US3726023A - Web drier - Google Patents

Web drier Download PDF

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US3726023A
US3726023A US00094790A US3726023DA US3726023A US 3726023 A US3726023 A US 3726023A US 00094790 A US00094790 A US 00094790A US 3726023D A US3726023D A US 3726023DA US 3726023 A US3726023 A US 3726023A
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web
chamber
housing
warm air
drier
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US00094790A
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E Geyken
P Dawidowitsch
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Agfa Gevaert AG
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Agfa Gevaert AG
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Priority claimed from DE19691961873 external-priority patent/DE1961873C3/en
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03DAPPARATUS FOR PROCESSING EXPOSED PHOTOGRAPHIC MATERIALS; ACCESSORIES THEREFOR
    • G03D15/00Apparatus for treating processed material
    • G03D15/02Drying; Glazing
    • G03D15/027Drying of plates or prints
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03DAPPARATUS FOR PROCESSING EXPOSED PHOTOGRAPHIC MATERIALS; ACCESSORIES THEREFOR
    • G03D13/00Processing apparatus or accessories therefor, not covered by groups G11B3/00 - G11B11/00
    • G03D13/002Heat development apparatus, e.g. Kalvar

Definitions

  • a drier for sheet-shaped photographic web materials has a housing in which first and second transport rol- [30] Foreign Application Priority Data lers are located for engaging the web at opposite major surfaces thereof to advance it in a predeter- Dec. 10,1969 Germany ..P 1961 873.6 mined path o or more blowers i associated heating devices are provided for blowing warm air (g1. ..34/151, 34/ towards one of the major Surfaces f.
  • the present invention relates generally to a drier, and particularly to a web drier. Still more specifically the invention relates to a drier for photographic materials, especially sheet-shaped photographic materials.
  • driers of the general type under discussion in which the photographic materials to be dried are passed between engaging rollers which transport them in a predetermined path, and in which streams of warm air are blown against the material to be dried. They are particularly well suited for use in conjunction with a developer device in which the materials pass through the developer apparatus in a straight usually at least substantially horizontal path, and in which their major upper and lower surfaces are treated with developer fluid. Subsequently the developed photographic material then passes through the associated web drier in which conventionally tubes or conduits have been provided which are arranged symmetrically with reference to the layer of the web to be dried and provided with slots through which warm air is blown at the web.
  • a concomitant object of the invention is to provide such an improved web drier which, because of its simplicity, is highly reliable in its operation.
  • a web drier which, briefly stated, comprises a housing and first and second transport rollers mounted in the housing for engaging a web at opposite major surfaces thereof to thereby advance it in a predetermined path.
  • Supply means supply at least one stream of warm air which is directed towards one of the major surfaces of the web.
  • Perforate wall means defines intermediate the supply means and the one major surface, proximal to the latter, a chamber extending at least substantially over the cross-sectional area of the housing and having in direction of flow of the stream of warm air a dimension which is substantially smaller than its dimensions transversely to this direction, so that the warm air leaves the chamber substantially evenly distributed over substantially the entire crosssectional area of the housing.
  • FIG. I is a vertical somewhat diagrammatic section through an apparatus according to the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a section taken on line II-II of FIG. 1.
  • reference numeral 1 in FIG. 1 identifies a frame for the apparatus according to the present invention, which may for instance be composed of a plurality of square cross-section tubes or the like.
  • the device comprises a web drier 2 having an inlet opening 3.
  • a developing station By the time the film or web to be treated has reached the inlet opening 3 of the apparatus 2, it has alreadypassed through a developing station, a fixing station and watering station.
  • These various stations maybe of any construction known from the art, for instance they may be constructed according to the teaching of German Pat. No. 1,293,586. In themselves they do not form part of the present invention and have been mentioned here only to provide background information on the treatment which the web will have undergone before it reaches the inventive web drying apparatus 2 according to the present invention.
  • the length of the path be kept as short as possible because it, added to the length of the path which the web traverses in the preceding stations, determines the overall horizontal length of the total apparatus; evidently, the shorter the total apparatus can be kept in horizontal direction, the better it will be because the apparatus will require less floor space which is frequently at a premium.
  • the web drier comprises five pairs of transport rollers, each pair having an upper transport roller 4 and a lower transport roller 5. At least one roller of each pairthat is either the roller 4 or the roller 5-is driven by means of a suitable drive, for instance a worm drive or the like.
  • the rollers are mounted in mounting elements 6 which at the same time constitute the lateral walls of the drying chamber 13 defined by the overall housing of the device 2.
  • the rollers themselves may be made of various different materials, for instance of hard paper, and contact one another only under the weight of the uppermost roller 4 of each pair.
  • the web to be dried advances between the rollers 4 and 5 of each pair in a path which in the illustrated embodiment is horizontal, but which could also be somewhat different, that is be only substantially horizontal.
  • a perforated sheet material wall 7 which extends over the entire cross-sectional area of the housing. It is advantageously constituted by a commercially available perforated sheet metal member provided with quadratic openings arranged in an even pattern, with the combined crosssectional area of the openings being not in excess of half of the total cross-sectional area of the member 7.
  • a chamber 8 whose height is approximately equal to the diameter of the rollers 4 or 5. It, also, extends over the entire cross-sectional area of the housing, that is of the chamber 13.
  • FIG. 2 shows particularly clearly, those edge regions of the chamber 8 which are lateral with respect to the direction of advancement of the web, that is which are located at opposite sides of the path traversed by the web, the chamber 8 is connected via slightly divergent channels 9 and 10, and curved guide baffles 9a and 10a, with the discharge openings of respective blowers l1 and 12.
  • the channels 9 and 10 have relatively large cross-sectional areas and therefore the blowers 11 and 12 are capable of turning over large quantities of air into the chamber 8, at relatively low energy requirements and against low back pressure.
  • the air is very evenly distributed over the entire cross-sectional area of the member 7 and therefore of the chamber 13, and rises from the apertures of the member 7 at relatively low speeds and in substantially nonnal direction with reference to the plane of the web, to impinge upon the downwardly directed major surface thereof.
  • the impingement is almost vertical and as a consequence the impinging air is deflected laterally to the edges of the web in the presence of a web; of course, if a web is momentarily not present the air will simply pass upwardly between the rollers.
  • the diameter of the rollers 4 and 5 is reduced to the configuration identified at 4a and 5a which is just sufficient for withstanding the mechanical forces acting upon the rollers, so that a sufficiently large flow space exists for flowing of the air from the underside to the upperside and to the upwardly directed major surface of the web.
  • the width of this space corresponds to at least one roller diameter.
  • Outlet means is provided, in the illustrated embodiment in form of an outlet slot 15 which is located above the discharge opening 14 for the web, and the upwardly deflected air moves in concomitant movement with the web until it reaches the slot 15 which is provided in the other cover 17 of the chamber 13. From the slot 15 the air moves into a distributing chamber 16 which is separated by the cover 17 from the chamber 13, handles 18 and 19 being provided for facilitating removal of the cover 17 for inspection and cleaning purposes.
  • a similarly removable cover 20 is provided which closes the distributor chamber 16 and can be withdrawn for inspection, cleaning and the like.
  • the cover 20 is provided with apertures 20a which communicate with the ambient atmosphere so that some of the air emitted through the slot 15 can escape to the exterior of the device.
  • the largest portion of the moist air leaving the chamber 13 through the slot 15 will flow along the lateral walls bounding the chamber 16 and from there downwardly through the passages P in the direction indicated by the arrows (see FIGS. 1 and 2) until it reaches the inlet of the blowers 11 and 12.
  • Heating devices are provided upstream of the blowers 11 and 12 which are controlled by a temperature sensor 21 located in the chamber 8, so that the temperature of the air supplied by the blowers 11 and 12 is automatically maintained at the desired value which can of course be adjusted as required.
  • the arrangement of the heating devices upstream of the blowers 11 and 12 has the advantage that even if the air is unevenly heated in the heating device, it becomes thoroughly admixed in the blowers 11 and 12 before it is supplied to the chamber 8 so that uneven heating is compensated.
  • the air aspirated by the blowers 11 and 12 is a mixture of fresh air aspirated from the exterior of the device, and of the air which has entered the chamber 16 through the slot 15 from the chamber 13.
  • the advantage of drying with air which is moister than the ambient air outside the apparatus is that the drying obtained in this manner is very even and is conformed to the throughput speed of the web, if a sufficiently large quantity of such air can be passed along the upper surface of the web to be dried, as is the case in the apparatus according to the present invention.
  • rollers 4 and 5 have an influence upon the drying efiect, inasmuch as their surfaces pick up droplets adhering to the major surfaces of the web and inasmuch as the thus picked up liquid is quickly returned into the airstream due to the higher temperature of the roller surfaces.
  • contact of the surfaces of the rollers at elevated temperature with the web facilitates heating and drying of the web.
  • the invention is not limited to the embodiment which has been illustrated herein for purposes of explanation. It is possible, for instance, to make the chamber 13 substantially lower so that the cover 17 would be located only a very small distance above the upper rollers 4. Should this be the case, then the outlet slot would have to be located in the middle of the device, that is in the middle of the path which is being traversed by the web, so that the warm air would move along the upper surface of the web in axial direction of the rollers to the middle of the path, and would be emitted from there.
  • cover 20 a portion 20b which cooperates with projections on the frame 1 to constitute a labyrinth seal preventing an overflowing of the moist warm air into the wet treating station of the overall device, with such wet-treating station not being a part of the present invention.
  • a web drier particularly for sheet-shaped photographic materials, comprising a housing having an inlet and a discharge opening for webs to be dried; first and second transport rollers in said housing for engaging a web at opposite major surfaces thereof to thereby advance the web in a predetermined path from said inlet to said discharge opening; supply means for supplying at least one stream of warm air directed towards one of said major surfaces; perforate wall means defining intermediate said supply means and said one major surface, proximal to the latter, a chamber extending at least substantially over the cross-sectional area of said housing and having in direction of flow of said stream of warm air a dimension which is substantially smaller than its dimension transversely to said direction, so that the warm air leaves said chamber substantially evenly distributed over substantially the entire cross-sectional area of said housing; and air outlet means in form of at least one slot located above said discharge penin 2.
  • said pe orate wall means comprising sheet-metal walls provided with evenly distributed perforations.
  • a web drier as defined in claim 1 said rollers being positioned for advancing said web in a substantially horizontal path, and wherein said chamber is located downwardly of and below said path.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Drying Of Solid Materials (AREA)
  • Photographic Processing Devices Using Wet Methods (AREA)
  • Photographic Developing Apparatuses (AREA)

Abstract

A drier for sheet-shaped photographic web materials has a housing in which first and second transport rollers are located for engaging the web at opposite major surfaces thereof to advance it in a predetermined path. One or more blowers with associated heating devices are provided for blowing warm air towards one of the major surfaces of the web. Perforated sheet metal walls establish adjacent this one surface intermediate the same and the blowers a pressure chamber which extends at least substantially over the cross-sectional area of the housing and which in the direction of flow of the airstream or airstreams has a dimension substantially smaller than its dimensions transversely to this direction. Thus, warm air enters the chamber from the blower or blowers and leaves it in direction towards the major surface of the web substantially evenly distributed over substantially the entire cross-sectional area of the housing.

Description

United States Patent 91 Geyken et a]. [4 1 Apr. 10, 1973 WEB DRIER FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS 75 Inventors; Erwin G Peter Dawidowitsch, 1,054,024 3/1959 Germany .34/162 both of Munich, Germany P E C n B D J rzmary xammer arro onty, r. [73] Asslgnee: fig ifi z e sggg Att0meyMichael S. Striker [22] Filed: Dec. 3, 1970 [57] ABSTRACT [21] Appl. No.: 94,790 A drier for sheet-shaped photographic web materials has a housing in which first and second transport rol- [30] Foreign Application Priority Data lers are located for engaging the web at opposite major surfaces thereof to advance it in a predeter- Dec. 10,1969 Germany ..P 1961 873.6 mined path o or more blowers i associated heating devices are provided for blowing warm air (g1. ..34/151, 34/ towards one of the major Surfaces f. the p Fieid 162 151 forated sheet metal walls establish ad acent this one 2 6 surface intermediate the same and the blowers a pressure chamber which extends at least substantially over [56] References Cited the cross-sectional area of the housing and which in the direction of flow of the airstream or airstreams has UNITED STATES PATENTS a dimension substantially smaller than its dimensions 3,254,426 6/1966 Lamb et a1. ..34 155 transversely to this directicn' Thus air enters 3 434 225 3/19 9 Knibiehly 3 2 thfi chamber from the blower OI blowers and leaves it 39,05 45 0 19 3 shepherd 34 1 2 in direction towards the major surface of the web sub- 3.308,555 3/1967 Kruger ..34/155 stantially evenly distributed over substantially the entire cross-sectional area of the housing.
6 Claims, 2 Drawing Figures PATENI'EDAFRIOIW 3,726,023
SHEET 1 OF 2 20b 20 76 II 200' Fig.7
INVENTOR ERWIN GEYKEN By PETER DAWIDOWITSCH PATENTEBAPRIUIBYS SHEET 2 [IF 2 INVENTOR ERWIN GEYKEN BY PETER DAWIDOWITSCH WEB DRIER BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates generally to a drier, and particularly to a web drier. Still more specifically the invention relates to a drier for photographic materials, especially sheet-shaped photographic materials.
It is already known to provide driers of the general type under discussion in which the photographic materials to be dried are passed between engaging rollers which transport them in a predetermined path, and in which streams of warm air are blown against the material to be dried. They are particularly well suited for use in conjunction with a developer device in which the materials pass through the developer apparatus in a straight usually at least substantially horizontal path, and in which their major upper and lower surfaces are treated with developer fluid. Subsequently the developed photographic material then passes through the associated web drier in which conventionally tubes or conduits have been provided which are arranged symmetrically with reference to the layer of the web to be dried and provided with slots through which warm air is blown at the web.
Experience has shown, however, that this type of drier is not entirely satisfactory for a variety of reasons. On the one hand, the effectiveness of the blowing arrangements and the through-put of air volume were relatively limited because of the necessary rather significant number of deflections in the fiow path of the air, andalso because of the relatively great back pressure resulting from the narrow slots through which the air had to escape. On the other hand, the concentrated blowing of air against the web tobe dried in relatively limited areas of the latter, caused uneven drying or difficulties in traversal of the web in its predetermined path because of the deflection exerted upon the web by the relatively high pressure of the escaping air.
For these reasons it is desirable to improve such web driers, and industry has felt this need for some time. However, heretofore no improved solution to this problem has been forthcoming.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION It is, accordingly, an object of the present invention to overcome the aforementioned disadvantages.
More particularly it is an object of the present invention to provide an improved web drier described here under discussion.
Still more specifically it is an object of the present invention to provide an improved web drier for photographic materials, particularly for sheet-shaped photographic material, in which quick drying results can be obtained with minimal technological measures.
A concomitant object of the invention is to provide such an improved web drier which, because of its simplicity, is highly reliable in its operation.
In pursuance of the above objects, andothers which will become apparent hereafter, one feature of the invention resides in a web drier which, briefly stated, comprises a housing and first and second transport rollers mounted in the housing for engaging a web at opposite major surfaces thereof to thereby advance it in a predetermined path. Supply means supply at least one stream of warm air which is directed towards one of the major surfaces of the web. Perforate wall means defines intermediate the supply means and the one major surface, proximal to the latter, a chamber extending at least substantially over the cross-sectional area of the housing and having in direction of flow of the stream of warm air a dimension which is substantially smaller than its dimensions transversely to this direction, so that the warm air leaves the chamber substantially evenly distributed over substantially the entire crosssectional area of the housing.
By resorting to this construction the warm air reaches the web to be dried without any flow-resistance differential developing anywhere over the cross-section of the housing. Thus, a large quantity of warm air can be blown at and past the web to be dried with a smallthereof, will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawing.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIG. I is a vertical somewhat diagrammatic section through an apparatus according to the present invention; and
FIG. 2 is a section taken on line II-II of FIG. 1.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Discussing now FIGS. 1 and 2 in detail, it will be seen that reference numeral 1 in FIG. 1 identifies a frame for the apparatus according to the present invention, which may for instance be composed of a plurality of square cross-section tubes or the like. In any case, the various structural units of an automatically operating sheet-film developing device with horizontal film feed are mounted in this frame 1. The device comprises a web drier 2 having an inlet opening 3. By the time the film or web to be treated has reached the inlet opening 3 of the apparatus 2, it has alreadypassed through a developing station, a fixing station and watering station. These various stations maybe of any construction known from the art, for instance they may be constructed according to the teaching of German Pat. No. 1,293,586. In themselves they do not form part of the present invention and have been mentioned here only to provide background information on the treatment which the web will have undergone before it reaches the inventive web drying apparatus 2 according to the present invention.
It will be appreciated that it is the purpose of the web-drying apparatus according to the present invention to completely dry the web-here sheet films-in the quickest possible time, with the lowest energy expenditure and in the shortest path, keeping in mind the established through-put speed selected for the films. Because the length of the path in such web driers, in which the path is horizontal or at least substantially horizontal, must be added to the length of the path traversed by the web in the preceding treating stations,
it is particularly important that in the drier the length of the path be kept as short as possible because it, added to the length of the path which the web traverses in the preceding stations, determines the overall horizontal length of the total apparatus; evidently, the shorter the total apparatus can be kept in horizontal direction, the better it will be because the apparatus will require less floor space which is frequently at a premium.
As shown, the web drier according to the present invention comprises five pairs of transport rollers, each pair having an upper transport roller 4 and a lower transport roller 5. At least one roller of each pairthat is either the roller 4 or the roller 5-is driven by means of a suitable drive, for instance a worm drive or the like. The rollers are mounted in mounting elements 6 which at the same time constitute the lateral walls of the drying chamber 13 defined by the overall housing of the device 2. The rollers themselves may be made of various different materials, for instance of hard paper, and contact one another only under the weight of the uppermost roller 4 of each pair. The web to be dried advances between the rollers 4 and 5 of each pair in a path which in the illustrated embodiment is horizontal, but which could also be somewhat different, that is be only substantially horizontal.
Below the lower rollers 5, spaced therefrom by approximately the roller diameter, is a perforated sheet material wall 7 which extends over the entire cross-sectional area of the housing. It is advantageously constituted by a commercially available perforated sheet metal member provided with quadratic openings arranged in an even pattern, with the combined crosssectional area of the openings being not in excess of half of the total cross-sectional area of the member 7. Below this member 7 is a chamber 8 whose height is approximately equal to the diameter of the rollers 4 or 5. It, also, extends over the entire cross-sectional area of the housing, that is of the chamber 13.
As FIG. 2 shows particularly clearly, those edge regions of the chamber 8 which are lateral with respect to the direction of advancement of the web, that is which are located at opposite sides of the path traversed by the web, the chamber 8 is connected via slightly divergent channels 9 and 10, and curved guide baffles 9a and 10a, with the discharge openings of respective blowers l1 and 12. The channels 9 and 10 have relatively large cross-sectional areas and therefore the blowers 11 and 12 are capable of turning over large quantities of air into the chamber 8, at relatively low energy requirements and against low back pressure. From the chamber 8 the air is very evenly distributed over the entire cross-sectional area of the member 7 and therefore of the chamber 13, and rises from the apertures of the member 7 at relatively low speeds and in substantially nonnal direction with reference to the plane of the web, to impinge upon the downwardly directed major surface thereof. The impingement is almost vertical and as a consequence the impinging air is deflected laterally to the edges of the web in the presence of a web; of course, if a web is momentarily not present the air will simply pass upwardly between the rollers. In the edge regions of the web outside the transverse width of the widest web to be processed in the drier, the diameter of the rollers 4 and 5 is reduced to the configuration identified at 4a and 5a which is just sufficient for withstanding the mechanical forces acting upon the rollers, so that a sufficiently large flow space exists for flowing of the air from the underside to the upperside and to the upwardly directed major surface of the web. The width of this space corresponds to at least one roller diameter. When the thus deflected warm air reaches the upper side of the web, it now flows in the axial direction of the rollers normal to the transportation of the web along the upper side of the latter, until the two streams of air coming from opposite lateral edges of the web meet in the middle and are deflected upwardly.
Outlet means is provided, in the illustrated embodiment in form of an outlet slot 15 which is located above the discharge opening 14 for the web, and the upwardly deflected air moves in concomitant movement with the web until it reaches the slot 15 which is provided in the other cover 17 of the chamber 13. From the slot 15 the air moves into a distributing chamber 16 which is separated by the cover 17 from the chamber 13, handles 18 and 19 being provided for facilitating removal of the cover 17 for inspection and cleaning purposes. A similarly removable cover 20 is provided which closes the distributor chamber 16 and can be withdrawn for inspection, cleaning and the like. The cover 20 is provided with apertures 20a which communicate with the ambient atmosphere so that some of the air emitted through the slot 15 can escape to the exterior of the device.
The largest portion of the moist air leaving the chamber 13 through the slot 15 will flow along the lateral walls bounding the chamber 16 and from there downwardly through the passages P in the direction indicated by the arrows (see FIGS. 1 and 2) until it reaches the inlet of the blowers 11 and 12. Heating devices are provided upstream of the blowers 11 and 12 which are controlled by a temperature sensor 21 located in the chamber 8, so that the temperature of the air supplied by the blowers 11 and 12 is automatically maintained at the desired value which can of course be adjusted as required.
The arrangement of the heating devices upstream of the blowers 11 and 12 has the advantage that even if the air is unevenly heated in the heating device, it becomes thoroughly admixed in the blowers 11 and 12 before it is supplied to the chamber 8 so that uneven heating is compensated. The air aspirated by the blowers 11 and 12 is a mixture of fresh air aspirated from the exterior of the device, and of the air which has entered the chamber 16 through the slot 15 from the chamber 13. Thus, after a short start-up period of the apparatus a constant value of air humidity develops for the air entering into the chamber 13, as well as for the air emitted from the chamber 13. The advantage of drying with air which is moister than the ambient air outside the apparatus, is that the drying obtained in this manner is very even and is conformed to the throughput speed of the web, if a sufficiently large quantity of such air can be passed along the upper surface of the web to be dried, as is the case in the apparatus according to the present invention.
It is also pointed out that the rollers 4 and 5 have an influence upon the drying efiect, inasmuch as their surfaces pick up droplets adhering to the major surfaces of the web and inasmuch as the thus picked up liquid is quickly returned into the airstream due to the higher temperature of the roller surfaces. On the other hand, contact of the surfaces of the rollers at elevated temperature with the web, facilitates heating and drying of the web.
It will be appreciated that the invention is not limited to the embodiment which has been illustrated herein for purposes of explanation. It is possible, for instance, to make the chamber 13 substantially lower so that the cover 17 would be located only a very small distance above the upper rollers 4. Should this be the case, then the outlet slot would have to be located in the middle of the device, that is in the middle of the path which is being traversed by the web, so that the warm air would move along the upper surface of the web in axial direction of the rollers to the middle of the path, and would be emitted from there. It will also be possible to provide on the cover 20 a portion 20b which cooperates with projections on the frame 1 to constitute a labyrinth seal preventing an overflowing of the moist warm air into the wet treating station of the overall device, with such wet-treating station not being a part of the present invention.
It will be understood that each of the elements described above, or two or more together, may also find a useful application in other types of constructions differing from the types described above.
While the invention has been illustrated and described as embodied in a web drier, it is not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made without departing in any way from the spirit of the present invention.
Without further analysis, the foregoing will so fully reveal the gist of the present invention that others can by applying current knowledge readily adapt it for various applications without omitting features that, from the standpoint of prior art, fairly constitute essential characteristics of the generic or specific aspects of this invention and, therefore, such adaptations should and are intended to be comprehended within the meaning and range of equivalence of the following claims.
What is claimed as new and desired to be protected by Letters Patent is set forth in the appended claims.
We claim:
1. A web drier, particularly for sheet-shaped photographic materials, comprising a housing having an inlet and a discharge opening for webs to be dried; first and second transport rollers in said housing for engaging a web at opposite major surfaces thereof to thereby advance the web in a predetermined path from said inlet to said discharge opening; supply means for supplying at least one stream of warm air directed towards one of said major surfaces; perforate wall means defining intermediate said supply means and said one major surface, proximal to the latter, a chamber extending at least substantially over the cross-sectional area of said housing and having in direction of flow of said stream of warm air a dimension which is substantially smaller than its dimension transversely to said direction, so that the warm air leaves said chamber substantially evenly distributed over substantially the entire cross-sectional area of said housing; and air outlet means in form of at least one slot located above said discharge penin 2. web drier as defined in claim 1, said pe orate wall means comprising sheet-metal walls provided with evenly distributed perforations.
3. A web drier as defined in claim 2, wherein the combined cross-sectional area of the perforations in the respective sheet-metal wall is at most equal to onehalf the total cross-sectional area of the wall.
4. A web drier as defined in claim 1, said rollers being positioned for advancing said web in a substantially horizontal path, and wherein said chamber is located downwardly of and below said path.
5. A web drier as defined in claim 1; further comprising side wall means bounding lateral sides of said chamber; and wherein said supply means comprises a pair of blowers each supplying a stream of warm air to said chamber, and conduit means extending from the respective blower to said side wall means so as to discharge the stream of warm air against the latter for deflection through substantially into said chamber.
6. A web drier as defined in claim 1; further comprising a distributor chamber outside said housing and communicating with said air outlet means, and apertures in said distributor chamber communicating with the ambient atmosphere.

Claims (6)

1. A web drier, particularly for sheet-shaped photographic materials, comprising a housing having an inlet and a discharge opening for webs to be dried; first and second transport rollers in said housing for engaging a web at opposite major surfaces thereof to thereby advance the web in a predetermined path from said inlet to said discharge opening; supply means for supplying at least one stream of warm air directed towards one of said major surfaces; perforate wall means defining intermediate said supply means and said one major surface, proximal to the latter, a chamber extending at least substantially over the crosssectional area of said housing and having in direction of flow of said stream of warm air a dimension which is substantially smaller than its dimension transversely to said direction, so that the warm air leaves said chamber substantially evenly distributed over substantially the entire cross-sectional area of said housing; and air outlet means in form of at least one slot located above said discharge opening.
2. A web drier as defined in claim 1, said perforate wall means comprising sheet-metal walls provided with evenly distributed perforations.
3. A web drier as defined in claim 2, wherein the combined cross-sectional area of the perforations in the respective sheet-metal wall is at most equal to one-half the total cross-sectional area of the wall.
4. A web drier as defined in claim 1, said rollers being positioned for advancing said web in a substantially horizontal path, and wherein said chamber is located downwardly of and below said path.
5. A web drier as defined in claim 1; further comprising side wall means bounding lateral sides of said chamber; and wherein said supply means comprises a pair of blowers each supplying a stream of warm air to said chamber, and conduit means extending from the respective blower to said side wall means so as to discharge the stream of warm air against the latter for deflection through substantially 90* into said chamber.
6. A web drier as defined in claim 1; further comprising a distributor chamber outside said housing and communicating with said air outlet means, and apertures in said distributor chamber communicating with the ambient atmosphere.
US00094790A 1969-12-10 1970-12-03 Web drier Expired - Lifetime US3726023A (en)

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE19691961873 DE1961873C3 (en) 1969-12-10 Drying device for photographic, in particular sheet-shaped, layer supports
US10365471A 1971-01-04 1971-01-04

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BE (1) BE759262A (en)
CH (1) CH530035A (en)
FR (1) FR2072641A5 (en)
GB (1) GB1338411A (en)
NL (1) NL172991C (en)

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US4779356A (en) * 1986-04-03 1988-10-25 Agfa-Gevaert Aktiengesellschaft Dryer for photosensitive material
US5475788A (en) * 1992-09-04 1995-12-12 Oce'-Nederland, B.V. Radiation fixing device with natural convection airflow
US5788803A (en) * 1996-10-16 1998-08-04 Interfic, Inc. Corrugated paperboard manufacturing apparatus with controllable preheating
US5837974A (en) * 1996-10-16 1998-11-17 Interfic, Inc. Corrugated paperboard manufacturing apparatus with board profile monitoring and related methods
US5847362A (en) * 1996-10-16 1998-12-08 Interfic, Inc. Corrugated paperboard manufacturing apparatus providing controllable heat and related methods
US5902502A (en) * 1996-10-16 1999-05-11 Interfic, Inc. Corrugated paperboard manufacturing apparatus and related methods
US10184897B2 (en) 2014-04-04 2019-01-22 Packaging Corporation Of America System and method for determining an impact of manufacturing processes on the caliper of a sheet material

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US4009034A (en) * 1973-07-09 1977-02-22 Xerox Corporation Dry film processing
US3902041A (en) * 1973-07-09 1975-08-26 Xerox Corp Dry film processing apparatus
US3974358A (en) * 1975-01-10 1976-08-10 Teckton, Inc. Portable food heating device
SU1023482A1 (en) * 1979-07-31 1983-06-15 Коммунарский горно-металлургический институт Cable repair device
GB8815040D0 (en) * 1988-06-24 1988-08-03 Fibre Treatments Ltd Heat treatment device
US5352863A (en) * 1992-04-03 1994-10-04 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Flat bed thermophotographic film processor
US5869806A (en) * 1996-02-02 1999-02-09 Imation Corp. Apparatus and method for thermally processing an imaging material employing means for bending the imaging material during thermal processing
US5869807A (en) * 1996-02-02 1999-02-09 Imation Corp. Apparatus and method for thermally processing an imaging material employing improved heating means
US5849388A (en) * 1996-02-02 1998-12-15 Imation Corp. Article, apparatus and method for cooling a thermally processed material
BE1010388A4 (en) * 1996-06-26 1998-07-07 Agfa Gevaert Nv Photothermographic DEVELOPMENT SYSTEM.
US5895592A (en) * 1996-12-19 1999-04-20 Imation Corp. Apparatus and method for thermally processing an imaging material employing a system for reducing fogging on the imaging material during thermal processing
US5986238A (en) * 1996-12-19 1999-11-16 Imation Corporation Apparatus and method for thermally processing an imaging material employing means for reducing fogging on the imaging material during thermal processing
US7317468B2 (en) * 2005-01-05 2008-01-08 Carestream Health, Inc. Thermal processor employing drum and flatbed technologies
CN104048779B (en) * 2014-05-30 2016-07-06 合肥京东方光电科技有限公司 A kind of thermometric sample makes tool and making apparatus
US11124161B2 (en) * 2018-01-26 2021-09-21 Robert Anthony Orazem Heated license plate system

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US3254426A (en) * 1962-05-14 1966-06-07 Cardel Electric Co Inc Air-jet dryer for printed material
US3308555A (en) * 1963-04-13 1967-03-14 Internat Copying Machines Co M Drier particularly for photographic sheet material
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US3434225A (en) * 1967-09-05 1969-03-25 Logetronics Inc Drier for film processors

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4779356A (en) * 1986-04-03 1988-10-25 Agfa-Gevaert Aktiengesellschaft Dryer for photosensitive material
US5475788A (en) * 1992-09-04 1995-12-12 Oce'-Nederland, B.V. Radiation fixing device with natural convection airflow
US5788803A (en) * 1996-10-16 1998-08-04 Interfic, Inc. Corrugated paperboard manufacturing apparatus with controllable preheating
US5837974A (en) * 1996-10-16 1998-11-17 Interfic, Inc. Corrugated paperboard manufacturing apparatus with board profile monitoring and related methods
US5847362A (en) * 1996-10-16 1998-12-08 Interfic, Inc. Corrugated paperboard manufacturing apparatus providing controllable heat and related methods
US5902502A (en) * 1996-10-16 1999-05-11 Interfic, Inc. Corrugated paperboard manufacturing apparatus and related methods
US10184897B2 (en) 2014-04-04 2019-01-22 Packaging Corporation Of America System and method for determining an impact of manufacturing processes on the caliper of a sheet material

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CH530035A (en) 1972-10-31
DE1961873B2 (en) 1977-04-07
DE1961873A1 (en) 1971-06-16
NL172991C (en) 1983-11-16
GB1338411A (en) 1973-11-21
FR2072641A5 (en) 1971-09-24
BE759262A (en) 1971-05-24
NL7017188A (en) 1971-05-25
US3648019A (en) 1972-03-07

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