This invention relates to a machine for forming knotted fence mesh.
Forms of fence mesh are known in which the wires forming the fence are knotted together at each or many wire intersections. In general knotted fence mesh is stronger than wire fence in which the fence wires are not knotted together at their intersections and which it is typically used for domestic or light industrial applications. Knotted fence mesh is used for applications where additional strength is required, such as for containing larger or stronger animals such as horses or deer for example; or as security fence for industrial and transport applications.
Knotted fence mesh with a rectangular or square mesh shape for example is typically formed from a number of generally parallel line-wires, which will extend generally horizontally when the fence mesh is set in position between fence posts, and lengths of stay-wire which extend laterally across the line-wires at regular spacings (and generally vertically when the fence mesh is set in position). In machines for forming knotted fence mesh a number of continuous line-wires are fed to a bed or knotting table of the machine comprising a number of similar knot boxes, and stay-wire is fed into the machine bed across the line-wires. Such machines typically have a step-wise operation and form a series of knots along a length of stay-wire at each intersection of the stay-wire and the line-wires at each operational step or “beat” of the machine. Typically such machines may operate at a rate of around 50 to 60 beats per minute. At each step or beat the line-wires are advanced forward in parallel through the side by side knot boxes at the machine bed, stay-wire is fed into the bed of the machine across the line-wires at the knot boxes, at approximately 90 degrees to the line-wires in case of a machine for forming rectangular fence mesh, one knot-wire passes through each knot box, a length of the stay-wire is cut, and simultaneously at each knot box at an intersection between the line-wires and the stay-wire each knot-wire is cut and a knot securing the stay-wire to the line-wire is formed.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,715,512 describes a knotted fence mesh forming machine including a plurality of side-by-side knot boxes each for forming a knot at the intersection between a line-wire and stay-wire, each of the knot boxes including at least one former arranged to move towards the line-wire-stay-wire intersection at each operation of the knot box, the former being hydraulically driven and/or hydraulically damped. More than one former may be provided in each knot box. A transversely moveable rack bar may be driven by a hydraulic cylinder, the transverse movement resulting in orthogonal movement of a drive bar which moves respective former or supports. A final former in each knot box is preferably hydraulically damped.
Conventional cam-driven knotted fence mesh forming machines typically operate in a manner in which the movement of one tool stops before the movement of another tool in an opposite direction starts, resulting in speed limitations and vibrations. As a result, a conventional knotted fence mesh forming machine has an operating rate of approximately 80 beats per minute. In addition, conventional cam-driven knotted fence mesh forming machines typically need to be individually adjusted and calibrated due to the vibrations causing components to move out of alignment.
In this specification where reference has been made to patent specifications, other external documents, or other sources of information, this is generally for the purpose of providing a context for discussing the features of the invention. Unless specifically stated otherwise, reference to such external documents or such sources of information is not to be construed as an admission that such documents or such sources of information, in any jurisdiction, are prior art or form part of the common general knowledge in the art.
It is an object of at least preferred embodiments of the present invention to provide a knotted fence mesh forming machine that addresses one or more of the problems of conventional knotted fence mesh forming machines and/or to at least provide the public with a useful alternative.
In accordance with an aspect of the invention, there is provided a machine for forming knotted fence mesh, the machine comprising:
In an embodiment, the profile of each of the rear pair of cams is configured such that during a sector of a rotation of the rear pair of cams, one of second pair of formers accelerates while the other of the second pair of formers simultaneously decelerates.
In an embodiment, the cam drive system is configured to simultaneously move the first pair of formers of all of the knot boxes or the second pair of formers of all of the knot boxes at each operation of the knot boxes.
In an embodiment, the cam drive system is configured to move the first formers of all of the knot boxes simultaneously with one another and the second formers of all of the knot boxes simultaneously with one another at each operation of the knot boxes.
In an embodiment, the front cam assembly comprises a front cam shaft configured to rotate at a constant speed.
In an embodiment, the rear cam assembly comprises a rear cam shaft configured to rotate at a constant speed.
In an embodiment, the first pair of formers comprises a blade tool and the blade tool is associated with a blade cam of the front pair of cams.
In an embodiment, the blade tool includes a notch having concave curved surface configured to support the stay-wire.
In an embodiment, the first pair of formers comprises a knot anvil and the knot anvil is associated with a knot cam of the front pair of cams.
In an embodiment, the knot anvil includes a generally U-shaped forming surface.
In an embodiment, the second pair of formers comprises a staple anvil and the staple anvil is associated with a staple cam of the rear pair of cams.
In an embodiment, the staple anvil includes a cutting edge configured to shear the knot-wire.
In an embodiment, the staple anvil includes a generally U-shaped forming surface.
In an embodiment, the second pair of formers comprises a support tool and the support tool is associated with a support tool of the rear pair of cams.
In an embodiment, the support tool includes a shallow concave curved surface configured to form and support the bow of the bent knot-wire.
In an embodiment, the machine further comprises a drive bar associated with each cam.
In an embodiment, the machine further comprises a cam follower between each cam and the associated drive bar.
In an embodiment, the machine further comprises a return cam follower associated with each tool and cam.
In an embodiment, during a first sector of a rotation of the cams, the blade tool is configured to move rearwardly towards the intersection and accelerate.
In an embodiment, the sector of rotation of the front pair of cams is a second sector of a rotation of the cams after the first sector, and the one of first pair of formers is a blade tool configured to move rearwardly towards the intersection and decelerate and the other of the first pair of formers is a knot anvil configured to move forwardly away from the intersection and accelerate.
In an embodiment, during a third sector after the second sector, the knot anvil is configured to move forwardly away from the intersection and accelerate and the staple anvil and the support tool are configured to move forwardly towards the intersection and accelerate.
In an embodiment, during a fourth sector after the third sector, the knot anvil is configured to move forwardly away from the intersection and decelerate while the staple anvil, the support tool is configured to move forwardly towards the intersection and accelerate.
In an embodiment, during a fifth sector after the fourth sector, the staple anvil and the support tool are configured to move forwardly towards the intersection and decelerate.
In an embodiment, during a sixth sector after the fifth sector, the knot anvil and the staple anvil are configured to move rearwardly and accelerate, and the staple anvil is configured to move away from the intersection and the knot anvil is configured to move with the staple anvil past the intersection.
In an embodiment, during a seventh sector after the sixth sector, the knot anvil and the staple anvil are configured to move rearwardly away from the intersection and decelerate.
In an embodiment, during an eighth sector after the seventh sector, the knot anvil is configured to move forwardly from behind the intersection and accelerate, the staple anvil is configured to move forwardly towards the intersection and accelerate, and the support tool is configured to move rearwardly away from the intersection and accelerate.
In an embodiment, during a ninth sector after the eighth sector, the knot anvil is configured to move forwardly away from the intersection and accelerate, the staple anvil is configured to move forwardly toward the intersection and accelerate, and the support tool is configured to move rearwardly away from the intersection and accelerate.
In an embodiment, during a tenth sector after the ninth sector, the knot anvil is configured to move forwardly away from the intersection and accelerate, the blade tool is configured to move forwardly away from the intersection and accelerate, the staple anvil is configured to move forwardly toward the intersection and accelerate, and the support tool is configured to move rearwardly away from the intersection and accelerate.
In an embodiment, during an eleventh sector after the tenth sector, the eleventh sector being the sector of a rotation of the rear pair of cams, the one of the second pair of formers is a knot anvil configured to move forwardly away from the intersection and decelerate, and the other of the second pair of formers is a blade tool configured to move forwardly away from the intersection and accelerate, the staple anvil is configured to move forwardly toward the intersection and accelerate, and the support tool is configured to move rearwardly away from the intersection and decelerate.
In an embodiment, during a twelfth sector after the eleventh sector, the blade tool is configured to move forwardly away from the intersection and decelerate, the staple anvil is configured to move forwardly toward the intersection and decelerate, and the support tool is configured to move rearwardly away from the intersection and decelerate.
In an embodiment, during a thirteenth sector after the twelfth sector, the knot anvil is configured to move rearwardly toward the intersection and accelerate and the staple anvil is configured to move forwardly toward the intersection and decelerate.
In an embodiment, during a fourteenth sector after the thirteenth sector, the knot anvil is configured to move rearwardly toward the intersection and decelerate and the staple anvil is configured to move forwardly toward the intersection and decelerate.
The term ‘comprising’ as used in this specification and claims means ‘consisting at least in part of’. When interpreting statements in this specification and claims which include the term ‘comprising’, other features besides the features prefaced by this term in each statement can also be present. Related terms such as ‘comprise’ and ‘comprised’ are to be interpreted in a similar manner.
It is intended that reference to a range of numbers disclosed herein (for example, 1 to 10) also incorporates reference to all rational numbers within that range (for example, 1, 1.1, 2, 3, 3.9, 4, 5, 6, 6.5, 7, 8, 9 and 10) and also any range of rational numbers within that range (for example, 2 to 8, 1.5 to 5.5 and 3.1 to 4.7) and, therefore, all sub-ranges of all ranges expressly disclosed herein are hereby expressly disclosed. These are only examples of what is specifically intended and all possible combinations of numerical values between the lowest value and the highest value enumerated are to be considered to be expressly stated in this application in a similar manner.
To those skilled in the art to which the invention relates, many changes in construction and widely differing embodiments and applications of the invention will suggest themselves without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims. The disclosures and the descriptions herein are purely illustrative and are not intended to be in any sense limiting. Where specific integers are mentioned herein which have known equivalents in the art to which this invention relates, such known equivalents are deemed to be incorporated herein as if individually set forth.
As used herein the term ‘(s)’ following a noun means the plural and/or singular form of that noun.
As used herein the term ‘and/or’ means ‘and’ or ‘or’, or where the context allows both.
The invention consists in the foregoing and also envisages constructions of which the following gives examples only.
The present invention will now be described by way of example only and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
With reference to
A continuous stay-wire 4 is projected across the knotting table 5 of the machine via a stay-wire pre-feed assembly 12a and a stay-wire Tri-drive assembly 12b, thereby forming a plurality of stay-wire-line-wire intersections.
It will be appreciated that the line-wires 2 are those which will extend generally horizontally when a fence mesh is set in position between fence posts, and the stay-wires 7 are those which extend laterally across the line-wires at regular spacings.
The machine 1 has a crimp drum 13 that pulls the completed fence mesh from the knot boxes 6, the drive roller being driven by crimp drum drive motor 14. The completed fence then would typically extend over a further rollers 15 (
The machine 1 generally has a step-wise operation and forms a series of knots along the length of stay-wire 4 at each line-wire-stay-wire intersection at each step or “beat” of the machine. At each step or beat, the line-wires 2 are advanced forward in parallel through the side by side knot boxes 6 in the machine knotting table 5 via the crimp drum 13, the stay-wire 4 is fed into the knotting table 5 of the machine across the line-wires at the knot boxes 6, at 90° for forming square fence mesh as shown, a length of the stay-wire 4 is cut, and simultaneously in each knot box 6 at each intersection between the line-wires and the stay-wire a knot securing the stay-wire to the line-wire is formed.
It will be understood that the relative orientations of the wires may be varied depending on the type of fence mesh required, and the details of the knot boxes 6 will vary depending on the type of knots and fence mesh required. Operation of one preferred type of knot box will be described with reference to
The various components of the machine will now be described.
The cams shown in the accompanying drawings have an exterior wall 41, an interior wall 43 and a side wall 45, which is most clearly shown in
As mentioned above, the cams are provided in pairs. When assembled, the hollow interiors of the cams face each other. The distance between each pair of cams is less than the distance between one pair of cams and the adjacent pair of cams. Each cam 47 has a slot for receiving a corresponding key section of the shaft so that the cams rotate with the shaft.
Each cam has been designed to minimise the pressure angles, velocities, and acceleration of the cam surface as the cam rotates. With reference to
The knotting table 5 with a plurality of preferred knot boxes 6 and the associated drive mechanisms is shown in
Each cam 17, 18, 19, 20 is associated with a cam follower. Each cam follower is a roller 26 that is fixed to a drive bar. As shown in
With reference to
During a first sector, the blade tool 27 and blade drive bar 23 move rearwardly towards the intersection and accelerate in the direction of arrow A of
Without the simultaneous deceleration/acceleration, energy would transferred back into the driving motor's windings or lost as frictional heating. By balancing this energy shift, both the forging and the crimping load when producing fence mesh can be reduced. An example of this is shown in
During a third sector, the knot anvil 28, the staple anvil 29, and the support tool 30 move forwardly and accelerate in the direction indicated by Arrows B, C and D. This movement cuts the knot-wire and forms it into a staple, shown in
During a fourth sector, the knot anvil 28 continues to move forwardly away from the intersection but now decelerates while the staple anvil 29 and the support tool 30 moves forwardly towards the intersection and continue to accelerate. During a fifth sector, the staple anvil 29 and the support tool 30 move forwardly towards the intersection and decelerate. The simultaneous movement of the staple anvil 29 and the support tool 30 in the direction indicated by Arrow C support the bow of the bent knot-wire 3 within the shallow concave curved surface 39 in the support tool 30. The shallow concave curved surface 39 forms and supports the bow of the bent knot-wire 3. The line-wire-stay-wire intersection is at this time still supported by the blade tool notch 51.
During a sixth sector, the knot anvil 28 and the staple anvil 29 move rearwardly and accelerate in the direction indicated by Arrows B and D of
The knot anvil 28 also includes a generally U-shaped forming surface 33 which bends the ends of the cut length of knot-wire 3 and wraps these around the stay-wire 4. It will be appreciated that configuration of the forming surface 33 in the knot anvil 28 could be altered to wrap the legs of the staple around the line-wire 2 rather than the stay-wire 4, although this would require a more complex forming surface shape. Alternatively, the line-wire and the stay-wire could be swapped in the knot box for this purpose.
With reference to
During a tenth sector and eleventh sector, the blade tool 27 moves away from the intersection ready for the mesh to be pulled upwardly away from the knot boxes 6. In particular, the knot anvil 28 moves forwardly away from the intersection and accelerates, the blade tool 27 moves forwardly away from the intersection and accelerates, the staple anvil 29 moves forwardly towards the intersection and accelerates, and the support tool 30 moves rearwardly away from the intersection and accelerates. During the eleventh sector, the knot anvil 28 continues to move forwardly away from the intersection and decelerates, the blade tool 27 moves forwardly away from the intersection and accelerates, the staple anvil 29 moves forwardly towards the intersection and accelerates, and the support tool 30 moves rearwardly and decelerates. Similar to the simultaneous deceleration and acceleration described above in relation to the second sector, this simultaneous acceleration of the blade tool 27 and blade drive bar, which is at the front and bottom of the knot box, and deceleration of the knot anvil 28 and knot drive bar, which is at the front and top of the knot box, results in the kinetic energy shifting from the top front moving bar to the bottom front moving bar. In the eleventh sector, another simultaneous deceleration and acceleration of the rear bars is also occurring. That is, there is a simultaneous acceleration of the staple anvil 29 and staple drive bar, which is at the rear and bottom of the knot box, and deceleration of the support tool 30 and support drive bar, which is at the rear and top of the knot box. The simultaneous deceleration and acceleration results in the kinetic energy shifting from the top rear moving bar to the bottom rear moving bar. It is now possible for the mesh to be pulled away from the knot boxes, which occurs during the subsequent sector.
During a twelfth sector, the mesh is pulled upwardly away from the knot boxes 6 in the direction indicated by Arrow E of
During a thirteenth sector, the knot anvil 28 moves rearwardly towards the intersection and accelerates and the staple anvil 29 moves forwardly towards the intersection and decelerates. During a fourteenth sector, the knot anvil 28 continues to move rearwardly towards the intersection but decelerates, and the staple anvil 29 moves forwardly towards the intersection and decelerates. The knot anvil 28, blade tool 27, staple anvil 29, and support tool 30 are now back at the starting position. The stay-wire and knot-wire are fired into position and the cycle starts again.
In addition to the features and functions described above, each cam 17, 18, 19, 20 is also associated with a return cam follower. One example of a return cam follower 59 is shown in
As shown in
The tables below represent the movement of each anvil and tool during each sector. A represents acceleration, D represents deceleration. > represent movement towards the rear of the machine and < represents movement towards the front of the machine. − represents no movement of that anvil or tool.
Conventional machine for forming knotted fence mesh.
Machine for forming knotted fence mesh according to the embodiment described and shown in relation to
As mentioned above in relation to
It will be appreciated that the stay-wire 4 will be wrapped around the end line-wires 2 in the completed fence mesh. This is achieved through the use of twister units, which are common to fence machinery. The operation of such twister units will be understood by a person skilled in the art and will not be described further here.
The preferred knot box, machine and method described above have a number of advantages over those that are conventionally known.
A conventional knotted fence mesh forming machine has an operating rate of approximately 80 beats per minute. It has been found that by utilising simultaneous cam acceleration/deceleration, an operating rate of at least 100 beats per minute is attainable.
The machine has improved efficiency during the crimping and forging of the knot. By using the relatively large cams, as described above, the cams had greater inertia to store localised energy as well as reduced pressure angles. This results in lower torque required to produce a knot per cycle then a conventionally known machine producing an equivalent fence. Overall this means a machine having the features cams described herein requires less energy to produce the same fence, creating a more efficient machine.
The machine described herein will have lower vibrations as it operates due to both larger cams and simultaneous cam acceleration/decelerations, which dampen the effective vibrations produced as the machine operates. In addition, the larger cams allow the machine to have a lower average machine torque.
The machine described herein will have the ability to perform more 2″ line-wire spacings not achievable on standard machines.
Preferred embodiments of the invention have been described by way of example only and modifications may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the invention.
For example, while the cam driven actuation of former and/or supports in knot boxes of a fence mesh forming machine is described above with reference to a particular embodiment knot box, it will be appreciated that it will have application with other types of knot boxes.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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789677 | Jun 2022 | NZ | national |