The current method of flat-bed die cutting in the packaging and other sectors, relies on a cutting blade protruding from a Forme (Drawing 1) to cut through cardboard or other material and make contact with a cutting surface or Platen under sufficient pressure to effect a clean cut (Drawing 1) in order to sever the waste area from the saleable die-cut ‘blank’. Each die-cutting Forme has cutting blades and creasing rules arranged so as to stamp out a blank to a required design. The blank when glued or similarly joined or formed, makes a corrugated or cardboard box or tray. This flat bed die cutting method is typical of many other industries where flat bed die cutting is employed.
Flat bed die cutting relies on a cutting forme, containing cutting blade to cut/stamp out a blank/shape through a process where the blade passes through the material/board and makes contact with a cutting plate/platen to affect a cut and therefore a separation of saleable area and waste area. Creasing rule makes surface contact to create a score allowing the material to fold accurately into a pre-determined structure.
Long set up times can and frequently do occur due to the uneven wear of the platen and cutting rule created by the contact method of die cutting. There is also the separate issue of vertical inaccuracy of the cutting blades, which, if not fixed at a consistent 90 degrees over all of the cutting area of the forme, will compound a lack of uniformity.
This current and usual method of achieving a uniformed cut is to “pack” the blades that are not cutting by fixing non-compressible tape to the plate at the back of the Forme. Too little tape has no effect and too much means removal of some or the taping of the blade that was previously cutting. It is not uncommon for the machine Crew to refer to this “Make-Ready” stage as “chasing their tail”. This stage can also be referred to as Patch Up.
Obviously this means lost Production time and because of the trial and error method of “fixing” the problem. This inflicts more damage/wear on the already inaccurate Forme or Platen surface. Occasionally the machine Crew will opt to increase pressure between the forme and platen to force the blades which are not cutting, to cut without the need for tape. This crude method will shorten the lifespan of the tooling and in some cases the blades can damaged and may need to be replaced. This is extreme, but by no means uncommon.
To overcome the issue of extended set up times resulting in lost production time, the Zero Make Ready method proposes, that through the negation of cutting blade contact with a platen surface, by means of an etched or engraved channel in a female Cutting Plate, set up time is reduced considerably or negated as is wear on the cutting blades and also the Platen/Cutting Plate. The trial and error Make Ready method of machine setting that creates partially or inaccurately cut product is also removed, thereby reducing waste product that is a necessary by product of trial and error setting. Employing this new Zero Make Ready method does not guarantee that there will be absolutely zero contact of the blade and the base of the channel. This may be due to Operator skill level, Operator choice, or indeed lack of machine accuracy for any reason including age and/or wear. If there is minimal contact, Zero Make Ready is still achieved.
The new Zero Make Ready Flat Bed Die-Cutting method offers a solution by negating the need for the cutting blade to contact any surface at any time other than as described previously. The blade passes through the corrugated fibreboard or solid cardboard (or other material) and enters a channel in the Platen or Cutting Plate (Drawing 2) before returning to the start point when the machine cycle begins again.
The top surface of the Platen or Cutting Plate (Female/Counter), which can be single or multi-layered and which is registered with the Cutting Forme (Male) during machine setting, will be etched or engraved, by laser or other method, to create a corresponding and opposite channel to accommodate the entering blade or blades. The channel needs only to be sufficiently deep and wide to accommodate the entering and retracting blade. The channel will be shaped to best accommodate the profile of the cutting blade. Notching, or attaching of waste, to assist transfer through an automatic or semi-automatic machine, will still be done in the preferred manner of the individual.
The machine can now be set with the cutting blades of the Forme passing through and beyond the material cutting at every point when entering the channel in the Cutting Plate (Female/Counter) there is therefore no need for “make ready” taping to level vertical inaccuracy of the blades in the forme, or indeed an uneven cutting surface.
Setting times are therefore limited to the loading of the Tooling Set, male and female, onto the machine. Running adjustments are absolutely minimised or perhaps even eliminated. Waste product is also reduced, as trial and error Make Ready adjustments are no longer required.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0521806.0 | Oct 2005 | GB | national |
| 0606500.7 | Mar 2006 | GB | national |
| 0618723.1 | Sep 2006 | GB | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/GB06/03851 | 10/18/2006 | WO | 00 | 4/28/2008 |