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Fast-Dry Adhesive Aids
Automation
Effort For Paint Brush Maker
By Tony Ring, senior technical director, and
Amedeo Granata, vice president, technical sales, Fielco, LLC,
Huntingdon Valley, Pa.
Waiting for
glue to dry has been an obstacle to in-line processing of paintbrushes.
Room temperature cure times of 4-6 hr are disrupting to a rapid
flow of products through an assembly process. Use of a faster-drying
epoxy adhesive is facilitating productivity at a Canadian paintbrush
manufacturer.
Through its
in-line use of a two-component, medium-viscosity, filled epoxy adhesive
that oven cures in 5 min at, 175ºF, T.S. Simms and Co. Ltd., Canada's
largest producer of paint applicators, has taken an important step
toward total automation of its paint brush manufacturing facilities.
Earlier efforts
to perfect fast cure systems aimed at accelerating brush production
failed because of excessive shrinkage during cure, reduced solvent
resistance, non-uniform material penetration and unsafe fuming of
emissive gases.
The shortened
curing time required by Sure Cure epoxy adhesive (see Figures 1
and 2), enables in-line pouring of the adhesive that fastens the
bristle or synthetic filaments to the brush. According to Heinz
Schmidt, manager of plant operations at Simms' factory in Saint
John, New Brunswick, Sure Cure cuts down on rejects by providing
early data concerning the degree of adhesive penetration. According
to Don Sheehan, machinery division manager at Simms, Sure Cure has
had no negative impact on conventional glue dispensing equipment.
Inefficient
manufacturing caused by lengthy adhesive penetration and curing
time has plagued the brush industry since the advent of the assembly
line. Work began on a successful effort to solve the problem when
Simms agreed to work closely with Fielco, LLC, Huntingdon
Valley, Pa.,a
specialist in the formulation and manufacture of high performance
polymer products. Fielco has been a Simms supplier for nearly 15
years, and distributes its materials to manufacturers throughout
the world.
The two companies
began a joint search for a fast-setting brush epoxy about five years
ago when Simms agreed to try out in production the experimental
formulations developed by Fielco's staff and senior technical director,
Tony Ring. In laying out the desired parameters of the product.
Simms was definite. They needed an epoxy system that, would facilitate
the in-line automated production of paint brushes. The adhesive
had to leave uniform wetting and flowability to offer consistent
depth of penetration into bristle and filament bundles. Additionally,
the penetration lengths of the epoxy through the filament shafts
had to be consistent, and wrap-around to the filaments by the adhesive
had to be controlled. Also, the adhesive needed to adhere well to
materials commonly used for ferrule fabrication, such as tin, nickel
and chrome, and offer high resistance to solvents, petroleum products,
acids, alkalis and to both salt and fresh water.
In responding
to thc assignment, Fielco engineered a flexi- ble set of parameters
into Sure Cure so the overall paint brush manufacturing industry
could use the product over a range of production line speeds. For
example, for temperatures at ambient (not requiring capital investment),
the new formulation cures effectively at a 30 min span instead of
requiring the presently common 5 hr span. By changing products,
the manufacturer can increase his processing throughput by more
than 80%, according to Fielco. Except for mechanization, little
had changed in the manufacture of brushes. In-line processing of
paintbrushes was previously not attainable due to the curing times
required by then current brush epoxy technology. Because 4-6 hr
cure times at room temperature (68-72 "F) were the norm, the brush-making
technician had to put his work aside for several hours to allow
for curing of the prior materials. Thus, assembly line interuptions
for bristle bonding took far too long to incorporate any type of
in-line processing schedule. Such interruptions had been too frequent,
irregular and time consuming to allow for the development of consistent
in-line processing schedules.
The long curing
time required by the earlier adhesives also had been expensive to
the brush industry in terms of rejected product. Under pressure
to produce, when deciding whether the adhesive had hardened sufficiently
to resume manufacture, plant personnel sometimes incorrectly estimated
the penetration state of the curing adhesive, resulting in product
rejection. At Simms, where the process is speeded by oven-generated
higher temperatures, only 2 min are needed after pouring to evaluate
penetration effects. Once they are known, the in-line process can
speedily resume. For brush assembly plants preferring to operate
at ambient temperatures, materials for immediate conversion to a
30 min available.
In approving
the use of Fielco's Sure Cure epoxy, Tom Simms, chairman and chief
executive officer of the corporation, noted the absence of odor
in the product, its less toxic qualities, and praised it, in terms
of environmental considerations. Pleased with the results for brush
manufacturing, Fielco has developed a fast, cure adhesive to be
used in the assembling of paint roller products.
The cooperation
between Simms and Fielco has also resulted in a range of curing
times wide enough to satisfy the needs of' a variety of paint, thrush
and other manufacturers. Examples of Sure Cure curing schedule vari-
ants are: 5 min at 175"V (Shore D-80) 30 min at ambient temperatures
(Shore D-60); 1 min at 200ºF (Shore D-70).
Additional applications
include an infrared curing as short as 15 sec and other variant
which uses an ultraviolet light as an accelerant. Because of the
capital investment required, however, those two techniques have
proved too costly for the paint brush industry. It seems clear,
though, that technologically driven factories, including those making
composite, laminated and abrasive products, are turning to fast
setting epoxies for their in-line processing to gain a competitive
advantage in today's global market.
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