[0001] This invention has to do with products simulative in appearance to the naturally
occurring semi-precious silicas known as onyx, or to like minerals such as marble.
More particularly, the invention is concerned with novel materials and methods and
mineral simulative products resulting therefrom, characterized by enhanced fidelity
to natural materials in appearance, in improved resistance to deterioration in their
expected use environment, reduced weight for lower cost shipping, and in versatility
of design confirguration. Moreover the present materials, methods and products are
achieved at significant reductions in manufacturing costs by virtue of the elimination
of various manufacturing steps heretofore thought necessary in the cultured onyx and
cultured marble industry. In the ensuing description, cultured onyx will be primarily
referred to as an ideal illustrative embodiment of the practice of the invention.
[0002] A large market exists for tubs, pullmans, tile, tub enclosures, plaques, sculptures,
and other shaped products having the uniquely attractive, nearly nacreous layered
translucent depth of onyx, an optical effect heightened by the presence of subtly
or strongly contrasting, diffuse striations of visually differeniatable localized
zones of concentration of contrastant having indistinct mergence with the surrounding
matrix in three dimensions. In general, this market has been supplied with products
based on a polyester resin matrix extended and optically modified with a filler comprising
tiny glass particles, referred to as frit.
PRIOR ART
[0003] In United States Patent 3,396,067 to K.A. Schafer the simulation of naturally occurring
onyx in a wide variety of useful products is taught to be achievable by blending polyester
resins filled with one or another fillers, e.g. silicas and more particularly glass
frit in a specific manner to interdistribute essentially alike polyester phases and
thereafter simultaneously curing all the polyester to hardness with one phase frozen
in another. The disadvantages of the technique taught include obtention of a nonpolishable
surface and excess weight since glass is more than twice as heavy as polyester resin
and so hard relative to the polyester that surface polishing produces a multiplicity
of discrete islands too small to really be seen and too numerous to count but which
in the aggregate appear as a surface dullness which increases with polishing rather
than diminishing. Thus those in the art having only the Schafer process and product
have resorted to gel coats, surface coverings of clear resin, which are polished appearing,
to conceal the true surface and thus beautify the product. Unfortunately, this expedient
brings its own problems, since gel coats may be rubbed through by too vigorous cleaning,
which may occur in a washbasin, for example. Too they are typically water vapor previous,
and over time, in use, they permit water seepage into the underlying structure which
is manifested by a separation of the gel coat from the substrate, and the resultant
appearance of an air pocket or bubble behind the gel coat which is disruptive of the
light reflection and spoils the product aestheics.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0004] It is therefore a major objective of the present invention to provide novel cultured
mineral products, having the surface appearance of, e.g. cultured onyx and cultured
marble. It is another objective to provide such products in the form of shaped articles
having: the requisite surface appearance; lighter weight for reduced shipping costs;
tougher surfaces against in-use degradation; uniform polishability deriving from chemical
and physical property homogeneity at the surface; freedom from costly gel coats which
are likely to wear or lift off from water vapor permeation; ease of shape forming
into conventional as well as nonconventional, artistic and aesthetic products; increased
variety of visual effects through limitless variation in color, size, uniformity of
size, concentration, distribution, and patterning of the filler, colorants, and matrix
relative one to the other, as compared with previously known cultured mineral products,
such as cultured onyx. it is a further objective to provide method for the preparation
of cultured onyx and like products which is economical, productive of enhanced aesthetic
effect, and free of requirements for gel coat cover up of surface imperfections inherent
in prior art methods. It is a particular object to provide product comprised of individually
hardened portions of a chemically alike resins whereby surface imperfections deriving
from different hardness materials at the product surface are avoided. Another highly
important object is to provide cultured marble or onyx simulative shaped articles
and products such as tubs, tub enclosures, lavabos, pullmans, basins and vases, fixtures,
fountains and the like which are free of internal hygroscopicity inducing agents such
as glass and which thereby are impervious to humid environments or water contact and
able to be free of gel coats whereby unsightly lifting of film at the product surface
is avoided and the aesthetic and practical use life of the product greatly extended.
Still other objectives include having like density components against gravity separation
in lay-up, deriving the matrix and filler portions from the same resin, preferably
a polyester resin, with each portion being hardened in a separate step, and the provision
of a universal filler system comprising neutral color resin particles triturated to
the proper size range and used with individual coloration in the matrix resin which
is only then cured with the filler cooperating with the colorant, or more broadly
the contrastant, since apparently similar colors of matrix and filler are distinguishable
as optically varying when the particles of filler are distributively disposed in locally
concentrated relation in the surrounding, product shape defining resin. Further objectives
include providing methods of molding shaped products, methods of preparing intermediates,
and techniques for obtaining the optimum in cultured onyx and like mineral product
appearance with maximum beneficial physical and chemical properties, and the provision
of products having water receiving receptacles and conduit therein, and with all the
appearance of onyx, marble and like naturally occurring materials, but of infinitely
variable shape and utility.
[0005] These and other objects of the invention to become apparent hereinafter, are realized
in accordance with the invention which provides a shaped structure having a polishable
cultured onyx, cultured marble, or like mineral-appearing surface of predetermined
hardness, the structure comprising a locally discontinuous phase comprising a synthetic
organic resin portion hardened to the predetermined hardness and a visually distinguishable
continuous phase comprising a synthetic organic resin portion separately hardened
to the predetermined hardness with the discontinuous phase intimately distributed
therein, whereby the structure surface is simulative of onyx or like mineral appearance
and uniformly polishable in phase undifferentiated relation.
[0006] The locally discontinuous resin portion typically comprises particles of resin hardened
to the predetermined hardness prior to intimate combination with the continuous resin
portion and which are less than about 50 U.S. mesh in mean average particle size diameter.
The discontinuous resin portion particles preferably comprise polyester resin.
[0007] The continuous resin portion also preferably comprises polyester resin and embeds
the discontinuous portion in local discontinuity and distribution defining relation.
[0008] The locally discontinuous resin portion particles of hardened resin may have a mean
average particle size diameter less than about 80 U.S. mesh.
[0009] Typically, the discontinuous resin portion particles comprise from about 5% to 55%
of the weight of the structure.
[0010] In particularly preferred embodiments, the continuous resin portion and the discontinuous
portion are each polymers of the same monomer, e.g. each polyester resin.
[0011] The structure typically also includes a colorant distinguishable within the continuous
phase, e.g. dispersed nonuniformly in continuous phase. Further the discontinuous
phase is typically particulate, uniformly distributed in the continuous phase, and
the structure also includes a colorant nonuniformly dispersed in the continuous phase.
[0012] The invention contemplates provision of a moldable mixture hardenable into the foregoing
product, i.e., a resinous mass for the production of cultured onyx, cultured marble,
or like mineral product comprising visually distinguishable portions of synthetic
organic resin, including a first, major weight portion defining a continuous, moldable
and hardenable resin matrix, a second, minor weight portion defining a particulate,
pre-hardened resin filler of less than about 50 U.S. mesh in mean average particle
diameter, the second resin portion particles having discontinuous distribution in
the first resin portion matrix, and a colorant visually distinguishably marking the
product with randomly localized zones of distributed filler concentration, the zones
having indistinct mergence with the surrounding matrix in three dimensions after mold-shaping
and hardening of the matrix portion simulatively of the surface appearance of onyx,
cultured marble, or like mineral.
[0013] The second resin portion typically constitutes from 25% to 50% by weight of the resinous
mass, and the first portion or matrix is hardenable with the filler in situ to the
hardness of the filler to have both filler and matrix portions which may be polymers
of the same monomer substantially equally wear resistant to polishing on the product
surface.
[0014] The invention further contemplates provision of an intermediate for inclusion in
the above moldable resinous masses, as well as in the mineral like final product.
This intermediate according to the invention comprises resinous particles for the
production of cultured onyx, cultured marble, or like mineral product by combination
in effective proportion with visually distinguishable synthetic organic resin, the
resinous particles comprising polyhedral chips of a relatively large, hardened mass
of synthetic organic resin, the particles being useful without further hardening,
preferably comprised of polyester, and having a mean average particle after being
chipped from the relatively large mass e.g. under low temperature conditions, may
have a colorant added, where the large mass is not of a visually distinctive color
tone relative to the tone of the intended matrix resin portion, e.g. by incorporation
of colorant for visually distinguishing the particles relative to the sythetic organic
resin matrix.
[0015] The combining of the foregoing particulate filler with the hardenable matrix, into
the blend described above produces after molding to a desired shape a shaped cultured
onyx, cultured marble, or like mineral-appearing product having a predetermined surface
hardness and comprising first and second, visually distinguishable portions of synthetic
organic resin, including a first, major weight portion defining a continuous, molded
post-hardened resin matrix, a second, minor weight portion defining a particulate,
pre-hardened resin filler of less than about 50 U.S. mesh in mean average particle
diameter, the second resin portion particles comprising polyhedral chips of a relatively
large hardened resin mass and having discontinuous distribution in the first resin
portion matrix in a manner visually marking the product with distributed filler having
indistinct mergence with the surrounding matrix in three dimensions simulatively of
the appearance of onyx, cultured marble, or like mineral. As in previous embodiments,
a colorant may be nonuniformly distributed in the resin matrix to enhance the simulative
effect, the locally discontinuous resin portion chips may be colored with added colorant,
comprise polyester resin, and be less than about 80 U.S. mesh in mean average particle
size diameter; the continuous resin portion may also comprise polyester resin, e.g.
the continuous and discontinuous portions may be polymers of the same monomer, and
embed the discontinuous portion and colorant in local discontinuity and distribution
defining relation; and the discontinuous resin portion particle chips typically comprise
from about 25% to 55% of the weight of the product, and may be artifically colored.
[0016] In one highly useful form of the invention, water receptacles, such as pullmans,
lavatories, water closets, tubs, and other receptacle apparatus such as faucets, faucet
handles and spigots, the shaped product includes means defining a passage within the
product, for the passage of water or other fluid, for receiving bolts, screws and
other fastening hardware, or for defining a wall aperture for water flow or insertion
of fixtures.
[0017] For this purpose the shaped product passage defining means in faucet and piping applications
with typically include a separately formed conduit member, e.g. brass tubing, the
product further defining means to maintain the member within the passage, such as
end fittings adapted to be sweated onto the brass tubing and to threadedly engage
aerators and mounting bosses in product installations.
[0018] The invention also contemplates method of manufacturing a cultured onyx, cultured
marble, or like mineral-appearing surface structure, which includes combining with
a first hardenable synthetic organic resin portion a second pre-hardened particulate
synthetic organic resin portion, the first resin portion being hardenable to a like
hardness to the second resin portion, hardening the first resin portion with the second
resin portion, hardening the first resin portion with the second resin portion distributively
disposed in situ therein to the like hardness in the desired form of the structure.
The method further may include adding powdered, or liquid colorant, hardening the
second resin portion in a relatively large mass and triturating the mass, after freezing
to aid crushing, if desired, to obtain the desired amount of the desired size particulate.
[0019] It is a signal feature of the present invention and method that by virtue of the
like hardnesses of the resin portion phases it is possible to polish the surface of
the structure to a uniform gloss, without use of an overlayer of gelling resin, i.e.
in gel coat free relation.
[0020] With further reference to the present method, it includes also hardening a polyester
resin as the second resin portion, triturating the hardened resin portion to a particulate
mass having an average mean particle size diameter of less than about 50 U.S. mesh
and combining the second resin portion with a first resin portion comprising hardenable
polyester resin; proportioning the first and second resin portions so that the said
second resin portion constitutes from 25% to 50% of the structure by weight; depositing
the combined resin portions into a structure-defining form prior to hardening of the
first resin portion; adding locally concentrated marblizing colorant to the mixed
portions and gently swirling or stirring to combine without mixing to define the onyx
or marble simulative striations; and thereafter hardening the first resin portion
with the prehardened second resin portion distributively disposed therein; maintaining
a passage within the combined resins during hardening of the first resin into a structure;
and disposing a performed, e.g. passage-defining element in the combined resins prior
to hardening of the first resin to maintain a passage therewithin.
[0021] Alternatively stated, the invention contemplates the method of manufacturing a cultured
onyx, cultured marble or like mineral-appearing structure, which includes confining
in a forming zone a previously hardened, particulate polyester resin and a visually
distinguishable, liquid, hardenable polyester resin in distributively commingled relation
and colorant in such relative proportions and patterns as to provide an onyx, marble
or other mineral simulative surface appearance, and hardening the hardenable portion
while confining the resin within the zone, and the product made by the method.
[0022] Further there is contemplated in a cultured onyx, cultured marble or like mineral-appearing
product comprising a hardened resin matrix and a particulate filler distributed therein
in visually varying relation, the improvement in which the filler comprises a separately
hardened portion of a chemically like resin to the matrix resin, whereby the surface
of the product is visually varied and compositionally uniform.
[0023] And still further contemplated is a cultured onyx, cultured marble, or like mineral-appearing
structure filler comprising a synthetic organic resin portion, e.g. of polyester,
hardened to a hardness desired in a final structure, and triturated to particulate
form having a mean average particle size of less than 50 mesh, and having an added
colorant if desired, for use in such product manufacture.
[0024] There is also provided the method of manufacturing resinous particulate filler, including
forming a body of hardened resin, freezing the body, and thereafter locally impacting
the body in body-fracturing relation, further reducing the fracture product by impact
at below room temperature, and using nitrogen or carbon dioxide for either or both
fracture and further reduction operations, as the source of cold therefor.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0025] The invention will be further described as to an illustrative embodiment thereof
in conjunction with the attached drawing, in which:
Figure 1 is a perspective view of a shaped product, namely a faucet produced in accordance
with the methods of the invention, using the compositions of the invention;
Figure 2 is a view in horizontal section thereof; and
Figure 3 is a view in vertical section of a faucet handle shaped product according
to the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0026] The present invention uses a resin portion as filler. The resin filler is prepared
by hardening a heat or catalytically curable liquid resin, such as polyester, or other
resin as described below, in bulk to form a solid body of hardened resin. The degree
of hardening is not narrowly critical, with typical resin bodies being nor friable
but trituratable by application of grinding or abrading force. Thus a body of hardened
resin is tritureated to a fine power comprised of discrete particles of generally
polygonal shape, by impacting at high centrifugal speed against circularly fixed teeth
under temperature conditions conductive to embrittlement of the resin body so as to
faciliate erosion of the body and generation of particulate. Crushing of the resin
body after freezing is effective, with the resultant lumps being further refined by
high speed impact with appropriately arranged teeth, also under lowered temperature
conditions where resin gumming may occur. A grind to at least 50 U.S. mesh mean average
particle size diameter is usually required for obtaining a cultured onyx product,
although other minerals having coarser, even grainy striations may be made with coarser
particulate, and grinding will not have to be so fine. A mean average particle size
of 80 U.S. and below is preferred for optimum subtlety of transition from accent to
background in cultured onyx. Typically the hardened resin body is coarsely divided
and the coarse pieces impacted against teeth until a particulate of the desired size
distribution is realized.
[0027] The particulate filler may be the color of the resin body which in a polyester resin
tends to be a water white to gray in the absence of added colorant. A colorant, i.e.
a material imparting a color value other than the naturally occurring color, may be
added to the resin, e.g. before hardening, for example an organic or inorganic dye
and/or pigment, liquid or solid powder, may be added to a slurry of the polygonal
chips in uncured resin or other vehicle prior to addition of the particulate to the
matrix resin. Advantageously, a masterbatch of chips may be prepared and specific
colorants added as need be from time to time for product production purposes, thus
to minimize inventory of colors. The use of reactive color formers on the particulate
is also practical, the color being developed in situ in the product. The color may
be any tone including deepened or lightened aspects of the eventual matrix color.
In this connection, it is the presence of visual distinguishability through the presence
of a contrast between the phases of the product that is important, not specific color
contrasts. The polyester resins for example exhibit contrast between commingled phases
regardless of a colorant as an additional contrastant.
[0028] The hardened filler is then mixed with the matrix material, suitably a further portion
of the filler resin. Colorant to form localized concentrations of high contrast, e.g.
striations, bursts, veins, whorls, umbras and the like, typical of onyxand marble
is added. The mix is controllably agitated or not as desired to achieve the nonuniform,
locally randomized, concentration pattern of distribution of colorant in the uniformly
comixed filler and matrix. Swirling, agitating, adding from single or multiple points
in thick or thin streams all have their effect on the final pattern. It is preferable
to slowly combine a first mix of a given background color of liquid, nonhardened matrix
and the hardened filler particulate with a second mix of another background color
of liquid, nonhardened matrix resin and the hardened filler and to combine these different
background color mixes with pigment or other pattern forming colorant, with careful
definition of distribution, and then to add the combined mixes and colorant to the
mold to be used to shape the product structure using more or less percentage of particulate
filler to vary the viscosity of the combined mixes for application to the form and
to determine the apparent concentration of pattern in the final product desired, more
mixing reducing colorant concentration and less mixing maintaining an initial pattern
of distribution. The substantially equivalent specific gravities of the filler and
matrix in the invention preferred compositions give a high degree of control over
distribution pattern not available where the filler for example is far heavier than
the matrix, as in
prior art systems.
[0029] The relative quantities of filler and matrix for achieving a cultured onyx appearance
is between about 5% and 55% of filler on the total weight of the product, with the
balance being matrix, colorant and any specific additives employed. Typically, colorant
is added at the rate of about 0.1 to 1.5% of the total weight of the product. The
term "product" herein refers to the combination of two resin phases, without regard
to colorants, contrastants, extenders, and nonresin components present in a final
shaped structure. This ratio again is for achieving the best appearing cultured onyx
product, other mineral simulations can use other ratios, e.g. from as little as 0.5%
filler to as much as 75% filler by weight, based on the weight of the product, the
matrix conversely comprising from 99.5% to as little as 25% by weight of the product.
[0030] After the combined resins are placed in a suitable mold, the matrix resin is cured,
by heat and/or catalysis with the filler resin in situ therein. A signal feature of
the present invention is the cohardening of the matrix to the hardness of the filler
or approximately so, to a degree affording a polishability to the filler and matrix
phases at the product surface which is uniform across the phases. The result is that
upon polishing, by sanding, buffing and/or light grinding, both phases wear, or do
not wear, but do so evenly and uniformly, so that islands of relatively harder filler
do not protrude, as happens with glass frit fillers, as polishing progresses. In the
present products, the filler and matrix wear at the same rate, i.e. without phase
differentiation where the filler and matrix are hardened to the same degree.
[0031] Molding of the combined resin phases is accomplished simultaneously with the hardening
of the matrix about the prehardened filler. The final shape of the product is determined
by the mold as in other molding processes.
[0032] The mold may typically define a tub or wash basin, or countertop or the like. Advantageously
with the present method and products, shaped articles of increased value relative
to their resin content can be formed reliable and easily. For example, faucets and
handles for operating water control valves can be readily molded of the present moldable
combination of hardened and unhardened resin.
[0033] With reference now to the accompanying drawing, a faucet is depicted in Figs. 1 and
2. The faucet F is shown to comprise a neck portion 16 and a base 24, the base being
centrally recessed to receive a brass fitting 22 with the fitting annular shoulder
22a being embedded within the molded faucet for security of fit. A conventional threaded
conduit 28 extending from household plumbing (not otherwise shown) is threaded into
the faucet fitting 22 at 26. A preformed element in the form of a conduit 20 of plastic
or brass extends through the faucet neck 16 defining a water passage 18 therethrough.
The conduit 20 is sweated to the fitting 22 at one end and to the fitting 32 at the
faucet nozzle 30. Nozzle fitting 32 is suitably molded in place and interiorly threaded
at 36 to receive a conventional aerator.
[0034] The received preformed element can be any structure which leads a particular utility
to the final molded product. In a faucet handle, for example, and with particular
reference to Fig. 3, the knob 10 defines the handle and is provided with a central
top recess 12 which receives for subsequent concealment under a hot/cold tab, a valve
stem 14 through bushing 15 which is fitted in the central bore 17 of the handle.
[0035] Resins useful herein for formation of one or both of the two phases, i.e. the locally
discontinuous phase and/or the continuous phase are those resins which harden to useful
rigidities for use as structural products. First among such resins for onyx simulation
is the polyester resin. Polyester resins are well known and amply described for example
in the 1979-1980 Modern Plastics Encyclopedia. Such resins are the reaction product
of a dibasic acid and a glycol, e.g. phthalic anhydride, isophthalic acid and adipic
acid with one or more of propylene glycol, ethylene glycol, diethylene glycol and
dipropylene glycol. Crosslinking monomers used include styrene, vinyl toluene, methyl
methylmethacrylate, methyl styrene, and diallyl phthalate. Inhibitors such as quinone,
hydroquinone and butyl catechol may be used. Typical catalysts for the reaction are
free radical precursors, e.g. the peroxides which decompose at elevated or ambient
temperatures, e.g. methyl ethyl ketone peroxide, cyclohexanone peroxide, and benzoyl
peroxide, or cumene hydroperoxide, t-butyl perbenzoate, and peroctoate. Resins of
less intrinsic clarity will be useful where the ultimate in translucency is not required.
Accordingly such thermosetting (including room temperature cure) resins as allyls,
ureas, phenolics, polyimides, epoxy, and polyurethanes, may be used in particular
cases.
[0036] It is particularly preferred herein to employ different portions of the same resin
as the raw material for the two distinct phases, one to be hardened and triturated,
then distributed in the other portion, whereupon the second portion is the hardened,
giving a two phase composite with the difference being not chemical or physical but
related to from (continuous or discontinuous) and derived from the time of cure or
hardening.
EXAMPLE
[0037] A polyester resin was hardened by the application of moderate temperature, ca. 175
degrees for a period of 60 minutes in a simple rectangular mold to provide a body
of hardened resin weighing about 5 pounds. The body was frozen instantly in liquid
nitrogen and crushed in an impact mill into pieces approximately 1/4 by 1/4 inches
on a side, and these pieces fed centrifugally against a series of teeth in a circular
path to reduce the pieces in after sufficient passes to polyhedras chips of nonsymmetrical
shape and of a mean average particle size of 80 U.S. mesh screen. The particles were
combined with a color pigment in a quantity of liquid uncured resin of the same type.
A further portion of this polyester resin was combined with particulate, and without
the addition of any colorant. These mixtures were then combined to achieve a ratio
of 48% particulate by weight relative to the nonhardened resin. Colorant in the form
of liquid pigment was distributively added to the combined resins, and a swirl pattern
established. The combined resin portions and swirled colorant therein were cast in
a faucet mold and the resin matrix as had been the particulate to achieve like hardness.
The performed element, e.g. the conduit and fittings is inserted in the mold in suitably
supported relation prior to cure if it is desired to have the element embedded. The
part was removed from the mold and lightly buffed to a high gloss. The onyx like translucent
striation and veining was striking, both in depth and diffusion below the article
surface and in its feathering off into indistinct mergence with the surrounding matrix
beyond its locus of concentration, the interposition of solid filler through the matrix
liquid serving to give the localized concentrations of striation defining colorant
an imperfection of line and edge definition which heightens the comparability to naturally
occurring striated, color marked minerals.
[0038] Water vapor exposure did not affect the product surface on testing. The absence of
a gel coat on the product is to be noted. Heretofore high gloss was dependent on application
of a glossy film former onto the molded product, because buffing highlighted the harder
filler as it eroded the softer matrix. With the present product, however, the filler
and matrix phases are of substantially coequal hardness. The problems of film lift
off and poor abrasion resistance, formerly tolerated because of the need for a high
gloss on the cultured onyx or cultured marble product, have been obviated.
[0039] Accordingly, the invention provides a novel product overcoming the disadvantages
of previous products and opening new opportunities for the manufacture of highly attractive
cultured onyx and marble products, such as the traditional tubs, pullmans, basins,
water closets, lavabos, and additionally fountains, sculptures, tiles, wall decorations,
faucets and handles, soap dishes and statuary.
1. A shaped structure having a polishable cultured onyx, cultured marble, or like
mineral-appearing surface of predetermined hardness, said structure comprising a locally
discontinuous phase comprising a synthetic organic resin portion hardened to said
predetermined hardness and a visually distinguishable continuous phase comprising
a synthetic organic resin portion separately hardened to said predetermined hardness
with said discontinuous phase intimately distributed therein, whereby said structure
surface is simulative of onyx or like mineral appearance and uniformly polishable
in phase undifferentiated relation.
2. Structure according to claim 1, in which said locally discontinuous resin portion
comprises particles of resin hardened to said hardness prior to intimate combination
with said continuous resin portion.
3. Structure according to claim 1 or 2, in which said locally discontinuous resin
portion comprises particles of polyester resin of less than about 50 U.S. mesh in
mean average particle size diameter.
4. Structure according to claim 1, in which said continuous resin portion comprises
polyester resin and embeds said discontinuous portion in local discontinuity and distribution
defining relation.
5. Structure according to claim 1, in which said discontinuous resin portion particles
comprise from about 5% to 55% of the weight of the product.
6. Structure according to claim 1, in which said continuous resin portion and said
discontinuous portion are each polymers of the same monomer.
7. Structure according to any one of the preceding claims, including also a colorant
distinguishable within said continuous phase.
8. Structure according to claim 7, in which said colorant is non-uniformly dispersed
in said continuous phase.
9. A resinous mass for the production of cultured onyx, cultured marble, or like mineral
product comprising visually distinguishable portions of synthetic organic resin, induding
a first, major weight portion defining a continuous, moldable and hardenable resin
matrix, and a second, minor weight portion defining a particulate, pre- hardened resin
filler of less than about50 U.S. mesh in mean average particle diameter, said second
resin portion particles having discontinuous distribution in said first resin portion
matrix in a manner visually distiguishably marking said product randomly localised
zones of concentration of distributed filler, said zones having indistinct mergence
with the surrounding matrix in three dimensions after mold-shaping and hardening of
said matrix portion simulatively of the appearance of onyx,cultured marble or like
mineral.
10. The method of manufacturing a cultured onyx, cultured marble, or like mineral-appearing
surface structure which includes combining with a first hardenable synthetic organic
resin portion, a second visually distinguishable pre-hardened particulate synthetic
organic resin portion, said first resin portion being hardenable to a like hardness
to said second resin portion, hardening said first resin portion with said second
resin portion distributively disposed in situ therein to said like hardness in the
desired form of said structure.
11. The method according to claim 10, including also, adding colorant, hardening said
second resin portion and triturating to the desired size particulate.
12. The method according to claim 11, including also polishing the surface of the
structure to a gloss in gel coat free relation.
13. The method according to claim 11 or 12, including also hardening a polyester resin
as said second resin portion, triturating the hardened resin portion to a particulate
mass having an average mean particle size diameter of less than about 50 U.S. mesh
and combining said second resin portion with a first resin portion comprising hardenable
polyester resin.
14. The method according to any one of claims 10 to 13, including also proportioning
the first and second resin portions so that the said second resin portion constitutes
from 25% to 50% of said structure by weight.
15. The method according to claim 10, including also depositing said combined resin
portions into a structure-defining form prior to hardening of said first resin portion,
and thereafter hardening said first resin portion with Said prehardened second resin
portion distributively disposed therein.
16. The method according to claim 15, including also maintaining a passage within
said combined resins during hardening of said first resin into a structure.
17. Resinous particles for the production of cultured onyx, cultured marble or like
mineral product by combination in effective proportion with visually distinguishable
synthetic organic resin, said resinous particles comprising polyhedral chips of a
relatively large, hardened mass of synthetic organic resin, said particles having
a mean average particle size diameter of less than about 50 U.S. mesh.
18. Resinous particles according to claim 17, in which the particle resin is a polyester.
19. Resinous particles according to claim 17 including also a colorant for visually
distinguishing said particles relative to said synthetic organic resin.
20. A shaped cultured onyx, cultured marble or like mineral-appearing product having
a predetermined surface hardness and comprising first and second, visually distinguishable
portions of synthetic organic resin, including a first, major weight portion defining
a continuous, molded post-hardened resin matrix, and a second, minor weight portion
defining a particulate, pre-hardened resin filler of less than about 50 U.S. mesh
in mean average particle diameter, said second resin portion particles comprising
polyhedral chips of a relatively large hardened resin mass and having discontinuous
distribution in said first resin portion matrix in a manner visually marking said
product with randomly localised zones of concentration of distributed filler said
zone having indistinct mergence with the surrounding matrix in three dimensions simulatively
of the appearance of onyx, cultured marble or like mineral.
21. Shaped product according to claim 20, including also a colorant non-uniformly
distributed in said resin matrix.
22. Shaped product according to claim 21, in which said locally discontinuous resin
portion particles are less than about 80U.S. mesh in mean average particle size diameter.
23. Shaped product according to claim 22, in which said discontinuous resin portion
particles comprise polyester resin.
24. Shaped product according to claim 23, in which said continuous resin portion comprises
polyester resin and embeds said discontinuous portion and colorant in local discontinuity
and distribution defining relation.
25. Shaped product according to claim 24, in which said discontinuous resin portion
particle chips comprise from about 25% to 50% of the weight of the product.
26. Shaped product according to claim 25, in which said continuous resin portion and
said discontinuous portion are each polymers of the same monomer.
27. Shaped product according to claim 26, in which said resin portions are each polyester
resin.
28. Shaped product according to claim 27, in which said locally discontinuous resin
portion chips are artificially coloured.
29. Shaped product according to claim 20, including also means defining a passage
within said structure.
30. Shaped product according to claim 29, in which said passage defining means includes
a separately formed conduit member, said product further defining means to maintain
said member within said passage.
31. Shaped product according to claim 20, in which said structure defines a water
receptacle.
32. Shaped product according to claim 1, in which said structure defines a water receptacle.
33. The method of manufacturing a cultured onyx, cultured marble or like mineral-appearing
structure, which includes confining in a forming zone a previously hardened, particulate
polyester resin, a colourant, and a visually distinguishable, liquid, hardenable polyester
resin in distributively commingled relation and in such relative proportions as to
provide an onyx, marble or other mineral simulative surface appearance, and hardening
the hardenable portion while confining the resin within said zone.
34. The product made by the method of claim 33.
35. In a cultured onyx, cultured marble or like mineral-appearing product comprising
a hardened resin matrix, colorant, and a particulate filler distributed therein in
visually varying relation, the improvement in which said filler comprises a separately
hardened portion of a chemically like resin to the matrix resin, whereby the surface
of said product is visually varied and compositionally uniform.
36. A cultured onyx, cultured marble or like mineral-appearing structure filler comprising
a synthetic organic resin portion hardened to a hardness desired in a final structure,
and triturated to particulate form having a mean average particle size of less than
50 mesh.
37. The cultured onyx, cultured marble or like mineral filler according to claim 36
in which said resin comprises polyester resin.
38, The cultured onyx, cultured marble or like mineral appearing structure filler
according to claim 36 including also an added colorant.
39. Method of manufacturing resinous particulate filler, including forming a body
of hardened resin, freezing the body, and thereafter locally impacting the body in
body fracturing relation.
40. The method according to claim 39, including also further reducing the fracture
product by impact at below room temperatures.
41. The method according to claim 39 or 40, including using nitrogen or carbon dioxide
as the source of cold.