This application is the US-national stage of PCT application PCT/EP2013/066167 filed 1 Aug. 2013 and claiming the priority of German patent application 102012015466.6 itself filed 3 Aug. 2012.
The invention concerns a method of folding paper with a folding machine having a folding station, and a portion of a paper web supplied to it is first folded into a first stack containing continuous sheets and, and after reaching a threshold value of the first stack thus created, is moved into a tray and thus remains connected to the remaining part of the paper web via a folded trailing sheet, and a section of the folded trailing sheet serves as the basis for a further subsequent stack of continuous sheets to be folded thereupon.
It is known that industry and document reproduction providers, for example, use large-format paper webs, in particular printed paper webs, to record technical documentation or other comprehensive data records thereupon. The standard widths of such paper webs range up to 914 millimeters (36″). The length of the paper web—and thus that of the document—can vary and can measure up to 100+ meters depending on application.
It is also known that large-format documents of this type are folded for easier handling or archiving. In Germany, standardized folding of technical documents is regulated in DIN 824. Folding standards vary by country.
Paper-folding of this type is usually as automated as possible, with folding machines being able to handle both lengthwise and widthwise folding and using rollers or belts, for example, for folding.
In this case, however, the length of the paper web to be folded one time, and thus the size of the documents being processed once are subject to technical limits. Because of this, the process of folding the printed paper web results in the formation of stacks of pages folded one-over-the-other that must be transported by components (for example rollers, folding belts) of the folding machine. These components must therefore be movable so that they provide the required space. The mobility of these components, however, compromises the accuracy of the folding. The folding length, i.e. the total width of the folded pages, is thus limited to approximately 6 m on roller-based folding machine when using 80 g/m2 weight paper. With a belt-based folding machine, the folding length for such paper would be limited to approximately 12 m. In both cases, the costs would rise disproportionately as folding length increases.
To be able to achieve large folding lengths for paper webs of several tens of meters to over one hundred meters, however, semiautomatic methods are designed, for example, such that stacks are initially folded to the maximum possible paper length and then moved from the folding machine into a storage position. The paper web remains connected to a further portion of the paper web via an unfolded trailing sheet, and a section of this trailing sheet serves as the basis for an additional subsequent stack of continuous sheets to be folded thereupon. This subsequent stack can then also be built up to the technologically possible length and then discharged. This method can be continued over multiple stacks. This results in a product of at least a few automatically generated folding packages that are connected to one another via unfolded trailing sheets. These trailing sheets must then be manually refolded by a system operator so that the individual folding stacks can be set one on the other to form a large stack. This manual folding of the trailing sheets is time-consuming, labor-intense and involves a high rate of failure.
DE 10 2009 032 159 discloses a fully automatic folding machine and a folding method in which an unfolded portion must be outputted when a paper stack is deposited in a tray and then retracted into the folding machine with at least a portion of the folded layers following the depositing of the paper stack so that these areas can be used as the basis for a folding stack. This comparatively large retracted portion of the paper can subsequently cause folding inaccuracies and delays in the folding procedure.
WO 2010/018059 [U.S. Pat. No. 8,298,127] also discloses a fully automatic folding method in which the paper is held back in the folding station while the folded stack is moved into the tray. During this time, the paper supply to the folding station must be stopped. Because, however, the upstream device, for example a printer or plotter or similar continuously operates, this results in a large loop of paper that must be handled when the subsequent stack is created.
The object of the invention seeks is to provide a method of folding paper such that the disadvantages described above are avoided and in which only the smallest possible loop is necessary.
To solve this problem it is proposed that before moving the first stack through the folding station outlet into the tray the trailing sheet is withdrawn from the folding station from the first already folded stack through the folding station intake, that the trailing sheet is fed back into the folding station while the first stack is moved into the tray, that the already folded sheet fed back into the folding station serves as the basis for the subsequent stack being folded, and that the process of withdrawing later trailing sheets upon reaching the particular threshold values is continued until the entire paper web supplied is completely folded.
Withdrawing the trailing sheet from the already folded stack in the folding machine and before it is discharged from the folding machine toward the tray results in the loop upstream of the folding machine being equal in size only to approximately the set folding length.
In a generic method in which the stack is guided alternatingly between three rollers into guide plates, it has proven advantageous that upon reaching the threshold value, the paper web is folded in the next folding step between two of the rollers only such that the rollers and the supply rollers are reversed after folding is performed, that after the completed fold has left the gap between the rollers, the rollers are once again reversed, while the supply rollers continue to pull the trailing sheet further out of the folding station, that at this point the first stack is guided into a guide plate and guided outward via same, that the supply rollers are then reversed when the next to last fold has left the gap between rollers and that after the first stack has exited the guide plate and reached the tray, the rollers are reversed for stacking again.
This way, after the paper web has been folded without the stack being transported further into the corresponding guide plate, the folding and supply rollers are reversed, and as soon as the fold has left the gap between the rollers folding it, the rollers can be reversed again. The supply rollers continue to further withdraw the paper web, but as soon as the second to last fold has exited the gap between the rollers that have created the second to last fold, the supply rollers can be reversed again. Thus the set length between folds has effectively been withdrawn only approximately one time by the supply rollers. The loop that has formed from the withdrawn paper web plus the further conveyed paper web is thus very small. The elimination of the loop can be started as early as when the stack is transported into the tray. In addition, only a comparatively small portion of the paper web is withdrawn for further processing, thereby allowing folding inaccuracies to be avoided.
The invention is described below in greater detail using drawings.
The drawing shows a folding station 16 formed between a roller 1 and rollers 2 and 3 cooperating with the roller 1. Guide plates 4 and 5 are associated with the roller 1. Supply rollers 6 and 7 feed a paper web 9 in a direction 8 to the rollers 1 to 3.
After the folds 11 have exited the gap between the rollers 1 and 3, the rollers 1 to 3 are reversed again, while the supply rollers 6 and 7 continue to pull the trailing sheet 12 of the paper web 9 farther out of the folding station 16 (see
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Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2012 015 466 | Aug 2012 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/066167 | 8/1/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/020103 | 2/6/2014 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4484905 | Ashburner | Nov 1984 | A |
5085624 | Felix | Feb 1992 | A |
5139247 | Meschi | Aug 1992 | A |
5616113 | Van Den Bergh | Apr 1997 | A |
6511408 | Miki | Jan 2003 | B2 |
8298127 | Terhaag | Oct 2012 | B2 |
20110130262 | Terhaag | Jun 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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102009032159 | Jan 2001 | DE |
1052462 | Nov 1983 | SU |
WO2011003508 | Jan 2011 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150175384 A1 | Jun 2015 | US |