The present invention relates to an apparatus for bending a glass sheet and, more particularly, to an apparatus for bending a glass sheet used for transporting machines such as automobiles, vessels, trains and aircrafts, buildings and other various applications.
The inventors of the present application proposed in JP-A-2000-72460 a forming apparatus for bending a glass sheet heated to a temperature close to the softening point in a heating furnace into a glass sheet having a desired curvature. This apparatus conveys a glass sheet heated in the heating furnace, along a conveying plane defined by a plurality of rollers of a roller conveyer, and by moving the rollers up and down according to the position of the glass sheet, a part of the conveying plane is bent with respect to the glass sheet conveying direction and the glass sheet is bent to have a desired curvature.
Meanwhile, U.S. Pat. No. 4,123,246 discloses an apparatus for bending a glass sheet heated to a temperature close to the softening point in a heating furnace, by conveying the glass sheet on a roller conveyer constituted by a plurality of curved rollers each curved with respect to the direction perpendicular to the glass sheet conveying direction.
According to the apparatus disclosed in the above two documents, the softened glass bends down by its own weight along the curved plane, whereby the glass sheet can be bent according to the curved conveying plane.
The conventional apparatus for bending disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,123,246 had a problem that although it could form a glass sheet to have a curved plane with respect to the direction perpendicular to the glass sheet conveying direction, it could not form a glass sheet to have a curved plane with respect to the glass sheet conveying direction. This apparatus has a conveying plane curved only with respect to one direction, and therefore, it is difficult to form a complicatedly curved glass having a plane curved with respect to two directions.
It is an object of the present invention to solve the above problems of the conventional techniques, and to provide a curved roller whose curvature can optionally be changed, and an apparatus for bending a glass sheet, so that a glass sheet having a complicatedly curved shape can be produced.
The present invention provides an apparatus for bending a glass sheet, comprising a heating furnace to heat a glass sheet to a bending temperature, and a roller conveyer having a plurality of rollers to convey the heated glass sheet along a conveying plane defined by the rollers, said rollers being movable up and down according to the position of the glass sheet, to have a part of said conveying plane bent with respect to the conveying direction of the glass sheet thereby to let the glass sheet bend by its own weight to have a desired curvature; characterized in that said rollers are curved rollers.
Further, the present invention provides a curved roller comprising a variable curvature rod having a first link structure to realize a predetermined mono-curvilineal shape, and a second link structure provided beside it to realize a predetermined mono-curvilineal shape, and a ring roller rotatable about said variable curvature rod as a rotation axis;
wherein said first and second link structures are each constituted by a plurality of link members connected via gear portions so as to be swingable,
each of said link members has two pivot pins located at a constant pitch, and the link members constituting said first link structure, and the link members constituting said second link structure, share said pivot pins with half pitch shifted from each other.
Now, preferred embodiments of an apparatus for bending a glass sheet, according to the present invention, will be described with reference to drawings.
Firstly, the bending step of a glass sheet 18 by the apparatus 10 for bending, will be described. The glass sheet 18 before bending is positioned to a conveying position at the entrance of the heating furnace 16, and is conveyed into the heating furnace 16 by a roller conveyer, not shown. Then, the glass sheet 18 is heated by a heater in the heating furnace 16 while it is conveyed in the heating furnace 16, whereby it is heated up to the bending temperature (about from 600 to 700° C.) at the exit of the heating furnace 16. The glass sheet 18 heated up to the bending temperature, is conveyed by a roller conveyer 13a for bending to the forming zone 16a provided on a downstream side of the heating furnace 16.
Rollers constituting the roller conveyer 13a, are each a curved roller curved vertically downward in a convex form so as to form, in the glass sheet 18, a curved plane curving with respect to the direction perpendicular to the conveying direction. And further, by moving up and down each roller of the roller conveyer 13a like the propagation of a wave while the glass sheet 18 is conveyed in the forming zone 16a, the glass sheet 18 will have a curved plane curving with respect to the conveying direction. As a result, the glass sheet 18 can be formed to have a curved plane having a curvature with respect to two directions. Here, rollers curving vertically upward in a convex form, can also be employed, but from a viewpoint of stability of conveying the glass sheet 18, rollers curving vertically downward in a convex form, are more excellent.
The bent glass sheet 18 is conveyed from the exit of the forming zone 16a into the air-cooling/tempering apparatus 16b by a roller conveyer 13b of the air-cooling/tempering apparatus 16b, to be tempered by air-cooling. The air-cooling/tempering apparatus 16b has an upper blowing head 17a and a lower blowing head 17b disposed sandwiching the roller conveyer 13b, and the glass sheet 18 is cooled and tempered by air blown from the blowing heads 17a and 17b towards the glass sheet 18.
Here, the cooling performance of the air-cooling/tempering apparatus 16b is appropriately set depending on e.g. a thickness of the glass sheet 18. The glass sheet 18 tempered by air-cooling, is conveyed to the inspection apparatus (not shown) as the next step by a roller conveyer 13c from the exit of the aircooling/tempering apparatus 16b. This is all about the bending step of the glass sheet 18 in the apparatus 10 for bending.
Curved rollers 12A to 12M, . . . , constituting the roller conveyer 13 (13a, 13b and 13c) shown in
The curved roller 12A is rotatably supported at its both ends via bearings 32, 32 by a movable frame 30 formed to have a concave shape. Further, to the left end of the curved roller 12A in
On the other hand, the movable frame 30 is, as illustrated in
Further, at both ends of a lower portion of the movable frame 30, racks 48, 48 are provided so as to protrude downward therefrom, and pinions 50, 50 are engaged with the racks 48, 48. The pinions 50, 50 are fixed to a rotational shaft 52 provided horizontally, and the rotational shaft 52 is supported by the bearings 54, 54 at its both ends, and its left end portion in
The rotation driving means and the elevating means described above, are provided for all of other curved rollers 12A to 12M, . . . , and the servo motors 38, 56 for those means are controlled by a motion controller CNT in
When the type of the glass sheet 18 is input from an external input means not shown, the motion controller CNT prepares angular speed control data and up/down movement control data of the curved rollers 12A to 12M, . . . , which correspond to the curvature of the glass sheet 18 of the type. Then, the motion controller CNT controls the servo motors 38 based on the angular speed control data prepared, and controls the servo motors 56 based on the up-down movement control data. Namely, the motion controller CNT carries out multi-axis control of the curved rollers 12A to 12M, . . . , so that the glass sheet 18 is bent to have a desired curvature during the conveyance by the curved rollers 12A to 12M, . . . .
Secondly, the multi-axis control method of the curved rollers 12A to 12M by the motion controller CNT will be described. Basic up/down movement of the rollers is such that according to the conveyance of a glass sheet G, down-movement and up-movement of the curved rollers 12A to 12M, . . . , are carried out sequentially in this order.
The curved rollers 12A to 12M, . . . , subjected to multi-axis control by the motion controller CNT, behave such that for example as illustrated in
Then, when the glass sheet 18 is conveyed as illustrated in
Thereafter, when the glass sheet 18 is further conveyed as illustrated in
Thereafter, when the glass sheet 18 reaches a substantially middle point of the curved conveying path as illustrated in
Thereafter, when the glass sheet 18 reaches a downstream side of the curved conveying path as illustrated in
As described above, the apparatus 10 for bending of this embodiment employs, as rollers of a roller conveyer in an apparatus for bending a glass sheet with respect to the glass sheet conveying direction by moving the rollers up and down, curved rollers 12 each having the surface curved with respect to the direction perpendicular to the glass sheet conveying direction. Consequently, a complicatedly curved glass curved along the conveying direction and along the horizontal direction perpendicular to the conveying direction, can be produced.
In the following, an embodiment of the curved roller 12 will be described.
Further, annular ribs 84, 84 are formed on both ends of the roller body 74 of the ring roller 72, and threaded holes 86, 86, . . . , are formed at two positions in the outer peripheral surface of each of the ribs. Further, a color 76 is fitted to the outer peripheral surface of the roller body 74 by e.g. shrinkfitting. The color 76 has a width substantially same as the total width of the roller body 74, and a hole 88 is formed in the extension of a threaded hole 86 of the roller body 74.
Adjacent ring rollers 72, 72 are connected each other by an elastic tubular member 90 made of rubber attached to their circular ribs 84, 84. Namely, the elastic tubular member 90 has perforations 92 at both ends, and is connected by screws 94 each inserted in a perforation 92 and screwed in the threaded hole 86 of the rib 84. Such elastic tubular member 90 has an inflated portion 90A formed in the entire circumference at the middle portion in its width direction.
Further, the curved roller 12 has a sprocket housing 96 at a left end of the ring roller 72. The sprocket housing 96 is rotatably supported by the guide shaft 70 via bushes 98. The sprocket housing 96 has a circular rib 100 formed on a ring roller 72 side end, and threaded holes 102 are formed at two positions in the circular rib 100. To each of the circular rib 100 and the circular rib 84 of the ring roller 72, an end portion of the elastic tubular member 90 made of rubber is fitted. The screws 94 each inserted in the perforation 92 of the elastic tubular member 90 are screwed in the threaded hole 86 of the circular rib 84, and screws 104 each inserted in the perforation 92 of the elastic tubular member 90 are screwed in the threaded hole 102 of the circular rib 100, whereby the sprocket housing 96 and the ring roller 72 are mutually connected. Further, a gear 34 is fixed to the sprocket housing 96.
Here, the connection between the sprocket housing 106 and the ring roller 72 on a right side in
The curved roller 12 thus constituted, has a guide shaft 70 preliminarily curved, whereby the curved conveying path 14 curved with respect to the direction perpendicular to the glass sheet conveying direction can be formed. Further, in this curved roller 12, when the gear 34 is rotated by a servo motor 38, the torque is transmitted to the ring rollers 72, 72, . . . , via elastic tubular members 90, 90, . . . . Accordingly, the conveying power of the glass sheet 18 can be obtained.
Further, to a link member 122 at left end side of the curved rod 124 in
The curved rod 124 is constituted by a first link structure 122 and a second link structure 130. As illustrated in
Accordingly, when the left end portion of the link structure 122 at the left end of the
When the curved rod 124 is curved, cores 126A and each of the ring rollers 126, 126, . . . , swing along the curved rod 124, and as a result, the curved roller 120 is curved with a single curvature with respect to the direction perpendicular to the glass sheet conveying direction. Further, by adjusting the amount of elevation given to the curved rod 124, the curvature of the curved rod 124, namely the curvature of the curved conveying path, can be adjusted. Accordingly, a different type of glass sheet having a different model (curvature) can be formed by a single type of curved rollers 120. By this effect, the job change of the curved roller accompanied by the change of the glass sheet model, is substantially eliminated.
Here, a gear 134 is fixed to the ring roller 126 on left end side in
Further, to the left end portion of the flexible shaft 152 in
Both ends 70A of the guide shaft 70 are protruded from both ends 192A of the hollow roller structure 192 by a predetermined length as shown in
The other end 194B of the outer cylinder 194, is connected to a bracket 204 via a bearing 202. The bearing 202 is rotatably connected to the bracket 204 via a horizontally implanted pin 206, whereby the bending of the outer cylinder 194 and the end 70A of the guide shaft 70 indicated by double dotted lines in
To a lower portion of the bracket 204, a slider 208 is connected, and the slider 208 is connected to a feed screw device 210 for moving up and down the slider 208. The feed screw device 210 is driven by a driving force of a motor 212. Here, the feed screw device 210 is fixed to a leg portion 201 of the stand 200.
Further, the other end 194B of the outer cylinder 194, is connected to an output shaft 220 of a motor 218 via a gear 214 and a gear 216. In this construction, when the motor 218 is driven, the torque is transmitted via the gear 216, the gear 214 and the outer cylinder 194 to the hollow roller structure 192, whereby the hollow roller structure 192 is rotated. Here, the gear 214 is rotatably supported by the guide shaft 70, and the gear 216 is rotatably supported by a bearing portion 224 of an inclination guide frame 222.
The inclination guide frame 222 has one end attached to the supporting member 198 via pins 226, 226 so as to be inclined, and has the bearing portion 224 formed at the other end. Therefore, the inclination guide frame is inclined according to the bending of the outer cylinder 194 and the end portion 70A of the guide shaft 70 shown by the double dotted lines in
When the slider 208 is elevated by the feed screw device 210 driven by the motor 212, the force is transmitted via the bracket 204 to the pin 206, and via this pin 206, the outer cylinder 194 is pushed upward as it is pivoted by the pin 199. By this operation, the outer cylinder 194 and the end portion 70A of the guide shaft 70 are bent as illustrated by the double dotted lines in
Here, since the pin 206 as a power point is apart by a predetermined distance from the pin 199 as a pivotal point, the curved roller 190 can be curved with a small power without applying an unreasonable power. Further, the right end portion of the guide shaft 70 in the Figure, has substantially the same construction as the above construction. Namely, the driving means for moving up and down the outer cylinder 194 and the guide shaft 70, are provided at both ends of the guide shaft 70, while the rotating driving means for rotating the outer cylinder 194, is-provided only at one end of the guide shaft 70. However, as the case requires, the rotating driving means may be provided at both ends of the guide shaft 70, or a means for moving the outer cylinder 194 and the guide shaft 70 up and down may be provided only at one end of the guide shaft 70 wherein the guide shaft 70 at the other end may only be supported so as to be movable up and down by employing e.g. LM guide.
Further, in
In the above, description has been made with respect to an example of an apparatus for bending which moves up and down each roller of the roller conveyer independently, but the present invention is not limited thereto. Namely, the curved roller 120, 150 or 190 illustrated in the
Further, the curvature of the curved conveying path 14 with respect to the direction of arrow B, gradually increases from the upstream side of the curved conveying path 14 towards the downstream side, and becomes a curvature corresponding to the curvature of the produced glass sheet at the most downstream side of the curved conveying path 14. Therefore, the glass sheet 18 conveyed in the heating furnace 16 is bent gradually by its own weight according to the curvature of the curved conveying path 14, and bent to have a curvature corresponding to the produced glass sheet at the most downstream side of the curved conveying path 14.
As described above, according to the apparatus for bending a glass sheet according to the present invention, a curved roller which has a roller surface curved with respect to the direction perpendicular to the glass sheet conveying direction, is applied as a roller for the apparatus for bending a glass sheet with respect to the conveying direction by moving rollers of a roller conveyer up and down, whereby a complicatedly curved glass having a curved plane with respect to two directions can be formed.
The entire disclosure of Japanese Patent Application No. 2001-217759 tiled on Jul. 18, 2001 including specification, claims, drawings and summary is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2001-217759 | Jul 2001 | JP | national |
This application is a continuation of and claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. §120 from U.S. Ser. No. 10/952,753, filed Sep. 30, 2004, which is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 10/389,995, filed Mar. 18, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,843,074, issued Jan. 18, 2005, which is a continuation of PCT/JP02/07268, filed Jul. 17, 2002, and claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 from Japanese Patent Application Number 2001-217759, filed Jul. 18, 2001, the entire contents of each which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10952753 | Sep 2004 | US |
Child | 12014862 | US | |
Parent | 10389995 | Mar 2003 | US |
Child | 10952753 | US | |
Parent | PCT/JP02/07268 | Jul 2002 | US |
Child | 10389995 | US |