US3728066A - Joint for endless belts - Google Patents

Joint for endless belts Download PDF

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US3728066A
US3728066A US00093538A US3728066DA US3728066A US 3728066 A US3728066 A US 3728066A US 00093538 A US00093538 A US 00093538A US 3728066D A US3728066D A US 3728066DA US 3728066 A US3728066 A US 3728066A
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Prior art keywords
belt
band
seam
film
seams
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US00093538A
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H Stadler
H Spanyar
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Vereinigte Metallwerke Ranshoffen Berndorf AG
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Vereinigte Metallwerke Ranshoffen Berndorf AG
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16GBELTS, CABLES, OR ROPES, PREDOMINANTLY USED FOR DRIVING PURPOSES; CHAINS; FITTINGS PREDOMINANTLY USED THEREFOR
    • F16G1/00Driving-belts
    • F16G1/20Driving-belts made of a single metal strip
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C41/00Shaping by coating a mould, core or other substrate, i.e. by depositing material and stripping-off the shaped article; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C41/24Shaping by coating a mould, core or other substrate, i.e. by depositing material and stripping-off the shaped article; Apparatus therefor for making articles of indefinite length

Definitions

  • a film-casting belt is composed of flexible metal of high hardness, especially stainless steel but possibly ordinary steel, copper and nickel, and has a thickness up to about 1 mm.
  • the belt joint is made by buttwelding the ends of the band and a bias such that the weld seam runs at an angle to the direction of movement to the belt which ranges between 2 and 45 but preferably is between 2 and 15.
  • the weld seam is ground flush with the surface of the belt which has a tolerance i 3 u.
  • the curvature of the band which is maintained under tensions up to 200 tons, may be reversed to facilitate stripping of the synthetic-resin or cellulosic film from the surface.
  • the invention also relates to ajoint for such belts.
  • Such belts are frequently constituted of metal and must have a hard, highly finished surface of limited dimensional tolerance. Since the belt must pass over rollers, it must be highly flexible and because any deformation of the belt will result in a corresponding defect in the film, the belt must be rigid during the casting and drying steps. Such rigidity is obtained by the application of high tension forces to the belt.
  • such belts are formed by joining the ends of the belt in a carefully prepared lap weld running perpendicularly to the direction of movement of the belt.
  • This has the disadvantage that the seam is a weak point and, indeed, prior'art belts tend to rupture at this seam.
  • the problem is increased by the fact that, where the seam contacts the rollers, it is bent therealong and lies along a generatrix of the roller and is subjected to severe bending stress. When the band leaves the roller, it straightens, thereby bending the band at the weld seam in the opposite direction.
  • the elevated tensile stress applied to the band to maintain its stiffness and the quality of its surface, the repeated bending stresses generated at the weld seam and the resulting material fatigue, cause failure of the belt, especially at the seam.
  • a further disadvantage, brought out in the aforedescribed copending application, is the fact that, when the seam lies perpendicular to the direction of movement of the belt, the entire seam passes at once beneath the pouring apparatus from which the filmforming material is dispensed. If a cavity is formed at the seam, e.g., by the grinding of the scam flush with the belt surface or by the tensile stresses applied at the scam, the gap between the receiving surface of the belt and the pouring apparatus will increase and the thickness of the film altered. This is, of course, a consequence of the fact that the entire seam is disposed beneath the pouring apparatus and lies along a generatrix of the support roller at once.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide an improved joint structure for such belts.
  • the metallic band has a thickness up to about 1 mm and that the butt-weld seam runs athwart the belt at an angle between 2 and 45 to the direction of movement of the belt.
  • the angle of inclination of the seam is preferably 2 to 15 (to the longitudinal edge).
  • the oblique weld seam may extend continuously across the entire transverse width of the belt.
  • the belt may be built up of a plurality of laterally juxtaposed belt sections which are joined by a longitudinal seam, i.e. a seam extending in the direction of movement of the belt while the oblique seams of each section include angles of 10 to 45 with the longitudinal seam.
  • the oblique seams of the plurality belt sections preferably are aligned with one another, i.e. form a single continuous oblique seam.
  • the belt is formed by winding a single band generally helically so that a correspondingly formed seam is produced, the seam having a pitch angle between about 2 and 8.
  • means may be provided for tensioning the band to about 200 tons and/or for inverting the curvature of the band to facilitate stripping of the film from the surface of the band.
  • the apparatus of the present invention is understood to include means for casting the film-forming material upon a surface of the belt and forming, therefore, a pouring gap therewith, means for vaporizing the solvent, and means for stripping the film from the belt upon vaporization of the solvent.
  • FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic perspective view showing a film-casting belt according to the present invention, made up of two belt sections in lateral juxtaposition;
  • FIG. 2 is a similar view of a belt formed by helical winding of a suitably shaped metal band
  • FIG. 3 is a perspective view, also in diagrammatic form, of an apparatus for the casting of synthetic resin film
  • FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken along the line IV IV ofFlG. 3;
  • FIG. 5 is an end view illustrating the inversion of the curvature of the band for stripping the film thereof;
  • FIGS. 6 and 7 are views similar to FIG. 1 illustrating other arrangements of the oblique seam.
  • FIG. 8 is an elevational view showing the utilization of the band of FIG. 2 in a film-forming apparatus.
  • FIG. 1 we have shown a metal film-casting conveyor of double breadth made up of two strips of normal breadth which have been welded together laterally along their longitudinal edges in the direction of movement of the conveyor via the weld seam 3.
  • the outer edges 7 thus constitute the longitudinal edges of the double-breadth belt produced from the two sections 1 and 2 and lie in planes perpendicular to the casting surface.
  • the sections 1 and 2 are individually joined into endless bands by oblique seams 4 which include an angle a in the direction of advance of the belt (arrow A) ranging between 10 and 45 and preferably between 10 and
  • the oblique weld seams 4 are aligned with one another and are buttwelds as described below in connection with FIG. 4.
  • the oblique seam has been lengthened by decreasing the angle so that, for example, the angle ranges between 2 and 8.
  • a central seam can be eliminated and the oblique seam formed as a helix.
  • the band between the longitudinal edges 7 has a width greater than the width of the band from which it is formed. While only somewhat more than a single complete turn of the helix is provided in this embodiment, the band may be made up of any number of such turns or turn fractions. The result is a screw-type joint which practically functions as a longitudinal seam but serves as well to join the band in an endless configuration (see FIG. 8).
  • onlya single band section l0,need be provided and its oblique seam 11 may include an angle 7 of, say, 10 with the longitudinal edges 12 and 13 of the band.
  • the total length L of the oblique seam may be less than the length of the longitudinal edge 7.
  • L is greater than the length of the longitudinal edge 7' in FIG. 2.
  • L in FIG. 3 is shown to be greater than the circumference C of the guide rollers 14 and 15 over which the belt passes.
  • the guide rollers have a diameter D so that the circumference C 1rD.
  • FIG. 3 moreover, we show a casting nozzle 16 from which a band of film-forming synthetic resin or cellulosic material is deposited at 17 upon the surface 18 of the belt 10 for vaporization of a solvent by heating in the subsequent stretch.
  • the heating means is represented at 19in FIG. 3.
  • a stripper 20 removes the finished film 21, preferably at a point of direction change of the belt 10 to facilitate such removal.
  • Arrow 22 represents the tension applied to the belt which may be of 200 tons, for example.
  • the weld seam 1 l is shown in cross section in FIG. 4 from which it can be observed that the seam is a butt weld with beads of weldment 23 introduced between the edges of the belt and ground flush with the surface 18 thereof so that the surface tolerance is :3
  • the thickness of the metal belt is ap proximately 1mm and the belt is preferably composed of stainless steel.
  • the weld prior to grinding, the weld is compacted by cold or hot rolling or hammering, thereby densifying the weldment. In fact, when the surface is hammered or rolled smooth, grinding may be omitted.
  • welding as used herein is intended to include soldering in which the bead is formed by low-melting solder;
  • FIG. 8 we show the use of the band of FIG. 2 in a film-forming apparatus in which it is assumed that the film has initially been produced elsewhere and is fed at 30 to the belt 6 whose helical seam 5 has a pitch angle [3 of 2 to 8 as previously noted.
  • the film 30 is fed at this pitch angle and in the same pitch sense as shown in FIG. 8 so that, whenever the helical seam meets the band, it will coincide with the junction between turns of the helical strip, the latter being fed from the apparatus at 31. While the film is drying on the heated metal belt,
  • FIG. 5 we have shown an arrangement in which a heated drum 40 or guide roller is subtended by an endless metal belt 41 which has a helical seam over a length greater than the arc length of the band in contact with the heated drum or roller 40, the latter being at a temperature of 200C.
  • the belt passes about idler and drive rollers 42, 43, 44 and 45, the rollers 43 and 44 being tensioned at T to apply a tensile stress of 200 tons to the belt.
  • the film is cast onto the belt 41 via a nozzle arrangement 46, the film 47 moving on the belt to contact the roller 40 for drive thereon.
  • a pressure roller 48 may serve to calibrate the thickness of the film.
  • the film is stripped at 49 upon its emergence from the gap between the belt and the roller 40 and as the belt 41 is deflected about the roller 42 to invert its curvature.
  • FIGS. 6 and 7 show that the seams 4' of the two-sec tion belt 1', 2', joined by the longitudinal seam 3', can
  • a belt or the formation of a film strip from a filmforming material comprising a metal-foil band having complementary edges 'joined together in a butt seam with metal bonding flush with the surfaces of the belt, said band being of generally flat configuration with longitudinal edges lying in planes perpendicular to the band surface, said seam extending athwart said band between said edges and obliquely thereto while including with at least one of said longitudinal edges in the direction of movement of the band, an angle ranging between 2 and 45, said band being composed of steel,
  • said band is composed of a plurality of metal-foil loops joined by such seams in endless relationship, further comprising a central longitudinal weld seam securing juxtaposed longitudinal edges of said loops together.

Abstract

A film-casting belt is composed of flexible metal of high hardness, especially stainless steel but possibly ordinary steel, copper and nickel, and has a thickness up to about 1 mm. The belt joint is made by butt-welding the ends of the band and a bias such that the weld seam runs at an angle to the direction of movement to the belt which ranges between 2* and 45* but preferably is between 2* and 15*. The weld seam is ground flush with the surface of the belt which has a tolerance + OR - 3 Mu . The curvature of the band, which is maintained under tensions up to 200 tons, may be reversed to facilitate stripping of the synthetic-resin or cellulosic film from the surface.

Description

United States Patent 1191 Stadler et al.
[ JOINT FOR ENDLESS BELTS [75] Inventors: Hubert Stadler, Berndorf; Horst Spanyar, Braunau am Inn, both of Austria [73] Assignee: Vereinigte Metallwerke Ranshofen- Berndori Aktiengesellschaft, Braunau-amlnn-Ranshofen, Austria [22] Filed: Nov. 30, 1970 [21] Appl. No.: 93,538
Related US. Application Data [63] Continuation-impart of Ser. No. 693,889, Dec 27,
1967, abandoned.
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 862,558 7/1907 Hiscock ..425/47l X 1451 Apr. 17, 19:73
Primary ExaminerH. A. Kilby, Jr. Att0mey-Karl F. Ross I 5 7 ABSTRACT A film-casting belt is composed of flexible metal of high hardness, especially stainless steel but possibly ordinary steel, copper and nickel, and has a thickness up to about 1 mm. The belt joint is made by buttwelding the ends of the band and a bias such that the weld seam runs at an angle to the direction of movement to the belt which ranges between 2 and 45 but preferably is between 2 and 15. The weld seam is ground flush with the surface of the belt which has a tolerance i 3 u. The curvature of the band, which is maintained under tensions up to 200 tons, may be reversed to facilitate stripping of the synthetic-resin or cellulosic film from the surface.
6 Claims, 8 Drawing Figures PAIENIEBAPRH 3.728.066
SHEET 1 BF 2 SUEFACE GROUND PLANAR r0 2 a- 3 1 Huber? Sfadler Horsf Spanyar I N VEN TORS BY R o W Attorney PATENTEDAPR 1 H973 SHEET 2 [IF 2 Huber? Sfadler Horsf Span ar. INVENTORg Y Attorney m GI V/Atik w JOINT FOR ENDLESS BELTS CROSS REFERENCE TO COPENDING APPLICATION This application is a continuation-in-part of our application Ser. No. 693,889 filed 27 Dec. 1967 now abandoned and entitled JOINT FOR ENDLESS BELTS".
FIELD OF THE INVENTION seam for the casting of films; the invention also relates to ajoint for such belts.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION In the formation of synthetic-resin or cellulosic films, it is common practice to spray or doctor the film-forming material onto a continually endless surface which carries the congealing film through a heating zone at which the solvent is dispelled and then into a stripping zone at which the film is removed from the surface.
Such belts are frequently constituted of metal and must have a hard, highly finished surface of limited dimensional tolerance. Since the belt must pass over rollers, it must be highly flexible and because any deformation of the belt will result in a corresponding defect in the film, the belt must be rigid during the casting and drying steps. Such rigidity is obtained by the application of high tension forces to the belt.
For the most part, such belts are formed by joining the ends of the belt in a carefully prepared lap weld running perpendicularly to the direction of movement of the belt. This has the disadvantage that the seam is a weak point and, indeed, prior'art belts tend to rupture at this seam. The problem is increased by the fact that, where the seam contacts the rollers, it is bent therealong and lies along a generatrix of the roller and is subjected to severe bending stress. When the band leaves the roller, it straightens, thereby bending the band at the weld seam in the opposite direction. Furthermore it may be desirable to reverse the curvature of the band to facilitate stripping as described below, whereupon an additional stress is provided. Hence the elevated tensile stress applied to the band to maintain its stiffness and the quality of its surface, the repeated bending stresses generated at the weld seam and the resulting material fatigue, cause failure of the belt, especially at the seam.
A further disadvantage, brought out in the aforedescribed copending application, is the fact that, when the seam lies perpendicular to the direction of movement of the belt, the entire seam passes at once beneath the pouring apparatus from which the filmforming material is dispensed. If a cavity is formed at the seam, e.g., by the grinding of the scam flush with the belt surface or by the tensile stresses applied at the scam, the gap between the receiving surface of the belt and the pouring apparatus will increase and the thickness of the film altered. This is, of course, a consequence of the fact that the entire seam is disposed beneath the pouring apparatus and lies along a generatrix of the support roller at once.
OBJECT OF THE INVENTION It is the principal object of the present invention to provide a metal-foil belt for the casting of syntheticresin and cellulosic film in which the aforementioned disadvantages are obviated.
Another object of the invention is to provide an improved joint structure for such belts.
It is also an object of our invention to provide a dimensionally stable belt for the casting of film which will yield a film of higher quality and will suffer less frequently from breakdown than theretofore.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION We have now discovered, most surprisingly, that the aforementioned disadvantages can be eliminated and the listed objects gained by providing a film-casting belt which consists of metal, especially stainless steel, but possibly also ordinary steel, nickel or copper, having a seam extending generally oblique to the direction of movement of the belt, the seam being formed as a butt weld rather than as the lap-type weld current heretofore.
The important feature of the invention is that the metallic band has a thickness up to about 1 mm and that the butt-weld seam runs athwart the belt at an angle between 2 and 45 to the direction of movement of the belt. The angle of inclination of the seam is preferably 2 to 15 (to the longitudinal edge). The fact that the seam intersects the guide rollers to an angle to its generatrices insures that the stress applies only to limited regions of the seam at any time, whereby unstressed portions of the seam serve to support the stressed portions of the seam against breakage. Moreover, since only a limited portion of the seam is located in the pouring gap at any given moment, there is no sharp alteration in the gap width simultaneously across the entire length of the pouring gap and hence no material change in the thickness of the film which is obtained.
In the aforementioned copending application, we have pointed out that the prior-art drawbacks are avoided by providing connecting seams oblique with respect to the side edges. Such an arrangement enables only partial passage of the welding seam over the guide roller at a given moment so that only that part of the seam is subjected to extraordinary stress. Unevenness in the welding seam cannot have too disadvantageous an effect in this arrangement.
According to a more specific feature of the invention, the oblique weld seam may extend continuously across the entire transverse width of the belt. Alternatively, the belt may be built up of a plurality of laterally juxtaposed belt sections which are joined by a longitudinal seam, i.e. a seam extending in the direction of movement of the belt while the oblique seams of each section include angles of 10 to 45 with the longitudinal seam. In this embodiment, the oblique seams of the plurality belt sections preferably are aligned with one another, i.e. form a single continuous oblique seam. According to another embodiment of the invention, the belt is formed by winding a single band generally helically so that a correspondingly formed seam is produced, the seam having a pitch angle between about 2 and 8.
In all cases, means may be provided for tensioning the band to about 200 tons and/or for inverting the curvature of the band to facilitate stripping of the film from the surface of the band. Since the oblique joint of the present invention has its specific importance in film-casting conveyors, the apparatus of the present invention is understood to include means for casting the film-forming material upon a surface of the belt and forming, therefore, a pouring gap therewith, means for vaporizing the solvent, and means for stripping the film from the belt upon vaporization of the solvent.
DESCRIPTION OF THE. DRAWING readily apparent from the following description,'
reference being made to the accompanying drawing in which:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic perspective view showing a film-casting belt according to the present invention, made up of two belt sections in lateral juxtaposition;
FIG. 2 is a similar view of a belt formed by helical winding of a suitably shaped metal band;
FIG. 3 is a perspective view, also in diagrammatic form, of an apparatus for the casting of synthetic resin film;
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken along the line IV IV ofFlG. 3;
FIG. 5 is an end view illustrating the inversion of the curvature of the band for stripping the film thereof;
FIGS. 6 and 7 are views similar to FIG. 1 illustrating other arrangements of the oblique seam; and
FIG. 8 is an elevational view showing the utilization of the band of FIG. 2 in a film-forming apparatus.
SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION In FIG. 1, we have shown a metal film-casting conveyor of double breadth made up of two strips of normal breadth which have been welded together laterally along their longitudinal edges in the direction of movement of the conveyor via the weld seam 3. The outer edges 7 thus constitute the longitudinal edges of the double-breadth belt produced from the two sections 1 and 2 and lie in planes perpendicular to the casting surface. The sections 1 and 2 are individually joined into endless bands by oblique seams 4 which include an angle a in the direction of advance of the belt (arrow A) ranging between 10 and 45 and preferably between 10 and In this embodiment, the oblique weld seams 4 are aligned with one another and are buttwelds as described below in connection with FIG. 4.
In the embodiment of FIG. 2, the oblique seam has been lengthened by decreasing the angle so that, for example, the angle ranges between 2 and 8. In this case, a central seam can be eliminated and the oblique seam formed as a helix. The band between the longitudinal edges 7 has a width greater than the width of the band from which it is formed. While only somewhat more than a single complete turn of the helix is provided in this embodiment, the band may be made up of any number of such turns or turn fractions. The result is a screw-type joint which practically functions as a longitudinal seam but serves as well to join the band in an endless configuration (see FIG. 8).
As represented in FIG. 3, onlya single band section l0,need be provided and its oblique seam 11 may include an angle 7 of, say, 10 with the longitudinal edges 12 and 13 of the band. The total length L of the oblique seam may be less than the length of the longitudinal edge 7. L is greater than the length of the longitudinal edge 7' in FIG. 2. L in FIG. 3 is shown to be greater than the circumference C of the guide rollers 14 and 15 over which the belt passes. The guide rollers have a diameter D so that the circumference C 1rD. In FIG. 3, moreover, we show a casting nozzle 16 from which a band of film-forming synthetic resin or cellulosic material is deposited at 17 upon the surface 18 of the belt 10 for vaporization of a solvent by heating in the subsequent stretch. The heating means is represented at 19in FIG. 3.
Beyond the heating means, a stripper 20 removes the finished film 21, preferably at a point of direction change of the belt 10 to facilitate such removal. Arrow 22 represents the tension applied to the belt which may be of 200 tons, for example. The weld seam 1 l is shown in cross section in FIG. 4 from which it can be observed that the seam is a butt weld with beads of weldment 23 introduced between the edges of the belt and ground flush with the surface 18 thereof so that the surface tolerance is :3 The thickness of the metal belt is ap proximately 1mm and the belt is preferably composed of stainless steel. Advantageously, prior to grinding, the weld is compacted by cold or hot rolling or hammering, thereby densifying the weldment. In fact, when the surface is hammered or rolled smooth, grinding may be omitted. In addition, we must point out that the term welding as used herein is intended to include soldering in which the bead is formed by low-melting solder;
In FIG. 8, we show the use of the band of FIG. 2 in a film-forming apparatus in which it is assumed that the film has initially been produced elsewhere and is fed at 30 to the belt 6 whose helical seam 5 has a pitch angle [3 of 2 to 8 as previously noted. The film 30 is fed at this pitch angle and in the same pitch sense as shown in FIG. 8 so that, whenever the helical seam meets the band, it will coincide with the junction between turns of the helical strip, the latter being fed from the apparatus at 31. While the film is drying on the heated metal belt,
it may be trimmed by blades 32 and 33 at the Iongitudinal edges 7' of the belt.
In FIG. 5, we have shown an arrangement in which a heated drum 40 or guide roller is subtended by an endless metal belt 41 which has a helical seam over a length greater than the arc length of the band in contact with the heated drum or roller 40, the latter being at a temperature of 200C. The belt passes about idler and drive rollers 42, 43, 44 and 45, the rollers 43 and 44 being tensioned at T to apply a tensile stress of 200 tons to the belt. At the roller 45, the film is cast onto the belt 41 via a nozzle arrangement 46, the film 47 moving on the belt to contact the roller 40 for drive thereon. A pressure roller 48 may serve to calibrate the thickness of the film. The film is stripped at 49 upon its emergence from the gap between the belt and the roller 40 and as the belt 41 is deflected about the roller 42 to invert its curvature.
FIGS. 6 and 7, show that the seams 4' of the two-sec tion belt 1', 2', joined by the longitudinal seam 3', can
be parallel to one another but staggered in the direction of movement of the belt. In the modification of FIG. 7, the oblique seams 4" converge toward one another in the direction of belt movement (arrow B) and terminate at a common vortex of longitudinal seam 3" of the sections 1" and 2". In the systems of FIGS. 5-8, of course, the seam has the same construction as already described for FIG. 4.
We claim:
1. A belt or the formation of a film strip from a filmforming material, comprising a metal-foil band having complementary edges 'joined together in a butt seam with metal bonding flush with the surfaces of the belt, said band being of generally flat configuration with longitudinal edges lying in planes perpendicular to the band surface, said seam extending athwart said band between said edges and obliquely thereto while including with at least one of said longitudinal edges in the direction of movement of the band, an angle ranging between 2 and 45, said band being composed of steel,
copper or nickel and having a thickness of the order of 1mm while being guided over at least two spaced-apart guide rollers, said seam having a length exceeding the circumference of said guide rollers.
2. The belt defined in claim 1 wherein said seam extends helically through at least one complete turn with a pitch angle of substantially 2 to 8.
3. The belt defined in claim 1 wherein said band is composed of a plurality of metal-foil loops joined by such seams in endless relationship, further comprising a central longitudinal weld seam securing juxtaposed longitudinal edges of said loops together.
4. The belt defined in claim 3 whereinsaid oblique seams are aligned with one another.
5. The belt defined in claim 3 wherein said oblique seams are offset from one another.
6. The belt defined in claim 3 wherein said oblique seams converge toward one another in the direction of said longitudinal seam.

Claims (6)

1. A belt or the formation of a film strip from a film-forming material, comprising a metal-foil band having complementary edges joined together in a butt seam with metal bonding flush with the surfaces of the belt, said band being of generally flat configuration with longitudinal edges lying in planes perpendicular to the band surface, said seam extending athwart said band between said edges and obliquely thereto while including with at least one of said longitudinal edges in the direction of movement of the band, an angle ranging between 2* and 45*, said band being composed of steel, copper or nickel and having a thickness of the order of 1mm while being guided over at least two spaced-apart guide rollers, said seam having a length exceeding the circumference of said guide rollers.
2. The belt defined in claim 1 wherein said seam extends helically through at least one complete turn with a pitch angle of substantially 2* to 8*.
3. The belt defined in claim 1 wherein said band is composed of a plurality of metal-foil loops joined by such seams in endless relationship, further comprising a central longitudinal weld seam securing juxtaposed longitudinal edges of said loops together.
4. The belt defined in claim 3 wherein said oblique seams are aligned with one another.
5. The belt defined in claim 3 wherein said oblique seams are offset from one another.
6. The belt defined in claim 3 wherein said oblique seams converge toward one another in the direction of said longitudinal seam.
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Cited By (21)

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US3777577A (en) * 1971-04-15 1973-12-11 G Giacomello System of mechanical coupling for piloting rotative transducers
US4138011A (en) * 1976-04-28 1979-02-06 The Laitram Corporation Non-pivotal modular conveyor belt and modular links therefor
US4254589A (en) * 1978-11-22 1981-03-10 Rohm And Haas Company Belt refurbishing
WO1992009423A1 (en) * 1989-05-31 1992-06-11 Firma Theodor Hymmen Endless pressure or conveyor belt made of metallic materials
US6042917A (en) * 1997-07-22 2000-03-28 Xerox Corporation Member having offset seams
US6263656B1 (en) * 1998-03-31 2001-07-24 Spindelfabrik Suessen, Schurr, Stahlecker & Grill Gmbh Arrangement and method for condensing a drafted fiber strand and method for making yarn therefrom
US20030102591A1 (en) * 2000-06-16 2003-06-05 Avery Dennison Corporation Delaware Process and apparatus for embossing precise microstructures and embossing tool for making same
US20030232583A1 (en) * 2002-06-14 2003-12-18 Xerox Corporation Apparatus for superpolishing the inside surface of a seam of a continuous photoreceptor belt
US20110048901A1 (en) * 2007-09-05 2011-03-03 George Terah Gough Conveyors and transmission belts
WO2011074789A2 (en) 2009-12-14 2011-06-23 Sk Innovation Co., Ltd. Casting belt for producing transcendental wide width film
WO2012145779A1 (en) 2011-04-27 2012-11-01 Berndorf Band Gmbh Method for butt-welding two strips along the longitudinal edges thereof
WO2013181683A1 (en) 2012-06-04 2013-12-12 Berndorf Band Gmbh Endless belt comprising an annular belt member
US8905749B2 (en) 2009-12-14 2014-12-09 Sk Innovation Co., Ltd. Casting belt for producing transcendental wide width film
WO2016123645A1 (en) 2015-02-02 2016-08-11 Berndorf Band Gmbh Endless belt with a metal belt body
CN109070301A (en) * 2016-05-13 2018-12-21 百德福钢带有限公司 Method for processing continuous band
WO2019140470A1 (en) * 2018-01-17 2019-07-25 Berndorf Band Gmbh Method for the manufacture of an endless belt
WO2020220062A1 (en) 2019-04-29 2020-11-05 Berndorf Innovations Und Technologie Gmbh Method for producing a continuous belt with a belt body
WO2021016647A1 (en) 2019-08-01 2021-02-04 Berndorf Innovations Und Technologie Gmbh Method for producing a continuous belt
WO2021102497A1 (en) * 2019-11-27 2021-06-03 Berndorf Band Gmbh Endless belt and a method for producing same
US20220080533A1 (en) * 2018-11-20 2022-03-17 Berndorf Innovations Und Technologie Gmbh Method for processing a strip
EP4180363A1 (en) * 2021-11-16 2023-05-17 Stadler Anlagenbau GmbH Belt strap for conveyor systems

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US3777577A (en) * 1971-04-15 1973-12-11 G Giacomello System of mechanical coupling for piloting rotative transducers
US4138011A (en) * 1976-04-28 1979-02-06 The Laitram Corporation Non-pivotal modular conveyor belt and modular links therefor
US4254589A (en) * 1978-11-22 1981-03-10 Rohm And Haas Company Belt refurbishing
WO1992009423A1 (en) * 1989-05-31 1992-06-11 Firma Theodor Hymmen Endless pressure or conveyor belt made of metallic materials
US6042917A (en) * 1997-07-22 2000-03-28 Xerox Corporation Member having offset seams
US6263656B1 (en) * 1998-03-31 2001-07-24 Spindelfabrik Suessen, Schurr, Stahlecker & Grill Gmbh Arrangement and method for condensing a drafted fiber strand and method for making yarn therefrom
US20030102591A1 (en) * 2000-06-16 2003-06-05 Avery Dennison Corporation Delaware Process and apparatus for embossing precise microstructures and embossing tool for making same
US6908295B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2005-06-21 Avery Dennison Corporation Process and apparatus for embossing precise microstructures and embossing tool for making same
WO2003049915A1 (en) * 2001-12-12 2003-06-19 Avery Dennison Corporation A process and apparatus for embossing precise microstructures and embossing tool for making same
US20030232583A1 (en) * 2002-06-14 2003-12-18 Xerox Corporation Apparatus for superpolishing the inside surface of a seam of a continuous photoreceptor belt
US6916232B2 (en) * 2002-06-14 2005-07-12 Xerox Corporation Apparatus for superpolishing the inside surface of a seam of a continuous photoreceptor belt
US20110048901A1 (en) * 2007-09-05 2011-03-03 George Terah Gough Conveyors and transmission belts
US8689969B2 (en) 2007-09-05 2014-04-08 George Terah Gough Conveyors and transmission belts
US20120276240A1 (en) * 2009-12-14 2012-11-01 Sk Innovation Co., Ltd. Casting belt for producing transcendental wide width film
EP2512767A2 (en) * 2009-12-14 2012-10-24 SK Innovation Co., Ltd. Casting belt for producing transcendental wide width film
WO2011074789A2 (en) 2009-12-14 2011-06-23 Sk Innovation Co., Ltd. Casting belt for producing transcendental wide width film
EP2512767A4 (en) * 2009-12-14 2014-07-16 Sk Innovation Co Ltd Casting belt for producing transcendental wide width film
US8905749B2 (en) 2009-12-14 2014-12-09 Sk Innovation Co., Ltd. Casting belt for producing transcendental wide width film
WO2012145779A1 (en) 2011-04-27 2012-11-01 Berndorf Band Gmbh Method for butt-welding two strips along the longitudinal edges thereof
US9296184B2 (en) 2011-04-27 2016-03-29 Berndorf Band Gmbh Method for butt-welding two strips along the longitudinal edges thereof
WO2013181683A1 (en) 2012-06-04 2013-12-12 Berndorf Band Gmbh Endless belt comprising an annular belt member
WO2016123645A1 (en) 2015-02-02 2016-08-11 Berndorf Band Gmbh Endless belt with a metal belt body
CN109070301A (en) * 2016-05-13 2018-12-21 百德福钢带有限公司 Method for processing continuous band
CN109070301B (en) * 2016-05-13 2020-09-25 百德福钢带有限公司 Method for processing a continuous strip comprising a strip body made of metal
WO2019140470A1 (en) * 2018-01-17 2019-07-25 Berndorf Band Gmbh Method for the manufacture of an endless belt
US20220080533A1 (en) * 2018-11-20 2022-03-17 Berndorf Innovations Und Technologie Gmbh Method for processing a strip
WO2020220062A1 (en) 2019-04-29 2020-11-05 Berndorf Innovations Und Technologie Gmbh Method for producing a continuous belt with a belt body
WO2021016647A1 (en) 2019-08-01 2021-02-04 Berndorf Innovations Und Technologie Gmbh Method for producing a continuous belt
WO2021102497A1 (en) * 2019-11-27 2021-06-03 Berndorf Band Gmbh Endless belt and a method for producing same
EP4180363A1 (en) * 2021-11-16 2023-05-17 Stadler Anlagenbau GmbH Belt strap for conveyor systems

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