1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to the manufacture of envelopes on a production line manufacturing apparatus and more particularly to an apparatus and method for measuring the thickness of seal gum at predetermined positions upon the envelope.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Envelope manufacturing machines which fold the closure side and bottom flaps of envelope blanks are well known in the prior art. Such machines which manufacture such envelopes in a production line basis are well known including such apparatus which automatically applies gum to predetermined portions of the envelope blank during the manufacturing process.
A typical process for manufacturing an envelope involves moving a pre-cut sheet of paper stock through a folding apparatus to form panels of the envelope, applying a strip of adhesive or glue (gum) to one or more predetermined locations on the formed panels of the paper stock, completing the folding of the panels to bring the portions with adhesive into contact with other portions of the paper stock, and then moving the folded and glued paper stock through a compression roller to cause the panels to adhere and form a completed envelope. Variations in the quality of the completed envelope occurred due to many reasons including movement or changing an alignment of the adhesive applicator, varying lengths and/or widths of the adhesive strip, incomplete or partial folds on the paper stock, movement of the paper stock and the folding apparatus, pressure variations in the rollers and other parameters.
Seal gum on an envelope is the adhesive that is used to adhere the envelope flap to the body once the envelope is filled. This seal gum is necessary to keep the contents of the envelope inside when the envelope is mailed. If the seal gum is incorrectly applied either in size, thickness or position, then the envelope will not function as designed. This will negatively affect the basic use of the envelope as well as cause problems with inserting equipment and postal sorting equipment. If the thickness of the seal gum is insufficient the envelope flap will not stay closed throughout handling in the postal system. If the seal gum is too thick, the envelopes could stick together during the manufacturing process because the seal gum will not dry to the degree that is required. In addition, if the thickness of the seal gum on the envelope flap is to great, it will stick or jam in the automatic inserting equipment utilized by mass mailers to insert the desired material into the envelope prior to sealing.
Traditional ways to validate the correct positioning of the gum at predetermined points on the envelope blank as well as the thickness of the gum have been visual inspection by holding the envelope to a template or the like or by utilizing a micrometer to measure the thickness of the gum, particularly the gum on the flap of the envelope. Such methods only validate a very small percentage of envelopes at a time and are not capable of being used in line on high speed production equipment utilized in envelope manufacturing. As a result, every envelope produced in such a high speed production manufacturing apparatus cannot be validated through utilization of these prior art measuring techniques.
There is thus need for an apparatus and process which may be utilized in line on high speed envelope production equipment to detect the thickness of the gum particularly on the flap of the envelope to eliminate human operator input and eliminate these possible sources of error and to validate the gum thickness on the seal flap of every envelope being manufactured in such high speed manufacturing equipment.
The present invention is directed to a method for measuring the thickness of the flap gum on an envelope including measuring the thickness of flap gum on an envelope to establish the desired thickness, directing a source of radiation toward the measured gum, measuring the reflectivity intensity of the radiation from the established desired thickness to establish a reflectivity intensity for such gum having the desired thickness, providing a programmable logic controller, programming the programmable logic controller with parameters for the established reflectivity intensity, radiating each envelope flap gum in a production line, sensing the reflectivity intensity from the gum on each such envelope and generating a signal representative thereof, comparing said signal with the parameters as programmed into the programmable logic controller, and providing a signal from the programmable logic controller only when the flap gum reflectivity intensity does not conform to the programmed established reflectivity intensity for the flap gum.
The invention is also directed to an apparatus for detecting the thickness of flap gum on an envelope which includes means for directing a source of radiation, toward gum deposited on an envelope, means for sensing the reflectivity intensity of the radiation from the gum on the envelope, means for comparing the sensed reflectivity intensity to a predetermined desired reflectivity intensity from the gum thickness deposited on the envelope flap and means for providing an indicia only when the sensed reflectivity intensity does not conform to the parameters established for the predetermined desired reflectivity intensity.
The present invention is directed to an apparatus and method for measuring the presence and thickness of seal gum on the flap of an envelope as it is produced on high speed envelope manufacturing equipment. The thickness of seal gum on the flap of an envelope which is of the desired amount is determined and reflectivity intensity of radiation from that gum thickness is measured to provide parameters representative of that desired thickness. Envelopes coated with flap gum are then passed through high speed production equipment and the thickness of the seal gum is sensed after the application of the seal gum in the production line.
The apparatus for sensing the reflectivity intensity of the radiation is an optical sensor and a rotary encoder connected to and controlled by a programmable logic controller (PLC). The PLC is contained within a housing which includes a touch screen LCD screen manufactured by Maple as part No. HM1530T-006E which serves as an operator interface. Many PLC's are available which will function to control the thickness measurement apparatus of the present invention, however, a preferred PLC is manufactured by Keyence as part KV-24AT. The PLC is programmed to receive the parameters representative of the desired thickness of the flap gum on the envelope. Thereafter, as the envelopes are passed through the high speed equipment, the sensor is utilized to measure the reflectivity intensity of radiation reflected from the flaps of the envelope and then to compare that reflectivity intensity to the parameters as set up in the PLC. The PLC interface includes various input devices and alarms. The input devices are used to program the PLC for the particular envelope manufacturing gum. The alarms notify the operator that the envelope flap gum thickness is out of specification. If the reflectivity intensity does fall within the parameters, then the manufacturing equipment continues to function. If, however, the reflective intensity from the envelope flap gum as detected by the sensor does not fall within the parameters as programmed into the PLC, then the PLC generates signals indicating that the gum thickness does not fall within the desired parameters.
A plain paper envelope with no seal gum reflects a different intensity of the radiation than a spot on the envelope coated with seal gum does. The seal gum is only partially translucent which means that as the thickness of the seal gum changes so does the intensity of the radiation that is reflected. An envelope with a very thin layer of seal gum will very closely resemble the reflectivity intensity of an envelope with no seal gum. As the layer of seal gum gets thicker through the gumming application, the gum gets smoother and more glossy and the reflectivity intensity increases as the gum thickness increases. Thus, by measuring the reflectivity intensity of the radiation from the gum, one can determine the thickness of the seal gum on the envelope and from that compare it to the parameters established in the PLC and ascertain whether or not the seal gum is within the specifications required for the particular envelope being manufactured by the high speed production equipment.
Seal gum thickness is generally measured in thousands of an inch (mils) and varies by paper type and thickness. For example, on a 20 pound white wove paper, the seal gum should be between 0.7 and 1.1 mils in thickness. On a 28 pound rough coated paper the seal gum should be between 1.2 and 1.6 mils in thickness. As one example, to ascertain the parameters to be programmed into the PLC, a layer of gum is applied to 28 pound rough coated paper, is dried, then measured with a micrometer until the gum is 1.2 mils thick. Radiation is directed to the gum and the intensity of the reflectivity is measured by the sensor and recorded. The thickness of the gum is increased to 1.6 mils, dried, and reflectivity intensity is again measured by the sensor and recorded. These lower and upper reflectivity intensities as measured by the sensor and recorded are used to establish the parameters that are programmed into the PLC. The same process is used for other paper stock and desired gum thickness.
During the envelope seal gumming process the envelopes are placed on top of each other but offset enough distance from the seal gum to remain open to the air thus resembling a plurality of shingles. As a result, a continuous surface of envelopes with alternating seal gum and plain paper are moved directly under sensors which are positioned directly over the envelopes and the sensor takes a continuous reading of the reflectivity intensity and the signal generated by the reflective intensity is transmitted to the PLC where that signal is compared to the parameters that have been preprogrammed into the PLC which are representative of the desired thickness of the seal gum on the flap of the envelope.
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As above indicated, as the thickness of the gum applied to the envelope increases, the reflectivity intensity of radiation directed toward the envelope and the gum increases. As above indicated, standards have been established as to the desired thickness of the gum on the seal flap of the envelope so that the envelope when manufactured will function in accordance with the desired specifications and with the subsequent converting equipment utilized in the postal process. As is shown in
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A method for detecting flap gum thickness on an envelope and for comparing the flap gum thickness to a preprogrammed set of parameters which are indicative of the appropriate thickness of the gum on the envelope and when that gum thickness envelope does not meet those parameters to provide an appropriate alarm to an operator to remove those envelopes in which the flap gum thickness is not in accordance with the parameters previously programmed. This system is capable of inline operation at a layer speed of up to 1500 feet per minute during the envelope manufacturing process. The sensors operate continuously and by the ability to detect the reflectivity intensity of the radiation illuminating the gum can detect the thickness thereof and detect an out of specification envelope at operational speeds and generate an alarm and/or spray ink on the out of specification envelope(s) so they may be removed.