Door panel
11203894 · 2021-12-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
E06B3/86
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E06B3/7001
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E06B2003/7063
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E06B3/7015
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
Abstract
A door panel comprising a body having front and rear door skins delimiting an interior for sandwiching filling material, an interlock provided with the body and configured to lock the front and rear skins and thereby prevent displacement of the front and rear skins along at least two transverse directions, and a reinforcement member provided between the front and rear door skins and extending transversely to the interlock for providing reinforcement to the body.
Claims
1. A door panel comprising: a body having front and rear door skins delimiting an interior for sandwiching filling material, an interlock provided within the body and configured to lock the front and rear door skins together and to thereby prevent displacement of the front and rear skins along at least two transverse directions, a reinforcement member provided inside the body between the front and rear door skins and transversely extending through the interlock for providing reinforcement to the body, and the interlock being configured for compartmentalizing the interior of the body and the reinforcement member extending across two compartments as the reinforcement member extends through the interlock.
2. The door panel as claimed in claim 1, wherein the reinforcement member intersects the interlock to form a reinforcement intersection.
3. The door panel as claimed in claim 2, wherein the reinforcement member extends perpendicular to the interlock.
4. The door panel as claimed in claim 1, further comprising an aperture preformed in the body wherein the reinforcement member is inserted into the aperture and is retained therein by friction.
5. The door panel as claimed in claim 4, wherein the reinforcement member has friction enhancement means on its outer periphery for enhancing the friction between the outer periphery and the aperture.
6. The door panel as claimed in claim 5, further comprising reinforcement intersections provided at respective apertures preformed at respective corners of the body.
7. The door panel as claimed in claim 1, wherein each of four corners of the body is reinforced by a pair of reinforcement intersections with reinforcement members running parallel to one another.
8. The door panel as claimed in claim 1, wherein the reinforcement member is formed from a material that comprises metal.
9. The door panel as claimed in claim 1, further comprising first and second locking members, extending from the doors skins, and the interlock is formed from interlocking of the first and second locking members.
10. The door panel as claimed in claim 9, wherein the first and second locking members are configured complementarily for complementary engagement and for thereby interlocking the front and rear door skins.
11. The door panel as claimed in claim 10, wherein the first and second locking members project from respective ones of the front and rear door skins and into the interior such that the interlock is located between the front and rear door skins.
12. The door panel as claimed in claim 11, wherein the first and second locking members are integrally formed with and on the respective front and rear door skins.
13. The door panel as claimed in claim 10, wherein the first locking member includes a guide for guiding movement of the second locking member towards the first locking member.
14. The door panel as claimed in claim 9, wherein a thickness of the interior is defined by an overall length of the interlock.
15. The door panel as claimed in claim 10, wherein the first locking member includes a free end shaped to engage with a complementarily shaped free end of the second locking member.
16. The door panel as claimed in claim 15, wherein the free end of the first locking member includes a male engagement member for engaging a female engagement member on the free end of the second locking member.
17. The door panel as claimed in claim 9, wherein the interlock includes two separated interlocks, wherein each of the interlocks is configured to prevent displacement of the front and rear skins along at least two transverse directions.
18. The door panel as claimed in claim 17, wherein each of the interlocks includes the first and second locking members, and the front door skin is provided with two locking members from the first and second locking members.
19. The door panel as claimed in claim 18, wherein the front door skin is provided with first and second locking members which are structurally distinct and spatially separated.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will now be more particularly described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(11) Referring to
(12) In the specific embodiment, the door skins 200 and 300 are fiberglass reinforced sheet compression molded skins. However, there is no intention to limit the universal application of the invention to doors formed from different methods with different materials in different constructions. As an example, a door with door skin formed from extrusion will not prevent the implementation of the invention therein.
(13) Referring to
(14) In more detail and with reference to
(15) The first and second locking members 501 and 502 each has a free end. The free ends are each provided with an engagement surface 501A. The engagement surface 501A of the first locking member 501 is shaped complementarily to the engagement surface 502A of the second locking member 502. With reference to
(16) Each of the locking members 501 and 502 extends along substantially the entire height of the respective door skin 200 and 300. The resulting interlock 500 compartmentalizes the interior and are functionable as tensile or mechanical reinforcement ribs to offer additional strength to the door panel 100, particularly in the direction along the height of the door panel 100. In an embodiment of the invention, the length of the locking members 501 and 502 is shorter than that of the door skins 200 and 300 at top and bottom ends to define a space for accommodating the top and bottom rails.
(17) In the embodiment as shown in
(18) To facilitate the formation of the door skins 200 and 300, it is possible that the front and rear door skins 200 and 300 are identical and formed from a same mold 701 and 702 except that when they are in use, they are oriented differently.
(19) As an alternative, it may be possible for the front door skin 200 to be provided with two first locking members 501 while the rear door skin 300 is provided with two second locking members 502.
(20) Furthermore, in an alternative embodiment, the second locking member 502 may be an indentation with an engagement surface 502A being shaped complementarily to that of the first locking member 501.
(21) The door panel 100 as detailed above benefits from the improved mechanical support offered by the interlocks 500 in addition to maintaining the interior 400 and preventing relative movement between the door skins 200 and 300. To enhance the bending stiffness of the door panel 100 along substantially the entire height thereof, in particular under severe condition such as when the door panel 100 is subject to high heat, reinforcement members 600 in
(22) In the embodiment of the invention as shown in
(23) In more detail, as shown in
(24) In
(25) The door skins 200 and 300 are held in place relative to one another by the interlocks 500 and the reinforcement members 600 in addition to adhesive. These parts of the door panel 100 are held together without the use of adhesive. Heat endurance of the interlocks 500 and the reinforcement members 600 is comparatively much better than that of adhesive. The door skins 200 and 300 are less likely to detach from one another and heat is less likely to penetrate as quickly as with conventional doors in which the door skin is secured by adhesive. The resulting door panel 100 is less likely to disintegrate or fall apart.
(26) The reinforcement members 600 integrate or join various parts of the door panel 100 together such that when the door panel 100 is subject to fire and heat, even though any wood components contract, the reinforcement members 600 serve to resist the bending of the door panel 100 and its disintegration. The adhesive that binds the door skins 200 and 300 to the door frame will disintegrate but are maintained in position and attached to the rest of the door panel 100 by the reinforcement member 600 and the interlock 500. Disintegration of the overall door panel 100 is postponed or slowed down. The resulting door panel 100 is able to resist deformation for a longer period of time in a fire.
(27) In an embodiment of the invention, the door skins 200 and 300 are made of sheet molding composite (SMC), a ready to mold glass-fiber reinforced polyester material. The rails and stiles 101 have wooden cores covered by plastic outer skin. The filling material that fills the interior 500 comprises PU foam or phenolic foam (fire resistant). Interlocks 500 run along height of the door panel 100 and reinforcement members 600 are provided at the corners of the door panel 100 as detailed above.
(28) In a conventional door panel 100, the door skins are adhesively attached to the core. There is no interlock or reinforcement member.
(29) When subject to heating, various parts of the door panel 100 will separate from one another, thereby progressively lowering the tensile and mechanical strength as well as the bending stiffness of the door panel 100. This is illustrated by the following fire tests.
(30) Fire Tests
(31) With reference to
(32) In more detail, as an example, for the conventional door, when it is heated for 30 minutes and the oven is at 1043 degree C., the deformation at position A′ is +30.1 while that at position B′ is +14.1. When the door with the invention is heated for 70 minutes and the oven is at 1022 degree C., the deformation of the door with the invention at position A is +17.9 and at position B′ is −2.9. With reference to
(33) In another example, for the conventional door, when it is heated for 16 minutes and the oven is at 888 degree C., the deformation at position A′ is +17.9 while that at position B′ is +9.9 and at position C′ is +6.6. When the door with the invention is heated for 30 minutes and the oven is at 888 degree C., the deformation of the door with the invention at position A is +15.0 and at position B′ is +0.54. Again, the figures show that the deformation in the door panel in accordance with the invention is smaller at various locations of the door when compared to that of a conventional door.
(34) The conventional door has a 1110 mm×2388 mm door panel in a 1200 mm×2400 mm door frame with sheet compression molded fiberglass skins sandwiching a phenolic foam core without reinforcement member 600 or interlock 500. The door with the invention has a 1110 mm×2440 mm door panel in a 1200 mm×2500 mm door frame with sheet compression fiberglass skins sandwiching a phenolic foam core with reinforcement member 600 and interlock 500. The position A′ is a upper corner of the door being tested on the side where the door handle is provided while position B′ is a lower corner of the door being tested on the same side of the door as position A′.
(35) The invention has been given by way of example only, and various other modifications of and/or alterations to the described embodiment may be made by persons skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention as specified in the appended claims.