The present invention relates to a rewinding machine to wind a web material around winding cores to form logs of wound web material
More specifically, the invention relates to a rewinding machine comprising surface winding members, which transmit a rotational movement to the log being formed by means of contact with the outer surface of the log being formed.
To produce rolls of toilet paper, kitchen towel and the like, one or more plies of tissue paper are unwound from one or more parent reels with large diameter, and predetermined quantities of web material formed by one or more plies are wound on individual tubular winding cores, typically made of cardboard, plastic or the like. The logs thus formed are subsequently cut into small rolls with an axial length equal to the length of the finished and packaged products.
In modern rewinding machines, winding is performed by means of peripheral or surface winding members, typically winding rollers, belts or combinations of these elements. The rotational movement is imparted to the winding core and to the log being formed by these members, which are in contact with the outer surface of the log being formed. Typically, the logs are formed in winding cradles defined by three winding rollers, one of which is movable to allow and control the increase in diameter of the log being formed.
Examples of surface rewinding machines of this type are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,979,818, GB-B-2105688, EP-A-0524158, U.S. Pat. No. 5,769,352.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,378,799 describes a surface rewinding machine with three rollers, wherein the third roller is supported by a pair of arms oscillating about an axis which in turn is supported by a slide which translates parallel to the direction of increase of the logs in the winding cradle defined by the three rollers. The object of this layout is to obtain an improvement in winding when the diameter of the logs varies.
In older designs of machines, winding takes place by rotating the winding core or winding spindle by means of a central mechanism, that is, by means of a motorized shaft which engages with the spindle or core. Examples of rewinding machines of this type are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,513,750, U.S. Pat. No. 6,179,241, U.S. Pat. No. 5,725,176.
WO-A-02055420 describes a rewinding machine to wind web material in logs around winding cores, comprising: a first winding roller and a second winding roller defining a nip through which said cores are inserted and through which said web material is fed. Moreover, this machine has at least one pair of motorized engaging members, in the form of motorized centers, to engage the ends of a winding core and transmit a rotational movement to the core during the winding cycle of each log. The engaging members and the first and second winding roller are designed and arranged so that the log being formed is in contact with the winding rollers during winding.
Therefore, this rewinding machine combines the two winding systems, to obtain continuous and high speed production of logs with specific characteristics. Among other things, the system thus conceived offers the advantage of knowing, instant by instant, the exact position of the axis of the log being formed, and therefore of controlling this position. This is due to the fact that the movements of the centers are controlled electronically and therefore the control unit is able to know and/or modify this position in any instant of the winding cycle. Moreover, as rotation of the centers about the axis thereof can also be controlled, for example, in speed, the system allows balancing of the winding torque transmitted to the log by the winding rollers and the winding torque transmitted by the centers, to prevent reciprocal slippage between the outer turns and the inner core. These operating characteristics are particularly advantageous when winding soft logs, that is, with low density and/or when winding a highly embossed paper web material.
The object of the present invention is to produce a rewinding machine of the type indicated above, with a combination of peripheral and central winding means, which makes it possible to obtain advantages, for example, in terms of product quality, constructional simplicity and efficiency in controlling winding.
Essentially, according to a first aspect, the invention combines a winding cradle formed of three winding rollers, one of which is movable to allow increase of the log being formed, with a system of motorized centers which impart, during at least part of the winding cycle of each log, part of the winding torque to said log. By using three rollers in combination with the centers or other pair of motorized members to engage the ends of the winding core, improved control of the winding cycle is obtained. In this way, the engaging members of the winding core can also be disengaged before winding is complete and/or engaging of the core by said members can be delayed with respect to the instant in which winding starts. Among other things, this makes machine management more flexible, and also offers the possibility of providing a single pair of engaging members.
According to an advantageous embodiment, the third winding roller is supported by at least one arm oscillating about a first axis of oscillation, associated with which is a first actuator to control oscillation of said first arm. Moreover, preferably the first axis of oscillation is supported by a movable element, and in particular by a second arm oscillating about a second axis of oscillation and with which a second actuator is associated to control oscillation of the second arm.
The first and the second axes of oscillation are parallel to each other. This layout allows the axis of the third winding roller to move during winding, along a direction parallel to the direction of increase of the log, keeping the axis of the third winding roller on the plane which also contains the axis of the log. With respect to other configurations, which allow analogous movement during winding, the use of a double oscillating arm allows further advantages to be attained. On the one hand the mechanical system is simpler and can be more easily and rapidly controlled. Moreover, when the log has been completed and must be unloaded, the third winding roller must be moved away from the position thereof to create the space required to unload the log and immediately subsequent to this must be returned towards the nip between the first and second winding roller to come into contact with the next log being formed. The use of a mechanism with a double oscillating arm allows this operation to be performed extremely rapidly. Considering that the winding cycle of a log lasts for only a few seconds (about 2-3 seconds in modern rewinding machines), the speed at which the third winding roller moves from the final winding position of a log to the initial winding position of the next log is an essential element for correct operation of the machine and in order to obtain high production speeds.
In fact, it must be taken into account that the feed speed of the web material towards the winding area is not decreased during the exchange phase, that is, the phase in which the web material is severed, the completed log unloaded and the initial free end formed by severing the web material is made to adhere to the subsequent winding core to start the subsequent winding cycle. In substance, the feed speed of the web material remains essentially constant during the various and subsequent winding cycles of the various logs.
With a layout of the winding roller supported by a system of articulated arms as defined above, the third winding roller can advantageously be held in a position in which it is equidistant from the first and from the second winding roller for most of the winding cycle. In other words, the three contact points of the rollers with the log are at the level of the vertices of an isosceles triangle, the base of which is defined by the line joining the centers of the first and of the second winding roller.
In practice, the movement of the third winding roller is controlled so that it follows the increasing line of the log, that is the line along which the axis of the increasing log moves. Preferably, this line is a straight line, which can be obtained using a first and a second winding roller with the same diameter.
The aforesaid layout allows optimum control of winding and a final product of high quality to be obtained, especially for winding very voluminous products. The presence of three winding rollers allows precise identification of the position of the log and the axis thereof, so that engaging of the winding core by said engaging members is facilitated, also when said engaging takes place after winding of the respective log has started.
The geometry of the winding rollers and the provision of a movable winding roller supported by at least one oscillating arm (or preferably by a pair of oscillating arms), the axis of oscillation of which is in turn connected to another oscillating arm or to a pair of oscillating arms, can also be used advantageously when winding is of the exclusively surface or peripheral type, that is, when there are no members to engage the winding cores and draw them in rotation. In particular, the advantage is obtained of being able to maintain the distance of the third winding roller constant with respect to the first and to the second winding roller with a construction that allows rapid transfer of the third roller from the position of unloading of the completed log to the position of initial winding of the subsequent log.
Thanks to the use of a group of three winding rollers, it is possible to provide a single pair of members to engage the winding cores. In fact, these engaging members or centers can also engage the winding core in an instant subsequent to the one in which insertion of the core in the winding area starts and/or can disengage from the winding core before winding has been completed. The first and/or the last phase of the winding cycle of each log can, in fact, take place under the exclusive control of the winding rollers, without the contribution of the engaging members of the winding core. This simplifies the machine from a constructional and control viewpoint, to the advantage of economy and functionality.
Preferably, in this case the engaging members are arranged and controlled to engage each core after it has been carried in rotation and into contact with the web material. Moreover, or alternatively, advantageously the engaging members are designed and arranged to disengage from the core before winding of the log has been completed.
In a way known per se, the rewinding machine can comprise a core inserter to insert the winding cores sequentially towards the nip between the first and the second winding roller, each core inserted by said inserter being subsequently engaged by the engaging members. A preferred embodiment of the invention is provided with a rolling surface, extending around the first winding roller upstream of the nip between the first and the second winding roller. The core inserter is arranged and designed to insert the cores between the first winding roller and the rolling surface, while the engaging members are produced and disposed to engage each core downstream of the rolling surface.
In a possible embodiment, each of said engaging members includes at least one inflatable chamber to clamp the winding core. The inflatable chamber is, for example, an annular chamber, disposed on the outside of a revolving head, which is inserted into the end of the winding core and expansion of the inflatable chamber causes clamping on the inner surface of the tubular winding core. It would also be possible to provide other reciprocal engaging mechanisms between the centers, or other engaging members, and the winding core. To increase the reliability of clamping, two adjacent annular inflatable chambers are preferably used.
In a possible embodiment, the head carrying the inflatable chamber or chambers is mounted on a rotating axle, connected to a pressurized fluid source, said head being provided with an axial insertion and extraction movement with respect to the winding cores. Moreover, the head can be torsionally coupled to a rotating sleeve drawn in rotation to make said head rotate.
According to a different aspect, the invention relates to a rewinding machine to produce logs of web material, comprising a first winding roller, a second winding roller and a third winding roller defining a winding space, wherein the third winding roller is supported by at least one first arm oscillating about a first axis of oscillation, said at least one first oscillating arm being associated with a first actuator to control oscillation of said at least one first oscillating arm. Characteristically the first axis of oscillation is supported by at least one second arm oscillating about a second axis of oscillation, parallel to the first axis of oscillation, said at least one second oscillating arm being associated with a second actuator to control oscillation of the second oscillating arm.
The invention shall be better understood by following the description and the accompanying drawing, which shows a non-limiting practical embodiment of the invention. Identical numbers indicate identical or equivalent parts in the various figures. In the drawing:
A winding system is disposed downstream of the perforating unit 5. This system includes a first winding roller 11, about which the web material N is fed. The first winding roller 11 forms, with a second winding roller 13, a nip 15, through which the web material travels and through which the winding cores also travel. The first and the second winding roller 11, 13, also form, with a third winding roller 17, a winding cradle to form the logs R of web material N. The two winding rollers 11 and 13 have the same diameter, which is greater than the diameter of the third winding roller 17.
The third winding roller 17 is supported by a pair of oscillating arms 19, hinged about a first axis of oscillation A. Oscillation of the arms 19 is obtained, through a rod 21, by means of an actuator 23 controlled electronically by a control unit indicated schematically with 25.
The axis of oscillation A of the pair of arms 19 is supported by a pair of arms 27, to which the arms 19 are hinged. The arms 27 oscillate about an axis B, parallel to the axis A, and oscillation is controlled by means of a rod 29 by an actuator 31, connected to the control unit 25. The oscillation movement of the two pairs of arms 19 and 27 is synchronized in the manner described hereunder. The axis of oscillation B of the arms 27 is on one side of the plane containing the axes of the winding rollers 11 and 13, while the axis A is on the other side.
A rolling surface 33, defined by a series of parallel thin plates, extends around the first winding roller 11. The rolling surface 33 is essentially coaxial to the winding roller 11 and is used for insertion of the winding cores on which the logs R are formed. Rotating about an axis D, parallel to the axes of rotation of the winding rollers, is a severing device for the web material, indicated as a whole with 35, the operation of which is known to those skilled in the art and described in detail in EP-B-0694020 and in U.S. Pat. No. 5,979,818.
The rolling surface 33 defines, with the outer surface of the first winding roller 11, a channel for insertion of the cores, the transverse dimension of which (defined by the distance between the cylindrical surface of the roller 11 and the rolling surface 33) is equal to or slightly lower than the diameter of the winding cores. In practice, as winding of the first turns around the winding core commences in said channel, the transverse dimension of the channel may vary slightly along the extension thereof and be chosen so that in all points it is equal to or slightly below the dimension of the diameter of the core, increased by the thickness of the web material wound thereabout in all positions of said channel. The transverse dimension slightly below that of the core allows a slight deformation to be produced through the radial compression of the core to keep it correctly under control.
The channel, indicated with 37, has an inlet end into which the cores are inserted, and an outlet end, at the level of the nip 15 between the winding rollers 11 and 13.
In the example illustrated the winding cores C are fed from a channel 39 towards a gluing unit 41, comprising a blade 43 which is immersed in a glue tank 45 and emerges therefrom to apply a longitudinal line of glue on the cores C. The individual cores C, equipped with glue, are inserted by an inserter 47 into the inlet of the channel 37. Once inserted in the channel, the cores C are accelerated angularly and start to roll on the surface 33, in contact with the web material N fed around the winding roller 11.
Disposed on the two sides of the rewinding machine are two carriages or slides 51, sliding along guides 52 integral with the side panels 54 (
The centers 57 are essentially symmetrical and one of them is shown in detail in
The center has a head 61 supported by bearings 63 and 65 on a hollow shaft 67 movable axially but not rotating. The inside 67A of the hollow shaft 67 is connected, by ducts 69, to two annular inflatable chambers 71 parallel with each other mounted on the head 61. These inflatable chambers are used to engage the head 61 torsionally with the respective end of the winding core C, expanding against the inner surface of said core C.
The head 61 slides axially to be inserted into and extracted from the core C and is engaged torsionally by means of a grooved profile to a sleeve 73 provided with a grooved profile 73A in which rods 75 integral with the head 61 engage. The sleeve 73 is supported by bearings 77, 79 on a fixed axis 81 and is drawn in rotation by a motor 83 by means of a belt 85 (
The hollow shaft 67, on which the head 61 is revolvingly supported, slides inside the fixed axle 81. The axle 81 has a duct 81A for feeding compressed air into the inflatable chambers 71. The pressurized air fed through the duct 81A reaches the inside of the hollow shaft 67 through radial holes 67A in said shaft.
The head 61 slides axially thanks to the fact that the hollow shaft 67 is integral with the rod of a piston-cylinder actuator 91 or itself forms the rod of said actuator (
Operation of the rewinding machine described above shall now be illustrated with reference to
In
In the nip 15 the engaging members or centers 57 are inserted into the respective ends of the core C and the inflatable chambers 71 are expanded to block the heads 61 in the core C. Insertion of the two centers can take place in a subsequent instant, for example in the condition in
By means of the respective motors 83 the heads 61 of the centers 57 are carried to the suitable rotation speed before insertion into the ends of the winding core C. The exact position of the winding core and the rotation speed thereof are known to the control unit 25, which can consequently control movement of the centers 57 with precision.
When the core has left the nip 15 winding of the log R continues in the winding cradle defined by the rollers 11, 13 and 17 under the control of said rollers and of the motorized centers 57. As the log R increases in diameter, the third winding roller 17 moves along the straight line T, along which the centers 57 also move, to follow the increase in the log R. Movement of the roller 17 is obtained by means of the combination of oscillations of the arms 19, 27 about the axes A and B.
Before winding is completed, the centers 57 disengage from the core C and return towards the nip 15 through an inverse translatory movement to the one with which they followed the log R in the increasing phase thereof. For example, the centers 57 can disengage and return to the area of the nip 15 when the log R has almost reached the final diameter thereof, as shown in
Once the log R has been completed it is unloaded from the winding cradle by moving the axis of the winding roller 17 from the straight line T, forming an aperture between the roller 17 and the roller 13 (
It is understood that the drawing merely shows a possible embodiment of the invention, which may vary in forms and layouts without however departing from the scope of the concept on which the invention is based. Any reference numerals in the appended claims are provided purely to facilitate reading in the light of the description hereinbefore and of the accompanying drawings, and do not limit the scope of protection whatsoever.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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FI2004A0061 | Mar 2004 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IT2005/000143 | 3/15/2005 | WO | 00 | 9/8/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/087639 | 9/22/2005 | WO | A |
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