US1867433A - Building construction - Google Patents

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US1867433A
US1867433A US608437A US60843732A US1867433A US 1867433 A US1867433 A US 1867433A US 608437 A US608437 A US 608437A US 60843732 A US60843732 A US 60843732A US 1867433 A US1867433 A US 1867433A
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floor
units
flooring
metal
beams
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Young James Howard
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HH Robertson Co
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HH Robertson Co
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04BGENERAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTIONS; WALLS, e.g. PARTITIONS; ROOFS; FLOORS; CEILINGS; INSULATION OR OTHER PROTECTION OF BUILDINGS
    • E04B5/00Floors; Floor construction with regard to insulation; Connections specially adapted therefor
    • E04B5/48Special adaptations of floors for incorporating ducts, e.g. for heating or ventilating

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  • This invention relates to a building construction and to a flooring for buildings.
  • the invention has for one of its objects to reduce the cost of a building of the character of a steel frame building, a bridge, or
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a novel cellular metal flooring characat the end of this specification.
  • Fig. 1 is a plan view of a portion of one floor of a building embodying this invention' Fig. 2, a perspective of a portion of the floor shown in Fig. 1 on an enlarged scale;
  • Fig. 3 a. detail on an'enlarged scale, showing an outside sheet metal unit extended over a side metal member of a floor panel;
  • FIG. 4 a perspective of an intermediate floor unit broken away and illustrating one method of suspending the metal frame for a ceiling
  • Fig. 5 a detail in cross section to illustrate the interlocking of the upper sheet metal members of adjacent units
  • Figs. 6 and 7 details showing a modified way of supporting the floor unit
  • the present invention contemplates a novel metal floor which is characterized articularly by its lightness and remarkab e strength and by the fact that it is capable of production within such limits of cost as to render its use commercially possible in the construction of the floors of oifice buildings, bridges, and other modern structures. Accordingly,
  • the invention contemplates a cellular metal floor having a. plurality of hollow cells, preferably closed in cross section and the walls of which form load-supporting beams capable of sustaining floor loads when the flooring is placed upon standard floor spans. It is preferred to construct a floor embodying the present invention by assembling'a plurality of prefabricated units, each unit havin a plurality of hollow cells, preferably clos in cross section and the walls of which form the load-supporting beams above referred to, and the units are preferably assembled side by side and end to end to form the floor.
  • the hollow cells may and preferably will be unobstructed to impart maximum potential electrical flexibility to the erected floor.
  • a represents a building, such, for instance, as an office building, which is provided with a. steel framework consisting of steel upright mem bers or columns 10 and horizontal steel mem-- bers usually girders 12 and beams 13.
  • the girders 12 and beams'13 form panels or open "ings at each floor of the building, and for convenience and simplification only four complete panels 14 of a floor in the building are shown in Fig. 1, one of the panels being uncovered.
  • the longitudinal girders 12 form the side members of the panels 14, and the cross girders 12 and the intermediate beams 13 connecting the longitudinal girders 12 form the end members of the-panels 14.
  • Each panel 14 has co-operating'with it a sheet metal flooring, which is composed of a plurality of units capable of being fabricated in the shop, transported to the job and laid in place.
  • Each floor unit comprises a sheet metal upper member 18 and a corrugated sheet metal under member 19, which is spot welded or otherwise secured to the underside of the uppersheet metal member 18.
  • the welds are represented in Figs. 3, 5, and 6 at 20, 21.
  • a under sheet metal member 19 is preferably provided with substantially V-beam corrugations which may be ofvarying depths according to the floor load to be carried, and
  • the upper sheet metal member 18 is preferably made to present a substantially flat upper surface and co-operates with the upper corrugations to close the same and provide the 'floor unit with substantially closed air spaces 22.
  • the sheet metal members 18, 19 of the units are made substantially long and of a length substantially equal to the length of the panel, and preferably of such length as to permit the corrugated under member 19 to rest upon and be supported by the metal end members of the panel, and the sheet metal upper member 18 co-operates with the corrugated sheet metal under member 19 to forma floor unit or section of suflicient strength and load-car rying capacity to enable the panels to be made of material length and thereby-diminish the number of cross beams or metal members 13 employed in the floors of the building, thereby efiecting a material saving in the amount of metal in the framework and in the cost of erecting" the same.
  • the upper and lower members 18, 19 may be made of substantially the same length and arranged with relation to each other and welded in fixed relation, so that one end of the upper member 18 projects beyond the corrugated under member 19 to leave the opposite end of the under member 19 uncovered by the upper member 18 (see Figs. 1, 2 and 4), whereby the corrugated under member 19 of the floor units of adjacent panels may abut on the common end member 13 of said panels and have the upper member 18 of adjacent floor units project beyond said common end interlock with one another and with the outside units.
  • the upper member 18 of the intermediate unit is provided on one side-with a straight depending flange 24 and on itsopposite side with a depending flange 25 having a channel 26 into which the straight flange 24 of an adjacent unit is extended, after the manner represented in Figs. 1 and 5.
  • the outside floor units are provided on their inner side with the appropriate flange, either straight or channeled, to enable the outside units to interlock with the flanges of the ad'- jacent intermediate units.
  • The'floor units may be supported bythe lower corrugated members 19 resting on the end metal members of the panels after the manner represented in Figs. 1, 2 and 3, in which case the upper member 18 of the outside units may extend over the side members of the panels and be separated therefrom, or if desired the sheet metal units .may be supported by the framework with the corrugated under sheet 19 located within the panels as represented in Figs. 6, 7 and 1O.
  • the floor units are supported by angle pieces 29 secured to the metal framework within the panel and upon whic the corrugated under members 19 rest, or said floor units may be located within the panel and be supported by the end members of the panel upon which rest the ends of the may be provided with a suitable reinforcement 44*when required as represented in Fig. 10.
  • the sheet metal units when laid in place are designed to have their sides in contact or in close proximity to one another and when thus positioned the upper metal sheets of con-' tiguous units may be spot welded together, as represented by the heavy black lines 31 111 Figs. 1 and 2, so as to provlde the panel with a sheet metal flooring having aunitary upper sheet metal member of substantially the area of the panel, and having attached to its under side a plurality of groups of independent or separate corrugated sheet metal loadsupporting members which extend lengthwise of the panel for substantially the length thereof substantially parallel with one another, each of said groups forming part ofan individual unit and being secured to the sheet metal member thereof.
  • a steel frame building may be erected at a minmium cost and in a minimum time, because the sheet metal floor units may be made in the shop of a length equal to the length of the panel formed by the steel framework, and of a strength sufficient to support the required or desired load, which strength may be varied to meet different load conditions by using substantially V-beam supporting members of the proper gauge.
  • each panel may be provided with a sheet metal floor of substantially the areaof the panel and composed of sections which are initially mechanically interlocked to hold them in place so as to permit the sheetrmetal floor to support workmen and apparatus if desired, and which may be permanently connected together by welding the sheet metal upper members together, by workmen supported by the upper members of the floor.
  • the upper sheet metal members of panels in line with each other may be welded together so as to provide a unitary sheet metalfloor which covers a plurality of bays and may extend the length of the building and which is provided with a plurality
  • the suspending wires 38 may be attached to the uncovered portions of the corrugated lower member 19, by providing the latter with holes 40 in the side walls of the corrugations through which the wires 38 may be passed.
  • each floor unit may be provided with an unbroken fiat upper surface as shown in Figs. 1 to 7 inclusive, or it may be provided with substantia'lly narrow depressions 42 and yet have its upper surface substantially flat to support the workmen, as shown in Figs. 8 and 9.
  • the floor spans encountered vary from six to twenty-two feet.
  • the floor loads usually encountered in such building constructlon vary from pounds per square foot up to 700 pounds per squarp foot.
  • the spacing between the cells should be correlated to impart to the floor structure a section modulus of at least 1.0 inches per foot width.
  • the section modulus is to be figured on individual cells as beams, the cells to be construed as including one half the web member on either side of same.
  • the section mod-- ulus figure for one foot width of floor is arrived at by multiplying the section modulus of a single cell by the number of cellsper foot width of floor.
  • the spacing indicated in Figs. v8 and 9 as the dimension S between adjacent beams should be less than substantially twice and preferably less than the depth of the beams.
  • the minimum thickness of the sheet steel with which it is practicable to produce the present flooring should be thatcorresponding to 18 U. S. standard gauge for sheet and plate iron and steel and which is 0.05inch.
  • the parts be welded together either by a continuous weld, or if welded intermittently as by spot welding as illustrated in Fig. 4, I have found that it is desirable that the distance D between the welds should be less than 7 0 times the thickness of the sheet steel being welded.
  • the distance D between the welds should be less than 70 times 0.05 or 3.5 inches If the distance between welds exceeds this rela-, extending over asupporting beam and tion, then a tendency exists for the structure to buckle between the welds when subjected to floor loads.
  • the following data is furnished for a commercial form of the present flooring unit, and in which the individual cells are shaped as illustrated in Fig. 8, in which the width of the unit is-24 inches and is made up of four cells connected together to form the unit, in which the cells are arranged on six inch centers and are of a total cell depth of five and three-quarters inches, being spaced-apart by web members one and seven-eighths inches in width and in which the depth of the corrugation of the lower member is four and eleven-thirty-seconds inches, and in which both members of the unit are made of 16 gauge sheet steel.
  • the cells are symmetrically arranged with respect .to the side edges of the unit.
  • Such a floor unit has a section modulus greater than 1.0 inches per foot width of -unit and which fromexperimental data has been determined A to be 3.06 inches per foot width of unit.
  • section modulus as used herem is intended to refer to the lesser-section modulus of the flooring in either vtension or compression.
  • v v 1 The combination with a frame work provided with beams and arranged to form floor panels, of a metal flooring covering said panels, said flooring comprising a plurality of prefabricated units, each unit having a plurality of hollow cells structurally closed in cross section and forming cooperating load supporting beams and with a plurality of said units arranged end to end with a plurality of said hollow cells in alignment and .end over a floor supporting beam and cooperating with other-units to form the flooring, said unit comprising an upper and a lower corrugated sheet having corrugations extending substantially the length of said sheets and secured together with the lower corrugations of the upper sheet opposed to and forming-extensions of the upper corrugations of the lower sheet, the corrugations of said units being adapted to form substantially unobstructed aligned ducts extending over said beams, andsaid ducts being structurally closed in cross section.
  • a portable prefabricated flooring unit comprising a multi-cellular metallic flooring unit, having a plurality of hollow cells, structurally closed in cross section and spaced apart a distance not over twice the depth of the cells, and forming cooperating hollow beams capable of resisting within themselves all of the normal load stresses to which the floor is subjected, the depth of said cells being at least three inches, the width, depth, lateral spacing, and thickness of the walls of said beams being correlated to impart to the structure a section modulus of at least 1.0 inches per foot width.
  • a metal flooring for a building comprising a multi-cellular metallic flooring having a plurality of hollow cells structurally closed in cross section, the depth of said cells being at least three inches and forming cooperating hollow load supportingbeams capable of resisting within themselves-all of the normal load stresses to which the floor is subjected, the metal comprising the cellular flooring being at'least as heavy as 18 gauge sheet steel and said hollow beams being spaced from one another a distance not exceeding the depth of the beams.
  • a weight bearing floor unit comprising a series of parallel hollow beams structurally closed in cross section and composed of sheet metal of at least 18 gauge, connected by horizontal webs, each beam being not less than three inches nor more than ten inches in depth, the webs being in width less than the depth of said beams.
  • a metal flooring for a building comprising a multi-cellular metallic flooring having a plurality of cells structurally closed in cross section and forming cooperating hollow load supporting beams,veach beam being not less than three inches nor more than ten inches in depth, said beams being capable of resistmg within themselves all of the normal load stresses to which the flobr is subjected and being spaced apart not over twice the depth of the cells,'the width, depth, lateral spacing and thickness of the walls of said beams being correlated to impart to the structure a section modulus of at least 1.0 inches per foot width.

Description

y 19332- J. H. YOUNG BUILDING CONSTRUCTION Filed April 50, 1932 4 Sheets-Sheet 2 July 12, 1932. I J H YOUNG 1 8(57 41-33 BUILDING CONSTRUCTION Filed April 30, 1952 4 Sheets-Sheet 3 V .994 hm j July 12, 1932. J H. YOUNG 11,867,433
. BUILDING CONSTRUCTION Filed April 50, 1952 4 Sheets-Sheet 4 I V M Patented July 12, 1932' 1 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE JAMES HOWARD YOUNG, OF PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA, ASSIGNOR TO I. H.
ROBERTSON COMPANY OF PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA, A CORPORATION OF 'PENN- SYLVANIA BUILDING CONSTRUCTION Application filed April 30, 1932. Serial No. 608,487.
'This invention relates to a building construction and to a flooring for buildings.
This application constitutes a continuation in part of my application Serial No. 5 524,813, filed March 24, 1931.
The invention has for one of its objects to reduce the cost of a building of the character of a steel frame building, a bridge, or
other building structure, and to enable it to be erected in a minimum time while complying with the requirements of the bu1ldmg authorities.
Another object of the invention is to provide a novel cellular metal flooring characat the end of this specification.
Fig. 1 is a plan view of a portion of one floor of a building embodying this invention' Fig. 2, a perspective of a portion of the floor shown in Fig. 1 on an enlarged scale;
Fig. 3, a. detail on an'enlarged scale, showing an outside sheet metal unit extended over a side metal member of a floor panel;
Fig. 4, a perspective of an intermediate floor unit broken away and illustrating one method of suspending the metal frame for a ceiling;
Fig. 5, a detail in cross section to illustrate the interlocking of the upper sheet metal members of adjacent units;
Figs. 6 and 7 details showing a modified way of supporting the floor unit;
Figs. 8 and 9, details of modified forms of sheet metal units, and
terized by its lightness and strength and scribed and particularlv defined in the claims Fig. 10, a detail illustrating a further modified form of floor unit and method of sup-' porting the same. The present invention contemplates a novel metal floor which is characterized articularly by its lightness and remarkab e strength and by the fact that it is capable of production within such limits of cost as to render its use commercially possible in the construction of the floors of oifice buildings, bridges, and other modern structures. Accordingly,
the invention contemplates a cellular metal floor having a. plurality of hollow cells, preferably closed in cross section and the walls of which form load-supporting beams capable of sustaining floor loads when the flooring is placed upon standard floor spans. It is preferred to construct a floor embodying the present invention by assembling'a plurality of prefabricated units, each unit havin a plurality of hollow cells, preferably clos in cross section and the walls of which form the load-supporting beams above referred to, and the units are preferably assembled side by side and end to end to form the floor. The hollow cells may and preferably will be unobstructed to impart maximum potential electrical flexibility to the erected floor.
In producing either the present floor or the present prefabricated ,flooring unit, I have found that the desired lightness, the necessary strength to sustain required floor loads when the flooring is placed upon standard floorspans together with the economy in metal necessary to enable the floor to be pro-- duced and used commercially, may be obtained by correlating the size ofthe hollow cells forming the load-supporting beams with various corrugated sheet metal roofing units heretofore proposed is only a small fraction of the minimum value which I regard as necessary for the production of a practical and commercial cellular metal floor.
- beams either by a continuous weld or by intermittent welds placed so that the maximum s acing between welds bears a definite rela tion to the thickness of the metal. r
As above stated, the drawings illustrate a portion of a building such as an 'ofiice building or other steel framed structure in which the framework is arranged toform panels or openings at the difierent floors of the building, and the present metal flooring is erected upon said framework and arranged to cover said panels. Referring now to the drawings, a represents a building, such, for instance, as an office building, which is provided with a. steel framework consisting of steel upright mem bers or columns 10 and horizontal steel mem-- bers usually girders 12 and beams 13. The girders 12 and beams'13 form panels or open "ings at each floor of the building, and for convenience and simplification only four complete panels 14 of a floor in the building are shown in Fig. 1, one of the panels being uncovered. a
In Fig. 1, the longitudinal girders 12 form the side members of the panels 14, and the cross girders 12 and the intermediate beams 13 connecting the longitudinal girders 12 form the end members of the-panels 14.
Each panel 14 has co-operating'with it a sheet metal flooring, which is composed of a plurality of units capable of being fabricated in the shop, transported to the job and laid in place. Each floor unit comprises a sheet metal upper member 18 and a corrugated sheet metal under member 19, which is spot welded or otherwise secured to the underside of the uppersheet metal member 18. The welds are represented in Figs. 3, 5, and 6 at 20, 21. The
a under sheet metal member 19 is preferably provided with substantially V-beam corrugations which may be ofvarying depths according to the floor load to be carried, and
- the upper sheet metal member 18 is preferably made to present a substantially flat upper surface and co-operates with the upper corrugations to close the same and provide the 'floor unit with substantially closed air spaces 22.
The sheet metal members 18, 19 of the units are made substantially long and of a length substantially equal to the length of the panel, and preferably of such length as to permit the corrugated under member 19 to rest upon and be supported by the metal end members of the panel, and the sheet metal upper member 18 co-operates with the corrugated sheet metal under member 19 to forma floor unit or section of suflicient strength and load-car rying capacity to enable the panels to be made of material length and thereby-diminish the number of cross beams or metal members 13 employed in the floors of the building, thereby efiecting a material saving in the amount of metal in the framework and in the cost of erecting" the same.
The upper and lower members 18, 19 may be made of substantially the same length and arranged with relation to each other and welded in fixed relation, so that one end of the upper member 18 projects beyond the corrugated under member 19 to leave the opposite end of the under member 19 uncovered by the upper member 18 (see Figs. 1, 2 and 4), whereby the corrugated under member 19 of the floor units of adjacent panels may abut on the common end member 13 of said panels and have the upper member 18 of adjacent floor units project beyond said common end interlock with one another and with the outside units. To this end, the upper member 18 of the intermediate unit is provided on one side-with a straight depending flange 24 and on itsopposite side with a depending flange 25 having a channel 26 into which the straight flange 24 of an adjacent unit is extended, after the manner represented in Figs. 1 and 5.
The outside floor units are provided on their inner side with the appropriate flange, either straight or channeled, to enable the outside units to interlock with the flanges of the ad'- jacent intermediate units.
The'floor units may be supported bythe lower corrugated members 19 resting on the end metal members of the panels after the manner represented in Figs. 1, 2 and 3, in which case the upper member 18 of the outside units may extend over the side members of the panels and be separated therefrom, or if desired the sheet metal units .may be supported by the framework with the corrugated under sheet 19 located within the panels as represented in Figs. 6, 7 and 1O.
In Figs. 6 and 7, the floor units are supported by angle pieces 29 secured to the metal framework within the panel and upon whic the corrugated under members 19 rest, or said floor units may be located within the panel and be supported by the end members of the panel upon which rest the ends of the may be provided with a suitable reinforcement 44*when required as represented in Fig. 10.
When the fioor units are required to carry heavy loads it is preferred to have the corrugated under member 19 rest upon the framework.
The sheet metal units when laid in place are designed to have their sides in contact or in close proximity to one another and when thus positioned the upper metal sheets of con-' tiguous units may be spot welded together, as represented by the heavy black lines 31 111 Figs. 1 and 2, so as to provlde the panel with a sheet metal flooring having aunitary upper sheet metal member of substantially the area of the panel, and having attached to its under side a plurality of groups of independent or separate corrugated sheet metal loadsupporting members which extend lengthwise of the panel for substantially the length thereof substantially parallel with one another, each of said groups forming part ofan individual unit and being secured to the sheet metal member thereof.
It will be observed that the welding of the upper sheet metal members 18 of the floor units in a panel may be effected by a workman standing on the sheet metal floor.
In the preferred construction illustrated in Fig. 1, wherein the ends of the upper sheet metal members of the floor units of adjacent panels project beyond the common end member 13 of said panels in line with each other, saidprojecting ends may be spot welded to the ends of the upper sheet metal members of the covered panel, as indicated by the heavy black lines 32 in Fig. 2, and in this manner a plurality of panels are provided with a sheet metal flooring having a unitary sheete metal upper member which extends the length of the plurality of panels in line with each other, and has secured to it a plurality of corrugated load-supporting sheet metal members 19 for each of the said panels.- The outside walls 34 of the building as well as the interior partitions 35 may be of any usual or suitable construction. I
From the above description, it will .be observed that a steel frame building may be erected at a minmium cost and in a minimum time, because the sheet metal floor units may be made in the shop of a length equal to the length of the panel formed by the steel framework, and of a strength sufficient to support the required or desired load, which strength may be varied to meet different load conditions by using substantially V-beam supporting members of the proper gauge. of metal and depth of corrugation, which units may be transported to the job and laid in position, so that each panel may be provided with a sheet metal floor of substantially the areaof the panel and composed of sections which are initially mechanically interlocked to hold them in place so as to permit the sheetrmetal floor to support workmen and apparatus if desired, and which may be permanently connected together by welding the sheet metal upper members together, by workmen supported by the upper members of the floor.
It will also be observed that the flooring units may, as illustrated in the drawings, be
mounted upon the panel in a manner such that the corrugations of aligning units co-* operate to form continuous substantially unobstructed conduits from one part of the building to the other, which enables the fioor to possess maximum potential electrical flexibility. The multiplicity of conduits thus formed affords maximum flexibility in wiring for any kind of electric service, and enables electrical apparatus to be positioned most advantageously and the connections to be made thereto in a most simple, economical andpractical manner.
Furthermore, the upper sheet metal members of panels in line with each other may be welded together so as to provide a unitary sheet metalfloor which covers a plurality of bays and may extend the length of the building and which is provided with a plurality The suspending wires 38 may be attached to the uncovered portions of the corrugated lower member 19, by providing the latter with holes 40 in the side walls of the corrugations through which the wires 38 may be passed.
The upper metal member 18 of each floor unit may be provided with an unbroken fiat upper surface as shown in Figs. 1 to 7 inclusive, or it may be provided with substantia'lly narrow depressions 42 and yet have its upper surface substantially flat to support the workmen, as shown in Figs. 8 and 9.
In practice, in the construction of modern buildings and particularly modern steelframed buildings such as oflice buildings and the like, the floor spans encountered vary from six to twenty-two feet. The floor loads usually encountered in such building constructlon vary from pounds per square foot up to 700 pounds per squarp foot.
As previously stated I have found that in order to enable the present flooring to be utilized as a commercial floor the size of the hollow cells forming the load-supporting beams, the thickness of the walls thereof, and
the spacing between the cells should be correlated to impart to the floor structure a section modulus of at least 1.0 inches per foot width. The section modulus is to be figured on individual cells as beams, the cells to be construed as including one half the web member on either side of same. The section mod-- ulus figure for one foot width of floor is arrived at by multiplying the section modulus of a single cell by the number of cellsper foot width of floor. In practice I have found that the spacing indicated in Figs. v8 and 9 as the dimension S between adjacent beams should be less than substantially twice and preferably less than the depth of the beams.
I-have also found that the minimum thickness of the sheet steel with which it is practicable to produce the present flooring should be thatcorresponding to 18 U. S. standard gauge for sheet and plate iron and steel and which is 0.05inch.
I have found that the length of the side walls of the deepest corrugations in either of the upper or lower metal members 18, 19.
forming the present flooring unit, and which 'is indicated in the drawings in Figs. 8 and 9 19 welded together, it is desirable that the parts be welded together either by a continuous weld, or if welded intermittently as by spot welding as illustrated in Fig. 4, I have found that it is desirable that the distance D between the welds should be less than 7 0 times the thickness of the sheet steel being welded.
For example, if 18 gauge sheet steel is used, then the distance D between the welds should be less than 70 times 0.05 or 3.5 inches If the distance between welds exceeds this rela-, extending over asupporting beam and tion, then a tendency exists for the structure to buckle between the welds when subjected to floor loads.
As illustrative of the unusual load-carrying capacity of a floor embodying the present invention and of the remarkable strength compared to its weight, the following data is furnished for a commercial form of the present flooring unit, and in which the individual cells are shaped as illustrated in Fig. 8, in which the width of the unit is-24 inches and is made up of four cells connected together to form the unit, in which the cells are arranged on six inch centers and are of a total cell depth of five and three-quarters inches, being spaced-apart by web members one and seven-eighths inches in width and in which the depth of the corrugation of the lower member is four and eleven-thirty-seconds inches, and in which both members of the unit are made of 16 gauge sheet steel. The cells are symmetrically arranged with respect .to the side edges of the unit. Such a floor unit has a section modulus greater than 1.0 inches per foot width of -unit and which fromexperimental data has been determined A to be 3.06 inches per foot width of unit.
Weight in pounds per square foot 9.50
Span in feet The term section modulus as used herem is intended to refer to the lesser-section modulus of the flooring in either vtension or compression.
By the use of the term structurally closed in cross section as employed in the claims I intend to define a cell which has the functional characteristics of an integral cell.
While the preferred embodiment of the invention has been herein illustrated and described,*it will be understood that the invention may be embodied in other forms within the scope'of the following claims.
Having thus described the invention, what 4 is claimed is: v v 1. The combination with a frame work provided with beams and arranged to form floor panels, of a metal flooring covering said panels, said flooring comprising a plurality of prefabricated units, each unit having a plurality of hollow cells structurally closed in cross section and forming cooperating load supporting beams and with a plurality of said units arranged end to end with a plurality of said hollow cells in alignment and .end over a floor supporting beam and cooperating with other-units to form the flooring, said unit comprising an upper and a lower corrugated sheet having corrugations extending substantially the length of said sheets and secured together with the lower corrugations of the upper sheet opposed to and forming-extensions of the upper corrugations of the lower sheet, the corrugations of said units being adapted to form substantially unobstructed aligned ducts extending over said beams, andsaid ducts being structurally closed in cross section.
3. A portable prefabricated flooring unit comprising a multi-cellular metallic flooring unit, having a plurality of hollow cells, structurally closed in cross section and spaced apart a distance not over twice the depth of the cells, and forming cooperating hollow beams capable of resisting within themselves all of the normal load stresses to which the floor is subjected, the depth of said cells being at least three inches, the width, depth, lateral spacing, and thickness of the walls of said beams being correlated to impart to the structure a section modulus of at least 1.0 inches per foot width.
4. A metal flooring for a building comprising a multi-cellular metallic flooring having a plurality of hollow cells structurally closed in cross section, the depth of said cells being at least three inches and forming cooperating hollow load supportingbeams capable of resisting within themselves-all of the normal load stresses to which the floor is subjected, the metal comprising the cellular flooring being at'least as heavy as 18 gauge sheet steel and said hollow beams being spaced from one another a distance not exceeding the depth of the beams.
5. The combination with a framework provided with beams and arranged to form floor panels of a metal flooring covering said panels, said flooring comprising a plurality of prefabricated units, each unit having a plurality of hollow cells structurall closed in cross section and being at least t ree inches in depth and forming cooperating load supporting beams and with a plurality of said units arranged end to end and side by side, and said units being connected together at their sides by welding, whereby concentrated loads are distributed over Wide areas of the floor, the metal comprising the cellular flooring being at least as heavy as 18 gauge sheet steel and the length of the side walls of the cells being less than times the thickness thereof, and the structure having a section modulus of at least 1.0 inches per footwidth.
6. A weight bearing floor unit comprising a series of parallel hollow beams structurally closed in cross section and composed of sheet metal of at least 18 gauge, connected by horizontal webs, each beam being not less than three inches nor more than ten inches in depth, the webs being in width less than the depth of said beams.
7. A metal flooring for a building comprising a multi-cellular metallic flooring having a plurality of cells structurally closed in cross section and forming cooperating hollow load supporting beams,veach beam being not less than three inches nor more than ten inches in depth, said beams being capable of resistmg within themselves all of the normal load stresses to which the flobr is subjected and being spaced apart not over twice the depth of the cells,'the width, depth, lateral spacing and thickness of the walls of said beams being correlated to impart to the structure a section modulus of at least 1.0 inches per foot width. In testimony whereof, I have signed my name to this specification.
JAMES HOWARD YOUNG.
US608437A 1932-04-30 1932-04-30 Building construction Expired - Lifetime US1867433A (en)

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Cited By (29)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2449292A (en) * 1944-06-07 1948-09-14 Detroit Steel Products Co Building structure
US2495557A (en) * 1946-11-15 1950-01-24 Walsh Arthur Floor construction of road vehicles
US2672958A (en) * 1946-11-26 1954-03-23 Harold L Pierce Structural building element
DE914611C (en) * 1948-10-02 1954-07-05 Maschf Augsburg Nuernberg Ag Bridge, especially road bridge with a large span
US2694475A (en) * 1948-11-19 1954-11-16 Robertson Co H H Cellular steel floor
DE1016734B (en) * 1952-01-02 1957-10-03 Maschf Augsburg Nuernberg Ag Surface support structure, in particular a slab for steel bridges
DE968035C (en) * 1951-02-02 1958-01-09 Demag Ag Road slab for steel road bridges
US2901062A (en) * 1955-08-29 1959-08-25 Inland Steel Products Company Metaldecking
US2945328A (en) * 1954-03-02 1960-07-19 Websteel Framing Systems Inc Floor joist and assembly
US2987330A (en) * 1956-10-16 1961-06-06 Robertson Co H H Sealed pipe to pipe to wall joint
US3066771A (en) * 1960-04-07 1962-12-04 Wolchuk Roman Prefabricated bridge deck panels
US3221670A (en) * 1962-09-17 1965-12-07 Pacific Car & Foundry Co Metal floor rack for refrigerator cars
US3909998A (en) * 1973-02-27 1975-10-07 Star Mfg Co Roof construction system
US4125977A (en) * 1976-10-19 1978-11-21 H. H. Robertson Company Internally composite cellular section and composite slab assembled therefrom
FR2443647A1 (en) * 1978-12-05 1980-07-04 Guiller Jacques Adhesive bonded metal duct for air conditioning - has wide integral flanges for support between beams and joists
US4404782A (en) * 1980-08-21 1983-09-20 Williams Virgil R Suspended modular floor assembly
US4966082A (en) * 1987-10-21 1990-10-30 Hitachi, Ltd. Construction and a manufacturing method of underframe for a rolling stock
US5299405A (en) * 1992-08-06 1994-04-05 Trinity Industries, Inc. Wall assembly
US6561726B1 (en) * 1999-06-16 2003-05-13 Walter Hecken Lining panel fastening
US6742315B2 (en) * 2001-01-11 2004-06-01 Jimmie L. Linn Method of making a wall system
US20070051719A1 (en) * 2005-09-02 2007-03-08 Fenton Gary L Container with supports and method of manufacturing same
US20070245668A1 (en) * 2004-03-05 2007-10-25 Gabriele Raineri Panel with Pre-Placed Tiles for Laying Floors
US20100115881A1 (en) * 2007-02-15 2010-05-13 Koutarou Inose Stiffened plate and method of manufacturing the same
US20100170181A1 (en) * 2008-09-17 2010-07-08 William Dale Nichols Protective shield assembly
US20140064831A1 (en) * 2011-05-24 2014-03-06 H-One Co., Ltd. Automobile frame component
US20140318056A1 (en) * 2012-05-09 2014-10-30 Farid Abugattas Prestressed, cambered and composite cellular steel decking floor system
US9556612B2 (en) * 2014-07-18 2017-01-31 Williams Scotsman, Inc. Floor assembly for modular building units
WO2017199107A1 (en) * 2016-05-16 2017-11-23 Soluciones E Innovaciones Estructurales S.A.S. Panel of compound sheets for the construction of light-weight one-way joist slabs
CN109415903A (en) * 2016-05-16 2019-03-01 结构解决方案和创新有限公司 For building the composite board of unidirectional lightweight joist plate

Cited By (37)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2449292A (en) * 1944-06-07 1948-09-14 Detroit Steel Products Co Building structure
US2495557A (en) * 1946-11-15 1950-01-24 Walsh Arthur Floor construction of road vehicles
US2672958A (en) * 1946-11-26 1954-03-23 Harold L Pierce Structural building element
DE914611C (en) * 1948-10-02 1954-07-05 Maschf Augsburg Nuernberg Ag Bridge, especially road bridge with a large span
US2694475A (en) * 1948-11-19 1954-11-16 Robertson Co H H Cellular steel floor
DE968035C (en) * 1951-02-02 1958-01-09 Demag Ag Road slab for steel road bridges
DE1016734B (en) * 1952-01-02 1957-10-03 Maschf Augsburg Nuernberg Ag Surface support structure, in particular a slab for steel bridges
US2945328A (en) * 1954-03-02 1960-07-19 Websteel Framing Systems Inc Floor joist and assembly
US2901062A (en) * 1955-08-29 1959-08-25 Inland Steel Products Company Metaldecking
US2987330A (en) * 1956-10-16 1961-06-06 Robertson Co H H Sealed pipe to pipe to wall joint
US3066771A (en) * 1960-04-07 1962-12-04 Wolchuk Roman Prefabricated bridge deck panels
US3221670A (en) * 1962-09-17 1965-12-07 Pacific Car & Foundry Co Metal floor rack for refrigerator cars
US3909998A (en) * 1973-02-27 1975-10-07 Star Mfg Co Roof construction system
US4125977A (en) * 1976-10-19 1978-11-21 H. H. Robertson Company Internally composite cellular section and composite slab assembled therefrom
FR2443647A1 (en) * 1978-12-05 1980-07-04 Guiller Jacques Adhesive bonded metal duct for air conditioning - has wide integral flanges for support between beams and joists
US4404782A (en) * 1980-08-21 1983-09-20 Williams Virgil R Suspended modular floor assembly
US4966082A (en) * 1987-10-21 1990-10-30 Hitachi, Ltd. Construction and a manufacturing method of underframe for a rolling stock
US5299405A (en) * 1992-08-06 1994-04-05 Trinity Industries, Inc. Wall assembly
US6561726B1 (en) * 1999-06-16 2003-05-13 Walter Hecken Lining panel fastening
US6742315B2 (en) * 2001-01-11 2004-06-01 Jimmie L. Linn Method of making a wall system
US20070245668A1 (en) * 2004-03-05 2007-10-25 Gabriele Raineri Panel with Pre-Placed Tiles for Laying Floors
US9067729B2 (en) * 2005-09-02 2015-06-30 Sti Holdings, Inc. Compartmentalized stacking posts and container with compartmentalized stacking posts
US20070051719A1 (en) * 2005-09-02 2007-03-08 Fenton Gary L Container with supports and method of manufacturing same
US9487352B2 (en) 2005-09-02 2016-11-08 Sti Holdings, Inc. Container with supports
US9334107B2 (en) 2005-09-02 2016-05-10 Sti Holdings, Inc. Gusseted container and method of manufacturing same
US20100115881A1 (en) * 2007-02-15 2010-05-13 Koutarou Inose Stiffened plate and method of manufacturing the same
US8759712B2 (en) 2007-02-15 2014-06-24 Ihi Corporation Method of manufacturing a stiffened plate by hybrid laser arc welding
US20100170181A1 (en) * 2008-09-17 2010-07-08 William Dale Nichols Protective shield assembly
US8166728B1 (en) 2008-09-17 2012-05-01 Gordon Incorporated Protective shield assembly and method
US20140064831A1 (en) * 2011-05-24 2014-03-06 H-One Co., Ltd. Automobile frame component
US10486752B2 (en) * 2011-05-24 2019-11-26 Jfe Steel Corporation Automobile frame component
US20140318056A1 (en) * 2012-05-09 2014-10-30 Farid Abugattas Prestressed, cambered and composite cellular steel decking floor system
US9151048B2 (en) * 2012-05-09 2015-10-06 Farid Abugattas Prestressed and cambered steel decking floor system
US9556612B2 (en) * 2014-07-18 2017-01-31 Williams Scotsman, Inc. Floor assembly for modular building units
WO2017199107A1 (en) * 2016-05-16 2017-11-23 Soluciones E Innovaciones Estructurales S.A.S. Panel of compound sheets for the construction of light-weight one-way joist slabs
CN109415903A (en) * 2016-05-16 2019-03-01 结构解决方案和创新有限公司 For building the composite board of unidirectional lightweight joist plate
US11332928B2 (en) 2016-05-16 2022-05-17 Soluciones E Innovaciones Estructurales S.A.S. Panel of compound sheets for the construction of light-weight one-way joist slabs

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