Hardwood lumber (mostly, red oak, white oak and walnut) are used in the production of solid strip flooring (under 3″ wide) and plank flooring (3″ and wider), furniture components, wooden door and window productions and many more products by factories that use hardwood lumber. A majority of the wood that is used in this process is approximately one inch thick. The uses include:
Hardwood lumber (red oak, white oak, walnut, etc.) is used in production of: solid flooring in form of strip (typically 2-2¼″ wide) and plank (3″ and wider);
Engineered flooring is constructed with a top layer made from hardwood (about 3-6 mm thick) is glued to a bottom layer of plywood;
Furniture components;
Door, window and cabinets production;
Moulding production, as well as many more wood product applications.
The first step in the production of such hardwood products typically is a ripping of kiln-dried random wide boards lumber into a strip of a specified width. These kiln-dried hardwood boards are typically not uniform in width and include various imperfections on their edges such as vein, bark, cracks, splits and other defects. These imperfections need to be removed as a result of the ripping operation.
In the manufacture of these products, the unused portion of the lumber boards represents a significant percentage of the total amount of the wood (e.g., between ten percent thirty percent (10%-30%). The unused pieces are between three fourths to two inches wide and either stored at manufacturing facilities for various purposes, or alternatively, dumped as a waste or burned. Such unused hardwood lumber waste through the country amounts to many millions of board feet of wood, creating a huge environmental problem and an economical problem.
The present invention addresses the issues of ecological and economical waste in the production of various wood products by utilizing the scrap wood to construct a flooring made entirely from waste.
The present invention converts the unusable hardwood waste into narrow (about 0.90″ wide and 7/16th″ thick) straight edge (no tongue and groove) strips, which is cut to the desired length and then assembled in staggered tiles.
Additional advantages of such tiles are:
fast installations;
concrete floor, which this tile will be glued to, can be uneven due to the fact that narrow strips can follow the shape of the concrete without problems; and
high number of glue joints of installed tiles provides strong glue bond.
These features and benefits will best be understood by reference to the following figures, in combination with the detailed description of the preferred embodiments below.
As a second step, the slats of random widths B are cut into uniform narrow strips 30 having a new width “C” of about 7/16ths″, which will become thickness of the floor (
The elongate, uniform strips 30 having a height of A ( 9/10ths) and width C ( 7/16ths) are then cut into blocks 40 having a desired length “D” as shown in
The blocks 40 are then assembled into parquet tile 50 having a staggered 3×2×3×2 repeating arrangement having a width “F” (
In the next step, the floor 60 is assembled by rotating a first tile 50 (side G on top) one hundred eighty degrees (side G now on bottom) with respect to a second tile (side G on top) as shown in
The foregoing description of the preferred embodiments are intended to be illustrative only, and not limiting. One of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate many modifications and alterations to the foregoing embodiments, and the present invention is intended to include all such modifications and alternations. Accordingly, the invention's scope is not limited to anything shown in the drawings or in the description, but rather the scope of the invention is governed by the claims below, using their ordinary and customary meanings.
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