The field of the invention is manufacturing techniques for making wire wrap screen.
Wire wrap screens are made by putting a series of longitudinal ribs in a circular arrangement an having each rib extend radially beyond a hub that places all the ribs in a cylindrical arrangement. A wrap wire is passed between the a weld roller and the ribs in succession as the hub rotates on its axis and the ribs are drawn along axes parallel to the axis of rotation of the hub. The weld roller is adjusted for the amount of force it places on the wrap wire. Current is applied as the wrap wire encounters a rib to effect a resistance weld.
The problem with this technique is that the wrap wire can neck down or get thinner as a result of uneven force applied to the wire from the weld roller. Additionally, if the wire is bent as it contacts a rib such bending also contributed to necking down when resistance welding the wrap wire to the ribs.
The present invention addresses this issue by straddling ribs with non-conductive and preferably ceramic supports so that the ribs extend radially only a fixed distance beyond the supports. This limits the penetration of the wire under pressure from the roller regardless of the roller force setting. As a result the penetration is uniform when the welding takes place. As an option, the wire can be pre-rolled to approximately the end diameter of the screen being made before there is rib contact as a way of reducing bending at the rib contact for the wire. This can be done with a set of opposed rollers through which the wire is fed before it contacts a rib mounted to the screen head. U.S. Pat. No. 3,875,977 is relevant to pre-rolling wrap wire.
These and other aspects of the present invention will become more readily apparent from the detailed description of the preferred embodiment and the associated drawings while recognizing that the full scope of the invention is given by the claims.
Non conductive supports flank the mounting location of ribs for a wire wrap screen so as to limit penetration into the wire being fed over the ribs and resistance welded notwithstanding variations of applied force from the weld roller. Optionally the wire can be pre-rolled to approximately its end diameter in the finished screen ahead of the time it contacts a rib so as to minimize bending the wire over the rib which thins the wire. The supports are preferably ceramic and provide equal penetration of the rib into the wrap wire despite variations in loading by the weld roller.
The screen head 10 has a plurality of notches 12 along its edge where ribs 14 are inserted. The screen head is a drum that is rotated about its center 16 while maintaining the relative positions of the ribs 14 in the notches 12. The ribs 14 are pulled in tandem relative to their notches 12 in the direction of arrow 18 as the screen head 10 is driven on its axis 16 and wrap wire 20 is fed between the screen head 10 and the weld roller 22. Arrow 24 represents an adjustment of normal force that is applied against the wrap wire 20 by roller 22.
In operation, electric current is supplied through the weld roller 22 which results in fusing the wrap wire 20 that comes in contact with a rib 14. In the past there was an issue of uneven penetration of the ends 26 into the wrap wire 20 caused by fluctuation of pressure during operations as depicted by arrow 24. The roller 22 used to force the wrap wire 14 right onto the rib ends 26 with no backstop. As a result if the force represented by arrow 24 varied during operations the penetration of ends 26 of ribs 14 would also vary.
To address this issue, the outer surface 28 of the screen head 10 has been fitted with non-conductive segments 30 that preferably straddle each rib 14. Now the variability of force 24 is irrelevant as the amount of penetration of rib ends 26 is structurally limited by the presence of the preferably ceramic segments that act as a travel stop. In the arrangement of
While the screen head 10 rotates about axis 16 and the ribs 14 are advanced with respect to their notches 12, the weld roller 22 feeds wrap wire 20 to form a cylindrical shape with spiral wound wrap wire 20 with a resistance weld at each intersection of the wrap wire 20 with a rib 14.
The wrap wire 20 can be fed by the weld roller tangentially as shown in
The above description is illustrative of the preferred embodiment and many modifications may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the invention whose scope is to be determined from the literal and equivalent scope of the claims below: