This application claims priority from and the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119 of Finnish Patent Application No. 20095931, filed Sep. 9, 2009 in the Finnish Patent Office, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a method for the optimal alignment of veneer sheets at a lay-up station, wherein the veneer sheets are laid up for a veneer assembly composed of veneer sheets glued on top of each other.
In the manufacture of plywood panels or laminated veneer lumber (LVL), the veneers are laid up at a lay-up station for a veneer assembly with a thickness of several veneer layers. Top surfaces of the veneers have adhesive applied thereto and the veneers are laid on top of each other and then, in the next working step, brought to a permanent attachment with each other by the application of pressure and heat. This calls for a precise alignment of veneers relative to each other. Traditionally, the alignment has been performed manually against two stationary fences. At present, the lay-up operation is often machine-operated, but two stationary fences are still involved one way or another. The manufacture of LVL has involved the use of a mechanical lay-up operation. However, the LVL is structurally different with its veneers supposedly parallel to each other. The application publication US 2003/0173734 describes one LVL manufacturing apparatus and method, enabling a precise alignment of veneer sheets relative to each other by adapting what in the advancing direction of a veneer sheet constitutes its leading edge to function as an alignment edge and by positioning the veneer sheets at a lay-up station on top of a two-segment tablet arrangement, said tablet segments being adapted to move towards and away from each other. In this solution, the identification of a leading edge position is used as a controlling parameter for the process. Still, even in this solution, the leading edge is identified by mechanical brackets in just two positions.
An objective of the present invention is to provide an improved solution, enabling a better consideration of defects in veneer sheets for optimizing the position of alignment edges. In order to achieve this objective, a method according to the invention is characterized in that the method comprises determining an optimal position for each veneer sheet and virtual locations for alignment edges, and laying up the veneer sheets, as positioned in accordance with the virtual alignment edges, for a veneer assembly.
In the context of this application, the virtual alignment edge refers to an optimal location of alignment edges, said alignment edges being in a substantially perpendicular relationship with each other, considering e.g. defects in the immediate vicinity of a real veneer edge in such a way that the defects shall end up in a portion to be cut off in a subsequent operation and, on the other hand, in such a way that a maximal surface area of the veneers can be utilized. Defects can be e.g. in the form of a sizable knot hole, a split or cracked veneer portion, an edge waviness, etc. The alignment can also be conducted in a totally visual manner by using e.g. laser lines as an alignment edge. Once a veneer assembly has been composed of the veneers, the veneer assembly shall be conveyed to a trimming operation for the virtual alignment edge to become a real alignment edge in the trimming operation, and especially in such a way that the defects of intermediate veneers shall not be visible until after an edge sawing operation.
The invention will now be described more closely with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
One alternative to the foregoing mode of operation is such that, as a veneer conveyed by belts arrives at a lay-up station, said veneer can be dropped onto a panel tablet traveling forward at a speed equal to that of the veneer, or onto some other veneer-receiving carrier. After the tablet has advanced across a halfway point, the grippers are able to take hold of the veneer, followed by performing necessary straightening operations, and then the tablet or another carrier can be pulled away from under for taking up the next veneer.
Once completed, the veneer assembly is conveyed for a trimming operation e.g. to an edge sawing apparatus, which is used for sawing the veneer assembly to provide it with an edge consistent with a virtual alignment edge and a desired amount of tolerance. One alignment edge 10′ is preferably the edge which is leading in the advancing direction of a veneer upon its arrival at the lay-up station, and a second alignment edge 10 is the edge perpendicular thereto. From the lay-up station, the veneer assemblies depart preferably in a direction perpendicular to the original advancing direction, such that the alignment edge 10′ lies in a parallel relationship with the veneer assembly's advancing direction and can be sawn without stopping the veneer assembly. Preferably, the edge opposite to the alignment edge is also sawn at the same time by driving the veneer assembly across saw blades 12′, 12 set at a desired crosswise distance from each other. The short sides perpendicular to the alignment edge are trimmed in such a way that the conveyor can be stopped e.g. on the basis of a pulse sensor reading, or such sides can be trimmed while the action is going on by using a so-called flying saw or a saw which advances in the same direction as the veneer assembly at the same speed while having its blade advancing across the veneer assembly. During the trimming operation, the veneer assembly is held e.g. by a belt 11.
A virtual edge can also be marked with some prior known method, which marking remains fixed in various operations of the process. Such a method may comprise e.g. marking a virtual edge by means of a perforation or another mechanical indication (see, e.g., element 21 or 22 in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20095931 | Sep 2009 | FI | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4700758 | Bernath | Oct 1987 | A |
4794963 | Oppeneer | Jan 1989 | A |
5201258 | Cremona | Apr 1993 | A |
5984301 | Holbert et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
20030173734 | Wong et al. | Sep 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2000-6112 | Jan 2000 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110057384 A1 | Mar 2011 | US |