Method for introducing blowing air into glass container forming machine molds
A method for intermittently delivering counterblow air to a gob glass at a formable temperature in a blank mold of an I.S. glass container forming machine being operated on the blow and blow process. The method utilizes a plunger having a fixed annular member with an enlarged recess at an inlet end and a valve seat at an upper end. The plunger has a sliding valve member with an annulus of the annular member, and the valve member has a stem portion and an enlarged vale seat portion at a free end thereof. Pressurized air is intermittently delivered to the recess of the annular member to urge a collar secured to the stem of a sliding valve of the plunger upwardly to unseat the valve portion from the seat of the annular member.
Latest Patents:
This is a division of application Ser. No. 10/172,550 filed Jun. 13, 2002.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThis invention relates to a method of and an apparatus for introducing counterblow blowing air into glass gobs in blank molds of a glass container forming machine of the individual section (I.S.) type.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION U.S. Pat. No. 4,364,764 (Farkas et al.), the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein, in
U.S. Pat. No. 4,191,548 (Fortner et al.), the disclosure of which is also incorporated by reference herein, discloses specific apparatus for introducing counterblow air into a glass perform in a blank mold of an I.S. machine that is operated on the blow and blow process.
Heretofore, counterblow air for use in the blow and blow process as practiced on an I.S. machine has been introduced into a gob of glass in the I.S. forming machine blank mold through a plunger that reciprocates with respect to the mold, and the glass gob therein that is to be blown into the desired shape of a parison, the counterblow air being blown only when the plunger is in its down position. This step is taught, for example, by the aforesaid Fortner et al. '548 patent at column 5, lines 49-57. The step of withdrawing the plunger during introduction of counterblow air can, however, lead to the distortion of the “corkage” of the finish portion of the parison, as the term “corkage” is used in the aforesaid '548 patent.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONTo avoid the aforesaid and other problems associated with the introduction of counterblow air into a glass gob to be blown into a parison in a blank mold of an I.S. glass container forming machine, there is provided a counterblow air introduction plunger that need not, and does not, reciprocate with respect to the gob and the mold during the introduction of counterblow air through the plunger. The plunger of the present invention has a non-reciprocating annular member that is positioned beneath the blank mold of the I.S. machine, and it also has a sliding valve member that reciprocates with respect to the annular member. The sliding member has a thin stem with an outwardly expanding frustoconical end that seats against a frustoconical surface of the annular member when no counterblow air is passing through the plunger. The valve also has an annular collar that is threadably secured to the stem of the sliding member, and the collar has a circumferential plurality of air passages passing therethrough. The collar slides within a recess of the annular member, to which blowing air is intermittently introduced, and is pressurized to unseat the frustoconical end of the sliding member from the frustoconical seat of the annular member to permit the blowing air to pass into the gob only when the recess of the annular member is pressurized. Upon depressurization of the recess in the annular member, the sliding member will return, by gravity, to its seated position. In this way, the plunger remains in contact with the finish of the parison that is being blown throughout the counterblow step, and thereby avoids problems of distortion of the corkage of the parison finish that previously could occur during the counterblow step when proceeding by conventional teachings with respect to counterblowing of glass parisons.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an improved method of, and an apparatus for, introducing counterblow air into a gob of glass in a blank mold of an I.S. glass container forming machine. More particularly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a method and an apparatus of the foregoing character in which it is unnecessary to withdraw a counterblow air introduction plunger with respect to other structure of the blank mold during the counterblow air introduction step, to thereby avoid distortion of the corkage of the finish of the parison that is being formed in the blank mold.
For a further understanding of the present invention and the objects thereof, attention is directed to the drawing and the following brief description thereof, to the detailed description of the invention and to the appended claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
A counterblow air introduction plunger according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention is generally indicated by reference numeral 10. The plunger 10 is made up of an annular housing member 12, which does not reciprocate in operation with respect to a blank mold of an I.S. machine (not shown), a valve member 14, which, in operation, slidingly reciprocates relative to the annular member 12 along a longitudinal central axis of the annular member 12, and a collar 16, which is secured to a stem portion 14a of the valve member 14 to reciprocate therewith. The collar 16 moves slidingly to and fro within an enlarged recess portion 12a at an inlet end of the annular member 12, and the collar 16 has a circumferentially spaced-apart plurality of fluid flow passages 16a extending therethrough, for purposes that will be hereinafter described more fully.
The valve member 14 also has an upwardly extending, enlarged frustoconical portion 14b at is upper free end, and, in a first position of the valve member 14, as shown in
Counterblow air is intermittently delivered to the recess 12a of the annular member 14 through an inlet line 20, which is shown schematically, the air inlet line 20 having an on/off valve 22 therein to control the timing of the flow of the counterblow air to the annular member 12. When the recess 12a is pressurized by the flow of counterblow air through the inlet line 20, the pressure therein will pressurize an underside of the collar 16, to cause the collar 16 and the valve member 14 jointly to elevate with respect to the annular member 12, as shown in
The annular member 12, the valve member 14 and the collar 16 of the plunger 10 are each formed of a suitable metallic material, preferably a heat-resistant grade of steel in view of the high temperatures that prevail in a region near blank molds of an I.S. machine. Such material has sufficient density to provide sufficient mass to the subassembly that includes the valve member 14 and the collar 16 to return it from the
Because the annular member 12 stays in position during the passage of counterblow air therethrough, problems of distortion of the corkage in a finish portion of the parison being formed by the counterblow air, which characterized prior art counterblow air introduction systems that relied on a retractable plunger to permit counterblow air to flow into a gob being formed into a parison in a blank mold, are avoided.
Although the best mode contemplated by the inventor for carrying out the present invention as of the filing date hereof has been shown and described herein, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that suitable modifications, variations, and equivalents may be made without departing from the scope of the invention, such scope being limited solely by the terms of the following claims and legal equivalents thereof.
Claims
1-10. (canceled)
11. The method of introducing counterblow air into a gob of glass at a formable temperature in a blank mold of an I.S. glass container forming machine after the gob has settled in the blank mold, the method comprising:
- providing a non-reciprocatable annular member, the annular member having a seat at an uppermost end thereof and an enlarged recess in a lowermost end thereof;
- providing a sliding valve member with an enlarged valve portion at an uppermost end thereof and a stem extending downwardly from the valve portion, the sliding member being reciprocatable with respect to the annular member to move between a first position, where the valve portion seats against the seat of the annular member to block fluid flow through the annular member, and a second position, where the valve portion is unseated from the seat of the annular member to permit fluid flow through the annular member;
- providing a collar on the stem of said sliding valve member to be reciprocatable with the sliding valve member with respect to the annular member, the collar being slidable within the recess of the annular member and having at least one fluid flow passage extending therethrough;
- pressurizing the recess of the annular member with a fluid that acts on an underside of the collar to urge the collar upwardly, and thereby move the sliding valve member from the first position to the second position; and then
- depressurizing the recess of the annular member to cause the sliding valve member to return, by gravity, to the first position.
12. The method according to claim 11 wherein the fluid is compressed air.
Type: Application
Filed: Dec 9, 2005
Publication Date: Feb 8, 2007
Applicant:
Inventor: Norman Pessoa (Chateauguay)
Application Number: 11/298,759
International Classification: C03B 11/04 (20060101); C03B 9/00 (20060101); C03B 7/00 (20060101);