This application is the U.S. national phase of PCT application number PCT/EP01/07159 filed Jun. 25, 2001, which claims priority to German patent application number 100 31 030.3 filed Jun. 26, 2000.
The invention relates to a method, an apparatus, and a system for producing components with a predetermined outer surface appearance, in particular front panels of kitchen elements.
A constructional feature of conventional kitchens is the fact that a wide variety of kitchen elements, drawers, cupboards, electrical devices and so forth are provided with front panels which impart a unique and attractive outer appearance to the kitchen. The variety of front panel sizes and the variety of customer-desired outer surfaces, which comprise various types of wood, synthetic material outer surfaces, various colors and patterns, leads to an extraordinarily cost intensive production with a large inventory. For example, front panels are produced from various solid natural woods or with various wood veneers, which are stained in the desired color and the outer surfaces are then sealed.
The object underlying the invention is to ameliorate the above-noted problem.
In one aspect of the present invention, a method is provided for producing components with a predetermined outer surface appearance, in particular, front panels of kitchen elements. In this method, components are printed to form a predetermined pattern using a printing process programmable with respect to the appearance resulting therefrom.
With the inventive method, components having a wide variety outer appearances can be produced from shaped pieces, whose shape corresponds to the components to be produced, although the printed shaped pieces use the same outer surfaces or shaped pieces which consist of a substantially reduced diversity with respect to the their outer surface material than the printed components to be produced. For example, shaped pieces with only two types of outer surfaces are processed in order to achieve an extraordinarily large variety. The one type of shaped pieces has a synthetic material outer surface and the other type of shaped pieces has a wood veneer outer surface. A wide variety of colors and/or patterns can be printed on the synthetic material outer surface in order to produce an appropriate outer appearance. A wide variety of wood grain patterns can be printed on the wood veneer outer surfaces, which wood grain patterns produce the appearance of a wide variety of wood types with various colorings, without actually having to use the particular wood type. Surprisingly, it has become apparent that a base grain pattern of the veneer outer surface or, as well, of a solid wood outer surface is not averse to printing with other grain patterns and, by appropriately tuning the color intensities, does not detrimentally affect the outer appearance of the imprinted grain pattern. Thus, it is possible with the inventive method to produce an extraordinarily high variety of outer appearances, i.e. to produce appearances in the variety desired by customers with a low variety of raw material pieces.
In preferred embodiments, three dimensional outer surfaces may be printed. In addition or in the alternative, the printing process is performed according to an ink-jet printing process, in which colored liquids of different colors are sprayed from different nozzles.
In accordance with further preferred features, the outer surfaces to be printed are pre-treated such that the outer surfaces absorb colored liquids well, which colored liquids are subject to certain limitations due to the employed printing process such as, for example, an ink jet printing process. In this manner, the outer surfaces to be printed and the colored liquids can be coordinated with one another. For wood outer surfaces, a pre-treatment can also include treating the wood in a predetermined manner in the form of a laser treatment such that its porosity and/or its fluid absorption capacity is tuned to the employed printing process or the wood is provided with a specified base hue.
In accordance with other preferred features, the printed outer surface can be sealed or can be provided with other coatings, which are, for example, mechanically highly resistive, not transparent to UV light, and so forth.
Also disclosed is an apparatus for producing components with a predetermined outer surface appearance, in particular, front panels of kitchen elements. The apparatus preferably comprises a base for receipt of the components, a printing device oppositely disposed to the component and having color spray nozzles for spraying differently colored inks, a transport device for producing a relative movement between the color spray nozzles and the components and a sensor device for sensing the positions of the outer surfaces of the components. An electronic control device controls the operation of the transport device and the printing device such that a predetermined, programmable pattern is printed on the outer surface of the components.
In further embodiments, the distance between the color spray nozzles and the base is preferably adjustable. In addition, the printing device preferably comprises color spray nozzles for printing variously oriented outer surfaces of the component. Moreover, a printing head is preferably longitudinally movable on a support and the support is pivotable about an axis perpendicular to the direction of longitudinal movement of the support. The printing device may also preferably include at least one two-dimensionally pivotable printing head.
A system for producing groups of components having a predetermined appearance, in particular, front panels for a kitchen comprised of elements, preferably comprises an order input for compiling an electronically-processible data record corresponding to a group of ordered components, a shape processing device for producing shaped components from component materials, a finishing device for assembling a group of shaped components that correspond, with respect to their number and their shapes, to the group of ordered components, a printing device for printing the group of shaped components in accordance with the ordered appearance, a product outlet for outputting the group of printed components and an electronic control device for controlling the operation of at least the printing device in accordance with the electronically-processible data record.
With the inventive system, it is possible to achieve, in either a fully automatic or substantially automatic manner and with a very small number of component materials and/or raw materials, an extraordinarily high variety for customers without a cost-intensive inventory storage of substantially finished, and therefore more expensive, parts being necessary. With the inventive system, much more can be produced “just in time” on order in a practical manner.
The invention is employable anywhere in which a high variety of components, with regard to the outer appearance, should be obtained for customers with low costs. The invention is especially advantageously employed with planar components, from which tailored parts with a predetermined shape are first produced; the tailored parts then receive the desired outer surface appearance. One application, for which the invention is particularly well suited, is the furniture industry, in which furniture such as, for example, kitchen furniture, is assembled from planar components which should have different inner and outer appearances, wherein, in particular, the appearance of the outer side thereof must be, to a large degree, customer-specific and of high quality.
The invention is described hereinafter with schematic drawings and with further details.
The broken lines 6 are contour lines to illustrate that the front panels are required in various sizes, wherein non-right angled front panels, round and oval front panels, and so forth also can be provided.
a shows in a plan view and
The front panel 2 is disposed on a transport device 8 which, for example, comprises a transport belt 12 moving over rollers and/or shafts 10; a motor 14 is provided for the driving thereof.
A gantry 16 extends transversely over the transport belt 12; a carriage 20 is movably guided on a crossbeam 18 of the gantry 16 longitudinally to the crossbeam 18. A motor 22 is provided to drive the carriage; a pinion gear 24 of the motor engages with a tooth gear structure of the carriage 20.
A bracket 26 is perpendicularly displaceably guided on the carriage 20 in the direction of the double arrow (
Sensors 30, 32, and 34 are provided for detecting the position of the front panel 2, its contour and its thickness, wherein the sensor 30, for example, senses the forward edges of the front panel 2 moving on the transport belt 12, the sensor 32 senses the height of the front panel 2, and the sensor 34, which is supported on the crossbeam 18, senses the side edges of the front panel 2.
The sensors can operate optically, using ultrasound or in another manner and can additionally be movably arranged so that the entire geometry of the outer surface of the front panel 2 can be respectively sensed before the outer surface comes into the area under the printing head 28.
In the figures, the colored liquid reservoir and the colored liquor supply for the printing head 28 is not illustrated; the colored liquid supply can take place, for example, from large reservoir containers that are disposed on the carriage 20.
A control device for controlling the apparatus is provided with a computer 36, a keyboard 38, and a screen 40. It is to be understood that a loudspeaker can also be provided.
The sensors 30, 32, and 34 are connected to the inputs 42 of the computer 36; the drives for two dimensional movement (in the transverse direction to the transport belt 12 and perpendicular to its outer surface) of the printing head 28, the control lines for driving the printing head 28 and, if necessary, the drives for movement of one or more of the sensors 30, 32, and 34, as well as the drive 14 for the transport belt 12, are connected to the outputs 44.
Data are input via a further input 46, the data providing the pattern which is to be produced by the printing head 28. For the formation of this pattern, all degrees of freedom exist, wherein the patterns can be produced by scanning of original images into digital form, can be stored, and then can be applied onto the front panel 2 by appropriate driving of the printing head 28, as well as its movement relative to the front panel 2, together with the controlling of the drive 14. With respect to the data processing, all modern technologies are available such as, for example, those that are conventional with respect to present day photo printing.
The construction and manner of operation of the individual elements of the apparatus are conventionally known and therefore are not elaborated herein.
A front panel 2, which is disposed on the transport belt 12, is recognized by the sensors 30, 32, and 34 based upon the position and size of the front panel, so that the carriage 20 and the perpendicular drive of the bracket 26, as well as the drive of the printing head 28, are controlled by the computer 36 in correspondence with the currently effective pattern data such that the desired pattern is formed. If the entire contour of the front panel 2 is sensed, this serves such that practically no colored liquid is applied to the transport belt 12; the outer surface of the front panel 2, including, as well, its edge regions, is completely printed.
The described apparatus can be modified in numerous ways. For example, if the geometry of the respective front panel is known and the front panel 2 is disposed at a respective reference position on the transport belt 12 and is oriented in a predetermined manner relative to the transport belt 12, it is only necessary to sense the front edge of the front panel 2 and/or the location of the reference position relative to the crossbeam 18, so that the expense for the sensors can be correspondingly reduced. The perpendicular movability of the printing head 28 is required for the reason that, in accordance with the specifications of the printing head 28 and the achievable pattern quality, a predetermined spacing between the color spray nozzles of the printing head 28 and the outer surface of the front panel 2 to be printed is required.
The single movable printing head shown in
With the apparatus, it is possible, as can be directly seen, to print side surfaces of the front panel 2 even if the side surfaces are inclined relative to the transport direction of the transport belt 12.
The printing head 283, which is further illustrated in
As can be directly seen in the preceding drawings, each outer surface contour of a front panel 2, including as well, for example, control knobs 60 provided on a front panel 2 according to
The amounts of the colored liquids of the individual liquid drops, which run into one another, can be influenced by the volume of the liquid drops and the nature of the outer surface.
With the assembled printing head 72, the following is achieved:
By appropriately driving the printing heads A, B, C, every mixed color can be produced in the intermediate container 74 in a programmable manner from the three different colored liquids, the homogeneity of the mixed color being guaranteed by stirrer 76. In this manner, the colored liquid of each desired color can be extensively and homogeneously sprayed from the printing head 78 and applied onto an outer surface.
Preferably, a coating layer covers the previously described printing of the outer surfaces of the front panels 2, in which the outer surface, which is formed in a predetermined pattern and/or with a predetermined background color using colored liquid, is provided with a protective coating, whereby this protective coating is applied, for example, as a film or as a one or two component synthetic resin or a natural resin. The protective coating, which is preferably transparent, makes the outer surface durable, chemically resistive, and scratch resistant. In addition, it reduces the requirements for the UV resistance capability of the utilized colored liquids and/or inks, with which the printing is effected. The protective coating can be formed by spraying, rolling, or also by other known ways.
The described method can be modified in numerous ways. The printing is not required to be effected according to the ink jet process. The coloring and/or pattern formation on the outer surfaces can be effected with any other process, which is preferably programmable, so that a high degree of flexibility is provided.
Reference numeral 100 refers to the order input, in which orders for a kitchen are input in a wide variety of ways. An ordered kitchen is characterized by the nature and number of its components, such as cupboards, shelves, electrical devices, and so forth, which are all finished with front panels on the visible side; the front panels have a specific decor that distinguishes itself, for example, by the outer surface material, the base color, and the pattern with its respective colors.
In response to the receipt of an ordered kitchen, an electronically-processible data record is compiled in the order input 100 for a group of front panels, which data record requires the group for an ordered kitchen and which data record is complied in view of the outer surface characteristics and dimensions of the front panels. Depending on whether the required front panels are already available in a finished condition in an inventory 102 or must be produced in a customizing device 104 with the respective dimensions, the ordered data record goes through the inventory 102 or the customizing device 104.
The data record complied in the order input 100 is supplied to a control device 102 that operates using electronic data processing.
Pre-prepared raw material boards with the required diversity of outer surfaces, e.g., synthetic material panels and/or panels with wood veneers, are stored in a material inventory 104.
A shape processing device 106 follows the material inventory 104; in the shape processing device 106, the unfinished panels taken from the material inventory 104 can be cut with cutting devices controlled in conventional numerical control manner or other cutting devices; shaped panels and/or shaped pieces with predetermined dimensions can be produced from the cut panels. The shape processing device 106 is followed by a shaped piece inventory 108 in which, in particular, frequently required pre-finished shaped pieces are stored.
Further, a finishing device 110 follows the shape processing device 106; in the finishing device 110, groups of shaped pieces, which belong, for example, to a single order, are assembled together with one another. These groups can be arranged in several different ways, for example, immediately after the order or thereafter, whether they require predetermined special outer surface treatments, which are first possible after alteration thereof. Various outer surfaces can belong to a single order.
The finishing device 110 is followed by a pre-treatment device 112, in which the shaped pieces assembled in the finishing device are pre-treated in a predetermined manner; for example, they are provided with a primer coat, an edge veneer is mounted, an edge protector is mounted, and so forth.
The pre-treatment device 112 is followed by a printing device 114 which, for example, is configured in a manner similar to the printing device described in the preceding figures. A coating device 116 follows the printing device 114, in which the printed and, if necessary low resistance, outer surfaces are coated, for example, with clear enamel which is mechanically especially resistant, not chemically corrodible and/or does not permit UV light to pass through. A product outlet 118 follows the coating device 116, in which the finished components are available for further processing into a complete kitchen, a furniture piece, and so forth.
In
In the individual devices and/or stations, the construction of the operation devices, transport devices, shelf inventories, and so forth, can be known, which devices are controlled by the control device 102 in accordance with the respective data record.
It is assumed that a data record corresponding to an ordered kitchen is compiled in the order input 100. The electronic control device then inquires in the shaped piece inventory 108 whether corresponding shaped pieces are already pre-finished. The available shaped pieces are delivered to the finishing device 110. The not yet finished shaped pieces are processed from the raw material boards in the shaped processing device 106 and are delivered to the finishing device 110. Thereafter, the components pass through the pre-treatment, the printing, and the coating, in order to then be available in the shipping area 118. The pre-treatment device 112 and the coating device 116 can basically be configured in a manner similar to the printing device, i.e., they comprise a transport belt or other transport device, on which they are supplied to the respective working station, wherein the respective position, geometry, and so forth thereof is sensed by position sensors.
As can be directly seen from the foregoing, the inventive system makes possible, with a very small stock inventory (material inventory 104; the shaped piece inventory 108 is not absolutely necessary), a need-based, fully-automatic production of component groups corresponding to an order input or, in case individual handles will be affixed manually, a substantially automatic production. It is to be understood that additional fully-automatic working stations could follow the product outlet 118, in which complete furniture pieces are assembled from the pre-finished components, whose outer surfaces are already complete.
The described system can be modified in numerous ways. For example, the pre-treatment device 112 and the coating device 116 are not necessary. The printing device 114 can work in accordance with various processes. A further working station can follow the finishing device 110 and/or the pre-treatment device 112, in which assembled components are produced from the not yet printed components, which assembled components are then printed. The construction of the shape processing device 106 can be complex so that not only components are cut from the raw material boards, but also components are formed, for example, with three-dimensional ornamentation and so forth.
With the illustrated system, replacement pieces for furniture pieces such as, for example, replacement walls for front panels of a kitchen, can also be produced, as the system operates with very good reproducibility due to the advantageously programmable printing 114 and, as may optionally be provided, with the enhancements of the pre-treatment and the coating. The system is extraordinarily flexible and is suitable with respect to the illustrated structural configurations for deployment for the production, especially, of furniture. The individual stations which are networked to the data processing system can also be networked as desired such as, for example, with remote order inputs communicating via different communication ways.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 31 030 | Jun 2000 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP01/07159 | 6/25/2001 | WO | 00 | 12/23/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/00449 | 1/3/2002 | WO | A |
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