US2013125494A1PendingUtilityA1
Weather Resistant Shingle System
Est. expirySep 16, 2029(~3.2 yrs left)· nominal 20-yr term from priority
Inventors:Robert L. Jenkins
E04D 1/20E04D 1/26E04D 1/00
50
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Claims
Abstract
A weather resistant shingle system is provided, wherein a starter strip course of shingles is applied to a roof, and with successive courses of field shingles applied thereover, with adjacent underlying and overlying shingles adhesively secured together to provide wind resistance to tabs of next overlying shingles from being upwardly lifted under wind conditions, and to prevent moisture, such as rain, from entering beneath tabs of shingles.
Claims
exact text as granted — not AI-modified1 . A weather resistant field shingle for use in a system of a plurality of courses of field shingles and a course of starter shingles applied to a roof, each field shingle comprising:
(a) a butt portion and a tab portion and comprising a bitumen impregnated web having upper and lower surfaces with granules adhesively secured on at least said tab portion of the upper surface and with particles adhesively secured on the lower surface; (b) with each field shingle having a top edge and a bottom edge and having at least first and second lines of adhesive generally parallel to one of said top and bottom edges, with the first line of adhesive being carried on a surface of the butt portion of the shingle and with the second line of adhesive being carried on a surface of the tab portion of said shingle; (c) with the at least first and second lines of adhesive, when a plurality of field shingles are laid up on a roof in courses with tab portions of shingles in an overlying course overlying butt portions of shingles in a next-underlying course, the first line of adhesive on an underlying shingle course being in an engagement with said second line of adhesive of an overlying shingle; with said engaged lines of adhesive each being of a three-dimensional configuration and being in any one of: (i) nested; (ii) interlocked; and (iii) of sloped surface
relation with each other and comprising a moisture barrier against moisture penetrating between underlying and overlying field shingles in adjacent courses.
2 . The shingle of claim 1 , wherein said engaged lines of adhesive form a wind resistant barrier against wind lifting an overlying field shingle from adjacent engagement with a next-underlying shingle.
3 . The shingle of claim 1 , wherein said engaged lines of adhesive are continuous across said shingle between right and left ends.
4 . The shingle of claim 1 , wherein said engaged lines of adhesive are discontinuous across said shingle between right and left ends.
5 . The shingle of claim 1 , wherein at least one of said first and second lines of adhesive is provided with a removable release strip covering said line of adhesive.
6 . The shingle of claim 1 , wherein the first and second lines of adhesive each have a thicker portion and a thinner portion, with the thinner portion of the first and second lines of adhesive being in engagement with a thicker portion of the other of the first and second lines of adhesive.
7 . The shingle of claim 1 , wherein the first and second lines of adhesive are each of triangular vertical cross-section, having sloped surfaces, with the sloped surfaces of the first and second lines of adhesive being in surface-to-surface engagement with each other.
8 . The shingle of claim 1 , wherein one of the first and second lines of adhesive has a projection and the other of the first and second lines of adhesive has a recess; with the projection of a line of adhesive being in nested engagement with a recess of a different line of adhesive.
9 . The shingle of claim 8 , wherein each of the projection and recess are of generally arcuate cross-section.
10 . The shingle of claim 8 , wherein each of the projection and recess are of generally rectangular cross-section.
11 . The shingle of claim 10 , wherein the first and second lines of adhesive are partially vertically offset relative to each other.Cited by (0)
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