The present invention relates to a device for cutting an extruded plastic pipe to length by means of a separating device and a separating unit that can be rotated about the extrusion axis of the extruded pipe.
DE 102013220620 A1, for example, describes a device for cutting a preferably thick-walled extruded pipe to length, having at least one separating tool and a receiving unit for the separating tool. The separating tool can be moved radially with respect to the extrusion axis and can be rotated by further means around the pipe to be cut to length in order to cut the pipe to length. Here, it is envisaged that the separating tool is operatively connected to a ring element, and the ring element can be moved by means of an axial drive, and the penetration depth of the separating tool and the travel can be determined by means of an adjusting unit.
To adjust the separating unit and ascertain the positions of the separating device, a multiplicity of sensors and control elements is required, and electric energy must furthermore be converted into hydraulic energy to actuate a drive.
An embodiment of the present invention provides a separating device that cuts an extruded pipe to length. The separating device has a separator is rotatably mounted and rotates about an extrusion axis of the extruded pipe, cutting tools arranged on the separator, the cutting tools being configured to perform the cutting of the extruded pipe, the cutting tools being configured to move in accordance with received energy, a rotating receiver arranged in the separator, an electromechanical drive that is configured to move a carrier, a cutting tool of the cutting tools being coupled to the carrier, the electromechanical drive and the carrier being arranged on the rotating receiver, and an energy conductor operatively connected to a moving part of the rotating receiver, the energy conductor being operatively coupled to an energy supplier arranged on the rotating receiver. The energy and control commands are configured to be transmitted to the electromechanical drive via the energy conductor and the energy supplier. The electromechanical drive, the carrier, or the cutting tool are arranged in such a way to yield to a force counter to a separating force that is greater than a required separating force for cutting the extruded pipe.
The present invention will be described in even greater detail below based on the exemplary figures. The invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiments. All features described and/or illustrated herein can be used alone or combined in different combinations in embodiments of the invention. The features and advantages of various embodiments of the present invention will become apparent by reading the following detailed description with reference to the attached drawings which illustrate the following:
Embodiments of the the present invention provide a drive for separating tools in which the mass of the moving part of the separating unit is significantly lower.
In an embodiment of the present invention, at least one electric component is mounted on a rotating receiving unit, via which component the energy and control commands are transmitted to at least one electromechanical unit for moving at least one carrier and a cutting tool arranged thereon. The space defined by the electromechanical unit, the carrier, and the cutting tool arranged thereon is smaller than that defined by a hydraulic unit required for the same generation of force. The electromechanical unit, the carrier, or the cutting tool are arranged in such a way that it is possible to yield to a force counter to the separating force if said force is greater than the required separating force.
The entire system is thus capable of yielding in the case of an overload in order to avoid damage. This may be necessary if there is a lack of circularity in the plastic pipe, for example.
The electromechanical unit for moving the cutting tool is advantageously a linear drive, which comprises a motor-driven spindle. However, the use of a rack with a pinion, or a toothed belt, or a magnetic field is also envisaged.
In the case of hydraulic drives, the operating temperature has an effect on the behavior of the drive and hence on the precise control of the units operated thereby. A large number of technical components is required to detect these different operating states and to respond appropriately and control them. Thus, in the case of cold oil for example, the initial position of a cylinder differs from that with heated oil. All these states must be detected by means of sensors in order to obtain optimum control, and the plant must first of all be run up to operating temperature.
In the case of the device according to the invention, all this can be omitted because all the states can already be stored by means of modern linear drives and can thus be called up at all times.
In accordance with a development, the rotating receiving unit has two surfaces. Only one of the surfaces is provided for mounting the cutting tools, and the entire power supply takes place via the surface of the rotating receiving unit on which no cutting tools are mounted.
In order to be able to yield to a force counter to the separating force if this force is greater than the required separating force, it is envisaged that the electromechanical unit, the carrier or the cutting tool is operatively connected to one or more spring elements.
Various technological solutions can be used in this context. The decisive point is whether it is possible to yield in the case of an overload in the chain of action from the electromechanical unit via the carrier and the cutting tool. If one of the elements is self-locking by nature, it is necessary to incorporate appropriate spring elements in the chain. This can be an arrangement of several diaphragm springs in a linear direction. However, it is also conceivable to use torsion springs or other elements, which develop a spring action. These can be a rack with a pinion and a torsion spring or a magnetic field in which a moving core floats, for example.
Thus, yielding is also ensured in the case of an excessive feed of the cutting tool. Thus, the system offers high flexibility in implementing the cutting or chamfering of the pipe.
Provision is also made to stop the separating process and to resume it, i.e. to allow stop and go in the feed of the cutting tool if required, and also a reverse motion back as far as the starting point. This gives rise to a kind of intermittent cutting action, thereby generating small, short chips, and a brief forward and backward motion to break the chips is also conceivable. Small chips entail little effort in cleaning and additionally less volume in terms of waste.
In the case of a device according to the invention and a method according to the invention, this can all be implemented within fractions of seconds because it is accomplished by means of electric and/or electronic signals. For reverse travel to the starting point, the time required is less than five seconds, and pure stop and go takes a maximum of two seconds. Among the reasons for this is that there is no longer any mechanical play in the components.
By means of conventional hydraulics, this would be possible only at very great expense since there would be a need to control valves and the time required for the switching processes to achieve this is many times greater.
The spring action can also be produced by means of a magnetic field in which a pin floats. A core pin is not moved by means of a self-locking thread but by means of a magnetic field and can thus yield. An electromechanical drive is likewise conceivable. A rack with a pinion, which are not self-locking in their interaction, can likewise yield to the counterpressure and can thus also manage without a spring element in the chain of action. Toothed belts etc. and other non-self-locking embodiments are also conceivable. Thus, hydraulic cylinders, which act like shock dampers, are also conceivable. Embodiments that act like expansion tanks can also be used.
Because the entire system comprising the electromechanical unit, the carrier and the cutting tool arranged thereon is smaller than a hydraulic unit required for the same generation of force, it also weighs less, and this in turn minimizes the masses to be accelerated and thus has an advantageous effect on the overall energy requirement. Of course, it is also possible to use two or more electromechanical units, which then each move a carrier with a cutting tool arranged thereon.
By means of a method according to an embodiment of the present invention, it is ensured that the applied force and the speed of movement of the electromechanical unit are largely independent of the operating temperature.
The speed of response following control commands is just as good at a temperature of −5° C. as at a temperature of +40° C. because an electric signal is processed directly and does not first have to be passed via valves—as in hydraulic systems. The plant thus does not first have to be brought to an operating temperature to ensure a reliable process.
The method, of an embodiment of the present invention, also allows a brief interruption in the separating process, thereby breaking chips. This stopping, possibly a reverse motion, and restarting or moving forward again takes place within fractions of seconds. Such cutting sequences can be stored as a master in the controller and called up again in the case of identical or similar cutting processes.
By virtue of a method according to an embodiment of the invention and a device according to an embodiment of the invention, it is also possible to arrange driven tools on the carrier. The system is thus not restricted to chipless separation. Thus, it is just as possible to use milling cutters as cutting tools as it is to use saws.
Using an intelligent tool recognition system, which can read out markings on the tool or can recognize the shape of the tool, defects or damage can be avoided by means of the controller. Through the recognition of the tool, it is also possible to call up parameters that are already stored in the controller. Thus, for example, the feed and penetration depth in the case of a chamfering tool are limited and can be directly preset by the recognition system.
Tool detection can be performed electromechanically, and it is proposed, for example, to configure both the geometrical embodiment of the coupling unit between the tool and the tool receptacle in such a way that it is possible to clearly recognize which tool has been mounted. By means of the electrics, e.g. a certain arrangement of a contact matrix, the machine controller clearly recognizes which tool has been mounted. By virtue of this recognition, it is possible for the controller to ascertain whether this tool is suitable for the process to be carried out. If this is not the case, the controller can output an alarm or even stop or refuse implementation. This check can be performed in dependence on the pipe diameter or pipe thickness, for example, and recognition in this case can be based on the inserted clamping jaws or equally well on the separating blades or merely on the cutting tools for chamfering.
A number of embodiments for marking the tool and for recognizing the mounted tool are proposed. Thus, a numerical code that is read out by a camera can be used as a marking. However, the camera can also recognize the tool by means of its shape or parts of the shape. The use of an RFID tag with a corresponding reader is also conceivable. RFID stands for radio-frequency identification and is a contactless transmitter-receiver system. Based on RFID technology, data transfer can then also take place by near field communication, abbreviated to NFC. NFC is an international transfer standard for the contactless exchange of data. However, tool recognition can also be accomplished by means of a barcode or a QR code with an associated reader, the barcode scanner or the QR scanner.
Recognizing the inserted tool is not the only possibility, however. The invention also allows the detection of the pipe diameter in production because the position of the clamping jaws that fix the pipe during cutting can be read out. This has the advantage that the travels for releasing the fixed pipe can be optimized. Neither the clamping jaws nor the cutting tools need to move back into the initial position in the case of a small pipe diameter, for example, it being sufficient to move back until the pipe, including its standard tolerances, has been released in order to be able to continue moving it past the separating unit in the extrusion direction without damage.
One side of the separating unit 8 is shown in
The carriers 16 and the tools 9 have a positioning aid 20, whereby assembly is simplified. In addition, the tools 9 are constructed in such a way that the total length 19 of all the tools that can be used is identical. This has the advantage that it is not necessary to move the carrier 16 when changing a tool for the same pipe diameter since the external clearance of the tool with respect to the outside diameter of the pipe remains unchanged. In addition, the tools can be provided with a tool recognition system. The machine controller can then recognize whether unsuitable tools are being mounted for the separating process envisaged and can respond accordingly with warning messages.
Irrespective of this, the tool 9, which is equipped with a tip for chamfering and is mounted on the left-hand carrier 16, can likewise be moved toward and away from the extrusion axis 7 by means of the linear drive 15. In addition, the tool 9 for chamfering is capable of yielding in the case of an overload by virtue of a spring element 21, in this case an arrangement of a plurality of diaphragm springs. This means sliding resiliently away from the occurring load, away from the extrusion axis, radially with respect to the extrusion axis, depending on the spring stress. The force above which yielding is to take place can thus be determined by means of the number of diaphragm springs.
However, other components acting as spring elements, even a resilient rotary motion during which the unit is pivoted out of the radial axis, are also conceivable.
While embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and foregoing description, such illustration and description are to be considered illustrative or exemplary and not restrictive. It will be understood that changes and modifications may be made by those of ordinary skill within the scope of the following claims. In particular, the present invention covers further embodiments with any combination of features from different embodiments described above and below. Additionally, statements made herein characterizing the invention refer to an embodiment of the invention and not necessarily all embodiments.
The terms used in the claims should be construed to have the broadest reasonable interpretation consistent with the foregoing description. For example, the use of the article “a” or “the” in introducing an element should not be interpreted as being exclusive of a plurality of elements. Likewise, the recitation of “or” should be interpreted as being inclusive, such that the recitation of “A or B” is not exclusive of “A and B,” unless it is clear from the context or the foregoing description that only one of A and B is intended. Further, the recitation of “at least one of A, B and C” should be interpreted as one or more of a group of elements consisting of A, B and C, and should not be interpreted as requiring at least one of each of the listed elements A, B and C, regardless of whether A, B and C are related as categories or otherwise. Moreover, the recitation of “A, B and/or C” or “at least one of A, B or C” should be interpreted as including any singular entity from the listed elements, e.g., A, any subset from the listed elements, e.g., A and B, or the entire list of elements A, B and C.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2018 114 472.5 | Jun 2018 | DE | national |
10 2018 114 473.3 | Jun 2018 | DE | national |
10 2018 114 474.1 | Jun 2018 | DE | national |
This application is a U.S. National Phase Application under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Application No. PCT/EP2019/065078, filed on Jun. 10, 2019, and claims benefit to German Patent Applications No. DE 10 2018 114 472.5, filed on Jun. 15, 2018, No. DE 10 2018 114 473.3, filed on Jun. 15, 2018, and No. DE 10 2018 114 474.1, filed on Jun. 15, 2018. The International Application was published in German on Dec. 19, 2019, as WO 2019/238609 A1 under PCT Article 21(2).
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2019/065078 | 6/10/2019 | WO | 00 |