The present invention generally concerns a method relating to manufacturing panels, especially floorboards, as well as a floorboard produced according to such method. Specifically, embodiments of the present invention relate to floorboards having mechanical joint systems, a core and a surface layer with curved edge portions located below the panel surface. Embodiments of the invention relate to a floorboard with such edge portions and a method to produce such floorboard.
Embodiments of the present invention are particularly suited for use in floors with a top surface layer including wood veneer, laminate, foils, a layer of paint or a layer which comprises a mix of wood fibres, binders and wear resistant particles and the like. The following description of known technique, problems of known systems as well as objects and features of the invention will therefore as non-limiting examples be aimed mainly at this field of application. However, it should be emphasized that the invention can be used in any building panels e.g. floor panels or wall panels having a top surface layer, which are intended to be joined in different patterns by means of a joint system.
In the following text, the visible surface of the installed floor panel is called “front side”, while the opposite side of the floor panel facing the subfloor is called “rear side”. “Horizontal plane” relates to a plane, which is parallel to the front side. Directly adjoining upper parts of two neighboring joint edges of two joined floor panels together define a “vertical plane” perpendicular to the horizontal plane. The outer parts of the floor panel at the edge of the floor panel between the front side and the rear side are called “joint edge”. As a rule, the joint edge has several “joint surfaces” which can be vertical, horizontal, angled, rounded, beveled etc. These joint surfaces may exist on different materials, for instance laminate, fiberboard, wood, plastic, metal (in particular aluminum) or sealing materials.
By “joint system” is meant cooperating connecting means which interconnect the floor panels vertically and/or horizontally. By “mechanical joint system” is meant that locking can take place without glue. Mechanical joint systems can, however, in many cases also be joined by glue.
By “locking groove side” is meant the side of the floor panel in which part of the horizontal locking means has a locking groove whose opening faces to the rear side. By “locking element side” is meant the side of the floor panel in which part of the horizontal locking means has a locking element, which cooperates with the locking groove.
By “decorative surface layer” is meant a surface layer, which is mainly intended to give the floor its decorative appearance. “Wear resistant surface layer” relates to a high abrasive surface layer, which is mainly adapted to improve the durability of the front side. A “decorative wear resistant surface layer” is a layer, which is intended to give the floor its decorative appearance as well as improve the durability of the front side. A surface layer is applied to the core.
By “WFF” is meant a powder mix of wood fibre binders and wear resistant particles and the like that is compressed under a pressure given the result of a compact surface layer with different kind of visual effect. The powder can be scattered.
To facilitate the understanding and description of the present invention as well as the knowledge of the problems behind the invention, here follows a description of both the basic construction and the function of floorboards with reference to
a-1d show according to known art, how laminate flooring is produced. A floor element 3,
A floorboard 1, 1′,
Conventional floorboards with a wood surface were previously usually joined by means of glued tongue-and-groove joints. The edges were often formed with bevels in order to eliminate tight tolerances.
In addition to such traditional floors, floorboards have been developed in recent years, which do not require the use of glue but which are instead joined mechanically by means of so-called mechanical joint systems. These systems comprise locking means, which lock the boards horizontally and vertically. The mechanical joint systems can be formed by machining the core 30 of the board 1, 1′. Alternatively, parts of the joint system can be made of a separate material, which is integrated with the floorboard. The floorboards are joined, i.e. interconnected or locked together in a floating manner, by various combinations of angling, snapping, insertion along the joint edge and by fold down methods using joint systems comprising separate displaceable tongues generally factory inserted in a groove at the short edges.
Such floors can be formed with tight tolerances. Bevels are therefore mainly used to obtain decorative properties. A laminate floor panel with a thin surface layer can be formed with beveled edges and then looks like a solid wood plank.
The advantage of a floating flooring which is not connected to a sub floor with, for example, nails or glue, is that a change in shape due to different degrees of relative humidity RH can occur concealed under basemouldings and the floorboards can, although they swell and shrink, be joined without visible joint gaps. Installation can, especially by using mechanical joint systems, be laid quickly and easily. The drawback is that the continuous floor surface must as a rule be limited even in the cases where the floor comprises of relatively dimensionally stable floorboards, such as laminate floor with a fiberboard core or wooden floors composed of several layers with different fibre directions. The reason is that such floors as a rule shrink and swell as the RH varies.
A solution for large floor surfaces is to divide the large surface into smaller surfaces with expansion strips. Without such a division, it is a risk that the floor when shrinking will change in shape so that it will no longer be covered by basemouldings. Also the load on the joint system will be great since great loads must be transferred when a large continuous surface is moving. The load will be particularly great in passages between different rooms. Examples of expansion strips are joint profiles that are generally aluminum or plastic section fixed on the floor surface between two separate floor units. They collect dirt, give an unwanted appearance and are rather expensive. Due to these limitations on maximum floor surfaces, laminate floorings have only reached a small market share in commercial applications such as hotels, airports, and large shopping areas. More unstable floors, such as wooden floors, may exhibit still greater changes in shape. The factors that above all affect the change in shape of homogenous wooden floors are fibre direction and the kind of wood. A homogenous oak floor is very stable along the fibre direction, i.e. in the longitudinal direction of the floorboard.
The advantage of gluing/nailing to the subfloor is that large continuous floor surfaces can be provided without expansion joint profiles and the floor can take up great loads. This method of installation involving attachment to the subfloor has, however, a number of considerable drawbacks. The main drawbacks are costly installation and that as the floorboards shrink, a visible joint gap arises between the boards.
In view of the cited documents there is still a need of improving a floating floor without the above drawbacks, in particular a floating floor which a) may have a large continuous surface without expansion joint profiles, b) may have a non-visible joint gap, and c) may have a bevel with the same visual effects as for a more expensive wood based floorboard. There is still a need of improving a method for producing such a floating floor, without the above drawbacks in particular a manufacturing method which may be less complex, thereby speeding up the manufacturing and decreasing the cost.
A first object of an exemplary embodiment of the invention is to enable improved joint systems, so floorboards are possible to be installed as semi-floating floors in large continuous surfaces even though great dimensional changes may occur as the relative humidity changes.
A second object of an exemplary embodiment of the invention is to provide joint systems, which allow considerable movement between floorboards while preventing moisture from penetrating into, or at least diminishing moisture from penetrating into, the joint gaps, and without large and deep dirt-collecting joint gaps and/or where open joint gaps can be excluded.
A third object of an exemplary embodiment of the invention is to provide joint systems, which allow a considerable movement between floorboards with bevels at the edges that are strong.
A fourth object of an exemplary embodiment of the invention is to enable improved manufacturing of wood veneer floorboards with a bevel, which can also be semi-floating.
A fifth object of an exemplary embodiment of the invention is to enable the possibility to apply a bevel to a floorboard with a production method that is less complex and thereby requires less complex machines and machines at low cost, and allow a production at high speed.
According to a first aspect, embodiments of the invention include floorboards provided with an upper decorative surface layer. The floorboards comprise a mechanical joint system at two opposite edges for locking together adjacent joint edges of two adjacent floorboards. The decorative surface layer at a first joint edge and the decorative surface layer at a second joint edge overlap each other at the mechanical joint system at an overlapping part, the overlapping part is preferably located under the horizontal main surface of the decorative surface layer, a first joint surface of the first joint edge faces a second joint surface at the second joint edge and the first and the second joint surfaces are essentially parallel and essentially horizontal.
According to the first aspect, an exemplary preferred embodiment of the invention is that the first and the second joint surfaces are in contact. Another preferred exemplary embodiment is that the first and the second joint surfaces extend in a plane which is about 0-10° to the horizontal plane.
According to a second aspect, embodiments of the invention include a method for manufacturing a floor panel, the method comprises the steps of:
According to the second aspect, an exemplary preferred embodiment of the invention is that the method further comprises the step of forming a mechanical joint system at the edge of the floor panel.
An advantage of some exemplary embodiments of the invention is with the special design of the mechanical joint system allowing semi-floating installation, and regardless of shrinking or swelling of the floorboard due to temperature or humidity changes, any visible openings between the floor panels are eliminated.
An advantage of some exemplary embodiments of the invention is that with the special design of the mechanical joint system allowing semi-floating installation giving the possibilities to seal the joint system from moisture without the possibilities for moisture to penetrate or with the extra help of a vapor barrier disposed either under the overlapping surface or on the surface being overlapped.
An advantage of some exemplary embodiments of the invention is that the visible joint opening will have the same kind of wood and fibre direction as the top surface layer and the appearance will be identical with that of a homogeneous wooden floor.
An advantage of some exemplary embodiments of the invention is that support is provided for an overlapping joint edge by the facing top surface layer of the locking joint edge being horizontal.
Still further advantage of some exemplary embodiments of the invention is that it enables the possibility to apply a bevel to a floorboard with a production method that is less complex and thereby requires less complex machines and machines at low cost, and production at high speed.
A further advantage of some exemplary embodiments of the invention is that a wood veneer floorboard with a bevel can be produced at a low production cost and still have the same visual effects as for a more expensive wood based floorboard, i.e. a floorboard with a thick top surface layer of solid wood floorboard.
A further advantage of some exemplary embodiments of the invention is that a floorboard with a surface of wood fibre mix with a bevel can be produced at a low production cost.
Still another advantage of some exemplary embodiments of the invention is the decreased tolerances though high-speed production of floorboards with a bevel.
The method described above for manufacturing a floor element comprising a surface following grooves or even local cavities formed in the core can also be used to form decorative depressions in the surface of a floorboard between two edges. This allows that thin surfaces with deep structures similar to, for example, grout lines, hand scraped wood, rough stone and slate shaped structures can be formed in a cost efficient way. Such structures are difficult to form with the known production methods where compression of the surface layer and/or the core is used to obtain for example local depressions in the surface.
Other objects, advantages and novel features of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings and claims.
a-1d are steps of how a floorboard is produced, known in the known art.
a-2b are two first exemplary embodiments of a special design of a mechanical joint system that allow semi-floating installation, according to the invention.
a-3d are a second exemplary embodiment, with two different dimensions of a special design of a mechanical joint system, in two different positions, that allows semi-floating installation, according to the invention.
a-5b are a third exemplary embodiment of a special design of a mechanical joint system, in two different positions, that allows semi-floating installation, according to the invention.
a-7c are close-up views of exemplary embodiments according to the invention.
a-15 are exemplary embodiments of different manufacturing steps of a special design of a mechanical joint system that allows semi-floating installation, according to the invention.
f are an exemplary embodiment of a summarization of the manufacturing steps in
a-16f and the related description below are used to explain certain principles of the invention and to show examples of embodiments that can be used in the invention. The illustrated embodiments are only examples. It should be emphasized that all types of mechanical joint system of floorboard allowing vertical folding and/or vertical locking, can be used and applicable part of this description form a part of the present invention.
The present invention of a special design of a mechanical joint system that allows semi-floating installation, and a method for producing such building panels are particularly suited for but not limited to use in:
a-2b illustrate first exemplary embodiments of the special design of a mechanical joint system for mechanical joining of floorboards 1, 1′, that allow semi-floating installation, without a visible joint gap and without using high-grade wood, according to the invention. The floorboard comprises a surface layer 31 applied on top of a core 30. The joined floorboards have a horizontal plane (HP), which is parallel to the horizontal main floor surface and comprises outer parts of the surface layer, and a vertical plane (VP), which is perpendicular to the horizontal plane. The joint system has mechanically cooperating locking means for vertical joining parallel to the vertical plane and for horizontal joining parallel to the horizontal plane of a first and a second joint edge 4a, 4b. The vertical locking means comprises a tongue 10, which cooperates with a tongue groove 9. The horizontal locking means comprise a strip 6 with a locking element 8, which cooperates with a locking groove 14. The floorboards 1, 1′ have, in an area TT of a first 4a and second 4b joint edge a first 18 and second 19 joint edge portion which are defined by the area between the upper parts of the tongue groove 9 and the horizontal plane HP.
a-2b show edge parts which are sharp in
a illustrates surface layer H1a in the upper first horizontal plane H1 parallel to the main floor surface HP, surface layer H3a in the lower third horizontal plane H3 located under the main floor surface HP, and a part of the core H2a in the second horizontal plane H2 between first and third horizontal planes H1, H3. When the floorboards 1, 1′ are joined and pressed towards each other the surface layer H1a and core H2a of the upper joint edge portion 19 in the second joint edge 4b overlap the surface layer H3a of the first joint edge 4a. The surface layers H1a and H3a may have substantially the same thickness. The core H2a is preferably thicker than surface layers H1a and H3a.
The locking groove 14 and the locking element 8 can be formed with a small play or space as shown in
The joint system in
The portion TT can either be divided up into an upper joint edge portion and lower joint edge portion or not divided up into portions. Here the first joint edge 4a has a joint edge portion 18 and in a corresponding area the second edge 4b a joint edge portion 19. When the floorboards 1, 1′ are pressed together, a portion of the surface layer 31 of joint edge portion 18 is located under the horizontal plane HP of the second joint edge 4b. More precisely a formed bevel is located under the horizontal plane HP if the horizontal plane HP is on the same level as the main floor surface. In the joint system, when the floorboards 1, 1′ are joined and pressed towards each other, a portion of the surface layer 31 and a part of the core 30 of the joint edge portion 19 of the second joint edge 4b overlaps a portion of the surface layer 31 of the first joint edge 4a. An advantage of the first joint edge 4a having a portion of the surface layer H3a horizontal in the lower horizontal plane H3 overlapped by the surface layer H1a and the part of the core H2a of the second joint edge 4b of the joint edge portion 19 is that support is obtained during the movement between the two floor panels and without the visible joint gaps.
The surface layer 31 of the first 4a joint edge and the surface layer 31 of the second 4b joint edge overlap each other at the mechanical joint system at an overlapping part 31a, said overlapping part 31a is located under the horizontal plane HP of the decorative surface layer 31. A first joint surface 4c of the first joint edge 4a faces a second joint surface 4d of the second joint edge 4b, and the first and the second joint surfaces are essentially parallel and essentially horizontal. The first and the second joint surfaces 4c, 4d of the floorboards 1, 1′ can then be in contact. The first and the second joint surfaces of the floorboards 1, 1′ extend in a plane which is about 0-10° to the horizontal plane.
a-3d illustrate a second exemplary embodiment with different dimensions of the special design of a mechanical joint system that allows semi-floating installation, according to the invention. The area TT of first joint edge 4a and second joint edge 4b are divided up into portions. The first joint edge 4a has a lower joint edge portion 17 positioned between the tongue 10 and the surface layer 31, and an upper joint edge portion 18′ that is closer to the main floor surface HP than the lower joint edge portion 17, and the second joint edge 4b has a lower joint edge portion 16 positioned between the tongue 10 and the surface layer 31, and an upper joint edge portion 19′ that is closer to the main floor surface HP than the lower joint edge portion 16. In the joint system, when the floorboards 1, 1′ are joined and pressed towards each other, the upper joint edge portion 19′ and a part of the core 30 in the second joint edge 4b overlap the surface layer 31 of the lower joint edge portion 17 of the first joint edge 4a.
a-5b illustrate a third exemplary embodiment of the special design of a mechanical joint system that allows semi-floating installation, according to the invention. The portion TT of second joint edge 4b is divided up into portions while the first joint edge 4a is not. The second joint edge 4b has a lower joint edge portion 16 positioned between the tongue 10 and the surface layer 31, and the upper joint edge portion 19′ is closer to the main floor surface HP than the lower 16. When the floorboards 1, 1′ are joined and pressed towards each other the joint edge portion 18 in the first joint edge 4a overlaps the lower joint edge portion 16 in the second joint edge 4b, and the upper joint edge portion 19′ and a part of the core 30 in the second edge 4b overlap the surface layer 31 of the joint edge portion 18.
b, 3d and 5b, illustrate the boards pressed together in their inner position, with the joint edge portions 16, 17 or 16, 18 in contact with each other, and
In the above exemplary embodiments, the overlapping joint edge portion 19′ is made in the groove side, i.e. in the joint edge having a groove 9, in the second joint edge 4b. The overlapping joint edge portion 18, 18′ can also be made in the tongue side, i.e. in the joint edge having a tongue 10, or in the first joint edge 4a as illustrated in
A piece of flexible material 45 can be applied reducing movements between two mechanically joined floor panels in the vertical plane VP on either the tongue or groove side, or both sides. Examples of flexible materials are plastic, rubber, and silicon or like material.
A piece of moisture removal material 45′ can be applied in the vertical plane VP on either the tongue or groove side, or both sides. This material prevents moisture to enter between two floor panels.
In the pressed-together position, the joint system has a play JO of for instance 0.2 mm. If the overlap in this pressed-together position is 0.2 mm, the boards can, when being pulled apart, separate from each other 0.2 mm without a visible joint gap being seen from the surface. The embodiments will not have an open joint gap because the joint gap will be covered by the overlapping second joint edge portion 19, 19′ in
a-7c illustrate in detail some parts of the exemplary embodiments of
a illustrates the surface layer H1a in the upper first horizontal plane H1 parallel to the main floor surface HP, the surface layer H3a in the lower third horizontal plane H3 located under the main floor surface HP, and a part of the core H2a in the intermediate second horizontal plane H2 between the first and third horizontal planes. When the floorboards 1, 1′ are joined and pressed towards each other the surface layer H1a and the part of the core H2a of the upper joint edge portion 18′ in the first joint edge 4a overlap surface layer H3a adjacent to the joint edge 19′ in the second joint edge 4b.
The invention provides further the exemplary embodiments of a production method to form deep core grooves 20′, 20″ in a panel with a thin surface layer. The advantage is that such deep core grooves can be formed very accurately without any substantial compression of the core, and in a production method with decreased production time and using little energy as well, thereby reducing the production cost.
a-16f show parts of a production line illustrating exemplary embodiments of how to produce beveled building panels, decreasing the production cost, time and energy, according to the invention. The process of producing floorboards/building panels comprising pre-forming the core material of the whole floor element 3, without separating the floor panels 2 from each other, applying a top surface layer of e.g. wood veneer, laminate, layer of paint or a solid layer comprising wood fibre mix, binders and wear resistant particles or similar, forming the top surface layer 31 around the pre-formed core groves 20′, 20″ in the core material 30. The floor element 3 is then separated into floor panels 2. The method for manufacturing the floor panels 2 is here now described in the following method steps:
a illustrates an exemplary embodiment of a production method to pre-form a core 30 with core grooves 20, 20′, 20″, which are intended to be covered with a surface layer 31, and formed as surface depressions in a floorboard preferably as beveled edges, according to the invention.
a illustrates the exemplary embodiment of adding adhesives 53 with a machine 52 to the core 30, on the pre-formed surface of the core, according to the invention. This facilitates the top surface layer 31 to be attached onto the core after pressing. As a person skilled in the art appreciates, any kind of adhesive can be used, e.g. polyvinyl acetate (PVA), aliphatic resin emulsion or other synthetic resins including resorcinol, urea-formaldehyde, phenol formaldehyde resin, etc., just to mention some.
b illustrates the exemplary embodiment of humidifying 53 with a machine 52 the top surface layer 31′, 31″ prior to pressing, according to the invention. This facilitates for example the bending of a wood fibre based top surface layer such as paper or wood veneer around the portions of the pre-formed groove 20 of the core 30, i.e. the surfaces which are lower than the main floor surface. As a person skilled in the art appreciates any way of humidifying 53 can be done, e.g. by spraying, steaming, painting liquid or lubricating, and any kind of humidifier 53 can be used such as, e.g. water, oil or wax, etc., just to mention some. Further, the top surface layer 31′, 31″ can be heated up to soften the top surface layer, which will then be more easily formed during pressing.
The method can be used to form the core grooves and the main floor surface in the same production step. A paper impregnated with, for example, a thermosetting resin can be applied over the core groove and, under heat and pressure, thereby forming around the depression and curing the top surface layer.
The method is particularly suitable to form for example deep depressions in floorboards comprising a solid surface of wood fibres, binders and wear resistant particles.
The method does not exclude that the core and/or parts of the core groove are partly compressed during the application of the surface layer over the core groove.
a illustrates the exemplary embodiment where each floor panel 2′, 2″ is more or less covered by a separated sheet 31′, 31″ of a top surface layer, according to the invention.
a-12c illustrate the exemplary embodiment of pressing on different top surface layer 31′, 31″, 31′″, 31p in a first step, according to the invention, using e.g. a fixed pressure plate 54, with a defined form following the contour of the pre-formed core groves (20, 20′, 20″). The pressing plate 54 shown, as a person skilled in the art appreciates, can have any form that suits the surface layer to be pressed. The top surface layer can be glued to the core or laminated under heat and pressure as an impregnated paper 31′, 31″, 31′″ or applied as a powder 31p comprising fibres and binders.
a-13b, illustrate the embodiment of a soft pressuring equipment 54, 55, working for example with a soft mattress 55 between the flat formed press 54 and the top surface layer 31′, 31″, according to the invention. When pressing the flat press 54, the mattress 55 bulks out into where the open spaces are, due to the pre-formed core groves (20′, 20″) on the surface of the core 30. The bulked part of the mattress 55 presses the top surface layer 31′, 31″ even over the surface laying lower, helping the top surface layer 31 to follow the contour of the core 30 surface, and attaching the top surface layer 31. As a person skilled in the art appreciates, the pressing plate can have any form that suits the surface layer to be pressed together with the mattress 55.
a-14b, illustrate the embodiment of a press plate 54 having only protruding portions 56 that are corresponding to the core groves (20′, 20″) and a roller 57 rolling over the top surface layer 31, according to the invention. Both the protruding portions 56 and roller 57 are following the contour surface, attaching the top surface layer to the surface of the core 30, particularly attaching the top surface layer to the pre-formed bevels 20.
a-16f, illustrate the embodiment of the different steps the floor element 3 go through during the production line, according to the invention.
The exemplary embodiments of manufacturing methods, in
It will be understood by those skilled in the art that various modifications and changes may be made to the present invention without departure from the scope thereof, which is defined by the appended claims.
The present application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/971,305, filed on Dec. 17, 2010, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/287,428, filed on Dec. 17, 2009, and claims the benefit of Swedish Application No. 0950980-3, filed on Dec. 17, 2009. The entire contents of each of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/971,305, U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/287,428 and Swedish Application No. 0950980-3 are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
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| 20140069044 A1 | Mar 2014 | US |
| Number | Date | Country | |
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| 61287428 | Dec 2009 | US |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent | 12971305 | Dec 2010 | US |
| Child | 14059523 | US |