The present invention relates generally to newspaper printing presses and folders, and to a broadsheet newspaper.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,935,234 discloses a newspaper printing press and is hereby incorporated by reference herein described below.
An unfolded Berliner or midi format newspaper normally measures about 470 mm (18.5 inches) in height and 315 mm (12.0 to 12.5 inches) in width. Several European newspapers, including Le Monde, La Vanguardia, and La Repubblica use this format. As opposed to tabloids, it is generally cross-folded. The fold is generally at the midpoint of the height, i.e. at 335 mm.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,367,792, 6,688,224, 6,733,431 and 6,752,751 disclose folders, and are hereby incorporated by reference herein. U.S. Pat. No. 6,082,724 discloses an inserter for placing inserts in a newspaper jacket.
The present invention provides a broadsheet newspaper printing press comprising:
at least one print unit printing at least one web of material; and
a folder having:
By having the cross-fold off-center at these distances, variable format broadsheet newspapers with a longer side can be created which permit inserts even with smaller sized broadsheet newspapers.
In a preferred embodiment, the broadsheet newspaper is a Berliner format newspaper of a height of about 18 and one half inches, and the distance between the pin edge of the product and the tucker blade is approximately 8 inches or less and the distance between the tucker blade and the non-pin edge of the product is 10.5 inches or more. Thus standard inserts of 10 and one half inches can be inserted into the Berliner format newspaper without sticking out.
The present invention also provides a folder as described above.
The present invention also provides a Berliner format broadsheet newspaper having a height of approximately 18 and one half inches and a cross fold at approximately 8 inches.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention is described below by reference to the following drawings, in which:
The web may be slit by a slitter 20 into ribbons which are recombined, potentially with other ribbons 110, at a roller 30. The ribbons of the web 100 then enter a folder 80 where they pass to a former board 40 for folding the ribbons longitudinally. A cross cutter 50 of the folder 80 then cuts the ribbons into broadsheet newspapers, which are gripped at a lead edge by a tucker cylinder 60. The tucker cylinder 60 grippers may be for example a hold-down device for pinless gripping or pins.
The newspapers 92 are then tucked and cross-folded into a jaw cylinder 70 and then released to, for example, to a fan wheel, and then to a belt conveyor and a gripper pick-up, and then delivered to a pocket conveyor 98, only the pocket conveyor being shown here for simplicity. The fan wheel and belt conveyor are shown for example in U.S. Pat. No. 6,733,341, hereby incorporated by reference herein.
A controller 90 can set the phasing between the grippers and tuckers of the cylinder 60, and control the phasing of jaws of cylinder 70, so that the cross-fold distance can be set. Owing to the phasing control, the cross-fold can be set between 33% and 45% or 55% and 67% of the height of the newspaper. The offset of at least 5% advantageously can permit smaller format newspapers to still receive standard inserts for example by providing a longer side. Moreover, folder spiders can provide this phasing, while further off-center cross folds may be difficult to achieve with current folder technology.
The newspaper could be printed such that the H1 section appears with the headline, with for example inserts behind. However, the H2 section could appear with the headline, i.e. the extra 2.5 inches would be at the rear and provide for example advertising space. However, 10.5 inch inserts would cover the advertising space in that embodiment.
While the folder has been shown with a tucking cylinder with two grippers and two tuckers, other configurations such as a three gripper or four gripper configuration are possible. Moreover, while the folder has been shown with a tucking cylinder with grippers and tuckers, other configurations such as a folder employing rotary tuckers and folding rollers, a so-called rotary blade folder, is possible. In that case, the jaw cylinder is replaced by folding rollers which receive the folded signatures from a tucker cylinder. U.S. Pat. No. 6,688,224 for example is hereby incorporated by reference herein as showing a rotary blade folder.
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