The present invention refers to a machine intended to separate but above all recover the pure cellulose paper contained in the trimming rolls or selvage of the cutting of paper reels in the production for domestic or sanitary use.
At the present state of the art, devices do not exist which may safely operate a separation between paper and cardboard inner tube of logs or the like of toilet paper and/or paper towels for domestic use. Such difficulty arises from the fact that there are intrinsic diversities of the tube, various diameters and various lengths, very often always different of these rolls, which are none other than trimmings or side discards or remains of a precise cutting work from an actual log or roll of sufficiently constant diameter. These trimmings, also called selvages, may be of two or three sizes, but of uncertain length, the reason for which until today it has been preferred to work these remnants by hand, given the considerable cost of the remnant of cellulose-rich white paper which may be reinserted in the actual production of new material.
Object of the present invention is therefore that of resolving the problems mentioned related to the recovery of both the paper and the cardboard of any size and length, since they are deriving from an end or trimming cutting operation.
These objects are achieved by realising a machine as described in the description and in the claims attached to the present description.
It is therefore noted how a machine of the invention, in addition to operating the separation and separate recovery of paper and core, executes a series of complementary preparation operations for the actual working. Indeed, during the precise cutting operation of the paper rolls for domestic or sanitary use, the cutter conveys the pieces produced to the final packaging machines, while the trimmings, of uncertain length but largely similar to each other, are separated and normally sent to the containers. According to the invention, the trimmings are conveyed with simple conveyor belts or the like to the principal conveyor of the present machine.
The first conveyor, in addition to moving the present rolls, has a simple sorter composed of an adjustable-height belt transverse to the conveyor, placed on a surface at a height slightly greater than the length of the roll in order to permit the free passage of the vertical axis rolls, and laterally move and therefore direct the superimposed or horizontal axis rolls, even knocking them over.
Once arranged with axis perpendicular to the conveyor belt, by means of movable and fixed lateral guides, the rolls are conveyed, as in a flat funnel on two parallel and centred belts in line with two parallel and vertical roller conveyors; once this course is terminated, which also operates by accumulation, two flat bands operated by actuators, generally pneumatics, at the precise command of a position reader of the roll make the trimming roll precipitate vertically, laterally and simultaneously coming off. In the fall, an “L”-shaped centering and guide pin with well-matched corner is inserted into the hole of the cardboard core, until the roll reaches a movable abutment which at the appropriate moment sends it toward the longitudinal cutting blade.
The cutter is composed of a blade arranged vertically on the upper horizontal generatrix of the previously mentioned centering pin of the trimming roll, therefore both the blade and a belt parallel to such pin bring the roll hinged into linear feed on the mentioned bar. At this point there is the separation of the paper wrapped around the core and the cardboard of the core: indeed, the cardboard, while cut, remains rolled up on the bar and will be pushed outside the machine, while the pure cellulose paper, just cut, opens up and even if slightly held by the belt falls downward. In such fall, the paper is taken by an appropriate suction pneumatic conveyor system and is sent once again to production or temporary stockpile.
Thus a completely automatic cycle is realized by the cutting machine of rolls for domestic use or the like, up until the recovery of the paper and its possible reuse, also directed if required.
It is evident that the ordering devices described here may also be substituted with other analogous devices while the cutting and recovery zone certainly remains as described or in any case subject to simple and unimportant modifications.
In the attached drawings, the various details of the machine are shown in an exemplifying and not limiting embodiment, in order to highlight the characteristics and advantages of a machine according to the invention.
In particular, meanings are attributed to the numbers and numbers with letters, which recall the various elements and groups, as reported here below:
Passing now to the details of the figures, in the attached
The fact remains that in spite of how 1-c is cut, at the two ends two rolls 1 are produced, shorter than the others, called trimmings or selvages in jargon, also composed of cellulose paper 1-b rolled on low-quality cardboard 1-a which obviously cannot be readmitted in the preparatory cycle of the cellulose layer since it would ruin the mixture used to make high quality paper.
The belt 2-a is placed here for exemplary use in order to indicate a generic origin from a machine of a previous process, in this case the cutting, which unloads here the various pieces 1 which are sent in bulk onto 2-b, the second belt, usually but not necessarily slightly ascending, where various trimming rolls may already have their axis vertical or else horizontal, or they may even be lying on other rolls and therefore slanting with respect to the conveyor 2-b. A movable belt 2-bb of an appropriate height, moving the rolls with its own motion, causes them to be arranged with axis perpendicular to the belt, passing therefore under 2-bb, and move toward the positioning zone 2-d for the insertion on the cutter 3; the operation of groups 2 and 3 will be more clearly explained in
The feed system of the rolls to the cutter represented in
Indeed,
The zone and operation characteristics of 3 are highlighted in
With the cutting of all of the paper 1, along the generatrix of the cylinder constituting the roll, the paper 1-b itself tends immediately to open up or stretch out, leaving the tube 1-a, which instead proceeds, advancing towards the exit, still enclosed on 3-a although cut and pushed ahead by the tubes (and rolls) arriving on the cutter but also driven towards the exit by the rotation direction of the blade 3-c.
In order to completely ensure the advancing motion of the rolls to the cutting under 3-c and with central guide 1-a, a belt 3-d was positioned, motorised by the starter of any power origin 3-d1; the circular section but also flat belt exerts a light pressure on the paper 1 and simultaneously moving itself in the same direction as 1 and 1-a favours its advancement toward the end of 3-a, which is supported, behind the blade 3-c, by a sharpened support, like a knife, to allow the passage of 1-a in the cut zone without obstacles or difficulties.
It should also be said that upon leaving the blade 3-c, which operates the cutting, the paper 1-b due to its own lightness and minor stiffness opens and separates and may be easily recovered by a pneumatic conveyor, usually composed of a simple suction of a use-specific fan and then sent either to the recovery containers or directly to the mixture preparation zone.
It is obvious that simple modifications of technical-contructive type do not modify the mode of operation of the present machine, which inherently keeps the tube or core on 3-a while it lets the pure cellulose paper fall and be separately recovered.
Thus one understands how according to the invention, a machine is realized which is intended to separate but above all recover the pure cellulose paper contained in the trimming or selvage rolls of the cutting of reels of paper for the production for domestic or sanitary use, separating it in a secure manner from the tube contained in the centre, which is called the core. This core is made of rather low-quality cardboard, thus it is not possible to reuse it together with the paper, and furthermore there also exist many sizes of these trimming rolls, with diverse diameter and length.
The present machine makes use of an ordering system of these rolls and therefore, with the axis placed vertically, causes the rolls to descend one by one, inserting a guide bar at the centre of the tube hole which leads the rolls toward a cutting system along the generatrix of the roll cylinder, operating now with the roll axis horizontal, and containing it slightly from below, and one obtains, once core and paper are cut, always along the generatrix, that the paper falls and the core remains supported on the above mentioned guide bar, until it moves outside the machine itself, permitting the recovery of the valuable or cellulose paper with a normal pneumatic conveyor system.
Thus the new and inventive technical solutions of the invention are quite evident, as are its advantages.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2005A 001466 | Jul 2005 | IT | national |