Technical Field
[0001] The present invention relates to reels of component carrier tape (also called surface
mount supplies carrier tape) of the type sent from the manufacturer of the carrier
tape to a component manufacturer who will unwind the carrier tape from the reel and
fill it with components.
Background Art
[0002] Surface mount supplies carrier tape or component carrier tape is used to transport
components (e.g., electrical components such as resistors, capacitors, or integrated
circuits) from a component manufacturer to a different manufacturer that assembles
the components into new products, typically by having automated assembly equipment
sequentially remove components from the carrier tape and assemble them into to the
new products. Such carrier tape is a polymeric strip that has been formed to have
wall portions defining a series of identical pockets at predetermined uniformly spaced
intervals along its length, which pockets are shaped to closely receive identical
components the tape is adapted to transport (e.g., which pockets could, for example,
have rectangular or generally "I" or "T" shapes in the plane of the strip, and could
have flat or rounded bottoms to accommodate the shape of the components), which strip
normally also has through openings uniformly spaced along one side to receive a drive
sprocket by which the strip can be driven and to provide indexing holes that can be
used for accurately locating the pockets along the tape with respect to assembly equipment.
Typically, the carrier tape is manufactured in a first manufacturing location, wound
on a reel and transported to the supplier of the components it is intended to transport.
The component supplier unwinds the carrier tape from the reel, fills the pockets along
the carrier tape with components, adheres a removable cover strip along the carrier
tape over the component filled pockets, winds the component filled carrier tape with
the attached cover strip onto a different typically smaller reel, and sends it to
the user who feeds it from the reel into the assembly equipment which removes the
components.
[0003] An industry standard dictates that the carrier tape must have less than 1 millimeter
non cumulative camber over a length of 250 millimeters. This means that when the carrier
tape is unwound from the reel on which it is shipped to the component supplier and
disposed on a planar surface, its elongate edges must not deviate from being straight
by more than 1 millimeter in any 250 millimeter length of the carrier tape. The component
tape can easily be made to meet this specification. When the component tape is wound
around a reel directly upon itself with the edges of all the wraps in a single plane
for shipment to the component supplier (called "planetary winding" in the industry)
it will remain generally as straight as it was when it was manufactured. Such planetary
wound reels are limited in the amount of component tape they can hold, however. Thus
more than one year prior to the filing date of this application eight millimeter wide
component tape shipped to component suppliers has been supplied level wound edge to
edge on reels with 203.2 millimeter (8 inch) outside diameter cores and a width (i.e.,
76.2 millimeter or 3 inch) between opposed flanges on the reel that was significantly
greater than the width of the carrier tape (i.e., the component carrier tape was helically
level wound around the 203.2 millimeter (8 inch) diameter peripheral surface of the
hub in layers with the wraps of carrier tape in each layer being disposed edge to
edge so that those wraps are displaced axially from each other by the width of the
carrier tape, and with the the opposite edges of wraps of carrier tape in successive
layers being angled in opposite directions with respect to the axis of the hub). It
has been found, however, that carrier tape supplied in this manner will not consistently
meet the camber specification noted above, (even though the carrier tape as originally
manufactured met that specification), and thus such level winding has not been commercially
successful.
Disclosure of Invention
[0004] The present invention provides a planetary wound reel of carrier tape that will consistently
meet the camber specification noted above, provided though the carrier tape as originally
manufactured met that specification.
[0005] Applicant has recognized that the inability of eight millimeter wide component tape
shipped to component suppliers level wound edge to edge on reels with 203.2 millimeter
(8 inch) outside diameter cores to consistently meet the camber specification noted
above (even though the carrier tape as originally manufactured met that specification)
was due to cold flow that occurs after the reel is level wound with the carrier tape
in transition portions of the carrier tape adjacent the flanges of the reel in which
the carrier tape changes its orientation with respect to the axis of the hub between
successive layers of wraps, and has found a solution to that problem.
[0006] According to the present invention there is provided a combination of a length of
component carrier tape and a reel of the type described above having a hub with a
peripheral surface about which the component carrier tape is helically level wound
in layers with the wraps of carrier tape in each layer being disposed edge to edge
so that those wraps are displaced axially from each other by the width of the carrier
tape, and with the the opposite edges of wraps of carrier tape in successive layers
being angled in opposite directions with respect to the axis of the hub in which the
peripheral surface of the hub has a minimum diameter "D" determined by the formula:

where "W" is the width of the carrier tape in millimeters.
[0007] Such a hub diameter (e.g., about 226 millimeters (8.9 inches) for 8 millimeter wide
component carrier tape) should allow the component carrier tape to normally meet the
camber specification noted above despite cold flow which will occur in the transition
portions of the carrier tape, as will be explained in greater detail below, and meeting
that specification for 8 millimeter wide component carrier tape can be virtually assured
through use of even a larger preferred 355.6 millimeter (14 inch) diameter reel hub.
Brief Description of Drawing
[0008] The present invention will be further described with reference to the accompanying
drawing wherein like reference numerals refer to like parts in the several views,
and wherein:
Figure 1 is a perspective view of a combination according to the present invention
of component carrier tape level wound on a reel;
Figure 2 is an enlarged edge view of the component carrier tape level wound on the
reel that is shown in Figure 1;
Figure 3 is an enlarged fragmentary edge view of the component carrier tape level
wound on the reel that is shown in Figure 1; and
Figures 4 and 5 are schematic diagrams illustrating the development of a formula for
the minimum diameter of a hub in the the reel of Figures 1, 2 and 3.
Detailed Description
[0009] Referring now to Figures 1, 2 and 3 of the drawing, there is shown a combination
according to the present invention, designated by the reference numeral 11, which
combination 11 generally comprises (1) a length of component carrier tape 10 having
elongate edges and a uniform width between its edges; and (2) a reel 14 including
a hub 15 having an axis 16, opposite axially spaced ends and a cylindrical peripheral
surface 18 between its ends, and a pair of flanges 19, one fixed to the hub 15 at
each of its ends and projecting radially from the hub 15, the flanges 19 having opposed
inner surfaces spaced by a distance (e.g., 76.2 millimeters or greater) significantly
greater than the width of carrier tape 10. The component carrier tape 10 is helically
level wound around the peripheral surface 18 of the hub 15 in layers with the wraps
of carrier tape 10 in each layer being disposed edge to edge so that those wraps are
displaced axially from each other by the width of the carrier tape 10, with the the
opposite edges of wraps of carrier tape 10 in successive layers being angled in opposite
directions with respect to the axis 16 of the hub 15, and with transition portions
20 of the carrier tape 10 located adjacent the flanges 19 of the reel 14 in which
transition portions 20 the carrier tape 10 changes its orientation with respect to
the axis 16 of the hub 15 between successive layers of wraps. It has been found that
cold flow will occur in the transition portions 20 of the carrier tape 10 shortly
after the carrier tape 10 is level wound wound on the hub 15 of the reel 14 to cause
camber in the carrier tape 10, and the present invention provides a sufficiently large
diameter for the peripheral surface 18 of the hub 15 to minimize the amount of camber
in the carrier tape 10 caused by such cold flow, as will be explained in greater detail
below.
[0010] The carrier tape 10 is unitary, can be made to have a variety of uniform widths between
its edges (e.g., 8, 12, 16, 24, 32 or 44 millimeters), and is made of a thin polymeric
material (e.g., any thermoplastic crystalline or non crystalline material such as
polyester, polycarbonate, polypropylene, styrene, butadiene, ABS plastic, etc. in
the range of about 0.012 to 0.04 centimeter thick, and typically 0.025 centimeter
thick) so that it is flexible. The carrier tape 10 comprises a strip like portion
22 defining a top surface for the tape 10, and wall portions defining a multiplicity
of similarly shaped pockets 24 spaced along the carrier tape 10 and opening through
its top surface. The wall portions may or may not include anti nesting shoulders for
restricting entry of side wall portions defining the pockets 24 in one wrap of the
carrier tape 10 on a reel into the pockets 24 in a wrap of carrier tape 10 beneath
it as is described and claimed in U.S. Patent No. 4,898,275 issued February 6, 1990,
the content whereof is incorporated herein by reference. The carrier tape 10 also
has a conventional series of equally spaced and sized through openings 26 along one
edge of the strip like portion 22 which will receive the teeth of a drive sprocket
by which the carrier tape 10 may be driven through automated equipment which loads
components into the pockets 24 or removes components from the pockets 24. Additionally,
the carrier tape 10 has an opening generally centered in the bottom wall of each of
the pockets 24 as is required by an industry standard to allow the presence of a component
in a pocket 24 to be sensed, or to allow access for a probe that facilitates removal
of a component from the pocket 24.
[0011] The hub 15 of the reel 14 is preferably a stiff hollow cylindrical tube of paper
material, and the flanges 19 are preferably discs of a corrugated cardboard material
attached to the ends of the hub 15 by a plurality of staples 28. The flanges 19 have
central openings 30 around which are fastened the ends of a hollow cylindrical reinforcing
journal tube 31 (also of paper material) extending between the flanges 19 and through
which openings 30 and tube 31 a spindle may be positioned to rotatably support the
reel 14. The flanges also have radially extending openings 32 that afford visual inspection
of the amount of component carrier tape 10 remaining on the reel 14, and drive openings
33 adjacent the openings 30 in which an external drive member may be positioned to
afford rotational driving engagement with the reel 14. The flanges 19 of the reel
14 are compressed around their peripheries to restrict engaging the edges of component
carrier tape 10 being wound onto or off of the hub 15, and may also be compressed
or creased along rectangularly disposed lines 34 ending in the openings 32 to afford
bending portions of the flanges 19 away from the opposite flange 19 along the lines
34 to either afford visual inspection of the amount of component carrier tape 10 remaining
on the reel 14, or to reduce the diameter of the reel 14 to facilitate its disposal,
preferably to a recycler of paper products.
[0012] It can be estimated mathematically that in order for the component carrier tape 10
of width "W" in millimeters to be level wound on the hub 15 of the reel 14 in the
manner illustrated and described with reference to Figures 1, 2 and 3 and so that
cold flow that will occur in the transition portions 20 of the component carrier tape
10 adjacent the flanges 19 of the reel 14 will not cause the component carrier tape
10 to fail the industry standard described above (i.e., that the carrier tape 10 must
have less than 1 millimeter non cumulative camber over a length of 250 millimeters)
the peripheral surface 18 of the hub 15 should have a minimum diameter "D" determined
by the formula:

[0013] The basis for this formula, described below, is illustrated in Figures 4 and 5.
[0014] Figure 4 illustrates a test length 250 millimeters long (which test length is designated
as 2 times Z where Z is 125 millimeters long) of the component carrier tape 10 that
is cambered in an arc to the maximum extent allowable under the industry specification
described above (i.e., the camber Y is 1 millimeter). From the relationships illustrated
Figure 4 it can be seen that R is the minimum radius that will still meet the industry
standard described above, and that the following equations apply:
[0015] Solving these equations simultaneously for the illustrated conditions that Y = 1
millimeter (i.e., the maximum allowable value for camber in 250 millimeters of component
carrier tape) and Z = 125 millimeter (i.e., one half of the 250 millimeter test length
of component carrier tape represented by the cord of which Z is one half) results
in a value for R of 7813 millimeters, which is the radius of the circle described
by the outer edge of the test length of component carrier tape 10 illustrated in Figure
4, and the minimum radius of a circle that can be described by the outer edge of that
test length for which the industry standard described above will be met.
[0016] In Figure 5 there is illustrated one flange 19 of the reel 14 and successive wraps
designated Z1 and Z2 of the component carrier tape 10 in different layers joined by
one of the transition portions 20 of the component carrier tape 10 that are curved
to allow those wraps Z1 and Z2 to be angled in opposite directions with respect to
the axis 16 of the hub 15, and which curvature will result from cold flow in the carrier
tape 10 caused by such angling in opposite directions. From the relationships illustrated
in Figure 5, which are essentially the same as those illustrated in Figure 4, it can
be seen that the following equations also apply:
and that the value R of 7813 millimeters, (which is the minimum radius of a circle
that can be described by the outer edge of the illustrated length of carrier tape
10 for which the industry standard described above will be met) will still be applicable.
Solving these equations simultaneously for the conditions that Y = the width W of
the carrier tape (i.e., when the component carrier tape 10 is wound on the peripheral
surface 18 of the hub 15 edge to edge, the edge of the carrier tape 10 adjacent the
flange 19 at the ends of the complete wraps Z1 and Z2 of carrier tape 10 will be displaced
away from the flange 19 by an amount Y equal to the width W of the tape), and that
Z₁ equals 0.5 πD will provide the formula

set forth above. It is recognized that the shape of the wraps designated Z1 and Z2
of the component carrier tape 10 in different layers and the transition portion 20
that joins them may not form a smooth circle, however, the approximation of a smooth
circle is believed close enough for a valid approximation.
[0017] The use of reels 14 with the minimum diameter hubs 15 that can be determined by the
above formula (e.g., about 226 millimeters (8.9 inches) for 8 millimeter (0.31 inch)
wide component carrier tape; about 274 millimeters (10.8 inches) for 12 millimeter
(0.47 inch) wide component carrier tape; about 317.5 millimeters (12.5 inches) for
16 millimeter (0.63 inch) wide component carrier tape; about 388.6 millimeters (15.3
inches) for 24 millimeter (0.94 inch) wide component carrier tape; about 449.6 millimeters
(17.7 inches) for 32 millimeter (1.26 inch) wide component carrier tape; about 527.1
millimeters (20.7 inches) for 44 millimeter (1.73 inch) wide component carrier tape;
and about 594.4 millimeters (23.4 inches) for 56 millimeter (2.2 inch) wide component
carrier tape) would provide little margin for errors that might occur in level winding
on the carrier tape 10 or for the approximation described above that is incorporated
in the formula. Thus it is preferred to use a reel 14 that has a hub 15 diameter that
is significantly above the minimum diameters indicated by the above formula, such
as a reel 14 with a 355.6 millimeter (14 inch) diameter for either 8 or 12 millimeter
wide component carrier tapes 10.
[0018] It is also useful to solve the formula

to determine R in millimeters for the hub 15 diameter D selected for the reel 14 and
the width W of the component carrier tape 10 wound on it, and to divide the value
determined for R into the minimum radius R of 7813 millimeter determined as explained
above with reference to Figure 4 to determine the percentage of that minimum radius
to which the carrier tape will be subjected in the selected reel. From such a calculation
it will be found that 8 millimeter wide carrier tape 10 wound on the peripheral surface
18 of a 355.6 millimeter (14 inch) diameter hub 15 will be subjected to a radius of
curvature that is about 40 percent of the maximum radius to which it could be subjected
and still be expected to meet the industry standard described above, which provides
a good safety factor; and that 12 millimeter wide carrier tape 10 wound on the peripheral
surface 18 of a 355.6 millimeter (14 inch) diameter hub 15 will be subjected to a
radius of curvature that is about 60 percent of the maximum radius to which it could
be subjected and still be expected to meet the industry standard described above,
which also provides a good safety factor.
[0019] The present invention has now been described with reference to one embodiments thereof.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that many changes can be made in the
embodiment described without departing from the scope of the present invention. Thus
the scope of the present invention should not be limited to the structure described
in this application, but only by structures described by the language of the claims
and the equivalents of those structures.
1. In combination,
a length of component carrier tape (10) having elongate edges, and a uniform width
between said edges; and
a reel (14) including a hub (15) having an axis (16), opposite axially spaced ends
and a cylindrical peripheral surface (18) between said ends, and a pair of flanges
(19), one fixed to said hub (15) adjacent each of said ends and projecting radially
from said hub (15), said flanges (19) having opposed inner surfaces spaced by a distance
significantly greater than the width of said carrier tape (10);
said component carrier tape (10) being helically level wound around the peripheral
surface (18) of said hub (15) in layers with the wraps of carrier tape (10) in each
layer being disposed edge to edge so that those wraps are displaced axially from each
other by the width of the carrier tape (10), and with the opposite edges of wraps
of carrier tape (10) in successive layers being angled in opposite directions with
respect to the axis (16) of the hub (15);
said peripheral surface (18) of the hub (15) having a minimum diameter "D" determined
by the formula:

where "W" is the width of the carrier tape (10) in millimeters.
2. A combination according to claim 1 wherein the width of said carrier tape (10) is
8 millimeters, and the diameter of said core is 355.6 millimeters (14 inches).
3. A combination according to claim 1 wherein the width of said carrier tape (10) is
12 millimeters, and the diameter of said core is 355.6 millimeters (14 inches).