abanders
Mechanical
- Apr 30, 2015
- 5
I work for a manufacturing company that makes thermoforming machines for the food industry and we are in the process of creating a new machine. The way our current machine works is it starts with a roll of film that gets pulled by a gripper chain into a form station which consists of a die set, this set has a stationary top die or head that has heater rods in it to heat the film, the lower die or bucket has the pockets that the hot film gets formed into. The lower die moves up and down. When the die is open the chain indexes the film in, then the lower die closes, at this point the film gets heated by the upper die then the top die forces air down onto the hot film forcing it into the lower dies pockets, at the same time the lower die pulls vacuum down on the film to help pull the film into the pockets to create a good looking and strong package. Once the pockets are formed the die set vents to atmosphere and opens the chain indexes and the formed pockets move along the machine where they are loaded with product, then they enter the seal station where the top film is introduced under the die top. In this die set the top die is also stationary but it has a heater plate inside it that moves up and down. So once the loaded pockets index into the seal station the lower die closes and the vacuum process begins evacuating the oxygen from the package, after that the heater plate inside the die top is forced down by air bladders and it seals the top film to the bottom film then the die set vents to atmosphere the die opens the chain indexes and the process starts all over again. Our current die lift uses pneumatic cylinders to raise and lower the bottom dies. The problem with our current system is that in the form station the cylinders are not strong enough to hold the die in place when the form air is introduced it simply forces the lower die open and leaks the air out instead of forcing the film down hard and fast. In our seal station when the seal plate is forced down to seal the package the lower die is forced down and the die vents to atmosphere before the package can be sealed completely.
We have looked at the competition, most use a scissor lift of some sort, either pneumatic or servo. I am just looking for new fresh ideas.
What I need is a die lift that will stroke 230mm, cycle 35 times a minute and hold a die closed at 35,000 pounds of down force, made out of stainless steel that will last at least 1 million cycles before any major maintenance, and of course be reliable and inexpensive.
We have looked at the competition, most use a scissor lift of some sort, either pneumatic or servo. I am just looking for new fresh ideas.
What I need is a die lift that will stroke 230mm, cycle 35 times a minute and hold a die closed at 35,000 pounds of down force, made out of stainless steel that will last at least 1 million cycles before any major maintenance, and of course be reliable and inexpensive.