BLOW MOLDED LOAD FLOORS
20170080879 ยท 2017-03-23
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60R13/011
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60R2013/015
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60R2013/018
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C49/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/085
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B60R13/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C49/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A load floor for a vehicle includes a carpet having a tuft attached to a backing, a plurality of inserts attached to a second side of the backing, a top surface fused to the carpet and encapsulating the inserts, and a bottom surface fused to the encapsulated inserts. The inserts may be varied in material, shape, thickness, and spacing to provide a tunable stiffness. A related method includes forming a parison feeding the parison between mold halves shaped like a load floor, hanging a carpet and a plurality of inserts in the first mold half, clamping the parison by moving the mold halves together to form a mold, and pushing the parison outward, using blown air, such that the parison is adjacent the backing in the first mold forming a top surface and encapsulating the inserts, and adjacent the second mold half forming a bottom surface fused to the parison encapsulating the inserts.
Claims
1. A load floor for a vehicle, comprising: a carpet having a tuft attached to a first side of a backing; a plurality of inserts attached to a second side of said backing; a top surface fused to said second side of said carpet and encapsulating said plurality of inserts; and a bottom surface fused to said encapsulated inserts.
2. The load floor for a vehicle of claim 1, wherein said top surface is thinner than said bottom surface.
3. The load floor for a vehicle of claim 1, further comprising a second carpet having a tuft attached to a first side of a backing, wherein said bottom surface is fused to a second side of said backing of said second carpet along a first side of said bottom surface and to said encapsulated inserts along a second side of said bottom surface.
4. The load floor for a vehicle claim 1, wherein each of said plurality of inserts is a paper, a paper core, a reinforced plastic, a recycled plastic, or a metal.
5. The load floor for a vehicle of claim 1, wherein at least a portion of said plurality of inserts are non-linear.
6. The load floor for a vehicle of claim 1, wherein spacing between said plurality of inserts varies from one portion of the load floor to a second portion of the load floor.
7. The load floor for a vehicle of claim 1, wherein a height of at least one insert of said plurality of inserts varies from a height of at least one other insert of said plurality of inserts, and said bottom surface is non-planar.
8. The load floor for a vehicle of claim 1, wherein a height of at least one insert of said plurality of inserts varies along a length of said at least one insert, and said bottom surface is non-planar.
9. The load floor for a vehicle of claim 1, further comprising a reinforcement mat between said carpet and said top surface, wherein a first side of said reinforcement mat is bonded to said second side of said backing, said plurality of inserts are attached to a second side of said reinforcement mat, and said top surface is fused to said second side of said reinforcement mat and encapsulates said plurality of inserts.
10. A load floor, comprising: a plurality of inserts; a top surface at least partially encapsulating said plurality of inserts; and a bottom surface fused to said top surface and said encapsulated inserts.
11. The load floor of claim 10, wherein end portions of said plurality of inserts extend above said top surface.
12. The load floor of claim 10, further comprising an outer surface, wherein said plurality of inserts are attached to a first side of said outer surface and fully encapsulated by said outer surface and said top surface, and said top surface is fused to said first side of said outer surface.
13. The load floor of claim 12, wherein said bottom surface includes a plurality of raised ribs.
14. The load floor of claim 10, wherein at least a portion of said plurality of inserts are non-linear.
15. The load floor of claim 10, wherein a distance between each of said plurality of inserts varies from one portion of the load floor to a second portion of the load floor.
16. The load floor of claim 10, wherein a height of at least one insert of said plurality of inserts varies from a height of at least one other insert of said plurality of inserts.
17. The load floor of claim 10, wherein a height of at least one insert of said plurality of inserts varies along a length of said at least one insert.
18. A vehicle incorporating the load floor of claim 10.
19. A method of forming a load floor of a vehicle comprising the steps of: forming a parison; feeding said parison between a first mold half and a second mold half, said first and second mold halves shaped like the load floor; hanging a carpet having a tuft attached to a first side of a backing and a plurality of inserts attached to a second side of said backing in said first mold half; clamping said parison by moving said first and second mold halves together to form a mold; and pushing said heated parison outward, using blown air, such that said heated parison is adjacent said second side of said backing in said first mold forming a top surface and encapsulating said plurality of inserts, and adjacent said second mold half forming a bottom surface fused to a portion of said parison encapsulating said plurality of inserts.
20. The method of forming a load floor a vehicle of claim 19, further comprising the step of tuning a stiffness of said load floor by varying at least one of a spacing between said plurality of inserts, a thickness of said plurality of inserts, a shape of said plurality of inserts, and/or a material of said plurality of inserts.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURES
[0022] The accompanying drawing figures incorporated herein and forming a part of the specification, illustrate several aspects of the load floor and together with the description serve to explain certain principles thereof. In the drawing figures:
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[0036] Reference will now be made in detail to the present embodiments of the load floor and the related methods, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawing figures, wherein like numerals are used to represent like elements.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0037] Reference is now made to
[0038] A top surface 20 in the described embodiment is a plastic (e.g., polypropylene). The plastic is in pellet form prior to heating and extruding to form a parison in a blow molding machine. The heated parison is fed between first and second mold halves 86, 88 and pushed outward using blown air. As the heated parison is pushed outward, the heated parison is forced adjacent a second side of the backing 14 in the first mold half 86 forming the top surface 20 and encapsulating the plurality of inserts 18. The heated parison is further pushed outward and is forced against the second mold half 88 forming a bottom surface 22. During the molding process, a first surface of the bottom surface 22 fuses to portions 24 of the parison encapsulating the plurality of inserts 18.
[0039] Alternate embodiments may exclude the carpet layer 12. In one such embodiment, the plurality of inserts are positioned within the mold half 86 and the heated parison is forced against the mold forming the top surface. In this embodiment, the plurality of inserts extend above the top surface 20 formed by the blow molding process forming an anti-slip or a non-skid surface. In other embodiments, the plurality of inserts may be attached to an outer surface formed by injection molding or other methods. The outer surface may include slit protrusions, for example, such that any type of insert can be attached to the outer surface in any orientation and/or spacing. In this embodiment, the outer surface and plurality of inserts are positioned within the mold half 86 and the heated parison is forced against a first side of the outer surface. The heated parison is fused to the first side of the outer surface forming the top surface and again encapsulating the plurality of inserts.
[0040] In the described embodiment, the plurality of inserts 18 are paper cores. In alternate embodiments, the plurality of inserts 18 may be made of other forms of paper, plastics or metals, recycled paper, plastics or metals, or combinations thereof. For example, first and third portions of the plurality of inserts 18 may be paper core while a second, middle, portion is recycled metal. The material chosen for use as the plurality of inserts 18 is dependent upon the particular application for the load floor.
[0041] As shown in
[0042] In the embodiment shown in
[0043] In another alternate embodiment shown in
[0044] In yet another alternate embodiment shown in
[0045] In addition to varying the material used for the plurality of inserts, the plurality of inserts may further be varied in alternate embodiments to tune the stiffness of the load floor. As shown in
[0046] Even more, spacing between the plurality of inserts may vary from one portion to another. As shown in
[0047] As shown in
[0048] Even more, a height of at least one insert 62 of a plurality of inserts of a load floor 66 may vary along a length (L) of the at least one insert. As shown in
[0049] As generally indicated above, the load floor 10 in the described embodiment is made utilizing a blow molding process as shown in
[0050] As shown in
[0051] As indicated above, the top surface 20 in the described embodiment is thinner than the bottom surface 22. As shown in
[0052] In summary, numerous benefits result from providing a load floor formed as described above. Forming the load floor in accordance with the described method provides for a load floor that is lightweight, thin, inexpensive and recyclable. These attributes assist in keeping the mass low, decreasing packing space, and helping the environment, and provide a stiffer structure with a tunable bending stiffness. Advantageously, the stiffness is tunable by altering inserts within the load floor without changing the molds. For instance, the thickness, material properties, spacing, and/or shape (e.g., linear or non-linear) of the inserts can be varied without touching the molds. Even more, the load floor allows for variations in thickness, provides cavities for storage, and is reversible, if desired.
[0053] The foregoing has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the embodiments to the precise form disclosed. Obvious modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings. All such modifications and variations are within the scope of the appended claims when interpreted in accordance with the breadth to which they are fairly, legally and equitably entitled.