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US2940505A - Production of plaster board - Google Patents

Production of plaster board Download PDF

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Publication number
US2940505A
US2940505A US385588A US38558853A US2940505A US 2940505 A US2940505 A US 2940505A US 385588 A US385588 A US 385588A US 38558853 A US38558853 A US 38558853A US 2940505 A US2940505 A US 2940505A
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United States
Prior art keywords
plaster
core
paper
cream
slurry
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Expired - Lifetime
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US385588A
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Brothers Nellie
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BPB Ltd
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British Plaster Board Ltd
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Publication date
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Publication of US2940505A publication Critical patent/US2940505A/en
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B28WORKING CEMENT, CLAY, OR STONE
    • B28BSHAPING CLAY OR OTHER CERAMIC COMPOSITIONS; SHAPING SLAG; SHAPING MIXTURES CONTAINING CEMENTITIOUS MATERIAL, e.g. PLASTER
    • B28B19/00Machines or methods for applying the material to surfaces to form a permanent layer thereon
    • B28B19/0092Machines or methods for applying the material to surfaces to form a permanent layer thereon to webs, sheets or the like, e.g. of paper, cardboard
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21JFIBREBOARD; MANUFACTURE OF ARTICLES FROM CELLULOSIC FIBROUS SUSPENSIONS OR FROM PAPIER-MACHE
    • D21J1/00Fibreboard

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to the production of plaster board, that is to say building boards comprising a core of gypsum plaster lined on at least one and usually both faces with paper liners bonded to the plaster core.
  • the usual practice in the production of such boards is to feed and distribute a water-setting slurry of plaster of Paris between two sheets or strips of paper drawn continuously between a pair of rollers arranged one above the other and spaced apart by a distance corresponding to the thickness of the board to be produced, and moving the formed plaster and paper sandwich on a conveyor for a'period during which the plaster takes a set, and thereafter passing it through a heating and drying chamber usually after dividing the sandwich into desired lengths.
  • a very strong bond is obtained between the thin plaster layer and the paper even with no starch or other adhesive present in the plaster used to form the thin layer, and the thin layer when subsequently applied to the core-forming plaster combines therewith to form a homogeneous mass.
  • a small proportion of starch, gum or other adhesive may be embodied in the plaster used to form the thin layer, but the use of such an adhesive in the core-forming plaster is unnecessary.
  • the invention accordingly consists in a method of producing a plaster board, paper lined on one or both surfaces thereof, said method including the step of applying a thin layer of plaster to the surface of the paper-liner sheet or sheets intended to engage the core-forming plaster, as a preliminary to bringing the paper-liner sheet or sheets intoengagement with the core-forming plaster slurry.
  • the preliminary thin coating layer of plaster may be formed by pouring on and distributing over the paper sheet a cream obtained by pre-mixing plaster and water,
  • the thus coated paper sheets may at any time, that is to say before or after the thin plaster coating has wholly set, be used in the production of the plaster board by bringing the thin-coated surface or surfaces into contact with the core-forming plaster slurry.
  • a lower or higher proportion of plaster than that named above can be used but with a higher proportion of plaster the spreading of the plaster cream to produce an even thin layer becomes more diflicult.
  • Fig. 1 is a view in side elevation of the part of the apparatus relevant to the present and Fig. 3 shows a detail.
  • 1 and 2 represent two con-. paper drawn of? from supply reels tinuous webs of liner (not shown) and intended to form the upper and lower surface liners respectively of the plaster boards to' be produced.
  • Core plaster slurry is delivered in well known manner" on to the lower moving paper liner 2 by Way of a chute 3 having an outlet 4 disposed over the centre of the paper web 2.
  • the core plaster slurry is supplied continuously to the chute 3 from a suitable source (not shown) by. means of an endless travelling band 5.
  • e web 2 with the core slurry thereon as indicated by 6 passes from below the chute 3 betweena pair of rolls 7 together with the upper liner web 1 and the' spacing of the rolls 7 is selected in accordance with the thickness of the plaster board to be produced.
  • the formed sandwich indicated at 8 in Fig. 1, of core plaster 6 and paper webs 1 and 2 pass from the rolls 7 onto an endless conveyor 9 on which it remains until it is set to an extent to permit it to be cut into lengths and handled for subsequent treatment such as heating to complete the set, all in well known manner.
  • two further delivery chutes 10 and 11 are mounted in positions in which the respective paper webs 1 and 2 are required to pass beneath the outlets 12 and 13 thereof before reaching the point of application to the core plaster 6.
  • Fig. 2 is al plan view of the part of the apparatus shown in Fig. 1
  • the said upperflweb 1 is led around a guide roller 16 which in conjunction with the upper of the two squeeze rollers 'Z, efiectsareversal of the web 1, and the chute-'10 supplying ing of the cream likc mixt re of neat plaster and with the r coated faces of said sheets facing each other, and feeding a slurry.
  • aggregate-forming plaster'h'etwe'enjs'aid sheets the plaster cream to the upper web 11 is located at-a point 7 precedingtheguide roller 16 as shown in the drawings when the sideiof the webl to which the plaster cream is to be applied is for the time being uppermost.
  • the spreading roller or some or all of the spreading rollers for the plaster cream may with advantage be,provided with relief projections. onthe surface thereof.
  • Such a roller isillustrated by way of example in Fig.3, the rollerhere shown being provided with right and left handhelically arranged ridges of small depth. 1 p
  • the core f rming plaster used in the formation of plasterboard usually contains setting accelerators and the setting time for neat plaster as usually employed for the formation of the preliminary coating cream according to the present invention is long by comparison.
  • What isclairned is: l f v I ,*1..,A method of producing plaster board which is paper-.lined-on both faces thereof, said method including thestepsof. pouring on one face of each paper-liner sheet at the point where they are brought into parallel relation. 2.
  • Apparatus for the continuousproduction j plas ter board formed of a plaster'core paper-linedon-lbdfll shrfaces, comprising a first chute for delivering corel-forming plaster slurry onto a lower liner-paper web, a pair of squeezing and-spreading'rolls between'which the said lower liner-paper web with the core-plaster ihfiI'BQIlqlEO- gether with an upper liner-paper Web are passed tofor m a sandwich of core-plaster between two liner-papers con- 'stituting the plaster board, two further chutes positioned one above each web at points preceding theentry of the two webs and the core-forming plaster slurry-between the said'squeezing and spreading rolls, a supply of a cream-like mixture of neat plaster in water feeding each of said two further chutes, and at least one spreading roller located between each one of the said two further chutes and said first chute and having rolling contact with said webs
  • ther chutes into thin layers of um'form'thickness across the width of the liner-paper webs before said webs'comc into contact with core-forming plaster slurry, said-mix tore-applying chutes being positioned in advance-of said squeezing rolls, a distance to ensure at least partialiimpregnation of said sheets by said cream mixture upon reaching said squeezing rolls, a smooth-surfaced table arranged beneath each web and supporting said "webs after they leave the said two further chutes, the spread-.
  • chutes being provided on opposite endportions' acream-likemixture of neat plaster and water, subject:

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Ceramic Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Laminated Bodies (AREA)

Description

June 14, 1960 w. M. BROTHERS 2,940,505
PRODUCTION OF PLASTER BOARD Filed Oct. 12, 1953 IN VENT OR W ll/dldn )n.
- ATTORNEY United States Patent 2,940,505 PRODUCTION OF PLASTER BOARD Filed Oct. 12, 1953, Ser. No. 385,588 Claims priority, application Great Britain Oct. 16, 1952 2 Claims. (Cl. 154-1.2)
The present invention relates to the production of plaster board, that is to say building boards comprising a core of gypsum plaster lined on at least one and usually both faces with paper liners bonded to the plaster core.
The usual practice in the production of such boards is to feed and distribute a water-setting slurry of plaster of Paris between two sheets or strips of paper drawn continuously between a pair of rollers arranged one above the other and spaced apart by a distance corresponding to the thickness of the board to be produced, and moving the formed plaster and paper sandwich on a conveyor for a'period during which the plaster takes a set, and thereafter passing it through a heating and drying chamber usually after dividing the sandwich into desired lengths.
If attempts are made to apply two sheets of paper in the manner described above, to a core-forming slurry of neat plaster, or of plaster containing usual additions such as from agents used to reduce the weight of the boards, setting accelerators and the like, the bond produced between the plaster core and the paper in boards so produced is ineffective, the paper being readily parted from the set core.
In order therefore to obtain a satisfactory bond between the core and the paper it is the present practice to embody in the core-forming plaster slurry an adhesive usually of the nature of a starch, so that adhesion between the paper and the core is achieved. The need for such adhesives, however, involves a substantial addition to the cost of production of the board.
It has now been found that a very strong bond is obtained by first coating the paper sheet or sheets with a very thin layer of plaster on the surface thereof which is to be engaged with the core-forming plaster and thereafter bringing the thin coated surface or surfaces into contact with the core-forming plaster.
A very strong bond is obtained between the thin plaster layer and the paper even with no starch or other adhesive present in the plaster used to form the thin layer, and the thin layer when subsequently applied to the core-forming plaster combines therewith to form a homogeneous mass.
In some cases a small proportion of starch, gum or other adhesive may be embodied in the plaster used to form the thin layer, but the use of such an adhesive in the core-forming plaster is unnecessary.
It will thus be seen that the need for starch or other adhesive is wholly or largely eliminated by the use of the present invention.
The invention accordingly consists in a method of producing a plaster board, paper lined on one or both surfaces thereof, said method including the step of applying a thin layer of plaster to the surface of the paper-liner sheet or sheets intended to engage the core-forming plaster, as a preliminary to bringing the paper-liner sheet or sheets intoengagement with the core-forming plaster slurry.
The preliminary thin coating layer of plaster may be formed by pouring on and distributing over the paper sheet a cream obtained by pre-mixing plaster and water,
distribution or spreading being effected for example by drawing the paper over a flat smooth table and below a roller mounted above the table. I
Good results have been obtained making use of a solution of plaster in water and comprising as an example 70 parts by weight of water to parts by weight of neat plaster and such a cream may be spread by the use of upper lightly loaded chromium plated or other smooth surfaced spreading rollers to provide a thin plaster layer on the paper sheet of a few, e.g. seven, thousandths of a'n inch thick. In some cases however, two or more spreading rollers may be used in succession and the first of said rollers may be provided with surface projectionseg. left and right hand helical ridges to effect the preliminary spreading of the plaster cream.
The thus coated paper sheets may at any time, that is to say before or after the thin plaster coating has wholly set, be used in the production of the plaster board by bringing the thin-coated surface or surfaces into contact with the core-forming plaster slurry.
A lower or higher proportion of plaster than that named above can be used but with a higher proportion of plaster the spreading of the plaster cream to produce an even thin layer becomes more diflicult.
The improved method of producing plaster board is well adapted to be carried out as a continuous process and an apparatus for carrying out such a continuous process as applied to the production of plaster board paper lined on both sides, is illustrated by way of example in the accompanying drawing in which Fig. 1 is a view in side elevation of the part of the apparatus relevant to the present and Fig. 3 shows a detail.
Referring to the drawings, 1 and 2 represent two con-. paper drawn of? from supply reels tinuous webs of liner (not shown) and intended to form the upper and lower surface liners respectively of the plaster boards to' be produced.
Core plaster slurry is delivered in well known manner" on to the lower moving paper liner 2 by Way of a chute 3 having an outlet 4 disposed over the centre of the paper web 2. The core plaster slurry is supplied continuously to the chute 3 from a suitable source (not shown) by. means of an endless travelling band 5. v V
e web 2 with the core slurry thereon as indicated by 6 passes from below the chute 3 betweena pair of rolls 7 together with the upper liner web 1 and the' spacing of the rolls 7 is selected in accordance with the thickness of the plaster board to be produced.
The rate of feed of the core plaster slurry from the thickness over a width corresponding to that of the required plaster board product.
The formed sandwich indicated at 8 in Fig. 1, of core plaster 6 and paper webs 1 and 2 pass from the rolls 7 onto an endless conveyor 9 on which it remains until it is set to an extent to permit it to be cut into lengths and handled for subsequent treatment such as heating to complete the set, all in well known manner.
In accordance with the present invention two further delivery chutes 10 and 11 are mounted in positions in which the respective paper webs 1 and 2 are required to pass beneath the outlets 12 and 13 thereof before reaching the point of application to the core plaster 6.
The plaster cream is supplied to the two chutes 10 and 11 from a source or sources (not shown) by means of endless conveyors 14 and 15, and is delivered from the outlets 12 and 13 of the chutes 10 and 11 on to the longitudinal centres of those surfaces of the moving webs 1 plaster board-forming invention, Fig. 2 is al plan view of the part of the apparatus shown in Fig. 1
cated by 1 7, thereon pass I smooth surfaces and beneath a roller, or in the case'il- .lustrafed, tworollers 19' and 20 in succession mounted aboveythesurfaces of the tables 18 and resting by their v and 2 whieh are to be applied to the core-forming plaster slurry 6. Since in the case of the upper web 1 the side of the web which is to engage the core-forming plaster slurry 6 is ultimately the underside of that web, the said upperflweb 1 is led arounda guide roller 16 which in conjunction with the upper of the two squeeze rollers 'Z, efiectsareversal of the web 1, and the chute-'10 supplying ing of the cream likc mixt re of neat plaster and with the r coated faces of said sheets facing each other, and feeding a slurry. encore-forming plaster'h'etwe'enjs'aid sheets the plaster cream to the upper web 11 is located at-a point 7 precedingtheguide roller 16 as shown in the drawings when the sideiof the webl to which the plaster cream is to be applied is for the time being uppermost.
f Thepaperwebs land 2 with the plastercream in'diover tables 18 having fiat own weight orlightly loaded, upon the moving paper webs whereby the plaster cream is distributed orspread over the whole width of the webs 1 and 2.
The 'stance of-travel of the webs Land 2 between the chutes and 11 delivering the plaster cream and the chute 3, delivering the core-plaster lurry need only be sufiicient to enable the plaster. cream 17 to be effectively spread over the width of the paper webs before engagemerit is made with the core-plaster slurry 6. V
In. some cases the spreading roller or some or all of the spreading rollers for the plaster cream may with advantage be,provided with relief projections. onthe surface thereof. Such a roller isillustrated by way of example in Fig.3, the rollerhere shown being provided with right and left handhelically arranged ridges of small depth. 1 p
'The core f rming plaster used in the formation of plasterboard usually contains setting accelerators and the setting time for neat plaster as usually employed for the formation of the preliminary coating cream according to the present invention is long by comparison.
, -Iheslow setting of the neat plaster of the cream: before it co'mes into contact with the core-formingplaster, however,lpre's'ents no inconvenience but afiords timeffor better absorption or. penetrationof the neat.plaster of the cream into the paper webs before the recrystallisation takes place. f
" After'thepreliminary thin-coatingof plaster on the wcb s ha s been brought into contact with the core-forming plaster the early setting of the latter in itself induces an accelerationof; the setting'of -theplaster ofthe preliminary. coating.
What isclairned is: l f v I ,*1..,A method of producing plaster board which is paper-.lined-on both faces thereof, said method including thestepsof. pouring on one face of each paper-liner sheet at the point where they are brought into parallel relation. 2. Apparatus for the continuousproduction j :plas ter board formed of a plaster'core paper-linedon-lbdfll shrfaces, comprising a first chute for delivering corel-forming plaster slurry onto a lower liner-paper web, a pair of squeezing and-spreading'rolls between'which the said lower liner-paper web with the core-plaster ihfiI'BQIlqlEO- gether with an upper liner-paper Web are passed tofor m a sandwich of core-plaster between two liner-papers con- 'stituting the plaster board, two further chutes positioned one above each web at points preceding theentry of the two webs and the core-forming plaster slurry-between the said'squeezing and spreading rolls, a supply of a cream-like mixture of neat plaster in water feeding each of said two further chutes, and at least one spreading roller located between each one of the said two further chutes and said first chute and having rolling contact with said webs under light pressure for spreading the mixture of neat plaster and water from the said two fur. ther chutes into thin layers of um'form'thickness across the width of the liner-paper webs before said webs'comc into contact with core-forming plaster slurry, said-mix tore-applying chutes being positioned in advance-of said squeezing rolls, a distance to ensure at least partialiimpregnation of said sheets by said cream mixture upon reaching said squeezing rolls, a smooth-surfaced table arranged beneath each web and supporting said "webs after they leave the said two further chutes, the spread-.
, further chutes being provided on opposite endportions' acream-likemixture of neat plaster and water, subject:
ing the saidI-poured mixture to spreading under light pressure to form on the liner sheets ,very thin layers of .plaster cream :of uniform thickness of the order ofseven thousandths of an inch thick, and thereafter thereof with. left-hand and. right-hand helical ridges. respectlvely, said ridges constituting relief projections" which assist in spreading the neat plaster andwater mix-.
ture laterally from the central zone of-each web.
' References Cited in the fileof this'patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,428,827 Brookby Sept. 12', "1922" 1,459,264 Routt a. June 19,1192; 2,051,452 Mactag'gart'e't a1. Au .1s,'1936 2,088,813 Roos Aug. 3,1193?" 2,213,249 Kelley Sept.:3, 1940
US385588A 1952-10-16 1953-10-12 Production of plaster board Expired - Lifetime US2940505A (en)

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GB26026/52A GB741140A (en) 1952-10-16 1952-10-16 Improvements in and relating to the production of plaster board

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Cited By (22)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3284227A (en) * 1962-12-06 1966-11-08 Fibreboard Paper Products Corp Catalyzed gypsum wallboard and method of production thereof
US4100242A (en) * 1971-02-24 1978-07-11 Leach Irby H Method of molding aqueous settable slurries containing shredded open-cell polystyrene particles
US4141949A (en) * 1972-03-23 1979-02-27 Hinojosa Servando G Method for making prefinished wall board #32
US4420295A (en) * 1979-09-26 1983-12-13 Clear Theodore E Apparatus for manufacturing cementitious reinforced panels
GB2281231A (en) * 1993-07-12 1995-03-01 Bpb Industries Plc Multi-layer plasterboard
WO1995032084A1 (en) * 1994-05-25 1995-11-30 National Gypsum Company Apparatus and method for manufacturing gypsum board
US5637362A (en) * 1993-08-20 1997-06-10 Louisiana-Pacific Corporation Thin, sealant-coated, fiber-reinforced gypsum panel
US6190476B1 (en) 1998-07-08 2001-02-20 Westroc Inc. Gypsum board manufacture with co-rotating spreader roller
WO2002068197A1 (en) * 2001-02-22 2002-09-06 Watras Edward W Continuous method of making four-tapered edge gypsum board and the gypsum board made therefrom
FR2824552A1 (en) * 2001-05-14 2002-11-15 Lafarge Platres Fabrication of plaster sheets involves application of different plaster pastes to form layers with differing compositions
WO2003016010A1 (en) * 2001-08-17 2003-02-27 Grenzebach Bsh Gmbh Method and device for producing gypsum plasterboards
US20050067082A1 (en) * 2003-09-29 2005-03-31 Mowry Aaron P. Reduced manufacturing cost of gypsum board
US20070082170A1 (en) * 2005-08-31 2007-04-12 Lafarge Platres Wallboard with antifungal properties and method of making same
US20080223258A1 (en) * 2007-03-12 2008-09-18 Robert Bruce Method and System for Manufacturing Lightweight, High-Strength Gypsum Products
WO2015185143A1 (en) 2014-06-05 2015-12-10 Knauf Gips Kg Method for producing a gypsum plasterboard and the gypsum plasterboard obtained thereby
US9802866B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2017-10-31 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
US9840066B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2017-12-12 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
US10537863B2 (en) 2015-12-31 2020-01-21 United States Gypsum Company Constrictor valve with webbing, cementitious slurry mixing and dispensing assembly, and method for making cementitious product
US11306028B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2022-04-19 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
CN114393696A (en) * 2022-01-11 2022-04-26 北新建材(嘉兴)有限公司 High-toughness light thistle board production line
US11338548B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2022-05-24 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
WO2024026264A1 (en) * 2022-07-29 2024-02-01 United States Gypsum Company Method and apparatus for making a gypsum board, and gypsum board made according to the method

Families Citing this family (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
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NO134359C (en) * 1973-02-15 1976-09-29 Walter Nilsen
AU528009B2 (en) * 1978-11-21 1983-03-31 Stamicarbon B.V. Sheet of fibre-reinforced hydraulically bindable material
DE4127932A1 (en) * 1991-08-23 1993-02-25 Bold Joerg Fibre-reinforced plasterboard mfr. - using by=product gypsum and waste paper
GB2337276B (en) * 1998-05-13 2002-05-08 Bpb Plc Plasterboard
TWI265087B (en) 2002-03-27 2006-11-01 Yoshino Gypsum Co Plaster board and method of fabricating the plaster board

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US1428827A (en) * 1921-11-12 1922-09-12 United States Gypsum Co Composition wall board and method of making the same
US1459264A (en) * 1920-06-12 1923-06-19 Orville L Routt Process of making wall board
US2051452A (en) * 1934-08-20 1936-08-18 Mactaggart Edmonds Frank Process and apparatus for the manufacture of plasterboard
US2088813A (en) * 1932-01-29 1937-08-03 United States Gypsum Co Apparatus for preparing gypsum slabs
US2213249A (en) * 1934-07-23 1940-09-03 Armstrong Cork Co Insulation board and method of making the same
US2346999A (en) * 1937-06-30 1944-04-18 Ici Ltd Manufacture of composite wallboard

Patent Citations (6)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1459264A (en) * 1920-06-12 1923-06-19 Orville L Routt Process of making wall board
US1428827A (en) * 1921-11-12 1922-09-12 United States Gypsum Co Composition wall board and method of making the same
US2088813A (en) * 1932-01-29 1937-08-03 United States Gypsum Co Apparatus for preparing gypsum slabs
US2213249A (en) * 1934-07-23 1940-09-03 Armstrong Cork Co Insulation board and method of making the same
US2051452A (en) * 1934-08-20 1936-08-18 Mactaggart Edmonds Frank Process and apparatus for the manufacture of plasterboard
US2346999A (en) * 1937-06-30 1944-04-18 Ici Ltd Manufacture of composite wallboard

Cited By (42)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3284227A (en) * 1962-12-06 1966-11-08 Fibreboard Paper Products Corp Catalyzed gypsum wallboard and method of production thereof
US4100242A (en) * 1971-02-24 1978-07-11 Leach Irby H Method of molding aqueous settable slurries containing shredded open-cell polystyrene particles
US4141949A (en) * 1972-03-23 1979-02-27 Hinojosa Servando G Method for making prefinished wall board #32
US4420295A (en) * 1979-09-26 1983-12-13 Clear Theodore E Apparatus for manufacturing cementitious reinforced panels
GB2281231A (en) * 1993-07-12 1995-03-01 Bpb Industries Plc Multi-layer plasterboard
GB2281231B (en) * 1993-07-12 1997-11-19 Bpb Industries Plc A method of manufacturing multilayer plasterboard and apparatus therefor
US5714032A (en) * 1993-07-12 1998-02-03 Bpb Industries Public Limited Company Method of manufacturing multilayer plasterboard and apparatus therefor
US5908521A (en) * 1993-07-12 1999-06-01 Bpb Industries Public Limited Company Method of manufacturing multilayer plasterboard
US5637362A (en) * 1993-08-20 1997-06-10 Louisiana-Pacific Corporation Thin, sealant-coated, fiber-reinforced gypsum panel
WO1995032084A1 (en) * 1994-05-25 1995-11-30 National Gypsum Company Apparatus and method for manufacturing gypsum board
US5718797A (en) * 1994-05-25 1998-02-17 National Gypsum Company Apparatus for manufacturing gypsum board
US5879486A (en) * 1994-05-25 1999-03-09 National Gypsum Company Methods of manufacturing gypsum board and board made therefrom
US6190476B1 (en) 1998-07-08 2001-02-20 Westroc Inc. Gypsum board manufacture with co-rotating spreader roller
WO2002068197A1 (en) * 2001-02-22 2002-09-06 Watras Edward W Continuous method of making four-tapered edge gypsum board and the gypsum board made therefrom
US20040089393A1 (en) * 2001-02-22 2004-05-13 Watras Edward W. Continuous method of making four-tapered edge gypsum board and the gypsum board made therefrom
FR2824552A1 (en) * 2001-05-14 2002-11-15 Lafarge Platres Fabrication of plaster sheets involves application of different plaster pastes to form layers with differing compositions
WO2002092307A1 (en) * 2001-05-14 2002-11-21 Lafarge Platres Method and device for forming dense layers in a gypsum paste
US20040134585A1 (en) * 2001-05-14 2004-07-15 Lafarge Platres Process and device for forming dense layers in a gypsum slurry
US7470338B2 (en) 2001-05-14 2008-12-30 Lafarge Platres Process for forming dense layers in a gypsum slurry
AU2002313044B2 (en) * 2001-05-14 2007-03-22 Lafarge Platres Method and device for forming dense layers in a gypsum paste
WO2003016010A1 (en) * 2001-08-17 2003-02-27 Grenzebach Bsh Gmbh Method and device for producing gypsum plasterboards
DE10139420A1 (en) * 2001-08-17 2003-03-06 Babcock Bsh Gmbh Method and device for producing plasterboard
US20050155689A1 (en) * 2001-08-17 2005-07-21 Hans-Joachim Smolenski Method and device for producing gypsum plasterboards
DE10139420B4 (en) * 2001-08-17 2006-07-27 Grenzebach Bsh Gmbh Method and device for producing plasterboard
US20050067082A1 (en) * 2003-09-29 2005-03-31 Mowry Aaron P. Reduced manufacturing cost of gypsum board
US11306028B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2022-04-19 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
US11884040B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2024-01-30 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
US11338548B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2022-05-24 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
US9802866B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2017-10-31 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
US9840066B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2017-12-12 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
US10406779B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2019-09-10 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
US10407345B2 (en) 2005-06-09 2019-09-10 United States Gypsum Company Light weight gypsum board
US20070082170A1 (en) * 2005-08-31 2007-04-12 Lafarge Platres Wallboard with antifungal properties and method of making same
US20080223258A1 (en) * 2007-03-12 2008-09-18 Robert Bruce Method and System for Manufacturing Lightweight, High-Strength Gypsum Products
EP3152022A1 (en) * 2014-06-05 2017-04-12 Knauf Gips KG Method for producing a gypsum plasterboard and the gypsum plasterboard obtained thereby
EP3152022B1 (en) * 2014-06-05 2021-08-04 Knauf Gips KG Method for producing a gypsum plasterboard and the gypsum plasterboard obtained thereby
WO2015185251A1 (en) 2014-06-05 2015-12-10 Knauf Gips Kg Method for producing a gypsum plasterboard and the gypsum plasterboard obtained thereby
WO2015185143A1 (en) 2014-06-05 2015-12-10 Knauf Gips Kg Method for producing a gypsum plasterboard and the gypsum plasterboard obtained thereby
US10537863B2 (en) 2015-12-31 2020-01-21 United States Gypsum Company Constrictor valve with webbing, cementitious slurry mixing and dispensing assembly, and method for making cementitious product
CN114393696A (en) * 2022-01-11 2022-04-26 北新建材(嘉兴)有限公司 High-toughness light thistle board production line
CN114393696B (en) * 2022-01-11 2023-10-13 北新建材(嘉兴)有限公司 High-toughness light paper gypsum board production line
WO2024026264A1 (en) * 2022-07-29 2024-02-01 United States Gypsum Company Method and apparatus for making a gypsum board, and gypsum board made according to the method

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Publication number Publication date
FR1085220A (en) 1955-01-28
GB741140A (en) 1955-11-30

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