PROCESS FOR MANUFACTURING GLASS SHEETS OF COMPLEX SHAPE
20170217819 · 2017-08-03
Inventors
Cpc classification
C03B33/04
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C03B33/0222
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C03B33/03
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C03B33/033
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C03B33/04
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C03B33/03
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C03B33/02
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C03B33/023
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
The process relates to the manufacture of a plurality of glazings of complex shape from a rectangular sheet of float glass of large dimensions. The process includes at a first station for cutting the glass sheet, scoring at least one cutting line corresponding to at least one ready-to-shape edge of the glazings; a first breaking operation; at a second cutting station, scoring at least one cutting line corresponding to at least one other ready-to-shape edge of the glazings, and a second breaking operation.
Claims
1. A process for manufacturing a plurality of glazings of complex shape from a rectangular sheet of float glass of large dimensions having at least one dimension corresponding to a width of a ribbon of float glass from which the sheet of float glass is produced, comprising: at a first station for cutting said glass sheet, scoring at least one cutting line corresponding to at least one ready-to-shape edge of the glazings; a first breaking step; at a second cutting station, scoring at least one cutting line corresponding to at least one other ready-to-shape edge of the glazings, and a second breaking step.
2. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein an accuracy of scoring the cutting lines at the first cutting station is ±0.2 mm.
3. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second cutting station incorporates a focusing step accurate to ±0.1 mm.
4. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein, at the first cutting station, the cutting line is a straight line passing through the glass sheet from one edge to the other.
5. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein, at the first cutting station, the cutting line forms a ready-to-shape edge of several glazings on the same side of the cutting line.
6. The process as claimed in claim 5, wherein, at the first cutting station, the cutting line also forms a ready-to-shape edge of several glazings on the other side of the cutting line.
7. The process as claimed in claim 5, wherein, on each side of the cutting line, the ready-to-shape edges are the same edge of the glazings.
8. The process as claimed in claim 6, wherein, on each side of the cutting line, the ready-to-shape edges are the opposite edges of the glazings.
9. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein the first breaking step forms a blank for each glazing to be manufactured, the second breaking step forming the ready-to-shape glazing.
10. The process as claimed in claim 1, comprising at least one additional cutting station, with at least one additional breaking step.
11. The process as claimed claim 1, further comprising, after the second breaking step, shaping the glazing.
12. The process as claimed in claim 11, wherein the shaping is a grinding.
13. The process as claimed in claim 12, wherein two grinding steps are carried out.
14. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein the large-format glass sheet has at least one dimension of at least 2.9 m.
Description
[0032] The invention will be better understood on reading the following description, given solely by way of nonlimiting example, with reference to the following figures:
[0033]
[0034]
[0035] As illustrated in
[0036] The cutting operation, that is to say the operation of scoring the cutting lines, is carried out at the same station, referred to as the first cutting station 2, before several breaking steps 14A, 14B, 14C are carried out successively on different tables.
[0037] The scoring of the cutting lines is for example carried out by means of a glass cutter or any other suitable cutting instrument, such as for example a laser. The cutting line is a crack intended to enable the breaking along this line during the breaking step. It is therefore a partial cut, i.e. only over a portion of the thickness of the glass sheet. This is what is understood by “cutting line” throughout the text.
[0038] The left-hand diagram in
[0039] In
[0040] The next diagram itself shows the transverse rectilinear breaking 14B. It should be noted that longitudinal and transverse breaking may as a variant be reversed, that is to say that firstly a transverse breaking is carried out and then a longitudinal breaking. The transverse lines in the example are parallel to the transverse edge of the large-format glass sheet. These are also rectilinear through-lines. The transverse breaking also consists in producing breadths 12 that are identical, in this example. More generally, the breadths will however have a length of any suitable type.
[0041] Illustrated in the right-hand diagram is the oblique breaking step 14C for splitting the two blanks remaining in the breadths obtained. The cutting lines are rectilinear through-lines and are oblique in this example.
[0042] As a further variant, the breaking operations are combined in a different order of any suitable type.
[0043] More particularly, as is seen more clearly in the drawing of a blank in the bottom right of
[0044] The blanks are provided here arranged in the same way in each longitudinal breadth 10. As a variant however, the blanks are for example arranged symmetrically with respect to the longitudinal cutting lines or according to another arrangement of any suitable type.
[0045] As a variant, it is not the lower and upper edges of the blanks that are produced in this way but other edges of the blanks. Generally, it is two ready-to-shape edges of the blanks, more generally still at least one ready-to-shape edge.
[0046] It should be noted that all the cutting lines made at the first cutting station illustrated in the example are rectilinear through-cutting lines. As a variant however, they are non-rectilinear and/or non-through-lines.
[0047] Also as a variant, it is the transverse cutting lines or the oblique cutting lines, or more generally at least one of the cutting lines made at the first cutting station, which forms a ready-to-shape edge of the glazings.
[0048] Thus, generally, the following are carried out: [0049] at a first cutting station, a step of scoring at least one cutting line corresponding to at least one ready-to-shape edge of the glazings; [0050] a first breaking step; [0051] at a second cutting station 22, a step of scoring at least one cutting line corresponding to at least one other ready-to-shape edge of the glazings; [0052] a second breaking step 24.
[0053] The first cutting step is a step of cutting a plurality of blanks 6 from said glass sheet 8 from the ribbon of float glass. As explained above, the blanks obtained after the first breaking step have at least one edge corresponding to a ready-to-shape edge of the glazing. The second cutting step 22 is a step of cutting the ready-to-shape glazing 26, also commonly referred to as a step of forming the glazing 26.
[0054] It should be noted that the implementation of the invention requires good cutting accuracy at the first cutting station 2. Thus, the scoring accuracy of the cutting lines at the first cutting station, i.e. on the large-format glass sheet, will preferably be ±0.2 mm.
[0055] Moreover, the second cutting station incorporates a focusing step accurate to ±0.1 mm. This focusing is typically carried out with an isostatic frame of reference and consists for example in bringing three points of the glazing into contact with two stops along one edge of the glazing and one stop on another edge, while the glazing is flat on a table. It may also be, for example, an optical system or a mixed contact/optical system.
[0056]
[0057] It should furthermore be noted that after cutting the ready-to-shape glazings, the latter are shaped, for example by grinding. According to one variant, there are two grinding operations.
[0058] The expression “ready-to-shape edge” is understood to mean that a cutting step is no longer necessary for this edge.