At K 2004, at least a half-dozen European machine builders
will show new direct-drive extruders running gearless—or
nearly gearless—drives with substantially
higher rpm and output rates than conventional extruders of
the same size. Direct-drive extruders also require less energy
and maintenance and are eerily silent in operation.
|
| Reifenhauser will demonstrate the world’s
first blown film line using high-speed, synchronous permanent-magnet
motors. |
Extruders
shown with direct drives will employ several motor configurations,
primarily the rapidly evolving rare-earth permanent-magnet
synchronous motors, which first appeared on a prototype extruder
only three years ago. The first users are finding energy savings
of 10% to 20% versus the same size extruder with gears. At this
year’s show, you’ll see synchronous motors
in blown and cast film, as well as in other processes. (These
drives are also likely to appear at the show on downstream rewinders,
injection and blow molding machines, and at least one granulator.)
Also
featured are new extruders that harness four motors in a single
drive mounted directly on the shaft. And a few direct-drive configurations
simply couple a conventional asynchronous AC motor directly to
a small screw.
Other extrusion news at K includes a new hybrid
blown film die and a couple of new winders. In pipe and profile
equipment, several machine makers have standardized extruders
and downstream modules to reduce cost and installation time.
And a new planetary extruder is being adapted for wood composites.
Run silent, run cheap
Reifenhauser’s patent on direct drives for extruders
has prompted a lot of R&D by competitors to work around the
patent. Reifenhauser’s patent
covers a doughnut-shaped, permanent-magnet synchronous motor
with the screw mounted in the middle. Patents aren’t an
issue for multiple-motor extruder drives, which date back to
the 1980s when Bausano in Italy began using them.
|
| Knoedler’s powerful four-motor drive
is being used on a number of new extruders from different suppliers.
(Photo: Henschel America) |
Permanent-magnet
synchronous motors are running trials and even some production
of pipe, blown film, and cast film. These drives so far are
limited to smaller extruders of up to 80 mm diam., but bigger
sizes and torque capacity are in the works. The leaders in developing
these motors for extrusion are Siemens
AG’s Automation and Drive Dept. in Cologne, Germany
(which supplies Reifenhauser), and Oswald Elektromotoren GmbH
in Miltenberg, Germany, which builds similar cylindrical motors
with a hollow core.
At the K show, Reifenhauser will run a three-layer
blown film line with REItorque motors on all three extruders—the
world’s first demonstration of
this type of motor for blown film. (Reifenhauser’s first
REItorque installation in 2003 was on a pipe line.) Earlier this
year, Reifenhauser delivered the first REItorque blown film line
to a beta test site in Germany, where it’s
running heavy-duty polyethylene sacks. The three-layer coex
production line has three 70-mm diam. screws and makes film with
a 1-meter layflat. The line at K will have two 60-mm extruders
and one 80-mm and will make film with 1.7-meter layflat.
Cincinnati
Extrusion in Austria (a unit of SMS Group) will introduce its
single-screw Proton 60-30G extruder with a G-Torq permanent-magnet
motor from Oswald. The drive isn’t gearless but uses a
single reduction gear and is mounted at a 90° angle beneath
the screw shaft. The 1:4 gear reduction allows use of a much
shorter motor than Reifenhauser’s, and it needs only 25%
as much torque for the same speed, Cincinnati says. (Incidentally,
Cincinnati Extrusion plans to open a U.S. sales office in the
Cincinnati area next January, upon the expiration of the non-compete
agreement with its former parent, Milacron Inc.)
 |
Link
To Graphic
Cincinnati Extrusion’s
new Proton extruder mounts a permanent magnet motor with a single
gear, allowing a smaller motor to be used. |
A small German
machine builder, esde Maschinentechnik GmbH, plans to run a two-layer
cast film line at the show with Oswald’s
TF synchronous motors on both extruders. It uses up to 500 Nm
of torque and is directly coupled to the shaft of a 25-mm coextruder,
model ESE 1-25-18, with a screw speed of 1150 rpm. The main extruder
will be either a 50-mm ESE 1-50-3N with 2100 Nm torque or a 70-mm
model with 4000 Nm of torque. For extruders larger than 70 mm,
esde says permanent-magnet motors are too bulky and expensive.
|
| Krauss-Maffei will show a new medium-range
profile extruder, called XS, running with new Windows-based controls.
The extruders and controls will be introduced here at NPE 2006. |
Kuhne
GmbH will show a 70-mm single-screw extruder with Oswald’s
TF motor
connected directly to the screw. It runs with 4000 Nm of torque
at up to 700 rpm.
Direct drives with multiple motors will be another
novel attraction at the show. Battenfeld Extrusionstechnik (represented
here by American Maplan) will show a new gearless direct-drive
extruder, model BEX 1-90-30 D, with a compact, four-motor CMG
drive built by K. & A. Knoedler GmbH in Ostfildern, Germany.
With this drive, the 90-mm-diam. extruder produces 1650 lb/hr
of polyolefin or 1870 lb/hr of PVC, about 25% more than a conventional
extruder of the same size. Battenfeld has also equipped a 45-mm
extruder with a 50-hp CMG drive and a 60-mm model with an 115-hp
CMG drive.
Knoedler’s CMG drive consists of four three-phase
AC motors that transmit power via a pinion shaft to a central
gear with a hollow shaft and thrust bearing. The hollow shaft
connects directly to the screw shaft. This arrangement saves
50% of the space and up to 30% of the cost of a conventional
AC motor and gears. An 85-hp CMG 30 drive for an 80-mm single-screw
extruder measures only 18 x 18 x 22 in.
Battenfeld has installed more than
20 gearless BEX extruders in Europe after only eight months on
the market. Sizes range from 1 in. with a 5-hp motor and 500
Nm of torque up to an 8-in. extruder with up to 330 hp and 3000
Nm.
|
| Troester’s new Rotospeed PXS 45-mm
diameter extruder runs on a four-motor direct drive at up to
800 rpm, doubling output vs. conventional geared extruders. |
Troester in Germany will show its new Rotospeed PXS extruder
for wire and cable, which also uses Knoedler’s four-motor
CMG drive. It is available in sizes of 30 to 75 mm diam., all
with 25:1 L/D. Troester plans to show the 45-mm at K. It can
achieve 800 rpm and produce the same output as a 60- to 80-mm
conventional extruder at 180 rpm.
Davis-Standard and Kuhne also
both plan to show extruders with a Knoedler CMG four-motor drive.
Knoedler
(represented here by Henschel America) says it is designing a
four-motor drive for a 12-in. extruder with up to 50,000 Nm of
torque, which should be ready in three months.
Extruders
will also be introduced at K that achieve higher speeds, lower
torque, and higher output by more conventional means. Maillefer
SA in Switzerland (represented here by Cable and Tubing Solutions)
will show a new high-speed MEH model with an AC motor. It runs
at up to 240 rpm instead of 160 rpm for a typical single-screw
extruder. The 60-mm, 30:1 unit has barrel grooves modified for
higher speeds.
Davis-Standard will introduce a compact 3.5-in.
extruder with a high-torque motor from Siemens. The variable-speed
motor runs with 7000 Nm of torque at 200 to 300 rpm and is directly
coupled to the drive shaft.
Plastimac SpA in Italy (distributed
here by American Jet Stream) will show 35-mm and 40-mm extruders
with AC motors directly coupled to the screw for higher speeds
and throughput. Both have bimetallic barrels to withstand the
higher rotation speeds.
New for blown film
Addex Inc. will introduce an extruder with a choice of grooved
or smooth feed section, available in 40 to 120-mm diam. Both
types of feed sections fit on the same chassis, so they are potentially
interchangeable. Addex also just built its first film flattener,
which has two S-wraps, one heated and one chilled.
|
| esde Maschinentechnik, a builder of extruders
for wire, cable and small profiles, applied a synchronousmotor
to its ESE1-0-28 extruder,which runs at 445 rpm. |
Macro Engineering & Technology
Inc. will show a new automatic dual-lip air ring called “D10
Pro,” designed for an 8-in. diam. die. It
has segmented air flow, using one valve for every 1.5 in. of
circumference.
Hosokawa Alpine will demonstrate the first prototype
of a new three-layer die. The K Series die has a new spiral geometry
that combines side- and bottom-fed features. It’s fed from
the side, but the spirals nest like those in bottom-fed dies.
The K series ranges from 10 to 30 in. diam.
Kiefel Extrusion will
show a new hauloff for very large bubbles with layflats of up
to 3.3 meters.
Windmoeller & Hoelscher will show a new Filmatic
S winder, a simpler, less expensive surface winder than W&H
has offered before. Customers can upgrade the modular unit in
the field by adding gap, reverse, or center assist winding to
the basic package.
Battenfeld
Gloucester Engineering is building a new back-to-back surface,
center, gap, and center/surface winder capable of up to 250 m/min.
Layflat can be up to 2.4 m and roll diam. up to 1.2 m. The first
unit built will be at the show.
Cast film & sheet
Battenfeld Extrusionstechnik will bring to the show a new planetary
extruder with four to eight screws, designed for sheet and calendering
of PVC, polyolefins, and urethane dispersions. An eight-screw
version is being adapted by American Maplan for extruding wood
composites. This unit has a 170-mm central screw and eight 2-in.
spindles.
|
| Battenfeld Extrusiontechnik’s new
WinBEX downstream calibration, cooling, cutting, and handling
equipment comes in prewired modules with short lead times. |
Extrusion Dies Industries will show new specialized
coatings for film and sheet dies, including a sharpening technique
for tungsten carbide coatings on BOPET dies and a corrosion resistant
ceramic coating for use with PVC.
Macro Engineering will show
samples of film striped in different colors. It is made on a
three-layer cast-film line with a special feedblock.
Battenfeld Gloucester has increased output on its Thermoforming
Sheet Line (TSL) by adding two more cooling rolls to the roll
stack, for a total of five, each individually cooled with closed-loop
temperature control.
Pipe & profile news
In twin-screw extruders, Cincinnati Extrusion has come out
with new Argos 72 EA and 90 EA parallel twin-screws for single-strand
window profiles. Output capacities are 176 to 484 lb/hr and 308
to 748 lb/hr, respectively. Both have 26:1 L/D and Windows XP
controls.
| More on Motors
Siemens builds Reifenhauser’s REItorque motor with a
potential for up to 11,000 Nm of torque. The first commercial
REItorque extruder, installed last year on a pipe line, used
only 5000 Nm of torque. The second installation, in June, was
for monolayer blown film using 7000 Nm of torque. Reifenhauser’s largest REItorque extrude at K will set a new record for a permanent-magnet extruder motor—11,000 Nm of torque.
Extrusion
trials, but no commercial production, are being run with Oswald’s
TF permanent-magnet synchronous motors having up to 4000 Nm
of torque. Oswald builds such motors for up to 10,000 Nm and
is developing models for up to 30,000 Nm. (Oswald has several
of these drives in commercial use on injection machines.) Oswald
has new MF and MA series of synchronous permanent-magnet motors
for up to 1000 Nm.
|
The company’s new Konos conical twin-screw line
of four models (38, 50, 63, and 72) can run 44 to 660 lb/hr of
profiles and 66 to 1210 lb/hr of pipe—a
20% increase over the previous Titan line. The increase is
credited to heavy-duty drives and longer screws.
Also new from
Cincinnati Extrusion are Alpha 45 and 60 single-screw profile
extruders. They are 3D longer (28:1) than earlier models and
have either standard grooved or fine-grooved feed sections. The
former is for PP and nylon and the latter for TPEs and TPU.
Several
machine makers are introducing new standardized downstream modules
for pipe and profile that reduce cost and delivery times. Battenfeld
Extrusionstechnik’s
new winBEX downstream window profile modules have prewired
calibration, cooling, cutting, and handling segments that can
be combined for any desired length.
Cincinnati Extrusion will
show its Alpha Tubeline, also with new downstream cooling and
handling modules for tubing of up to 63 mm diam. It includes
new cooling and calibration systems for the company’s Fiberex
wood-composite line, which are said to increase output (ten times
higher than at the last K) and achieve line speeds up to 3 meters/min.
Krauss-Maffei
will show a new, standardized profile extruder, KMD 75 XS/P,
running with new Windows-based C5 controls. The new controls
will be introduced in the U.S. at NPE 2006. Krauss-Maffei has
also lengthened its single-screw profile extruders from 30:1
L/D to 36:1. The added length allows for two degassing zones
and increases output, homogeneity, and the amount of filler that
can be used.
Maillefer will show patented in-line crosslinking
with infrared in place of hot fluid baths or steam.