The invention relates to a method for manufacturing coated profile members, wherein a foil is cut to a predetermined width and wrapped around the profile member so as to form a butt seam extending in a longitudinal direction of the profile member, as well as an apparatus for carrying out this method.
Methods of this type are employed especially for furniture profiles but also for manufacturing door frames, door leaves, window profiles and the like and have the purpose to coat a profile member, e.g. a chipboard or an MDF board, with a decorative foil, e.g., a plastic foil. In this process, the profile member shall be wrapped in at least one foil web such that neither an overlap nor a gap is produced at the positions where the edges of the foil webs abut against one another. This implies that the foil web is precisely cut to a suitable width.
Up to now, this is done by first bonding the foil onto the surface of the profile member and then milling away an edge strip of suitable width from the foil that adheres to the surface of the profile member adjacent to a butt seam which extends, for example, in a certain distance from an edge of the profile member. This method has the drawback that the dust that is produced in the milling process is likely to cause contaminations and other problems. In particular, dust particles may stick to the adhesive layer on the foil that has not yet been bonded onto the profile member, so that ugly pimples are produced when the foil is bonded. Moreover, the milling tool may be soiled by rapidly curing adhesive.
It is an object of the invention to provide a method and an apparatus which permit to neatly and precisely coating profile members with a foil.
In order to achieve this object, according to the invention, the foil is cut by means of a cutting beam in a condition in which an edge strip of the foil projects beyond the profile member, while a face of the profile member is used as reference for the position of the cutting beam.
The cutting beam is preferably a laser beam. Optionally, however, a water jet or a plasma beam may also be used, for example.
When a reference face of the profile member is gauged, such a beam can be used for producing a clean cut which extends exactly in longitudinal direction of the profile member. During cutting, the edge strip of the foil does not need to be supported on a substrate but projects freely from an edge of the profile member. Moreover, since the cut is performed with a cutting beam, there will be no contact between a cutting tool and the foil which is generally coated already with an adhesive. Consequently, there is no contamination of the cutting tool with adhesive, and there is no risk that the foil will stick to the cutting tool and will thereby be distorted or disturb the formation of a clean cut. After the foil has been cut to suitable width, the projecting edge strip of the foil web is wrapped around the profile member and finally bonded thereto. Since the profile member has been gauged and the cutting beam is positioned with high precision, the width of the projecting and cut edge strip may be controlled such that a clean butt seam is formed after the foil has been wrapped around the profile member.
It turns out to be particularly advantageous that, in this method, the surface of the profile member is not needed for supporting the foil during the cutting process. This opens the possibility, for example, to coat individual profile members with an endless foil web in a continuous process, wherein certain gaps are left between the successive profile members, which gaps are only bridged by the foil. In contrast to conventional procedures where the profile members succeed one another without gaps therebetween and the foil connecting them is torn off along the butting ends in order to separate the profile members from one another, the method according to the invention permits to cleanly cut through the foil bridges that connect the successive profile members.
Useful details and further developments of the invention are indicated in the dependent claims.
Embodiment examples will now be explained in conjunction with the drawings, wherein:
In
In the example shown, the profile member 10 is formed with a rebate 22 on both sides, and the foil 16 is bonded in such a position that it projects beyond the rebate on both sides.
In
The cutting heads 26 are rigidly connected to callipers 28 each of which gauges a lateral face of the profile member 10, a face of the rebate 22 in the example shown. For example, the calipers 28 are elastically biased against the lateral edges of the profile member by means of springs 30, and, in order to reduce friction, they roll over the lateral face of the profile member with rollers 32.
In this way, the face of the rebate 22 which extends at right angles to the foil 16 serves as a positional reference for the cutting edge 24, so that the projecting width of the foil can be controlled with high precision. In the example shown, this projecting width has been selected such that it corresponds exactly to the face of the rebate 22 that extends at right angles to the plane of the door leaf.
In a subsequent process step, shown in
In a next step, as is shown in
Since, in each of the cutting processes shown in
The cutting station shown in
As an alternative, the two cutting heads 40 may be coupled to one another mechanically and may be driven by a common actuator.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 012 198 | Mar 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/001249 | 2/20/2009 | WO | 00 | 8/30/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/109302 | 9/11/2009 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110005665 A1 | Jan 2011 | US |