GB2031096A - Improvements in or relating to guards for cutting instruments - Google Patents

Improvements in or relating to guards for cutting instruments Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2031096A
GB2031096A GB7930443A GB7930443A GB2031096A GB 2031096 A GB2031096 A GB 2031096A GB 7930443 A GB7930443 A GB 7930443A GB 7930443 A GB7930443 A GB 7930443A GB 2031096 A GB2031096 A GB 2031096A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
blade
guard
moving
work
guard according
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB7930443A
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GB2031096B (en
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VITOLS R
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VITOLS R
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by VITOLS R filed Critical VITOLS R
Priority to GB7930443A priority Critical patent/GB2031096B/en
Publication of GB2031096A publication Critical patent/GB2031096A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2031096B publication Critical patent/GB2031096B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26DCUTTING; DETAILS COMMON TO MACHINES FOR PERFORATING, PUNCHING, CUTTING-OUT, STAMPING-OUT OR SEVERING
    • B26D7/00Details of apparatus for cutting, cutting-out, stamping-out, punching, perforating, or severing by means other than cutting
    • B26D7/22Safety devices specially adapted for cutting machines
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26DCUTTING; DETAILS COMMON TO MACHINES FOR PERFORATING, PUNCHING, CUTTING-OUT, STAMPING-OUT OR SEVERING
    • B26D1/00Cutting through work characterised by the nature or movement of the cutting member or particular materials not otherwise provided for; Apparatus or machines therefor; Cutting members therefor
    • B26D1/01Cutting through work characterised by the nature or movement of the cutting member or particular materials not otherwise provided for; Apparatus or machines therefor; Cutting members therefor involving a cutting member which does not travel with the work
    • B26D1/46Cutting through work characterised by the nature or movement of the cutting member or particular materials not otherwise provided for; Apparatus or machines therefor; Cutting members therefor involving a cutting member which does not travel with the work having an endless band-knife or the like
    • B26D1/465Cutting through work characterised by the nature or movement of the cutting member or particular materials not otherwise provided for; Apparatus or machines therefor; Cutting members therefor involving a cutting member which does not travel with the work having an endless band-knife or the like for thin material, e.g. for sheets, strips or the like
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16PSAFETY DEVICES IN GENERAL; SAFETY DEVICES FOR PRESSES
    • F16P1/00Safety devices independent of the control and operation of any machine
    • F16P1/02Fixed screens or hoods

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Knives (AREA)

Abstract

A guard 8 for moving-blade cutting instruments, for instance band-saws and band-knives 1. The guard 8 is in the form of a comb 25 or other toothed member, mounted alongside the blade 1 and vibrated cyclically so that the tips of the teeth 25 lie proud of the cutting edge 5 at least once per cycle. The clearances between the teeth 25 are aligned so as to facilitate access of piles of cloth 4 or the like to the blade 1, but the bulkier fingers of the operator should be struck by the tips of the vibrating comb 25 and repelled before being seriously cut, or cut at all, by the blade 1. The guard 8 may be mounted to yield within limits 20, 21, so as to increase the exposure of the blade 1, when subjected to sustained pressure from approaching work 4. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Improvements in or relating to guards for cutting instruments This invention relates to cutting instruments with moving blades, and to guards for those blades. By such blades we mean to include both saws and knives, and in particular bandsaws and band-knives. The invention applies particularly to band knives of the kind now commonly used in the clothing industry to cut a lay, that is to say a pile of pieces of flexible material laid flat one above the other, to a common shape for use as one component of a mass-produced garment.Band knives are notoriously dangerous, and with band knives used for this purpose it has proved exceptionally difficult to devise an effective guard for the knife that does not also impede the operator in his task of addressing the lay to the knife, and that does not resist the natural parting of the lay as it moves on past the knife after cutting.
According to the invention a guard for a moving-blade cutting instrument comprises a cyclically-vibratable toothed member to be mounted alongside the blade, the points of the teeth lying slightly proud of the blade edge at at least one moment in the vibratory cycle. The member may be comb-like and the clearances between teeth are aligned with the direction in which the work moves past the blade during use.
The member may be mounted to vibrate in a direction substantially parallel to the direction of movement of the work, and the vibrations may include components either aligned with that direction, or perpendicular to it, or may include both of these components.
There may be two toothed members, located on to each side of the blade. At at least one moment in each cycle of vibration the points of the teeth of both members may lie proud of the cutting edge, one member lying slightly more so than the other, or alternatively the points of the teeth of the second member may lie less than proud of the blade edge. The two members may constitute the legs of a unitary structure of "U"-section, the blade lying within the "U".
The guard may be mounted to yield, within a limited distance, when work is advanced towards the blade and makes contact with guard; this distance may be sufficient to retract the or each member of the guard until no tooth points lie proud of the blade edge any longer. The guard may constitute a link within a system of pivoted, swinging links and may be biassed to its normal, undeflected position by a weight; this weight may be provided by the motor which creates the vibration.
The invention also includes a cutting instrument comprising such a guard, in which the line of the blade edge remains constant during use. The blade may, for instance, be that of a continuous-type knife or saw, arranged for one-directional movement during use. Alternatively the blade could execute oscillating movement. The instrument could also include a working surface over which work may be caused to slide to approach the blade, and blade and guard may both pass through a hole formed in the surface.
The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: Figure 1 is an elevation, Figure 2 shows sections through a blade lying within a guard, the sections being taken at opposite extreme positions of the vibratory movement of the guard, and Figures 3 and 4 are sections through blades lying within alternative forms of guard.
The illustrated cutting instrument comprises a vertical band knife 1, guided and driven by the customary rollers and motor (not shown) and passing through a hole 2 formed in a horizontal work table 3 over which work 4 is moved by sliding to meet the knife. The illustrated work 4 is a pile or "lay" of sheets of textile material, which will be cut by the knife to the shape required for a chosen garment component. The references 5, 6 and 7 indicate respectively the cutting edge and two side faces of the knife blade 1.
A guard 8 for the knife comprises a length of metal strip bent to "U" section. One end of the length is fixed to an arm 9 pivoted at 10 to a bracket 11 fixed to the frame 1 2 of the instrument. The other end of guard 8 is pivoted at 1 3 to an arm 1 4 pivoted at its other end to a crank arm 1 5 driven by a motor 1 6 pivoted in turn at 1 7 to a bracket 1 8 fixed to the underside of work table 3. A stub 1 9 projecting from motor 1 6 on the opposite side from pivot 1 7 moves between two stops 20 and 21.When the pivoted linkage system comprising guard 8, arm 14 and motor 1 6 is hanging freely, with no force being exerted upon guard 8 in the direction of the arrow 22 (Fig. 1) stub 1 9 rests against stop 20. When a force is exerted upon guard 8 in the direction of arrow 22, as by the approach of the lay 4, the guard yields a little and the system swings to the left until stub 19 meets stop 21. Arrow 22 also indicates the direction of motion of the work relative to the knife.
As Fig. 2 most clearly shows, guard 8 is of "U"-section, the two arms of the "U,' having rounded ends and being referenced 23, 24.
The body of blade 1 lies between the two arms of the guard. As Fig. 1 shows, the leading edges of the arms of the guard are formed with comb-like slots 25.
Fig. 2 shows the position of blade 1 relative to the guard 8 at the two opposite extreme positions of the vibratory movement of the latter. The upper half of the Fig. shows the guard at its most rearward position relative to the blade, with the teeth of arm 23 lying proud of edge 5 and those of arm 24 almost level with it, while the lower half of the Fig.
shows the teeth of both arms 23 and 24 proud of edge 5. Thus when motor 1 6 is rotating crank 1 5 (at 50Hz, for example) so that the arms are oscillating back and forth at the same frequency, the blade edge is always guarded by at least one of the arms should an operator move his hand towards the blade in the same direction as that in which work normally approaches it, and when he touches the guard the high frequency vibration will be unpleasant but not dangerous to touch, and will tend to make him draw his hand away.
Adequate amplitude of the fore-and-aft vibration of the guard may be of the order of 3mm. When work is addressed to blade 1, guard 8 can yield but in practice may do so little, because provided the comb slots 25 are at least as wide as the individual "layers" of the lay they enable the forward edges of the layers to reach the edge 5 of the blade. It is believed that the slots also help to steady the individual layers of material as the blade cuts them, that the different tip locations of arms 23 and 24-one in front of the other-helps to aid penetration of the comb by the layers, and that the vibration may tend to part the severed edges of the material after cutting so that they lose contact with the side faces 6, 7 of blade 1 and also clear the base 26 of the "U" of guide 8.
A mass of 8kg for motor 16, and of about one-thirtieth of that for the driven linkage (arms 9 and 14, and guard 8) have been found satisfactory in practice.
The essential features of guard 8 may be summarised by saying that the teeth of the arms must be robust enough as they vibrate to repel the flesh of an intruder, and that the gaps or slots between the teeth should be as large as possible without allowing human fingers to reach edge 5.
In the alternative construction shown in Fig.
3 the knife blade 1 is sharp at both ends 28, 29 and is protected by a single guard 30, the tips 31, 32 of which are formed with comblike slots (as shown at 25 in Fig. 1) and are bent out-of-plane with the rest of the section of the guard so that they align with the plane of the blade 1. Tips 31, 32 thus lie directly forward of cutting edges 28, 29, so protecting them better than they would if located laterally of the edges. Fig. 4 shows a construction similar to that of Fig. 2 except that the knife blade 1 is double-edged as in Fig. 3 and there are two separate guards, each with slots at both tips 33 and 34, instead of a single "U"-shaped guard.

Claims (11)

1. A guard for a moving-blade cutting instrument, comprising a cyclically-vibratable toothed member to be mounted alongside the blade, the points of the teeth lying slightly proud of the cutting edge of the blade at at least one moment in the cycle of vibration.
2. A guard according to Claim 1, in which the toothed member is of comb-like form and the teeth and the clearances between them are aligned with the direction in which the work to be cut will move past the moving blade during use.
3. A guard according to either of the preceding claims in which the toothed member is mounted to vibrate in a plane lying substantially parallel both to the moving blade and to the direction of movement of the work during use.
4. A guard according to Claim 1 comprising two toothed members, one located to each side of the blade.
5. A guard according to Claim 4, in which the two members constitute the legs of a unitary structure of "U' '-section, the blade lying within the "U".
6. A guard according to Claim 1 so mounted as to deflect, within a limited distance, when work is advanced toward the blade and makes contact with the guard.
7. A guard according to Claim 6 arranged as a link within a system of pivoted, swinging links, the guard being biassed to its normal, undeflected position by a weight.
8. A guard according to Claim 7 in which the weight is provided by a motor which vibrates the toothed member.
9. A moving-blade cutting instrument including a guard according to any of the preceding claims, and also a working surface over which work may be caused to slide to approach the blade, and in which this surface is formed with a hole and both blade and guard pass through this hole.
1 0. A guard for a moving-blade cutting instrument, according to Claim 1 and substantially as described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
11. A moving-blade cutting instrument according to Claim 9, substantially as described with reference to Fig. 1 of the accompanying drawings.
GB7930443A 1978-09-05 1979-09-03 Guards for cutting instruments Expired GB2031096B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7930443A GB2031096B (en) 1978-09-05 1979-09-03 Guards for cutting instruments

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7835583 1978-09-05
GB7930443A GB2031096B (en) 1978-09-05 1979-09-03 Guards for cutting instruments

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2031096A true GB2031096A (en) 1980-04-16
GB2031096B GB2031096B (en) 1982-09-02

Family

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB7930443A Expired GB2031096B (en) 1978-09-05 1979-09-03 Guards for cutting instruments

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GB (1) GB2031096B (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2350658A (en) * 1999-02-12 2000-12-06 Staples Group Plc Blade guard
US20170203466A1 (en) * 2016-01-19 2017-07-20 Triodyne Safety Solutions, L.L.C. Auto-deploying vertical band saw guard

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2350658A (en) * 1999-02-12 2000-12-06 Staples Group Plc Blade guard
US20170203466A1 (en) * 2016-01-19 2017-07-20 Triodyne Safety Solutions, L.L.C. Auto-deploying vertical band saw guard

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2031096B (en) 1982-09-02

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Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee