The present invention relates to board edgers and is particularly concerned with edgers capable of handling misaligned boards.
The efficient production for saleable lumber from sawn boards is critical to saw mill viability. One way to improve efficiency is to increase production rates. In order to achieve increased production and efficiency many improvements have been made in equipment. One such improvement is taught in the applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 6,929,043, an optimized board edger in which the structure of the saw blade moving mechanism has a low inertia, for rapid positioning of the saw blades. The cutting tool in the optimized board edger follows optimized cut lines on a virtual entity of the wood board to be trimmed. This virtual entity is made to be longer than the wood board such that the tracking of the optimized cut lines starts before the saw blades enter the leading edge of the wood board and ends after the saw blades have completely exited the wood board. This patent addresses efficiency by ensuring that lumber is efficiently sawn from boards received regardless of misalignment of the boards relative to the axis of the infeed conveyor. While avoiding the problem of skewed cut lines, the board edger does require a gap between boards, corresponding to the extension beyond the actual board needed to start the saw box moving in the desired direction and at the desired angle to optimize usable lumber production and set up time for the saw blades to reach the initial position.
Hence, despite such improvements in board edging a problem still remains that affects the board throughput rate and hence the sawmill's production rate. The throughput is dependent upon several factors, the length of the board, the belt speed, the scanner/optimizer/controller processing time and the machine preset time. Regardless of the type of board edger used, it is necessary to provide a gap between boards. The size of this gap relative to the length of the boards being sawn, prevents the mill operator from optimizing the efficiency of the mill's operation.
An object of the present invention is to provide an improved board edger.
In accordance with an aspect of the present invention there is provided a A board edger comprising an input for receiving a signal from a scanner, a reference plane for supporting a board to be edged, a first saw box disposed adjacent the reference plane and having at least two blades controllable for width, longitudinal angle and depth, a second saw box disposed adjacent the reference plane and having at least two blades controllable for width, longitudinal angle and depth, a saw controller coupled to the input for receiving signals from the scanner and coupled to the first and second saw boxes for setting the first saw box for cutting and controlling the cutting by the second saw box.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention there is provided a board edger comprising a scanner for scanning a board to be edged to determine orientation and dimension, a reference plane for supporting a board to be edged, a first saw box disposed adjacent the reference plane and having at least two blades controllable for width, longitudinal angle and depth, a second saw box disposed adjacent the reference plane and having at least two blades controllable for width, longitudinal angle and depth, a saw controller coupled to the input for receiving signals from the scanner and coupled to the first and second saw boxes for setting the first saw box for cutting and controlling the cutting by the second saw box.
In accordance with a further aspect of the present invention there is provided a board edger comprising a reference plane for supporting a board to be edged, a first saw box disposed adjacent the reference plane and having at least two blades controllable for width, longitudinal angle and depth, a second saw box disposed adjacent the reference plane and having at least two blades controllable for width, longitudinal angle and depth, an input for coupling a saw controller, coupled a scanner for receiving signals therefrom, to the first and second saw boxes for setting the first saw box for cutting and controlling the cutting by the second saw box.
In accordance with a further aspect of the present invention there is provided A board edger comprising an infeed conveyor, a scanner for scanning a board to be edged as it passes on the infeed conveyor to determine orientation and dimension, a saw including a reference plane for supporting a board to be edged, a first saw box disposed adjacent the reference plane and having at least two blades controllable for width, longitudinal angle and depth, a second saw box disposed adjacent the reference plane and having at least two blades controllable for width, longitudinal angle and depth, and a saw controller coupled to the scanner for receiving signals from the scanner and coupled to the first and second saw boxes for setting the first saw box for cutting and controlling the cutting by the second saw box.
In an embodiment of the present invention the scanner may provide information concerning visual characteristics of the board.
Advantageously, while one saw box is cutting a board the other saw box is being set up by the saw controller to cut the next board. This is made possible by moving the other sawbox out of the infeed path as soon as it completed its cutting, thereby decreasing the spacing required between boards. This increases the throughout of the board edger.
The present invention will be further understood from the following detailed description with reference to the drawings in which:
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In operation, the scanner 18 scans board 22, feeds the dimensional and orientation information to the saw controller 20. The saw controller then computes the angle of the saw box 30 rotating it in direction 32 to align the saw blades with the axis 26. The saw controller also sets the spacing between blades and causes the blades to move along direction 36 to provide to track the orientation of the board and to generate an optimal amount of lumber from the board.
While this type of board edger optimizes board utilization, the set-up time between cuts, necessitates a board spacing that limits saw throughput. Examples of this type of board edger are the applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 6,929,043, the entire specification of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
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In operation, the boarder edger system of
Shortly thereafter, while the saw box 104 is cutting the first board, the saw controller 122 sets up the second saw box 106 for angle 108′ and spacing 110′ to align with the axis 128 of the second board 130. As shown in
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For the various embodiments taught herein above, it is also contemplated that different saw blade sizes may be used and that the machine geometry may be adjusted to accommodate these different saw blade sizes and consequently, if of smaller diameter and more closely spaced, they would further reduce the saw set-up time.
Numerous modifications, variations and adaptations may be made to the particular embodiments described above without departing from the scope patent disclosure, which is defined in the claims.