US1832844A - Paper making machine and process - Google Patents

Paper making machine and process Download PDF

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Publication number
US1832844A
US1832844A US270610A US27061028A US1832844A US 1832844 A US1832844 A US 1832844A US 270610 A US270610 A US 270610A US 27061028 A US27061028 A US 27061028A US 1832844 A US1832844 A US 1832844A
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wire
suction
boxes
seepage
paper making
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US270610A
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Austin E Cofrin
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21FPAPER-MAKING MACHINES; METHODS OF PRODUCING PAPER THEREON
    • D21F1/00Wet end of machines for making continuous webs of paper
    • D21F1/48Suction apparatus
    • D21F1/52Suction boxes without rolls

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  • the invention relates to paper making machines and a method carried out thereby and has as an object the provision ofan improvement upon the invention described and 6 claimed in my Patent No. 1,623,526 granted April 5, 1927.
  • the devices there shown for this purpose provide a slight suction effect to draw water downwardly throu h the wire. It is found that this suction e ect may be to some extent increased with advantage.
  • wiping means comprising suction boxes having desirably a very slight suction effect.
  • Fig. 2 is a plan view partly broken away of the seepage removing means
  • Fig. 3 is a detail side elevation of a portion of the wire having the seepage removingv means provided by the present invention shown in vertical transverse section.
  • the machine comprises a Fourdrinier wire 10, a breast roll 11, an apron 12,slice board 13, press rolls 14, 15, and idle rolls 16, 17.
  • the devices of the present 5 invention are placed in lieu of the bars shown in the former patent referred to. According to the present invention these devices 19 are in the form of small suction boxes and the leading edge of each of these boxes as well as the edges 20 of the slits 21 in the boxes serve 55 to remove seepage in the manner described in my patent referred to.
  • conduits 22 each provided with a valve 23, which conduits are shown as communicating with a common pipe 24 which desirably is rovided with a valve 25.
  • valves 23 may be kept closed until the boxes are filled with terior of the boxes.
  • the boxes may be controlled in multiple by means of a valve such as 25 or the suction effect 4may be graduated by the 80 variation of the amount of opening of the valves 23 so as to produce a sli htly greater suction effect upon each succee 'ng box over which the wire travels.
  • the suction e'ect upon the mem- 85 bers 19 may be graduated from zero to any desirable amount and if desired some or all of these boxes may have positive suction in' Jerusalem therein in the same manner as the usual suction boxes shown at 26, Figure 1.
  • the seepage may be removed from the wire so eectivel as to enable the wire to be run at a much 'gher speed than was possible with the tube rolls formerly used for removing seepage in the place of elements 19 and even'with this Vincreased speed an improved grade of pa r may be produced as compared with the ormer practice of using tube rolls for removal 1 0f seepage. 0
  • the suction effect upon successive boxes ⁇ may be gradually increased by the apparatus disclosed, as the formation of the sheet progresses to provide a method securing the greatest advantage.
  • a Fourdrinier paper making machine as a ⁇ substitute for tube rolls thereof, in combination with the Fourdriner wire, suction boxes located in the sheet forming portion of said wire having their upper corners facing toward said feed end located in the path of the ilm of seepage carried by the lower surface of the wire, said boxes arranged to leave open spaces therebetween and acting to wipe said seepage from the wire, and means to produce suction in said boxes.
  • a Fourdrinier paper making machine as a substitute for tube rolls thereof, in combination with the Fourdrinier wire, suction boxes located in the sheet forming portion of said wire, said boxes having perforated tops, the upper corners of said boxes and the margins of said perforations facing said feed end located within the path of seepage carried by the lower surface of the wire and acting to wipe said seepage from the wire,
  • suction boxes having longitudinally slotted tops, said boxes spaced apart and the rst thereof located adjacent the feed end of the sheet forming portion of the wire, the upper-.corners of the boxes and the margins of said slots facing said feed end located in the path of the ilmof seepage carried by the lower surface of the wire and acting to wipe seepage therefrom.
  • suction boxes located adjacent the feed end of the sheet forming portion of the wire and approaching the wire within the path of the layer of seepage upon the lower surface thereof, means to retain said boxes full of liquid during initiation of the operation of the wire and to allow the liquid to escape as seepage enters the same to cause a suction by atmospheric pressure.
  • a plurality of suction boxes located under the sheet forming por tion of the wire adjacent the feed end there@ of, means to individually maintain said boxes full of liquid during the starting of the machine and to individually control the outflow therefrom whereby to induce suction.
  • the process of making paper which comprises removing water from a moving film of pulp stock by suction while the film is in fluent condition upon a moving, water permeable non-absorbtive carrier, and the fibres of the stock are forming into a sheet, progressively increasing the suction as the proportion of fibre to water increases, and wiping the water from the lower surface of the ilm carrier by stationary means placed in the path of the moving film of seepage.

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Description

NW@ 24 W33- A. E. COFRIN 'm PAPER MAKING MACHINE AND PROCESS Filed April 17. 1928 z 40 fo 2f ff. 20
2a ,2a INVENTOR.
mm ET @5mm @fm/ayuda: @Tom/Ew Patented Nov. 17, 1931 warm r. corinne: GREEN my, wrscoNsm rma MAKING momma um Pancras Application led April 17, 1928. Serial lo. 870,810.
UNITED STATES PATENT oF -FICE The invention relates to paper making machines and a method carried out thereby and has as an object the provision ofan improvement upon the invention described and 6 claimed in my Patent No. 1,623,526 granted April 5, 1927.
In my patent referred to there is shown as a substitute for the usual tube rolls used with Fourdrinier machines, a series of bars` pro- 10 viding edges for 'scraping or wiping the seepage from the under side of the Fourdrinier wire.
As described in the specilication of that patent the devices there shown for this purpose provide a slight suction effect to draw water downwardly throu h the wire. It is found that this suction e ect may be to some extent increased with advantage. According to the present invention there is substituted for the usual tube rolls or for a majority thereof, wiping means comprising suction boxes having desirably a very slight suction effect.
It is an object of the invention to provide an apparatus and a method whereby seepage is removed more effectively than by the method and apparatus shown in said former patent. An illustrative embodiment of an apparatus for this purpose and for carrying out the method is shown in the 'accompanying drawings wherein Figure 1 is a diagrammatic side elevation of a Fourdrinier machine having the invention applied thereto;
Fig. 2 is a plan view partly broken away of the seepage removing means; and
Fig. 3 is a detail side elevation of a portion of the wire having the seepage removingv means provided by the present invention shown in vertical transverse section.
As shown in Figure 1', the machine comprises a Fourdrinier wire 10, a breast roll 11, an apron 12,slice board 13, press rolls 14, 15, and idle rolls 16, 17.
It is found that closely adj acent the apron 12 it is desirable to use a small number, as two or three, of the usual tube rolls 18. Im-
. mediately adjacent the tube rolls 18, if any tube rolls be used, the devices of the present 5 invention are placed in lieu of the bars shown in the former patent referred to. According to the present invention these devices 19 are in the form of small suction boxes and the leading edge of each of these boxes as well as the edges 20 of the slits 21 in the boxes serve 55 to remove seepage in the manner described in my patent referred to.
As shownthe outlets of these boxes have applied thereto conduits 22, each provided with a valve 23, which conduits are shown as communicating with a common pipe 24 which desirably is rovided with a valve 25.
To provi e a mild suction effect upon the interior of members 19, the valves 23 may be kept closed until the boxes are filled with terior of the boxes.
A If desired the boxes may be controlled in multiple by means of a valve such as 25 or the suction effect 4may be graduated by the 80 variation of the amount of opening of the valves 23 so as to produce a sli htly greater suction effect upon each succee 'ng box over which the wire travels. By the control thus provided the suction e'ect upon the mem- 85 bers 19 may be graduated from zero to any desirable amount and if desired some or all of these boxes may have positive suction in' duced therein in the same manner as the usual suction boxes shown at 26, Figure 1. By virtue of the invention the seepage may be removed from the wire so eectivel as to enable the wire to be run at a much 'gher speed than was possible with the tube rolls formerly used for removing seepage in the place of elements 19 and even'with this Vincreased speed an improved grade of pa r may be produced as compared with the ormer practice of using tube rolls for removal 1 0f seepage. 0
It is found that when a small degree of suction is applied to the forming sheet upon the wire as provided by the apparatus and methodl of the invention, the air pressure upon the surface of the stock tends to seal the fibers together, slightly squeezing the water therefrom, which` action combined with the method of wiping the seepage from the lower surface of the wire according to the method of my patent referred to causes'a rapid and effectual sheet formation. Since no seepage is returned through the wire by centrifugal action of tube rolls a uniform sheet of high quality is produced. Moreover the present invention, by more eifectually removing seepage and accelerating the seeping action enables the speed of the wire to be stillk further increased.
The suction effect upon successive boxes` may be gradually increased by the apparatus disclosed, as the formation of the sheet progresses to provide a method securing the greatest advantage.
Minor changes may be made in the physical embodiment of the apparatus or in the steps of the method within the scope of the appended claims, without departing from the spirit of the invention.
I claim:
1. In a Fourdrinier paper making machine as a`substitute for tube rolls thereof, in combination with the Fourdriner wire, suction boxes located in the sheet forming portion of said wire having their upper corners facing toward said feed end located in the path of the ilm of seepage carried by the lower surface of the wire, said boxes arranged to leave open spaces therebetween and acting to wipe said seepage from the wire, and means to produce suction in said boxes.
2. In a Fourdrinier paper making machine as a substitute for tube rolls thereof, in combination with the Fourdrinier wire, suction boxes located in the sheet forming portion of said wire, said boxes having perforated tops, the upper corners of said boxes and the margins of said perforations facing said feed end located within the path of seepage carried by the lower surface of the wire and acting to wipe said seepage from the wire,
` and means to produce suction in said boxes.
3. In aFourdrinier paper making machine as a substitute for tube rolls thereof, in combination with the Fourdrinier wire, suction boxes having longitudinally slotted tops, said boxes spaced apart and the rst thereof located adjacent the feed end of the sheet forming portion of the wire, the upper-.corners of the boxes and the margins of said slots facing said feed end located in the path of the ilmof seepage carried by the lower surface of the wire and acting to wipe seepage therefrom. i
4. In a Fourdrinier paper making machine as a substitute for tube rolls thereof, in combination with the Fourdrinier wire, suction boxes located adjacent the feed end of the sheet forming portion of the wire and approaching the wire within the path of the layer of seepage upon the lower surface thereof, means to retain said boxes full of liquid during initiation of the operation of the wire and to allow the liquid to escape as seepage enters the same to cause a suction by atmospheric pressure.
5. In a paper making machine, in combination with a Fourdrinier wire as a substitute for usual tube rolls, a plurality of suction boxes located under the sheet forming por tion of the wire adjacent the feed end there@ of, means to individually maintain said boxes full of liquid during the starting of the machine and to individually control the outflow therefrom whereby to induce suction.
6. The process of making paper which comprises removing water from a moving film of pulp stock by suction while the film is in fluent condition upon a moving, water permeable non-absorbtive carrier, and the fibres of the stock are forming into a sheet, and wiping the water from the lower surface of the film carrier by stationary means placed in the path of the moving film of seepage.
7. The process of making paper which comprises removing water from a moving film of pulp stock by suction while the film is in fluent condition upon a moving, water permeable non-absorbtive carrier, and the fibres of the stock are forming into a sheet, progressively increasing the suction as the proportion of fibre to water increases, and wiping the water from the lower surface of the ilm carrier by stationary means placed in the path of the moving film of seepage.
8. The process of making paper which includes subjecting a film of stock upon a Fourdrinier wire to alternate suction and release from suction in the sheet-forming portion of the wire and removing seepage from the lower surface of the wire by alternately applied pure wiping action and combined wiping and suction action in the said sheet-forming portion of the wire.
AUSTIN E. COFRIN.
US270610A 1928-04-17 1928-04-17 Paper making machine and process Expired - Lifetime US1832844A (en)

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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2487202A (en) * 1943-08-07 1949-11-08 West Virginia Pulp & Paper Co Suction box cover
US2543870A (en) * 1947-12-10 1951-03-06 Douglas R Robbins Suction box cover for papermaking machines
US2893486A (en) * 1956-02-27 1959-07-07 Crown Zellerbach Corp Fourdrinier paper making machine
US2928466A (en) * 1955-12-27 1960-03-15 Ontario Paper Co Ltd Means for improving drainage on paper machines
US3022821A (en) * 1959-01-05 1962-02-27 Henry J Mcardle Suction box cover
US20070144699A1 (en) * 2003-11-17 2007-06-28 Asten-Johnson, Inc. Shaped slot vacuum dewatering box cover

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2487202A (en) * 1943-08-07 1949-11-08 West Virginia Pulp & Paper Co Suction box cover
US2543870A (en) * 1947-12-10 1951-03-06 Douglas R Robbins Suction box cover for papermaking machines
US2928466A (en) * 1955-12-27 1960-03-15 Ontario Paper Co Ltd Means for improving drainage on paper machines
US2893486A (en) * 1956-02-27 1959-07-07 Crown Zellerbach Corp Fourdrinier paper making machine
US3022821A (en) * 1959-01-05 1962-02-27 Henry J Mcardle Suction box cover
US20070144699A1 (en) * 2003-11-17 2007-06-28 Asten-Johnson, Inc. Shaped slot vacuum dewatering box cover
US7540943B2 (en) * 2003-11-17 2009-06-02 Astenjohnson, Inc. Shaped slot vacuum dewatering box cover

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