Roller Apparatus Comprising a Variable-Width Spacer
20230232842 · 2023-07-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A roller assembly for producing a compressed sheet material, such as a food product, having a roller support frame holding a fixed and a slidable roller; an actuator to apply force to the slidable roller, and a variable width spacer located between the shaft bearings of the rollers to limit the minimum separation between them. Variable width spacers comprising sliding wedges or a cam are described.
Claims
1. A roller assembly for producing a compressed sheet material comprising: (a) a roller support frame; (b) a first roller mountable in a fixed position relative to the frame; (c) a second roller mountable to the frame for sliding displacement relative to the first roller; (d) an actuator mountable to the frame and arranged to apply force to a shaft bearing of the second roller to urge the second roller towards the first roller; and (e) a variable width spacer located between a shaft bearing of the first roller and the shaft bearing of the second roller to limit the minimum separation between the first and second rollers.
2. The roller assembly of claim 1 wherein the variable width spacer comprises: (a) two adjacent wedges in sliding contact with each other such that a combined width of the two adjacent wedges changes as the wedges slide relative to each other; and (b) a spacer actuator arranged to reversibly slide the wedges relative to each other to vary the width of the spacer.
3. The roller assembly of claim 1 wherein the variable width spacer comprises: (a) a cam; and (b) a spacer actuator arranged to reversibly rotate the cam to vary the width of the spacer.
4. The roller assembly of claim 1 wherein the actuator comprises a hydraulic ram.
5. The roller assembly of claim 1 further comprising a load cell to measure and transmit force exerted on the variable width spacer by the roller shaft bearings to a controller.
6. The roller assembly of claim 1 further comprising a force sensor to measure and transmit force exerted by the actuator on the shaft bearing of the second roller to a controller.
7. The roller assembly of claim 5 wherein the controller is configured to calculate a force exerted on the rollers from compressing the sheet material by subtracting a load cell force from either a pre-set or a measured actuator force.
8. (canceled)
9. A method of manufacturing a sheet food material comprising: passing a food material through a roller assembly that comprises: (a) a roller support frame; (b) a first roller mountable in a fixed position relative to the frame; (c) a second roller mountable to the frame for sliding displacement relative to the first roller; (d) an actuator mountable to the frame and arranged to apply force to a shaft bearing of the second roller to urge the second roller towards the first roller; and (e) a variable width spacer located between a shaft bearing of the first roller and the shaft bearing of the second roller to limit the minimum separation between the first and second rollers.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0026] The invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0033]
[0034] The roller assembly 1 comprises a roller support frame 2 in which is mounted a first roller in a fixed position relative to the frame. In this embodiment, a spacer 5 is provided between the bearing housing 6 of the first roller and the inner surface of the frame 2 to allow coarse adjustment of the gap between the rollers.
[0035] A second roller 7 is mounted in the frame for sliding displacement relative to the first roller 4 so that the gap between the faces of the rollers 4, 7 may be adjusted. An actuator 16 is provided, mounted to a yoke 3 attached to the frame 2 to apply force to the shaft bearing of the second roller 7. In this embodiment, a hydraulic actuator (e.g. a hydraulic ram) is used to apply force via a push rod 17 that passes through a hole in the yoke 3 and bears on a surface of the bearing housing 8 of the second roller 7. The force is thereby transferred onto the shaft bearing 15. On commissioning the roller assembly for any particular purpose, the force exerted by the actuator is chosen to be greater than the force exerted on the rollers by the product, to ensure that the rollers do not move apart under force of the product. Typically, the force exerted by the actuator might be chosen to 5%, 10, or even 20% above the expected product force.
[0036] A variable width spacer 18 is located between the shaft bearings 15 of the first and second rollers. In this embodiment, the spacer 18 is mounted between the two bearing housings 6, 8, each opposite side 19 of the spacer 18 abutting its adjacent bearing housing. Alternative designs for such variable width spacer are discussed below, but in principle the spacer can be controlled (e.g. by a control signal) to vary the width between the opposite faces 19 of the spacer 18 to limit the minimum separation of the first 4 and second 7 rollers.’
[0037] If variation of the gap between the rollers 4, 7 is required in addition to that provided by the variable width spacer 18, a shim, or multiple shims (not illustrated) can be positioned between the spacer 18 and one or both of the bearing housings 6, 8. This might be required if, e.g. a different product thicknesses is required or renovation of the surface of a roller has been undertaken, resulting in a change of roller diameter.
[0038]
[0039] This embodiment is largely the same as that of
[0040] A signal can therefore be transmitted from the load cell to a controller for monitoring and control purposes. For example, it could be used to control the moisture content or temperature of the product (e.g. a dough) entering the roller assembly, to maintain a desired product force for a given gap width. Alternatively, it could trigger an alert to process operators if the calculated product force varies outside a predetermined range. The product load can either be calculated from the load cell reading minus a known, pre-set hydraulic force, or by subtracting the load cell force from a measured hydraulic force.
[0041]
[0042]
[0043] Any change in the length of the legs 13 of the frame 2 due to temperature change or contraction when the tensile load reduces when the product load is removed is compensated for by the force applied by the push rod 17; additionally, as the variable width spacer (and in this embodiment, the load cell) are located between the two bearing housings 6, 8, any change in length cannot in any case cause the rollers to move together. The same is true for any deformation of the yoke. The only change in roller separation upon release of the product load can be the movement of the roller shafts 14 in their bearings 15, with a magnitude of ΔB. The greatest possible change in gap ΔG when the product load is removed, and the assembly cools is therefore given by ΔG = ΔB, using the same nomenclature as above.
[0044] It can be seen therefore, that the risk of rollers touching when a product load is removed is greatly reduced. If the required product gap is less than the AG, then the risk is removed altogether.
[0045]
[0046] The variable width spacer 18 comprises a mounting block 21 that supports the various components. A first wedge 22 is located between two arms 23 of the mounting block 21. The first wedge 22 is provided with a hole therethrough, containing a threaded bushing 24. A threaded rod 25 is rotatable by a servo gearhead 26 to cause the first wedge 22 to be moved up and down between the two arms 23.
[0047] A second wedge 27 is mounted for sliding displacement within a keyway 28 in each of the arms 23. The angled faces of the two wedges 22, 27 are placed in sliding abutment.
[0048] The slopes of the two angled faces are conveniently the same, to enable the axis of the threaded rod 25 to be perpendicular to the axis of the keyway 28. Choice of an appropriate slope is a balance between the amount of adjustment provided by the spacer, and the balance of forces normal to and parallel to the plane of abutment of the two wedges 22, 27. A large slope provides a greater range of adjustment but leads to more force parallel to the plane of abutment with a risk that frictional forces between the wedges might be overcome, leading to unwanted relative movement of wedges. A smaller slope reduces this risk, and provides finer control, but over a smaller range. This may be mitigated by use of shims between the spacer 18 and one of the bearings 6, 8 as described above. The inventors have found that a slope of between 1:10 and 1:20 provides a useful balance, but a consideration of transmitted forces and materials of construction could lead other choices in different circumstances.
[0049] In this way, when the servo gearhead 26 rotates the threaded rod 25 located in the bushing 24, the first wedge 22 slides relative to the first wedge and the geometry of the wedges causes the overall width of the gap adjuster to change.
[0050]