Claims
- 1. In an apparatus for wet treatment of webs of photographic material, a combination comprising a vessel for a supply of liquid; a conditioning chamber disposed above said vessel and including vertically spaced upper and lower compartments respectively defining upper and lower paths for the movement of webs of photographic material through said chamber; means for advancing the webs along the respective paths; means for conveying liquid from said vessel into said chamber above and below said paths so that the webs which are being advanced through said chambers are contacted by liquid and the liquid is evacuated from said chamber by flowing in and counter to the direction of movement of webs along said paths; and reflux means for returning evacuated liquid into said vessel, said reflux means including means for intercepting the liquid flowing in and counter to the direction of movement of webs along said upper path and passages adjacent to opposite sides of said upper path for conveying the intercepted liquid into said vessel.
- 2. The combination of claim 1, wherein said passages extend downwardly along the sides of said lower path.
- 3. The combination of claim 1, wherein said returning means further comprises means for intercepting the liquid flowing in and counter to the direction of movement of webs along said lower path and for directing the intercepted liquid into said passages.
- 4. The combination of claim 3, wherein said passages seal the liquid therein from the surrounding atmosphere.
- 5. The combination of claim 3, wherein said advancing means comprise a pair of rollers disposed ahead of and behind each of said paths.
- 6. In an apparatus for wet treatment of webs of photographic material, a combination comprising a vessel for a supply of liquid; a conditioning chamber disposed above said vessel and including upper, lower and median sections, said upper and median sections defining an upper path and said median and lower sections defining a lower path for the movement of webs of photographic material through said chamber; means for advancing the webs along the respective paths; means for conveying liquid from said vessel into said chamber above the below said paths so that the webs which are being advanced through said chamber are contacted by liquid and the liquid is evacuated from said chamber by flowing in and counter to the direction of movement of webs along said paths; and reflux means for returning evacuated liquid into said vessel, said reflux means including means for intercepting the liquid flowing in and counter to the direction of movement of webs along said upper path and passages adjacent to opposite sides of said upper path for conveying the intercepted liquid into said vessel.
- 7. The combination of claim 6, wherein said sections form an integral unit and said liquid conveying means comprises a pipe which supplies liquid to each of said sections.
- 8. The combination of claim 6, wherein each of said sections has an inlet which receives liquid from said conveying means and said chamber further comprises a partition which divides the liquid issuing from the inlet of said median section into two streams one of which contacts the undersides of webs moving along the said upper path and the other of which contacts the upper sides of webs moving along said lower path.
- 9. The combination of claim 8, wherein said paths are substantially horizontal and said partition is inclined with respect to said paths.
- 10. The combination of claim 8, wherein the rate of liquid flow through the inlet of said median section substantially equals the combined rate of liquid flow through the inlets of said upper and lower sections.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
2403984 |
Jan 1974 |
DT |
|
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED INVENTIONS
The apparatus of the present invention constitutes an improvement over and a further development of apparatus disclosed in commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 3,688,677, granted Sept. 5, 1972, to Frick et al. and in commonly owned copending application Ser. No. 433,444 filed Jan. 15, 1974, now U.S. Pat. No. 3,873,988, by Pfeifer et al.
US Referenced Citations (5)