Gel-coat application method and apparatus

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6824071
  • Patent Number
    6,824,071
  • Date Filed
    Monday, August 27, 2001
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, November 30, 2004
    19 years ago
Abstract
A spray-up operator may conveniently control the application of a gel-coat material to a mold or preform to achieve a uniform coating by using an application means comprising a manipulatable nozzle and air control assembly including a liquid nozzle for forming the catalyzed gel-coat material into a fan-like film with substantially flat faces and expanding stream-like edges extending from a liquid orifice, and an air nozzle assembly for directing independently controllable flows of compressed air at the substantially flat faces and at the expanding stream-like edges of the fan-like film.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to plural component spray-up manufacturing methods and apparatus, and more particularly to methods and apparatus for the application of gel-coat to molds and preforms.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Plural component spraying systems are used in manufacturing plastic articles by applying resinous materials to a mold or preform for an article. In such systems, a liquid resin and a catalyst for the resin are mixed and directed to a substrate where the catalyst and resin react and harden to form the article. For example, in manufacturing articles with polyester resin, a catalyzing agent for the polyester resin is mixed with the resin; and the resin-catalyst mixture is applied to the substrate. In internal mix systems, the resin and catalyst are mixed within the spraying apparatus, and the mixture is directed by a nozzle onto the substrate. In external mix systems, the resin and catalyst are mixed externally of the apparatus and directed onto the substrate.




Many “plastic” articles, such as boat hulls, shower stalls, bathroom sinks and other shell-like articles of manufacture, are formed from liquid plural component materials, including a liquid polymer resin and a catalyst that converts the liquid polymer resin to a solid state. The manufacture of such articles is frequently performed by the “spray-up” method, that is, by directing a flow of the catalyzed liquid plural component material at a mold or preform for the article to provide an initially liquid coating that subsequently hardens in the form of the article. To provide strength and toughness to the article, reinforcing fibers, preferably glass, are combined with the catalyzed liquid plural component material as one or more layers of the catalyzed liquid plural component material are applied to the mold or preform. Curing and hardening of the catalyzed plural component material with the incorporated reinforcing fibers forms a more durable plastic article.




Because many such articles, for example, boat hulls, must have an attractive outer surface to provide a saleable article, a common method of providing such an attractive outer surface is to provide the mold or preform with a smooth polished surface and to apply, as the first step of the spray-up method in manufacturing the article, a liquid catalyzed plural component “gel coat” material. Gel coat materials are expensive and include catalyzable polymer resins and constituents such as pigments and particulate fillers that can cure on the smooth, polished surface of a mold or preform and provide, as the outer surface of the resulting article, an attractive, smooth, polished and colored, if desired, layer that hides the underlying layered reinforcing structure of the article.




Because the smooth, polished surface of the mold or preform forms the outer surface of the article, it is not necessary that the liquid plural component gel-coat material, or for that matter, the plural component materials used to form the structural layer of the article, be finely atomized, or formed into small particles, for deposition on the mold or preform. In such spray-up operations, and particularly in gel-coat operations, the formation of a uniform coating on the mold or preform is of the most importance, and it is desirable that the liquid gel-coat material be deposited uniformly, regardless of the particulate nature of the gel-coat material being deposited on the mold or preform.




In some spray-up systems, large quantities of pressurized air are used to atomize the liquid components. Such systems are expensive to operate and have a number of operational inadequacies. It is expensive to compress air, and the large quantities of compressed air used by existing systems impose a significant operating cost on the system. In addition, the blast of compressed air used to atomize the liquid components carries a significant quantity of spray particles away from the substrate, wastes the expensive resin and catalyst, creates an unclean spray area and sometimes requires over-spray collection systems, and can contribute to the problem of operating such manufacturing operations safely. Furthermore, the use of large quantities of air during operation of the system can create an undesirable spread of fumes.




In order to overcome some of the inadequacies attending the use of pressurized air to atomize components dispensed from a spraying apparatus, spraying systems have been developed which incorporate airless application techniques.




In prior airless application devices, an airless nozzle has been used to atomize liquid materials which are pumped at high pressure, that is, pressures generally exceeding 300-500 p.s.i. The most commonly used airless nozzle includes an internal, hemispherical passage termination, which is cut through by an external, V-shaped groove to form an elongated, elliptical-like orifice. Liquid material pumped at high pressures through such a spray nozzle is forced by the hemispherical termination of the passageway to converge in its flow at and through the elongated orifice. Because of the converging flow at the orifice, the liquid material is expelled through the orifice into a substantially planar, expanding, fan-like film with stream-like edges, forming particles, which are carried by their momentum to the article target. Such fan-like films, because they are formed by the convergence of the fluid, include heavy streams at their expanding edges, which are referred to as “tails.” Because of the heavy stream-like flow in the “tails,” the deposited layer of liquid formed by these edge portions of the expanding, fan-like film includes a disproportionate quantity of resin and produces a non-uniform deposit with stripes when the spray pattern is swept across a substrate by a gun operator, as shown in FIG.


10


. The non-uniform deposit and resulting stripes make the blending of deposited material into a film of uniform thickness difficult and can lead to a wasteful, excessively thick gel-coat layer.




Compressed air has also been used to solve the problem of tails created by airless spray nozzles. See, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,202,363; 3,521,824; 3,635,400; 3,843,052; 4,386,739 and 4,967,956.




Nevertheless, a need remains for an inexpensive, conveniently controllable means for uniform gel-coat application to molds and preforms.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The invention provides an apparatus and method by which a spray-up operator may conveniently control the application of a gel-coat material to a mold or preform to achieve a uniform coating.




Systems of the invention include a first source of gel-coat resin, a second source of catalyst for the gel-coat resin, means for delivering gel-coat resin and catalyst from the first and second sources to an application means, and air delivery means to provide a flow of compressed air to the application means, wherein the application means comprises a mixer for gel-coat resin and catalyst, and a manipulatable nozzle and air control assembly including a liquid nozzle for forming the catalyzed gel-coat material into a fan-like film with substantially flat faces and expanding stream-like edges extending from a liquid orifice, and an air nozzle assembly for directing independently controllable flows of compressed air at the substantially flat faces and at the expanding stream-like edges of the fan-like film.




Apparatus of the invention include an application means manipulated by a workman, such as the apparatus commonly referred to as a “spray gun,” comprising, as its forward end, a nozzle and air control assembly including a liquid nozzle forming the liquid coating material into an expanding fan-like film having opposed, generally flat faces between expanding stream-like edges, an air nozzle assembly carrying the liquid dispensing nozzle and including a pair of compressed air nozzles for directing an expanded flow of compressed air at each of the opposed, generally flat faces of the expanding fan-like film of coating material and a pair of air outlets for directing jets of compressed air at the expanding, stream-like edges of the expanding fan-like film of liquid coating material, and an air control element carrying the liquid nozzle and the air nozzle assembly and having a compressed air inlet, means for dividing a flow of compressed air from said compressed air inlet into two independent flows of compressed air leading, respectively, to the pair of compressed air nozzles and to the pair of compressed air outlets, and first and second air valves conveniently located on the air control element for independently controlling the two independent flows of compressed air leading to the pair of compressed air nozzles and to the pair of compressed air outlets.




In preferred methods and apparatus of the invention, a pair of controllable expanding flows of compressed air are directed at the opposed substantially flat faces of the expanding liquid film of mixed gel-coat material from the opposite sides thereof to impinge upon the expanding catalyzed liquid gel-coat film closely adjacent the liquid nozzle, and a pair of controllable compressed air jets are directed forwardly and generally parallel to each other at the expanding stream-like edges of the catalyzed liquid gel-coat film on axes impinging the expanding stream-like edges of the liquid gel-coat film generally at or forwardly of the area of impingement of the expanding flows of compressed air on the faces of the liquid film, and the pair of controllable expanding compressed air flows and the pair of controllable compressed air jets are independently adjusted to obtain a uniform deposition of gel-coat on a mold or preform surface. Preferred apparatus may include liquid mixing means for the gel-coat resin and catalyst in the liquid passageway of the air control element.




Incorporation of air control valve means, permitting adjustment the compressed air flows impinging on the faces and edges of the expanding film of mixed gel-coat material, on the gel-coat application means permits the workman to adjust the conditions of operation to achieve an improved and more uniform application of gel-coat to the article-forming substrate, reducing the cost associated with an unwanted non-uniform thickness of the expensive gel-coat material and providing an attractive outer surface finish to the resulting articles.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a block diagram of an internal mix system to illustrate the invention;





FIG. 2

is an exploded view of a preferred air control and nozzle assembly of the invention;





FIG. 3

is a perspective view of the air control element of the invention illustrated in

FIG. 2

showing one set of air passageways in phantom line, and, exploded therefrom, a valve element for controlling the flow of air in the illustrated set of air passageways;





FIG. 4

is another perspective view of the air control element of the invention illustrated in

FIGS. 2 and 3

, showing a second set of air passageways in phantom line, and, exploded therefrom, a valve element for controlling the flow of air in the illustrated set of air passageways;





FIGS. 5-8

are illustrations of a preferred air nozzle assembly of the air control and nozzle assembly of the invention;

FIG. 5

being a front view of the air nozzle assembly;

FIG. 6

being a cross-sectional view of the air nozzle assembly of

FIG. 5

at a plane through the central axis of the nozzle assembly at line


6





6


of

FIG. 5

;

FIG. 7

being a cross-sectional view of the air nozzle assembly of

FIG. 5

at a plane through the central axis of the nozzle assembly at line


7





7


of

FIG. 5

; and

FIG. 8

is a rear view of the air nozzle assembly of

FIGS. 5-7

.





FIG. 9

is a perspective view of the air control and nozzle assembly of the invention in operation to illustrate the expanding fan-like film of catalyzed gel-coat material formed by the airless liquid nozzle and its relationship to the air outlets of the air nozzle assembly whereby compressed air jets are directed at the expanding stream-like edges of the expanding fan-like film and expanded flows of compressed air are directed at the opposed, substantially flat faces of the expanding fan-like film;





FIG. 10

illustrates the non-uniform deposition of gel-coat on a mold or preform without the benefit of the invention because of the non-uniform stream-like flow of liquid at the edges of the expanding fan-like film from an airless liquid nozzle; and





FIG. 11

illustrates the substantially uniform deposition of gel-coat that can be obtained on a mold or preform with the invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION





FIG. 1

schematically illustrates an internal mix, gel-coat application system that may incorporate the invention. The system is generally designated by reference numeral


10


and includes a first source


11


of a first component, e.g., a gel-coat resinous material; a second source


12


of a second component, e.g., a catalyst for the resinous gel-coat material; an application means


13


for mixing the catalyst and gel-coat resin and for directing the mixture at a mold or preform


14


; and delivery means


16


for delivering the gel-coat resin, catalyst, and compressed air to the application means


13


during operation of the system. Any of a number of liquid gel-coat materials can be used in the invention.




Various aspects of application means


13


are shown in

FIGS. 2-9

. The application means


13


preferably comprises a hand-held gun, which is manipulatable by a workman in applying gel-coat to a mold or preform


14


. Such an application means


13


includes a gun body


17


with an air control and nozzle assembly


18


of the invention at its front. The gun body


17


, on which the air control and nozzle assembly


18


is carried, can be any of several gun bodies known in the art, e.g., the Model INDY II™ of Glas-Craft, Inc. of Indianapolis, Ind. Air control and nozzle assembly


18


preferably incorporates a mixer


18




a


to mix the gel-coat resin and catalyst. A preferred mixer is sold by TAH Industries, Inc., of Imlaystown, N.J. 03526 as their Part No. 121-126. Air control and nozzle assembly


18


comprises a combined compressed air and airless liquid nozzle assembly, illustrated in

FIGS. 2-9

, in which compressed air and liquid pressure are combined in uniformly applying mixed gel-coat resin and catalyst to the substrate


14


of the mold or preform. Thus, system


10


includes a compressed air source


19


.




Delivery means


16


includes means


21


for delivering the gel-coat resin including a resin pump


22


and gel-coat resin conduit


23


between the source of gel-coat resin


11


and the gun body


17


; means


24


for delivering catalyst for the gel-coat resin including a catalyst pump


25


and a catalyst conduit


26


between the source of catalyst


12


and the gun body


17


; and means


27


for delivering compressed air including a compressed air control


28


and an air conduit


29


between compressed air source


19


and the application means


13


. If desired, a source of solvent


68


may be connected through a solvent pump


67


, and a flexible solvent hose


69


to a solvent flow control valve


69




a


carried by the gun body


17


to provide a cleansing flow of solvent through the liquid passageways of the gun body.




As described below, a flow of gel-coat resin from resin source


11


and a flow of catalyst from catalyst source


12


are delivered to gun body


17


where they are controlled by valves in the gun body actuated by a trigger


15


and directed to air control and nozzle assembly


18


which mixes the gel-coat resin and catalyst, and directs the catalyzed gel-coat material to mold or preform


14


. Air control and nozzle assembly


18


includes a conventional airless nozzle


160


(see

FIG. 2 and 9

) to which the mixed gel-coat resin and catalyst are directed and which forms the catalyzed gel-coat mixture into a fan-like film with substantially flat faces between expanding stream-like edges (see FIG.


9


). Air control and nozzle assembly


18


is also connected to the source of compressed air


19


and provides a plurality of compressed air flows to co-act with the airless nozzle


160


to assist in formation of a uniform deposited film of the resin-catalyst mixture, particularly by reducing the non-uniformity caused by the stream-like edges of the fan-like resin-catalyst film formed by the airless nozzle


160


. Thus, mixed gel-coat resin and catalyst can be uniformly applied to mold or preform


14


, where it solidifies to form a smooth and lustrous outer surface of an article of manufacture. Mold


14


can be for an article, such as a boat hull, boat part, shower stall, or the like.




In one embodiment of this invention, compressed air from source


19


is directed through a factory pressure regulator


28


and a flexible air hose


29


to a compressed air inlet


34


formed in air control and nozzle assembly


18


into which a hose fitting


34




a


is threaded, as illustrated by FIG.


2


. In other embodiments, the flexible air conduit


29


may be attached to the gun body


17


, which may also carry an air valve that is actuated by the gun's trigger (with the actuation of resin and catalyst valves carried by the gun body) and upon actuation delivers a flow of compressed air to the air control and nozzle assembly


18


through internal passageways formed in the gun body and air control element


30


.




The air control and nozzle assembly


18


of the invention is shown in greater detail in the exploded view of

FIG. 2

, and the perspective and cross sectional views of the air control element


30


,

FIGS. 3 and 4

, and of the air nozzle assembly


140


,

FIGS. 5-8

.




As shown in

FIG. 2

, the air control and nozzle assembly


18


includes an air control element


30


, which carries a pair of air control valve elements


31


and


32


, and a connector


34




a


for a flexible hose which forms compressed air passageway


29


. Air control element


30


includes a labyrinth of internal air passageways by which compressed air entering the compressed air inlet opening


34


is divided into two independent flow paths, one of which includes valve element


31


and leads from valve


31


to a first opening


35


, and the other of which includes the second valve element


32


and leads to a second set of openings


36


and


37


. The air passageways of the air control element


30


may be formed, for example, by drilling blind holes and closing the surface ends of the holes with set screw seals. The air control element


30


carries a controllable flow of catalyzed gel-coat resin material through a central passageway leading from a gun body passageway to an opening


39


a located midway between openings


36


and


37


.





FIGS. 3 and 4

are perspective drawings to illustrate the labyrinth of passages that divides the compressed air entering air inlet


34


into two independently controllable flows of compressed air. To avoid the confusing clutter that would be created by showing all of the internal passageways formed within air control element


30


,

FIG. 3

, with phantom lines, illustrates only the passageways by which the compressed air is led from the air inlet


34


past the valve control element


31


to opening


35


, and

FIG. 4

illustrates, with phantom lines, only the passageways by which the compressed air is led from the air inlet


34


past the valve control element


32


to openings


36


and


37


, it being understood that the passageways shown in

FIGS. 3 and 4

are all formed within air control element


30


.




Referring now to

FIG. 3

, which illustrates the internal air passageways between the air inlet


34


and the air outlet


35


. As indicated in

FIG. 2

, compressed air from the flexible hose compressed air passageway


29


enters air inlet


34


through a threaded hose connection


34




a


that is threaded into air inlet opening


34


, and flows from the hose connection


34




a


through a passageway


101


to an intersecting passageway


102


, which lies transversely of passageway


101


. From passageway


102


the compressed air flows through an intersection opening


103


and through downwardly extending passageway


104


to an opening


105


at the intersection of the downwardly extending passageway


104


and a forwardly extending passageway


106


. The forward end of passageway


106


intersects the upper end of the bore


107


at intersection opening


108


. The bore


107


carries valve control element


31


and forms an air control opening


109


and a surrounding valve seat


110


. The flow of air through air control opening


109


is controlled by the extent to which valve seat end


31




a


of control element


31


, which is threadedly carried by air control element


30


in bore


107


, is displaced from valve seat


110


. Compressed air which controllably passes between the valve seat end


31




a


of valve control element


31


and the valve seat


110


formed by air control element


30


escapes through air opening


111


formed in bore


107


, travels through passageway


112


and escapes through opening


35


. As will be explained further below, this flow of compressed air will travel outwardly between the extended forward-most faces


30




b


and


30




c


of the air control element


30


for ejection from air nozzle outlets


146




a


and


146




b


(

FIGS. 5 and 6

) and directed at the substantially flat faces of the fan-like film of gel-coat, as illustrated by FIG.


9


.





FIG. 4

illustrates, in phantom lines, the second set of air passageways formed within air control element


30


. As indicated above, compressed air is directed into the air inlet


34


by a threaded hose fitting


34




a


in the air inlet


34


, and compressed air travels from the hose fitting


34




a


through passageway


101


, which intersects a forwardly extending passageway


120


at an intersection opening


121


. (Forwardly extending passageway


120


lies below the passageway


102


illustrated in

FIG. 3.

) The compressed air entering the forwardly extending passageway


120


through intersection opening


121


travels to the forward end of passageway


120


which intersects, at intersection opening


123


, the control valve bore


122


, which carries the valve control element


32


. The control valve bore


122


forms at its lower end an air control opening


124


and a surrounding valve seat


125


. The flow of compressed air through the air control opening


124


and past the valve seat


125


is controlled by the extent to which the seat-engaging end


32




a


of the valve control member


32


, which is threadedly carried by the air control element


30


in bore


122


, is displaced from the valve seat


125


. Compressed air, which controllably flows between the valve seat


125


and the seat-engaging end


32




a


of valve control element


32


, flows outwardly from control valve bore


122


through a pair of openings


126


and


127


, formed by the intersections of transverse passageways


128


and


129


, and outwardly through passageways


128


and


129


, to their intersections with a pair of downwardly extending passageways,


130


and


131


, respectively, which intersect passageways


128


and


129


at intersection openings


132


and


134


, respectively. Compressed air then flows downwardly through passageways


130


and


131


to intersection openings


135


and


136


, respectively, and forwardly through intersecting passageways


137


and


138


, and outwardly from air outlets


37


and


36


, respectively. As will be described in greater detail below, the controlled flow of air from outlets


36


and


37


of the air control element


30


will be directed by air outlets


142




a


and


142




b


(

FIGS. 5 and 7

) of the air nozzle assembly


140


at the expanding stream-like edges of the expanding fan-like film, as illustrated in FIG.


9


.




Thus, an application operator, by adjustment of the position of valve control members


31


and


32


at the forward end of the application means


13


can adjust the velocity of the air jets directed from openings


142




a


and


142




b


of the air nozzle assembly


140


at the expanding stream-like edges of the expanding fan-like film of gel-coat formed by liquid nozzle


160


(FIG.


2


), and can control the expanding fan-like flows of compressed air formed by the air nozzles


146




a


and


146




b


and directed at the substantially flat faces of the expanding fan-like film of gel-coat material. (See FIG.


9


).




As indicated above, the passageways


101


to


112


of

FIG. 3 and 120

to


138


of

FIG. 4

, including their intersection openings, may be formed by drilling holes in the air control element


30


and closing and sealing the ends at the surface of the air control element


30


, for example, by threading set screws into the holes formed in the air control element


30


.




Referring again to

FIG. 2

, opening


39




a


is formed by a cylindrical cavity in the air control element


30


, which accepts a plastic liquid seal member


139


. The rear portion and periphery of the liquid seal member


139


provides a seal, with the walls of cylindrical cavity


39




a


, against the pressure exerted on the catalyzed gel-coat mixture by pumps


22


and


25


, and the forward portion of the liquid seal member


139


is formed to sealingly engage the rear of airless liquid nozzle


160


. Air nozzle assembly


140


(

FIGS. 5-8

) has a central opening


144


to accept the forward end of the liquid nozzle


160


and position its orifice so the expanding fan-like film of catalyzed gel-coat material is properly oriented with respect to air outlets


142




a


,


142




b


,


146




a


, and


146




b


, as shown in FIG.


9


. When the air control and nozzle assembly


18


is assembled, the seal member


139


is placed in the cavity


39




a


forming the liquid outlet opening of the air control element


30


, the liquid nozzle


160


is placed over the forward end of the liquid seal member


139


with its flat sides substantially vertical, the air nozzle assembly


140


is placed over the liquid nozzle


160


with its seal extension members


148


and


149


extending into air outlets


36


or


37


, and the threaded nut


170


is threaded onto threaded forward end


30




a


of the air control element


30


to fasten and seal the parts into a functioning unit.

FIG. 2

shows how the air control and nozzle assembly


18


is assembled.




Retainer nut


170


includes a threaded portion


171


at its rear which threads onto a threaded portion


30




a


at the forward end of the air control element


30


. At its forward portion, retainer nut


170


forms an inwardly projecting flange


171




a


(not shown) which engages front flange


143


of air nozzle assembly


140


, urging it rearwardly and toward the forward-most faces


30




b


,


30




c


of threaded forward end of the air control element


30


. Air nozzle assembly


140


is formed with a central opening


144


which is shaped to include two, flat surfaces


144




a


and


144




b


(see

FIGS. 5 and 8

) which engage the flat outer side surfaces


160




a


and


160




b


of the airless liquid nozzle


160


and orient it with respect to air outlets


142




a


,


142




b


,


146




a


and


146




b


. A rearwardly facing flange


145


is formed around central opening


144


as shown in

FIGS. 6 and 7

; and as the retaining nut


170


is threaded on the forward end


30




a


of the air control element


30


and its rearwardly facing flange


171




a


(not shown) engages flange


143


of air nozzle


140


and urges air nozzle


140


rearwardly, flange


145


of air nozzle


140


presses liquid nozzle


160


and sealing means


139


rearwardly into sealing engagement with air control element


30


in cylindrical cavity


39




a


. As shown in

FIG. 2

, sealing means


139


is preferably formed with a forward portion


139




b


of reduced diameter to fit within a cavity at the rear of liquid nozzle


160


. Sealing means


139


can thus be sealingly engaged between liquid nozzle


160


and the air control element


30


.




When the trigger


15


of the gun body


17


is pulled rearwardly, opening the gun valve assemblies controlling the flow of gel-coat resin and catalyst, the gel-coat resin and catalyst flow under the influence of pressure imparted by pumps


22


and


25


through one or more internal passageways in the gun body into the central passageway of air control element


30


that carries static mixer


18




a


and delivers a catalyzed gel-coat mixture through a central passageway


139




a


formed in sealing means


139


, and liquid nozzle


160


and its opening


161


. Liquid nozzle


160


is a conventional airless atomizing nozzle, frequently referred to as an “airless spray tip” and includes an interior passageway formed to force the resin to flow into a fan-like film with expanding stream-like edges extending forwardly from liquid orifice


161


, as shown in FIG.


9


. Such liquid nozzles may be purchased to form fan-like films with included angles from 20° to over 60°, angles of 30° to 50° being preferred.





FIGS. 5-8

illustrate the air nozzle assembly


140


which directs four controllable flows of compressed air at the expanding fan-like film of catalyzed gel-coat material to control the uniformity of the gel-coat layer applied to the mold or preform.




When the retainer nut


170


is tightened against air control element


30


, the plastic seal member


139


, which is squeezed between the rear surface of opening cavity


39




a


and the rear of liquid nozzle


160


, can prevent the rear surface of air nozzle assembly


140


from engaging the front surfaces


30




b


and


30




c


of the air control element


30


. In any event, the flow of compressed air from air outlet


35


of air control element


30


is directed to passageways


146




c


and


146




d


(FIGS.


6


and


8


), and outwardly through compressed air nozzles


146




a


and


146




b


, which expand the flows of compressed air into expanding fan-like flows directed at the substantially flat faces of the liquid resin expelled from liquid nozzle


160


, as indicated by FIG.


9


. The engagement of the threads of threaded element


170


with the threaded forward portion


30




a


of air element


30


provides a sufficient air seal to ensure that substantially all of the compressed air leaving air outlet


35


is expelled from air nozzles


146




a


and


146




b.






As best illustrated by

FIG. 7

, the air nozzle assembly


140


includes a pair of seal extension members


148


and


149


that are press-fit into the rear of the air nozzle assembly


140


and form, with the air nozzle assembly


140


, passageways


142




c


and


142




d


, leading to air outlets


142




a


and


142




b


in the forward face of the air nozzle assembly. The seal extension members


148


and


149


carry o-rings


151


and


152


. As indicated by

FIG. 2

, when the air nozzle assembly


140


is assembled to air control element


30


, the seal extension members


148


and


149


extend into cavities formed at the forward end of air outlets


36


and


37


of air control element


30


, and o-rings


151


and


152


sealingly engage the air control element


30


so that air directed to the compressed air outlets


36


and


37


of the air control element


30


is expelled through passageways


142




c


and


142




d


and outlets


142




a


and


142




b


, respectively, as jets of compressed air formed, respectively, by air outlet


142




a


and passageway


142




c


and by air outlet


142




b


and passageway


142




d


. As indicated by

FIG. 9

, the compressed air jets leaving compressed air apertures


142




a


and


142




b


are directed at the expanding stream-like edges of the expanding fan-like film of gel-coat resin expelled from the liquid nozzle


160


.




As shown by

FIGS. 5-9

, the air nozzle assembly


140


surrounds the airless nozzle


160


, which preferably forms an expanding fan-like film with an included angle R. The compressed air nozzles


146




a


and


146




b


of the nozzle assembly


140


are located on a plane that is perpendicular to and bisects the expanding fan-like film formed by the airless nozzles and are oriented to directed their expanding flows of compressed air at acute, included angles A with respect to the substantially flat faces of the expanding fan-like liquid film for impingement upon the substantially flat faces of the expanding fan-like film at distances from about one-half an inch to about one inch or more forwardly of the orifice


161


of airless nozzle


160


. Preferably, as indicated in

FIGS. 5 and 6

, the air nozzles


146




a


and


146




b


are equally spaced from the center line of the liquid orifice


160


by distance C of about ⅜″ to about ½″, and most preferably about ⅜″, and directed to form equal acute, included angles A of about 25° to about 30° with respect to the substantially flat faces of the expanding fan-like liquid film.




As further illustrated by

FIGS. 5-9

, the compressed air jets leaving the orifices formed by the passageways


142




a


,


142




c


, and


142




b


,


142




d


, respectively, are generally parallel to both the longitudinal axis of the nozzle assembly


140


and to each other, and are equally spaced from the central axis of the liquid nozzle


160


a distance E of about {fraction (3/10)}″ to about {fraction (4/10)}″, and most preferably about ⅜″. Preferably the air orifices


142




a


and


142




b


lie in a plane that perpendicularly bisects the plane through the center of the air nozzles


146




a


and


146




b


. In a particularly preferred embodiment of the air nozzle assembly, where the liquid nozzle


160


forms an expanding fan-like film with an included angle R of about 40° to about 50°, the distance C is about ⅜″; the angle A is about 30° and the distance E is about ⅜″.




For preferable operation, the distance E (the separation between the center line of the air passageways


142




a


,


142




b


from the center line of the liquid orifice


161


) divided by the tangent of one-half of the angle R (the included angle formed by the expanding fan-like film) is greater than the distance C (the separation between the center line of the air nozzles


146




a


and


146




b


and the center line of the liquid orifice


161


) divided by the tangent of A (the acute angle between a line parallel to the central axis of liquid nozzle


160


and the center axes of air nozzles


146




a


and


146




b


).




In the absence of the controllable flows of compressed air of this invention, the expanding liquid film formed by the liquid orifice


160


includes a relatively thin central portion with substantially flat opposed faces, having a high ratio of width to thickness, and two expanding stream-like edges that are characterized by a heavy stream-like flows of liquid having almost circular cross sections.

FIG. 10

illustrates an example of a cross section of a layer of gel-coat resin that will be deposited by liquid nozzle


160


in the absence of the flow of compressed air from air nozzle assembly


140


. As indicated by

FIG. 10

, the deposited layer


200


includes a relatively thin, substantially uniform central portion


201


and two thick outer portions


202


and


203


, formed by the stream-like edges of the liquid film.




By adjustment of the air control valves


31


and


32


, and the resulting controlled impingement of compressed air from the air outlets


142




a


and


142




b


,


146




a


and


146




b


of the air nozzle assembly


140


, the non-uniformities in the deposited film caused by the operation of the liquid nozzle


160


can be corrected to provide a substantially uniform deposited film of gel-coat


210


, as illustrated by FIG.


11


.




Those skilled in the art will recognize that the method and apparatus of the present invention has many applications and that the present invention is not limited to the preferred embodiment illustrated and described herein, and is incorporated into all embodiments covered by the scope of the following claims, including those equivalents which are not obvious in view of the prior art.



Claims
  • 1. A plural component gel-coat application system, comprising:a hand manipulatable application means for directing gel-coat at a substrate; first means for providing a flow of a first gel-coat component to said hand manipulatable application means; second means for providing a flow of a second gel-coat component to said hand manipulatable application means; a source of compressed air; and air delivery means for providing a flow of compressed air to said hand manipulatable application means, said hand manipulatable application means including mixing means for mixing said first and second gel-coat components to provide mixed first and second gel-coat components for application, an airless liquid nozzle for forming the mixed first and second gel-coat components into a fan-like film with substantially flat faces and stream-like edges extending from a liquid orifice, and an air nozzle assembly for directing first expanded flows of compressed air at the substantially flat faces of the fan-like film and for directing second flows of compressed air at the stream-like edges of the fan-like film, said hand manipulatable application means further including first valve means for adjusting said first expanded flows of compressed air and second valve means for adjusting said second flows of compressed air.
  • 2. A plural component gel-coat application system, comprising:a hand manipulatable application means for directing gel-coat at a substrate; first means for providing a flow of a first gel-coat component to said hand manipulatable application means; second means for providing a flow of a second gel-coat component to said hand manipulatable application means; a source of compressed air; and air delivery means for providing a flow of compressed air to said hand manipulatable application means, said hand manipulatable application means including mixing means for mixing said first and second gel-coat components to provide mixed first and second gel-coat components for application, an airless liquid nozzle for forming the mixed first and second gel-coat components into a fan-like film with substantially flat faces and stream-like edges extending from a liquid orifice, and an air nozzle assembly including a pair of air nozzles for forming and directing first expanded flows of compressed air at the substantially flat faces of the fan-like film of mixed gel-coat components as expanding fan-like flows, and further including a pair of air passages with openings for directing second flows of compressed air at the stream-like edges of the fan-like film as jet-like flows, said hand manipulatable application means further including first valve means for adjusting said first expanded flows of compressed air and second valve means for adjusting said second flows of compressed air.
  • 3. A plural component gel-coat application system, comprising:a hand manipulatable application means for directing gel-coat at a substrate; first means for providing a flow of a first gel-coat component to said hand manipulatable application means; second means for providing a flow of a second gel-coat component to said hand manipulatable application means; a source of compressed air; and air delivery means for providing a flow of compressed air to said hand manipulatable application means, said hand manipulatable application means including: mixing means for mixing said first and second gel-coat components to provide mixed first and second gel-coat components for application; an airless liquid nozzle for forming the mixed first and second gel-coat components into a fan-like film with substantially flat faces and stream-like edges extending from a liquid orifice; an air nozzle assembly comprising: a nozzle body having a central opening at its longitudinal centerline in which the airless liquid nozzle is positioned; a pair of air nozzles equally spaced on opposing sides of the longitudinal center line of the nozzle body for directing first expanded flows of compressed air at the substantially flat faces of the fan-like film; and a pair of air orifices, equally spaced on opposing sides of the longitudinal center line of the nozzle body and located on a line that perpendicularly bisects the line between the pair of air nozzles, for directing second flows of compressed air at the expanding edges of the fan-like resin film, said hand manipulatable application means further comprising a compressed air control element, including passageways for dividing the flow of compressed air from said air delivery means into two independent flows of compressed air and first and second valve means, said first valve means controlling one of said independent flows of compressed air and said second valve means controlling the other of said independent flows of compressed air, said airless liquid nozzle and air nozzle assembly being carried by said compressed air control element.
  • 4. A method of forming a gel-coat on an article mold, comprising:delivering a flow of a gel-coat resin to an application means; delivering a flow of a catalyst for said gel-coat resin to said application means; delivering a flow of compressed air to said application means; mixing said gel-coat resin and said catalyst for said gel-coat resin and forming the mixture into a fan-like film with substantially flat faces between expanding edges extending from the application means; dividing the flow of compressed air into a first compressed air flow and a second compressed air flow; dividing the first compressed air flow into two airflows, forming the two air flows to provide two expanding air flows and directing said two expanding airflows at the substantially flat faces of the fan-like film of said mixture from opposite sides of the film within about an inch of the application means; dividing the second flow of compressed air into two generally parallel air jets directed at the expanding edges of the fan-like film, and adjusting the first compressed air flow and second compressed air flow to provide, from the fan-like film, a substantially uniform application of gel-coat to the article mold.
  • 5. A means for application of a liquid coating material, comprisinga liquid dispensing nozzle forming the liquid coating material into an expanding, fan-like film having opposed, generally flat faces between expanding stream-like edges, a compressed air nozzle assembly carrying the liquid dispensing nozzle, including a pair of compressed air nozzles for directing an expanded flow of compressed air at each of the opposed, generally flat faces of the expanding fan-like film of coating material, and a pair of air outlets for directing jets of compressed air at the expanding, stream-like edges of the expanding fan-like film of liquid coating material, and an air control element carrying said liquid dispensing nozzle and air nozzle assembly having a compressed air inlet and passages for dividing a flow of compressed air into two independent compressed air flows, one set of passages leading to the pair of compressed air nozzles, and a second set of passages leading to the pair of compressed air outlets, and further carrying first and second air valves for independently controlling the flows of compressed air from the pair of compressed air nozzles and from the pair of compressed air outlets.
  • 6. A gel-coat application device, comprising:a liquid nozzle forming a gel coat material into an expanding fan-like liquid film having opposed substantially flat faces between expanding stream-like edges; a compressed air nozzle assembly, including an opening in which the liquid nozzle is carried, two compressed air nozzles located on each side of the liquid nozzle, each compressed air nozzle forming and directing an expanding flow of compressed air at one of the opposed, substantially flat faces of the expanding fan-like flow of gel-coat material, and two compressed air outlets located between the compressed air nozzles and directing compressed air at the expanding stream-like edges; and an air control element on which the airless liquid nozzle and compressed air nozzle assembly are carried, said air control element including a compressed air inlet, a first set of passageways and a first adjustable air valve between said air inlet and said two compressed air nozzles, and a second set of passageways and second adjustable valve between said compressed air inlet and said two compressed air outlets.
  • 7. A plural component application system, comprising:a first source of a first liquid component; a second source of a second liquid component; a hand-held application means for directing mixed first and second components at a substrate; liquid delivery means for providing a flow of said first component from said first source to said hand-held application means and for providing a flow of said second component from said second source to said hand-held application means; mixing means for mixing said first and second liquid components to provide a mixture of said first and second liquid components for application, a source of compressed air; and air delivery means for providing a flow of compressed air from said compressed air source to said hand-held application means; and said hand-held application means including an airless liquid nozzle for forming the mixed first and second components into a fan-like film with substantially flat faces and stream-like edges extending from a liquid orifice, and an air nozzle assembly for directing first expanded flows of compressed air to impinge on the substantially flat faces of the fan-like film and for further directing second flows of compressed air to impinge on the stream-like edges of the fan-like film, said hand-held application means further including first valve means for adjusting said first expanded flows of compressed air and second valve means for adjusting said second flows of compressed air.
  • 8. The system of claim 7 wherein said first and second components comprise a gel-coat material.
  • 9. The system of claim 7 wherein said hand-held application means includes said mixing means upstream of said airless liquid nozzle.
  • 10. A plural component application system, comprising:a first source of a first liquid component; a second source of a second liquid component; a hand-held application means for directing mixed first and second components at a substrate; liquid delivery means for providing a flow of said first component from said first source to said hand-held application means and for providing a flow of said second component from said second source to said hand-held application means; mixing means for mixing said first and second liquid components to provide a mixture of said first and second liquid components for application, a source of compressed air; and air delivery means for providing a flow of compressed air from said compressed air source to said hand-held application means, said hand-held application means including an airless liquid nozzle for forming the mixed first and second components into a fan-like film with substantially flat faces and stream-like edges extending from a liquid orifice, and an air nozzle assembly comprising: a nozzle body having a central opening at its longitudinal centerline in which the airless liquid nozzle is positioned; a pair of air nozzles equally spaced on opposing sides of the longitudinal center line of the nozzle body for directing the first expanded flows of compressed air at the substantially flat faces of the fan-like film; and a pair of air orifices, equally spaced on opposing sides of the longitudinal center line of the nozzle body and located on a line that perpendicularly bisects the line between the pair of air nozzles, for directing said second flows of compressed air at the expanding edges of the fan-like resin film, said hand-held application means further comprising a compressed air control element, said air control element including said first and second air valve means for said first and second compressed air flows, said first valve means adjusting said first expanded flows of compressed air and said second valve means adjusting said second flows of compressed air.
  • 11. A plural component application system, comprising:a first source of a first liquid component; a second source of a second liquid component; a hand-held application means for directing mixed first and second components at a substrate; liquid delivery means for providing a flow of said first component from said first source to said hand-held application means and for providing a flow of said second component from said second source to said hand-held application means; mixing means for mixing said first and second liquid components to provide a mixture of said first and second liquid components for application, a source of compressed air; and air delivery means for providing a flow of compressed air from said compressed air source to said hand-held application means, said hand-held application means including an airless liquid nozzle for forming the mixed first and second components into a fan-like film with substantially flat faces and stream-like edges extending from a liquid orifice, an air nozzle assembly for directing first expanded flows of compressed air to impinge on the substantially flat faces of the fan-like film and for further directing second flows of compressed air to impinge on the stream-like edges of the fan-like film, and an air control element having a compressed air inlet and a plurality of internal passageways dividing a flow of compressed air entering the compressed air inlet into two independently controllable flows of compressed air, one of said two independently controllable flows of compressed air being controlled by first valve means and the other of said two independently controllable flows of compressed air being controlled by second valve means, said first valve means adjusting said first expanded flows of compressed air and said second valve means adjusting said second flows of compressed air, said air control element carrying said airless liquid nozzle in communication with said mixing means and carrying said air nozzle assembly in communication with each of said independently controllable floats of compressed air.
US Referenced Citations (10)
Number Name Date Kind
3202363 Kautz et al. Aug 1965 A
3521624 Wilcox Jul 1970 A
3635400 Nord et al. Jan 1972 A
3843052 Cowan Oct 1974 A
4386739 Kwok Jun 1983 A
4824017 Mansfield Apr 1989 A
4928884 Smith May 1990 A
4967956 Mansfield Nov 1990 A
5178326 Kukesh et al. Jan 1993 A
5570839 Kukesh Nov 1996 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
234187 Sep 1944 CH
1104277 Nov 1966 GB