Apparatus and method for winding at least one fiber

Abstract
An apparatus for winding a fiber strand onto a former, wherein there is provided a separating means for fixing and separating the fiber strand at the end of an operation of winding on a finish-wound first former and for bringing the fixed fiber-strand end to a second former to be wound in order to begin a new winding operation. At least one thread buffer for temporary storage of a fiber-strand portion between the end of one winding operation and the beginning of a new winding operation is disposed upstream from the separating means in the feed direction.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention


The invention relates to an apparatus for winding at least one fiber, especially a fiber strand, onto a former. The invention also relates to a method for winding at least one fiber, especially a fiber strand, onto a former.


2. Description of the Related Art


From practical experience it is known how to impregnate a fiber strand with a resin and then to wind the impregnated fiber strand onto a former. The former is in particular a cylindrical hollow body, such as a blow-molded plastic container. The resin used for impregnation is allowed to cure, and the resulting end product can be used, for example, as a tank for liquids or similar substances. When the operation of winding on one former is to be ended in these known apparatuses or methods, the fiber strand is manually cut off and then manually attached to a further former. It is self-evident that this procedure takes time and effort, and also that the winding operation must be interrupted repeatedly, meaning that a continuous procedure is not possible.


However, a more or less automated method is also known from practical experience. After the end of the operation of winding on one former, the fiber strand is then wound onto a core, where it is cut off. After removal of the finish-wound former, a further former is inserted. Thereupon the fiber strand is wound from the core onto this further former. However, this procedure leaves much to be desired as regards functional reliability and precision. Furthermore, the starting turns in this procedure can be applied only at the axial end of the former, and to this extent limits are imposed on a flexible working technique.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In contrast, the technical problem underlying the invention is to provide an apparatus of the type mentioned hereinabove, with which apparatus an automatic and continuous working technique is possible with little time and effort and high functional reliability. A further technical problem underlying the invention is to provide a corresponding method.


To solve this technical problem, the invention teaches an apparatus for winding at least one fiber, especially a fiber strand, onto a former,

    • wherein there is provided a separating means, with which the fiber strand can be separated and fixed to the separating means at the end of an operation of winding on a finish-wound first former, and wherein the separating means is provided for bringing the fiber-strand end fixed on the separating means to a second former to be wound in order to begin a new winding operation,
    • and wherein at least one thread buffer for temporary storage of a fiber-strand portion between the end of one winding operation and the beginning of a new winding operation is disposed upstream from the separating means in feed direction.




BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The invention will be explained in more detail hereinafter on the basis of a drawing, which illustrates merely one practical example and in which, in schematic diagrams:



FIG. 1 shows a top view of an inventive apparatus,



FIG. 2 shows the object according to FIG. 1 in another functional position,



FIG. 3 shows a side view of the object according to FIG. 2,



FIG. 4 shows a perspective view of the object according to FIG. 3,



FIG. 5 shows a detail of the object according to FIG. 4 in another functional position,



FIG. 6 shows a side view of an inventive thread buffer, and



FIG. 7 shows the object according to FIG. 5 in a further functional position.




DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

It is within the scope of the invention for a fiber strand comprising a plurality of fibers or filaments to be wound onto a former. Within the fiber strand, the fibers or filaments are disposed in the form of bundles or flat tapes. The fibers can be glass fibers, carbon fibers, aramide fibers or even plastic fibers, such as polyester fibers. The fiber strand is expediently taken off from a spool and then passed through the impregnating device.


On the one hand, the former can be what is known as a liner, or in other words a former that remains in the product and becomes a part of the product. On the other hand, however, the former can also be a mandrel, which is withdrawn from the product after a winding operation or after the resin has cured, and which is available once again for further winding operations. It is within the scope of the invention for a former to be driven in rotation during a winding operation.


According to a first embodiment, at least one impregnating device for impregnating the fiber strand with a resin is present. Expediently, the impregnating device is disposed upstream from the thread buffer in feed direction. Here and also hereinafter, feed direction means the direction in which the fiber strand is transported. Impregnation or saturation of the fiber strand with a resin matrix takes place in the impregnating device. The resin or synthetic resin can be a thermosetting resin or a thermoplastic plastic.—According to a second embodiment, a preimpregnated fiber or a preimpregnated fiber strand is fed to the thread buffer and to the former. Such preimpregnated fibers are also known as prepregs. Thus an impregnating device is not necessary in this second embodiment of the inventive apparatus.


It is also within the scope of the invention for the separating means to be provided with a clamping device for fixing or for clamping the fiber strand and also with a cutting device for severing the fiber strand. The clamping device is expediently equipped with two oppositely acting clamping jaws, between which the fiber strand can be clamped. The cutting device is preferably provided with at least one cutting blade. The cutting device or the cutting blade is preferably disposed downstream from the clamping device in feed direction. According to a preferred embodiment, the separating means comprising clamping device and cutting device is disposed in the winding region or in the region of the respective former only during the end of one winding operation and at the beginning of a new winding operation, and otherwise can be swiveled out of the winding region.


When the fiber strand is severed by means of the cutting device at the end of a winding operation, one residual end remains on the fiber strand already wound onto the former. According to a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, there is provided a squeegee device, with which this residual end of the fiber strand is squeezed or pressed against the finish-wound former. The residual end is expediently squeezed against the former immediately after cutting/separation. The squeegee device is preferably configured in the form of an elastic lip. During further rotation of the finish-wound former, this elastic lip automatically presses the residual end of the fiber strand against this former. During the squeezing action, therefore, this elastic lip is disposed closely or directly above the finish-wound former.


Thereafter the finish-wound first former is removed and a second former to be newly wound is introduced into the winding region. It is within the scope of the invention for the fixed fiber-strand end to be brought together with the separating means or together with the clamping device to the second former to be newly wound, so that the fiber-strand end fixed in the clamping device is in contact with the second former to be newly wound. Thereafter the separating means or clamping device opens and the fiber-strand end is released and rests on the second former. In other words, therefore, the clamping jaws of the clamping device open, so that the fiber-strand end is now in contact only with the second former to be newly wound.


According to a very preferred embodiment of the invention, there is provided, on the separating means, a second squeegee device, with which the fiber-strand end can be pressed against the second former to be newly wound after detachment from the separating means or clamping device. Thus the fiber-strand end is squeezed or pressed against the second former, preferably after the clamping jaws of the clamping device have opened and it is resting on this second former. The second squeegee device also is designed expediently as an elastic lip, which presses the fiber-strand end against the second former. It is within the scope of the invention for this elastic lip to be disposed directly above the second former when the separating means is located in the winding region or in the region of the former.


According to a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, the thread buffer is provided with at least two guide rolls for the fiber strand and, by increasing the distance between these two guide rolls, a fiber-strand portion proportional to the distance increment Δa can be stored temporarily between these two guide rolls. Preferably one guide roll is displaced relatively toward the second guide roll or is moved away from the second guide roll. In the process, the first guide roll carries along with it, so to speak, the fiber strand wrapped around it, so that the fiber-strand portion is temporarily stored between the first and second guide rolls.


To solve the technical problem explained in the foregoing, the invention further teaches a method for winding at least one fiber, especially a fiber strand, onto a former,

    • wherein the continuously fed fiber strand is impregnated with a resin and wherein the impregnated fiber strand is wound onto a first former driven in rotation,
    • wherein the fiber strand is fixed and severed in the course of ending the operation of winding on the first former,
    • wherein a fiber-strand portion of the fiber strand, which is still being continuously fed, is temporarily stored in a thread buffer as long as the fiber strand is fixed,
    • wherein the fixed fiber-strand end is detached to apply the starting turns on the second former to be newly wound,
    • wherein the starting turns of the temporarily stored fiber-strand portion are then applied on the second former under a first smaller thread tension,
    • and wherein the continuously fed fiber strand is then wound on the second former under a second higher thread tension, and so on.


According to one embodiment of the invention, the fact that the fiber strand is impregnated with a resin means that the fiber strand is impregnated on-line, or in other words in an impregnating device disposed upstream from the thread buffer or from the former. Within the scope of the inventive method, however, the fiber strand can also be impregnated off-line, or in other words used as a preimpregnated fiber strand. Within the scope of the invention, fixing means in particular clamping of the fiber strand or of the fiber-strand end between the clamping jaws of a clamping device. Thus this fixed fiber-strand end is no longer moved further or is no longer further delivered. By virtue of the inventive temporary storage of a thread-strand portion, however, the fiber strand can nevertheless be continuously fed further to the thread buffer. After detachment or release of the fiber-strand end, the starting turns of the fiber strand are then first applied on the second former to be newly wound. For this purpose, this second former together with the detached fiber-strand end resting on it is turned in the direction opposite to winding direction, or in other words in the direction of unwinding of the former. In the process, the fiber-strand end is then preferably pressed against the second former by the second squeegee device of the separating means. During rotation in unwinding direction, the former preferably executes only one partial revolution, for example one quarter revolution. Then the former reverses its direction of rotation and is turned in winding direction. Thereupon the starting turns of the fiber strand are applied on the second former with the first lower thread tension. The thread buffer permits the storage of a sufficiently long fiber-strand portion that the starting turns can be applied with low or weak thread tension. While the starting turns are being applied with the first lower thread tension, the former expediently executes one half revolution to as many as four revolutions, preferably one half revolution to as many as two revolutions. Thread tension means the tension or initial tension with which the fiber strand runs onto the former. After the starting turns have been applied, winding onto the former then takes place under the second higher thread tension. This second higher thread tension is usually associated with a higher speed of rotation of the former than is the case while the starting turns are being applied.


The invention is based on the knowledge that, by virtue of the inventive configuration of the apparatus or by virtue of the inventive procedure, very simple and functionally reliable winding of a fiber strand onto formers is possible, and that, in the process, continuous operation in particular is possible. In principle, therefore, stoppages of the winding operation are not necessary. It is also of particular importance that winding can be accomplished very precisely with the inventive apparatus and with the inventive method. The winding speed of the inventive method is substantially higher than the winding speed in comparable winding methods known from the prior art. It must also be emphasized that these advantages are achieved with relatively little time and effort.


The figures show an apparatus for winding a fiber strand 1 onto a former 2. Fiber strand 1 is preferably—and this is the case in the practical example—a flat tape composed of a plurality of fibers. Fiber strand 1 is first passed through an impregnation device, not illustrated in the figures, in which it is impregnated or saturated with a synthetic resin. The fiber strand saturated with the synthetic resin is then wound onto former 2. In the practical example, former 2 is a winding mandrel that is driven in rotation and that is removed from the product and made available once again for a subsequent winding operation after a winding operation has ended and the synthetic resin has cured.


The figures show a separating means 3 for fixing and separating fiber strand 1 at the end of an operation of winding on a finish-wound first former 2 and for bringing fixed fiber-strand end 4 to a second former 2′ to be newly wound in order to begin a new winding operation.



FIG. 1 shows the functional condition in which the winding operation is in full swing. In this functional condition, separating means 3 is swiveled out of the winding region 5 on former 2. For this purpose, separating means 3 can be swiveled around swivel shaft S. At the end of a winding operation, separating means 3 is swiveled into winding region 5. This functional condition is illustrated in FIGS. 2 to 5 and 7.


As an example, it is evident in FIGS. 3 and 4 that separating means 3 is provided with a cutting device 6 for severing fiber strand 1. For this purpose, a cutting blade 7 that can be extended in the direction of arrow s is provided in cutting device 6. The separating means is also provided with a clamping device 8 having clamping jaws 9, 10 that can be moved together or apart from one another. At the end of the operation of winding on first former 2, clamping jaws 9, 10 are moved together to trap fiber strand 1 or fiber-strand end 4, so that fiber strand 1 or fiber-strand end 4 is clamped or fixed between the clamping jaws. This functional condition is illustrated in FIGS. 5 and 7. After fiber strand 1 has been clamped between clamping jaws 9, 10, fiber strand 1 is severed by means of cutting blade 7 (FIG. 5). Because former 2 continues to rotate in the direction of arrow R, residual end 11 of fiber strand 1 is squeezed or pressed against finish-wound former 2 by a first squeegee device designed as elastic lip 12. In the practical example, the first squeegee device designed as elastic lip 12 is mounted on separating means 3 and is disposed directly or closely above former 2.


Continuous further delivery of fiber strand 1 onto former 2 does not take place, of course, as long as fiber-strand end 4 is fixed by clamping device 8. Nevertheless, fiber strand 1 is still fed continuously to thread buffer 13. In FIGS. 1 to 3, thread buffer 13 has merely been indicated very schematically. This thread buffer 13 is expediently disposed downstream from the impregnating device, not illustrated, and upstream from former 2 or separating means 3. Thread buffer 13 is illustrated in more detail in FIG. 6. Here the direction of delivery of fiber strand 1 has been indicated by dashed arrows. Thread buffer 13 is provided first with a first guide roll 14 and then with a second guide roll 15, over which guide rolls 14, 15 there is passed fiber strand 1. Second guide roll 15 is connected to a lever device 16, which can be acted on by a cylinder arrangement 17. Second guide roll 15 can be displaced relative to first guide roll 14 by the action of cylinder arrangement 17 on lever device 16, so that the distance between first guide roll 14 and second guide roll 15 grows by a distance increment Δa. When fiber strand 1 or fiber-strand end 4 is now fixed or clamped by clamping device 8, fiber strand 1 can nevertheless be fed continuously to thread buffer 13, as before, provided second guide roll 15 is then displaced by distance increment Δa. In this way, a fiber-strand portion 18 proportional to distance increment Δa can be temporarily stored in thread buffer 13. In other words, fiber strand 1 can be fed continuously to thread buffer 13, even though fiber-strand end 4 is clamped or fixed by clamping device 8.



FIG. 7 illustrates the functional condition in which former 2, which has already been finish-wound, has been removed and a second former 2′ to be newly wound has already been introduced into winding region 5. Furthermore, separating means 3 has in this case been brought up to former 2′ in such a way that fiber-strand end 4 is in contact with second former 2′. Following the functional position illustrated in FIG. 7, clamping jaws 9, 10 of clamping device 8 open, so that fiber-strand end 4 is released, as it were, from clamping device 8. Thereafter, second former 2′ rotates in the direction of arrow G, opposite to the direction of winding. Thereby the fiber-strand end is squeezed or pressed against former 2′ by the second squeegee device designed as elastic lip 19. The second squeegee device designed as elastic lip 19 is also a part of separating means 3. Here elastic lip 19 is mounted on a swivel arm 20, which is provided at its end with second or lower clamping jaw 10. Swivel arm 20 is illustrated in particular in FIGS. 3 and 4, and can be swiveled around shaft A or swiveled toward upper clamping jaw 9.


Once fiber-strand end 4 has been squeezed against new former 2′ as described in the foregoing, the starting turns are then applied, and for this purpose former 2′ is once again rotated in winding direction. The starting turns of fiber-strand portion 18 stored temporarily in thread buffer 13 are now applied on second former 2′ under a first smaller thread tension. For this purpose, second guide roll 15 of thread buffer 13 is retracted by means of lever device 16 and cylinder arrangement 17 back to its starting position (indicated by the solid outline in FIG. 6). In the course of this application of the starting turns with smaller thread tension, former 2′ executes, for example, one half revolution to as many as two revolutions. Thereafter winding of fiber strand 1 takes place once again, and does so under a second thread tension, which is greater than that of the operation of application of the starting turns. Separating means 3 can then be swiveled back out to the position illustrated in FIG. 1. At the end of the operation of winding onto second former 2′, separating means 3 is then again swiveled into winding region 5 (FIG. 2), and then the sequence of steps of the method described in the foregoing begins all over again.


European Application EP 04005399.3 filed on Mar. 6, 2004, is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


Obviously, numerous modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein.

Claims
  • 1. An apparatus for winding at least one fiber, especially a fiber strand, onto a former, wherein there is provided a separating means, with which the fiber strand can be separated and fixed to the separating means at the end of an operation of winding on a finish-wound first former, and wherein the separating means is provided for bringing the fiber-strand end fixed on the separating means to a second former to be wound in order to begin a new winding operation, and wherein at least one thread buffer for temporary storage of a fiber-strand portion between the end of one winding operation and the beginning of a new winding operation is disposed upstream from the separating means in feed direction.
  • 2. An apparatus according to claim 1, wherein at least one impregnating device for impregnating the fiber strand with a resin is present, the impregnating device preferably being disposed upstream from the thread buffer in feed direction.
  • 3. An apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the separating means is provided with a clamping device for fixing or for clamping the fiber strand and also with a cutting device for severing the fiber strand.
  • 4. An apparatus according to claim 1, wherein there is provided a squeegee device, with which the residual end of the fiber strand can be squeezed against the finish-wound former.
  • 5. An apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the fiber-strand end can be brought together with the separating means to the second former to be newly wound, so that the fiber-strand end is in contact with the second former.
  • 6. An apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the separating means is provided with a second squeegee device, with which the fiber-strand end can be squeezed against the second former to be wound after detachment from the separating means.
  • 7. An apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the thread buffer is provided with at least two guide rolls for the fiber strand and wherein, by increasing the distance between the two guide rolls, a fiber-strand portion proportional to the distance increment Δa can be stored temporarily.
  • 8. A method for winding at least one fiber, especially a fiber strand, onto a former, wherein the fiber strand is impregnated with a resin and wherein the impregnated fiber strand is wound onto a first former driven in rotation, wherein the fiber strand is fixed and severed in the course of ending the operation of winding on the first former, wherein a fiber-strand portion of the fiber strand, which is being continuously fed, is temporarily stored in a thread buffer as long as the fiber strand is fixed, wherein the fixed fiber-strand end is detached to apply the starting turns on the second former, driven in rotation, to be newly wound, wherein the starting turns of the temporarily stored fiber-strand portion are then applied on the second former under a first smaller thread tension, and wherein the continuously fed fiber strand is then wound on the second former under a second higher thread tension, and so on.
  • 9. A method according to claim 8, wherein the second former together with the fiber-strand endresting thereon is first turned opposite to the winding direction.
  • 10. A method according to claim 9, wherein the fiber-strand end is squeezed against the second former by means of the second squeegee device.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
04 005 399.3 Mar 2004 EP regional