U.S. patent number 3,921,521 [Application Number 05/439,861] was granted by the patent office on 1975-11-25 for squeegee device.
This patent grant is currently assigned to Peter Zimmer. Invention is credited to Hans Kudlich.
United States Patent |
3,921,521 |
Kudlich |
* November 25, 1975 |
Squeegee device
Abstract
A squeegee device with a roller squeegee for applying a fluid
through a perforated screen onto a material includes a guide wall
or guide wall member positioned adjacent the periphery of the
roller squeegee and extends to the region where the fluid is
applied to the material to be worked. The guide wall has a concave
face facing the roller squeegee with a gap formed therebetween. The
gap is filled with the liquid or viscous compound so that the
hydrodynamic pressure of the liquid in the gap is increased. The
guide wall may also be formed as part of the limitation wall of a
squeegee box, into which the roller squeegee is pivotally mounted.
The roller squeegee is spaced from the screen and rotates at a
speed much greater than the speed of movement of the screen.
Inventors: |
Kudlich; Hans (Oberndorf-Ebbs,
OE) |
Assignee: |
Zimmer; Peter (Kufstein,
OE)
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[*] Notice: |
The portion of the term of this patent
subsequent to April 30, 1991 has been disclaimed. |
Family
ID: |
27150679 |
Appl.
No.: |
05/439,861 |
Filed: |
February 6, 1974 |
Related U.S. Patent Documents
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Application
Number |
Filing Date |
Patent Number |
Issue Date |
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164332 |
Jul 20, 1971 |
3807302 |
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Foreign Application Priority Data
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Jul 22, 1970 [OE] |
|
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6731/70 |
Dec 21, 1970 [OE] |
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11462/70 |
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Current U.S.
Class: |
101/120; 101/123;
101/124 |
Current CPC
Class: |
B05C
11/1039 (20130101); B05C 1/10 (20130101); B05C
11/025 (20130101); B41F 15/44 (20130101); B41F
15/426 (20130101) |
Current International
Class: |
B41F
15/42 (20060101); B41F 15/14 (20060101); B41F
15/40 (20060101); B41F 15/44 (20060101); B05C
1/10 (20060101); B05C 11/02 (20060101); B05C
11/10 (20060101); B41F 015/42 () |
Field of
Search: |
;101/115,116,119,120,123,124,129 |
References Cited
[Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
Foreign Patent Documents
Primary Examiner: Burr; Edgar S.
Assistant Examiner: Suter; R. E.
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Wenderoth, Lind & Ponack
Parent Case Text
The present application is a continuation-in-part of copending
application Ser. No. 164,332, filed July 20, 1971, now U.S. Pat.
No. 3,807,302.
Claims
I claim:
1. A squeegee device for applying liquid, in particular highly
viscous liquid, onto the surface of a material, said device
comprising:
a perforated screen mounted for movement in contact at one surface
thereof with said material;
a rotatable roller squeegee having an outer extreme surface mounted
at a position spaced from said screen;
means for rotating said roller squeegee at a speed greater than the
speed of movement of said screen;
a stationary guide wall member having a concave surface, said guide
wall member being mounted such that said concave surface is spaced
from the cylindrical peripheral surface of said roller squeegee,
thereby forming a gap between said roller squeegee and said guide
wall member, there being a plane extending through the axis of said
roller squeegee and the line formed by the points on said roller
squeegee positioned most closely to said screen, said guide wall
member being mounted on that side of said plane wherein a point on
the periphery of said roller squeegee and said screen approach each
other during movement thereof, an edge of said guide wall member
being positioned between said roller squeegee and said screen;
and
sealing means sealing said guide wall member to said screen;
whereby said liquid is conveyed on rotation of said roller
squeegee, through said gap and towards the surface of the material
and the pressure of said liquid in said gap is increased.
2. A device as claimed in claim 1, further comprising means forming
a liquid chamber between said roller squeegee and said screen, said
forming means comprising a squeegee box supporting said roller
squeegee, said guide wall member forming a wall of said liquid
chamber.
3. A device as claimed in claim 2, wherein said guide wall member
is an integral part of said squeegee box.
4. A device as claimed in claim 3, wherein said guide wall member
comprises a first wall of said squeegee box; and further comprising
a second roller mounted in said squeegee box above said roller
squeegee, said second roller being mounted for variable speed
rotation; a second wall of said squeegee box defining a second gap
with said second roller; said second gap being in communication
with the first mentioned gap.
5. A device as claimed in claim 2, wherein said guide wall member
is attached to said squeegee box and forms one wall thereof.
6. A device as claimed in claim 5, wherein said guide wall member
forming one wall of said squeegee box extends over substantially
half of the circumference of said roller squeegee.
7. A device as claimed in claim 5, further comprising a cylinder,
rotatable in a direction opposite to that of said roller squeegee,
mounted within said squeegee box at a position above and offset
horizontally with respect to said roller squeegee, said cylinder
being provided on the periphery thereof with inclined resilient
strips extending parallel to the axis of said cylinder.
8. A device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said perforated screen
comprises a cylindrical rotary mounted screen.
9. A device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the thickness of said
gap is uniform.
10. A device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the thickness of said
gap lessens in a tapered manner from an end thereof furthest from
said screen to an end thereof closest to said screen.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a squeegee device having a perforated
screen and a rotating roller squeegee for applying a liquid, in
particular a highly viscous compound, through the screen onto the
surface of a material to be worked, the squeegee being spaced from
the screen.
With known squeegee devices it is not possible to apply large
quantities of liquid onto the material to be printed. This can
result, e.g., in screen printing, in unsatisfactory permeation of
the liquid into the textile goods. The reason for this shortcoming
is that the increase in pressure of the liquid taking place
adjacent the roller squeegee in the wedge-like region between the
roller squeegee and the screen is insufficient to ensure sufficient
application or penetration of the liquid into the material.
Mere increase in static pressure, e.g., by a feeding pump, would
increase the amount of liquid applied to the material but, in
screen printing, would result in a premature penetration of the
screen and subsequently in blurred printing.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to increase the quantity of liquid
applied to the material without premature penetration. This object
is achieved by providing a guide wall or guide wall member adjacent
a portion of the periphery of the roller squeegee to provide a gap
therebetween. A concave face of the guide wall faces the roller
squeegee, and the guide wall extends into the region where the
liquid is applied to the material through the screen. Thus, the
liquid is prevented from contacting the material in an uncontrolled
manner. The pressure of the liquid in the gap is increased to
ensure better penetration of the goods by the liquid. The gap may
be of uniform thickness, in which case it is believed that the
liquid pressure will increase from the top to the bottom of the gap
due to the increased hydrostatic pressure of the fluid from the top
to the bottom of the gap, and further due to an incremental
increase in the hydrodynamic pressure exerted on the fluid within
the gap due to the viscosity of the fluid and the rotation of the
roller squeegee. Alternatively, the thickness of the gap may taper
downwardly, thus increasing the fluid pressure from the top to the
bottom of the gap. In a particularly advantageous embodiment, the
roller squeegee is rotated at a much greater speed than the
movement of the screen, thereby greatly increasing the pressure of
the fluid. Also, the gap stabilizes the flow of the liquid. This is
advantageous, particularly in the case of printing machines with a
printing velocity of more than 100 m/min.
The bottom edge of the guide wall member projects into the region
under the roller squeegee filled with the liquid.
In accordance with the present invention the space serving for the
hydrodynamic increase in pressure between roller squeegee and the
screen is enlarged by the gap formed between the guide wall and the
roller squeegee so that a higher pressure can develop in the
liquid. This results in a larger quantity of the liquid being
applied to the material to be worked by means of the squeegee
device according to the invention. Also, due to the enlarged gap
any detrimental turbulences are prevented in squeegee devices in
fast operating machines (e.g., fast operating rotary screen
printing machines).
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Embodiments of the invention are hereinafter described in detail
with reference to the accompanying drawings, without, however,
being limited thereto.
FIG. 1 is a section taken along lines I--I of FIG. 2 of a first
embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a vertical section of the device of FIG. 1;
FIGS. 3-6 are vertical sections of modified embodiments of the
present invention; and
FIG. 7 is a partial longitudinal section of a drive device for the
modified embodiment of FIG. 6.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
In the following description, the invention will be described with
reference to rotary screen printing devices. However, it is to be
understood that the present invention is equally applicable to
devices employing flat perforated screens.
The embodiment according to FIGS. 1 and 2 is a squeegee device for
a rotary screen printing machine including a rotary screen 1 whose
end pieces 2 are rotatably mounted in screen bearings 3 which are
connected to the machine frame 4. A roller squeegee 5 is mounted
within screen 1 and spaced therefrom to provide a dye chamber 6.
The roller squeegee is rotated by any conventional device for this
purpose (not shown). The material to be printed 9 is moved between
the rotary screen 1 and the support base by means of a printing
blanket 10. While the material to be printed 9 and the printing
blanket 10 move in the direction of arrow 11, the rotary screen 1
rotates in the direction of arrow 12 and the roller squeegee 5
rotates within the screen in the direction of arrow 13. The dye is
fed in a manner known per se by a dye tube 14 provided with outlet
apertures to a dye supply 15 positioned above squeegee 5 and screen
1 upstream of the direction of rotation thereof.
A gap 18 is formed around a portion of the periphery of roller
squeegee 5 by means of a squeegee box 43, which mounts the roller
squeegee. Dye chamber 6 is formed by squeegee box 43 and spaces
roller squeegee 5 from screen 1. Spacing of squeegee 5 from screen
1 serves to prevent any wear of the rotary screen 1, which may have
a thickness of only some tenths of a millimeter according to modern
galvanoplastic methods of production, even if the roller 5 is
driven at a much higher circumferential speed than the rotary
screen 1.
Roller 5 can be driven by a rotating device arranged outside the
rotary screen 1, so that the speed of rotation is adjustable.
Depending on the speed of rotation of roller 5, a predetermined
pressure increase of the dye flowing through gap 18 is created. The
pressure of the liquid in the chamber 6 beneath the roller 5 is
determinative of the amount of dye forced through the holes of the
rotary screen 1 in the area of zone 19 between the sealing lips 53
and 54.
It is not important whether the roller 5 rotates in the same
direction or in the opposite direction as screen 1. It is an
important feature of this invention that the roller 5 does not
contact the rotary screen 1, this being attained by the position of
roller 5' in the squeegee box 43. The sealing of the squeegee box
43 with rotary screen 1 is effected by sealing lips 53 and 54,
which are pressed onto the wall of the screen by means of support
means 62 of magnetizable material positioned at the bottom of the
squeegee box. The support means are attracted by the electromagnets
8, whereby the squeegee box 43 and the sealing lips 53 and 54 are
drawn toward the rotary screen 1. Any dye which passes sealing lip
54 is removed by squeegees or doctor blades 55 and 56. By means of
member 57 linked to the squeegee 55, the dye removed from the
interior of screen 1 is returned to the supply 15 of the squeegee
box 43. The dye removed from the outside of the screen by the
squeegee 56 is removed through a channel 58.
As can best be seen from FIG. 2 the lower edge of the guide wall
member or squeegee box extends well into the printing area, i.e.,
the region 19 where dye is to penetrate through the screen 1 into
the material 9.
If in such device, the roller, screen and material move in the
directions of the arrows 13, 12 and 11, respectively, dye is
conveyed by adhesion to the surface of roller 5 through the gap 18
between the roller 5 and the squeegee box 43 into chamber 6 at the
printing region 19 where it is squeezed through the screen into the
material. This requires considerable dye pressure which is achieved
over the length of the gap 18, since from this entrance the dye is
positively guided and prevented from flowing through the screen
before reaching the printing region 19, and by high speed rotation
of the roller 5.
On the contrary, in known devices, any liquid pressure build up
occurs only approximately over the length of region 19, which
length is much less than the length of gap 18. Accordingly, the
maximum pressure obtainable with gap 18 will be much greater than
without the gap, and because of the increase of pressure, the
amount of liquid applied to the material increases.
FIGS. 3 to 7 are further embodiments of squeegee devices according
to the invention, also for use in rotary screen printing
machines.
According to FIG. 3 the roller squeegee 5 is arranged in a squeegee
box having four generally vertical walls, two of which are shown as
28 and 31 and which extend parallel to the axis of roller 5, and
the other two walls (not shown) are perpendicular to walls 28 and
31. A guide wall 64 is attached to wall 28, and its concave surface
forms a gap 18, the thickness of which tapers from the top to the
bottom, with roller 5 through which dye from the dye supply 15 is
fed by the dye tube 14 to the lower dye chamber 6, thus effecting a
gradual pressure increase in the dye during its passage through gap
18. The guide wall 64 is sealed off towards the rotary screen 1 by
a flexible sealing member 29, secured to the guide wall 64 by means
of a wedge fastener 30. The bottom part of wall 31 of the squeegee
box has a low friction seal 32 providing a support for the roller
squeegee 5 and thus sealing it. The squeegee box is fastened by
clamps 33 to the dye tube 14. The lower end of seal 32 is sealed to
screen 1 by means of a flexible sealing member 29, secured to seal
32 by means of a wedge fastener 30.
In the embodiment according to FIG. 4, the roller squeegee 5 is
arranged in a squeegee box. Guide wall 65 differs from the
embodiment of FIG. 3 in that it replaces wall 28 and that it
extends over almost half the circumference of the roller squeegee
5. The pressure increasing gap 18 is therefore longer than in the
aforementioned embodiments and thus results in a higher pressure
and greater flow of liquid.
The embodiment according to FIG. 5 is similar to that of FIG. 4,
except that a cylinder 35 is mounted inside the squeegee box above
roller squeegee 5 and offset horizontally with respect thereto.
Cylinder 35 is provided on the surface thereof with a coating 36
having a series of resilient strips 38 extending parallel to the
axis of cylinder 35 and inclined with respect to the direction
thereof, radii of the cylinder passing through the bases of the
strips. In the squeegee box the dye supply 15 has the level 37. A
chamber 39 formed between adjacent strips 38 is filled with dye
under level 37. If the roller squeegee 5 moves in the direction of
arrow 13 and the cylinder 35 moves in the direction of arrow 40,
the dye is transported to the entrance 41 of gap 18. When strips 38
reach this point, they are bent flat by nose 42, and the liquid
within chamber 39 is forced downwardly into gap 18, thereby
increasing the pressure. Within gap 18 between roller 5 and guide
wall 66, a further increase of pressure is effected because of the
rotation of roller squeegee 5 and the ensuing carriage of the dye
in the gap 18. In this embodiment a very high pressure is
produced.
Very high pressure can also be obtained by the arrangement
according to FIGS. 6 and 7. In a squeegee box 43 a second roller 44
is arranged above the normal roller squeegee 5. The two rollers
rotate in the opposite directions indicated by arrows 60 and 13.
The surfaces of the inner walls of the squeegee box 43 follow
closely the outer surfaces of the rollers 5 and 44 on one side
thereof. On the other sides are formed gaps 46 and 18 through which
dye is conveyed downwardly from supply 15 fed from a dye tube (not
shown). While flowing through gap 46 the dye builds up a pressure
as described above. Thus, when reaching the gap transition area 47
the dye has already a considerable pressure which is further
increased when passing through gap 18. Spacing elements 21
extending through the gaps in the direction of flow assure proper
spacing of the rollers. Area 47 provides compensation of the forces
acting on roller 5. By the pressure increase in gap 18 at the lower
portion of roller 5, higher specific pressures act on the bottom
portion of the roller than on the upper portion thereof. These
forces consequently tend to push roller 5 upwardly. This is
compensated, at least partially, by the provision of area 47 which
acts to some degree as a retaining surface.
The sealing of the dye under pressure in the lower dye chamber is
effected by sealing lips 53, e.g., of polytetrafluorethylen.
Sealing lips 53 extend parallel to the axis of the roller squeegee
5 and are attached to both bottom edges of squeegee box 43 and
insure that the dye is forced through screen 1 over the distance
19.
By changing the absolute and relative speeds of rotation of the
rollers, the pressure increase in the dye can be influenced and
accordingly adapted as conditions may necessitate. The pressure
increase can also be influenced by changing the relative
thicknesses of the gaps 46 and 18.
An example for the drive of roller squeegee 5 and roller 44 can be
seen in FIG. 7. Roller squeegee 5 has a shaft 22 projecting
therefrom bearing a gear wheel 48. Gear wheel 48 meshes with a gear
wheel 49 which also drives a gear wheel 50 secured to the end of
the rotary screen 1. The gear ratios of gear wheels 48 and 50 are
designed, in an understood manner, to bear a relationship with the
diameters of roller squeegee 5 and rotary screen 1 such that the
roller squeegee 5 and rotary screen 1 have desired relative speeds
when gear wheel 49 is driven by drive means 45. Roller 44 is driven
by a rotation device 52 via a shaft 51 permanently secured to the
end of roller 44. The driving device 52 can be a continuous
transmission gear receiving its driving motion from the drive means
45. Driving device 52 may also be an engine whose speed of rotation
is variable to a desired gear ratio to the main drive means 45.
In all embodiments of the invention, the roller 5 is spaced from
the screen 1. This prevents wear of the screen. Further, it is
desirable that the speed of rotation of roller 5 be much greater
than the speed of movement of the screen 1, thereby greatly
increasing the pressure of the fluid in the gap 18 and the chamber
6.
The gap or gaps may be of uniform thickness, in which case it is
believed that the liquid pressure will increase from the top to the
bottom of the gap due to the increased hydrostatic pressure of the
fluid from the top to the bottom of the gap, and further due to an
incremental increase in the hydrodynamic pressure exerted on the
fluid within the gap due to the viscosity of the fluid and the
rotation of the roller squeegee. Alternatively, the thickness of
the gap may taper downwardly, thus increasing the fluid pressure
from the top to the bottom of the gap.
The above description has been with regard to specific structural
embodiments of the invention. However, it will be understood that
the scope of the present invention encompasses obvious
modifications of these specific structural embodiments as well as
combinations of the specific structural features thereof.
* * * * *