The invention generally relates to the field of floor panels with mechanical locking systems comprising a separate displaceable tongue allowing easy installation. The invention provides new improved locking systems and methods to install and disconnect building panels, especially floor panels and methods to produce the locking system.
In particular, yet not restrictive manner, the invention concerns a mechanical locking system for rectangular floor panels with long and short edges, which could be installed with vertical folding. It should be emphasized that long and short edges are only used to simplify the description. The panels could also be square, they could have more than 4 edges and the adjacent edges could have angles other than 90 degrees. However, the invention is as well applicable to building panels in general. More particularly the invention relates mainly to the type of mechanically locking systems, which allow that angling of long edges and vertical movement of short edges could lock all four edges of a panel to other panels with a single action method generally referred to as vertical folding.
Floor panel of this type are presented in WO 2008/004960 (Applicant Välinge Innovation AB) and WO 2008/017301 (Schulte). The main principles are shown in
A side push locking system according to known technology that requires that a displacement groove is formed which is not parallel to the edge is very difficult to produce and deep grooves will have a negative effect on the stability and strength of the panel edge. As an alternative wedge shape tongues consisting generally of two parts, which are not parallel with the edge could be used. Such tongues are expensive and complicated to produce and insert into an edge.
The main disadvantage of side push systems of this kind compared to other mechanical locking systems is that it is difficult to form cavities that cooperates with protrusion on a displaceable tongue in a precise and cost effective way and to avoid negative effects on the stability and the strength of the panel edge.
In the following text, the visible surface of the installed floor panel is called “front face”, while the opposite side of the floor panel, facing the sub floor, is called “rear face”. The edge between the front and rear face is called “joint edge”. If not defined otherwise upper and lower means towards the front face and towards the rear face. Inner and outer means towards or away from the center of the panel. By “horizontal plane” is meant a plane, which extends parallel to the outer part of the surface layer. Immediately juxtaposed upper parts of two adjacent joint edges of two joined floor panels together define a “vertical plane” perpendicular to the horizontal plane. By “horizontally” is meant parallel with the horizontal plane and by “Vertically” parallel to the vertical plane.
By “joint” or “locking system” are meant co acting connecting means, which connect the floor panels vertically and/or horizontally. By “Strip panel” is meant a panel edge that comprises a strip and a locking element and by “groove panel” is meant a panel edges that comprises a locking groove, which cooperates with the locking element in the horizontal locking.
By “vertical push folding” is meant an installation method where the short edges of two panels are locked when they are laying flat on a sub floor after the angling. The vertical locking is obtained by a side push that displaces a separate tongue in the length direction of the short edges. The horizontal locking is in conventional fold down systems obtained in the same way as for the angling systems with a locking element in one edge of a strip panel that cooperates with a locking groove on another edge of a groove panel. By “side push locking system” is meant a locking system, which could be locked with the vertical push folding method.
By “tongue width” is meant the maximum distance between two parallel lines along the length of a tongue that are in contact with the most outer and inner part of the tongue.
The general objective of the present invention is to improve the function and strength of a side push locking system and particularly of those parts that cause a displaceable tongue to move perpendicularly to an edge from one groove and into an adjacent groove when the displaceable tongue is displaced along the edge.
According to a first aspect of the invention a floor panels is provided with a locking system comprising a displaceable tongue in a displacement groove in a first edge and a tongue groove in adjacent second edges for vertical locking. A locking strip with a locking element in the first edge cooperates with a locking groove in the second edge for horizontal locking. The displaceable tongue comprises a protrusion and the displacement groove a cavity such that the protrusion is sliding against a cavity wall and in a first direction perpendicular to the edge when the displaceable tongue is displaced in a second direction along the edge. The displacement in the first direction causes the displaceable tongue to enter into the tongue groove whereby the edges are locked vertically. The cavity extends vertically downwards to the rear side of the panel.
The advantage is that a simple machining could be used to form the cavities and such forming will not have an adverse effect on the strength and stability of the edge.
The cavity is according to a preferred embodiment a blind hole surrounded by an essentially vertical wall.
Such cavity provide an extremely stable edge and a minimum of material must be removed.
According to a second aspect of the invention a floor panels is provided with a locking system comprising a displaceable tongue in a displacement groove in a first edge and a tongue groove in adjacent second edges for vertical locking. A locking strip with a locking element in the first edge cooperates with a locking groove in the second edge for horizontal locking. The displaceable tongue comprises a protrusion and the displacement groove a cavity such that the protrusion is sliding against a cavity wall and in a first direction perpendicular to the edge when the displaceable tongue is displaced in a second direction along the edge. The displacement in the first direction causes the displaceable tongue to enter into the tongue groove whereby the edges are locked vertically. The protrusion is flexible and configured to exert a horizontal pre tension against the tongue groove.
This second aspect offers the advantages that the negative effects of production tolerances could be reduced and an improved locking quality could be reached.
According to a third aspect of the invention a floor panels is provided with a locking system comprising a displaceable tongue in a displacement groove in a first edge and a tongue groove in adjacent second edges for vertical locking. A locking strip with a locking element in the first edge cooperates with a locking groove in the second edge for horizontal locking. The displaceable tongue comprises a protrusion and the displacement groove a cavity such that the protrusion is sliding against a cavity wall and in a first direction perpendicular to the edge when the displaceable tongue is displaced in a second direction along the edge. The displacement in the first direction causes the displaceable tongue to enter into the tongue groove whereby the edges are locked vertically. The protrusion is located on the lower and/or upper part of the displaceable tongue.
The third aspect offers the advantage that it possible to form a displacement groove with small depth and improved stability and strength could be reached.
According to a fourth aspect of the invention a set of floor panels are provided with a locking system comprising a displaceable tongue having a main tongue body and at least two wedge parts located in a displacement groove in a first edge of a first floor panel, cooperating for vertical locking of the edges with a tongue groove in adjacent second edge of a second floor panel. The locking system further comprises a locking strip with a locking element in one edge, which cooperates, for horizontal locking of the edges, with a locking groove in an adjacent edge. The main tongue body comprises at least two flexible protrusions and two recesses. The wedge parts are located at least partly in the recesses. The flexible protrusions are slideable against the wedge parts to obtain a displacement of the main tongue body perpendicular to the edges and thereby causing the vertical locking of the edges. The flexible protrusions are in unlocked position essentially displaced along the displaceable tongue in relation to the wedges and configured to exert a pre-tension against the wedge parts and the tongue groove. The main tongue body comprises a friction connection that allows displacement along the displacement groove and prevents the main tongue body to fall out from the displacement groove. The wedge parts comprise friction connection that prevents the wedge parts to be displaced in the displacement groove when the main tongue body is displaced along the edge. The wedge parts and the main tongue body comprise releasable wedge part connections adapted to be released during the insertion of the displaceable tongue into the displacement groove.
The fourth aspect offers the advantages that the edge could be formed with only a simple machining parallel to the edges in the same way as conventional mechanical locking systems. The displaceable tongue could be formed in a cost efficient way as a one-piece component and converted to a two-piece component during a controlled insertion of the tongue into a groove.
According to a fifth aspect of the invention a tongue blank is provided comprising at least two tongues having a tongue length and being connected to each other. The tongues are adapted to be separated from each other and inserted into an edge groove of a floor panel. Each tongue comprises a main tongue body comprising at least two protrusions extending essentially in the tongue length direction and two recesses. The tongue comprises two wedge parts located at least partly in or adjacent to the recesses. The main tongue body and the wedge parts comprise releasable wedge part connections adapted to be released from the main tongue body during the insertion of the tongue into the groove.
The fifth aspect offers the advantages that the tongues could be produced, handled and inserted into a groove in a simple and cost efficient way.
All embodiments of the first, second, third, fourth and fifth aspects could be combined and the flexible protrusion could for example be used together with a cavity extending to the rear side and being located on an upper and/or lower side of the displaceable tongue.
The invention provides for new embodiments of locking systems preferably at short edges but also at long edges or in square panels. Useful areas for the invention are wall panels, ceilings, exterior applications and floor panels of any shape and material e.g. laminate; especially panels with surface materials contain thermosetting resins, wood, HDF, veneer or stone.
Almost all embodiments of the locking system are described with a displacement groove and a displaceable tongue on the strip panel, mainly in order to simplify the description. It is obvious that the main principle or the invention could also be used on the locking groove side. A tongue is inserted into a displacement groove in one edge, which is located adjacent, and preferably above the locking groove and a tongue groove is formed in another edge adjacent to the locking strip and preferably essentially above the strip.
The position in the length direction of a cavity formed on a panel edge depends on the position of the first entrance tool tooth 56a that comes into contact with the panel edge as shown in
The pitch 55 of the tool configuration defines the intermediate distance of the cavities. It is therefore very easy to form a lot of cavities and protrusions with very precise intermediate distances over a considerable length of a joint. The teeth 56 of a screw cutter are preferably made of industrial diamonds.
Cavities could also be formed with a large rotating tool similar to a saw blade, which comprise cutting teeth on only a portion of the tool body. This is a simple variant of the screw cutter principle and each rotation forms one cavity. The advantage is that the intermediate distance between the cavities could be changed by an adjustment of the tool rotation speed or the feeding speed of the panel.
A planned or unplanned production stops where the displacement of a panel is stopped is a problem if the screw cutter is integrated with the profiling equipment since the screw cutter will destroy all cavities of a panel that are in contact with the tool teeth. This problem could be solved with production methods comprising the following steps where some or all steps could be used independently or in combinations.
a) The panel is always stopped when is has passed the crew cutter tool and after a full production of all cavities located on a panel edge. This method is used for all planned stops. The screw cutter is displaced away from the panel edge when a panel is stopped at a position, which does not allow a full production of all cavities on an edge. Such panels with partly produced cavities are detected and rejected from normal production.
b) The screw cutter is displaced away from the panel edge when the panel stops. The transportation device is than reversed. The screw cutter is moved back to its original position and the panel is produced in the normal way.
c) The screw cutter comprises a moving device that allows that it could be displaced parallel to the panel edge and against the feeding direction of the panels when a panel stops. The screw cutter is displaced such that its teeth pass the panel edge of a stopped panel. All cavities will always be fully machined even when an emergency break occurs. The screw cutter returns to its original position when the transportation device starts and a new panel is produced in the normal way.
The displaceable screw cutter method as described in c) above offers the advantages that conventional profiling equipment could be used without any modification of the transportation device or the control systems.
The above described production methods to form cavities with a crew cutter could be used in all type of panel machining and especially in such machining where cavities are formed which comprises parts of a mechanical locking system for floor panels.
The tongue friction connection 44 is preferably flexible. Such tongue friction connections, which could be used to create a controlled pre tension against an upper and/or lower wall of the displacement groove 40, keep the tongue in the displacement groove in a controlled way and prevent that the tongue falls out from the displacement groove. The flexible tongue friction connection 44 allows a smooth and easy displacement along the joint and eliminates the need for tight production tolerances when the displacement groove is formed. The wedge parts 45 comprise one or several wedge friction connections 47 that could be formed as vertically extending small protrusions. Such protrusions could also be flexible.
The wedge friction connections 47 should preferably be designed to create a friction, which is larger than the friction created, by the tongue friction connections 44. The wedge friction connections 47 should create a firm connection between the wedge parts 45 and the displacement groove 40 and prevent that the wedge part 45 is displaced when the main tongue body 30a is displaced along and perpendicular to the joint during locking. Such a firm friction connection could be accomplished for example with a displacement groove which is formed with a smaller vertically extending opening in an inner part than in an outer part of the groove. The inner part of a wedge friction connection could be pressed against the upper and lower parts of the displacement groove during locking when the main tongue body 30a creates an inwardly directed pressure against the wedge part 45.
The protrusion 31 could be formed such that the pre tension increases when the main tongue body is displaced during the final locking as shown in
The protrusion 31 could according to one embodiment shown in
The displaceable tongue comprises in this embodiment three tongue widths. A maximum width TW 3 when it is in a locked position, a minimum width TW 2 when it is in an unlocked position and an intermediate width TW 1 between the maximum and minimum width when it is produced and not connected to an edge of a panel.
The minimum tongue width TW 2 is preferably about 4-6 mm, the maxim tongue width TW 3 is preferably 5-8 mm and the intermediate tongue width TW 1 is preferably 5-7 mm. The locking distance is preferably 1-3 mm and the displacement distance preferably DD about 2-5 mm.
It is essential that the tongue is fixed to the displacement groove in a rather precise manner. This could be accomplished with inserting equipment that inserts a tongue into a groove and a positioning device 90 that positions a tongue at a pre-determined and precise distance from a panel corner after insertion as shown in
A displacement and positioning in both directions could be obtained by for example a chain or belt comprising several pushers with panel contact surfaces 91 and tongue edge contact surfaces 92. The speed of the chain/belt could be increased and decreased in a controlled way in relation to the displacement speed of the panel such that a contact between the pushers and two opposite edge parts extending perpendicular to the feeding direction is established and the tongue is pushed along or against the feeding direction to its pre-determined position.
The above described production methods could be used to position any type of tongues in any locking system.
The production methods comprising inserting and positioning as described above require however that the tongue body and the wedge parts are displaced in a groove and this could create locking problems due to for example loose wedge parts that could slide during locking. The tongue is therefore most preferably connected and positioned in a pre-determined position during connection and no further adjustments should be required. Such a precise insertion of a tongue in a groove could be obtained if the speed of a pusher or hammer 67 that inserts the tongue is synchronized with the speed of the chain or belt that displaces the panel edge relative to the inserting equipment. Such a precise and controlled insertion could be used to insert any type of tongue or separate parts into a groove.
One tongue cavity and one wedge part could be sufficient to accomplish a locking especially if a flexible protrusion is used in one edge section that cooperates with a corner section of a panel. It is preferred however to use at least two tongue cavities and wedge parts. Such an embodiment provides easier and more controlled displacement and a stronger vertical locking.
All embodiments of the tongues could be formed in a material comprising wood fibers. Such materials could for example be wood fibers mixed with thermoplastic or wood comprising thermosetting resins. Extruded, injection molded or sheet shaped materials could be used. A preferred material is HDF and preferably HDF with a density exceeding 700 kg/cm2. Combinations of machining and/or punching and/or material compression could be used to form tongues or tongue blanks with rather complex three-dimensional forms and which could be used in any application where a separate and/or displaceable tongue is used to lock adjacent panel edges, preferably floor panels. This production method is very cost efficient end environmental friendly.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/SE2009/050103 | Jan 2009 | WO | international |
0900580 | Apr 2009 | SE | national |
The present application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/146,731, filed on Jul. 28, 2011, which is a national stage application of International Application No. PCT/SE2009/051238, filed on Nov. 2, 2009, which claims priority to International Application No. PCT/SE2009/050103, filed on Jan. 30, 2009, and to Swedish Application No. 0900580-2, filed on Apr. 29, 2009. The entire contents of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/146,731, International Application No. PCT/SE2009/051238, International Application No. PCT/SE2009/050103, and Swedish Application No. 0900580-2 are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140208677 A1 | Jul 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13146731 | US | |
Child | 14206214 | US |