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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a press pad for use in a laminating press for the production of laminate sheets, such as decorative laminates, laminated floorboards, and punted circuit boards, using low pressure and high pressure single daylight and multi daylight presses
2. Description of Related Art Including Information Disclosed Under 37 CFR 1.97 and 37 CFR 1.98.
The purpose of a press pad is to compensate for density variations in the laminate sheet being pressed and thereby to ensure that an equal pressure is applied to all parts of the sheet. In addition, the press pad compensates for any unevenness in the surfaces of the platens of the press itself and any flexure or bow mg of the platens when under pressure. Again, this assists in the product on of a flat, even density laminate. Thus, it is important for a press pad to be resilient and have a natural springiness to permit it to compensate for the aforementioned density variations and the surface unevenness of the press platens but also to allow it to relax after each pressing operation and recover its form to enable it to be used again. The capacity a press pad has to re-form itself after each pressing, namely its compensation capability, is an important characteristic to ensure a reasonable working life and to avoid unnecessary downtime of a press whilst the press pads are replaced.
However, because the purpose of the press is to apply heat to the laminate sheet whilst it is under pressure, it is important that the press pad also conducts the heat supplied by the press platens to the laminate sheet. Working temperatures for such presses are usually in a range up to 220° C.
Typically, therefore, a conventional press pad is a densely woven combination of high temperature-resistant, non-asbestos yarns and metal wire. The metal wire is included to give good heat transmission through the pad to the laminate sheet. In contrast, the non-metal yarn is required to give the pad the springiness and resilience required to enable the pad to relax after each pressing operation. The relative proportion of the two types of material is a consideration when devising a press pad for a particular purpose. Usually a compromise must be reached between the heat transference and the resilience or springiness required in each case.
A conventional press pad is described in WO9613376. The pad comprises a woven fabric of heat resistant strands such as copper wires wherein a substantial proportion of either the warp or the weft comprises a silicone elastomer. In practice, as shown in
In WO2007129041 is described a press pad that mitigates the aforementioned problem. In this press pad the wires within the core 3 of the well are not stranded or bunched but are arranged to lie substantially parallel to one another and to the longitudinal axis of the core 3, as shown in
Also described within WO2007129041 is the possibility of using a weft Wherein the wires 3 are arranged to lie in the same plane of the core when they are not under any applied pressure. This involves the extrusion of an elastomeric sheath 4 in a non-circular, cross-sectional profile, for example an oval cross-sectional profile. However, such a well is ribbon-like, being, significantly wider than it is thick. Weaving such wells to produce a satisfactory press pad is difficult as all wefts tend to twist during weaving so that the resulting press pad would have an uneven thickness and differently sized interstices between the warp and well owing to the twists in the weft. This is undesirable because the number of contact points between the warp and the well in any given surface area of the resulting pad is reduced which in turn reduces the compensation capabilities of the pad. Even if it Were possible to weave a pad with a ribbon-like well that remained untwisted, increasing the width of the well in any plain or twill weave results in a reduction in the number of well insertions or picks over a given length of woven fabric. This is also undesirable because the number of contact points between the warp and press platens in any given surface area of the resulting pad is thereby reduced which in turn reduces the beat transfer capabilities of the pad,
The primary object of the present invention is to provide a press pad wherein elastomeric material forms a greater percentage of the overall pad volume than in conventional pads and thereby produce an enhanced compensating ability or ‘spring’ effect without significantly reducing the heat transfer capability of the pad.
In preferred embodiments it is a further object of the present invention to overcome the aforementioned disadvantages of conventional pads and to provide a pad wherein the elastomeric material remains intact for a longer period because the tendency for it to be cut by metal strands in the warp is reduced.
According to the present invention there is provided a press pad for use in a laminate press comprising a woven fabric of heat-resistant strands wherein at least a proportion of the weft comprises a core made up of a bundle of strands within an extruded sheath of an elastomeric material and at least a proportion of the warp comprises metal strands, characterized in that the strands forming the bundle are close-packed prior to extrusion of the sheath around them and in that the transverse cross-sectional profile of the sheath is a regular geometric profile that is other than a circular profile prior to weaving of the fabric of the press pad.
Both herein and in the claims the term ‘close-packed’ is to be interpreted as meaning that in any transverse cross-sectional plane through the strands forming the bundle, the strands are arranged so that they occupy the minimum practical amount of space and therefore have the highest practical density, there always being a small degree of drift of the strands during the extrusion process from an ideal dose-packed arrangement. The arrangement described in WO2007129041 wherein the weft comprises strands arranged to lie in the same plane of the core when they are not under any applied pressure does not, therefore, fall within the scope of this definition as the strands are not close-packed prior to extrusion of the sheath around them.
It is known that the resistance to pressure of a press pad is dependent on the weave density. This resistance increases the closer adjacent elastomeric weft strands are to one another in the weave as the pressure is applied, to the pad in use. It has been found that altering the transverse cross-sectional profile of the elastomeric sheath, which conventionally is circular, to a regular geometric profile that is other than a circular profile while retaining the strands in the core in a close-packed bundle enables the quantity of elastomeric material within a pad to be increased with a consequent increase in the compensating ability of the pad.
Preferably, the transverse cross-sectional profile of the sheath is a profile or a regular polygonal profile that is composed of straight lines or arcs. In the case of a splined profile, preferably the profile has at least six and advantageously at least twelve splines. Preferably, the splines or all the angles of the polygonal profile form projections outwards from the welt surface from hypothetical in-circle of the profile.
The use of such a profiled weft means that the weave contains more elastomeric material than would be the case if the cross-sectional pro file were circular because a non-circular profile will distort sufficiently at the crossing points between the warp and the weft to permit the same number of picks or weft insertions per decimeter as in a weave using a weft with a circular cross-sectional profile. However, the quantity of elastomeric material within any given volume of the pad will be greater. During the weaving process, pressure is exerted on the elastomeric material of the well at the crossing points between the warp and the well and causes localized distortions in the elastomeric material. The use of a splined profile or as regular polygonal profile means that the splines or projecting angles of these profiles bear this pressure so that the load per unit area at the points of contact between the warp and the weft is significantly greater than if a circular profile were used. This load readily compresses the splines or angular projections at every crossing point but critically the underlying main body of the elastomeric profile is no more distorted than is the elastomeric profile in well with a conventional circular profile.
Whilst a simple increase in the diameter of the sheath of a circular profile may appear to have the same effect, as the elastomeric material is typically a flexible siloxane that can be forced into place, it is a mathematical fact that whatever the maximum diameter of a weft with a circular profile that could be comfortably woven without reducing the number of picks per decimeter, significantly more elastomeric material is included in the weave by using as splined profile or a regular polygonal profile wherein the aforesaid maximum diameter is either the base in-circle of a splined profile or the in-circle of a regular polygonal profile.
Preferred additional features of the invention are described in the dependent claims appended hereto.
The present invention and examples of wefts with different cross-sectional profiles for use in embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a to 3e are cross-sectional views, to an enlarged scale in comparison to
a and 5h are diagrams showing a core of a weft for use in a press pad according to the present invention that is made up of seven close-packed strands and of three close-packed strands respectively; and
As indicated, above, the elastomeric material, used in the production of a sheathed well for press pads is typically a siloxane, usually silicone or fluoro-silicone although other elastomeric materials may be used. The production of an elastomeric-sheathed weft is typically carried out by extruding the elastomer over a core comprised of a bundle of strands, for example wire strands, using a cross-head extrusion machine. The bundle of strands comprising the core passes through a tip into a flow of the elastomer and thence through a die, which controls the shape and thickness of the resulting, sheath.
Dies capable of producing cross-sectional profiles as shown in
In most conventional press pads, for example that shown in
In
The following table, Table 1, gives an indication of the estimated volumetric increase in the elastomer of a sheath 9 that can be achieved using the illustrated, profiles as compared with a circular profile. The calculations are based on a 1.4 Mm diameter in-circle 10, which is shown in dotted lines in
It can be seen that the greatest volumetric increase is achieved with a triangular profile. However, from a practical point of view such a profile presents difficulties because the size of the angular projections beyond the diameter of the in-circle 10 are large and are not as readily compressed by the warp at the crossing points of the warp and weft. Without increasing the tension of the warp, which may be undesirable, this can lead to a decrease in the number of picks per decimeter, which defeats the object of the invention. This leaves the square profile and the splined profile as the best of the various profiles under consideration. However, the use of weft with a square profile also has potential problems. Ideally, weft with a square profile should be inserted into a weave so that the well strands are perfectly aligned with one another so that the surface of the pad has a flat appearance. However, it is unlikely to be possible to insert such weft strands into a weave without introducing some deuce of twist. Given that some degree of twist has to be accepted, a further problem arises in that the lay of any twist introduced is unlikely to be consistent across the width of the loom and between different weft insertions. This would give the resulting press pad an uneven appearance.
Such problems with twist in the weft do not occur to the same extent with the splined profile, partly because the number of splines evens out any requirement for orientating the weft in a particular fashion. This is one reason for using a splined profile with a large number of splines 13. Preferably, the profile has at least six and advantageously up to twelve splines 13, which is the maximum it is practical to use given the dimensions of the well. Also, for any given volumetric increase in the quantity of elastomer used for any given size of in-circle 10, the greater the number of splines provided to make up this increase the easier they will be to compress at the warp and weft crossing points. This reduces the problem outlined above with the triangular profile and is another reason for using a profile with twelve splines 13,
Table 1 above gives an indication of the estimated volumetric increase in the elastomer of the sheath that can be achieved using a splined profile based on a 1.4 mm diameter in-circle 10 with twelve semi-circular splines 13 uniformly spaced around the profile that each have a radius of 0.125 mm. Preferably, the sheath 9 has an in-circle diameter between 1.25 mm and 2.0 mm inclusive and splines 13 that each has a radius between 0.1 mm and 0.2 mm inclusive. The following table, Table 2, gives the estimated volumetric increase in the elastomer of the sheath 9 that can be achieved using differently sized in-circles 10 and differently sized semi-circular splines 13, assuming in each case that there are twelve splines 13 regularly arranged around the in-circle 10.
From these results, it can be seen that a weft with a 1.25 mm in-circle diameter and twelve splines of 0,15 mm radius or a weft with a 1.5 mm in-circle diameter and twelve splines of 0.18 mm give the greatest percentage volumetric elastomer increase.
In the present invention, strands 11 making up a core 12 of the weft are preferably metal strands but may comprise any of the following, namely copper wires, brass wires, stainless steel wires, copper alloy wires, aramide yarns, glass strands or filaments, and aromatic polyamide yarns. The choice of strands 11 used will depend on the purpose of the press pad, the desired degree of heat transference and resilience or springiness required. However, as stainless steel wire has a greater tensile strength and a greater shear strength than copper wire, a core 12 made up of three strands 11 of stainless steel wire exhibits the similar tensile and shear strengths as a core 12 made up of seven strands of copper wire. Hence, as it is desired to maximize the volume of elastomer in the weft, preferably instead, of seven strands 8 of copper wire being used to form the core 3, as shown in the prior art arrangements in
While the present invention can be used with a core 12 wherein the strands 11 are stranded or bunched, which means that they are twisted together, preferably the strands 11 in the core 12 comprise a bundle of strands that are substantially parallel to one another and to the longitudinal axis of the core, such as is shown in
In addition to the foregoing, the strands 11 forming the core 12 should be close-packed, as defined above, so that they occupy the minimum practical amount of space. This means that in a transverse cross-section, the strands 11 in one row will nestle between the strands of adjacent rows. If there are seven strands, then they will lie within the outline of a hexagon, as shown in
The warp must also be chosen with the intended, purpose of the press pad in mind. The warp weaves around the weft from the top to the bottom of the pad. It therefore forms the main conduit for heat transfer through the pad. For this reason a large proportion and preferably all of the warp usually comprises metal strands and may take the form of metal wires, in particular wires made from copper, brass or other copper alloys which all have a high heat conductivity. Preferably, the warp also comprises a plurality of substantially parallel, untwisted metal strands, for example seven parallel strands, so that they also flatten under pressure in use. As a warp that comprises a plurality of completely parallel, untwisted metal strands can be difficult to work with it is advantageous for the warp to have at least some degree of twist. Preferably, therefore, the warp is composed of a plurality of metal strands each having a diameter of the order of 0.2 mm with a lay of at least 25 mm. Such a lay is an improvement on the conventional lay of 15 mm but the greater the lay, and therefore the least amount of twist in the metal strands, the better.
A press pad in accordance with the present invention maybe woven in a plain weave, similar to that shown schematically in
It will therefore be appreciated from the foregoing that the present invention provides a press pad that has an increased, quantity of elastomeric material and therefore, enhanced compensation ability without any noticeable reduction in the heat transfer capability of the pad.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1114140.5 | Aug 2011 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2012/000640 | 8/7/2012 | WO | 00 | 5/13/2014 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2013/024237 | 2/21/2013 | WO | A |
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6737370 | Espe | May 2004 | B2 |
6780280 | Halterbeck et al. | Aug 2004 | B2 |
7892990 | Douglas | Feb 2011 | B2 |
8573280 | Marxen | Nov 2013 | B2 |
20080311811 | Douglas | Dec 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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102007024509 | Dec 2008 | DE |
1336685 | Aug 2003 | EP |
2007129041 | Nov 2007 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report for corresponding International Application No. PCT/GB2012/000640. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140238616 A1 | Aug 2014 | US |