The present invention relates to an embossing device.
The present invention may be used to particular advantage in the manufacture of packets of cigarettes, to which the following description refers purely by way of example.
Packing material is known to be embossed or satin finished by feeding it between two embossing rollers, each of which has an outer surface with a number of impression pins which cooperate with the impression pins on the other roller to satin finish the packing material.
Patent Application WO 0230661 A1 describes an embossing device, in which a roller comprises pins of different geometric shapes, and the difference in shape of the pins provides for impressing graphics on the packing material.
The embossing rollers described in Patent Application WO 0230661 A1 are fairly complex and therefore expensive to produce, and must be changed alongside a change in format, so that producing a number of packing materials of different formats calls for a large number of different, high-cost embossing rollers.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,913,765 discloses an embossing device comprising two pairs of embossing rollers; each pair is designed to emboss a respective pattern on the embossing material.
Also the embossing rollers disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,913,765 must be changed alongside a change of format so that producing a number of packing materials of different formats calls for a large number of different, high-cost embossing rollers.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an embossing device designed to eliminate, at least partially, the aforementioned drawbacks.
According to the present invention, there is provided an embossing device as claimed in the attached claims.
A number of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
Device 1 comprises a feed unit (not shown) for feeding the strip of packing material 2 along a given path through an embossing station 3, an embossing station 4 downstream from embossing station 3, and a cutting station 5 downstream from embossing station 4 and where a cutting unit cuts the strip of packing material 2 transversely into portions B of satin finished packing material 2 (
Device 1 also comprises an embossing unit 6 located at embossing station 3 and for satin finishing packing material 2.
Embossing unit 6 comprises two embossing rollers 7 and 8, each having a respective axis of rotation 9, and a respective longitudinal outer surface 10 substantially parallel to respective axis of rotation 9. Axes of rotation 9 are substantially parallel, and each outer surface 10 has a respective number of impression pins 11, which cooperate with the impression pins 11 on the other outer surface 10 to satin finish the strip of packing material 2 (so-called pin up-pin up embossing configuration). With reference to
In a further embodiment, only one embossing roller 7 has impression pins 11, and the outer surface 10 of the other embossing roller 8 has a number of cavities 12, each for housing a pin 11 of embossing roller 7 (so-called pin up-pin down embossing configuration).
Device 1 also comprises an embossing unit 13 located at embossing station 4 and for impressing graphics G on packing material 2.
Embossing unit 13 comprises two embossing rollers 14, 15, each having a respective axis of rotation 16, and a respective longitudinal outer surface 17, 17′ substantially parallel to respective axis of rotation 16. Axes of rotation 16 are substantially parallel.
With particular reference to
It should be noted that pins 19 and 20 may differ in shape from pins 11.
Portions 22 of outer surfaces 17 and 17′ outside impression areas 18 and 21 are substantially smooth; and impression areas 18 and 21 are raised with respect to substantially smooth portions 22. Preferably, impression areas 18 and respective portions 22 define outer surface 17; and impression areas 21 and respective portions 22 define outer surface 17′. The term “substantially smooth portions” is intended to mean surface portions with no impression pins.
Embossing unit 13 also comprises actuating members 13a (schematically shown in dotted line in
Actuating members 13a may be connected to a control unit (not shown) having a Human Machine Interface (HMI, e.g. a monitor and a keyboard), through which an operator may input data to the control unit (not shown). The control unit is designed to control actuating members 13a as a function of the inputted data.
In an alternative embodiment not shown, only embossing roller 14 has impression pins 19, and the outer surface 17′ of the other embossing roller 15 is covered with elastic material.
In a further embodiment, only one embossing roller 14 has impression pins 19; and the outer surface 17′ of the other embossing roller 15 has a number of cavities 23, each for housing an impression pin 19 on embossing roller 14 (so-called pin up-pin down embossing configuration).
In a further embodiment not shown, impression pins 19 are shaped differently from impression pins 20, e.g. may be higher than impression pins 20. And impression pins 20 may be shaped differently from or be substantially the same shape as impression pins 11.
Different-shaped impression pins 11, 19, 20 provide for impressing graphics G with particular optical effects on packing material 2. Particularly interesting are the shape combinations producing graphics G, the intensity of which varies as a function of angle of observation and/or the direction and/or type of light.
In the
It should be noted that, being movable, embossing units 13 and 24 also permit fast, easy fine adjustments, which are frequently advantageous during operation of device 1.
In alternative embodiments, pins 11, 19, 20 may be shaped differently from those described, and each shape may, for example, be selected independently of the others from a range comprising: conical, truncated-cone, pyramid, truncated-pyramid shapes.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2004A0718 | Nov 2004 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2433965 | Upson | Jan 1948 | A |
2464301 | Francis, Jr. | Mar 1949 | A |
4189344 | Busker | Feb 1980 | A |
4682540 | Eastman et al. | Jul 1987 | A |
5007271 | Boegli | Apr 1991 | A |
5269983 | Schulz | Dec 1993 | A |
5913765 | Burgess et al. | Jun 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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4 342 737 | Jun 1995 | DE |
WO 0230661 | Apr 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060107848 A1 | May 2006 | US |