GB2092947A - A method of patch mending a veneer sheet - Google Patents

A method of patch mending a veneer sheet Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2092947A
GB2092947A GB8105152A GB8105152A GB2092947A GB 2092947 A GB2092947 A GB 2092947A GB 8105152 A GB8105152 A GB 8105152A GB 8105152 A GB8105152 A GB 8105152A GB 2092947 A GB2092947 A GB 2092947A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
veneer sheet
plug
sheet
cut
patch
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB8105152A
Other versions
GB2092947B (en
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.)
Meinan Machinery Works Inc
Original Assignee
Meinan Machinery Works Inc
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 Meinan Machinery Works Inc filed Critical Meinan Machinery Works Inc
Priority to GB8105152A priority Critical patent/GB2092947B/en
Priority to DE19813107559 priority patent/DE3107559C2/en
Publication of GB2092947A publication Critical patent/GB2092947A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2092947B publication Critical patent/GB2092947B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B27WORKING OR PRESERVING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; NAILING OR STAPLING MACHINES IN GENERAL
    • B27GACCESSORY MACHINES OR APPARATUS FOR WORKING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIALS; TOOLS FOR WORKING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIALS; SAFETY DEVICES FOR WOOD WORKING MACHINES OR TOOLS
    • B27G1/00Machines or devices for removing knots or other irregularities or for filling-up holes
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26FPERFORATING; PUNCHING; CUTTING-OUT; STAMPING-OUT; SEVERING BY MEANS OTHER THAN CUTTING
    • B26F1/00Perforating; Punching; Cutting-out; Stamping-out; Apparatus therefor
    • B26F1/38Cutting-out; Stamping-out
    • B26F1/40Cutting-out; Stamping-out using a press, e.g. of the ram type
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B27WORKING OR PRESERVING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; NAILING OR STAPLING MACHINES IN GENERAL
    • B27MWORKING OF WOOD NOT PROVIDED FOR IN SUBCLASSES B27B - B27L; MANUFACTURE OF SPECIFIC WOODEN ARTICLES
    • B27M1/00Working of wood not provided for in subclasses B27B - B27L, e.g. by stretching

Landscapes

  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Veneer Processing And Manufacture Of Plywood (AREA)

Abstract

A method of mending a veneer sheet 1 having a defective portion is provided. An incomplete veneer sheet 1 and a sheet of mending material 2 are laid one on top of the other. The sheets are cut through by a single stroke of an annular cutting tool 4 such that the defective portion of the veneer sheet 1 is cut-out whereas a plug 2a having a same size and shape as the cut-out defective portion is cut from the sheet 2. The cut portions retained in the annular cutting tool 4 until the plug 2a is shifted into a plane in which the veneer sheet 1 extends. At the same time, the cutout defective portion 1a is routed out from the veneer sheet 1. Then, when the cutting tool 4 is removed from the sheets 1, 2 a mended veneer sheet 1 results. Another method is also provided. A plurality of plugs are cut-out from a sheet of mending material by repeatedly cutting through it by a single annular cutting tool. The cut-out plugs are retained in the annular tool. Then, an incomplete veneer sheet is cut through by the tool to cut-out a defective portion from the veneer sheet while the plugs retained in the tool pushed farther into it. However, a plug in contact with the cut-out defective portion is pushed toward the plane in which the veneer sheet extends. As a result, the defective portion is routed out. When the annular cutting tool is removed from the sheet, the mended veneer sheets results. This can be repeated until the plugs run out. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION A method of patch mending a veneer sheet Background of the invention The present invention relates to a method of routing out local defective portions in a veneer sheet such as knotholes, dead knots, rotten spots and the like and filling the routed-out openings with defectfree patching pieces.
Various methods of the type described are known in the art as stated for instance in "PLYWOOD PRODUCTION", 2nd Edition, pp 127-131 written by Haruo Watanabe and published by Morikita Shuppan.
One of the known methods consists in cutting out a defective portion from a veneer sheet at a suitable first station and manually seating in the routed-out opening of the veneer sheet a pre-shaped patch common in shape and size to the opening at a second station remote from the first station.
Another known method which is generally referred to as Reiman's method employs a sequence of mechanical actions for performing the routing-out operation and plugging operation of the first known method at the same station. This method compared with the first method saves a substantial amount of labor and facilitates an automatic patching process.
Such conventional methods involve a common drawback originating from the use of essentially independent punches (cutting members) for routing out a defective portion and forming a patch or plug to be seated in the routed-out opening. The two different punches need an identically high precision which in turn calls for such a skill for their precision control, centering at mounting positions etc. This makes it difficult to favorably keep the patch or plug seated in the hole of a veneer sheet in register therewith. Meanwhile, a patch or a plug has heretofore been inserted manually in a veneer sheet as mentioned after the removal of the routed out defect of the veneer sheet or such a manual procedure has been simply replaced by a mechanical procedure.
This gives rise to another drawback concerning the efficiency of operations. Another factor which limits the efficiency of workability is that patching is carried out only at a fixed location and a defective portion of a veneer sheet must be moved by manual work all the way to a position just below a punch.
Thus, the efficiency obtainable with the conventional method is not more than the once of a patching technique with a fixed patching position.
Summary ofthe invention It is an object of the present invention to provide a basic patch mending method which is applicable not only to the traditional fixed-spot patching but to patch mending at any spot on a selected line, patch mending at any spot in a selected flat or curved plane and the like while ensuring constant coincidence in shape and size of patches with routed-out portions of a veneer sheet. This method of the present invention improves the quality and yield of plywood and thereby contribues to the plywood production which is suffering from the supply of inferior quality logs today.
Brief description ofthe drawings Figures 1-4 illustrate in section the sequence of operations of an apparatus for practicing a first example of a patch mending method according to the present invention; Figures 5-8 show in section the sequence of operations of an apparatus for practicing a second example of the method according to the present invention; Figures 9-12 show the sequential operations of an apparatus for practicing a third example of the method of the present invention; Figure 13 is a plan view of a cutter bearing assembly of the apparatus which performs the first example of the invention; Figures 14 and 15 individually show in plan and section a modification to the apparatus for carrying out the first example of the invention;; Figures 16-20 show the sequential operations of an apparatus for practicing a fourth example of the method of the present invention; and Figure 21 is a perspective view of an annular cutter member 4.
Detailed description of the preferred embodiments Reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings for describing some apparatuses for practicing preferred examples of the patch mending method of the present invention.
Figures 1-4 illustrate an apparatus for a first example of the method according to the present invention and its operating sequence in sectional views.
Referring to Figures 1-4, there is shown a veneer sheet 1 having a defective portion 3 and a patch mending material or patch blank 2 from which a plug 2a will come out as will be described. As shown, the veneer sheet and the sheet of mending material are laid one on top of the other. While the patch blank 2 usually takes the form of a defect-free veneer sheet common in thickness to the defective veneer sheet 1, use may be made of corrugated cardboard, a plastic sheet, an ordinary board or like fiberboard if desired.
The apparatus for patch mending the veneer sheet 1 with the patch blank 2 essentially comprises a patch mending head assembly and a cutter bearing assembly coactive therewith. The patch mending head assembly includes an annular cutting tool 4 which may have an edge line shown by way of example in "PLYWOOD PRODUCTION", Figure 8.27 in page 131. An exemplary configuration of such a cutter is indicated in Figure 21. Two continuous or discontinuous pressing means in the form of flexible rubber members 6 and 5 which are easily deformed under external force are arranged substantially along the inner and outer peripheries of the cutter 4 individually. These presser members 6 and 5 are secureiy mounted to the underside of a flat holder 7 of the patch mending head.The cutter bearing assembly on the other hand includes a cutter bearing body 8 which will be engaged by the edge of the annular cutting tool 4 and a table 9 surrounding the cutter bearing body 8. Figure 13 illustrates the positional relationship between the cutter bearing body 8, table 9 and edge line of the cutting tool denoted by the reference numeral 19.
With the apparatus thus arranged, the method of the present invention will be carried out according to the sequence shown in Figures 1-4 to patch mend a defective veneer sheet at a pre-determined fixed spot, at any spot on a determined line or at any spot in a determined plane as desired. As viewed in Figure 1,the patch mending head is lowered by suitable means (not shown) such that the annular cutting tool 4 integral therewith cuts through, first, a sheet of patch blank 2 and, then, a veneer sheet 1 by a single stroke of the single annular cutting tool to cut off a defective portion 1 a from said veneer sheet and further to cut out a plug 2a from said sheet of patch blank 2.Then, as shown in Figure 2, the cutter bearing body 8 is moved a distance substantially equal to the thickness of the veneer sheet 1 away from the top of its associated table 9 which is supporting the veneer sheet and patch blank. Now pressed by the member or members 6 inside the tool 4, the cut-off portion 1 a of the veneer sheet and the cut portion or plug 2a of the patch blank are lowered to the position indicated in Figure 2 where the plug 2a becomes substantially flush with the balance of the veneer sheet 1 outside the annular cutter 4. In this way, the plug 2a is pressed toward a plane in which the veneer sheet 1 extends and shifted into it while the cut-off defective portion is rounted out from the veneer sheet.The annular cutter 4 is removed, thereafter, from the veneer sheet 1 and overlying patch blank 2 which are still held in the same positions by the outer presser member 6 and the table 9 as illustrated in Figures 3 and 4, so that the veneer portion 1 a is routed out from the veneer sheet and the plug 2a is left in place in the veneer sheet. These patch mending operations of the coactive patch mending head and cutter bearing assemblies takes place after the patch blank 2 and defective veneer sheet 1 are brought to a position between the two assemblies.
It will be seen from Figures 1-4 and 13 that the relationship between the patch mending head assembly and cutter bearing assembly for practicing the method of the present invention does not need any special precision. These assemblies can thus be designed, if necessary, movable through suitable means along a desired line or in a desired plane to any desired position where a defective portion of a veneer sheet is to be routed out and replaced by a plug.
The sequence of operations discussed with referpence to Figures 1-4 may be practiced by using modified cutter bearing assembly and patch mending head assembly as will be described hereinafter.
As shown in Figure 14, the modified cutter bearing assembly comprises an elongate cutter bearing body 20 and a pair of parallel elongate table parts 21 located on the opposite sides of the cutter bearing body 20. The reference numeral 19 in Figure 14 denotes the edge line of the annular cutter 4 and 22 the annular zone in which the outer presser member or members will press the patching blank 2 underlying veneer sheet 1. The modified patch mending head assembly coactive with the cutter bearing assembly is shown in Figure 15 and includes an outer presser member or members 5 essentially similar to those of Figure 1-4 except for the additional provision of a steel plate 17 and a thin rubber layer 18 thereon. To match with such modification to the cutter bearing assembly, a slightly modified flat holder 16 is provided to the patch mending head assembly.The modification to the patch mending head assembly is applied for the following reasons in correspondence with the modification to the cutter bearing assembly.
The coactive assemblies depicted in Figures 14 and 15 are driven for patch mending a defective veneer sheet in the manner shown in Figures 1-4.
When the cutter bearing body 20 is moved to the position of Figure 2 after the annular cutting tool 4 has cut the veneer sheet 1 and patch blank 2 together, the outside flexible rubber member 5 would also sag and press the veneer sheet downward and patch blank outside the annular cutter in an area which is not supported by elongate tables 21. This prevents the desired shift which makes the plug 2a inside the cutter 4 substantially flush with the veneer sheet 1 outside the cutter 4. The steel plate 17 shown in Figure 15 is adhered or secured to the rubber member 5 having an elastic and sectional pressing function so that the latter is displaceable in unison to press the overlaid flat materials outside the annular cutter 4.More specifically, the provision of the steel plate 17 ensures that a part of the presser member 5 in the area where the tables 21 are absent is displaceable in perfect unison with the remainder where the tables 21 are present. The steel plate 17 in this way prevents the presser member 5 from accidentally moving the veneer sheet 1 and patch blank 2 downward in the regions outside the annular cutter 4, ensuring the intended downward shift of the routed cut portion 1 a and plug 2a. The thin rubber layer 18 increases the friction force thereby avoiding damage to the patch blank 2 and/or veneer sheet 1 when the cutter 4 cuts them together.
These modified cutter bearing assembly and patching head assembly constitute in combination an apparatus which is desirably operable for patch mending at spots on a selected line or linear patching. The patch mending head assembly mounted to the holder 16 is suitably movable along the elongate cutter bearing body 20 and, at a desired location, driven as indicated in Figures 1-4 for patch mending the defective veneer sheet 1. If desired, the two coactive assemblies may be made integrally movable perpendicular to the elongate cutter bearing body 20 so as to facilitate the patch mending operation at desired spots in a selected plane or planar patching.
It will be understood that the above-described alternative design of the outer presser member is applicable also to those formed of rubber along in the arrangement shown in Figure 13.
Turning to Figures 5-8, there will be described another example of the patch mending method according to the present invention.
Aswill be seen from the drawings, not the veneer sheet i but the patch blank 2 is fed in this case onto the cutter bearing assembly in contrast to the sequence shown in Figures 1-4. In other words, the veneer sheet 1 is laid upon the patch blank 2. The apparatus for practicing this method comprises a cutter bearing assembly made up of a cutter bearing body 11 and a pressing head 10 surrounded by the cutter bearing body 11 and movable upward into the annular cutter 4. A patch mending head assembly to cooperate with the cutter bearing assembly has the same construction as that employed for the operations of Figures 1-4.
First, the patch mending head assembly is brought downward as viewed in Figure 5 by suitable means to cut, first, the defective veneer sheet 1 to cut off the defective portion 1a and, then, cut the underlying patch blank 2 to cut out a plug 2a by means of a single annular cutting tool 4. Then the pressing head 10 is raised to the position shown in Figure 6 to shift the now cut defective portion 1 a and plug 2a upward a distance substantially equal to the thickness of the veneer sheet 1 until the plug 2a becomes substantially flush with the balance of the veneer sheet outside the annular cutter 4. The annular cutter 4 is removed from the overlaid materials while the inner and outer presser members 6 and 5 are maintaining the shifted relation of the defective portion and plug.
The defective portion 1a is thus routed out from the veneer sheet 1 and the plug 2a is seated in the routed out hole.
Another example of the patch mending method according to the invention will be described with reference to Figures 9-12.
In Figures 9-12, the patch blank 2 is laid on the cutter bearing assembly as in the process discussed in conjunction with Figures 5-8. The cutter assembly employed for this patch mending method consists solely of flat cutter bearing body 15. The patch mending head assembly replaces the inner presser member by a positioning head 13 which is located inside the annular cutting tool 4 as viewed in the drawings and provided with a positioning member 12. The annular cutter 4 has a frustoconical inner wall at its edge portion which diverges to the lower most end as illustrated. This type of patch mending apparatus will be operated as follows.
The patch mending head is first lowered to the position shown in Figure 9 so that its associated annular cutter 4 cuts through, first, the veneer sheet 1 to cut off the defective portion 1 a and, then, the patch blank 2 to cut out a plug 2a. Then, as viewed in Figure 10, the cutting tool 4 withdraws from the stacked stock and pulls upwards the cut defective portion 3 and plug 2a while pinching them therein until the positioning member 12 spots the upward movement of the defective portion and plug. Such a shift makes the plug 2a substantially flush with the plane in which the veneer sheet 1 extends outside the annular cutter 4. The upward shift of the defective portion 3 and plug 2a is enabled in this example by the single-edged and inwardly inclined edge portion of the annular cutter 4.An alternative arrangement of so raising the defective portion 3 and plug 2a may be by suction with the vacuum which will develop inside the cutter 4, needle-like members provided to the holder 14 such that they thrust into the two cut pieces and raise them in accordance with the subsequent upward stroke of the holder 14, or the combination of the suction and needle-like members.
Then, as shown in Figure 11, despite a further movement of the cutter 4 away from the stacked stocks, the positioning member 12 holds the plug 2a in the same position at earliest until the effort exerted by the cutter 4 to raise the plug 2a is lost.
Thereafter, the positioning member 12 is moved upward together with the cutter 4 to the position shown in Figure 12 away from the routed out veneer portion 1 a and plug 2a. The apparatus in this way routes out the defect 3 from the veneer sheet 1 and fills the routed-out hole of the veneer sheet with the plug 2a in the same sequence.
It will be seen from the three different examples described above that in one aspect the present invention provides a patch mending method which consists in laying a patch blank 2 on a portion of a veneer sheet 1 including a defect 3, cutting the defective portion of the veneer sheet and a superimposed part of the patch blank with an annular cutter 4, shifting the cut-off defective portion and plug together in thicknesswise direction to make the patch 2a inside the cutter 4 substantially flush with the balance of the veneer sheet outside the cutter 4 with the cutter 4 serving as a guide, and drawing out the cutter 4 while holding the shifted positions of the defective portion and plug to leave the plug in the routed out hole oftheveneersheeet. This simultaneous removal of a defect and replacement thereof with a patch affords an outstanding advanrage that the shape of a plug cut from a patch blank is always identical with that of a hole of a veneer sheet resulting from routing out of a defect. Another outstanding advantage lies in that seating of a plug proceeds using the annular cutter essentially as a guide and, thus, completes favorably with incomparable positiveness.Stated another way, the method of the present invention achieves precise coincidence in shape and size of a patch with a routed out hole in a veneer sheet and sure insertion of the patch in the hole, which have constituted major targets to be tacked in the art of veneer sheet patch mending, by cutting a veneer sheet and a patch blank with a single cutter and seating a plug with a guide afforded by the cutter as described.
With the same principle, such a very rationalized technical idea can also be embodied as a further example of the patch mending method which will be described hereinafter.
Referring to Figures 16-20, there are shown an apparatus and its sequence of operations for practicing the further example of the present invention.
Briefly described, the illustrated method includes the steps of cutting a suitable number of plugs 2a from a common patching blank 2 and holding them inside the annular cutter 4 in stacked relation as seen in Figure 16, and patching plural defects successively by supplying the plug 2a one by one from the patch stack as seen in Figures 17-20.
The patch mending apparatus includes the outer presser member 5 outside the annular cutting tool 4 and an inner presser member 25 inside the same.
The inner presser member 25 is integral with a piston which is associated with a holder 24. Ports 26 and 27 are provided to the apparatus for selective communication of a fluid under pressure to the cylinder of the holder 24. The reference numeral 13 in Figure 16 denotes a flat cutter bearing body placed at a suitable station in order to prop up the annular cutting tool 4while patches 2a are being cut from the patching blank 2. The cutter bearing assembly for patch mending on the other hand comprises the cutter bearing body 8 and table 9 as viewed in Figures 17-20 which are constructed and arranged as in the cutter bearing assembly of Figures 1-4.
In operation, the apparatus first repeatedly cuts through a sheet of patch blank by means of a single annular cutting tool to cut out a suitable number of plugs 2a from the patch blank 2 as seen in Figure 16 in combination with the cutter bearing body 23. As a defective portion 3 of the veneer sheet 1 arrives at the cutter bearing body 8 as seen in Figure 17, the patch mending head assembly moves to a position where it will be ready for patch mending actions.
After the plugs are produced from the blank 2, the ports 26 and 27 may be kept in a fluid-out state to depressurize the cylinder of the holder 24 and maintain the pressure acting on the inner presser member 25 low so that the annular cutter can frictionally retain the plugs 2a thereinside. It will be noted, however, that it is preferable to admit the pressurized fluid into the cylinder solely through the port 26 when the cutter 4 cuts into the blank 2 on the body 23 because the fluid pressure then acting on the member 25 will prevent the breakage of a plug 2a being cut from the blank. The patch mending head is lowered to the position shown in Figure 18 to cut a part of the veneer sheet including the defect 3 by means of the annular cutting tool 4 which now carries a stack of plugs 2a thereinside. These plugs are pushed farther into the cutting tool by the cut-off defect.During this downward cutting stroke of the patch mending head, the port 26 is preferably actuated to its fluid-in state and the port 27 to its fluid-out state for thereby pushing the inner presser member 25 downward within the cutting tool 4 such that the inner presser member 25 presses the plugs toward a plane in which the veneer sheet extends.
Then the body 8 of the cutter bearing assembly is moved downward a distance substantially equal to the thickness of the veneer sheet 1 relative to the table 9 as indicated in Figure 19 whereby the defect 3 and patch stack within the cutter 4 are shifted bodily downward by the presser member 25 until the lower-most plug 2a becomes substantially flush with the remainder of the veneer sheet 1 outside the cutter. In other words, one of the pushed-in plugs is shifted into the plane in which the veneer sheet extends while routing out the cut-off defect from the plane. Thereafter, the cutter 4 is drawn out from the veneer sheet 1 as shown in Figure 20 while the inner and outer presser member 25 and 5 holding the conditions indicated in Figure 19.The port 26 will change its state from the fluid-in to the fluid-out about the time when the edge of the cutter 4 rises clear of the veneer sheet 1 and, at the same time, the port 27 will be actuated to its fluid-in state. As will be noted, the black dots and white dots in the drawing indicate the fluid-in and fluid-out states of the ports 26 and 27, individually.
Eventually, the lowermost plug 2a is fed out from the stack inside the annular cutter 4 and left in the veneer sheet 1 to replace the routed out portion 1 a.
It will be appreciated from Figures 16-20 that in another aspect the present invention provides a method which consists of cutting plugs 2a from a patch blank 2 with an annular cutter 4 and retaining them as a stack inside the cutting tool 4, cutting a defective portion of a veneer sheet with the annular cutter, shifting the patch stack and defective cut portion employing the cutter as a guide until the lowermost plug 2a becomes substantially flush with the balance of the veneer sheet outside the cutter 4, and removing the cutter from the veneer sheet while holding and shifted condition of the lowermost plug 2a and routed out defective portion 1 a, thereby leaving the plug 2a in the veneer sheet in place of the routed out defective portion.Apart from the advantages already discussed, this alternative process promotes concentrated high-speed patching operations on a defective veneer sheet because it can patch multiple defects in the veneer sheet successively without supplying a patch blank for each defect until the stack of plugs 2a in the annular cutter runs out. It will be understood that the apparatus shown in Figures 16-20 can also be modified as already described to patch a defective veneer sheet along a selected line in a selected plane.
While the present invention has been shown and described in connection with some preferred examples thereof, various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the principle and scope of the present invention.
A plug in the examples shown and described has been made substantially flush with the balance of a defective veneer sheet outside the annular cutter by shifting the materials inside the cutting tool 4 relative to those outside the cutting tool 4. The flush position may occur in a curved plane depending on the manner of holding a a veneer sheet outside the cutter. More specifically, where a veneer sheet is retained in a suitable curved plane, a plug inside the cutter will be shifted relative to a patch blank such that it is contained in the common curved plane. In other words, the flush position concerned may occur either in a flat plane or in a curved plane in matching relation with the plane which will contain a veneer sheet.
While the actions of the apparatus in each exam ple have concentrated on the downward movement of the patch mending head assembly, it will be noted that the cutter bearing assembly may be moved upward instead or the vertical positional relationship between the patch mending head assembly and cutter bearing assembly may be inverted and moved relative to each other.
The circular cutting edge of the annular cutting tool 4 is not limitative but only illustrative. Besides various other possible configurations, the cutter 4 may comprise of a strip of thin replaceable edge or bit 28 shown in Figure 21 which is curved and has some gap 29 defined between its opposite ends.
After a plug has been seated in a defective veneer sheet, a secondary mending operation may be performed with a tape, an adhesive or the like if desired.
In summary, the present invention provides a veneer patch mending method which contributes a great deal to the industry by promoting positive and reliable patching on veneer sheets and building up the foundation of a linear, planar or like efficient patch mending technique.

Claims (9)

1. A method of patch mending a veneer sheet comprising the steps of (1) laying a veneer sheet having a defective portion and a sheet of mending material one on top of the other; (2) cutting through said veneer sheet and said sheet of mending material by a single stroke of a single annular cutting tool to cut off said defective portion from said veneer sheet and further to cut out a plug from said sheet of mending material; (3) shifting said plug into a plane in which the veneer sheet extends while routing out said cut-off defective portion from said veneer sheet; and (4) removing said annular cutting tool from said sheet of mending material and said veneer sheet to leave said plug within the veneer sheet resulting in a patch mended veneer sheet.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein said cutting step is performed in the sequence of first the sheet of mending material and then the veneer sheet.
3. A method according to claim 2, wherein said shifting step includes a step of pressing the plug toward the plane in which the veneer sheet extends.
4. A method according to claim 1, wherein said cutting step is performed in the sequence of first the veneer sheet and then the sheet of mending material.
5. A method according to claim 4, wherein said shifting step includes a step of pressing the plug toward the plane in which the veneer sheet extends.
6. A method according to claim 4, wherein said shifting step includes a step of pinching the plug by said annular cutting tool and pulling the pinched plug toward the plane in which the veneer sheet extends.
7. A method of patch mending a veneer sheet comprising the steps of (1) cutting through a sheet of mending material by means of a single annular cutting tool to cut out a plug; (2) removing said single annular cutting tool from the mending material while leaving said plug within the cutting tool; (3) cutting through a veneer sheet having a defective portion by means of said single annular cutting tool to cut-off said defective portion from said veneer sheet while pushing said cut-out plug far their into the cutting tool with said defective portion; (4) shifting said pushed-in plug into a plane in which the veneer sheet extends while routing out the cut-off defective portion from said plane; and (5) removing the annular cutting tool to leave the plug in place resulting in a patch mended veneer sheet.
8. A method according to claim 7, in which sais steps of (1) and (2) are repeated a plural number of times.
9. A method according to claim 7, in which said shifting step includes a step of pressing the plug toward said plane in which the veneer sheet extends.
GB8105152A 1981-02-18 1981-02-18 A method of patch mending a veneer sheet Expired GB2092947B (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8105152A GB2092947B (en) 1981-02-18 1981-02-18 A method of patch mending a veneer sheet
DE19813107559 DE3107559C2 (en) 1981-02-18 1981-02-27 Method for mechanically repairing a veneer sheet

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8105152A GB2092947B (en) 1981-02-18 1981-02-18 A method of patch mending a veneer sheet
DE19813107559 DE3107559C2 (en) 1981-02-18 1981-02-27 Method for mechanically repairing a veneer sheet

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2092947A true GB2092947A (en) 1982-08-25
GB2092947B GB2092947B (en) 1985-01-09

Family

ID=25791464

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB8105152A Expired GB2092947B (en) 1981-02-18 1981-02-18 A method of patch mending a veneer sheet

Country Status (2)

Country Link
DE (1) DE3107559C2 (en)
GB (1) GB2092947B (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2629006A1 (en) * 1988-03-24 1989-09-29 Ind Meccanica F Fulcheri CUTTING TOOLS FOR THE PERIPHERAL FINISHING OF PANELS FOR THE INTERIOR COVERING OF MOTOR VEHICLES
CN114750256A (en) * 2022-04-22 2022-07-15 东北林业大学 Method for punching and alternately taking out defective waste plates by single plate defect digging and supplementing two-way continuous plate feeding

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FI125228B (en) * 2010-07-21 2015-07-15 Raute Oyj Device for repairing veneer layers

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE635699C (en) * 1934-06-19 1936-09-25 Raimann G M B H B Machine for patching out damaged areas in veneer sheets
DE912146C (en) * 1940-12-31 1954-05-24 Heinrich Heissmann Method for joining two veneer edges without adding any binding agents
US2488835A (en) * 1945-12-29 1949-11-22 Per F Skoog Mechanism for inlaying sheet material
US2675837A (en) 1950-01-21 1954-04-20 Ekstromcarlson & Co Board repairing machine
US2663332A (en) * 1950-12-26 1953-12-22 Roy V Peterson Veneer sheet patching machine
US3405746A (en) 1966-05-27 1968-10-15 Coe Mfg Co Plywood panel patching apparatus

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2629006A1 (en) * 1988-03-24 1989-09-29 Ind Meccanica F Fulcheri CUTTING TOOLS FOR THE PERIPHERAL FINISHING OF PANELS FOR THE INTERIOR COVERING OF MOTOR VEHICLES
CN114750256A (en) * 2022-04-22 2022-07-15 东北林业大学 Method for punching and alternately taking out defective waste plates by single plate defect digging and supplementing two-way continuous plate feeding

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE3107559A1 (en) 1982-09-23
DE3107559C2 (en) 1987-03-05
GB2092947B (en) 1985-01-09

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP3548233A1 (en) 3d printed paperboard creasing/cutting rule
US4444078A (en) Apparatus for cutting sheet material
US4151637A (en) Dip component lead cut and clinch apparatus
US2336704A (en) Means for patching veneer sheets
CN104827328A (en) Support turning clamp
US4388956A (en) Method of patch mending a veneer sheet
GB2092947A (en) A method of patch mending a veneer sheet
US5809858A (en) Device for achieving optimum leveling of cutting die and platen components in die cutting machines
US4907942A (en) Arrangement for separating paper sheet pads from a stack
CA1147245A (en) Method of patch mending a veneer sheet
US8182404B2 (en) Method for converting a trimming machine for the preferably three-sided trimming of a stack of sheets
US1955866A (en) Method and apparatus for perforating sheet material
US4713046A (en) Circular machine for automatic manufacturing of display boxes
US4963126A (en) Method and apparatus for forming carton blanks
CN204235654U (en) &#34; Air-Uplift &#34; pressure type veneer patcher
AU638772B2 (en) Method and apparatus for manufacturing sheets
FI72072C (en) Procedure for patching a veneer sheet.
CN211942172U (en) Clutch type multifunctional adhesive tape sticking mechanism capable of punching, sticking adhesive and cutting synchronously
US3962941A (en) Press for perforating and trimming boards of filamentary material
KR840002422B1 (en) Plate patch repairing method
US5033201A (en) Rotary cutting cylinder blade height setting gauge
CN111618947A (en) Method for cutting corrugated board grating for manufacturing paperboard
US3129736A (en) Plywood panel patching machine
US3273614A (en) Method and means for patching assembled plywood panels
KR100433886B1 (en) Method and apparatus for processing aligned sheet bundles of flat objects

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee