CA1226812A - Slitting apparatus - Google Patents

Slitting apparatus

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Publication number
CA1226812A
CA1226812A CA000462364A CA462364A CA1226812A CA 1226812 A CA1226812 A CA 1226812A CA 000462364 A CA000462364 A CA 000462364A CA 462364 A CA462364 A CA 462364A CA 1226812 A CA1226812 A CA 1226812A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
arbors
gears
synchronizing
scroll
slitting
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
CA000462364A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
John C. Eiting
Thomas J. Wente
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Precision Strip Inc
Original Assignee
Precision Strip Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Precision Strip Inc filed Critical Precision Strip Inc
Priority to CA000462364A priority Critical patent/CA1226812A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1226812A publication Critical patent/CA1226812A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Abstract

Abstract of the Disclosure A scroll-type slitting machine of the type having upper and lower arbors, each having a plural-ity of mating rotary cutting members, a movable housing rotatably supporting ends of the upper and lower arbors, a fixed housing rotatably supporting opposite ends of the upper and lower arbors, and a mechanism for vertically adjusting at least one of the arbors relative to the other, includes the improvement which consists of a pinion stand mounted outboard of and adjacent one of the housings, upper and lower intermeshing, synchronizing gears rotatably mounted within the pinion stand, and upper and lower torque-transmitting couplings extending between and operatively joining the upper and lower synchronizing gears to the upper and lower arbors, respectively, while permitting relative movement between the arbors.

Description

1226t3~2 Background of the Invention The present invention relates to slitting apparatus and, in particular, to apparatus for continuous scroll slitting of sheet metal or similar material, in which scroll knives are mounted on arbors which are adjustable relative to each other in order to accommodate scroll knives of different diameters.

Prior Art In order to form a plurality of relatively narrow strips from a single, relatively wide web of metal such as steel, it is commonly known to utilize a slitting line. Slitting lines basically consist of an uncoiled from which a web of metal is unwound from a coil, a slitter which slits the web into a plurality of strips, and a recoiling mechanism which recoils the strips into individual strip coils.
The slitting mechanism typically includes upper and lower arbors which are rotatable mounted in housings.
Each arbor includes a plurality of rotary cutting members positioned so that the cutting members on the upper arbor intermesh or mate with the cutting members on the lower arbor to provide a cutting or slitting operation upon a web of metallic material.

If strips are to be formed having rectilinear longitudinal edges, the rotary cutting members mounted on the arbors are essentially disk-shaped, having circular peripheries. However, if the slitter is adapted to form strips having curvilinear longitudinal edges, cutting members or knives provided with serpentine or sinuous cutting edges are required. Slitters of this type are known as scroll slitters.

mob ~26~312 It is desirable to slit a metallic web into strips having serpentine or curvilinear longitudinal edges if circular or disk-shaped pieces are to be formed from the slit strips, such as can ends, motor armatures and brake backing plates. The serpentine edges reduce the amount of material wasted in the forming of the disk-shaped pieces from the strips. An example of this type of slitting process is disclosed in US. Patent No. 3,517,532.

Since the cutting edges of knives used in scroll slitting are serpentine or sinuous, the relative rotational positions of mating scroll knives must be maintained in synchronization so that their cutting edges meet properly as the arbors are rotated. In order to effect this synchrony-ration, usual practice is to provide inter meshing synchronization gears mounted on the upper and lower arbors, either within the arbor housings or inboard of the housings, so that the arbors rotate at the proper speed relative to each other.
An example of such a slitting apparatus is disclosed in US. Patent No. 3,373,627.

The slitting apparatus shown in this patent is adjustable to accommodate metallic webs of different thicknesses and to permit different diameter knives to be mounted on the arbors. Therefore, the upper arbor is disclosed as being vertically adjustable in its supports relative to the lower arbor by a rotatable hand wheel which drives a conventional motion transmitting mechanism mounted in the housings which support the arbors.
For relatively small movements between the arbors, synchronization gears in the form of split gears are provided which can be modified to increase the effective thickness of the gear teeth to compensate for and reduce the backlash and clearance created by small relative movements mob 12261~12 of the arbors mounting the gears.

However, when it is desired to change the amplitude of the scroll slitting pattern, it is necessary to change the knives to others of larger or smaller diameter, and this in turn requires replacing the synchronizing gears with others of correspondingly larger or smaller diameter.
Thus, each set of cutters or knives is provided with a matching set of gears. Obviously, set up time is increased where synchronization gears as well as cutters must be changed each time a different set of cutters is installed, and the expense of multiple sets of gears as well as their storage, creates additional disadvantages and problems.

Accordingly, there is a need for a scroll slitting apparatus which includes means or synchronizing the rotation of the arbors without the necessity of multiple sets of synchronizing gears and the necessity of having to dismantle the slitting apparatus to substitute different synchronization gears each time a different set of knives is required. Furthermore, there is a need for a synchrony-ration apparatus which is relatively inexpensive in relation to the overall cost of the slitting apparatus, and one which does not have large height and width requirements so that the slitting apparatus may remain a relatively compact unit.

Summary of the Invention The present invention provides an improved adjustable slitting apparatus in which upper and lower arbors may be positioned closer together or farther apart, and in which the rotational synchronization of the arbors is maintained outboard of, prior to an independently of the center-to center mob Jo 1226~

spacing of the arbors and without the necessity of maintaining multiple sets of synchronization gears of differing diameters. The slitting machine of the present invention includes a synchronization appear-anus which is relatively inexpensive in relation to the cost of the entire slitting machine and which is relatively easy to fabricate and, once installed, to maintain!
The present invention comprises slitting apparatus having upper and lower arbors, a plurality of upper and lower matins rotary cutting members or knives mounted on the arbors, a movable housing rotatable supporting first ends of the upper and lower arbors, a fixed housing rotatable supporting opposite ends of the upper and lower arbors, and mechanism for adjusting the position of at least one of the arbors relative to the other, in which the improvement includes a pinion stand mounted outboard of and adjacent one of the housings, upper and lower inter meshing synchronizing gears rotatable mounted in the pinion stand, and upper and lower torque-transmitting, zero backlash, constant angular veillike-fly couplings which extend between and operatively join the upper and lower synchronizing gears to the upper end lower arbors, respectively, while permit-tying adjustment ox the arbors relative to each other to accommodate scroll knives or cutters of different diameters, but which only one set of synchronizing gears for all sets of knives.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, one of the synchronizing gears includes an axle having an end adapted to be driven by a motor and an opposite end joined to one of the torque-transmitting couplings. Since the axle is limited to rotational movement, it may be directly coupled to a gear reducer which preferably is driven by an electric motor.

lZZ6~312 It is also preferred to utilize svnchroni-ration gears which are adjustable split gears in which the effective circular thickness of the gear teeth may be varied to reduce backlash and play between the inter meshing teeth of the synchronization gears for rotation in either direction. However, since the synchronization gears are mounted within a fixed pinion stand located outboard of the housings and are not moved relative to each other, the gears may be manufactured to relatively closely tolerances and thus not have a sufficient amount of backlash to present a problem in synchronizing the rotation of the arbors and the rotary gutting members carried by them. If split gears are used, adjustment would be required on an inEreqllent basis since the gears are not moved relative to each other.
Although any type ox torque-transmittins coupling may be utilized which meets the requisite strength and displacement requirements, a preferred coupling is the type shown in patent Jo. 3,2~2,694.
These couplings are desirable in that there is a minimum of play or backlash in the ~ouplinc3, and there is no change in performance of the coupling at differing input and output shaft displacements.
Furthermore, the couplings are h~sira~le in that they provide an output havirlcl an angular loyalist which is equal to the angular velocity of tile input.
Thus, the synchronization ox rotational velocities achieved by the synchronizing gears is maintained in on the transmission from the synchronizing clears to the upper and lower arbors.
accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide scroll slitting apparatus which includes synchronization gears mounted outboard of the arbor housings so that the arbors may be adjusted relative to each other without the necessity of 1226~312 substituting synchronization gears; to provide scroll slitting apparatus having synchronization gears located outboard of the arbor housings which transmit rotary motion to the arbors with a minimum of slippage and backlash to provide accurate synch-ionization of the scroll knives; and to provide scroll slitting apparatus having synchronization gears mounted outboard of the arbor housings in a pinion stand which is relatively inexpensive to manufacture and relatively easy to maintain.
Other objects and advantages of the invent lion will be apparent from the following description the accompanying drawings and the appended claims.

Brief Description of the Drawings Fig. 1 is a side elevation of the preferred embodiment of the adjustable slitting apparatus of the present invention;
Fig. 2 is a plan view of the slitting apparatus of Fig. 1 taken at line 2-2 of Fig. l;
Fig. 3 is a detail of the slitting apparatus of Fig. 1 showing the pinion stand and synchronizing gears in section;
Fig. 4 i_ a detail of the slitting apparatus of Fig 1 showing the arbors rotated away prom each other; and Fig. 5 is an end view of the f it Ed housillg of the slitting apparatus taken at line S-5 of Fig.

Description of the Preferred Embodiment As shown in Figs. 1 and 2, the adjustable slitting apparatus of the present invention includes a scroll slitter, generally designated 10, a synch-ionizing mechanism 12, and a base 14 for supporting the synchronizing mechanism and scroll slitter. The 1~:26-~312 scroll slitter 10 includes a movable housing 16 which is slid ably position able along the base 14, a fixed housing 18 which is rigidly mounted to the base, and upper and lower arbors 20,22, respectively.
The upper arbor 20 is rotatable mounted within upper journal bearings 24,26 mounted within the movable and fixed housings 16,18, respectively.
' Similarly, the lower arbor 22 is rotatable mounted within lower journal bearings 28,30 rotatable mounted within the movable and fixed housings 16,18. The upper journal bearings 24,26 include upper pinions 32,34, all the lower journal bearings 28,30 include lower pinions 36,38 which intermesh with upper pinions 32,34, respectively.
Drive pinions 40,42 are mounted on a shaft 44 which extends the length of the scroll slitter 10 and is rotatable supported in the movable and fixed housings 16,18. The drive pinions 40,42 mesh with the lower pinions 36,38, respectively. The shaft 44 is operatively connected to a hand-operated crank 46 by a gearing mechanism 48 of conventional design.
The upper and lower arbors 20,22 are each eccentrically mounted within their respective journal bearings 24,26,28,30. This is best shown in Fig. 5 in which the upper and lower arbors 20,22 are shown positioned to the right of the centers of the upper and lower journal bearings 26, on. '['he location and positioning of the upper and lower arbors 20,22 within the upper and lower journal bearings 24,28, mounted within the movable housing 16, not silowrl in 'Fig. 5, would be identical in position.
Rotation of the shaft 44 by turning the crank 46 causes the drive pinions 40,42 to rotate the lower pinions 36,38 which in turn rotate upper pinions 32,34 in an opposite direction. Thus, the centers of the upper and lower arbors 20,22, design noted by points AHAB, respectively, will always lie lX261312 upon a common vertical line, represented by line C in Fig.
5. Rotation of the pinions 32, 34, 36, 38 thus causes the upper and lower arbors 20, 22 to be moved toward or away from each other.

As shown in Fig. 1, the upper arbor 20 includes a plurality of upper rotary cutting members 50, and the lower arbor 22 includes a plurality of lower rotary cutting members 52 which intermesh with the upper cutting members.
The upper and lower cutting members 50, 52 include curvilinear cutting edges 51, 53, which intermesh during the scroll slitting operation.

Scroll slitting is known from prior art patents, as noted above. The improvement here consists of the manner in which synchronization is maintained between sets of cutters or knives of different diameters. The synchronization mechanism 12, as best seen in Figs. 1-4, includes a pinion stand 54 which supports an upper synchronizing gear 56 and a lower synchronizing gear 58. The upper synchronizing gear 56 is rotatable mounted within upper bearings 60, 62 and the lower synchronizing gear 58 is mounted within bearings 64, 66. The synchronizing gear 56 is preferably a split or adjustable gear which can be adjusted after mounting within bearings 60, 62 in order to eliminate any play or backlash in the meshing with the lower synchronizing gear 58.

The upper synchronizing gear 56 is mounted to an axle 67 which includes a s-tub 68 that extend outwardly from the pinion stand 54 -toward the fixed housing 18 and is mounted to an end 70 of upper, torque transmitting coupling 72. An opposite end 74 of the upper torque-transmitting coupling 72 is mounted to a stub 76 which extends outwardly from the end of the upper arbor 20.

mob/; r Lyle I

Similarly, the lower synchronizing gear 58 is mounted to an axle 78 which includes a stub 80 that extends outwardly from the pinion stand 54 and is mounted to an end 82 of a lower coupling 84.
slower coupling 84 includes an opposite end 86 which is attached to a stub 88 extending outwardly from the lower arbor 22. Upper and lower couplings 72,84 may be by any conventional type but a preferred coupling is type NSS~ coupling manufactured by l0Schmidt Couplings, Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio. Such couplings permit a substantial displacement of input and output shafts without variance in angular veillike-fly and with substantially zero backlash.
The axle 78 supporting the lower synchrony 15ization gear 58 includes an end 90 opposite stub 80 which is adapted to mount a coupling 92 of convent tonal design which is joined to the drive shaft 34 of a gear reducer 96 driven by an electric motor 98 (shown in Figs. l and 2).
assay shown in Fig. 4, displacement of the upper and lower arbors 20,22 as a result of rotation of the upper and lower pinions 34,38 ho drive pinion 42 causes the stubs 76,88 projecting from the upper and lower arbors to be displaced apart from each other. The ends 7~1,86 of the upper and lower coup plinks 72,84 ore displace along with the stubs.
Thus, the upper and lower couplings 72,84 permit rotary motion to be transmitted from the synchrony-ration gears within the pinion stand I to the upper and lower arbors 20,22 even though the axis of rotation of the stub I projecting from the upper synchronizing gear is not colinear with the stub 76 projecting from the upper arbor 20, and the end stub 80 projecting from the lower synchronizing gear is not colinear with the end stub 88 projecting from the lower arbor 22. In this fashion, rotary power 1226l31~

may be transmitted from the motor 98 (Figs. 1 and 2) through the synchronizing mechanism 12 and to the upper and lower arbors 20,22, regardless ox their relative positions within the movable and fixed housings 16,18 and without the necessity of subset-tuning different sized synchronizing gears.
The operation of the adjustable slitting apparatus of the present invention is as follows.
Prior to the slitting operation, the upper and lower arbors 0,22 are adjusted relative to each other to provide the proper degree of clearance between the upper and lower mating rotary cutting members 50,52.
This spacing is a function of the thickness of the metallic web (not shown) which is to be slit by the apparatus. The motor 98 is activate which drives the gear reducer 96, which in turn rotates the output shaft 94 an the lower synchronizing gear 58. Rotation of the lower synchronizing gear 58 rotates the Tneshing upper synchronizing gear 56 and the lower coupling 84. Rotation of the upper synch-ionizing gear 56 rotates the lopper coupling 72, and the upper and lower couplings together rotate the upper and lower arbors 20,22. Since the upper and lower synchronizing gears 56,58 provide proper I rotational speeds for the upper and lower rotary cutting members 50,52, the cutting melnbers engacle each other in proper synchronization regardless of the relative position of the upper and lower arbors 20,22.
While the form of apparatus herein described constitutes a preferred embodiment of this invention, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to this precise form of apparatus and that changes may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention.
What is claimed is:

Claims (7)

1. A scroll slitting apparatus comprising, a pair of spaced, parallel arbors, a plurality of mating rotary cutting members having sinuous cutting edges mounted on said arbors, means for rotatably supporting said arbors, means for simultaneously moving both of said arbors to vary the spacing of said arbors relative to a fixed cutting plane, a pair of intermeshing synchronizing gears rotatably mounted outboard of and adjacent said arbor supporting means; and a pair of substantially constant angular velocity, zero backlash coupling means, each one of said pair of coupling means extending between and operatively coupling one of said pair of synchronizing gears to one of said arbors respectively for transmitting torque from said synchronizing gears to one of said arbors while permitting relative displacement of said arbors with respect to each other.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein one of said synchronizing gears includes an axle having an end adapted to be driven by a motor and an opposite end joined to one of said coupling means.
3. The apparatus of claim 2 wherein said synchronize in gears include means for reducing backlash in said gears.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said means for rotatable supporting ends of said arbors comprise a fixed housing and a movable housing movable with respect to said fixed housing.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said arbors comprise upper and lower arbors, ends on said arbors, and said ends of said arbors being supported for eccentric translational movement with respect to their axes for varying the spacing thereof.
6. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said synchronize in gears comprise upper and lower gears, and said lower gear is driven to thereby rotate said upper gear and said arbors.
7. Slitting apparatus comprising spaced, parallel, upper and lower arbors, a plurality of sets of scroll-type rotary knives having sinuous cutting edges carried by said arbors with opposing edges of said sets synchronized with respect to each other for producing a scroll slitting pattern in sheet metal passed between said sets of knives, a movable housing for rotatably mounting one end of each of said upper and lower arbors, a fixed housing for rotat-ably mounting opposite ends of said upper and lower arbors, means within each of said housings for effecting movement of at least one of said arbors to vary the spacing between said upper and lower arbors, intermeshing upper and lower synchronizing gears rotatably mounted outboard of said fixed housing, one of said upper and lower synchroniz-ing gears comprising a split gear having two relatively adjustable sections for enabling all backlash between said upper and lower synchronizing gears to be eliminated, drive means connected to one of said synchronizing gears for rotation thereof, and substantially constant angular velocity, zero backlash torque-transmitting coupling interconnecting said upper and lower gears and said upper and lower arbors, respectively, while permitting relative movement of said arbors transversely of the axes thereof without substantial change in the angular velocity of said gears with respect to said arbors, thereby to permit said arbors to be spaced from each other at different distances to accommodate rotary knives of different diameters and produce scroll patterns of different amplitudes without the necessity of changing said synchronizing gears.
CA000462364A 1984-09-04 1984-09-04 Slitting apparatus Expired CA1226812A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000462364A CA1226812A (en) 1984-09-04 1984-09-04 Slitting apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000462364A CA1226812A (en) 1984-09-04 1984-09-04 Slitting apparatus

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1226812A true CA1226812A (en) 1987-09-15

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA000462364A Expired CA1226812A (en) 1984-09-04 1984-09-04 Slitting apparatus

Country Status (1)

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CA (1) CA1226812A (en)

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