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On the creasing, folding and gluing of corrugated fibreboards
A case conversion process has been investigated with a view to understanding and ultimately improving the case quality. In particular, fishtailing, or the squareness of case, has been studied in relation to creasing, folding and gluing. The process has been optimized in terms of fishtailing on the i...
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Format: | Default Thesis |
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1993
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/2134/27793 |
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author | Andrew M. Lau |
author_facet | Andrew M. Lau |
author_sort | Andrew M. Lau (7200863) |
collection | Figshare |
description | A case conversion process has been investigated with a view to understanding and ultimately improving the case quality. In particular, fishtailing, or the squareness of case, has been studied in relation to creasing, folding and gluing. The process has been optimized in terms of fishtailing on the individual panels. Uni-directional fishtailing results have been attributed to the existing method of folding. To this end, the folding mechanism has been studied and two innovations, generic to any continuous folding operations, have been suggested: the coil cam and the twin cam. [Continues.] |
format | Default Thesis |
id | rr-article-9516485 |
institution | Loughborough University |
publishDate | 1993 |
record_format | Figshare |
spelling | rr-article-95164851993-01-01T00:00:00Z On the creasing, folding and gluing of corrugated fibreboards Andrew M. Lau (7200863) Mechanical engineering not elsewhere classified untagged Mechanical Engineering not elsewhere classified A case conversion process has been investigated with a view to understanding and ultimately improving the case quality. In particular, fishtailing, or the squareness of case, has been studied in relation to creasing, folding and gluing. The process has been optimized in terms of fishtailing on the individual panels. Uni-directional fishtailing results have been attributed to the existing method of folding. To this end, the folding mechanism has been studied and two innovations, generic to any continuous folding operations, have been suggested: the coil cam and the twin cam. [Continues.] 1993-01-01T00:00:00Z Text Thesis 2134/27793 https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/On_the_creasing_folding_and_gluing_of_corrugated_fibreboards/9516485 CC BY-NC-ND 2.5 |
spellingShingle | Mechanical engineering not elsewhere classified untagged Mechanical Engineering not elsewhere classified Andrew M. Lau On the creasing, folding and gluing of corrugated fibreboards |
title | On the creasing, folding and gluing of corrugated fibreboards |
title_full | On the creasing, folding and gluing of corrugated fibreboards |
title_fullStr | On the creasing, folding and gluing of corrugated fibreboards |
title_full_unstemmed | On the creasing, folding and gluing of corrugated fibreboards |
title_short | On the creasing, folding and gluing of corrugated fibreboards |
title_sort | on the creasing, folding and gluing of corrugated fibreboards |
topic | Mechanical engineering not elsewhere classified untagged Mechanical Engineering not elsewhere classified |
url | https://hdl.handle.net/2134/27793 |