The preferred embodiment concerns a device for engraving of cups into printing cylinders for rotogravure comprising at least one laser light source by means of which the laser light is directed on the printing cylinder (thereby driven such that it rotates) to form the cups. An exit of the laser light source is constantly moved in the axial direction of the printing cylinder dependent on the rotation of the printing cylinder or an exit of the laser light source is respectively moved by a predetermined amount in the axial direction of the printing cylinder after completion of a complete rotation of the printing cylinder.
A device is known for engraving of cups for rotogravure (unpublished European patent application 04 004 470.3). In the formation of the cups, burrs are created in the border area of the cups (towards the printing cylinder in which the cups are formed), both in the engraving of printing cylinders for rotogravure by means of a mechanical engraving member (for example a diamond engraver) and in the engraving of printing cylinders for rotogravure by means of laser light. The burrs compulsorily created at each mechanically-engraved cup are either: 1) removed in a special work process (after conclusion of the complete engraving of the printing cylinder) via two-dimensional deburring of the entire printing cylinder circumference in which the cups have been formed, and these cups are subsequently polished if necessary, or: 2) a metal removal device runs at a certain distance following and offset from the engraving member, if necessary synchronized with this with regard to the axial movement of the engraving member along the printing cylinder, such that the surface of the printing cylinder charged by the metal removal member is deburred at a certain interval in the axial direction after the mechanical engraving member in the course of the rotation of the printing cylinder.
These methods of deburring of cups formed by means of mechanical engraving is possible in the form described in the preceding only given a mechanical engraving of the cups.
The methods of deburring described in the preceding fail, given the engraving of cups in printing cylinders by means of laser light. This has as its significant reason that a cup produced by means of laser light, due to the liquefaction of the material and its vaporization in the course of the charging of the surface of the printing cylinder (which is comprised of metal at least in the surface region), has a specific edge bead that stands out from the actual surface of the metallic printing cylinder, which is always formed in the border area of the cup formed by means of laser light, and is in fact created by the melting of the metal and the vaporization of the metal in the center of the laser light beam. Due to the beam profile of the laser beam, the border area is merely melted, such that a part of the metal melted in the center of the beam profile (namely the part that is not vaporized) accumulates there.
In high-resolution laser engraving a plurality of cups (for example 50 and more cups) must be formed on the same surface of the printing cylinder on which previously a single cup could be formed by means of mechanical engraving, since the tracks in which the laser light impinges around the circumference of the printing cylinder to form the high-resolution plurality of cups lie very close to one another in the axial movement direction of the laser light along the printing cylinder. Given laser engraving, after an engraving in one track around the printing cylinder, the adjacent, finished engraved track would be impaired by the aforementioned melt accumulation at the beginning of the next track. Thus the engraving in the preceding track would be unusable since the cups previously formed in the preceding track partially close again due to the melt accumulation of the subsequent track, however, would be impaired at least with regard to the cup contour such that a printing cylinder so engraved with laser light would deliver defective print results.
Many attempts have been made in this context, for example, to focus the beam profile of the laser light and to confine it via diaphragms such that the melt accumulation is no longer so serious. However, this normally has the result that the effective emitted power of the laser light was also limited at the impinging location on the printing cylinder, such that the intended high-resolution laser engraving inherently possible by means of the laser light was again significantly limited with regard to the good engraving results thereby achieved.
It is thus an object to achieve a device previously cited type with which a high-resolution engraving with very satisfactory print results of the engraved printing cylinder is possible by means of laser engraving, and that elaborate deburring measures for the finished, engraved printing cylinder are foregone. Thus the finished, engraved printing cylinder is substantially ready for the subsequent printing event after conclusion of the laser engraving. Thus the production expenditure of the printing cylinder produced for the printer can be significantly reduced relative to the processes for its production, whereby the device can in principle be executed in a simple manner and also can be equipped in devices known in the prior art via corresponding retrofitting in the sense of the preferred embodiment.
In a device for engraving of cups into a rotating printing cylinder for rotogravure, at least one laser light source with which laser light for formation of the cups is directed onto the rotating printing cylinder. A metal removal element is arranged in a region of an impingement location of the laser light on the printing cylinder to form the cups such that a melt accumulation of material of the printing cylinder which forms a burr at the cups created by the impingement of the laser light is removed substantially continuously and substantially immediately after its creation with the removal element.
For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the invention, reference will now be made to the preferred embodiment illustrated in the drawings and specific language will be used to describe the same. It will nevertheless be understood that no limitation of the scope of the invention is thereby intended, such alterations and further modifications in the illustrated device, and/or method, and such further applications of the principles of the invention as illustrated therein being contemplated as would normally occur now or in the future to one skilled in the art to which the invention relates.
With the preferred embodiment, a metal removal element is arranged in the region of the impingement location of the laser light on the printing cylinder, such that with this metal removal tool the melt accumulation of the material which forms a burr, which is created given the charging of the printing cylinder with laser light to form the cup, is continuously removed immediately after its creation.
The advantage of the preferred embodiment is essentially that the melt accumulation created on all sides of the cup is removed by means of the removal element from the engraving track virtually immediately after its engraving. The track is defined such that it either runs in a screw formation around the printing cylinder or runs strictly radially around the printing cylinder and, after execution of a complete rotation of the printing cylinder, a new track is begun, displaced by a corresponding width of the track in the axial direction of the printing cylinder, etc. Since, according to the preferred embodiment, the melt accumulation is removed on all sides of the cup immediately after the engraving of the cup in the axial direction of the printing cylinder, the melt accumulation of the first, finished engraving track on which the cups of the first engraving track lie is no longer hindering a new engraving track adjustment to the finished engraving track.
After completion of the engraving of the entire printing cylinder, the entire printing cylinder is thus rid of melt accumulation, i.e. from burrs, such that the printing cylinder can be used for its intended printing function virtually without post-processing.
The metal removal element virtually only needs to be associated with the track that is directly provided with cups by means of laser light in the course of the engraving member, or in which the cups are formed. However, embodiments of the invention are also possible in which a plurality of laser beams simultaneously charge a plurality of tracks in parallel to form the cups. In order to ensure that the melt accumulation thereby created per cup per track does not cause a hindrance to the adjustment track in the aforementioned sense, and thus insufficiently-engraved cups are created, it is advantageous to arrange the metal removal element immediately following in the region of the impingement location of the laser light on the printing cylinder in the rotation direction of the printing cylinder, such that the melt accumulation can be removed virtually immediately after the creation of the cup by means of laser light.
In principle, each laser light source for the purposes of the preferred embodiment, can have the requirement that it is capable of delivering a sufficiently high laser energy for execution of the engraving event. The laser light source can thereby be, for example, arranged displaced from the region of the impingement location of the laser light on the printing cylinder, whereby the generated laser light can, for example, be supplied to an optic for focusing of the laser light and, if necessary, can also be conducted for collimation of the laser light via a light conductor that is arranged immediately in the region of the impingement location of the laser light on the printing cylinder. Given this design, the light conductor can additionally also be designed as an active fiber laser in order to increase the energy of the laser light at the impingement location of the laser light on the printing cylinder.
With regard to the previously-posed object, it is advantageous in one preferred embodiment to design at least the light source and the output unit of the laser light (which, in the sense of the preceding statements, comprises the optic of the laser device) such that they can move in combination along the printing cylinder in its axial direction, i.e. the output unit of the laser light and the laser light source are advantageously comprised in a unit that can be moved back and forth in the axial direction on a support that is axis-parallel to the rotation axis of the printing cylinder. This embodiment has the advantage that the entire unit can be exchanged and replaced by a new one given malfunctions and maintenance, such that an interruption of the engraving event can be reduced to a minimum by means of this advantageous embodiment of the device, and the maintenance and servicing of the laser unit can be very significantly simplified.
Since the metal removal element for removal of the melt accumulation spatially correlates with the creation location, i.e. the location of the formation of the cup by laser-light charging, it is advantageous to design the removal element coupled (in terms of actuation) together with at least the output of the laser light, such that the removal element can move along the printing cylinder, such that a separate actuator of the removal element can be omitted in this advantageous embodiment of the device, and thus a separate controller of the removal element can also be omitted with regard to its movement in the axial direction relative to the printing cylinder. However, in principle it is also possible to decouple the movement of the removal element along the printing cylinder from the movement of the laser light along the printing cylinder, i.e. to provide it with its own actuator.
In principle, any suitable and suitably-shaped metal removal elements are provided to achieve the object. However, it has proven to be advantageous to design the removal element in the form of a scraper blade directed at its end towards the printing cylinder, and in fact as these are used in the machining of metal parts via scraping.
Normally, the metal removal element continuously rests against the printing cylinder in the processing of the printing cylinder by means of laser light to form the cups, and in fact the removal element rests against the printing cylinder by means of a suitably-adjusted force that, among other things, also applies to the regular metallic material of the printing cylinder in which the cups are formed. However, since the removal element wears away in the course of its removal activity, it is advantageous to design the removal element controlled with regard to application on the printing cylinder, such that the wear can be taken into account during the engraving event of the printing cylinder and can be continuously applied on the printing cylinder with suitable control and with uniform pressure. For exchange and adjustment, it can be advantageous to also develop the removal element such that it can be moved away from the printing cylinder.
In a further advantageous embodiment of the device, due to a spring force the removal element is supported on the surface of the printing cylinder via a support element with which the factor can be accounted for that the removal element can, for example, not move uncontrolled relative to the surface of the printing cylinder as a consequence of a wear during the intended operation as well as the possible variation of the scraper angle as a consequence of said wear, and said printing cylinder is not possibly consequently damaged.
In order to prevent that the support element itself damages the surface of the printing cylinder, it can be advantageous to design the support area of the support element from a hard material with good sliding properties, or even to form the support surface from diamond.
In principle, it can be reasonable to subsequently polish or grind the corresponding regions of the surface of the printing cylinder that have been directly engraved and whose melt accumulation has been remedied by the removal element of the preferred embodiment, i.e. to at least reproduce the original quality of the surface of the printing cylinder before execution of the engraving. A polishing element that polishes the region of the removed melt accumulation can thus be arranged immediately following the region of the metal removal element in the rotation direction of the printing cylinder. In another advantageous embodiment of the invention, the metal removal element is itself designed in the form of a polishing element, i.e. the melt accumulation is removed via polishing, whereby a separate, additional polishing event after the removal event can be omitted.
Reference is first made to the representation of
In the embodiment of the device 10 shown in
A metal removal element 20 is arranged in the region 18, i.e. in the immediate proximity of the impingement location 19 of the laser light 14 on the printing cylinder 12, which removal element 20 is discussed further below in detail in connection with the function of the removal element 20.
In a manner different than is shown in
The device 10 is again shown in side view in
The metal removal element 20 (compare
The unit 23, of which either only the output unit 15 or the entire unit 23 itself can be moved along the axial direction 17 of the printing cylinder on the stated support, comprises the actual laser light source 13 that, for example, can be comprised of at least one laser diode, but can also be comprised of another suitable laser source. For operation of the laser light source 13, a supply voltage is supplied by a voltage supply device 30, whereby the laser light generated by the laser light source 13 (as indicated above) is fed to the output unit 15 that comprises an optical system (such as lenses and possibly diaphragms) in order to generate a suitably focused and possibly collimated beam of laser light 14, whereby the laser light 14 is fed to the surface 24 of the printing cylinder 12. This occurs by means of a control and regulation unit 31 that has embedded into the overall control a regulation function of the device 10. Since this control of the device 10 as well as the control and regulation of the unit 23 for the components listed in the preceding are known in the prior art, and at this point this is not further discussed.
Reference is now made to the representations of
As already indicated above, the printing cylinder 12 rotates in the direction of arrow 22 in the execution of the engraving. The individual cups 11 in tracks 27 are thereby engraved in series in the rotation direction 22 for execution of the engraving.
In the image according to
In the preferred embodiment the melt accumulation 21 can be completely removed, independent of whether the metallic material of the printing cylinder 12 in which the cups 11 are engraved is copper, chromium, or zinc.
While a preferred embodiment has been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and foregoing description, the same is to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive in character, it being understood that only the preferred embodiment has been shown and described and that all changes and modifications that come within the spirit of the invention both now or in the future are desired to be protected.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
04010675.9 | May 2004 | EP | regional |