SHEET CONVEYING SYSTEM
20170240366 · 2017-08-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65H2406/33
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2220/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2220/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2220/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2220/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2801/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2404/2691
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2401/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2301/342
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H29/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A sheet conveying system includes an upstream conveyor section having an endless first conveyor belt movable in a first conveying direction x and extending in a first lateral direction z, the first conveying direction x and the first lateral direction z defining a first conveying plane xz; and a downstream conveyor section having an endless second conveyor belt that adjoins the first conveyor belt and is movable in a second conveying direction x′ and extends in a second lateral direction z′, the second conveying direction x′ and the second lateral direction z′ defining a second conveying plane x′z′. The conveyor sections are adapted to hold the sheets slip-free on the first and second conveyor belts. The second conveyor belt has a shear compliance in the second conveying plane x′z′ that is larger than the shear compliance of the first conveyor belt in the first conveying plane xz.
Claims
1. A sheet conveying system comprising an upstream conveyor section having an endless first conveyor belt movable in a first conveying direction and extending in a first lateral direction, said first conveying direction and said first lateral direction defining a first conveying plane; and a downstream conveyor section having an endless second conveyor belt that adjoins the first conveyor belt and is movable in a second conveying direction and extends in a second lateral direction, said second conveying direction and said second lateral direction defining a second conveying plane, the conveyor sections being adapted to hold the sheets slip-free on the first and second conveyor belts, wherein the second conveyor belt has a shear compliance in the second conveying plane that is larger than the shear compliance of the first conveyor belt in the first conveying plane.
2. The system according to claim 1, wherein the second conveyor belt is made of a woven fabric.
3. The system according to claim 2, wherein the second conveyor belt is made of a plain weave fabric with either warp threads or weft threads extending in the second conveying direction.
4. The system according to claim 1, wherein the first conveyor belt is made of a metal film.
5. The system according to claim 1, wherein the second conveyor section includes a drum-type conveyor downstream of the second conveyor belt.
6. The system according to claim 1, wherein the first conveying plane and the second conveying plane form an angle with one another.
Description
[0018] An embodiment example will now be described in conjunction with the drawings, wherein:
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024] As is shown in
[0025] The second conveying section B comprises an endless second conveyor belt 16 passed around deflection rollers 18 and adjoining the downstream end of the first conveyor belt 10 and driven to move the sheets 14 in a second conveying direction x′.
[0026] In the example shown, the second conveyor belt 16 is inclined such that it rises upwardly from the horizontal conveying plane of the first conveyor belt 10. Consequently, the first and second conveying directions x and x′ form an angle α.
[0027] The second conveying section B further includes a drum-type conveyor having a large diameter metal drum 20. The drum 20 has a perforated peripheral wall and includes a suction system for drawing-in ambient air through the perforations of the peripheral wall. As a consequence, the sheets 14 that have been passed on from the second conveyor belt 16 to the periphery of the drum 14 will be attracted and will be moved-on as the drum rotates. While the sheets 14, which have been heated in a previous processing step, are held in intimate contact with the drum surface, heat will be transferred onto the metal drum, so that the sheets are cooled. At a suitable angular position, the sheets 14 are released again from the drum 20 and passed-on to another conveyor which has not been shown here.
[0028] The first and second conveyor belts 10, 16 are also perforated, and suction boxes 22, 24 are disposed directly underneath the upper section of each of these conveyor belts, so that the sheets 14, as long as they rest on the conveyor belt, will be attracted to the belt due to vacuum action and will thereby be prevented from slipping relative to the belt.
[0029] In the first conveying section A, a high positional accuracy of the sheets 14 on the conveyor belt 10 is important. By way of example, it may be assumed that the first conveying section A serves for conveying the sheets 14 through a printing station of the printer, so that positional accuracy is important for obtaining a high print quality.
[0030] For this reason, the first conveyor belt 10 is formed by a thin perforated flexible metal film which has a high expansion-elastic modulus (i.e. a high tensile strength) and also a high shear modulus (e.g. more than 70 GPa), so that the exact alignment of the sheets 14 relative to the print heads (not shown) will not be compromised by elastic expansion or shear deformation of the conveyor belt 10.
[0031] In contrast, the second conveyor belt 12 is formed by a woven fabric which has also a high tensile strength, comparable to that of the first conveyor belt 10, but a much lower shear modulus. Preferably, the shear modulus of the second conveyor belt 16 is less than 10%, even more preferably less than 1% of the shear modulus of the first conveyor belt 10.
[0032] The reason for the low shear modulus of the second conveyor belt 16 will be explained below in conjunction with
[0033] As is shown in
[0034] Ideally, the first and second conveyor belts 10 and 16 and their respective conveying directions x and x′ should be perfectly aligned in the horizontal plane, i.e. the projection of the second conveying direction x′ onto the first conveying plane xz should be exactly parallel with the first conveying direction x. In practice, however, inevitable manufacturing and mounting tolerances will lead to a certain misalignment, so that, in the top plan view in
[0035] In
[0036] In
[0037] However, as is shown in
[0038] As the sheet 14 moves on, the trailing part of the sheet that is still firmly held on the first conveyor belt 10 will gradually shrink to zero, and at a certain point the forces exerted by the first conveyor belt 10 will no longer be sufficient to hold the sheet 14 in position against the restoring forces of the second conveyor belt 16. At that point, the second conveyor belt 16 will return to its normal posture, as has been shown in
[0039]
[0040]
[0041] The inclination of the second conveyor belt 16 relative to the first conveying plane xz of the first conveyor belt 10 has the effect that the sheet 14 forms a narrow bend at the transition point, as has been indicated by a dotted line in
[0042] Conversely, when the speed of the second conveyor belt 16 would be slightly smaller than that of the first conveyor belt 10, the sheet 14 would be caused to buckle downward into a gap between the deflection rollers 12 and 18. Although such buckling may be tolerated to a certain extent, it will be preferable to adjust the target speeds of the conveyor belts 10 and 16 such that, given the speed tolerances, the speed of the second conveyor belt 16 will be rather higher than lower than the speed of the first conveyor belt 10.
[0043] It will be observed that the bend in the sheet 14 at the transition point will increase the stiffness of the sheet in the lateral direction z or z′. However, due to the shear compliance of the second conveyor belt 16, this has no adverse effect on the conveying properties.