Fiber polymer trim
11473312 · 2022-10-18
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29B7/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04F13/068
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B29L2031/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2055/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/2886
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/022
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2223/065
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29C48/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A corner trim material that is made of a material that will bond with current industry mastics such as all purpose joint compounds, resists impact, resists abrasion, and readily accepts common coatings such as drywall mud, texture and paints. The surface of this material generally does not need to be covered by any secondary fiber based material such as paper to improve bonding or coating on the inside or outside. The material generally consists of a polymer mixed with a fibrous material like pulp or glass fiber. A corner trim piece can be directly extruded from the mix. The corner trim piece can have a center hinge, can be bullnose, and the flanges can optionally have holes or optionally be coated with adhesive.
Claims
1. A drywall corner trim piece, comprising: a substantially uniform profile having a radiused bullnosed center section and a tapered flange extending from an end of the radiused bullnosed center section in a substantially continuous taper on each side of the drywall corner trim piece to thinner outside edges of the tapered flange; wherein the drywall corner trim piece is formed from an extruded composite material comprising at least one polymer and at least one fibrous material.
2. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 1, further comprising: a plurality of holes disposed through each of the flanges.
3. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 2, wherein the radiused center section is free of holes.
4. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 1, wherein the drywall corner trim piece is extruded at a predetermined manufactured angle.
5. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 4, wherein the predetermined manufactured angle is substantially 90 degrees.
6. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 1, wherein the drywall corner trim piece is extruded in a substantially flat configuration and configured to be flexed about a corner formed between at least two drywall surfaces.
7. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 1, wherein the drywall corner trim piece is configured for finishing an outer corner formed between at least two drywall surfaces.
8. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 1, wherein the drywall corner trim piece is configured for finishing an inner corner formed between at least two drywall surfaces.
9. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 1, wherein the drywall corner trim piece reduces an amount of finishing compound required to blend the corner trim piece to a smooth wall appearance between at least two drywall surfaces.
10. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 1, wherein the extruded composite material is configured to maintain strength and flexural characteristics of a base polymer while adding a porous nature of the fibrous material.
11. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 10, wherein the drywall corner trim piece is configured to bond with drywall finishing compound without any secondary fiber based material.
12. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 1, wherein the at least one polymer comprises High Density Polyethylene (HDPE), Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET), or Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS).
13. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 1, wherein the at least one fibrous material comprises pulp, wood, paper, glass fibers, or a combination thereof.
14. The drywall corner trim piece of claim 1, wherein the drywall corner trim piece is suitable for finishing an interior corner of a structure and an exterior corner of a structure.
15. A method of forming a drywall corner trim piece, comprising: mixing a base polymer and a fibrous material at a temperature sufficient to melt the base polymer and the fibrous material into a contiguous composite material mix; and extruding a corner trim piece from the contiguous composite material mix, wherein the corner trim piece comprises substantially co-planar flanges extending from an end of a radiused bullnosed center section in a substantially continuous taper in a substantially flat configuration, wherein the corner trim piece comprises tapered flanges extending from a thicker section at the centerline in a substantially continuous taper on each side of the drywall corner trim piece to thinner sections at distal edges of the tapered flanges.
16. The method of claim 15, further comprising: cutting holes in the flanges, wherein the holes are configured to increase bond strength between the flanges and at least two drywall surfaces.
17. The method of claim 15, further comprising: flexing the corner trim piece about a corner formed between at least two drywall surfaces; and applying a finishing compound to the flanges, wherein the corner trim piece reduces an amount of finishing compound required to blend the corner trim piece to a smooth wall appearance between the at least two surfaces.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) Attention is now drawn to several illustrations of the features of the present invention:
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(8) Several illustrations and drawings have been presented to aid in understanding the present invention. The scope of the present invention is not limited to what is shown in the Figures.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(9) The present invention relates generally to the field of drywall corner trim products and more particularly to a corner trim material that is made of a material that will bond with current industry mastics such as all purpose joint compounds, will resist impact, will resist abrasion, and will readily accept common coatings such as drywall mud, texture and paints. The surface of this material generally does not need to be covered by any secondary fiber based material such as paper to improve bonding or coating on the inside or outside.
(10) More particularly, the present invention relates to a corner trim product made of a material that is inexpensive, commonly available, incorporates the beneficial characteristics of a polymer such as strength and flexibility which yields impact resistance, and an ability to flex or hinge, the beneficial characteristics of paper exterior, such as bonding well to mastics commonly used in the industry, and being easily coated with textures and paints, and strength approaching that of metal. It can also withstand abrasion from various finishing processes such as sanding.
(11) Materials that have these characteristics can be a blend of, or separate components of, wood, or pulp fibers, fiber glass and a polymer such as High Density Polyethylene (HDPE), Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) or Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS). Any suitable plastic or polymer is within the scope of the present invention. Each of these separate materials are already common for use as wood alternative materials for decking or other outside construction such as picnic benches and the like. Making a drywall corner trim out a mixture of wood and a polymer is one embodiment of the present invention.
(12) This material can be extruded into any profiled shape for various corner trim product characteristics. Some of these characteristics can include two adjacent flanges attached at a common edge forming the apex of some predetermined angle between said flanges, like on current outside 90 corner trims known in the art. Alternatively, the flanges can be joined by a large radius bull nose running longitudinally along the center line of the trim, like bullnose products known in the art. Each flange can have an inside surface for mating to the sheet rocked wall and an outside surface for feathering with mud and/or finishing with texture, paints or other common wall finishes. The inside and outside surface of each flange can be parallel forming a flange of constant thickness, be tapered from the apex of a solid inside or outside 90 degree corner trim product, or be tapered from the end of the radius of a Bullnose product to the outside edge of the flange furthest away from the said apex or radius. The apex can be formed by a thin groove running longitudinally along the centerline of the trim piece creating a hinge feature that allows the product to flex to any angle of corner being finished.
(13) A corner trim material made of this material can be manufactured into any shape and can replace all constructions that today's corner trim materials are available in. In particular, it can replace paper faced metal, vinyl, paper-plastic, paper-plastic-paper or any of the other types of corner trim or other bead assembly constructions on the market today with a single composite material product. An optional adhesive layer can be added to the inside (wall side) of this material to create a permanent, strong and fast bond to the corner.
(14) A particular material that includes all these beneficial properties without the negative properties of many existing products is a blend of fibers or other filler (such as pulp or wood, foaming agents, or absorbent polymers) to make the final material porous so it will accept coatings, and a polymer such as High Density Polyethylene (HDPE) to give the material strength, impact resistance and flexibility.
(15) This mix of materials can be extruded and/or rolled, or otherwise shaped in one or more operations into any profile to match any drywall corner trim shape currently available in the drywall corner trim industry, or a new shape to achieve a particular benefit or function. An optional adhesive layer may added to the inside (or wall side) of the profile to aid in bonding the trim piece onto the drywall corner rapidly and easily.
(16) The materials used in this product are generally common in the building industry but usage is so far limited to decking, railing, trim and other extruded shapes. Sometimes they are used in furniture molding or picnic bench materials or other outside use. Another benefit of this material is that it can often be made completely out of recycled materials. The exact type of polymer, and the exact fiber/filler to attain bonding properties, can be changed get the best property mix and are not limited to current materials or technologies. Any material with these properties is within the scope of the present invention.
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(23) It should be noted that any of the above-described sharp angle nose pieces can be flexible by having a thin hinge extruded at the apex. This hinge can be a thin section of the material, or it can be formed by grooving the material. Pieces with these hinges can generally be bent so that the two flanges make any angle with respect to each other, and they can be bent repeatedly any number of times without fatiguing or cracking.
(24) A method of making the corner pieces of the present invention is to mix and melt the base polymer, and then add the fibrous material to the mix at an elevated temperature sufficient to melt the mix. Pieces can then be directly extruded from the mix. Holes can be optionally made in the flanges during extrusion or later, and adhesive, especially water-activated adhesive can be added to the finished flanges.
(25) Several descriptions and illustrations have been presented to aid in understanding the present invention. A person of skill in the art will understand that there are many changes and variations that can be made without departing from the spirit of the invention. Each of these changes and variations is within the scope of the present invention.