The present invention relates generally to forming apertures in resinated fibrous trim panels for use in vehicles, and more particularly, to forming integral speaker grilles which hide the presence of any underlying aperture.
Vehicle interior panels, particularly for automobiles, have been formed from a variety of composite molded products. Construction of a skin backed by a semi-rigid foam and supported by a rigid plastic or metal substrate are well-known. More recently, cloth, fabric and carpet constructions, both woven and non-woven, have become more popular on all surfaces of the vehicle to provide differentiation in appearance and texture, as well as to provide sound attenuation. Vehicle cabin comfort and ambiance, to meet the demand for “creature features”, has been enhanced through the addition of improved quality sound systems, which may include a multiplicity of speakers located throughout the vehicle, each individually tunable to suit the preferences of the occupant. In addition, air vents for distributing filtered air to the occupants may be strategically located to provide personalized climate control. Conventionally, these speakers and air vents have been preferably located behind perforated plastic trim panels to distribute clean air or undistorted sound.
In many cases, a separate plastic molded grille has been mounted over the speaker or air outlet to prevent foreign objects from falling inside. Too often these molded plastic grilles suffer from poor fit (gap and flush) and poor color match to the surrounding trim panel. In addition, the grilles must be mounted or mechanically attached. These speakers and/or air outlets may be found nearly anywhere in the interior of today's vehicle; in the door panel, headliners, cargo door, quarter panels, pillar posts, console, package shelf, seat back, headrest and especially the instrument panel
Recent advances in electronics now provide a number of sources of high quality sound to the vehicle via satellite radio, compact disc (CD) and digital video disc (DVD) which should not suffer from distortion or be muffled by covering materials.
Providing fresh filtered air to the vehicle occupants and removing stale air is also an increasingly important feature.
What is needed is an integrated trim covering for a speaker or an air outlet which is aesthetically pleasing, blending in with the surroundings, and which can provide a free undistorted flow of air and sound, but does not provide detracting gaps and poor color match. What is needed is a process and apparatus for preparing these trim coverings.
It is thus an object of the present invention to provide a decorative trim covering for an air vent or speaker which is integrated into a trim panel and does not include distracting gaps, color mismatches or objectionable sound distortion.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a trim panel comprising at least one layer of resinated fibrous or plastic material which includes a plurality of apertures formed in the material and covered with a porous cloth fabric or carpet.
It is still a further object of the present invention to form these apertures in the resinated fibrous or plastic material as part of the molding process for forming the trim panel, using pins which penetrate the panel, preferably from both sides.
It is still further object of the present invention to provide a stronger perforated area for transmitting sound by using tapered pins which penetrate the resinated fibrous material before it has hardened and by displacing material laterally as the pins pierce the material, densifying the material at the periphery of the apertures so formed.
It is a still further object of the present invention to provide a decorative pattern in the surface of the resinated fibrous product placed at the top surface of the material between the apertures to prevent any readthrough from the aperture beneath the trim covering. The design may be a logo or message.
In a first embodiment the present invention relates to a trim panel for a vehicle comprising a substrate having a top surface including a series of apertures therethrough for transmitting sound or air comprising a decorative outer layer, wherein the top surface of the substrate between the apertures includes a raised surface portion and wherein the decorative outer layer bridges the apertures.
In a second embodiment the present invention is directed at a method of forming a trim panel for a vehicle including a path for sound or air transmission comprising the steps of providing a resinated fibrous mat, providing a forming mold having first and second mold portions whichcooperate to form a cavity space therebetween, providing a series of pins extending from one or both of the first and second mold portions which engage from one mold portion to the opposite mold portion when the mold portions are mated, heating said resinated fibrous mat, placing said heated mat into said cavity space, forming said heated mat into a three dimensional shape by mating said first and second mold portions, piercing said heated mat with said pins as said first and second mold portions are mated, and removing said formed three dimensional shape including a series of apertures formed by said pins from said forming mold.
In a third embodiment, the present invention is directed a method of forming a trim panel for a vehicle including a path for sound or air transmission comprising the steps of providing a substrate precursor, providing a forming mold having first and second mold portions which cooperate to form a cavity space therebetween, providing a series of pins extending from one or both of the first and second mold portions which engage from one mold portion to the opposite mold portion when the mold portions are mated, closing the first and second mold portions to form said cavity space and introducing the substrate precursor into the cavity space and around said pins, wherein an area between said pins includes recesses in either the first or second mold portions to form a raised area in the surface of the substrate, and removing said substrate from said mold wherein said substrate includes a series of apertures formed by said pins.
In a fourth embodiment the present invention is directed at an apparatus for forming apertures for transmitting air or sound through a trim panel comprising a forming mold first portion, a forming mold second portion, a series of pins extending from one or both of said first portion and said second portion in opposed fashion, wherein said first and second mold portion cooperate to form a cavity space therebetween; wherein said pins extend to said opposite mold portion from one or both of said first or second mold portion, wherein upon closing said first and second mold portions together over a fibrous substrate, said pins pierce said substrate to form said apertures.
In a fifth embodiment the present invention is directed at an apparatus for forming apertures for transmitting air or sound through a trim panel comprising a forming mold first portion, a forming mold second portion, a series of pins extending from one or both of said first portion and said second portion in opposed fashion, wherein said first and second mold portion cooperate to form a cavity space therebetween, wherein said pins extend to said opposite mold portion from one or both of said first or second mold portion, wherein one of said first or second mold portions has a surface with one or more recess portions between said pins.
These and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become apparent upon consideration of the description of the invention and the appended drawings in which:
The present invention now is described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art.
For elements common to the various embodiments of the invention, the numerical reference character between the embodiments is held constant, but distinguished by the addition of an alphanumeric character to the existing numerical reference character. In other words, for example, an element referenced at 10 in the first embodiment is correspondingly referenced at 10A, 10B, and so forth in subsequent embodiments. Thus, where an embodiment description uses a reference character to refer to an element, the reference character applies equally, as distinguished by alphanumeric character, to the other embodiments where the element is common.
The present invention addresses the deficiencies of the prior art by providing a trim covering for a speaker or air outlet integrated into preferably a resinated fibrous trim panel wherein the trim covering includes a decorative pattern that prevents readout of the underlying apertures which provide sound or air transmission. As the resinated fibrous trim panel is molded, provisions are made in the tooling to provide a positive relief feature in the surface of the trim panel between the apertures formed for air and sound transmission. When covered with a porous outer layer (cloth, fabric, carpet, etc.) this positive relief feature supports the outer covering layer, bridging the apertures and may provide a logo, message or other distinguishing design which prevents readthrough of the apertures.
In addition, the apertures are formed into the resinated fibrous substrate with preferably tapered pins which preferably extend into both sides of the substrate from both halves of the forming tool prior to solidifying the substrate. By using tapered pins no “waste slugs” are created and a stronger “grille” area is formed as the fibers are pushed aside or compressed laterally and formed in that position rather than being fractured by a punch die, thus the periphery of the aperture so formed becomes more fiber-rich and stronger.
In addition, another preferred embodiment is to apply the invention herein to molded plastic substrates. In such circumstances, the plastic substrate can be formed by supplying a precursor to a mold having pins extending from a tool surface to form apertures in the plastic substrate after the precursor has flowed around the pins and solidified The tooling surface can also then include recessed sections between the pins which then would form raised areas in the surface of the substrate between the apertures in the substrate. This then is followed by the application of the decorative layer to bridge and hide the apertures.
Included in the top surface 16A over each speaker or air outlet is a decorative pattern 30A, 30B in raised relief that allows the decorative cover layer 12A to bridge over holes or apertures (not shown, see
The decorative covering material of the present invention is preferably formable with heat and somewhat porous, at least in the areas where air/sound must flow. Preferred materials include cloth, fabric, carpet and like woven or non-woven fibrous materials including natural fibers, synthetic fibers and combinations thereof. The substrate layer is preferably a sound reducing construction comprising one or more layers which are formable under heat and pressure. The term “sound reducing layer” is therefore defined as any material which might absorb, attenuate, insulate or serve as a barrier to sound. This may include, but is not limited to thermoformable fibrous materials, foam, highly filled thermoplastic such as massback, Maratex®, shoddy, polyester fibers, nylon fibers and bi-component fibers.
As used herein “resinated fibrous substrate” refers to any combination of fibrous materials which are heated to a temperature and formed into a three dimensional shape where upon cooling, adjacent material or fibers bond to one another. This may be accomplished by a variety of methods, one of which is heating the material or fibers to a temperature such that adjacent material or fibers bond to one another without melting. Elaborating on this concept, it can be appreciated that this is in reference to the feature of employing an amorphous polymer, as part of the material or fiber mix, wherein the amorphous polymer itself does not have a defined melting point (Tm) sufficient to soften as a consequence of a true thermodynamic melting event, and provide bonding. Instead, since the polymer is amorphous, the softening may occur at a secondary transition temperature, e.g. the glass transition temperature (Tg), or at some other temperature. Those of skill in the art will therefore appreciate that heating of, for instance, fibers to a temperature such that the adjacent fibers bond to one another without melting may occur at a temperature above the Tg of a substantially amorphous polymer material within the fiber composition. Under such circumstances, the crystalline polymer fibers of the fiber mix remain non-melted, and the amorphous polymers heated at or above their Tg will provide the bonding necessary upon cooling.
Alternatively, it is contemplated that bonding may occur via the use of binders which themselves may be chemically reactive due to the introduction of heat. For example, one may optionally employ a binder system that includes a component, such as a polymeric precursor, which undergoes chemical crosslinking, as in the case of a thermoset type precursor. Alternatively, one may optionally elect to use a moisture cure system, wherein the component, such as a polymer resin, will, upon introduction of heat and moisture, react and solidify upon cooling to provide binding within the perform.
Furthermore, one may also use a non-reacting binder system, e.g., a urethane water dispersion which can be used to coat a material or fibers and which upon heating and evaporation of the water provides bonding of adjacent material or fibers to form a perform. Again, this would be another example of material or fiber bonding without the fibers of the perform themselves melting.
In an even further embodiment, one could also utilize a component binder, such as a polymer, with a melting point below the melting point of the fibers of the preform, which polymer binder could be applied to the fibers, say by spraying, which would experience melting at elevated temperature to cause bonding of adjacent fibers within the perform when cooled. Again, this would be yet another example of material of fiber bonding without the fibers of the perform themselves melting.
Alternatively, the resinated fibrous layer may comprise a blend of fibers having different melting points, where upon heating, the fibers having the lower melting point melt and, upon cooling, bond the rest of the higher melting point fibers together.
The decorative covering layer may be a porous carpet layer as disclosed in U.S. application Ser. No. 10/253,373 filed Sep. 4, 2002, entitled “Porous Carpeting For Vehicle And Methods Of Producing Same”, assigned to the assignee of the present invention and included herein by reference.
The decorative outer layer 12A and substrate layer 14A or layers are preferably combined in a compression molding process as known to those skilled in the art where the covering layer and substrate are heated, placed in layered relationship in a mold set and compressed slightly and allowed to cool. In this case, holes may be formed through both the substrate and decorative covering and are visible in the decorative covering after molding. In a second, preferred, embodiment, the substrate layer is heated and formed in a first compression tool and the holes or apertures for the speaker grille or air outlet are formed during the molding process. Subsequently, the decorative outer covering layer is applied to the top surface of the substrate layer, over the raised areas between apertures, in a second molding process. This provides a decorative cover with no visible holes for a speaker or air outlet.
Methods of forming porous carpeting/sound reducing substrate combinations are disclosed in World Patent Application PCT US04/07024, entitled “Methods Of Forming Decouplers For Vehicle Interior Components”, filed Mar. 9, 2004; U.S. application Ser. No. 10/775,548, entitled “Methods Of Forming Vehicle Interior Components Which Include A Decoupler Layer”, filed Feb. 10, 2004; U.S. application Ser. No. 10/776,015, entitled “Rotary Apparatus For Forming Decouplers For Vehicle Interior Components”, filed Feb. 10, 2004; and U.S. application Ser. No. 10/775,549, entitled “Contoured Mold For Forming Decouplers For Alternating Sound In A Vehicle”, filed Feb. 10, 2004; all assigned to the assignee of the present invention and included herein by reference.
The pins 60 of the present invention which form the apertures 36 (see
In
Preferably, the raised portion between the apertures comprise raised portions that are of substantially similar height. Alternatively, the raised portions 40A between the apertures comprise raised portions that differ in height. In either event, the raised portions between the apertures 36 that are raised relative to other locations on the top surface of the substrate may be raised in the range of 0.010-0.250 inches, including all incremental values therebetween.
Thus, the present invention provides a trim panel including a series of apertures for transmitting sound or air having an improved surface appearance and added strength in the apertured area by providing the apertures formed by tapered piercing pins in a resinated fibrous substrate. The trim panel further includes raised surface areas between the apertures which allow a decorative trim covering to bridge the apertures, preventing readout and further providing a decorative design in place of a separate grille.
The present application claims the benefit of the filing date of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/600,620 filed Aug. 11, 2004, the teachings of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60600620 | Aug 2004 | US |