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US2785700A - Paper tube and method of making the same - Google Patents

Paper tube and method of making the same Download PDF

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US2785700A
US2785700A US536898A US53689855A US2785700A US 2785700 A US2785700 A US 2785700A US 536898 A US536898 A US 536898A US 53689855 A US53689855 A US 53689855A US 2785700 A US2785700 A US 2785700A
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tube
strip
edges
wound
bevelled
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US536898A
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Joseph T Yovanovich
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PENNSYLVANIA PAPYRUS CORP
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PENNSYLVANIA PAPYRUS CORP
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B31MAKING ARTICLES OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER; WORKING PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31CMAKING WOUND ARTICLES, e.g. WOUND TUBES, OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31C3/00Making tubes or pipes by feeding obliquely to the winding mandrel centre line

Definitions

  • spiral wound tubes have been known in the art but have all presented irregular exterior surfaces.
  • the adjacent edges of successive convolutions of the outermost strip of material if not fitted perfectly, give rise to irregularities principally in the form of depressions or raised edges on the surface of the tube extending therealong in spiral fashion coincident with the region of adjacent edges of the outermost wrapped strip. If these mating edges could be made to align perfectly, the outer surface of the tube would be substantially uniform. However, as a practical matter, it is substantially impossible to provide perfect alignment and engagement of these mating edges.
  • the edges of the outer strip may be bevelled and the overall width of the strip extended in order that the bevelled edges of successive convolutions of the outer strip will overlap each other and thus small errors or variations in register will produce irregularities which are substantially reduced due to the bevelled or inclined overlapping edges of the strip.
  • this method of manufacture is attended by certain difficulties in that the bevelled edges of the strip are generally produced in skiving apparatu by means of abrasive wheels and thus have a roughened surface which appears on the exterior of the tube.
  • Figure l is a diagrammatic representation of the various steps involved in the manufacture of the tube
  • Figure 2 is a showing of apparatus for applying adhesive to the underside of one of the strips from which the tube is wound;
  • Figure 3 is a fragmentary longitudinal section of the wall of the tube during manufacture thereof.
  • Figure 4 is an elevation of a fragmentary portion of the apparatus shown in Figure 1.
  • FIG 1 there is shown four strips 2, 4, 6 and 8 from which the tube described herein is formed.
  • the strips may be formed of paper, fabric or other suitable flexible material.
  • Each of the four strips are traveling in the direction indicated by the arrow 10 in Figure l and have been drawn from a spool such as that shown at 12 in Figure 2 and carried as a strip 14 over a brush 16 positioned within a container 18 containing a glue or other suitable adhesive 20.
  • a glue or other suitable adhesive 20 a glue or other suitable adhesive 20.
  • various known adhesive applying means may be employed and that the particular adhesive need not be described in detail, many types of conventionally employed adhesives being well known in the art.
  • the four strips are fed over a mandrel 22 which is fixed in a stationary position and attached to a suitable support member 23.
  • the four strips each having its underside covered with a layer of adhesive are fed in overlapping relation as shown in Figure 1 and are rolled around the stationary mandrel 22 by means of a belt 24 which makes one turn around the mandrel and the strips of material thereon as indicated generally at 26 in Figure 1.
  • the belt 24 is carried and driven by a pair of rollers 28. It will be evident that with the belt 24 advancing in the direction of the arrow 30, shown in Figure 1, that the four strips of material will be caused to rotate around the mandrel and form adjacent convolutions and successive layers of a tube which is constantly rotating and is constantly advancing in the direction of the arrow 34 in Figure l.
  • the procedure thus far described is conventional in the tube wrapping art.
  • the outermost sheet 8 is provided with bevelled or skived longitudinally extending edges as indicated at 36 and 38. These bevelled edges are provided both on the same side of the strip and on the underside of the strip as it is wound into the tube.
  • the glue applying apparatus described in connection with Figure 2 preferably employs a brush 16 in order to more adequately apply the adhesive to the bevelled portions 36 and 38 of the strip than would be accomplished if, for example, a roller were used.
  • the bevelled edge 38 will fall over the prior wrapped bevelled edge deflecting the prior wrapped bevelled edge 36 downwardly.
  • the adjacent edges of the outermost strip are in overlapping relation and the outer surface of the strip 8 adjacent to this overlap, as indicated at 42, presents a smooth hard surface which has not been disturbed by the skiving operation.
  • steam line 41 connected through a valve. 43 to a suitable source is provided with a pair of nozzles 45 through which. there is directed a jet of'steam onto each of. the edges 36 and 33 of the outermost strip 8. These steam jets serve to soften the bevelled edges of the strip to substantially a point of disintegration.
  • the finished tube '32 passes under a roller 47 which is positioned to roll over the overlapping edge 38 of the outer. convolution- 8 as indicated at 49 in Figure 3.
  • the roller. may be supported by conventional support means and rotated merely by the passage of the longitudinally moving and rotating tube thereunder; Pressure applied by this roller will. serve to fuse the softened disintegrated edge to the underlying portion of the tube.
  • the application. of adhesive by means of an. arrangement. such as that shown in Figure 2 will provide an adhesive coating on. the surface of the edge 38 which will be efiective in securing the edge to the tube. order to avoid disturbing the softened bevelled edges of the outermost strip 3, the drive belt 24 may be positioned ahead of the application of the outermost strip 8.
  • strips 2, '4, 6 and any other inner strips employed would be wound and passed under the belt 24', and in a position subsequent to the belt 24, the outermost strip 8 would be wound onto the tube, being drawn thereon purely by rotation of the tube.
  • the .roller 47 provides a pressing down action in place of that which might otherwise have been provided by the belt 24 without encountering the possible gathering of the softened edges of the strip 8 by the belt 24. While the arrangement shown in the drawing discloses the use of two jets, one directed toward each edge of the strip 8, it will be evident that at least partial results may be obtained by the use of only one jet such as that directed onto the edge 38 of the outer strip 8 which is the overlapping edge strip.
  • a fixative or binding material preferably in liquid form.
  • this material may be supplied from a suitable reservoir 44 in liquid. form through a conduit 46 under. the control of a valve 48 and applied to the surface of the rotating and advancing. tube through spray nozzles 50. tudinally of the tube for the length of one convolution It will be evident that if desired, in'
  • the entire surface of the tube will be coated with the fixative material.
  • Suitable materials may be, for xample, waxes carried in emulsified form, waxes carried in solvents, various penetrating adhesive materials which may be in either water solution or otherwise carried in liquid form. These and numerous other materials which would suggest themselves to one well versed in the art may be employed, the essential function of the material being to provide lubrication for the burnishing operation which will hereafter be described and to provide a certain amount of penetration by a fixative'material ino the sur face of the tube.
  • the tube passes through a burnishing ring 52.
  • the inside surface of the burnishing ring presents a smooth surface in engagement with the outer surface of the tube and is of slightly reduced diameter from the diameter of the tube entering the burnishing ring.
  • the ring is driven for rotation around the tube in the direction of the arrow 54 by means of a belt 56 passing over a pulley afiixed to the burnishingring' and driven by a pulley 58 connected to the output shaft of a suitable motor 60. Sizing and burnishing operations per so are Well known in the art and the operation and the apparatus therefor need not be described in detail herein.
  • the essential consideration involved in this burnishing operation is that it it is accomplished over a tube which has been coated with a fixative material which, in part, provides lubrication between the surface of the burnishing ring and the tube surface and, further, prov-ides an impregnation of the surface of the tube which both hardens and polishes the tube surface. Furthermore, the impregnationby the fixative material insures adherence of the outermost portions. of the I bevelled edge 38 tov the surface of its adjacentconvolution. From the foregoing it will be evident that the method of manufacture disclosed provides an improved tube structure as well as an improved method of manufacturing of a tube.
  • the method of manufacture is important by virtue of the fact that an improved surface is provided with the maintenance ofwrappingtolerances which heretofore provided an irregular tube surface.
  • the application of the fixative material provides notonly unimproved surface condition butan improved burnishing operation in that the burnishing operation is facilitated by the lubricating coating and thereffects of the burnishingoporation are enhanced due to the impregnation. of the tube surface by the fixative material both before and during the burnishing operation. Additionally, the ultimately produced tube has not only a more uniform.
  • the substantially perfectly smooth outer surface. of the tube makes the tube particularly suitable. for carrying, plastic. film materials and other similar thin strip.
  • a spiral wound tube comprising a plurality of overlapping. strips of material each. coated with. an. adhesive material on its. underside and wound. in spiral convolutions, the outermost strip having its. underside prising beveling both edges of the underside of the strip to be wound on the outer surface of the tube, applying an adhesive coating to the undersides of the, strips to be Wound in overlapping relation, spiral winding the strips in overlapping relation into a tube, and winding the outer strip with one bevelled edge overlapping and radially inwardlydeflecting the oppositebevelled edge of its prior convolution.
  • a method of forming a tube as claimed in claim 4 including impregnating the surface of the tube with an adhesive binding: material and burnishing the adhesive impregnated surface.
  • a method of forming a tube as claimed in claim 4' in which the strips lying below the outermost strip are wound with adjacent edges of successive convolutions of each strip lying substantially in engagement with each other.

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Description

March 19, 1957 .J. T. YOVANOVICH 2,785,700
PAPER TUBE AND METHOD OF MAKING THE SAME Filed Sept. 27, 1955 ATTORN EYS United States Patent PAPER TUBE AND METHOD OF MAKING Tm SAME Joseph T. Yovanovich, Rosemont, Pa., assignor to Pennsylvania Papyrus Corporation, Philadelphia, Pin, a corporafion of Pennsylvania Application September 27, 1055, Serial No. 536,898
7 Claims. (Cl. 13878) strip being wound with the adjacent edges of its successive convolutions desirably lying in engagement with each other.
Heretofore, spiral wound tubes have been known in the art but have all presented irregular exterior surfaces. The adjacent edges of successive convolutions of the outermost strip of material, if not fitted perfectly, give rise to irregularities principally in the form of depressions or raised edges on the surface of the tube extending therealong in spiral fashion coincident with the region of adjacent edges of the outermost wrapped strip. If these mating edges could be made to align perfectly, the outer surface of the tube would be substantially uniform. However, as a practical matter, it is substantially impossible to provide perfect alignment and engagement of these mating edges.
In order to simplify the problem of register and to reduce the adverse effects of improper register or mating of the adjacent edges of the outer strip, the edges of the outer strip may be bevelled and the overall width of the strip extended in order that the bevelled edges of successive convolutions of the outer strip will overlap each other and thus small errors or variations in register will produce irregularities which are substantially reduced due to the bevelled or inclined overlapping edges of the strip. Even this method of manufacture is attended by certain difficulties in that the bevelled edges of the strip are generally produced in skiving apparatu by means of abrasive wheels and thus have a roughened surface which appears on the exterior of the tube.
It is the object of the present invention to provide 2.
tube which has a substantially perfectly smooth exterior surface.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a tube in which the exterior convolutions of spiral wound strip are formed with skived edges and in which the skived surfaces face downwardly, thus providing a smooth unroughened surface exteriorly of the finished tube.
It is a further object of the invention, when paper or similar material is employed for the outer convolution of a tube, to soften the skived edges of the outer convolution to substantially a point of disintegration and, after the tube is wound, to fuse the overlapping skived edge to the underlying portion of the tube by the application of pressure and sometimes also by the application of heat.
It is a still further object of the invention to impregnate the exterior surface of the tube after the tube is wound with a binding and/or fixative material which will not only serve as a lubricant for a sizing or burnishing operation but which will also serve to securely adhere the upper or outer skived edge to the underlying skived edge of the outer spiral wound strip,
iii
2,785,700 Patented Mar. 19, 1957 These and other objects of the invention relating to procedure of manufacturing the tube and tothe tube itself will become evident from the following description when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawing in which:
Figure l is a diagrammatic representation of the various steps involved in the manufacture of the tube;
Figure 2 is a showing of apparatus for applying adhesive to the underside of one of the strips from which the tube is wound;
Figure 3 is a fragmentary longitudinal section of the wall of the tube during manufacture thereof; and
Figure 4 is an elevation of a fragmentary portion of the apparatus shown in Figure 1.
In Figure 1 there is shown four strips 2, 4, 6 and 8 from which the tube described herein is formed. The strips may be formed of paper, fabric or other suitable flexible material. Each of the four strips are traveling in the direction indicated by the arrow 10 in Figure l and have been drawn from a spool such as that shown at 12 in Figure 2 and carried as a strip 14 over a brush 16 positioned within a container 18 containing a glue or other suitable adhesive 20. It will be evident that various known adhesive applying means may be employed and that the particular adhesive need not be described in detail, many types of conventionally employed adhesives being well known in the art.
The four strips are fed over a mandrel 22 which is fixed in a stationary position and attached to a suitable support member 23. The four strips each having its underside covered with a layer of adhesive are fed in overlapping relation as shown in Figure 1 and are rolled around the stationary mandrel 22 by means of a belt 24 which makes one turn around the mandrel and the strips of material thereon as indicated generally at 26 in Figure 1. The belt 24 is carried and driven by a pair of rollers 28. It will be evident that with the belt 24 advancing in the direction of the arrow 30, shown in Figure 1, that the four strips of material will be caused to rotate around the mandrel and form adjacent convolutions and successive layers of a tube which is constantly rotating and is constantly advancing in the direction of the arrow 34 in Figure l. The procedure thus far described is conventional in the tube wrapping art.
It will be evident that substantial difiiculty i encountered in maintaining perfect alignment of adjacent edges of successive convolutions of each strip of material employed in the winding process. The result of this difiiculty is that the abutting edges of the outermost strip are either too close together providing slight raised ribs extending in a helical path along the surface of the tube or are too far apart providing a slight gap or depression extending in a helical path. In order to minimize the efiects of imperfect register, the outermost sheet 8 is provided with bevelled or skived longitudinally extending edges as indicated at 36 and 38. These bevelled edges are provided both on the same side of the strip and on the underside of the strip as it is wound into the tube. For this reason the glue applying apparatus described in connection with Figure 2 preferably employs a brush 16 in order to more adequately apply the adhesive to the bevelled portions 36 and 38 of the strip than would be accomplished if, for example, a roller were used.
A the strip 8 is wrapped on the tube, the bevelled edge 38 will fall over the prior wrapped bevelled edge deflecting the prior wrapped bevelled edge 36 downwardly. Thus, as indicated at 40 in Figure 3, the adjacent edges of the outermost strip are in overlapping relation and the outer surface of the strip 8 adjacent to this overlap, as indicated at 42, presents a smooth hard surface which has not been disturbed by the skiving operation.
The overlap indicated at 40 minimizes the effect of poor register and shght misalignment of the successive convolutions of the outermost strip 8 produces only relatively small deviations in surface contour. steam line 41 connected through a valve. 43 to a suitable source is provided with a pair of nozzles 45 through which. there is directed a jet of'steam onto each of. the edges 36 and 33 of the outermost strip 8. These steam jets serve to soften the bevelled edges of the strip to substantially a point of disintegration.
After the strip is wound by. the belt 24, the finished tube '32 passes under a roller 47 which is positioned to roll over the overlapping edge 38 of the outer. convolution- 8 as indicated at 49 in Figure 3.. The roller. may be supported by conventional support means and rotated merely by the passage of the longitudinally moving and rotating tube thereunder; Pressure applied by this roller will. serve to fuse the softened disintegrated edge to the underlying portion of the tube. The application. of adhesive by means of an. arrangement. such as that shown in Figure 2 will provide an adhesive coating on. the surface of the edge 38 which will be efiective in securing the edge to the tube. order to avoid disturbing the softened bevelled edges of the outermost strip 3, the drive belt 24 may be positioned ahead of the application of the outermost strip 8. Thus strips 2, '4, 6 and any other inner strips employed would be wound and passed under the belt 24', and in a position subsequent to the belt 24, the outermost strip 8 would be wound onto the tube, being drawn thereon purely by rotation of the tube. With an arrangement such as this, the .roller 47 provides a pressing down action in place of that which might otherwise have been provided by the belt 24 without encountering the possible gathering of the softened edges of the strip 8 by the belt 24. While the arrangement shown in the drawing discloses the use of two jets, one directed toward each edge of the strip 8, it will be evident that at least partial results may be obtained by the use of only one jet such as that directed onto the edge 38 of the outer strip 8 which is the overlapping edge strip.
To further insure the perfection of the outer surface of the tube, as the tube is formed it advances from the wrapping stage and there is continuously applied to the tube a fixative or binding material preferably in liquid form. As shown in Figure 1, this material. may be supplied from a suitable reservoir 44 in liquid. form through a conduit 46 under. the control of a valve 48 and applied to the surface of the rotating and advancing. tube through spray nozzles 50. tudinally of the tube for the length of one convolution It will be evident that if desired, in'
If the spray nozzles 50 extend longiof the strip 8, then. as the tube is advanced and rotated, V
the entire surface of the tube will be coated with the fixative material.
Suitable materials may be, for xample, waxes carried in emulsified form, waxes carried in solvents, various penetrating adhesive materials which may be in either water solution or otherwise carried in liquid form. These and numerous other materials which would suggest themselves to one well versed in the art may be employed, the essential function of the material being to provide lubrication for the burnishing operation which will hereafter be described and to provide a certain amount of penetration by a fixative'material ino the sur face of the tube.
Following the application of the fixative material, the tube passes through a burnishing ring 52. 'The inside surface of the burnishing ring presents a smooth surface in engagement with the outer surface of the tube and is of slightly reduced diameter from the diameter of the tube entering the burnishing ring. The ring is driven for rotation around the tube in the direction of the arrow 54 by means of a belt 56 passing over a pulley afiixed to the burnishingring' and driven by a pulley 58 connected to the output shaft of a suitable motor 60. Sizing and burnishing operations per so are Well known in the art and the operation and the apparatus therefor need not be described in detail herein. The essential consideration involved in this burnishing operation is that it it is accomplished over a tube which has been coated with a fixative material which, in part, provides lubrication between the surface of the burnishing ring and the tube surface and, further, prov-ides an impregnation of the surface of the tube which both hardens and polishes the tube surface. Furthermore, the impregnationby the fixative material insures adherence of the outermost portions. of the I bevelled edge 38 tov the surface of its adjacentconvolution. From the foregoing it will be evident that the method of manufacture disclosed provides an improved tube structure as well as an improved method of manufacturing of a tube. The method of manufacture is important by virtue of the fact that an improved surface is provided with the maintenance ofwrappingtolerances which heretofore provided an irregular tube surface. The application of the fixative material provides notonly unimproved surface condition butan improved burnishing operation in that the burnishing operation is facilitated by the lubricating coating and thereffects of the burnishingoporation are enhanced due to the impregnation. of the tube surface by the fixative material both before and during the burnishing operation. Additionally, the ultimately produced tube has not only a more uniform. and
harder surface but also has a surface in. which the; outermost portions of the bevelled edges of the outer convolutions arefirmly secured to the tube.
The substantially perfectly smooth outer surface. of the tube makes the tube particularly suitable. for carrying, plastic. film materials and other similar thin strip.
or sheet material. which may acquire a permanent deformation when deformed for. extended. time intervals. When materials such as these are wound on a. tube having. an irregular surface, the irregularities produce. deformation in the material for a plurality of convolutions thereof on. the tube. Thus, asubstantial loss can be avoided if a tube is employed having a perfect surface.
From the. foregoing it will. be evident that the method disclosed produces an. improved. tube structure and that various modifications may be made in the disclosed em bodiment of the invention without departing from the scopeoff the invention as set forth in the following claims.
What is claimedis:
L A spiral wound tube, comprising a plurality of overlapping. strips of material each. coated with. an. adhesive material on its. underside and wound. in spiral convolutions, the outermost strip having its. underside prising beveling both edges of the underside of the strip to be wound on the outer surface of the tube, applying an adhesive coating to the undersides of the, strips to be Wound in overlapping relation, spiral winding the strips in overlapping relation into a tube, and winding the outer strip with one bevelled edge overlapping and radially inwardlydeflecting the oppositebevelled edge of its prior convolution.
5. A method of forming a tube as claimed in claim 4 including impregnating the surface of the tube with an adhesive binding: material and burnishing the adhesive impregnated surface.
6. A method of forming a tube as claimed in claim 4' in which the strips lying below the outermost strip are wound with adjacent edges of successive convolutions of each strip lying substantially in engagement with each other.
7. The method of forming a tube as claimed in claim 4 including softening at least one of the bevelled edges of the outermost strip prior to winding the strip into the tube.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS
US536898A 1955-09-27 1955-09-27 Paper tube and method of making the same Expired - Lifetime US2785700A (en)

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Cited By (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3002433A (en) * 1958-01-10 1961-10-03 Sonoco Products Co Spiral wound paper tube having seamless outer surface
US3280709A (en) * 1963-12-30 1966-10-25 American Can Co Container and manufacture thereof
US3302898A (en) * 1964-10-15 1967-02-07 Smith William Franklin Winding and feeding device
DE1239531B (en) * 1960-03-03 1967-04-27 Bristol Aeroplane Plastics Ltd Tubular hollow body, the wall of which consists of a number of layers of non-metallic material
US3338270A (en) * 1965-05-03 1967-08-29 Denenberg Maurice Laminated tubing
US3400029A (en) * 1965-01-22 1968-09-03 Continental Can Co Method of making spiral wound container bodies
DE3150774A1 (en) * 1981-12-22 1983-07-07 Tanaka Shikan K.K., Yao, Osaka Paper tube and process for its production
US4504261A (en) * 1981-12-18 1985-03-12 Tanaka Shikan Kabushiki Kaisha Method of making a paper tube
DE3442000A1 (en) * 1983-11-18 1985-06-13 Société Nationale des Poudres et Explosifs, Paris BODY FOR COMBUSTIBLE OR SEMI-COMBUSTIBLE SLEEVES AND METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION THEREOF
US4645553A (en) * 1984-07-03 1987-02-24 L'homme, S.A. Process and apparatus for forming a multilayer tube
US4791966A (en) * 1982-04-20 1988-12-20 Hew-Kabel Heinz Eilentropp Kg Wrapped, elongated stock
USRE33060E (en) * 1975-05-27 1989-09-19 Sonoco Products Company High speed carrier with deckled underply
USD385183S (en) * 1995-01-19 1997-10-21 King Jon E Multi-compartment tube
US6033352A (en) * 1996-07-17 2000-03-07 Sonoco Development, Inc. Method and apparatus for enhancing seam uniformity in spirally wound tubes
US6454691B1 (en) * 2000-05-02 2002-09-24 Patrick Hsu Method for making tubular product of fiber composite material
EP1625012A1 (en) * 2003-05-15 2006-02-15 Fabio Perini S.p.A. Machine and method for forming helically wound paper tubes having improved mechanical resistance
WO2006054327A1 (en) * 2004-11-22 2006-05-26 Fabio Perini S.P.A. Machine and method for forming tubes by helical winding of strips of web material
US20090008037A1 (en) * 2007-07-03 2009-01-08 Yaron Cina Cylndrical container sleeve formation
US20110057350A1 (en) * 2008-02-04 2011-03-10 Societe Technologie Michelin Method and Device for Making a Reinforcement by Winding a Tape on Itself

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1287945A (en) * 1918-04-11 1918-12-17 Ben K Ford Tube.
US2751936A (en) * 1953-01-08 1956-06-26 Sonoco Products Co Textile carrier and means for forming same

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1287945A (en) * 1918-04-11 1918-12-17 Ben K Ford Tube.
US2751936A (en) * 1953-01-08 1956-06-26 Sonoco Products Co Textile carrier and means for forming same

Cited By (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3002433A (en) * 1958-01-10 1961-10-03 Sonoco Products Co Spiral wound paper tube having seamless outer surface
DE1239531B (en) * 1960-03-03 1967-04-27 Bristol Aeroplane Plastics Ltd Tubular hollow body, the wall of which consists of a number of layers of non-metallic material
US3280709A (en) * 1963-12-30 1966-10-25 American Can Co Container and manufacture thereof
US3302898A (en) * 1964-10-15 1967-02-07 Smith William Franklin Winding and feeding device
US3400029A (en) * 1965-01-22 1968-09-03 Continental Can Co Method of making spiral wound container bodies
US3338270A (en) * 1965-05-03 1967-08-29 Denenberg Maurice Laminated tubing
USRE33060E (en) * 1975-05-27 1989-09-19 Sonoco Products Company High speed carrier with deckled underply
US4504261A (en) * 1981-12-18 1985-03-12 Tanaka Shikan Kabushiki Kaisha Method of making a paper tube
DE3150774A1 (en) * 1981-12-22 1983-07-07 Tanaka Shikan K.K., Yao, Osaka Paper tube and process for its production
US4791966A (en) * 1982-04-20 1988-12-20 Hew-Kabel Heinz Eilentropp Kg Wrapped, elongated stock
DE3442000A1 (en) * 1983-11-18 1985-06-13 Société Nationale des Poudres et Explosifs, Paris BODY FOR COMBUSTIBLE OR SEMI-COMBUSTIBLE SLEEVES AND METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION THEREOF
US4645553A (en) * 1984-07-03 1987-02-24 L'homme, S.A. Process and apparatus for forming a multilayer tube
USD385183S (en) * 1995-01-19 1997-10-21 King Jon E Multi-compartment tube
US6033352A (en) * 1996-07-17 2000-03-07 Sonoco Development, Inc. Method and apparatus for enhancing seam uniformity in spirally wound tubes
US6454691B1 (en) * 2000-05-02 2002-09-24 Patrick Hsu Method for making tubular product of fiber composite material
US7452318B2 (en) * 2003-05-15 2008-11-18 Fabio Perini S.P.A. Machine and method for forming helically wound paper tubes having improved mechanical resistance
EP1625012A1 (en) * 2003-05-15 2006-02-15 Fabio Perini S.p.A. Machine and method for forming helically wound paper tubes having improved mechanical resistance
US20070010387A1 (en) * 2003-05-15 2007-01-11 Fabio Perini S.P.A. Machine and method for forming helically wound paper tubes having improved mechanical resistance
WO2006054327A1 (en) * 2004-11-22 2006-05-26 Fabio Perini S.P.A. Machine and method for forming tubes by helical winding of strips of web material
US20090008037A1 (en) * 2007-07-03 2009-01-08 Yaron Cina Cylndrical container sleeve formation
WO2009004619A1 (en) * 2007-07-03 2009-01-08 Polyraz Plastics Industries System for cylindrical container sleeve formation
US7775248B2 (en) 2007-07-03 2010-08-17 Polyraz Plastics Industries Cylndrical container sleeve formation
US20110057350A1 (en) * 2008-02-04 2011-03-10 Societe Technologie Michelin Method and Device for Making a Reinforcement by Winding a Tape on Itself

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