[0001] The present invention relates to ring machines for wrapping loads which are usually
palletized, with stretch film, so as to firmly fix the said loads on the support pallet
and impart to the whole assembly a rigid condition suitable for transportation and
storage. In the machines in question, the carriage which supports the reel of stretch
film, the rollers for pre-stretching the film unwound from the reel and usually a
jockey device with means for retroactive control of the movement imparted to the said
pre-stretching rollers, travels together with or on a horizontal, round, annular structure
which is fastened to a support structure via raising and lowering means and in the
centre of which the load to be wrapped with helical turns of the said pre-stretch
film is positioned. The front end of the wrapping film is initially retained by a
gripper device with associated cutting means, which may be arranged in a fixed position,
on the side of the load or which may be associated with the structure which supports
the ring. In this type of machine, the motor of the pre-stretching unit and the safety
devices situated on the rotating carriage are connected to a fixed power supply and
control panel by means of a slip ring, for example with a plurality of brushes associated
with the said carriage and cooperating with corresponding annular electrically conductive
tracks which are mounted with conventional electrical insulation coaxially on the
said ring when the said carriage moves along it. In order to be able to use these
machines in the sectors of the industry which require a high degree of insulation
of the electrical systems it is required to provide the said slip ring and brushes
with fluid-tight qualities, which give rise to design problems, increase the production
costs of the machine and result in the need for frequent quality checks. In order
to simplify the fluid-tight design of the slip ring, in some cases the latter is made
with small dimensions and is arranged so as to be coaxial with the ring and at a height
higher than that of the maximum vertical travel of this component on the cross-beam
of the gantry structure with the means for guiding and raising/lowering the said ring,
and the small movable element of the slip ring is connected to the carriage with the
pre-stretching rollers and with the reel, by means of electric wires guided in an
arm in the form of an overturned L, the vertical branch of which has a telescopic
form.
[0002] In other machines of the known type, an electric generator is mounted on the carriage
with the pre-stretching rollers or on an oppositely arranged carriage which also performs
dynamic balancing functions. Said generator is activated with the rotation of the
carriage and forms a buffer power supply for an electric accumulator, so as to provide
the electric power necessary for activation of the motor for the pre-stretching rollers
without any external connection, also because the entire control and operating logic
is mounted on the moving element.
[0003] In all the ring wrapping machines of the known type the following drawbacks are encountered:
a) All the machines have a moving element which rotates together with the pre-stretching
rollers and with the on-board reel and in some cases with other parts as well and
which has an overall weight which is not negligible, with inertia-related problems,
and which limits the speed of wrapping of the load to values which on average are
not greater than 60-65 rpm;
b) In order to overcome the drawback mentioned in the previous paragraph, a reel of
limited weight and therefore limited autonomy is mounted on the carriage, so that
it is frequently required to replenish the carriage with a new reel of film, in some
cases using costly automatic reel-changing devices, in order to reduce the machine
downtime;
c) The film unwound from the reel undergoes a single pre-stretching operation, with
elongation in general not greater than 200-250%.
[0004] The invention intends to overcome the drawbacks of the prior art mentioned above
with a ring machine able to operate at an average speed of about 80 rpm and also higher,
to use reels of film with a large diameter and therefore a high autonomy and to subject
the film to a first pre-stretching step, a subsequent rest (elastic memory return)
step and a second pre-stretching (re-stretching) step, with overall elongation of
the film equal to about 300% and also more. It has been possible to achieve these
important results with the followed proposed solution. The large reel of film, together
with the first motor-driven pre-stretching rollers, are arranged on the raising/lowering
frame which supports the ring and therefore are in a static position, so that their
weight does not pose a problem. The ring is mounted rotatably on the said raising/lowering
frame and is made to rotate by a motor which is arranged statically on the said raising/lowering
frame. The ring has, mounted thereon, a plurality of vertical rollers which are partly
rubberized and partly smooth and are directed downwards, the rubberized rollers among
them being connected together by means of a chain or other suitable means, with associated
pinions and with an independent drive system, similar to that for rotation of the
ring, all the said rollers being driven in a suitable direction and at a suitable
speed. At a small distance from one of the rubberized rollers, a pair of rubberized
rollers is provided, these also being driven by the said synchronization chain, but
with a ratio such that at least one of these rollers rotates at a peripheral speed
higher than that of the upstream roller. The film unwound from the reel is pre-stretched
by the said pair of first static pre-stretching rollers, is deposited outside the
said rollers supported by the ring, exits from the said pair of second pre-stretching
rollers supported by the said ring and reaches a support gripper arranged in a known
manner on the side of the load to be wrapped. In order to wrap the palletized load,
the ring is made to rotate and with each revolution wraps the said load with a turn
of film which has been pre-stretched by the said two pairs of pre-stretching rollers.
Since the diameter of the palletized load to be wrapped is always much less than that
of the ring of the machine, during rotation of this ring around the load to be wrapped,
the film accumulates on the rollers of the said ring and may remain on the latter
for the time necessary for recovery of its elastic memory such that it may undergo
the final second pre-stretching operation before wrapping of the load, so as to reach
the overall stretching percentages mentioned above. The film collecting rollers situated
on the rotating ring of the machine rotate at a speed which is controlled by the motor
in the static position and which depends on the shape and on other requirements of
the palletized load to be wrapped and which, during rotation of the ring, may vary
automatically so as to keep at predetermined values the tension of the film during
the final load wrapping step. This adjustment may be performed automatically by means
of software which takes into account the characteristics, the shape and the size of
the load, these being entered in each case into the program manually and/or using
autodidactic means.
[0005] Further characteristic features and the advantages arising therefrom will emerge
more clearly from the following description of a preferred embodiment thereof, illustrated
purely by way of a non-limiting example, in the figures of the accompanying plates
of drawings, in which:
- Fig. 1 is a perspective view of the machine without certain components;
- Fig. 2 shows a top plan view of the machine, complete with the various driving systems
and with the film during unwinding from the reel and during wrapping of the load;
- Fig. 3 shows a perspective and enlarged view of the details relating to the main driving
systems of the machine;
- Fig. 4 shows a side elevation view of a detail of the driving system for the motor-driven
rollers of the machine.
[0006] In Figures 1 and 2 it can be seen that the machine comprises a robust gantry structure
1 with a base 101 which is designed for stable fixing on the ground and which has,
sliding on its uprights 201 in a vertically guided manner, controlled by means of
a raising/lowering drive system which has not been shown in that it is known, the
wide transverse side 102 of a quadrangular and horizontal frame 2 which, for example,
projects in cantilevered fashion from one side of the structure 1 and which, by means
of horizontal-axis pulleys 3 and vertical-axis pulleys 4, rotatably supports underneath
it a ring 5 which is also horizontal and in the centre of which and underneath which
the load C to be wrapped is positioned, said load, as shown in the example of Figure
2, being moved in the direction of the arrows A by special motor-driven rollerways,
not shown in that they are also of a known type.
[0007] The ring 5 has on its outer side a groove 105 inside which at least one belt 6 of
the reinforced and closed loop type is seated, said belt embracing this ring substantially
over the entire circumference, except for a small section along the cross-beam 102
of the frame, where the said belt follows a U-shaped path as a result of being deflected
over a pair of pulleys 7 which are supported freely rotatably by the said cross-beam
102 and a pulley 8 which also has a vertical axis and is keyed onto the shaft of an
electric motor 9, which is preferably of the type with electronic speed and phase
control, for example of the brushless type, mounted on a bracket which is also supported
by the cross-beam 102. As a result of rotation of the motor 9, the ring 5 rotates
for example in the clockwise direction indicated by the arrow F in Figures 1 and 3.
[0008] Internal lugs 205 of the ring 5, which are angularly spaced equidistant from each
other and are for example twelve in number, have, rotatably mounted on them, the shafts
of vertical rollers 10 and 11 which are identical in height and directed downwards
and which, at their bottom end, are interconnected by a ring 12 which is coaxial with
the upper ring 5 and which has the function of supporting the said rollers against
the centripetal stresses resulting from the residual elasticity of the film which
is deposited on the said rollers 10, 11 (see below). The rollers 10 are rubberized
and have the same diameter, for example about 90 mm, while the rollers 11 are made
of steel, are smooth and have a diameter the same as or less than that of the said
rubberized rollers. The rollers 10 and 11 are arranged alternately with each other
so that a rubberized roller is followed by a smooth roller and so on. The smooth rollers
11 are idle, while the rubberized rollers are driven so as to rotate at the same speed
and in the same direction F1 as the direction F of rotation of the ring 5. For this
purpose, the top end of the shafts of the rollers 10, as also shown in detail in Figure
4, have, keyed onto them, pinions 13 on which a chain 14 is driven, said chain circumscribing
said pinions and being kept suitably tensioned by a tensioning device described further
below. In order to keep the chain along the plan-view dimensions of the ring 5, in
Figures 2 and 3 it can be seen that the said chain 14 is also driven over idle pinions,
not visible, which are arranged freely rotatably on the ring 5 at the top of the smooth
rollers 11, for example making use of an extension of the shaft of the rollers as
a support. From the detail shown in Figure 2 and Figure 3 it can be seen that, between
one rubberized roller 10 and a neighbouring smooth roller 11, the ring 5 has internally
a lug 305 which is larger than the lugs 205 and which rotatably supports the shafts
of a pair of rubberized rollers 15, 115 which are vertical and close to each other
and which, for example, have characteristics the same as those of the rollers 10,
the shafts of these rollers having, keyed thereon, pinions 16, 116 with a different
number of teeth, on which the said chain 14 is driven so that the roller 115 rotates
in the same direction F1 as the rollers 10, the roller 15 rotates in the opposite
direction and the roller 115 rotates at a speed greater than that of the roller 15
(see below). In Figures 2 and 3, 17 denotes the idle and adjustable pinion which ensures
that the chain 14 has the correct longitudinal tension. The pinion 16 is, for example,
identical to the pinions 13 so that the rubberized roller 15 rotates at the same speed
as the rubberized rollers 10. As shown in the detail of Figure 4 and as can be seen
from the other illustrative figures, the rubberized rollers 10 finally have, keyed
onto their shafts, pairs of pulleys 18 on which corresponding pairs of elastic belts
19 are driven externally, said belts forming a closed loop and also being driven on
pairs of idle pulleys 20 which are situated on the ring 5 along the shafts of the
smooth rollers 11, so that the rotation performed by the said belts is as far as possible
similar to a circle (see below). Opposite the cross-beam 102 of the frame 2, the pairs
of belts 19 follow a U-shaped path as a result of being deflected over two pairs of
pulleys 21 which are supported idly by the said cross-beam 102 and as a result of
passing over a driving pulley 22 keyed onto the shaft of an electric motor 23 with
speed and phase control, for example of the brushless type, which is also fixed onto
the said cross-beam 102. As a result of rotation of the electric motor 23, the pairs
of elastic belts 19 are made to rotate in the same direction F of rotation as the
ring 5 and at a speed such that the rubberized rollers 10 rotate at the correct speed
in the direction of the arrow F1. The polygonal non-round shape of the section of
the belts 19 driven on the pulleys 18 and 20, whenever the set of these pulleys passes
in the vicinity of the static pulleys 20, 21, produces on the said belts 19 small
cyclical variations in the longitudinal tension which are easily compensated for by
the elasticity of these belts 19.
[0009] Underneath the cross-beam 102 means for supporting a reel 24 of stretch film and
for the controlled unwinding therefrom of the film 124 are mounted together with at
least one pair of rubberized vertical rollers 25, 125 of the known type, with an associated
drive system 26, for performing longitudinal pre-stretching of the film 124 in accordance
with known parameters. The pre-stretched film leaving the first pre-stretching rollers
25, 125 is deposited on the rollers 10 and 11 in the direction indicated by the arrow
F, until it reaches the last smooth roller 11, after which it is driven along a winding
path between the last pre-stretching rollers 15, 115 and is finally secured to a moving
element 27 of the known type situated alongside the path of the palletized load C
and fixed for example on the side of the rollerway for conveying the said load or
fixed for example to one of the uprights 201 of the gantry structure 1. This moving
element 27 comprises a gripper for retaining the film, comprises means for fixing
the tail end of the film onto the wound material and cutting means for separating
the said tail end of one turn from the new front end of the film which is retained
by the said gripper for the following working cycle. The pre-stretched film which
has been stored on the rollers 10 and 11 of the rotating ring 5, 12 is kept with the
width which it has when leaving the first pre-stretching rollers as a result of transverse
gripping with the rubberized rollers 10 and, remaining stationary on the said rollers
10 and 11, gradually reacquires elastic memory so that it may undergo a final pre-stretching
operation by the last rollers 15, 115 when the machine is started up. Upon start-up
of the machine, as a result of the action of the motor 9, the set of rings 5, 12 starts
to rotate in the clockwise direction F when viewing Figure 2, at a peripheral speed
suitable for requirements of the load wrapping process. The rotating structure 5,
12 with the accompanying rollers is very light so that there are no problems of inertia
either during start-up or during the final stoppage stage.
[0010] During rotation of the ring 5, 12, as a result of activation of the electric motor
23, the rubberized rollers 10 are made to rotate in the direction of the arrow F1
at a speed such as to take up, with or without correct longitudinal tensioning, the
pre-stretched film leaving the pre-stretching roller 125 and such that film leaves
the final pre-stretching rollers 15, 115, further stretched in the longitudinal direction,
in an amount and with the longitudinal tension necessary for wrapping the load C.
The motor 23 may rotate at a constant speed or at a variable speed, so as to produce
a variable supply of film from the final pre-stretching rollers 15, 115, depending
on the characteristics and/or the shape and/or the size of the load to be wrapped.
These variables may be introduced with suitable means into the working program of
the machine or the latter may be equipped with means and with an autodidactic program,
at least as regards the shape and size of the load. Since these variations in speed
of the motor 23 would produce variations in accumulation of the material on the rollers
10, 11, special means are envisaged for connecting together electrically the shafts
of the motors 23 and 26 or for ensuring that the first pre-stretching rollers 25,
125 are operated with driving power obtained from the motor 23. It is also possible
to envisage the presence, downstream of the final pre-stretching rollers 15, 115,
of a mechanical jockey device with one or more rollers. The weight created in an eccentric
position on the ring 5 by the final pair of pre-stretching rollers 15, 115 and by
any jockey device may be conveniently counterbalanced by a ballast weight 28 situated
on an inner lug 305' of the said ring 5, in a position diametrically opposite to the
lug 305 with the said rollers 15, 115.
[0011] Owing to the fact that there are no unbalanced loads mounted, the ring assembly 5
is able to rotate at speeds much higher than those of the prior art and even as high
as about 80 rpm and more.
[0012] It is clear how, owing to the considerable difference between the diameters of the
ring 5 and the load to be wrapped, during use of the machine the rollers 10 and 11
tend to accumulate increasingly more pre-stretched film which has plenty of time to
rest and recover the elastic memory which allows it to undergo the final pre-stretching
by the rollers 15, 115, so that the overall elongation of the film may reach values
of about 300% or even more, with all the advantages resulting from this condition.
In order to obtain these advantages also when loading a new reel of film into the
machine, it is also possible for the loading cycle of the said machine to envisage
a preliminary step during which the front end of the film is not fixed to the gripper
27 but is temporarily fixed to the roller 115, while the motor 23 is made to rotate
at a speed such that the rollers 10 and 11 do not rotate about their axis, with the
sole aim of accumulating on these rollers a suitable amount of pre-stretched film
from the first pair of rollers 25, 125 so that this film has the time to rest and
reacquire sufficient elastic memory for the final re-stretching step. Subsequently
the front end of the film will be fixed to the gripper 27 and the machine will be
ready to start operation.
[0013] It is clear how the improved pre-stretching and the large diameter of the reel 24
positioned on the cross-beam of the frame 2 ensure that the machine has a long operating
autonomy, with wrapping costs much lower than those of the prior art, also because
a large-diameter reel of film costs a lot less than the quantity of small reels needed
to achieve overall the same number of meters of film as the said large diameter reel.
[0014] Wrapping of the load is completed with the known steps of raising and lowering the
frame 2, so that the palletized load is wrapped by one or more helically wound turns
of film which are partially superimposed on each other. During the final step, the
film will be gripped again by the gripping, cutting and fixing unit 27 and the wrapped
load may be removed and replaced by a new load to be wrapped.
[0015] It is understood that the improvements described here must be regarded as protected
also for horizontal-axis ring machines for wrapping loads horizontally. It is also
understood that the description relates to a preferred embodiment of the invention
to which numerous constructional variations and modifications may be made. One of
these modifications may for example relate to the fact that driving and synchronization
of the rubberized rollers 10 may be performed in a different manner using a ring with
internal teeth which meshes with pinions keyed onto the shafts of the rollers 10 and
which has externally a groove so as to be able to be actuated by the static motor
23 by means of a belt, in the same manner as the ring 5. The final pre-stretching
rollers 15, 115 could obtain their driving movement from the closest of the rubberized
rollers or from a dedicated pinion, via any suitable positive drive transmission.
According to a further modification, the idle rollers 11 may be rubberized so as to
help maintain the transverse dimensions of the pre-stretched film. For this same object,
as illustrated by means of broken lines in Figure 4, the rollers 10 and 11 may be
designed to support and drive the external belts 29 or a single band or web, so as
to form a continuous-surface conveyor which is made of suitable material with a suitable
coefficient of friction in relation to the film and on which the said film rests and
is thus prevented from performing both transverse and longitudinal contracting movements.
Differently from that shown, the rings 5 and 12 may be interconnected also by means
of internal cross-beams in the form of a trellis. Finally the scope of the invention
includes also the solution whereby the film is subjected to a single pre-stretching
action by the initial rollers 25, 125 or by only the final rollers 15, 115, so that
there are no problems of contraction while being driven over the aforementioned rollers
10 and 11. It is also understood that the said pre-stretching rollers may be all or
partly such that they subject the film to only longitudinal pre-stretching or to both
longitudinal pre-stretching and transverse pre-stretching.
1. Vertical and horizontal axis ring machine, for wrapping with stretch film usually
palletized loads which are surrounded by the said ring and in which a suitable displacement
between ring and load is envisaged so as to ensure that the latter is wrapped with
film over the desired extension,
characterized in that it comprises:
- a ring (5) with a diameter suitably greater than that of the maximum-size load (C)
to be wrapped, which is made to rotate by drive means (9) mounted on a frame (2) which
rotatably supports the said ring by means of support rollers (3) and containing rollers
(4);
- there being mounted on the said frame (2) supporting the ring (5) means for supporting
the reel (24) of stretch film and means for unwinding from it the film and for statically
supplying it to:
- conveying means situated on the said rotating ring (5) and controlled by drive means
situated on the said support frame (2), for collecting the film supplied from the
said static supplying means, so as to keep it in the condition in which it is supplied
by these means, so as to accumulate it in the form of annular turns superimposed on
each other in an amount greater than that with which the innermost turn of this winding
is supplied to the load to be wrapped (C), by supplying means situated on the said
rotating ring (5);
- means (27) for temporarily retaining on the load to be wrapped the front end of
the film unwound from the said last supplying means, abandoning the film when the
wound turn is suitably fastened thereon, and which at the end of the load wrapping
cycle intervene again in order to retain the new front end of the film, separating
it from the tail end of the wound turn and fixing the latter onto the said wound turn
performed.
2. Machine according to Claim 1), in which the conveying means situated on the rotating
ring (5) for collecting and accumulating the film supplied from the said static supplying
means comprise a plurality of rollers (10, 11) which are parallel to the axis of the
said ring, mounted rotatably at one of their ends on the said ring (5), with a height
suitably greater than that of the film to be collected, and all or partly (10) having
a side surface with a high coefficient of friction in relation to the wrapping film,
for example a rubberized surface, and being connected together by means of a positive
drive transmission and arranged in any suitable way so that they may all be rotated
in the same direction and at a same appropriate speed by drive means (23) mounted
on the said support frame (2) which in machines with a ring (5) having a vertical
axis is actuated with a suitable raising/lowering movement.
3. Machine according to Claim 2), in which the said final supplying means comprise at
a short distance from one of the rubberized rollers (10) and kinematically connected
to this roller a further pair of rubberized rollers (15, 115) which rotate with a
speed ratio such as to subject the film which passes through them to a pre-stretching
action of suitable magnitude.
4. Machine according to Claim 3), in which the reel of stretch film (24), which may also
have a large diameter, is arranged with a pair of first motor-driven pre-stretching
rollers (25, 125, 26) on the said supporting and raising/lowering frame (2), in a
position such that the film unwound from the reel and pre-stretched may be deposited
on the cage formed by the said rollers (10, 11) supported by the ring, so as to form
an accumulating store which allows the film subjected to the first pre-stretching
the possibility of reacquiring elastic memory and being able to undergo a second pre-stretching
(re-stretching) action upon passing through the said final second pre-stretching rollers
(15, 115), upon leaving which the front end of the film is secured to known support
means (27) situated on the side of the load to be wrapped.
5. Machine according to Claim 2), in which the vertical-axis ring (5) is mounted rotatably
underneath the support frame (2) and the rollers (10, 11) for collecting the film
subjected to the first pre-stretching step are supported at one end by the said ring,
are directed downwards and at the other end are interconnected by a second ring (12)
which in turn may be connected by the upper ring to any internal structures in the
form of a trellis.
6. Machine according to Claim 2), in which the ring (5) has an external groove (105)
on which at least one closed belt (6) is driven, said belt for a short section being
separated from said ring and following a U-shaped path as a result of deflection by
a pair of idle pulleys (7) and a driving pulley (8) keyed onto the shaft of a motor
(9) supported by a cross-beam (102) of the said frame, which also supports the said
idle pulleys (7).
7. Machine according to Claim 2), in which the rollers (10, 11) which collect the film
supplied from the static supplying means are of a number such as to form a cage which
is polygonal in plan view and has a shape as close as possible to that of a circle
and these rollers may all be rubberized or may alternately be rubberized and smooth
and may all be motor-driven or motor-driven only partly, the remainder being idle.
8. Machine according to Claim 7), in which the motor-driven rollers (10) are connected
together at the top by means of pinions (13) and a chain (14) from which the last
pair of rubberized pre-stretching rollers (15, 115) also obtains the driving movement
via associated pinions (16, 116), respective pairs of pulleys (18) being keyed onto
the shafts of the said motor-driven rollers and other idle pulleys (20) being situated
for example on the shafts of the idle rollers (11) and a pair of closed and elastic
belts (19) being driven on these pulleys, which belts for a short section follow a
U-shaped path as a result of being deflected over pairs of idle rollers (21) and over
a driving pulley (22) keyed onto the shaft of an electric motor (23) supported by
the same side (102) of the supporting and raising/lowering frame (2) on which the
said idle pulleys are mounted.
9. Machine according to Claim 7), in which the motor-driven rollers (10) are connected
kinematically by means of a ring with internal teeth which meshes with pinions keyed
onto the shafts of the said rollers (10) and which has externally a groove so as to
be able to be actuated by the static motor (23) by means of a belt, in the same way
as the ring (5), it being envisaged that the final pre-stretching rollers (15, 115)
obtain the driving movement from the closest of the rubberized rollers (10) or from
a dedicated pinion, by means of a positive drive transmission.
10. Machine according to Claim 3), in which means may be envisaged for ensuring that the
motor (23) for rotation of the rollers (10) situated on the rotating ring (5) rotates
at a constant speed or at a variable speed, so as to produce a variable supply of
film from the final pre-stretching rollers (15, 115), depending on the characteristics
and/or the shape and/or the size and/or the non-centred position of the load to be
wrapped, it being envisaged that these variables may be entered via suitable means
into the working program of the machine or that the latter may be equipped with means
and an autodidactic program, at least as regards the shape, the size and the possible
offset position of the load.
11. Machine according to Claim 10), characterized in that, in order to ensure that the variations in speed of the motor (23) for rotation of
the storage rollers (10, 11) cause corresponding variations in accumulation of the
material on these rollers, special means may be envisaged for connecting together
electrically the shafts of the said motor (23) and that of the motor (26) of the first
pair of static pre-stretching rollers (25, 125) or for ensuring that these first pre-stretching
rollers are actuated with take-off of the driving movement from the said motor (23).
12. Machine according to Claim 4), in which a mechanical jockey device with one or more
rollers may be envisaged downstream of any one or both the pairs of pre-stretching
rollers (15, 115, 25, 125).
13. Machine according to Claim 10), in which the weight created in an eccentric position
on the ring (5) by the pair of final pre-stretching rollers (15, 115) and by the jockey
device, where present, may be counterbalanced by a ballast weight (28) situated on
an inner lug (305') of the said ring (5), in a position diametrically opposite to
the lug (305) with the said rollers (15, 115).
14. Machine according to Claim 4), characterized in that, when a new reel (24) of film is loaded, at least during start-up of the said machine,
means may be envisaged for activating a preliminary step during which the front end
of the film is not fixed to the gripper (27), but is temporarily fixed to one of the
final pre-stretching rollers (115), while the motor (23) is made to rotate at a speed
such that the storage rollers (10, 11) do not rotate about their axes, so as to accumulate
on these rollers a suitable quantity of film pre-stretched by the first pair of rollers
(25, 125), so that the film has time to rest and reacquire sufficient elastic memory
for the final re-stretching step, it being envisaged that only subsequently the front
end of the film is fixed to the said gripper (27) and the machine is set to perform
a normal wrapping cycle, with supplying of the film by the last pre-stretching rollers
(15, 115).
15. Machine according to Claim 2), in which the said rollers (10, 11) may be designed
to support and to drive external belts (29) or a single band or web, so as to form
a continuous-surface conveyor of the closed loop type and made of suitable material
with a suitable coefficient of friction in relation to the film and on which the said
film rests, thus being prevented from performing both transverse and longitudinal
contracting movements.