Building arbor for tires and like articles having inextensible bead rings

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 4087305
  • Patent Number
    4,087,305
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, June 1, 1976
    48 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, May 2, 1978
    46 years ago
Abstract
A simple low cost building arbor having a wide range of axial length or bead set length variation. The arbor has no moving parts which are not of rubber or rubber-like material and is operable by air pressure alone. An expandable ring expands, by air pressure, to hold a bead ring in axial position and independently a turn-up bladder is expanded to turn a ply sleeve end about the bead ring. Operating air is conducted, in all axially selected positions in the range, not by tubing but by air transfer chambers connecting the bladder and a sleeve associated with the expandable ring with passage in the center shaft.The present invention relates to a building arbor for tires and like articles.The principal object of the invention is the provision of a simple, low cost building arbor actuable solely by fluid pressure to position an inextensible bead ring about a ply in cylindrical form on the arbor and to turn the ply ending about the bead ring. Broadly, the objects of the invention are accomplished in a building arbor comprising a center shaft having passages for conducting fluid, a pair of end rings axially slidable on the center shaft and having axially elongated annular air transfer chambers, the chambers being in air flow communication, respectively, with said passages and with a plurality of inflatable members affixed to each of the end rings, each of the members being expandable by fluid pressure in the respectively associated passage independently of another of said members in any selected axial position of the respectively associated end ring.Briefly, the objective of the invention is accomplished also by a building arbor having a fixed nonexpandable building surface and a pair of expandable beadseating rings located respectively at the axial ends of the building surface, said beadseating rings being mounted respectively in unitary assemblies each including a primary ring, and means for adjustably fixing the axial distance between the two end rings comprising a pair of semi-cylindrical shells of selected axial length axially abutting each end ring and supported coaxially of the arbor by said end rings.To acquaint persons skilled in the most closely related arts certain preferred embodiments illustrating the best mode now contemplated of putting the invention in practice are described hereinbelow making reference to the attached drawings forming a part of the description and of this specification.
Description
Claims
  • 1. A building arbor for use in building a flexible cylindrical article having at least one end portion turned or folded about an inextensible bead ring, which arbor in use is free of relatively moving metal parts, such arbor comprising a shaft, rigid cylindrical building surface having a multiplicity of perforations therethrough, a circumferentially expandable elastomeric ring having an inflatable bladder attached integrally thereto and extending axially away from said surface and disposed close to and at the same radial level as said surface, said expandable ring having a coaxial groove in its radially outward surface, an expandable sleeve secured to said shaft coaxially of each expandable ring, an annular recess defining with said expandable sleeve an inflation chamber, said sleeve having a plane of maximum circumferential elongation midway between its circumferential edges, said plane being axially inward of the associated expandable ring so that on being inflated the sleeve expands the expandable ring and rotates each axial cross-section thereof angularly with respect to the shaft, thereby expanding more at its axially inward side than at its axially outward side relative to an inextensible ring disposed therearound.
US Referenced Citations (8)
Number Name Date Kind
2084009 Sohl Jun 1937
2980160 Deibel Apr 1961
3027289 Gitzinger Mar 1962
3053308 Vanzo et al. Sep 1962
3434897 Caretta et al. Mar 1969
3489634 Pizzo et al. Jan 1970
3490980 Mallory et al. Jan 1970
3853653 Olbert et al. Dec 1974