Rectangilar-Ribbed Profile Tubular Core and Method
20180099320 ยท 2018-04-12
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B21D13/045
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21C37/121
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B21C37/15
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21C37/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D39/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Disclosed is a tubular core on which sheets of metal or other material can be wound and supported, for shipment, handling and dispersal, and a method for forming the core. The core comprises a metal sheet or strip which has a rectangular-ribbed cross-sectional profile of flattened ribs, and which is wound spirally into a tubular configuration. The core is formed by passing the strip through a plurality of roll-forming stands, to initiate forming and progressively form an arcuate ribbed sinusoidal profile, then a final roll-forming pass is used (or several such passes are used) to flatten the ribs of the profile so that the rectangular flattened ribs collectively form a support surface for the sheets which are wound and supported on the core.
Claims
1. A method for forming a metal strip into a cylindrical core, comprising: passing an elongated metal strip having width and length and opposite longitudinal edges through a multiplicity of forming stands each of which forms curved longitudinally extending sinusoidal corrugations in said strip or changes the size of existing curved corrugations or both, then passing the strip through at least one final forming stand for flattening the corrugations, wherein upon completion of the corrugation forming process a plurality of the rectangular corrugations as-formed along the width of the strip comprise longitudinally extending, alternating ribs including upwardly extending ridges and downwardly extending grooves, the ridges and grooves comprising generally vertical spaced-apart sidewalls with the ridges further comprising longitudinally extending, flattened, spaced-apart top surfaces extending between adjacent ridge sidewalls and the grooves further comprising longitudinally extending, flattened, spaced-apart bottom surfaces extending between adjacent groove sidewalls, the flattened ridges and flattened grooves together forming a rectangular ribbed cross sectional profile extending along the width of the strip transverse to the length thereof; forming the opposite longitudinal edges of the as-formed corrugated metal strip into flanges adapted for forming an interlocking seam; helically coiling the as-formed corrugated strip into a cylinder having a longitudinal axis and an outer surface defined by flat, spaced-apart surfaces selected from the top surfaces and the bottom surfaces; and compressing the opposite edge flanges together thereby forming an interlocking seam extending in a spiral around the cylinder along the longitudinal axis thereof.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the metal strip is aluminum and is 0.005 to 0.050 thick.
3. The method of any of claims 1 and 2 wherein during the helical coiling step, the metal strip is oriented at a helix angle of approximately 60 or greater relative to the longitudinal axis.
4. A cylindrical core, comprising: an elongated metal strip having width and length and being helically coiled into a cylinder, the cross-sectional profile of the strip along the width thereof transverse to the length thereof including corrugations comprising longitudinally extending alternating ribs including upward extending ridges alternating with downward extending grooves, the ridges having longitudinally extending, generally flattened, spaced-apart top surfaces, the grooves having longitudinally extending, generally flattened, spaced-apart bottom surfaces, and the flattened ridges and the flattened grooves together forming a flat ribbed corrugated transverse cross section; said cylinder having an outer surface formed by flat spaced-apart surfaces selected from the top surfaces of the ridges and the bottom surfaces of the grooves; and a lockseam of joined opposite edges of the metal strip, the lockseam extending in a spiral around the cylinder along the longitudinal axis thereof.
5. The core of claim 4 wherein the metal strip is aluminum and is 0.005 to 0.050 thick.
6. The core of claim 5 wherein the pipe diameter is at least approximately 6.
7. The core of any of claims 4, 5 and 6 wherein prior to forming the cylinder the aluminum strip is approximately 0.023 thick and approximately 3 wide; the vertical dimension between adjacent top and bottom surfaces of the as-formed cylinder is approximately 0.27; the width of the flat ridge surfaces is approximately 0.027, the distance between adjacent flat ridge surfaces is approximately 0.027; the width of the flat groove surfaces is approximately 0.027, the distance between adjacent flat ridge surfaces is approximately 0.027; and the diameter of the as-formed cylinder is within the range approximately 16-24.
8. The core of claim 7 further comprising embossments in the legs of the ribs.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0012] The pipe forming in accordance with the present invention can be achieved via fixed forming using a forming shoe with a predetermined inside diameter to provide the desired pipe diameter, or by free forming using several sets of roller dies of different sizes to achieve pipes of different diameters, by adjusting the helix angle or by a combination thereof.
[0013] The illustrative equipment and process described here use, and are improvements of, the multi-pass roll former, three roll, free forming system disclosed in commonly assigned and incorporated U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,940,962 and 3,247,692 as specifically adapted to bellows pipe (relatively small diameter corrugated pipe) in commonly assigned and incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 5,074,138.
[0014] The '962 patent describes corrugating and forming sections which can continuously corrugate a strip or sheet of material and form the corrugated strip into a pipe. The corrugating section comprises multiple stands of rolls which form a curved sinusoidal profile in the driven strip. The corrugated strip is then fed to the three-roll forming section which deforms or curls the advancing strip into a cylinder or pipe along which the opposite strip edges form a mating spiral, then seals the mating strip edges into a continuous lockseam which wraps along the pipe. The continuous corrugated pipe is then advanced to a discharge station where the pipe can be cut into lengths and received on a run-out table for any further processing and handling.
[0015] The illustrative equipment and process described here are an improvement of the approach described in the '962 patent in that in accordance with the present invention multiple passes are used to roll-form a flat metal sheet or strip into an arcuate sinusoidal profile, then at least one final pass is used to deform the arcuate sinusoidal profile of the strip into a flattened, generally rectangular profile.
[0016] According to the present invention and referring to
[0017] In a presently preferred embodiment of the present invention, initially the flat metal strip is passed through multiple roll-forming stands, to form the strip into a transverse profile comprising arcuate ribbed sinusoidal corrugations, then prior to forming the strip into a tube or core, the strip is passed through a final roll-forming stand or stands to flatten the strip profile, that is, to reform the strip profile into a rectangular-ribbed profile. Illustratively and presently, nine passes are used to roll-form the strip into an arcuate sinusoidal transverse profile, then a tenth pass is used to deform and thereby flatten the profile into the rectangular-ribbed profile 10.
[0018] The above profile-forming method results in the profile 10 shown in
[0019] To form the profiled strip into a tube or core, and referring to
[0020] In the formed pipe 20, the spaced-apart adjacent flat surfaces 14 of the rectangular grooves 12 form the outside surface 22 of the core 20 and the spaced-apart flat surfaces 13 of the rectangular ridges 11 form the inside surface 23 of the core.
[0021] The strip 10 illustrated in
[0022] Referring to the
[0023] Embossments or reinforced embossments can be added to the ribs, e.g., to the legs, to enhance core strength.
EXAMPLES
[0024] The above design and method have been used to form cylindrical cores of different sizes.
[0025] Specifically, in strips or sheets 10 of aluminum which were 0.010 to 0.023 thick and 3 wide, ridges 11 and grooves 12 were formed which were 0.27 in height from the top of the a ridge to the bottom of the adjacent groove. Both the ridges and the grooves were 0.27 wide and were spaced apart 0.27 from adjacent ridges and grooves, respectively. See
[0026] Other dimensions and materials will be readily adapted to the invention described here by those of usual skill in the art. For example the invention can be used to form pipes approximately 6 in diameter and greater. For a given sheet width, increasing the helix angle increases the pipe diameter. For a given pipe diameter, increasing the sheet width reduces the required helix angle. Increasing the strip width tends to increase the pipe wrapping/manufacturing speed and to decrease the number of seams in a given length of pipe.