Metal working – Plural diverse manufacturing apparatus including means for... – Binding or covering and cutting
Patent
1990-09-11
1992-10-20
Briggs, William
Metal working
Plural diverse manufacturing apparatus including means for...
Binding or covering and cutting
83176, 83703, B23Q 500
Patent
active
051558890
DESCRIPTION:
BRIEF SUMMARY
In the manufacture of insulating chutes, for instance, a ply with a desired thickness has generally been sawn out of insulation wool wound into a roll, and the ply has then been fed into a machine in which it has been shaped and cured into an insulating chute. The sawing may be carried out by rotating the wool roll against the edge of a band saw.
A drawback has been that the process is interrupted when one roll of wool runs out and is replaced with another. In addition to disturbances caused by the interruption as such, disturbances occur also for the reason that the end portions of an old and a new roll will not get the same evenness as the rest of the ply in the sawing. The result from all this is that quite a great number of insulating chutes of inferior quality are formed due to the interruption.
It is also known to open a roll of wool manually and feed a wool layer of a relatively high thickness into a band saw, the surplus being collected onto an intermediate storage roll from which the sawing is continued when the roll of wool opened manually runs out. A new roll of wool is opened and fed into the band saw after the intermediate storage roll has suitably decreased. In this way a continuous insulating material ply can be obtained; the technique, however, is laborious and requires great watchfulness from the worker.
The object is now to provide a new apparatus for the formation of a continuous insulating material ply in a simple way and automatically.
The object is achieved by means of an apparatus defined in claim 1. Preferred embodiments are defined in more detail in claims 2 to 7.
In the following the invention will be described with reference to the attached schematical drawing.
FIG. 1 is a side view of the whole apparatus.
FIG. 2 is an enlarged view of the most important parts of the apparatus.
A roll 1 of insulating wool is positioned on a transporter 2 which transports one roll at a time into a cradle 3 moving with an endless transporter 4. The transporter 4 may be a chain conveyor comprising a number of cradles.
When the cradle 3 with the roll reaches a working cylinder 5, the cylinder tilts the cradle, in the drawing clockwise, so that the roll 1 rolls on to a transporter 6, being stopped by a roller assembly 8 which is provided at a band saw 7 and in which individual rollers 9 rotate actively.
Thereafter a working cylinder 11 is caused to retract from the position shown in the drawing, whereby an arm 9 is lowered towards the roll 1 under the influence of its own weight, being pressed against the roll through a roller 10 which, similarly to the rollers 9, rotates actively. The compression pressure of the roller 10 can be adjusted by means of a counter weight 12. The roller assembly 8 is positioned in the left-hand side position shown in the drawing.
The roll 1 is rotated for some time by means of the roller assembly 8 and the roller 10 until the roll 1 is sufficiently round to be sawn by means of the band saw 7. On coming to the transporter 6, the roll 1 may therefore be rather "deformed"; no core is needed.
When the roll 1 is sufficiently round, the roller assembly 8 is passed into the right-hand side position shown in the drawing by means of a working cylinder 13, whereby the roller 10 presses the roll 1 within the reach of the edge of the band saw, and while the roller assembly 8 and the roller 10 keep rotating the roll, in the drawing anticlockwise, the band saw 7 saws a primary ply 14 out of the roll 1. The primary ply is passed from the transporter 6 on to a transporter 15 and further therealong to another band saw 16 which splits the primary ply 14 into a secondary ply 17 which goes on into a chute manufacturing means to be wound and cured therein. A surplus 18 from the primary ply is collected in a manner known per se e.g. onto a drum 19 formed by a round section, and after the end portion of the primary ply has passed through the band saw 16, the sawing of the secondary ply 17 is continued directly from the intermediate storage.
By means of articulated arms 20, 21, the intermediate s
REFERENCES:
patent: 3808771 (1974-05-01), Drella et al.
patent: 4266112 (1981-05-01), Niedermeyer
patent: 4700447 (1987-10-01), Spann
patent: 4838968 (1989-06-01), Nelson
Briggs William
Oy Partek Ab
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