This application is a national stage application of International Application No. PCT/EP2012/068956, filed on Sep. 26, 2012, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The embodiments of the present invention relate to a method and system for the manufacture of a razor cartridge.
Mechanical razor heads with movable blades have been described in the past. In such heads, a cutting member is positioned on spring tongues which push it upwards, in contact with a part of the head which defines an upper stop. The position of the blade is to be defined very precisely, since its exposure will greatly affect the shaving performance of the razor head.
It is a challenge to manufacture such products in a very reliable way, yet cost effectively and with high throughput.
WO 2010/006654 discloses a suitable way, by which the cutting members are placed into a guard. A plastic cap covers the guard and cutting members and is assembled to the guard by ultra-sonic welding.
Although this process is very useful when the razor head comprises two plastic parts, which can be each tailored to a specific function, one may alternatively want to reduce the number of different plastic parts (ie reduce the number of molds and the risk of discarding an assembly because only one of the two plastic parts is outside of the acceptable dispersion range).
To this aim, it is provided a method for the manufacture of assemblies, which includes:
providing a sub-assembly comprising:
a molded plastic housing having a front part and a rear part, a first lateral part and a second lateral part, the front, rear, first and second lateral parts defining a hollow space between them, the housing having a top face having a window mouthing into the hollow space, and an opposed bottom face, the housing further comprising elastic support members extending in the hollow space,
at least one member elastically supported by at least one elastic support member, and having an elongated edge running from the first to the second lateral faces, and accessible through the window,
providing a pre-clamp, made of a formable material, and having a U-shape with a first and a second parallel leg portions joined by a transverse base portion,
assembling the pre-clamp to the sub-assembly, by placing the first and second leg portions on either sides of the hollow space with the base portion extending across the edge of the member,
deforming the first and second leg portions to cooperate with the bottom face of the housing to hold the member in the housing.
The above method showed able to provide the required levels of accuracy and throughput.
In the embodiments of the present invention, one might also use one or more of the features defined in the claims.
Other characteristics and advantages of the present invention will readily appear from the following description of one of its embodiments, provided as a non-limitative examples, and of the accompanying drawings.
On the drawings:
On the different Figures, the same reference signs designate like or similar elements.
In particular, the guard comprises a front area 61 and a rear area 62 (front and rear are defined by the normal direction of shaving). The front area 61 may comprises a guard bar, and the rear area may comprise a lubrication strip. Between the front and rear areas, a central area 63 defines a hollow space receiving one or more cutting member(s) extending in parallel to one another. The cutting members extend between two lateral areas 64a and 64b of the guard. The two lateral areas 64a and 64b extend from the front area 61 to the rear area 62.
The guard 1 is also provided with biasing members 65. These biasing members bias the cutting members toward a rest position. As an exemplary description, biasing members 65 comprise spring tongues. A spring tongue extends from a lateral area toward the center of the guard, sensibly in parallel with the cutting member edge. It also extends from the bottom area toward the top area of the guard, where ‘top’ designates the face normally used for shaving, and ‘bottom’ an opposite face, through which rinsing water and cut hair flow. The cutting member rests on two opposed spring tongues.
Each lateral portion of the guard is provided with two insertion holes 66. Such holes are through holes which extend from the top to the bottom area of the guard. For each given lateral portion, an insertion hole is provided on either side of the hollow space.
The cutting members can for example be of the type ‘blade fixed to a bent support’.
The inputs of the machine are a guard feeding station 4, three cutting member magazines 5a, 5b, 5c, and a pre-clamp feeding station 6. The number of cutting member magazines may vary, for example from 1 to 5.
The machine 8 comprises a servo-motor 10 which drives stepwise a platen 11 consisting of a plurality of stages 12 (only two stages are shown on
The cycle is made of ⅓ platen movement and ⅔ platen stay. During platen stay, other tools provided along the assembly path 13 are operated under the action of a crankshaft 15 synchronized with the servo-motor 10.
The stages of the platen can be loosely connected to one another, floating in the room's reference frame.
As shown on
The nest comprises a base 17 which has a bottom portion 18 fixed to the stage (through screws), and a receiving cavity (filled with an assembled razor head on one of the nests of the above drawing) shaped to receive the guard. Lateral jaws 19a, 19b are movably mounted on the base, and are spring-loaded with respect thereto in order to hold the guard 1 in the nest.
In particular, in
Back to
The pick-and-place apparatus 23 can use an end provided with suction (vacuum) to hold the guard and release it in correct position in the nest 16.
Movement of the end can be commanded by the crankshaft 15. Hence, the end is moved in Z direction (up-down) with a vertically mobile part 73, which itself is mounted on a horizontally mobile part 74 which moves in the horizontal plane with respect to a fixed frame 75 of the system. Alternatively, movement of the end can be commanded by a servo-motor synchronized with the servo-motor 10.
The guard is moved to a first cutting member-placing station 76. Here, 3 cutting member-placing stations 76, 77, 78 are used, the one after the other along the assembly path. All cutting member-placing stations are identical.
As shown schematically on
At this stage, all three cutting members 2a, 2b, 2c are placed in the guard 1, to provide a sub-assembly, as shown on
Control can be provided after the blades are placed in the guard. Control can be performed by pressure switch during each pick-and-place action. If the control does not reveal any problem, the process continues as follows. If the control reveals a problem, the process continues as follows except that the pre-clamps are not delivered (meaning that the following tools will operate ‘empty’ in such case), or the process continues as follows but the head will be discarded after clamp formation.
The guard with introduced cutting members is moved into the clamp delivery station 32. It is possible to retain the cutting members inside the head by any additional means. There can be two clamp-providing stations, one for each pre-clamp to be placed on each respective side of the guard. The stations are similar, except for the different locations for providing the pre-clamp (one on each lateral side of the guard). A device similar to the one handling the cutting members can be used.
In the clamp-forming station 11, both ends of both U-shaped pre-clamps are bent simultaneously to their final shape.
As shown on
The forming station comprises a base 42 which is movable up and down under crankshaft command, using the two-link arm system 35, 36 as described above.
The support 54′ receives two claw shafts 54. The claw shafts extend parallel to each other along a horizontal axis and are offset with respect to one another along the normal horizontal axis. The claw shafts are rotatably mounted on the base 42.
The base 42 comprises 2 pairs of bending claws 45a, 45b and 46a, 46b (one pair for each pre-clamp, one claw of a given pair for each pre-clamp end) which are fixed on a respective claw shaft 54a, 54b.
A spring 47 extends between the upper ends of two associated claws, and biases the claws of a given pair toward a rest position. Alternatively, a torsion spring could be mounted directly on each claw shaft end. The claw shaft 54 cooperates by caming action with the surface 49 of the cam bracket 48 to cause rotation of the claws which surround the guard and pass beneath it so as to fold/bend the pre-clamp ends to their final bent condition. This is described for the front claws, but applies equally to the rear claws.
In this final condition, and as shown on
The tool further comprises a holder 50 to maintain the clamp and the guard (the holder 50 contacts only the upper clamp surface 85) during the bending action. The holder has a basis 51 mounted to translate on the base 42 of the tool along the Z axis, and a stop 53. Springs 52 are provided between the holder and the base 42.
The station which has just been described operates as follows: The whole cycle is driven by the crankshaft 15 through the arms 35 and 36.
Upon a first step of the movement of the base 42, the basis 51 is moved together with the base 42 until it contacts the upper surface 85 of the pre-clamp and also the stop 53 abuts on a not-shown stop of the frame. This stop of the frame ensures that the holder 50 will stop on its way down in case the nest is empty—without razor head—and so it will not crash on the nest. At this location, the basis 51 forms a load member in contact with the base 81 of the pre-clamp, preventing the pre-clamp from moving upward during bending movement. The stop 53 defines the ultimate exposure of the blades. The stop's position can be finely adjustable in the Z direction by an operator. Hence, the springs which receive the cutting member might be biased to a requested load at this stage.
Further movement downward of the base (second step of base movement) will compress the springs 52 in order to provide a retardation effect upon release and also to allow for the further movement of the base downwards.
As the support moves downward, the claw shafts 54 cooperate with the cam bracket 48, so that the cam surface 49 causes a rotation of the claw shaft with respect to its longitudinal axis. The rear claw shaft is submitted to a movement symmetric to the above one, with respect to a central plane of symmetry passing vertically between the two axis. Thus, the claws 45a and 46a are rotated counter clock-wise on
As a third step of the base movement, the claw shafts are rotated in the reverse direction (still by cam action). Upon release, the springs 52 will first be unloaded, without the basis 51 moving upward, thus still somehow maintaining the clamps in place just after bending. Only when the springs are sufficiently uncompressed, the basis 51 will move upwards.
The apparatus can then be provided with an inspection station. This station can for example be an optical inspection station which will check the presence of the two clamps. If the two clamps are not present, the head will be removed from the nest, and will fall to scrap. If the inspection station does not reveal any problem, the operation continues as follows.
The machine 8 further comprises an output station 7 which outputs assembled heads to bulk or toward further processing.
The output station has an actuating means to move the jaws 19 of the nest away from the head against the springing action. The head can be picked-and-placed from the main apparatus to further processing or bulk using a similar pick-and-place apparatus as the one used for pick-and-placing the guard in the nest at the guard-placing station.
Although an embodiment of such an apparatus has been described in details below, other embodiments appear possible.
As a variant of the platen embodiment, the servo-motor 10 could drive stepwise an endless belt consisting of many stages 12 along an assembly path 13 (here a straight path along a longitudinal horizontal axis) and back along a return path parallel to and below the assembly path. In such case, the mis-assembled head will not be removed from the nest, but will fall to scrap when the belt returns to its original position. An inspection station can be provided just before the guard-feeding station to check that the nest really is empty.
Such a system would provide increased modularity, for example in order to add more stations, for example more cutting member insertion stations in order to assemble razor heads with more cutting members. It might just be sufficient to add a few additional stages to cope with the increased length of the path.
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PCT/EP2012/068956 | 9/26/2012 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/048460 | 4/3/2014 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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International Report of PCT/EP2012/068956; dated Jun. 4, 2013. |
European Office Action, dated Mar. 26, 2018 for European Application No. 12 768 772.1-1006. |
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20150239137 A1 | Aug 2015 | US |