The present invention relates to a printing machine, including a roller which is hollow and through which a temperature control liquid flows.
Such a printing machine is described in European Patent EP 0 733 478 B1. According to that prior art document, the roller is an oscillating distributor roller and is rotationally mounted by its journals in side walls of a machine frame. In that case, removal of the roller from the printing machine by the operator is neither required nor possible.
German Published, Non-Prosecuted Patent Application DE 103 15 191 A1, corresponding to U.S. Pat. No. 6,941,861, describes a printing machine having anilox or engraved or screen rollers which, replacing one another, are inserted into a pair of roller fittings, that are constructed as quick-acting closures. In that case, there is no provision to control the temperature of the anilox rollers through the use of a temperature control liquid.
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a printing machine which overcomes the hereinafore-mentioned disadvantages of the heretofore-known devices of this general type and in which favorable conditions for constructing the roller as an anilox roller are provided.
With the foregoing and other objects in view there is provided, in accordance with the invention, a printing machine, comprising roller fittings constructed as quick-change devices or quick-acting closures, and a hollow roller through which a temperature control liquid flows. The roller is mounted in the roller fittings. The roller fittings permit the roller to be quickly removed from the roller fittings and the printing machine and permit the roller to be quickly inserted into the roller fittings and the printing machine again, by an operator of the printing machine.
The printing machine according to the invention is advantageously constructed with regard to maintenance of the roller carried out outside the printing machine. For instance, the roller can be an anilox roller having an engraved structure which can in principle be cleaned only outside the printing machine. In addition, the construction of the printing machine according to the invention is advantageous with regard to a change of the roller carried out from print job to print job. For instance, in the case of the construction already mentioned of the roller as an anilox roller, its engraved structure can be suitable for a specific print job and the engraved structure of another anilox roller can be suitable for a following print job, so that one anilox roller is replaced by the other between the two print jobs. The fact that the roller fittings are constructed as quick-change devices or quick-acting closures means that the operator can quickly remove the anilox roller used during the preceding print job from the roller fittings and insert the other anilox roller into the roller fittings.
In accordance with another feature of the invention, the roller and a feed line for conducting the temperature control liquid into the roller are connected fluidically to each other through a line coupling, having a first coupling half and a second coupling half, when the roller is inserted into the printing machine. The roller and the feed line are separated fluidically from each other when the roller is removed from the printing machine.
In accordance with a further feature of the invention, the first coupling half is a first shutoff valve and the second coupling half is a second shutoff valve. The shutoff valves can, for example, be shutoff cocks that can be operated by hand.
In accordance with an added feature of the invention, the first shutoff valve and the second shutoff valve are constructed as self-closing shutoff valves which close automatically when the roller is removed from the printing machine. Therefore, when the roller is removed from the printing machine, one of the shutoff valves substantially prevents the temperature control liquid from emerging from the feed line, and the other of the shutoff valves substantially prevents the temperature control liquid from emerging from the roller.
In accordance with an additional feature of the invention, the first shutoff valve has a sprung, first valve body and the second shutoff valve has a sprung, second valve body. The first coupling half is displaceably mounted in such a way that, when the first coupling half is displaced toward the second coupling half, the first valve body and the second valve body are displaced mutually in order to open the shutoff valves.
In accordance with yet another feature of the invention, the first coupling half is disposed on the feed line and the second coupling half is disposed on the roller. In this case, the feed line can be mounted through at least one rotary bearing in a slide for displacing the feed line and the first coupling half.
In accordance with yet a further feature of the invention, the first coupling half is disposed on the roller and the second coupling half is disposed on the feed line. In this case, the feed line can be a hollow shaft, through which the temperature control liquid flows, for driving the roller in rotation, and a gear can be seated on this hollow shaft. The hollow shaft and the roller can be associated with a driver coupling for transmitting a torque from the hollow shaft to the roller.
In accordance with yet an added feature of the invention, the feed line is a rotary leadthrough, which is located in the printing machine when the roller is removed from the printing machine.
In accordance with a concomitant feature of the invention, the roller is an anilox, engraved or screen roller.
Other features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in a printing machine, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.
The construction and method of operation of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now initially to the common features of the exemplary embodiments shown in the drawings and first, particularly, to
Only one of the roller fittings 3 is illustrated in the drawing. The other roller fitting is constructed mirror-symmetrically with respect to that which is illustrated. The illustrated roller fitting 3 is fitted to a side wall 18 of a machine frame and has a clamping eccentric 23 to secure the roller 2 radially in the roller fitting 3. The clamping eccentric 23 is rotatably mounted in the roller fitting 3 and is rotated by the operator through the use of a socket wrench into a rotary position to secure it. In this rotary position, the clamping eccentric 23 presses an antifriction bearing 24 against two stops of the roller fitting 3, so that the antifriction bearing 24 is clamped in between the clamping eccentric 23 and the stops as in a three-point mounting. The antifriction bearing 24 is seated firmly on an axle journal of the shaft 2.
A rotary leadthrough 17 is a constituent part of a feed line 4, through which a temperature control liquid, preferably water, is pumped into a hollow space 25 inside the roller 2. A line coupling 5 having a first coupling half 6 and a second coupling half 7 is disposed between the feed line 4 and the roller 2. Through the use of the line coupling 5, the roller 2 is connected to a temperature control liquid circuit as desired during roller installation and separated from the circuit again during roller de-installation.
In the following text, the exemplary embodiments will be described separately from one other with a view toward their special features.
In the first exemplary embodiment illustrated in
The first exemplary embodiment is based on the following function: After the roller 2 has been inserted into the roller fitting 3 and secured, the slide 13 together with the first coupling half 6 and the first shutoff valve 8 is displaced toward the roller 2, so that the first valve body 10 of the first shutoff valve 8 strikes and presses the second valve body 11 of the second shutoff valve 9, and the valve bodies 10, 11 are displaced mutually into the aforesaid valve position, in which the shutoff valves 8, 9 are open.
Each valve body 10, 11 is constructed as a substantially M-shaped profiled ring and has at least one valve opening 27 in the form of a transverse bore introduced into the inner side or flank of the respective valve body 10, 11. In the valve position provided in order to open the shutoff valve 8 or 9 (see
In the aforesaid valve position, the temperature control liquid flows out of an annular gap 29 of the rotary leadthrough 17 and between the outer sides or flanks of the valve bodies 10, 11 resting on each other and the bead-like valve seats 28 and, subsequently, into the hollow space 25 of the roller 2. The temperature control liquid then flows through the hollow space 25 and flows out of the latter into the interior of the second shutoff valve 9. The temperature control liquid flows through the valve opening 27 in the second valve body 11, out of the interior of the second shutoff valve 9 into an internal space formed jointly by the two valve bodies 10, 11 resting on each other. The temperature control liquid flows from this internal space through the valve opening 27 introduced into the first valve body 10 into the interior of the first shutoff valve 8 and, from the latter, through the pipe 22, back into the rotary leadthrough 17. The flow path of the temperature control liquid is illustrated symbolically through the use of arrows in
In the second exemplary embodiment illustrated in
The hollow shaft 14 is subdivided by a dividing wall 34 into a first liquid channel 35 and a second liquid channel 36. The pipe 22 of the rotary leadthrough 17 extends into an inlet of the first liquid channel 35, and the second shutoff valve 9 is disposed in an outlet of the first liquid channel 35. The first shutoff valve 8 is disposed in an extension of the first liquid channel 35 formed in the roller 2. A third shutoff valve 30 is disposed in an extension of the second liquid channel 36, likewise formed in the roller 2. A fourth shutoff valve 31 is disposed in an inlet of the second liquid channel 36, and the annular gap 29 of the rotary leadthrough 17 is connected to an outlet of the second liquid channel 36. The third shutoff valve 30 has a third valve body 32, and the fourth shutoff valve 31 has a fourth valve body 33. The four shutoff valves 8, 9, 30, 31 are identical and the valve bodies 32, 33 are conical or tapered and spring-loaded through the use of valve springs 26, so that the shutoff valves are self-closing. The first coupling half 6 of the line coupling 5 is provided with blind holes, in the bases of which the first valve body 10 and the third valve body 30 are seated in the closed valve position. The second coupling half 7 is provided with hollow plug pins, in the tops of which the second valve body 11 and the fourth valve body 33 are seated in the closed valve position.
When the coupling halves 6, 7 are coupled to each other (see
The line coupling 5 is coupled due to the roller 2 with the first coupling half 6 disposed thereon being displaced in the axial direction. This displacement of the roller 2 together with the first coupling half 6 toward the second coupling half 7 on the frame side is carried out at the time at which the antifriction bearing 24 of the roller has already been inserted loosely into the roller fitting 3 but has not yet been secured therein through the use of the clamping eccentric 23. In order to guide the aforesaid axial displacement of the roller 2, a linear guide 38, along which the antifriction bearing 24 slides as far as the clamping eccentric 23, is formed on the roller fitting 3.
As the line coupling 5 is coupled, at the same time a driver coupling 16 is also coupled. In the coupled state, the driver coupling 16 transmits the rotational drive movement from the hollow shaft 14 to the roller 2. The driver coupling 16 is what is known as a shaft-hub connection and includes one or more axial grooves 20 on the outer side of the axle journal of the roller 2 and sliding springs 21 complimentary to the groove or grooves 20 on the inner side of the hollow shaft 20 or, preferably, a ring connected to the hollow shaft 20. When the driver coupling 16 is engaged, the grooves 20 are brought into engagement with the sliding springs 21. A mutually interchanged configuration of the grooves 20 and of the sliding springs 21 is equally possible, as is the construction of the driver coupling 16 as a claw coupling of a different configuration having coupling halves which can be released from each other.
An important advantage possessed by both exemplary embodiments described previously is to be seen in the fact that the temperature control liquid can run neither out of the roller 2 nor out of the feed line 4 when the roller 2 is removed from the roller fitting 3. Without any action on the part of the operator, the shutoff valves prevent any leakage of the temperature control liquid, so that not only is contamination otherwise caused by the temperature control liquid avoided but the volume of the temperature control liquid in the temperature control liquid circuit is also kept constant and frequent topping-off or replenishment of the temperature control liquid is not necessary. From this point of view, the printing machine 1 is therefore very easy to maintain.
This application claims the priority, under 35 U.S.C. ยง 119, of German Patent Application DE 10 2004 054 388.7, filed Nov. 11, 2004; the entire disclosure of the prior application is herewith incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 054 388 | Nov 2004 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3633663 | Tafel | Jan 1972 | A |
4138778 | Marzoli | Feb 1979 | A |
5535674 | Vrotacoe et al. | Jul 1996 | A |
5784957 | Rau et al. | Jul 1998 | A |
5904642 | Kusters et al. | May 1999 | A |
6598378 | Pottier | Jul 2003 | B1 |
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6941861 | Bitterich et al. | Sep 2005 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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103 15 191 | Nov 2003 | DE |
0 733 478 | Sep 1996 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060096481 A1 | May 2006 | US |