The present invention relates to book binding with a compact machine having a page-forming mode and a spiral-insertion and cutting with bending mode, where a curved foundation forms a collection of pages being bound into a concave edge, and an angled side guide sets a proper pitch angle to accept insertion of a plastic spiral binding coil.
Existing book binding coil insertion machines insert plastic spiral coil into a collection of pages being bound. Previously, such book binding machines have been large, and have several sequential functions to accomplish forming up pages, inserting plastic coils and cutting and crimping the coils. While forming up the pages, the proper tool must be selected from a set so as to match the variety of book thickness being bound. Most often, the exact tool for the particular thickness is unavailable to form the sheets properly.
Each plastic spiral gets inserted through the holes in a stack of sheets forming a book.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a book binding machine having a page-forming mode and a spiral-binding mode, where a curved foundation forms a collection of pages being bound into a concave edge.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide a book binding machine utilizing a page-forming convex support member attached to a carriage bar movable between an engaged position and a disengaged position and means to produce said motion therebetween.
It is also an object of the present invention to use the pulsating pneumatic exhaust of a pneumatic vibrator, instead of discarding the exhaust air, so as to aerate the binding edges of the plurality of book pages during a book binding function.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide a book binding machine that is relatively small and compact.
Other objects which become apparent from the following description of the present invention.
This invention describes a semi-automatic plastic spiral binding machine with several improvements over prior machines in the areas of page alignment.
A major subassembly of this compact binding machine is a carriage formed of two circular arc brackets near opposite sides of the machine supporting three transverse bars. The three bars have specific functions. One is the book forming carriage bar, a second is a vibrator support bar, and a third is a cutter bar. Since the circular arc brackets are rotatable, they are used to position the various bars in relation to the book forming/binding station which is another subassembly of this binding machine.
At the start of the binding process, the circular arc brackets are rotated so that the book forming carriage bar is properly positioned under the page forming/binding station to support pages introduced into the open page holder, such as, for example, a page holding clamp. After the book pages are formed and clamped, the book forming carriage bar is rotated out of the way of the advancing plastic spiral which binds the pages into a book; this is an intermediate position with no transverse bar engaged with the binding process. Then, in a third distinct rotation, the cutter bar is rotated into position engaging coils of the spiral at either end of the bound book with cutter/crimpers which then proceed to cut and bend the ends of the plastic spiral thereby completing the binding process. The vibrator bar does not have a unique operational position. It introduces vibration via the circular brackets to the book forming carriage bar during the book forming process to aid gravity and combat page clinging so that the book pages assume a configuration suitable for binding prior to the engagement of the page holding clamp.
For accurate tracking of the plastic spiral through the holes in a stack of sheets forming a book, two orthogonal edges of the book should be pre-formed so as to create a spiral path through the binding holes. Specifically, since the spiral coil is inserted adjacent the binding edge of the book, this edge should be formed into a concave shape of a diameter closely approximating the diameter of the plastic spiral coil. At the same instant prior to entry of the spiral coil, the perforation holes should be angled laterally at the pitch angle of the spiral coil. This step is known as sheet or page forming.
The present invention provides a more simple device for shaping the gathered pages waiting to be bound into a concave shape to accept the spiral coil segments therethrough. This shaping device is a convex rest upon which the gathered page edges are placed. The convex shape of the rest produces a corresponding concave shape to the stack of pages, which is needed to provide the desired curvature of the multiple page perforations.
The convex rest upon which the gathered page edges are placed produces the required corresponding concave shape of the binding edge of the book being formed.
The ideal convex rest for forming the shape of proper diameter for the book being bound is a section of plastic binding spiral used to bind this particular book. This length of binding spiral is clamped to the book forming carriage bar before the start of the run. In this way there is no confusion in selecting the proper rest and no tooling is required for each book thickness needed to be bound.
This surface can be formed by a piece of rigid tubing of the appropriate diameter, or by an extruded profile having a semicircular outer top surface. In the preferred embodiment, a length of the actual binding plastic spiral is introduced into the binding machine and clamped in place to form the required concave shape of the binding edge of the book. In this way, there is no confusion about the proper diameter of tubing or semicircular profile for a particular run. The operator simply uses a sample of the actual binding spiral with a convex edge prior to starting the run.
The convex edge can be provided from a corresponding second plastic spiral coil of the same size and shape as the spiral coil to be inserted into the pages, or by a rigid member having a convex portion, such as a cylinder, semi-cylinder or other member having at least an arcuate convex surface portion.
Both the second plastic spiral coil and the convex rigid member are not narrow enough in their respective total lengths to fit between respective loops of the first plastic spiral coil supporting the concave edge of the pages being bound into a book.
An angled side guide as taught in the 1997 Spiel COIL MASTER® Binding machine of Spiel Associates, Inc. is used to shift the pages of the book laterally at the proper pitch angle. The angled stop bracket is used to form the proper pitch, matching that of the binding spiral, in the stack of pages being formed into a book. The combination of concave shaped binding edge with the proper page pitch angle allows the plastic binding spiral to hit each perforation of each page perfectly and smoothly as it is rotated during insertion.
The compact semi-automatic plastic spiral binding machine also includes a spreader mechanism, taught by U.S. Pat. No. 6,851,907 of Spiel using spreaders to spread apart the leading edge of a plastic spiral being inserted into pages to form a book to compensate for first and last holes of the pages having margin differences from front and rear ends of the book, greater than a predetermined spacing of all intermediate holes.
To help prevent pages from clinging to each other and to help them rest on the convex rest during book forming, a vibrator vibrates the page forming carriage by transmitting vibration via the curved side brackets. A pneumatic vibrator of the circulating ball variety is used. This operates on a normal compressed air or “shop air” supply, only during the book forming process.
An artifact of this type of vibrator is that its exhaust is a pulsating stream of compressed air. In this invention, an aerator is directed to aerate the pages. In one example, this supply of air is the exhaust of the vibrator is directed to a manifold on the back of the angled bracket stop and allowed to exhaust through a linear array of small holes transverse to the pages of the book resting against it. This supply of pulsed air being blown between the pages is used to aerate the pages being bound, so as to further minimize cling during the book forming process prior to being clamped in the proper shape and position for binding.
At this point in the process, the circular brackets are rotated to space the page forming carriage bar away from the bottom edge of the clamped book into an intermediate position to provide clearance and prevent interfering with the plastic spiral which is then rotated into the holes adjacent the bottom edge of the clamped book. The leading edge of the spiral exiting the last binding hole is sensed triggering the end of the spiral advance phase.
The next process step positions the cutter bar under the bound edge of the bound book so that each of the pair of cutter/crimpers is brought into contact with the binding spiral at either end of the book. These are used to cut and bend the spiral to finish the binding process at which time the book clamp is released.
Prior to the start of the binding run, the pair of cutter/crimpers are positioned at the proper locations on the cutter bar insuring that the plastic spiral is cut and bent at the proper locations matching the size and position of the books being bound.
The present invention can best be understood in connection with the accompanying drawings. It is noted that the invention is not limited to the precise embodiments shown in drawings, in which:
As shown in
An alternate embodiment of cutter/crimper is shown in
In the foregoing description, certain terms and visual depictions are used to illustrate the preferred embodiment. However, no unnecessary limitations are to be construed by the terms used or illustrations depicted, beyond what is shown in the prior art, since the terms and illustrations are exemplary only, and are not meant to limit the scope of the present invention.
It is further known that other modifications may be made to the present invention, without departing the scope of the invention, as noted in the appended Claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5569012 | Kosasa et al. | Oct 1996 | A |
5785479 | Battisti et al. | Jul 1998 | A |
6036423 | Westra et al. | Mar 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080095596 A1 | Apr 2008 | US |