This invention relates to a machine for heat setting yarn, principally, but not exclusively, carpet yarn. The machine conditions twisted yarns with saturated steam to increase the crystallinity of the yarn and lock the twist or the crimp into the yarn. The machine is a continuous process machine with yarn entering one end of the machine, moving downstream through the machine and exiting the downstream end properly treated and ready for the next production step—typically winding onto yarn packages in preparation for carpet tufting.
In general, the heat setting machine includes a coiler or other yarn-depositing device for depositing yarn on a moving conveyor which carries the yarn into a pretreatment chamber where the yarn is heated. The yarn then passes through a sealing head that includes a set of entrance sealing rolls which maintain a pressurized environment within the system. The yarn is carried by the conveyor into an entrance-cooling chamber where cool, dry air is circulated through the yarn, cooling the yarn to a uniform temperature and thus allowing redevelopment of the bulk in the yarn. This cooling chamber also protects the sealing rolls from the higher temperature of the heating chamber.
The yarn then passes into a heating chamber where a homogeneous mixture of steam and air is circulated through the yarn. The yarn is carried by the conveyor out of the heating chamber into an exit cooling chamber where cool dry air is circulated through the yarn to reduce the yarn temperature, remove excess moisture, and protect the exit sealing rolls of an exit sealing head which cooperate with the entrance sealing rolls to maintain a pressurized environment within the system. The yarn passes through the exit sealing head and can be further dried, separated and wound onto packages on a take-up winder which runs in synchronization with the remaining components. The entrance and exit sealing heads are identical in construction and operation, and operate in synchrony to insure that the conveyor and the yarn move smoothly through the heat set machine from entrance to exit. A yarn accumulator can be part of the system, allowing the system to continue operating during winder doffing cycles.
Sealing heads are known in the art, and include such devices disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,074,130, 4,949,558, 7,219,516 and 7,543,463. Each of these patents contains a general disclosure of paired rollers that transport yarn carried on a conveyor into and out of a continuous heat set machine. Several features are disclosed in this application that differentiate the machine and method from prior art machines and provide more efficient and safe operation. These features include use of pneumatic cylinders to effect sealing pressure on the sealing rolls, sealing lamellas that assemble more efficiently, retaining gibs that float in order to accommodate uniform radial movement of the sealing rolls, and a sealing head safety circuit that ensures access to reserve cylinder pressure in the event of a loss of air pressure by a principal air supply and/or electrical power supply. Additional improved features are explained below.
Continuous heat setting machines and continuous space dyeing lines were originally produced mainly for processing straight set yarns. Over time as carpet styling changed and the advent of solution dyed yarns for manufacturing carpets that do not require subsequent dyeing of the carpet yarn in the carpet form has made some carpet constructions less critical. Many factors have contributed to these changes over time, but there have been substantial improvements that enable carpet yarn to be made less expensively. The subsequent dyeing of non-dyed carpet yarns that have been heat set is much more critical from a quality standpoint and any inconsistencies related to the heat setting of the yarn that is subsequently dyed will show up as off-quality in the form of dye streaks as the dye take-up for these yarns will be different, therefore showing light and/or dark streaks in carpets.
Also, over time, the carpet industry has substituted different synthetic fiber types such as polypropylene, polyamide 6 (nylon), polyamide 6,6 (nylon 6,6) and polyester (PET) for example. All of these fiber types can be solution dyed.
At present many bulked continuous filament (BCF) carpets are produced from polyester. Polyester carpets can be manufactured from solution dyed yarns or dyed in the carpet form. Due to the inherent attributes of polyester, for example, stain resistance, polyester requires more energy to heat set the fiber so that the twist is properly set. For example, in a continuous autoclave, a typical heat setting temperatures for nylon 6 will average ˜260 degrees F.; for nylon 6,6, ˜270 degrees F.; and for polyester, ˜280 degrees F. or higher. Polyester is inherently hydrophobic in comparison to nylon and of course, the heat transfer medium in a continuous autoclave is steam under pressure.
As styling over time has changed to more textured yarn for residential carpet, most of the high volume residential styles are manufactured with textured yarn. These carpets are often referred to as trackless carpets, being that the surface of the carpets is somewhat random in appearance after being sheared after the tufting process.
Many variations in the carpet products manufactured from textured yarns are more forgiving as far as heat setting, especially when using solution dyed yarns. Due to the increase in the use of textured yarns, the yarn depositing device is typically a stuffer box or texture box. In a typical example, on a 260 mm width conveyor belt, for a given denier 2 ply straight set yarn, an average belt density would be between ˜300-325 grams/meter. For the same yarn that has been textured, the average belt density would be between ˜275-300 grams/meter, and this belt density would not be evenly spaced apart across the width of the conveyor belt. Due to these facts, this innovative modular pneumatic sealing head with multiple air cylinders is designed to accommodate textured yarn mass bundles and adequately seal the continuous autoclave and reduce wear on the upper and lower sealing rolls and the associated wear items such as lamellas, reducing maintenance cost and associated process downtime required for rebuilding the sealing heads.
It is a principal object of the present invention to provide a modular, pneumatically operated sealing head that will allow for a yarn mass of bulked textured yarn with a higher pile height and an increased density located primarily in the center portion of a conveyor belt of a continuous autoclave to be properly processed as required. The inventions allow heat setting of these types of yarn products with reduced wear on lamellas and sealing rolls for increased productivity and more effective sealing at the entry and exit sealing heads.
It is another object of the present invention to provide pneumatic cylinders that pressurize top and bottom sealing rolls between which the conveyor and yarn pass as they enter and exit the entrance and exit chambers.
It is another object of the present invention to provide top and bottom lamellas that include a two-piece machined base plate that provides increased clamping force.
It is another object of the present invention to provide pneumatic cylinders that are adapted to pressurize the top and bottom lamellas.
It is another object of the present invention to provide pneumatic cylinders that engage side plates for sealing off the ends of the top and bottom sealing rolls.
It is another object of the present invention to provide gib assemblies that include a fixed base with one or more floating gibs attached to the base of the sealing head apparatus to control and accommodate vertical and radial movement of the top and bottom sealing rolls without unacceptable pressure loss.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an integrated air supply reservoir that maintains system pressure to the pneumatic cylinders pressurizing the sealing heads in the event of a loss of pneumatic air supply and/or electrical power supply.
These and other objects and aspects are achieved by providing a continuous process heat set tunnel for setting yarn that includes a heat set tunnel adapted to extend longitudinally along a supporting floor surface and including an entrance end and an entrance sealing roll assembly and an exit end and an exit sealing roll assembly. An interconnected entrance cooling section, yarn steaming chamber and exit cooling section is positioned intermediate the entrance sealing roll assembly and the exit sealing roll assembly. An endless conveyor belt is adapted to transport yarn into, through and out of the heat set tunnel. An entrance sealing head is provided for sealing the entrance end of the heat set tunnel against loss of steam and pressure, and an exit sealing head is provided for sealing the exit end of the heat set tunnel against loss of steam and pressure. The entrance sealing head and the exit head sealing head each include a sealing roll frame for being mounted in heat-sealing relation adjacent the end opening, a bottom sealing roll mounted for rotation in the sealing roll frame and a top sealing roll mounted for rotation in the sealing roll frame and above the bottom sealing roll in roll surface contact with the bottom sealing roll along respective laterally-extending roll widths and defining a nip between which a yarn-transporting conveyor is adapted to pass. The top sealing roll and the bottom sealing roll are interconnected in a respective driving and driven configuration relative to each other, and a prime mover assembly is adapted to provide rotation to the driving one of the top sealing roll and the bottom sealing roll for passing the conveyor through the nip. A top lamella engages the top sealing roll along its width to prevent escape of steam and pressure from the heat set line past the top sealing roll and a bottom lamella engages the bottom sealing roll along its width to prevent the escape of steam and pressure from the heat set line past the bottom sealing roll.
First and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders are carried by the sealing roll frame for exerting a sealing force against the top sealing roll, the conveyor and the bottom sealing roll. At least first and second top pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders are mounted on the sealing roll frame for exerting against the top lamella a sealing force against the roll surface of the top sealing roll, and at least first and second bottom pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders are mounted on the sealing roll frame for exerting against the bottom lamella a sealing force against the roll surface of the bottom sealing roll.
According to another aspect of the invention, first, second and third top lamella sealing cylinders are mounted on the sealing roll frame between the first and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders.
According to another aspect of the invention, first, second and third bottom lamella sealing cylinders are mounted on a bottom frame of the sealing roll frame.
According to another aspect of the invention, first, second and third top lamella sealing cylinders are mounted on the sealing roll frame between the first and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders, and first, second and third bottom lamella sealing cylinders are mounted on a bottom frame of the sealing roll frame.
According to another aspect of the invention, a plurality of side pneumatic cylinders are mounted on the sealing roll frame for exerting a sealing force against opposing ends of the top sealing roll and the bottom sealing roll.
According to another aspect of the invention, the plurality of side pneumatic cylinders exert a sealing force in a direction perpendicular to the force applied by the first and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders carried by the sealing roll frame for exerting a sealing force against the top sealing roll.
According to another aspect of the invention, an electronic pneumatic circuit is adapted to permit pressure values for the first and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders, the at least first and second top pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders and the at least first and second bottom pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders to be independently and variably set to either the same or different pressure values.
According to another aspect of the invention, an integrated compressed air supply reservoir is provided for maintaining pressure to the first and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders, the at least first and second top pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders and the at least first and second bottom pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders upon a loss of pneumatic air supply pressure and/or electrical power supply. An electronically controlled pneumatic circuit is provided that maintains a pneumatic connection between the air supply reservoir and a all sealing cylinders in a closed condition during normal operation and that is opened upon a loss of plant pneumatic pressure and/or electrical power supply to maintain sealing cylinder pressure.
According to another aspect of the invention, a plurality of independent pneumatic circuits are provided for supplying pressures to selected groups of the first and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders, the at least first and second top pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders, the at least first and second bottom pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders and a plurality of side pneumatic cylinders exerting a sealing force in a direction perpendicular to the force applied by the first and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders carried by the sealing roll frame for exerting a sealing force against the top sealing roll upon a loss of pneumatic air supply pressure.
According to another aspect of the invention, a sealing head for sealing an end of a heat set tunnel against loss of steam and pressure is provided, and includes a sealing roll frame for being mounted in heat-sealing relation adjacent the end opening, a bottom sealing roll mounted for rotation in the sealing roll frame, and a top sealing roll mounted for rotation in the sealing roll frame and above the bottom sealing roll in roll surface contact with the bottom sealing roll along respective laterally-extending roll widths and defining a nip between which a yarn-transporting conveyor is adapted to pass. The top sealing roll and the bottom sealing roll are interconnected in a respective driving and driven configuration relative to each other and a prime mover assembly is adapted to provide rotation to the driving one of the top sealing roll and the bottom sealing roll for passing the conveyor through the nip. A top lamella engages the top sealing roll along its width to prevent escape of steam and pressure from the heat set line past the top sealing roll, and a bottom lamella engages the bottom sealing roll along its width to prevent the escape of steam and pressure from the heat set line past the bottom sealing roll. First and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders are carried by the sealing roll frame for exerting a sealing force against the top sealing roll, the conveyor and the bottom sealing roll. At least first and second top pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders are mounted on the sealing roll frame for exerting against the top lamella a sealing force against the roll surface of the top sealing roll, and at least first and second bottom pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders mounted on the sealing roll frame for exerting against the bottom lamella a sealing force against the roll surface of the bottom sealing roll.
According to another aspect of the invention, the bottom sealing roll is mounted for rotation about a fixed position axis of rotation and the top bottom sealing roll is mounted for rotation about a variable position axis of rotation relative to the bottom sealing roll.
According to another aspect of the invention, first and second gibs are mounted on the sealing roll frame in radial alignment with respective first and second laterally spaced-apart bearing blocks in which the top and bottom sealing rolls are mounted for rotation, each of the first and second gibs being adapted to engage the spaced-apart bearing blocks for allowing vertical motion of the top and bottom sealing rolls relative to each other while restricting longitudinal, axial, or rotational movement of the bearing blocks.
According to another aspect of the invention, the first and second gibs each include at least two vertically-spaced floating gib segments adapted to move independently of each other in response to vertical movement of the top sealing roll relative to the bottom sealing roll.
According to another aspect of the invention, the first and second gibs are each affixed to a stationary base by at least one spring element that passively applies a uniform and repeatable contact force within a range upon a slidable connection to a bearing block through which the top and bottom sealing rolls rotate, the slidable connection and contact force restricting longitudinal, axial or rotational movement of the bearing block while permitting controlled vertical and longitudinal movement of the bearing block.
According to another aspect of the invention, the first and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders are adapted to lift the top sealing roll vertically out of sealing contact with the bottom sealing roll.
According to another aspect of the invention, a sealing head for sealing an end of a heat set tunnel against loss of steam and pressure is provided, and includes a sealing roll frame for being mounted in heat-sealing relation adjacent the end opening, a bottom sealing roll mounted for rotation in the sealing roll frame, and a top sealing roll mounted for rotation in the sealing roll frame and above the bottom sealing roll in roll surface contact with the bottom sealing roll along respective laterally-extending roll widths and defining a nip between which a yarn-transporting conveyor is adapted to pass. The top sealing roll and the bottom sealing roll are interconnected in a respective driving and driven configuration relative to each other, and a motor and a connected gear train are provided for driving one of the top sealing roll and the bottom sealing roll and for passing the conveyor through the nip. A top lamella is provided for engaging the top sealing roll along its width to prevent escape of steam and pressure from the heat set line past the top sealing roll, and a bottom lamella is provided for engaging the bottom sealing roll along its width to prevent the escape of steam and pressure from the heat set line past the bottom sealing roll. First and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders are carried by the sealing roll frame for exerting a sealing force against the top sealing roll, the conveyor and the bottom sealing roll, and three pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders are mounted on the sealing roll frame between and in lateral alignment with the first and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders for exerting against the top lamella a sealing force against the roll surface of the top sealing roll. Three pneumatic lamella sealing cylinders are mounted on the sealing roll frame for exerting against the bottom lamella a sealing force against the roll surface of the bottom sealing roll, and four side pneumatic cylinders are mounted on the sealing roll frame for exerting a sealing force against opposing ends of the top sealing roll and the bottom sealing roll in a direction perpendicular to the force applied by the first and second laterally-spaced pneumatic sealing roll cylinders.
The following drawings are referred to in the Detailed Description of a Preferred Embodiment and Best Mode:
Referring now to
The treated yarn passes through a heat/cool transition 54 into an exit cooling section 60 which cools the yarn as it passes into and through an exit sealing roll assembly 30. The yarn is then conveyed to a winder, not shown, where the yarn is packaged on suitable yarn packages and is ready for further processing. The operation of the tunnel segments 51, 52 and 53 is well-known as disclosed in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,219,516.
The entrance roll sealing assembly 20 is shown in detail in
As is best shown in
According to
Also according to
The top and bottom sealing rolls 75, 76 are supported by the bearing blocks 93, 94 and 96, 97, respectively. The sealing head design provides active controlled movement of the top sealing roll 75. This movement is limited to the vertical direction, as transverse and longitudinal movements are restricted by the fit of the bearing blocks 93, 94 to the gib assemblies 140.
As is shown in
The top sealing roll 75 is connected to the pneumatic cylinder 90, 91 to raise and lower the top sealing roll 75. As shown with reference to cylinder 90, rod end fitting 100 attached to pneumatic cylinder 90 engages with receiver block 102 attached to the top surface of the bearing block 93 using a key-and-groove configuration so that only vertical force inputs are transmitted to the bearing block 93, with no restrictive forces transmitted due to assembly misalignments that may be present in the transverse or longitudinal directions. This same description is also applicable to the bearing block 94.
As shown in
As best shown in
In normal operation, the pneumatic pressure supply for the cylinders 90 and 91 is on a separate supply from the pneumatic lamella cylinders 105, 110 and 115, as is the pressure supply for the side plate seal cylinders 170, 171, 172 and 173. The pneumatic cylinders 105, 110 and 115 exert a downward pressure on a top lamella 116 to seal the top lamella 116 against the top sealing roll 75. The pneumatic lamella cylinders 120, 125 and 130 are mounted on the bottom frame 71 for applying pressure to a bottom lamella 118 to seal the bottom lamella 118 against the bottom sealing roll 76. The bottom sealing roll 76 is mounted in stationary bearing blocks 96 and 97. It is intended that the number of pneumatic cylinders applying pressure to the top and bottom lamellas 116 and 118 is modular and therefore variable, and may be decreased or increased depending on the width of the conveyor 87 and/or the thickness of the yarn being transported through the heat set tunnel 10. This modular design is important as industry will continue to seek means to increase productivity and reduce production costs. Without the development of a wider conveyor belt system as a means to increase yarn mass density, the sections of the continuous autoclave must become longer, requiring additional labor for operating the equipment. The application of a wider conveyor belt with an increased yarn mass, especially with textured yarn, allows the conveyor belt speed through the heat set tunnel 10 to be reduced, therefore offering a shorter overall process length for the same amount of dwell time.
Further details of the construction and operation of the lamellas are provided below.
Referring now to
As the floating gibs 151, 152 of the gib assembly 140 are placed into guide tracks 160, 161, the gib face surfaces contact the face surface of the guide tracks 160, 161. Once the floating gibes 151, 152 are in contact and aligned with the block guide tracks 160, 161, the base 149 is secured to the sealing head frames 70, 71 by bolts 165 that extend through bores 166 in the base 149 and are captured by nuts 167. The action of the bolts 165 and nuts 167 generate force as the gib 140 progressively compresses the array of spring elements 156 further until the base 149 is securely fastened to the sealing head frames 70, 71, passively applying a uniform and repeatable contact force within a predictable and sufficient range between the gib assembly 140 and the guide tracks 160, 161. These contact surfaces are in full contact under the resultant applied force allowing desired vertical motion while limiting the possibility of unintended clearances that fail to restrain the bearing blocks 94 and 97 from unwanted longitudinal, axial, or rotational movement. These desired conditions are achieved using interchangeable parts without need for specialized skill in assembling the floating gibs 151, 152 and sliding mechanisms. This design also promotes interchangeability of any floating gib assembly among any number of sealing head assemblies, as unique fit relationships between parts are not present. Again note that the above description is equally applicable to the gib assembly 145 positioned on the left-hand side of the sealing head 20, as shown in, for example,
Referring now to
As with other components, the following description of the top roll lamella 116 is generally applicable to the bottom roll lamella 118, as well. As is well-known, a lamella provides sealing pressure against an adjacent surface against which it is forced. The lamella 116 locks into place between the top of the top sealing roll 75 and the top lamella pneumatic cylinders 105, 110 and 115. The lamella 116 includes a base plate 180, a clamping strip 182, a fixed seal 184, a lamella seal 186 and two hold down strips 188, 190. The base plate includes a recess 192 into which the clamping strip 182 and the lamella seal 186 are positioned. As is shown by comparing
By further securing the lamella 116 and fixed seal 184 with additional clamping force, in case of a yarn lap up on a sealing roll and/or any of the situations described previously where there is a sudden loss of the seal of the continuous autoclave for whatever reason at an entry or exit sealing head, the rapid rate of pressure loss will be reduced by not having the lamella seal 186 and fixed seal 184 forcibly removed from the lamella assemblies.
Further to increasing the clamping force of the lamella and the fixed seal in place, this new design allows for the fixed seal to be removed easily without the use of a mallet. By removing three fasteners allows easy access to remove the fixed seal 184 and lamella 116 and at the same time, increasing the clamping force for each once assembled.
The top side of the lamella 116 includes a series of spaced-apart cleats 194 that are positioned between the top frame 70 and the top sealing roll 75. The pneumatic cylinders 105, 110 and 115 extend downwardly from the top frame 70 and are positioned between pairs of these cleats 194 and thereby lock the lamella 116 into a fixed position where the pneumatic cylinders 105, 110, and 115 bear directly down on the lamella 116, forcing the fixed seal 184 and the lamella seal 186 into a sealing position against the surface of the top sealing roll 75. See also
The bottom side of the lamella 118 is constructed in the same manner to seal against the bottom of the bottom sealing roll 76 under the pressure exerted by the pneumatic cylinders 120, 125 and 130. See
Finally, the lamellas 116 and 118 each include outwardly extending handles 196 that facilitate placement and removal of the lamellas 116 and 118 into and out of operative position against the sealing rolls 75 and 76 as described above.
Other iterations or combinations are possible, and more or fewer pneumatic cylinders may be used to seal a lamella to the surface of a sealing roll. A different number of pneumatic cylinders may be used to seal the top sealing roll 75 than for the bottom sealing roll 76, and the spacing of the pneumatic cylinders may vary top to bottom. The flexibility of this modular design includes the capability to supply different pneumatic pressures to each individual pneumatic cylinder applying force to the lamella plates for any given conveyor belt width and yarn mass which is superior to the existing industry standard sealing heads of today, especially for increased pile heights of textured yarn.
Referring now to
From the above description it is apparent that the entire continuous heat set process is not fully sealed, but permits a controlled leak in several areas. The system is never completely sealed. Pneumatic pressure is supplied to the entry and exit cooling chambers 40 and 60 at a higher pressure than the steam pressure required in the heat setting sections 51, 52 and 53 to keep these heat setting sections 51, 52, 53 of the process isolated to heat set the yarn, and to protect the entry and exit sealing heads 20 and 30 from the high temperature steam in the heat setting sections 51, 52 and 53 of the process. An automatically controlled pneumatic shuttle valve, not shown, varies the air pressure supplied to the entry and/or exit cooling chambers 40 and 60, using feedback from temperature probes in the transition plates 41 and 54 to control the position of the volume of pressurized steam, known in the industry as a “steam bubble”, so that the “steam bubble” is confined within the heat setting sections 51, 52 and 53. Some steam-air mixture leaks out of the entry and exit cooling chambers 40 and 60 at the sealing heads 20 and 30, as well as some air pressure that leaks into the heat setting sections 51, 52 and 53 where the conveyor belt 87 and yarn products transverse between the entry cooling chamber 40 into the entry heat setting section 51 and where the conveyor belt 87 and yarn products transverse between the exit heat setting section 53 and the exit cooling chamber 60. As can be understood by those in the art, a proportional steam valve is constantly operating to supply a variable quantity of sparge steam into the sump of the heat setting sections 51, 52 and 53 to maintain the constant temperature set-point for the heat setting process, to account for the yarn mass on the conveyor belt 87 moving through the system taking away heat as it exits the heat setting section 5, as well as for any leaking of air into the heat setting sections 51, 52 and 53 from by the entry and exit cooling chambers 40 and 60.
As a function of the overall continuous heat setting process, the sealing rolls 75, 76, the lamellas 116, 118 and side plates 72 and 73 are inherently lubricated when the system is pressurized due to the “controlled leak” of steam and water around these elements described above, and especially when yarn mass is being transported through pre-bulking stage on the conveyor belt prior to entering the continuous heat setting sections 51, 52 and 53.
As best shown in
Referring now to
The schematic illustrates three independent circuits supplying pressures A, B and C. Each independent circuit includes a passive shuttle valve 222, 224, 226 respectively, that permits the greater of two pressures presented to each shuttle valve, for example pressures A and A′, B′ and B, and C′ and C, to pass through the respective shuttle valves 222, 224, 226 and on to the actuated respective clamping cylinder. In practice, the pressure differential across the inlet ports of this type of shuttle valve 222, 224, 226 must be a minimum of 10 psi for the shuttle 222, 224, 226 to initiate and complete the act of isolating the port offering the lower pressure from the active actuator circuit.
Under normal operation the system supplies regulated pressurized air to ports designated A, B and C. The air flows at A, B and C pressurize the respective sealing roll, lamella, and side plate clamping cylinder circuits. A reserve supply release solenoid valve 228 is held in an open position by energized solenoid to contain the pressurized volume of reserve air in the reserve supply storage tank 230 and its pneumatic circuit while allowing a no pressure condition at ports A′, B′ and C′, opposite to pressures A, B and C at their respective shuttle valves 222, 224 and 226. Plant air also supplies pressure to a solenoid valve 234 that controls non-operational functions of refilling the storage tank (required following the release of the reserve air volume to the cylinders, and return of the system to a normal power and plant air pressure operating condition), and a reserve system evacuation solenoid valve 236 that evacuates of the storage tank 230 to de-energize the pneumatic system prior to the performance of maintenance at or in the vicinity of the sealing heads 20 and 30. As noted, these functions are controlled by a PLC.
The first mode of system failure is loss of electrical power to the system which causes the solenoid valves within the primary pneumatic control 240 to shift to a closed position, isolating the system from available plant air pressure. No air flow is permitted through the valve in this state, and with the presence of O-ring seals in the valves, and piston seals in the cylinders, the pressurized volume captured in the now-closed circuit will remain pressurized for a period of time, the length of which depends on the rate of depletion of the closed system volume, with which occurs a decrease in system pressure until the pressure lowers to a level which allows the steam pressure within the tunnel 10 to displace the pressurized cylinders, causing the clamped seals to open.
Upon a power failure, this solenoid valve 228 will shift to the closed position via spring return of the spool, releasing the reserve pressurized volume from the storage tank 230 to ports A′, B′ and C′ of shuttle valves 222, 224 and 226. Pressure at these ports ensures that as the pressures A, B and C decrease, the reserve pressure is available to pressurize the cylinders once the 10 psi pressure differential is exceeded, where pressure A′>A, B′>B, C′>C.
In practice, the set pressure level in the reserve supply tank 230 should be set at a high enough level to shift the shuttle valves 222, 224 and 226 well before the clamping system can release due to decreased primary system pressures A, B and C.
The second mode of failure is the partial or complete loss of pressure in the plant air supply. In this instance, pressure at ports A through C will diminish or go to zero, and the reaction of the reserve supply circuit will be the same as described in the power loss failure example of the previous paragraph, as solenoid valve 228 will shift to the closed position in reaction to feedback to a PLC from a pressure switch to monitor for the presence of an adequate supply of air pressure. The reserve supply tank 230 air regulated pressure level is set high enough to quickly release the reserve supply air volume well before the clamped seals can release due to primary air supply pressure loss.
A heat setting machine and a sealing head for a heat setting machine are described above. Various details of the invention may be changed without departing from its scope. Furthermore, the foregoing description of the preferred embodiment of the invention and the best mode for practicing the invention are provided for the purpose of illustration only and not for the purpose of limitation—the invention being defined by the claims.
This U.S. Non-Provisional patent application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/645,377 filed on Mar. 20, 2018, the contents of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62645377 | Mar 2018 | US |