1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to printing presses and more particularly to printing presses having printing sleeves that are placed on or removed from a cylinder with the aid of air or other fluid pressure.
2. Background of the Invention
Tubular-shaped printing sleeves, such as offset lithographic printing blankets described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,215,013, are placed and removed axially over a printing cylinder. As described with respect to a blanket in the '013 patent, air holes typically are located on a work side end of the blanket cylinder to provide pressure to the inside of the blanket as the blanket is removed or placed axially over the blanket cylinder.
However, blankets can become stuck when mounted for too long, as air pressure from the air holes can be blocked and not reach the gear side end of the cylinder. Moreover, the use of only one set of air holes on the work side end makes hole placement critical, or the sleeve will not inflate or expand at all. With improperly placed holes, the air may simply rush out of the work side end without inflating the gear side end.
Also, it may be desirable to place multiple blankets side-by-side over a single blanket cylinder. A single set of work side holes can inflate only one of the blankets at the work side, thus not permitting the other blankets closer to the gear side to be removed.
It has been attempted to place additional air holes along the length of the body of the printing cylinder. However, when the sleeve is in a partially removed or placed position, these air holes remain uncovered while the work side air holes are covered. A large pressure reduction results as the air rushes out the uncovered holes and the flow drops at the work side holes, thus making blanket placement or removal difficult or impossible. Thus the additional holes require the use of multiple plumbing fixtures, solenoids and valves to control the air flow properly. These features tend to be expensive and are complicated, especially because the cylinder must rotate.
In a 1981 textbook entitled, Beruehrungsfreie Dichtungen (Contactless Seals), the authors describe labyrinth seals, in which fluid flow can be blocked or reduced using vortices. In FIG. 3-56 at pages 174–176, the effect of placement of fins on air flow and vortex generation is shown. However, the use of these seals in printing machines or for printing cylinders is not discussed.
An object of the present invention is to provide a printing cylinder that can accommodate the fluid-assisted removal or placement of more than one printing sleeve. An alternate or additional object of the present invention is to improve the fluid-assisted removal or placement of a printing sleeve.
The present invention provides a printing cylinder for accepting an axially-removable printing sleeve comprising a cylinder body having an outer surface, the outer surface having at least one hole and a supply line in the cylinder body for supplying fluid to the at least one hole. The supply line has at least one flow restrictor designed to alter fluid flow as a function of the at least one hole being covered by an axially-removable printing sleeve.
The fluid preferably is air, and the flow restrictor preferably forms vortices when the at least one hole in uncovered.
The outer surface may have a plurality of other holes at a work side end of the printing cylinder, with the at least one hole located axially between the other holes and a gear side end of the printing cylinder. The plurality of other holes may include another supply line having at least one other flow restrictor for the other holes.
The flow restrictor preferably includes a plurality of opposing fins, tips of opposing fins being spaced so as to form a free-flow channel.
The at least one hole preferably includes a plurality of holes, with the at least one flow restrictor including a flow restrictor for each hole.
The outer surface may include a second set of holes for a second axially-removable printing sleeve, the second set of holes having second flow restrictors.
The present invention also provides a printing press comprising a first printing cylinder having at least one external hole and a first flow restrictor, a first axially removable printing sleeve fitting over the first printing cylinder, a second printing cylinder having at least one second external hole and a second flow restrictor, a second axially removable printing sleeve fitting over the second printing cylinder, and a fluid supply source for supplying pressure to the first and second external holes. The first flow restrictor restricts flow through the external hole as a function of an axial position of the first printing sleeve with respect to the first printing cylinder and the second flow restrictor restricts flow through the second external hole as a function of an other axial position of the second printing sleeve with respect to the second printing cylinder.
Advantageously, complicated valves are not required between the first and second external holes.
The printing press preferably is an offset lithographic printing press, and the first printing cylinder a blanket cylinder.
Also provided is a method for axially removing a printing sleeve over a printing cylinder comprising the steps of applying fluid pressure to an inside of a printing sleeve located on a printing cylinder through holes at a work side end of the printing cylinder and through other holes between the holes at the work side end and a gear side end of the printing cylinder, sliding the printing sleeve in a direction of the work side end of the printing cylinder, and automatically restricting flow through the other holes when the printing sleeve no longer is located over the other holes.
Several preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described in more detail with reference to the figures, in which:
a and 4b show a first embodiment of a flow restrictor for the flow restricted air holes of the cylinder according to the present invention, with a blanket being located over the hole in
a and 7b show in top view and side view a further embodiment of the flow restrictor of the cylinder of the present invention, with
a and 8b show in top view and side view another embodiment of the flow restrictor of the cylinder of the present invention, with
The blankets 12, 62, 112, 162 are axially removable through openings in the work side frame of the printing press 1, with the aid of air pressure supplied through holes in the blanket cylinders 10, 60, 110, 160, respectively. A compressor 80 feeds air through a feed line 90 to the blanket cylinders 12, 62, 112, 162. Preferably, no valves or cutoff devices are placed in the feed line 90, and thus air pressure is supplied to all four cylinders 10, 60, 110, 160 at the same time.
As shown in
As the blanket 12 is pulled in work side direction 2 for removal, the holes 16 are uncovered as shown in
All of the holes away from the work side holes have the restrictors 78. The work side holes 14 may or may not have the restrictors.
The restrictor 60 in the embodiment of
a and 7b show a top and side view, respectively, of a maze shaped restrictor 60 in space 50. During unrestricted fluid flow with no back pressure generated by the sleeve, vortices can form in the corners of the maze.
a and 8b show a top and side view of another maze shaped restrictor 60 located in space 50.
The restrictors may be integral with the cylinder or may be designed as inserts which can be pushed or screwed into existing holes in a printing cylinder. This permits easier manufacturing of new cylinders and also easier retrofitting of existing cylinders. The restrictors may be made of plastic or metal. Other shapes for the restrictors, such as square or triangular-shaped fins 76 in
While air is a preferred fluid for aiding in sleeve removal, other fluids could be used.
The present invention, while described with respect to the preferred embodiment for use with a blanket sleeve, could be used with other types of printing sleeves, such as flexographic sleeves or lithographic plate cylinder sleeves.
The present invention has particular advantages when used with a printing press having a plurality of printing cylinder supplied by a single pressure source. The pressure from the pressure source can thus be maintained at a sufficient level, even as various blankets or other sleeves are removed.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20020096073 A1 | Jul 2002 | US |