of the extent of the stake, and engageable with the stake by such movement to lock the ribbon to the stake.
6. A form as in claim 5, including an enlargement upon the smaller end .of the wedge means to prevent separation thereof from the guiding box.
7. A concrete curb form comprising front and back ribbons adapted for parallel positioning on edge, one such ribbon having means thereon for xing the same to the ground in upright position thereof, and means for xing the other ribbon in parallel relationship with the tirst ribbon, including transversely aligned horizontally extending apertures in the respective ribbons and removable crosstie bars extending through corresponding aligned apertures in the respective ribbons, said cross-tie bars being slidably received in said apertures and having notches formed therein transversely of their lengths adapted to snugly accommodate the edges of the respective apertures by bodily movement of the cross-tie bars lengthwise of the ribbons, thereby to prevent relative separation or approach between such ribbons.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,141,057 5/1915 Heltzel 249-4 1,676,477 7/ 1928 Carr 249-6 X 1,911,146 5/1933 Diehl 249-6 X 1,939,007 12/1933 Heltzel 249-4 X 2,566,528 9/ 1951 Mackie 249-38 2,611,169 9/1952 Torrelli 249--4 2,678,482 5 1954 Cuthbertson et al 249-4 2,875,500 3/ 1959 Stough 249-6 2,907,089 10/ 1959 McCaffrey 249--6 1,368,699 2/1921 Collins. 1,905,051 4/1933 Podd 249-41 X 3,069,743 12/ 1962 Luyben 249--216 X FOREIGN PATENTS 31,955 1927 France. 700,526 12/ 1964 Canada.
WILLIAM I. ISTEPHENSON, Primary Examiner.
US487506A 1965-09-15 1965-09-15 Concrete curb form construction Expired - Lifetime US3395884A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US487506A US3395884A (en) 1965-09-15 1965-09-15 Concrete curb form construction

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US487506A US3395884A (en) 1965-09-15 1965-09-15 Concrete curb form construction

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3395884A true US3395884A (en) 1968-08-06

Family

ID=23936002

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US487506A Expired - Lifetime US3395884A (en) 1965-09-15 1965-09-15 Concrete curb form construction

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3395884A (en)

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3730475A (en) * 1970-09-23 1973-05-01 L Werfel Form for casting concrete building foundation
US3776501A (en) * 1971-07-08 1973-12-04 W Loftin Apparatus for coping a wall
US4627205A (en) * 1984-07-23 1986-12-09 Hitchins William G Building foundations invention
US4844402A (en) * 1988-07-01 1989-07-04 Ronald Werner Form for a mortar cap
US4882882A (en) * 1988-04-04 1989-11-28 Ronald Werner Form for a mortar cap
US20070131840A1 (en) * 2005-12-13 2007-06-14 Jones Kurtis D Integral form panel for concrete form system
US20090202302A1 (en) * 2008-02-07 2009-08-13 Kevin Koenig Trench drain system
US20110232218A1 (en) * 2010-03-26 2011-09-29 Hynes Thomas A Form work, system, and method
US20150136943A1 (en) * 2013-11-19 2015-05-21 Kevin Parr Telescoping concrete form assembly
US9340933B2 (en) * 2013-11-19 2016-05-17 Kevin Parr Telescoping concrete form assembly
US20160326704A1 (en) * 2014-09-23 2016-11-10 Hae Young PARK Prefabricated mold for constructing kerb stones and method for constructing kerb stones by using same
US9982432B1 (en) * 2015-10-14 2018-05-29 Illinois Tool Works Inc. Curb wall forming apparatus and method of forming a curb wall
US20200080326A1 (en) * 2018-09-06 2020-03-12 MW Panel Tech, LLC Configurable Steel Form System for Fabricating Precast Panels

Citations (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1141057A (en) * 1914-12-05 1915-05-25 John N Heltzel Sidewalk and road form.
US1368699A (en) * 1916-10-16 1921-02-15 Collins Cornelius Fireproof wall or partition construction
FR31955E (en) * 1926-06-03 1927-08-27 Removable formwork for the establishment of reinforced concrete walls and pillars
US1676477A (en) * 1922-08-31 1928-07-10 Edward G Carr Road-form connection
US1905051A (en) * 1930-08-14 1933-04-25 Ernest A Podd Spreader clamp
US1911146A (en) * 1932-01-06 1933-05-23 West Virginia Rail Company Road form
US1939007A (en) * 1931-01-27 1933-12-12 John N Heltzel Adjustable concrete form
US2566528A (en) * 1948-07-15 1951-09-04 Mackie Robert Shuttering for use in the manufacture of concrete structures
US2611169A (en) * 1950-08-14 1952-09-23 Torrelli Frank Curb form
US2678482A (en) * 1953-04-03 1954-05-18 Alexander R Cuthbertson Steel form for concrete roads and runways
US2875500A (en) * 1954-10-25 1959-03-03 Whitehead & Kales Co Road form structure
US2907089A (en) * 1955-06-23 1959-10-06 Mccaffrey John Francis Road form
US3069743A (en) * 1960-07-01 1962-12-25 William J Luyben Concrete form tie
CA700526A (en) * 1964-12-22 Symons Mfg. Company Tie rod for concrete wall form panels

Patent Citations (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CA700526A (en) * 1964-12-22 Symons Mfg. Company Tie rod for concrete wall form panels
US1141057A (en) * 1914-12-05 1915-05-25 John N Heltzel Sidewalk and road form.
US1368699A (en) * 1916-10-16 1921-02-15 Collins Cornelius Fireproof wall or partition construction
US1676477A (en) * 1922-08-31 1928-07-10 Edward G Carr Road-form connection
FR31955E (en) * 1926-06-03 1927-08-27 Removable formwork for the establishment of reinforced concrete walls and pillars
US1905051A (en) * 1930-08-14 1933-04-25 Ernest A Podd Spreader clamp
US1939007A (en) * 1931-01-27 1933-12-12 John N Heltzel Adjustable concrete form
US1911146A (en) * 1932-01-06 1933-05-23 West Virginia Rail Company Road form
US2566528A (en) * 1948-07-15 1951-09-04 Mackie Robert Shuttering for use in the manufacture of concrete structures
US2611169A (en) * 1950-08-14 1952-09-23 Torrelli Frank Curb form
US2678482A (en) * 1953-04-03 1954-05-18 Alexander R Cuthbertson Steel form for concrete roads and runways
US2875500A (en) * 1954-10-25 1959-03-03 Whitehead & Kales Co Road form structure
US2907089A (en) * 1955-06-23 1959-10-06 Mccaffrey John Francis Road form
US3069743A (en) * 1960-07-01 1962-12-25 William J Luyben Concrete form tie

Cited By (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3730475A (en) * 1970-09-23 1973-05-01 L Werfel Form for casting concrete building foundation
US3776501A (en) * 1971-07-08 1973-12-04 W Loftin Apparatus for coping a wall
US4627205A (en) * 1984-07-23 1986-12-09 Hitchins William G Building foundations invention
US4882882A (en) * 1988-04-04 1989-11-28 Ronald Werner Form for a mortar cap
US4844402A (en) * 1988-07-01 1989-07-04 Ronald Werner Form for a mortar cap
US20070131840A1 (en) * 2005-12-13 2007-06-14 Jones Kurtis D Integral form panel for concrete form system
US20090202302A1 (en) * 2008-02-07 2009-08-13 Kevin Koenig Trench drain system
US20110232218A1 (en) * 2010-03-26 2011-09-29 Hynes Thomas A Form work, system, and method
US20150136943A1 (en) * 2013-11-19 2015-05-21 Kevin Parr Telescoping concrete form assembly
US9051745B1 (en) * 2013-11-19 2015-06-09 Kevin Parr Telescoping concrete form assembly
US9340933B2 (en) * 2013-11-19 2016-05-17 Kevin Parr Telescoping concrete form assembly
US20160326704A1 (en) * 2014-09-23 2016-11-10 Hae Young PARK Prefabricated mold for constructing kerb stones and method for constructing kerb stones by using same
US9822496B2 (en) * 2014-09-23 2017-11-21 Hae Young PARK Prefabricated mold for constructing curbs
US9982432B1 (en) * 2015-10-14 2018-05-29 Illinois Tool Works Inc. Curb wall forming apparatus and method of forming a curb wall
US20200080326A1 (en) * 2018-09-06 2020-03-12 MW Panel Tech, LLC Configurable Steel Form System for Fabricating Precast Panels
US10947746B2 (en) * 2018-09-06 2021-03-16 MW Panel Tech, LLC Configurable steel form system for fabricating precast panels
US11571834B2 (en) * 2018-09-06 2023-02-07 MW Panel Tech, LLC Configurable steel form system for fabricating precast panels

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3395884A (en) Concrete curb form construction
US3980279A (en) Interlocking system for roadway traffic barriers
US5046884A (en) Roadway traffic barriers
US2745165A (en) Paving form structure
US3584465A (en) Earth-shoring apparatus
US3204918A (en) Concrete wall form panel units and connecting means therefor
US3190607A (en) Molding device for producing railway sleepers
US2875500A (en) Road form structure
US1897530A (en) Form for plastic materials
US3136023A (en) Form means for concrete structures
US2793416A (en) Road form
US3362674A (en) Adjustable concrete column form and panel therefor
US3052008A (en) Panel-supporting stringer assembly for a concrete floor slab
US2731700A (en) Construction forms
US3605367A (en) Laterally related wall structures with transverse tie
US1987392A (en) Road construction
US2138634A (en) Road rail stake pocket
EP1136631A1 (en) Concrete formwork system
US2795836A (en) Road form and anchor therefor
US1951949A (en) Adjustable form for constructing concrete piers
US1974752A (en) Concrete mold construction
US1523961A (en) Concrete form
US2843911A (en) Road forms
US1916796A (en) Road rail form
US2907089A (en) Road form