Automated door assembly system and method
09555609 ยท 2017-01-31
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y10T156/1761
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B27D5/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E06B3/72
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Y10T156/1744
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B32B37/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T156/108
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T156/1089
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B62D65/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T156/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B32B37/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B62D65/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B37/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present invention is directed to a method of making a door having first and second door facings and an internal doorframe. An interior side of a first facing is coated with quick acting adhesive. A frame is placed on the coated interior side about the periphery of the first facing. The frame is then coated with quick acting adhesive. An interior side of a second facing is placed on the coated frame. The facings and frame assembly are then compressed to form a door. The present invention also provides for an automated system of making the door.
Claims
1. A process for making doors, comprising the steps of: a) removing a first door skin from a first plurality of stacked door skins having respective first exterior surfaces disposed face up and respective first interior surfaces disposed face down; b) flipping the first door skin; c) applying adhesive on at least a portion of the face-up first interior surface of the first door skin; d) positioning a door frame onto the adhesive applied face-up first interior surface; e) applying adhesive on at least a portion of an upwardly facing surface of the door frame; f) removing a second door skin from a second plurality of stacked door skins having respective second exterior surfaces disposed face up and respective second interior surfaces disposed face down; g) positioning the face-down interior surface of the second door skin in contact with the adhesive applied upwardly facing surface of the door frame to form a door assembly; and h) compressing the door assembly.
2. The process of claim 1, wherein steps a) to h) are performed at different stations.
3. The process of claim 1, wherein steps c) or e) is accomplished by a spray coater or a roll coater.
4. The process of claim 1, wherein the adhesive sets in step h).
5. The process of claim 1, wherein steps a) and f) are accomplished by a first vacuum gantry and a second vacuum gantry, respectively.
6. The process of claim 1, further comprising the steps of i) trimming an edge of the door assembly; and j) applying a coating to the exposed edges of the frame.
7. The process of claim 1, wherein step c) is accomplished by coating the face-up first interior surface of the first door skin with a spray coater having multiple spray nozzles that apply a uniform coat of quick acting adhesive to the interior surface of the first door skin.
8. The process of claim 1, wherein the first plurality of stacked door skins are stacked on a first pallet and the second plurality of stacked door skins are stacked on a second pallet.
9. The process of claim 8, wherein said process further comprises the steps of repeating said step a) until the first pallet is empty and automatically sensing when the first pallet of is empty and removing the empty first pallet.
10. A process for making doors, comprising the steps of: a) removing a first door skin from a first plurality of stacked door skins having respective first exterior surfaces disposed face up and respective first interior surfaces disposed face down; b) flipping the first door skin; c) applying adhesive on at least a portion of the face-up first interior surface of the first door skin; d) positioning a door frame and a core component onto the adhesive applied face-up first interior surface; e) applying adhesive on at least a portion of upwardly facing surfaces of the door frame and of the core component; f) removing a second door skin from a second plurality of stacked door skins having respective second exterior surfaces disposed face up and respective second interior surfaces disposed face down; g) positioning the face-down interior surface of the second door skin in contact with the adhesive applied upwardly facing surfaces of the door frame and of the core component to form a door assembly; and h) compressing the door assembly.
11. The process of claim 10, wherein steps a) to h) are performed at different stations.
12. The process of claim 10, wherein steps c) or e) is accomplished by a spray coater or a roll coater.
13. The process of claim 10, wherein the adhesive sets in step h).
14. The process of claim 10, wherein steps a) and f) are accomplished by a first vacuum gantry and a second vacuum gantry, respectively.
15. The process of claim 10, further comprising the steps of i) trimming an edge of the door assembly; and j) applying a coating to the exposed edges of the frame.
16. The process of claim 10, wherein step c) is accomplished by coating the face-up first interior surface of the first door skin with a spray coater having multiple spray nozzles that apply a uniform coat of quick acting adhesive to the interior surface of the first door skin.
17. The process of claim 10, wherein the first plurality of stacked door skins are stacked on a first pallet and the second plurality of stacked door skins are stacked on a second pallet.
18. The process of claim 17, wherein said process further comprises the steps of repeating said step a) until the first pallet is empty and automatically sensing when the first pallet is empty and removing the empty first pallet.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(8) A preferred facility layout of a system S for making doors according to the present invention is best shown in
(9) From distribution station 12, pallets are transported to either a first station 16 for processing a first door facing F1 of a door being manufactured, or a second station 18 for processing a second door facing F2 on the opposing side of the door. Preferably, the first three pallets of door facings received at distribution station 12 are directed to first station 16. The next three pallets of door facings received at distribution station 12 are directed to second station 18. Door facings F1, F2 may be made from a wood fiber composite, hardboard, steel, polymer and like materials used to manufacture door skins. Preferably, door facings F1, F2 are contoured, although flush doors may be manufactured through use of system S.
(10) As best shown in
(11) An optical sensor O1 is preferably associated with receiving port 20 for sensing when a pallet received therein is empty. When the sensor senses an empty pallet, the empty pallet is moved onto a first station pallet conveyor 26, as best shown in
(12) Data from optical sensor O1 in receiving port 20 is preferably communicated to distribution station 12. Once an empty pallet is discharged from receiving port 20, and moved out of first station 16 via pallet conveyor 26, distribution center 12 automatically forwards the next pallet into position in first station 16. Alternatively, the timing and rate of door skin depletion at first and second stations 16, 18 may be controlled by a programmable logic controller (PLC). Distribution station 12 may coordinate distribution of pallets according to a determined rate of depletion of pallets at first and second stations 16, 18.
(13) Although
(14) From feed port 24, door facing F1 is transported to a third station 28, where door facing F1 is coated with a quick acting adhesive, as best shown in
(15) Feed port 24 is preferably a conveyor that moves facings F1 into openings 31 of star conveyor 30. Feed port 24 transports one facing F1 into an opening 31. Facing F1 is thereby pushed into opening 31 until the forwardly moving edge of facing F1 contacts central member 30B. Once a facing F1 has indexed into opening 31, star conveyor 30 rotates several degrees, thereby rotating facing F1. The next adjacent opening 31 is thereby ready to receive the next facing F1 from feed port 24.
(16) Legs 30D on wickets 30A keep facings F1 from sliding off of planar members 30C. However, facings F1 are not clamped into star conveyor 30. Therefore, as star conveyor 30 rotates, each facing eventually falls forward in direction R onto the forwardly disposed, adjacent planar member 30C of wicket 30A due to gravity. Typically, each facing F1 will fall forward after having been rotated 90 or more by star conveyor 30. Star conveyor 30 continues to rotate each facing F1 about 180. Each facing F1 then slides off the wicket 30A onto production conveyor 32 when wicket 30A is downwardly sloped relative to central member 30B. Tangential forces created during rotation of facing F1 also cause facing F1 to slide onto production conveyor 32.
(17) Preferably, a door facing F1 is indexed from feed port 24 into an opening 31 every 10 to 12 seconds. More preferably, star conveyor 30 includes twenty openings 31 and holds 10 facings F1, with wickets 30A rotating 18 every three seconds. The conveyor of feed port 24 and production conveyor 32 are positioned so that ten openings are above the conveyors and ten openings are below the conveyors. After ten openings (or of the openings) have received door facings F1, a door facing F1 is released onto production conveyor 32 with each successive rotation of star conveyor 30. This, in turn, moves one of the empty openings into position adjacent feed port 24, and another facing F1 indexes into a corresponding opening 31.
(18) Door facings F1 are thereby flipped onto production conveyor 32 from feed port 24. Typically, door facings are stacked on a pallet with the intended interior surface of each door facing stacked on top of the intended exterior surface of the next facing in the stack. However, door facing F1 is placed onto production conveyor 32 so that the intended interior surface of each facing F1 is face up, with the intended exterior surface of facing F1 placed against production conveyor 32. In this way, the intended interior surface of door facing F1 is exposed for coating at third station 28.
(19) Preferably, the quick acting adhesive applied at third station 28 is a hot melt, polyurethane reactive (PUR) adhesive. However, other quick acting adhesives known in the art may also be used. The adhesive may be heated for application, and sprayed onto the interior surface of each facing F1 by spray headers. The spray headers may include multiple spray nozzles, which apply an even coat of adhesive on the entire surface. Alternatively, the spray headers may be adjusted for selectively coating portions of the interior surface. The width and thickness of the adhesive applied may also be adjusted depending on the desired amount of adhesive and/or the width of the door being assembled. Depending on the specific formulation of the adhesive, it has an open time in which components can be moved around prior to the glue achieving hardening strength. These open times can vary from less than a minute to several hours. However, the quick-acting adhesive has sufficient tackiness so that the components do not shift as the components proceed in the manufacturing process.
(20) After the adhesive has been applied to the interior surface of door facing F1, door facing F1 is transported via production conveyor 32 from third station 28 to a fourth station 34, as best shown in
(21) Fourth station 34 preferably includes optical sensors O2 for ensuring proper positioning and alignment of each perimeter frame P onto the adhesive covered interior surface of door facing F1. The optical sensors indicate when each door facing F1 is moving into fourth station 34 via production conveyor 32. Alternatively, fourth station 34 may include a mechanical limit switch for ensuring proper positioning of frame P on facing F1. At that time, mechanical stops elevate into position to stop movement of facing F1, and hold facing F1 in the proper position for securing the frame thereto. After frame P has been positioned onto facing F1, the mechanical stops lower and allow facing F1 to proceed along production conveyor 32.
(22) As best shown in
(23) If a solid core door is desired, system S may include a fifth station 42 where a core component C is positioned onto the adhesive covered interior surface of door facing F1, as best shown in
(24) As best shown in
(25) After core component C is placed onto adhesive covered interior surface of facing F1, door facing F1 is then transported to a sixth station 50 via production conveyor 32, as best shown in
(26) After hot melt (PUR) adhesive has been applied at sixth station 50, second door facing F2 may be placed onto the adhesive covered frame P and core C. Second door facings F2 are transported from distribution station 12 to second station 18 via a second station conveyor 51. A transfer mechanism 52 is provided, which transports and positions each facing F2 from second station 18 onto the adhesive covered frame P and core component C. Transfer mechanism 52 preferably includes a transfer conveyor 54 for transporting pallets of facings F2 from second station 18 to a gantry device. As described above, pallets of facings F2 are forwarded via conveyor 54 to a transfer receiving port 56. Each facing F2 is then lifted and placed onto adhesive covered surface of frame P via gantry G4. Gantry G4 may be similar to the gantry used at first station 16, and includes vacuum cups that suction to each door facing F2 when moving each door facing F2 into position. Preferably, optical sensors O4 are provided for ensuring proper positioning and alignment of the intended interior surface of facing F2 onto adhesive covered frame P, as described above for fourth station 34.
(27) Once all of the second door facings F2 are used from a pallet in transfer receiving port 56, empty pallets are removed via a transfer conveyor 55, and may be stored in an empty pallet storage port 57, similar to empty pallet port 27. The two empty pallet ports may be operatively connected via a conveyor, so that empty pallets may be easily removed from one empty pallet port 27 by fork truck.
(28) After door facings F1, F2, and frame P and core C have been assembled, the resulting assembly is transported via production conveyor 32 to a compression station 58, as best shown in
(29) Exiting pinch rollers 60, each door D is successively stacked on a pallet at a stacking station 62, as best shown in
(30) Empty pallets are supplied to stacking station 62 via a pallet station 66, as best shown in
(31) The process time, from application of adhesive at third station 28 to the compressed door D, is approximately one minute. Door D may then be finally processed after about one hour of stack down time, more preferably after about thirty minutes of stack down time. Preferably, no step in the production process (aside from stack down time) takes longer than twelve seconds. As such five doors per minute, or 300 doors per hour, can be produced by system S. More than 2000 doors per eight-hour shift may easily be produced with relatively low labor costs. For example, operation of system S may be achieved with two fork truck operators and one roving operator. Thus, substantial savings in labor cost are realized. In addition, the hot melt (PUR) technology and pinch rollers 60 provide additional savings because conventional presses, required for conventional cold adhesive formulations, are relatively expensive. For example, an automated production line making 300 doors per hour using cold adhesive technology would require at least six conventional presses to achieve comparable assembly rates.
(32) Preferably, system S can hold at least about one hour's worth of components (door facings F1, F2, frames P and core components C). For example, each pallet load of door facings received at first and second stations 16, 18 may comprise 200 facings.
(33) The present invention is also directed to a method of making a door using system S described above. A first door facing F1 and a second door facing F2 are provided. An interior side of the first facing F1 is then coated with quick acting adhesive. Preferably, a hot melt (PUR) adhesive is sprayed on the interior side of first facing F1. Portions of the interior side of the first facing F1 may also be selectively coated with the adhesive. A frame is placed on the coated interior side about the periphery of the first door facing F1. A core component may also be placed on the coated interior side of the first door facing F1. The frame (and core) is coated with quick acting adhesive, preferably the same type of hot melt (PUR) adhesive used during the first application. An interior side of the second door facing F2 is placed onto the adhesive coated frame. The assembly is then compressed to form a door.
(34) It will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in construction or configuration of the present invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the present invention. Thus, it is intended that the present invention include all such modifications and variations, provided they come within the scope of the following claims and their equivalents.