MD Automation
Senior Member
- Location
- Maryland
- Occupation
- Engineer
They had a device to pick up the speed of expiring roll of paper that could be traveling over 40 MPH and have the incoming 3,000 # roll of newsprint perform a speed match then make a splice by double sided tapes and cut it. This was 30 years ago when they still were printing a lot of newspaper.
That kind of synchronized motion matching software is always the most interesting stuff to me (I'm an engineer working a lot with servo drive applications). It's relatively easy to do simple synchronization with modern equipment, but it would have been real interesting to see how they worked out a complicated process on something like you saw 30 years ago! To perform a paper splice "on the fly", between 2 different rolls, at those speeds...pretty neat.
Applications like a "winder" are very cool to watch - how they keep track of the tension on the product as well as the size of the spool (as it changes with winding / unwinding, the speed of the product will change unless you keep adjusting the spool rpm).