This invention relates to a die cutter apparatus for severing blisters into individual blisters from a sheet of blisters which has been formed from a deformable transparent or translucent sheet of plastic material by a process known to those skilled in the art.
Blisters which are used in the blister packaging art are conventionally formed from a large sheet of plastic material which is heated and formed around molds to produce a plurality of the blisters as part of an integral sheet of plastic material. Because of the nature of the plastic from which the blisters are formed there is a shrinkage of the sheet upon cooling and the amount of shrinkage is dependent upon the chemical nature of the plastic from which the blisters are formed and is also dependent upon other factors too numerous to mention herein. As a result of the shrinkage, the individual blisters will end up when the sheet is cooled at various distances from each other which is inconsistent as between blisters when they are originally formed about their respective molds. In other words, the finished blisters on the formed sheet, because of the shrinkage referred to above, will have distances from their respective centerlines which is different from the centerlines of the molds used to form the blisters. As a result when it is desired to cut the individual blisters from the integral sheet and since they are varying distances apart, the blister itself will be offset from the flange surrounding it.
The present invention contemplates the construction of a blister die cutter unit which accommodates a cutter for each blister formed on a sheet of plastic material with each blister die cutter unit being movable relative to the other so as to accommodate the shrinkage and relative movement of the blisters formed on the integral plastic sheet. This results in the provision that the rim or flange around each individual blister will be essentially concentric with the blister itself. This object of the invention will be observed with more particularity after an understanding of the structure and function which will be pointed out hereinafter.
Another object of the present invention is to produce a blister die cutter apparatus which is capable of cutting a plurality of blisters from an integral sheet on which the blisters are formed and producing an individual blister severed from the plastic sheet which is concentric with the rim or flange or ridge which is normally formed with each blister.
Another object of the invention is to provide a cutter apparatus which produces a blister which has a consistent flange about the severed blister which provides for a more reliable sealing function when it is subsequently sealed to a card which carries advertising indicia thereon and which carries the product within the blister.
Another object is to provide a blister die cutter apparatus which provides a finished blister which is more pleasing in appearance, more structurally sound and which functions to hold a product in a more reliable fashion to a card or substrate to which it is subsequently sealed.
Other objects and a full understanding of this invention may be had by referring to the following description and claims, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The drawings illustrate the compensating die cutter apparatus of the present invention illustrated generally by the reference numeral 30 and which is seen in various of the views including
The problem which the present invention is designed to solve comes from the nature of the sheets of plastic material illustrated at 20 in
As is understood in the blister packaging industry, it is normal to form a plurality of blisters 22 on and from a sheet of polymeric material by forming a heated sheet of the polymeric material around individual molds which form the blisters 22. In this process the polymeric material is heated to a substantially high temperature, for example on the order of 400° F. which allows the sheet 20 to more easily form over the individual molds and with the assistance normally of a vacuum the individual blisters 22 are formed. The sheet is then cooled and removed from the individual dies resulting in a sheet like that shown in FIG. 1. In the cooling process, a given batch of polymeric sheet material will shrink as it is cooled and will shrink irregularly. This results in the distance from individual center lines of the individual blisters being inconsistent. In most instances after a first group of blisters have been produced from a given batch of the polymeric sheet, the individual shrinkage will be somewhat consistent for subsequent sheets. When a manufacturer next goes to another batch of polymeric material the shrinkage will again, in most cases, be different and as usual inconsistent.
In the use of the blister die cutter apparatus of the present invention and for the reasons given hereinafter, it has been found that when the plurality of blisters 22 carried by the sheet 20 are cut by the present invention, blisters are produced which approach the illustrations found in
In previous and present date cutter mechanisms, the results that are produced are relatively inconsistent and are demonstrated in
Each of the blister die cutter units 34-39 is illustrated in detail in
Threaded members 64 are provided and extend through holes 66 in the backup plate 46 and the top board 50 and are threadably received in threaded holes 68 in the bottom board 44 to hold the top board, backup plate and bottom board together fixedly as a unit.
Adjustment members 70 in the form of threaded members extend through holes 72 in the top board 50, backup plate 46 and bottom board 44 and threadably connect into threaded holes 74 in the base 31. The adjustment members 70 are fixedly secured in the base 31 and are of an outer diameter which is smaller than the diameter of the holes 72 in the top board, backup plate and bottom board. This permits the blister die cutter units to move relative to the base 31. The top board, backup plate, bottom board and associated structure comprise a support member and the member 70 of a smaller diameter than holes 72 amounts to a lost motion connection connecting the support member to the base 31.
The construction of each of the blister die cutter units 3439 as shown in
This spacing as a matter of example only maybe on the order of {fraction (1/16)}″ to ⅛″.
The cutting operation is conventional in nature in that the apparatus as illustrated in
It will thus be seen that the present invention accomplishes the objects hereof in that the cutting units are constructed and mounted in such a fashion that they accommodate any possible and reasonable shrinkage of sheet 20 from which the blisters are formed thereby enabling the blisters 22 to symmetrically reside in the cavities of the units. The blisters are severed in such a fashion that a symmetrical rim 24 is produced on the blisters.
Although this invention has been described in its preferred form with a certain degree of particularity, it is understood that the present disclosure has been made only by way of example and that numerous changes in the detail of construction and the combination and arrangement of parts may be restored to without departing from the spirit and the scope of the invention as hereinafter claimed.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2313801 | Carll | Mar 1943 | A |
2619897 | St. Lawrence | Dec 1952 | A |
2939347 | Tobey | Jun 1960 | A |
3048069 | Berlin et al. | Aug 1962 | A |
3752042 | Castille | Aug 1973 | A |
5515749 | Sandford | May 1996 | A |