The present invention relates to a device for rolling tubes of cigarette plug wrap with single or multiple internal filter elements.
Cigarette filter rods can be processed in pairs in the so-called “two-up” filter rod configuration. According to this configuration, one solid filter plug is placed in the middle of a tube created using plug wrap so that an empty space is created on either end of the filter plug. The empty space may then be filled with a sequence of granular material, such as carbon and the like, and solid material, such as cellulose acetate fibers or fibers with flavorant. Upon completion, a tobacco rod may be joined to each end of the filter tube using tipping paper, and the central solid filter may then be cut in half to form two cigarettes.
The plug wrap can wrinkle or become folded as it is rolled around the filter material. Thus, there is a need for an apparatus and method for rolling plug wrap around a filter plug that avoids the disadvantages of the prior art. Thus, the present invention relates to a device and method for rolling wrinkle-free and crease-free hollow tubes of plug wrap with single or multiple internal filter elements.
In accordance with the present invention, a method of forming filter tubes comprises delivering a filter element to a flute on a first drum having a vacuum for securing the filter element thereto, and axially engaging opposite ends of the filter element with first and second tube forming rollers. A continuous web of paper with a glue pattern thereon is delivered to a second drum. The paper is cut into discrete pieces, and at least a portion of the paper piece is delivered to at least a portion of the filter element in the flute of the first drum. The paper piece is rolled around the filter element and the tube forming rollers to form a cylindrical shape. The tube forming rollers are then disengaged to thereby produce a filter tube with hollow ends and a centrally positioned filter element.
The apparatus of the present invention comprises a flute on a first drum for accepting a filter element, the flute having vacuum for securing the filter element thereto. First and second tube forming rollers axially engage opposite ends of the filter element. A second drum accepts and cuts a continuous web of paper with a glue pattern thereon into paper pieces and delivers a cut paper piece to the filter element. A belt contacts the paper piece to roll the paper piece around the filter element.
Novel features and advantages of the present invention in addition to those noted above will be become apparent to persons of ordinary skill in the art from a reading of the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein similar reference characters refer to similar parts and in which:
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the drawings.
Filter element 10 may be any conventional element of a smoking article filter, such as a plug of cellulose acetate tow or other suitable material. Filter element 10 may be provided in any conventional manner to a filter feed drum 12 comprising at least one flute 13 for accepting filter elements. For example, filter element 10 may be manually placed in flute 13 or may be delivered to the flute from a filter element creation and/or distribution apparatus. Flute 13 may be a generally semi-circular tubular shaped opening along the perimeter of the drum 12. Flute 13 may comprise a vacuum or other suitable means conventional in the art to hold filter element 10 as the feed drum rotates in a clockwise direction as illustrated with the arrow 15 in
As filter elements 10 arrive at position A, they may be transferred to a flute 16 on tube rolling drum 14 that may rotate in a counter-clockwise direction as illustrated by arrow 17. Flute 16 may be a generally semi-circular tubular shaped opening along the perimeter of the drum 14. The filter elements 10 may be held in the drum flutes 16 by a vacuum or other suitable means conventional in the art.
Each flute 16 in the tube rolling drum 14 may equipped with rollers 24, which are designated by hidden lines shown in
Each flute 16 may also be equipped with tube forming rollers 30 and 32, shown in
In Position A, indicated in
Each flute 16 may also be equipped with cowls 26 and 28, shown in
Filter elements 10 can be brought in proximity with tipping drum 20 to be paired with paper segments 22. To deliver a cut segment 22 of paper to the filter element 10, a continuous web of paper 18 may be delivered to the tipping drum 20 where it can be cut into individual cut paper segments 22. Paper segments 22 may have a glue pattern that is pre-applied when the paper is still continuous or the glue may be applied after the step of cutting. Continuous paper 18 may be cut using a blade 19, cutting wheel, or other suitable cutting device conventional in the art. The paper feed and cutting process may be the same as employed in conventional cigarette filter tipping machinery.
At position B, a leading edge of paper segment 22 (hereafter simply “paper”) is stuck to filter element 10 by virtue of the patterned glue. Paper 22 is left to extend generally tangentially to filter element 10. As tube rolling drum 14 rotates from position B to position C, cowls 26 and 28 pivot inwardly toward the filter element 10 and tube forming rollers 30 and 32. This pivoting does not appreciably interfere with the paper, which at this point in the process may still extend tangentially away from filter element 10.
The process of rolling paper 22 around element 10 may be commenced at position C.
At position C, one or more rolling belts 38 come into contact with paper 22 and the vacuum is disengaged at least slightly. A belt may be provided to contact paper 22 in the regions of tube forming rollers 30 and 32. The rolling belt 38 may be driven by a motor 39 and guided by wheels 46, 47 and 49 to run at a higher speed than the surface speed of paper 22, which is controlled by the rotational speed of rolling drum 14. Tension in belt 38 may be maintained using tensioners 50, which are attached to an arm 52 that pivots about a fixed point 54. Tensioners 50 may comprise, for example, springs 55 which may be tightened or loosened using tension screws 56, as is well known in the art for adjusting tension in a tensioning system. Thus, as the tube rolling drum 14 rotates from position C to position D, the rolling belts 38, which have a surface speed that is faster than the rotational speed of rolling drum 14, push paper 22 through gap 34 and around filter element 10 and tube forming rollers 30 and 32 in the flute 16, as shown in
When the filter tube 36 reaches position E, a pressure belt 40 comes into contact with the filter tube 36. Belt 40 may be positioned between two belts 38 all of which may rotate on independent wheels 47 to allow belts 38 to contact paper 22 around tube forming rollers 30 and 32 and to allow belt 40 to contact paper 22 around filter element 10. Additionally, wheels 47 may spin freely of each other so that one of the wheels 47 may allow belts 38 to move faster than the rotational speed of drum 14, while another of the wheels 47 may rotate at a matched speed relative to drum 14. Although
Belt 40 may run at a matched speed with the tube 36 and drum 14 so that belt 40 may hold tube 36 tight against the surface of flute 16. The pressure of belt 40 may assist in maintaining tube 36 in position as the tube forming rollers 30 and 32 are removed. The vacuum may also be reengaged at this point to maintain tube 36 in position.
The pressure belt 40 may be tensioned using tensioners 50 as described above with reference to rolling belt 38. As tube rolling drum 14 rotates from position E to position F, tube forming rollers 30 and 32 are axially withdrawn. This action can be observed by comparing
As the tube rolling drum 14 rotates from Position F to Position G, the left and right cowls 26 and 28 open up. The finished rolled filter tube 36 is then removed at position G, as shown in
Alternatively or additionally, tube forming rollers 30 and 32 may be provided with vacuum holes 44 and/or filter engaging pins 46 as shown in
It should be understood that the above detailed description while indicating preferred embodiments of the invention are given by way of illustration only since various changes and modifications within the spirit and scope of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the detailed description.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2952105 | Schur | Sep 1960 | A |
3081778 | Dearsley | Mar 1963 | A |
3354887 | Vanmeda | Nov 1967 | A |
3961633 | Schubert et al. | Jun 1976 | A |
3985144 | Payne | Oct 1976 | A |
4492238 | Wheless | Jan 1985 | A |
5024242 | Garthaffner et al. | Jun 1991 | A |
5984851 | Irikura | Nov 1999 | A |
6131582 | Draghetti | Oct 2000 | A |
7226404 | Rizzoli et al. | Jun 2007 | B2 |
7338421 | Eusepi et al. | Mar 2008 | B2 |
20020119874 | Heitmann et al. | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20060196513 | Atwell et al. | Sep 2006 | A1 |
20060281614 | Scott et al. | Dec 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2096237 | Nov 1972 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080160123 A1 | Jul 2008 | US |