1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a winding machine for winding a web of paper or other raw material or textile stocks, e.g. polymeric films, into large rolls. More particularly, it relates to a dual-drum winding machine capable of producing uniformly tightly wound rolls of such web material across the entire radius of the roll.
2. Description of the Related Art
In conventional dual-drum winding machines, a web of material, e.g. paper, polymeric sheet or film, textile material, etc., is continuously wound on a central core from a source of the web material that is fed continuously from outside the winding machine. As more of the web material becomes wound around the central core, the diameter of the resulting roll increases commensurately, with the increasing diameter roll being supported in a position substantially centered between two adjacent and level support rolls or drums.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,593,106 discloses a typical conventional dual-drum winder characteristic of the prior art, and is incorporated herein by reference. FIG. 1 of the '106 patent shows the web roll of increasing diameter supported in a rolling position B between two adjacent and level winding drums 36 and 38. As the drums 36 and 38 are rotated clockwise, the web roll is thereby caused to rotate counterclockwise and thus to wind additional web material thereon from the web material source shown at W in FIG. 1 of '106. Once the web roll has achieved its final diameter D, the piston-driven cutter 48 extends upward to cut the web source from the now complete web roll, and the finished roll is urged out of the machine via an ejection mechanism comprising a sweep arm 42 and associated piston 44 as shown in the figure.
From FIG. 1 of '106 and the foregoing description, it will be evident to those skilled in the art that existing winding machines such as that disclosed in '106 rely on the web source, which supplies the web material to the winding machine, to also supply the necessary web tension to provide a tightly wound finished web roll. This arrangement results in poorly tensioned web rolls causing the finished rolls to have nonuniform radial or layer density (density of web material on the finished roll measured in layers of web material per radial inch).
In addition, as the source web material is severed from the finished web roll, a long and loose untensioned flap portion of source web material results. This loose flap portion is pressed against a newly supplied central core to begin forming the next successive web roll. The loose flap portion is not tensioned by the web source because the web is severed downstream of the leading drum roller (e.g. roller 32 in FIG. 1 of '106). Hence, the loose flap portion of the web material typically includes myriad folds, creases, lines, wrinkles and other random undesirable gatherings of web material characteristic of untensioned webs. As this loose flap portion is laid against the spinning newly supplied central core, additional layers of web material are wound thereover as the web roll grows. As these additional layers are wound on the creased, untensioned underlying layers, they too become creased and folded, exhibiting undesirable gathering characteristic of web material that has not been properly tensioned. The fact that the web is conventionally severed some distance (e.g. 12 inches, or up to 2 or 4 feet or more) from the newly supplied central core contributes significantly to this problem because the resulting loose flap is very long; sometimes many times the circumference of the central core. The overall result is that a significant portion of the finished web roll within a certain radial distance from the central core is unusable in subsequent processing operations for which tightly and uniformly tensioned material webs are required. In fact, the folds and creases in the rolled web material can lead or contribute to exactly the edge profile defects of finished web rolls with which the '106 patent was principally concerned.
Accordingly, there is a need in the art for a dual-drum winding machine that overcomes the aforementioned deficiencies characteristic of the prior art. Preferably, such an improved dual-drum winding machine will not rely solely on the web source to supply web tension to the forming web roll. Also preferably, such an improved machine will significantly minimize or substantially eliminate the loose flap portion supplied to fresh central cores which has been characteristic of and problematic in the prior art.
A winding machine for winding a web of material around a central core is provided. The machine has a leading winding drum having a surface and a succeeding winding drum having a surface, the leading and succeeding winding drums being arranged such that a first horizontal plane tangent to a topmost position of the surface of the leading winding drum is located above a second horizontal plane tangent to a topmost position of the surface of the succeeding winding drum.
A method for winding web material around a central core is also provided including the following steps: a) providing a winding machine that has a leading winding drum having a surface and a succeeding winding drum having a surface, the leading and succeeding winding drums being arranged such that a first horizontal plane tangent to a topmost position of the surface of the leading winding drum is located above a second horizontal plane tangent to a topmost position of the surface of the succeeding winding drum; b) providing a substantially cylindrical central core for winding the web material therearound to form a web roll; c) supporting the web roll in a winding position against both the leading winding drum and the succeeding winding drum; and d) winding the web material onto the web roll in the winding position.
A further method for winding web material around a central core is provided having the following steps: a) providing a winding machine having a leading winding drum and a succeeding winding drum; b) providing a substantially cylindrical core for winding the web material therearound to form a web roll; c) supporting the web roll in a winding position against both the leading winding drum and the succeeding winding drum; d) winding the web material onto the web roll in said winding position; and e) supporting or pressing the web roll against the succeeding winding drum with greater force than against the leading winding drum.
A still further method for winding web material around a central core is provided having the following steps: a) providing a winding machine having a leading winding drum and a succeeding winding drum; b) providing a substantially cylindrical core for winding the web material therearound to form a web roll; c) supplying a web of the web material to the winding machine via a web pathway of the machine; d) supporting the web roll in a winding position against both the leading winding drum and the succeeding winding drum; e) winding the web material onto the web roll in the winding position; f) tensioning the web of web material in a position ahead of the leading winding drum relative to the web pathway; and g) tensioning the web of web material in a position adjacent the winding position.
a is a close-up view of the web cutting device of
As used herein, when a range such as 5–25 (or 5 to 25) is given, this means preferably at least 5 and, separately and independently, preferably not more than 25.
Referring to
Substantially centrally located between the first and second vertical support structures 13 and 14, at or adjacent the base of the winding machine 10, a pair of winding drums 20 and 22 are provided. The winding drums 20 and 22 are generally cylindrical in shape and extend between the base structures 11 of the frame 12. The winding drums 20 and 22 are preferably rotationally supported by drum mounts 21. The winding drums 20 and 22 are spaced apart from one another such that a gap 19 is provided therebetween. The first or leading winding drum 20 is preferably the same diameter as the second or succeeding winding drum 22. The leading winding drum 20 is coupled to a first drive motor 24 and the succeeding winding drum 22 is coupled to a second drive motor 26. Each drive motor 24 and 26 (shown schematically in
In operation, the winding machine 10 winds web material 50, which is supplied from a source outside of the machine (shown schematically in the drawings as “SOURCE”) onto a series of continuously and successively provided tubular cores 40. Additional machine elements of the invented winding machine 10 will now be described in reference to its manner of operation. Because the machine 10 operates continuously to supply successive cores 40 with web material 50, multiple cores can be present within or on the machine 10 at the same time. Therefore, in the figures, in particular
Referring to
Referring next to
Located generally within the gap 19 between the leading and succeeding winding drums 20 and 22, a web cutting device 70 is provided. The web cutting device 70 (see
In the initial winding position A, web material is first wound to the central core 40a from the point where the knife 73 severed the web material from a previously wound roll. Winding continues in the initial winding position A at least long enough for the cutting device 70 to retract to its resting position within the gap 19 between the drums 20, 22. During this initial phase of winding, the first friction roller 62 presses down against the core 40a and the web material 50 wound thereto, compressing the core and wound web material against the leading winding drum 20 to ensure that there is no or substantially no slippage between the newly forming roll 40a and the drum 20. It is important to note that the friction roller 62 does not act keep the web 50 tensioned as it is wound to the core 40a; in the initial winding position, web tension is supplied by the first and second tension rollers 80 and 82 as will be further described.
Once the cutting device 70 has fully retracted to its resting position, and the diameter of the forming roll 40a has grown to some degree in the initial winding position A, the first friction roller 62 is withdrawn or retracted from engagement with the forming roll 40a, and the roll 40a is engaged by a second friction roller 64 as seen in
The second friction roller 64 is translatable along a substantially vertical path (i.e. perpendicular to the rails 15, 16) via conventional translation means. Suitable translation means include conventional gear and chain assemblies, or other conventional means well known in the art. The actual mechanism for translating the second friction roller 64 along its substantially vertical path is not critical to the invention, all that is important is that the mechanism selected is capable of achieving such substantially vertical translation, and that, when the friction roller 64 is engaged against a forming roll, the translating mechanism is capable of supplying sufficient downward force such that the friction roller 64 presses the forming roll securely against the winding drums (leading drum 20 in the initial winding position, both drums 20, 22 in the primary winding position B, described in the next paragraph, and succeeding winding drum 22 in the finishing winding position C, described below). The translating mechanism must be capable of supplying the described downward force to a forming roll while simultaneously being urged upward as a result of increased roll diameter from continuous rolling of web material.
Referring still to
As web material is wound onto the roll 40a in the primary winding position B, its diameter continues to expand until a final diameter is reached. Once this final diameter is reached, the overhead carriage 65 is again translated (with the second friction roller 64 still engaged against the roll 40a) such that the roll 40a is now provided in a finishing winding position C, substantially adjacent the topmost portion of the surface of the succeeding winding drum 22. See
Referring generally to
When the roll 40 is in the primary winding position B, this is where the majority of winding of web material onto the core is performed; where the majority of diameter increase occurs. A principal problem with conventional winding machines is that it has been difficult to achieve uniform, tightly tensioned web winding across the entire radius of a finished web roll. The machine 10 of the present invention solves this problem as follows. As already explained, by providing the succeeding winding drum 22 in a lower, offset vertical alignment relative to the leading winding drum 20, in the primary winding position the majority of the weight of the forming roll 40 is supported against the succeeding winding drum 22. Therefore, there is a diminished tendency for slippage between the roll 40 and the succeeding winding drum 22 compared to between the roll 40 and the leading winding drum 20, because the roll is pressed against the leading winding drum 20 with less force than it is against the succeeding winding drum 22. Preferably, at least 60, preferably at least 65, preferably at least 70, preferably at least 75, preferably at least 80, preferably at least 85, percent of the weight of the roll 40 is supported against the succeeding winding drum 22 in the primary winding position B.
With a roll 40 in the primary winding position, the succeeding winding drum 22 is operated at a higher linear circumferential speed (effective linear speed of the web 50 at the surface of the roller) than the leading winding, drum 20. The result is that the roll 40 is caused to rotate at a speed determined by the linear circumferential speed of the succeeding winding drum 22, with the roll 40 slipping at its point (line) of contact against the slower-rotating leading winding drum 20. This, in turn, further tensions the web material 50 being wound to the roll 40 between the points (lines) of contact of the roll 40 with the succeeding and leading winding drums 22 and 20 respectively. The overall result is that once freshly wound web material 50 passes the point (line) of contact with the succeeding winding drum 22 as the roll 40 rotates, the web material has been very tightly re-tensioned against the roll 40, which provides very uniformly and highly tensioned finished web rolls in a highly reproducible manner upon exiting the machine. This tensioning of the web 50 in the primary winding position B is in addition to, and performed independently from any prior tensioning of the web 50 ahead of the primary winding position B relative to the web pathway through the machine 10; e.g. by tension rollers 80, 82. For a given web material, the layer density of a finished roll can be controlled, to some extent, by regulating the relative linear circumferential speeds of the leading and succeeding winding drums 20 and 22. A result of this tensioning step at the primary winding position B is that the web tension on the finished rolls (and layer density) are adjustable largely independently of the web tension rollers 80 and 82.
Thus, a winding machine according to the invention provides dual stage tensioning; with a first tensioning stage being provided substantially prior to the web 50 entering the machine 10 (i.e. ahead of the leading winding drum 20 relative to the web pathway), and a second tensioning stage provided just prior to (as pair of) the primary rolling operation with the forming roll 40 in a primary winding position B. The first tensioning stage is responsible for providing initial web tension between the source of web material and the leading winding drum 20; it is not responsible for supplying tension to the web 50 in order to provide the finished rolls to ensure that they are tightly wound having uniform layer density. This has been a primary drawback to prior art machines; the tension rollers supplied to tension the web 50 from the source of web material to the winding machine 10 were also relied upon to supply primary tension to the web material as it was wound around a core to provide a finished web roll. This arrangement has resulted in largely non-uniform web rolls, with un-reproducible results in terms of layer density and tension of web material in the finished roll. The present invention solves this problem via the vertically offset succeeding and leading winding drums 22 and 20 respectively, together with their relative linear circumferential speed differential as previously described. Not only can web rolls be provided having uniform layer density by the present invention, but successive web rolls can be provided having substantially constant layer density among the successive rolls.
It will now be clear why it is important that each of the leading and succeeding winding drums 20 and 22 is coupled to its own respective drive motor 24 and 26 respectively. Alternatively, both drums 20 and 22 can be driven by the same drive motor so long as the drums are geared (e.g. via conventional transmission means, torque converter, etc.) such that the succeeding winding drum 22 rotates with a higher linear circumferential speed relative to the leading winding drum 20.
In a further alternative embodiment, the overhead carriage assembly 65 can be replaced with a pivot assembly (not shown) by which the second friction roller 64 is pivoted (rather than translated) from an overhead pivot point. In this embodiment, it is important that the substantially vertical translation path of the second friction roller 64 be properly aligned such that the downward force supplied from the second friction roller 64 is equally or substantially equally distributed against both the leading and succeeding winding drums 20 and 22 in the primary winding position B as described above. The location of the pivot point (including altitude) should be carefully selected to achieve this alignment with a roll 40 in the primary winding position B.
From the above description, it will be clear that the invented machine 10 operates or is operable on a continuous basis, to provide a continuous supply of uniformly tightly and reproducibly wound web rolls of a characteristic layer density so long as the supply of fresh cores and web material are not exhausted. This is a significant advance over the continuous winding machines of the prior art which do not produce such uniformly tightly wound web rolls, both because tight uniform tensioning is impossible on such machines, and also because a significant loose flap portion, having myriad imperfections such as rolls and creases, is inevitably applied to each successive core, resulting in a significant portion of each roll adjacent the core being unusable or of diminished value.
Although particular embodiments of the invention have been described in detail, it will be understood that the invention is not limited correspondingly in scope, but includes all changes and modifications coming within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
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