The present invention relates to a coil winding device and relates particularly but not exclusively to a device for winding a fully annealed tube into a coil with a minimum of work hardening.
The process of annealing is commonly used on copper tubes in order to improve the properties of the tubing for use in products such as refrigeration units. With reference to
A first method of winding a fully annealed tube into a coil is illustrated in
This process however has a number of limitations. For instance the use of rollers 100 has a negative effect on the hardness of the tube 102, increasing it in proportion to the degree of bending required to achieve the diameters of each wind in a coil. Layers of coils produced using this method are loosely wound and have random spacing between each coil. The presence of overlapping winds of coils in different layers ensures that more cubic space per coil is required for packaging and transportation. Furthermore, the individual coils are more susceptible to damage during transport as the free space between the windings of each coil allows for movement and potential crushing of overlapping winds in concentric coil layers.
When using this first method of winding a tube, nitrogen gas is required to be blown through the tube in an ‘upstream direction’ to the apparatus performing the annealing process. Such gas is used to displace oxygen from within a tube while it is being annealed to reduce the formation of impurities on the interior surface of the tube. Typically the tube is manually coupled to a back purge system used to blow the nitrogen gas back through the tube. In this instance, the first few windings of coil will not be correctly annealed as the tube will not have been running through the annealer at the correct speed. As a result, the first few windings of the finished coil will not be to specification.
A second method of winding a tube into a coil is illustrated in
This second method of winding a tube into a coil has the advantage over the first method of more tightly winding the respective layers of coils and more accurately configuring the spacing between each coil.
However the second method has the disadvantage of applying significant work hardening to the tube while winding it into a coil. This requires that a length of tubing tightly wound by the second winding method must be annealed in an oven after the winding process. However, the maximum size of the coil is determined by the size of the annealing furnace.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention seek to overcome the above disadvantages of the prior art.
According to an aspect of the present invention there is provided a device for winding an elongate member into a coil, the device comprising:
By applying a force, having perpendicular first and second force components, to a tube as it is being wound into a plurality of coils layered on top of one another, allows each individual winding in a coil to be held in place while a coil is being wound. By applying to each respective winding in a coil while it is being wound a force in the direction of the preceding winding provides the advantage of more tightly winding a coil. By applying a downward force to each winding in a coil as it is being wound prevents the windings in respective layers of coils piled on top of one another from overlapping with the windings of coils in different layers. This provides the advantage of minimizing the cubic space per coil required for packaging and transportation, and reduces susceptibility to damage during transportation of the individual coils by minimizing the free space between the windings of each coil which would otherwise allow for movement and potential crushing of overlapping winds in concentric coil layers.
The winding device of the present invention has the further advantage of being able to provide the advantages above at the same time as minimizing the work hardening on a tube while it is being wound.
In a preferred embodiment the force application means comprises a second body portion from which a plurality of bristles extend.
The bristles provide the advantage of being able to apply two perpendicular components of force to a tube while it is being wound so as to provide the advantages previously discussed.
In another preferred embodiment at least one of the first or second body portions defines a planar surface.
This provides the advantage of providing a surface onto which a tube may be easily wound and unwound, and also simplifies any devices used to transport such a wound tube.
In a further preferred embodiment at least one of the first or second body portions is adapted to move along the first axis.
This provides the advantage of quickly winding a plurality of coil layers and minimizes the length of bristles required to provide the other advantages of the present invention.
In a preferred embodiment the elongate member is wound into a coil from an inside portion of the first body portion adjacent its centre to an outside portion of the first body portion adjacent its edge.
In another preferred embodiment the elongate member is wound into a coil from an outside portion of the first body portion adjacent its edge to an inside portion of the first body portion adjacent its centre.
In a further preferred embodiment the elongate member is an elongate tube.
In a preferred embodiment, the device further comprises a guide portion from which an elongate member extends into engagement with the device.
In another preferred embodiment, the first body portion is adapted to move relative to the guide portion.
This provides the advantage of more accurately controlling the diameter of each individual winding in a coil so wound using the device of the present invention.
In a further preferred embodiment, the device further comprises an annealing portion for annealing at least a portion of an elongate member before it is wound into a coil.
This provides the advantage of minimizing the amount of work hardening of the coil once it is wound. Also by annealing a tube before it is wound into a coil allows individual portions of the tube to be separately annealed rather than annealing the entire tube at once after being wound into a coil. This provides the advantage of reducing the size of the furnace used to anneal a tube to be wound using the device of the present invention.
According to an aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of winding an elongate member into a coil, comprising the steps of:
In a preferred method, further comprising the step of moving the first body portion and the force application means relative to one another along the first axis.
In another preferred method, the elongate member is wound into a coil from an inside portion of the first body portion adjacent its centre to an outside portion of the first body portion adjacent its edge.
In a further preferred method, the elongate member is wound into a coil from an outside portion of the first body portion adjacent its edge to an inside portion of the first body portion adjacent its centre.
In a preferred method, further comprising the step of annealing the elongate member before it is wound into a coil.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example only and not in any limitative sense, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to
The first body portion 302 is adapted to move along axis 306 so as to bring the bristles 308 and former member 309 into contact with the tube 303 such that the bristles 308 bend around the tube 303. Each bristle 308 bent by the tube 303 exerts a force 310 on the tube 303. A bristle 308 bent by the tube 303, as illustrated in
The process by which the winding device 300 winds an annealed tube into a coil will now be described. Firstly an end portion of an elongate tube 303, extending from a guide member 305, is fixably attached to the first body portion 302 adjacent its centre such that it is able to be wound around the former member 309 of the second body portion 304 when brought into engagement therewith.
The bristles 308 and former member 309 of the second body portion 304 are then brought into engagement with the tube 303, such that the bristles 308 bend around it as shown in
When the first coil, which engages the first body portion 302, has been fully wound, i.e. windings are wound from the former member 309 to the edge of the first body portion 302, the first body portion moves away from the second body portion by a distance of one tube diameter. The first and second body portions 302, 304 then both begin to move back along the second axis 307 at the same speed they did when winding the first coil. This causes the tube 303 to wind into a second coil on top of the first coil. The second coil consists of an identical number of windings to that of the first coil, each winding of the second coil being on top of a corresponding winding in the first coil. Because during the winding of the second coil the first and second body portions 302, 304 and therefore axis 306, moves back towards their original position, the windings in the second coil are wound with ever decreasing diameter, each winding being increasingly closer to the centre of the first body portion 302, the innermost winding of which engages the former member 309 of the second body portion.
When the second coil has been wound, the first body portion 302 is moved away from the second body portion 304 along axis 306 a dimension equal to the diameter of the tube 303 being wound. A third coil is then wound, on top of the second coil, with windings of increasing diameter, the innermost of which is in engagement with the former member and the outermost of which is adjacent the edge of the first body portion. The first body portion 302 is then again moved away from the second body portion 304 along axis 306 a dimension equal to the diameter of the tube 303 being wound. A forth coil with windings of ever decreasing diameter is then wound, on top of the third coil, the innermost winding of which engages the former member 309. This winding process is then repeated, moving the first body portion 302 along axis 306 relative to the second body portion 304 a dimension equal to the diameter of the tube 303 being wound after the winding of each successive coil, until the required number of coil layers has been built up on top of each other.
When the tube 303 has been wound into the required number of coil layers the tube 303 is removed from the guide member 305 and the bristles 308 and former member 309 of the second body portion 304 are disengaged from the coils wound around the first body portion 302 which is subsequently removed from the device 300.
The influence of the bristles 308 on a coil being wound from an inner portion of the first body portion 302 adjacent its centre to an outer portion of the first body portion 302 adjacent its edge, is illustrated in
The corresponding situation to that illustrated in
The tube 303 is passed through an annealing device (not shown) before it is wound into a coil using the device 300. Because of this an inert gas such as nitrogen is blown through the tube 303, using a back purge system (not shown), while using the winding device 300 of the present invention. In the winding device 300, a tube 303 is automatically connected to the back purge system using an automatic clamping system, see
The operation of the automatic clamping system in
It will be appreciated by persons skilled in the art that the above embodiments have been described by way of example only and not in any limitative sense, and that various alterations and modifications are possible without departure from the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. For example, the winding device 300 may be used to wind elongate members not made from metal into a coil e.g. plastic. The winding device 300 may be able to rotate, and thereby wind a coil, in both clockwise and anti-clockwise directions. It is possible that, with all of the advantages previously discussed, an adaptation of the present invention would be able to wind a tube into a coil about a cylindrical body. Such an adaptation is illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0911394.5 | Jul 2009 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB10/51059 | 6/25/2010 | WO | 00 | 4/5/2012 |