The invention relates to a device for storing, selecting, and metering base tints for paint, in particular (but in non-limiting manner) for paints that are prepared on demand by automobile repair professionals.
In this field, body repairers prepare the quantities of paint needed for repairing bodywork by mixing together a certain number of base tints. Each mixture is determined from a formula defined by the paint manufacturer, the formula giving the weight of each base tint to be incorporated for a given quantity of mixture that is to be obtained. Such preparation commonly involves mixing together five to ten base tints in order to obtain the particular shade specified by the paint manufacturer.
Most of the technical metering solutions that have been used in the past by body repairers are based on the principle of a metering lid that is fitted on a container in the form of a rigid tin, as described for example in WO 2006/027450 A2 (Fillon Investissement).
Other systems make use of base tints packaged in receptacles in the form of flexible pouches for single use. Such a pouch is fitted with a base enabling it to be connected to a metering valve or tube by means of a quick coupling type connector.
Outside the field of automobile repair, devices are also known for selecting and mixing base tints, e.g. a device of the kind described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,074,597 B1 (Felts) for preparing paints suitable for use in building, where the pigments are added to a white paint in order to obtain a particular color on demand. The device described in that document comprises a horizontal-axis rotary element having mounted thereon in a radial configuration a plurality of tanks storing the base tints. The rotary element is actuated so as to bring such-and-such a tank into a delivery position from which the desired quantity of pigment is ejected into a collector receptacle under the action of a piston incorporated in the tank.
In the field of cosmetics, WO 03/026458 A2 (IMX Labs, Inc.) describes a device presenting the same general configuration as described above, for preparing cosmetics such as nail varnishes on demand at points of sale close to consumers.
In the automobile repair field, the paints that are used, particularly paints of the latest generation, nevertheless give rise to a certain number of additional precautions and constraints, given their particular nature.
Firstly, for a professional who is repairing a portion only of the bodywork, it is necessary to obtain almost perfect color identity between the repaired portion and the remainder of the bodywork, which implies extremely accurate relative metering of the various base tints in the mixture.
Furthermore, present paints are more and more concentrated with ever-increasing covering power, whereas the areas that need repairing are becoming smaller and smaller. As a result, the quantities of mixture that need to be prepared are becoming very small, of the order of 30 grams (g) to 50 g, and in order to obtain the required color accuracy with such very small quantities of mixture, the accuracy with which each base tint needs to be metered is of the order of the weight of a single drop, i.e. about 0.03 g to 0.1 g.
Concerning their composition, the base tints used for automobile repair are constituted by a liquid matrix having solid particles incorporated therein. The liquid matrix contains binders, solvents, soluble organic inks, and various additives, so as to produce a liquid with specific gravity generally lying in the range 0.8 to 1. However the solid particles are mainly constituted by pigments, fillers, and metal particles, and they generally present specific gravity lying in the range 2 to 4.
Unless special precautions are taken, the difference in density between the solid particles and the liquid matrix would lead, under the effect of gravity, to the solid particles becoming deposited on the bottom of the paint container.
To mitigate that risk, in systems of the kind described in above-mentioned WO 2006/027450 A2 in which the base tints are stored in rigid tins, regular stirring is provided so as to maintain good homogeneity of the base tint. Each tin is fitted for this purpose with a special lid provided with a helix that is driven in rotation.
That enables the solid particles to be maintained in suspension in the matrix but presents two drawbacks:
In the other technique that consists in storing the various base tints in flexible pouches, the tints are always protected from air, but the lack of mechanical stirring means that a solution needs to be found to keep the soluble particles in suspension.
The known solution to that problem consists in incorporating certain additives in the liquid matrix such as dispersants (which are particularly effective with small particles) and gelling agents (which are also effective with large particles).
Such additives nevertheless present drawbacks, insofar as they increase the viscosity of the base tints and thus make it more difficult to meter them out accurately. Furthermore, the physico-chemical characteristics of the base tint may turn out to be difficult to maintain over time since certain additives, in particular gelling agents, are sensitive to certain parameters such as temperature and aging.
The object of the invention is to propose a novel device for storing, selecting, and metering base tints that makes it possible to combine:
In other words, the object of the invention is to propose such a device that makes it possible:
To this end, the invention proposes a device of the general type disclosed in above-mentioned U.S. Pat. No. 3,074,597 B1, i.e. a device that comprises in known manner:
In a manner characteristic of the invention, in order to achieve the above-mentioned objects:
The cells may in particular be radial cells with the expulsion orifice of each container directed radially relative to the axis of the carousel.
Such a device lends itself to being loaded in various ways:
According to subsidiary characteristics that are advantageous:
The invention also provides a method of preparing a mixture of base tints by means of a device as described above, the method comprising the following steps:
a) driving the carousel in rotation to a delivery position in which the cell containing the pouch corresponding to the selected tint is placed in register with the collector receptacle;
b) pressurizing the inside volume of the cell;
c) opening the expulsion orifice in controlled manner to expel a predetermined quantity of tint into the collector receptacle, the pressure established in step b) being maintained at least throughout the duration of step c); and
d) reiterating steps a) to c) for other tints that are to be incorporated in the mixture.
Advantageously, during step c), provision is made for continuously weighing the collector receptacle simultaneously with the tint being expelled, the opening of the expulsion orifice being controlled by data derived from said weighing.
There follows a description of an embodiment of the device of the invention given with reference to the accompanying drawings in which the same numerical references are used from one figure to another to designate elements that are identical or functionally similar.
In
The device comprises a circular metal structure with a horizontal axis, the structure being similar to a wheel rim 12 and having a plurality of radial cells 14 mounted thereon for receiving and storing respective base tints.
The assembly forms a carousel that may be rotated by appropriate indexing means (not shown) that may be manual or automatic, enabling any one of the cells 14 to be placed facing a collector receptacle 16 designed to receive a plurality of base tints in succession in order to produce a mixture of tints for use in preparing on demand a paint having a particular shade.
The collector receptacle 16 is placed on a support 18 that includes electronic scales (not shown) serving to measure in real time the weight of base tints introduced into the collector receptacle 16.
In addition to indexing for the purpose of selecting base tints, the carousel has the function of producing a turning gravity field suitable for preventing particles present in suspension in the tints from settling. For this purpose it is associated with a motor enabling the wheel rim 12 to be caused to turn about the horizontal axis 20 with permanent rotary motion that is slow (e.g. one revolution per hour). The permanent rotation is not necessarily continuous, it may be performed intermittently, providing it serves to conserve the homogeneity of the base tints when the device is not specifically in use (for taking tints), such that the device can be ready, immediately and at any instant, for use in preparing a mixture.
Insofar as the permanent rotation is slow, a low-power (about 1 watt) micromotor with suitable gearing is sufficient in spite of the relatively heavy weight of the carousel loaded with all of the base tints. In addition to its low energy consumption, the use of such a micromotor provides a high degree of safety: a hand caught in the carousel will do no more than block the micromotor, and there is no risk of injuring the person.
During periods of use, in order to index the wheel rim to the position for taking tint from the selected receptacle, the wheel rim may be turned either automatically under motor drive, or by hand by the operator. For turning by hand, means are provided to declutch the micromotor that provides permanent rotary drive, so as to enable the operator to turn the wheel rim freely to the selected position.
Various other configurations may be envisaged for the general structure of the carousel.
Thus, in
In yet another embodiment, the collector receptacle may be located on one side, with the system for expelling tint including an angled member for directing the expelled tint in the appropriate direction.
Finally, it should be observed that the radiating configuration of the described element in which the cells extend radially relative to the axis of rotation of the carousel is not limiting, and the cells may extend in any other direction, providing the carousel rotates about an axis of rotation that is horizontal.
Each tint is stored in a flexible deformable pouch 22 for single use.
The pouch has a valve 24 mounted thereon. By way of example, the valve may be of the type described in European patent application EP 07/290369.3 filed on Mar. 28, 2007 and entitled “Dispensing valve” in the name of Fillon Technologies. That valve may be mounted on the flexible pouch 22 by means of a quick coupling of the kind described in European patent application EP 08/290235.4 filed on Mar. 12, 2008 and entitled “Quick coupling type assembly for liquids, in particular for a flexible-pouch receptacle” in the name of Fillon Technologies.
The pouch 22 fitted with its valve 24 is inserted in a respective cell 14. At one of its ends, each cell has an orifice 26 enabling the valve 24 to pass through the bottom wall of the cell so that the valve projects from the cell 14 and is accessible from the outside, as shown in
Each cell 14 also includes a passage 32 for putting the closed inside volume of the cell into communication with a pressure source P (not shown), e.g. a source of compressed air forming part of the device 10. The cell also has means 34 enabling it to be mounted on the wheel rim 12.
Once the assembly comprising the pouch 22 and the cell 14 has been assembled (as shown in
This pressurization may be permanent. It is also possible, and preferable, for pressurization to be applied solely at the time of use, after the base tint has been selected. Under such circumstances, the pressure P is applied only when the corresponding cell has been put into the delivery position, in register with the collector receptacle 16.
The device is then ready to expel the base tint into the collector receptacle.
This expulsion is performed by controlling the valve 24, with the valve being opened for a duration that is controlled—automatically or manually—on the basis of data derived from the weighing performed continuously by the scales associated with the support tray 18 receiving the collector receptacle 16, until the exact required weight has been obtained.
Since the pressure is maintained in the cell at least throughout this delivery stage, the base tint may be delivered under conditions that are completely reproducible, and without any risk of air penetrating into the pouch at the moment the valve is closed (since the content of the pouch is then still at a pressure that is greater than or equal to atmospheric pressure).
The above-described device also serves, outside delivery periods, to preserve the homogeneity of the base tints by continuous rotation of the carousel, and during delivery it ensures measurement that is particularly accurate and reproducible by the controlled pressurization of the cell containing the pouch storing the selected base tint.
Furthermore, with such a device, risks of soiling are practically non-existent.
With the above-described pouch 22 and cell 14 configuration, the valve 24, which is the only element that might be subjected to primary soiling, is connected to the single use pouch 22 and thus to the portion that is consumable. In contrast, the cell 14 that remains permanently mounted on the wheel rim 12 forms an element that can be separated from the assembly comprising the pouch 22 and the valve 24.
The pressure source (a source of compressed air), and the means for pressurizing the pouch (the cell forming a closed volume) thus form integral portions of the device proper (ignoring consumables) and they are normally never in contact with the base tint (confined within the pouch 22 and the valve 24)—unlike devices in which paint is stored in a receptacle having a piston type moving bottom or, even worse, devices based on rigid tins having a metering lid with a stirring helix.
The risks of soiling and corrosion as a result of splashes of base tint are thus avoided, such that the device may be installed permanently and used without taking special precautions in an environment that is clean, which constitutes a major additional advantage for professionals;
Finally, it should be observed that the consumable portion, i.e. the portion that is changed, may take various forms:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
08290588.6 | Jun 2008 | EP | regional |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 12737178 | Dec 2010 | US |
Child | 13845408 | US |