Claims
- 1. A coating method in a coating line for coating a vehicle body with a paint which is flowable at an ambient temperature during a baking step of a drying step to form a highly reflective surface coating on the body, comprising:
- a spraying step in which the paint is sprayed to form a coating in a film thickness thicker than a thickness at which the paint sags during the baking step on a surface of the body extending at last upwardly and downwardly; and
- a drying step comprising a baking step in which the body is held in an ambient temperature sufficient to bake the paint coating thereon and in which the body with a substantially all the coat sprayed thereon is rotated about its horizontal axis until the paint sprayed thereon achieves a substantially sagless state, the rotation of the body in the baking step being carried out at a speed which is high enough to rotate the body from a vertical position to a horizontal position before the paint coated thereon substantially sags due to gravity yet which is slow enough so as to cause no sagging as a result of centrifugal force;
- wherein the rotation of the body in the baking step is carried out while the body is being held in and conveyed by the carriage;
- the carriage comprising a pair of support sections for rotatably supporting the body about its substantially horizontal axis, a rotatable rotation-transferring member for transferring rotation, and a rotation transmitting mechanism for transmitting the rotation of the rotation-transferring member to the body supported by the pair of the support sections; and
- wherein a rotation supplying member disposed along a passage of travel of the carriage provides a force of rotation to the rotation transferring member.
- 2. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the rotation of the body is carried out in clockwise and counterclockwise directions.
- 3. A coating method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the rotation of the body is carried out continuously in a clockwise direction and thereafter in a counterclockwise direction.
- 4. A coating method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the rotation of the body is carried out alternatively in clockwise and counterclockwise directions.
- 5. A coating method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the rotation of the body in both directions is carried out through an angle of at least 90 degrees.
- 6. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the body to be coated has already had coated thereon an intermediate coat.
- 7. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the rotation of the body is carried out in one direction.
- 8. A coating method as claimed in claim 7, wherein the rotation of the body is continuous.
- 9. A coating method as claimed in claim 7, wherein the rotation of the body is intermittent.
- 10. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the paint is a powder paint.
- 11. A coating method as claimed in claim 10, wherein the paint is coated in a film thickness beyond its sagging threshold value of about 80 .mu.m.
- 12. A coating method as claimed in claim 10, wherein the coat sags by less than 2 mm.
- 13. A coating method as claimed in claim 10, wherein the rotation of the body is carried out at least at an initial stage of the baking step.
- 14. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the body is held substantially stationary during the coating step.
- 15. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the body is rotated in a preparatory step prior to the coating method to remove foreign matter from the body.
- 16. A coating method as claimed in claim 14, wherein the body is conveyed by a rotary carriage from the preparatory step to the baking step.
- 17. A coating method as claimed in claim 16, wherein the body is conveyed by the same carriage from the preparatory step to the baking step.
- 18. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein a rotational axis passes through the center of gravity of the body.
- 19. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the body has a rotational axis disposed in a longitudinal direction of the body.
- 20. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the body is rotated at a speed of 380 cm per second or slower at a radially outward tip portion of the body.
- 21. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the paint is thermosetting paint.
- 22. A coating method as claimed in claim 21, wherein the drying step for drying the coat on the body after the coating step comprises sequential setting and baking steps in which the body is held in a ambient temperature during the setting step which is lower than the ambient temperature during the baking step and in which the body is rotated about its horizontal axis thereof in the setting step.
- 23. A coating method as claimed in claim 22, wherein the paint is coated to a film thickness beyond its sagging threshold.
- 24. A coating method as claimed in claim 23, wherein the sagging threshold is 40 .mu.m.
- 25. A coating method as claimed in claim 21, wherein the paint sags by 2 mm or less.
- 26. A coating method as claimed in claim 25, wherein the rotation of the body is carried out at a speed which causes sagging at a maximum sagging speed at which the paint sags due to a heat flow created during the baking step.
- 27. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein:
- the rotation transferring member is a toothed rotary body; and
- the rotation supplying member is a toothed longer body so disposed as to be engageable with the toothed rotary body and extend in a long distance along the passage along which the carriage travels.
- 28. A coating method as claimed in claim 27, wherein:
- the toothed rotary body is a sprocket; and
- the toothed longer body is a chain or a rack.
- 29. A coating method as claimed in claim 27, wherein:
- the toothed longer body is secured at a location along the passage along which the body travels; and
- the force of rotation is supplied from the toothed longer body to the toothed rotary body by moving the carriage along the passage along which the carriage travels.
- 30. A coating method as claimed in claim 27, wherein:
- the toothed longer body is movable along the passage along which the carriage travels; and
- the force of rotation is supplied from the toothed longer body to the toothed rotary body by displacing the toothed longer body relative to the carriage.
- 31. A coating method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the body is rotatably supported by the support section through a rotary jig held rotatably by the support section.
- 32. A coating method as claimed in claim 31, wherein:
- the rotary jig comprises a front rotary jig and a rear rotary jig;
- the front rotary jig is detachable secured to a front portion of the body and rotatably held by one of the pair of the support sections; and
- the rear rotary jig is detachably secured to a rear portion of the body and rotatably held by the other of the pair of the support sections.
- 33. A coating method as claimed in claim 32, wherein:
- each of the front rotary jig and the rear rotary jig is so arranged as to be engaged with its respective support section by allowing downward displacement of said respective rotary jig and as to be disengaged from said respective support section by allowing upward displacement of said respective rotary jig.
- 34. A coating method as claimed in claim 33, further comprising the steps of:
- loading the body on the carriage after each of the front rotary jig and the rear rotary jig has been secured to the body; and
- unloading the body from the carriage while each of the front rotary jig and the rear rotary jig remains secured to the body.
- 35. A coating method as claimed in claim 34, wherein:
- each of the pair of the support sections has a section for receiving a rotary shaft; and
- the rotary jig has a rotary shaft section to be supported rotatably by the section for supporting the rotary shaft.
- 36. A coating method as claimed in claim 35, wherein:
- the section for supporting the rotary shaft has grooves therein opening upwardly and is so arranged as to be engageable with or detachable from the rotary shaft section of the rotary jig in a vertical direction.
- 37. A coating method as claimed in claim 31, wherein the rotary jig has a first rotary shaft section rotatably supported by one of the pair of the support sections, a second rotary shaft section rotatably supported by the other of the pair of the support sections, and a connecting section for connecting the first rotary shaft section to the second roatry shaft section.
- 38. A coating method as claimed in claim 37, wherein the rotary jig has a first mounting section which is capable of being detachably secured in the vicinity of the first rotary shaft section to the front portion of the body, a second mounting section which is capable of being detachably secured in the vicinity of the second rotary shaft section to the rear portion of the body, and a third mounting section which is capable of being detachably secured at the connecting section of the rotary jig to an intermediate portion of the body located between the front and rear portions thereof.
- 39. A coating method as claimed in claim 37, wherein:
- the loading of the body to the carriage is performed by loading the body on the rotary jig; and
- the unloading of the body from the carriage is performed by unloading the body from the rotary jig.
- 40. A coating method in a coating line for coating a vehicle body with a paint which is flowable at an ambient temperature during a baking step of a drying step to form a highly reflective surface coating on the body, comprising:
- a spraying in which the paint is sprayed to form a coating in a film thickness thicker than a thickness at which the paint sags during the baking step on a surface of the body extending at least upwardly and downwardly; and
- a drying step comprising a baking step in which the body is held in an ambient temperature sufficient to bake the paint coated thereon and in which the body with substantially all the coat sprayed thereon is rotated about it horizontal axis until the paint sprayed thereon achieves a substantially sagless state, the rotation of the body in the baking step being carried out at a speed which is high enough to rotate the body from a vertical position to a horizontal position before the paint coated thereon substantially sags due to gravity yet which is low enough so as to cause no sagging as a result of centrifugal force;
- wherein the rotation of the body in the baking step is carried out while the body is being held in and conveyed by the carriage;
- the carriage comprising a pair of support sections for supporting the body;
- wherein the body is held through a rotary jig to the pair of the support sections so as to be rotatable about its substantially horizontal axis; and
- the rotary jig is detachably secured to the body in plural positions around a substantially horizontal axis of the body in the vicinity of one of the pair of the support sections, and in plural positions around the substantially horizontal axis thereof in the vicinity of the other of the pair of the support sections.
- 41. A coating method a claimed in claim 40, wherein a source for supplying force of rotation to the rotary jig is loaded on the carriage.
- 42. A coating method as claimed in claim 40, wherein a source for driving rotation for supplying force of rotation to the rotary jig is disposed in a position outside the carriage.
- 43. A coating method as claimed in claim 40, wherein
- one of the pair of the support sections is located in a position to the front of the body and the other of the pair of the support sections is located in a position to the rear of the body;
- and the rotary jig is detachably secured in the plural positions at the front portion of the body and in the plural positions at the rear portion thereof.
- 44. A coating method as claimed in claim 43, wherein the carriage travels in a direction parallel to a longitudinal dimension of the body.
- 45. A coating method as claimed in claim 43, wherein the rotary jig is detachably secured to a frame section of the body.
- 46. A coating method as claimed in claim 43, wherein the rotary jig comprises a front rotary jig detachably secured to a front portion of the body and rotatably held by the one of the pair of the support sections and a rear rotary jig detachably secured to a rear portion of the body and rotatably held by the other of the pair of the support section.
- 47. A coating method as claimed in claim 43, wherein:
- the rotary jig is longer than longitudinal length of the body; and
- a front end portion of the rotary jig is rotatably held by the one of the pair of the support sections and a rear end portion thereof is rotatably held by the other of the pair of the support sections.
- 48. A coating method in a coating line for coating a vehicle body with a paint which is flowable at an ambient temperature during a baking step of a drying step to form a highly reflective surface coating on the body, comprising:
- a loading step for loading the body on a carriage having a pair of support sections, in which the body is loaded between the pair of the support sections and supported by the pair of support sections so as to be rotatable about its substantially horizontal axis;
- a spraying step in which the paint is sprayed onto the body which is rotatably held on the carriage yet in such a state that the rotation of the body is suspended, thereby forming a coating in a film thickness thicker than a thickness at which the paint sags during the baking step on a surface of the body extending at least upwardly and downwardly;
- a drying step comprising a baking step in which the body is held in an ambient temperature sufficient to bake the paint coated sprayed thereon is rotated about its horizontal axis while the body is held on the carriage until the paint sprayed thereon achieves a substantially sagless state, the rotation of the body in the baking step being carried out at a speed which is high enough to rotate the body from a vertical position to a horizontal position before the paint coated thereon substantially sags due to gravity yet which is low enough so as to cause no sagging as a result of a centrifugal force;
- an unloading step for unloading the body from the carriage after the completion of the drying step; and
- a transferring step for returning the carriage to the loading step after the body loaded on the carriage has been unloaded.
- 49. A coating method as claimed in claim 48, further comprising a dirt removing step for removing dirt from the body interposed between the loading step and the spraying step.
- 50. A coating method as claimed in claim 49, wherein the body is rotated about its substantially horizontal axis in the dirt removing step while being loaded on the carriage.
- 51. A coating method as claimed in claim 48, wherein the body is rotatably held by the part of the support sections through the rotary jig secured detachably to the body.
- 52. A coating method as claimed in claim 51, wherein:
- in the unloading step, the body is unloaded from the carriage by removing the body from the rotary jig while the rotary jig remains secured to the support sections; and
- in the loading step, the body is loaded on the carriage by fixing the body to the rotary jig.
- 53. A coating method as claimed in claim 51, wherein:
- in the unloading step, the body is unloaded from the carriage, together with the rotary jig; and
- in the loading step, the body is loaded on the carriage by rotatably mounting the body to the support sections through the rotary jig after the rotary jig has been secured to the body.
- 54. A coating method as claimed in claim 48, further comprising a setting step in the drying step which is prior to the baking step, the setting step being carried out at a temperature lower than the temperature of the baking step.
- 55. A coating method as claimed in claim 54, wherein the body is rotated about its substantially horizontal axis in the setting step while loaded on the carriage.
Priority Claims (5)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
62-226458 |
Sep 1986 |
JPX |
|
62-70388 |
Mar 1987 |
JPX |
|
62-70389 |
Mar 1987 |
JPX |
|
62-104426 |
Apr 1987 |
JPX |
|
62-104427 |
Apr 1987 |
JPX |
|
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 07/398,100, filed Aug. 24, 1989, now abandoned, which is a division of application Ser. No. 07/100,767, filed Sep. 24, 1987, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,874,639.
US Referenced Citations (5)
Foreign Referenced Citations (9)
Number |
Date |
Country |
3520924 |
Dec 1985 |
DEX |
48-67332 |
Sep 1973 |
JPX |
51-2228 |
Jan 1976 |
JPX |
56-20053 |
May 1981 |
JPX |
57-30581 |
Feb 1982 |
JPX |
58-80390 |
May 1983 |
JPX |
59-109430 |
Jul 1984 |
JPX |
59-4471 |
Nov 1984 |
JPX |
60-20361 |
Feb 1985 |
JPX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
48-67332 (Japan)-translation pp. 1-8 and 2 pp. of figures. |
Divisions (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
100767 |
Sep 1987 |
|
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
398100 |
Aug 1989 |
|