1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to the production of insulated glass units (“IGUs”) for windows and, in particular, to the production of IGUs for custom windows.
2. Background Information
Known prior production systems for insulated glass units (“IGUs”) for custom windows include a number of stages or stations, for example, a glass cutting station, a glass washing station, one or more assembly stations in which spacers are matched to the glass, and as a final stage a heated roller press station. Typically, the IGU production run is scheduled each day, based on the various customer orders and the associated shipping requirements, and also on the thickness of glass that is being cut on a given day. The IGUs are scheduled in batches, and within each batch the respective IGUs are produced in the same order in which the finished windows will ultimately be shipped or bundled for delivery.
When the IGUs are completed, they are then sent to the various other production processes, such as a vinyl fabrication process and a glazing process, which similarly take up the IGUs in the order in which the corresponding windows ship. Accordingly, at the end of the final process, the respective windows can be readily packed for shipping as the windows are completed. The windows thus do not require further sorting or storing and/or the associated extra handling. The potential for damage to the completed windows and the need for storage space for the custom-order windows is therefore minimized.
To produce the IGUs, an insulated glass sheet is cut into appropriately sized pieces, with matching pieces cut for each of the respective IGUs. The glass sheet is typically cut in a manner that optimizes the use of the glass. After cutting, the pieces are broken out of the sheet and the cut glass pieces for a given IGU are grouped together and the groups are then sorted into the production order. To sort the cut glass, the workers place the pieces for a given IGU in a designated slot of a particular production, or harp, cart. Each harp cart holds the cut glass for approximately 100 IGUs, and each batch of cut glass corresponds to approximately 400 IGUs, or the contents of four carts. If the cut glass breaks or is otherwise damaged during the breakout, sorting or carting steps, repair glass is cut and placed in the appropriate cart/slot. Once the carts are filled, the carts are moved to the washer station, and the cut glass pieces are removed from the carts and sent through the washer in the sorted order.
After washing, the glass is provided to the assembly stations where spacers are matched to and combined with the glass. At the assembly station the spacers are arranged on a first of the cut glass pieces and the second piece of cut glass is then placed on top of the spacers, such that the spacers are sandwiched between the two pieces of cut glass. The glass “sandwiches” are then sealed at a next station by heating and pressing. Thereafter, the assembled IGUs are labeled and returned to the carts, still in the sorted order, and the carts then transport the IGUs to the fabrication and/or glazing processes.
The end result of the production method described above is that the IGUs, and ultimately the finished windows, are made in an order that corresponds to how the windows must be arranged for shipment. The windows can thus be readily moved off of the production line to trucks or containers for shipping, as discussed above.
One of the disadvantages of the production method is that the steps of carting and un-carting the cut glass have the potential for scratching or breaking the glass. In particular, when the two cut pieces of glass are grouped, the two pieces may scratch one another. Also, when the two pieces are placed on end in the cart, the pieces may scratch as they ride against each other and/or the pieces may break at the corners or along the ends on which they rest in the cart. Further, when the glass is pulled out of the cart for washing, there is again the risk of scratching and/or breaking. Also, when low-E glass is used, the carting and un-carting of the glass may introduce smudges and/or fingerprints that are not easily removed. Additionally, the carting and un-carting steps involve a risk of cuts or other injuries to the workers who handle the glass and/or maneuver the heavy carts.
Another disadvantage is that the various stations tend to operate at different paces, in the sense that the cutting, breaking out and sorting process takes longer than the respective washing and assembly processes. After the cutting and sorting process, the glass for approximately 400 windows essentially arrives by cart at the washing station at one time. The glass is then relatively quickly removed from the carts and serially fed into the washer. The washed glass is then provided directly to the spacer assembly station at a is relatively rapid rate. The assemblers must work quickly to assemble the glass and spacers, to keep pace with the arrival of the washed glass. After the batch of IGUs are assembled, the assemblers are then idle until a next batch arrives at the washer. The intermittent and rapid pace of the assembly work tends to increase the potential for repetitive motion injuries.
The invention is a system and a method for in-line production of IGUs for custom windows. The system and method schedule IGU production based on the order in which the cut glass is available, or broken out, from the glass cutting station. Once the IGUs are assembled, they are then sorted into the order in which they are to be further processed, i.e., into the order in which the corresponding windows are to be produced and shipped. Thus, the sorting, or carting, step occurs after the cut glass is contained in sealed IGUs, and the workers who perform the sorting step do not have to directly handle the pieces of cut glass.
More specifically, the in-line IGU production system and method uses a conveyor mechanism to transport the cut glass directly from the glass cutting station to the glass washer. If a piece of glass is broken during, for example, the cutting or breakout process, the broken piece is removed from the conveyor system and a piece of tempered glass is used as a “placeholder” in the line. The placeholder then travels through the system, to maintain the relative order.
The cut and washed glass pieces are provided to the spacer assembly station, where the pieces are matched with spacers and the respective spacers are sandwiched between the corresponding two cut glass pieces. The assembled sandwiches are next sent through a heated roller press and emerge as sealed IGUs. The IGUs are then sorted into the order for shipping as the IGUs are carted for delivery to the fabrication and/or glazing areas.
The sorting step is simplified by attaching printed labels to the IGUs as the IGUs emerge from the heated roller press. The labels, which are printed in the same order in which the IGUs are produced, designate the carts and slots into which the respective IGUs are to be placed after sorting. The sorting step is thus a matter of placing each IGU in the cart/slot indicated on the associated label.
When a placeholder arrives at the spacer assembly station, a worker at the station retains the spacers for use with repair glass and provides to a worker at a repair station information that identifies the corresponding IGU. The placeholder then continues through the heated roller press, to maintain the relative order of the line. As the placeholder emerges from the heated roller press, the workers at the end of the IGU production line add the corresponding label to a repair list that is maintained in the same relative order.
Once the full line of IGUs and placeholders have passed through the IGU production line, the cut glass pieces from the repair station are brought to the assembly station, in the same order in which the repair information was provided to the repair station from the production line. The assembly workers then combine the repair cut glass with the corresponding spacers, which were retained at the spacer assembly station in the same relative order. Thereafter, the assemblies are passed through the heated roller press and emerge as sealed IGUs. The saved labels, which are also in the same order as the respective repairs, are then applied to the IGUs, and the IGUs are placed in the carts/slots that are indicated on the respective labels. The carts are then ready for transport to the fabrication and glazing areas, which process the IGUs in the sorted order.
The invention description below refers to the accompanying drawings, of which:
Referring now to
The scheduler 10 also receives from, for example, a shipping department (not shown), information concerning the shipping order for the batch. The scheduler then determines the order in which the respective IGUs must be provided to associated fabrication and glazing areas. The scheduler provides a mapping of IGUs to carts/slots, i.e., a sorting map, to a label printer 22, which prints associated labels. The operations of the printer are discussed in more detail below.
The glass cutting station 12 includes a dual head cutting system that for each IGU simultaneously cuts both pieces of glass. One head cuts one piece and the second head cuts the mirror image. Thus, at breakout, both pieces of cut glass for a given IGU emerge from the cutting system at essentially the same time. Alternatively, the glass cutting system may use two cutting tables, each of which operates in synchronism to simultaneously cut two sheets of glass to produce the matched pieces.
After the sheets move under the cutter, the cut pieces are “broken” out of the sheet. The first pieces that break out are the ones that are closest to the end of the sheet that emerges first from the cutter. As discussed, the two pieces of cut glass for a given IGU break out at essentially the same time.
A conveying system 13 transports the matched pieces, in the order in which they break out, to a washer 14. Along the route of the conveying system, the cut glass is examined for damage, such as scratches, cracks and breaks. If a cut piece is damaged, the piece and its mate are removed, and they are replaced with a piece of tempered glass that serves as a “placeholder” and preserves the relative order of the IGU production.
The washed glass pieces are next provided to a spacer assembly station 16. At the spacer assembly station, the two pieces of cut glass are combined with appropriately sized spacers. The spacers are thus arranged on a first piece of the cut glass and the second piece is then placed on top of the spacers. The glass assembly is then provided to a heated roller press 18, which seals the cut glass into an IGU.
When a tempered glass piece, i.e., a placeholder, reaches the spacer assembly station 16, the assemblers notify a repair station that the glass for a particular IGU must be re-cut. The assemblers identify which unit requires repair by the relative position of the tempered glass piece in the IGU production line. The assemblers also retain the associated spacers in, for an example, a repair rack, and allow the tempered glass piece to proceed to the heated roller press. Each time a tempered glass piece reaches the spacer assembly station, the assemblers report the need for a repair to the repair station and the assemblers also retain the associated spacers in the repair rack. The repairs are thus reported and the spacers retained in the same order in which the corresponding IGUs would have been produced
Before a cut glass assembly or a placeholder enters the heated roller press 18 the assembly or placeholder passes a sensor 20, which sends a corresponding signal to a label printer 22. Each time the label printer receives a signal, the printer prints a next label. If the label corresponds to a placeholder, the worker saves the label in a repair list. Otherwise, the worker attaches the label to the associated IGU, that is, to the IGU that next emerges from the heated roller press.
The printed labels include associated slot numbers and cart identifiers that correspond to the order in which the associated windows are to be produced, i.e., the order in which the windows will ship. Once a label has been attached to an IGU, the IGU is placed in the cart/slot that is identified on the label, and at the end of the batch, the respective IGUs are thus sorted in the order in which they are to be taken up in the fabrication and glazing areas.
If there are no repairs, the harp carts are then moved to the fabrication and/or glazing areas. If there are repairs, the harp carts remain in place until the repair IGUs are produced.
For the repairs, new glass is cut at the repair station in the order in which the repair pieces are reported from the IGU production line. The repair cut pieces are provided, in the same order, to the spacer assembly station 16. At the station, the cut glass is assembled with the reserved spacers, which are racked in the order in which the repairs were reported. The glass and spacer assemblies are next provided to the heated roller press 18. As each repair IGU emerges from the press, the next label on the repair list is attached to the IGU. The IGU is then placed in the cart/slot that is indicated on the label. Once all the repairs are run and the carts are loaded, the carts are moved to the fabrication or glazing areas.
There are several advantages to the in-line IGU production system and method over the known prior IGU production systems and methods. The main advantage is that the sorting step is done with IGUs instead of cut glass. Thus, the workers do not have to cart and un-cart the cut glass pieces. The workers are thus less prone to damage the glass and/or to cut themselves. In addition, the sorting step in the in-line production system and method relies on printed labels that designate the placement of the IGUs within the various harp carts. The old system relies on the workers consulting and following one or more printed or displayed schedules, which requires that the workers keep track of the progress of the glass breakout. Further, the workers must also keep track of damaged glass, in order to provide the appropriate information to the repair station during the sorting step.
Another advantage of the current system is that the cut glass is provided to the spacer assembly station at the rate at which the glass is broken out of the sheets. Thus, the assemblers work continuously and at a less rapid pace to assemble the batch of IGUs. The workers may thus be less prone to repetitive motion injuries.
The system described with reference to
The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/435,176, which was filed on Dec. 19, 2002, by Randall Holden et al., for a System and Method for In-Line Production of Insulated Glass Units for Custom Windows and is hereby incorporated by reference.
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