The present patent application refers to a process used to automatically iron the edges of slash pockets, and also the machine used to implement said process.
The ironing operation is currently carried out by hand, and therefore the ironing process and machine of the invention are an absolute novelty.
The machine of the invention provides for a loading station for the items to be ironed and means to transfer them automatically to the ironing station, where two ironing buffers operate and are situated over and under the ironing plane.
The plane is characterised by the presence of a large window over which the item to be ironed is moved and held, partly supported by the lower ironing buffer and partly supported by threads with suitable orientation adapted to favour the perfect ironing of the fabric and avoid the creation of undesired folds.
For major clarity the description of the invention continues with reference to the enclosed drawings, which are intended for purposes of illustration only and not in a limiting sense, whereby:
FIGS. 4 to 7 are cross-sections with a transversal vertical plane of the two ironing buffers, each of them showing the position of the said buffers in the different steps of the ironing process.
For a better understanding of the invention, it is necessary to define the different parts of a slash pocket, as the one shown in
At the loading station (SC) the item with the pocket to be ironed is placed as illustrated in
The pocket cut (TT) is bordered and finished by a pair of parallel edges (F) with reinforcements (R), while a facing (M) is designed to internally cover the mouth of the pocket.
As shown in
Two seams (C1, C2) run parallel and equidistant on the fabric (T) with respect to the pocket cut (TT); the seam (C2) is situated on the upper part (PS) of the pocket cut (TT) and affects the facing (M), the edge (F) and the reinforcement (R), while the seam (C1) is situated on the lower part (PI) of the pocket cut (TT) and affects the edge (F) and relevant reinforcement (R), as shown in
In
In view of the above, this description continues with a detailed illustration of the machine used to implement the ironing process of the invention.
The machine is provided with a worktop (P) with a slot (1) that extends from the loading station (SC) to the ironing station (SS), ending in a rectangular window (2) where the fabric (T) is transferred and held long enough to allow the ironing means (MS) to perform their function correctly.
As shown in
More precisely, the threads (4) of the second pair are respectively fixed to the connection vertexes (1a) between the slot (1) and the window (2) and continue with diverging direction through the window (2), as shown in
The fabric (T) is transferred from the loading station (SC) to the ironing station (SS) by means of transport blades of known type, which drag the fabric (T) over the worktop (P) along a direction that coincides with the longitudinal axis (X-X) of the slot (1), which is the same as the axis of the pocket cut (TT).
After the pocket has been placed in the loading station (SC), the first pair of threads (3) is situated under the fabric (T), and more precisely inside the fold (B) on the fabric (T) near the seams (C1 and C2), as shown in
The position of the threads (3) guarantees that the position of the edges (F) with relevant reinforcements (R) and the position of the facing (M) are perfectly maintained while the item is transferred from the loading station (SC) to the ironing station (SS), that is to say that the folding lines (B) maintain the distance and the parallel position with respect to the axis X-X of the slot (1).
The second pair of threads (4), that is to say the threads situated in the window (2), guarantee the perfect ironing of the pocket, since the threads (4) support the fabric (T) inside the window (2).
The ironing means (MS) include an overlapped pair of buffers (5 and 6) situated respectively over and under the worktop (P) in the window (2), both of them being supported by a jack (5a and 6a) that allows them to move vertically.
The vertical travels of the lower buffer (6) are smaller than the travels of the upper buffer (5), it being understood that the two buffers mutually adhere on a plane coplanar to the worktop (P).
The lower buffer (6) in idle position is slightly lower with respect to the pair of threads (3 and 4) so as not to interfere with the correct position of the pieces of fabric (F, R, M) in the ironing station (SS), and particularly inside the window (2).
The lower buffer (6) is padded with silicone or honeycomb soft material of known type.
The upper buffer (5) includes a central body (5b) having basically the same dimensions as the lower buffer (6), and, as shown in FIGS. 4 to 7, laterally provided with an opposite pair of jacks (5c) with horizontal axis, which support and actuate a pair of divaricating plates (7) folded with L-shape so as to partially cover the lower face (5d) of the central body (5b) with their horizontal wings (7a).
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the horizontal wings (7a) have arched convex longitudinal borders (7b), so that the adherence points to the fabric (T) are closer to the pocket cut (TT) in the centre and farther from the pocket cut (TT) at the ends.
The presence of the arched shape is due to the need to adjust the ironing tension of the pieces of fabric (F, R, M, T), which must be higher in the central section of the pocket cut (TT), where the fabric can give way more easily, and lower in the ending sections of the pocket cut (TT), where ironing encounters some resistance in the continuity of the fabric (T) and in the seams at the two ends of the pocket cut (TT).
When the upper buffer descends over the lower buffer, the divaricating plates (7) press the pieces of fabric (T, F, R, M) situated between the two buffers (5 and 6) and then open out following to the activation of the jacks (5c).
Once the plates (7) have divaricated, the upper buffer (5) irons the pieces of fabric (T, F, R, M) with steam jets coming out of a series of holes drilled on the lower side (5d) of the central body (5b), which, according to a known construction, includes channels with valves to distribute and dispense steam through the said holes.
Once the dispensing of steam has ceased, the lower buffer (6) aspirates the steam dispensed by the upper buffer (5) by means of a series of upper holes.
Also the lower buffer (6) has a conventional construction, with a perforated surface and internal channels used to aspirate the steam dispensed by the upper buffer.
The ironing process includes nine operational steps, which are now illustrated in detail with reference to FIGS. 4 to 7, which, for easier graphical reference, show the position of the ironing means (MS) at each operational step and not the pieces of fabric (T, R, F, M) to be ironed.
The worktop (P) is not sectioned in FIGS. 4 to 7, which is only shown with a line (P1).
During the nine operational steps the buffers (5 and 6), the divaricating plates (7) and the threads (3 and 4) cooperate to iron the fabric (T), edges (F), reinformcements (R), and facing (M).
The process includes the following sequences of operational steps:
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| MC2004A000102 | Jul 2004 | IT | national |