This application claims priority to PCT/EP2004/051744 entitled “A reeling device for semi-finished rolled products”, filed on 6 Aug. 2004, which claims priority to Italian Patent Application No. MI2003A001637, filed on 8 Aug. 2003.
The present invention relates to a reeling device for semi-finished rolled products, such as round bars, flat bars, rods, or wire rods (whether smooth or ribbed) of hot-rolled metal material, which have, for example, a round, square, rectangular or hexagonal cross section.
A device for guiding the formation of the turns of a skein of hot-rolled products, known in the state of the art, is described in the European patent No. EP1.126.935 filed in the name of the present applicant and is schematically illustrated in
The overlapping of the turns inevitably causes damage of the rolled material on account of the deformations and scratches that are generated thereby, and this occurs at the expense of the quality of the end product. Said overlapping moreover causes an irregular final shape, which has repercussions on the final shape of the skein.
A solution for overcoming said drawback could be that of increasing the distance between the turns, i.e., increasing the pitch of the winding given the same cross section of the rolled material to be wound. In this way, however, the various turns cannot be compacted against one another so that less compact reels would be obtained.
The purpose of the present invention is to provide a device for reeling semi-finished rolled products that will represent an improvement over devices of a known type, in particular with reference to the problem outlined above of overlapping of the bar arriving on the reel with respect to the turns already formed on the same layer in order to obtain skeins of good quality and with a geometrically more orderly arrangement of the turns.
Another purpose of the present invention is to obtain a compact and perfectly cylindrical shape of the skein (optimal shape) and with a high filling coefficient. The advantages that result therefrom are smaller overall dimensions, a better exploitation of storage space in the warehouse, as well as optimization of transportation.
The above purposes are reached, according to a first aspect of the present invention, by means of a device having the features of claim 1, and, according to a second aspect of the present invention, with a method having the features of claim 8.
Further advantages that may be achieved with the present invention will emerge more clearly, to the person skilled in the sector, from the following detailed description of a non-limiting example of a particular embodiment, with reference to the following figures.
The example of embodiment of
With reference to
One end of the tubular body 3, referred to as input end of the first guide element 1, is set on the axis of rolling of the rolling mill L in front and in the proximity of its outlet in such a way that the bar of rolled material may slide easily inside the tubular body 3 itself. The opposite end of the tubular body 3 (in the present description referred to as output end of the first tubular body 1) is set in the proximity of one end (referred to in what follows as input end of the second guide element 2) of the tubular body 4 in such a way that, whilst the distributor performs the movements described hereinafter, a rolled flat steel material, or other material, coming out of the rolling mill L may traverse in succession, sliding within them, the three tubular bodies 3, 4, 5 and come out from the output end 8 of the second guide element 2, and from there reach the reel AS and the corresponding winding spindle M, on which the rolled flat material is bent so as to form the turns of a reel. The tubular bodies 3, 4, 5 and the corresponding supporting beams 6, 7 have, that is, the function of supporting, containing and guiding the metal bar coming out of the rolling mill towards a precise position of the winding spindle M, which, in the present example of embodiment, turns about a horizontal axis.
The guide element 1 in the proximity of the output of the rolling mill L is fixed to the fixed hinge 9 (
The guide elements 1, 2 are fixed to the two mobile supports 10, 11—which, in the present example, consist of two slides. The mobile support 11 is fixed in the proximity of the output end 8 of the tubular body 5, whilst the mobile support 11 is fixed in the proximity of the output end of the first guide element 1 and of the input end of the second guide element 2, so as to support both of them. More in particular, the mobile support 10 is provided with a pneumatic cylinder, on which there rests the beam 7 that enables raising of the second guide element 2 so as to follow the increase in diameter of the reel as this is wound. With this system, the weight of the distributor portion comprised between the two mobile supports 10, 11 is prevented from weighing on the rolled material as the diameter of the reel increases.
Both of the mobile supports 10, 11 are able to slide horizontally in the two senses according to directions parallel to the axis X of rotation of the spindle M, as indicated by the arrows F1, F2 in
By causing the mobile supports 10, 11 to translate, the first guide element 1 and the second guide element 2, according to a first aspect of the present invention, may vary the respective inclinations with respect to one another and with respect to the axis X of the spindle M or else with respect to the axis of rolling AL, where said inclinations are considered according to planes parallel to the axis of the spindle itself, independently of one another. In particular, in the example described herein (
The angle αi is the angle of inclination of the helix of winding of the turns of the i-th layer (i=1, 2, 3, . . . ) with respect to the rolling axis AL (
There now follows a description of an example of operation of the device just described.
The end plane P1 indicated in
When the mobile carriage 10 has reached the end plane P1, it is halted, the first guide element 1 stops rotating about the substantially vertical axis passing through the hinge 9, and only the second guide element 2 continues to rotate in a counterclockwise direction, with reference to
At this point, the overlapping of the end turns must be obtained in each case in order to enable the diameter jump, i.e., in order to start to distribute the rolled material on top of the turns already wound on the entire table of the spindle in the preceding pass. In said step, then, the distributor assumes the configuration of distribution for the (i+1)-th layer and reverses the motion. The guide element 1 and the guide element 2 start to rotate in a clockwise direction, as viewed in
In the example of embodiment represented, the distributor is preferably, but not necessarily, provided, at the output end 8, with a device for guiding the bar 12 (
Said device for guiding the bar 12 comprises a first pair of idler rollers 120 and a second pair of idler rollers 121, all four designed to guide and contain laterally in a horizontal direction the rolled bar BL that passes between them. In fact, the axes both of the rolls 120 and of the rolls 121 are vertical or in any case inclined with respect to the vertical, and the rollers 120, 121 are mounted on rocking connecting rods 123, which have the function of bringing the rollers 120, 121 up closer to the bar and moving them further away therefrom (
In the present example of embodiment, the device 12 further comprises a vertical guide roller 122, which, in the present example of embodiment, is an idler roller and has the function of guiding the rolled material at output 8 from the second guide element in a vertical direction. The rolled material slides on a plate 124, set immediately beneath the vertical guide roller, only for a few instants in the step of start-up of winding until the material is tensioned and then comes into contact with the roller 122.
As illustrated in
Using the reeling device described previously, it is possible to obtain a more orderly arrangement of the turns on the reel, practically without any twisting or overlapping, which enables, in the processes located downstream, an increase in speed of unwinding of the skein that takes place continuously and without any jamming, with enormous advantages for the end user—for example, the drawer—in that it eliminates, or at least reduces considerably, any waste of time due to traditional drawbacks.
With the reeling device previously described it is moreover possible to obtain a more compact and cylindrical shape of the skein (optimal shape) and a greater coefficient of filling. The advantages that derive therefrom are smaller overall dimensions, a better exploitation of the storage space and also the optimization of transportation.
The device for distributing rolled bars and the corresponding operation described above may undergo numerous modifications and variations, without thereby departing from the scope of the present invention. For example, the distributor may comprise not just two guide elements 1, 2 but also three or four or a generic number N. The guide element 2, which is closer to the spindle M, may perform winding of a layer of turns with an angle of distribution β1 and winding of a second layer of turns, on top of the first, with an angle of distribution β2 equal, both in sign and in absolute value, to the angle β1. In this case, the value of the gap (g) between the turns of the inner layers will vary with respect to the value of those of the outer layers.
Any modification and variation that falls within the meaning and the range of equivalence of the claims is understood as being included herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2003A1637 | Aug 2003 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2004/051744 | 8/6/2004 | WO | 00 | 2/6/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/051560 | 6/9/2005 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3507458 | Merchant et al. | Apr 1970 | A |
4143834 | Hara et al. | Mar 1979 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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821 666 | Nov 1951 | DE |
12 67 507 | May 1968 | DE |
33 06 579 | Aug 1984 | DE |
1 126 935 | Aug 2001 | EP |
05 229733 | Sep 1993 | JP |
10-157927 | Sep 1993 | JP |
05-229733 | Jun 1998 | JP |
10 157927 | Jun 1998 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060266870 A1 | Nov 2006 | US |