The present invention relates to a tuft picker device for a brush making machine.
Tuft pickers serve to remove individual tufts of bristles from a bristle magazine in succession in order to feed them to a brush making machine. The tuft picker essentially is a slider which reciprocates in a sliding motion at an open side of the bristle magazine and has a tuft picking notch in which the bristles forming the tuft will collect during the sliding motion past the bristle magazine. The tuft picker transports each separated tuft of bristles to a processing station, for example a tufting tool, and is then moved back to the bristle magazine for separating the next tuft of bristles. With each working stroke of the tuft picker, a tuft of bristles is separated in this way.
The profile of the tuft picking notch dictates the quantity of the bristles that are separated in each working stroke of the tuft picker. In order that a single tuft picker device can be used for separating tufts having different quantities of bristles, the effective depth of the tuft picking notch can be varied by laterally covering part of the profile with a shield member. Rather than the bottom of the tuft picking notch, it is then the shield member that defines the depth up to which the bristles can penetrate into this notch. A tuft picker device including a tuft picking notch having an adjustable effective depth is disclosed, e.g., in DE 40 40 297 C2. A device of this type is suitable for separating bristle tufts of different cross-sections for different brushes.
In connection with modern brushes, in particular toothbrushes, it has been desirable to have bristle tufts of different cross-sectional shapes and sizes that are arranged next to each other in a bristle field. Brushes of this kind are complicated to produce since the high-speed, efficiently operating brush making machines available can not be used for making them.
The invention provides a tuft picker device that is capable of varying the effective depth of the tuft picking notch in each working stroke while keeping abreast of modern high-speed brush making machines. The tuft picker device according to the invention for a brush making machine has a bristle magazine for holding a supply of loose bristles, a tuft picker having a tuft picking notch being movable past an open side of the bristle magazine in a working stroke. At least one shield member is adapted to be shifted across the profile of the tuft picking notch to thereby change the effective depth thereof. The shield member is displaced by way of a constrained guidance using an adjusting device. Adjusting devices are available which can perform the required small adjusting stroke rapidly, precisely and reproducibly. An important factor here is a rigid coupling between the shield member and the adjusting device. It has proved to be of advantage to use a crank drive including a rotary drive that is fixed to the machine frame and has a servomotor and including a crank arm articulatedly coupled to a connecting rod which in turn is articulatedly coupled to a stirrup that is adapted to be shifted in translation on the machine frame and by means of which the adjusting stroke is rigidly transmitted to the shield member.
The tuft picker may be curved along a circular arc and be adapted to be pivoted about a fixed axis in a conventional fashion; the shield member then is a rigid rail which is curved in the shape of a circular arc and is engaged by the adjusting device. Alternatively, the adjusting device engages a curved rigid guide which is radially displaceable in relation to the axis and has a cam follower guided in a constrained fashion therein which actuates the shield member.
In another embodiment, the tuft picker is displaceable along a straight path; in this embodiment, a stirrup is then rigidly connected to the shield member which is designed as a straight rigid rail.
Further features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description of several embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
The embodiment of the tuft picker device as shown in
For varying the effective depth of the tuft picking notch 12, a shield or covering member in the form of a rigid rail 18 is provided which is curved in the shape of a circular arc. The rail 18 is connected to a rigid stirrup which consists of a pair of parallel bars 20, 22 and a web 24 connecting them. The stirrup, and the rail 18 along with it, are articulatedly connected via the web 24 to a connecting rod 26 which in turn is articulatedly connected to a crank arm 28 of a rotary drive 30. The rotary drive 30 is mounted on the machine frame of the brush making machine. As indicated by a double arrow in
In the tuft picker device according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2004 016 409.4 | Oct 2004 | DE | national |