The present invention refers to a cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly useful for producing slits and creasing-lines in a material. The invention also refers to a method for cutting and creasing a material, such as webs or boards of corrugated or otherwise compressible paper or plastics.
In the production of packaging blanks, e.g., it is a common practice to feed a web material to be engaged by creasing tools and cutting tools arranged to produce creasing lines and slits, respectively, in a pattern adapted for making a packaging design, such as a box. In the prior art, creasing wheels and cutting wheels are separately supported and arranged in tandem in machines through which the web material is advanced by feed rollers. Examples of prior art cutting wheels and creasing wheels may be found in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,072,641; U.S. Pat. No. 5,964,686, and U.S. Pat. No. 6,840,898.
Each operative engagement with a material being fed through separate stations for creasing, cutting etc., increases the risk of the material jamming in or between the separate stations. More stations also means more expensive components such as feed rollers and supporting structures, and results in machines of greater lengths. Longer machines makes the accuracy in lateral guidance of a web material more problematic, and also makes it more difficult to observe and monitor the process and to reach into the structure at maintenance work.
Another problem encountered in connection with forming slits through a corrugated paper board, e.g., is the thickness of the material, resulting from the corrugation that separates the upper paper liner from the lower paper liner. Cutting the corrugated paper board with the circular edge of a cutting wheel thus requires an excessive cutting length through the upper liner and through the corrugation, which may weaken the finished packaging and which may form crack indications that occasionally will lead to rupture. Obviously, this problem grows with increasing radial dimensions of the cutting-wheel.
The present invention aims to avoid these problems. It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly, as well as a method, by which safety of operation and precision is enhanced upon cutting through a corrugated or otherwise compressible material.
The object is met through the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly and by the method, defined in the appending claims.
Briefly, the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly comprises a cutting tool arranged between a pair of rotatable creasing-wheel halves, the creasing-wheel halves being of equal radial dimension. The cutting tool is controllable between the creasing-wheel halves to engage and to produce a slit in a material which is moved relative to the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly, or vice versa.
In a preferred embodiment, the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly comprises a circular disc having a cutting edge. The disc is rotatable and movably supported between a pair of rotatable creasing-wheel, the creasing-wheel halves being of equal radius. The disc is controllable, between the creasing-wheel halves, for movement between a non-operative position wherein said cutting edge is withdrawn inside the outer peripheries of the creasing-wheel halves, and an operative position wherein the cutting edge is projected radially outside said peripheries.
Preferably, the creasing-wheel halves are ring-shaped and journalled for rotation on rollers, the rollers guiding an inner periphery of the ring-shaped creasing-wheel halves.
Also preferred, the radius of the cutting-wheel is less than the radius of the creasing-wheel halves, and an axis of rotation of the cutting-wheel is displaced from a common axis of rotation for the creasing-wheel halves. In this preferred embodiment, the cutting-wheel is guided and controlled for a linear movement in radial direction of the creasing-wheel halves, said movement being substantially perpendicular to the general plane of a material that is processed by the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly.
Briefly, the method of cutting and creasing a corrugated or otherwise compressible material involves the provision and control of a cutting tool arranged between a pair of rotatable creasing-wheel halves, the creasing-wheel halves being of equal radius. Preferably, the cutting tool is a circular disc having a cutting edge. The disc is arranged to be rotatable and movably supported between the two creasing-wheel halves. Upon cutting, the disc is controlled for projecting said edge radially outside the peripheries of said creasing-wheel halves to engage and to cut a slit through the material, which is moved relative to the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly, or vice versa.
Preferably, the creasing-wheel halves are driven and controlled for compression of a material while simultaneously controlling the cutting tool to engage and to cut a slit through the compressed material, resulting in a better controlled cut, higher accuracy and less risk of cracking. In the preferred embodiment, the creasing-wheel halves and the cutting tool are arranged and controlled for engagement with the material at points of contact located essentially on a common line, parallel with an axis of rotation of the creasing-wheel halves.
The invention is further explained below with reference to the accompanying, diagrammatic drawings, showing one embodiment of the invention and wherein
With reference to the drawings, a cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly according to a preferred embodiment of the invention comprises a circular disc 1 having a cutting edge 2. The cutting edge may be formed continuously about the entire periphery of the disc, or serrated. The disc 1 is rotatable and movably supported between a pair of rotatable creasing-wheel halves 3 and 4, the creasing-wheel halves being of equal radial dimension. In this context, the expression “creasing-wheel halves” refers to a creasing-wheel structure by which a creasing line is produced by depression of a corrugated or otherwise compressible material in two parallel lines so narrowly spaced that also the material between the lines is compressed, creating in practice a single creasing line allowing for folding the material in a subsequent finishing process. The disc is controllable for movement between a non-operative position (
In a useful application, the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly is arranged in a machine for producing packaging blanks from a corrugated or otherwise compressible web material. A bracket, the structure of which may be adapted for lateral displacement of the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly relative to the machine, positions the assembly with respect to a web material that is advanced through the machine in order to be engaged by the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly, the assembly forming slits and creases in longitudinal and/or transverse directions relative to the feed direction of the material. Optionally, curved or diagonal cutting- and creasing lines may likewise be produced by a proper design and control of the supporting structure. Typically, the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly is associated with counter-pressure rollers (not shown in the drawings) supporting the web material from the opposite side and assisting cutting- and creasing-wheel assemblies operating in the feed direction, or by a transverse supporting element (also not shown in the drawings) running transversally to the feed direction and assisting a cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly operating in the transverse direction. Attached to the bracket, or formed integrally therewith, is a carrier 6. As will be explained further below, the carrier 6 houses bearings and drive means for controlling rotation and movements of the creasing-wheel halves 3,4 and the cutting tool or disc 1.
The creasing-wheel in the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly of the present invention comprises two rings 3 and 4, each of which is formed with an outer and an inner periphery. The rings 3 and 4 are of equal outer radial dimension and, typically, also of equal inner radial dimension. The inner peripheries of the rings 3,4 are guided on rollers 7, 8 and 9, arranged for the rings to be freely rotating with their centers located on a common axis of rotation. The inner peripheries of the two rings are chamfered and received, respectively, in corresponding notches formed circumferentially on the rollers. The outer peripheries of the rings 3,4 are rounded towards the sides facing outward of the creasing-wheel, while the sides facing the opposite ring may connect more sharply to the periphery. The rings are journalled on the rollers with an axial spacing, providing there between a gap sufficient for the disc 1 to move between the rings into an operative position as will be further described below.
The rollers 7, 8 and 9 are journalled for rotation on bearings arranged on a lifter 10, which is guided in the carrier 6 for linear movements substantially perpendicular to the web material, i.e. in a vertical direction when the web material is advanced horizontally beneath the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly as is typically the case. The lifter 10 comprises a vertical rod 11 reaching through the carrier 6 and guided therein through an opening formed in a lower member of the carrier. In its top end, the rod 11 carries a slide block 12 that journals a roller 7 for the creasing-wheel halves 3,4. The slide block 12 is guided on pillars 13, 14 depending from an upper member of the carrier 6, supporting a jam free motion of the lifter. In its lower end, the rod 11 carries a horizontal girder 15 that journals a pair of rollers 8 and 9 for the creasing-wheel halves 3,4.
The operative positions of the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly are controlled by the operation of a power unit acting between the carrier 6 and the girder 15. In the shown embodiment, two cylinders 16 and 17 powered by air are attached to the carrier while the cylinder pistons 18, 19 are connected to the ends, respectively, of the girder 15. Extension of the pistons will thus extend the lifter 11, girder 15, rollers 7, 8 and 9, and the rings or creasing-wheel halves 3 and 4. Naturally, hydraulic liquid or electricity may be used to operate the power unit/units.
The cutting tool, i.e. the disc 1 described above, is carried by the girder 15, or more precisely, journalled for free rotation on a pivot bearing 20 connected to the piston ends of two cylinder units 21 and 22 that are carried by the girder. By operation of the cylinders 21 and 22, in this embodiment driven by air, the disc 1 is controlled to move relative to and between the creasing-wheel halves, from a non-operative position shown in
In practice, preferably, the cutting tool or disc 1 is projected by operation of the cylinders 21,22 to form a slit through the compressible material, while simultaneously the creasing-wheel halves 3,4 are activated for compression of the material, thus reducing the thickness and avoiding the need for excessive cutting length through, e.g., the upper liner and corrugation of a corrugated material. By arranging the cutting-wheel to cut the material through a gap formed between the halves of a split creasing-wheel, the points of contact between the material and the creasing-wheel halves and cutting-wheel, respectively, are located substantially on a common line, parallel with an axis of rotation of the cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly. Since cutting is performed on a reduced material thickness, cutting discs of reduced diameter size may be used. The smaller diameter also allows for reduced thickness of the disc, allowing a minimum gap between the creasing-wheel halves. In other words, since compression and cutting is performed simultaneously in more or less one single point, using a cutting disc of small dimensions, the precision by which slits may be formed through a corrugated or otherwise compressible material in a machine for producing packaging blanks will be substantially enhanced through the present invention.
Arranging the cutting tool simultaneously to operate at substantially the same point as the creasing tool makes a packaging design program more easy to produce, and may also increase the capacity of the machine. The reason for the later is, that a cut normally should be performed after the creasing operation in order to avoid cracks. To secure this, an inactive backward movement of the tool may be required or multiple tools be installed in succession. Such inactive movement and multiple installations will be avoided through the present invention.
Furthermore, projecting the cutting tool all way through a corrugated material will take longer time as compared to a corrugated material in a compressed condition, where the tool only has to project a couple of millimeters. This difference in length of movement makes it possible to increase the capacity of the machine while still maintaining the accuracy of cutting, especially when the tools are operated while the material is moved relative to the assembly or vice versa. This is particularly important when cutting short slits or perforations through a corrugated material, e.g.
The preferred embodiment also is a weight-effective solution that allows the use of creasing-wheels having greater radius: in order to achieve more easily folded creasing lines, higher pressing force may be applied from the bigger creasing-wheels without cracking the paper liner of a corrugated paper board.
In the shown embodiment the cutting tool is a circular disc, which may be preferred in connection with corrugated paper boards. However, other types of cutting tools may be arranged between the creasing-wheel halves and controlled for a single-point engagement in cooperation with the split creasing-wheel. Alternative tools, such as laser cutters, water jet cutters, abrasive water jets and non-circular knifes, e.g., may thus be used in combination with the split creasing-wheel to achieve the higher precision cuts through a compressed section of a compressible material.
Although the invention is explained with reference to a machine for producing packaging blanks from a web material that is advanced through the machine, the suggested compact structure of a cutting- and creasing-wheel assembly is equally useful in applications where a stationary material is processed by one or more cutting- and creasing-wheel assemblies, driven for movement relative to the material.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0500431-2 | Feb 2005 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE06/00233 | 2/22/2006 | WO | 00 | 11/9/2007 |