This application claims priority to European Patent Application No. 17020107.3, filed Mar. 21, 2017, the content of which is incorporated by reference herein.
This invention is related a module for replacement of a sleeve to be slipped on a mandrel for a rotary printing press. Further, the invention also relates to a method for assembling a sleeve with a mandrel.
The invention is in the field of large rotary printing presses, for example flexogravure or heliogravure rotary printing presses. In particular, this invention refers to methods and devices for changing the rollers and more generally the so called “print job” of those machines. Rollers used in flexogravure or heliogravure rotary printing press tend to be massive and heavy. Their core is usually made of steel.
Whenever a print job changes, i.e. the image or the text to be printed is modified or changed, the roller or rollers also need to be changed.
To save costs and to make the replacement of the roller easier, a roller/mandrel and sleeve approach is used. Instead of an entire roller, a roller made of a mandrel and a sleeve is used, and for changing the print job only the sleeve has to be replaced. Therefore, it is known to provide sleeve stations where joining of the sleeve and adapter/mandrel is done.
The sleeve is lighter than a massive roller and thus easier to replace. Further, the material used to build the sleeve does not need to meet the stiffness requirements of a roller as a whole, which can lead to cost savings.
On small machines, with rollers that are on the order of 1 m width, sleeves can be changed manually. On bigger machines, with rollers wider than 1 m, it is convenient to automate the task of changing the sleeves to reduce the downtime. This can, however, be challenging, as when replacing the sleeve, the mandrel is held only by one of its ends, causing it to bend and oscillate due to its weight. The tolerance for the mounting of the sleeve being on the order of a few microns, so that this bending is not negligible and needs to be compensated.
Further, as a free end of the mandrel is moved, for example when removing a sleeve, or in the operation of releasing the tip when removing the sleeve, the mandrel tip starts to oscillate. Thus, it is necessary to wait until this oscillation ends before replacing the sleeve, which adds further to the overall downtime of the rotary printing press.
US 2011/0283907 discloses a sleeve replacement system where a robot fetches a sleeve from a storage device and mounts it on a mandrel which is fixed horizontally in the rotary printing press. The system requires ad-hoc position sensors and a continuous monitoring of the tip of the mandrel and sleeve to compensate the effects of gravity that cause the bending and oscillation of the sleeve and the mandrel.
An object of this invention is to provide a method and a module to replace the sleeves of a rotary printing press by limiting the drawbacks of the prior art. Another object of the invention is to provide a sleeve station which is separate from the press and which can be used with a large variety of printing presses already available in the market. It is a further object of the invention to assemble, in a simple and automated manner, a sleeve with a mandrel (or an adapter), suitable for large sleeve lengths.
According to the invention, these aims are achieved by means of a method, a sleeve station and a module according to the disclosure herein.
According to one aspect, the invention relates to a module for replacement of a sleeve to be slipped on a mandrel for a rotary printing press, comprising a sleeve gripper, a mandrel gripper and a linear guide wherein, in a replacement position, a revolution axis of the sleeve coincides with a revolution axis of the mandrel defining an assembly axis. The linear guide is engaged with at least one of the sleeve gripper and/or the mandrel gripper, and the linear guide is configured to translate the sleeve gripper and/or the mandrel gripper substantially along the assembly axis. The orientation of the assembly axis is according to the invention substantially perpendicular to a revolution axis of the sleeve in a printing mode.
In particular, the arrangement of the sleeve in a substantially vertical direction was found to be advantageous according to one aspect of the invention. Vertical according to the invention should be understood as the roll axis being in the direction of gravity. This vertical also corresponds to a direction of the roller axis of the roller comprising at least a sleeve substantially perpendicular to the roller axis in operation during printing. By using such an arrangement of the sleeve and therefore also the mandrel, bending of the sleeve and its possible related oscillations that impair the assembly of large sleeves can be largely diminished.
According to a preferred embodiment, the module further comprises a motor for moving the linear guide.
Good results could be achieved, if the sleeve gripper is connected to a first pivot for pivoting the sleeve at least between an orientation of the assembly axis and an orientation of delivery, whereas preferably, a rotation axis of the first pivot is perpendicular to the assembly axis.
Preferably, the mandrel gripper is connected to a second pivot for pivoting the mandrel at least between the orientation of the assembly axis and the orientation of delivery; whereas preferably a rotation axis of the second pivot is perpendicular to the assembly axis.
Further to this it might be advantageous that the sleeve gripper comprises a central stem for carrying the sleeve, a first clamp element, a second clamp element and a third clamp element, wherein at least one of the clamp elements is arranged to move toward the central stem up to a position where the sleeve is gripped by the first, second and third clamp element, whereby the revolution axis of the sleeve is in parallel to the axis of the stem.
According to a yet further preferred embodiment of the invention, the stem comprises centering means.
According to another aspect, the invention relates to a method for assembling a sleeve with a mandrel, comprising the steps of gripping the sleeve with a sleeve gripper; gripping the mandrel with a mandrel gripper; aligning the revolution axis of the sleeve with the revolution axis of the mandrel in a direction substantially perpendicular to a revolution axis; and slipping the sleeve over the mandrel by translating the sleeve and/or the mandrel substantially along the direction of the assembly axis.
According to another aspect, the invention relates further to a method for assembling a sleeve with a mandrel, comprising the steps of slipping the sleeve over a stem in a delivery orientation; assembling the sleeve with the mandrel according to the method as described above; pivoting the assembled mandrel and sleeve back into the delivery orientation; and opening the sleeve gripper to release the assembled sleeve.
Preferably a sleeve station comprises one or several modules as described above and such a sleeve station is operated separately and independent from any printing machine.
The invention will now be explained with reference to several embodiments which are shown in the attached drawings.
In the figures, the frame is sometimes partially represented to show the other elements of the station better.
This section describes in details some possible variations for implementing the invention followed by specific examples of embodiments. Unless stated otherwise, each paragraph in this section may refer to a different aspect of the invention; in other words, the features disclosed in distinct paragraphs may be used in distinct embodiments. Nevertheless, the features disclosed in distinct paragraphs may also be used in combination with the features disclosed in other paragraphs.
The aligned revolution axes define an assembly axis 6, as shown in
The so called vertical aspect of the assembly axis leads to the advantage that the sleeve is prevented from bending, and consequently also prevents the tip of the sleeve oscillating around a bending position. The lack of bending and/or oscillations leads to a system which can effect changing of a sleeve in less time and with less complexity.
With a module according to the invention the need for measuring the bending can be prevented. Further oscillations are diminished and therefore time to reach stable conditions to perform the assembly is much shorter. The system as proposed can be implemented as an open loop system, even if the use of positioning sensors is preferred. Positioning sensors double check on the relative positioning of the sleeve and mandrel prior to the assembly. The sleeve station is configured for assembly and disassembly of the sleeves and the mandrel.
The linear guide 4 mechanically guides the mandrel gripper 3 and the sleeve gripper 2 in an engaged position. In the example in
The linear guide 4 can be connected to the sleeve gripper 2, to cause the motion of the sleeve gripper 2, as shown in the pictures. This is the preferred solution because the sleeve is lighter than the mandrel, which is kept fixed and below the sleeve.
In another embodiment, the linear guide 4 is connected to the mandrel gripper and causes the mandrel to move toward and away from the sleeve to perform the assembly or disassembly of the printing roller. In another embodiment, the linear guide 4 is connected to the mandrel gripper and the sleeve gripper and moves both the mandrel and the sleeve toward and away from each other to perform the assembly and the disassembly.
For ergonomic reasons, the sleeve is inserted on a stem 13 which is preferably oriented horizontally. The assembly orientation is the orientation of the sleeve gripper when the sleeve rotation axis is aligned with the assembly axis and the loading orientation if the orientation of the sleeve gripper 2 when the stem 13 is oriented for loading and unloading the sleeve 10.
In the loading orientation, the stem 13 of the sleeve gripper can be slightly tilted, preferably so that the sleeve slides to the back of the stem. For example, it can be set to −5 degrees from the horizontal, the negative sign representing a slope may cause the sleeve 10 to slide, or at least stay, toward the back 131 of the stem 13. In the loading orientation, the stem 13 may be positioned at an angle ranging from +5 degrees to −30 degrees.
The sleeve gripper is connected to a first pivot 17 (
The assembly axis is preferably vertical to avoid the bending of the sleeve and the oscillation mentioned earlier in the description. However, the system is expected to work also if the assembly axis departs from the vertical, as defined above, orientation from −10 to +10, preferably −5 to +5 degrees.
In
According to a preferred embodiment the stem 13 may comprise centering means.
To ensure a proper gripping, but without deforming the sleeve, the clamp elements are either positioned at a predefined location which depends on the sleeve diameter or using a pressure sensor on at least one of the clamp elements. Preferably, the parameters of the sleeve and mandrel (diameter, length, thickness, weight) are loaded into the sleeve station electronics prior to the assembly or disassembly. In a preferred embodiment, the sleeve and the mandrel comprise a code, which is read by the machine, to determine the parameters without the user intervention. In some embodiments, instead of a code, the values of the parameters themselves are stored in, or on, the sleeve or mandrel.
In a preferred embodiment, before the sleeve is gripped, a device comprised of arms 140,150 ensures that the sleeve is positioned against an abutment positioned toward the back 131 of the sleeve gripper (not shown). In a preferred embodiment, this device is implemented using two arms 140 and 150, which have ends that are parallel to the surface of clamp elements 14 and 15, respectively, slightly shifted toward the inside (as depicted in
Instead of using arms 140 and 150 to push the sleeve toward the back, the mandrel gripper can use the pivot to orient the sleeve gripper in a steep orientation, with the back 131 of the stem at the bottom, clamp the sleeve, and then turn the gripper toward the assembly orientation. The orientation can range, for example from 30 to 60 degrees from the vertical, to ensure that the sleeve slides against an abutment positioned toward the back 131 of the stem and that the sleeve touches both clamp elements 14 and 15 during the whole clamping operation.
In
The mandrel gripper comprises an inlet for pressurized air. This pressurized air is transmitted to the mandrel through a pipe (not represented), either through the stem 23 holding the mandrel or on the back 231 of the stem. The air exits the front of the mandrel through an ad hoc pipe in the mandrel itself. This air creates an air cushion between the mandrel and the sleeve which allows the sleeve to slide over the mandrel for assembly or disassembly. The air pressure in the current embodiment is of the order of 6 to 10 bars. When the air is stopped, then the sleeve is tightly connected to the mandrel, either only through pressure and friction, or with the help of an adhesive layer 110 placed in the inside 11 of the sleeve 10, or on the surface 22 of the mandrel.
The mandrel gripper 3 comprises means for holding the mandrel 20, for example from the inside using a stem 23. In systems using mandrels 20 that have a shaft, the mandrel gripper grips the mandrel by the shaft. In a preferred embodiment, when the sleeve is assembled on the mandrel, the stem 13 of the sleeve gripper is inserted into the stem 23 of the mandrel gripper.
According to a preferred embodiment the sleeve and the mandrel have a registered rotation orientation. In other words, the relative orientation of the sleeve and mandrel according to a rotation along the revolution axis must be known. The mandrel and sleeve may be assembled in an arbitrary orientation, and their relative rotation orientation may then be measured, for example by using a camera and some markings on the border of the sleeve and mandrel.
Advantageously, the sleeve is assembled in a well-defined rotation orientation relative to the mandrel. To do so, a positioning slot is provided on the sleeve, and a corresponding protrusion is provided on the mandrel (not shown). Then, either the sleeve gripper 2 or the mandrel gripper 3 may be provided with means for rotating around the revolution axis during or before assembly. Preferably, the mandrel gripper is equipped with such means, for example using a motor that rotates the mandrel about its revolution axis. Thus, once the relative rotation orientation of both the sleeve and the mandrel is known, then the motor is used to set the orientation accordingly so that the positioning slot is aligned with the protrusion. Finally, the protrusion is inserted into the slot.
The position of the positioning slot can be measured using a camera or a laser sensor. The positioning of the corresponding protrusion on the mandrel can also be measured with a camera or a laser sensor (any other marking on the mandrel can be used to measure the orientation as long as the position of the protrusion is well defined with respect to said marking). The rotation orientation of the mandrel may also be set by the operator when loading the mandrel on the stem 23. In the latter case, the position of the protrusion does not need to be measured.
Except for the rotation orientation setting (when required), the sleeve station can work in open loop. However, to prevent from destroying a sleeve when one of the positioning element is less precise than expected due to some error or wearing over time, a set of positioning sensors can be used for
To assemble the sleeve with a mandrel to obtain a printing cylinder or printing roller, we apply the following method that comprises the steps of:
Prior to the above-mentioned method, the sleeve and mandrel have to be loaded into the station. To do so, the sleeve gripper and mandrel gripper are oriented according to the loading position. The sleeve is (manually) slipped over the stem 13 of the sleeve gripper (the operation is manual unless the whole transfer from the sleeve station to the printing machine is automatized as well with a separate system).
Prior to the assembly of a sleeve with a mandrel, and to allow the handling of sleeve/mandrel assemblies with varying sizes, the dimensional parameters of the sleeve and the mandrel are loaded in the electronics of the sleeve station. The dimensional parameters comprise the sleeve outer diameter and the sleeve (and mandrel) length. The parameter may comprise many more parameters as well, like for example material types, which would influence the speed or forces at stake, the air pressure to be applied, the size of the slot, etc.
In the method, the chronological order of the steps of a process is defined when the steps, or group of steps, are separated by the word “then”. If not, the order can be reversed, or the steps can be performed in parallel. By vertical orientation, we mean a parallel to the gravitational force direction.
The activation can be effected by all means accessible to the person skilled in the art. This can be for example a pneumatic, hydraulic, mechanic or electric activation.
The centering means 29 provide a supplemental centering from the “inside”. The clamp elements 14, 15 and 16 create a centering from the “outside”. As soon as a first part of the sleeve 10 is slipped on the mandrel 20, the centering means 29 might not be necessary anymore and therefore could be retracted, as then the guidance is given by the mandrel 20 and the sleeve 10 themselves.
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17020107 | Mar 2017 | EP | regional |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180272688 A1 | Sep 2018 | US |