Workpiece cutting equipment hanging over the top of workpieces
12257734 ยท 2025-03-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
B27B7/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B27B25/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B27B1/007
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B27B3/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B27B1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Wood cutting and chipping equipment having saws and chippers mounted to an overhead support structure.
Claims
1. A machine that processes a log, cant, or other wooden workpiece for the purpose of creating lumber comprising: a feedline for longitudinally conveying the log, cant, or other wooden workpiece; the feedline comprising an entry feed module and an exit feed module and an opening between the entry feed module and the exit feed module; the entry feed module and the exit feed module each comprising an upper roller or conveyor and a lower roller or conveyor, whereby the log, cant, or other wooden workpiece is pressed and conveyed in between the upper roller or conveyor and the lower roller or conveyor; an overhead support structure comprising: a horizontal beam extending over the opening in the feedline between the entry feed module and the exit feed module; two or more vertical legs, supporting the horizontal beam, extending below the feedline, to the left and right of the feedline; an opening in the overhead support structure, below the horizontal beam, between the vertical legs, below the feedline; the entry feed module and the exit feed module configured to longitudinally convey the log, cant, or other wooden workpiece across the opening in the feedline between the entry feed module and the exit feed module and through the overhead support structure over the opening in the overhead support structure; a linear guide rail mounted to the horizontal beam of the overhead support structure extending over the feedline; a cutting tool assembly hanging from the linear guide rail; the cutting tool assembly comprising a vertical axis, an upper arbor, an upper saw rotated by the upper arbor, a lower arbor, and a lower saw rotated by the lower arbor; the cutting tool assembly configured to traverse the linear guide rail and pivot over the opening in the feedline, about the vertical axis, between the entry feed module and the exit feed module to position the cutting tool assembly to adjust to the geometric shape of the log, cant, or other wooden workpiece being longitudinally conveyed by the feedline; and the cutting tool assembly configured to receive the log, cant, or other wooden workpiece between the upper arbor and the lower arbor and to cut the log, cant, or other wooden workpiece being longitudinally conveyed by the feedline; whereby falling debris, created from operating the machine falls below the horizontal beam of the overhead support structure extending over the opening in the feedline between the entry feed module and the exit feed module and the cutting tool assembly hanging from the linear guide rail, produced as a byproduct of cutting the log, cant, or other wooden workpiece, falls through, or collects in and is accessible and removable from, an open area comprising the opening in the overhead support structure.
2. The machine of claim 1 where the linear guide rail is perpendicularly oriented relative to the feedline.
3. The machine of claim 1 where the linear guide rail comprises a linear rail and a bearing.
4. The machine of claim 1 where the cutting tool assembly is powered by a motor above the feedline.
5. The machine of claim 1 further comprising an electric actuator above the feedline.
6. The machine of claim 1 where the cutting tool assembly comprises a door.
7. The machine of claim 1 where the cutting tool assembly comprises a door; the door being powered by a hydraulic cylinder.
8. The machine of claim 1 where the saw is a gang saw.
9. The machine of claim 1 where the saw is a curve saw.
10. The machine of claim 1 where the saw is a curve gang saw.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The included drawings are for illustrative purposes and serve only to provide examples of possible structures and process operations for one or more implementations of this disclosure. These drawings in no way limit any changes in form and detail that may be made by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of this disclosure. A more complete understanding of the subject matter may be derived by referring to the detailed description and claims when considered in conjunction with the following figures, wherein like reference numbers refer to similar elements throughout the figures.
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION AND BEST MODE OF IMPLEMENTATION
(11) The included drawings are for illustrative purposes and serve only to provide examples of possible structures and process operations for one or more implementations of this disclosure. These drawings in no way limit any changes in form and detail that may be made by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of this disclosure. A more complete understanding of the subject matter may be derived by referring to the detailed description and claims when considered in conjunction with the following figures, wherein like reference numbers refer to similar elements throughout the figures.
(12) Referring to
(13) Looking now at
(14) Looking now to
(15) Referring now to
(16) Referring to
(17) Referring to
(18) Looking at
(19) Referring now to
(20) The invention encompasses gang saws, gang edger, board edger, canter, chipper, profiler, circular twin, circular quad and many other industry names; as well as straight sawing, curve sawing, slew sawing and all other forms of sawing or chipping logs into lumber. The present invention involves said machinery being mounted above the workpieces (logs) that are being processed into lumber. The workpiece cutting equipment hanging over the top of the workpieces in profiling curve sawing gang application is a machine that is used to cut, chip or saw a cant into lumber.
(21) There are many advantages of the present invention in comparison to conventional machines and processes, including but not limited to the following advantages.
(22) When trees or logs are processed into lumber or boards, the equipment used must be installed on a foundation of some kind, conventionally, below the workpieces. A cant is a log that has been through the first step of breakdown in a sawmill, commonly referred to as the primary breakdown stage. What turns a log into a cant is the process of cutting or chipping two parallel faces onto the log. The profiling curve sawing gang will receive the cant with the parallel faces horizontally orientated. The profiling curve sawing gang can then chip a second pair of parallel faces perpendicular to the first horizontal faces. A profile of a board will then be cut into said second pair of parallel faces, typically one on each face. The profiling curve sawing gang will then use the gang saw portion of the machine with saws rotating about a horizontal axis, to saw the remaining portion of the cant into boards of a predetermined thickness.
(23) Conventionally, all workpiece cutting equipment in the sawmill industry is mounted below the workpiece. There is an extremely large amount of debris that is produced from processing logs into lumber. One of the advantages of the current invention is that such debris does not pile up on the equipment reducing the life of components and increasing cleanup time for the sawmills, and the invention allows the possibility of using superior actuators to position the cutting tools and makes it easier to access the machinery for maintenance.
(24) Conventionally, profiling curve sawing gang machines have two directions of motion. They pivot for the first direction which is angular, and a second direction which is linear and can be perpendicular to the workpiece flow. For the curve sawing gang machine, the pivot point is fixed to the centerline of the workpiece flow. The second direction is only perpendicular to the workpiece flow, if the curve sawing gang pivot is set to zero degrees. The amount the curve sawing gang can pivot is +/6 degrees. This means that the second direction angle will be +/6 degrees to workpiece flow. When the curve sawing gang is moving at an angle, the saws that are mounted inside of the curve sawing gang saw box are in fact moving in two directions relative to the workpiece. This makes matching the profiled board shape to the saws more difficult, even though this motion is accounted for in the motion calculation. The present invention makes matching the profiled board shape to the saws easier and more precise.
(25) Another aspect of conventional equipment used to process logs or tress into lumber or boards is the need to change saws and guides. This is done by opening a door that is also the bearing support for the saw arbors. The door is fastened to the saw box wall with tapered bolts that mate to a female taper in the saw box wall to align the door and arbor bearings to the fixed opposing saw box wall. This has multiple downsides including the potential to unsafely open the door while the arbor is still turning due to the manual nature of the operation. Another downside is the time it takes to manually perform this operation. The saw filer changing the saws must get a tool to remove the bolts, typically there are 4 of them. Once all the bolts are removed and placed into a receptacle for safe keeping, the saw filer must then get a pusher bolt and install it into the end of the arbor to push the door open, off the arbor. Saw changes typically happen numerous times throughout the day depending on various sawing conditions. This means a lot of time being spent taking out bolts and putting them back in. These tapered bolts and female receivers are high wear items that when not replaced necessarily will cause arbor misalignment and premature bearing failures as well as poor sawing performance. The present invention avoids these downsides of such conventional equipment.
(26) Conventionally, saw guides locate the saws in predetermined locations to produce an accurate thickness of lumber or boards. Such saw guides are supported by a saw guide shaft which locates the saw guides relative to the arbor axis. There is also a saw guide anti-rotate bar which keep the saw guide in a rotationally acceptable position relative to the saw guide shaft axis. Furthermore, there is a saw guide clamp adjustable, and clamping ends. The saw guide clamp assembly generally consists of a hydraulic clamp cylinder attached to three round shaft pushers spaced equidistant around the guide clamp hydraulic cylinder and guide clamp surface. This has many downsides, mainly in that when the shaft pushers wear, or are not perfectly adjusted, the guides are able to shift, causing poor saw alignment and reduced guide life contributing to poor sawing performance. The present invention avoids these downsides of such conventional equipment.