The present disclosure relates generally to printing presses and more specifically to printing sleeves of variable cutoff printing presses.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,440,987, U.S. Pat. No. 5,206,102, U.S. Pat. No. 5,816,161, U.S. Pat. No. 5,379,693; U.S. Pat. No. 6,779,449; U.S. Pat. No. 6,424,366, U.S. Pat. No. 6,190,828, EP 1188579 and EP 1495877 disclose imaging techniques.
A method of forming printing sleeve for mounting on a cylinder in a printing press is provided. The method includes providing a permanent hydrophilic tubular layer on a tubular base; selectively providing a first temporary hydrophobic layer on the hydrophilic tubular layer to form a first imaged printing sleeve, the temporary hydrophobic layer forming a first image; printing, by the first imaged printing sleeve, a first print job including the first image on a substrate; and removing the first temporary hydrophobic layer from the permanent hydrophilic layer such that the permanent hydrophilic layer remains intact on the tubular base.
A lithographic printing sleeve for a printing press is also provided. The lithographic printing sleeve includes a tubular base layer for contacting and surrounding an outer circumference of the cylinder, a permanent tubular hydrophilic layer on an outer surface of the tubular base layer and a temporary hydrophobic layer on an outer surface of the tubular hydrophilic layer.
The present invention is described below by reference to the following drawings, in which:
a and 2b show a plate cylinder in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;
a shows a tubular printing sleeve in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;
b shows a view of a cross-section of a portion of the printing sleeve along A-A in
c shows a view of a cross-section of another portion of printing sleeve along A-A in
a to 4c show methods of forming an imaged printing sleeve in accordance with different embodiments of the present invention.
Printing press 10 is a variable cutoff printing press. A variable cutoff printing press as used herein refers to a printing press that can be modified between print jobs so that the printing press can print repeating images of different lengths during different print jobs. The length of the repeating images printed during a particular print job is commonly referred to as a cutoff length or a cutoff. Plate cylinders and blanket cylinders that print the repeating images for the particular print job may be said to have that cutoff length or cutoff. For example, a variable cutoff printing press can print repeating images of a first cutoff length on a web or other substrate during a first print job and then can print repeating images of a second cutoff length that varies from the first cutoff length on a web or other substrate during a subsequent second print job. The first print job is printed using a first printing plate and a first printing blanket each having an outer circumference of a length corresponding to the first cutoff length. After the first print job and before the second print job, the first printing plate and the first printing blanket, which are in the form of gapless tubular sleeves, are removed from the printing unit and replaced with a second printing plate and a second printing blanket, which are also in the form of gapless tubular sleeves, that each have outer circumferences of a length corresponding to the second cutoff length.
a and 2b show plate cylinder 22 in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention. The cutoff length of plate cylinder 22 may be varied by varying the outer diameter thereof through the exchange of support cylinders 30, 32 and tubular printing sleeves 34a, 34b, 36a on a mandrel 38. Printing sleeves 34a, 34b, 36a are hollow tubes that are mountable onto mandrel 38 via corresponding support cylinders 30, 32.
Mandrel 38 may be held at an axial end by a support, one of support cylinders 30, 32 may be slid over the outer surface of mandrel 38 and the corresponding tubular printing sleeve 34a, 34b, 36a may be slid over the corresponding support cylinder 30, 32. For example, during a cutoff change, the support holding the axial end of mandrel 38 is uncoupled from and swung away from mandrel 38. A printing sleeve 34a, 34b, 36a mounted on mandrel 38 via the corresponding support cylinder 30, 32 is then slid off of the corresponding support cylinder 30, 32. If, for example, support cylinder 30 and printing sleeve 34a are mounted on mandrel 38 and a press operator wants to switch to printing sleeve 34b, support cylinder 30 is kept on mandrel 38 and the cutoff change may be accomplished by sliding printing sleeve 34a off of support cylinder 30 and sliding printing sleeve 34b onto support cylinder 30. If, for example, support cylinder 30 and printing sleeve 34a are mounted on mandrel 38 and a press operator wants to switch to printing sleeve 36a, printing sleeve 34a and support cylinder 30 are removed from mandrel 38 and the cutoff change may be accomplished by sliding support cylinder 32 onto mandrel 38 and and sliding printing sleeve 36a onto support cylinder 32.
Mandrel 38 may include holes 42 formed in the outer surface thereof at the axial end of mandrel 38 that support cylinders 30, 32 are slid onto so pressurized air may be supplied internally to mandrel 38 and flow out of holes 42 to pneumatically mount support cylinders 30, 32 on and remove support cylinders 30, 32 from mandrel 38. Similarly, support cylinders 30, 32 may each include holes 44 formed in the outer surface thereof at the axial end of thereof, which align with holes 42, so pressurized air may be supplied internally to mandrel 38 and flow out of holes 44 to pneumatically mount printing sleeves 34a, 34b, 36a on and remove printing sleeves 34a, 34b, 36a from the corresponding support cylinders 30, 32. The air pressure (e.g., 70 to 160 psi) supplied to the outer surface of mandrel 38 or support cylinders 30, 32 radially expands the corresponding support cylinders 30, 32 or sleeve 34a, 34b, 36b being mounted or removed allowing for the sliding. The sleeves are secured on the support cylinders by a clamping force, through an interference fit between the sleeve and cylinder. This clamping pressure keeps the printing sleeve's position fixed while on the cylinder. The circumferential and lateral positions of the printing sleeve are dictated by a registration system, such as a positioning pin and slot. For the unit to unit register, a similar positioning system is used on all of the printing units. After a sleeve is slid onto a respective mandrel, the supply of air to the mandrel is stopped and the sleeve is snugly held in place on the mandrel.
Infinite repeats, for example from 406.4 mm (16″) to 1400 mm (55.12″), are achieved by changing the outer diameter and thickness of the printing sleeve. This infinite repeat range is divided into 15 to 30 discretely sized cylinders, for example. All of the support cylinders have a common inner diameter, allowing for them to be mounted on the same mandrel in the printing press. For each of the support cylinder sizes, the inner diameter of the printing sleeves are kept constant and the wall thicknesses are varied to reach the desired image repeat. Due to the large variety of diameters and wall thicknesses, the printing sleeve is made out of wound or extruded materials such as fiberglass, carbon fiber, polyester, polyurethane, epoxy, or other composite materials.
The printing sleeves, for example sleeves 34a, 34b, 36a, are each made into a lithographic printing sleeves for use on a printing unit by first starting with a hydrophilic surface and adding hydrophobic material onto the surface. As in traditional lithography, the hydrophilic material is the non-image area (attracts fountain solution), while the hydrophobic material is the image area, which repels fountain solution and attracts ink. For embodiments of the present invention, the hydrophobic material is applied over the hydrophilic material.
a shows a tubular printing sleeve 52 in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention. Tubular printing sleeve 52 includes a tubular base layer 54 for contacting and surrounding an outer circumference of a support cylinder (e.g., one of cylinders 30, 32), a permanent tubular hydrophilic layer 56 on an outer surface of the tubular base layer 54 and a temporary hydrophobic layer 58 on an outer surface of the tubular hydrophilic layer 56. While permanent tubular hydrophilic layer 56 covers the entire outer surface of base layer 54, temporary hydrophobic layer 58 covers only portions of hydrophilic layer 56, as dictated by the image to be printed by printing sleeve 52.
b shows a view of a cross-section of a portion of printing sleeve 52 along A-A in
c shows a view of a cross-section of another portion of printing sleeve 52 along A-A in
The surface energy of the hydrophobic material of hydrophobic layer 58 is lower than the surface tension of the fountain solution. This difference creates a high contact angle 66 between the fountain solution and the image area, causing the fountain solution to repel from these areas. Since these low surface energy areas are dry and free of fountain solution, ink is attracted and transferred further down in the printing process. The hydrophobic surface may be created from low surface energy materials such as epoxies or synthetic polymers. Multiple materials and layers may be required to complete the image area, such as a primer to promote adhesion or a top coating for chemical resistance.
For printing sleeve 52 to be continuous, the hydrophobic (image areas) and hydrophilic (non-image areas) materials exist in full circumference, i.e. without a gap, seam. Printing sleeve 52 is reusable and reimageable because the hydrophilic (non-image) area formed by hydrophilic layer 56 is permanent (i.e. hard and durable) and the hydrophobic (image) area formed hydrophobic layer 58 is removed and reapplied between print jobs.
a to 4c show methods of forming an imaged printing sleeve in accordance with different embodiments of the present invention. All of these embodiments include a step 100 of providing a permanent hydrophilic tubular layer on a tubular base. The permanent hydrophilic tubular layer may be provided on the tubular base hydrophilic material by forming a hydrophilic material on the tubular base through metal deposition processes such as thermal spraying, vapor deposition, or electroplating. These embodiments then each use different techniques for a step 110 of selectively providing a first temporary hydrophobic layer on the hydrophilic tubular layer at desired image area locations to form a first imaged printing sleeve. The temporary hydrophobic layer forms a first image on the first imaged printing sleeve. The hydrophobic material is applied onto the permanent hydrophilic layer through thin film coating techniques such as, spray coating, spin coating, dip coating, or ink jetting. Creating and imaging the hydrophobic material image area can be performed by different techniques, all of which may be performed in the printing press (
The embodiments in
After the first print job is completed, the embodiments in
After all of the image area is removed, the hydrophilic surface may be rinsed and the embodiments of
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
In the preceding specification, the invention has been described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments and examples thereof. It will, however, be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of invention as set forth in the claims that follow. The specification and drawings are accordingly to be regarded in an illustrative manner rather than a restrictive sense.
Priority is hereby claimed to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/918,052 filed on Dec. 19, 2013, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61918052 | Dec 2013 | US |