Product Description

Rubber Roller | Industrial Rubber Roller | Printing Roller | Machine Roller | Pulley Roller

Rubber Roller

 

 

RUGAVAL RUBBER specialized in manufacturing and exporting different types of Rubber Roller for various types of Machines. Rubber Rollers for different types of Industry also per client’s custom requirement. Synthetic Nitrile Rubber Roll, Neoprene Rubber Rolls, Guide Rollers, Brush Roller, Super Hard Rubber Roll, Inflatable Rubber Tube, Nip Roll, Pinch Roller, Printing Rollers, Impression Rollers, Silicon Roller, EPDM Rubber Roll, Rubber Sleeves, Rubber Lining, Screen Exposing Tube, Quick Change Sleeve, Rubber Tube Roller, Rubber Blanket, PU Rollers, Rubber Covering. All our Rubber Rollers designed with high quality, durability and including performance meets the need per client. All type of Rubber rolls available for different industry with custom size and applications. Also, Rubber Rolls are widely attached in Flexible Packaging, Paper, and Textile Industries. Specialized for different machines like Stentor Machine, Rotary Machine, Jigger machine. Rubber Rolls with accurate dimension for different polymer per client’s requirement and different applications. Wrinkle Removing Rolls, Rubber Rolls, Industrial Roller, Textile Rolls, Bow Roll, Spreader, Expander Rollers, Banana Roller and many more.

 

 

Applications

 

Commonly, rubber roller applications relate to material application, movement facilitation and material support and transportation.

Examples of these applications include: conveyor belt, assembly line operation, grocery store checkout line operation, mail machine operation, printing, rotary screen printing, automotive rubber components laminating, industrial heat treat equipment operation, automatic car wash movement and boat trailer function. They’re also commonly used as wheels and castors.

However, rubber rolls are primarily used in conveyor belts to help move things since rubber has a high coefficient of friction that makes them apt candidate for covering rolls.

 

 

The History of Rubber Rollers

 

Before rubber, people used rollers made from materials like wood and metal. Rubber rollers would not exist if not for the discovery of vulcanization, developed by Charles Goodyear in 1840. Goodyear found that by adding a sulfur and lead and dropping the rubber mixture into a stove, it would become weather resistant, chemical resistant, water resistant and elastic.

 

Shortly after, as engineers experimented with the process, manufacturers of the Industrial Revolution discovered that they could add soft or hard rubber to a hard steel shaft to perform material nipping (pinching or squeezing) applications that the steel alone could not. Thus, the rubber roller was born.

 

After the rubber roller was invented, manufacturers in a wide variety of industries began using it for their purposes. For example, starting in the 1920s, publishers began relying on rubber rollers to spread thin glue layers and apply ink to their printing plates.

 

In the years ensuing, little has changed about the rubber roller, except the rubber materials with which it is made and the applications for which it used. Now, both the material possibilities and the application possibilities for rubber rolls have grown exponentially.

 

 

Design

 

Production Process

 

1. Rubber Fabrication

Standard rubber roller manufacturing involves a rubber fabrication step, which can be achieved either by plying method, extrusion, casting, or die press.

 

Plying involves the calendering process, during which, to make calendered rubber sheeting, rubber is passed through a combination of rollers. As the rubber sheet moves through the rollers, it is smoothed and flattened. Using this process, two types of polymer can be sandwiched together, if an application demands. Once the calendared sheet is ready, the sheet becomes a rubber cover of an iron core or another metal core. With that, it is a rubber roller. Based on client requirements, sheets can be polished, glazed or embossed.

Extrusion is the most common manufacturing method that involves an extruder. With this method, a rubber profile of fixed cross-sectional can be made continuously by-passing rubber through a die. In this process, raw material is heated by passing it through a screw mechanism, which heats material by a combined action of pressure and temperature, and then the material is pushed through the die. The critical step in this fabricating technique is curing, which involves conditioning the rubber product in a controlled environment where it is exposed predetermined temperature and pressure. The curing process gives the structural strength to a rubber product by removing porosity.

 

Casting, inarguably, is the oldest way of giving shape to a range of materials. From automobile engines to high-end sculptures, have been crafted by this method. Whatever the material is, all is molded by a same principle, which involves pouring of raw material in a mold and then exposing it to an oven for a period of time that cures it and set it in a predefined shape.

 

Die press rubber fabrication commonly involves a hydraulic press and a die. The die gives the shape to the raw rubber, whereas press provides pressure and heat to cure the rubber product. The process begins by filling raw rubber into a metal mold, and then a hydraulic arm fitted with a die presses the mold and provides heat and pressure. Unlike extrusion, the press method is not continuous, thus is not as efficient as extrusion.

 

2. Roller Manufacturing

Rubber rollers are usually manufactured via casting or molding, but they may also made through extrusion.

Casting processes are utilized only with rubber rollers that have metallic cores. In this case, cores are formed through a metal casting process like stamping, after which they are bound to a rubber coating. Binding is carried out using a bonding agent that usually made of polymer-solvent solutions, a primer coat based on phenolic-style resins and a top layer of mixed polymers and other various materials.

Rubber roller molding processes include compression molding and injection molding; these are used for solid rollers.

 

Extrusion of rubber rollers takes place when manufacturers heat chosen elastomeric material(s) and squeeze the molten material through a die that has a pin in the center to fabricate the hollow tube.

 

3. Grooving

The next step involves surface grooving. There are a number of grooves that can be created on a surface of rubber, including square, trapezoidal, “V”, double edge saw, half circle, and round. Moreover, on a rubber roll, these grooves can be made vertically, horizontally, helically, worm, diamond cut groove and screw threaded.

 

4. Inspection

At the end of this step, the products are inspected for aberration.

 

Materials

The elastomeric materials from which manufacturers can choose from is fairly varied. Each material has its own strengths and weaknesses, but all of them have some level of resistance to water, wear, certain chemicals and heat extremes.

 

Among the many, a few materials that are frequently used to fabricate rubber rollers include: EPDM, silicone, nitrile, neoprene, polyurethane and natural rubber. Metal core rollers are usually made with steel, stainless steel, aluminum or another metal that fits application requirements.

 

Considerations and Customization

When designing a rubber roll for a specific application, manufacturers consider a number of factors, such as: chemical contact (required chemical resistance/inertness), standard requirements, required length, load capacity, thickness, shape and tapering, etc. They also consider roller speed. If a roller is exposed to high speeds with large loads, manufacturers generally recommend you buy rubber rolls with a core that can be water cooled. When rubber is nipped, it releases heat—called hysteresis heat—and water cooling is an effective way to contain that heat.

 

Manufacturers can easily customize rubber rolls per your specifications. For example, you may order rubber rolls to meet unique diameter and length specifications, and you may order them in a variety of thicknesses and colors. In addition, manufacturers can use different types of rubber to make rollers inert against chemicals based on an application. They can also put on specialty finishes or coatings and specialty shaping. Find out more by discussing customization with your prospective supplier.

 

A Note on Load Capacity

A typical rubber roller has the maximum load capacity of 100 kilogram-force centimeter (kgf/cm) when force is exerted linearly. However, the load capacity of a roll varies with the rubber hardness, materials, and the rotation speed, as well as thickness of rubber, the temperature range, type of the core, and construction. Therefore, we recommend you check the rubber roller load capacity while installing them. If needed, your manufacturer can design a roller with greater load capacity of 100 kgf/cm. Ask your manufacturer if your requirement falls in this range.

 

Features

Rubber rolls feature a rubber outer covering and a metal core. They typically feature grooves, which offer a variety of possible uses depending on the application, such as: increasing the amount of coating, smoothing wrinkles out from a paper or plastic film, preventing belts from slipping in a conveyor system, embossing surfaces, helping to release heat created by friction and adding texture to rubber rolls.

 

Types

Ink rollers, also called printing rollers, apply ink to paper and other materials; rollers may contain ink within themselves or they may be engraved with a pattern.

 

Laminating rollers, made of heat resistant materials like silicone rubber, are heated up to 500°F to laminate materials on both a small and large scale.

 

Drive rollers are movement focused rubber rollers. Often used for converters and web machines, they operate using integral shafts equipped with keyway that acts as a gear.

Guide rollers, or idler rollers, provide support to other roller systems like conveyors, but they do not actually move anything.

 

Grooved rollers are called so because they have a grooved pattern, usually a spiral, U or V; grooved rollers are usually part of moving systems like belt driven conveyor systems.

 

Conveyor rolls, or conveyor rollers, simply move, or convey, materials.

 

Live shaft rollers are designed to withstand difficult environments and high load quantities; they have external bearings in which both the roller shaft and the roller rotate.

 

Dead shaft rollers have internal bearings located at the same place as a spinning roller that spins around a stationary shaft.

 

Cleaning rollers are used to remove dirt, dust and other contaminants from different surfaces. They are highly specialized to each surface they clean.

 

Spreader rollers, frequently machined with specialized groove designs, like herringbone, spiral, circumferential and lateral-fluted, are commonly used for webs spreading machinery and other spreading applications. In the case of web spreading machinery, spreader rollers stretch and spread the web to prevent and fix wrinkles.

Stinger rollers, finally, are configured very much like dead shaft rollers, but they are designed specifically for marine applications.

 

Urethane rollers, also known as polyurethane rollers, are made from a synthetic roller from polyurethane. They are inexpensive to produce, they have many great qualities, including: shock resistance, formability, durability, elasticity and strength. Urethane rollers are best for use in: data storage, packaging and assembling, printing, material handling, measurement systems and office equipment.

 

EPDM rollers are heat resistant, corrosion and oxidation resistant and weather resistant, and are thus quite versatile. However, they do not hold up well against petroleum products.

 

Industrial rubber rollers are rubber rolls used in industrial applications, primarily manufacturing machines like: stamping presses, conveyor systems, bending machines, printing presses, and the like. Many types of rollers can be categorized as industrial rollers, as long as they perform industrial applications.

 

Advantages of Rubber Rolls

Rubber rollers offer their users a wide range of advantages. First, unlike metal rollers used in conveyor system, rubber rolls have high coefficient of friction, which provides great traction in moving parts and components. Also, rollers can compensate for small changes emerging from machine functions. In addition, these rollers offer all of the advantages of rubber itself.

 

The reason that rubber is such a popular material for making rollers and assisting object movement is that it can be repeatedly compressed and relaxed without losing its shape. A material that could not hold its shape, which would need constant replacing, would be virtually useless. In addition, rubber can absorb shocks and resist and protect against damage and scratching. Rubber is also fairly inexpensive to extract and manipulate. Another great thing about rubber rollers is the fact that the rubber can be removed and recycled again and again.

 

Proper Care for Rubber Rolls

Rubber rolls, just like every other component, has its limits and should be used as per the instructions. To learn how to extend the working life of your rubber rolls, read the advice below.

 

Temperature Regulation

High temperature is an enemy of rubber, regardless of the rubber type used for making rolls. Therefore, it is best to avoid rapid heating while using rubber rolls. You should also avoid rapid heating because the bonding adhesive usually has low heat resistance even lower than the rubber. If your application demands work under high temperature, we recommend you keep your roller temperatures under operating range by water cooling them.

 

Storage

To avoid damage, you also need to store them properly. While storing a rubber roll, you must hold the shafts and stand them upright, so the rubber part does get exposed to other materials. Moreover, since rubber can be damaged by UV light, we recommend that you store your roller in a cool and dark place.

 

Maintenance Checks

During regular maintenance checks, you need to pay special attention to a number of roller parts. These include: ball bearings, axes and gears. Watch out for: worn-out ball bearings, bearings misaligned along their axes, overloaded gears, faulty gears, unbalanced rollers and deflected rollers.

 

Standards

Rubber rolls are subject to a number of different standard requirements, depending on their application. For example, rubber machinery like extruders, generally speaking, any rubber roll you purchase should meet ISO standards for rubber products. In addition, most rubber rolls are rated according to ASTM International’s rubber hardness scale. This is helpful for determining if the roll meets your requirements.

 

Contact Details

Rubber Roller | Industrial Rubber Roller | Printing Roller | Machine Roller | Pulley Roller

Supplier : Rugaval Rubber Sdn Bhd
Email : rugavalrubber@gmail.com
Phone : 60351918961
Fax : 60351915961
Location : Selangor, Malaysia

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