The present invention relates to windups in general and to automatic reel change in a windup in particular.
A windup is used with a calender or other paper handling equipment. Paper is unwound and passed through a calender, coater or other paper handling equipment and wound on to empty spools. In a process such as calendering, it is most cost effective if the winding of paper onto the reels is as automatic as possible. Automation reduces labor, increases productivity of the machinery used, and increases safety.
After leaving the last lead-out roll in a calender or other paper converting equipment, the paper web is threaded through a rider roll assembly. The rider roll assembly typically includes a pivoting arm, a lead-in roll, and a rider roll. Auto splicing components and a traversing knife, as well as a nip guard may also be mounted to the pivoting arm. The rider roll engages a reel being formed about a spool which is held in a windup stand.
Stiff paper webs can present difficulties in reliably directing a paper tail around the new spool in a windup. This is particularly true if a nip guard requires the web to be threaded into a narrow gap between the nip guard and the new spool. What is needed is an automatic device which can thread a web of paper or other sheet material, particularly board or stiff paper, reliably and in the presence of a nip guard.
The windup stand of this invention has a tail turn-up assembly which can also be referred to as a sheet windup starter which effects the transference of a paper web from a machine spool to a new spool. A new reel spool is engaged with the web and turns at the same speed as a moving web. As the web continues past the new spool to a finished reel spool, a knife blade mounted on a knife carriage cuts a tail about 10 inches wide from the web. A a tail turn-up assembly is positioned upstream of the reel spool. The tail turn-up assembly has a frame and a carriage pivotally mounted by a four bar linkage to the frame. The frame is mounted to the machine floor below and upstream of the reel spool.
The carriage is pivoted from a retracted position to an extended position by a pneumatic actuator. The carriage has wheels mounted on either side of the carriage which, when the carriage is in the extended position, one wheel the other wheel engage only the reel spool. A plurality of wheels are resiliently mounted by springs to a knife carriage which rides on the carriage. These wheels also engage the web and the reel spool about which the web is wrapped.
When the carriage is in engagement with the reel spool, a pair of curved tracks are positioned so that the arcs defined by the tracks have their centers coincident with the spool axis. The knife carriage has cam followers which ride on the curved tracks. The cam followers and the curved tracks constrain the knife carriage to move circumferentially about the reel spool. A second pneumatic actuator on the carriage causes the knife carriage to traverse circumferentially about the reel spool as guided by the circumferential tracks. The knife carriage has a leading edge formed by a knife which tears through the 10 inch tail being cut from the web by the traversing knife.
The cut web tail is held against the reel spool by the spring-loaded wheels and air jets from an air blow pipe mounted on the knife carriage, and the driven reel spool continues to feed the tail into a nip with a rider roll positioned above the reel spool. A threading pan with an air blow directs the web tail into the nip formed with the rider roll, and a new reel begins to form on the reel spool. The traveling knife then moves in a cross machine direction, widening the tail until it encompasses the entire web.
It is a feature of the present invention to provide a windup with automatic threading which can reliably handle paper or board which is relatively stiff.
It is a further feature of the present invention to provide a tail turn-up assembly which can be moved into and out of a tail turnup position from beneath a reel spool.
It is another feature the present invention to provide a turn-up assembly which can reliably direct a paper web into a narrow slot formed between a nip guard and a reel spool.
Further features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring more particularly to
A second center wind assist (not shown) mounted to one of a spaced apart pair of transfer arms 34 continues to drive the spool 38 about which the reel 30 is formed as it is transferred to and held on the rails 36. The rider roll 26 is mounted on rider roll arms 40. When the reel 30 is transferred by the transfer arms 34, the rider roll arms 40 are retracted by linear actuators 42. A guide roll 44 is mounted to guide arms 46. The guide roll 44 is retracted by a linear actuators 48 which pivot the guide arms 46 about pivots 50. A new reel spool 28 is loaded into the windup station 32 by overhead spool loading devices 51. With the rider arms 40 and guide arms 46 retracted, the web 22 is directed away from the windup station while the reel spool 28 is lowered on to the windup stations 32. The center wind assist (not shown) brings the reel spool 28 up to the speed of the moving web 22. The guide arms 46 are then extended raising the guide roll 44, then the rider roll 26 is lowered by extending rider roll arms 40 bringing the web 22 into engagement with the reel spool 28.
A tail turn-up assembly 58 has a frame 60 positioned upstream of the reel spool and windup stand 32. The turn-up assembly 58 has a leading edge knife 102 mounted on a knife carriage 84 which is mounted for motion on a pivoting carriage 62, which is pivotally mounted to the frame 60.
A knife blade 52 is mounted on a cross machine direction movable knife shuttle 54, which is positioned upstream of the rider roll 26. The knife blade 52 is positioned inwardly from the edge of the web, and when it is brought into engagement with the web the web is slit into two adjacent strips. When the new reel spool 28 is engaged with the web 22, as shown in
To cut the tail 56 from the narrow strip of web, the carriage 62 is pivoted from a retracted position as shown in
When the carriage 62 is positioned in engagement with the reel spool 28, a pair of curved tracks 86 formed by opposed grooves 88 are positioned so that the arcs defined by the tracks 86 has their centers 90 coincident with a spool axis 92. The knife carriage 84 has cam following wheels (not shown) which ride in the grooves 88 forming the curved tracks 86.
The cam following wheels and the curved tracks 86 constrain the knife carriage 84 to move circumferentially about the reel spool axis as shown in
The cut web tail 56 is held against the reel spool 28 by the spring-loaded wheels 80 and an air blow pipe 104, as the driven reel spool 28 continues to feed the tail 56 into the nip 110 formed between the rider roll 26 and the reel spool 28. A threading pan 106, shown in
Following completion of the reel spool change, the pneumatic actuators 68 and 94 are retracted and the carriage 62 and knife carriage 84 are returned to their original positions as illustrated in
It should be understood that the wheels 78 of the carriage 62 for purposes of the claims in engage the spool 28 when they engage the web 22 against the spool 28.
It is understood that the invention is not limited to the particular construction and arrangement of parts herein illustrated and described, but embraces all such modified forms thereof as come within the scope of the following claims.