The present invention retates to a transport system for a mould-string casting plant of the kind set forth hereafter.
In transport systems for mould-string casting plants of this kind it is known to effect the transport by means of the pressure plate expelling the formed moulds from the moulding machine and supplementary mechanical means in the form of movable longitudinal side rails applying a positive lateral force on each side of the mould string and moving in an advancing and longitudinal stepwise manner synchronised with the movement provided by the pressing plate of the moulding machine, said mechanical means being positioned close to the moulding machine for gripping the moulds immediately after leaving said moulding machine. A transport system of this kind is known from U.S. Pat. No. 3,744,552.
Another supplementary mechanical means for providing the forward movement of the mould string comprises an array of equally spaced, parallel, rigid rails extending in the direction of the movement of the mould string from the moulding machine. The array of equally spaced rails comprises fixed rails and movable rails, said movable rails being moved by mechanical and hydraulic means and positioned between the fixed rails in an alternate manner, the movable rails being moved in a cyclic manner synchronised with the movement provided by the pressing plate of the moulding machine, said cyclic movement of the movable rails comprising lifting the movable rails to support the mould string, moving one step forward, lowering the movable rails leaving the mould string supported on the fixed rails, and moving the movable rails back to their initial position ready to be lifted again to support the mould string in order to minimise the vertical movement of the moulds and reduce the friction, the so-called fixed rails are lowered during the forward movement of the movable rails. A transport system of this kind is known from DE-2,311,253.
It is furthermore known to provide a belt conveyor for performing the final transport of the mould string towards the knock-out station, said belt conveyor being positioned to receive the mould string after sufficient solidification of the mouldings, whereby the precision of the transport is less significant for obtaining precision mouldings.
In connection with modern moulding machines having a high production rate, the distance over which the mould string has to be transported before reaching the knock-out station increases and furthermore, the distance over which the precision conveyance of the mould string is essential for obtaining precision mouldings by avoiding dislocation of individual mould parts relative to one another, is also increasing. Accordingly, there exists a demand for extending the high-precision part of the transport system as well as the total length of the transport system.
It is the present invention to provide a transport system for a mould-string casting plant of the kind referred to above, with which it is possible to provide a longer high-precision transport part and a longer total length of the transport system, and this object is achieved with a transport system of said kind, which according to the present invention also comprises the features set forth hereafter. With this arrangement, the high-precision sliding transport of the mould string can be extended relatively long until problems arise in connection with the contact between the side rails for the sliding transport, whereupon a walking beam transport can take over the transport of the mould string, said walking beam transport also being of a relatively high-precision type avoiding dislocation of mould parts relative to one another, and the walking beam transport system extending as long as possible until a possible belt conveyor transport system can take over the transport after sufficient solidification of the castings. The combination of the pressure plate transport, side rail transport and walking beam transport provides the possibility of extending the high-precision transport to a longer distance than possible with the existing systems which only use pressure plate transport combined with either side rail or walking beam transport.
Preferred embodiments of the invention, the advantages of which will be evident from the following detailed part of the present description, are revealed hereafter. Due to the fact that the supplementary mechanical movement means of the second section are not active in the start of the mould string, a special method for emptying the transport system may be implemented, as revealed hereafter.
In the following detailed part of the present description, the invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the exemplary embodiments of a transport system for a mould-string casting plant according to the invention shown in the drawings, in which
The transport system shown in
In the first part of a conveyor part I, the moulds are guided in a channel provided by means of a bottom and possibly two fixed side rails guiding the produced moulds during their sliding movement towards the pouring station.
The side rail transport system in the second transport section II shown in
The side rail transport system may extend all the way from the moulding machine to the walking beam transport system but preferably only from a position downstream of the pouring station 4, in which position the castings have achieved a solidified outer shell.
The walking beam transport system of the third transport section III shown in
The first transport section I provides a secure and stable contact pressure or weighting between the mould parts in the pouring station 4, and the friction between the moulds 3—positioned between the moulding machine 1 and the pouring station 4—and the sliding section is sufficient to maintain this contact pressure even when the hydraulically operated pressure plate 2 is moved back into the moulding machine 1 for producing the next mould 3.
In order to be able to empty the system, when changing from one type of casting to another or any other production stop, lightweight dummy blocks can be inserted instead of new moulds, to enable all the cast moulds to reach the supplementary mechanical means for providing the forward movement thereof, and using the hydraulically operated pressure plate 2 to move said dummy blocks forward and thus provide the sliding movement of the casting moulds 3 in the section I. Another way of emptying the system would be to provide a separate set of longitudinal side rails 8 for the section I, which however would only be brought into engagement with the casting moulds 3 during such emptying of the transport system, in order to maintain the above advantage of providing a desired contact pressure between the mould parts in the mould string during normal operation. In order to maintain a suitable pressure between the mould parts during emptying, this side rail transport system for the section I should possibly be advanced further than the corresponding transport system in the section II.
One further advantage of the system in accordance with the present invention should be mentioned, namely that at the pouring station 4, the mould string 3 may be supported by a planar surface free from side rails or movable rails under the bottom, whereby possible failures of the moulds during pouring resulting in outrunning hot metal can easily be cleaned up, at least compared to the big problems arising when such outrunning metal runs into the movable and stationary rails 6, 7, or into the moving mechanism for the side rails 8 in a similar position. Furthermore, the free sides and planar bottom of the transport system in section I provide the possibility of pouring from the side or even from the bottom of the mould string, which is especially interesting in connection with casting of light alloys.
In connection with moulding machines producing a high number of moulds per hour, it is necessary to have a relatively long transport section in order to cause a solidification and cooling of the castings before the knockout station. In this connection, it is interesting to have several different types of transport systems along the solidification and cooling sections, i.e. combining the first sliding transport section I with a side rail transport section II and possibly a synchronised belt conveyor 11, as shown in
The invention has been described above in connection with preferred embodiments thereof and several modifications may be envisaged within the scope of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/DK02/00321 | 5/16/2002 | WO | 00 | 5/20/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/097275 | 11/27/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3659701 | Taccone | May 1972 | A |
3744552 | Lundsgart | Jul 1973 | A |
4112999 | Gasper | Sep 1978 | A |
4180156 | Popov et al. | Dec 1979 | A |
4248290 | Hermes | Feb 1981 | A |
4304288 | Pluim | Dec 1981 | A |
4540036 | Jensen | Sep 1985 | A |
6092585 | Larsen et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
6263952 | Hunter | Jul 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 311 253 | Oct 1973 | DE |
WO 9630140 | Oct 1996 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050211409 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |