Many business situations require the use of labels affixed to liners. Printers image the face of the labels and dispense the labels for application at business sites. The printers typically come with built-in peel bars that enable the labels to automatically separate from the liner substrate after imaging and dispensing from the printers. The waste liner is then wound back into a spool for subsequent disposal.
Each business has their own printer and corresponding built-in peel bar. Many factors determine whether a label face sheet will separate properly from the liner substrate when dispensed from a given printer. If the label does not separate from the liner, then the liner does not wind properly into a waste spool causes disruptions during operation of the printer for the business. When this happens, the business is likely to switch to a different label-liner combination before investigating or before even considering a new printer.
Label manufacturers have to manage business customers with different printers and ensure that manufacturer's label-liner products will work for their customers; otherwise, these customers will seek business elsewhere. In addition, the manufacturers have to manage expenses associated with components of their label-liner products, such as the strength and placement of the adhesive used on the backside of the label, the features associated with the release coating that is applied to the front side of the liner, the strength and quality of the substrate used for the label, and the features associated with any thermal imaging coatings applied to the front side of the label.
Currently, the manufacturers have no way of knowing when business customers might obtain different printers, such that previous label-liner products that separated properly when dispensed from the business customers' printers will no longer separate properly with the new/replacement printers. Moreover, manufacturers have no way of knowing when designing new label-liner products or when replacing components of existing label-liner products whether the liners of the new products or the components of the modified products are going to permit proper separation from the labels when printed and dispensed by their customers' printers.
In various embodiments, an apparatus and a method for testing liner and label separation are provided.
Specifically, and in an embodiment, an apparatus is provided. The apparatus comprises a base element, a roller, and printer peel bars. The roller is integrated into the base element and each printer peel bar is adapted to be placed in and removed from the base element. Each printer peel bar comprises a different radius. The apparatus is adapted to determine a specific printer peel bar having a specific radius at which separation between a label and a liner of a given label-liner product occurs when a web of the given label-liner product is fed under the roller, over a disengage edge of the specific printer peel bar, and out of the base element.
As used herein a “liner” comprises a substrate made of a translucent or film and is coated with a release coating before being aligned and affixed to a backside of a label. The terms and phrases “liner” and “liner substrate” may be used synonymously and interchangeably herein and below.
A “label” comprises a separate substrate from the liner and a backside of the label is coated with an adhesive before being aligned and affixed to a front side of a liner. The label may or may not also include additional coatings on the front side of label, such as and by way of example only, thermal sensitive coatings to permit a front side and/or portions of a backside of the label to be thermal imaged by thermal printers. The terms and phrases “label,” “face stock,” “face,” and “label substrate” may be used synonymously and interchangeably herein and below.
Apparatus 100 comprises replaceable peel bars of various radiuses 101, a base component 110, and a roller 120. Apparatus 100 may also comprise a calibrated weight 300.
Roller 120 is arranged and oriented within base 100 to receive a label-liner web 200 under a bottom portion of roller 120 and direct a leading edge of web 200 at a predefined angle over replaceable peel bar 101 and out of base 110 (egress or dispense point of apparatus 100).
In an embodiment, web 200 is fed under roller 120 and pulled over a selected replaceable peel bar 101 through and out away from the base 110.
A calibrated weight 300 is attached to a string 301 and the string 301 is affixed to the underside and backside of the liner 202 (see
In an embodiment, the calibrated weight 300 is 12 grams.
In an embodiment, an operator of apparatus 100 holds a leasing edge of web 200 by label or face portion for label 201 (see
Weight 300 is a constant known peel force applied to the back side of liner 202, the release coating on the front side of liner 202 is also known during testing for the web 200 as is the adhesive coating on the backside of label 201, thus, the only variable changed during operation of apparatus 100 for testing label 201 and liner 202 separation of a given web 200 (label-liner product) is the radius 105 (angle over dispense edge 106) of peel bar 101. If liner 202 does not separate from label 201 with a given peel bar of a given radius 105, then a peel bar 101 having a different radius 105 is inserted into apparatus 100 and the test continues with the next radius 105.
There is a direct correlation between the radius 105 chosen for a given peel bar 101 and both the release force needed to separate liner 202 from label 201 and/or the stiffness of the face stock 201 (label 201). This is illustrated in
In
Apparatus 100 permits testing of label-liner products 200 for specific printers having specific peel bars with specific radiuses. Testing enables a label manufacturer to determine whether the release coating, adhesive coating, and/or stiffness in the face stock 201 of the products 200 need to be modified. Modifications to the release coating and/or adhesive coating alters the release force or bond between the backside of label 201 and the front side of liner 202.
As the radius 105 of replaceable peel bars 101 get smaller (sharper dispense angle 106) without label 201 and liner 202 separation from a given web 200 using apparatus 100, the more stiffness is needed in the face stock/label 201.
As the radius of 105 of replaceable peel bars 102 get larger without label 201 and liner 202 separation from a given web 200 using apparatus 100, the less stiffness is needed in the face stock/label 201.
In addition, when a given radius of a replaceable peel bar 102 fails to obtain label 201 and liner 202 separation from a given web 200 using apparatus, the release coatings and/or adhesive coatings can be changed to achieve a weaker bond (require less release force) between label 201 and liner 202.
So both increased or decreased face stock/label 201 stiffness and/or weakened bonds via the release and adhesive coatings can be changed in a label-liner produce when a known peel bar 101 having a known radius 105 of a given printer is required.
Apparatus 100 permits peel bars 101 of variable radiuses to be swapped in and out of base 110 for purposes of testing a proper dispensing of a label 201 for a given label-liner product 200. The industry has been unable to provide such a label dispensability testing mechanism and as such label manufacturers may find that significant investments in new or changed label-liner products are unable to properly dispense from their customer printers before the products or product changes are released. Apparatus 100 permits label manufactures to know (not guess or hope) in advance whether a new or changed label-liner product 200 will dispense for their customers' printers such that if changes are needed for label dispensing the changes can be made before release of the products 200. Apparatus 100 also permits label manufacturers to customize label-liner products 200 for specific printers for optimal operation of such printers when dispensing labels 201 and when spooling liner 202.
In an embodiment, apparatus 100 comprises a motor that drives roller 120 urging web 200 automatically towards peel bar 101 and over dispense edge 106.
In an embodiment, apparatus 100 comprises an adhesive chain under peel bar 101 that adheres to a backside of liner 202 on one end and the other end applies or comprises force (weight 300).
In an embodiment, roller 120 is a 2 inch in diameter roller with bearings.
In an embodiment, weight 300 can be changed as needed.
In an embodiment, a position of roller 120 and correspondingly an angle with which web 200 is fed from roller 120 to peel bar 101 and over dispense edge 106 s adjustable within base 110 of apparatus 100.
In an embodiment, an optimal label 201 and liner 202 separation for any given label-liner product 200 is one in which the separation occurs with a peel bar 101 having a radius of 0.04 or higher. In an embodiment, apparatus 100 is used to test any stiffness of face stock 201 and any bond between face stock 201 and liner 202 for all released changed or new label-liner products 200 to ensure label 201 and liner 202 separation on any peel bar 101 having the radius of .04 or higher and modifications are made when no separation is achieved in the stiffness and/or the bond (via the release coating and/or adhesive coatings).
At 410, a leading edge of a label-liner web 200 is aligned under a roller 120 of an apparatus 100.
At 420, the leading edge of web 200 is urged under the roller 120 and up at a predefined angle within the apparatus 100 over a disengage edge 106 of a replaceable printer peel bar 101 inserted into the apparatus 100.
At 430, a first end of a string 301 is affixed to a backside of a liner portion 202 of the web 200 past the disengage edge 106.
At 440, a second end of the string 301 is affixed to a weight 300.
At 450, a label portion 201 of the web 200 is urged up and away from the disengage edge 106 to determine whether the label portion 201 of the web 200 separates from the liner portion 202 during 450.
In an embodiment, at 460, the peel bar 101 is replaced with a different peel bar 101 having a different radius from that which was associated with the original peel bar 101 when the liner portion 202 fails to separate from the label portion 201 during 450. 450 is repeated with the different peel bar 101. 460 and 450 are iterated until a specific peel bar 101 with a specific radius results in the liner portion 202 separating from the label portion 201 during 450.
Although the present invention has been described with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, variations and modifications of the present invention can be affected within the spirit and scope of the following claims.