The invention relates to a method and a device for changing the spacing at which at least one tool, which is disposed on the radial outside of an associated rotating roller, engages with a web of material running past.
Tool-equipped rollers are used to process material webs running past them, for example as cross cutters for paper. A paper cross cutter is used to cut a paper web—which is wound on a roll—by means of a tool in the form of a knife, into individual segments that usually correspond to standardized formats. The current invention can be used in all machines in which a chronologically periodic movement of a tool occurs, for example crosscut saws or bag forming, filling, and sealing machines, and the like.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,662,018 has disclosed a paper cross cutter that is comprised of two opposing rollers, which are each equipped with a number of knives disposed on the radial outside, in order to cut a material web—which is being conveyed between the two rollers—into predetermined segments. During the engagement of the tools with the material web, the circumferential speed of the tool is synchronized with the speed of the material web in order to permit the cut to be executed along a correct line. This device also makes it possible to cut the material web in different formats. A changeover of the consequently required engagement spacing of the knife-like tool is achieved by virtue of the fact that different tools are associated with different engagement spacings, where of the tools that are kept on hand, the tools that produce the desired engagement spacing are the ones that are brought into engagement. The tool engagement is controlled mechanically by means of hydraulic adjusting mechanisms. A disadvantage of this changing of the engagement spacing lies in the rather complex design of the device, which is expensive to assemble and is subject to wear due to the large number of individual mechanical parts.
By contrast, DE 36 08 111 C1 has disclosed changing the engagement spacing of a tool through the use of electronic means. Two opposing rollers, each of which is provided with a respective tool in the form of a knife, are driven directly by means of respectively associated electric motors. The upper roller is driven with the lower roller by means of a gear transmission in order to synchronize the rotating rollers.
Special d.c. motors are used as the electric motors, which are driven discontinuously by a shared electronic control unit, as a function of various input data, i.e. in a manner similar to disk-cam control. The input data for the control unit include the circumferential speed of the tool detected by an incremental transducer as well as data regarding the speed of the material web traveling through the rollers. It is also possible to preset a desired engagement spacing of the tool, i.e. a desired format length. Depending on these data, the two special d.c. motors are controlled so that starting from a standstill, they can be brought extremely quickly to their full speed, which corresponds to the respective speed of the material web. This speed is kept constant for the entire duration of the cutting procedure. Depending on the desired format length, the motor can be adjusted down to a lower speed and then for the cutting procedure, can be accelerated back to the full speed. For smaller formats, after passing the cutting speed, the motor can be accelerated to higher speeds in order to rotate the roller at an increased speed and to execute the cut before the material web has traveled the distance of the so-called synchronous format, which corresponds to the revolution circumference of the knife.
In the above-described known method for determining the spacing at which knives, which are disposed on the radial outside of rotating rollers, engage with a passing material web, the problem arises that although it is possible to change the engagement spacing during operation, i.e. to change the format length, waste is produced during the time it takes to change the format length. In order to avoid generating such waste while changing the engagement spacing, it was previously customary to first turn off the machine, set the machine to the new engagement spacing, and then turn the machine back on. On the other hand, however, this procedure requires a lot of time, which is disadvantageous in mass production, and generates waste during the run-up and braking.
The object of the current invention, therefore, is to further improve the method of this generic type as well as the device associated with it so that it is possible to change the engagement spacing of the tool without the generation of waste or loss of time.
The invention includes the process engineering-based teaching that in order to change the spacing at which the tool engages in the passing material web, first a number of different engagement spacings in conjunction with corresponding different circumferential speeds of the tool are predefined, i.e. provided, in a retrievable form, wherein after the activation of a changeover switch, the change to another predefined engagement spacing during operation is executed precisely at the moment the tool engages so that the next time the tool engages with the material web, the new engagement spacing is executed.
The advantage of the method according to the invention lies particularly in that it does not generate any waste associated either with the preceding engagement spacing or with the new engagement spacing. Consequently, the method according to the invention can execute a waste-free changeover of the engagement spacing at full web speed without the machine being switched off. This is achieved through the immediate provision of control data by electronic means, wherein the changeover itself is favorably controlled in a waste-free manner as a function of the engagement situation of the tool with the material web. This is achieved in that the time during the engagement of the tool is used to electronically execute a change to a new engagement spacing. The synchronous running continues to be maintained during the engagement so that the new circumferential speed of the tool becomes effective immediately thereafter.
Preferably the circumferential tool speed to be executed for this is determined in such a way that a uniform motion component is executed as a fundamental motion in order to determine the engagement spacing and is overlaid with a compensation component—which produces an acceleration or braking—in order to achieve an adaptation to the circumferential speed synchronous to the material web during the engagement of the tool. In order to produce a shorter engagement spacing of the tool, a faster uniform motion component of the roller relative to the speed of the material web can be executed, whereas in order to produce a longer engagement spacing of the tool, a relatively slower uniform motion component of the roller is executed.
The method described above is preferably executed by means of a device that includes an electronic control unit, which provides, in a retrievable form, the different circumferential speeds that represent desired engagement spacings. After the activation of a changeover switch, the control unit executes the change to a different predefined engagement spacing precisely at the moment the tool engages.
A sensor is provided to measure the material web speed data required for this and this sensor determines the corresponding desired values in order to control the rollers in accordance with the principle of a real guide axle. In addition, it is also possible to use speed data that are obtained in accordance with the principle of a virtual guide axle. Advantageously, these desired values are provided to a drive regulating unit associated with each roller, which allows the associated roller to be directly controlled in a position-controlled manner.
In addition, a separate computing unit—preferably a PC—can be provided, which is directly connected to the control unit and which, based on various desired engagement spacings of the tool, calculates various corresponding disk-cam-like circumferential speeds of the tool. In this respect, the software used for this purpose functions as a disk-cam-generating tool. The constant rotary motion of the virtual guide axle is converted into a chronologically desirable rotary motion of the roller. In this connection, for every rotation of the roller, there is a region of constant circumferential speed, which coincides with the web speed in order to achieve a synchronous engagement with the material web. The speed in the remaining region is used to determine the distance at which the tool engages with the material web.
According to another step that improves the device according to the invention, the data determined by the computer, together with the virtual guide axle transmission data determined by means of the control unit, are stored directly in the drive regulating unit associated with each roller. Preferably, the control unit has a binary input that functions as a changeover switch. The changeover switch executes a change among a number of disk-cam-like sets of data stored in the drive regulating unit at the same time as the associated guide axle transmission data. The simultaneous changeover assures that the synchronization of the web speed with the circumferential speed of the tool is maintained at all times.
Other steps that improve the invention will be explained in detail below, along with the description of a preferred exemplary embodiment of the invention in conjunction with the drawings.
According to
By means of a changeover switch 13 associated with the input side of the control unit 10, the control unit 10 executes a change from the current engagement spacing of the two tools 6 and 7 to another engagement spacing as soon as the tool 6, 7 engages.
According to
The invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiment disclosed above. Modifications of it are conceivable, which nonetheless fall within the scope of the invention defined by the claims. It is also conceivable for the invention to be used in a known paper cross cutting device that cuts a material web—which is divided into several longitudinal segments—with different engagement spacings, in such a way that different paper formats are produced simultaneously in each of the longitudinal webs, this embodiment permitting the engagement spacings to be changed independently of one another during operation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 53 247 | Oct 2000 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE01/04026 | 10/26/2001 | WO | 00 | 9/11/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/34484 | 5/2/2002 | WO | A |
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4170155 | Saito et al. | Oct 1979 | A |
4201102 | Rudszinat | May 1980 | A |
4255998 | Rudszinat | Mar 1981 | A |
4283975 | Knoll | Aug 1981 | A |
4440051 | Aykut | Apr 1984 | A |
4881436 | Rommel | Nov 1989 | A |
5600221 | Tomatsuri et al. | Feb 1997 | A |
5662018 | Klein | Sep 1997 | A |
5713256 | Keeny | Feb 1998 | A |
5899128 | Smithe et al. | May 1999 | A |
6173633 | McLaughlin | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6604444 | Belanger et al. | Aug 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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36 08 111 | Oct 1987 | DE |
0 001 565 | May 1979 | EP |
0 035 462 | Sep 1981 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040059457 A1 | Mar 2004 | US |