ROTOGRAVURE PRINTING SYSTEM AND THE PREPARATION AND USE THEREOF
20170043569 ยท 2017-02-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
B41F9/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41P2213/80
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41N3/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41N1/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
The rotogravure printing system comprising a machine provided with at least one shaft (6) and means for movement and for rotation of said shaft (6) and a rotogravure cylinder sleeve (10) to be rotated by means of the at least one shaft (6), further comprising a first substantially annular end plate (7) which is in use connected to the shaft (6) of the system, which end plate (7) is provided with at least one contact surface (23) that is designed for contact with a mating contact surface (13) defined at an inner side (12) of the cylinder sleeve (10).
Claims
1. A method of operating a rotogravure printing system comprising a machine provided with at least one shaft and means for rotation of said shaft, which system further comprises a rotogravure cylinder sleeve provided with a gravure at a printing surface, which cylinder sleeve is to be rotated by means of the at least one shaft, and further comprising at least one end plate for transfer of said rotation of the shaft to the cylinder sleeve, which method comprises the steps of: assembling the end plate and the cylinder sleeve in a manner suitably for disassembly, which end plate is provided with at least one contact surface that is designed for contact with a mating contact surface defined at an inner side of the cylinder sleeve, mounting the end plate and the cylinder sleeve onto the shaft; carrying out a printing operation, comprising the step of rotating the at least one shaft, and therewith the rotogravure cylinder, so as to print the substrate in accordance with the gravure, and thereafter, Disassembling the end plate and the cylinder sleeve.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the assembly of the end plate and the cylinder sleeve occurs after mounting of the cylinder sleeve and the end plate onto the shaft.
3. The method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the assembly comprises the steps of moving the at least one shaft provided with the end plate, towards a lateral end of the rotogravure cylinder, and arranging the first end plate into an inside of the cylinder, such that the mating contact surfaces of the cylinder and the end plate contact each other.
4. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the assembly of the end plate and the cylinder sleeve occurs prior to mounting of both onto the shaft.
5. The method as claimed in claim 1, further comprising the step of selecting an end plate from a series of end plate with varying diameters, so as to fit the mating contact surface of the cylinder sleeve.
6. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the end plate is reused for a further cylinder sleeve in a subsequent printing operation.
7. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the combination of claim 8 is used.
8. A combination of a rotogravure cylinder sleeve provided with a gravure at a printing surface, and at least one end plate for transfer of rotation of a shaft to be inserted through the end plate to the cylinder sleeve, wherein the end plate is provided with at least one contact surface, and the cylinder sleeve is provided with a mating contact surface defined at an inner side thereof, wherein the contact surface are fit to constitute a disassemblable assembly of the cylinder sleeve and the end plate.
9. The combination as claimed in claim 8, wherein the mating contact surfaces are tapered.
10. (canceled)
11. The combination as claimed in claim 8, wherein the contact surface of the cylinder sleeve is obtained by partial removal of the base.
12. The combination as claimed in claim 10, wherein the contact surface of the cylinder sleeve is obtained by partial removal of the base.
13. The combination as claimed in claim 11, wherein the base has a lower hardness than the layer package.
14. The combination as claimed in claim 12, wherein the layer package is obtained by thermal spraying.
15. The combination as claimed in claim 8, wherein the end plate has a first, second and third contact surface, that are mutually spaced when viewed along a circumference of the annular end plate.
16. The combination as claimed in claim 14, wherein the contact surfaces are mutually separated by retracted portions, so as to define cavities between the end plate and the cylinder.
17. (canceled)
18. The combination as claimed in claim 8, wherein the end plate and the cylinder are provided with mutually complementary mechanical locking means.
19. The combination as claimed in claim 16, wherein the mechanical locking means are defined as ribs and corresponding channels on the contact surfaces.
20. The combination as claimed in claim 8, wherein the first end plate comprises an inner annular part and an outer annular part, which outer annular part is provided with said contact surfaces.
21. The combination as claimed in claim 13, wherein the layer package of the cylinder sleeve comprises an engraving layer with a Vickers Hardness in the range of 300-600 HV
22. A rotogravure printing system comprising a machine provided with at least one shaft and means for rotation of said shaft, which system further comprises a rotogravure cylinder sleeve provided with a gravure at a printing surface, which cylinder sleeve is to be rotated by means of the at least one shaft, and further comprising at least one end plate for transfer of said rotation of the shaft to the cylinder sleeve, wherein the end plate is provided with at least one contact surface, and the cylinder sleeve is provided with a mating contact surface defined at an inner side thereof, wherein the contact surface are fit to constitute a disassemblable assembly of the cylinder sleeve and the end plate.
23-33. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0046] These and other aspects of the invention will be further elucidated with respect to the following figures, wherein:
[0047]
[0048]
[0049]
[0050]
[0051]
[0052]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENTS
[0053] The Figures not drawn to scale and they are only intended for illustrative purposes. Equal reference numerals in different figures refer to identical or corresponding parts.
[0054] The term rotogravure cylinders relates herein to rotogravure cylinders and/or any gravure cylinders used in the printing industry, particularly for the printing of packaging materials. The length of such cylinders is typically at least 1.0 meter, more preferably in the order of 1.5-2.5 meter.
[0055] The term cylindrical base as used in the context of the present invention does not require the base to be a block-like material. Rather and preferably, the base may be hollow.
[0056] The term aluminum in the present invention refers to pure aluminum, aluminum with small addition of other materials or aluminum alloys. Likewise, the term copper refers to pure copper, copper with small addition of other materials or copper alloys. Most suitably, however, in the process in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention, particles are sprayed that contain at least 99% copper, more preferably at least 99.5% copper or more. Likewise, the term zinc layer comprises a zinc layer and a zinc alloy. The zinc content of such a zinc alloy may vary over a wider range. One feasible alloy is for instance brass (in any of the commercially available compositions).
[0057] The term high velocity spraying relates to a spraying process wherein particles are sprayed with a velocity of at least 300 m/s, more preferably at least 500 m/s, at least 800 m/s or even at least 1,000 m/s. Preferably, use is made of a jet with a velocity above the said particle velocity. Generation of a supersonic jet is considered most advantageous. Herein, the jet velocity may be higher than 1,400 m/s. High velocity spraying may for instance be implemented with High-Velocity Air Fuel (HVAF) technology and guns as commercially available
[0058] Printing cylinders or rollers currently used in the printing industry comprise of:
[0059] a hollow cylinder base, which is usually made of steel or aluminum
[0060] an intermediate layer, suitably for adhesion to the cylinder base. Such intermediate layer for instance comprises a material known in the art as soft copper;
[0061] an engraving layer, suitable for engraving of a desired pattern. This engraving layer for instance comprises a material known in the art as hard copper and suitably has a high hardness, for instance in the range of 200-240 HV;
[0062] a protection layer, which is usually a chromium layer on top of the hard copper layer and
[0063] end plates on both lateral ends of the cylinder. The end plates may be connected to the cylinder by means of mechanical means, or be inserted into the cylinder and then mechanically pressed and therewith fixed to the cylinder.
[0064] The cylinder base is usually made of steel which satisfies the requirements for precision and small deflection required in the printing process. Alternatively for the printing industry, the cylinder base can be manufactured from a light weight metal like aluminum or an aluminum alloy. Aluminum has specific weight of about 2700 kg/m.sup.3, while steel has a specific weight of about 7800 kg/m.sup.3. Using aluminum as the cylinder base results in a lighter rotogravure cylinder (by about one third) which means significant reduced transportation costs and safer handling during production phases.
[0065] The conventional method of manufacturing a printing cylinder involves plating the cylinder base made of steel in electroplating solutions to plate the soft copper layer, the hard copper layer and the chromium layer after engraving. This process has been described in many patents. Recent innovations made by the Applicant and described in non-prepublished applications (mentioned hereinafter) demonstrate the manufacture of cylinders with a layer package comprising one or more layers made by thermal spraying, such as high-velocity thermal spraying. This has resulted in cylinders with improved properties and an increased versatility, i.e.:
[0066] the use of high velocity thermal spraying with at least partial melting results in less surface porosity, better adhesion of the layer package to the cylinder base and better dimensional accuracy, as discussed in PCT/EP2013/071195;
[0067] the use of a single layer copper support that matches the difference in properties between the base and a copper engraving layer with a high hardness, for instance in the range of 250-500 HV, as discussed in PCT/EP2013/067895;
[0068] the provision of a zinc layer for refurbishing and/or resizing printing cylinders, as discussed in PCT/EP2013/050228;
[0069] In International Patent Application PCT/EP2013/067895, filed on 29 Aug. 2013, also by the same inventor incorporated here by reference, the dual layer approach of making new cylinders (involving an intermediate layer followed by a plated copper layer) is replaced by a single high velocity copper particle layer which is thermal sprayed directly on a preferable aluminum base. For the first time, a thermal sprayed copper layer serves as the actual engrave layer, completely eliminating copper plating altogether. Despite the harder surface properties of the thermal spray deposited copper later it was shown that it is feasible, in fact desirable and highly efficient, to mechanically image or laser etch an image thereon. The harder surface in fact, for many applications, eliminates the need for chrome plating, resulting in a cylinder that is completely eco-friendly, low-cost, and faster to produce, among other benefits.
[0070] The hollow base cylinder comes with specific inside and outside diameter. The thickness of the base cylinder, i.e. the distance between the inside and outside diameter, is important since the integrity of the printing cylinder when working on the printing machine depends on the two basic dimensional parameters of the cylinder, the length of the cylinder and the thickness of the cylinder. Therefore it is of paramount significance to manufacture the cylinder with the minimum thickness required for each cylinder length to avoid excessive deflection.
[0071] Once the base cylinder is cut according to the length required by the customer and having the appropriate thickness to ensure the integrity of the cylinder during printing, the surface of the cylinder is processed to provide an outside layer of material which can be engraved with the pattern required by the customer.
[0072] Prior to the engraving and suitably after the provision of the layer package, the end plates are assembled to the cylinder base according to the conventional process. The purpose of the end plates is to enable installation of the cylinder or roller on the printing machine's shaft. Such a printing press may have several cylinders mounted in parallel working together to transfer a corresponding portion of an intended pattern to the substrate that is ultimately to be imaged. Misalignment in the printed process by one cylinder will adversely impact the entire printed result. Consequently, end plates must be perfectly sized and secured, which is one reason why they are traditionally permanently fitted into position by the cylinder manufacturer and not configured as slip-on (slidable) attachments.
[0073] With widespread adoption of aluminum base cylinders, introducing a steel flange into an aluminum base sleeve introduces frictional and torque disparities. Similarly, an aluminum flange quickly deforms when subjected to the rotational forces and stresses induced by a driving shaft running therethrough, particularly at very high speeds. One solution is to make each flange in two-part assembly form: one part being aluminum and the other steel. By making the aluminum flange part substantially annular, it could made to fit around the steel flange part and inside the cylinder base. The assembly of the aluminum and the steel part of the flanges were designed to be permanently set in position by heating (normal or induction heating) and press fitting the two parts. Unfortunately, the fitting of a two-part flange is prone to deformation of the cylinder and/or the flange during cylinder manufacture. Deformation of a cylinder is a costly and particularly undesirable event, not to mention, time consuming from a production standpoint.
[0074] The present disclosure describes an improved cylinder sleeve and cylinder end plate combination, as well as various embodiments to show different possible configurations for carrying out the inventive aspects. The words cylinder and roller will be used interchangeably in the following text.
[0075]
[0076] The cylinder sleeve 10 is hollow. It therefore has an inner diameter a1 (also called inside cylinder base diameter), and an outer diameter a2. The cylinder sleeve has a cylinder base 1, which has a thickness b1. The outer diameter a2 is primarily defined by means of the thickness b1 but may be modified by means of a resizing layer, such as a zinc layer, as is described in the above mentioned patent application that is herein included by reference. The cylinder sleeve 10 is further provided with lateral edges 15. Contact surfaces 13 are defined adjacent to the lateral edges 15 and in the cylinder base 5. The contact surfaces 13 are tapered and include an angle relative to the inside 12 of the cylinder, or more systematically, relative to an axis of rotation aligned with the shaft 6.
[0077] In accordance with the invention, the end plates 7 are connected on the shaft 6 of the machine. Suitably, use is made of a first and a second end plate 7 for insertion into the cylinder at opposed lateral ends 15. These end plates 7 are made in a way as to fit both to the sleeve inside diameter a1 and the machine shaft diameter. Thereto, they are provided with at least one contact surface 23 at their outer edge 29 (as shown in
[0078] As shown in more detail in
[0079] As is further shown in
[0080]
[0081] Thus, the sleeve type cylinder 10 will be produced, in one embodiment, with specific internal diameters a1, minimum thickness b1 to ensure integrity and an outside diameter a2 that varies according to the customer requirements. One advantage of this new sleeve type printing system is the reduced production cost and minimization of raw material usage, since the printing cylinder 10 is not manufactured with end plates 7. This saves considerable quantities of raw material usage for the manufacturing of the end plates 7. The end plates 7 with the preferably tapered contact surfaces 23 are now part of the printing machine, are manufactured once by the printer and are used for any cylinder sleeve 10 with specific inside diameter a1. The end plates 7 are suitably comprised of either a single metal or can be a composite (e.g. steel and aluminum) as described in patent application EP12187941.5. It is considered beneficial that the end plates 7 are made from steel. The standardization introduced by the current invention is revolutionizing the management of the printing rollers both on the cylinder manufacturer side, on the printing machine manufacturer side, as well as on the printer side.
[0082]
[0083] The shaft 6 is herein shown with a fin 61 and with a tip 62. The fin 61 is present so as to improve the connection with the end plate 7. The fin 61 is tapered, with the consequence that the end plate 7 is sandwiched between the shaft 6 and the cylinder sleeve 10. Rather than a tapered fin 61, the shaft could thereto be provided with a tapered protrusion, suitably an annular protrusion, or alternatively ribs. Furthermore, it is feasible that the shaft 6 is without tapered fin 61 or tapered protrusion. The end plate 7 is suitably provided with a surface around its bore (27, see
[0084]
[0085] The outer annular part 70 further comprises an aperture 80 at its inside. This aperture 80 is configured for assembly of an inner annular part (not shown). The inner annular part will be composed of at least two elements to be assembled to the outer part 70 from the first side 71 and the second side 72. The surface 76 at the aperture 80 is thereto made convex. In this implementation, the surface 76 is thereto provided with a main, cylindrical section 77 and tapered sections 78, 79 on opposed sides 71, 72 thereof. A radial extension of the inner annular part will rest on such tapered section 78, 79 or even extend on the first or second side 71, 72 of the outer part 70. The two elements of the inner part need not to be equal in size and need not to be made of the same material. Rather one can be dominant (the body) and the other, the connection means, may be minor. Rather than two elements, a plurality of elements could be used.
[0086] Rather than using an inner annular part composed of at least two elements, use may be made of an inner annular part of a single element. This type is suitably provided with means for contact with the outer annular part. Examples of such means include a flange configured to reside on the first side 71, a protrusion or other mechanical locking means configured for locking to the surface 76. In such a situation, a convex surface 76 is not deemed necessary. Evidently, rather than using an additional annular part, the aperture 80 may be designed for the shaft 6.
[0087]
[0088] Starting at step 110, a technician is provided with a certain size sleeve which he must inspect to identify the proper removable end plates that are to be selected. The critical geometric features to be identified or deduced include sleeve inner diameter size. The present invention contemplates providing automatic or visual aid selection features (such as color codes, markings, or other visuals) either directly on the sleeve or provided in some other fashion to the technician to aid in the identification process.
[0089] At step 120, the technician identifies and selects the matching removable end Plate(s) capable of accommodating the shaft of the print Press onto which a sleeve will be mounted. Where a print operation involves the mounting of parallel gravure cylinders/sleeves across a series of roller stations, a separate set of end plates are needed. Assuming the shafts at each station and the sleeves to be mounted thereto are all identical, then each end plate combination to be fitted to the sleeve and mounted to a shaft will likewise be identical.
[0090] At step 130, once the end plates are selected (or in the case of a single shaft print press configuration, a single end plate and a corresponding closing plate pair) the pair is fitted in a manner earlier described above, onto each sleeve. At step 140, any locking mechanism provided to secure a stable and snug coupling between end plates and sleeve is then engaged. At step 150, the sleeve and matching selected end plate pair combination is then mounted by the technician onto the printing press by fitting onto or into the available shaft or shafts of the printing press.
[0091] At step 160, once mounted onto the shafts of the printing press, the sleeve or sleeves are then locked in position using any appropriate locking mechanism, including the mechanisms described above. At step 170, the technician initiates printing operations and monitors activities as they progress. At step 180, it is presumed that a trigger event requiring the un-mounting of one or more sleeves has occur. This trigger event may be the result of, for example, the print job having come to completion, or the result of a fault condition requiring the removal/un-mounting of a sleeve, or the result of a visual or other indication, indicative of a cylinder wear condition requiring the replacement of the cylinder sleeve by a new cylinder (or if not new, by a suitable resurfaced cylinder bearing the same cylinder image as that being removed). At step 190, the technician disengages any locking mechanisms thus freeing up the sleeve and end plate combination for removal (un-mounting) from the press. At step 195, the actual sleeve and end plates are removed and replaced or simply removed and set aside.
[0092] The process heretofore described of maintaining a stock of end plates ready to fit onto a sleeve at the time of print operation, locking the combination in place in a non-permanent fashion, mounting and, in some instances, locking the combination onto a print press using the available shafts, and when done, removing and setting aside the removable end plates to be used again with a different sleeve, has never been implemented before in any fashion. As previously described and explained, applicants have discovered that aluminum base sleeves can be easily fashioned such that an optimum but selectively limited number of pre-formed aluminum stock cylinders may be made available to choose from in order to fully accommodate a given range of cylinder widths and engrave layer circumferences.
[0093] Let us assume, by way of example, that a minimum sleeve circumference size is 250 mm, and a maximum circumference size is 850 mm. Let us also assume, that the sleeve manufacturing technique to be employed across the whole range of sleeves to be manufactured is a single thermal spray layer as described in the non-prepublished PCT/EP2013/067895. In an ideal situation, for any desired circumference, the largest possible outer diameter aluminum pre-form base is ordered with the thinnest possible wall thickness and accounting for the thickness of the thermal layer. For example, if a certain print job required an outer engrave layer circumference of 650 cm, if the smallest possible thermal sprayed engrave layer is, let's say, 5 cm thick, the desired outer circumference of the aluminum base should be 645 cm. If a desired wall thickness of the aluminum base can be no smaller than 10 cm, then an ideally sized (ignoring length) pre-formed aluminum cylinder I might wish to use is a cylinder that has an inner diameter of 635 cm, an outer diameter of 645 cm, and when engraved, provides the desired 650 cm circumference engrave layer called for in my customer's specifications. Unfortunately, calling up one's aluminum stock supplier and asking it to send you over a custom roll of preformed stock is neither practical nor possible. Fortunately, thermal spraying has many advantages over traditional plating, one of which is the ability to build a thermal layer to much higher thicknesses than what might be considered optimal in every case. This proves very beneficial in being able to use the build up of thermal sprayed copper layering, as a way to provide for fixed step-size selection of raw aluminum base material to choose from to build up a circumference to a sufficient width without necessarily having to unreasonably tradeoff aluminum size scalability for too much building up of a thermal layer.
[0094] Applicant has in fact determined that it is possible to achieve a stepped selection of aluminum preformed core material to cover a range of possible circumference sizes ranging from 250 to 850 cm using a predetermined number of fixed-increasing size aluminum stock bore dimensions. By fixing the wall thickness to, for example, 15 cm, and allowing for 5 cm maximum thermal spray layer thickness, it is possible to stage cylinder core outer diameter in increments of 20 cms. Having a fixed pool of aluminum cores to work with, if standardized in some way, also serves to provide a useful tool by which to set the outer diameter of removable end plates to be made available for use with sleeves as presently proposed. Thus, the present approach indirectly drives gravure industry toward standardization aimed to benefiting all involved thus driving down costs of gravure printing and hopefully attracting business from other printing technologies. It is envisioned that the process of selecting and matching a sleeve to the best fit aluminum preform stock, taking into account the flexibility and desirability of using stepped selection formula, may be automated.
[0095]
[0096] At step 210, when a gravure cylinder sleeve manufacture order is received, a technician enters information into a platform, software package, online web-based tool or the like, which identifies the cylinder length and outer circumference specifications provided by the client.
[0097] At step 220, an algorithm crunches the numbers and identifies a best fit aluminum pre-form base. The algorithm may simply crunch numbers or perform a look up table function, to select an ideal sized stock, the optimum sized stock based on standardized available options programmed into the system, or it may seek and identify a best stock material from that currently available on hand.
[0098] In one scenario, functionality may be provided to assist in the ordering of a selected stock material. At step 230, the result is displayed and action is taken by the technician. In one scenario, cylinder length information is taken into account in selecting a different size or thickness stick material to account for instability and other forces that must be taken into account in a sleeve being provided which is flangeless.
[0099] Tests were carried out for comparison of ink consumption for printing of different cylinder sleeve. A prior art cylinder sleeve was tested, comprising a chrome protection coating. Furthermore, cylinder sleeves were tested based on the inventive process underlying the invention, comprising a layer package of thermally sprayed layers onto a base of aluminium. Use was made of the equipment as identified in PCT/EP2013/067895. The cylinders were provided with identical test patterns. The engraving layer of the layer package according to the invention was measured to have a Vickers Hardness of 532 HV, as based on five different measurements. The surface roughness Rz turned out to be 0.35 m before printing for the engraving layer, which reduced to 0.26 m after that a first printing run was carried out. The Ra was 0.04 m before printing, which reduced to 0.025 m after the first print run. Use was made of a conventional rotogravure printing system comprising a doctor blade system operating on the rotogravure cylinder, so as to remove any ink that is present on the surface rather than within the gravure (i.e. the grooves thereof). The ink saving turned out to be 10-15%.
[0100] The previous description of the disclosed exemplary embodiments is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the present invention. Various modifications to these exemplary embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown herein but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features disclosed herein.