THIS invention relates to a drum body manufacturing method, means and product.
The invention can be applied to the manufacture of bodies of steel drums of 210 l capacity, but it will be understood from the description which follows that the principles of the invention are equally applicable to the manufacture of bodies for drums of different capacity.
Empty steel drums are expensive to transport because of the space which they consume. Thus the cost of steel drums can be high if they are manufactured at a site remote from that at which they are to be filled. To reduce the transportation cost, it has been proposed, in the so-called Sirco drum, to produce drum kits having three separate components, namely a tubular body, a top end and a bottom end. The kit is supplied to the customer who then assembles the drums as required. To save space, the tubular bodies are normally nested one inside the other. The flat top and bottom ends are easily and compactly stacked.
On receipt of the kit, the customer himself assembles the drums in a series of sequential steps. Firstly the drum bodies are denested manually and the bodies are then passed through a rounding machine which restores them to a round cylindrical shape. Thereafter each body is passed through a beader/flanger machine which forms circumferential beads in the body and flanges at the ends of the body.
The body is then passed through a seaming machine which seams the top and bottom ends to the flanged ends of the drum in a seam rolling operation, and which injects a rubber compound into the seam. Finally the assembled drum is tested for leaks.
Conventionally the body of the kit is formed by rolling a flat, pre-painted steel sheet to a round cylindrical form. Company indentification logos and/or other markings are typically screen-printed on the flat pre-painted sheet before it is rolled. The free edges of the round cylindrical form are then welded to one another.
A problem which arises is that the weld is unsightly and destroys the continuity of the originally applied paintwork, possibly requiring a localised touch-up of the paint. This is particularly problematical in situations where the body is painted different colours in different regions along its length, for instance where a central region of the body is to be one colour or carries screen-printed markings and end regions are to be another colour. The end result is invariably unsightly. In situations where one surface of the initial flat sheet is precoated with a rust inhibitor or other treatment, the further problem which arises is that the protection provided by the internal coat is discontinuous at the weld, leading to the possibility of localised internal corrosion in this region if a subsequent step to coat the weld line is not undertaken.
The present invention seeks to address these problems.
According to one aspect of the invention there is provided a method of manufacturing the body of a drum kit, the method including the steps of rolling a flat, unpainted metal sheet to a cylindrical form, welding free edges of the form to produce a cylindrical body, temporarily stiffening the cylindrical body, applying paint to the exterior of the temporarily stiffened body, and destiffening the body.
The cylindrical body may be stiffened temporarily during the paint application step by engaging a stiffening form such as a round ring, releasably with one or each end of the body. The paint application step may be carried out at a roller spray station in which the body is arranged with its axis vertical and is rotated, while temporarily stiffened, about that axis relative to one or more paint spray heads which spray paint into the external surface of the body.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a method of nesting a plurality of drum bodies manufactured by a method as summarized above, wherein the bodies are in turn deformed to a kidney shape and are slipped, in this shape, one into the other. Preferably each body is deformed to a kidney shape by arranging the body with its axis horizontal and a weld line between the free edges thereof at the top, and pressing downwardly on the body in the region of the weld line.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a drum kit comprising a body manufactured by the method summarized above, a drum top attachable to an operatively upper end of the body and a drum bottom attachable to an operatively lower end of the body.
According to yet another aspect of the invention there is provided a drum kit body which is of tubular form, which is suitable for nesting with other similar bodies and which has a weld line running from one end of the body to the other, the exterior of the body, including the weld line, being covered by a continuous paint lining applied to the body by a roller spraying operation.
Further according to the invention there is provided apparatus for manufacturing the body of a drum kit, the apparatus comprising sequence, means for rolling a flat, unpainted metal sheet to a cylindrical form, means for welding free edges of the form to produce a cylindrical body, means for temporarily stiffening the cylindrical body and means for applying paint to the exterior of the temporarily stiffened body. Apparatus may also be provided for deforming the body to a kidney shape suitable for nesting with other such bodies.
Other features of the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
The invention will now be described in more detail, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying diagrammatic drawings in which FIGS. 1 to 12 depict sequential steps in a method according to one embodiment of the invention.
The method of the invention commences with a flat, rectangular mild steel sheet 10 (
Where the internal surface of the body is to be coated with a rust inhibitor or other corrosion resistant or other treatment, the body is then arranged with its central axis upright. At an internal spray station, a spray head apparatus 20 is moved relative to the interior of the body to spray the relevant treatment onto the internal surface of the body (
At this stage, the body 18 has little ridigity. Its lack of stiffness would make it unsuitable for external roller spray painting. For this reason, the body is temporarily stiffened or rigidified at this stage. As shown in FIGS. 6(a) and 6(b), this is achieved by fitting a stiffening ring 24 as a friction fit into the lower end of the body. This may be achieved manually. If desired, a similar stiffening ring (not shown) may also be fitted to the upper end of the body.
The stiffened body 18 is then passed through a roller spray station in which the body, with its axis upright, is rotated about that axis relative to stationary spray heads 26 which spray paint onto the external surface of the body (
The body is then passed through an oven 27 to cure the external paint (
Where alphanumerics and/or graphics are to be screen printed on the exterior of the body, the body is arranged with its axis horizontal and is passed through a screen printing station (
After the screen printing head has completed its job, and after the body has passed through a curing oven 36 (
As an alternative to a machine which automatically engages stiffening rings or other stiffening means with the ends of the body and then withdraws them after screen printing, the invention envisages a less sophisticated version in which stiffening rings are manually engaged with the ends of the body and are pulled towards one another, for instance by means of an elastic cord extending between them along the axis of the body, prior to entry to the screen printing station. In this case, the rings and cord must be detached manually after screen printing.
After curing of the screen printed alphanumerics and/or graphics in the oven 36 the body is taken to a nesting station. Here the body is deformed to a kidney shape and is slipped lengthwise into another similarly deformed body (
As shown in
An important feature of the method as described above is the fact that the step of welding (
In the nest of bodies 40 (
Although mention has been made, in relation to FIGS. 1 to 10, of a single body, it will be understood that the steps depicted in these Figures will be carried out on a production line with the body being one of a train of bodies which follow one another on a conveyor system.
In alternative embodiments means other than one or more stiffening rings may be used to rigidify the cylindrical drum body prior to external spray painting. The rigidifying or stiffening means may be incorporated in the spray booth itself. As an example cone-shaped bodies may be inserted automatically into the ends of the body to rigidify it as necessary for painting to take place. The screen printing station may also incorporate automatically inserted rigidifying or stiffening means.
In the above embodiment, the drum body undergoes a first curing step (
In one embodiment envisaged by the invention, the drum body is arranged with its axis upright and stiffening means is applied to the lower end of the body at the external spray painting station. The stiffening means at the lower end of the body is driven in rotation to rotate the body. The stiffening means may in this embodiment take the form of a ring or cone which is mounted to a rotatable table and which is applied to the lower end of the body. Alternatively it may be provided by a series of rollers which are arranged in a circular format of variable diameter. As the drum body arrives at the external spray station the rollers are moved upwardly into the lower end of the body. The rollers are carried on a frame which is then expanded radially for the rollers to engage the internal surface of the drum body. The rollers are then rotated to cause rotation of the body while spray paint is applied externally to the body. In practice, where the drum is to have upper and lower bands of one colour and a central band of a different colour, the body may be rotated in a first spray booth at which the upper and lower bands are painted, and thereafter moved to a second spray booth in which the central band is painted. During these steps the upper end of the body may be engaged by a freely rotatable stiffening means such as a ring or cone.
Thereafter the body may be transported, with its lower end still engaged still engaged by the rotatable stiffening means, to an internal spray station at which the internal coating is applied while the body is rotated. As illustrated in
After the external paint and internal coating have been applied, the drum is demounted from the rotatable table and transported to a curing oven when the paint and coating are cured in a single curing step.
It will be understood that in the embodiment just described, the internal coating step could, as in the illustrated embodiment, be carried out before the external spray painting step.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003/0745 | Jan 2003 | ZA | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB03/05534 | 12/1/2003 | WO | 5/22/2006 |