The present invention relates generally to a sheet accumulating system and, more particularly, to a continuous web cutter.
Continuous web cutters are known in the art. Typically, a continuous web cutter is used to cut a continuous web of material into cut sheets, and provide the cut sheets to a sheet accumulator, where the accumulated sheets are moved to an insertion station in a mass mailing inserting system. In a typical web cutter, a continuous web of material with sprocket holes on both side of the web is fed from a fanfold stack into the web cutter. The web cutter has a tractor with pins or a pair of moving belts with sprockets to move the web toward a guillotine cutting module for cutting the web cross-wise into separate sheets. Perforations are provided on each side of the web so that the sprocket hole sections of the web can be removed from the sheets prior to moving the cut sheets to other components of the mailing inserting system. In particular, some continuous web cutters are used to feed two webs of material linked by a center perforation. In the cutter, a splitter is used to split the linked webs into two separate web portions before the linked webs are simultaneously cut by the cutting module into two cut sheets.
In a feed cycle, the paper is advanced past the blade of the guillotine cutting module by a distance equal to the length of the cut sheet and is stopped. In a cut cycle, the blade lowers to shear off the sheet of paper, and then withdraws from the paper. As soon as the blade withdraws from the paper path, the next feed cycle begins. The feed and cut cycles are carried out in such an alternate fashion over the entire operation.
In some web cutters, it is desirable to achieve a cutting rate of 25,000 cuts per hour or more, for example. This means that the web cutter has a feed/cut cycle of 144 ms. Typically the length of the cut sheet is 11 inches (27.94 cm). If the time to complete a cut cycle is about 34 ms, then the total time in a feed cycle is 110 ms. This means that the web must be accelerated from a stop position to a predetermined velocity and then decelerated in order to stop again within 110 ms. The acceleration and deceleration action of the tractor causes the paper web immediately upstream of the tractor to whip up and down uncontrollably. If the whipping motion is severe, the web may break. As the cutting rate increases, the problem becomes more acute.
Lorenzo (U.S. Pat. No. 5,768,959) discloses a web cutter wherein two separate modules are used to take in a web from upstream: a slitter module for slitting the web into two web portions so as to allow a cutter module to separately cut the web portions into sheets. In order to coordinate the movement of the web portions between the slitter module and the cutter module, two parallel paper loops are provided between the two modules.
While this approach helps reduce the breakage of the web, the loops are too large. Moving such a large loop might still cause the web to tear because of the inertia and whip when the web cutter operates at a high cutting rate.
It is advantageous and desirable to provide a method and device for further reducing the whipping motion of the web paper immediately upstream of the tractor and the tension in the web due to acceleration of the tractor so as to avoid breakage of the web.
The present invention uses one or more control loops upstream from the tractor of a web cutter to reduce the whipping or snapping action of the web.
According to the first aspect of the present invention, a method is provided for further reducing breaking in a paper web when the web is moved into a web cutter from an upstream source, wherein the web cutter comprises:
a cutting mechanism for cutting the web into sheets, and
a first moving mechanism for moving the web into the web cutter, wherein the first moving mechanism operates in a start-and-stop motion cycle, the motion cycle having
a stop period to allow the cutting mechanism to cut a sheet from the web, and
an acceleration period during which the first moving mechanism accelerates from a stationary state to a predetermined velocity at a cutter acceleration in order to move a length of the web downstream from the cutting mechanism, and
a deceleration period during which the first moving mechanism decelerates from the predetermined velocity at a cutter deceleration to the stop period. The method comprises the steps of:
disposing a second moving mechanism upstream from the first moving mechanism for moving the web toward the first moving mechanism to form a partial loop upstream from the first moving mechanism so as to allow the first moving mechanism to move the web toward the cutting mechanism via the partial loop, and
operating the second moving mechanism in a further motion cycle in coordination with the start-and-stop motion cycle and having a second acceleration less than the cutter acceleration and a second deceleration less than the cutter deceleration.
Preferably, the first moving mechanism moves the web into the web cutter along a first plane, and the second moving mechanism moves the web toward the first moving mechanism along a second plane different from the first plane. The first plane is a horizontal plane, and the second moving mechanism is disposed below the first plane so as to move the web toward the first moving mechanism from a point below the first plane.
Preferably, the second plane is substantially a vertical plane.
Advantageously, the further motion cycle having a further starting point substantially coincident with a starting point of the start-and-stop motion cycle.
Preferably, the second moving mechanism has a minimum speed when it is at the further starting point. The minimum speed can be zero or greater than zero.
Advantageously, substantially all of the loop of paper upstream from the first moving mechanism is used up after the acceleration period of the second moving mechanism.
According to the present invention, the first moving mechanism moves the web more than the second moving mechanism by a length difference prior to the deceleration period, and the loop is greater than or substantially equal to the length difference.
Advantageously, the method further comprises the step of
disposing a third moving mechanism upstream from the second moving mechanism for moving the web toward the second moving mechanism, such that a further partial loop of paper is formed between the second moving mechanism and the third moving mechanism so as to allow the second moving mechanism to move the web toward the first moving mechanism via the further partial loop.
According to the second aspect of the present invention, a web cutting system is provided for moving a web of paper from an upstream paper source and for cutting the web into sheets. The web cutting system comprises:
a cutting mechanism;
a first moving mechanism, positioned upstream from the cutting mechanism, for moving the web of paper past the cutting mechanism, wherein the first moving mechanism operates in a stop-and-start motion cycle, the motion cycle having
a second moving mechanism positioned upstream from the first moving for moving the web toward the first moving mechanism to form a partial loop of paper upstream from the first moving mechanism so as to allow the first moving mechanism to move the web via the partial loop, wherein the second moving mechanism operates in a further motion cycle in coordination with the start-and-stop motion cycle, wherein the further motion cycles has a second acceleration less than the cutter acceleration and a second deceleration less than the cutter deceleration.
Advantageously, the web cutting system further comprises:
a third moving mechanism positioned between the second moving mechanism and the upstream paper source for moving the web toward the second moving mechanism, such that a further partial loop of paper is formed between the second moving mechanism and the third moving mechanism so as to allow the second moving mechanism to move the web toward the first moving mechanism from the further partial loop.
The present invention will become apparent upon reading the description taken in conjunction with
a is a schematic representation illustrating a preferred embodiment of the present invention at the start of a feeding cycle.
b is a schematic representation illustrating the preferred embodiment at the end of the feeding cycle.
The method of web control, according to the present invention, is illustrated in
In particular, when the primary tractor 60 moves the web in a direction substantially in a horizontal plane 260, the secondary tractor 80 is oriented such that it moves the web in a direction substantially in a vertical plane 280 from a point below the horizontal plane 260. As such, the web is pushed upward when it enters the loop 180. As shown in
It is preferred that the control loop 180 be small so as to reduce the inertia acting on the web. In order to achieve a small control loop 180, both the primary tractor 60 and the secondary tractor 80 are set in motion in a coordinated way. In particular, both the primary tractor 60 and the secondary tractor 80 are designed to accelerate and decelerated in a related operation cycle. Because only the primary tractor 60 must stop to allow for the cutting cycle, the secondary tractor 80 can accelerate and decelerate differently from the primary tractor 60. Thus, while the primary tractor 60 operates at full acceleration and advances the web 20 as quickly as possible, the secondary tractor 80 operates at a lower acceleration rate. This lower acceleration rate reduces the breakage of the web as the web paper is pulled by the secondary tractor 80 from the upstream source. At the same time, because the paper at the control loop 180 is moved by the secondary tractor 80 toward the primary tractor 60, the stop-and-start motion of the primary tractor 60 does not produce as severe a pull on the paper.
An exemplary velocity profile of the primary tractor 60 and that of the secondary tractor 80 are shown in
For example, if the primary tractor 60 accelerates from 0 to 135 in/sec from t=0 to 30 ms and the secondary tractor 80 accelerates from 0 to 135 in/sec from t=0 to 64 ms, then the reduction in paper length in the control loop 180 is given by Area 1, or
(1/2)(135 in/sec)(0.03 sec)+(135 in/sec)(0.034 sec)−(1/2)(135 in/sec)(0.064 sec)==2.295 in
This means that there must be at least 2.295 inches of paper in the control loop 180 before a feed/cut cycle begins. In order to maintain the same loop situation, Area 2 must be equal to Area 1, as shown in
With this motion profile, the acceleration rate of the primary tractor 60 is given by
at1=135 (in/s)/0.03 s=4500 (in/s2)=11.6 g,
and the acceleration rate of the secondary tractor 80 is given by
at2=135 (in/s)/0.064 s=2109 (in/s2)=5.44 g
where g is acceleration of gravity.
With the motion profiles, as shown in
Accordingly, the required minimum amount of paper in the loop 180 (
coordinated movement of the secondary tractor 80 alone, substantially reduces the mass of the control loop.
It should be noted that the secondary tractor 80 is not required to stop between cycles. For example, the secondary tractor 80 can accelerate and decelerate, yet maintain a minimum velocity Vn, as shown in
If it is desirable to have a maximum of 36,000 cuts per hour with a cut cycle of 24 ms, the velocity profile of the primary tractor and that of the secondary tractor are shown in
a
t1=203 (in/s)/0.022 s=9227 (in/s2)=23.8 g,
at2=203 (in/s)/0.046 s=4413 (in/s2)=11.4 g
With the velocity profile, as shown in
With the motion profiles as shown in
By placing the secondary tractor 80 orthogonal to the primary tractor 60, control of loop formation is enhanced by the bend in the paper path. Thus, as shown in
It is preferred that the primary and the secondary tractors are driven by separate and independent motors. However, these motors will be controlled in a coordinated way, as shown in
It is also possible to have more than one control loop between the upstream source and the primary tractor 60. As shown in
It should be noted that the number of control loops can be three or more. As shown in
The web moving mechanisms for moving the paper web into the web cutter have been described as tractors. However, it is also possible to use wheels and rollers to move the web. This is known in the industry as pinless tractors. With wheels and rollers, it is not necessary to provide sprocket holes of the web.
Although the invention has been described with respect to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing and various other changes, omissions and deviations in the form and detail thereof may be made without departing from the scope of this invention.
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Number | Date | Country |
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10011006 | Sep 2001 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040221700 A1 | Nov 2004 | US |