The subject-matter of the invention is a combination of mechanisms suitable for guaranteeing a quick and automatic change of materials wound on reels, with substitution of exhausted reels with fresh ones that replace the former ones and continue the work after reconnecting the reeled material.
Nowadays it is usual, in working machines of common use, to change reels by means of a manual operation while the machine is not running, said operation comprising cutting of the remaining material from the exhausted reel, dismounting the reel (i.e. its core), mounting a fresh reel and connecting the leading edge thereof to the remaining trailing edge of the exhausted reel; after these operations the machine can be re-started. The service time can be quite reduced by adopting two reel-holders located in the working position and to be alternated in feeding the same material; however, this may involve problems of overall dimensions as well as of safety for the operators if they have to intervene on one of the two reels for replacing it while the machine is running.
A main object of the invention is to solve the aforementioned problems by providing a solution that is industrially applicable in a cost-effective way.
The term “reel-holder” here means a spindle that is rotatable around its axis and on which a reel of material to be unwound is mounted; something completely different is, instead, a rewind reel-holder, in which the spindle is motor-driven for forming a reel of wound material.
The apparatus according to the invention consists mainly of a mechanism for cutting and reconnecting the reeled material; such mechanisms are briefly described here below by way of example.
The reel-changing apparatus according to the invention is particularly suitable for feeding working machines and comprises at least:
an element rotatable around itself and carrying two or more reel-holders, the whole forming substantially a carousel;
supporting and guiding means allowing said rotatable element to be brought to the working point and moved away from it;
means for the guided rotation of said rotatable element, said means allowing to alternate each of the reel-holders in the same angular working position;
means for displacing said rotatable element, said means allowing to bring said element away toward the outside and, after its rotation, to retract it by bringing again one of the reel-holders in the working position.
The rotatable element equipped with reel-holders is fixed to a carriage slidable on guides and is moved forward and backward by a piston attached to the carriage itself, whereas the shaft protruding from the piston is anchored to the guide support, the attachment of the piston and/or the anchoring of the shaft being adjustable through adjusting means adapted to establish the working position of the reel-holders.
For rotation of the element with the reel-holders around itself there is provided an axial gear engaged by a toothed rack which is freely slidable longitudinally for a certain distance and is then blocked by a stop, preferably an adjustable stop.
The axial gear is mounted on a one-way bearing which becomes engaged when the rotatable element with the reel-holders moves away from the working position and becomes disengaged when it is retracted to said position.
The reel-holders have protrusions adapted to engage into a clutch device or reel-unwinding control device, said engagement being provided upon retraction of each reel-holder to the working position.
The reel-changing apparatus is particularly suitable for feed working machines and comprises:
an abutment element which inserts itself near the reeled material when the latter is close to exhaustion, said abutment element being retractable;
a device blocking the flow of said material downstream of the exhausted reel;
a mobile element which, abutting against the abutment element, causes cutting of the material, while holding, attached to itself, an edge of the material of the exhausted reel, and then moves, thus leaving space for the entrance of a fresh reel, onto which it subsequently intervenes by engaging the leading edge of the fresh reel with the held edge from the former exhausted reel.
The retractable abutment element is sharp.
The mobile element which abuts against the abutment element is an oscillating arm provided with air suction adapted to hold an edge of the cut material.
Some embodiments of the invention will be described by way of non-limiting example with reference to the annex drawings, in which:
As illustrated in
By actuating the piston P, the carriage SS moves outwards, thus bringing both reel-holders B1,B2 out of the working path and guiding the toothed rack C into contact with the abutment element R2, and thereafter—by continuing the action of the piston P until its end stop—the gear 1 in engagement with the toothed rack C, which is blocked, is forced to rotate by 180° around itself together with the shaft A and the corresponding reel-holders B1,B2. As a consequence, the reel-holder B2 takes angularly the place formerly occupied by the reel-holder B1, turning the fresh reel towards the machine wall M; in order to take said fresh reel to the working position it is then necessary to actuate the piston P so as to retract it, while avoiding, however, that the return of the toothed rack C to the starting position brings about a counter-rotation by 180° of the shaft A; to this aim it is provided that the connection between the gear 1 and the shaft A is established by a one-way bearing SL which comes into engagement only when the action of the piston P is directed outwards. In order to prevent unwanted movements of the shaft A and of the corresponding reel-holders there are also provided two devices with spring-biased balls (so called “click” balls) indicated with K1,K2 in
The solution illustrated for controlling reels is essentially mechanical, but an equivalent thereof can be the adoption of electrical controls, such as for instance an electronically controlled motor for rotating the reel-holding carousel GS, or an actuator, this too being electrical, for moving the carriage SS forward and backward.
It must be stressed once again that the proposed solutions are not exclusive for characterizing the invention, the scope of which is defined by the claims.
Now that the mechanism for alternating the reels has been described, the steps in which the reeled material is cut and reconnected are still to be examined, said steps being interposed with the steps, already described, of reel alternation; indeed, only after cutting of the remaining material from the reel of the reel-holder B1 the carriage SS can move outward, whereas the reconnection of the material T of the fresh reel is provided only after the fresh reel of the reel-holder B2 has been put in the working position. The correlation between the functions provided for the mechanisms already described and for those that are still to be described makes it necessary to consider them in an organic way from the patent viewpoint; nevertheless, as these technical solutions are not mutually necessary—meaning that the solution of the rotating carousel GS+carriage SS may not necessarily require the solution cutting-reconnection described here below, and vice versa—it is convenient to protect them with separate autonomous claims, though patent unity is satisfied.
The description of the cutting and reconnecting mechanism starts from the basic illustration of
The provided steps start with signalling by a detector of the reel diameter, followed by blocking of the forward movement of the material T by means of the brake FR acting on the underlying roll RL through the piston P2; it is not necessary to concomitantly stop the machine, because the piston P3, adequately biased in advance before the reel BB1 becomes exhausted, has already created a stock of material (the so-called “buffer stock”) which is sufficient, at low speed, for carrying out the provided step without stopping the machine.
Simultaneously, a knife CT comes out of the slot FE—provided in the machine wall—and positions itself transversely behind the material T; immediately thereafter, a mobile counter-acting tool comprising a mobile arm BM equipped with a protrusion with a suction head ASP, moves against the front face of the material T and pushes it against the cutting edge of the transverse knife CT, cutting the material and holding its upper edge by air suction, whereas the lower edge remains attached to the core of the exhausted reel BB1 (see
The fresh reel BB2 is placed so that its leading edge, suitably provided with an adhesive, or provided with an adhesive appendix, is directed towards the protrusion with suction head of the mobile arm BM; said arm immediately moves and brings the remaining upper edge of the material T into contact with the adhesive of the leading edge of the reel BB2, whereby a connection is created that restores the continuity of the material to be fed to the machine. At this point the suction by the arm BM ceases and therefore the arm becomes detached from the material and returns to its starting position, and the same is done by the brake FR by means of the piston P2; in the meantime, the “buffer stock” of material created by the piston P3 has become exhausted and the piston P3 has gradually returned to the condition provided for the machine working at full speed, once the phase at low speed necessary for the already described steps has been completed; consequently the shaft of the piston P3 comes out entirely, bringing the roll RU3 under the rolls RU1 and RU2, so that at full speed the path of the material T is rectilinear, undeflected by the action of the rolls; after that, the machine can start working again at full speed, after all the steps of reel alternation and cutting and reconnecting of the material have been performed in a few seconds.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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AN2014A000120 | Aug 2014 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2015/055831 | 7/31/2015 | WO | 00 |