The present invention relates to improvements to storage units or containers for tubular winding cores, for example, although not exclusively, for use in the filed of paper converting.
In many industrial sectors it is necessary to wind a continuous web material around tubular winding cores to form rolls of said web material. Typically in paper converting, for producing toilet paper, kitchen towels or the like, a continuous web cellulosic material, usually tissue paper, is unwound from large reels and wound around tubular winding cores to form so-called logs or rolls having a diameter equal to the diameter of the rolls destined for the final consumption and an axial length multiple of the length of the rolls destined for consumption. These rolls or logs are then cut, and the resulting small rolls are packaged to be sold. Winding occurs in so-called rewinding machines, to which tubular winding cores are fed from a storage unit. Rewinding machines for this use are known to those skilled in the art, and they will not be described hereafter.
Usually, tubular cores are made of cardboard, by winding one or more cardboard strips around a spindle in specific machines, called corewinders.
Tubular cores are generally accumulated in boxes near the production line, where the rewinder is arranged, and are singularly taken and inserted in a feed path towards the rewinder. Cores are taken from the lower area of the boxes, and forward movement of the cores inside the box occurs through gravity. An agitator member is generally provided for maintaining the cores moving, thus avoiding bunching and therefore feedblock.
These storage systems are particularly easy to be constructed, but have some drawbacks. Firstly, the tubular winding cores are stacked one over the other, thus forming a significant mass. The tubular cores in the lower area of the box can be therefore damaged due to the weight of the cores above. Furthermore, cores are inserted randomly, and taken from the lower area of the storage unit or container randomly, so that it is possible that some cores remain inside the box for very long times before being taken, with the risk of damage. The more the axial dimensions of the cores increase, the more the risk of feedblock and/or of damage of the cores increases.
Insertion of a damaged tubular winding core inside the rewinder can block the rewinder and therefore all the line, resulting in production losses. One or more operators are necessary for putting back the line in operation. This requires even long down times, with high production losses, as the throughput rate of these lines can be greater than 1000 m/min.
Furthermore, modern rewinders produce a significantly high number of rolls per minute, and require therefore to be fed with tubular winding cores at a very high rate, typically with intervals from 1 to 4 seconds. The storage unit must thus guarantee an efficient and reliable feed of the tubular winding cores at high speed, what is not guaranteed by the storage units of the type described above.
For accumulating and feeding tubular winding cores of high length, necessary for the modern rewinders that can produce logs or rolls with axial lengths of some meters, particularly complex storage units have been developed, similar to the storage containers for the rolls exiting from the rewinder. In these storage systems the tubular winding cores are supported on chains defining a continuous zigzag path, formed by vertically developed ascending and descending branches of the chains. Storage units of this type are described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,258,221 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,840,368.
These storage units are particularly efficient, guarantee a reliable feeding, also with high rates, of tubular winding cores to the rewinders, and guarantee a constant permanence of each tubular winding core inside the storage unit or container. These are in fact storage units or containers of the FIFO type, i.e. “First-In-First-Out” type. Their structure is however highly complex.
According to one aspect, the invention provides for a storage unit which partially or completely overcomes one or more of the drawbacks of the traditional storage units.
According to one embodiment, a storage unit for tubular winding cores is provided, comprising an entrance, an exit and an accumulation area between the entrance and the exit, in which a feeding path for the tubular winding cores is provided. The feeding path is formed by feeding channels mutually overlapping and connected by means of preferably curve descending branches allowing falling by gravity from a feeding channel to the feeding channel below. The tubular winding cores gather along the feeding path resting one on the other, i.e. into contact one with the other. Preferably, an entrance elevator is furthermore provided to raise the tubular winding cores to a height greater than the entrance and insert them in said feeding path. The storage unit or container formed in this way is of the First-In-First-Out type, and the tubular winding cores are subjected to minimum stresses. They move in an ordered manner, without the risk of stresses or blocks inside the feeding path. The structure of the storage unit is extremely simple and economical, although it guarantees at the same time a high reliability and efficiency in managing tubular winding cores even of great axial dimensions and that must be fed at high rate.
In some embodiments an exit elevator is provided, designed so as to take the tubular winding cores from a lower end of the feeding path and lift them to a greater height, where said exit is located.
In some embodiments, the feeding path develops in a zigzag manner, from the top downwards, and the tubular winding cores are transferred from one to the other of the overlapping channels, moving in each channel and in the channel immediately below in opposite directions.
Each feeding channel has preferably a nearly rectilinear development, but channels in other shape can be also provided, for example in the shape of an arch.
In some embodiments each feeding channel is nearly horizontal. Forward movement of the cores in each channel can occurs due to the effect of gravity and inertia: each core falls into the channel from a higher level and moves forward along the channel towards the end opposite to the end from which it has been inserted. To facilitate rolling, the channels can be slightly inclined from the top downwards and from the entrance end to the exit end.
In other and preferred embodiments, along at least some feeding channels a conveyor for the tubular winding cores is provided, developing from an entrance end to an exit end of the corresponding feeding channel. Preferably each channel will be provided with at least one conveyor. Conveyors help the forward movement of the cores along the respective channels, so that horizontal channels in the place of inclined channels can be provided. Conveyors also assure that the tubular winding cores are always arranged adjacent to each other the entire feeding path, thus guaranteeing a more regular and reliable operation of the storage unit.
Further features and embodiments of the invention will be described hereinafter and in the attached claims, which form an integral part of the present description.
The invention will be better understood by means of the description below and the attached drawing, which shows a non-restrictive practical embodiment of the invention. More in particular, in the drawings:
With initial reference to
In some embodiments, to the entrance 3 of the storage unit 1 a slide 7 can be associated, with which detectors 9, for example photocell detectors, can be combined, detecting the presence and/or the number of tubular winding cores A waiting on the entrance slide 7 that must be taken and inserted in a feeding path, described below and arranged inside the storage unit 1. The signals from the detectors 9 are used, for instance, to control the picking-up rate of the tubular winding cores A from the entrance 3, so as to prevent an excessive number of tubular cores from gathering on the entrance slide 7.
The cores fed along the entrance slide 7 are picked-up singularly by an entrance elevator 11. The latter is formed by one o more chains 13 or by other continuous flexible members.
Shaped supports 25 are fixed along the chains 13 at regular steps. Each support 25 has a double V-shape defining, superiorly and inferiorly, respective cradles for supporting the tubular winding cores A. The tubular winding cores A are therefore taken singularly from the supports 25, that are arranged on the ascending branch of the chains 13, they are lifted to the guiding wheels 15 and transferred around these wheels, and then go down along the descending branch of the chains 13, passing from the cradle defined by a first support 25 to the cradle defined by the support 25 immediately downstream of, and opposite to, it. Around the guiding wheels 15 a guiding profile 27 is arranged to prevent the tubular winding cores A from falling during the rotation movement around the upper guiding wheels 15.
Along the descending path of the chains 13 of the entrance elevator 11 at least one unloading element is arranged, that causes the unload of the tubular winding cores A from the support 25 of the chains 13 towards the feeding path defined inside the storage unit 1. In the illustrated embodiment an upper unloading element 29 is provided, formed by one or more inclined profiles that intersect the descending trajectory of the entrance elevator 11 and extend downward to about the height of a first conveyor 31 of a plurality of analogous overlapping conveyors defining, in the manner described below, feeding channels for the tubular winding cores forming a feeding path from the top downward to an exit elevator, described below, which takes the tubular winding cores in the lower area of the storage unit 1 and transfers them to the exit 5.
More in particular, in the illustrated example the storage unit 1 comprises a plurality of feeding channels 33, arranged so as to form a zigzag path for the tubular winding cores A, which develops from the top downward. The feeding channels 33 are defined by substantially horizontal and parallel branches of a plurality of feeding conveyors, labeled 31 and more precisely subdivided into two series formed by conveyors indicated respectively with 31A and 31B.
The conveyors 31A are carried by a first fixed structure 35. Each conveyor is formed by a belt 37 (see in particular
As mentioned above, the conveyors 31B have a structure substantially symmetrical to that of the conveyors 31A and are carried by a second structure 36. Structures 35 and 36 are connected to each other and form a part of the fixed structure of the storage unit 1.
The conveyors 31A are arranged spaced from one another and vertically overlapping, at such a mutual distance to allow interposition between them of respective conveyors 31B, that are also vertically overlapping and spaced from one another by the same mutual distance. The series of conveyors 31A and 31B form substantially respective comb-like arrangements carried by the structures 35 and 36, the conveyors 31B being inserted between the conveyors 31A, the various conveyors 31A, 31B being arranged at substantially regular intervals. This arrangement of the conveyors 31A and 31B defines the core feeding channels 33. Each channel is therefore delimited by the upper branch of a conveyor below and by a lower branch of a conveyor above.
In front of the free ends of each conveyor 31A, 31B, the structures 36 and 35 support shaped profiles 61. The profiles 61 form guiding surfaces for unloading the tubular cores from a feeding channel 33 above towards a feeding channel 33 below. In some embodiments the profiles 61 have a shape substantially of an arc of circle.
The channels 33 and the profiles 61 define a zigzag path developing from the top near the upper profile or unloading element 29 downwards to a lower conveyor indicated with 31C and carried by the structure 35. This latter conveyor 31C is substantially equal to the conveyors 31A, but is longer than the conveyors 31A and 31B, and extends with its farthest end from the bearing structure 35 until it interferes with the ascending branch of an exit elevator 65.
In the illustrated example the exit elevator 65 has two or more chains or other continuous flexible members 67. The picture shows a single chain 67 but, analogously to what has been described in connection with the chains 13 of the entrance elevator 11, the exit elevator 65 has two or more chains 67 overlapping and developing along identical paths defined between upper guiding wheels 69, keyed on a shaft 71, and lower guiding wheels 72, keyed on a shaft 75. The latter is advantageously motorized by a motor 77, that moves the chains 67 according to the arrows f67. The forward speed of the chains 67 can be controlled according to the speed of the machines downstream of the storage unit 1, for example according to the production rate of the rewinder.
On the chains 67 supports 70 are fixed at regular intervals, shaped as the supports 25 described above with reference to the entrance elevator 11.
The tubular winding cores A conveyed by the lower conveyor 31C towards the exit elevator 65 are taken singularly from the supports 70 and transferred from the bottom upwards until they rotate around the guiding wheels 69. To prevent the tubular winding cores A from falling accidentally, a guide 73 is provided around the wheels 69. Along the descending branch of the chains 67 an exit chute 76 is arranged, that takes single tubular winding cores from the supports 70 and make them roll toward an exit conveyor belt 77. The conveyor belt 77 develops according to a direction substantially orthogonal to the plane of
The storage unit described above operates as described below.
The tubular winding cores A coming from a corewinder, not shown, are conveyed along the slide 3 towards the entrance of the storage unit 1. The single cores A are taken from the supports 25 of the entrance conveyor 11 along the ascending branch of the chains 13.
Through movement, according to f13, of the chains 13 of the entrance conveyor 11, the tubular winding cores A are lifted and unloaded along the upper profile or unloading element 29. The cores fall onto the first conveyor 31A by gravity, and move from left to right (in the drawing) towards the guiding profile 61 opposite to the upper profile or unloading element 29. The guiding profile 61 make the single tubular winding cores A fall onto the rest surface formed by the first conveyor 31A downwards inside the channel 33 below, defined between the lower branch of the first conveyor 31A and the upper branch of the second conveyor 31B. From here the tubular winding cores continue to move forward along a zigzag path (see in particular
The single tubular winding cores are taken from the exit end of the lower conveyor 31C by means of the exit elevator 65, they are lifted to the guiding wheels 69 and unloaded along the chute 76, from which the conveyor belt 77 feed them to the rewinder or other machine for the processing line in which they are used to form rolls.
When the storage unit 1 is completely empty, as shown in
With such an arrangement, bringing the profile 61X in the position shown in dotted line in
In other embodiments one or more fixed profiles 61X and removable profiles 61 can be provided to allow the entrance of the tubular winding cores intercepted by the fixed profiles 61X.
It is understood that the drawing merely shows a practical embodiment of the invention, which may vary in forms and arrangements without however departing from the scope of the concept on which the invention is based. Any reference numbers in the claims are provided for the sole purpose of facilitating the reading thereof in the light of the description hereinbefore and the accompanying drawings and do not in any way limit the scope of protection of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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FI2010A000009 | Jan 2010 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IT2011/000012 | 1/14/2011 | WO | 00 | 8/6/2012 |