SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR ALIGNING AND JOINING THE SAME SIDES OF TWO WEB MATERIALS
20210354946 ยท 2021-11-18
Inventors
- Andrew P. Butler (Mattapoisett, MA, US)
- Michael A. Mucci (Upton, MA, US)
- Adam Hirshan (Barrington, RI, US)
Cpc classification
B29C66/8362
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H19/1873
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2701/191
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H19/1852
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2301/46115
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C65/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A system and method for performing a splicing operation where the splicing apparatus is configured to orient the web to ensure the two sealing sides are presented to each other and the splice is always made on one side of the web.
Claims
1. A splicing apparatus comprising: a lower roll drawer configured to hold a lower web material in alignment with a first predefined location; a first cylinder actuated to cause an upper web material to be engaged by a first clamp, the first cylinder also configured to cause the upper web material to engage a cutting edge to separate the upper web material into a downstream upper web portion and an upper web portion; a second cylinder actuated to cause the downstream upper web portion to be engaged by a second clamp; a third cylinder configured to cause the downstream upper web portion to be placed in alignment with the first predefined location; and a fourth cylinder configured to cause a first side of the downstream upper web material to be in contact with a first side of the lower web material at the first predefined location.
2. The splicing apparatus of claim 1 wherein the first side of the upper web material is a heat-sealable material.
3. The splicing apparatus of claim 1 wherein the first side of the downstream upper web material is a heat-sealable material.
4. The splicing apparatus of claim 1 wherein the cutting edge is a stationary knife.
5. The splicing apparatus of claim 1 wherein the lower web material has a second side, wherein the second side of the lower web material has at least one differing property than the first side of the lower web material.
6. The splicing apparatus of claim 1 wherein the downstream upper web material has a second side, wherein the second side of the downstream upper web material has at least one differing property than the first side of the downstream upper web material.
7. The splicing apparatus of claim 1 further comprising: a heating wire located to perform a heat sealing operation of the first side of the downstream upper web material and the first side of the lower web material at the first predefined location.
8. A method comprising the steps of: securing a lower web material in alignment with a first predefined location; clamping, using one or more clamps, an upper web material; separating the upper web material to into a downstream upper web portion and an upper web portion; causing the clamped downstream upper web portion to be extended so that a first side of the downstream upper web portion is in alignment at the first predefined location; and compressing the first side of the downstream upper web portion with a first side of the lower web material at the first predefined location.
9. The method of claim 8 further comprising performing a heat sealing operation of the first side of the downstream upper web portion and the first side of the lower web material at the predefined first location.
10. The method of claim 9 further comprising clearing a waste portion of the downstream upper web portion.
11. The method of claim 8 wherein separating the upper web material comprises cutting the upper web material using a knife edge.
12. The method of claim 11 wherein the knife edge is stationary.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007] The above and further advantages of the present invention are described in connection with the accompanying drawings in which like reference numerals indicate identical or functionally similar elements, of which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF AN ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENT
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[0020] Illustratively, procedure 100 begins in an exemplary environment in which an upper roll of web material is currently being fed and a lower roll of web material needs to be spliced into operation. Procedure 100 also covers the corresponding splicing of an upper roll onto a running lower roll, beginning at step 165 below. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, procedure 100 may be illustratively performed a plurality of times repeatedly in operation as upper and lower rolls are replaced over and over while the line is in operation. A noted advantage of the present invention is that the splicing operations enable the same side of materials, e.g., a heat-sealable side, to be sealed together. Exemplary procedure 100 is described and illustrated as being directed towards an apparatus that utilizes an upper and a lower roll of web material. However, it should be noted that in alternative embodiments of the present invention, different arrangements of rolls of web material may be utilized. Therefore, the description of an upper roll and a lower roll of web material should be taken as exemplary only.
[0021] The procedure 100 begins in step 105 continues to step 110 where a lower roll of web material is prepared for splicing. As noted, procedure 100 assumes that the initial state is that the upper roll is currently feeding a downstream process and that the ready roll is the lower roll. Should the lower roll be currently feeding the downstream process, the procedure would begin in step 165, described further below, which describes splicing the upper roll onto the running lower roll.
[0022] This preparation of the lower roll is shown in relation to
[0023] Exemplary web material coming from the upper roll 205 traverses a plurality of idlers 215B, C, D, E before heading to a downstream process (not shown). In accordance with an illustrative embodiment, the downstream process may comprise of an accumulator (not shown) as is well known to those skilled in the art. The accumulator may store lengths of the web material to feed further downstream process apparatus. Further, the accumulator may also provide tension on web material as it is heading through the splicing apparatus in accordance with illustrative embodiments of the present invention. As described below, the accumulator may permit web material to be rolled back into the splicing apparatus during operation of the splicing procedure.
[0024] Lower web material 210 enters from a lower roll into a moveable drawer 220 that has been opened towards an operator. In operation, an operator will align the lower web material 210 in the drawer 220, typically using registration points so that the splice will be in registration with the upper web material 205. An idler 215 is located to support the lower web material 210 when the drawer 220 is inserted into the splicing apparatus, as described further below.
[0025] Once the lower roll web material has been prepared, the drawer is then closed with the lower roll web material in step 115. This is shown is
[0026] In step 120, a vertical cylinder 415 is actuated to clamp and cut the upper web 205. This is shown in exemplary
[0027] Then, in step 125, the upper roll is rewound to remove the web upstream of the knife 410. Additionally, the horizontal cylinder is actuated in step 130. This is illustrated in
[0028] The vertical cylinder is then actuated again in step 135. The web material 205 remains clamped by the horizontal cylinder 505 as seen in
[0029] The pusher cylinder 705 is actuated in step 140. As the pusher cylinder 705 is actuated, the upper web material 205 is still clamped at clamp 505. The actuation of the pusher cylinder 705 causes material to be drawn from the downstream process, e.g., an accumulator, so that the upper web material is extended to be in alignment with a splice nip cylinder and over a heating wire 710 as shown in
[0030] The splice nip cylinder 805 is then actuated to cause the two webs (upper roll and lower roll) to come into contact with each other in step 145. The heating wire 710 is then activated to bond the two webs in step 150. This is illustrated in exemplary
[0031] Further, as noted above, the lower web has been prepared so that it may be in registration with the upper web at the point of heating. This ensures that printed material, such as that printed on sides 205B and 210B are in alignment/registration so that after the splicing operation, the web will be continuous as it proceeds to the downstream. This registration works to ensure that printed material is continuous on the spliced web and that no breaks occur in the printed design. It should be noted that in alternative embodiments of the present invention, splices may not be performed in registration. Therefore, the description of splicing occurring in registration should be taken as exemplary only.
[0032] The splice nip cylinder is actuated as well as the pusher cylinder in step 155. This actuation is illustrated in
[0033] The lower prep cylinder 1005 is actuated to remove the scrap web in step 160. The scrap web may be remnants of the web that was stuck to the heating wire after the previous splicing operation. The operator prepares the upper web in step 165. This can be seen in view 1000 (
[0034] The splice nip cylinder is then actuated to cause the two webs to come into contact with each other at the heating wire in step 170. The heat wire is activated to seal the two webs together in step 175. This is illustrated in
[0035] The splice nip cylinder is actuated in step 180. Once the splice nip cylinder has been actuated, the upper roll may then be fed onto the downstream process as operation continues. As the accumulator or other downstream process exerts tension to the upper roll web material, the cross-sectional view of the exemplary apparatus will transition from that shown in
[0036] The procedure 100 then completes in step 185. As noted above, exemplary procedure 100 identifies the steps to perform both a transition from an upper roll to a lower roll, as well as the transition from a running lower roll to a ready upper roll. In operation, procedure 100 will be repeated a plurality of times during operation of the splicing apparatus. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, conventional or modern web material processes often run uninterrupted for substantial periods of time. By utilizing the teachings of the present invention, rolls may be spliced to each other in a manner to ensure that the same sides of materials are sealed to each other, thereby obviating noted disadvantages of having dissimilar sides sealed together.
[0037] It should be noted that various components have been described as being actuated. While the figures and description may depict a particular direction of movement, it is expressly contemplated that in alternative embodiments, the direction of movement may vary. Therefore, the term actuated should be interpreted broadly to include any direction of movement, including non-linear motions.
[0038] The present invention has been described in accordance with various illustrative embodiments. However, it is expressly contemplated that the principles of the present invention may be implemented in a plurality of alternative embodiments. The various components and their orientations in exemplary splicing apparatus may be varied dependent on implementation requirements. For example, while an upper roll and lower roll have been described and shown, the principles of the present invention may be utilized with rolls in differing orientations, e.g., side by side. Therefore, the various descriptions of operations, the order in which they are performed, particular components and their orientations, etc. should be taken as exemplary only.