shingle

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(shĭng'gəl) pronunciation
n.
  1. A thin oblong piece of material, such as wood or slate, that is laid in overlapping rows to cover the roof or sides of a house or other building.
  2. Informal. A small signboard, as one indicating a professional office: After passing the bar exam, she hung out her shingle.
  3. A woman's close-cropped haircut.
v.tr., -gled, -gling, -gles.
  1. To cover (a roof or building) with shingles.
  2. To cut (hair) short and close to the head.

[Middle English, from Old English scindel, scingal, from Late Latin scindula, alteration of Latin scandula (influenced by scindere, to split).]

shingler shin'gler n.

shin·gle2 (shĭng'gəl) pronunciation
n.
  1. Beach gravel consisting of large smooth pebbles unmixed with finer material.
  2. A stretch of shore or beach covered with such gravel.

[Middle English.]

shingly shin'gly adj.


Thin piece of building material made of wood, asphaltic material, slate, metal, or concrete, laid in overlapping rows to shed water. Shingles are widely used as roof covering on residential buildings and sometimes also for siding ( Shingle style). Wood shingles in the U.S. are usually made of cypress, redwood, or Western red cedar.

For more information on shingle, visit Britannica.com.

Gale's How Products Are Made:

How is a shingle made?

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Background

Roofing shingles are made from several types of materials. Wood shingles are sawed from red cedar or pine. Modern shingles are cut from new growth trees and must be treated with chemical preservatives to make them last as well as earlier versions that were cut from old growth trees. They must also be chemically treated to achieve a fire resistance rating comparable to other types of shingles; in fact, the highest rating can be attained only by installing them over a special subsurface layer. Aluminum shingles have a long life span, although they are comparatively expensive. Asphalt shingles cover about 80% of the homes in the United States. Their popularity is due to their relatively light weight, comparatively low cost, ease of installation, and low maintenance requirements.

A typical asphalt shingle is a rectangle about 12-18 in (30-46 cm) wide and 36-40 in (91-102 cm) long. Popular styles have several cutouts along one edge to form tabs that simulate smaller, individual shingles. Three tabs are common, but the number may range from two to five. Some styles are made to interlock with adjacent shingles during installation, creating a more wind-resistant surface.

History

Asphalt has been used as a building material for thousands of years. Ancient Babylonians used it as mortar between clay bricks and as a waterproofing liner in canals. Roll roofing, consisting of long strips of asphalt-coated felt with a finishing layer of finely crushed stone, has been manufactured in the United States since 1893. In 1903, Henry M. Reynolds began marketing asphalt shingles he cut from sheets of roll roofing. By the 1920s, this roofing material had become so popular it was sold through mail-order catalogs. By the 1950s, the typical asphalt shingle looked much as it does today, including the tab-forming cutouts.

Since the late 1950s, manufacturers have sought to develop inorganic base materials as alternatives to the traditional organic felt. Inorganic bases are desirable because they are more fire resistant than an organic base; furthermore, they absorb less asphalt during the manufacturing process, so the resulting shingles weigh less. Asbestos was used in shingle mats until its related health risks became well known. Improvements in fiber-glass matting have made them the most popular asphalt shingle base material in the industry since the late 1970s.

Raw Materials

Asphalt shingles are sometimes called composite shingles. Their foundation is a base of either organic felt or fiberglass. Organic felt mats are made of cellulose fibers obtained from recycled waste paper or wood. These fibers are reduced to a water-based pulp, formed into sheets, dried, cut into strips, and wound onto rolls. Thinner, lighter shingles with a higher resistance to fire are made on a base of fiberglass. In a typical process, the fiberglass membrane is made by chopping fine, glass filaments and mixing them with water to form a pulp, which is formed into a sheet. The water is then vacuumed out of the pulp, and a binder is applied to the mat. After curing, the mat is sliced to appropriate widths and rolled.

Asphalt, a very thick hydrocarbon substance, can be obtained either from naturally occurring deposits or, more commonly, as a byproduct of crude oil refining. Before being used in the manufacture of shingles, asphalt must be oxidized by a process called blowing. This is done by bubbling air through heated asphalt to which appropriate catalysts have been added, causing a chemical reaction. The resulting form of asphalt softens the right amount at the right temperatures to make good shingles. To further process the blown asphalt into a proper coating material, a mineral stabilizer such as fly ash or finely ground limestone is added. This makes the material more durable and more resistant to fire and weather.

Various colors of ceramic-coated mineral granules are used as a top coat on shingles to protect them from the sun's ultraviolet rays, increase their resistance to fire, and add an attractive finish. The granules may be small rocks or particles of slag (a byproduct of ore smelting). Shingles designed for use in humid locations may include some copper-containing granules in the top coat to inhibit the growth of algae on the roof. The back surface of the shingles is coated with sand, talc, or fine particles of mica to keep the shingles from sticking together during storage.

Strips or spots of a thermoplastic adhesive are applied to most shingles during the manufacturing process. Once installed on a roof, the shingles are heated by the sun, and this adhesive is activated to bond overlapping shingles together for increased wind resistance.

The Manufacturing
Process

Asphalt shingles are produced by passing the base material through a machine that successively adds the other components. The same machine can be used to make either shingles or roll roofing.

Dry looping

  • A jumbo roll [6 ft (1.83 m) in diameter] of either organic felt or fiberglass mat is mounted and fed into the roofing machine. The base material first passes through a dry looper. Matting is accumulated accordion-style in this reservoir, so that the machine can continue to operate when the supply roll is exhausted and a new one is mounted.

Saturation

  • The base material passes through a presaturation chamber, where it is sprayed on one side with hot asphalt to drive out any moisture that may be present. It then goes into a saturator tank filled with hot asphalt. Soaking in the asphalt coats the fibers within the mat and fills the voids between them.

Wet looping

  • The matting is again formed into accordion-like folds. While the asphalt coating on the mat cools, it is drawn into the felt, creating an even greater degree of saturation.

Coating

  • Coating asphalt, which has been stabilized with powdered minerals, is applied to both surfaces of the mat. The mat passes between a pair of coating rolls, which are separated by an appropriate distance to ensure that the desired amount of coating asphalt is applied to the mat. This step may be sufficient to coat fiberglass filaments and fill voids between them; in this case, the saturation and wet looping steps can be bypassed.

Mineral surfacing

  • Granules of ceramic-coated minerals of the desired color are applied to the top surface of the asphalt-coated mat. A coating of fine particles of a mineral, such as talc or mica, is applied to the back surface of the mat. The sheet of treated mat then passes through a series of rollers that embed the coating particles in the asphalt and cool the material.

Finishing

  • The strip of roofing material is accumulated, accordion-style, on a cooling looper to finish cooling.

Cutting

  • The sheet of finished shingle material then passes into a cutting machine, where it is cut from the back side into the desired size and shape. The machine separates the shingles and stacks them in bundles. Bundles generally contain enough shingles to roof 25-35 sq ft (7.62-10.67 sq m).

Packaging

  • The bundles of shingles are transferred to equipment that wraps them and affixes labels.

Quality Control

Quality control begins during the manufacture of the base material. Not only must the material perform well in the final product, but it must also have enough tensile (pulling) strength and tear resistance to withstand the shingle-making process. In addition to these strength characteristics, organic mats are continuously monitored to ensure proper moisture content and absorbency. Fiberglass mats are monitored for proper fiber distribution and uniform weight.

During the manufacturing of the shingles themselves, numerous characteristics are monitored, including uniformity and thickness of the asphalt coating. Application of the mineral coatings is monitored for uniform distribution and proper embedding of the particles. Inspections of the finished shingles verify proper weight, count, size, and color of the product.

In addition to their own quality control measures, shingle manufacturers may also invite third-party, independent testing laboratories to their plants and send them product samples. These testing laboratories verify the product's compliance with ratings defined by Underwriters Laboratories (UL) and the American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM). Such ratings indicate that the product meets specified standards for fire resistance and other performance characteristics like strength and wind resistance.

Byproducts/Waste

Asphalt-coated waste from the manufacturing process includes shingle fragments and waste generated by cutting tabs on the shingles. In some cases, this waste is sold for use in making asphalt pavement for roads. For example, the state of North Carolina has allowed such material to be used in asphalt pavement since 1995 and has not encountered any problems with making or placing the paving material. Because of shipping costs, however, this option may not be practical unless a paving asphalt processing plant is located relatively close to the shingle plant.

Where to Learn More

Books

Gibson, Barbara G., ed. Sunset Books. Roofing & Siding. Lane Publishing Co., 1981.

Herbert, R.D., III. Roofing: Design Criteria, Options, Selection. R.S. Means Company, 1989.

Residential Asphalt Roofing Manual. Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association, 1993.

Other

"Frequently Asked Questions." Certain-Teed Corporation.http://www.certainteed.com/roofing/ctroof/faq.html (7 May 1997).

[Article by: Loretta Hall]


A roofing unit of wood, asphaltic material, slate, tile, concrete, asbestos cement, or other material cut to stock lengths, widths, and thickness; used as an exterior covering on sloping roofs and side walls; applied in an overlapping fashion; usually in one of the following designs: chisel pattern, coursed pattern, diamond pattern, fishscale pattern, sawtooth pattern. Also see wood shingle and pine shingle.


Random House Word Menu:

categories related to 'shingling'

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Random House Word Menu by Stephen Glazier
For a list of words related to shingling, see:
  • Hair Styles - shingling: cutting hair with scissors over comb to create tapering effect


  See crossword solutions for the clue Shingle.

Shingle can refer to:

  • A flat covering element for a roof, including
    • Shake (shingle), a wooden shingle that is made from split logs
    • Roof shingle, a roof covering consisting of individual overlapping elements
  • Shingle beach, especially in Western Europe, a beach composed of pebbles
  • Shingle, former name of Shingle Springs, California
  • Shingling (metallurgy), the process of consolidating iron or steel with a hammer during production
  • A small wooden platform, used for shingle dancing
  • Shingle style architecture, a plain American house style with little ornamentation
  • An alluvial material of flat slate stones with edges rounded by erosion, typically forming a shingle beach at the seashore
  • Herpes zoster ("shingles"), a disease of the nerves
  • Shingle back (Trachydosaurus rugosus), a species of skink found in Australia.
  • Shingle bob, a short hairstyle for women in the mid 1920s
  • In text mining, a contiguous subsequence of tokens in a document used to gauge syntactic similarity. A set of shingles comprise a w-shingling
  • Toast, in diner lingo
  • "Hanging out a shingle", a common phrase in the legal profession meaning to start one's own law firm. It can also be applied to other businesses or trades.

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Dansk (Danish)
1.
n. - rullesten, ral

2.
n. - tagspån, træspån
v. tr. - tække med spåner

Nederlands (Dutch)
gordelroos, kiezel, dakpan, uithangbord, bedekken, haar knippen

Français (French)
1.
n. - galets

2.
n. - (Constr) bardeau, coiffure à la garçonne
v. tr. - (Constr) couvrir de bardeaux, coiffer à la garçonne

Deutsch (German)
1.
n. - Kies

2.
n. - Schindel, Schild, Kurzhaarschnitt, (med.) Gürtelrose
v. - schindeln, (Haar) kurz schneiden

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - ταβανοσάνιδο, βότσαλο, (ΗΠΑ) πινακίδα ιατρείου, (πληθ.) έρπης ζωστήρ
v. - σανιδώνω (στέγη)

Italiano (Italian)
herpes zoster, Fuoco di S. Antonio, ciottoli

Português (Portuguese)
n. - tábua de madeira (f), corte de cabelo dos bebês (m)
v. - recobrir de madeira, cortar o cabelo dos bebês

Русский (Russian)
кровельная дранка, галька, берег покрытый галькой, короткая дамская стрижка, обшивать, коротко стричь волосы

Español (Spanish)
1.
n. - playa de guijarros

2.
n. - ripia (para techar)
v. tr. - cubrir con ripia

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - klappersten, takspån, takplatta, shingelfrisyr, skylt
v. - täcka med spån, spåntäcka, shingla

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
1. 屋顶板, 木瓦, 小招牌, 木板钉成的屋顶, 女子短发式样, 用木瓦盖, 把剪成短式

2. 砂砾, 圆卵石

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
1.
n. - 砂礫, 圓卵石

2.
n. - 屋頂板, 木瓦, 小招牌, 木板釘成的屋頂, 女子短髮式樣
v. tr. - 用木瓦蓋, 把剪成短式

한국어 (Korean)
1.
n. - 둥글고 작은 돌, 조약돌 , 조약돌이 깔린 해변

2.
n. - 지붕널, (의사, 변호사 등의) 작은 간판, 싱글 커트
v. tr. - 지붕널로 이다, (머리를) 치켜 깎다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 屋根板, 板ぶきの屋根, 小看板, シングルカット, 丸い小石
v. - 屋根板でふく

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) لوح خشبي صغير تكتسى به ألسقوف على نحو متداخل, قصه شعر نسويه قصيرة, حصى (فعل) يكسو بألواح خشبيه, يصف على نحو متداخل, يطرق ألحديد أو يضغطه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮חלוקי-אבנים‬
n. - ‮רעף, לוחית ציפוי, שלט, תספורת קצרה‬
v. tr. - ‮כיסה ברעפים, עשה תספורת קצרה‬


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