OBJECT OF THE INVENTION
[0001] As is expressed in the title of this specification the present invention refers to
a system for automatic correction of the pressing density in the manufacture of tiles.
[0002] In the ceramics industry it becomes necessary to test the density of tiles, in different
points or areas of the same, after the pressing of the material they are made of,
in presses defined for this purpose.
[0003] The importance of this control of density, lies in the fact that for the firing of
the ceramic products it is necessary that the distribution of the density is homogeneous,
since the following factors have a big influence: stress in the piece, porosity, absorption,
mechanical resistance and shrinkage.
[0004] The fact that when the pressed pieces do not have the same density in their different
areas, or in other words, pieces are not pressed homogeneously and have high differences
of density, they are less resistant to the entire manufacturing process and especially
to the drying and firing, is well known. These poorly pressed pieces have incorrect
physical characteristics for applying enamel, as well as insufficient mechanical
resistance and variations of size once the firing process has ended.
[0005] Different pressing control systems are presently known and used in the ceramics industry,
such as the use of the penetrometer, or else, the one that establishes a control by
selenium absorption, or submerging the piece in mercury.
[0006] Therefore, an object of the invention is attainment of automatic correction in pressing,
the differences of density found in different areas of a ceramic tile, so that it
is as uniform as possible.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0007] Presently, the pressing of the granular or wet powder ceramic product is done in
presses which are comprised of a mold holder bed, the mold being prolonged into a
platform upon which a slidable slide related to some screens which fill up with wet
granular clay, contained in a hopper, rests.
[0008] The feed slide moves forward with its screens full of granular material until it
is over the mold, where it will be subsequently compacted once a scraper bar connected
to the slide cleans the surface of the mold so that the clay is leveled with the mouth
of the mold.
[0009] This mold filling process is a dynamic process which is carried out at a high speed,
since a press can operate at a rate of more than 20 pressings per minute. This means
that the feed slide hardly has one second to effect its path forward to fill the mold
and to return. When the granular material falls, this granular matter tends to fall
horizontally forward and therefore falls according to the inertia of its mass in
an inclined manner. The variables: speed of the slide, falling point of the plate
that defines the bottom of the mold, height of the slide, separation and amount of
screens between which the product to be pressed is situated, are used by the specialists
in presses to obtain the most uniform possible filling though it is never obtained
perfectly, since any variation of the granulometry or wetness of the clay, speed
of the slide, or soiling of said screens, alter the filling conditions.
[0010] As a result of an irregular filling, neither can the formed tile be pressed homogeneously,
therefore, it is denser in the points where the clay was the most concentrated.
[0011] Other factors also intervene in the variation of density of tiles, such as the ones
defined by manufacturing defects of the compacting plates, with thicknesses which
are not totally identical; the surface of the bed or movable transversal support
can also have defects or maladjustments which entails unequal pressings. For this
reason it is essential to supplement the plates with fine sheets in certain points
to prevent pressing defects.
[0012] The above means that in the pressing process there are multiple interruptions in
order to be able to make the corrections of the load and conditions of the mold,
and due to the complexity of this work many hours of production are lost. The high
maintenance cost of the specialized personnel must also be taken into account. This
means that a certain percentage of defective production is almost always obtained,
since it is impossible to correct presses as frequently as necessary.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0013] In order to avoid the above cited problems, in accordance with the invention, the
scraper bar that removed the excess material from the mold, during the return of the
slide, is replaced by a support for a series of independent scrapers, whose height
can be adjusted.
[0014] These independent scrapers coincide in their width with the theoretical bands which
divide the piece into identical portions longitudinally to the movement of the slide.
The position of these independent scrapers can also be detected, when they pass by
theoretical transversal lines, with all of which a squared division of the piece is
obtained. Precisely the number of identical squares into which the mold is imaginatively
divided coincides with the cut portions in which one of the pressed pieces, or a sampling
thereof, is divided, in order to correctly effect the density control.
[0015] In this way, when one of the squares, or several of them, has (have) a smaller density
upon effecting this control, a larger load of material may be given rise to so that,
after compacting, the density is identical or very similar to that of the rest of
the tile.
[0016] Each independent scraper is hung vertically and can move thus upon the slide moving
back, those square portions of the piece that would have a qualitative and quantitative
compacting defect have a larger amount of product placed in them. The electronic control
of the tester, sends the information to the control of the slide so that the scrapers
compensate for these defects, upon moving vertically during the return of the slide,
occupying the highest position upon exceeding the squares of the mold where there
would be the least compacting.
[0017] In order to make the understanding of the features of the invention easier and as
an integral part of this specification, some sheets of drawings in whose figures
the following has been represented in an illustrative and nonrestrictive manner are
attached:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018]
Figures 1 to 4. They schematically represent different stages of the mold filling
process and subsequent pressing of the product for the forming of ceramic tiles, as
is done at the present time.
Figure 5. It is a schematic plan view of the slide of the press which holds the independent
scrapers and whose height can be adjusted. With them the automatic correction of the
pressing density is obtained.
Figure 6. It is a longitudinal raised view of what has been shown in figure 5.
Figure 7. It shows in rectangular coordinates the curve that represents the density
values of the piece in the different squares into which the tile has been divided,
longitudinally to the movement of the slide.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0019] Referring to the numbering that is indicated in the above cited figures, we can see
that the system for automatic correction of the pressing density in the manufacture
of tiles is carried out by providing the press used at this time and generally referred
to as no. 1 in figures 1 to 4 with a series of independent scrapers referred to as
no. 2 in figures 5 and 6, with some features that we will explain later on and with
which it is obtained that in those parts of the tile that after compacting have a
density smaller than that of the rest of the tile more material is accepted so that
after the pressing operation the density is uniform in the entire piece.
[0020] In the presses used nowadays to obtain ceramic tiles there is a bed 3 which supports
the mold 4 and the bottom plate 5. The mold 4 is prolonged in accordance with a platform
6 upon which the feed slide 7 rests. Above this feed slide 7 there is the feed hopper
which contains the wet granular clay (with a certain degree of wetness), which fills
the space between the screens 9.
[0021] Above the mold 4 there is the transversal support 10 to which the top plates 11 fixed
in its bottom surface are connected.
[0022] A single press can therefore include an aligned series of bottom plates 5, top plates
11 and screens 9 which are capable of being confronted so that they simultaneously
form a repeated series of tiles 12, once the material which descends the transversal
support 10 has been compacted.
[0023] With this arrangement, the feed slide 7 moves forward with its screens 9 full of
wet granular material, until this screen is over the bottom plate 5. At a certain
moment the bottom plate 5 moves downward to form a chamber that is to be filled with
granular material 13 which falls by gravity and is drawn by the vacuum that the descent
of the bottom plate 5 causes, as is clearly observed in figure 2. The slide 7 returns
and since it has a scraper bar 14 it cleans the surface of the mold 4 leaving only
the clay contained in it, leveling with the top edge of the mold.
[0024] Next the transversal support 10 of the press descends and the top plate 11 is inserted
in the recess of the mold 4 in order to compress the granular material 13 and convert
it into a tile 12.
[0025] Upon the transversal support 10 withdrawing, and the bottom plate 5 rising simultaneously,
the tile 12 remains situated in such a way that it levels with the top edge of the
mold. In another advance movement of the feed slide 7, the tile 12 is pushed forward
and after this the bottom plate 5 drops again, repeating the pressing process in a
way similar to the cited one, as is shown in these figures 1 to 4. In figure 1 the
filling process starts; in figure 2 the slide has moved forward and the mold is filled
with the product; in figure 3 the tile rises in order to be withdrawn with another
advance of the slide, as is shown in figure 4.
[0026] Although with this present arrangement, the most uniform possible filling of the
mold 4 can be attained, as we have said at the beginning of this specification, any
variation of granulometry wetness, speed of the slide, soiling of the screens, etc.,
appreciably modifies the filling conditions and therefore the density after pressing
is not uniform.
[0027] In order to conduct a correct control of the density that an already pressed piece
has, such as a square tile referred to as 15 in figure 5, it is cut into a certain
number of equal parts, following longitudinal and transversals alignments. In this
example shown in the drawings, the number of parts into which the tile 15 is divided
is sixteen, forming a square of four by four individual portions, each one of which
has been referred to as no. 16. In the case at hand, the ceramic piece 15 is ideally
divided into this same number of portions 16, each one of which has to have the same
density. Therefore it has means that can make it vary during the return stage of the
feed slide 7, which we specify in detail hereinafter.
[0028] In order to obtain the aim sought by the invention, the feed slide 7 that had a continuous
scraper bar 14 connected to it in order to level the granular material with the mold
4, during the return of the slide 7, now has this bar 14 alone as a support for a
series of independent scrapers 2 (four in the case shown in figures 5 to 7) and has
a length equivalent to the corresponding dimension of each one of the portions 16,
as is clearly seen in figure 5 The bar 14 remains situated above the mold 4 so that
it does not act as a scraper.
[0029] The independent scrapers 2 coincide in their width and position with the theoretical
separation of piece 15 longitudinally, in other words, the end scrapers sweep the
end longitudinal bands of piece 15 divided into sixteen portions, while the intermediate
scrapers 2 sweep the respective center bands of piece 15 or recess of the mold 4.
Each scraper 2 can move vertically with its corresponding cylinder head 17 that contains
a valvular system and hydraulic piston for movement thereof, not represented in the
figures as they are already known.
[0030] The advance and return of the feed slide 7 is achieved by means of a motor 18 to
which the lever 19 whose free end holds a roller 20 which moves in a transversal groove
21 of said slide, is connected. During a complete rotation of the lever 19, the mold
is filled and the screen 9 withdraws, starting another cycle in the following turn.
[0031] In order to locate when the slide 7 has its scrapers 2 over the transversal lines
22 of separation of the portions 16 of the tile 15, it has a detector of the angle
corresponding to each one of these positions. The length of the independent scrapers
2 defines the longitudinal readings or those of the distance between the longitudinal
lines 23 of the square of the tile 15.
[0032] Each cylinder head 17 contains a distance detector in order to also know the individual
vertical position of each scraper, this position being automatically selected by the
electronic control of the apparatus.
[0033] With this arrangement, when the density tester detects in each test, which of the
squares or portions 16 of the tile 15, have a compacting defect, its electronic control
sends to the control of slide 7 the information needed for the independent scrapers
2 to compensate for the difference observed, by vertical movements during the return
of the slide, permitting a larger or smaller load of product in the detected area.
[0034] As is shown in the diagram of figure 7, if in the portions or squares 16 of a same
alignment longitudinal to the movement, it is verified that there are different compacting
densities, the scrapers 2 located in the corresponding longitudinal band, will have
to rise or descend consequently. In figure 7 the different squares 16 indicated are
under the dominion of the same scraper 2.
[0035] The corresponding scraper 2 will move vertically each time that the slide moves backward
after having filled the mold 4, as is indicated in the curve 24 of this figure 7,
rising in the squares with a density less than the stipulated one and descending in
the ones with a greater density, proportionally. In this figure 7, portion 16 located
on the left, taken as "zero", is the one with the greatest density and remains situated
over the abscissa axis.
[0036] The more divisions 16 or squares are placed in each piece or tile 15, for the tester
as well as for the press, all controlled with independent scrapers 2, the greater
solution of adjustability of density will be attained. Of course, there is an interesting
optimum, defined by the minium amount of squared portions 16 necessary for a required
quality.