U.S. patent number 3,565,129 [Application Number 04/768,715] was granted by the patent office on 1971-02-23 for wire crimper.
This patent grant is currently assigned to Manganese Steel Forge Company, Philadelphia, PA. Invention is credited to Richard H. Field.
United States Patent |
3,565,129 |
|
February 23, 1971 |
WIRE CRIMPER
Abstract
A wire crimper for crimping uncrimped wire from a coil to obtain
a straight crimped wire to be used in fabricating conveyor belts,
comprising a head member, a pair of crimping wheels mounted on the
head member in such a fashion that the crimping wheels are
freewheeling and partly mesh in a mesh zone, said head member being
rotatable about its axis, the mesh zone between the crimping wheels
being on a line between the axes of the wheels and also on the
rotatable axis of the head member, and mechanism for pulling the
wire from the coil through the mesh zone between the wheels in
order to crimp the wire.
Inventors: |
Richard H. Field (Broomall,
PA) |
Assignee: |
Manganese Steel Forge Company,
Philadelphia, PA (N/A)
|
Family
ID: |
25083297 |
Appl.
No.: |
04/768,715 |
Filed: |
October 18, 1968 |
Current U.S.
Class: |
140/105;
72/196 |
Current CPC
Class: |
B21F
1/04 (20130101) |
Current International
Class: |
B21F
1/04 (20060101); B21F 1/00 (20060101); B21f
001/04 () |
Field of
Search: |
;140/71,105
;72/191,196,(SB) |
References Cited
[Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
Primary Examiner: Lowell A. Larson
Attorney, Agent or Firm: John F. A. Earley
Claims
I claim:
1. A wire crimper for crimping uncrimped wire from a coil to obtain
a straight crimped wire, comprising a head member, a pair of
crimping wheels mounted in a plane, means for mounting the wheels
on the head member so that the crimping wheels are freewheeling and
partly mesh in a mesh zone, means for pulling the wire from the
coil through the mesh zone between the wheels in order to crimp the
wire, and means for rotatably mounting said head member in a plane
parallel to the plane of the crimping wheels and about a head
member axis which is perpendicular to the plane of the crimping
wheels.
2. The wire crimper of claim 1 wherein the mesh zone between said
wheels is on a line between the axes of the wheels.
3. The wire crimper of claim 1 wherein the mesh zone between said
wheels is on the rotatable axis of said head member.
4. The wire crimper of claim 1 wherein the mesh zone between said
wheels is on a line between the axes of the wheels and also on the
rotatable axis of the head member.
5. The wire crimper of claim 1 wherein each crimping wheel is
provided with a shaft, and said mounting means comprises a pair of
bearing housings that rotatably support the shafts of the crimping
wheels.
6. The wire crimper of claim 1, including means for adjusting the
angular position of the head member in a plane parallel to the
plane of the crimping wheels.
7. The wire crimper of claim 1 including means for adjusting the
distance between wheels.
8. The wire crimper of claim 7 wherein each crimping wheel is
provided with a shaft, said mounting means comprises a pair of
bearing housings having openings with bearings therein that
rotatably support the shafts of the crimping wheels, and said
adjusting means includes a slot formed in the bearing housing, a
stud extending from the head member into said slot, and means for
clamping the housing to the stud at various positions along the
slot.
9. The wire crimper of claim 1, wherein the pulling means is a pair
of power-driven wheels which have resilient facings that
frictionally grasp the sides of the crimped wire and pull the
uncrimped wire directly from the coil to the crimping wheels
without passing through any prestraightening means.
10. A wire crimper for crimping uncrimped wire from a coil to
obtain a straight crimped wire, comprising a head mf member, a pair
of crimping wheels mounted in a plane, means for mounting the
crimping wheels on the head member so that the crimping wheels are
freewheeling and partly mesh in a mesh zone, and means for pulling
the wire from the coil through the mesh zone between the wheels in
order to crimp the wire, said head member in a plane parallel to
the plane of the crimping wheels and about a head member axis which
is perpendicular to the plane of the crimping wheels being on a
line between the axes of the wheels and also on the rotatable axis
of the head member, means for adjusting the distance between
crimping wheels, each crimping wheel being provided with a shaft,
said mounting means including a pair of bearing housings having
openings with bearings therein that rotatably support the shafts of
the crimping wheels, said means for adjusting the distance between
crimping wheels including a slot formed in each bearing housing, a
stud extending from the head member into each slot, and means for
clamping each housing to its stud at various positions along the
slot, said pulling means including a pair of power-driven wheels
which have resilient facings that frictionally grasp the sides of
the crimped wire and pull the uncrimped wire directly from the coil
to the crimping wheels without passing through any prestraightening
means.
Description
This invention relates to the crimping of wire, and more
particularly concerns the crimping of wires which are to be
fabricated into conveyor belts.
In the crimping of wire for making conveyor belts, it is important
that the wires be uniform and regular in order that the wire
conveyor belts may be assembled easily and operate satisfactorily.
In conventional wire crimping machines, crimping wheels are
provided which are power-driven. The wire is fed to the
power-driven crimping wheels from a coil, and the wire must undergo
a prestraightening operation between the coil and the crimper so as
to lose the curl which was imparted to it while wound in the coil.
The straightened wire is then forced into a symmetrical pattern,
generally sinusoidal in shape, by passing the wire through the pair
of driven, gear-shaped crimping wheels. The desired crimp-to-crimp
spacing and the depth of the crimp are obtained by selecting
crimping wheels of proper tooth pitch, and by setting the proper
amount of mesh between the two gears. However, because of backlash
in the machine gear train that drives the wheels, erratic pulling
torque, and other problems, the symmetry of the crimp is distorted
and the crimp imparted to the wire is erratically irregular, and
this causes problems in fabricating the crimped wires into a
conveyor belt.
To overcome the problems which produce irregularly crimped wires in
crimping machines having power-driven crimping wheels, it has been
proposed to build a new crimping machine having a closely coupled
servosystem to maintain opposed tooth to tooth position and the
required distributed torque necessary to produce an acceptable
regular crimp. However, the required servo control system would be
so complex and expensive that this proposal was dropped.
Accordingly, it is an object of this invention to provide a wire
crimper which produces an acceptable regular crimped wire suitable
for fabrication into a conveyor belt, and does so without the
complexity and expanse of the an electrical control system and
without a prestraightener. This object is accomplished by providing
a wire crimper having a pair of crimping wheels that are entirely
freewheeling. The uncrimped wire is pulled through freewheeling
crimping wheels mounted on a head member that is rotatable about
its axis, and the mesh zone between the wheels is on a line between
the axes of the wheels and also on the rotatable axis of the head
member. The resulting crimped wire is straight, having lost the
curl of the coil, and is symmetrical.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Other objects and advantages of the invention, including its
simplicity and economy, will further become apparent hereinafter
and in the drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a view in front elevation of a wire crimper constructed
in accordance with this invention;
FIG. 2 is a view in section taken as indicated by the lines and
arrows 2-2 which appear in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is an overall view, partly diagrammatic, of the wire
crimping apparatus including the coil, the lead-in guide, the wire
crimper, and the wire pulling mechanism;
FIG. 4 is an enlarged partial view of the crimped wire produced by
the wire crimper;
FIG. 5 is a view in side elevation of the wire crimper of FIG.
1;
FIG. 6 is a view in rear elevation taken as indicated by the lines
and arrows 6-6 which appear in FIG. 5;
FIG. 7 is a view in top plan of the wire crimper of FIG. 1;
FIG. 8 is a diagrammatic view in front elevation of the wire
crimper with its head in vertical position with the crimping zone
between wheels being on a line between the axes of the wheels and
coinciding with the rotatable axis of the head member;
FIG. 9 is a diagrammatic view in front elevation showing the wire
crimper with its head rotated counterclockwise with the crimping
zone being located above the rotatable axis of the head member;
FIG. 10 is a diagrammatic view in front elevation with the head of
the wire crimper being rotated clockwise and the crimping zone
being located below the rotatable axis of the head member;
FIG. 11 is a diagrammatic view of the wire crimper showing its head
rotated counterclockwise;
FIG. 12 is a partial view on an enlarged scale of the crimped wire
obtained from the wire crimper of FIG. 11;
FIG. 13 is a diagrammatic view of the wire crimper with its head
rotated clockwise; and
FIG. 14 is a partial view on an enlarged scale of the crimped wire
obtained from the wire crimper of FIG. 13.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Although specific terms are used in the following description for
clarity, these terms are intended to refer only to the structure
shown in the drawings and are not intended to define or limit the
scope of the invention.
Turning now to the specific embodiment of the invention selected
for illustration on the drawings, there is shown a wire crimper 11
for taking a curled uncrimped wire 13 from coil 15 and crimping it
to obtain a straight crimped wire 17. Crimper 11 comprises a head
member 19, a pair of crimping wheels 21, 23, means including
bearing housings 25, 27 for mounting crimping wheels 21, 23 on head
member 19 so that they are freewheeling and partly mesh in a mesh
zone 29, and means or mechanism 31 for pulling the wire from coil
15 through mesh or crimping zone 29 between crimping wheels 21 and
23 in order to crimp the wire. Pulling mechanism 31 may be a pair
of power-driven wheels 32 having a resilient facing 34 of
polyurethane. The resilient facings 34 of wheels 32 frictionally
engage the sides of the crimped wire 17 since wheels 32 are in
engagement.
A lead-in guide 36 is mounted at the entrance to the bite of
crimping wheels 21, 23 on level with crimping zone 29 to guide the
wire 13 from the coil 15 to the crimping zone so that the wire 13
enters crimping zone 29 on a line which is tangential to crimping
wheels 21, 23. Lead-in guide 36 includes three pairs of rollers
having grooves in their circumference to pass the wire. The grooves
of the middle rollers are narrower than the grooves of the pair of
rollers nearest the coil 15, and the grooves of the pair of rollers
nearest the crimping wheels 21, 23 are narrower than the grooves of
the pair of middle rollers so that the roller grooves exert more
control over the wire as it approaches the crimping zone 29.
Head member 19 is mounted on a shaft 33 which forms the axis of the
head member, and crimping wheels 21, 23 are provided with shafts
35, 37, respectively. Mesh zone 19 is on a line 39 between the axes
35, 37 of the wheels 21, 23 and is also on the rotatable axis 33 of
the head member 19.
Head member shaft 33 is rotatably supported in blocks 40 and is
locked against rotation by a lock mechanism 41 adapted to lock the
shaft 33 and head member 19 in any desired angular position. When
it is desired to change the angular position of the head member 19,
lock mechanism 41 is released, shaft 33 is rotated to the proper
setting, and mechanism 41 is relocked. An indicator 43 may be
formed at the end of shaft 33 to show degrees of angle in
cooperation with a pointer 44.
Bearing housings 25 and 27 have an opening with roller bearings
therein that rotatably support shafts 35 and 37 of the crimping
wheels.
To adjust the distance between crimping wheels, bearing housings 25
and 27 have a slot 45 formed therein that receives a stud 47
extending outwardly from head member 19. The side edges of bearing
housings 25 and 27 ride in parallel facing grooves 49 formed in
head member 19, and a clamping nut 51 is screwed onto threaded stud
47 and is tightened to clamp the bearing housing in proper
position. Inwardly facing grooves 49 serve to keep movement of the
housing, when clamping nut 51 is untightened, along the line 39
between the axes of the crimping wheels.
In operation, the wire is pulled by mechanism 31 from coil 15 and
through mesh zone 29 between crimping wheels 21 and 23 to obtain
the crimped wire 17. Resilient facings 34 of the wheels 32
frictionally grasp the sides of the wire and pull the wire 17
directly from coil 15 to the crimping wheels 21, 23 without passing
through any prestraightening means.
If the desired crimped depth is deep enough, the curl of the wire
from the coil is overcome, and crimped wire 17 is straight.
However, if the desired crimp is a light crimp that does not
straighten the wire, the wire may be straightened by offsetting the
head member 19 a sufficient number of degrees to curl the wire in
the opposite direction and thereby obtain a straight crimped
wire.
It is to be noted that the pull on the wire need not be in a
horizontal direction just so long as the axis 33 of the head member
19 is midway between the crimping wheels so as to coincide with
crimping or mesh zone 29. Wire crimper 11 is a significant
improvement over conventional wire crimping machines utilizing
power-driven crimping wheels, and is much more economical than the
proposed fully automatic crimper with electrical controls.
Head member 19 is centrally cantilevered and balanced about its
shaft 33. If desired, mechanism 41 may be unlocked so that head
member 19 is free to swing or rotate to assume a position
perpendicular to the force imposed by the wire as it passes between
the crimping wheels 21, 23.
Dial indicators 53, 55 are mounted on spring-loader plungers
attached to head member 19 and serve to measure the position of the
crimping wheels 21 and 23 relative to each other and in respect to
the axis 33 of head member 19. Crimp depth is preset as follows:
The wheels 21, 23 are adjusted to contact the wire between two
opposing teeth, and dial indicators 53 and 55 are set to zero.
Then, to obtain a 50 percent crimp depth from a .080 inch diameter
wire, each wheel is intermeshed by .020 inch by moving bearing
housings 25, 27 toward each other by .010 inch as indicated by
dials 53, 55.
There are two factors that define the symmetry of a single crimped
element as shown in FIG. 4. One is pitch distance 57 and the other
is span lengths 59 and 61. It is important to develop a constant
pitch distance 57 along the length of wire 17, and it is also
desirable to maintain span 59 equal to span 61 so that an extended
section of crimped wire 17 progressively, and repetitively,
corresponds to the pitch of an interlocking spiral wire of the
conveyor belt. The crimped wire 17 forms the cross rods of the
belt.
One of the advantages of the invention is its ability to accept a
bent or curled length of wire 13, curled because of its set in coil
15, and cause it to become straight while crimping it. This occurs
when mesh zone 29 coincides with the axis 33 of head member 19, and
this condition is shown diagrammatically in FIG. 8.
However, if crimping zone 29 does not intersect axis 33 but instead
is above it, and shaft 33 is unlocked, pulling the wire through the
crimping wheels 21, 23 tilts head member 19 counterclockwise as
shown in FIG. 9 and causes crimped wire 17a to curl upwardly.
If mesh or crimping zone 29 is located below axis 33 and shaft 33
is unlocked, pulling the wire through crimping wheels 21, 23 tilts
head member 19 clockwise to the position shown in FIG. 10 and
crimped wire 17b assumes a curl downwardly.
Accordingly, if crimping zone 29 coincides with axis 33, crimped
wire 17 is straight and has a balanced crimp, provided the notch is
deep enough to overcome the natural set of wire 13 imparted by coil
15.
For example, a .080 diameter wire was run through crimping zone 29
of wire crimper 11 with the depth of crimp set at 1 times the wire
diameter, .080 inch, with the crimping zone 29 positioned so as to
coincide with head member axis 33, and a crimped straight wire 17
was obtained.
When the crimped depth was reduced to one-half times wire diameter,
.040 inch, the crimped wire produced was not straight but instead
retained partial coil curvature. However, when the head member 19
was rotated clockwise, the opposite direction to the coil
curvature, the crimped wire produced was straight with the crimp
depth being one-half times wire diameter, .040 inch. The offsetting
of the head member 19 had overcome the coil curvature. The front
span was not the same length as the rear span but this was not
objectionable.
Referring to FIG. 11, a counterclockwise offset of head member 19,
with crimping zone 29 coinciding with shaft 33, produces an upward
bend and a crimp as shown in FIG. 12 with front span 63 being
longer than rear span 65.
Referring to FIG. 13, a clockwise offset of head member 19, with
crimping zone 29 coinciding with shaft 33, produces a downward bend
and a crimp as shown in FIG. 14 having a front span 67 which is
shorter than rear span 69.
Referring more particularly to FIG. 5--7 locking mechanism 41
includes a clamping bar 71 which rides on shaft 33 and may be
clamped onto the shaft 33 to stop any shaft rotation by bolts 73
extending from the ends of bar 71 to clamping plates 75. Bolts 77
attach plates 75 to a base member 79 and the plates are supported
by springs 81.
To check the accumulated a error along a given length of crimped
wire, two sections were cut from selected runs and mounted on a
strip of plywood, one on top of the other. Nails were placed at
random crimp notches approximately 12 to 15 inches apart to secure
the and align the samples. Visual inspection detected no relative
error or out-of-phase progression. Then the top length was removed
and turned end-for-end and replaced as before. The crimps again
matched quite perfectly indicating a well-formed symmetrical
shape.
It is to be understood that the form of the invention herewith
shown and described is to be taken as a presently preferred
embodiment. Various changes may be made in the shape, size and
arrangement of parts. For example, equivalent elements may be
substituted for those illustrated and described herein, parts may
be reversed, and certain features of the invention may be utilized
independently of the use of other features, all without departing
from the spirit or scope of the invention as defined in the
subjoined claims.
* * * * *