AU2015203257A1 - Shower base - Google Patents

Shower base Download PDF

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Publication number
AU2015203257A1
AU2015203257A1 AU2015203257A AU2015203257A AU2015203257A1 AU 2015203257 A1 AU2015203257 A1 AU 2015203257A1 AU 2015203257 A AU2015203257 A AU 2015203257A AU 2015203257 A AU2015203257 A AU 2015203257A AU 2015203257 A1 AU2015203257 A1 AU 2015203257A1
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
zone
shower base
shower
base according
corners
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.)
Abandoned
Application number
AU2015203257A
Inventor
James Yu
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.)
CLASSIC HARDWARE SUPPLIERS Pty Ltd
Original Assignee
CLASSIC HARDWARE SUPPLIERS Pty Ltd
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
Priority claimed from AU2011900965A external-priority patent/AU2011900965A0/en
Application filed by CLASSIC HARDWARE SUPPLIERS Pty Ltd filed Critical CLASSIC HARDWARE SUPPLIERS Pty Ltd
Priority to AU2015203257A priority Critical patent/AU2015203257A1/en
Publication of AU2015203257A1 publication Critical patent/AU2015203257A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02ATECHNOLOGIES FOR ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02A30/00Adapting or protecting infrastructure or their operation
    • Y02A30/60Planning or developing urban green infrastructure

Landscapes

  • Residential Or Office Buildings (AREA)
  • Bathtubs, Showers, And Their Attachments (AREA)
  • Sink And Installation For Waste Water (AREA)

Abstract

The present specification discloses a shower base (10) having a first part (11) fabricated from sheet metal having a first zone (13) defining a shower zone of the shower base (10), the first zone (13), and an insert (25) located beneath said first zone (13) and the insert (25) when installed, defining a substantially horizontal plane supported by an underlying floor structure, an upturned wall engaging flange (15,16) extending along at least one edge region of the first zone (13), an upwardly formed ledge formation (19, 21) positioned along a front edge region of the first zone (13), a drainage opening (24) leading through the first zone (13) adjacent an edge region of said first zone (13), and said insert (25) positioned underneath said first zone (13), providing an inclined upper surface (26) with a single inclination plane. - -- -/ , , / / -,/ -, -/ - *lg

Description

1
SHOWER BASE
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to improvements in the construction of trays or bases for personal showers.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Australian patent application no. 2010226970 filed on 6 October 2010 relates to a shower base construction enabling a level entry to a personal shower zone from a bathroom surrounding the shower zone. Currently available shower trays or bases on the market normally require some constructional modifications to the underlying floor structure in the shower zone where the shower base will be installed. This may include lowering of the floor structure or removal of flooring boards or the like in the shower zone. Typically, known shower bases also include multiple inclined floor surfaces sloping towards an internal or centrally located drainage outlet. Such multiple floor surfaces provide a complication for tile installation, often requiring tiles to be cut to provide a neat floor surface in the shower zone. While patent application no. 2010226970 primarily relates to a level entry type shower base construction, there is also a need to provide a more conventional shower zone and a shower base for such a shower zone.
It is also known from US patent nos. 5913777 and 6643863 to mould a shower base from a suitable polymer material as a one piece base.
These patent specifications show multiple fall planes to a generally centrally located drainage outlet with the designs being necessarily complicated to provide satisfactory load carrying capacity without utilising excessive amounts of polymer material. Moreover shower recesses typically are provided in multiple shapes, sizes and configurations with a different mould being required for each size and configuration. This either restricts the designs and sizes or results in a relatively expensive base.
Australia patent application no. 2012201525 discloses a shower base construction made in substantially two parts having a first sheet metal part forming a tray adapted to be installed resting directly on an underlying horizontal floor surface with a separate insert installed in and secured to a floor panel region of the first sheet metal part, the insert providing a single inclination plane falling towards a drainage opening. 2
The objective of the present invention is to provide an improved or modified shower base construction of the type shown in Australian patent application no. 2012201525. The improved or modified arrangement also enabling installation with minimal constructional changes to the installation zone and with minimal difficulties in tile installation in the shower zone.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a shower base having a first part fabricated from sheet metal having a first zone defining a shower zone of the shower and a second part formed as an insert positioned, in use, beneath said first zone when installed defining a substantially horizontal plane supported by an underlying floor structure, an upturned wall engaging flange extending along at least one edge region of said first zone, an upwardly formed ledge formation positioned along at least one other edge region of said first zone, a drainage opening leading through said first zone adjacent one edge region of said first zone, and said first zone providing an inclined upper surface with a single inclination plane leading downwardly to said drainage opening.
Preferably, said ledge formation is formed by said sheet metal being formed into an inverted U configuration. Conveniently an outwardly extending sheet metal flange is formed from at least one said upwardly formed ledge formation whereby, in use, said sheet metal flange is supported by the underlying floor structure.
Conveniently, the first zone is substantially square or rectangular in plan view. In one practical preferred embodiment at least two said upturned wall engaging flanges are provided meeting at a corner of said first zone, said upturned flanges being connected to or sealed to one another at said corner. In a further possible preferred embodiment, three said upturned wall engaging flanges are provided respectively meeting at corners of said first zone, each of said upturned flanges being connected to or sealed to an adjacent said upturned flange at a said corner.
Conveniently, at east two said ledge formations are provided meeting at a corner of said first zone, said ledge formations being permanently connected to one another at said corner. 3
In a possible alternative arrangement, three said ledge formations might be provided respectively meeting at adjacent corners of said first zone, said ledge formations being permanently connected to one another at said corners.
Preferably, a said ledge formation is positioned directly opposite a said upturned wall engaging flange across said first zone. The shower base may further include at least one shower supporting means connected to said first part adjacent one edge of said first zone. Conveniently a said door supporting means is positioned in at least one corner of said first zone and at an intermediate position along said one edge of said first zone. The door supporting means may be positioned in at least two adjacent corners of said first zone and at an intermediate position along said one edge of said first zone between said two corners. In yet another configuration the door supporting means may be positioned along said one edge of said first zone between adjacent corners of said first zone.
In a preferred configuration the drainage opening is positioned in said first zone adjacent a said upturned wall engaging flange. The shower base may further include a wall upstanding from the first zone spaced inwardly from the or each said upturned wall engaging flange, said wall being spaced from the adjacent said upturned wall engaging flange to define a recess to receive an edge zone of a wall cladding sheet.
Preferably, means is included to allow a shower zone wall to be connected to at least one said ledge formation.
Conveniently, the first zone has a plane shape defining five corners, to allow a shower zone wall to be connected to at least one said ledge formation.
Preferably mounting means is provided to allow an access door for a shower recess formed by said shower base to be located above an edge region of the first zone forming said obtuse angle corners. Conveniently, said first zone may have a plane shape defining three adjacent right angled corners and a convex curved edge line forming two of said right angled corners. Preferably mounting means is provided for an access door for a shower recess formed by said shower base to be located above said convex curved edge line of said first zone. 4
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRITPION OF THE DRAWINGS
Fig 1 is a perspective schematic view of a first preferred arrangement;
Fig 2 is a section view along line I-I of Fig 1 showing a first possible embodiment; and
Fig 3 is a section view along line II-II of Fig 1.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring to the drawings, Fig 1 represents schematically a rectangular shower base 10 adapted to be fitted into a corner zone 11 of a bathroom. The shower base 10 includes a first part 12 preferably made from a sheet metal that would desirably be resistant to corrosion as a result of possible water contact in use. Suitable metals might be stainless steel, aluminium or aluminium alloys, however other sheet metals could be employed. The shower base 10 includes a second part 25 formed as an insert positioned underneath and supporting a first central zone 13 of the first part 12. The central first zone 13 is also rectangular (or square) and in use is mounted horizontally with the insert 25 supported on an underlying floor structure 14 of any type including wood or concrete. Typically the underlying floor structure is not modified and the surface of the floor structure 14 underneath the central first zone 13 is at the same level as the floor structure 14 surrounding the base 10. The first zone 13 has a first inclined surface 26 in a single plane leading to a substantially flat and horizontal surface 91 on the other side of a fold line 90. The first part 12 of the shower base 10 has an upstanding wall engaging flange 15 at the end of the horizontal surface 91. A second upstanding flange 16 might also be provided meeting at a corner 17 and permanently connected at the corner 17 to provide an upright seal at this point. If the upstanding flanges 15, 16 meet at a corner, they would normally be connected to one another by any suitable sealing manner. Depending on the intended position of the shower base 10 in the room 11, one, two or three upstanding wall engaging flanges 15, 16 could be provided. Formed at the front edge 18 of the shower base 10 is a ledge formation 19 bent from the sheet metal forming the first part 12 into an inverted U shape in cross-section preferably with a forwardly extending flange 20 and adapted to also be positioned on the 5 underlying floor structure 14. In the embodiment illustrated a second ledge formation 21 of similar structure to the ledge formation 19 is provided, also with a flange 22 positioned on the floor 14. A plurality of screws may be used passing through the flanges 20, 22, to fix the first part 12 in position on the floor structure 14. Similarly a plurality of screws might pass through the upstanding flanges 15 or 16 to connect the first part 12 to studs of the walls of the room. The under surface of the insert 25 could also be glued to the underlying floor structure 14 and/or to the first part 12. A waterproof membrane and/or a curable silicon sealant layer might also be positioned below the first zone 13 and insert 25. One or both of the ledge formations 19/21 is/are intended to support a side wall of the shower recess. This may be achieved by, in known manner, providing an upwardly open channel to the upper surface of the ledge formation 19, 21 along the desired length thereof such that a wall panel, typically a glass panel can be installed therein. The open channel might be formed by stainless steel, aluminium, aluminium alloy or plastics material. A drainage opening 24 is provided extending through the part 91 of the first zone 13 adjacent the wall engaging flange 15 or 16 depending on the configuration of the shower base 10 in the bathroom 11. Conveniently end zones of the ledge formations 19, 21 adjacent the upstanding flanges 15, 16 are permanently secured thereto by welding, soldering or similar to provide a water tight connection at these locations.
As shown in Fig 2, the upstanding flange 16 may be sandwiched between a wall stud 41 and the lower edge region of a cladding sheet 30 such as a cement sheet or similar. A sealant material 47 might be provided beneath the lower edge of the cladding sheet 30. The cladding sheet 30 might also be glued at 47 and/or nailed to the wall studs 41.
While Fig 1 shows a generally rectangular first part 12 of the shower base, other configurations are equally possible. Those other configurations include rearranging the rectangle, providing a square configuration or modifications of those including modifying the front forward corner 23 by connecting the ledge formations 19, 21 with a curved ledge formation rather than a sharp right angle corner. In yet another possibility, a further straight ledge formation section might connect the ledge formations 19, 21 forming obtuse angles therewith. 6
As can be seen in Fig 1, the shower base 10 includes an insert part 25 shown in broken outline that can be secured by gluing with waterproof glue or otherwise to an underneath surface 33 of the first zone 13. The insert part 25 might be moulded from fibreglass or some other suitable waterproof material including polymer materials such as polyurethane and presents an upwardly facing surface 26 in a single plane sloping downwardly, in use, to the drainage opening 24. As shown in Figs 2 and 3 in the installed position, tiles 27 are secured in the conventional way to the upwardly facing surface 26 of the first zone 13. The inclined or sloping surface 26 is substantially flat and in a single plane so that the tiles 27 can be easily secured thereto without excessive cutting of the tiles to take account of differing inclination planes. Also a conventional floor covering 56 such as a cement sheet can cover the floor flanges 20 and/or 22 which can then carry conventional floor tiles for the bathroom. Similarly wall connected cement sheet 30 can be provided over the wall engaging flanges 15, 16 which can then have wall tiles 31 secured thereon. A bar may be positioned between the wall studs 41 and flange 16 and the semi-liquid and curable sealant substance 47 such as a silicon based sealant may be introduced into the recess between the lower edge of the cladding sheet 30 and the bar prior to installing the cladding sheet 30 whereby the sealant seals potential water flow outwardly from the shower base 10. The sealant may flow and form a layer between the flange 16 and the adjacent edge region of the cement sheet 30. Similar silicon based sealant might also be applied as a layer between the outer surface of the first part 12 and the floor structure 14 and between the outer surfaces of the flanges 15, 16 and any adjacent wall structure. Conveniently a waterproof layer may be applied to the cement sheet 30 located below any tile adhesive and between the cement sheet 30 and the wall tiles 31. Silicon based sealant might also be applied to the wall tiles 31 and the shower recess floor tiles 27.
One or more door support member(s) may also be provided to enable a desired door structure to be provided for the shower recess. The door support member may be provided either as a connected bar between the front corners of the shower base 10 or as individual bar sections secured at the corners and at an intermediate location along the front of the shower base 10. The support members may be welded to the base 10 and the insert part 25 will have recessed 2015203257 05 Jun2015 7 or cut out zones complementary to the support members. The door utilized can comprise a sliding door or swinging door of any known type.
Various modifications or improvements may be made to the shower base falling within the scope of the annexed claims.

Claims (19)

  1. CLAIMS:
    1. A shower base having a first part fabricated from sheet metal having a first zone defining a shower zone of the shower base and a second part formed as an insert positioned, in use, beneath said first zone, said first zone and said insert, when installed defining a substantially horizontal plane supported by an underlying floor structure, an upturned wall engaging flange extending along at least one edge region of said first zone, an upwardly formed ledge formation positioned along at least one other edge region of said first zone, a drainage opening leading through said first zone adjacent one edge region of said first zone, and said first zone providing an inclined upper surface with a single inclination plane leading downwardly to said drainage opening.
  2. 2. A shower base according to claim 1 wherein said ledge formation is formed by said sheet metal being formed into an inverted U configuration, and an outwardly extending sheet metal flange is formed from at least one said upwardly formed ledge formation whereby in use said sheet metal flange is supported by the underlying floor structure.
  3. 3. A shower base according to claim 1 or 2, wherein said first zone is substantially square or rectangular in plan view.
  4. 4. A shower base according to any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein at least two said upturned wall engaging flanges are provided meeting at a corner of said first zone, said upturned flanges being connected to or sealed to one another at said corner.
  5. 5. A shower base according to claim 3, wherein three said upturned wall engaging flanges are provided respectively meeting at corners of said first zone, each of said upturned flanges being connected to or sealed to an adjacent said upturned flange at a said corner.
  6. 6. A shower base according to claim 3, wherein at least two said ledge formations are provided meeting at a corner of said first zone, said ledge formations being permanently connected to one another at said corner.
  7. 7. A shower base according to claim 6, wherein three said ledge formations are provided respectively meeting at adjacent corners of said first zone, said ledge formations being permanently connected to one another at said corners.
  8. 8. A shower base according to any one of claims 1 to 7, wherein a said ledge formation is positioned directly opposite a said upturned wall engaging flange across said first zone.
  9. 9. A shower base according to any one of claims 1 to 8, further including at least one shower door supporting means connected to said first part adjacent one edge of said first zone.
  10. 10. A shower base according to claim 9, wherein said door supporting means is positioned in at least one corner of said first zone and at an intermediate position along said one edge of said first zone.
  11. 11. A shower base according to claim 9, wherein said door supporting means is positioned in at least two adjacent corners of said first zone and at an intermediate position along said one edge of said first zone between said two corners.
  12. 12. A shower base according to claim 9, wherein said door supporting means is positioned along said one edge of said first zone between adjacent corners of said first zone.
  13. 13. A shower base according to any one of claims 1 to 12, wherein said drainage opening is positioned in said first zone adjacent a said upturned wall engaging flange.
  14. 14. A shower base according to claim 13, further including a wall upstanding from the first zone spaced inwardly from the or each said upturned wall engaging flange, said wall being spaced from the adjacent said upturned wall engaging flange to define a recess to receive an edge zone of a wall cladding sheet.
  15. 15. A shower base according to any one of claims 1 to 14, wherein means is provided to allow a shower zone wall to be connected to at least one said ledge formation.
  16. 16. A shower base according to claim 1, wherein said first zone has a plane shape defining five corners, three adjacent said corners being right angles and two adjacent said corners forming obtuse angles.
  17. 17. A shower base according to claim 16, wherein mounting means is provided to allow an access door for a shower recess to be located above an edge region of the first zone joining said obtuse angle corners.
  18. 18. A shower base according to claim 1, wherein said first zone has a plane shape defining three adjacent right angled corners and a convex curved edge line joining two of said right angled corners.
  19. 19. A shower base according to claim 18, wherein mounting means is provided for an access door for a shower recess formed by said shower base to be located above said convex curved edge line of said first zone.
AU2015203257A 2011-03-17 2015-06-05 Shower base Abandoned AU2015203257A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU2015203257A AU2015203257A1 (en) 2011-03-17 2015-06-05 Shower base

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU2011900965A AU2011900965A0 (en) 2011-03-17 Shower Base
AU2012201525A AU2012201525B2 (en) 2011-03-17 2012-03-15 Shower base
AU2015203257A AU2015203257A1 (en) 2011-03-17 2015-06-05 Shower base

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU2012201525A Addition AU2012201525B2 (en) 2011-03-17 2012-03-15 Shower base

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU2015203257A1 true AU2015203257A1 (en) 2016-12-22

Family

ID=46934769

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU2012201525A Ceased AU2012201525B2 (en) 2011-03-17 2012-03-15 Shower base
AU2015203257A Abandoned AU2015203257A1 (en) 2011-03-17 2015-06-05 Shower base

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU2012201525A Ceased AU2012201525B2 (en) 2011-03-17 2012-03-15 Shower base

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AU (2) AU2012201525B2 (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP3633117A4 (en) * 2017-06-02 2020-05-27 Pardo Esteban, José Ruperto Sealed panel structure that can be used to line shower trays and surfaces

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN110353546B (en) * 2019-08-20 2024-03-26 江苏昊钧华科住宅工业有限公司 Water leakage-proof integral bathroom mounting structure and integral bathroom chassis

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2106516A (en) * 1936-08-27 1938-01-25 Cheney Allan Shower bath and pan
US2648409A (en) * 1945-12-27 1953-08-11 Sanymetal Products Co Inc Shower cabinet
GB2313306B (en) * 1996-05-23 2000-08-16 Beldore Ltd Shower trays
NZ531166A (en) * 2004-02-13 2006-10-27 Kohler New Zealand Ltd A Shower Enclosure and Shower Base
US7752686B2 (en) * 2005-04-20 2010-07-13 John Polimeno Infinity shower pan
AU2010226970A1 (en) * 2009-10-09 2011-04-28 Classic Hardware Suppliers Pty Ltd Shower base

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP3633117A4 (en) * 2017-06-02 2020-05-27 Pardo Esteban, José Ruperto Sealed panel structure that can be used to line shower trays and surfaces

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU2012201525A1 (en) 2012-10-04
NZ598830A (en) 2013-06-28
AU2012201525B2 (en) 2017-03-30

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Date Code Title Description
MK4 Application lapsed section 142(2)(d) - no continuation fee paid for the application