This application is a 371 of PCT/IB01/01766, filed Sep. 26, 2001.
The invention relates to plate processing device. The invention further relates to a method for processing a plate.
Metal plates are normally bent within a long gap. The bending means generally obtains its driving power by means of a hydraulic cylinder or some other mechanism, and since the driving power is brought either from one point or a few points, the apparatus must be fairly rigid and stable. For this reason the apparatus is usually expensive to manufacture. The deflection of the apparatus usually obeys a generally known rule, which is proportional to the third power of the span length. Similarly, the thickness of structure has the same effect when the profile is constant. A plate-bending machine with holding jaws and a pivotable forming tool is known e.g. from German application publication 4343123 and from German application publication 2248679 corresponding to U.S. Pat. No. 3,815,393.
Swiss patent 620609 corresponding e.g. to U.S. Pat. No. 4,181,002 introduces a plate-bending device in which bending against a counter element is brought about by a forming member that is mounted for rotational movement in a housing of a mounting element and forms jaws that bend the plate edge against the counter element. The rotational movement of the forming member is brought about by moving the mounting element towards the counter element by a hydraulic cylinder. The device is a tool that is transferred manually in a direction parallel with the plate edge.
An object of the invention is to construct a plate-bending and cutting device operating on a totally different principle, wherein it will be light-weighted and inexpensive. Another object of the invention is to design a safe device, whereby risks to occupational safety can be avoided, especially of fingers being clamped. The device according to the invention is composed of at least two tube elements or tube sectors that are cut open partly in a sector-like configuration and rotating within each other. Inside the intact sector part of the tubes or in a space between radial projections outside the tube elements is directed hydraulic pressure or gas pressure inside inflatable hose-like power elements that act between the tube sectors and operate as actuators to bring about bending or cutting movement.
In the following, the invention will be described in more detail with reference to the appended drawings, in which
The pressure of the medium, such as hydraulic pressure or gas pressure makes the hose-like elements inflate and rotates the innermost tube element 2 relative to the static element 1 up to the limit where the plate 5 to be bent is wished to be bent. In accordance with the invention, the same pressure can be used for closing by a hose unit 9, which is placed inside handle parts 8 of bending pliers 7 and inflate by pressure. There may be one hose or a plurality of hoses. One handle part 8 is pivotally connected to turn to the inner tube element 2, and the opposite handle part 8 is fixedly connected to the tube element.
In accordance with the invention, the pressure and the torsion brought about thereby is distributed evenly over the entire length that is bent and it stresses walls 11 and 12 of a space 10 that remains inside the outer tube element 1, one of said walls being a radial wall 11 of the outer tube element, and the other being a radial wall 12 of the inner, moving tube element.
When the inner tube element 2 (
A second embodiment of the invention (
The plate-bending device according to the invention is very inexpensive and easy to build compared to the heavy-weighted devices for the same work processes on the market. Similarly, it is easy to transfer from one place to another and it can also be easily connected to work as an auxiliary device in automatic sheet metal working centres.
It is also possible to consider an embodiment for the invention (
In
The movements of the device are smooth and no point load stresses are caused. It should particularly be noted that in device of the invention the price of the structure increases more slowly than its width, whereas in conventional plate-bending devices the price increases at least proportionately to the second power of the constructional width. All in all, the plate-bending device according to the invention is more oriented to occupational safety than any device presently on the market. The operation of the device can be made faster when a pressure accumulator 17 for the hose-inflating fluid is used. An operating pump 20 can charge the pressure accumulator when the plate is not bent (
It is preferable to arrange “lubrication” between the opposing sliding surfaces of the tube sectors that rotate within each other in a manner that pressurized air is brought from inside into the space between the tube elements that move relative to each other. In this case the air cushion principle is used. This “air cushion lubrication” is particularly effective when air is taken from an oil-lubricated compressor in a manner that the oil is not entirely separated from the air. The lubrication air is let to exit directly to the outer air. If air of 5 bar is used, the diameter of the tube shells is 600 mm, and the average lubrication carrying pressure is kept at 1.5 bar, the “lubrication force” obtained is almost 1000 MN/meter in length. If the device uses e.g. 5 bar of hydraulic pressure and it is e.g. 5 m in width and 600 mm in diameter, the torsional force available is 260000 Nm. Bending a steel plate of 2 mm over the width of 5 m requires, in turn, only 1500 Nm. Under the above conditions, the device can be used for bending steel plates up to the thickness of 27 mm. For strengthening the outer tube element in bendings that require this much power it is advantageous to use a reinforcing flange around the outer tube, in a position perpendicular to the tube. An adequate number of sufficiently thick reinforcement flanges are mounted.
The movement between the tubes can naturally be made rotable also by using a conventional system, which is illustrated in
The movement of the tube elements, particularly when the device is constructed only for cutting a plate, can be made rotatable also on the outside, e.g. by using ball bearings 22, as shown in
When the working device consisting of tube elements is used only for cutting a plate, the track of the plate 5 can be opened also on the other side of the tube elements in order to let the plate pass through the device entirely, as illustrated in
When a narrow plate blank is processed by a wide plate-processing device it is advantageous that the inflating power elements of the actuators 4 are divided into a plurality of different sections in relation to length, as is shown in
The directions from which the plates are supplied to the device are determined on the basis of the positioning of the tube sectors 1, 2, i.e. the tube elements. They can be positioned in a manner that a path passing through the device is formed approximately in parallel with the diameter, i.e. supply takes place in a direction substantially perpendicular to the rotation axis, as described above. When supplying from this direction the plate can be bent gradually when the supplying proceeds, wherein curved or polygonal forms can be obtained in the plate, depending on the structure of the bending tool.
Another alternative supplying direction is the direction of the rotation axis. Thus, the plate can be supplied e.g. between two tube sector units and both edges of the plate can be worked. The tube sector units are not necessarily parallel, but they can form an angle, wherein plates can e.g. be cut to a conically tapering form. The device can be adjustable, wherein rotation axes of the tube sectors located on both edges can be set to a desired angle relative to each other.
If the plate is supplied to the device in a manner that it is located over the entire length of the device (longitudinal direction refers here to the direction of the rotation axis of the tube sector), the actuators divided in compartments (
a and 10b show an option relating to a cutting device which makes it possible to feed the plate through the direction of the diameter, or the plate can also be supplied at the end. The figure shows also the ascent of the cutting blade.
The invention is not restricted to what has been described above, but it can be modified within the scope of the inventive idea presented by the claims. Different tools can be changed to the rotating tube sector according to the desired working method. Further, the device can be provided with a function in which holes are punched in a plate by a rectilinear movement by connecting the punching tool by means of a linear guide and a driving rod to the tube sector performing the rotating movement. The fixed tube sector 1, relative to which the rotation movement of one or two moving tube sectors 2, 3 takes place, does not need to be made of a plate of even thickness, but it can also form a “housing” with a circular inner surface, in which housing the rotating tube sectors are made rotatable. Nevertheless, a fully tube-like form is preferably for a light-weighted structure.
Moreover, it is possible to arrange the plate to be supplied in a manner that the plate it kept in place by suitable attaching means and the device is moved in relation thereto, e.g. when the plate is worked on both edges simultaneously.
The invention is applicable for processing all types of plate materials to be worked, particularly for processing sheet metal carried out by bending or cutting.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20002116 | Sep 2000 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB01/01766 | 9/26/2001 | WO | 00 | 8/27/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/26413 | 4/4/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3149518 | Winestock | Sep 1964 | A |
3815393 | Daniels | Jun 1974 | A |
4181002 | Eckhold et al. | Jan 1980 | A |
4412466 | Jurkowski | Nov 1983 | A |
4756863 | Petershofer | Jul 1988 | A |
4875356 | Boardman et al. | Oct 1989 | A |
5495741 | Yamada | Mar 1996 | A |
5507168 | Mizukawa et al. | Apr 1996 | A |
6029493 | Maier et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6487888 | Baulier et al. | Dec 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
4188093 | May 1994 | AU |
4206417 | Sep 1993 | DE |
4343123 | Jun 1995 | DE |
2713965 | Jun 1995 | FR |
2344546 | Jun 2000 | GB |
8203340 | Mar 1984 | NL |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040035175 A1 | Feb 2004 | US |