The present invention relates to a method and device for hot gluing a bundle of material in the form of sheets.
Nowadays, hot gluing has become a very popular way to make documents and similar, in which the general principle is that a bundle of sheets, for example, paper sheets, are bound together, usually in a device designed for this purpose.
In the device, there are means for holding the bundle in place, possibly means for roughening the back of the bundle, means for spreading the glue on the spine surface of the bundle, and means for gluing covers onto the sides of the bundle.
On the other hand, hot-gluing devices intended for small jobs are also known, in which a separate handheld device is used to spread the glue.
It is obvious that a handheld device is only suitable for work that is not very demanding. This is because hot gluing often requires quite precise settings, to permit the desired high-quality finished product to be created. This seldom succeeds with a handheld device.
In hot gluing, because the intention is to glue the sheets to each other, even though over a very limited area, the bundle to be glued is bent to the side for a certain distance, thus forming, in a known manner, a small step between adjacent sheets of paper and exposing a small part of the side surface of the sheet to allow the glue to be spread onto it too. This esnures the strength of the gluing. The bending takes place by using flexible supports on either side of the edge of the bundle.
However, the system referred to has the drawback that, in cases in which it is intended to glue a cover or covers, included in the bundle, onto the bundle, for instance, when making books, the gluing of the cover is generally insufficient, when this forced bending takes place with the aid of supports. An attempt can be made to improve this during the process, by manually pulling the sheet of cover material to the side, to open a gap between the cover sheet and the first sheet to be glued. It is obvious that manual operations during work that is otherwise done mechanically takes unnecessary energy and accuracy that could be used better in the other work stages of the process.
It has now been surprisingly invented, that by suitably adapting the previous known method, a total process can be achieved, which no longer has stages requiring the manual pulling of the cover material, and which also surprisingly gives a better result than before, using only conventional operations of the machine. Particularly, when making a book, this achieves excellent gluing of the cover sheet to the rest of the bundle of sheets.
The aforesaid and other advantages and benefits of the present invention are achieved in the manner described as characteristic in the accompanying claims.
In the following, the invention is examined in greater detail with reference to the accompanying patent drawings, which show as a series some of the work stages required to glue bind a bundle of sheets.
Thus
As stated,
On top of the bundle to be glue bound, there is an apparatus for spreading glue on the spine of the bundle. The apparatus includes a glue-spreading roller 6, which, if necessary, can be rotated using a suitable operating device, which is not shown in
An arrow 9 is used to show the vertical basic adjustment of the glue-spreading apparatus, which in this case is implemented using screws 10, but which can of course be of any type at all. The glue-spreading roller can also be adjustable vertically, for example, by pivoting it rotatably around an axis parallel to the roller. If necessary, adjustments can also be made by tilting the roller 6. If necessary, there can be several glue rollers. The apparatus can also include one or several separate roughening rollers, if required.
However, the most important aspect is that the cover material 11, which is on the outside of the bundle pressed on the press bench and is folded away from the bundle 2, folds regularly in such a way that a gap opens between the cover material and the outermost sheet of the bundle and the glue forms an accumulation over the edge of the bundle and to the point of contact of the cover material with the roller, thus permitting strong side gluing between these two sheets of material. The strength is due to the additional amount of glue, which also means that the gluing takes place over a greater distance than in the solutions of the state of the art.
In
Both adjustment screws 17 and 18 are attached to the edge of a side-nip bench 16. The bench 16 also has a beam or similar support piece 19, against which the press-bench side of the bundle 2 is supported. The precise positioning of the press bench takes place using the screw 18.
The final stages of the gluing process begin once the gluing roller has spread the glue on the back of the bundle 2 as described above. After this, the press bench is turned in a suitable manner, for example, using a lever, which is not shown here, from the position of
As the final stage, the glued piece that has cooled for a moment and been bound is removed from the press and the free part of the cover is pressed in place at the side of the bundle that has been formed, after which the final finishing operations, such as the final trimming of the book, are carried out, if necessary.
The core of the whole process is that no separate devices are required to bend the bundle or to fan it out. Fanning takes place naturally, when the relatively sturdy press bench/press beam components 21, 21′ are used to support the bundle from both sides. These components are particularly completely rigid, or at least sufficiently rigid to only permit a limited degree of bending. The position of the supports during the process is such that the glue-spreading roller 6 can cause a suitable bend in the sheets to spread the glue slightly onto the side surfaces of the sheets as well. In practice, this means a distance of centimetres from the edge of the bundle, usually, for example, a distance of about 1-3 centimetres. Usually, the supports are positioned symmetrically relative to the bundle, i.e. the edges of the supports are essentially at the same distance from the edges of the bundle 2.
The above discloses only one embodiment of the invention, without in any way being restricted to it. Many variations are possible while nevertheless remaining within the scope of the protection of the basic inventive idea and defined in the accompanying claims. For example, in addition to the glue-spreading roller, a separate spreader roller can be used in front of the glue-spreading roller, so that the first roller carries out the opening/fanning out of the back while the second spreads the glue. The glue-spreading roller then does not need to exert as much pressure on the spine of the bundle as it does when operating alone.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20020162 | Jan 2002 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI03/00024 | 1/15/2003 | WO | 00 | 3/7/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/064169 | 8/7/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1741269 | Alger | Dec 1929 | A |
2044365 | Pederson | Jun 1936 | A |
2455971 | Bosch | Dec 1948 | A |
5011187 | Hunder et al. | Apr 1991 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
119555 | May 1976 | DE |
3439984 | May 1986 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050152771 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |