US2589933A - Machine for producing patterns photographically on the surface of copper and like rollers - Google Patents

Machine for producing patterns photographically on the surface of copper and like rollers Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2589933A
US2589933A US177694A US17769450A US2589933A US 2589933 A US2589933 A US 2589933A US 177694 A US177694 A US 177694A US 17769450 A US17769450 A US 17769450A US 2589933 A US2589933 A US 2589933A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
jacks
cover
machine
rollers
roller
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 - Lifetime
Application number
US177694A
Inventor
Frank Laszlo
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2589933A publication Critical patent/US2589933A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03FPHOTOMECHANICAL PRODUCTION OF TEXTURED OR PATTERNED SURFACES, e.g. FOR PRINTING, FOR PROCESSING OF SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; MATERIALS THEREFOR; ORIGINALS THEREFOR; APPARATUS SPECIALLY ADAPTED THEREFOR
    • G03F7/00Photomechanical, e.g. photolithographic, production of textured or patterned surfaces, e.g. printing surfaces; Materials therefor, e.g. comprising photoresists; Apparatus specially adapted therefor
    • G03F7/20Exposure; Apparatus therefor
    • G03F7/24Curved surfaces

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the photographic reproduction of patterns or designs upon copper or like printing rollers and is concerned with the means by which the roller with the pattern in firm contact therewith is brought into correct horizontal position for the photographic process to be carried out.
  • the invention consists in a machine for use in the photographic reproduction of patterns or designs upon printing rollers comprising jacks for supporting at an adjustable height the ends of the mandrel carrying the printing roller, a transparent cover to pass round the printing roller and clamp a positive or negative thereon of the pattern or design to be reproduced photographically upon the printing roller, clamps for holding the ends of the cover beneath the print ing roller, and means for raising the jacks simultaneously to apply resilient pressure to the roller for tensioning the cover.
  • the invention further comprises a construction of machine in which the jacks comprise rollers to support the printing roller mandrel and allow it to turn freely to prevent uneven tensioning of the cover.
  • the invention further comprises a construction of machine in which the jacks can be bodily elevated by rack and pinion mechanism operating on the jacks through springs, there being a common shaft for the rack pinions of the two jacks, with a handle or the like for turning the shaft, pawl and ratchet wheel mechanism for holding the shaft in any desired position with the jacks elevated and a release means for the pawl to allow the jacks to fall.
  • the invention further comprises a construction of machine in which the clamps for holding the two ends of the cover comprise bars upon channel members supported at an adjustable height and at an adjustable distance apart, the cover end passing round the bar and into the channel where it is clamped by a bar inserted over the cover and locked in the channel.
  • Figure 1 is a side elevation and Figure 2 an end elevation of a machine in which the photographic reproduction of patterns or designs on copper or like printing rollers is effected, constructed and arranged in one convenient form in accordance with this invention.
  • Figure 3 is a sectional end view on the line 3-3 of Figure 1.
  • Figure 4 is similar to the upper part of Figure 3 but showing the film tightened around the printing roller.
  • the machine illustrated has jacks a therein upon which the ends of the mandrel I) through the printing roller 0 are supported.
  • Each jack has rollers 01 therein upon which the mandrel end rests so that the jacks offer a minimum resistance to the printing roller turning.
  • the film or negative having thereon the pattern or design to be photographed on the printing roller 0 is placed upon such roller and over it is placed a celluloid or transparent cover e.
  • the two ends of the latter are brought down the opposite sides of the printing roller and around bars extending along opposite sides of and beneath the printing roller, the bars being spaced apart less than the diameter of the roller 0 so as to give a large arc of contact between the cover e and the'pattern negative around the roller 0.
  • the bars 1 are carried by channel shaped membars 9 mounted upon adjustable supports it carried by slides 2 adjustable in inverted T slots in parts 9' secured to the machine frame. The slides can be locked in the parts 7' by screws it.
  • Each end of the cover e after passing around the bars j is turned up over the channel member at its open side and is held in each channel by a bar m.
  • the ends of the bars m are locked in the channel members by screws 11.
  • Each jack a has a screwed stem which threads through a nut 0 formed as a handwheel, which when turned by hand cannot move in an axial direction so that turning the nut raises or lowers the jack a and so the printing roller 0.
  • Each nut o is supported on a column 1) when in its lowest position and is secured against axial movement by attachment to a sleeve q guided in the column 10.
  • a plunger 1' enters the bottom of the sleeve q and at its upper end is pressed upon by a spring s, which at its upper end presses on a disc t bearing against an internal shoulder in the sleeve q.
  • the plunger T has rack teeth formed thereon at u and these are engaged by a rack pinion 12 upon a shaft w extending along from end to end of the machine, there being two rack pinions on the shaft engaging two racks, one for operating each jack, so that the two jacks are operated simultaneously and to a like extent when the rack pinion shaft is turned by the handle a: secured to the shaft.
  • the mode of operating the machine is as follows: the copper or like printing roller is supported in the jacks a and the photographic negative or positive film is placed on the roller.
  • the cover e is placed over the photographic film around the roller 0, and its ends are clamped around the bars 1 and the channel members g.
  • the jacks a are now raised to give a preliminary tightening of the cover e by turning the handwheels 0.
  • the handle a is pulled forward and turns the two rack pinions thereon which raise the plungers r beneath the jacks. This applies lifting pressure through the springs s to the jacks so that-the cover is tensioned to the desired extent.
  • the pedal 2 When the photographic process is completed, the pedal 2 is depressed and releases the pawl 2, so removing upward pressure from the springs s.
  • the jacks can now be lowered by turning the handwheels o.
  • the cover ends are released from the clamping bars m in the channel members, enabling the covers to be removed along with the pattern or design beneath the cover.
  • the printing roller 0 can then be removed from the machine.
  • the rollers d therein allow the printing roller to turn freely to prevent twisting strains on the cover e.
  • hydraulic means may be employed, the hydraulic fluid acting simultaneously on the two jacks to give equality of tension.
  • the pattern negative or positive may be held on the printing roller 0 by mechanical means or by hand during the tightening of the cover e produced by raising the jacks a and forcing the roller with the negative or positive thereon firmly into the fold of the cover e.
  • a machine for use in the photographic reproduction of patterns or designs upon printing rollers comprising jacks for supporting at an adjustable height the ends of the mandrel carrying the printing roller to which the pattern or design is secured, a pair of rollers upon each jack to support the printing roller mandrel between them, springs supporting the jacks, rack and pinion mechanism with a common shaft for the two pinions for operating the jacks simultaneously through said springs, pawl and ratchet wheel mechanism for holding the said common shaft in any desired position, means for releasing the pawl to lower the jacks, a transparent cover to pass round the printing roller and clamp thereon the pattern or design to be reproduced photographically upon the printing roller, and clamps for holding the two ends of the cover beneath the printing roller, said clamps each comprising a bar with rounded operative face to engage the cover, a channel shaped member to the flat face of which the bar is secured, the cover passing round the bar and into the channel of the channel shaped member where it is clamped, means supporting each clamp at an adjustable

Description

March 18, 1952 FRANK 2,589,933
MACHINE FOR PRODUCING PATTERNS PHOTOGRAPHICALLY ON THE SURFACE OF COPPER AND LIKE ROLLERS Filed Aug. 4, 1950 2 SHEETS-SHEET 1 March 18, 1952 FRANK 2,589,933
' MACHINE FOR ODUCING PATTERNS PH GRAPHICALLY ON THE S ACE OF COPPER AND L ROLLERS Filed Aug. 4, 1950 2 SHEETS-SHEET 2 N Ev sxx N m mu mun Patented Mar. 18, 1952 MACHINE FOR PRODUCING PATTERNS PHOTOGRAPHICALLY ON THE SUR- FACE OF COPPER AND LIKE ROLLERS Laszlo Frank, Sale, near Manchester, England Application August 4, 1950, Serial No. 177,694 In Great Britain July 18, 1949 1 Claim. 1
This invention relates to the photographic reproduction of patterns or designs upon copper or like printing rollers and is concerned with the means by which the roller with the pattern in firm contact therewith is brought into correct horizontal position for the photographic process to be carried out.
The invention consists in a machine for use in the photographic reproduction of patterns or designs upon printing rollers comprising jacks for supporting at an adjustable height the ends of the mandrel carrying the printing roller, a transparent cover to pass round the printing roller and clamp a positive or negative thereon of the pattern or design to be reproduced photographically upon the printing roller, clamps for holding the ends of the cover beneath the print ing roller, and means for raising the jacks simultaneously to apply resilient pressure to the roller for tensioning the cover.
The invention further comprises a construction of machine in which the jacks comprise rollers to support the printing roller mandrel and allow it to turn freely to prevent uneven tensioning of the cover.
The invention further comprises a construction of machine in which the jacks can be bodily elevated by rack and pinion mechanism operating on the jacks through springs, there being a common shaft for the rack pinions of the two jacks, with a handle or the like for turning the shaft, pawl and ratchet wheel mechanism for holding the shaft in any desired position with the jacks elevated and a release means for the pawl to allow the jacks to fall.
The invention further comprises a construction of machine in which the clamps for holding the two ends of the cover comprise bars upon channel members supported at an adjustable height and at an adjustable distance apart, the cover end passing round the bar and into the channel where it is clamped by a bar inserted over the cover and locked in the channel.
Referring to the accompanying explanatory drawings:
Figure 1 is a side elevation and Figure 2 an end elevation of a machine in which the photographic reproduction of patterns or designs on copper or like printing rollers is effected, constructed and arranged in one convenient form in accordance with this invention.
Figure 3 is a sectional end view on the line 3-3 of Figure 1.
Figure 4 is similar to the upper part of Figure 3 but showing the film tightened around the printing roller.
The machine illustrated has jacks a therein upon which the ends of the mandrel I) through the printing roller 0 are supported. Each jack has rollers 01 therein upon which the mandrel end rests so that the jacks offer a minimum resistance to the printing roller turning.
The film or negative having thereon the pattern or design to be photographed on the printing roller 0 is placed upon such roller and over it is placed a celluloid or transparent cover e. The two ends of the latter are brought down the opposite sides of the printing roller and around bars extending along opposite sides of and beneath the printing roller, the bars being spaced apart less than the diameter of the roller 0 so as to give a large arc of contact between the cover e and the'pattern negative around the roller 0. The bars 1 are carried by channel shaped membars 9 mounted upon adjustable supports it carried by slides 2 adjustable in inverted T slots in parts 9' secured to the machine frame. The slides can be locked in the parts 7' by screws it. Each end of the cover e after passing around the bars j is turned up over the channel member at its open side and is held in each channel by a bar m. The ends of the bars m are locked in the channel members by screws 11.
Each jack a has a screwed stem which threads through a nut 0 formed as a handwheel, which when turned by hand cannot move in an axial direction so that turning the nut raises or lowers the jack a and so the printing roller 0. Each nut o is supported on a column 1) when in its lowest position and is secured against axial movement by attachment to a sleeve q guided in the column 10. A plunger 1' enters the bottom of the sleeve q and at its upper end is pressed upon by a spring s, which at its upper end presses on a disc t bearing against an internal shoulder in the sleeve q.
The plunger T has rack teeth formed thereon at u and these are engaged by a rack pinion 12 upon a shaft w extending along from end to end of the machine, there being two rack pinions on the shaft engaging two racks, one for operating each jack, so that the two jacks are operated simultaneously and to a like extent when the rack pinion shaft is turned by the handle a: secured to the shaft. There is a ratchet wheel 11 secured to the shaft 10, and the wheel is engaged by a spring loaded pawl z. The latter serves to hold the jacks a in any position to which they have been raised by manipulating the handle at. When it is desired to drop the jacks to a lower position, the pawl z is released by depressing the foot pedal 2.
The mode of operating the machine is as follows: the copper or like printing roller is supported in the jacks a and the photographic negative or positive film is placed on the roller. The cover e is placed over the photographic film around the roller 0, and its ends are clamped around the bars 1 and the channel members g. The jacks a are now raised to give a preliminary tightening of the cover e by turning the handwheels 0. When the cover is uniformly tensioned, the handle a: is pulled forward and turns the two rack pinions thereon which raise the plungers r beneath the jacks. This applies lifting pressure through the springs s to the jacks so that-the cover is tensioned to the desired extent.
When the photographic process is completed, the pedal 2 is depressed and releases the pawl 2, so removing upward pressure from the springs s. The jacks can now be lowered by turning the handwheels o. The cover ends are released from the clamping bars m in the channel members, enabling the covers to be removed along with the pattern or design beneath the cover. The printing roller 0 can then be removed from the machine.
As the jacks are raised, the rollers d therein allow the printing roller to turn freely to prevent twisting strains on the cover e.
The loading of the jacks through the springs 's when the handle :0 is operated prevents damage to the cover e during tensioning thereof. 1
Instead of using mechanical means for the final tensioning of the cover e, hydraulic means may be employed, the hydraulic fluid acting simultaneously on the two jacks to give equality of tension.
The pattern negative or positive may be held on the printing roller 0 by mechanical means or by hand during the tightening of the cover e produced by raising the jacks a and forcing the roller with the negative or positive thereon firmly into the fold of the cover e.
By the employment of balls or rollers in the jacks I ensure that any pressure applied between the cover and the negative or positive on the roller during tightening of the latter into the cover, which would tend to turn the negative or positive around the roller, will result in the roller turning without displacing the negative or positive thereon.
What I claim is:
A machine for use in the photographic reproduction of patterns or designs upon printing rollers, comprising jacks for supporting at an adjustable height the ends of the mandrel carrying the printing roller to which the pattern or design is secured, a pair of rollers upon each jack to support the printing roller mandrel between them, springs supporting the jacks, rack and pinion mechanism with a common shaft for the two pinions for operating the jacks simultaneously through said springs, pawl and ratchet wheel mechanism for holding the said common shaft in any desired position, means for releasing the pawl to lower the jacks, a transparent cover to pass round the printing roller and clamp thereon the pattern or design to be reproduced photographically upon the printing roller, and clamps for holding the two ends of the cover beneath the printing roller, said clamps each comprising a bar with rounded operative face to engage the cover, a channel shaped member to the flat face of which the bar is secured, the cover passing round the bar and into the channel of the channel shaped member where it is clamped, means supporting each clamp at an adjustable height, and means allowing the clamps to be adjusted away from and towards each other.
LASZLO' FRANK.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record'in the file of this patent: V
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 2,170,896 Henderson Aug. 29, 1939 2,338,877 Stead July 26, 1941 2,338,878 Stead July 26, 1941 FOREIGN PATENTS Number Country 'Date 519,760 Great Britain Apr. 4, i940
US177694A 1949-07-18 1950-08-04 Machine for producing patterns photographically on the surface of copper and like rollers Expired - Lifetime US2589933A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB2589933X 1949-07-18

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2589933A true US2589933A (en) 1952-03-18

Family

ID=10910936

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US177694A Expired - Lifetime US2589933A (en) 1949-07-18 1950-08-04 Machine for producing patterns photographically on the surface of copper and like rollers

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2589933A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2898834A (en) * 1956-05-23 1959-08-11 Carolina Textile Engraving Com Machine for making photoprints on printing cylinders

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2170896A (en) * 1937-03-13 1939-08-29 Paper Patents Co Transfer machine
GB519760A (en) * 1938-11-05 1940-04-04 Josef Molnar Device for the photo-mechanical application of pattern elements to rollers serving for the production of printing cylinders
US2338878A (en) * 1941-07-26 1944-01-11 Linotone Corp Means for supporting the masks in printing rollers
US2338877A (en) * 1941-07-26 1944-01-11 Linotone Corp Clamp for roller printing

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2170896A (en) * 1937-03-13 1939-08-29 Paper Patents Co Transfer machine
GB519760A (en) * 1938-11-05 1940-04-04 Josef Molnar Device for the photo-mechanical application of pattern elements to rollers serving for the production of printing cylinders
US2338878A (en) * 1941-07-26 1944-01-11 Linotone Corp Means for supporting the masks in printing rollers
US2338877A (en) * 1941-07-26 1944-01-11 Linotone Corp Clamp for roller printing

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2898834A (en) * 1956-05-23 1959-08-11 Carolina Textile Engraving Com Machine for making photoprints on printing cylinders

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4751838A (en) Machine and process for leveling sheet metal strip
US2589933A (en) Machine for producing patterns photographically on the surface of copper and like rollers
DE3232881A1 (en) LOADING DEVICE FOR A TIRE VOLCANIZING MACHINE
US2882774A (en) Cam-lever actuated, slidable jaw hand tool
US2146853A (en) Apparatus for stringing tennis rackets and the like
AT112716B (en) Plate holders for photographic printing machines.
US2320352A (en) Lay-on apparatus and method
US2014989A (en) Stringing of tennis and like rackets
US2250266A (en) Method and device for registering forms for multicolored printing
DE413078C (en) Device on rotary printing machines for switching on and off inking units
DE1817942A1 (en) METHOD AND DEVICE FOR TIGHTENING A SHOE UP OVER A LAST
DE2552306A1 (en) DEVICE FOR COVERING A DOOR OR DGL.
DE108213C (en)
DE447585C (en) Device for pulling out already advanced heating pipes
DE465838C (en) Machine for the production of an inclined or parallel corrugation to the edges of endless leather straps (terry leather for spinning machines)
DE541387C (en) Plaett- o. The like. Machine with laundry introduction device
DE284846C (en)
DE477485C (en) Device for covering the heels of shoes
AT65691B (en) Method and machine for the manufacture of footwear.
DE33173C (en)
GB1574274A (en) Material tensioning apparatus
DE201359C (en)
DE481003C (en) Press for sticking soles on footwear
US2470867A (en) Machine for breaking in shoes
DE520476C (en) Skin stretching and pressing machine