Sheet feeder, feed roller system and method
A sheet feed roller system for reversing the sheet contact side of a sheet feed mechanism for an offset printing press. A traction roller is attached to a pivot shaft in the place of an idler roller. A non-traction roller is attached in the place of a drive roller. A transmission is provided having a rotary input connectable to the press for receiving rotational power from the press and having a rotary output. A variant axes drive mechanism with a first end and a second end is constructed so that the first end couples to the rotary output of the transmission. A power roller is attached and coupled to the second end of the variant axes drive mechanism and so that it pivots with the pivot shaft and remains in rotational contact with the traction roller to impart rotational power to the traction roller. The power roller and the traction roller pivot together about the pivot shaft toward and away from contact with the non-traction roller so that a sheet to be fed is engaged between the traction roller and the non-traction roller and is propelled into the printing press by rolling contact with the traction roller.
Rotary offset printing presses are normally designed to print on one side of a sheet of printing material such as paper or other printable sheets of feed stock. Normally the sheets of printing material are fed into the printing with a roller drive mechanism through power driven rolling contact with the side of the sheet that is not to be printed. Typically the side to be printed is face up and the side that will not be printed is face down. Also typically a power driven traction drive roller is forced into contact with the face down side to propel the sheet into the press. The power driven traction roller is secured to or formed on a gear driven rotating shaft. The sheet is held by a stop gate so that the traction roller is spinning beneath or in very light contact with the sheet. Typically, when the transfer cylinder rotates the grippers into position for grabbing a new sheet, a downward contact force is applied to the non-print side, typically the top side, of the sheet to be fed by pivoting an idler roller into close proximity to the power driven traction drive roller. The sheet to be printed is engage against the traction surface of the drive roller so that it is squeezed and rolled into the press between the idler roller and the power driven traction roller.
It is often desirable to print on two sides of the same sheets of feed stock. For two sided printing to be accomplished, either a press must be configured for complex side reversing, or the sheets must first be printed on one side and later fed through the printer faced in the opposite direction for printing on the other side. For example, in a typical offset printing press a stack of clean sheet to be printed are placed in the input or feeder area, and fed through the printing press so that one side is printed and recovered in an output stack. The press is configured for printing the second side. The stack of printed sheets is removed from the output area and place printed-side-down in the input area to be fed through the press a second time to print on the other side. Thus, when printing the second side of the sheets, the initially printed sides are faced down against a power feed traction roller and blank sides are faced up toward an idler roller. The idler roller pivots down to force the printed side against the traction roller and the sheet is propelled into the press.
SUMMARY OF INVENTIONIt has been found by applicant that smearing of the first printed side often occurs when the traction drive roller feeds the sheets that have already been printed on one side. This results from the rolling traction contact with the printed side of each sheet before the ink is completely dry. It will be understood that the sheet to be fed may be paper, cardstock, envelopes, film, plastic, composite material, or any other material capable of receiving printing and unless the context or the description indicates otherwise, all such sheets to be fed shall be referred to herein as a sheet or sheets to include any possible sheets to be printed. Depending upon the type of sheet material and the type of printing ink used, it can sometimes take more than a few hours for the first side of printed sheets to dry sufficiently to avoid smearing. Some types of ink and sheet combinations may take a day or more to dry sufficiently to avoid the smearing. Applicant has found that the smearing during two sided printing is often caused by rolling traction contact between the drive roller and the first printed side of the sheet. To facilitate printing a sheet on a second side within a short time of printing the first side, a sheet feeder is provided for changing the side of the sheet that the rolling traction feed roller contacts.
In one embodiment, where there is an existing sheet feed mechanism for an offset printing press, an assembly of add-on and replacement parts is constructed to convert the structure and function of the feed mechanism to drive the sheets on the opposite side from the one driven by the existing sheet feed mechanism. In this embodiment the existing feed mechanism is of the type having a drive roller for rolling traction contact with one side of the sheet and an idler roller connected to a pivot shaft for pivoting toward and away from the drive roller. Thus, according to one embodiment, a sheet feeder includes a non-traction roller sized and constructed for replacement of the existing traction drive roller. Typically, the existing drive roller of an existing sheet feeder has at least one portion that is provided with a rolling traction surface, such as a rubber surface, another polymer surface, or another surface material having traction against sheet materials, and the existing idler roller has non-traction rolling surfaces, such as polished steel, a smooth and hard plastic, or another surface having relatively low traction against a sheet material to be printed. In an embodiment where a replacement non-traction feed roller is provided, the rolling traction surface portion of the existing drive roller may be replaced with a non-traction surface. In one alternative embodiment the entire drive roller is replaced with a roller having smooth metal rolling surfaces. In other alternative embodiments, the traction surface portions of the existing drive roller may be replaced or otherwise converted to a non-traction surface. For example, and existing traction roller may have a traction coating, a traction sleeve, or cover forming a traction surface. The traction surface may be covered with a non-traction cylinder surface (such as a hard smooth tubular steel, tubular plastic, or a bearing), the traction surface may be removed down to the bare metal of the existing drive roller shaft so that traction is reduced, the traction surface may be removed and replaced with a non-traction cylinder surface (such as a hard smooth tubular steel, tubular plastic, or a bearing).
In one embodiment the non-traction drive roller whether a new replacement roller or the same roller converted to have a non-traction rolling surface may continue to be gear driven by the press. In such an embodiment replacing the traction surface with a non-traction surface has been found by applicant to avoid significant smearing of a previously printed side of the sheets. In another embodiment the traction drive roller might be replaced with a non-traction free rotating roller assuming that the mass is sufficiently small to permit quick acceleration when engaged against the sheet to be fed so that smearing does not result.
In one embodiment an existing idler roller for an existing sheet feeder will typically have a non-traction rolling surface. The existing idler roller is attached to a pivot shaft to pivot into and out of engagement with previously existing drive roller. In one embodiment of the invention, such an existing idler roller is either replaced with a replacement traction roller having a traction surface or the existing idler roller may be other wise converted to have a traction surface. This is essentially the reverse of the replacement or conversion of the existing drive roller to one having a non-traction surface. The replacement or converted traction roller continues to be mounted for pivoting on the pivot shaft. Thus, the positions of the traction roller and non-traction roller relative to the sheet to be fed are effectively reversed so the traction roller pivots toward and away from the non-traction roller.
In one embodiment a transmission assembly having a rotary input is provided that is constructed to be attachable to the offset printing press in a position for receiving rotational power in a given direction from the offset printing press. The transmission also has a rotary output that rotates in the same rotational direction as the rotary input. The output of the transmission is coupled to drive a power roller that in turn drives the traction roller. Note that the traction roller is now in the place of the previously existing idler roller that was not driven except by contact with the previously existing drive roller. Thus, the transmission and power roller are added to provide rotational power to the traction roller.
To allow the power roller to pivot with the traction roller while receiving rotational power from the transmission, a flexible drive shaft or an variant axes drive mechanism is provided. The flexible drive or the variant axes drive shaft will have opposite ends that both rotate in the same rotational direction. The axis variance capability of the flexible drive shaft or the variant axes drive mechanism permits the opposite ends of the drive shaft to rotate in the same direction about different axes. The positions of the rotational axes of the opposite ends can also be varied relative to one another during rotation. One of the ends of the variant drive mechanism and the rotary output of the transmission are constructed be coupled together. The other end of the variant axes mechanism is constructed to be coupled to a power roller. For convenient reference in this description the end coupled to the transmission may be referred to as the first end and the end coupled to a power roller may be referred to as the second end. The power roller is constructed to be mountable to an existing pivot shaft that forms part of the existing feed mechanism. The power roller is positioned intermediately between the transmission and the traction roller so that the power roller receives axial rotation from the transmission through the variant axes drive mechanism and is positioned in surface-to-surface rolling contact with traction rolling surface of the traction roller. The rolling surface of the power roller is held against the traction surface of the traction roller to impart rotational power from the power roller to the traction roller. Thus, the power roller is constructed with a traction surface for rolling contact with the traction surface of the traction roller that replaces the previously existing idler roller of an existing sheet feeder. The pivot shaft to which the power roller is mounted is the same pivot shaft that also pivots the idler roller into and out of contact with the non-traction surface of the drive roller. The power roller and the traction roller maintain their position relative to each other while they are pivoted and move together toward and away from the non-traction roller.
Typically the pivot shaft of an existing feeder mechanism is actuated by an existing pivot cam follower that is attached to the pivot shaft. The pivot cam follower engages an existing cam surface that rotates with or is otherwise driven by rotation of the press. Typically, this pivot cam surface is formed or otherwise attached on one end of the transfer roller so that there is a raised cam lobe positioned at a location around the transfer cylinder so that it will activate the sheet feeder when a gripper mechanism on a transfer cylinder is in a position for grabbing the next sheet to be fed into the printing press. A stop gate is also typically provided to operate in sequence with the printing press and the feeder mechanism to hold each next sheet to be fed so that it overlays the drive roller. According to one embodiment of the invention, the existing pivot cam, pivot cam follower and stop gate mechanisms remain in place. When the pivot cam follower engages the pivot cam lobe, it pivots the pivot shaft with the power roller and the traction roller attached so that the traction roller is brought into contact or into close proximity with the non-traction roller. At the same time the stop gate is dropped so that a sheet is driven into the press. The leading edge of the sheet is grabbed by the grippers on the transfer cylinder and is carried to the impression cylinder. After the sheet is grabbed by the transfer cylinder, the pivot cam lobe moves past the pivot follower and thereby drops the follower so that the pivot shaft moves back to a starting position with the traction roller held spaced a short distance away from the non-traction roller. The stop gate returns to its stop position when the trailing edge of the grabbed sheet passes the stop gate and the leading edge of the next sheet is thereby stopped at the stop gate. The next sheet is stopped overlaying the non-traction roller awaiting the next feed cycle when the traction roller is brought into contact with non-traction roller to start the feed cycle over again. The feed cycle is repeated so that multiple sheets are fed one-at-a-time into the printing press.
Thus, in one embodiment the new traction roller, or the idler roller with a new traction surface formed thereon, is driven in rotation by the new power roller. The new traction roller is moved toward and away from contact with the non-traction roller. The roller in the position of the previous idler roller becomes a traction roller and thereby engages and propels the sheet to be fed into the press through rolling traction contact on the side that is to be printed. It will be understood that in the case of a sheet that was previously printed on one side, the traction roller will engage the side opposite the previously printed side. In the case where printing occurs on the top side of the sheet to be fed, the traction roller engages the top of the sheet. Thus, when both sides of the sheet are blank the traction roller engages a blank side that then is printed. After the first side is printed it is place into the input stack face downward and the traction roller engages the remaining blank side that is then printed. The amount of time required between printing one side and then another side is reduced so that a two sided printing job can be competed quickly without waiting hours for the first printed side to dry completely.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
Typically, the drive roller 22 receives rotary power from the press 10 as schematically indicated by rotational power arrow 28. The idler roller 24 is mounted on a pivot shaft 30 so that by appropriate timed cam operation the idler roller 24 is pivoted toward and away from the drive roller 22. In atypical arrangement the drive roller 22 has a traction rolling surface for contacting the sheet 26 and the idler roller 27 has a non-traction surface that contacts the sheet 26. There may be one or more axially spaced apart rolling traction surfaces on the drive roller 22 and correspondingly, one or more non-traction surfaces on the idler roller. The sheet 26 is held by a stop gate 27 so that it overlays the traction drive roller 22 without a significant amount of normal force against the traction surface of the drive roller 22 so that there is very little friction and therefore no significant traction is generated. In this position the sheet 26 is interposed horizontally between the drive roller 22 and the vertically spaced apart idler roller 24. When the idler roller 24 is pivoted toward the drive roller 22 the sheet 26 is pushed against the traction surface of the drive roller 22. The stop gate 27 is simultaneously moved to release the sheet 26, traction is generated between the sheet 26 and the traction surface of the drive roller 22, and the drive roller 22 propels the sheet 26 into the printing press 10. It will be understood that the sheet 26 moves from the transfer cylinder 32 to the impression cylinder 34, and between the impression cylinder and the blanket cylinder 36. The blanket cylinder 36, having received an ink image from plate cylinder 38, prints the image onto side “a” of the sheet 26. After the sheet 26 moves through one set 16 of printing cylinders, the sheet 26 may be further transferred by transfer cylinders 40 and 42 to another set 18 of printing cylinders 44, 46, 48, and 50 to have another color portion of the image printed on the same side “a”. Generally, each set of the printing cylinders 16 and 18 provides a different color portion of a combined multicolor image. The example shown in
In the arrangement shown in
In one embodiment the power source 59 comprises a power roller 94 that is attached to pivot shaft 30 through a mount 96. The power roller 94 has a traction surface 95 that engages the traction surface of 92 of traction roller 90. The power roller 94 receives rotational power from the press through a series of gears and shafts. A transmission 100 is attached to the press and has an input gear 102 that meshes with gear 60 on the press. The transmission 100 transmits rotational power through an intermediate gear 104, and to an output gear 106 and to an offset drive 110. The offset drive 110 is coupled to the power roller 94. In the non-feed position shown, the pivot shaft 30 moves the arms 68 upward so that the traction surface 92 of traction roller 90 is moved away from a non-traction surface 86 of non-traction roller 82. The sheet to be fed 26 is held overlaying the non-traction surface 86 of non-traction roller 82 by a stop gate 27. Thus the rotational power is provided by this power source 59 to the traction roller 90 when it is pivoted into contact with the sheet 26. The stop gate 27 is moved out of the way to allow feeding of the sheet into the press 10.
It will be noted that in one embodiment input gear 102 may be the same as input gear 62. In such an embodiment the non-traction roller 82 may continue to be rotatably driven by gear 102 (or gear 62, as the case may be) meshing with gear 66 attached to the non-traction roller 82. Because surface 86 is a non-traction surface the driving of the sheet 26 continues to result primarily from rolling traction contact with traction roller 90.
In the embodiment shown in
In this embodiment, the first coupler 112 is coaxially attached to the output shaft 108 of the transmission 100. To allow axis position variation between the first coupler 112 and the second coupler 130, a cylindrically shaped receiving socket 114 is formed in the first coupler 112. The receiving socket 114 has a slot 116 formed partially into one side. Similarly, the second coupler 130 has a cylindrically shaped receiving socket 134 with a slot 136 formed at least partially into one side. In the depiction shown the slots 116 and 136 are formed entirely through a side and partially along the depth of the cylindrical sockets 114 and 134 of couplers 112 and 130, respectively. The moveable shaft 111 comprises a main shaft portion 118 having a first boss 120 and a second boss 140 formed or attached at opposite ends of the shaft portion 118. Each boss 120 and 140 are formed with a partially spherical surface sized for slip fit reception into the coupler sockets 114 and 134 respectively. The moveable shaft 111 is sometimes referred to as a “knuckle shaft” or a “dog bone shaft” because of its shape.
A cylindrically shaped engagement bearing surface 122 is secured to the boss 120 so that the axis of symmetry of the cylindrical bearing surface 122 passes through the center 121 of the partially spherical boss 120. The bearing surface 122 is sized for metal to metal engagement with the interior edges of the slot 116. In this embodiment rotation of the coupler by shaft 108 is imparted by the slot 116 to the bearing surface 122 by direct metal-to-metal contact. The rotation is transmitted from the bearing surface 122 to the main shaft portion 118. The other partially spherical boss 140 is formed at the other end of the main shaft 118 and is also provided with a cylindrical bearing surface 142 attached to the partially spherical boss 140. The boss 140 and the receiving socket 134 are formed in the second coupler 130 and are sized for slip fit engagement. The slot 136 and the bearing surface 142 are sized for metal-to-metal engagement.
In the embodiment shown in
Rotation of the shaft 108 and coupler 112 is transmitted through the slot 116 and bearing surface 122 into rotation of the main shaft portion 118 that in turn drives the bearing surface 142 to rotate the second coupler 130. The moveable shaft 111 can pivot continuously and to a certain degree about the partially spherical boss ends 120 and 140. The angular degree of pivoting of the moveable shaft 111 may depend upon the size differences between the diameter of the spherical bosses 120 and 140 and the diameter of the main shaft portion 118. Thus, the respective axes 113 and 131 of the first and second couplers 112 and 130 can be variably offset from one another and from the axis 119 of the shaft 118 while rotational force is transmitted therebetween.
The coupler 130 is connected through an axle 132 to the power roller 94. A traction surface 95 is formed on the power roller 94. The power roller 94 is held for rotation about axle 131 in journal bearings 158 held in a support bracket 160. The support bracket 160 is mounted to a mounting plate 150 that will be attached to the existing pivot shaft (not shown in
To set up the feeder mechanism 80, the lockdown screw 162 is tightened to compress the spring 164 and lock down the bracket 160 against the mounting plate 150. This lifts the power roller 94 away from the traction roller 90 so that the feeding dwell time can be conveniently observed and adjusted. For example, on a typical printing press the relative surface speeds of the feed rollers 90 and 84, compared to the speed of the grippers 72 on the transfer cylinder 32 are such that the traction roller 90 should engage for feeding a sheet 26 for about 1 to 1¼ revolutions, nominally 1⅛ revolutions, of the traction roller 90. The pivot cam lobe should typically pivot the traction roller 90 into engagement with the sheet 26 for this short duration. The desired feeding dwell time is a time sufficiently long to allow the grippers 72 to grab the sheet 26 yet sufficiently short to stop feeding the sheet 26 before the sheet 26 buckles between the traction rollers 90 and the transfer cylinder 32. In an embodiment where the non-traction roller 82 receives rotational power from the press 10, setting the dwell time is facilitated by locking down the power roller without having a sheet 26 interposed. The traction roller 90 will rotate only while it is in contact with the rotating non-traction roller 82 and will stop rotating when the pivot cam lifts apart the two rollers 90 and 82. Thus, the dwell may be conveniently observed and adjusted. After adjustment of the dwell time (as by appropriate positioning of the pivot cam follower) the lockdown screw 162 is loosened and the spring 164 is allowed to resiliently bias the power roller 94 against the traction roller 90. The resilience of the spring 164 or other biasing means is also useful if something thicker than one sheet 26 gets between the feed rollers 90 and 82. For example, if several sheets go through at once, the spring 164 can flex and avoid immediate damage. A sensor (not shown) might also determine when this occurs and the press 10 can be shut down or otherwise adjusted to avoid damage to other parts of the press as well.
It will be understood that the mount plate 150, the bracket 160, the power roller 94, the arms 68, and the traction roller 90 are all pivoted together as a pivoted sub-unit 81 by the pivot shaft 30 when a pivot cam lobe is contacted by a pivot follower for each revolution of the press. One sheet 26 is fed for each revolution and feeding cycle. It will also be noted that the transmission 100 will be mounted to the press 10 in a fixed relation to the gear 60 so that the transmission 100 does not pivot with the power roller 94 and the traction roller 90. Thus, the rotational power from the transmission output shaft 108 is uniquely transmitted to the power roller 94 using an offset drive 110, such as a variable axis drive mechanism 110. When the pivoted sub-unit 81 pivots relative to the transmission 100 the variable axis drive mechanism 110 permits the pivoting without binding and without interrupting the rotational power to the power roller 94 and the traction roller 90.
The dwell time of the pivot shaft 30 is set so that the sheet 26 is fed completely against the grippers 72 as the grippers grab the sheet; but the sheet is released by the feeder mechanism 80 before the sheet 26 buckles against the grippers 72. For example, in some printing presses a sufficient dwell time is equivalent to about one to one and one-fourth rotations of the traction roller 82. This will depend upon various aspects of the mechanism such as the relative diameters of the power roller 94, the traction roller 82, the transfer cylinder, and also the gear ratio of the transmission 100.
Alternatives and Equivalents
In one alternative embodiment, if the non-traction roller that replaces the drive roller has a sufficiently small mass, the drive gear mechanism might be removed so that the replacement non-traction roller effectively becomes an idler roller.
Those skilled in the art might consider other offset positive drives or variant axes positive drive mechanisms could also be useful to provide an offset drive mechanism for certain purposes of the invention. One example of such another variant axes positive drive is a U-Joint shown in
Those skilled in the art might consider other offset drive mechanisms, other than the specifically a positive drive mechanisms disclosed in some of the embodiments of the present invention, might be useful for certain purposes and application. One example of a variant axes flexible drive is shown in
Claims
1. A replacement sheet feeder for changing the rolling contact traction side of a sheet to be fed in an existing sheet feed mechanism for an existing offset printing press of the type having a drive roller for driving rolling traction contact with one side of the sheet to be fed and an existing idler roller pivotable about an existing pivot shaft toward and away from the drive roller, the replacement sheet feeder comprising:
- a non-traction roller sized and constructed for installation in place of the existing drive roller;
- a traction roller sized and constructed for installation in place of the existing idler roller; and
- a traction roller power source operatively installed to provide rotation to the traction roller during pivoting so that the traction roller receives rotational power when it contacts a sheet to be fed on a side of the sheet to be fed opposite from the non-traction roller.
2. The sheet feeder of claim 1, wherein the power source comprises:
- a transmission attachable to the existing offset printing press having a rotary input in a position for receiving rotational power in a given direction from the offset printing press, the transmission having a rotary output;
- a variant axes drive mechanism having first and second ends that rotate in the same rotational direction about first and second axes that are variable during rotation, the first end constructed to be coupled to the rotary output of the transmission;
- a power roller coupled to the second end of the variant axes drive mechanism, the power roller mountable to the existing pivot shaft so that it is positioned in rotational contact with the traction roller when the traction roller is installed in place of the existing idler roller to impart rotational power from the power roller to the traction roller, wherein the installed traction roller is pivotable toward and away from contact with the installed non-traction roller to thereby contact a sheet to be fed between the traction roller and the non-traction roller to thereby propel the sheet to be fed into the press through rolling traction contact on the traction roller side of the sheet to be fed.
3. The sheet feeder of claim 2 wherein the variant axes drive mechanism comprises a variant axes positive drive.
4. The sheet feeder of claim 3 wherein the variant axes positive drive comprises a knuckle shaft.
5. The sheet feeder of claim 4 wherein the variant axes positive drive comprises
- a first coupler having a first socket with a first slot;
- a second coupler having a second socket and a second slot,
- a knuckle shaft having a first boss at one end of the knuckle shaft for slip fit engagement in the first socket and a first bearing surface projecting from the first boss for engagement in the first slot and having a second boss at another end of the knuckle shaft for slip fit engagement in the second socket and a second bearing surface projecting from the second boss for engagement in the second slot, wherein the first and second bosses pivot relative the first and second couplers while the bearings surfaces engage against the first and second slots to transmit rotational power through the knuckle shaft.
6. The sheet feeder of claim 4 wherein the variant axes positive drive comprises:
- a U-joint having a first and second coupler on either end.
7. The sheet feeder of claim 4 wherein the variant axes drive mechanism comprises a flexible drive shaft.
8. The sheet feeder of claim 7 wherein the flexible drive shaft comprises:
- a coil metal spring encased in polymeric tubing;
- a first coupler formed at one end of the flexible shaft;
- a second coupler formed at another end of the flexible shaft, so that the first and second couplers are rotatable about variable axes through flexure of the coiled spring and polymeric tubing.
9. The sheet feeder of claim 2 wherein the variant axes drive mechanism comprises a variant axes positive drive.
10. The sheet feeder of claim 1 wherein the non-traction roller comprises at least one non-traction rolling surface formed on a metal shaft.
11. The sheet feeder of claim 10 wherein the at least one non-traction rolling surface formed on a metal non-traction shaft comprises at least one smooth cylindrical metal surface formed coaxially along a portion of the metal.
12. The sheet feeder of claim 1 wherein the traction roller comprises at least one traction rolling surface formed on a metal traction shaft.
13. The sheet feeder of claim 12 wherein the traction rolling surface formed on a metal comprises at least one cylindrically shaped polymeric surface coaxially attached along a portion of the metal shaft.
14. The sheet feeder of claim 2 wherein the power roller comprises a rotatable shaft having a polymeric traction surface formed thereon, the rotatable shaft mounted through bracket and journal bearings to a mounting plate in a position with the power roller parallel to the traction roller, wherein the mounting plate is attachable to the existing pivot shaft adjacent to the so that the power roller remains engaged with the traction roller when the traction roller is pivoted on the pivot shaft.
15. The sheet feeder of claim 14 further comprising:
- a pivot connection between the journalled bracket rotatably holding the power roller and the mounting plate;
- a basing device interposed between the mounting plate and the journalled bracket operatively connected to bias the bracket and thereby to bias the power roller into rolling contact with the traction roller; and
- a lockdown device connecting between the bracket and the mounting plate having a locked down position holding the bracket so that the power roller is pulled away from the traction roller against the biasing device and having a release position allowing the biasing device to bias the power roller into rolling contact with traction roller.
16. A sheet feed roller system for inverting the rolling contact side of a sheet feed mechanism for an offset printing press of the type including a drive roller operatively coupled to the offset printing press through a rotary power receiving mechanism for receiving rotational power in a given direction to rotate the drive roller, an idler roller mounted above the drive roller on a pivot shaft, and the pivot shaft operatively connected for timed alternating pivoting of the idler roller downward toward the drive roller and upward away from the drive roller so that a sheet to be fed into the press when placed overlaying the drive roller can be pushed down by the pivoted idler roller against a top side of the sheet so that a bottom side contacts against the drive roller so that the sheet to be fed is caused to be linearly propelled into the press by rolling contact with the drive roller on the bottom side of the sheet to be fed, the sheet feed roller system for inverting the rolling contact side comprising:
- a non-traction roller installed in place of the drive roller in a position below a sheet to be fed into the printing press;
- a traction roller installed on the pivot shaft in place of the idler roller for alternating pivoting toward and away from the non-traction roller; and
- a traction roller power source operatively connected to provide rotation to the traction roller during pivoting so that the traction roller is rotating when it is pivoted into contact with a sheet to be fed on the top side of the sheet to be fed opposite from the non-traction roller below the sheet to be fed.
17. The sheet feed system of claim 16 wherein the traction roller power source comprises:
- a transmission having a rotary input positioned for receiving rotational power from the printing press and having a rotary power output;
- a variant axes positive drive mechanism having a first end and a second end, the first end constructed for coupling to the rotary power output of the transmission;
- a power roller constructed to be coupled to the second end of the variant axes drive mechanism and mountable to the pivot shaft in rotational contact with the traction roller to impart rotational power from the power roller to the traction roller and so that the power roller and the traction roller pivot together about the pivot shaft toward and away from contact with the non-traction roller so that non-traction roller receives rotational power when contacting the sheet to be fed and the sheet to be fed is propelled into the press by rolling contact with the traction roller.
18. A sheet feeder for a printing press of the type for printing on one side of a sheet, the sheet feeder comprising:
- a non-traction roller installed in a position below that a staging position of sheet to be fed into the printing press, wherein the non-traction roller is adjacent to a side of the sheet that is not the side to be printed;
- a traction roller installed on a pivot shaft parallel to and spaced vertically above the non-traction roller and above the staging position of a sheet to be fed, wherein the pivot shaft is actuated by the press for alternating pivoting the traction roller toward and away from the non-traction roller and for contacting the side of the sheet that is the side to be printed;
- a transmission having a rotary input positioned for receiving rotational power from the press and having a rotary output rotated in response to rotation of the rotary input;
- a variant axes positive drive mechanism having a first end and a second end, the first end coupled to the rotary output of the transmission;
- a power roller having a rolling traction surface, the power roller coupled to the second end of the variant axes drive mechanism and mounted to the pivot shaft so that the rolling traction surface is in rolling contact with the traction roller to impart rotational power from the power roller to the traction roller and so that the power roller and the traction roller pivot together about the pivot shaft toward and away from the non-traction roller so that the sheet is propelled with rolling contact on the traction roller on top of the side of the sheet that is the side to be printed.
19. A method for changing the rolling contact traction side of a sheet to be fed in an existing sheet feed mechanism for an existing offset printing press of the type having a drive roller for driving rolling traction contact with one side of the sheet to be fed and an existing idler roller pivotable about an existing pivot shaft toward and away from the drive roller, the replacement sheet feeder comprising:
- removing and existing drive roller and installing a non-traction roller in place of the removed existing drive roller;
- removing an existing idler roller and installing a traction roller in place of the removed existing idler roller; and
- installing a power source for the traction roller operatively connected to the press and the traction roller to provide rotation to the traction roller during pivoting so that the traction roller receives rotational power when it contacts a sheet to be fed on a side of the sheet to be fed opposite from the non-traction roller.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the installing the power source for the traction roller comprises:
- installing a transmission attached to the existing offset printing press, the transmission having a rotary input in a position for receiving rotational power from the offset printing press and the transmission having a rotary output;
- installing a variant axes drive mechanism having first and second ends that rotate in the same rotational direction about first and second axes that are variable during rotation, the first end constructed to be coupled to the rotary output of the transmission;
- installing a power roller coupled to the second end of the variant axes drive mechanism, the power roller mounted to the existing pivot shaft so that it is positioned in rotational contact with the traction roller when the traction roller is installed in place of the existing idler roller to impart rotational power from the power roller to the traction roller, wherein the installed traction roller is pivotable toward and away from contact with the installed non-traction roller to thereby contact a sheet to be fed between the traction roller and the non-traction roller to thereby propel the sheet to be fed into the press through rolling traction contact on the traction roller side of the sheet to be fed.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 5, 2006
Publication Date: Oct 11, 2007
Inventor: James Keller (Tempe, AZ)
Application Number: 11/398,225
International Classification: B65H 5/00 (20060101);