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US3309984A - Method of preparing embossing rollers - Google Patents

Method of preparing embossing rollers Download PDF

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US3309984A
US3309984A US329791A US32979163A US3309984A US 3309984 A US3309984 A US 3309984A US 329791 A US329791 A US 329791A US 32979163 A US32979163 A US 32979163A US 3309984 A US3309984 A US 3309984A
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roll
portions
intermediate face
face
end bearings
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US329791A
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Mackay Robert
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MACKAY ENGRAVING Corp
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MACKAY ENGRAVING CORP
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23PMETAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; COMBINED OPERATIONS; UNIVERSAL MACHINE TOOLS
    • B23P15/00Making specific metal objects by operations not covered by a single other subclass or a group in this subclass
    • B23P15/28Making specific metal objects by operations not covered by a single other subclass or a group in this subclass cutting tools
    • B23P15/40Making specific metal objects by operations not covered by a single other subclass or a group in this subclass cutting tools shearing tools
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B44DECORATIVE ARTS
    • B44BMACHINES, APPARATUS OR TOOLS FOR ARTISTIC WORK, e.g. FOR SCULPTURING, GUILLOCHING, CARVING, BRANDING, INLAYING
    • B44B5/00Machines or apparatus for embossing decorations or marks, e.g. embossing coins
    • B44B5/02Dies; Accessories
    • B44B5/026Dies
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21FPAPER-MAKING MACHINES; METHODS OF PRODUCING PAPER THEREON
    • D21F1/00Wet end of machines for making continuous webs of paper
    • D21F1/44Watermarking devices

Definitions

  • My invention is directed to a novel method of preparing embossing cylinders or rollers so that the male and female images reproduced thereon Will be in register to efficiently emboss sheet material which is fed between said cylinders.
  • rollers for embossing paper, foil and other like light sheet material are relatively expenisve and involve many steps requiring a considerable amount of time.
  • One of these prior methods includes the preparation of a male steel hardened engraved cylindrical roller having radially and outwardly projecting designs thereon and then mounting said roller in a speed driven mechanism and driving the same by coupling and gear means while simultaneously turning a second metal roller made of a relatively softer metal and thereby pressing the designs in th-e second softer roller to the desired depth under high compression of the male roller to form cavity images or designs in said second roller.
  • the second or female roller is suitably hardened to retain small details and avoid deformation.
  • Such method also employs a suitably mounted compensator roller to aid in maintaining registration. Embossing pressure is obtained by the aid of hydraulic rams producing relatively great pressure, and micrometer adjustment of the bearing boxes is necessary to control the depth of embossing.
  • a further object of my invention is the provision of a novel method of preparing cylindrical rollers for embossing recited in the preceding paragraph and in which separate positive and negative films of the design to be reproduced are releasably mounted in a releasable holding means, and the images on the positive and negative films are phot-ographically transferred to fixed positions upon said cylinders in a manner so that such images when the etching step is completed will register.
  • FIG. l is a top plan view of two of my embossing cylinders, with cooperating gears and power transmission mechanism and journalled in a typical position; the remainder of the press being omitted.
  • FIG. 2 is an end view thereof looking at the right end of FIG. l.
  • FIG. 3 is an enlarged fragmentary and cross sectional view of portions of two embossing cylinders, illustrating a registering male member on the lower cylinder and female embossing member on the upper cylinder.
  • FIG. 4 is an enlarged perspective of a sheet on which letter A has been embossed.
  • FIG. 5 is a diagrammatic view illustrating the temporary position in which the negative and positive of a photographic reproduction is removably mounted before printing and transfer of the images upon the two cylinders respectively.
  • FIG. 6 is a perspective illustrating a portion of a pinbearing holding and jig bar and the positioning of the positive film prior to transfer of the image to the cylinder.
  • FIG. 7 is a perspective illustrating the position of one of the cylinders and of the film and of a light means positioned above a portion of the cylinder.
  • reference numeral 10 ⁇ designates a cylindrical metal roller having mandrels 1l mounted in the opposite ends thereof, and which include the respective -oppositely projecting secured shafts 12 and 13.
  • the cylinder of each roller is of steel and is turned down on a lathe to a smooth cylindrical surface.
  • the intermediate surface portion of said cylinder is then copper plated to form a copper face or layer 10a by one of the presently known electrolytic plating processes to the desired depth, which depth of plating is varied according to the depth of embossing to be performed.
  • Said male roller 10 is provided with two annular rolling surfaces 23 and 24 which are at opposite ends of the copper skin thereof and are of smaller circumference than the plated portion thereof, prior to etching as hereinafter described.
  • Numeral 25 designates a steel cylindrical roller which has its intermediate portion turned down on a lathe so that such intermediate portion is of smaller circumference than the two annular end bearing faces 26 and 27 on the ends thereof which are simultaneously formed in the lathe cutting operation.
  • Bearing faces 26 and 27 and bearing faces 23 and 24 all have substantially the same diameter.
  • the intermediate cylindrical face of said roll 25 is copper plated to the desired depth to form a copper layer of skin 25a and which depth should be greater than the depth of the etched cavities to be formed therein.
  • the diameter of layer 25a, before etching, is preferably approximately the same as that of the bearing faces.
  • Said second or female cylindrical roller 25 with its cylindrical copper face 25a has end mandrels mounted on the opposite ends thereof which include oppositely projecting stub shafts 28 and 29 respectively.
  • the master art unit 3l bears the designs to be embossed and said designs are usually in varying textures or artistic unit in specific positions of the areas of the features to be embossed.
  • Said .art unit 30 has mounted on the end of it a relatively rigid apertured mounting strip 30a.
  • a photographic negative 33 is made from the master 30 and its mounting strip 30a and two holes are made in said negative film 33 positioned identically to the holes in said strip 30a of said master.
  • a photographic positive film 42 is made from the aforesaid negative film and holes are formed in the end portion thereof in positions corresponding to the positions of the holes in said mounting strip 30a of said master 30.
  • a gear 20 is secured on the end shaft 13 of said lower male roller 10.
  • a gear 43 is suitably secured upon the projecting end of shaft 29 of the female roller 25.
  • the male roller is locked in a fixed position on a suitable support by means of a removable lug such as the lug 40 on a pivotally connected arm 41 as shown in FIGS. 6 and 7.
  • Said lug 40 is inserted into the recesses between a two adjacent teeth of the gear wheel 2t) to releasably hold said roller 10 in fixed position.
  • a visible mark 32 is made on the tooth of gear 2f), as shown in FIG. 7, and a similar mark is made on gear 43 to register with mark 32.
  • Said meshing gears 2li and 43 hold the rollers 25 and l@ in registering position.
  • Said visible marks on gears 20 and 43 provide for properly setting the said rollers 25 and llt) in a press in registering positions so that said marks are initially in registering adjacent positions.
  • Each of the copper ⁇ faces 19a and 25a of the rollers l and 25 respectively are coate-d with a suitable light sensitive solution, which is preferably applied by spraying.
  • a metal holding or jig bar 35 is securely mounted on a support (not shown) in a fixed position parallel to and spaced from said male roller ltd.
  • Said jig bar 35 has removably secured therein a pair of upwardly projecting metal pins 36 which are spaced apart a distance equal to the spacing between the holes in the end portion of the positive film 42 so that the positive film may be mounted on said pins 36 and so that said lm will lie over the plated and -coated face of the roller ll() and be impinged against said roller by a pair of parallel spaced apart suitably journalled impression rollers 37 and 38 which are preferably Iformed of rubber and which hold the positive film in position prior to the photographic printing step.
  • Said rollers 37 and 38 are journalled at their opposite ends on two rotatable lead screws (not shown). Said lead screws are manually rotated to push the rollers 37 and 38 downward to impinge the positive film 42 against the coated face of roller lil.
  • the photographic image is transferred and printed from the positive film 42 upon the copper plated face lila of the roller Iii, said impression rollers 37 and 38 being suitably mounted for rotation and the roller 10 being released and rotated during such printing step.
  • This printing is done after removal of the pins 36 so as to cause said positive film to lie directly on Vand. move in contact with the cylindrical copper face 10a of said roller 10.
  • the face 10a of roller 10 is suitably etched in a conventional manner.
  • the negative 33 is similarly positioned on two of the pins 36 and beneath the impression rollers 37 and 38 and against the copper plated face 25a after said roller 25 is released from locked position in which it was held with the aid of lug 40 engaging the gear ⁇ /vheel 43 mounted on shaft 29. Said initial positioning is aided by alignment of the mark 32 made on the end face of a tooth of the gear wheel 43 with a mark on gear wheel 20. With the proper exposure from a -light mounted within the casing 39, the image is printed from said negative in correct position upon the ⁇ face 25a of the roller 25. Said roller 25 is then etched suitably in a conventional manner to the desired depth to produce cavities or recesses corresponding to the male projecting parts produced by etching of the cylinder ft).
  • rollers 10 and 25 are then mounted in superposed position in suitable bearings of a press and with the alignment of the marks on their respective meshing gear wheels 20 and 43, so that their respective annular end faces 27 and 23 and faces 26 and 24 will roll in contact with each other ⁇ and so that the respective male images of lower cylinder il() will register with and seat in the corresponding image recesses of the copper face 25a of the cylinder 25.
  • the copper plated layers 10a and 25a. are made of such a thickness so that these layers are slightly spaced apart when the rollers are mounted in work position.
  • the etching of the copper plated layers 10a and 25a is to a degree so that when the male images of the layer 10a register with and seat partly into the corresponding female images of the layer 25a, there will be a slight spacing or clearance between same to permit the sheet material to be embossed to pass therebetween and be simultaneously embossed.
  • Such spacing is preferably equal to approximately one-half the thickness of the sheet material to be embossed.
  • annular face 23 with face 27 and of annular face 24 with annular face 26 prevents undesirable wear and pressing Contact between the raised embossing members of coated layer lila and the female recesses of layer 25a, and this results in greatly increased life and period of use of my embossing rollers.
  • FIG. 3 I have illustrated a fragment in cross section of the lower roller It) having a raised projecting embossing member 45 integral with its copper layer 10a and with said member projecting in a registering cavity 4d of the copper layer 25a of roller 25.
  • a sheet of paper 47 is illustrated in normal impinged position with an embossed portion formed thereon between the raised projecting member and said cavity.
  • FIG. 4 is illustrated a typical sheet of material 47 on which the embossed image 48 has been produced in the described manner.
  • the sheet material to be embossed is preferably in roll form in a continuous web which is fed at the desired speed ybetween the embossing rolls which pull said web during normal operation.
  • Said embossing rolls and their connected mounting means and mechanism are positioned as the last station or position relative to the printing press which reproduces the designs on the web.
  • the adjustability of the variable speed drive is accordingly important to provide for proper speed of rot-ation of the embossing rollers so as to take the printed web directly froml a printing press to emboss same.
  • first and second rotatable assemblies including first and second rolls each having a cylindrical intermediate face and annular end bearings at opposite ends of said intermediate face with said annular end bearings of both rolls having the same diameter, mandrels projecting from the ends of said rolls and gears secured on said mandrels, the diameter of said intermediate face of said rst roll being greater than the diameter of said end bearings and the diameter of said intermediate face of said second roll being approximately equal to the diameter of said end bearings, etching said intermediate face of said first roll to provide etched portions of reduced diameter and unetched projecting portions, etching said intermediate face of said second roll to provide etched recessed portions mating with said unetched projecting portions of said intermediate face of said first roll and unetched portions mating with said etched portions of said intermediate face of said first roll, thereby to define a design image to be embossed, the etching of said intermediate faces of said rolls being carried out to an extent such that with said end bearing
  • etching of said intermediate faces being accomplished through the steps of providing first and second films each having alignment means thereon, forming positive and negative images of a pattern to be embossed on said first and second films in a certain fixed relation to said alignment means thereon, applying lightsensitive coatings to said intermediate faces, placing said first and second films against said intermediate faces while References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,680,097 8/1928 Eaton 101-395 1,958,299 5/1934 Ericksson lOl-375 2,639,660 5/1953 Sunderhauf et al.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Machines For Manufacturing Corrugated Board In Mechanical Paper-Making Processes (AREA)
  • Shaping Of Tube Ends By Bending Or Straightening (AREA)

Description

arch 2l, i967 R, MacKAY METHOD 0F PREPARING EMBossING ROLLERS Filed Dec. l1, 1965 INENTOR.
United States atl'f i@ METHOD GF PREPARING EMBGSSING ROLLERS Robert MacKay, Lyndon, Ky., assignor to MacKay Engraving Corporation, Louisville, Ky., a corporation of Kentucky Filed Dec. 11, 1963, Ser. No. 329,791 2 Claims. (Cl. 101-32) My invention is directed to a novel method of preparing embossing cylinders or rollers so that the male and female images reproduced thereon Will be in register to efficiently emboss sheet material which is fed between said cylinders.
The presently known methods of preparing rollers for embossing paper, foil and other like light sheet material are relatively expenisve and involve many steps requiring a considerable amount of time. One of these prior methods includes the preparation of a male steel hardened engraved cylindrical roller having radially and outwardly projecting designs thereon and then mounting said roller in a speed driven mechanism and driving the same by coupling and gear means while simultaneously turning a second metal roller made of a relatively softer metal and thereby pressing the designs in th-e second softer roller to the desired depth under high compression of the male roller to form cavity images or designs in said second roller. Thereafter, the second or female roller is suitably hardened to retain small details and avoid deformation. Such method also employs a suitably mounted compensator roller to aid in maintaining registration. Embossing pressure is obtained by the aid of hydraulic rams producing relatively great pressure, and micrometer adjustment of the bearing boxes is necessary to control the depth of embossing.
Certain presently known methods have not been satisfactory due to failures of proper registration and due to undesirable variation in the depth of embossing and nonuniformity of em-bossing upon sheets of varying thicknesses.
It is an object of my invention to provide a novel method of preparing cylindrical embossing rollers for embossing paper, foil and other sheet material and which includes the steps of copper plating said cylinders; releasably securing said cylinders in a fixed relative position; transferring the images from a positive film and from a negative film -onto said cylinders respectively in a predetermined position for subsequent registry; etching said cylinders and then mounting the same in a suitable press so as to permit sheets of suitable material to be fed between the driven rollers and thereby embossed.
A further object of my invention is the provision of a novel method of preparing cylindrical rollers for embossing recited in the preceding paragraph and in which separate positive and negative films of the design to be reproduced are releasably mounted in a releasable holding means, and the images on the positive and negative films are phot-ographically transferred to fixed positions upon said cylinders in a manner so that such images when the etching step is completed will register.
Other and further objects of my invention will be apparent from the following description and appended claims.
On the drawings:
FIG. l is a top plan view of two of my embossing cylinders, with cooperating gears and power transmission mechanism and journalled in a typical position; the remainder of the press being omitted.
FIG. 2 is an end view thereof looking at the right end of FIG. l.
FIG. 3 is an enlarged fragmentary and cross sectional view of portions of two embossing cylinders, illustrating a registering male member on the lower cylinder and female embossing member on the upper cylinder.
FIG. 4 is an enlarged perspective of a sheet on which letter A has been embossed.
FIG. 5 is a diagrammatic view illustrating the temporary position in which the negative and positive of a photographic reproduction is removably mounted before printing and transfer of the images upon the two cylinders respectively.
FIG. 6 is a perspective illustrating a portion of a pinbearing holding and jig bar and the positioning of the positive film prior to transfer of the image to the cylinder.
FIG. 7 is a perspective illustrating the position of one of the cylinders and of the film and of a light means positioned above a portion of the cylinder.
As shown on the drawings:
Referring to FIGS. l and 2, reference numeral 10` designates a cylindrical metal roller having mandrels 1l mounted in the opposite ends thereof, and which include the respective -oppositely projecting secured shafts 12 and 13. The cylinder of each roller is of steel and is turned down on a lathe to a smooth cylindrical surface. The intermediate surface portion of said cylinder is then copper plated to form a copper face or layer 10a by one of the presently known electrolytic plating processes to the desired depth, which depth of plating is varied according to the depth of embossing to be performed. Said male roller 10 is provided with two annular rolling surfaces 23 and 24 which are at opposite ends of the copper skin thereof and are of smaller circumference than the plated portion thereof, prior to etching as hereinafter described.
Numeral 25 designates a steel cylindrical roller which has its intermediate portion turned down on a lathe so that such intermediate portion is of smaller circumference than the two annular end bearing faces 26 and 27 on the ends thereof which are simultaneously formed in the lathe cutting operation. Bearing faces 26 and 27 and bearing faces 23 and 24 all have substantially the same diameter. The intermediate cylindrical face of said roll 25 is copper plated to the desired depth to form a copper layer of skin 25a and which depth should be greater than the depth of the etched cavities to be formed therein. The diameter of layer 25a, before etching, is preferably approximately the same as that of the bearing faces. Said second or female cylindrical roller 25 with its cylindrical copper face 25a has end mandrels mounted on the opposite ends thereof which include oppositely projecting stub shafts 28 and 29 respectively.
The master art unit 3l) bears the designs to be embossed and said designs are usually in varying textures or artistic unit in specific positions of the areas of the features to be embossed. Said .art unit 30 has mounted on the end of it a relatively rigid apertured mounting strip 30a.
A photographic negative 33 is made from the master 30 and its mounting strip 30a and two holes are made in said negative film 33 positioned identically to the holes in said strip 30a of said master. A photographic positive film 42 is made from the aforesaid negative film and holes are formed in the end portion thereof in positions corresponding to the positions of the holes in said mounting strip 30a of said master 30.
A gear 20 is secured on the end shaft 13 of said lower male roller 10. A gear 43 is suitably secured upon the projecting end of shaft 29 of the female roller 25. The male roller is locked in a fixed position on a suitable support by means of a removable lug such as the lug 40 on a pivotally connected arm 41 as shown in FIGS. 6 and 7. Said lug 40 is inserted into the recesses between a two adjacent teeth of the gear wheel 2t) to releasably hold said roller 10 in fixed position. A visible mark 32 is made on the tooth of gear 2f), as shown in FIG. 7, and a similar mark is made on gear 43 to register with mark 32. Said meshing gears 2li and 43 hold the rollers 25 and l@ in registering position.
Said visible marks on gears 20 and 43 provide for properly setting the said rollers 25 and llt) in a press in registering positions so that said marks are initially in registering adjacent positions.
Each of the copper `faces 19a and 25a of the rollers l and 25 respectively are coate-d with a suitable light sensitive solution, which is preferably applied by spraying.
A metal holding or jig bar 35 is securely mounted on a support (not shown) in a fixed position parallel to and spaced from said male roller ltd. Said jig bar 35 has removably secured therein a pair of upwardly projecting metal pins 36 which are spaced apart a distance equal to the spacing between the holes in the end portion of the positive film 42 so that the positive film may be mounted on said pins 36 and so that said lm will lie over the plated and -coated face of the roller ll() and be impinged against said roller by a pair of parallel spaced apart suitably journalled impression rollers 37 and 38 which are preferably Iformed of rubber and which hold the positive film in position prior to the photographic printing step. Said rollers 37 and 38 are journalled at their opposite ends on two rotatable lead screws (not shown). Said lead screws are manually rotated to push the rollers 37 and 38 downward to impinge the positive film 42 against the coated face of roller lil.
Thereupon, with the aid of a suitable electric light (see FIG. 7), which may be mounted in a casing or housing 39, the photographic image is transferred and printed from the positive film 42 upon the copper plated face lila of the roller Iii, said impression rollers 37 and 38 being suitably mounted for rotation and the roller 10 being released and rotated during such printing step. This printing is done after removal of the pins 36 so as to cause said positive film to lie directly on Vand. move in contact with the cylindrical copper face 10a of said roller 10. Thereupon the face 10a of roller 10 is suitably etched in a conventional manner.
The negative 33 is similarly positioned on two of the pins 36 and beneath the impression rollers 37 and 38 and against the copper plated face 25a after said roller 25 is released from locked position in which it was held with the aid of lug 40 engaging the gear `/vheel 43 mounted on shaft 29. Said initial positioning is aided by alignment of the mark 32 made on the end face of a tooth of the gear wheel 43 with a mark on gear wheel 20. With the proper exposure from a -light mounted within the casing 39, the image is printed from said negative in correct position upon the `face 25a of the roller 25. Said roller 25 is then etched suitably in a conventional manner to the desired depth to produce cavities or recesses corresponding to the male projecting parts produced by etching of the cylinder ft).
The rollers 10 and 25 are then mounted in superposed position in suitable bearings of a press and with the alignment of the marks on their respective meshing gear wheels 20 and 43, so that their respective annular end faces 27 and 23 and faces 26 and 24 will roll in contact with each other `and so that the respective male images of lower cylinder il() will register with and seat in the corresponding image recesses of the copper face 25a of the cylinder 25. The copper plated layers 10a and 25a. are made of such a thickness so that these layers are slightly spaced apart when the rollers are mounted in work position. Similarly the etching of the copper plated layers 10a and 25a is to a degree so that when the male images of the layer 10a register with and seat partly into the corresponding female images of the layer 25a, there will be a slight spacing or clearance between same to permit the sheet material to be embossed to pass therebetween and be simultaneously embossed. Such spacing is preferably equal to approximately one-half the thickness of the sheet material to be embossed.
The metal-to-metal rolling engagement of annular face 23 with face 27 and of annular face 24 with annular face 26 prevents undesirable wear and pressing Contact between the raised embossing members of coated layer lila and the female recesses of layer 25a, and this results in greatly increased life and period of use of my embossing rollers.
In FIG. 3, I have illustrated a fragment in cross section of the lower roller It) having a raised projecting embossing member 45 integral with its copper layer 10a and with said member projecting in a registering cavity 4d of the copper layer 25a of roller 25. A sheet of paper 47 is illustrated in normal impinged position with an embossed portion formed thereon between the raised projecting member and said cavity.
In FIG. 4 is illustrated a typical sheet of material 47 on which the embossed image 48 has been produced in the described manner.
When said prepared embossing rollers are mounted in suitable bearings 17 and 18 in a press 19 in work producing position, with gears y43 and 20 in mesh and in proper registering position, gear wheel 21 is secured on shaft or mandrel l2 and a driving .gear 51 is mounted on the projecting end of a shaft 52 of Ia conventional variable speed drive 5f), only an end fragment of which is illustrated in FIG. l. Said variable speed drive 5G is adapted to be operatively connected to be driven by a suitable electric motor (not shown).
The sheet material to be embossed is preferably in roll form in a continuous web which is fed at the desired speed ybetween the embossing rolls which pull said web during normal operation. Said embossing rolls and their connected mounting means and mechanism are positioned as the last station or position relative to the printing press which reproduces the designs on the web. The adjustability of the variable speed drive is accordingly important to provide for proper speed of rot-ation of the embossing rollers so as to take the printed web directly froml a printing press to emboss same.
While the foregoing specification sets forth the invention in spacific terms, it is to be understood that numerous changes in the shape, size and materials may be resorted to without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as claimed hereinafter and it is contemplated that various changes may be made in the embodiment of the invention herein specifically described without departing from or sacrificing any of the advantages of the invention or any features thereof, and nothing herein shall be construed as limitations upon the invention, its concept or structural embodiment as to the whole or any part thereof except as defined in the appended claims.
I claim:
l. In a method of embossing sheet material, the steps of providing first and second rotatable assemblies including first and second rolls each having a cylindrical intermediate face and annular end bearings at opposite ends of said intermediate face with said annular end bearings of both rolls having the same diameter, mandrels projecting from the ends of said rolls and gears secured on said mandrels, the diameter of said intermediate face of said rst roll being greater than the diameter of said end bearings and the diameter of said intermediate face of said second roll being approximately equal to the diameter of said end bearings, etching said intermediate face of said first roll to provide etched portions of reduced diameter and unetched projecting portions, etching said intermediate face of said second roll to provide etched recessed portions mating with said unetched projecting portions of said intermediate face of said first roll and unetched portions mating with said etched portions of said intermediate face of said first roll, thereby to define a design image to be embossed, the etching of said intermediate faces of said rolls being carried out to an extent such that with said end bearings in engagement a slight spacing is provided .between said unetched projecting portions of said intermediate face of said first roll and said etched recessed portions of said second roll and also between said etched portions of said intermediate face of said first roll and said unetched portions of said intermediate face of said second roll, said slight spacing being suticient for passage of sheet material between said intermediate faces while said end bearings are in engagement, and rotatably driving said assemblies while meshing said gears maintaining said end bearings in engagement and feeding sheet material between said intermediate faces.
2. In a method of embossing sheet material as defined in claim 1, said etching of said intermediate faces being accomplished through the steps of providing first and second films each having alignment means thereon, forming positive and negative images of a pattern to be embossed on said first and second films in a certain fixed relation to said alignment means thereon, applying lightsensitive coatings to said intermediate faces, placing said first and second films against said intermediate faces while References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,680,097 8/1928 Eaton 101-395 1,958,299 5/1934 Ericksson lOl-375 2,639,660 5/1953 Sunderhauf et al. 101-23 2,816,025 12/1957 Dahlberg 93-37 2,833,193 5/1958 Poschel 95-77.5 3,022,231 2/1962 Broderick 101--28 X 3,196,788 7/1965 Knowles 10i-216 ROBERT E. PULFREY, Primary Examiner.
J. A. BELL, Assistant Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. IN A METHOD OF EMBOSSING SHEET MATERIAL, THE STEPS OF PROVIDING FIRST AND SECOND ROTATABLE ASSEMBLIES INCLUDING FIRST AND SECOND ROLLS EACH HAVING A CYLINDRICAL INTERMEDIATE FACE AND ANNULAR END BEARINGS AT OPPOSITE ENDS OF SAID INTERMEDIATE FACE WITH SAID ANNULAR END BEARINGS OF BOTH ROLLS HAVING THE SAME DIAMETER, MANDRELS PROJECTING FROM THE ENDS OF SAID ROLLS AND GEARS SECURED ON SAID MANDRELS, THE DIAMETER OF SAID INTERMEDIATE FACE OF SAID FIRST ROLL BEING GREATER THAN THE DIAMETER OF SAID END BEARINGS AND THE DIAMETER OF SAID INTERMEDIATE FACE OF SAID SECOND ROLL BEING APPROXIMATELY EQUAL TO THE DIAMETER OF SAID END BEARINGS, ETCHING SAID INTERMEDIATE FACE OF SAID FIRST ROLL TO PROVIDE ETCHED PORTIONS OF REDUCED DIAMETER AND UNETCHED PROJECTING PORTIONS, ETCHING SAID INTERMEDIATE FACE OF SAID SECOND ROLL TO PROVIDE ETCHED RECESSED PORTIONS MATING WITH SAID UNETCHED PROJECTING PORTIONS OF SAID INTERMEDIATE FACE OF SAID FIRST ROLL AND UNETCHED PORTIONS MATING WITH SAID ETCHED PORTIONS OF SAID INTERMEDIATE FACE OF SAID FIRST ROLL, THEREBY TO DEFINE A DESIGN IMAGE TO BE EMBOSSED, THE ETCHING OF SAID INTERMEDIATE FACES OF SAID ROLLS BEING CARRIED OUT TO AN EXTENT SUCH THAT WITH SAID END BEARINGS IN ENGAGEMENT A SLIGHT SPACING IS PROVIDED BETWEEN SAID UNETCHED PROJECTING PORTIONS OF SAID INTERMEDIATE FACE OF SAID FIRST ROLL AND SAID ETCHED RECESSED PORTIONS OF SAID SECOND ROLL AND ALSO BETWEEN SAID ETCHED PORTIONS OF SAID INTERMEDIATE FACE OF SAID FIRST ROLL AND SAID UNETCHED PORTIONS OF SAID INTERMEDIATE FACE OF SAID SECOND ROLL, SAID SLIGHT SPACING BEING SUFFICIENT FOR PASSAGE OF SHEET MATERIAL BETWEEN SAID INTERMEDIATE FACES WHILE SAID END BEARINGS ARE IN ENGAGEMENT, AND ROTATABLY DRIVING SAID ASSEMBLIES WHILE MESHING SAID GEARS MAINTAINING SAID END BEARINGS IN ENGAGEMENT AND FEEDING SHEET MATERIAL BETWEEN SAID INTERMEDIATE FACES.
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Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4059479A (en) * 1973-08-10 1977-11-22 Hisaji Tanazawa Method of forming an embossed pattern
US4192229A (en) * 1977-10-07 1980-03-11 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Fixing apparatus
US4200389A (en) * 1977-12-12 1980-04-29 Minolta Camera Kabushiki Kaisha Pressure fixing apparatus for copier
US4732082A (en) * 1986-06-25 1988-03-22 Carl Ireton Apparatus and method for mounting embossing rollers in a press line
US5406705A (en) * 1994-02-03 1995-04-18 Gencorp Inc. Method of producing an embossing cylinder
US6257135B1 (en) * 1999-04-19 2001-07-10 Fort James Corporation Unitary saddle for mounting multiple emboss slugs on a single emboss roll
US6578728B1 (en) * 2000-02-10 2003-06-17 Norman Weigen Message delivery apparatus and system for paper dispensers and similar devices
US20030213809A1 (en) * 2000-02-10 2003-11-20 Norman Weigen Message delivery apparatus and system for paper dispensers and similar devices
US20040151857A1 (en) * 2002-03-06 2004-08-05 Stratum Oy Coating method for a roll or cylinder
US20050253324A1 (en) * 2004-05-11 2005-11-17 Ellison Educational Equipment, Inc. Roller press
US20060086266A1 (en) * 2004-10-21 2006-04-27 Mario Spatafora Embossing unit and relative production method
US20130273322A1 (en) * 2010-12-23 2013-10-17 Boegli-Gravures S.A. Device for embossing foils
US20140000465A1 (en) * 2012-06-27 2014-01-02 Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd. Electronic device and embossing method of electronic device
USD1001604S1 (en) * 2021-06-01 2023-10-17 Stäubli Electrical Connectors Ag Press jaw

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US1958299A (en) * 1930-10-15 1934-05-08 Standard Process Corp Intaglio printing methods and apparatus
US2639660A (en) * 1951-02-14 1953-05-26 Frederick A Sunderhauf Roll apparatus for localized embossing
US2816025A (en) * 1953-07-23 1957-12-10 Croname Inc Photoetching embossing dies
US2833193A (en) * 1953-05-18 1958-05-06 Meyercord Co Photo-engraving apparatus for printing cylinders
US3022231A (en) * 1959-07-27 1962-02-20 Frank W Broderick Method of producing matching embossing rolls
US3196788A (en) * 1962-03-19 1965-07-27 Michle Goss Dexter Inc Bearer ring desing for four cooperating cylinders

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1680097A (en) * 1926-08-31 1928-08-07 William s
US1958299A (en) * 1930-10-15 1934-05-08 Standard Process Corp Intaglio printing methods and apparatus
US2639660A (en) * 1951-02-14 1953-05-26 Frederick A Sunderhauf Roll apparatus for localized embossing
US2833193A (en) * 1953-05-18 1958-05-06 Meyercord Co Photo-engraving apparatus for printing cylinders
US2816025A (en) * 1953-07-23 1957-12-10 Croname Inc Photoetching embossing dies
US3022231A (en) * 1959-07-27 1962-02-20 Frank W Broderick Method of producing matching embossing rolls
US3196788A (en) * 1962-03-19 1965-07-27 Michle Goss Dexter Inc Bearer ring desing for four cooperating cylinders

Cited By (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4059479A (en) * 1973-08-10 1977-11-22 Hisaji Tanazawa Method of forming an embossed pattern
US4192229A (en) * 1977-10-07 1980-03-11 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Fixing apparatus
US4200389A (en) * 1977-12-12 1980-04-29 Minolta Camera Kabushiki Kaisha Pressure fixing apparatus for copier
US4732082A (en) * 1986-06-25 1988-03-22 Carl Ireton Apparatus and method for mounting embossing rollers in a press line
US5406705A (en) * 1994-02-03 1995-04-18 Gencorp Inc. Method of producing an embossing cylinder
US6257135B1 (en) * 1999-04-19 2001-07-10 Fort James Corporation Unitary saddle for mounting multiple emboss slugs on a single emboss roll
US6578728B1 (en) * 2000-02-10 2003-06-17 Norman Weigen Message delivery apparatus and system for paper dispensers and similar devices
US20030213809A1 (en) * 2000-02-10 2003-11-20 Norman Weigen Message delivery apparatus and system for paper dispensers and similar devices
US20040151857A1 (en) * 2002-03-06 2004-08-05 Stratum Oy Coating method for a roll or cylinder
US7052780B2 (en) * 2002-03-06 2006-05-30 Stratum Oy Coated roll or cylinder and machine having same
US20050253324A1 (en) * 2004-05-11 2005-11-17 Ellison Educational Equipment, Inc. Roller press
US20060086266A1 (en) * 2004-10-21 2006-04-27 Mario Spatafora Embossing unit and relative production method
US20130273322A1 (en) * 2010-12-23 2013-10-17 Boegli-Gravures S.A. Device for embossing foils
US9505167B2 (en) * 2010-12-23 2016-11-29 Boegli-Gravures S.A. Device for embossing foils
US20140000465A1 (en) * 2012-06-27 2014-01-02 Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd. Electronic device and embossing method of electronic device
USD1001604S1 (en) * 2021-06-01 2023-10-17 Stäubli Electrical Connectors Ag Press jaw
USD1043293S1 (en) 2021-06-01 2024-09-24 Stäubli Electrical Connectors Ag Press jaw

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