Multi-roll granule application
11724281 · 2023-08-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B05D5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04D2001/005
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B05C19/008
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C19/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05D5/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05D1/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05D1/36
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C9/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B05C19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C19/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C19/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C9/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05D1/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05D1/36
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05D5/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method and apparatus for applying or dropping granules onto the asphalt coated surface of a moving sheet in shingle manufacturing is disclosed. The method includes sharing each drop between two or more blend rolls with a subsequent blend roll or rolls applying a partial drop directly on top of partial drops already applied by a first blend roll or rolls. High production speeds can be accommodated since each roll can be operated at slower rotation rates and with slower acceleration and deceleration requirements than would be required if the full granule drop were applied during the same time interval with a single blend roll.
Claims
1. A method comprising the steps of: (a) moving an asphalt coated sheet of material along a path at a predetermined rate; (b) dropping a first predetermined amount of granules at intermittently timed intervals such that the first predetermined amount of granules fall at a rate dictated by gravity onto the moving asphalt coated sheet of material to form a plurality of spaced apart first partial granule patches on the moving asphalt coated sheet of material; the first partial granule patches having a first granule density determined by the first predetermined amount of granules; (c) dropping at least a second predetermined amount of granules at intermittently timed intervals such that the first predetermined amount of granules fall at a rate dictated by gravity onto the moving asphalt coated sheet of material to form second partial granule patches on top of the first partial granule patches formed in step (b); the plurality of spaced apart second partial granule patches formed during this step (c) having a second granule density that is different from the first granule density and determined by the second predetermined amount of granules; wherein each of the first partial granule patches and each of the second partial granule patches together define a single granule patch on the moving asphalt coated sheet having a desired final granule density greater than either the first granule density or the second granule density; wherein a pattern of spaced single granule patches separated by gaps of substantially no granules is formed along the moving asphalt coated sheet of material.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein step (a) comprises obtaining a conveyor assembly and using the conveyor assembly to move the asphalt coated sheet of material.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein step (b) comprises dropping the first predetermined amount of granules from a first granule applicator disposed over the asphalt coated sheet of material.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein the first granule applicator comprises a first fluted roll granule applicator.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the first fluted roll granule applicator comprises a first blend drop applicator.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein step (a) comprises moving the asphalt coated sheet of material in a downstream direction and step (c) comprises dropping the second predetermined amount of granules from a second granule applicator located downstream from a first granule applicator.
7. The method of claim 6 wherein the second granule applicator comprises a second fluted roll granule applicator.
8. The method of claim 7 wherein the second fluted roll granule applicator comprises a second blend drop applicator.
9. A method comprising the steps of: (a) moving an asphalt coated sheet of material along a path in a downstream direction; (b) locating a first granule applicator above the path, a second granule applicator above the path downstream of the first granule applicator, and a third granule applicator above the path downstream of the second granule applicator; (c) selectively dropping a first predetermined amount of granules at intermittently timed intervals from the first granule applicator or from the second granule applicator such that the first predetermined amount of granules fall at a rate dictated by gravity onto the moving asphalt coated sheet of material to form a plurality of spaced apart first partial granule patches on the moving asphalt coated sheet of material; the first partial granule patches having a first granule density determined by the first predetermined amount of granules dropped by the first granule applicator or dropped by the second granule applicator; (d) dropping a second predetermined amount of granules at intermittently timed intervals from the third granule applicator such that the second predetermined amount of granules fall at a rate dictated by gravity onto the moving asphalt coated sheet of material to form second partial granule patches on top of the first partial granule patches formed in step (c); the plurality of second granule patches formed during this step (d) having a second granule density that is different from the first granule density and determined by the second predetermined amount of granules; wherein each of the first partial granule patches and each of the second partial granule patches together define a single granule patch on the moving asphalt coated sheet having a desired final granule density greater than either the first granule density or the second granule density; wherein a pattern of spaced single granule patches separated by gaps of substantially no granules is formed along the moving asphalt coated sheet of material.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein the first, second, and third granule applicators comprise fluted roll granule applicators.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein at least one of the fluted roll granule applicators comprises a blend drop granule applicator.
12. The method of claim 11 wherein step (a) comprises moving the asphalt coated sheet of material in a downstream direction at a rate greater than about 800 feet per minute.
13. A method comprising the steps of: (a) moving an asphalt coated sheet of material along a path in a downstream direction; (b) selectively dropping a first predetermined amount of granules onto the moving asphalt coated sheet of material to form a plurality of first partial granule patches on the asphalt coated sheet of material; wherein the first partial granule patches have a first granule density determined by the first predetermined amount of granules; (c) as the asphalt coated sheet of material with the first partial granule patches formed thereon moves along the path in the downstream direction, selectively dropping a second predetermined amount of granules onto the first partial granule patches on the moving asphalt coated sheet of material to form second partial granule patches on top of the first partial granule patches; wherein the second partial granule patches formed on top of the first partial granule patches have a second granule density that is different from the first granule density and is determined by the second predetermined amount of granules; wherein each of the first partial granule patches and each of the second partial granule patches together define a single granule patch on the moving asphalt coated sheet having a desired final granule density greater than either the first granule density or the second granule density; wherein the first predetermined amount of granules are dropped onto the moving asphalt coated sheet of material at a first intermittently timed interval and the second predetermined amount of granules are dropped onto the moving asphalt coated sheet of material granules at a second intermittently timed interval that is different from the first intermittently timed interval to form a pattern of the single granule patches each separated by a gap of substantially no granules along the moving asphalt coated sheet of material.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein step (a) comprises moving the asphalt coated sheet of material in a downstream direction at a predetermined rate; and further comprising adjusting the first predetermined amount of granules dropped onto the moving asphalt coated sheet of material, the second predetermined amount of granules dropped onto the moving asphalt coated sheet of material, or a combination thereof, based on the predetermined rate of the moving asphalt coated sheet of material.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the predetermined rate of the moving asphalt coated sheet of material is at least about 700 feet per minute.
16. The method of claim 13, wherein step (b) comprises dropping the first predetermined amount of granules from a first granule applicator disposed over the moving asphalt coated sheet of material; and wherein step (c) comprises dropping the second predetermined amount of granules from at least a granule applicator disposed over the moving asphalt coated sheet of material downstream from the first granule applicator.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein, the first and second granule applicators each include a blend roll; and further comprising adjusting a timing at which the blend rolls of the first granule applicator and the second granule applicator are rotated to form the single granule patches having a selected length based on a predetermined rate of the moving asphalt coated sheet of material along the path.
18. The method of claim 16, wherein, the first and second granule applicators comprise fluted roll granule applicators.
19. The method of claim 16, wherein at least one of the first and second granule applicators comprises a blend drop granule applicator.
20. The method of claim 13, wherein step (b) comprises dropping the first predetermined amount of granules from a first granule applicator or a second granule applicator disposed over the moving asphalt coated sheet of material; and wherein step (c) comprises dropping the second predetermined amount of granules from a third granule applicator disposed over the moving asphalt coated sheet of material.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(4) Reference will now be made to the annexed drawing figures, wherein like reference numerals indicate like parts throughout the views.
(5) The fluted roll 17 has an outer surface formed with longitudinally extending flutes or other features and can be rotated or indexed or jogged in direction 18 by an associated servo motor (not shown). The servo motor can be controlled by a software application residing in and running on a computer or dedicated controller to start, rotate, and stop the fluted roll according to a predetermined timing schedule. A gate 19 is mounted for controlled movement in directions 21 so that the distance between the lower edge of the gate 19 and the fluted roll 17 can be varied as needed to increase or decrease the space between the bottom edge of the gate 19 and the surface of the fluted roll 17. This, in turn, increases or decreases respectively the volume of granules that are dropped per rotation of the fluted roll 17.
(6) It will be understood by the skilled artisan that the gate 19 might be located on the opposite side of the hopper 16 and the fluted roll 17 in that event might rotate in the opposite direction from direction 18. These two variants are known in the art, with one dropping granules generally in the direction of movement of the asphalt coated sheet 13 and the other dropping granules generally in a direction opposite to the movement of the asphalt coated sheet 13. The present invention is applicable to either of these variants. The invention is described herein within the context of the variant shown in
(7) During production, the asphalt coated sheet 13 is moved by an appropriate conveyor in direction 14 at a predetermined velocity V. Periodically, the fluted roll 17 is jogged (i.e. rotated through a predetermined angle) by its servo motor at a predetermined rate and for a predetermined duration. This causes granules to be dragged out of the hopper 16 by the fluted surface of the roll 17. When the granules are free of the hopper, they fall in a curtain 15 onto the moving asphalt coated sheet 13. The position of the gate 19 as well as the acceleration, duration, and deceleration of the rotation of fluted roll 17 determines the volume of granules that are dropped onto and applied to the sheet. The timing of the intermittent jogging of the fluted roll 17 causes granules to be deposited onto the sheet in spaced apart generally rectangular patches 12. The spaces between the patches may be filled in later with a blend of granules and/or other patches to result in a decorative granule pattern on a finished shingle.
(8) As discussed above, at higher production speeds or velocities V above about 800 ft/min, the ability to control precisely the rotation of the fluted roll 17 and to control precisely the position of the gate 19 degrades significantly. As a result, the ability to apply well-defined predictable patches 12 of granules also deteriorates. Plus, when a higher production speed requires rotation of the fluted roll beyond its maximum rotation rate, the production speed cannot be increased further. As a result, a single roll application system 11 such as that shown in
(9)
(10) According to the invention, the first applicator 33 and second applicator 32 are coordinated and synchronized with each other such that the applicators share the task of depositing each patch of granules onto the moving sheet. The first applicator 33 is controlled to apply a first but only partial charge of granules to the area of the granule patch and the second applicator is timed and controlled to apply a second partial charge on top of the first partial charge applied by the first applicator 33. Each partial charge may, for example, comprise half of the amount of granules needed for the completed granule patch. The first applicator 33 drops its partial charge in a curtain or curtains of granules 47 to form a thinly distributed patch or patches 48 of granules on the moving sheet. Then, the second applicator 32 is timed to drop its partial charge in a curtain or curtains of granules 49 on top of the thinly distributed patch 48 created by the first applicator. This creates a second partial patch 51 of granules on top of the first partial patch 48 and the granules of the second partial patch fill in the spaces between granules of the first partial patch to create a final granule patch 52 comprised of the correct amount of granules. In other words, the first partial patch has a granule density less that the final or target granule density as does the second. However, the sum of the two granule densities is substantially equal to the desired final density of the patch.
(11) One important advantage of the system and method of
(12)
(13) The three applicators shown in
Example
(14) Following is an example of how multiple granule applicators may be coordinated and synchronized to obtain a desired spaced granule patch pattern on a moving asphalt coated sheet.
(15) In this example, a 60 inch repeat pattern containing 15 inch long granule patches separated by 15 inch gaps is desired to be applied to the moving asphalt coated sheet. Each repeat thus comprises a first 15 inch long granule patch, a fifteen inch long gap, a second fifteen inch long granule patch, and another 15 inch long gap. Three blend rolls are used to deposit the granule patches in this example and the blend rolls are positioned nine (9) inches apart along the machine direction. Two blend rolls share each granule drop in that one drops a partial charge of granules and another drops another partial charge directly onto the previously applied partial charge. Blend roll 1 is the upstream blend roll, blend roll 3 is the downstream blend roll, and blend roll 2 is between blend rolls 1 and 3 in this example.
(16) With the forgoing configuration in mind, the production speed; i.e. the speed at which the asphalt coated sheet is moving, is taken or read from the master ramp. Assume for this example that the production speed is determined to be 700 feet per minute (fpm). The machine control routine scans or cycles at a frequency of once every 5 milliseconds (0.005 seconds). It is desired then to determine the number of inches of asphalt coated sheet that pass a fixed point in 0.005 seconds. We thus have 700 fpm/60 seconds per minute equals 11.666 feet per second (fps). 11.666 fps×12 inches per foot equals 140 inches per second (ips). Finally, 140 ips×0.005 seconds equals 0.7 inches for each 5 millisecond scan interval of the control program. This means that at each scan or cycle of the control routine, the asphalt coated sheet has moved 0.7 inches in the downstream direction.
(17) The calculated inches per 5 milliseconds then gets accumulated or added up in a counter each cycle of the control routine and this accumulated length is used by the routine to decide when the fluted rolls of the granule applicators should be rotated or jogged to produce the desired granule patterns on the moving sheet below. The accumulated length in this example is incremented until it equals 60 inches (the length of the repeat pattern) and then is reset to zero for the next successive repeat.
(18) The routine is programmed to send a command to blend roll 1 to rotate and drop its partial charge of granules during the time when the accumulated length in the counter is between 0 and 15 inches. This deposits the partial charge of granules in the area of the first granule patch. As long as the accumulated length is between 0 and 15 inches, the servo for blend roll 1 rotates blend roll 1 at the necessary speed to drop its partial charge of granules. Blend roll 2 is 9 inches downstream from blend roll 1 and deposits a partial charge of granules in the area of the second granule patch, which is located between 30 and 45 inches from the start of the repeat pattern. Thus, for this drop, the accumulated length is read from the counter and 9 inches is subtracted. The blend roll 2 servo is commanded to rotate blend roll 2 when the accumulated length less 9 inches is between 30 and 45 inches. Accordingly, a partial charge of granules is deposited by blend roll 2 between 30 inches and 45 inches from the start of the repeat pattern. Subtracting the 9 inches simulates a configuration where the two blend rolls are located at the same position so that the methodology works easily.
(19) Blend roll 3 is used to deposit another partial charge of particles on top of the partial charges deposited by blend rolls 1 and 2 to complete the creation of the granule patches. For this step, 18 inches (the distance between the first blend roll and the third blend roll) is subtracted from the accumulated length of the counter and the servo for blend roll 3 is commanded to rotate blend roll 3 to apply its partial drop when the accumulated length less 18 inches is between 0 and 15 inches. In this way, a partial blend drop is applied by blend roll 3 directly on top of the first blend drop previously deposited by blend roll 1. The first granule patch is thus completed. The third blend roll is also commanded to be rotated when the accumulated length in the counter, less 18 inches, is between 30 and 45 inches. In this way, the third blend roll deposits another partial charge of particles directly on top of the patch previously deposited by blend roll 2 to complete the second granule patch. At the end of the 60 inch repeat, the accumulation counter is reset to zero, and the process repeats to create the next successive pattern of granule patches.
(20) Various parameters should be adjusted as the production speed is increased. More specifically, at 100 fpm intervals of production speed, the acceleration, deceleration, and speed of the blend rolls are adjusted linearly. This may be done visually by running the product, observing the granule patterns, and making the appropriate adjustments in 100 fpm increments. If the drops don't have enough density then the blend roll rotation rate may be increased to allow more granules to flow during an application. The acceleration and deceleration of the blend rolls is adjusted to provide the desired leading and trailing edge contours for each drop. If acceleration is to fast then the granules are slipped under. If the acceleration is too slow then the pattern of granules looks smaller. The last adjustment is to the pre-triggers where a few inches can be added or subtracted from the length of the drop to provide the best looking drop possible.
(21) By using two blend rolls and servo's to share the task of creating a single granule patch, the density of the final granule patch is the same as if a full drop had been applied with one roll. However, and particularly at the higher production speeds, the speed at which the individual servos and their blend rolls must be rotated is reduced significantly since a smaller amount of granules need to be dropped in the same time interval. This allows the velocity at the surface of the rolls to be less, which improves the amount of slip that would normally occur. It also provides the capability to raise production speeds higher because the speed of each blend roll is not maxed out by a requirement for a short duration drop of a full charge of granules.
(22) The invention has been described herein in terms of preferred embodiments and methodologies considered by the inventor to represent the best mode of carrying out the invention. However, a wide range of additions, deletions, and modifications might well be made by one of skill in the art within the scope of the invention. For instance, a drop may be shared by more than two blend rolls to accommodate higher production speeds or to improve the appearance of each granule patch. Patterns other than those in the given example may be created through similar methodology. These and other changes may be made to the disclosed exemplary embodiment without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the claims.