Claims
- 1. In a method of making molded articles, in combination, the steps of storing in a supply container a pourable mixture comprised of a heat-setting binder and a particulate and porous fibrous material the fibers of which contain in absorbed condition both moisture and a part of the heat-setting binder; continually transporting the pourable mixture of heat-setting binder and fibrous material from the supply container along a predetermined path into an unheated mold, the transporting step comprising pouring the pourable mixture into the unheated mold; subjecting the mixture poured into the unheated mold to a cold-molding operation in the mold without addition of heat to the mixture in the mold and not resulting in setting of the binder; during said transporting step utilizing a high-frequency electromagnetic field to impart to the pourable mixture of heat-setting binder and fibrous material, prior to entry thereof into the unheated mold, an adhesiveness so great that the mixture in the unheated mold, upon completion of a molding operation without addition of heat to the mixture in the mold, can be removed from the unheated mold as a unitary body and thereafter transported away from the unheated mold without falling apart, the imparting of said adhesiveness consisting of utilizing the high-frequency electromagnetic field to heat the pourable mixture of heat-setting binder and fibrous material to a temperature which does not cause the heat-setting binder to set and which is furthermore no higher than between 40.degree. and 100.degree. C. to convert the individual fibers of the fibrous material into a state in which the absorbed moisture and binder within the individual fibers throughout the fibrous material are expelled from the interiors to the surfaces of the individual fibers without thereby substantially changing the overall moisture content of the mixture, said molding operation performed in the unheated mold being carried out with the individual fibers of the fibrous material in said state; and upon completion of the molding operation, and without adding heat to the mixture in the mold, removing the mixture from the unheated mold as a unitary body and transporting it as a unitary body away from the unheated mold.
- 2. In a method of making molded articles, in combination, the steps of storing in a supply container a pourable mixture comprised of a heat-setting binder and a particulate and porous fibrous material the fibers of which contain in absorbed condition both moisture and a part of the heat-setting binder; continually transporting the pourable mixture of heat-setting binder and fibrous material from the supply container along a predetermined path into an unheated mold, the transporting step comprising pouring the pourable mixture into the unheated mold; subjecting the mixture poured into the unheated mold to a cold-molding operation in the mold without addition of heat to the mixture in the mold and not resulting in setting of the binder; during said transporting step utilizing a high-frequency electromagnetic field to impart to the pourable mixture of heat-setting binder and fibrous material, prior to entry thereof into the unheated mold, an adhesiveness so great that the mixture in the unheated mold, upon completion of a molding operation without addition of heat to the mixture in the mold, can be removed from the unheated mold as a unitary body and thereafter transported away from the unheated mold without falling apart, the imparting of said adhesiveness consisting of utilizing the high-frequency electromagnetic field to heat the pourable mixture of heat-setting binder and fibrous material to a temperature which does not cause the heat-setting binder to set and which is furthermore no higher than between 40 and 100.degree. C. to convert the individual fibers of the fibrous material into a state in which the absorbed moisture and binder within the individual fibers throughout the fibrous material are expelled from the interiors to the surfaces of the individual fibers without thereby substantially changing the overall moisture content of the mixture, said molding operation performed in the unheated mold being carried out with the individual fibers of the fibrous material in said state; and upon completion of the molding operation, and without adding heat to the mixture in the mold, removing the mixture from the unheated mold as a unitary body and transporting it as a unitary body to a heated further mold; and subjecting the body thusly inserted into the heated further mold to a hot-molding operation resulting in setting of the binder.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
2105998 |
Feb 1971 |
DEX |
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CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
The present application is a continuation of my prior application Ser. No. 479,490, filed on June 14, 1974 now abandoned. Application Ser. No. 479,490 in turn was a continuation-in-part of my prior application Ser. No. 224,511, filed Feb. 8, 1972 now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (9)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
Wakeman, Chemistry of Commercial Plastics, Reinhold (1947), N.Y., pp. 174 & 824. |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
479490 |
Jun 1974 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
224511 |
Feb 1972 |
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