US2869258A - Arrangement in calenders - Google Patents

Arrangement in calenders Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2869258A
US2869258A US502944A US50294455A US2869258A US 2869258 A US2869258 A US 2869258A US 502944 A US502944 A US 502944A US 50294455 A US50294455 A US 50294455A US 2869258 A US2869258 A US 2869258A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
chest
shoe
roll
partitions
ironer
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
US502944A
Inventor
Petterson Olof Holger
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
Priority to US502944A priority Critical patent/US2869258A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2869258A publication Critical patent/US2869258A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06FLAUNDERING, DRYING, IRONING, PRESSING OR FOLDING TEXTILE ARTICLES
    • D06F67/00Details of ironing machines provided for in groups D06F61/00, D06F63/00, or D06F65/00
    • D06F67/08Beds; Heating arrangements therefor
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06FLAUNDERING, DRYING, IRONING, PRESSING OR FOLDING TEXTILE ARTICLES
    • D06F67/00Details of ironing machines provided for in groups D06F61/00, D06F63/00, or D06F65/00

Definitions

  • V ' The present invention relates to flat work ironers and particularly to the chest forming the bed for the roll of such ironers. Steam orother heating medium is supplied to the chest for heating the ironer shoe, which partially encloses the roller.
  • One object of the invention is to obtain a design for the chest, permitting a thermal expansion without the risk of distortion.
  • This has mainly been obtained owing to the fact that the chest is provided with mutually parallel end Walls and partitions arrangedas transverse structural elements, preferably of uniform strength, said elements being, by welding, connected both to the ironer shoe and to the bottom of the chest, which bottom follows, in cross section, a circular line or a polygon, the centre of curvature of which is located in the same direction as that of the ironer shoe.
  • Fig. 1 is a vertical section taken on the line 1-1 in Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 2 is a front view of the machine.
  • Fig. 3 is an axial section on a larger scale through one end portion of the roll, showing a universal joint for driving said roll.
  • Fig. 4 is a cross section taken on the line 4-4 in Fig. 6.
  • Fig. 5 shows the chest as viewed from below.
  • Fig. 6 is a side view of the chest partial in longitudinal section.
  • the mangle comprises a roll 1, which is rotatable on a chest 2 forming a bearing for the roll.
  • Said roll 1 is provided with a central body 3 and is built in known manner with perforated outside casing 4 covered with a textile fabric pad.
  • said roll is provided with a hub sleeve 5 connected to the suction side of a fan 6 producing suction for the purpose of removing moisture from the clothes during the ironing operation.
  • the opposite end wall of the roll is provided with a hub sleeve 7, which forms a coupling sleeve having axial grooves 8 and accommodates a cross cylindrical and has a radius corresponding to that of the roll.
  • the ironer shoe. 14 is along its longitudinal edge portions bent away-from the roll and forms togetherwith this latter feed in and discharge openings for the material.
  • the chest is provided with a substantially semi-cylindrical bottom 15 having generally the same radius of curvature as that of the shoe 14.
  • Two end walls 16 seal the space between the shoe and the bottom so that a steam chamber is formed, to which steam may be supplied through a short fixed pipe 17 extending upwardly through the bottom 15 towards the shoe 14 at the lowest part of the latter.
  • a short fixed pipe 17 extending upwardly through the bottom 15 towards the shoe 14 at the lowest part of the latter.
  • the steam passes through the chest in its longitudinal direction and those parts of the shoe 14, from which the largest amount of heat is removed, cause an increased condensation and thus an increased supply of heat.
  • the steam pressure of the steam supplied is in the range of 7 to 8 atmospheres, the working temperature of the chest thus reaching about C., which involves considerable expansions of the various parts of the chest when they are heated from room temperature.
  • a chest has been built, which in practice has proved to be thoroughly satisfactory from said point of view.
  • the roll rotates with the same smooth action both when the chest is cold and when it is hot, and the contacting pressure of the roll against the material is evenly distributed throughout the roll surface. Only in this way an effective mangling is obtained.
  • the chest is brought to a temperature considerably higher than that of the casing 4 ofthe roll.
  • said casing 4 expands in a smaller degree than the shoe 14.
  • the radius of curvature of the shoe should correspond to the radius of the roll, i. e., the shoe 14 should, during heating, be bent in such a manner that the radius increases only in proportion to that of the roll. The essential thing is, however, that the thermal expansion does not cause dis tortion of the ironer shoe.
  • the chest is provided with transverse structural elements consisting of partitions 20 of the .same thickness as that of the end walls 16.
  • the partitions 20 are connected to the shoe 14 as well as to the bottom 15 of the chest, and they extend substantially along the entire transverse dimension of said cylindrical walls, with the exception of uncovered passages 21 for the steam, situated at the highest portions of the chest.
  • the steam may be introduced into a'chamber 22 disposed, according to Fig. 6, nearest the lefthand end wall 16, said chamber being closed in the other direction by the nearest partition 20, and may pass therefrom through the two passages 21 at the edges of the chest into the next chamber 22, and so on.
  • all of the partitions 20 are formed with a small recess 23 in the lowest part of the chest so that the water of condensation may pass from one chamber 22 to the other and further to the bottom outlet.
  • the end walls and the partitions are primarily attached to the ironer shoe by means of welded joints 24 extending on either side of each wall.
  • the end walls 16 have a greater width than the partitions 20 so as to project beyond the bottom.
  • Their outer contour follows an arc concentric with the cylindrical bottom 15.
  • the bottom plate may bewelded to the inside of the .end Walls by means of welded joints 25.
  • the bottom is provided witha series of holes 26 for each partition, as appears from Figs. 4 and 5, distributed over the edge surface of the partition.
  • the partitions 20 are accessible for welding through the holes 26, which are filled up by so-called plug welding, the bottom thus being rigidly secured to the partitions and deformable with the same due to temperature changes.
  • Each end wall 16 is provided, on the outside, with a bracket 27 intended for mounting the chest in stand walls 28 and 29, which are each provided with a corresponding bracket 30.
  • a plate 31 is fixed under tension around the outer edge of the end walls 16 and closes a space 32 (Fig. 6) along the outside of the bottom 15. This space is filled with a heat insulating material 33, preferably glass wool or the like, thereby preventing radiation of heat from the bottom surface 15.
  • Each end wall of the chest 11 is provided with a valved outlet 34, which outlets are kept open merely during-the first part of the steam supply, so that the air is allowed 'to escape from the chest, and are subsequently closed.
  • the partitions may be dimensioned in such a manner that the same have a certain yielding ability.
  • the partitions are arranged at a distance from each other shorter than the height of the chest, thus dividing the chest into a plurality of chambers 22.
  • The-end walls 16 have a moment of inertia greater than that of the partitions. The thickness of these latter is approximately twice that of the shoe 14 and approximately three 'times that of the bottom 15.
  • a sealed chest including a substantially semi-cylindrical ironer shoe and a substantially semi-cylindrical bottom spaced therefrom and having substantially the same radius of curvature as the ironer shoe, parallel end walls arranged perpendicularly to the longitudinal axis of the ironer shoe and bottom closing the chest, means to introduced a heating medium into the chest to heat the same, a roll resting in and rotatable with respect to the ironer shoe, means connecting the roll with a source of power, a plurality of spaced apart transverse partitions arranged within the chest in parallelism to the end walls, weld means securing the partitions to the ironer shoe and to the semi-cylindrical bottom whereby the bottom deforms with the partitions due to temperature changes, a heat insulating cover means on the bottom of the sealed chest, and each of said partitions being provided with at least one passage adjacent the ironer shoe to allow theheating medium to flow into the compartments within the chest defined by adjacent partitions.

Description

Jan. 20, 1959 o. H. PETTERSON 2,869,258
' ARRANGEMENT IN CALENDERS FiledjApril 21, 1955 s Sheets-Sheet 1 FIG. 7.
1. N Inventor '.H.Pe25tr som/ J 1959 b. H. PETTERSON 2,369,253
ARRANGEMENT IN CALENDERS 5 Sheets-Sheet 2 Filed April 21, 1955 llIIIIII/IIIIII ll/11111111111 111i,
FIG. 4.
0. H: PETTERSON ARRANGEMENT IN CALENDERS Jan. 20, 1959 s Sheets-Sheet 3 Filed April 31, 1955 8 QIH IOW IH I IMHI HUI UNHM HUH FIG. 5;
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIL ARRANGEMENT IN CALENDERS Olof Holger Petterson, Bromma, Sweden Application April 21, 1955, Serial No. 502,944
' 1 Claim. or. 38-56) V 'The present invention relates to flat work ironers and particularly to the chest forming the bed for the roll of such ironers. Steam orother heating medium is supplied to the chest for heating the ironer shoe, which partially encloses the roller.
In.previously known devices of this kind, numerous difficulties have been experienced on account of tendencies of 'the chest upon heating to be deformed in such a manner that the ironer shoe does not fit the form of the roll. In such cases, said roll will load the ironer shoe along areas uncontrollable with regard to their shape. The ironing becomes incomplete, and the material being ironed has to be fed through the machine repeatedly. Above all, a distortion of the chest causes, however, the disadvantage that the material being ironed is advanced irregularly, and hence wrinkling may result. Several pro- Patented Jan. 20, 1959 "ice which constitutes the ironer shoe and is substantially semipos als have been made for avoiding the above-mentioned inconveniences, but theseproposals generally are directed to devices for controlling the pressure between roller and chest, mainly in order to eliminate the defective contact of the roller with the ironer shoe. However, such measures have not met with success, since they do not attack the actual source of errors, namely the deformation of the chest, above all by distortion.
One object of the invention is to obtain a design for the chest, permitting a thermal expansion without the risk of distortion. This has mainly been obtained owing to the fact that the chest is provided with mutually parallel end Walls and partitions arrangedas transverse structural elements, preferably of uniform strength, said elements being, by welding, connected both to the ironer shoe and to the bottom of the chest, which bottom follows, in cross section, a circular line or a polygon, the centre of curvature of which is located in the same direction as that of the ironer shoe.
The invention will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 is a vertical section taken on the line 1-1 in Fig. 2.
Fig. 2 is a front view of the machine.
Fig. 3 is an axial section on a larger scale through one end portion of the roll, showing a universal joint for driving said roll.
Fig. 4 is a cross section taken on the line 4-4 in Fig. 6.
Fig. 5 shows the chest as viewed from below.
Fig. 6 is a side view of the chest partial in longitudinal section.
In the embodiment shown the mangle comprises a roll 1, which is rotatable on a chest 2 forming a bearing for the roll. Said roll 1 is provided with a central body 3 and is built in known manner with perforated outside casing 4 covered with a textile fabric pad. At one end wall, said roll is provided with a hub sleeve 5 connected to the suction side of a fan 6 producing suction for the purpose of removing moisture from the clothes during the ironing operation. The opposite end wall of the roll is provided with a hub sleeve 7, which forms a coupling sleeve having axial grooves 8 and accommodates a cross cylindrical and has a radius corresponding to that of the roll. The ironer shoe. 14 is along its longitudinal edge portions bent away-from the roll and forms togetherwith this latter feed in and discharge openings for the material.
According to the example, the chest is provided with a substantially semi-cylindrical bottom 15 having generally the same radius of curvature as that of the shoe 14. Two end walls 16 seal the space between the shoe and the bottom so that a steam chamber is formed, to which steam may be supplied through a short fixed pipe 17 extending upwardly through the bottom 15 towards the shoe 14 at the lowest part of the latter. As a result, water of condensation is prevented from accumulating in the steam inlet. The water of condensation is discharged through an outlet 18 connected to a water collecting tank.
The steam passes through the chest in its longitudinal direction and those parts of the shoe 14, from which the largest amount of heat is removed, cause an increased condensation and thus an increased supply of heat. The steam pressure of the steam supplied is in the range of 7 to 8 atmospheres, the working temperature of the chest thus reaching about C., which involves considerable expansions of the various parts of the chest when they are heated from room temperature.
With regard to even contact of the roll, it is of very great importance that the chest should maintain its shape during temperature variations so that no distortion ensues.
According to the invention, a chest has been built, which in practice has proved to be thoroughly satisfactory from said point of view. The roll rotates with the same smooth action both when the chest is cold and when it is hot, and the contacting pressure of the roll against the material is evenly distributed throughout the roll surface. Only in this way an effective mangling is obtained.
In operation, the chest is brought to a temperature considerably higher than that of the casing 4 ofthe roll. Under such circumstances, said casing 4 expands in a smaller degree than the shoe 14. However, the radius of curvature of the shoe should correspond to the radius of the roll, i. e., the shoe 14 should, during heating, be bent in such a manner that the radius increases only in proportion to that of the roll. The essential thing is, however, that the thermal expansion does not cause dis tortion of the ironer shoe.
The chest is provided with transverse structural elements consisting of partitions 20 of the .same thickness as that of the end walls 16. By welding, the partitions 20 are connected to the shoe 14 as well as to the bottom 15 of the chest, and they extend substantially along the entire transverse dimension of said cylindrical walls, with the exception of uncovered passages 21 for the steam, situated at the highest portions of the chest. Thus, the steam may be introduced into a'chamber 22 disposed, according to Fig. 6, nearest the lefthand end wall 16, said chamber being closed in the other direction by the nearest partition 20, and may pass therefrom through the two passages 21 at the edges of the chest into the next chamber 22, and so on. For the purpose of collecting the water of condensation and drawing it off through the bottom outlet 18, all of the partitions 20 are formed with a small recess 23 in the lowest part of the chest so that the water of condensation may pass from one chamber 22 to the other and further to the bottom outlet.
The end walls and the partitions are primarily attached to the ironer shoe by means of welded joints 24 extending on either side of each wall. The end walls 16 have a greater width than the partitions 20 so as to project beyond the bottom. Their outer contour follows an arc concentric with the cylindrical bottom 15. Thus, the bottom plate may bewelded to the inside of the .end Walls by means of welded joints 25. For the purpose of 'welding together the bottom 15 and the partitions .20, the bottom is provided witha series of holes 26 for each partition, as appears from Figs. 4 and 5, distributed over the edge surface of the partition. Consequently, after the bottom has been welded to the end walls .16, the partitions 20 are accessible for welding through the holes 26, which are filled up by so-called plug welding, the bottom thus being rigidly secured to the partitions and deformable with the same due to temperature changes.
Each end wall 16 is provided, on the outside, with a bracket 27 intended for mounting the chest in stand walls 28 and 29, which are each provided with a corresponding bracket 30. A plate 31 is fixed under tension around the outer edge of the end walls 16 and closes a space 32 (Fig. 6) along the outside of the bottom 15. This space is filled with a heat insulating material 33, preferably glass wool or the like, thereby preventing radiation of heat from the bottom surface 15.
Each end wall of the chest 11 is provided with a valved outlet 34, which outlets are kept open merely during-the first part of the steam supply, so that the air is allowed 'to escape from the chest, and are subsequently closed.
Because of the fact that in operation the shoe .14 is maintained at a lower temperature than the bottom '15, forces are produced, which tend to reduce the radius of curvature of the shoe. Thus, said forces operate in a favourable sense and in consideration of said efiect, the partitions may be dimensioned in such a manner that the same have a certain yielding ability.
According to the embodiment shown the partitions are arranged at a distance from each other shorter than the height of the chest, thus dividing the chest into a plurality of chambers 22. The-end walls 16 have a moment of inertia greater than that of the partitions. The thickness of these latter is approximately twice that of the shoe 14 and approximately three 'times that of the bottom 15.
What I claim is:
In a machine of the character described, a sealed chest including a substantially semi-cylindrical ironer shoe and a substantially semi-cylindrical bottom spaced therefrom and having substantially the same radius of curvature as the ironer shoe, parallel end walls arranged perpendicularly to the longitudinal axis of the ironer shoe and bottom closing the chest, means to introduced a heating medium into the chest to heat the same, a roll resting in and rotatable with respect to the ironer shoe, means connecting the roll with a source of power, a plurality of spaced apart transverse partitions arranged within the chest in parallelism to the end walls, weld means securing the partitions to the ironer shoe and to the semi-cylindrical bottom whereby the bottom deforms with the partitions due to temperature changes, a heat insulating cover means on the bottom of the sealed chest, and each of said partitions being provided with at least one passage adjacent the ironer shoe to allow theheating medium to flow into the compartments within the chest defined by adjacent partitions.
References Citedin the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 683,402 Hoyt Sept. 24, 1901 FOREIGN PATENTS 983,699 France Mar. 25, 1949
US502944A 1955-04-21 1955-04-21 Arrangement in calenders Expired - Lifetime US2869258A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US502944A US2869258A (en) 1955-04-21 1955-04-21 Arrangement in calenders

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US502944A US2869258A (en) 1955-04-21 1955-04-21 Arrangement in calenders

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2869258A true US2869258A (en) 1959-01-20

Family

ID=24000086

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US502944A Expired - Lifetime US2869258A (en) 1955-04-21 1955-04-21 Arrangement in calenders

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2869258A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3170256A (en) * 1960-06-30 1965-02-23 Jesus Henri Leon Lucien Drying and ironing machines

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US683402A (en) * 1900-08-24 1901-09-24 Empire Laundry Machinery Company Mangle.
FR983699A (en) * 1948-04-07 1951-06-26 Braithwaite I & Son Eng Ltd Flatware ironing machine

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US683402A (en) * 1900-08-24 1901-09-24 Empire Laundry Machinery Company Mangle.
FR983699A (en) * 1948-04-07 1951-06-26 Braithwaite I & Son Eng Ltd Flatware ironing machine

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3170256A (en) * 1960-06-30 1965-02-23 Jesus Henri Leon Lucien Drying and ironing machines

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
USRE28459E (en) Transpiration drying and embossing of wet paper webs
US3432936A (en) Transpiration drying and embossing of wet paper webs
US3257739A (en) Drying garments
US2932091A (en) Heated shell drum dryers
US2869258A (en) Arrangement in calenders
JPH0134080B2 (en)
US4787157A (en) Dryer and ironer with deformable trough
US3163502A (en) Removable hood for a drying cylinder
US2878583A (en) Drums for the temperature treatment of materials
US1757344A (en) Laundry ironing machine
US1769009A (en) Laundry ironing and pressing apparatus
US2686978A (en) Laundry drier
US3206869A (en) Apparatus for applying a gloss to paper in drying thereof
US1633960A (en) Paper-making device
US3642182A (en) Machines for ironing laundry, and similar machines
US6792705B2 (en) Ironing device for uncreased-trousers ironing machines including means for ironing the trousers bottom portion
US1682903A (en) Steam press for clothes
US1678383A (en) Drying machine
US624180A (en) Mangle
US1834365A (en) Laundry ironing and pressing apparatus
US2035959A (en) Electric presser and ironer
US2325475A (en) Ironing machine
US1438129A (en) Drier
US1677367A (en) Cloth sponging and shrinking machine
US3395458A (en) Covers or hoods for the rollers of machines for the treatment of material in web form with humidified air or steam