Method and apparatus for winding spooled materials

Manufacturing container or tube from paper; or other manufacturi – Bending – Pulling over an edge

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C242S166000, C242S471000, C242S615400

Reexamination Certificate

active

06656104

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to wound or spooled materials, including decorative ribbon.
2. Description of the Related Art
Different types of wound or spooled materials are presently in use. For example, decorative ribbon, string, thread, tape, and the like are characteristically wound in a rotary fashion onto a spool to facilitate space-efficient storage and access to the material by a user. Winding these materials onto the spool is typically accomplished using a machine which rotates the receiving spool and the material delivery device (which feeds the material onto the spool) in relation to one another such that the material is deposited in generally concentric or helical layers. The resulting product is a spool of material which can be serially unwound by the user after purchase.
For some such spooled materials, however, conditioning or preparation of the material after being wound off of the spool by the user is desirable. One salient example of such conditioning is decorative ribbon. Such ribbon is commonly removed from the spool in the length required, and then “stripped” with a pair of scissors or other mechanical device (or even heat) to impart a curl to the ribbon for decorative purposes. Generally speaking, comparatively small radius curls (i.e., less than about 1 in radius) are most desirable, but this is dependent on a number of factors including user preference, size of the package or other application that the ribbon is being attached to, etc. The action of passing one side of the ribbon over the blade of the scissors alters the ribbon so that it curls preferentially and consistently in one direction relative to the longitudinal axis of the material. Speed is an important factor in this process, since the curl radius of the resulting ribbon varies in some proportion to the speed at which it passes over the blade. If a certain minimum speed is not achieved, the ribbon will not curl substantially. Humans being imperfect machines, the speed of the ribbon pull varies significantly from person to person, from pull to pull, and even within a given pull.
Furthermore, it is noted that the curl achieved using such prior art methods is difficult to maintain constant, and the radius of curl is difficult to control precisely. Also, kinks can occur in the ribbon while curling which make a given piece of curled ribbon non-uniform in appearance. This reduces the satisfaction provided to the user as well as any other individuals viewing the ribbon. There is also the labor involved with locating the scissors or other stripping device, and performing the stripping operation. Also, there is some potential for personal injury from the sharpened blade of the scissors or other stripping device, or heat from a curling device.
Additionally, the “twist” present in the ribbon is difficult to maintain uniform. Twist is imparted to the ribbon in order to form a helical shape such that when the ribbon is left free-standing, it generally defines the shape of a cylinder. If the curl/twist is non-uniform, then the helix formed by the ribbon when free-standing may be non-uniform as well, thereby resulting in an undesirable appearance.
Another desirable attribute of decorative ribbon in certain applications is the use of two or more distinct types or colors of ribbon in a single application. Traditionally, decorative ribbon of a single color or type is curled and applied in a single helix, the user potentially applying helices of different colors or types adjacent to but separate from one another. However, a different decorative effect may be achieved by intertwining the two or more distinct colors or types of ribbons in a generally concentric series of helices. Alternatively, the two or more types or colors of ribbon may be intertwined in two or more helices of common radius, one helix being juxtaposed or slightly translated along its longitudinal axis with respect to the other helix (or helices). To achieve such results using discretely wound helices would be prohibitively time consuming and tedious, since the user would be required to somehow concentrically or co-extensively wind the individual helices together after they were unwound from their respective spools.
Several different prior art approaches to curling and preparing ribbon are available. See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,407,417 issued Apr. 18, 1995 entitled “Ribbon Curling Device”, U.S. Pat. No. 5,551,646 issued Sep. 3, 1996 entitled “Ribbon Curling and Ribbon Splitting Device”, and U.S. Pat. No. 6,074,592 issued Jun. 13, 2000 entitled “Method for Imparting Curl to Ribbon Material” and assigned Berwick Delaware, Inc. However, the foregoing inventions do not provide a mechanism by which the curled ribbon is ultimately stored in the desired helical geometry of substantially similar radius to that imparted to the ribbon during curling so as to maintain its shape to maximum degree practicable. Additionally, the application of heat to help impart and maintain curl such as that disclosed in the aforementioned '592 patent requires the ribbon to be wound around the heating surface. Hence, there is a finite duration the ribbon must be in contact with the heating surface in order to impart the curl, since there is a finite heat transfer coefficient between the materials (i.e., the ribbon will not heat to a sufficient curling temperature instantaneously, but rather over a finite interval).
Similarly, none of the foregoing prior art references disclose a method or apparatus for accomplishing concentric or co-extensive (juxtaposed) winding of different types or colors of decorative ribbon or other spooled materials.
Based on the foregoing, there is a need for an improved method and apparatus for winding conditioned materials onto a spool such that such materials retain desirable characteristics when removed from the spool at a later time. Such a method and apparatus would ideally (i) allow for the materials to retain their desirable characteristics while being stored on the spool for a significant period of time; (ii) eliminate the need for the end-user to condition the materials (including eliminating the time, labor, and cost potentially associated therewith); (iii) increase end-user satisfaction based on the ability to readily and easily obtain materials having highly uniform and precise conditioning; and (iv) make available concentrically or co-extensively wound materials of different types. Furthermore, such improved method and apparatus would allow the user to store, and dispense the conditioned material easily and conveniently, and in a space-efficient manner.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention disclosed herein addresses the foregoing needs by providing an improved method and apparatus for winding conditioned materials onto a spool.
In a first aspect of the invention, an improved method of winding conditioned material onto a spool is disclosed. In one specific embodiment, the material is decorative ribbon which is passed through a conditioning device to impart curl to the ribbon. Prior to or during curling, the desired physical properties of the material after conditioning are specified by the user. The curled ribbon is then wound in a generally helical fashion onto a spool having a diameter generally consistent with that of the radius of the curled ribbon. Accordingly, when the ribbon is subsequently removed from the spool by the user, the conditioned curl and other desirable properties are retained, thereby obviating further conditioning by the user.
In a second aspect of the invention, a method of winding two or more types or colors of material (e.g., decorative ribbon) in a concentric fashion is disclosed. The method generally comprises providing unconditioned ribbon of two or more distinct types or colors; simultaneously passing the different ribbons through parallel conditioning apparatus, each apparatus imparting a curl of slightly different radius to its respective ribbon; and winding the different ribbons concentrically onto a common spool in helical lay fashion s

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