US2782459A - Covering - Google Patents

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US2782459A
US2782459A US246455A US24645551A US2782459A US 2782459 A US2782459 A US 2782459A US 246455 A US246455 A US 246455A US 24645551 A US24645551 A US 24645551A US 2782459 A US2782459 A US 2782459A
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Prior art keywords
tube
rod
mandrel
expansion
covering
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US246455A
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Moncrieff Leslie John
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Acordis UK Ltd
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British Celanese Ltd
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C63/00Lining or sheathing, i.e. applying preformed layers or sheathings of plastics; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C63/18Lining or sheathing, i.e. applying preformed layers or sheathings of plastics; Apparatus therefor using tubular layers or sheathings
    • B29C63/20Lining or sheathing, i.e. applying preformed layers or sheathings of plastics; Apparatus therefor using tubular layers or sheathings using pressure difference, e.g. vacuum
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29KINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASSES B29B, B29C OR B29D, RELATING TO MOULDING MATERIALS OR TO MATERIALS FOR MOULDS, REINFORCEMENTS, FILLERS OR PREFORMED PARTS, e.g. INSERTS
    • B29K2001/00Use of cellulose, modified cellulose or cellulose derivatives, e.g. viscose, as moulding material
    • B29K2001/08Cellulose derivatives
    • B29K2001/12Cellulose acetate
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29LINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASS B29C, RELATING TO PARTICULAR ARTICLES
    • B29L2031/00Other particular articles
    • B29L2031/46Knobs or handles, push-buttons, grips
    • B29L2031/463Grips, handles
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/49805Shaping by direct application of fluent pressure
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/49826Assembling or joining
    • Y10T29/49863Assembling or joining with prestressing of part
    • Y10T29/4987Elastic joining of parts

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in covering, and in particular to a method and apparatus for providing rods with a tight-fitting tubular covering of cellulose acetate or other thermoplastic.
  • rods is used in this specification to include tubes (i. e. hollow rods) as well as solid rods.
  • the rods may be of circular or other cross-section, for example elliptical or polygonal.
  • the cross-sectional. area and shape of the rods may be constant throughout their length or may vary to some extent.
  • the rods for example may be peripherally ridged and/or grooved and may taper slightly, for example towards each end.
  • the invention provides a simple and rapid method of providing rods with a tubular covering of cellulose acetate or other thermoplastic.
  • a tube of the thermoplastic material of smaller in ternal cross-section than the cross-section of the rod is drawn in a temporarily softened condition over a man drel on to the rod, the tube being expanded before reaching the rod by passage over an expanded portion of the mandrel, and pressure being exerted on the interior of the tube by a gaseous medium, preferably air at atmospheric temperature, supplied through outlets in the mandrel in the neighbourhood of said expansion.
  • a gaseous medium preferably air at atmospheric temperature
  • the outlet orifices for the gaseous medium are in two regions of the mandrel spaced apart along its length so that the gaseous pressure around one of said regions can be increased when necessary, to prevent the tube sticking to the mandrel in that region, by pressing the tube against the mandrel in the other region so. as to reduce the gaseous fiow into said other region.
  • one of said regions pre-formed tube of the thermoplastic material is used in a softened condition brought about by soaking the tube in a suitable volatile liquid.
  • the tube in the softened condition should be limp rather than sticky, and it must readily undergo'hardening, e. g.
  • thermoplastics such as polyvinyl chloride and cellulose nitrate
  • more rigid plastics such as cellulose acetate, cellulose propionate, cellulose acetatepropionate and cellulose acetate-butyrate.
  • These more rigid thermoplastics give excellent service as rod coverings, for example on perambulator handles, and in service have many advantages over the more rubber-like plastics such as polyvinyl chloride, for example in hardness, high heat-softeningpoint, appearance and resistance to States Patent 0 staining when brought in contact with dyed articles.
  • Apparatus comprises a mandrel suitable for use in providing rods with a covering of thermoplastic material, which comprises a hollow stem and a rearwardly tapering expansion thereon whereby a softened tube of said material can be expanded while being drawn over the mandrel, said stem projecting behind said expansion so as to be capable of supporting the tube on its way to the expansion, and projecting forward of said expansion so as to be capable of engaging the rear end of the rod being covered, one end of the stem being closed and the other end being open so that a gaseous medium can be admitted to the inside of the stem, and the stem being provided with outlet means for allowing said medium to escape into the annular space between the stem and the tube behind and in front of the expansion.
  • the rod is preferably held during covering between hollow centres engaging opposite ends of said passage, one of the centres supplying the gaseous medium to said passage, the other centre being on the forward end of the mandrel and conveying the gaseous medium from said passage to a passage in the mandrel communicating with outlet orifices whence it issues into the annular space between the tube and the mandrel.
  • a mandrel suitable for use in covering hollow rods comprises a hollow stem. and a rearwardly tapering expansion thereon for expanding the softened tube drawn over it, .the stem extendingbehind the expansion to form a support for the tube approaching the expansion, and being closed at its rear end, and extending forward of the expansion to form a nozzle adapted to fit into the rear end of the rod so that the mandrel is carried by the rod and the passage through the rod communicates with the inside of the stern, and outlets being provided in the stem near the rear end of the expansion and between the forward end of the expansion and the nozzle, for allowing the gaseous medium entering the stem from the passage through the rod to issue into the annular space between. the tube and the stem on both sides of the expansion.
  • This mandrel is employed in combination with a support for the forward end of a tubular rod to be covered, said support comprising a nozzle capable of fitting into said forward end so as to support the rod and enable a gaseous medium supplied to the nozzle to pass therefrom into the passage through the rod.
  • the rod is preferably held between centres during covering, one of said centres being at the end of the mandrel, and the mandrel has an internal passage connecting the supply of gaseous medium with orifices through which said medium issues into the annular space between the tube and the mandrel.
  • a mandrel suitable for use in covering solid rods comprises a sleeve slidably mounted on a tubular member adapted to carry the sleeve and to admit a gaseous medium supplied to said member into the inside of the sleeve, said sleeve carrying the expansion for expanding the thermoplastic tube and being provided with outlet means for the gaseous medium behind and in front of said expansion, and being capable of disengagement from the tubular member for the insertion of a fresh thermoplastic tube behind the expansion and of being held in a position on said tubular member in which it engages the rear end of the rod.
  • This mandrel is used in combination with retractable means for engaging and supporting the forward end of a rod to be covered while the rear end of said rod is engaged and supported by the forward end of the mandrel.
  • Figure 1 shows in part-sectional elevation an apparatus for providing a hollow rod with a tubular covering of cellulose acetate
  • Figure 2 shows, also in part-sectional elevation, an apparatus for achieving the same purpose when the rod to be coated is solid.
  • the covered rods are suitable for use as perambulator handles.
  • a support 1 is held by set-screws 2 an air pipe 3 having a nozzle 4 which forms a support for the wooden rod 5 to be covered.
  • the air pipe is connected with a reservoir of compressed air (not shown)v and is provided with a foot-operated throttle valve (not shown) for the control of the air supply.
  • the rod which has two series of peripheral grooves 6 and 7 is circular in cross-section; the radius increases gradually towards the mid point.
  • the rod has a bore 8 extending throughout its length. Into the rearward end 9 of this bore fits the tapered forward end 10 of a hollow mandrel 11 having a rearwardly tapering expansion 12 the maximum diameter of which is substantially equal to the maximum diameter of the rod 5.
  • the rearwardly projecting part of the mandrel is closed by a rounded wooden plug 13.
  • Air outlet holes extending through the mandrel from the bore 8 are provided at 14 and 15.
  • the arrangement is such that with a hollow rod in position, on opening the air throttle air passes from the air-supply pipe through the bore of the rod and then through the bore of the mandrel and escapes through the holes 14 and 15.
  • a reservoir of air is formed in the rearward extension of the bore 8 and exerts a useful buffer effect.
  • the drawing shows a cellulose acetate tube 16 in course of being drawn from the mandrel 11 on to the rod 5.
  • the tube is of internal diameter smaller than the maximum diameter of the expansion 12 on the mandrel but larger than the external diameter of the rearwardly projecting part of the mandrel.
  • the tube is softened, for instance by immersion in a bath comprising acetone, alcohol and water, until it is quite limp.
  • the operator then applies a little lubricant to the expansion 12 of the mandrel, turns on the air supply by means of the foot-control and draws the softened tube along the mandrel, over the expansion, along the rod to the end thereof.
  • the support 20 carries in a housing 21 a centre 22 adapted to engage a countersink 23 centrally disposed in the forward face 24 of the wooden rod 25 which is identical with the rod 5 of Fig. 1 except for being solid.
  • a spring 26 in the housing 21 bears against a flange 27 on the centre 22 urging it in a rearward direction.
  • a countersink 28 in the rearward face 29 of the rod 25 accommodates the conical forward end of the mandrel 30.
  • the mandrel has a rearwardly tapering expansion 12 and air holes at 14 and 15 as in the mandrel of Fig. l.
  • the bore 31 of the mandrel 30 is a sliding fit round the air pipe 32 having a nozzle 33 adapted to seat against the rearward face of a plug 34 in the bore 31 of the mandrel so that the bore 35 of the air pipe connects through the passage 36 in the plug with the bore 31 of the mandrel.
  • the air pipe 32 is carried by a support 38.
  • the air pipe 32 is connected to a source of compressed air and provided with a foot-operated throttle valve (neither shown). On opening the throttle air passes through the bore of the mandrel and out through the airholes 14 and 15.
  • the air holes 14 and 15 should be exactly in the positions shown nor is it even essential that two separate series 14 and 15 of air holes should be provided. It is very desirable to have air holes in the neighbourhood of the forward edge of the expansion 12 so as to provide for inflation of the tube in the region beyond the expansion 12 but these holes may, instead of being in the forwardly projecting stem portion of the mandrel, be in the forward face of the expansion; or some of the holes may be in said face and the others in said forwardly projecting stem.
  • the holes 14 at or near the rear end of the expansion have been found useful (but'not essential) in dealing with any tendency to stick to the rearwardly projecting part of the mandrel. Additional holes may be provided further back from the expansion.
  • An advantage of having air holes in the rearwardly projecting stem portion of the mandrel is that better control of the air pressure at various points along the path of the tube can be so obtained.
  • the air pressure acting to inflate the tube can be reduced below that exerted when the tube is nipped not only on the rod but also against the mandrel at a point behind the air holes 14.
  • control of local inflation can be obtained by manual operation of the tube during the covering operation without the necessity of varying the throttle opening.
  • separate air control for the two or more series of holes can be provided, for instance by providing a sleeve valve in the mandrel, but this is a refinement which is generally unnecessary.
  • a suitable material for the mandrel is brass.
  • the surface may be plated and/ or highly polished but this is not generally necessary and a finely roughened surface such as can be obtained by etching or sand blasting may even be of advantage in reducing any tendency to bind on the mandrel.
  • a very suitable material 1" J1 the pre-fommcd tube is cellulose acetate plasticised with diethyl phthalate, di- (methoxyethyD-phthalate' or a mixture of dimethyl phthalate and triphenyl phosphate in the Weight ratio of 4:1.
  • Other plastioisers' can be used, for instance methyl phthalyl ethyl glycollate, ethyl phthalyl .ethylglycollate and tri- (mono-chlorethyl)phosphate.
  • the pro-formed tube may be made by solventles's hot extrusion, e. g. as described, in U. S. application S. No.
  • a tube is of such composition as to be capable of being made by solventless extrusion it will also be suitable in composition for use in the present invention.
  • the thickness of the tube depends largely on the thickness required in the covering. The most useful results have been obtained with pie-formed tubes of thickness at least 0.01 inch, e. g. 0.02 to 0.1 inch and especially 0.02 to 0.05 inch.
  • the internal diameter of the tube should be less than the maximum diameter of the rod to be coated. Thus, for instance, in. coat-ing a rod of maximum diameter 1.125 inches a tube of thickness 0.02 .inch and internal diameter 0.720 inch has been found very suitable.
  • the tube liquids consisting essentially of a volatile solvent for the material of the tube diluted with a volatile non-solvent have been found most suitable.
  • volatile solvents include acetone, methylene ethylene ether, and dioxane
  • volatile non solvents include water, methanol, ethanol, isopropauol, benzene and toluene.
  • Acetone isthe prefenred volatile solvent and among volatile non-solvents water, especially in admixture with an alcohol, is preferred.
  • a particularly useful softening liquid for cellulose acetate has the composition (by volume) 23 parts ofacetone 43 parts of industrial alcohol 34 parts of water.
  • softening of a tube of thickness 0.20 inch and initial diameter 0.720 inch to the desired degree of limpness occurs at ordinary temperature in the space of about one hour.
  • Thinner tubes soften more rapidly.
  • the speed of softening can be increased by raising the temperature of the bath or by increasing the proportion of acetone, but too high a proportion of acetone or other active solvent is apt to result in the formation of a hard skin on the tube.
  • Minor proportions of a medium boiling solvent, e. g. ethyl lactate or diacetone alcohol, can be included in the softening bath.
  • the softening bath may also contain a small proportion of a wetting agent such as the sodium salt of secondary octadecyl acid sulphate.
  • thermoplastics for example other thermoplastic cellulose derivatives such as cellulose propionate, cellulose acetate-propionate, cellulose acetate-butyrate, ethyl cellulose and benzyl cellulose; solid polymers and co-polymers of ethylene; thermoplastic polyvinyl compounds, for example polyvinyl chloride, polystyrene, and co-polymers of vinyl chloride with a.
  • thermoplastic polymers of acrylic acid derivatives for example polyethyl acrylate and poly methyl methaorylate
  • thermoplastic linear condensation polymers such as the nylons, polyethylene 'terephthalate and poly-a-amino-l.2.4-ttriazole.
  • the hollow or solid rods to be covered may be of various rigid materials including wood, metals, ceramics and heat-hardenedplastics. Naturally the material of the rod must not be such that it becomes soft or sticky by contact with the softened tube.
  • the cross-sectional shape of the expansion on the mandrel may be modified correspondingly and pro-formed tubes may be used of crosssectional shape approximating to the average cross-sectional shape of the rod, though this is not usually necessary.
  • a mandrel suitable for use in providing rods with a covering of thermoplastic material which comprises a hollow stem and a rearwardly tapering expansion thereon whereby a softened tube of said material can be expanded while being drawn over the mandrel, said stem projecting behind said expansion so as to be capable of supporting the tube on its way to the expansion, and projecting forward of said expansion so as to be capable of engaging the rear end of the rod being covered, one end of the stem being closed and the other end being open so that a gaseous medium can be admitted to the inside of the stem, and the stem being provided with outlet means for allowing said medium to escape into the annular space between the stem and the tube behind and in front of the expansion.
  • a mandrel according to claim 6 suitable for use in covering hollow rods, wherein the forward projection of the stem terminates in a nozzle that can be fitted into the rear end of the passage in a rod to be covered so that the mandrel is supported by the rod and a gaseous medium can be admitted from said passage to the inside of the hollow stem, and the rear end of the stem is closed.
  • a mandrel according to claim 6 suitable for use in covering solid rods, which comprises a sleeve slidably mounted on a tubular member adapted to carry the sleeve and to admit a gaseous medium supplied to said member into the inside of the sleeve, said sleeve carrying the expansion for expanding the thermoplastic tube and being provided with outlet means for the gaseous medium behind and in front of said expansion, and being capable of disengagement from the tubular member for the insertion of a fresh thermoplastic tube behind the expansion and of being held in a position on said tubular member in which it engages the rear end of the rod.
  • a mandrel which comprises a sleeve slidably mounted on a tubular member adapted to carry the sleeve and to admit a gaseous medium supplied to said member into the inside of the sleeve, said sleeve carrying the expansion for expanding the thermoplastic tube and being provided with outlet means for the gaseous medium behind and in front of said expansion and being capable of disengagement from the tubular member for the insertion of a fresh thermoplastic tube behind the expansion and of being held in a position on said tubular member in which it engages the rear end of the rod, together with retractable means for engaging and supporting the forward end of the rod to be covered while the rear end of said rod is engaged and supported by the forward end of the mandrel.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Shaping By String And By Release Of Stress In Plastics And The Like (AREA)
  • Shaping Of Tube Ends By Bending Or Straightening (AREA)

Description

Feb. 26, 195 7 1.. J. MONCRIEFF COVERING L- ONCIQIEF /NVEN7-M vow/w iled Q LL.
COVERENG Application September 13, 1951, Serial No. 246,455
Claims priority, application Great Britain September 26, 1950 Claims. (Cl. 18-1) This invention relates to improvements in covering, and in particular to a method and apparatus for providing rods with a tight-fitting tubular covering of cellulose acetate or other thermoplastic.
The terms rods is used in this specification to include tubes (i. e. hollow rods) as well as solid rods. The rods may be of circular or other cross-section, for example elliptical or polygonal. The cross-sectional. area and shape of the rods may be constant throughout their length or may vary to some extent. The rods for example may be peripherally ridged and/or grooved and may taper slightly, for example towards each end.
The invention provides a simple and rapid method of providing rods with a tubular covering of cellulose acetate or other thermoplastic. In the process of the invention a tube of the thermoplastic material of smaller in ternal cross-section than the cross-section of the rod is drawn in a temporarily softened condition over a man drel on to the rod, the tube being expanded before reaching the rod by passage over an expanded portion of the mandrel, and pressure being exerted on the interior of the tube by a gaseous medium, preferably air at atmospheric temperature, supplied through outlets in the mandrel in the neighbourhood of said expansion. Preferably the outlet orifices for the gaseous medium are in two regions of the mandrel spaced apart along its length so that the gaseous pressure around one of said regions can be increased when necessary, to prevent the tube sticking to the mandrel in that region, by pressing the tube against the mandrel in the other region so. as to reduce the gaseous fiow into said other region. It is of particular advantage for one of said regions to be immediately behind and the other in front of the expansion. Preferably a pre-formed tube of the thermoplastic material is used in a softened condition brought about by soaking the tube in a suitable volatile liquid. The tube in the softened condition should be limp rather than sticky, and it must readily undergo'hardening, e. g. by evaporation of volatile softening agent, to a rigid condition which is maintained under all atmospheric conditions. This hardening should be accompanied by some shrinkage. Softening could be effected by heat and hot air or steam could be used as the gaseous medium but these are unnecessary complications which are preferably avoided so that the operation can be carried out manually with a minimum of equipment.
An important advantage of the process of the'invention is that it can be used not only with the relatively flexible thermoplastics such as polyvinyl chloride and cellulose nitrate, but also with the more rigid plastics such as cellulose acetate, cellulose propionate, cellulose acetatepropionate and cellulose acetate-butyrate. These more rigid thermoplastics give excellent service as rod coverings, for example on perambulator handles, and in service have many advantages over the more rubber-like plastics such as polyvinyl chloride, for example in hardness, high heat-softeningpoint, appearance and resistance to States Patent 0 staining when brought in contact with dyed articles. Compared with cellulose nitrate these more rigid cellulose derivatives have, of course, the important advantage of substantial non-inflammability. Their use in the form of tubes for covering rods such as perambulator handles has, however, hitherto involved an operation so slow and difiicult that materials inferior in service to these cellulose derivatives have been generally preferred for the purpose. In addition to the advantage of enabling such relatively rigid thermoplastics to be used on substantially equal terms with the more flexible thermoplastics, the process of the invention is of advantage even with these more flexible thermoplastics in giving great speed of operation and improved control.
Apparatus according to the invention comprises a mandrel suitable for use in providing rods with a covering of thermoplastic material, which comprises a hollow stem and a rearwardly tapering expansion thereon whereby a softened tube of said material can be expanded while being drawn over the mandrel, said stem projecting behind said expansion so as to be capable of supporting the tube on its way to the expansion, and projecting forward of said expansion so as to be capable of engaging the rear end of the rod being covered, one end of the stem being closed and the other end being open so that a gaseous medium can be admitted to the inside of the stem, and the stem being provided with outlet means for allowing said medium to escape into the annular space between the stem and the tube behind and in front of the expansion.
In covering rods having an axial passage through them from end to end, e. g. the peripherally grooved wooden dowels of this construction commonly used in making perambulator handles, the rod is preferably held during covering between hollow centres engaging opposite ends of said passage, one of the centres supplying the gaseous medium to said passage, the other centre being on the forward end of the mandrel and conveying the gaseous medium from said passage to a passage in the mandrel communicating with outlet orifices whence it issues into the annular space between the tube and the mandrel.
A mandrel suitable for use in covering hollow rods comprises a hollow stem. and a rearwardly tapering expansion thereon for expanding the softened tube drawn over it, .the stem extendingbehind the expansion to form a support for the tube approaching the expansion, and being closed at its rear end, and extending forward of the expansion to form a nozzle adapted to fit into the rear end of the rod so that the mandrel is carried by the rod and the passage through the rod communicates with the inside of the stern, and outlets being provided in the stem near the rear end of the expansion and between the forward end of the expansion and the nozzle, for allowing the gaseous medium entering the stem from the passage through the rod to issue into the annular space between. the tube and the stem on both sides of the expansion. This mandrel is employed in combination with a support for the forward end of a tubular rod to be covered, said support comprising a nozzle capable of fitting into said forward end so as to support the rod and enable a gaseous medium supplied to the nozzle to pass therefrom into the passage through the rod.
In covering solid rods, e. g. peripherally grooved wooden dowels unprovided with an axial passage the rod is preferably held between centres during covering, one of said centres being at the end of the mandrel, and the mandrel has an internal passage connecting the supply of gaseous medium with orifices through which said medium issues into the annular space between the tube and the mandrel.
A mandrel suitable for use in covering solid rods comprises a sleeve slidably mounted on a tubular member adapted to carry the sleeve and to admit a gaseous medium supplied to said member into the inside of the sleeve, said sleeve carrying the expansion for expanding the thermoplastic tube and being provided with outlet means for the gaseous medium behind and in front of said expansion, and being capable of disengagement from the tubular member for the insertion of a fresh thermoplastic tube behind the expansion and of being held in a position on said tubular member in which it engages the rear end of the rod. This mandrel is used in combination with retractable means for engaging and supporting the forward end of a rod to be covered while the rear end of said rod is engaged and supported by the forward end of the mandrel.
Apparatus according to the invention is shown by way of example in the accompanying drawings wherein:
Figure 1 shows in part-sectional elevation an apparatus for providing a hollow rod with a tubular covering of cellulose acetate, and
Figure 2 shows, also in part-sectional elevation, an apparatus for achieving the same purpose when the rod to be coated is solid. The covered rods are suitable for use as perambulator handles.
Referring now to Fig. 1 of the drawings, in a support 1 is held by set-screws 2 an air pipe 3 having a nozzle 4 which forms a support for the wooden rod 5 to be covered. The air pipe is connected with a reservoir of compressed air (not shown)v and is provided with a foot-operated throttle valve (not shown) for the control of the air supply. The rod which has two series of peripheral grooves 6 and 7 is circular in cross-section; the radius increases gradually towards the mid point. The rod has a bore 8 extending throughout its length. Into the rearward end 9 of this bore fits the tapered forward end 10 of a hollow mandrel 11 having a rearwardly tapering expansion 12 the maximum diameter of which is substantially equal to the maximum diameter of the rod 5. The rearwardly projecting part of the mandrel is closed by a rounded wooden plug 13. Air outlet holes extending through the mandrel from the bore 8 are provided at 14 and 15. The arrangement is such that with a hollow rod in position, on opening the air throttle air passes from the air-supply pipe through the bore of the rod and then through the bore of the mandrel and escapes through the holes 14 and 15. In addition a reservoir of air is formed in the rearward extension of the bore 8 and exerts a useful buffer effect. The drawing shows a cellulose acetate tube 16 in course of being drawn from the mandrel 11 on to the rod 5. The tube is of internal diameter smaller than the maximum diameter of the expansion 12 on the mandrel but larger than the external diameter of the rearwardly projecting part of the mandrel.
In operation the tube is softened, for instance by immersion in a bath comprising acetone, alcohol and water, until it is quite limp. The operator then applies a little lubricant to the expansion 12 of the mandrel, turns on the air supply by means of the foot-control and draws the softened tube along the mandrel, over the expansion, along the rod to the end thereof. (Lubricant could be introduced into the air stream or sprayed into the tube but it has been found better for the operator to apply what lubricant is necessary to the mandrel from time to time.) Once the tube has made contact all round with the tapered portion of the expansion 12 any tendency to stick can be overcome by pressing the tube into close contact with the mandrel at a point in advance of where the sticking is occurring so that slight inflation of the tube occurs at the point of sticking and overcomes the sticking. An operator soon becomes so expert at this operation that it is done almost unconsciously, and the whole process of drawing the tube over the mandrel on to the rod is performed with great rapidity and without undue inflation of the tube such as might cause defects in the covering.
Referring now to Fig. 2 the support 20 carries in a housing 21 a centre 22 adapted to engage a countersink 23 centrally disposed in the forward face 24 of the wooden rod 25 which is identical with the rod 5 of Fig. 1 except for being solid. A spring 26 in the housing 21 bears against a flange 27 on the centre 22 urging it in a rearward direction. A countersink 28 in the rearward face 29 of the rod 25 accommodates the conical forward end of the mandrel 30. The mandrel has a rearwardly tapering expansion 12 and air holes at 14 and 15 as in the mandrel of Fig. l. The bore 31 of the mandrel 30 is a sliding fit round the air pipe 32 having a nozzle 33 adapted to seat against the rearward face of a plug 34 in the bore 31 of the mandrel so that the bore 35 of the air pipe connects through the passage 36 in the plug with the bore 31 of the mandrel. The air pipe 32 is carried by a support 38. The air pipe 32 is connected to a source of compressed air and provided with a foot-operated throttle valve (neither shown). On opening the throttle air passes through the bore of the mandrel and out through the airholes 14 and 15.
In the operation of the apparatus shown in Fig. 2, assuming that the covering of one rod has just been completed, the covered rod and mandrel are disengaged by retracting the centre 22 against the action of the spring 26, a fresh thermoplastic tube is inserted on the mandrel 30 so that the forward end of the tube is in contact with the expansion 12, the mandrel is then pushed back into position on the air pipe 32, and a fresh rod 25 is then centred between the end 28 of the mandrel and the springloaded centre 22. The air is turned on and the tube is drawn over the expansion 12 of the mandrel on to the rod 25 using the same technique as in operating the apparatus of Fig. 1.
In the apparatus of the invention it is not essential that the air holes 14 and 15 should be exactly in the positions shown nor is it even essential that two separate series 14 and 15 of air holes should be provided. It is very desirable to have air holes in the neighbourhood of the forward edge of the expansion 12 so as to provide for inflation of the tube in the region beyond the expansion 12 but these holes may, instead of being in the forwardly projecting stem portion of the mandrel, be in the forward face of the expansion; or some of the holes may be in said face and the others in said forwardly projecting stem. The holes 14 at or near the rear end of the expansion have been found useful (but'not essential) in dealing with any tendency to stick to the rearwardly projecting part of the mandrel. Additional holes may be provided further back from the expansion. An advantage of having air holes in the rearwardly projecting stem portion of the mandrel is that better control of the air pressure at various points along the path of the tube can be so obtained. Thus, for instance, by nipping the tube against the rod with one hand and against the tapered part of the expansion with the other, the air pressure acting to inflate the tube can be reduced below that exerted when the tube is nipped not only on the rod but also against the mandrel at a point behind the air holes 14. Thus with sets of holes on each side of the expansion as shown in the drawings control of local inflation can be obtained by manual operation of the tube during the covering operation without the necessity of varying the throttle opening. If desired separate air control for the two or more series of holes can be provided, for instance by providing a sleeve valve in the mandrel, but this is a refinement which is generally unnecessary.
A suitable material for the mandrel is brass. The surface may be plated and/ or highly polished but this is not generally necessary and a finely roughened surface such as can be obtained by etching or sand blasting may even be of advantage in reducing any tendency to bind on the mandrel. The mandrel surface may be made of selflubricat-ing material such, for example, as the porous metallic materials charged with lubricant that are used in self-lubricating bearings. Or a material such as polytetrafiuorethylene having a loW-coeffic-ient'of fixation=towards cellulose derivative materials maybe used.
A very suitable material 1" J1 the pre-fommcd tube is cellulose acetate plasticised with diethyl phthalate, di- (methoxyethyD-phthalate' or a mixture of dimethyl phthalate and triphenyl phosphate in the Weight ratio of 4:1. Other plastioisers'can be used, for instance methyl phthalyl ethyl glycollate, ethyl phthalyl .ethylglycollate and tri- (mono-chlorethyl)phosphate. The pro-formed tube may be made by solventles's hot extrusion, e. g. as described, in U. S. application S. No. 243,488, filed August 24, 1951, and in general if a tube is of such composition as to be capable of being made by solventless extrusion it will also be suitable in composition for use in the present invention. The thickness of the tube depends largely on the thickness required in the covering. The most useful results have been obtained with pie-formed tubes of thickness at least 0.01 inch, e. g. 0.02 to 0.1 inch and especially 0.02 to 0.05 inch. The internal diameter of the tube should be less than the maximum diameter of the rod to be coated. Thus, for instance, in. coat-ing a rod of maximum diameter 1.125 inches a tube of thickness 0.02 .inch and internal diameter 0.720 inch has been found very suitable.
For softening the tube liquids consisting essentially of a volatile solvent for the material of the tube diluted with a volatile non-solvent have been found most suitable. (The term volatile in this specification means having a normal boiling point not greater than about 110 C.) For cellulose acetate, volatile solvents include acetone, methylene ethylene ether, and dioxane, and volatile non solvents include water, methanol, ethanol, isopropauol, benzene and toluene. Acetone isthe prefenred volatile solvent and among volatile non-solvents water, especially in admixture with an alcohol, is preferred. A particularly useful softening liquid for cellulose acetate has the composition (by volume) 23 parts ofacetone 43 parts of industrial alcohol 34 parts of water.
in this solution softening of a tube of thickness 0.20 inch and initial diameter 0.720 inch to the desired degree of limpness occurs at ordinary temperature in the space of about one hour. Thinner tubes, of course, soften more rapidly. The speed of softening can be increased by raising the temperature of the bath or by increasing the proportion of acetone, but too high a proportion of acetone or other active solvent is apt to result in the formation of a hard skin on the tube. Minor proportions of a medium boiling solvent, e. g. ethyl lactate or diacetone alcohol, can be included in the softening bath. The softening bath may also contain a small proportion of a wetting agent such as the sodium salt of secondary octadecyl acid sulphate.
The invention has been described with particular reference to covering the rods with tubes having a basis of cellulose acetate. The process and apparatus of the invention can, however, be employed with advantage in covering rods with tubes having a basis of other thermoplastics, for example other thermoplastic cellulose derivatives such as cellulose propionate, cellulose acetate-propionate, cellulose acetate-butyrate, ethyl cellulose and benzyl cellulose; solid polymers and co-polymers of ethylene; thermoplastic polyvinyl compounds, for example polyvinyl chloride, polystyrene, and co-polymers of vinyl chloride with a. minor proportion of vinyl acetate, of vinylidene chloride with a minor proportion of vinyl chloride, and of vinyl chloride or vinylidene chloride with acrylonitrile or methacrylonitrile; thermoplastic polymers of acrylic acid derivatives, for example polyethyl acrylate and poly methyl methaorylate; and thermoplastic linear condensation polymers such as the nylons, polyethylene 'terephthalate and poly-a-amino-l.2.4-ttriazole.
The hollow or solid rods to be covered may be of various rigid materials including wood, metals, ceramics and heat-hardenedplastics. Naturally the material of the rod must not be such that it becomes soft or sticky by contact with the softened tube. For covering rods of non-circular cross-section, the cross-sectional shape of the expansion on the mandrel may be modified correspondingly and pro-formed tubes may be used of crosssectional shape approximating to the average cross-sectional shape of the rod, though this is not usually necessary.
Having described my invention, what I desire to secure by Letters Patent is:
1. Process for providing rods with a covering of thermoplastic material, wherein a tube of said material of smallerinternal cross-sectional area than the maximum cross-sectional area of the rod in a temporarily softened condition is drawn as a single operation over a mandrel, which gradually expands the tube to said maximum area, and on to the rod, pressure being exerted against the inside of the tube meanwhile by a gaseous medium introduced through apertures in the mandrel.
2. Process for providing rods with a covering of normally rigid thermoplastic material, wherein a tube of said material of smaller internal cross-sectional area than the maximum cross-sectional area of the rod is converted into a temporarily limp condition by swelling with a homogeneous mixture of a solvent and a non-solvent, and while in said condition is expanded gradually to an internal cross-sectional area at least as great as said maximum cross-sectional area, by being drawn over a three dimensional shaping surface, and is drawn from said surface on to the rod, pressure being exerted on the internal surface of the tube by air supplied to the interior of the tube in region-s behind and in front of said shaping surface, and the tube subsequently being hardened in position by evaporation.
3. Process for providing rods with a covering of normally rigid thermoplastic material, wherein a tube of a plasti-cised celluloseestcr of a carboxylic acid containing 2 to 4 carbon atoms of smaller internal cross-sectional area than the maximum cross-sectional area of the rod is converted into a temporarily limped condition by swelling with a homogeneous mixture of a solventand a non-solvent, and while in said condition is expanded gradually to an internal cross-sectional area, at least as great as said maximum cross-sectional area, by being drawn over a three dimensional shaping surface, and is drawn from said surface on to the rod, pressure being exerted on the internal surface of the tube by air supplied to the interior of the tube in regions behind and in front of said shaping surface, and the tube subsequently being hardened in position by evaporation.
4. Process for providing rods with a covering of normally rigid thermoplastic material, wherein a tube of plasticised cellulose acetate of smaller internal cross-sectional area than the maximum cross-sectional area of the rod is converted into a temporarily limp condition by swelling with a homogeneous mixture of a solvent and a nonsolvent, and while in said condition is expanded gradually to an internal cross-sectional area at least as great as said maximum cross-sectional area, by being drawn over a three dimensional shaping surface, and is drawn from said surface on to the rod, pressure being exerted on the internal surface of the tube by air supplied to the interior of the tube in regions behind and in front of said shaping surface, and the tube subsequently being hardened in position by evaporation.
5. Process for providing rods with a covering of normally rigid thermoplastic material, wherein a tube of plasticised cellulose acetate of smaller internal cross-sectional area than the maximum cross-sectional area of the rod is converted into a temporarily limp condition by swelling with a homogeneous mixture of acetone, ethyl alcohol and water, and while in said condition is expanded gradually to an internal cross-sectional area at least as great as said maximum cross-sectional area,
by being drawn over a three dimensional shaping surface, and is drawn from said surface on to the rod, pressure being exerted on the internal surface of the tube by air supplied to the interior of the tube in regions behind and in front of said shaping surface, and the tube subsequently being hardened in position by evaporatron.
6. A mandrel suitable for use in providing rods with a covering of thermoplastic material, which comprises a hollow stem and a rearwardly tapering expansion thereon whereby a softened tube of said material can be expanded while being drawn over the mandrel, said stem projecting behind said expansion so as to be capable of supporting the tube on its way to the expansion, and projecting forward of said expansion so as to be capable of engaging the rear end of the rod being covered, one end of the stem being closed and the other end being open so that a gaseous medium can be admitted to the inside of the stem, and the stem being provided with outlet means for allowing said medium to escape into the annular space between the stem and the tube behind and in front of the expansion.
7. A mandrel according to claim 6 suitable for use in covering hollow rods, wherein the forward projection of the stem terminates in a nozzle that can be fitted into the rear end of the passage in a rod to be covered so that the mandrel is supported by the rod and a gaseous medium can be admitted from said passage to the inside of the hollow stem, and the rear end of the stem is closed.
8. A mandrel according to claim 6 suitable for use in covering solid rods, which comprises a sleeve slidably mounted on a tubular member adapted to carry the sleeve and to admit a gaseous medium supplied to said member into the inside of the sleeve, said sleeve carrying the expansion for expanding the thermoplastic tube and being provided with outlet means for the gaseous medium behind and in front of said expansion, and being capable of disengagement from the tubular member for the insertion of a fresh thermoplastic tube behind the expansion and of being held in a position on said tubular member in which it engages the rear end of the rod.
9. The combination of a mandrel according to claim 6 wherein the forward projection of the stem terminates in a nozzle that can be fitted into the rear end of a passage through the rod to be covered so that the mandrel is supported by the rod and a gaseous medium can be admitted from said passage to the inside of the hollow stem, the rear end of the stem being closed, and a support for the forward end of the rod to be covered, said support comprising a nozzle capable of fitting into said forward end so as to support the rod and enable a gaseous medium supplied to the nozzle to pass therefrom into the passage through the rod.
10. The combination of a mandrel according to claim 6, which comprises a sleeve slidably mounted on a tubular member adapted to carry the sleeve and to admit a gaseous medium supplied to said member into the inside of the sleeve, said sleeve carrying the expansion for expanding the thermoplastic tube and being provided with outlet means for the gaseous medium behind and in front of said expansion and being capable of disengagement from the tubular member for the insertion of a fresh thermoplastic tube behind the expansion and of being held in a position on said tubular member in which it engages the rear end of the rod, together with retractable means for engaging and supporting the forward end of the rod to be covered while the rear end of said rod is engaged and supported by the forward end of the mandrel.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 901,093 Gregory Oct. 13, 1908 1,461,130 Loughead July 10, 1923 1,479,936 Stevens Jan. 8, 1924 1,537,860 Miller May 12, 1925 2,027,962 Currie Ian. 14, 1936 2,183,691 Owens Dec. 19, 1939 2,272,704 Harding Feb. 10, 1942 2,565,316 Lucas Aug. 21, 1951

Claims (1)

  1. 2. PROCESS FOR PROVIDING RODS WITH A COVERING OF NORMALLY RIGID THERMOPLASTIC MATERIAL, WHEREIN A TUBE OF SAID MATERIAL OF SMALLER INTERNAL CROSS-SECTIONAL AREA THAN THE MAXIMUM CROSS-SECTIONAL AREA OF THE ROD IS CONVERTED INTO A TEMPORARILY LIMP CONDITION BY SWELLING WITH A HOMOGENEOUS MIXTURE OF A SOLVENT AND A NON-SOLVENT, AND WHILE IN SAID CONDITION IS EXPANDED GRADUALLY TO AN INTERNAL CROSS-SECTIONAL AREA AT LEAST AS GREAT AS SAID MAXIMUM CROSS-SECTIONAL AREA, BY BEING DRAWN OVER A THREE DIMENSIONAL SHAPING SURFACE, AND IS DRAWN FROM SAID SURFACE ON TO THE ROD, PRESSURE BEING EXERTED ON THE INTERNAL SURFACE OF THE TUBE BY AIR SUPPLIED TO THE INTERIOR OF THE TUBE IN REGIONS BEHIND AND IN FRONT OF SAID SHAPING SURFACE, AND THE TUBE SUBSEQUENTLY BEING HARDENED IN POSITION BY EVAPORATION.
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Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3074832A (en) * 1957-12-04 1963-01-22 Detag Plastic window plate structure and method of making same
US3090027A (en) * 1959-06-22 1963-05-14 Delbert L Phillips Modular electrical connector
US3146709A (en) * 1962-04-09 1964-09-01 West Essex Printing Plate Inc Method and apparatus for mounting printing sleeves
US3842483A (en) * 1973-09-10 1974-10-22 W Cramer Method and apparatus for mounting a sleeve on a combined ferrule and electrical conductor
US4551293A (en) * 1984-03-05 1985-11-05 Jamak, Inc. Method of forming spark plug boots
US5163989A (en) * 1990-08-27 1992-11-17 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method for forming a balloon mold and the use of such mold
US5413810A (en) * 1994-01-03 1995-05-09 Xerox Corporation Fabricating electrostatographic imaging members
US5443785A (en) * 1994-01-03 1995-08-22 Xerox Corporation Method of treating seamless belt substrates and carriers therefor
US6393226B1 (en) * 2000-10-04 2002-05-21 Nexpress Solutions Llc Intermediate transfer member having a stiffening layer and method of using
US6393249B1 (en) 2000-10-04 2002-05-21 Nexpress Solutions Llc Sleeved rollers for use in a fusing station employing an internally heated fuser roller
US6541171B1 (en) 2000-10-04 2003-04-01 Nexpress Solutions Llc Sleeved photoconductive member and method of making
US6567641B1 (en) 2000-10-04 2003-05-20 Nexpress Solutions Llc Sleeved rollers for use in a fusing station employing an externally heated fuser roller

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US901093A (en) * 1908-01-20 1908-10-13 Thomas M Gregory Means for molding hot-water bottles.
US1461130A (en) * 1923-02-26 1923-07-10 Four Wheel Hydraulic Brake Com Method of assembling hose and fitting
US1479936A (en) * 1921-06-22 1924-01-08 Stevens And Company Inc Method of making spectacle temples
US1537860A (en) * 1924-02-28 1925-05-12 Faultless Rubber Co Apparatus for making hollow rubber articles, such as nipples, finger cots, bulbs, and the like
US2027962A (en) * 1933-03-03 1936-01-14 Nat Carbon Co Inc Production of articles from plastic compositions
US2183691A (en) * 1936-05-21 1939-12-19 Celon Company Container closure and method for making same
US2272704A (en) * 1940-05-29 1942-02-10 Us Rubber Co Method and apparatus for making corrugated tubes
US2565316A (en) * 1946-08-17 1951-08-21 Gen Electric Method of using dilatable sealing elements

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US901093A (en) * 1908-01-20 1908-10-13 Thomas M Gregory Means for molding hot-water bottles.
US1479936A (en) * 1921-06-22 1924-01-08 Stevens And Company Inc Method of making spectacle temples
US1461130A (en) * 1923-02-26 1923-07-10 Four Wheel Hydraulic Brake Com Method of assembling hose and fitting
US1537860A (en) * 1924-02-28 1925-05-12 Faultless Rubber Co Apparatus for making hollow rubber articles, such as nipples, finger cots, bulbs, and the like
US2027962A (en) * 1933-03-03 1936-01-14 Nat Carbon Co Inc Production of articles from plastic compositions
US2183691A (en) * 1936-05-21 1939-12-19 Celon Company Container closure and method for making same
US2272704A (en) * 1940-05-29 1942-02-10 Us Rubber Co Method and apparatus for making corrugated tubes
US2565316A (en) * 1946-08-17 1951-08-21 Gen Electric Method of using dilatable sealing elements

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3074832A (en) * 1957-12-04 1963-01-22 Detag Plastic window plate structure and method of making same
US3090027A (en) * 1959-06-22 1963-05-14 Delbert L Phillips Modular electrical connector
US3146709A (en) * 1962-04-09 1964-09-01 West Essex Printing Plate Inc Method and apparatus for mounting printing sleeves
US3842483A (en) * 1973-09-10 1974-10-22 W Cramer Method and apparatus for mounting a sleeve on a combined ferrule and electrical conductor
US4551293A (en) * 1984-03-05 1985-11-05 Jamak, Inc. Method of forming spark plug boots
US5163989A (en) * 1990-08-27 1992-11-17 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method for forming a balloon mold and the use of such mold
US5413810A (en) * 1994-01-03 1995-05-09 Xerox Corporation Fabricating electrostatographic imaging members
US5443785A (en) * 1994-01-03 1995-08-22 Xerox Corporation Method of treating seamless belt substrates and carriers therefor
US6393226B1 (en) * 2000-10-04 2002-05-21 Nexpress Solutions Llc Intermediate transfer member having a stiffening layer and method of using
US6393249B1 (en) 2000-10-04 2002-05-21 Nexpress Solutions Llc Sleeved rollers for use in a fusing station employing an internally heated fuser roller
US6541171B1 (en) 2000-10-04 2003-04-01 Nexpress Solutions Llc Sleeved photoconductive member and method of making
US6567641B1 (en) 2000-10-04 2003-05-20 Nexpress Solutions Llc Sleeved rollers for use in a fusing station employing an externally heated fuser roller

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