GB1588506A - Manufacture of filters for cigarettes - Google Patents

Manufacture of filters for cigarettes Download PDF

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Publication number
GB1588506A
GB1588506A GB2758376A GB2758376A GB1588506A GB 1588506 A GB1588506 A GB 1588506A GB 2758376 A GB2758376 A GB 2758376A GB 2758376 A GB2758376 A GB 2758376A GB 1588506 A GB1588506 A GB 1588506A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
tow
pressure
tongue
machine according
stretch
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
GB2758376A
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Mpac Group PLC
Original Assignee
Molins Ltd
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 Molins Ltd filed Critical Molins Ltd
Priority to GB2758376A priority Critical patent/GB1588506A/en
Priority to DE2760354A priority patent/DE2760354C2/de
Priority to DE2728797A priority patent/DE2728797C2/en
Priority to GB861780A priority patent/GB1588508A/en
Priority to GB846680A priority patent/GB1588507A/en
Priority to FR7719920A priority patent/FR2356382A1/en
Priority to BR7704305A priority patent/BR7704305A/en
Priority to IT25222/77A priority patent/IT1114819B/en
Priority to CH811477A priority patent/CH618590A5/fr
Priority to JP7893777A priority patent/JPS536499A/en
Priority to US06/015,906 priority patent/US4248139A/en
Publication of GB1588506A publication Critical patent/GB1588506A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A24TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
    • A24DCIGARS; CIGARETTES; TOBACCO SMOKE FILTERS; MOUTHPIECES FOR CIGARS OR CIGARETTES; MANUFACTURE OF TOBACCO SMOKE FILTERS OR MOUTHPIECES
    • A24D3/00Tobacco smoke filters, e.g. filter-tips, filtering inserts; Filters specially adapted for simulated smoking devices; Mouthpieces for cigars or cigarettes
    • A24D3/02Manufacture of tobacco smoke filters
    • A24D3/0295Process control means
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A24TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
    • A24CMACHINES FOR MAKING CIGARS OR CIGARETTES
    • A24C5/00Making cigarettes; Making tipping materials for, or attaching filters or mouthpieces to, cigars or cigarettes
    • A24C5/32Separating, ordering, counting or examining cigarettes; Regulating the feeding of tobacco according to rod or cigarette condition
    • A24C5/34Examining cigarettes or the rod, e.g. for regulating the feeding of tobacco; Removing defective cigarettes
    • A24C5/3418Examining cigarettes or the rod, e.g. for regulating the feeding of tobacco; Removing defective cigarettes by pneumatic means

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  • Cigarettes, Filters, And Manufacturing Of Filters (AREA)

Description

(54) MANUFACTURE OF FILTERS FOR CIGARETTES (71) We, MOLINS LIMITED, a British Company, of 2 Evelyn Street, Deptford, London SE8 5DH, do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement: One aspect of this invention is concerned with an improvement in the control of cigarette filter manufacture described in U.S.
defensive publication T 941,011. Publication T 941,011 describes a means of sensing the pressure drop through the filter tow (which measurement is used to control the tow feed) by means of a pressure tapping near the up stream end of the tongue which compresses the tow to its final cross-section, i.e.
that of the finished filter rods.
Filter tow commonly comprises crimped fibres of cellulose acetate, but it could in principle be of other materials having similar physical characteristics.
We have discovered that the monitoring of pressure drop is best carried out after the main compression of the tow has occurred, i.e. where the cross-section is not very much greater than the cross-section of the finished rod, and where the positions of the tow fibres are more settled and are less subject to subsequent alteration by air moving through the tow or by drag caused by the tongue. By sensing the pressure drop in this way, for example near the downstream end of the tongue (in contrast with the pressure drop measurement at the upstream end of the tongue as in publication T 941,011), we achieve a better signal which we believe will not only be stronger but also more reliable.
According to one aspect of the present invention a machine for making cigarette filters from filter tow includes means for feeding filter tow towards a rod forming section; means for laterally compressing the filter tow to the cross-section of the finished rod, including a tongue which shapes and compresses the tow to the final cross-section; and means associated with the tongue for sensing the pressure drop through the tow in a region where the tow has nearly reached its final cross-section.
According to another aspect of the invention a machine for making cigarette filters from filter tow includes means for feeding filter tow towards a rod forming section; means for laterally compressing the filter tow to the cross-section of the finished rod, including a tongue which shapes and compresses the tow to the final cross-section; and means for measuring the pressure drop through the tow, comprising two longitudinally spaced pressure tapping means in the downstream part of the tongue, and à comparator arranged to compare the pressures at the two pressure tappings.
The tow feed is preferably controlled by proportionally adjusting the speeds of all rollers feeding the tow, that is by adjusting the speeds upwards or downwards by the same proportion so as not to alter the amount by which the tow is stretched while moving between successive rollers. Alternatively it is possible to arrange the tow feed so that the desired control can be achieved by altering the speed of only one pair of cooperating rollers so as to alter the amount by which the tow is stretched.
In one preferred arrangement before the tow reaches the tongue it is laterally compressed, preferably to approximately its final cross-section, by a suction wheel or other suction conveyor. Upstream of the suction conveyor there is preferably a tow fluffing device arranged to blow air into the tow, preferably through an annular air outlet around the tow; the suction conveyor in this case cooperates with the fluffing device by drawing excess air out of the tow before the tow passes under the tongue.
Unless the tongue is of highly wear-resistant material, the pressure drop sensing device is preferably located slightly upstream of the downstream end portion of the tongue so as to avoid the area of the tongue in which there tends to be the greatest amount of wear.
Other aspects of the invention will be clear from the following description and claims.
Preferred examples of machines according to this invention are shown in the accompanying drawings. In these drawings: Figure 1 is a fragmentary partly sectioned view of one machine; Figures 2A to 2G are sections, on a larger scale, on the lines A to G in Figure 1; Figure 3 is a fragmentary partly sectioned view of a different machine; Figures 4 and 5 are sections, on a larger scale, on the lines IV-IV and V-V in Figure 3.
Figure 6 is a diagrammatic side view of another machine in the region of the tongue; Figure 7 shows how each of two pressure tappings in the tongue may be arranged, and shows diagramatically a control circuit; Figure 8 shows a different way of arrangeing each pressure tapping; and Figure 9 is a block diagram of a control circuit for minimising the consumption of tow.
The machine shown in Figure 1 includes a condensing cone 25 into which cellulose acetate or other tow is fed through the right hand end of the cone. The cone begins the compression of the tow, and this compression is continued by a suction wheel 26 comprising an tair-pervious rim 26a mounted between side walls 26d and 26e (see Figure 2F). It should be noted that the rim 26a is recessed from the outer edge of the walls 26d and 26e so as to form a shallow circumferential groove around the wheel.
Between the side walls 26d and 26e of the wheel there is a fixed member 26c formed with a recess 26b which is connected with a source of suction via a port 26h so that air is drawn inwards through the rim 26a of the wheel, as shown by the approximately radial arrows in Figure 1.
The cone 25 is cut away to allow the suction wheel 26 to enter the cone to grip the tow and to compress it between the wheel and a wrapper web 27. The decreasing cross-section of the passage formed between the wheel and the web 27 is shown by Figures 2C to 2E. Further compression of the tow occurs up to the section line F, at which point the cross-sectional area of the tow is preferably approximately equal to and certainly not much greater than the cross-sectional area of the final rod, e.g. 60 square mm. where the final rod cross-section is about 50 square mm.
At the section line G, the tow parts from the wheel, and its compression and final shaping is continued by a tongue 29. The slight increase in cross-section of the channel between the wheel and web 27 between the section lines F and G facilitates the action of the tongue (which serves in effect also as a stripping shoe) in stripping the tow from the wheel. Furthermore, the fixed member 26c is formed with a second recess 26f which is supplied with air at atmospheric or above-atmospheric pressure so that air flows outwards from the recess 26f and helps to remove the tow from the periphery 26a of the wheel. Substantially all the air flowing out of the recess 26f is drawn into the recess 26b, as shown generally by the arrow 26g.
The cone 25 may be formed with a number of apertures 25a on both sides, as shown in the drawings.
It will be understood that the main compression of the tow is carried out by the wheel 26. Some further compression and shaping of the tow is achieved by the tongue 29, which converges slightly towards the wrapper web 27 and is appropriately shaped in cross-section so as to form the tow into a cylindrical cross-section. The paper is supported throughout by a base member 28 formed with a longitudinal groove of curved cross-section in its upper surface in which the web 27 moves.
The tongue 29 is formed with two apertures providing pressure tappings at longitudinally spaced points 30 and 31 from which pipes 32 and 33 deliver pressure signals to a comparator device 34. An electrical output from the comparator device 34 depends upon the pressure difference at the two pressure tappings and is indicative of the pressure drop through the tow. The output of the comparator may be used to control the rate at which tow is fed into the cone 25 so as to maintain a substantially constant pressure drop.
In order to avoid or minimise air leakage from or into the tow between the tongue and the wrapper web 27, the edges of the wrapper web 27 may be pressed against the sides of the tongue by air pressure supplied through slots or apertures in the adjacent parts of the base member 28. This pressure on the web 27 would in practice be transmitted via a woven tape (not shown) by which the web 27 would be supported in the usual way.
The air-pervious rim portion 26a of the wheel 26 may, for example, be a very fine metal gauze (e.g. with 0.010 inch diameter holes) or a woven tape, e.g. of nylon.
Figure 3 shows an alternative machine which is basically the same as that shown in Figure 1 in regard to the suction wheel 26, wrapper web feed 27, tongue 29, and the pressure drop measuring device including the comparator 34. However, the tow feed upstream of the wheel 26 is different.
In Figure 3 the tow is fed initially through a fluffing unit 40 comprising a conical inner part 41 and a surrounding outer part 42 which defines with the inner part 41 an annular space 43 having an annular outlet 44. Compressed air is applied to the space 43 through inlets 45 and 46 to produce an annular flow of air inwards into the tow through the outlet 44, e.g. at a flow rate of about 6 cubic feet/minute. This flow of air counters the tendency for the crimping of the cellulose acetate fibres to be removed by stretching. In other words, the fluffing unit tends to maintain or restore the crimping of the fibres which is necessary to provide the desired pressure drop through the finished filter rod.
The fluffing unit, 40 has an outlet portion 47 which is joined via a duct 48 and a connecting ring 49 to a duct 50 which feeds the tow towards. the suction wheel 26. The inner part 41 of the fluffing unit is of circular cross-section, as is the outlet 47; and the duct 48, the connecting ring 49 and the duct 50 change progressively from a circular cross-section to an oval cross-section as shown in Figure 4, which is a cross-section on the line IV-IV.
The combination of the fluffing unit 40 with the suction wheel 26 is useful in that it enables more air to be blown into the tow by the fluffing unit than would be possible without the suction wheel 26. This is because the suction wheel draws the air forward (preventing a reverse flow of air which could otherwise occur) and removes most of the air from the tow before the tow enters the region below the tongue 29.
The connecting ring 49 may have apertures 49a to let in more air from the atmosphere if necessary; the ring may be closely surrounded by a flexible sleeve formed with a similar set of holes which can be brought partly or fully into alignment with the holes 49a by rotation of the sleeve to control the air flow. In addition the duct 50 may have a number of air inlet apertures 50 near the wheel 26 along both sides of the duct as shown in the drawings.
The machine shown in Figure 6 includes a tow condensing cone 60. Filter tow (not shown) is fed into the right-hand end of the cone 60 and is laterally compressed during its passage through the cone.
As the tow emerges from the left-hand end of the cone 60 it is confined between a tongue 61 and a wrapper web 62 which is already at that stage curved into a troughlike section, as shown in Figure 2C. The web 62 is carried by a woven garniture tape 63 which supports and drives the web.
The tongue 61 shapes the tow and, in cooperation with the web 62, compresses it to substantially its final circular cross-section.
Near the downstream end of the tongue 61 there are two pressure tapping points comprising apertures 61a and 61b. The pressure in the tongue at these points is fed by pipes 1.62 and 163. to a comparator device 64 which may be as shown in Figure 7. A signal from the comparator device 64 is used to control the tow feed so as to maintain a substantially constant pressure difference between the tapping points 61a and 61b.
Each pressure tapping in Figure 6 and in Figures 1 and 5 may be made as shown in Figure 7, which shows the pressure tapping including aperture 61a which is covered by a housing 65 secured to the tongue and defining a chamber 66. The pipe 162 leads from the chamber 66 to the corpparator 64 as shown. Air at above-atmospheric pressure is supplied into the chamber 66 through a pipe 67. A disc 68 formed with a small aperture 68a serves as an orifice producing a drop in pressure of the air from the pipe 67 as it enters the chamber 66.
The arrangement is such that the pressure in the chamber 66 is slightly greater than the pressure in the tongue, so that air flows through the aperture 61a from the chamber 66 during normal operation. This air flow through the aperture 61a helps to ensure that the aperture 61a does not become blocked. For example, the pressure in the pipe 67 may be approximately 3 psi (pounds per square inch) and the pressure in the chamber 66 may have a mean value of approximately 3-1- inches water gauge; in other words, the orifice 68a drops the pressure by about 96%. In another possible example the pressure in the pipe 67 is about 12 psi and the diameter of the aperture 61A is 1 mm; in order to drop the pressure to a sufficient extent the diameter of the orifice 68a may be about 0.1 mm.
In Figure 7 the chamber 66 is shown, for the purpose of illustration, larger than it is preferably constructed in practice. Figure 8 shows an alternative construction, being a cross-section in a transverse plane immediately downstream of the pipe 162 and looking towards the pipe 162. In this example, the pipe 162 extends all the way to the tongue 61 and in effect serves as a chamber equivalent to the chamber 66 in Figure 7. A pressure supply pipe 81 is connected to the pipe 162, and an orifice 82 equivalent to the orifice 68a in Figure 7 is formed in the wall of the pipe 162 within the pipe 81.
Figure 8 also shows that the wrapper web 62 is at this stage folded over the tongue along one side (the left hand side) by the garniture tape 63. Consequently the aperture 61A is offset to the right from the centre of the tongue.
By way of example, if the total length of the tongue 61 is 9 inches, the pressure tappings 61a and 61b may be respectively at approximately 1 inch and 2 inches from the downstream end of the tongue.
As shown in Figure 7 the comparator device 64 comprises a diaphragm 69 lying between chambers 70 and 71 which com municate respectively with the pipes 162 and 163. Capacitance plates 72 and 73 are mounted on opposite sides of the diaphragm 69 (which is of metal or is metal coated), the arrangement preferably being such that the capacitance between the diaphragm and each of the plates 72 and 73 is the same when the diaphragm is unstressed. When there is a difference of pressure between the chambers 70 and 71, the diaphragm is flexed towards one capacitance plate and away from the other, thus creating a differential capacitance. Electrical leads 74, 75 and 76 are connected respectively to the two capacitance plates and to the diaphragm and lead to an electrical circuit 77.The circuit 77 together with the capacitances formed between the diaphragm and the capacitance plates form a bridge circuit (well known per se) which produces an output indicative of the pressure difference at the tapping points 61 and 61 b. This output is averaged over a pre-determined time period by an integrator circuit 78 and the output from the integrator circuit 78 is fed via an amplifier 79 and controls the speed of a motor 80 by which the tow is fed into the condensing cone 60. As already mentioned, the control of the motor speed is such as to maintain the pressure difference between the tapping points 61ez and 61b substantially constant.
Upstream of the pulley or pulleys driven by the motor 80 there is provision for stretching the tow in a well known manner.
If the pressure differential detected by the comparator 64 ever changes so significantly as to fall outside a predetermined range, the machine may be arranged to eject the filters formed subsequently from the corresponding part of the tow, while at the same time preferably indicating that this has occurred.
A machine according to this invention may be arranged to optimise the use of tow by varying the degree of stretch in the following way. The tow consumption is monitored, for example, by, weighing batches of the finished filters which are produced by the machine; the filters may be conveyed from the machine in trays, and every tray or every Nth tray may be weighed automatically. The weight indications may be used to vary the degree of stretch, while maintaining a constant pressure drop between the tappings 61a and 61b, so as to minimise the weight of tow material used in the filter manufacture.For example, the degree of stretch may be increased automatically in small steps (of for example 270 in response to declining weight signals until the stage is reached at which the weight begins to increase, whereupon the stretch is reduced by the same steps until successive weight signals again indicate a weight increase, whereupon the, amount of stretch again is increased by the same small steps, and so on to minimise the weight of the finished filters (i.e. more particularly the amount of tow used to produce them) while maintaining a substantially constant pressure drop.
As an alternative to tray weighing, the filters may be weighted in batches at regular intervals by a weighing conveyor which conveys the filters from the making machine.
There is preferably an automatic provision whereby the weighing conveyor is temporarily delayed from operating whenever filters are ejected or samples are taken by hand for inspection.
In the case of a weighing conveyor or, for example, a nucleonic scanning device for continuously monitoring the weight of the filter rod (as used commonly in cigarette making machines), the weight signal is averaged over a cycle occurring at predetermined intervals (e.g. about every minute) long enough not to infere with the operation of the pressure drop control. Each such average signal (or each tray weight signal) may be transmitted to a logic circuit simply as a digital indication (either 1 or 0) indicative of whether the weight has increased or decreased compared with the previous cycle.
The logic circuit, using well-known components, could in addition have a memory recording whether the amount of stretch as as result of the previous cycle was increased or decreased. This "stretch order" is repeated for the next cycle if it previously resulted in a weight reduction, and is reversed if it previously resulted in a weight increase.
Figure 9 shows diagrammatically how the tow optimisation may be achieved. Filters are delivered by a machine 85 via an ejector 86. (by which unsatisfactory fillers are ejected) and a weighing device 87. Each monitoring cycle is initiated by a clock 88 which may operate at predetermined time intervals or, on the basis of a machinegenerated clock pulse, at regular intervals in terms of a filter count; in both cases, when the ejector 86 is operated it delays operation of the clock to ensure that each integrated weight signal is based on the same number of filters.
The weight signal for each cycle is fed via an integrator 88 to a weight memory 89 and (as a signal Wn) to a weight comparator circuit 90. This circuit 90 at the same time receives from the weight memory 89 a signal Wn-l representing the integrated weight registered during the previous cycle.
The comparator compares the signal Wn with signal Wn-1 and transmits to a stretch control logic circuit 91 a digital signal indicating whether Wn is greater or less than Wn-1. A stretch memory circuit 92 informs the circuit 91 what stretch adjustment Sn was applied at the beginning of this cycle (i.e. whether the stretch was increased or decreased compared with the previous cycle) and the circuit 91, on the basis of this information and of the signal received from the comparator 90, transmits a stretch adjustment signal Sn+l to alter the stretch by one increment before the commencement of the next cycle.
The amount of stretch is adjusted by a step motor 93. This motor may, for example; control the speed of a tow driving motor to alter the amount of stretch; another possibility may be that the step motor 93 adjusts a valve (not shown) controlling a fluid pressure which in turn controls the pressure with which a tow stretching roller bears against the tow.
If the clock 88 is a filter counter, the count frequency (which represents the speed of the continuous filter rod before it is cut into individual filter rods) may be used to adjust automatically the value of the target pressure drop which is controlled by adjusting the tow feed. This is on the basis that the pressure drop during manufacture of the continuous rod (i.e. the pressure difference between the two pressure tappings) is dependent on rod speed since it results basically from the displacement relative to the tow of air contained in the tow.
The ejector may be arranged to eject a few filter rods at regular fairly long intervals (e.g. once each day) to allow manual measurement of the pressure drop characteristics of the filters with any suitable measuring instrument. On the basis of these measurements adjustment may, when necessary, be made of the target pressure drop signal in the tongue. This would compensate for any error which might gradually creep into the continuous measurement owing to wear of the tongue or of the base member 28 (Figure 2).
The examples described above are concerned with the manufacture of filter rods including a wrapper of paper or other material around the tow. As an alternative this invention may be applied to a machine which makes filter rods having no wrapper, e.g. as described in British Patent Specification No. 1,169,932.
Reference is directed to our copending applications 8008617 (Serial No. 1588508) and 8008466 (Serial No. 1588507) divided from the present application which claim matter described in the present specification.
WHAT WE CLAIM IS:- 1. A machine for making cigarette filters from filter tow, including means for feeding filter tow towards a rod forming section; means for laterally compressing the filter tow to the cross-section of the finished rod, including a tongue which shapes and compresses the tow to the final cross-section; and means associated with the tongue for sensing the pressure drop through the tow in a region where the tow has nearly reached its final cross-section.
2. A machine according to claim 1 including means for altering the tow feed rate by a variable amount dependent upon the pressure drop measurement so as to maintain the pressure drop substantially constant.
3. A machine according to claim 1 or claim 2 in which the means for sensing the pressure drop comprises two longitudinally spaced pressure tappings in the tongue, and a comparator arranged to compare the pressure at the two pressure tappings.
4. A machine according to any preceding claim including a suction conveyor arranged to compress the tow laterally before the tow passes under the tongue.
5. A machine according to claim 4 in which the suction conveyor is a suction wheel arranged to rotate adjacent to a web or tape carrying the tow so as to compress the tow in cooperation with the web or tape.
6. A machine according to claim 4 or claim 5 in which the suction conveyor is arranged to compress the tow approximately to its final cross-sectional area.
7. A machine according to any preceding claim including a fluffing device arranged to blow air into the tow from the side before the tow is laterally compressed.
8. A machine according to claim 7 in which the fluffing device includes an annular air outlet through which air is blown into the tow from all sides.
9. A machine according to any preceding claim in which the pressure drop sensing means comprises a pressure tapping in the tongue, a hollow member defining a pressure space adjacent to the outer surface of the tongue in the region of the pressure tapping, a pipe which is connected to the pressure space and to a supply of air at a pressure substantially higher than the pressure in the tongue, an orifice by which the pressure from the pipe is dropped as it enters the pressure space to a level slightly above the mean pressure within the tongue in the region of the pressure tapping, the space being connected to a pressure measuring device or pressure comparator.
10. A machine according to claim 1, including means for monitoring the pressure drop through the tow and for adjusting the tow feed so as to maintain the pressure drop substantially constant; a weight monitoring device arranged to monitor the rate of consumption of tow; and a tow stretching device arranged to stretch the tow to a variable extent before the tow is laterally compressed; and a stretch control logic circuit arranged to operate at spaced time intervals to increase or decrease the tow stretch by a predetermined step at each
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.

Claims (13)

**WARNING** start of CLMS field may overlap end of DESC **. (i.e. whether the stretch was increased or decreased compared with the previous cycle) and the circuit 91, on the basis of this information and of the signal received from the comparator 90, transmits a stretch adjustment signal Sn+l to alter the stretch by one increment before the commencement of the next cycle. The amount of stretch is adjusted by a step motor 93. This motor may, for example; control the speed of a tow driving motor to alter the amount of stretch; another possibility may be that the step motor 93 adjusts a valve (not shown) controlling a fluid pressure which in turn controls the pressure with which a tow stretching roller bears against the tow. If the clock 88 is a filter counter, the count frequency (which represents the speed of the continuous filter rod before it is cut into individual filter rods) may be used to adjust automatically the value of the target pressure drop which is controlled by adjusting the tow feed. This is on the basis that the pressure drop during manufacture of the continuous rod (i.e. the pressure difference between the two pressure tappings) is dependent on rod speed since it results basically from the displacement relative to the tow of air contained in the tow. The ejector may be arranged to eject a few filter rods at regular fairly long intervals (e.g. once each day) to allow manual measurement of the pressure drop characteristics of the filters with any suitable measuring instrument. On the basis of these measurements adjustment may, when necessary, be made of the target pressure drop signal in the tongue. This would compensate for any error which might gradually creep into the continuous measurement owing to wear of the tongue or of the base member 28 (Figure 2). The examples described above are concerned with the manufacture of filter rods including a wrapper of paper or other material around the tow. As an alternative this invention may be applied to a machine which makes filter rods having no wrapper, e.g. as described in British Patent Specification No. 1,169,932. Reference is directed to our copending applications 8008617 (Serial No. 1588508) and 8008466 (Serial No. 1588507) divided from the present application which claim matter described in the present specification. WHAT WE CLAIM IS:-
1. A machine for making cigarette filters from filter tow, including means for feeding filter tow towards a rod forming section; means for laterally compressing the filter tow to the cross-section of the finished rod, including a tongue which shapes and compresses the tow to the final cross-section; and means associated with the tongue for sensing the pressure drop through the tow in a region where the tow has nearly reached its final cross-section.
2. A machine according to claim 1 including means for altering the tow feed rate by a variable amount dependent upon the pressure drop measurement so as to maintain the pressure drop substantially constant.
3. A machine according to claim 1 or claim 2 in which the means for sensing the pressure drop comprises two longitudinally spaced pressure tappings in the tongue, and a comparator arranged to compare the pressure at the two pressure tappings.
4. A machine according to any preceding claim including a suction conveyor arranged to compress the tow laterally before the tow passes under the tongue.
5. A machine according to claim 4 in which the suction conveyor is a suction wheel arranged to rotate adjacent to a web or tape carrying the tow so as to compress the tow in cooperation with the web or tape.
6. A machine according to claim 4 or claim 5 in which the suction conveyor is arranged to compress the tow approximately to its final cross-sectional area.
7. A machine according to any preceding claim including a fluffing device arranged to blow air into the tow from the side before the tow is laterally compressed.
8. A machine according to claim 7 in which the fluffing device includes an annular air outlet through which air is blown into the tow from all sides.
9. A machine according to any preceding claim in which the pressure drop sensing means comprises a pressure tapping in the tongue, a hollow member defining a pressure space adjacent to the outer surface of the tongue in the region of the pressure tapping, a pipe which is connected to the pressure space and to a supply of air at a pressure substantially higher than the pressure in the tongue, an orifice by which the pressure from the pipe is dropped as it enters the pressure space to a level slightly above the mean pressure within the tongue in the region of the pressure tapping, the space being connected to a pressure measuring device or pressure comparator.
10. A machine according to claim 1, including means for monitoring the pressure drop through the tow and for adjusting the tow feed so as to maintain the pressure drop substantially constant; a weight monitoring device arranged to monitor the rate of consumption of tow; and a tow stretching device arranged to stretch the tow to a variable extent before the tow is laterally compressed; and a stretch control logic circuit arranged to operate at spaced time intervals to increase or decrease the tow stretch by a predetermined step at each
operation, depending upon whether the previous stretch adjustment step increased or decreased the tow consumption, so as to minimise the consumption of tow.
11. A machine for making cigarette filters from filter tow, including means for feeding filter tow towards a rod forming section; means for laterally compressing the filter tow to the cross-section of the finished rod, including a tongue which shapes and compresses the tow to the final cross-section; and means for measuring the pressure drop through the tow, comprising two longitudinally spaced pressure tapping means in the downstream part of the tongue, and a comparator arranged to compare the pressures at the two pressure tappings.
12. A machine according to claim 11, in which each pressure tapping means comprises means defining a pressure space adjacent to the outer surface of the tongue, a pipe which is connected to the pressure space and to a supply of air at a pressure substantially higher than the pressure in the tongue, an aperture formed in the tongue and communicating with the pressure space, and an orifice by which the pressure in the pipe is dropped as it enters the pressure space to a level slightly above the main pressure within the tongue in the region of the aperture.
13. A machine according to claim 1 and substantially in accordance with any one of the examples described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
GB2758376A 1976-07-02 1976-07-02 Manufacture of filters for cigarettes Expired GB1588506A (en)

Priority Applications (11)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB2758376A GB1588506A (en) 1976-07-02 1976-07-02 Manufacture of filters for cigarettes
DE2760354A DE2760354C2 (en) 1976-07-02 1977-06-25
DE2728797A DE2728797C2 (en) 1976-07-02 1977-06-25 Device for producing cigarette filters from filter tow
GB861780A GB1588508A (en) 1976-07-02 1977-06-28 Method and machine for making cigarette filters
GB846680A GB1588507A (en) 1976-07-02 1977-06-28 Method and machine for making cigarette filters
FR7719920A FR2356382A1 (en) 1976-07-02 1977-06-29 IMPROVEMENTS IN THE MANUFACTURE OF CIGARETTE FILTERS
BR7704305A BR7704305A (en) 1976-07-02 1977-06-30 PERFECTING IN MACHINE AND IN THE PROCESS OF MANUFACTURING FILTERS FOR CIGARETTES FROM ALBA MECHA DE FILTER
IT25222/77A IT1114819B (en) 1976-07-02 1977-06-30 MACHINE AND PROCEDURE, FOR THE MANUFACTURE OF CIGARETTE FILTERS
CH811477A CH618590A5 (en) 1976-07-02 1977-07-01
JP7893777A JPS536499A (en) 1976-07-02 1977-07-01 Machine for producing tobacco filter
US06/015,906 US4248139A (en) 1976-07-02 1979-02-28 Manufacture of filters for cigarettes

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB2758376A GB1588506A (en) 1976-07-02 1976-07-02 Manufacture of filters for cigarettes

Publications (1)

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GB1588506A true GB1588506A (en) 1981-04-23

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Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB2758376A Expired GB1588506A (en) 1976-07-02 1976-07-02 Manufacture of filters for cigarettes

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4661090A (en) * 1982-12-13 1987-04-28 Molins Plc Filter rod manufacture
EP0284639A1 (en) * 1987-04-02 1988-10-05 B.A.T. Cigarettenfabriken GmbH Device for measuring the draw resistance of a tobacco rod
EP0284640A1 (en) * 1987-04-02 1988-10-05 British-American Tobacco (Germany) GmbH Device for continuously determining two physical characteristics of the constituents of a smokable product
EP0361903A1 (en) * 1988-09-30 1990-04-04 Courtaulds Plc Monitoring of tobacco smoke filter rods

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4661090A (en) * 1982-12-13 1987-04-28 Molins Plc Filter rod manufacture
EP0284639A1 (en) * 1987-04-02 1988-10-05 B.A.T. Cigarettenfabriken GmbH Device for measuring the draw resistance of a tobacco rod
EP0284640A1 (en) * 1987-04-02 1988-10-05 British-American Tobacco (Germany) GmbH Device for continuously determining two physical characteristics of the constituents of a smokable product
US4811744A (en) * 1987-04-02 1989-03-14 B.A.T. Cigarettenfabriken Gmbh Apparatus for measuring the draw resistance of a rod of tobacco fibers
US4865051A (en) * 1987-04-02 1989-09-12 B.A.T. Cigarettenfabriken Gmbh Apparatus for the continuous determination of two physical properties of the constituents of a smokable article
EP0361903A1 (en) * 1988-09-30 1990-04-04 Courtaulds Plc Monitoring of tobacco smoke filter rods

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PS Patent sealed
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19960628