Clip wrapping tool apparatus

4546528
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Inventors

Langas, Arthur

Application #

586670

Filed

Mar-6-1984

Published

Oct-15-1985

Current US Class

029/243.56
227/130
227/95

International Classes

B23P 011/00

Field of Search

29/243.56 29/243.57 227/95 227/130 140/53 140/57

Assignee

Hartco Company (Skokie, IL)

US Patent References

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Referenced by:

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Citation

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Abstract
Free standing apparatus adapted for use with a clip clinching tool capable, at high speed, of exerting a pulling force on a clip assembly whereby the clips comprising the assembly are sequentially severed and wrapped on elements of a workpiece, especially overlapping wire members employed in the manufacture of furniture, mattress innersprings, and the like, to firmly secure the wire members together. The apparatus includes a flexible track, provided with guides, along which the interconnected clips of the clip assembly are pull-fed into the clinching tool.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. Apparatus for use with a clinching tool capable at high speeds of sequentially severing and wrapping clips on overlying wire members employed in the manufacture of furniture, mattress innersprings, and the like, to secure the wire members together, comprising: a plurality of interconnected clips oscillatingly wound into the form of a convoluted, elongated, cylindrically shaped roll; support means for said roll, said support means including horizontally disposed roll retaining means for enabling the interconnected clips to be oscillatingly unwound from the roll; and flexible clip guide means for guiding the interconnected clips as they are oscillatingly unwound from the roll to a pull-fed clinching tool capable at high speeds of sequentially severing and wrapping the clips on the overlying wire members of the workpiece.



Description
TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates to apparatus adapted for use with a clinching tool capable, at high speed, of sequentially severing and wrapping U-shaped clips on elements of a workpiece, especially overlapping wire members employed in the manufacture of furniture, mattress innersprings, and the like, to firmly secure the wire members together.

BACKGROUND OF THE PRIOR ART

In U.S. Pat. No. 3,613,878, there is disclosed a clip assembly in the form of a row of U-shaped sheet metal clips. The clips are maintained in alignment with each other either by means of a pliant carrier strip which may be a plastic tape, most suitably a polyester plastic tape, the width of which is slightly less than the width of the clips, which is adhered to the clips by means of an adhesive, such as a pressure sensitive adhesive, or by means of a continuous layer of an adhesive substance per se, applied to the undulatory surfaces constituting the arched crown portions of the clips. The clip assembly of the patent is adapted to be used with a hand-held clinching tool provided with a magazine for receiving the clip assembly, and along which the clip assembly is pushed in the direction of the forming jaw of the tool by a slidable member, such as a spring biased follower, in abutting engagement with the last clip of the assembly. Exemplary of such a tool is the tool disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,641,656. While the patent states that an "indeterminate" or "indefinite" number of the pliant material adhesively held U-clips can be spiraled into a coil, and that such a coil "could be extensive enough to keep an automatic clipreforming tool operating for an entire workday", in actual practice those statements proved to be merely prophetic and, in actual commercial usage in the field, the attainment of those goals was found in no way to be attainable. More specifically in this connection, with the introduction of high-speed clinching tools, whether they be of the stationary type, or robot-like in operation, wherein each clip of the clip assembly is successively pull-fed, at a rapid rate, into the forming jaw of the clinching tool, the clip assembly made in accordance with the preferred embodiment shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,613,878 could not withstand the forces applied to it by such tools with the result that the plastic tape would peel-off the crown portion of the clips, and the clips would be easily dislodged from the clip assembly. Coil failure, therefore, regularly and inevitably occurred. As a consequence, the clip assembly made in accordance with the patent was later found, in commercial operations, to be limited to use in lengths of up to about 45 clips, and could only be used with a tool such as that disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,641,656. An operator, therefore, was compelled to reload the magazine of the tool as many as five times in order to complete a single mattress innerspring, for example. Moreover, it was found that the clip assembly of the patent could not be wound, under tension, into a tight, integrated roll, in the manner of a spool of thread or wire, because the the plastic tape would peel-off the crown portions of the clips, and the clip assembly would tend to unravel and fall away from the roll, thereby creating shipping and handling problems which made the use of the clip assembly in roll form impractical and uneconomical.
 
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