The invention concerns a method for positioning a component, in which a fluid drive moves the component along a guide.
The invention also concerns a device for positioning a component, which has a fluid drive and a guide for moving the component.
These kinds of methods and devices are used, for example, in the blow molding of containers, in which a preform is stretched by a stretch rod during thermal conditioning inside a blow mold and blow molded into the container by the action of blowing pressure. The stretch rods are often positioned by pneumatic cylinders.
In container molding by the action of blowing pressure, preforms made of a thermoplastic material, for example, preforms made of PET (polyethylene terephthalate), are fed to different treatment stations within a blow-molding machine. A blow-molding machine of this type typically has a heating system and a blowing system, in which the preform, which has first been brought to a desired temperature, is expanded into a container by biaxial orientation. The expansion is effected by means of compressed air, which is fed into the preform to be expanded. DE-OS 43 40 291 explains the process-engineering sequence in this type of preform expansion. The aforementioned introduction of the pressurized gas comprises both the introduction of compressed gas into the developing container bubble and the introduction of compressed gas into the preform at the beginning of the blowing operation.
The basic design of a blowing station for container molding is described in DE-OS 42 12 583. Possible means of bringing the preform to the desired temperature are explained in DE-OS 23 52 926.
Various handling devices can be used to convey the preforms and the blow-molded containers within the blow-molding device. The use of transport mandrels, onto which the preforms are slipped, has proven especially effective. However, the preforms can also be handled with other supporting devices. Other available designs involve the use of gripping tongs for handling the preforms and the use of expanding mandrels, which can be inserted in the mouth region of the preform to support the preform.
The handling of containers with the use of transfer wheels is described, for example, in DE-OS 199 06 438 with the transfer wheel arranged between a blowing wheel and a delivery line.
The above-explained handling of the preform occurs, for one thing, in so-called two-step processes, in which the preforms are first produced by injection molding and temporarily stored and then later conditioned with respect to their temperature and blown into containers. For another, the preforms can be handled in so-called one-step processes, in which the preforms are first produced by injection molding and allowed to solidify sufficiently and are then immediately suitably conditioned with respect to their temperature and then blow molded.
With respect to the blowing stations that are used, various embodiments are known. In the case of blowing stations that are arranged on rotating transport wheels, book-like opening of the mold supports is often encountered. However, it is also possible to use mold supports that can be moved relative to each other or that are guided in a different way. In stationary blowing stations, which are suitable especially for accommodating several cavities for container molding, plates arranged parallel to one another are typically used as mold supports.
DE-OS 101 45 579 gives a detailed description of a stretching system of a blowing station with an associated stretch rod. The stretch rod is designed here as a solid rod, and the blowing air is fed to the blow mold through a connecting piston that has a larger inside diameter than the outside diameter of the stretch rod. This produces an annular gap between the stretch rod and an inner surface of the connecting piston, through which the pressurized gas can flow.
The use of a hollow stretch rod is described, for example, in DE-OS 28 14 952. A connection for the pressurized gas is created in this case by an end of the tubularly shaped stretch rod that faces away from a stretch rod tip. Supplying pressurized gas through the end of a hollow stretch rod is also described in DE-OS 34 08 740 C2.
DE-OS 103 25 229.0 already describes the positioning of a stretch rod with the use of an electric linear drive, which is designed on the basis of an operating principle similar to that of a high-speed train system. Linear motors of this type allow highly precise reproducibility in the performance of stretching movements, but they have a comparatively high structural weight and a high price.
In general, each of the previously known devices for positioning components has a series of individual advantages, but so far it has not been possible to satisfy all of the requirements, namely, a low structural weight, a low price of the device, and precise performance of the positioning movements.
The objective of the present invention is to improve a method of the type described at the beginning in a way that is conducive to exact performance of positioning movements with a low resulting equipment weight.
In accordance with the invention, this objective is achieved by virtue of the fact that at least one positioning marker of the component is detected by at least one sensor, that an output signal of the sensor is supplied to a control unit, and that the control unit automatically controls a position of the component by varying the supply of the fluid as a function of the output signal of the sensor.
A further objective of the invention is to design a device of the type described at the beginning in such a way that exact performance of positioning movements is made possible at a low price of the device and at a low device weight.
In accordance with the invention, this objective is achieved by virtue of the fact that the component has at least one positioning marker, that at least one sensor for detecting the positioning marker is mounted in the vicinity of the guide, that the sensor is connected with a control unit for the fluid drive, and that the control unit is connected with a control element for varying the supply of fluid as a function of the output signal of the sensor and for carrying out automatic position control.
The combination of the fluid drive with position detection and position-dependent automatic control of the supply of fluid makes it possible, with the use of a simple and inexpensive fluid drive, for example, a pneumatically operated cylinder, to achieve positional accuracy that would otherwise be possible only with the use of servomotors or linear motors. Compared to the use of servomotors or linear motors, the use of an automatically controlled fluid drive offers the advantage of extreme compactness, a high degree of robustness, and the development of a large amount of power per required element of volume. The automatic control of the fluid drive could thus make it possible to combine the advantages of the previously known drive systems with one another.
An especially inexpensive embodiment is provided by using a pneumatic drive as the fluid drive.
Especially high actuating forces can be produced by using a hydraulic drive as the fluid drive.
To realize a simple design, it is helpful if the fluid drive carries out a linear movement.
The accuracy of position detection can be improved if optical means are used to detect the position.
Position detection without contact can be realized if optical means are used to detect the position.
In another design variant, magnetic means are used to detect the position.
Fast and precise controllability of the supply of fluid is made possible if the control unit drives an electrically controllable valve.
An embodiment that produces high actuating forces and at the same time has a compact design is realized if a piston that moves within a cylinder is used as the fluid drive.
To achieve controllability that is both fast and accurate, it is useful if the piston can be acted upon on two sides by the actuating pressure.
A very high level of automatic control quality with a compact design can be realized if a linear motor is used as the sensor.
In a preferred embodiment, the device is used in a blow-molding machine.
In particular, it is contemplated that the device be used in a stretching system of a blow-molding machine.
Further optimization of the method in connection with the performance of blow-molding operations is achieved if blowing valve control is carried out as a function of position detection provided by the linear drive.
Specific embodiments of the invention are schematically illustrated in the drawings.
The device for molding the container 2 consists essentially of a blowing station 3, which is provided with a blow mold 4, into which a preform 1 can be inserted. The preform 1 can be an injection-molded part made of polyethylene terephthalate. To allow the preform 1 to be inserted into the blow mold 4 and to allow the finished container 2 to be removed, the blow mold 4 consists of mold halves 5, 6 and a base part 7, which can be positioned by a lifting device 8. The preform 1 can be held in place in the area of the blowing station 3 by a transport mandrel 9, which, together with the preform 1, passes through a large number of treatment stations within the device. However, it is also possible to insert the preform 1 directly into the blow mold 4, for example, with tongs or other handling devices.
To allow compressed air to be fed in, a connecting piston 10 is arranged below the transport mandrel 9. It supplies compressed air to the preform 1 and at the same time produces a seal relative to the transport mandrel 9. However, in a modified design, it is also basically possible to use stationary compressed air feed lines.
In this embodiment, the preform 1 is stretched by means of a stretch rod 11, which is positioned by a cylinder 12. In accordance with another embodiment, the stretch rod 11 is mechanically positioned by means of cam segments, which are acted upon by pickup rollers. The use of cam segments is advantageous especially when a large number of blowing stations 3 is arranged on a rotating blowing wheel.
In the embodiment illustrated in
After the mold halves 5, 6, which are arranged in the area of supports 19, 20, are closed, the supports 19, 20 are locked relative to each other by means of a locking mechanism 40.
To adapt to different shapes of a mouth section 21 of the preform 1, provision is made for the use of separate threaded inserts 22 in the area of the blow mold 4, as shown in
In addition to the blow-molded container 2,
To make it possible for a preform 1 to be blow molded into a container 2 in such a way that the container 2 has material properties that ensure a long shelf life of the foods, especially beverages, with which the container 2 is to be filled, specific process steps must be followed during the heating and orientation of the preforms 1. In addition, advantageous effects can be realized by following specific dimensioning specifications.
Various plastics can be used as the thermoplastic material. For example, PET, PEN, or PP can be used.
The preform 1 is expanded during the orientation process by feeding compressed air into it. The operation of supplying compressed air is divided into a preblowing phase, in which gas, for example, compressed air, is supplied at a low pressure level, and a subsequent main blowing phase, in which gas is supplied at a higher pressure level. During the preblowing phase, compressed air with a pressure in the range of 10 bars to 25 bars is typically used, and during the main blowing phase, compressed air with a pressure in the range of 25 bars to 40 bars is supplied.
To allow the closest possible arrangement of the transfer wheel 29 and the feed wheel 35 relative to each other, the illustrated arrangement is found to be especially effective, since three guide wheels 34, 36 are positioned in the area of the corresponding extension of the heating line 24, namely, the smaller guide wheels 36 in the area of the transition to the linear stretches of the heating line 24 and the larger guide wheel 34 in the immediate area of transfer to the transfer wheel 29 and to the feed wheel 35. As an alternative to the use of chain-like transport elements 33, it is also possible, for example, to use a rotating heating wheel.
After the blow molding of the containers 2 has been completed, the containers 2 are carried out of the area of the blowing stations 3 by an extraction wheel 37 and conveyed to the delivery line 32 by the transfer wheel 28 and a delivery wheel 38.
In the modified heating line 24 illustrated in
The coupling element 42 illustrated in
In the embodiment illustrated in
According to the embodiment in
The valve 54 can be designed, for example, as a 5/3-way valve. Alternatively to an arrangement of the positioning markers on a marker bar 57, it is also possible to provide corresponding markers on the positioning rod 51 and to position the position sensor, for example, on the marker bar 57, in a different place within the interior space 56 of the rod, or outside the positioning rod 51 or the piston 53.
In accordance with another embodiment, a linear motor is used as a position measuring system. In accordance with a special embodiment, the linear motor does not contribute to the driving of the positioning rod 51 but rather acts only as the position measuring system. This allows the use of a linear motor with small dimensions, low structural weight, low structural volume and low cost. The linear motor is thus used in this embodiment only as a highly precise position measuring system.
The positioning rod 51 has a position measuring device for detecting a given position of the actuating rod 58. The position measuring system integrated in the positioning rod 51 makes it possible to control the times for switching on the blowing valves for the blowing station 3. At least one of these valves (63, 64, 65, 66) is a preblowing pressure valve, a main blowing pressure valve, a blowing air return valve, and a vent valve for the blow-molded container 3. This allows exact coordination between the time sequences for stretching and blowing.
The combination of the pneumatic drive and the automatic electric control makes it possible, with a low structural weight and high available stretching forces, to provide a programmable stretching movement for almost any desired size of containers 2. In particular, it is possible by means of operator control to adapt to different products to be produced without changing heavy mechanical stretching cams.
In accordance with another embodiment, it is also contemplated that each individual blowing station 3 be provided with its own control system, which controls the respective blowing operation in a locally distributed way. This results in systems that are very simple and unsusceptible to problems, so that even in the event of a local failure of individual components, the other blowing stations remain functional.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 034 846.7 | Jul 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE2006/001265 | 7/17/2006 | WO | 00 | 3/11/2008 |