TIRE BUILDING DRUM
20190070811 ยท 2019-03-07
Inventors
- George Michael Stoila (Tallmadge, OH, US)
- Michael James Hogan (Tallmadge, OH, US)
- Frank Anthony Kmiecik (Akron, OH, US)
- Minwu Yao (Hudson, OH, US)
- Mark John Montgomery (Rootstown, OH, US)
- Kristian Daniel Johnson (North Canton, OH, US)
- John Edward Anderson (Atwater, OH, US)
- Richard David VARGO (Cuyahoga Falls, OH, US)
- Pablo Rafael Morales (Brimfield, OH, US)
- Andrew Robert Ondo (Pulaski, PA, US)
Cpc classification
B29D2030/2664
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A second stage tire building drum is disclosed. The tire building drum has two hubs with an inner sleeve mounted to a central shaft of the tire building drum and configured for axial movement. At least one of the hubs is configured for free axial movement. Preferably, each hub further include a sliding sleeve mounted on the inner sleeve for unconstrained sliding in the axial direction relative to the inner sleeve. Preferably, each hub has a bead receiving mechanism mounted on the sliding sleeve and comprised of one or more segments that are radially expandable. Preferably, each segment has a pocket with a curved surface for receiving a bead. The method employs the steps of mounting a green cylindrically shaped tire carcass onto a tire building drum so that each bead are seated in a respective bead pocket segment, inflating the carcass under low pressure and expanding the carcass into engagement with tread and belt assembly while allowing the one or more of the hubs or one or more of the bead pocket segments to freely slide in the axial direction.
Claims
1. A second stage tire building drum comprising: a first and second hub, wherein each hub is mounted on a central shaft of the second stage tire building drum; wherein at least one of said hubs is configured for unconstrained axial movement on the central shaft; and wherein each hub has a bead receiving mechanism mounted on each hub.
2. The second stage tire building drum of claim 1 wherein said bead receiving mechanism includes one or more bead segments.
3. The second stage tire building drum of claim 2 wherein each bead segment has a curved pocket.
4. The second stage tire building drum of claim 1 wherein the axial movement is sliding.
5. A second stage tire building drum comprising: a first and second hub, wherein each hub is mounted on a central shaft of the second stage tire building drum; wherein each hub has an inner sleeve that is mounted on the central shaft; wherein each hub has a sliding sleeve mounted on the inner sleeve and configured for unconstrained axial movement relative to the inner sleeve; wherein each hub has a bead receiving mechanism mounted on the sliding sleeve, wherein said bead receiving mechanism includes one or more bead segments, wherein each bead segment has a curved pocket.
6. The second stage tire building drum of claim 5 wherein each inner sleeve is axially movable.
7. The second stage tire building drum of claim 5 wherein the curved pocket is concave.
8. A second stage tire building drum comprising: a first and second hub, wherein each hub is mounted on a central shaft of the second stage tire building drum; wherein each hub has an inner sleeve that is mounted on the central shaft; wherein at least one of said hubs has a sliding sleeve mounted on the inner sleeve and configured for unconstrained axial movement relative to the inner sleeve and a bead receiving mechanism mounted on the sliding sleeve; wherein the other hub has a bead receiving mechanism; wherein said bead receiving mechanism includes one or more bead segments, wherein each bead segment has a curved pocket.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025] The invention will be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0041] The invention provides a new and improved tire building drum that reduces the residual stresses in the green tire carcass, resulting in an improved tire. The process provides that the tire ply and components are shaped into a catenary structure. A catenary structure is a structure that has no tensile or compressive reactions at the base of the structure, and has uniform strain along the length of the structure. In the case of a tire, the beads are the base of the structure and the length from the bead to the crown has uniform strain.
[0042] The tire building drum of the present invention allows the tire to be built into a catenary shape, producing a tire that has a bead area and sidewall made with minimal strain. The tire building drum allows the tire to be built so that the ply cords that have the shortest cord length which are maintained in tension, and not compression. The tire building drum also prevents ply cord trisomy, or the unravelling of the cords due to the cords being loaded in compression and not tension.
[0043] A first embodiment of a second stage tire building drum 100 of the present invention is shown in
[0044] Each sliding sleeve 140 further includes a bead lock mechanism 200 for receiving the bead area of the green carcass. Each bead lock mechanism 200 further includes a plurality of bead segments 210. Each bead segment 210 may optionally be expanded and contracted in a radial direction by bead actuating cylinders 220. Each bead locking mechanism 200 preferably utilizes zero or low pressure. Preferably the bead lock cylinder pressures range from zero to less than 5 bar, and more preferably from zero to 2 bar. Preferably the force from the bead pockets is less than 30 psig over the projected area of the bead face. As distinguished from the prior art drums, exact placement of the carcass beads over the bead pockets is not required, nor is exact bead pocket location. As soon as the inflation process starts, the beads are able to pull towards the centerline of the carcass, thereby becoming centered and symmetrical to the bead pockets. As the catenary shaping of the carcass begins, the beads are freely able to move, and the carcass cord tension is very low. If the beads cannot move as in prior art drums, then the cord path is straight and horizontal, while the cord tension undesirably increases exponentially. If the bead pockets are expanded with too much force then the beads cannot move towards the inside edge of the pocket as needed and the carcass cannot become centered to the drum. Thus, the bead pocket force is preferably zero or minimal. The nonexistent or substantially reduced bead pressure is also reduced to limit bead compression and prevent cold forging of the toe guard and chafer under the bead sole.
[0045] As shown in
[0046]
[0047]
[0048]
[0049] The first step of the catenary method of building tires begins with the tire building drum located in the start position as shown in
[0050] After the green tire carcass is loaded, the next step is to shape the green carcass using the catenary shaping process of the invention. As the tire drum rotates, the green carcass 610 is slowly inflated using low pressure, high volume shaping air. The locking member 172 is unlocked from the retaining member 300, allowing the sliding sleeve 140 to freely slide axially inward towards the adjacent hub. During inflation, the carcass cord tension is maintained at a low tension due to the evolvement of the catenary shape and the free sliding movement of the beads mounted on the sliding sleeves, which are each free to move in the axial direction. The shaping air pressure is very low at the level needed to gently strain and overcome the carcass composite stiffness. The carcass is self shaping itself to the balanced catenary shape. Thus each sliding sleeve is free to move in the axial direction towards the other sliding sleeve so that the tire is shaped by the tension of the ply cords as shown in
[0051] The assembled belt and tread package 650 is positioned over the inflating carcass 600 as shown in
[0052] Then the tire is removed from the tire building drum completing the process. The green tire is then cured in a conventional mold.
[0053] In an alternate embodiment of the invention, only one of the hubs has a sliding sleeve.
[0054] In an alternate embodiment of the invention, one of the hubs does not move in the axial direction and has no sliding sleeve.
[0055] The advantage of the catenary shaping process is that it does not produce any ply pull through into the squeegee and inner liner. The catenary shaping process allows the beads to move as need and the low bead locking force allow the rotation of the cable bead outer lang wire around the core wires of the cable bead. The plies then tacked to the outer lang wire are free to rotate along with the outer lang wires. There is no elastic energy in the outer lang wire when the wire is rotated so the ending rotational angle of the bead carcass elements is saved. Another advantage to the catenary shaping process is the tire is the carcass is shaped on a pneumatic core to within approximately 4% of the final molded shape, closely approximating a tire that has been made on a core.
[0056] While certain representative embodiments and details have been shown for the purpose of illustrating the invention, it will be apparent to those skilled in this art that various changes and modifications may be made therein without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention.