This invention relates to a marking system for a web advancing along a path, and also to a method of marking such a web.
Many industrial processes employ stock materials in web form, the web being advanced along a path to allow the required processing. For example, in the printing industry, a web of paper may be supplied in roll form and the web is drawn from the roll as the paper printing progresses, whereafter the web is cut into separate printed sheets. In the textile industry, many fabrics are manufactured in the form of an elongate web which is then spooled before being supplied to a garment manufacturer, for making up, or to a printer for the printing of a suitable design or pattern on to the fabric.
As manufactured, many webs of stock materials include defects. These defects might include a splice undertaken at the time of manufacture, to allow continuous manufacturing processes to operate, defects in the width of the web or in the thickness of the material, or variations in quality along the length of the web. Depending upon the particular web, many other kinds of defect may be present, but which cannot be allowed to pass through to a finished product manufactured from the material of the web.
In order to eliminate the likelihood of such a defect passing through a processing stage to a finished product, it is known to observe the web as it is despooled, and then to mark an area which must be cut out, so as not to be used in a processing operation performed on the web, downstream of the observation station. Alternatively, after manufacturing a web or performing a conversion process on a web, the web may be observed for defects as it is spooled or re-spooled. Typically, a human operator might watch the web and then apply to the web a simple paper label which will be clearly visible in a subsequent process. For example, when the web is observed as it is about to be spooled or re-spooled, a brightly coloured label may be manually inserted into the spooling web to be left projecting from the side edge of the spooled web, so that it is immediately apparent the web has been labelled.
A human operator can apply a selected colour of label, depending upon the observed fault. For example, the operator can fairly easily have at least three different colours of label and then apply the appropriate label for the defect observed. Such labels could be pre-printed to have some wording indicative of the observed defect.
It is difficult for a human operator to concentrate for long periods, watching for defects in a web as it is despooled. As a consequence, equipment has been designed to look for certain kinds of defect and then to cause a label to be automatically applied to the web, by the equipment detecting the presence of a defect. For example, one proposal uses a conventional labelling machine to apply a self-adhesive label to the advancing web, using conventional labelling technology, but a disadvantage of such equipment is that the machine must be pre-charged with a particular kind of label for use during an entire despooling or spooling operation. As a consequence, only one kind of label can be applied, irrespective of the nature of the detected defect.
This invention aims at addressing the above problem, in order to allow the use of equipment which can identify different kinds of defects in an advancing web, and then appropriately to mark the web to indicate not just where the defect is, but also what kind of defect is present.
According to one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a marking system for a web advancing along a path, comprising:
According to a second but closely related aspect of this invention, there is provided a method of marking a web advancing along a path, which method comprises:
With the marking system and method of this invention, it becomes possible to identify the nature of a defect noted as being present in an advancing web. The defect is flagged up by attaching to the web an adhesive tab in the vicinity of the defect, but the tab is printed immediately before application with suitable indicia in order to identify the nature of the defect. This allows more effective operation of a process performed on the web downstream of the marking station, and permits a decision to be made at some point subsequently as to whether the defect may be ignored, or whether that part of the web must be eliminated from the processing. A further possibility is for the beginning and end points of a defect to be appropriately marked in the event that there is an elongate section of the web which should be eliminated from the processing.
Preferably, the tab applicator includes a labelling head adapted to apply tabs to the web, each tab being in the form of a self-adhesive label. Such a labelling head may include at least one air-jet nozzle appropriately disposed to direct a jet of air on to a tab discharged from the labelling head and so to apply that tab to the advancing web. By suitable adjustment of the timing, tabs may be applied transversely to the direction of advancement of a web, even when the web has a relatively high linear speed of advancement. In this way, each tab may be left projecting from the edge of the web. In this case, it is preferred for each label to carry adhesive on only that part which adheres to the web, the projecting part of the label being free of adhesive, though for handling purposes a strip of adhesive may be present on that projecting part.
The in-line printer advantageously is arranged to allow the printing of alphanumeric characters on to each tab. For example, by printing three separate characters, a very large number of different marks may be given, or each mark may be in the form of a mnemonic for a particular kind of defect. Such a printer may comprise one of a dot-matrix print head, a thermal transfer print head or even a direct thermal print head but in the latter case each tab must be of a thermally-responsive material in order to allow the thermal print head to print markings on to the tab.
Preferably, the tab applicator is arranged to advance the next tab to be applied initially at a low speed while printing takes place and then at a high speed and then to apply a printed tab to the advancing web, at the required location. Such operation is controlled by the control means, which responds to the mark signal produced by the monitoring means and also a further signal dependent upon the speed of advancement of the web such that the tab is applied to the appropriate part of the web, at which is located the noted defect. That further signal may simply be a fixed time interval calculated on the basis of a constant known web speed and the distance between the monitoring station and the tab applicator. Alternatively, the web speed could be monitored and the further signal determined dependent upon the instantaneous web speed.
Monitoring means may be provided at the monitoring station, configured to suit the defect or defects which are to be detected. For example, the monitoring means may include a splice detector adapted to monitor for a step in the thickness of the web, or to monitor for a step-change in the light-transmissivity properties of the web. Other defects may be monitored using a video camera looking at the surface of the web, for imperfections in that surface. The output of the monitoring means is provided to the control means and which then appropriately operates the tab applicator including the in-line printer, to ensure the correctly identified tab is applied at the correct location.
By way of example only, one specific embodiment of this invention will now be described in detail, reference being made to the accompanying drawings in which:—
Referring initially to
The speed of advancement of the web 10 is monitored by a speed sensing wheel 16 carried by an arm 17 so as to bear on the web, in opposition to a guide roller 18. The speed sensing wheel 16 provides to the control arrangement 13 a pulsed signal the frequency of which depends upon the speed of advancement of the web.
The control arrangement 13 analyses the signals 12 and 15 respectively from the video camera 11 and the splice detector 14, to determine whether a mark need be applied to the web. If so, and in a timed relation to the advancement of the web using the signal from the speed sensing wheel 16, an appropriate drive signal 19 is sent to a tab applicator 20, downstream of the speed sensing wheel 16.
The tab applicator 20 is shown in more detail in
The tab applicator includes an in-line printer 33, disposed between the roller 25 and the stripping beak 27, to print on to the next tab to be projected an appropriate marking or indicia, for the nature of the defect noted by the video camera 11 or the splice detector 14. Typically, the in-line printer may print a group of three adjacent alphanumeric characters which will give sufficient flexibility to note a wide range of defects. Though various forms of in-line printer may be employed, preferably the printer is a direct thermal or a thermal transfer printer, arranged to transfer ink from a thermal transfer ribbon to a plain-paper self-adhesive label.
As shown in
The control arrangement 13 includes a display panel 35 which conveniently takes the form of a colour LCD touch display, to facilitate the input of information by an operator. In addition, or separately, a remote control panel 36 may be provided, communicating through an umbilical cord to the control arrangement 13 or perhaps by an infra-red or wireless link. This permits the operator to make manual marks where required, or to change the output codes to be printed, dependent upon the nature of a detected defect.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02 07874.9 | May 2002 | GB | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10510128 | Oct 2004 | US |
Child | 12127277 | US |