This application is a U.S. national stage application of International App. No. PCT/FI2003/000594, filed Aug. 7, 2003, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein, and claims priority on Finnish Application No. 20021454, Filed Aug. 8, 2002.
Not applicable.
In the slitter-winders of paper and board machines a web is cut in the cross-direction into several component webs, and a pair of blades comprising a top blade and a bottom blade is used in the cutting. The width of the component webs to be slit by the blades and thus the position of the slitting blades can vary to a great extent when different blade settings are used, depending on the set widths of the rolls to be produced. The slitting blades have to be positioned, in the lateral direction of the web, in the right slitting position corresponding to the desired roll widths. In order to produce component webs of the desired width the slitting blades of the slitter-winder are spaced apart as desired in the lateral direction of the paper or board web i.e. a change of settings is carried out.
FI patent 68185 discloses a method and a system for position change. This publication describes a method in a system used in the slitting of a paper web, in which, to observe the position of the slitting device, a measuring device is used which is in a position arrangement which comprises actuating members for controlling and performing the movement of the measuring device in the cross-direction of the web and which system comprises at least one limiter i.e. for limiting the operation of the measuring device along the distance between the extreme positions such that one extreme position serves as the datum position for the determination. An observing device in both directions of movement observes at least one member of the slitting device. The system comprises drive means for the actuating members and moving devices performing a corrective movement of a movable device or member. The position of the slitting blades has been determined during a standstill of the machine by means of this known arrangement, having the aim of minimizing the duration of the standstill.
It is known from prior art to measure the position of the blades used in slitting by means of a carriage-type arrangement, in which a sensor is placed in a moving carriage with which, by means of optic or magnetic measurement, the position of the blades has been established. These measurement methods are used in connection with the changing of settings.
In a prior art application based on magnetic measurement each blade carriage is equipped with a fixed permanent magnet, and the distance between the permanent magnet and the slitting blade is constant, and the position of the permanent magnet connected to the blade carriage is measured by means of a magnetic measuring device, thereby establishing the position of the blade. In connection with the changing of blade settings, information is also needed, in addition to the information on the position of the sharpening blades, on the new, replacing blades and, after the detachment and grinding of the blades, position information, since, after these steps, the distance between the slitting blade edge and the magnet of the blade carriage changes, which means that no exact information on the position of the blade is available based on the results from the measurement methods described above. Also, the slitting blade edge wears, which leads to inaccuracy when using the above-mentioned measurement methods. In the above-described situations, when prior art applications have been used, there has been a need to carry out so-called tuning runs in order to determine the position of the slitting blade edge.
It is an object of the invention to provide a solution for eliminating or at least minimizing the disadvantages described above. An object of the invention is to provide an easy-to-use and reliably operating method and device for calibrating the position of the blades of a slitter-winder.
The invention is based on a magnetostrictive sensor known as such, which sends out magnetic pulses on the basis of whose returning time the position of the blade is determined. Each top and bottom blade used in slitting comprises a permanent magnet on the basis of which information is continuously received on the position of the blades.
According to the invention at least one of the measurement points of the sensor is used, and magnetostrictive measurement is most appropriately used as the measurement method, some other equivalent multipoint measurement method also being suitable in this connection.
According to the invention, when the position of the blade carriage changes in relation to the position of the slitting edge, a measuring device i.e. a calibration tool is used, which is placed by the blade so that the positioning member of the calibration tool touches the slitting edge. The calibration tool is located on a guide and the position of the slitting edge is determined based on the measurement results of the magnet pairs or equivalent measuring members. When the blade concerned is known, it is possible to calculate, based on the distances, the exact position for the slitting edge. The device according to the invention is used on a slitter-winder when the blade is calibrated, e.g. when the bottom blade is worn or when changing the top blade, whereby information on the position of the slitting blade edge is received immediately, e.g. after a blade change, without separate tuning runs or the like.
The device according to the invention comprises, according to one of its advantageous applications, a manually operated measuring device equipped with a permanent magnet and its use in connection with a magnetostrictive sensor in the off-set calibration of a slitting blade edge. According to the invention the measuring device can also be positioned using other ways of measurement, e.g. based on optic procedure. Different types of data transfer procedures and wire and wireless, preferably digital, data transfer can be used in connection with the invention.
According to an advantageous application of the invention a manually operated measuring device is pressed against a blade guide and moved sideways to be in contact with the blade to be measured. Attachment to the guides allows the position of the magnet of the measuring device with respect to the sensor to be established, and it ensures that the direction of measurement is right. After this, the position of the magnet of the measuring device is read by means of a magnetostrictive sensor and the distance between the slitting blade edge and the fixed magnet of the blade carriage is calculated by software. According to the invention the calibrated blade positions can be brought accurately to the target i.e. to the desired slitting point without separate control measurements and movements or tuning runs and, in addition, the exact position of the blade is known at all times on the basis of feedback data.
According to a further advantageous feature of the invention the calibration can be automated, for example, so that when the measuring device finds a magnet, it performs the calibration, e.g., after the expiration of ten seconds, or, for example, a control button or an equivalent arrangement is used for performing the measurement.
The calibration according to the invention can be carried out easily without slide gauges or other equivalent precision tools. A further advantage of the invention is that, most appropriately, the calibration measurement procedure makes use of the same measurement method that is used in any case in determining the position of the blades.
In addition to the actual calibration tool no separate auxiliary devices or other accessories are needed in the invention and it is suited to be used for both the top and the bottom blades and for left- and right-handed blades. The device according to the invention is easy to use, thus reducing the chance of human mistakes, and the calibration arrangement according to the invention is easy to put into practice and does not require any special know-how.
A further advantage obtained by means of the invention is that, if the blade carriage is in an oblique position, which as such does not affect the mechanical operation of the slitting blade, this defect—irrectifiable as such only by improvement of measurement precision in other procedures—is also eliminated. Since the calibration tool according to the invention performs the measurement from the slitting point, better quality in the width of the component webs to be slit and thus in the delivery tolerance of the rolls can be obtained.
In the following, the invention will be described in greater detail with reference to the figures of the accompanying drawing.
The calibration tool 20 in the example shown in
When the calibration tool 20 is attached to the blade guide 14 and moved sideways so that the control edge 21 is in contact with the slitting edge 17 of the ground bottom blade 11, the precise position of the blade edge 17 is determined as follows. The position of the calibration tool magnet 23 is measured by the magnetostrictive sensor 16, as is the position of the permanent magnet 18 on the bottom blade carriage 11A. Software then computes the distance between the slitting blade edge (as determined by the position of the calibration tool control edge) and the permanent magnet 18 of the bottom blade 11. The distance between the bottom blade carriage permanent magnet 18 and the blade edge 17 is then known. The blade carriage can then be moved to position with the blade edge 17 in a known position.
In the foregoing the invention has been described with reference only to some of its advantageous exemplifying embodiments, to the details of which the invention is, however, by no means intended to be narrowly confined.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20021454 | Aug 2002 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FI03/00594 | 8/7/2003 | WO | 00 | 2/8/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/014619 | 2/19/2004 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
319751 | Shimer | Jun 1885 | A |
493807 | Beale | Mar 1893 | A |
696309 | Bowers | Mar 1902 | A |
1687649 | Gillett | Oct 1928 | A |
3205586 | Mullen | Sep 1965 | A |
3298106 | Duvall | Jan 1967 | A |
4443950 | Cockeram | Apr 1984 | A |
4458514 | Bathory | Jul 1984 | A |
4501177 | Logan et al. | Feb 1985 | A |
4531328 | Jewett | Jul 1985 | A |
4548105 | Koutonen | Oct 1985 | A |
4592259 | Görner et al. | Jun 1986 | A |
4607552 | Siler | Aug 1986 | A |
4809573 | Welch | Mar 1989 | A |
6382066 | Maier et al. | May 2002 | B1 |
6544105 | Berne et al. | Apr 2003 | B1 |
6662072 | Berne et al. | Dec 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
42 33 010 | Apr 1994 | DE |
100 23 210 | Nov 2001 | DE |
68185 | Apr 1985 | FI |
2 093 189 | Aug 1982 | GB |
WO 2004014619 | Aug 2003 | WO |