EP0120651A1 - Stretching sheet material - Google Patents

Stretching sheet material Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0120651A1
EP0120651A1 EP84301744A EP84301744A EP0120651A1 EP 0120651 A1 EP0120651 A1 EP 0120651A1 EP 84301744 A EP84301744 A EP 84301744A EP 84301744 A EP84301744 A EP 84301744A EP 0120651 A1 EP0120651 A1 EP 0120651A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
frame
screen
area
stretched
plane
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.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP84301744A
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Inventor
Alfred Charles Louis Baker
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.)
Utec BV
Original Assignee
Utec BV
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
Priority claimed from GB838306999A external-priority patent/GB8306999D0/en
Priority claimed from GB838307329A external-priority patent/GB8307329D0/en
Priority claimed from GB838308192A external-priority patent/GB8308192D0/en
Priority claimed from GB838325300A external-priority patent/GB8325300D0/en
Priority claimed from GB848400851A external-priority patent/GB8400851D0/en
Application filed by Utec BV filed Critical Utec BV
Publication of EP0120651A1 publication Critical patent/EP0120651A1/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41FPRINTING MACHINES OR PRESSES
    • B41F15/00Screen printers
    • B41F15/14Details
    • B41F15/34Screens, Frames; Holders therefor
    • B41F15/36Screens, Frames; Holders therefor flat

Definitions

  • This invention relates to apparatus for use in stretching sheet materials and it has particular, though not exclusive, application in stretching fabric or woven screens, sometimes known as silk screens, for use in printing. It will be appreciated that such screens may be fabricated or woven from a variety of materials, including stainless steel and plastics materials.
  • the preferred embodiment of the invention to be described enables a screen to be stretched exceptionally uniformly and to be maintained in the stretched condition in a comparatively simple way. Furthermore, with this embodiment, it is possible to position a screen and a stencil relative to one another comparatively easily, the positioning step being carried out at one location, and the screen with the stencil thereon being transferred to and arranged at a second location at which the printing step is carried out.
  • a rectangular main frame 1 having longitudinally extending side members 2 and 3 and side members 4 and 5 defining the width of the frame.
  • the members 2 and 3 are longer than the members 4 and 5 and at each of their ends there is an adjustable leg 6 having a foot 7.
  • the legs 6 are arranged to space the assembly from a bed or platform on which it is placed by a given predetermined amount.
  • the outer edges of the side members 2, 3, 4 and 5 have flange portions extending therefrom as best seen in Figs. 5-7 where flanges 8 and 9 extend from members 2 and 5 respectively.
  • the widths of the lower faces 11 and 12 of the side members 2 and 3 are of both the same dimensions.
  • the widths of the lower faces 13 and 14 of the side members 4 and 5 are both of the same dimensions.
  • the widths of the faces 11 and 12 are greater than the widths of the faces 13 and 14, for reasons which will be explained below.
  • Clamping members 15-18 having a U-shaped cross section are held in position on the flange portions extending from the side members 2, 3, 4 and 5, by means of butterfly headed screws 19 and knurled headed screws -20. There is no significance in the use of the different types of screws 19 and 20.
  • the particular embodiment shown is a prototype which employs and illustrates the basic features of the invention. There are a number of different features of design that would be incorporated in a final embodiment.
  • a mesh screen 22 is shown in Fig. 1 extending over the main frame 1 and around the flanges projecting from the outer edges of the sides 2-5, as may best be seen from Figs. 5-7.
  • the screen 22 is held in position by the clamping members 15-18 which are clamped on to the flange portions, e.g. 8 and 9, extending from the outer edges of the side membexs2-5 by the screws 19 and 20.
  • the screen 22 is held substantially in a plane against the faces 11-14 (Fig.2),as indicated by the solid lines in Figs. 3 and 4.
  • the major portion of the screen 22 is next displaced from the plane indicated by the solid lines in Figs. 3 and 4 to a second plane indicated by chain dotted lines in Figs. 3 and 4, by means of a stretching frame 23.
  • the length of the stretching frame 23 is defined by longitudinally-extending side members 24 and 25 and its width is defined by side members 26 and 27.
  • the side members 24-27 have downwardly extending portions 28-31 whose outer faces fit snugly against the inner faces of the side members 2-5 of the main frame 1, and flange portions 32-35 which overlap the upper faces of the side members 2-5.
  • Countersunk headed screws 36 pass through holes 37-40 in the flange portions 32 and 33 and engage threaded holes 41-44 in the sides 2 and 3 of the main frame 1.
  • the lower outer corner edges of the downwardly-extending portions 28 and 29 are bevelled to a greater degree towards their ends, as indicated at 46 and 47 on portion 29 and in Figs. I and 3, than they are at their centres.
  • the lower outer corner edges of the downwardly extending portions 30 and 31 are bevelled uniformly along their length, as indicated at 48 in Figs. 1 and 3.
  • the screen 22 is first attached to the frame 3 by locating it around the flange, for example flange 8, projecting from one of the longitudinally extending members and clamping it in position by means of theU-shaped member 15 and the screws 19.
  • the screen is then stretched by hand, as uniformly as possible, and located around the flange extending from the other longitudinally extending member 3, where it is clamped in position by the member 16 and the screws 19.
  • a similar operation is then carried out to stretch the screen 22 along its length from the position in which it is located around the flange portion 9 on member 5 and held in position by the clamping member 18 and the screws 20 to the position in which it is located by the clamping member 17 around the corresponding flange extending from the member 4.
  • the screen 22 is held'in a plane against the faces 11-14,as shown by the solid line in Fig. 3. -
  • the stretching frame 23 is then lowered into position so that the lower edges of the downwardly extending portions 26-29 of the members 24-27 rest on the screen 22.
  • the frame 23 is then drawn down in an even manner to press upon the screen 22 by screwing the screws 36 into the holes 41-44 in the sides 2 and 3 of the main frame 1.
  • the stretching frame 23 is drawn down into the main frame 1 until the flange portions 32-35 rest on the side members 2-5 and the major portion of the screen 22 is displaced to the plane indicated by the chain dotted lines in Fig. 3.
  • a stencil (not shown) to be used in the printing process is placed on the base 22a upon which the feet 7 rest and the frame assembly 1, 23 can easily be positioned accurately with respect to the stencil so that the screen 22 is a little above the stencil.
  • the screen 22 may be pressed down on to the stencil.
  • the screen will pick-up the stencil and the assembly complete with the stencil can be moved to a further location at which the printing step may be carried out.
  • the distance between the screen 22 and the material to be printed may be suitably adjusted, for example by adjusting the lengths of the legs 6.
  • the dimensions of the main frame 1 and the stretching frame 23 are carefully determined. It will be noted that the screen 22 is rectangular in shape and, unless a different degree of stretching is applied to the width of the screen from that applied to its length, the stretching of the screen is not uniform. In some printing applications, the lack of such evenness of stretching may not be of great importance, however in others it is of great importance in order to enable accurate registration to be obtained.
  • the downwardly extending portions 28-31 of the members 24-27 are of equal depth and that they displace the screen 22 from the first to the second parallel planes, as indicated by the-solid and chain-dotted lines 22 in Fig. 3 in a uniform manner.
  • the difference between the amount by which the screen 22 is stretched across its width and that by which it is stretched along its length is determined by the difference in the widths of the side members 2 and 3 and the side members 4 and 5 of the main frame 1. This difference is clearly visible in Fig. 2. This difference may also be appreciated by comparing Figs. 5 and 7 and noting the difference between the widths of the faces 11 and 14. Considering Figs. 5 and 7, a portion of the screen 22 forms in each case the hypoteneuse of a right angled triangle, and, in Fig. 7, the face 14. The other side of the triangle is in each case provided by the respective downwardly extending members 29 and 31.
  • the length of the side of the triangle provided by the respective members 29 and 31 is in each case the same since the lower edges of the members 29 and 31 of the stretching frame 27 have been moved downwardly from the level of the faces 11 and 1 q defining the first planar position of the screen 22 to the position shown, by the same amount.
  • the width of the screen 22 initially included the portions which were against the face 11 and the corresponding face 12 on the member 3.
  • the insertion of the stretching frame 23 has caused the portions which were against the faces 11 and 12 to be moved so that they form the hypoteneuse of the above-mentioned triangle and the portion between the sides of the frame 23 to be displaced directly downwards.
  • the width of the screen 22 has been stretched by twice the difference between the width of the face 11 and the length of the above-mentioned hypoteneuse of the triangle shown in Fig. 5. Similar considerations apply to the length of the screen 22.
  • the length of the screen 22 may be considered to have been stretched by twice the difference between the width of the face 14 and the length of the hypoteneuse of the above mentioned triangle shown in Fig. 7.
  • the method of clamping of the screen by means of the members 15-18 and the screws 19 and 20 may be replaced in a production model by the use of bars having a surface that grips the screen material and that are held in position by toggle-action clamps.
  • one of the side members for example member 2, to be of the same depth as the downwardly extending portions 29 of the stretching frame 23 so that the action of stretching occurs as a result of the displacement of the screen from its position against the lower face 12 of the side member 3 only.
  • each of the clamping members 15-18 there may be provided a strip of resilient material having ridges and grooves along the length of its surface that mate with grooves and ridges in a similar strip of material on the underside of the flange portions, e.g. 8 and 9 extending from the outer edges of the side members 2-5.
  • a strip of resilient material having ridges and grooves along the length of its surface that mate with grooves and ridges in a similar strip of material on the underside of the flange portions, e.g. 8 and 9 extending from the outer edges of the side members 2-5.
  • a strip of resilient material having on its surface upwardly-directed serrations or teeth that grip the screen material and draw the screen tighter across the frame as the screws 19 and 20 are tightened and the clamping members 15-18 are moved upwards relative to the side members 2-5.
  • the stretching frame 23 is introduced into the main frame 1 and the screws 36 are tightened to bring the stretching frame down into the main frame 1 until the screen 22 is displaced into the second plane indicated by the chain-dotted lines in Figs. 3 and 4.
  • the frame 23 and the screen 22 are on the bed or base 22a upon which the feet 7 rest.
  • the bed or base 22a is flat, it is possible by this means easily to bring the stretching frame 23 and the screen 22 down on to the bed or base 22a,and to arrange that the screen is in even contact with the bed or base and therefore also flat.
  • each of the legs 6 is then extended by an equal amount.
  • the legs 6 are replaced by longer legs which, in effect, are gauges or spacers.
  • These longer legs 6 space the stretched flat screen 22,in the plane indicated by the chain dotted lines in Figs. 3 and 4, from the base on which the feet 7 rest by a predetermined amount.
  • the predetermined amount is sufficient to enable a stencil film or coating to be arranged beneath, and in a given position relative to, the screen 22. Pressure on top of the screen 22, for example by a roller, results in the screen 22 being brought down on to the stencil which is picked-up by the screen in a well-known way.
  • the screen 22 is moved down evenly on to the stencil by means of further downwards movement of the stretching frame 23, brought about by further tightening of the screws 36, in order to assist in picking-up the stencil and then to release the screws 36 sufficiently to bring the screen 22 back up into or towards the plane indicated by the chain-dotted lines in Figs. 3 and 4.
  • the longer legs 6 employed in this third stage are such that the distance between the screen and the base which is beneath the screen during printing is not sufficient to allow the screen to he stretched beyond a predetermined limit during printing.
  • the step of releasing the screws 36 after the stencil has been picked-up has the effect of releasing the tension in the screen 22 slightly and thus the screen shrinks slightly and grips the stencil better in its interstices.
  • adjustable, hinged or replaceable legs 6 may be used to achieve the required spacings.
  • fixed studs of different predetermined lengths may be arranged upon the frame in such a way that, in any one stage of the process, only one set of the studs is operative. It is, of course, possible to arrange for the spacers or studs to be on the base or bed on which the frame 1 rests and not upon the frame itself, or for separate and different spacer members of predetermined depth to be brought into position from an adjacent position at the appropriate stages in the process.
  • FIG. 8 there is shown one side 55 of a male tensioning frame with one box section side 56 of a previously manufactured separate frame-arranged between the side 55 of the tensioning frame and a woven screen 57.
  • a side 58 of the main (female) frame of the assembly incorporates a spacer portion 59 and a flange 60 having a longitudinally serrated lower surface 61.
  • the spacer portion 59 locates the side 56 of the separate frame and similar spacer members, each aranged on another side of the separate frame, maintain the differential stretching relationship previously described.
  • a tensioning screw 62 is shown coupling the side 55 of the tensioning frame to the spacer portion 59.
  • the serrated lower surface 61 of the flange 60 extends along the length of the flange by an amount corresponding at least to the length of the separate frame 56.
  • Cooperating with the serrated surface 61 is a similarly serrated surface 63 of a member 64 forming with the flange member 60 a pair of jaws.
  • the jaw members 60 and 64 are held together by a channel section-member 65 which slides over them.
  • the screen material 57 is arranged to extend between the jaw members 60 and 64 and it passes around one of the members.
  • the material 57 is shown at 66 passing around the member 64 to extend at 67.
  • the material 57 is first pulled as evenly as possible.manually and then the jaws 60 and 64 are brought together and held in an interlocked position by the channel member 65.
  • the jaw members grip the material 57 firmly between the serrated portions and provide an additional tensioning.
  • the channel member 65 holds the jaw members together and grips the material 57 firmly. Further tensioning is carried out by means of the screws 62 as described previously.
  • the lower jaw 64 may be hinged to the upper jaw 60 on one side only, making sure that the serrations fully engage when the hinge is closed.
  • the upper jaws may be attached loosely to their respective lower jaws so that the cloth or fabric may freely slide between them and so that any one side can be clamped independently of any or all of the other three.
  • the cloth is gently pulled to remove excess folds, wrinkles or creases and the jaws 60 and 64 are pressed together.
  • the channel section 65 is then slipped or pushed over the two closed jaws to lock them.
  • the spacer portions 59 need not extend along the whole length of a side, they may be placed at points where it is necessary to transfer the strain to the manufactured frame.
  • the frame may be other than rectangular in shape and the ridges and grooves on the members 15-18 and on the jaw member 60 and 64 may be rounded at the peaks and in the troughs.
  • cloth, fabric and screen are interchangeable in the context of this specification and that they may be made from any suitable material, including filament materials of plastics and metal, or that they may be sheet material which may be perforated or not.
  • material may be stretched in shapes other than rectangular, for example a frame may be shaped such that material is stretched over a circular or an oval area.
  • differences in tensioning may be obtained by varying the depths of the downwardly-extending side portions 28, 29 and 30,31 of the frame 23 along their lengths and/or of varying the spacings between the corresponding side portions 28,29 and 30,31 of the frame 23 and the outer edges of the corresponding side members 2, 3 and 4,5 of the frame 1 along their lengths.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Screen Printers (AREA)

Abstract

Apparatus for use in stretching sheet material (22) which is supported substantially in a plane includes a frame (23) arranged to move at least a part of the material with a first area out of the plane and to stretch the material within the first area in one dimension by an amount which is different from that in which it is stretched in another dimension.

Description

  • This invention relates to apparatus for use in stretching sheet materials and it has particular, though not exclusive, application in stretching fabric or woven screens, sometimes known as silk screens, for use in printing. It will be appreciated that such screens may be fabricated or woven from a variety of materials, including stainless steel and plastics materials.
  • The preferred embodiment of the invention to be described enables a screen to be stretched exceptionally uniformly and to be maintained in the stretched condition in a comparatively simple way. Furthermore, with this embodiment, it is possible to position a screen and a stencil relative to one another comparatively easily, the positioning step being carried out at one location, and the screen with the stencil thereon being transferred to and arranged at a second location at which the printing step is carried out.
  • Arrangements for stretching silk screens have previously been described. For example, in U.K. Patent Specification No. 711,269, there is described an arrangement in which a screen is stretched by pushing or pulling the screen at or near to its edges into a channel or groove. However, the arrangements described in that specification do not provide any simple means for ensuring that the screen is stretched along its length by an amount different from that by which it is stretched across its width.
  • In the embodiments of the present invention to be described, means are provided which enable more uniform stretching of a screen to be obtained in a comparatively simple way.
  • An embodiment of the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:-
    • Fig. 1 is a perspective view of the main parts of a frame assembly separated from one another;
    • Fig. 2 is a plan view from beneath of the parts shown in Fig. 1 assembled together;
    • Fig. 3 is a side view of the assembly as shown in Fig. 1;
    • Fig. 4 is an end view of the assembly with the parts assembled;
    • Fig. 5 is a section on the line A-A of Fig. 2 in the direction of the associated arrows;
    • Fig. 6 is a section on the line B-B of Fig. 2 in the direction of the associated arrows;
    • Fig. 7 is a section on the line C-C of Fig. 2 in the direction of the associated arrows; and
    • Fig. 8 is a section through a part of another arrangement.
  • Referring now to the drawings, there is shown a rectangular main frame 1 having longitudinally extending side members 2 and 3 and side members 4 and 5 defining the width of the frame. The members 2 and 3 are longer than the members 4 and 5 and at each of their ends there is an adjustable leg 6 having a foot 7. The legs 6 are arranged to space the assembly from a bed or platform on which it is placed by a given predetermined amount.
  • The outer edges of the side members 2, 3, 4 and 5 have flange portions extending therefrom as best seen in Figs. 5-7 where flanges 8 and 9 extend from members 2 and 5 respectively. The widths of the lower faces 11 and 12 of the side members 2 and 3 are of both the same dimensions. The widths of the lower faces 13 and 14 of the side members 4 and 5 are both of the same dimensions. The widths of the faces 11 and 12 are greater than the widths of the faces 13 and 14, for reasons which will be explained below.
  • Clamping members 15-18 having a U-shaped cross section are held in position on the flange portions extending from the side members 2, 3, 4 and 5, by means of butterfly headed screws 19 and knurled headed screws -20. There is no significance in the use of the different types of screws 19 and 20. The particular embodiment shown is a prototype which employs and illustrates the basic features of the invention. There are a number of different features of design that would be incorporated in a final embodiment.
  • A mesh screen 22 is shown in Fig. 1 extending over the main frame 1 and around the flanges projecting from the outer edges of the sides 2-5, as may best be seen from Figs. 5-7. The screen 22 is held in position by the clamping members 15-18 which are clamped on to the flange portions, e.g. 8 and 9, extending from the outer edges of the side membexs2-5 by the screws 19 and 20. At -this stage the screen 22 is held substantially in a plane against the faces 11-14 (Fig.2),as indicated by the solid lines in Figs. 3 and 4.
  • The major portion of the screen 22 is next displaced from the plane indicated by the solid lines in Figs. 3 and 4 to a second plane indicated by chain dotted lines in Figs. 3 and 4, by means of a stretching frame 23.
  • The length of the stretching frame 23 is defined by longitudinally-extending side members 24 and 25 and its width is defined by side members 26 and 27. The side members 24-27 have downwardly extending portions 28-31 whose outer faces fit snugly against the inner faces of the side members 2-5 of the main frame 1, and flange portions 32-35 which overlap the upper faces of the side members 2-5. Countersunk headed screws 36 pass through holes 37-40 in the flange portions 32 and 33 and engage threaded holes 41-44 in the sides 2 and 3 of the main frame 1.
  • The lower outer corner edges of the downwardly-extending portions 28 and 29 are bevelled to a greater degree towards their ends, as indicated at 46 and 47 on portion 29 and in Figs. I and 3, than they are at their centres.
  • The lower outer corner edges of the downwardly extending portions 30 and 31 are bevelled uniformly along their length, as indicated at 48 in Figs. 1 and 3.
  • The variation in the bevel on the lower outer corner edges 29 of the portion of the member 25 may be clearly seen in the differences between the cross- sectional views shown in Figs. 5 and 6, where the screen 22 passes around the edges.
  • In use, the screen 22 is first attached to the frame 3 by locating it around the flange, for example flange 8, projecting from one of the longitudinally extending members and clamping it in position by means of theU-shaped member 15 and the screws 19. The screen is then stretched by hand, as uniformly as possible, and located around the flange extending from the other longitudinally extending member 3, where it is clamped in position by the member 16 and the screws 19. A similar operation is then carried out to stretch the screen 22 along its length from the position in which it is located around the flange portion 9 on member 5 and held in position by the clamping member 18 and the screws 20 to the position in which it is located by the clamping member 17 around the corresponding flange extending from the member 4. At this stage the screen 22 is held'in a plane against the faces 11-14,as shown by the solid line in Fig. 3. -
  • The stretching frame 23 is then lowered into position so that the lower edges of the downwardly extending portions 26-29 of the members 24-27 rest on the screen 22. The frame 23 is then drawn down in an even manner to press upon the screen 22 by screwing the screws 36 into the holes 41-44 in the sides 2 and 3 of the main frame 1.
  • By this means the stretching frame 23 is drawn down into the main frame 1 until the flange portions 32-35 rest on the side members 2-5 and the major portion of the screen 22 is displaced to the plane indicated by the chain dotted lines in Fig. 3.
  • It will be noted that the plane defined by the chain-dotted lines 22 is arranged such that a small gap exists between it and a base 22a upon which the feet 7 rest.
  • A stencil (not shown) to be used in the printing process is placed on the base 22a upon which the feet 7 rest and the frame assembly 1, 23 can easily be positioned accurately with respect to the stencil so that the screen 22 is a little above the stencil. When the stencil and screen 22 are in the correct registration, the screen 22 may be pressed down on to the stencil. The screen will pick-up the stencil and the assembly complete with the stencil can be moved to a further location at which the printing step may be carried out. At the further location, the distance between the screen 22 and the material to be printed may be suitably adjusted, for example by adjusting the lengths of the legs 6.
  • In order to provide a more uniformly stretched screen 22, the dimensions of the main frame 1 and the stretching frame 23 are carefully determined. It will be noted that the screen 22 is rectangular in shape and, unless a different degree of stretching is applied to the width of the screen from that applied to its length, the stretching of the screen is not uniform. In some printing applications, the lack of such evenness of stretching may not be of great importance, however in others it is of great importance in order to enable accurate registration to be obtained.
  • In the particular embodiment described, it will be noted that the downwardly extending portions 28-31 of the members 24-27 are of equal depth and that they displace the screen 22 from the first to the second parallel planes, as indicated by the-solid and chain-dotted lines 22 in Fig. 3 in a uniform manner.
  • The difference between the amount by which the screen 22 is stretched across its width and that by which it is stretched along its length is determined by the difference in the widths of the side members 2 and 3 and the side members 4 and 5 of the main frame 1. This difference is clearly visible in Fig. 2. This difference may also be appreciated by comparing Figs. 5 and 7 and noting the difference between the widths of the faces 11 and 14. Considering Figs. 5 and 7, a portion of the screen 22 forms in each case the hypoteneuse of a right angled triangle, and, in Fig. 7, the face 14. The other side of the triangle is in each case provided by the respective downwardly extending members 29 and 31. The length of the side of the triangle provided by the respective members 29 and 31 is in each case the same since the lower edges of the members 29 and 31 of the stretching frame 27 have been moved downwardly from the level of the faces 11 and 1q defining the first planar position of the screen 22 to the position shown, by the same amount. The width of the screen 22 initially included the portions which were against the face 11 and the corresponding face 12 on the member 3. The insertion of the stretching frame 23 has caused the portions which were against the faces 11 and 12 to be moved so that they form the hypoteneuse of the above-mentioned triangle and the portion between the sides of the frame 23 to be displaced directly downwards. It may thus be considered that the width of the screen 22 has been stretched by twice the difference between the width of the face 11 and the length of the above-mentioned hypoteneuse of the triangle shown in Fig. 5. Similar considerations apply to the length of the screen 22. The length of the screen 22 may be considered to have been stretched by twice the difference between the width of the face 14 and the length of the hypoteneuse of the above mentioned triangle shown in Fig. 7.
  • The use of the chamfered portions of the edges shown best at 46 and 47 in Fig. 3 have been found to be helpful in evening-out tensions that might overwise occur in the corner regions of the screen 22. Chamfering or rounding of the edges, as shown at 48 is helpful in reducing stresses on the screen 22.
  • It will be appreciated that the arrangement of the rounding or chamfering may be different from that shown and that variable degrees of chamfering may be given to the lower edges of the downwardly extending portions 30 and 31 of the members 26 and 27 in addition to or instead of that on the portions 28 and 29.
  • The method of clamping of the screen by means of the members 15-18 and the screws 19 and 20 may be replaced in a production model by the use of bars having a surface that grips the screen material and that are held in position by toggle-action clamps.
  • It is also possible for one of the side members for example member 2, to be of the same depth as the downwardly extending portions 29 of the stretching frame 23 so that the action of stretching occurs as a result of the displacement of the screen from its position against the lower face 12 of the side member 3 only.
  • In determining the difference between the amount of stretch given to the screen in one direction compared to the amount of stretch given in the other direction, it may be necessary to take account of differences in tension between the longitudinally-extending strands and the transversely-extending strands of the woven fabric screen material. Thus, even with a square frame it may be necessary to employ a degree of differential stretching in order to even out the tension in the screen material.
  • On the inside lower face of each of the clamping members 15-18, there may be provided a strip of resilient material having ridges and grooves along the length of its surface that mate with grooves and ridges in a similar strip of material on the underside of the flange portions, e.g. 8 and 9 extending from the outer edges of the side members 2-5. In this arrangement, when the screws 19 and 2O are tightened, the action of the clamping members 15-18 is not only to clamp the screen, but also to apply further tension to the screen as the screen material is forced into the mating grooves by the ridges of the strips of resilient material.
  • In yet another embodiment, there is, attached to the inner face of the vertical wall of each of the clamping members 15-18, a strip of resilient material having on its surface upwardly-directed serrations or teeth that grip the screen material and draw the screen tighter across the frame as the screws 19 and 20 are tightened and the clamping members 15-18 are moved upwards relative to the side members 2-5.
  • In one particular application of the embodiment described, it may be considered that three stages of operation are employed in setting-up the apparatus.
  • Firstly, there is the stage during which a screen 22 is stretched evenly and comparatively lightly, with the screen material held between the clamping members 15-18 and the sides 2-4 of the main frame 1.-
  • In the second stage, the stretching frame 23 is introduced into the main frame 1 and the screws 36 are tightened to bring the stretching frame down into the main frame 1 until the screen 22 is displaced into the second plane indicated by the chain-dotted lines in Figs. 3 and 4. In this position the frame 23 and the screen 22 are on the bed or base 22a upon which the feet 7 rest. Assuming that the bed or base 22a is flat, it is possible by this means easily to bring the stretching frame 23 and the screen 22 down on to the bed or base 22a,and to arrange that the screen is in even contact with the bed or base and therefore also flat.
  • In the particular application being described, in a third stage, the length of each of the legs 6 is then extended by an equal amount. In the particular prototype, the legs 6 are replaced by longer legs which, in effect, are gauges or spacers.
  • These longer legs 6 space the stretched flat screen 22,in the plane indicated by the chain dotted lines in Figs. 3 and 4, from the base on which the feet 7 rest by a predetermined amount. The predetermined amount is sufficient to enable a stencil film or coating to be arranged beneath, and in a given position relative to, the screen 22. Pressure on top of the screen 22, for example by a roller, results in the screen 22 being brought down on to the stencil which is picked-up by the screen in a well-known way. It is alternatively possible to arrange that the screen 22 is moved down evenly on to the stencil by means of further downwards movement of the stretching frame 23, brought about by further tightening of the screws 36, in order to assist in picking-up the stencil and then to release the screws 36 sufficiently to bring the screen 22 back up into or towards the plane indicated by the chain-dotted lines in Figs. 3 and 4.
  • The longer legs 6 employed in this third stage are such that the distance between the screen and the base which is beneath the screen during printing is not sufficient to allow the screen to he stretched beyond a predetermined limit during printing.
  • The step of releasing the screws 36 after the stencil has been picked-up has the effect of releasing the tension in the screen 22 slightly and thus the screen shrinks slightly and grips the stencil better in its interstices.
  • It will be appreciated that other means than adjustable, hinged or replaceable legs 6 may be used to achieve the required spacings. For example, fixed studs of different predetermined lengths may be arranged upon the frame in such a way that, in any one stage of the process, only one set of the studs is operative. It is, of course, possible to arrange for the spacers or studs to be on the base or bed on which the frame 1 rests and not upon the frame itself, or for separate and different spacer members of predetermined depth to be brought into position from an adjacent position at the appropriate stages in the process.
  • It will also be understood that, after a screen 22 has been stretched to a required even tension, a separate frame may be placed upon and glued to the screen 22. When the separate frame has become firmly attached to the screen 22, the screen may be cut-away around the separate frame and a separate frame having a screen with a particularly even tension is thereby obtained in a simple manner. In this use of the invention-in the production of separate frames, the actual arrangement shown in the accompanying drawings is not itself used in a printing process.
  • It has been found that by adjusting independently individual ones of the screws 19 and 20 in the embodiment described, extremely accurate control of the tension in local areas of the screen 22 can be obtained.
  • In attaching a separate frame to a screen that has already been stretched, it is necessary to place the separate frame on to the screen or cloth and, in order to ensure a good contact with the screen or cloth suitable for gluing, it may be necessary to press the frame on to the screen while the glue between them sets or cures. This pressing or pushing will change the tensions in the screen or cloth that is in a stretched condition. If however, the separate or manufactured frame is placed between the stretching frame and the surface of the screen or cloth, and provided that the correct dimensions are maintained, the screen can be stressed accurately to the particular separate frame in one operation. After the frame has been glued to the screen, the manufactured or sub-frame can be cut away from the stretching frame assembly by cutting the screen around the separate frame in the way described above.
  • A cross-section through a part of an arrangement employing this method will now be described with reference to Fig. 8 of the accompanying drawings.
  • In Fig. 8 there is shown one side 55 of a male tensioning frame with one box section side 56 of a previously manufactured separate frame-arranged between the side 55 of the tensioning frame and a woven screen 57. A side 58 of the main (female) frame of the assembly incorporates a spacer portion 59 and a flange 60 having a longitudinally serrated lower surface 61. The spacer portion 59 locates the side 56 of the separate frame and similar spacer members, each aranged on another side of the separate frame, maintain the differential stretching relationship previously described. A tensioning screw 62 is shown coupling the side 55 of the tensioning frame to the spacer portion 59. The serrated lower surface 61 of the flange 60 extends along the length of the flange by an amount corresponding at least to the length of the separate frame 56. Cooperating with the serrated surface 61 is a similarly serrated surface 63 of a member 64 forming with the flange member 60 a pair of jaws. The jaw members 60 and 64 are held together by a channel section-member 65 which slides over them.
  • In use the screen material 57 is arranged to extend between the jaw members 60 and 64 and it passes around one of the members. In Fig. 8 the material 57 is shown at 66 passing around the member 64 to extend at 67. The material 57 is first pulled as evenly as possible.manually and then the jaws 60 and 64 are brought together and held in an interlocked position by the channel member 65. The jaw members grip the material 57 firmly between the serrated portions and provide an additional tensioning. The channel member 65 holds the jaw members together and grips the material 57 firmly. Further tensioning is carried out by means of the screws 62 as described previously.
  • The lower jaw 64 may be hinged to the upper jaw 60 on one side only, making sure that the serrations fully engage when the hinge is closed.
  • Alternatively the upper jaws may be attached loosely to their respective lower jaws so that the cloth or fabric may freely slide between them and so that any one side can be clamped independently of any or all of the other three.
  • To clamp any side, the cloth is gently pulled to remove excess folds, wrinkles or creases and the jaws 60 and 64 are pressed together. The channel section 65 is then slipped or pushed over the two closed jaws to lock them.
  • When a screen or cloth is placed between the jaws and they are pressed together, the cloth is drawn into the jaws. If one end of the cloth offers resistance as a result of it having been clamped, the cloth continues to be drawn into the jaws until the frictional forces exerted by the jaws equalise the tensional forces on the cloth. To some extent, the forces required to deflect the cloth will play a part. Should there be a wrinkle, fold or crease in the cloth, no tensional forces will occur until the wrinkle, fold or crease is removed. Further advantages of this particular arrangement are that the cloth or fabric lays flat and is unencumbered by any protuberances. The only protuberances may be hinges on the jaws.
  • The spacer portions 59 need not extend along the whole length of a side, they may be placed at points where it is necessary to transfer the strain to the manufactured frame.
  • It will be appreciated that this development concerns a different approach from the-usual to the stretching of sheet materials and cloths. Woven cloths used in screen printing are usually plain or twill woven and are so made as to give an interlocking action to each thread making it impossible to pull a thread out of the main body of the cloth. Each thread acts upon others in its vicinity. Stresses in other sheet materials act in a similar mamner. The apparatus of the invention can stretch other sheet materials for example paper and sheet metals, and it can be used to prestress reinforcing materials.
  • By increasing the number of tension screws in the arrangement described and by making the female main frame flexible, the tensions in any given part of the screen surface can be varied comparatively easily.
  • It will be appreciated that, although the invention has been described, by way of example, with reference to particular embodiments, variations, modifications and combinations of the arrangements shown may be made.
  • For example, the frame may be other than rectangular in shape and the ridges and grooves on the members 15-18 and on the jaw member 60 and 64 may be rounded at the peaks and in the troughs.
  • It will also be understood that the terms cloth, fabric and screen are interchangeable in the context of this specification and that they may be made from any suitable material, including filament materials of plastics and metal, or that they may be sheet material which may be perforated or not.
  • It will also be appreciated that material may be stretched in shapes other than rectangular, for example a frame may be shaped such that material is stretched over a circular or an oval area.
  • It will also be appreciated that differences in tensioning may be obtained by varying the depths of the downwardly-extending side portions 28, 29 and 30,31 of the frame 23 along their lengths and/or of varying the spacings between the corresponding side portions 28,29 and 30,31 of the frame 23 and the outer edges of the corresponding side members 2, 3 and 4,5 of the frame 1 along their lengths.

Claims (10)

1. Apparatus for use in stretching sheet material, including means to support the material substantially in a plane, means to move at least a part of the material within a first area out of the plane, whereby the material within the first area is stretched, and means to cause the material within the first area to be stretched in one dimension by an amount which is different from that in which it is stretched in another dimension during the movement of the material.
2. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 in which the means to support the material substantially in a plane defines a second area, the first area being within the second area.
3. Apparatus as claimed in claim 2 in which corresponding parts of the boundaries of the first and second areas are parallel to one another.
4. Apparatus as claimed in either claim 2 or claim 3 in which the spacings between the first and second boundaries in one dimension are different from the spacings between the first and second boundaries in the other dimensions.
5. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 in which the means to support the material includes a first frame for supporting the material substantially in the plane, the apparatus further including a second frame defining the boundary of the first area, the first and second frames being relatively movable to extend at least partly one within the other in order to move at least a part of the material out of the plane, wherein the first frame defines the boundary of a second area of the material, and corresponding parts of the first and second frames defining the second and the first areas respectively are displaced from one another in one dimension by an amount which is different from that by which they are displaced from one another in the other dimension during the relative movement of the frames.
6. Apparatus as claimed in claim 5 including adjustable legs extending from the first frame for supporting the first frame upon a base.
7. Apparatus as claimed in either claim 5 or claim 6 in which the edges of the first frame defining the boundary of the first area are bevelled, chamfered or rounded.
8. Apparatus as claimed in any one of the preceding claims in which the means to support the material includes jaw members having serrated interacting surfaces between which the material may be gripped.
9. A method of stretching sheet material including supporting the material upon a first frame substantially in a plane, placing a second frame in contact with the supported-material, the second frame defining a first area of the material, moving the first and second frames relative to one another to move the material within the said area out of the said plane, the dimensions of the first and second frames being such that the material within the first area is stretched in one dimension by an amount which is different from that in which it is stretched in another dimension during the relative movement of the frames.
10. A method as claimed in claim 2 in which the material is attached after stretching to the second frame.
EP84301744A 1983-03-14 1984-03-14 Stretching sheet material Withdrawn EP0120651A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (10)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8306999 1983-03-14
GB838306999A GB8306999D0 (en) 1982-12-14 1983-03-14 Self stretching frame
GB838307329A GB8307329D0 (en) 1983-03-17 1983-03-17 Clamp
GB8307329 1983-03-17
GB8308192 1983-03-24
GB838308192A GB8308192D0 (en) 1982-12-14 1983-03-24 Self stretching frame
GB8325300 1983-09-21
GB838325300A GB8325300D0 (en) 1983-09-21 1983-09-21 Stretching sheet materials
GB8400851 1984-01-13
GB848400851A GB8400851D0 (en) 1984-01-13 1984-01-13 Stretching sheet materials

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0120651A1 true EP0120651A1 (en) 1984-10-03

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ID=27516504

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP19840901204 Withdrawn EP0139684A1 (en) 1983-03-14 1984-03-14 Stretching sheet materials
EP84301744A Withdrawn EP0120651A1 (en) 1983-03-14 1984-03-14 Stretching sheet material

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP19840901204 Withdrawn EP0139684A1 (en) 1983-03-14 1984-03-14 Stretching sheet materials

Country Status (2)

Country Link
EP (2) EP0139684A1 (en)
WO (1) WO1984003662A1 (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2257948A (en) * 1991-07-25 1993-01-27 Peter Welton Watercolour paper stretcher.
WO1996014210A1 (en) * 1994-11-05 1996-05-17 Bebro-Electronic Bengel & Bross Gmbh Stencil holder
US5941171A (en) * 1994-11-05 1999-08-24 Bebro-Electronic Bengel & Bross Gmbh Stencil holder
DE102010024262A1 (en) * 2010-06-18 2011-12-22 Hans und Antonie Priwitzer Ingenieurbüro GBR (vertretungsberechtigte Gesellschafter: Hans Priwitzer, 90596 Schwanstetten; Antonie Priwitzer, 90596 Schwansteten) Printing stencil for application of e.g. solder paste, for fastening of surface mounted device components on printed circuit boards, has clamping elements for clamped fixing of stencil component at stencil frame
FR3017565A1 (en) * 2014-02-20 2015-08-21 Pochet Du Courval ASSEMBLY AND METHOD FOR TURNING ON A SCREEN PRINTING SCREEN AND A CORRESPONDING PRINTING MACHINE

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
ATE60003T1 (en) * 1986-10-29 1991-02-15 Juerg Holderegger DEVICE FOR A SCREEN PRINTING WITH PLANES, FLEXIBLE PRINTING SCREENS.
US5297487A (en) * 1993-02-11 1994-03-29 Simmons David O Ink containment apparatus for screen printing frame assemblies
US11993069B2 (en) * 2019-10-18 2024-05-28 Blueback, Llc Apparatus and process for T-shirt/garment screen printing

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR680227A (en) * 1929-08-12 1930-04-26 Improvement to printing stencil frames
US2013772A (en) * 1933-06-01 1935-09-10 Ulrich Hans Caspar Device for reproducing signs and lettering
DE930863C (en) * 1952-03-20 1955-07-25 Ratazzi & May Tensioning device, especially for film printing fabrics

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR680227A (en) * 1929-08-12 1930-04-26 Improvement to printing stencil frames
US2013772A (en) * 1933-06-01 1935-09-10 Ulrich Hans Caspar Device for reproducing signs and lettering
DE930863C (en) * 1952-03-20 1955-07-25 Ratazzi & May Tensioning device, especially for film printing fabrics

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2257948A (en) * 1991-07-25 1993-01-27 Peter Welton Watercolour paper stretcher.
GB2257948B (en) * 1991-07-25 1994-05-25 Peter Welton Watercolour paper stretcher
WO1996014210A1 (en) * 1994-11-05 1996-05-17 Bebro-Electronic Bengel & Bross Gmbh Stencil holder
US5941171A (en) * 1994-11-05 1999-08-24 Bebro-Electronic Bengel & Bross Gmbh Stencil holder
DE102010024262A1 (en) * 2010-06-18 2011-12-22 Hans und Antonie Priwitzer Ingenieurbüro GBR (vertretungsberechtigte Gesellschafter: Hans Priwitzer, 90596 Schwanstetten; Antonie Priwitzer, 90596 Schwansteten) Printing stencil for application of e.g. solder paste, for fastening of surface mounted device components on printed circuit boards, has clamping elements for clamped fixing of stencil component at stencil frame
DE102010024262B4 (en) * 2010-06-18 2013-05-29 Hans und Antonie Priwitzer Ingenieurbüro GBR (vertretungsberechtigte Gesellschafter: Hans Priwitzer, 90596 Schwanstetten; Antonie Priwitzer, 90596 Schwansteten) Clamp fixing of a printing template
FR3017565A1 (en) * 2014-02-20 2015-08-21 Pochet Du Courval ASSEMBLY AND METHOD FOR TURNING ON A SCREEN PRINTING SCREEN AND A CORRESPONDING PRINTING MACHINE

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0139684A1 (en) 1985-05-08
WO1984003662A1 (en) 1984-09-27

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Inventor name: BAKER, ALFRED CHARLES LOUIS