US3783775A - Stands for presses - Google Patents

Stands for presses Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3783775A
US3783775A US00254910A US3783775DA US3783775A US 3783775 A US3783775 A US 3783775A US 00254910 A US00254910 A US 00254910A US 3783775D A US3783775D A US 3783775DA US 3783775 A US3783775 A US 3783775A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
yokes
uprights
yoke
stand
sections
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
US00254910A
Inventor
Platen B Von
F Jonsson
S Trolle
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.)
Radiator
Original Assignee
Radiator
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 Radiator filed Critical Radiator
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3783775A publication Critical patent/US3783775A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B30PRESSES
    • B30BPRESSES IN GENERAL
    • B30B15/00Details of, or accessories for, presses; Auxiliary measures in connection with pressing
    • B30B15/04Frames; Guides
    • B30B15/048Laminated frame structures

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT This invention relates to stands for high pressure presses. Such presses are often of a type including a pair of yokes, separated by a pair of uprights and surrounded by a girdle built up from prestressed steel strip. In order to reduce the piece weight and increase the strength of such presses, it is now proposed to build up the yokes, and preferably also the uprights, from sections arranged in face to face relationship.
  • Each section is similar in shape to its fellows and the 1 sections may be bolted together in closely packed or spaced face to face relationship.
  • the present invention relates to stands for high pressure presses, the stands of which have to absorb very high forces or stresses.
  • the size of the conventional stand is limited by the piece weight of the steel parts that can be produced by steel manufacturers.
  • the fit between the constituent parts, especially the yokes and uprights, is of such a close nature that the parts have to be machine. finished. Owing to this the size of the stand is limited not only by the piece weight of the constituent parts, but also by the possibility of machining these parts.
  • the uprights may also be built up from sections in face to face relationship.
  • Stands according to the invention can be made several times larger than has hitherto been possible, as the piece weight now limits only the size of the constituent sections of yokes and uprights, but not the total size of the assembled yokes and uprights.
  • a stand according to the invention is easier to erect, and smaller lifting and auxiliary apparatus can be used owing to the comparatively low piece weight of the constituent parts.
  • An essential advantage as compared with the conventional stands is that if e.g. a crack develops in a constituent part this part alone is damaged.
  • a decisive advantage is that the invention ensures considerably higher values of mechanical strength for the stand as a whole through the yokes and uprights being composed of sections which can be given higher mechanical strength than an undivided upright or an undivided yoke.
  • the specific strength of steel material decreases with growing dimensions and conversely increases with declining dimensions.
  • FIG. 1 is a fragmentary view in front elevation of one form of press stand, the lower part being broken away;
  • FIG. 2 is a view similar to that of FIG. ll, showing a modified yoke configuration of a stand otherwise the same as that of FIG. ll;
  • FIG. 3 is a cross sectional view in side elevation showing the laminated construction of the press stands of FIGS. 1 and 2.
  • a stand for a highpower press is constructed of two semi-eliptical yokes llA, separated by two orthogonal uprights 2.
  • a saddle 3 is provided along the outward curved surface of the yoke, and each upright is provided on the outside with a corresponding spacing plate 3a.
  • a girdle 4 is provided along the saddles 3 and spacing plates 3a.
  • the girdle is composed of steel strips wound round the yokes and uprights and prestressed as described in the Swedish and German patent specifications mentioned above.
  • the girdle is laterally bounded and supported by bracket plates 5, which are supported by pairs of posts 7.
  • the posts 7 are in their turn secured in position, on the one hand, by screws 13, screwed into the saddles 3 and the spacing plates 3a, and, on the other, by bolts 12 with nuts, which bolts interconnect the posts 7 of a pair.
  • each yoke 1A is composed of sections la (see FIG. 3), formed as semicircular plates having two flat opposite faces in parallel planes.
  • each upright 2 is composed of sections 2a, formed as rectangular plates having at least two opposite plane sides parallel to each other.
  • the yoke sections lla which build up to the yoke ll, (see FIG. 3) are held together by a plurality of bolts 6 with corresponding nuts, the bolts being passed through aligned holes formed in the yoke sections lla.
  • a groove is formed in the inward flat face of the yokes ll, and a corresponding groove is also formed in the adjacent face of the upright.
  • the groove in the yoke combines with the corresponding groove in the upright to form a recess, which can receive a bolt 6a.
  • Each bolt 6a is provided with nuts, and the guiding and assembling of the yoke and upright is effect by the cooperation between the bolts tia, their nuts and the corresponding recesses.
  • the bolts 6d and the corresponding nuts have the effect of holding the yokes and the uprights together.
  • FIG. 2 A useful variant of a yoke is shown in FIG. 2.
  • the yoke 113 is here composed of semicircular discs or plates identically arranged as in the embodiment of FIG. ll, except that in this case the configuration of the individual yoke plates provides an increase in the height of the yokes relatively to their structural length by having an extension or flap shaped part 14 projecting beyond the joint plane between the yoke and uprights.
  • the yokes and uprights each comprise a plurality of separate sections arranged in face-to-face relationship and that more than one of the yoke sections in any press stand is supported by or upon one upright section.
  • FIG. 3 wherein two sections 1a of yoke 1A are supported on each upright section 2a.
  • FIG. 2 The same relationship applies with respect to the embodiment of FIG. 2, in that more than one section of yoke 18 is supported by each section of uprights 2.
  • a stand for a press comprising a pair of opposed yokes and a pair of uprights interconnecting and supporting the yokes, and a girdle surrounding the yokes and uprights: the improvement that the yokes and uprights each comprise a plurality of separate sections arranged in face-to-face relationship and that more than one of said yoke sections is supported by the same upright section, in which the sections are in the form of semi-elliptical discs.
  • each yoke meets the upright on a joint plane and are in the form of discs each having an extension projecting beyond the joint plane between the yoke and the uprights.
  • a stand for a press comprising a pair of opposed yokes, a pair of uprights interconnecting and supporting the yokes, and a girdle surrounding the yokes and uprights: the improvement that the yokes and uprights each comprise a plurality of separate sections arranged in face to face relationship and that more than one of said yoke sections is supported by the same upright section, in which each yoke meets the upright on a joint plane and are in the form of discs each having an extension projecting beyond the joint plane between the yoke and uprights.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Rod-Shaped Construction Members (AREA)

Abstract

This invention relates to stands for high pressure presses. Such presses are often of a type including a pair of yokes, separated by a pair of uprights and surrounded by a girdle built up from prestressed steel strip. In order to reduce the piece weight and increase the strength of such presses, it is now proposed to build up the yokes, and preferably also the uprights, from sections arranged in face to face relationship. Each section is similar in shape to its fellows and the sections may be bolted together in closely packed or spaced face to face relationship.

Description

United States Patent Von Platen et al.
[ STANDS FOR PRESSES [75] Inventors: Baltzar Carl Von Platen; Finn Lennart Jonsson; Sten Trolle, all of Ystad, Sweden [73] Assignee: Etablissement Radiator, Vaduz, Liechtenstein [22] Filed: May 19, 1972 [21] Appl. No.: 254,910
Related US. Application Data [62] Division of Ser. Nb. 72,558, Sept 15, i576, PatiNo.
3,687,066. H V q 1 [52] US. Cl. 100/214 [51] Int. Cl B30b 1/00 [58] Field of Search 100/214; 72/455 [56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,064,558 11/1962 Von Platen 100/214 3,563,167 2/1971 Pennell et a1. 100/214 FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS 949,813 2/1964 Great Britain 100/214 182,512 11/1966 U.S.S.R ..100/214 Primary ExaminerBil1y J. Wilhite Attorney-Merril F. Steward et a1.
[5 7] ABSTRACT This invention relates to stands for high pressure presses. Such presses are often of a type including a pair of yokes, separated by a pair of uprights and surrounded by a girdle built up from prestressed steel strip. In order to reduce the piece weight and increase the strength of such presses, it is now proposed to build up the yokes, and preferably also the uprights, from sections arranged in face to face relationship.
Each section is similar in shape to its fellows and the 1 sections may be bolted together in closely packed or spaced face to face relationship.
3 Claims, 3 Drawing Figures STANDS FOR PRESSES This is a division of application Ser. No. 72,358, filed Sept. 15, 1970. v
The present invention relates to stands for high pressure presses, the stands of which have to absorb very high forces or stresses.
It is known, for instance from the Swedish Pat. specification No. 186 278 or German Pat. specification No. 1055958, to construct suchstands from two substantially semi-cylindrical prismatic yokes, separated by two preferably orthogonal or parallellipipedal uprights. The yokes and uprights, which are made of high-quality steel, are held together by a girdle built up of prestressed steel strip. Stands of the type described here can absorb very high forces, and it is possible to calculate with adequate accuracy the forces acting upon and in the different parts of the stand.
It is, nevertheless, inevitable that such stands should have certain drawbacks, which come increasingly to the fore as the size of the stand increases.
The size of the conventional stand is limited by the piece weight of the steel parts that can be produced by steel manufacturers. The fit between the constituent parts, especially the yokes and uprights, is of such a close nature that the parts have to be machine. finished. Owing to this the size of the stand is limited not only by the piece weight of the constituent parts, but also by the possibility of machining these parts.
Another essential drawback of the known stands is that if, for example, a crack occurs in a constituent part, as may happen with the high stresses involved, the crack tends to spread through the whole part. This leads to complete destruction, which involves great economic and material loss, as well as considerable physical danger to personnel and other equipment in the vicinity.
According to the present invention, these disadvantages are overcome in a suprisingly simple way, in that the yokes are built up from sections arranged in face to face relationship.
The uprights may also be built up from sections in face to face relationship.
Yokes and uprights built up from smaller sections eliminate the disadvantages presented by the conventional stands for high-power presses as detailed above.
Stands according to the invention can be made several times larger than has hitherto been possible, as the piece weight now limits only the size of the constituent sections of yokes and uprights, but not the total size of the assembled yokes and uprights.
It is, further, possible to attain a sufficient degree of precision in a simpler way, and the necessary machine finishing of the sections can be carried out in smaller machines. It will also be seen that a stand according to the invention is easier to erect, and smaller lifting and auxiliary apparatus can be used owing to the comparatively low piece weight of the constituent parts.
An essential advantage as compared with the conventional stands is that if e.g. a crack develops in a constituent part this part alone is damaged.
Finally, a decisive advantage is that the invention ensures considerably higher values of mechanical strength for the stand as a whole through the yokes and uprights being composed of sections which can be given higher mechanical strength than an undivided upright or an undivided yoke. In this respect it is known that the specific strength of steel material decreases with growing dimensions and conversely increases with declining dimensions.
The invention will be further described with reference to the accompanying drawings which show various embodiments of the invention, and in which:
FIG. 1 is a fragmentary view in front elevation of one form of press stand, the lower part being broken away;
FIG. 2 is a view similar to that of FIG. ll, showing a modified yoke configuration of a stand otherwise the same as that of FIG. ll; and
FIG. 3 is a cross sectional view in side elevation showing the laminated construction of the press stands of FIGS. 1 and 2.
In the parent application referred to above of which this is a division, embodiments of the invention are disclosed wherein the yoke members of the press stands are of semicircular configuration as seen in front elevation. It may, however, be desirable from the point of view of mechanical strength to increase the height of the yokes in relation to their structural length or lengths between points of support. This can be effected within the broader scope of the invention by forming the yokes with a somewhat modified configuration from that previously disclosed.
Referring first to FIGS. l and 3, a stand for a highpower press is constructed of two semi-eliptical yokes llA, separated by two orthogonal uprights 2. In each yoke a saddle 3 is provided along the outward curved surface of the yoke, and each upright is provided on the outside with a corresponding spacing plate 3a.
Round the outside of the stand formed by the yokes 11A and uprights 2 a girdle 4 is provided along the saddles 3 and spacing plates 3a. The girdle is composed of steel strips wound round the yokes and uprights and prestressed as described in the Swedish and German patent specifications mentioned above. The girdle is laterally bounded and supported by bracket plates 5, which are supported by pairs of posts 7. The posts 7 are in their turn secured in position, on the one hand, by screws 13, screwed into the saddles 3 and the spacing plates 3a, and, on the other, by bolts 12 with nuts, which bolts interconnect the posts 7 of a pair.
lEach yoke 1A is composed of sections la (see FIG. 3), formed as semicircular plates having two flat opposite faces in parallel planes. In a similar way each upright 2 is composed of sections 2a, formed as rectangular plates having at least two opposite plane sides parallel to each other.
The yoke sections lla, which build up to the yoke ll, (see FIG. 3) are held together by a plurality of bolts 6 with corresponding nuts, the bolts being passed through aligned holes formed in the yoke sections lla. A groove is formed in the inward flat face of the yokes ll, and a corresponding groove is also formed in the adjacent face of the upright. The groove in the yoke combines with the corresponding groove in the upright to form a recess, which can receive a bolt 6a. Each bolt 6a is provided with nuts, and the guiding and assembling of the yoke and upright is effect by the cooperation between the bolts tia, their nuts and the corresponding recesses. In addition, the bolts 6d and the corresponding nuts have the effect of holding the yokes and the uprights together.
A useful variant of a yoke is shown in FIG. 2. The yoke 113 is here composed of semicircular discs or plates identically arranged as in the embodiment of FIG. ll, except that in this case the configuration of the individual yoke plates provides an increase in the height of the yokes relatively to their structural length by having an extension or flap shaped part 14 projecting beyond the joint plane between the yoke and uprights.
In each of the modifications, however, it is an essential characteristic of the press stands of this invention that the yokes and uprights each comprise a plurality of separate sections arranged in face-to-face relationship and that more than one of the yoke sections in any press stand is supported by or upon one upright section. This is exemplified in FIG. 3 wherein two sections 1a of yoke 1A are supported on each upright section 2a. The same relationship applies with respect to the embodiment of FIG. 2, in that more than one section of yoke 18 is supported by each section of uprights 2.
We claim:
1. In a stand for a press, the stand comprising a pair of opposed yokes and a pair of uprights interconnecting and supporting the yokes, and a girdle surrounding the yokes and uprights: the improvement that the yokes and uprights each comprise a plurality of separate sections arranged in face-to-face relationship and that more than one of said yoke sections is supported by the same upright section, in which the sections are in the form of semi-elliptical discs.
2. A stand as claimed in claim 1, in which each yoke meets the upright on a joint plane and are in the form of discs each having an extension projecting beyond the joint plane between the yoke and the uprights.
3. In a stand for a press, the stand comprising a pair of opposed yokes, a pair of uprights interconnecting and supporting the yokes, and a girdle surrounding the yokes and uprights: the improvement that the yokes and uprights each comprise a plurality of separate sections arranged in face to face relationship and that more than one of said yoke sections is supported by the same upright section, in which each yoke meets the upright on a joint plane and are in the form of discs each having an extension projecting beyond the joint plane between the yoke and uprights.

Claims (3)

1. In a stand for a press, the stand comprising a pair of opposed yokes and a pair of uprights interconnecting and supporting the yokes, and a girdle surrounding the yokes and uprights: the improvement that the yokes and uprights each comprise a plurality of separate sections arranged in face-toface relationship and that more than one of said yoke sections is supported by the same upright section, in which the sections are in the form of semi-elliptical discs.
2. A stand as claimed in claim 1, in which each yoke meets the upright on a joint plane and are in the form of discs each having an extension projecting beyond the joint plane between the yoke and the uprights.
3. In a stand for a press, the stand comprising a pair of opposed yokes, a pair of uprights interconnecting and supporting the yokes, and a girdle surrounding the yokes and uprights: the improvement that the yokes and uprights each comprise a plurality of separate sections arranged in face to face relationship and that more than one of said yoke sections is supported by the same upright section, in which each yoke meets the upright on a joint plane and are in the form of discs each having an extension projecting beyond the joint plane between the yoke and uprights.
US00254910A 1970-09-15 1972-05-19 Stands for presses Expired - Lifetime US3783775A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US7235870A 1970-09-15 1970-09-15
US25491072A 1972-05-19 1972-05-19

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3783775A true US3783775A (en) 1974-01-08

Family

ID=26753283

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US00254910A Expired - Lifetime US3783775A (en) 1970-09-15 1972-05-19 Stands for presses

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3783775A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4155476A (en) * 1977-12-21 1979-05-22 Autoclave Engineers, Inc. Hanging reaction frame assembly
EP0589050A4 (en) * 1992-03-24 1994-01-05 Kobe Steel Ltd Tire vulcanizing press.
US20040261489A1 (en) * 2001-11-06 2004-12-30 Franco Stefani Structure for presses, inparticular for forming ceramic products

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
SU182512A1 (en) * STANINA HYDRAULIS "! EU PRESS
US3064558A (en) * 1955-03-18 1962-11-20 Asea Ab Press stand
GB949813A (en) * 1961-06-14 1964-02-19 Asea Ab Improvements in pre-stressed press frames
US3563167A (en) * 1967-07-26 1971-02-16 Vickers Ltd Frames for presses

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
SU182512A1 (en) * STANINA HYDRAULIS "! EU PRESS
US3064558A (en) * 1955-03-18 1962-11-20 Asea Ab Press stand
GB949813A (en) * 1961-06-14 1964-02-19 Asea Ab Improvements in pre-stressed press frames
US3563167A (en) * 1967-07-26 1971-02-16 Vickers Ltd Frames for presses

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4155476A (en) * 1977-12-21 1979-05-22 Autoclave Engineers, Inc. Hanging reaction frame assembly
EP0589050A4 (en) * 1992-03-24 1994-01-05 Kobe Steel Ltd Tire vulcanizing press.
EP0589050A1 (en) * 1992-03-24 1994-03-30 Kabushiki Kaisha Kobeseikosho Tire vulcanizing press
US5387094A (en) * 1992-03-24 1995-02-07 Kabushiki Kaisha Kobeseikosho Tire vulcanizing press
US20040261489A1 (en) * 2001-11-06 2004-12-30 Franco Stefani Structure for presses, inparticular for forming ceramic products
US7160092B2 (en) * 2001-11-06 2007-01-09 System S.P.A. Structure for presses, inparticular for forming ceramic products

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3687066A (en) Stands for presses
GB1570120A (en) Press for shapping sheet metal
US3783775A (en) Stands for presses
KR101724106B1 (en) assembly type angle display stand
US3024676A (en) Hydraulic presses
US3545372A (en) Frame structure and hydraulic press construction
US2627290A (en) Press, especially a veneering press
US3418923A (en) Compact frame structures
WO2010000837A1 (en) Press frame module
DE1259708B (en) Frame-like stand of a press that exerts great force
GB1216149A (en) Improved frame structure
US3685932A (en) Heating platen press
US5611271A (en) Press with a window-type tension frame
GB1211210A (en) Load-bearing frame structure
US3892122A (en) Hydraulic presses
US6865984B2 (en) Press, especially single-level or multilevel of continuous press
US5732590A (en) Supporting frame of a slab upsetting press
DE2262551A1 (en) PRESS WITH A PRE-TENSIONED PRESS FRAME
GB710780A (en) Improvements in and relating to laminated press structures
US3370526A (en) Press
US2428620A (en) Press structure
JPS5927680B2 (en) press frame
US3038520A (en) Gripperhead for hydraulic stretching machines
JP3836844B2 (en) Structure for pressing, especially for ceramic product molding
SU1191135A1 (en) Horizontal hydraulic tube section press