The present invention relates to improvements in the field of high speed rotary die cutters especially for use in cutting corrugated paperboard such as is used in paper products such as boxes, and more specifically, but not limited to use in the high speed Mitsubishi EVOL die cutter to enhance the ability to control scrap separation to enhance the probability of producing a scrap-free product.
Rotary die cutting machines (not shown in the drawings) have been publicly known. In these types of cutters a frame is used to provide powered rotation to a die cut cylinder and an anvil cylinder. A blanking die, which may be provided in sections, is attached to the die cut cylinder to form a blanking die roll and rotated together with the anvil cylinder. The rotary die cutting machine is commonly used in the manufacture of cartons or boxes to trim or otherwise cut corrugated paperboard stock to desired shapes, provide them with apertures and cutouts. Cutting is performed by a cutting rule that extends radially outwardly from the blanking die roll.
The rotary die cutting machine die roll may also include at least one and usually a plurality of blocks of so-called “scrap ejection” and “material separation” rubber. The rubber blocks are mounted upon and extend outwardly from the curved surface of the die boards which comprise the die roll, at advantageous locations and often closely adjacent to various cutting rules. In their uncompressed condition the rubber blocks project radially outwardly, and often beyond the height of the toothed cutting edge of the cutting rule. The rubber blocks may be compressed as they pass into and through the close space between the die roll and the anvil cylinder. As they pass from such close spaced relationship, the rubber blocks return outward movement to help separate the freshly cut corrugated fiberboard sheet product from the areas occupied by the cutting rule. Where a hole is cut, for example, the cutting rule will be arranged in a somewhat continuous closed line to form an enclosed cut. The rubber blocks are especially helpful in removing the freshly cut corrugated fiberboard sheet product from these shapes of cutting knives.
The use of rubber blocks is insufficient to assist scrap rejection in a high speed Rotary die cutting machine. Even where a clean cut takes place, and even with many precise feed controls and the like, in both low speed and high speed rotary die cutters the process of cutting out a portion of the rejection of scrap needs more control. In some dies an ejector mechanism is used, which is a cantilevered arm having a pivot connected first end and a second end extending partially behind the die blade and which has limited movement to assist in dislodging scrap. In some cases the cantilevered arm receives an assist from within the die cut cylinder and communicating through the blanking die with a cam mechanism. In other die cut cylinders, an ejector mechanism may rely upon centrifical force, or interaction with the anvil cylinder (either a rebound action or a positive compression action), and may also use springs or other rubber blocks. The number of combinations and configurations to provide an “assist” to scrap rejection are many.
Even with finely tuned reactive structures assisting in the rejection of scrap, the certainty with which this scrap material is eliminated as soon as possible after it is cut from corrugated fiberboard sheet is not yet achieved. Corrugated fiberboard sheet scrap may be unintentionally carried with the corrugated fiberboard sheet product to a stacking machine downstream from the operation of the anvil cylinder and blanking die roll. The scrap can make its way into the sheets of cut material in one of two ways. The first way for it to make it into the sheets of cut material is for an incomplete cut to occur. The completeness of cut can be adjusted by adjusting the pressure and penetration of the cutter into the passive polymeric roller, as well as by periodic sharpening of the cutting rules. The second, and traditionally less controllable way that scrap can make it into the finished product is by failure of the scrap to be rejected from within the cutting rule.
The presence of scrap within cut cardboard is costly and hazardous. Where the presence of scrap is prominent enough to cause the producer of the cut cardboard to visually notice it, it results in additional handling, and more personnel than would otherwise be needed. Where the scrap is present in the die cut and stacked cardboard, it disrupts further handling machinery. Further handling machinery may include box assembly, box manipulation and filling and box closure and sealing. Most of the automated processes which act upon die cut and stacked cardboard involve vacuum pickup devices which rely upon vacuum cups to cleanly abut and engage the die cut stacked cardboard for lifting, manipulation, repositioning and the like. One small piece of scrap can prevent vacuum engagement and cause a machine to jam.
The most expensive and highest speed processing types of machinery have a higher reliance upon a consistent product feed stock which can be engaged consistently at high speed and speedily manipulated. The presence of scrap within cut cardboard can result in high numbers of ruined constructed structures or can cause the machinery to shut down until repaired. Where capacity of final production machinery is high, even a 10 minute shut down can result in significant loss of production. A thirty second malfunction can ruin high numbers of products resulting a significant waste.
Corrugated fiberboard sheet scrap may therefore eventually wind up within the corrugated fiberboard sheet product, carton, box or processed the like formed in the die cutting operation. Unwanted scrap downstream of the die cutting process can have very undesirable consequences, particularly when the carton or box is used for foods, such as pizza, which can be contaminated by the scrap paperboard. Scrap contamination of the carton or box can also ensue when the blocks of product ejection rubber do not extend rapidly enough, as they exit from space between the die roll and anvil cylinder of the apparatus, to prevent the paperboard stock from advancing beneath the trimmed scrap, and then being transported by the cut paperboard stock to the packing machine.
Proper rejection means that the cutting rule area should be able to reject the scrap just after cutting occurs and after the cut sheet moves on to the remainder of the cutting process, but before the cutting rule is brought back into contact with a fresh area of material to be cut. Any scrap which remains within the cutting rule will be doubled at the next cutting cycle. Doubling can cause scrap to be transmitted to the final product by forming an incomplete cut. An incomplete cut can cause a “shad” effect and draw scrap into the finished product. Doubling can also cause scrap to remain within the blade area over several cutting cycles.
Correct operation dictates that each piece of die-cut scrap be held only long enough for the processed sheet material to pass away from the cutting die without any entrained scrap, and for any scrap within the cutting die to be rejected and expelled as soon as possible after clearing the processed sheet in order that the cutting die be “emptied” and ready for the next cutting operation. Because there are so many variables, including die size, blade depth, ejector action, and especially paper type, surface and corrugation, finding a solution which works to broadly contribute to a significant reduction of the possibility of the rejection of scrap outside of the desired range of operation of the die wheel, has not heretofore been devised.
A hardened insert is positioned within the cutting rule area of a rotary cutting die to limit and control the extent to which die cut scrap can position itself within the area within the cutting rule. Further, it has been found to be advantageous in some applications to provide the outwardly exposed surface of the hardened insert with ribs and grooves which have been found to even further limit the tendency for instability within the cutting rule after the die cut is achieved and to better control the ejection of die cut scrap and thus significantly reduce the instance of die cut scrap making its way into finished die cut product. The invention has been found to work well with the high speed Mitsubishi Evol die cutters.
Using the Mitsubishi Evol die cutter as a working example, these machines use curved plywood die cut cylinder sections having a thickness from about one half inch (0.500) to about eleven sixteenths of an inch (0.6875) thick and which conventionally have three visually prominent structures, namely a die cutting rule, a material carve-out for accommodating a scrap ejector arm which extends underneath the die cutter rule cutting rule to assist in pushing scrap out of the area within the die cutting rule, and resilient polymeric blocks placed around the die cutting rule to assist in disengaging the cardboard material around the ruled cut away from the blanking die roll. Assistance in freeing the uncut surrounding corrugated fiberboard sheet material will help to eliminate unwanted engagement between the die cutting rule and the processed corrugated fiberboard sheet material at the earliest moment when the processed corrugated fiberboard sheet material is free of engagement between the blanking die roll and the anvil cylinder.
The invention involves a relatively hard wood or plastic insert that may be between one eighth of an inch (0.125 inches) thick and seven sixteenth of an inch (0.4375 inches) thick. The inventive insert is supported within the cutting rule area, but it is preferable for a portion of the inventive insert to be cut away sufficient to accommodate a scrap rejector if present. The inventive insert will preferably, but need not have a bottom curvature which generally tracks the curvature of the blanking die, such as an inner radius to match the curvature of the blanking die and an outer radius slightly greater than the radius of the curved support since the insert will be less than one half inch in thickness. A flat insert is possible but may require more threaded members for its stability. Conversely, it may bend, but is not expected to have as constant of a height with respect to the upper edge of the cutting rule as would otherwise be the case if the insert were curved on its bottom side evenly with a similar curvature of its top side and outer surface at mounting.
The inventive insert also helps to stop the cutting rule from bending and flexing in a high speed rotary die cutting environment. In typical cutting rule, the bottom of the cutting rule is inserted into narrow slots in the curved blanking die section. However to accommodate a scrap ejector, some of the underlying wood or plastic material in the curved blanking die section support may be carved out to make room for a scrap ejector lever arm. The material removed to accommodate the scrap ejector lever arm, especially at the point where the scrap ejector lever arm underlies the die cutting rule, may provide a less supported, less secured rule, and the insert of the invention may be positioned to help to stabilize and support those portions of the cutting rule.
The preferred environment for the inserts of the invention is the Mitsubishi Evol die cutters which have blanking die roll and the anvil cylinder having a diameter typically between ten inches and twelve inches. The use of one half inch (0.500) to eleven sixteenths of an inch (0.675) thick curved plywood blanking die sections will increase the diameter of the die cut cylinder only slightly to result in a blanking die roll increased in diameter by not more than 1.35 inches overall. The inventive wood or plastic or nylon insert of the invention that is between one eighth of an inch (0.0125) and seven sixteenth (0.4375) thick is not believed to make any significant increase on the combined diameter of the blanking die roll.
However, the inventive inserts within the area of the cutting rule formed in a continuous shape to form of a die board cut outs, neglecting any carved out areas due to the presence of a scrap ejector lever arm, reduces the distance between the surface of the blanking die roll within the die board cut out area to the height of the cutting rule by the aforementioned one eighth of an inch (0.0125) to seven sixteenth (0.4375) thickness of the inventive insert.
Most of the supporting curved die cut cylinder sections are typically supplied with a material which is either one half inch (0.500) or five eighths of an inch (0.6875). A typical cutting rule has an overall height of about 0.990 of an inch and the cutting rule is typically pressed into the material (typically wood) of the supporting curved die cut cylinder section up to the thickness of the supporting curved die cut cylinder section. Thus the cutting rule height may be either 0.990−0.500 to equal 0.490 of an inch high to 0.990−0.6875 to equal 0.3025 of an inch. Comparing the aforementioned one eighth of an inch (0.0125) to seven sixteenth (0.4375) thickness of the inventive insert gives a corresponding range of reduction in the height of the supporting curved die cut cylinder section to the top of the exposed cutting rule.
The minimum and maximum percentage reduction in the distance from the height of the supporting curved die cut cylinder section to the top of the exposed cutting rule have been determined using a one half inch (0.500) supporting curved die cut cylinder section, but the workable range limits can be adapted to other supporting curved die cut cylinder sections and other heights of die cutting rule. The minimum percentage distance from the height of the supporting curved die cut cylinder section to the top of the exposed cutting rule would be, for a 0.125 inch thickness insert, a reduction in height above curved die cut cylinder section protruding 0.490 inches high would be 0.125/0.490 or 25.51% reduction in height. Also in the case of a The maximum percentage distance from the height of the supporting curved die cut cylinder section to the top of the exposed cutting rule would be, for a 0.4375 inch thickness insert, a reduction in height above curved die cut cylinder section protruding 0.490 inches high would be 0.4375/0.490 or 89.28% reduction in height. The resulting smaller volume of this area within the rule cutting die board cutout area may also tend to crush, compress, or otherwise deform the portion of the scrap cut from the blanked corrugated fiberboard sheets. An insert also gives the cutting rule increased lateral support. The added lateral support afforded a cutting rule embedded 0.625 by an additional 0.125 height insert is 0.125/0.625 or twenty percent. The added lateral support afforded a cutting rule embedded 0.500 by an additional 0.4375 height insert is 0.4375/0.500 or eighty seven and a half percent additional support.
It has also been discovered that the provision of a surface pattern on the upper surface of the insert which contacts the blanked corrugated fiberboard sheets may give even more control in rejection of scrap. The surface pattern may preferably be ribbed and arranged with the ribs extending perpendicularly to the path of travel of the blanking die roll as it turns in time with the anvil cylinder. It has been suggested that one mechanism by which the hardened insert helps to control scrap is the ability to hold the scrap to be rejected within the area of the ruled die board cutout circumscribed area until the moment that it is to be positively rejected, rather than allowing it to escape from this same area prematurely where it has a higher probability of finding its way into the blanked corrugated fiberboard sheets.
It may also be that the use of ribs provides a momentary accordion-like slight forced stretching or contraction with stretching which may momentarily and slightly engage the edge of the cutting rule for a moment sufficient to enable scrap rejection at the correct moment and after the blanked corrugated fiberboard sheets are further downstream in the manufacturing process, or at least separate enough from the cutting rule that scrap rejection will be able to occur in a direction well away from the blanked corrugated fiberboard sheets.
The invention, its configuration, construction, and operation will be best further described in the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to
Just inside the inner periphery of die cutting rule 23, an insert 25 is seen. The insert 25 fits closely adjacent the inner periphery of die cutting rule 23 and may form a close and supporting fit to support the die cutting rule 23. A series of four screws 27 are seen which attach the insert 25 directly to the material of the curved die cut cylinder section 21. On the right portion of insert 25, a rectangular “C” shaped cutout 31 is seen to permit operation of a pair of scrap rejection levers 33 to operate within the inner periphery of die cutting rule 23 to directly push scrap directly from within the die cutting rule 23 at the time that the die cutting rule 23 has sufficiently cleared an anvil roller (not shown).
Just to one side of the die cutting rule 23, a cutout depression 35 is seen. The cutout depression 35 extends within the periphery of the inside the die cutting rule 23 and is generally coextensive with and matches the rectangular “C” shaped cutout 31 of the insert 25. The cutout depression 35 provides for movement of the pair of scrap rejection levers 33 between a lower position preferably touching the cutout depression 35, and an upper position where the pair of scrap rejection levers 33 extend upward near the uppermost extent, and perhaps beyond the top of the cutting rule 23. The angular movement is small and the cutout depression 35 should be sufficiently deep to enable the pair of scrap rejection levers 33 to pivot without knocking against the lower edge of the cutting rule 23 as it extends across the cutout depression 35.
Beyond the periphery of the die cutting rule 23, the cutout depression 35 opens and takes on a shape sufficient to support the middle and end of a scrap ejector lever arm 37. The scrap ejector lever arm 37 supports the scrap rejection levers 33. At the distal end of the scrap ejector lever arm 37, opposite the pivot arms 33, a hinge 41 which is secured by screws 27 enables a pivot pin 43 which is attached to or attached through the distal end of the scrap ejector lever arm 37 to pivotally operate. The combination of a scrap rejection lever 33, scrap ejector lever arm 37, hinge 41, and pivot pin 43 may be referred to collectively as a scrap ejector mechanism is not limited to the mechanical components or connectivity illustrated in
Also seen and illustrated by representation, is a foam block 49, also sometimes known as product ejection rubber, which may be located about an area immediately adjacent the cutting rule 23 and which is used to urge the blanked corrugated fiberboard sheets away from the curved die cut cylinder section 21 as soon as the cutting rule 23 leaves the compressive influence of the anvil cylinder (not shown) after perforative cutting of the cutting rule 23 occurs. Typically a plurality of the foam blocks 49 will be present, will be fixably placed about the periphery of the cutting rule 23, but will typically not be placed within the confines of the cutout depression 35. Foam blocks 49 may also preferably be made of closed cell rubber or elastomer so that entrapped air can resist the natural tendency of foam rubber to be weakened in its resiliency and ability to spring back to assist removal of processed material from the vicinity of the cutting rule 23.
Referring to
The plain insert 51 is seen as having an outwardly facing or outer surface 53 and an inwardly facing or inner surface 55. The view of
Referring to
Also seen is the slight curvature between a first end 77 and a second end 79. The curvature occurs between the ends 77 and 79 as the shaped surface insert 71 in the same manner as was the case for plain insert 51 and it will move in an arced path on a die cut cylinder in a direction between ends 57 and 59. However, given the non-bilaterally similar orientation of the ribs 73 and grooves 75 seen in
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The view of
Once the anvil die 161 moves away from the curved die cut cylinder sections 21, the foam block 49 begins to decompress and push the processed corrugated fiberboard sheet material 151 away from the curved die cut cylinder sections 21 causing a formed aperture 165 in the processed corrugated fiberboard sheet material 151 to move beyond the edge 137 of the cutting die 23, to clear the cutting rule 23. Because the insert 111 enabled the scrap corrugated fiberboard sheet material 155 to be cut evenly and to be effectively compressed by the anvil die 161, and perhaps even deformed and partially held by insert 111, it has been shown that the scrap corrugated fiberboard sheet material 155 will remain stably in place until ejected by at least one scrap rejection lever 33.
Note that the rectangular “C” shaped cutout 31 of
While the present invention has been described in terms of a hard insert for use with die cutting machinery, and in particular a specified thickness of hard material to limit the extent to which fibrous cutouts can be pressed into an area within a die cutting rule, the structure and process of the invention can be realized in many different types of embodiments and combination.
Although the invention has been derived with reference to particular illustrative embodiments thereof, many invention changes and modifications may become apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the broad spirit and scope of the invention. Therefore, included within the patent warranted hereon are all such changes and modifications reasonably and properly be included within the scope of this contribution to the art.
This is a continuation of co-pending Provisional Patent No. 61/484,837 filed May 11, 2011.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61484837 | May 2011 | US |