AU562872B2 - Continuous or semi-continuous process for forming reconsolidated wood product - Google Patents

Continuous or semi-continuous process for forming reconsolidated wood product

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Publication number
AU562872B2
AU562872B2 AU36761/84A AU3676184A AU562872B2 AU 562872 B2 AU562872 B2 AU 562872B2 AU 36761/84 A AU36761/84 A AU 36761/84A AU 3676184 A AU3676184 A AU 3676184A AU 562872 B2 AU562872 B2 AU 562872B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
webs
product
space
compression device
compression
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
AU36761/84A
Other versions
AU3676184A (en
Inventor
William Granton Grace
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Repco Ltd
Original Assignee
Repco Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Repco Ltd filed Critical Repco Ltd
Priority to AU36761/84A priority Critical patent/AU562872B2/en
Publication of AU3676184A publication Critical patent/AU3676184A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU562872B2 publication Critical patent/AU562872B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Description

CONTINUOUS OR SEMI-CONTINUOUS PROCESS FOR FORMING RECONSOLIDATED WOOD PRODUCT
This invention relates to a process for forming a reconsolidated wood product, apparatus for forming a reconsolidated wood product, and a reconsolidated wood product formed by the process.
Australian Patent Specification 510,845 describes a reconsolidated wood product formed from at least one flexible open lattice work web of naturally intercon- nected wood strands generally aligned along a common grain direction, a substantial proportion of said strands being substantially discrete but incompletely separated from each other; said web having been consolidated by compression whilst substantially maintaining the wood strands aligned along same common grain direction and said strands being bonded together to hold them in juxtapositions assumed pursuant to said consolidation.
That patent specification also describes a process for forming a reconsolidated wood product from a flexible open lattice work web of naturally inter¬ connected wood strands, said web being formed by partially rending natural wood so that said strands are generally aligned along a common grain direction, a substantial proportion of said strands being sub¬ stantially discrete but incompletely separated from each other, said process comprising compressing the web to consolidate the strands whilst maintaining them such as to substantially extend in said original grain direction and bonding said splinters or strands together to hold them in juxtapositions assumed pursuant to said consolidation.
An object of this invention is to provide a process and apparatus capable of producing a contin¬ uous product, thereby to improve production efficiency and reduce losses occurring in finishing discrete - product lengths.
In one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a process for forming a reconsolidated wood product as described above, said web comprising one.of- a plurality of webs? said process further comprising applying bonding agent to said webs, for effecting said bonding, and successively passing them through a compression device to effect said compression and consolidation, said webs being fed into the device in such a fashion that the webs make an angle to the direction of extent of the product and so that adjacent webs overlap each other in the direction of passing of the webs through said compression device. The passing through of the webs may be effected by engagement and movement of the reconsolidated wood product emerging from the device. The process of the invention may be carried out in a semi-continuous fashion, with the said compres¬ sion device comprising two compression elements which are moved towards each other to effect said compres- sion and consolidation, the engagement and movement of the reconsolidated product emerging from the device being effected by gripping the product with gripping means and moving the gripping means to effect the engagement and movement of the product. The invention further provides, in another aspect, apparatus for carrying out the process of the invention, the apparatus comprising a compression device having a space extending therethrough for passage of said webs, after application of bonding agent, through the compression device, said compres¬ sion device being effective to compress and consoli¬ date said webs as they pass therethrough; and engagement means operable to engage the reconsolidated wood product as it emerges from said space, or said webs before passage into said space, to effect said passing through of the webs. Preferably, the compression device includes a pair of members movable towards and away from each other whereby to present, at two extreme positions of such movement respective greater and lesser magnitudes of said space therebetween and means for cyclically moving the elements between said extreme positions, said engage¬ ment means being effective to move said product intermittently and at times when the said members do not present said lesser magnitude of said space. Preferably, the members are arranged so that said
OMPI space is convergent in the direction from an input to an output end thereof.
The invention is further described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings in which
Figure 1 is a diagram showing the steps in processing reconsolidated wood products in accordance with the invention described in the aforementioned Australian patent specification 510,845; Figure 2 is a schematic diagram of apparatus used in practising the method of the present invention; Figure 3 is a fragmentary side view of a reconsol¬ idated wood product formed by the apparatus in Figure 2; Figure 4 is a perspective view of a device useful for coating bonding agent onto webs prior to passage to the apparatus of Figure 2;
Figure 5 is a front view of -the apparatus of Figure 4; and Figure 6 shows a modified form of apparatus useful in practising the present invention.
Referring firstly to Figure 1, in the process of Australian Patent Specification 510,845 natural wood logs 10 are first partially broken down, being passed successively between rollers 12 of one or more roller pairs to induce cracking and thence progressively open up the log structure to form it into a web of loosely interconnected splinter-like strands (called "splin¬ ters" in Patent Specification 510,845). The resultant web, shown at 14 in Figure 1 is of flexible open lattice work form, individual strands maintaining the
OMPI original grain direction of the wood. Adhesive is then applied to the webs 14 such as by immersion in a suitable liquid adhesive in a bath 16 as shown. AFter removal of excessive adhesive, a plurality of webs 14 are assembled together, such as by laying them one over the other in a suitable mould 18. The assemblage of overlaid webs 14 is then compressed in mould 18 such as by compression between the base of the mould and an upper press element 20 as shown, and the adhesive is cured, to form the final product 22.
Product 22 is characterized in that it comprises a plurality of wood strands which remain naturally interconnected and which extend generally in the original grain direction of the wood. The strands are bound together by the adhesive but are positioned in somewhat displaced relative locations as compared with the positions occupied in the original log 10. The product 22 has been found to be particularly satisfac¬ tory as it possesses good mechanical properties, due to the relatively small degradation of the original wood structure which is caused by the process, as well as good nailability and a generally pleasing appear¬ ance.
The process immediately before described is a batch-type process and Figure 2 shows a method of processing webs 14 by a semi-continuous process in accordance with this invention.
In Figure 2, webs 14, preformed as immediately above described and precoa ed with bonding agent, such as by use of the apparatus described later, are passed to a compression device 100. This comprises two compression members 102, 104 positioned one above the other. In this instance, member 102 has a flat upper surface 102a and member 104 has an, opposed, under surface 104a which is non linear so that the space between the members 102 and 104, as defined by the opposed surfaces 102a, 104a, tapers from a relatively wide opening at an input end 100a of the device 100 to a relatively narrow output end 100b. At locations towards the output end, the surfaces 104a, 104b may however, as shown, be substantially parallel. The member 102 is mounted rigidly, but the member 104 is mounted, such as by hydraulic rams, in such a fashion as to be movable vertically so as to vary the space between the surfaces 102a, 104a from a minimum magni- tude, as shown in the drawing, to a maximum magnitude (not illustrated) . The webs 14 are laid in, as shown, in overlapping configuration on a feed table having an upper surface 106, as shown, leading to the input.end ■ of the apparatus. The webs are laid in overlapping fashion so that a rear end 14a.of each web rests on the surface 106, and an intermediate portion 14b overlies the immediately preceding web 14 with the forward end 14c of each web being positioned over the underlying web 14 at a location somewhat back from the forward end of that immediately preceding web.
The arrangement of the device 100 is such that a certain length of pre-laid-up webs on table surface 106 is advanced into the space between the members 102, 104, when member 104 is at its uppermost postion. Then, the member 104 is moved downwardly to effect compression of the webs 14 therebetween and also to effect curing of the bonding agent of the webs 14 therein, at least over a substantial part of the length of the device 100 extending back from the output end 100b thereof. Then, the member 104 is again moved upwardly and a completed section of final product 22 is withdrawn and emerges from the appara¬ tus.
The movement of the webs 14 through the device 100 is effected by use of an engagement device 110. This comprises two opposed gripping elements 112, 114 disposed to opposite sides of the emergent product 22. To effect movement, the gripping elements are moved towards each other to engage the product 22 from either side thereof, and thence the two elements are moved together away from the output end 100b of the device 100 to draw a length of product 22 from the device 100. This movement is effected at a time when the member 104 is in its upper position. Then, the two elements 112, 114 are' moved away from each other and out of engagement with the product 22 and thence back towards the apparatus 100 ready for a subsequent engagement and movement step. Completed sections of product 22 may be docked off by use of a saw 120 movable to traverse the product 22 at times when the emergent product 22 is not being moved.
The members 102 and/or 104 may be heated to effect curing of the bonding agent on the webs 14 as these pass through the device 100. In any event, the arrangement is such that sufficient bonding occurs over the length of the material represented by webs 14 within the length of device 100 that, when the
OMPI finished product 22 is moved by action of the engage¬ ment means 110, in-feeding to the device 100 occurs in such a fashion as to draw into the device 100 suffi¬ cient of the webs 14 at the input end to form a length of product 22 equal to the length so advanced from the output end.
The above process is capable of being operated in a semi-continuous fashion as described to produce product 22 of the form shown in more detail in Figure 3.
It will be appreciated that webs 14 when formed by the process of Australian Patent Specification 510,845 will possess a greater cross-sectional area at one end as compared to the other end, by virtue of the natural taper of trees. That is to say that part of the web formed from the part of a log closest the base of the tree from which the log was cut will be of greater cross-sec ional area than the other end thereof. In the arrangement shown in Figure 2, the webs 14 are laid with the greater cross-sectional area portion lowermost. During the compression and con¬ solidation process, the upper ends 14c of the webs are compressed relatively downwardly so that each web assumes a slightly- curved configuration as shown in Figure 3. The webs 14 each extend at an angle to the lengthwise direction of extent of the product 22. This angle, designated " " in Figure 3, may be of the order of 0-5°. The angle "V is determined by the ratio between the length of the webs 14 and the thickness of the product 22. It has been found satis¬ factory for many applications to arrange the webs so that at any cross-section of the finished product 22 six webs appear. It is a consequence of the described angular lay-out of webs 14 that each web has its lower end 14a at one (lower) surface of the finished product 22, and its upper end 14c at the opposed (upper) surface of the product 22.
While the above process involves laying down of individual webs 14, in practice it is possible to bundle a number of webs together and to lay down the bundles one after the other rather than individual webs as described. With such an arrangement, it is preferred to weigh each bundle before laying down so as to maintain each bundle of webs approximately the same weight thereby to facilitate obtaining a product 22 of relatively uniform density.
Although the operation of the apparatus of Figure 2 has been described in relation to a semi-continuous process it would of course be possible to adapt the process for continuous operation. For example the members 100, 102 may be fixed and, by appropriately arranging for a sufficient degree of curing of the bonding material to occur back from the output end of the device 100, during operation, the product 22 may be drawn from the device 100 in a continuous process. Whether the process is operated intermittently, it is advisable to ensure that advancement of the material through the device 100, at each incremental advance is for a distance which is not greater than the distance in "D" shown in Figure 2, being a distance for which the surfaces 102a, 104a extend in parallel relation¬ ship back from the output end 100b of the apparatus.
OMPI ' When operating the process as described above whether continuously or intermittently, it is prefer¬ red that the coating of the webs 14 with bonding agent be effected on a semi-continuous or continuous basis. Figures 4 and 5 show an apparatus 200 suitable for this purpose. Apparatus 200 includes a pair of input rollers 202, 204 and a pair of output rollers 206, 208. Rollers 202, 204 are mounted on a frame 210 (figure 5 only) . The rollers are rubber surfaced and have rubber transverse end surfaces at each end. The rollers are arranged with roller 202 above 204 and with the surfaces of the rollers in engaging contact. The transverse end surfaces of the rollers engage inner surfaces of upright side walls 212, 214 of frame - 210. The output rollers 206, 208 likewise have rubber surfaces and rubber transverse end surfaces. These are arranged one above the other with roller 206 above and in contact with roller 208. The transverse end surfaces of the rollers 206, 208 are likewise engaged with upright side surfaces of the walls 212, 214 of frame 210. An idler roller 216 is positioned between and in driving contact with rollers 204, 208. It is formed with end surfaces which engage the inner upright surfaces of the walls 212, 214 of frame 210. In the rest state, the rollers 202, 204, by virtue of their engagement together, form an upright wall at the input end of the apparatus and rollers 206, 208 likewise form an upright wall at the output end. A base wall is defined by the three rollers 204, 216, -208, by virtue of the contact between these rollers. When viewed from the side, then, the apparatus 200 defines a cavity 220 closed at the front by the rollers 202, 204, at the rear by rollers 206, 208 and at the bottom by rollers 204, 216, 208. Cavity 220 is closed at opposed sides of the apparatus by the side walls 212, 214, which sealingly engage the transverse end surfaces of the rollers 202, 204, 216, 206, 208. The rubber surfaces of the rollers 202, 204, 206, 208 are made of sufficient resilience to permit a web 14 or bundle of webs 14 to be passed between the pairs of roller 202, 204 and 206, 208, the rubber surfaces enclosing and bearing against the periphery of the cross-section of the web during this action.
To use the apparatus 200, the cavity 220 is filled with bonding agent, such as a bonding agent formed of a solution of tannin together with a suit¬ able activator which has been foamed by mechanical mixing. Then, the webs are passed through the appara¬ tus 200, first passing through the rollers 202, 204 and thence emerging through the rollers 206, 208. This action may be facilitated by driving the rollers 202, 204, 206 and 208 (by means not shown) in the directions indicated by arrows on the rollers in figure 4. Thus, a web 14 may be driven through the apparatus 200 to emerge from the roller pair 206, 208 coated with the bonding agent in the cavity 220. The close engagement between the rollers 202, 204; 206, 208 prevents substantial loss of bonding agent from the cavity 220. Excess material may be removed by a pair of squeeze rollers 222 through which the webs 14 pass after leaving the apparatus 200.
OMPI In order to prevent escape of picked-up bonding agent on the roller 202 during rotation thereof, a plate 224 is provided which engages the periphery of the roller 202. After coating as above described in the apparatus 220, and removal of excess bonding agent by action of the roller pair 222, webs 14 are passed to the device 100 as previously described.
While the apparatus of Figure 2 operates to pull webs 14 through the compression device 100, Figure 6 shows a modified arrangement in which the webs 14 are fed to device 100 by pushing at the input end. In this figure parts commonly shown in Figures 2 and 6 are shown by like reference numerals and only the differences as between the two figures are now described. In particular, the engagement device 110 is omitted and replaced by a pair of rollers 115 arranged at the input end 100a of the device 100. At least one of these rollers 115. is driven intermittently to more webs 14 presented thereto into the device 100 when members 102, 104 are moved apart. The product 22 emerging from the device 100 is thus pushed through the device 100. Of course, rollers like rollers 115 could be employed at the output end of the device 100 to engage the emergent product 22 to move webs 14 through the device 100. Likewise engagement device 110 could be positioned at the input end of the device 100 to engage and move webs 14 into the device 100.
The described method and apparatus have been advanced merely by way of explanation and many modi¬ fications may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
OMPI

Claims (11)

1. A process for forming a reconsolidated wood product from a flexible open lattice work web of naturally interconnected wood strands, said web-being formed by partially rending natural wood so that said strands are generally aligned along a common grain direction, a substantial proportion of said strands being substantially discrete but incompletely separated from each other, said process comprising compressing the web to consolidate the strands whilst maintaining them such as to substantially extend in said original grain direction and bonding said strands together to hold them in juxtapositions assumed pursuant to said consolidation, said web comprising one of a plurality of webs; said process further comprising applying bonding agent to said webs and successively passing them through a compression device to effect said compression and consolidation, said webs being fed into the-device in such a fashion that the webs make an angle to the direction of extent of the product and so that adjacent webs overlap each other in the direction of passing of the webs, for effecting said bonding, through said compression device.
2. A process as claimed in claim 1 wherein said passing through is effected by engagement and movement of the reconsolidated wood product emerging from the device.
3. A process as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2 wherein said passing through is effected by engaging said webs at an entry side of said compression device whereby to move them into the compression device.
4. A process for forming a reconsolidated wood product as claimed in claim 2 wherein said compression device comprises two compression elements which are moved towards each other to effect said compression and consolidation, the engagement and movement of the reconsolidated product emerging from the device being effected by gripping the product with gripping means and moving the gripping means to effect the engagement and movement of the product.
5. Apparatus for carrying out the process of claim 1 comprising a compression device having a space extend¬ ing therethrough for passage of said webs, after application of bonding agent, through the compression device, said compression device being effective to compress and consolidate said webs when positioned therein; and engagement means operable to engage the reconsolidated wood product, as it emerges from said space, or said webs before passage into said space, to effect said passing through of the webs.
6. Apparatus as claimed in claim 5 wherein the compression device includes a pair of members movable towards and away from each other whereby to present, at two extreme positions of such movement respective greater and lesser magnitudes of said space therebetween and means for cyclically moving the elements between said extreme positions, said engage¬ ment means being effective to move said product intermittently and at times when the said members do not present said lesser magnitude of said space.
7. Apparatus as claimed in claim 6 wherein the members are arranged so that said space is convergent in the direction from an input to an output end thereof.
8. A process as claimed in claim 6 or claim 7 wherein said engagment means comprises a pair of rollers at least one of which is driven intermittently to pass the webs therethrough and into said space.
9. A process as claimed in claim 6 or claim 7 wherein said engagement means comprises a pair of members movable to engage said product as it emerges from said space and which are moved to effect movement of the product to effect passing of the webs through the compression device by pulling.
10. A process as claimed in claim 6 or claim 7 wherein said engagement means comprises a pair of rollers at least one of which is driven intermittently to engage said product as it emerges from said space to pull said webs through the compression device.
11. A process as claimed in claim 6 or claim 7 wherein said engagement means comprises a pair of members movable to engage said webs and to be moved to feed said webs to said compression apparatus.
OMPI
AU36761/84A 1983-11-23 1984-11-23 Continuous or semi-continuous process for forming reconsolidated wood product Ceased AU562872B2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU36761/84A AU562872B2 (en) 1983-11-23 1984-11-23 Continuous or semi-continuous process for forming reconsolidated wood product

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AUPG251783 1983-11-23
AUPG2517 1983-11-23
AU36761/84A AU562872B2 (en) 1983-11-23 1984-11-23 Continuous or semi-continuous process for forming reconsolidated wood product

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU3676184A AU3676184A (en) 1985-06-13
AU562872B2 true AU562872B2 (en) 1987-06-18

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
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Families Citing this family (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1988004983A1 (en) * 1986-12-24 1988-07-14 South Australian Timber Corporation A process and apparatus for applying bonding agent and a process for forming reconsolidated wood product
CA1329755C (en) * 1988-05-18 1994-05-24 Robin David Sealey Method and apparatus for use in producing reconsolidated wood products

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU3676184A (en) 1985-06-13

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