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A grooved spreader roller can be manufactured from a variety of materials, such as steel, aluminum, stainless steel, plated aluminum or steel and hard rubber. A rigid grooved spreader roller has grooves machined into the roller face surface. These grooves (resembling screw threads) are machined – starting from the center of the roller and leading out to each edge of the roller face. The grooves can be supplied in almost any fashion; from as simple as wrapping masking tape across the face of a standard idler roller to a machined groove that has very intricate machining details. Groove design is completely application dependent, however it can be generally stated that the greater the number of groove starts there are the greater the spreading will be realized.

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Theory of operation:

Quite simply the theory is that the grooves will push wrinkles out of the web, from the center out to each edge, which, unfortunately is not always the case (see advantages and disadvantages, below).

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Recommended wrap angle for this type of spreader roller normally ranges between 90° - 180°.

Advantages when applied as an idler roller:

 

  • This type of spreader roller will remove air when air entrainment is a problem (this in itself will help to remove or prevent wrinkles).
  • Depending on the groove design, these rollers can often be manufactured by most machine shops, rubber roller manufacturer or idler roller supplier. Making this type of spreader one of the least expensive, most readily available types of spreader roller.
  • Simplicity of design, with no special parts, makes this spreader roller extremely easy to maintain.
  • Because this roller is linear across its face, it will not stretch, distort or tear any portion of the web.
  • This type of spreader roller is best suited for use with textiles and non-wovens. It has limited application with papers, foils and films.
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Disadvantages when applied as an idler roller:

 

  • When this spreader is applied as an idler roller (driven at the surface speed of the web), the grooves do not push wrinkles out from the center of the roller face (even though this is most often believed to be the case). When the surface of the grooved roller is driven at the same speed as the surface of the web (such is the case when used as an idler roller) the tangent point, at any given point across the web or roller face, where the web first touches the roller remains in a constant position through the roller rotation. Because the tangent point of the web lying on top of the groove does not vary, the groove has no cross machine direction movement effect on the web. The belief that the grooves have some effect on the web is mostly an optical illusion (like the illusion caused by a rotating barber shop pole). An engineer once told me an excellent analogy of the non-effect of the grooves on the web in this application (I can’t take credit for the analogy); if you place a plow in a field, does the field plow itself by the rotation of the earth? Of course not, and the reason is because the tangent point of the plow in the field remains constant with the earth in its rotation.
  • This type of roller does not have a smooth surface so it has the potential to mark the web surface.
  • Some materials may deform across the web face and the groove will actually form in the profile of the web causing wrinkles.
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Advantages when used as a “dead bar” or driven slower or faster than the web:

 

  • All the advantages as an idler roller plus one more.
  • When the surface speed of this type of roller is not synchronized with the web speed (standing completely still is included here) then we get a different level of performance with this type of roller. When this is the case, the grooves will push the web outward toward each edge of the roller face. This effect occurs because the tangent point where the web touches the roller face is ever-changing as the web travels around the circumference of the roller. The changing position of this tangent point ensures that the web, at that point, will travel in the direction the groove is facing.
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Disadvantages when used as a “dead bar” or driven slower or faster than the web:

 

  • Web marking and scratching will occur much more frequently than with spreader rollers that rotate, at the same rate, with the web.
  • When there is speed differential between the roller face and the web, the web is not in traction with the roller. For this reason the web position can vary across the roller face causing edge guiding and possibly wrinkling problems down-line of this spreader roller.
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Grooved Roller – Soft Flexible Rubber

Description:

A soft flexible grooved roller can be manufactured from different types of rubber compounds, but what is most important is that the rubber is soft enough to flex under the pressure of the web tension. The flexible grooved roller has grooves machined under its’ surface. The grooves must be precisely spaced. The groove depth is varied across the roller face, as the grooves move out from the center of the roller, they get deeper. This depth variance is even across the face of the roller and must be accurately controlled.

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Theory of operation:

As this roller rotates with the same surface speed as the web, it has flexible lands (created by grooves machined into the surface of the soft rubber face), which deflect under the webs tension. The lands deflect in the direction they are angled, from the center out to each edge of the roller face. The depth of the grooves increases from the center out to each edge of the roller face. The reason for the depth adjustment out to each edge of the roller face is so each land will flex more than the land next to it, ever increasing from the center of the roller. The difference in flex amount between each land is important because it provides for web spreading between each land. In other words if all the lands flexed exactly the same amount, spreading would be achieved only in the center of the web, there would be no spreading from land to land.

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Recommended wrap angle for this type of spreader roller is strictly application dependent and can vary between 30° to 180°

Advantages:

 

  • This type of spreader will remove air when air entrainment is a problem. This will help keep the web in traction with this roller improving its’ operation.
  • Because this roller is linear across its face, it will not stretch distort or tear any portion of the web.
  • Because of its soft surface, this roller will not mark or scratch the web.
  • This type of spreader is used with all types of webs.
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Disadvantages:

 

  • While the lands do flex under the pressure of the tension on the web, they will return to their natural position as the pressure is being relieved. The pressure is relieved as the web exits the roller. As the lands flex back to their natural position, some of the wrinkles the roller removed may return.
  • This roller does not have a smooth surface, so some webs may deform inside the groove, taking on the profile of the groove.
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This type of spreader roller has no wrap angle. Because the web is not supported across its full width, the material must be fed straight in and out of this spreader roller assembly.

Advantages:

  • This type of spreader roller is the most aggressive.
  • Simplicity of design makes this type of spreader roller easy to maintain.
  • The amount of spreading is easily adjustable, by changing the angle of each nip set independently of each other.
  • Works well with woven and non-woven webs.
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Disadvantages:

  • Because this spreader roller will not support the web across its full width, it will mark, distort and possibly tear most foils.
  • This type of spreader roller is specifically designed for woven and non-woven materials. Any other type of materials may have difficulty with this type of spreader roller, because of web distortion.
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News No. 62
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