[go: up one dir, main page]

US1415923A - Prepared-roofing shingle strip - Google Patents

Prepared-roofing shingle strip Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1415923A
US1415923A US299538A US29953819A US1415923A US 1415923 A US1415923 A US 1415923A US 299538 A US299538 A US 299538A US 29953819 A US29953819 A US 29953819A US 1415923 A US1415923 A US 1415923A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
shingle
strip
roofing
shingles
prepared
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
US299538A
Inventor
Roscoe B Crabbs
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.)
Philip Carey Manufacturing Co
Original Assignee
Philip Carey Manufacturing 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 Philip Carey Manufacturing Co filed Critical Philip Carey Manufacturing Co
Priority to US299538A priority Critical patent/US1415923A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1415923A publication Critical patent/US1415923A/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
    • E04D1/26Strip-shaped roofing elements simulating a repetitive pattern, e.g. appearing as a row of shingles

Definitions

  • My invention relates to roofing, particularly to prepared roofing made in the form of a shingle strip, that is, a roofing made so that when applied in position on a roof it resembles a roofing formed of shingles.
  • roofing shingle strips are made in any of the various methods of making prepared roofing by combining one or more plies of roofing felt or similar material saturated with a preservative and waterproofing material and coating with a bituminous coating and then surfaced with a crushed slate, gravel, sand or other suitable fire resisting material.
  • roofing shingle strips have been made of this character by cutting portions of the roofing material away, thereby exposing the underlying shingle strip, so as to resemble the spaces between shingles; the result of this is that each shingle has three edges exposed to the weather and the corners of the shingles are liable to be mutilated.
  • My invention is especially arranged so as to overcome these objections.
  • My shingle strip is completely covered over its entire surface with a mineral or similar surfacing such as crushed slate, crushed asbestos asbestos fibre, asbestos sand or other suitable material except at the portions resembling the spaces between adjacent shin 'les when the surfacing material is omitte in the manufacture or is removed so as to expose other material which is contrasting in appearance and gives the effect oii spaces between the shingles.
  • a mineral or similar surfacing such as crushed slate, crushed asbestos asbestos fibre, asbestos sand or other suitable material except at the portions resembling the spaces between adjacent shin 'les when the surfacing material is omitte in the manufacture or is removed so as to expose other material which is contrasting in appearance and gives the effect oii spaces between the shingles.
  • I have also found that I can make my improved shingle strips of roofing either longitudinally or laterally of the strip. In my improved shingle strip there is only one edge, which is a continuous, straight edge, exposed to the elements when in place on the roof.
  • Fig. 1 is a top view.
  • Fig. 2 a sectional view of Fig. 1.
  • the roofing is arranged in strips of suitable length divided laterally by lines or marks to divide it into a plurality of subdivisions so that when used on the roof the appearance is given of a plurality of individual shingles laid in place.
  • These shingle strips are formed, of what I will for convenience call, the shingle end, that is, the portion of the strip which is exposed when in position on the building and the strip body.
  • a coating or layer of asphalt compound or other suitable bituminous material C covering the shingle end or lower portion A and the strip body or upper portion 13-01 the strip.
  • a surfacing layer E of crushed slate or other suitable crushed stone or mineral particles depending upon the material to form the finished or wearing surface of the shingle.
  • This layer E of crushed slate or similar material is applied so that it completely covers the surface of both the strip. body, i. e., the upper portion; andshingle end, i.
  • the lines E separate only the lower or exposed portion of the shingles, so that in laying the shingle strip no more of the strip may be shown than is equivalent to-the distance from the lower edge or end of the shingle to the edge or lower end of the next above adjacent layer of shingles.
  • the exposed portion of the shingle cannot be greater than the length of the lines F which separate the lower or. exposed errds A of the shingle strip.
  • the strip shingles may be manufactured in many ways, although I prefer to manufacture them in one of the following methods: Taking a strip of paper or roofing felt, say 20 wide or multiples thereof-this is passed through a saturating bath of asphalt or other bituminous material Where the felt is saturated so as to'preserve it and make it weather proof, after which it is run ting machine and cut into strips, t .e cutter of the machine preferably cutting across the str p of roofing, bisecting the lines, separating the shingles, so that the two lower edges of a set of shingles are adjacent to each other and the upper edges of two shingles or two sets of shingles are adjacent to each other.
  • a shingle strip having a body portion, portions representative of spaced shingle ends, and portions between said last named portions extending from one edge of the strip to points intermediate opposite edges of the strip, to simulate spaces between shingles, said strip being composed of a 1 base saturated with bituminous material having an area co-extensive with all of said portions, a layer of bituminous bonding material on said base'and having an area at least co-eXtensive with said bodyportion and portions representative of shingle ends, and a layer of mineral particles arranged over the entire body portion and portions representative of shingle ends, the portion of the strip covered with mineral particles being of uniform thickness throughout, and the portions of the-strip simulating spaces between shingles being free of mineral particles and of less thickness than the mineral surfaced portion by an amount substantially equal to the depth of the mineral covering.

Landscapes

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

Description

R. B. CRABBS.
PREPARED ROOFING SHINGLE STRIP.
APPLICATION FILED MAY24, 1919.
1,415,923. Patented M y 16, 1922 JNVENTOR BY -4CZu /v 12" 01min UNITED. STATES RJOSCOE B. CRAIBBS, OF CINCINNATI, OHIO,
ASSIGNOR TO THE PHILIP MANU- FACTURING COMPANY, A CORPORATION OF OHIO.
PREPARED-ROOFING SHINGLE STRIP.
Application filed May 24,
To all whom it may concern: e it known that I, Roscoe B. Games, a citizen of the United States, and a resident of Cincinnati, in the county of Hamilton and State of Ohio, have invented Improvements in Prepared-Roofing Shingle Strips, of which the following is a specification. My invention relates to roofing, particularly to prepared roofing made in the form of a shingle strip, that is, a roofing made so that when applied in position on a roof it resembles a roofing formed of shingles. These shingle strips are made in any of the various methods of making prepared roofing by combining one or more plies of roofing felt or similar material saturated with a preservative and waterproofing material and coating with a bituminous coating and then surfaced with a crushed slate, gravel, sand or other suitable fire resisting material. Heretofore roofing shingle strips have been made of this character by cutting portions of the roofing material away, thereby exposing the underlying shingle strip, so as to resemble the spaces between shingles; the result of this is that each shingle has three edges exposed to the weather and the corners of the shingles are liable to be mutilated. My invention is especially arranged so as to overcome these objections. My shingle strip is completely covered over its entire surface with a mineral or similar surfacing such as crushed slate, crushed asbestos asbestos fibre, asbestos sand or other suitable material except at the portions resembling the spaces between adjacent shin 'les when the surfacing material is omitte in the manufacture or is removed so as to expose other material which is contrasting in appearance and gives the effect oii spaces between the shingles. I have also found that I can make my improved shingle strips of roofing either longitudinally or laterally of the strip. In my improved shingle strip there is only one edge, which is a continuous, straight edge, exposed to the elements when in place on the roof.
In the drawings in which like characters relate to like parts,
Fig. 1 is a top view. Fig. 2 a sectional view of Fig. 1.
I have shown in the drawings my invention as it is embodied in a strip shingle; that is, a form of prepared roofing in which Specification of Letters Patent. Patented May 16, 1922.
1919. Serial No. 299,538:
the roofing is arranged in strips of suitable length divided laterally by lines or marks to divide it into a plurality of subdivisions so that when used on the roof the appearance is given of a plurality of individual shingles laid in place. These shingle strips are formed, of what I will for convenience call, the shingle end, that is, the portion of the strip which is exposed when in position on the building and the strip body.
which is the portion which when fixed in position on the building is covered by the next adjacent layer of shingles.
In the drawings I have marked the shingle end that is the lower or exposed, when in use, portion of the shingle as A and the strip body that is the upper or covered, when in use, portion of the shingle as B. These shingle strips are made by using any suitable number of plies D of material, such as felt, paper, burlap or other suitable material saturated with an asphalt or other bituminous hydrocarbon substance adapted to preserve the said material and weather and waterproof same. When two or more plies are used as shown in Fig. 2 they are bonded together by a bonding layer D of asphalt compound or other suitable material. Applied to the surface of these plies is a coating or layer of asphalt compound or other suitable bituminous material C, covering the shingle end or lower portion A and the strip body or upper portion 13-01 the strip. On this coatipg material I apply a surfacing layer E of crushed slate or other suitable crushed stone or mineral particles depending upon the material to form the finished or wearing surface of the shingle. This layer E of crushed slate or similar material is applied so that it completely covers the surface of both the strip. body, i. e., the upper portion; andshingle end, i. e., the lower portion, of the shingle except that in the shingle end A I leave portions or channel like lines between areas of the crushed slate E so as to form lines F, there by sub-dividing the shingle strip into a plurality of shingles integral with each other.
In the preferred form of my invention the lines E separate only the lower or exposed portion of the shingles, so that in laying the shingle strip no more of the strip may be shown than is equivalent to-the distance from the lower edge or end of the shingle to the edge or lower end of the next above adjacent layer of shingles. The exposed portion of the shingle cannot be greater than the length of the lines F which separate the lower or. exposed errds A of the shingle strip.
In the manufacture of my improvement the strip shingles may be manufactured in many ways, although I prefer to manufacture them in one of the following methods: Taking a strip of paper or roofing felt, say 20 wide or multiples thereof-this is passed through a saturating bath of asphalt or other bituminous material Where the felt is saturated so as to'preserve it and make it weather proof, after which it is run ting machine and cut into strips, t .e cutter of the machine preferably cutting across the str p of roofing, bisecting the lines, separating the shingles, so that the two lower edges of a set of shingles are adjacent to each other and the upper edges of two shingles or two sets of shingles are adjacent to each other.
What I claim is: v
A shingle strip having a body portion, portions representative of spaced shingle ends, and portions between said last named portions extending from one edge of the strip to points intermediate opposite edges of the strip, to simulate spaces between shingles, said strip being composed of a 1 base saturated with bituminous material having an area co-extensive with all of said portions, a layer of bituminous bonding material on said base'and having an area at least co-eXtensive with said bodyportion and portions representative of shingle ends, and a layer of mineral particles arranged over the entire body portion and portions representative of shingle ends, the portion of the strip covered with mineral particles being of uniform thickness throughout, and the portions of the-strip simulating spaces between shingles being free of mineral particles and of less thickness than the mineral surfaced portion by an amount substantially equal to the depth of the mineral covering. I
In testimony whereof, I have signed my name to this specification.
Roscoe B. omens.
US299538A 1919-05-24 1919-05-24 Prepared-roofing shingle strip Expired - Lifetime US1415923A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US299538A US1415923A (en) 1919-05-24 1919-05-24 Prepared-roofing shingle strip

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US299538A US1415923A (en) 1919-05-24 1919-05-24 Prepared-roofing shingle strip

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1415923A true US1415923A (en) 1922-05-16

Family

ID=23155241

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US299538A Expired - Lifetime US1415923A (en) 1919-05-24 1919-05-24 Prepared-roofing shingle strip

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1415923A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20190127982A1 (en) * 2011-10-27 2019-05-02 Kwik Ridge, Inc. Roof ridge cover

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20190127982A1 (en) * 2011-10-27 2019-05-02 Kwik Ridge, Inc. Roof ridge cover
US10704264B2 (en) * 2011-10-27 2020-07-07 Kwik Ridge, Inc. Roof ridge cover

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1894614A (en) Strip shingle
US2096968A (en) Shingle
US1345627A (en) Roof-covering
US1688917A (en) Shingle
US2099131A (en) Thick butt shingle
US1732403A (en) Strip shingle
SE438172B (en) ROOFING PLATE AND SET FOR ITS PREPARATION
US2340038A (en) Roofing and shingle therefor
US1958560A (en) Prepared roofing
US1597135A (en) Roofing strip
US1765796A (en) Sealed laminated roofing element
US2151794A (en) Roof construction and roofing element therefor
US2045423A (en) topping
US1795913A (en) Shingle
US1994643A (en) Roof covering and method of forming same
US2013391A (en) Shingle strip
US1415923A (en) Prepared-roofing shingle strip
US1491015A (en) Shingle
US2356570A (en) Covering element
US1928285A (en) Roofing
US1604708A (en) Shingle
US2069444A (en) Shingle
US1534165A (en) Roofing
US2021577A (en) Ornamented wall board for outside weatherproofing
US1937933A (en) Shingle strip