This invention relates generally to the formation of drum shells consisting of wood, such as plywood; and more particularly the invention concerns cooling of shells after their formation in annular configuration, under heat and pressure.
Multi ply drum shells are typically made of plywood consisting of single ply, 2 ply and 3 ply cross laminate lay ups. Drum shells may consist of a combination of those factors.
When such plies are rolled together with glue (or any type of adhesive) and inserted into a mold, there are two elements that work together to form the shell-pressure and heat. The mold (also known as a heating device or drum shell machine) typically has an outer platen and an inner platen, which work via hydraulics, as well as serving as heating elements. The outer platen closes to establish the outside diameter of the shell. The inner platens, provided with a tapered pin to displace them, spreads the inner platens toward the outer platens, thus trapping the plywood (shell) in between the inner and outer platens at roughly 200 degrees Fahrenheit, heat and pressure working together to form the inner diameter of the shell.
The shells typically remain in this heating device under about 2,500 psi. of hydraulic pressure for 5.5 (five and one-half) minutes. Adhesives that are used to bond the plywood typically activate under heat and pressure. Substantially constant pressure is an important element, besides the heating process. After the shell has been properly heated and molded, the pressure from the inner platen and then from the outer platen is relieved, releasing the shell, which is removed from the heating device. Typically, at this stage the drum shell is then placed on a cold cement floor and another shell is loaded into heater, for treatment.
It has been found that the cold cement floor cools the shell from the floor, such cooling traveling up the shell to create a colder and cured shell by the time it reaches the top of shell. During that process, the annular shape of the drum shell can and does distort leading to problems in use of the final drum.
It is vital for drums shell to be round and hard. The roundness helps the tuning process of the drum i.e. having the drum head centered, top and bottom, to achieve maximum tunability, with bearing edges for drum heads on a flat and even plane. The hardness of the shell is necessary to allow the hollow interior chamber to vibrate freely and with continuity in use. Between these objectives lies the possibility for a successful sounding tuned drum shell. In the past it was found that the success of realizing both these elements or characteristics was only achieved by hit and miss, hoping that the elements would come together naturally. However, through many years of experience and research it was discovered that the failure rate of realizing both of these two elements is fairly high i.e.; dry whether, cold-damp weather, heat, moisture, wind as well as many other influential elements contributed to the failure or rejection rates of drum shells. There is need for a new process that virtually ensures a consistent manufacturing process to consistently realize these objectives.
All drums are exposed to extreme variations in temperature due to a wide variety of elements. Most commonly these include exposure to a hot concert stage, then packing into a cold truck, and then returning to a hot, dry or moist environment. Due to such repeated exposures the potential for the drum shell to go out of round is quite high, absent starting off with as perfectly round a drum shell as possible, ultimately threatening the integrity of the sound.
There is need to prevent such uneven cooling of the heat and pressure formed plywood shells, in an efficient reliable manner. Also, there is need to significantly speed up the over-all process of heating and cooling plywood drum shells. Further, there is need to prevent distortion of the plywood shell as it cools.
It is a major object of the invention to provide an improved method of forming plywood drum shells, meeting the above needs, and overcoming distortion problems, as referred to.
Basically, the overall method of plywood drum shell formation, in accordance with the invention comprises:
a) forming the plywood shell under pressure and heat into cylindrical configuration,
b) providing inner and outer cooling platens adapted respectively to engage the interior and exterior surfaces of the heated shell,
c) trapping the heated shell between such cooling platens, at elevated pressure,
d) allowing the shell to cool while trapped between the platens, at elevated pressure,
e) and removing the cooled shell from between the cooling platens.
As will be seen, the method typically includes transferring heat from the shell side walls to the cooling platens, whereby cooling takes place substantially from all shell side walls, sidewardly, instead of endwise from one end only of the shell. Cooling efficiency at sides of the shell is enhanced by maintaining the shell in radial compression, on all sides, during such cooling. In particular, such heat transfer from the shell to the inner platen is preferred, whereby the shell is cooled radially, as from its inner side toward its outer side. The relatively small radial thickness of the shell serves to enhance the rapidity of cooling, and at substantially the same rate and at substantially the same time, over the entirety of the shell, which is maintained under pressure to eliminate warpage during cooling. Accordingly, shell temperatures, at different portions of the shell, decrease at substantially the same rate or rates toward ambient temperature, in the overall cooling zone.
Other objects include platen configurations as circular segments, and provision for cooling fluid flow through the platens.
Yet another object is to provide apparatus for treating plywood drum shells to enhance consistency of manufactured drum shell quality, and rapidity of multiple shell production, the apparatus comprising
a) a first bank of platens operable to receive plywood blanks to form the blanks into annular drum shape, under elevated temperature and pressure,
b) a second bank of platens operable to receive the shells removed from the first bank of platens, and having means to rapidly and substantially uniformly cool the received shells by heat transfer in shell thickness directions, and under elevated pressure,
c) the cooled shells then being removed from the second bank of platens.
These and other objects and advantages of the invention, as well as the details of an illustrative embodiment, will be more fully understood from the following specification and drawings, in which:
In
Thereafter, the shells are removed from bank 13, as shown at 16. During such cooling in bank 13, the bank 11 is again used to heat form, under pressure, another set of shells, for rapid, efficient, production.
The platen 12 is like the platen 10, except that coolant liquid flows through tubing 26, 26a, 26b, 26c and 26d. A source of such coolant appears at 26e. Heat is rapidly extracted from the hot shell, due to the metallic masses of the platens, (at least 5-10 times thicker in radial dimension than the captivated shell 25) and also due to the high face to face pressure (about 2,500 psi) exerted upon the side wall or walls of the shell. Such cooling occurs at substantially the same rate of heat transfer from all wall portions of the shell, into the cold platens, kept at temperatures between 68° F. and 35° F. Cooling time varies for different size shells, but is normally between 2 and 5 minutes. After completion of cooling, the inner and outer platen segments are relatively separated to allow shell removal, the shells being near ambient temperature.
Steps of the overall method include:
a) providing first inner and outer shell forming platens,
b) trapping plywood between the platens at elevated temperature and pressure to annularly form the drum shell,
c) providing second inner and outer shell cooling platens,
d) trapping the formed shell in heated state between the second platens at elevated pressure,
e) allowing the shell to cool between the second platens, by heat transfer sidewardly of the shell to second platens, while remaining at elevated pressure,
f) removing the cooled shell from between the inner and outer second platens.
As seen in
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