The exemplary arrangement relates to a circular blade having two end faces and a peripheral cutting edge. The exemplary arrangements relate in particular to circular blades for a longitudinal cutting machine or for a roller cutting machine.
Longitudinal cutting machines usually comprise a blade holder with a lowering device, which holder carries a blade head. The blade head holds a circular blade with a peripheral cutting edge as a so-called upper blade and drives this upper blade as necessary. The longitudinal cutting machine further comprises a lower blade which is associated with the upper blade. By means of the lowering device, the upper blade can be brought to the lower blade at least in two spatial directions, wherein the material to be cut is located between the upper blade and the lower blade. As a rule, the upper blade is set in rotation through the friction with the driven lower blade. However, it is also known for the upper blade to be actively driven. Both the upper blade and the lower blade are each attached directly or by means of a hub to a shaft or axis, wherein the lower blade and/or upper blade is fixed by means of a holding element on the hub.
In roller cutting machines, the rotary driven circular blade is guided, for example, along a circular path through paper rolls, whereby the paper rolls are trimmed in their length. Such machines are also known as a “log saw machine” as described in US 2014/331838 A1. For example, a plurality of relatively short paper rolls is cut from a paper roll several meters long.
When such a circular blade is dulled, the cutting machine can be stopped, the circular blade can be removed from the hub and then reground. Alternatively, however, the circular blade can be reground within the machine. After repeated regrinding, the circular blade should usually no longer be used, since the blade increases in thickness at its midpoint and the cutting edge can no longer be ground or can only be reground with great effort, on the worn peripheral side of the circular blade.
In conventional circular blades, the thickness of the circular blade increases from the peripheral cutting edge towards the blade midpoint. When regrinding, it must be ensured that the end faces adjoining the peripheral cutting edge have a predetermined alignment and a predetermined angle to each other. A considerable effort is necessary for the required material removal to ensure this alignment and maintenance of this angle between the end faces with repeated regrinding.
Therefore, a circular blade is known from DE 10 2016 104227 B4, in which an outer ring segment comprising the peripheral cutting edge can be separated from the central blade segment at a predetermined breaking point arranged concentrically to the peripheral cutting edge, so that a cutting edge can be reground at the break-off edge. However, it has now been found that in some applications with very large circular blades, the circular blade does not run evenly and in which a maximum thickness is not exceeded, due to weakening of the material at the predetermined breaking point.
The object of the exemplary embodiment is therefore to at least partially solve the problems described with reference to the prior art and in particular to provide a circular blade in which a sharp cutting edge can be produced with reasonable effort even after repeated regrinding.
Improvements are achieved by a circular blade having the features of the independent claims. Further advantageous features of the exemplary circular blade are specified in the dependent claims and in the description, wherein individual features of the advantageous developments are combined with each other in a technically meaningful manner.
Improvements are achieved in particular by a circular blade having two end faces and a peripheral cutting edge, wherein in at least one end face at least one material tapering running concentric to the cutting edge is formed, so that a thickness of the circular blade decreases radially outward towards a minimum tapering thickness due to the geometric formation of the material tapering, and in particular after the minimum tapering thickness, increases again over a short radial distance outward. The minimum tapering thickness is dimensioned so that the circular blade is not breakable at the material tapering, so that a cutting edge can be produced in the region of the material tapering by, for example, peripheral grinding, without breaking.
The exemplary embodiment proposes that the thickness of the circular blade does not increase too much radially inward even after the wear of the original peripheral cutting edge caused by repeated regrinding, and a sharp cutting edge can be ground when the minimum tapering thickness is reached in this region. Due to the formation of the material tapering, the alignment and the angle of the end faces adjacent to the new cutting edge are substantially predetermined at the minimum tapering thickness and can be reground with little material removal. This eliminates the effort of regrinding the end faces in regions in which the original blade was relatively thick. At the same time, due to the sufficient material thickness in the region of the minimum tapering thickness, it is ensured that the peripheral cutting edge runs stable and quiet even during the operation of a longitudinal cutting machine.
For this purpose, the minimum tapering thickness in exemplary arrangements is more than 0.5 mm [millimeter], and in other arrangements more than 0.7 mm and in other exemplary arrangements at least 1 mm.
In contrast, the thickness of the circular blade in a central region is in particular at least 1 mm, in other exemplary arrangements at least 3 mm and in other arrangements at least 5 mm.
In exemplary arrangements, the circular blade has at least two, and in other exemplary arrangements, more than two material taperings arranged concentrically with one another, each having a minimum tapering thickness. For example, the total diameter of the original circular blade can be 1 m, wherein a minimum tapering thickness of a first material tapering is formed in the range of 85 to 95 cm in diameter and a minimum tapering thickness of a second material tapering is formed in the range of 75 to 85 cm in diameter.
The material taperings formed, for example, as recesses can be arranged on only one axial side of the circular blade, but in other exemplary arrangements the material taperings are formed in the form of recesses on both axial sides of the circular blade, which are shaped in particular mirror-image to each other.
In an exemplary embodiment, the transverse thickness of the circular blade in axial cross section decreases evenly radially outwards toward the minimum tapering thickness in the region of the at least one material tapering, so that an angle in some embodiments not greater than 15°, in other embodiments not greater than 12° and in other embodiments not great than 10° between the two end faces is enclosed in the region of the material tapering.
In exemplary arrangements the end faces of the circular blade enclose an angle towards the peripheral cutting edge, which angle has the same size as the angle enclosed by the end faces in the region of the material tapering.
In one exemplary embodiment, the cutting edge is formed symmetrically to a central attachment region of the circular blade. In this embodiment, the end faces are in axial cross-section inclined towards each other, wherein the inclination of the end faces with respect to the axis of rotational symmetry of the circular blade which is transverse to the axis of rotation of the blade, are directed towards each other and meet at the cutting edge. Such circular blades are also referred to as burst cutting blades.
In an alternative embodiment, in axial cross-section the cutting edge can be configured asymmetrically offset from a central attachment region of the blade. The end faces are in this case in particular inclined with respect to the axis of rotational symmetry of the circular blade in the same direction. The cutting edge is thus arranged relative to the axis of rotation, offset in the axial direction from the attachment region. Such circular blades are also referred to as a disc knife.
In particular, exemplary embodiments also relate to a longitudinal cutting machine or a roller cutting machine having a blade according to the exemplary embodiments.
The exemplary embodiments and the technical environment are explained below by way of examples with reference to the drawing Figures.
As shown best in
In some embodiments, as shown in
When viewing the exemplary embodiment of the blade configuration of
In other exemplary embodiments, as shown in
In reference to
In exemplary arrangements, the first axial side 12 of the circular body 10 includes a tapered recess face 28 that bounds the first circular body 10 within the circular recess 20 in axial cross-section as shown in
In an exemplary embodiment, as shown in
In the exemplary embodiment, the taper thickness 5 which is also referred to as the minimum tapering thickness 5, comprises a body thickness of the circular body 10 that is parallel to the blade rotational axis 18. The circular body 10 includes the taper thickness 5 at a taper thickness radius 42 that is disposed radially intermediate of the outer recess radius 24 and the cutting edge 3. As shown in
In the exemplary embodiment of
Again referring to
The convergent angle 7 of the embodiment shown in
The exemplary embodiment of
In the exemplary embodiment shown in
In exemplary arrangements once the peripheral cutting edge 3 is dulled, the circular blade 1 can first be reground several times. Such regrinding of the original cutting edge 3 is no longer economically viable when the cutting edge 3 must be reground in a region in which the circular blade 1 is relatively thick in a direction parallel to axis 18. Through the formation of the material taperings 4 (circular recesses), an economically viable reconditioning of the circular blade 1 is available even after repeated regrinding, since a successor cutting edge can be produced in the region of the relatively thin material tapering 4, without the end faces 2 (tapered end faces 26 and 36) having to be reground with great effort radially inward where the blade has greater thickness.
In the exemplary arrangement, the body 10 of the circular blade 1 is configured to be ground to a successor cutting edge 62, shown in phantom, that extends radially outward from the minimum recess thickness 52 after wearing and regrinding of the cutting edge 3 is no longer reasonably feasible. The circular body 10 of the circular blade 1 also includes a successor tapered end face 64 that extends continuously closer to the second axial side 14 with radially outward proximity to the successor cutting edge 62. The circular body further includes a successor further tapered end face 66 that extends continuously closer to the first axial side 12 with radially outward proximity to the successor cutting edge 62.
Additionally, the successor tapered end face 64 includes the tapered recess face 28, and the successor further tapered end face 66 includes the further tapered recess face 38. In exemplary embodiments, the successor tapered end face 64 extends continuously closer to the second axial side 14 with radially outward proximity to the successor cutting edge 62, and the successor tapered end face includes the tapered recess face 28.
In the exemplary embodiment as shown in
In some embodiments, the cutting edge 3 is arranged symmetrically in axial cross-section to a central fastening region 8 of the circular blade 1, as shown in
In the exemplary circular blade according to
Thus, the example embodiments achieve improved operation, eliminate difficulties encountered in the use of prior devices and systems, and attain the useful results described herein.
In the foregoing description, certain terms have been used for brevity, clarity and understanding. However, no unnecessary limitations are to be implied therefrom because such terms are used for descriptive purposes and are intended to be broadly construed. Moreover, the descriptions and illustrations herein are by way of examples and the new and useful features are not limited to the exact features shown and described.
Further, in the following claims, any feature described as a means for performing a function shall be construed as encompassing any means known to those skilled in the art as being capable of carrying out the recited function, and shall not be deemed limited to the particular means shown or described for performing the recited function in the foregoing description or mere equivalents thereof.
Having described the features, discoveries and principals of the exemplary embodiments, the manner in which they are constructed and operated, and the advantages and useful results attained; the new and useful structures, devices, elements, arrangements, parts, combinations, systems, equipment, operations, methods, processes and relationships are set forth in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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DE102018107495.6 | Mar 2018 | DE | national |