CA1147799A - Machine and method for continuously casting battery grids - Google Patents

Machine and method for continuously casting battery grids

Info

Publication number
CA1147799A
CA1147799A CA000357129A CA357129A CA1147799A CA 1147799 A CA1147799 A CA 1147799A CA 000357129 A CA000357129 A CA 000357129A CA 357129 A CA357129 A CA 357129A CA 1147799 A CA1147799 A CA 1147799A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
lead
drum
shoe
slot
orifice slot
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
CA000357129A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
John W. Wirtz
Raymond L. Schenk
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Wirtz Manufacturing Co Inc
Original Assignee
Wirtz Manufacturing Co Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Wirtz Manufacturing Co Inc filed Critical Wirtz Manufacturing Co Inc
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1147799A publication Critical patent/CA1147799A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22DCASTING OF METALS; CASTING OF OTHER SUBSTANCES BY THE SAME PROCESSES OR DEVICES
    • B22D11/00Continuous casting of metals, i.e. casting in indefinite lengths
    • B22D11/06Continuous casting of metals, i.e. casting in indefinite lengths into moulds with travelling walls, e.g. with rolls, plates, belts, caterpillars
    • B22D11/0602Continuous casting of metals, i.e. casting in indefinite lengths into moulds with travelling walls, e.g. with rolls, plates, belts, caterpillars formed by a casting wheel and belt, e.g. Properzi-process
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22DCASTING OF METALS; CASTING OF OTHER SUBSTANCES BY THE SAME PROCESSES OR DEVICES
    • B22D25/00Special casting characterised by the nature of the product
    • B22D25/02Special casting characterised by the nature of the product by its peculiarity of shape; of works of art
    • B22D25/04Casting metal electric battery plates or the like

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Continuous Casting (AREA)
  • Cell Electrode Carriers And Collectors (AREA)

Abstract

AJD:jss MACHINE AND METHOD FOR
CONTINUOUSLY CASTING BATTERY GRIDS

Abstract of the Disclosure A machine for casting battery grids has a rotary drum, the pattern of the battery grid cavity being recessed into the outer periphery thereof. An arcuate shoe is fixedly positioned against the drum in sliding contact with the outer peripheral surface thereof. The shoe has an internal passageway connect-ed to an orifice slot which extends to the periphery of the drum. The orifice slot is connected at one end to a source of molten lead under pressure and at its other end to a restricted outlet which maintains the molten lead in the orifice slot under pressure and con-trols the rate of flow of the molten lead through the orifice slot.

------------ o ------------

Description

11~7799 This invention relates to a battery grid casting machine and method, and, more particularly, to a machine and method for casting battery grids in a continuous manner.
~t the present time battery grids are normally cast individually in molds having separable mold sections, the grid pattern cavity being machined as shallow grooves in the opposed faces of the mold sections. The mold faces in which the grid cavity is machined are periodically coat-ed with a thin layer of powdered cork or acetylene smoke which acts as an insulator to prevent the lead from chill-ing before all of the grooves definig the grid pattern are completely filled. The production of individual battery grids in this manner is a relatively slow process and requires a considerable amount of skill on the part of the operator.
In recent years attempts have been made to cast battery grids in a more rapid, continuous manner utiliz-ing a rotary drum having the desired battery grid pattern cavity machined into the outer peripheral surface of the drum. Such continuous casting machines have presented numerous problems, especially with respect to the diffi-culty in obtaining complete filling of the shallow grooves forming the grid cavity with molten lead while rotating the drum at a reasonably rapid rate. Because of this ~ 4t7799 and other problems encountered, continuous casting of battery grids with such drums has not enjoyed wide commercial use at the present time.
The primary object of the present invention is to provide a machine and method for casting battery grids in a continuous manner which overcomes the problems here-tofore encountered with such methods and machines.
More specifically, it is an object of this in-vention to provide a machine and method for continuously casting battery grids which utilize a rotary drum having the grid cavity machined in the outer peripheral surface thereof and in which complete and rapid filling of the grid cavity is assured by directing the lead thereto under substantial pre~sure and in an amount greatly in excess of that required to fill the grid cavity as the drum rotates.
The machine of the present invention includes a shoe having a smooth arcuate surface conforming closely to the outer cylindrical surface of the drum. The shoe is held in fixed position against the outer periphery of the drum while the drum is rotating so as to provide a smooth sliding engagement therewith. An internal passageway in the shoe extends to the surface of the drum and is connect-ed to a source of molten lead under pressure and the out-let is restricted by suitable means to maintaio the molten 1~4t77~9 metal flowing through the passageway under superatmos-pheric pressure. This arrangement produces several desirable advantages discussed hereinafter.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the follow-ing description and accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a vertical sectional view of a battery grid casting machine according to the present invention taken on a plane transverse to the axis of rotation of the casting drum;
. FIG. 2 is a plan view of a portion of the con-: tinuous battery grid strip cast in the machine;
FIG. 3 is a sectional view taken along the line 3-3 in FIG. l;
FIG. 4 is a sectional view generally along the line 4-4 in FIG. 3;
FIG. 4a is an enlarged view of a portion of the arrangement shown in FIG. 4;
FIG. S is an enlarged sectional view of a por-tion of the machine shown in FIG. l;
FIG. 6 is a fragmentary sectional view taken along the line 6-6 in FIG. 5;
FIG. 7 is a sectional view of a modified form of shoe on the machine;
FIG. 8 is a sectional view taken along the line 8-8 in FIG. 7; and ~4'77~9 FIG. 9, which is on the same sheet of drawings as FIGS. 1 and 2, is a fragmentary side elevational view, partly in section, of another modification of the machine.
Referring first to FIGS. 1 and 3, the machine comprises a supporting frame 10 by means of which it is mounted on the supporting structure 12 of a heated lead pot 14. Frame 10 can be of any suitable construction and, in the arrangement shown, includes a pair of spaced channels 16 supported at their opposite ends for vertical adjustment on upright threaded rods 18. A pair of pillow blocks 20 on channels 16 support a shaft 22 to which a ca~ting drum 24 is keyed. A suitable drive 26 is connect-ed to shaft 22 for rotating drum 24 at the desired speed.
In the arrangement shown in FIG. 1 drum 24 is rotated in a counterclockwise direction.
A pair of support bars 28 is mounted on shaft 22 at opposite sides of drum 24 by means of pillow blocks 30. Each support bar 28 has one end ~hereof fixed to its adjacent channel 16 at a desired angle of inclination by a screw 32. A pair of laterally spaced guide bars 34 is mounted on support bars 28 by screws 36,38 which enable the guide bars 34 to be adjusted toward and away from support bars 28. Between guide bars 34 there is mounted a shoe 40.

~ ~ .
~ a~

1~47~9 The desired pattern of the battery grid cavity 42 is machined in the smooth outer cylindrical surface of drum 24. This grid pattern comprises a plurality of cir-cumferentially extending grooves 44 and a plurality of ~, 5 transversely extending grooves 46. Grooves 44 are adapt-ed to form the longitudinally extending wires 44a,44b and the transverse grooves 46 are adapted to form the trans-verse wires 46a,46b of the finished grid shown in FIG. 2.
The wires 44b and 46b are normally wider than the wires 44a and 46a and form the outer framework of the finished grid. At one side of the grid the groove 44 is enlarged to form the conventional solder lug 44c adjacent one end of each grid. At each side thereof the grid cavity terminates inwardly from the side edges of drum 24 so that the laterally outer edge portions 48 of the drum 24 are in the form of smooth, continuous, cylindrical sur-faces which lie in the same cylindrical surface as the pads 48a bounded by grooves 44,46. In the embodiment illustrated the drum 24 comprises a central web 50 with a cylindrical flange 52 extending around the periphery thereof. The grid cavity 42 is machined around the outer face of flange 52.

~i:47799 Shoe 40 is in the form of a block of metal having a smooth curved surface 54 which conforms closely to and which i8 in sliding engagement with the outer cylindrical surface portions 48,48a of drum 24. A smooth sliding engagement between the curved surface 54 of shoe 40 and the outer peripheral surface of the drum 24 is ob-tained by the adjustment of screws 36,38. In the embodi-ments illustrated in FIGS. 1 through 6 and 9 shoe 40 has an inlet 56 at one side thereof and an outlet 58 at the opposite side thereof. An internal orifice slot 60 ex-tending transver6ely acro6s shoe 40 and open at the curved surface 54 thereof extends between inlet 56 and outlet 58. Orifice slot 60 is of smaller cross section than the inlet and the outlet and is connected thereto at its OppO9 ite ends by upwardly angled passageways 62.
As shown in FIG. 6, the orifice slot 60 is co-extensive in a direction transversely of drum 24 with the grid cavity 42 therein. As shown in FIG. 3, a conduit 64 ex-tends downwardly from inlet 56 into the molten lead in pot 14 and is connected with the outlet of a pump 66.
A suitable drive shaft 68 extending upwardly from the pump is provided for driving the pump at the desired speed. A similar conduit 70 extends downwardly into the lead pot 14 from outlet 58 and discharges into the lead pot through a restricting valve 72, the amount of restric-tion provided by valve 72 being adjustable by control rod ~147799 74. Valve 72 allows adjustment of the rate of lead flow and back pressure in orifice slot 60.
The liquid level in lead pot 14 is designated by the broken line 76. It will be noted that the lower 5 portion of drum 24 is spaced above the lead level 76 and that the shoe 40 is partially submerged within the lead in pot 14. Shoe 40 is provided with a plurality of cool-ant passageways 78, each of which is located above the lead level 76. In the arrangement shown three such 10 passageways 78 extend transversely through shoe 40 down-stream of orifice slot 60 and one such passageway 78 ex-tends transversely through shoe 40 upstream of orifice slot 60. The upstream coolant passageway 78 is provided to prevent molten lead from flowing in a clockwise direc-15 tion from orifice slot 60 and di~charging from betweenthe drum and the upstream end of shoe 40O The terms "upstream" and "downstream" are used with reference to the direction of rotation of drum 24. Passageways 78 are connected by suitable piping 80 for conducting cool-20 ant (such as water) through shoe 40. A thermocouple isalso preferably located in shoe 40 within a thermocouple recess 82.
In operation drum 24 is rotated at a desired speed and pump 66 is operated to provide a continuous supply of molten lead alloy (for example at 70Q-800 F.) to inlet 56. The interior of the drum flange 52 is preferably cooled by air nozzles 84 so that the casting surface of the drum will be maintained at a temperature (for example 400-500~ F.) substantially below the solidi-fication temperature of the alloy being cast. Thus, themolten lead directed into orifice slot 60 through inlet 56 from pump 66 is quickly chilled as it comes into con-tact with the surfaces 48,48a and the grooves 44,46 on the outer surface of drum 24. Since the drum is rotat-ing in a counterclockwise direction, the lead which tendsto solidify on the surfaces 48,48a is scraped off of these surfaces by the downstream edge 86 of orifice slot 60 and tends to accumulate along this edge. However, since the molten lead directed through the orifice slot 60 by pump 66 is far in excess of that required to fill the adjacent portion of the rotating cavity, the continuous stream of lead flowing through orifice slot 60 i8 maintained at a relatively high temperature sufficient to melt, break-up or remove the solidified lead scraped from the surface of the drum. This rapid and continuous flow of high temperature molten lead through the orifice slot 60 thus prevents the solidified lead from building up along the edge 86 and thereby prevents clogging of the orifice slot 60. In addition, since valve 72 provides a restric-tion for the free flow of lead back to the lead pot through outlet 58, the lead in orifice slot 60 is maintained ata desirably high, superatmospheric pressure. This pres-sure is sufficient to continuously feed and force molten lead into the portions of grooves 44,46 that have rotated upwardly past orifice slot 60. This assures a final and complete filling of the grooves 44,46 even if the grooves have voids therein after they rotate past the orifice slot 60. Thus, the combination of the excessive lead flow and the superatmospheric pressure on the lead being directed into the grid cavity assures complete filling of the successive portions of the grid cavity while still maintaining a very rapid chill within the grooves. The rapid chill results in a very fine and uniform grain struc-ture in the lead alloy. This ~ery fine grain structure is excellent in cast battery grids because of its resis-tance to corrosion.
As the filled portions of grooves 44,46 rotate upwardly in a counterclockwise direction they advance along the portion of shoe 40 cooled by the coolant passage-ways 78 on the downstream side of orifice slot 60. Thus,the temperature of the lead in these groove~ is progres-sively lowered such that, aq it emerges from the down-stream end of the shoe, the lead has solidified into a continuous strip having the battery grid pattern. The strip S is preferably stripped from the top side of the 77~

drum so that it will have cooled to a sufficiently low temperature to assume a sufficiently rigid condition to permit easy handling. The grid strip is cooled substan-tially after it emerges from between the shoe and drum by the nozzles 84 which direct streams of air against the interior and exterior surfaces of flange 52 as these surfaces rotate past the shoe and before the grid is stripped therefrom. Thereafter, strip S is advanced to a die (not illustrated) which shears it into individual battery grids.
In a typical machine according to the present invention the drum has a diameter of about 18 inches, a width of about 3-1/4 inches and is rotated at about 20 R.P.M. to produce a lineal speed of 94 feet per minute.
The battery grids are cast from a lead alloy containing about .0~/O Ca and .3% Sn and have a length of 5-1/2 inches, a width of 2 inches and a thickness of .035 inches. Each grid weighs about 18 grams and the grid strip weighs about .085 pounds per foot. At a lineal speed of 94 feet per minute the grid strip uses about 8 pounds of alloy per minute. Pump 66 has a capacity of about 45 pounds per minute and can be operated at full capacity or its inlet can be adjusted so that the pump delivers somewhat less than its full capacity de-pending upon the setting of restrictor valve 72. Theshoe 40 has a length of about 4 inches and a width of 10 .

1~t7799 about 3-1/4 inches. The orifice slot 60 has a width of about 3/8 inches, a depth of about 5/16 inches and is located about 1 inch from the upstream end of the shoe.
The lead pot is heated to a temperature of be-tween 750 to 800 F. With cooling water at about 70 F.
and the air nozzles as shown, the temperature of the shoe stabilizes at about 575 F. and at the outer surface of the drum at about 450 F.
While these relative dimensions and other para-meters are given by way of example and are not critical, several basic considerations are important. For example, it is very important to maintain a close sliding fit be-tween the curved surface 54 of the shoe 40 and the outer peripheral surface of the drum. Since the temperature of the shoe differs substantially from the temperature of the drum and since the temperatures o each vary somewhat at different sections thereof, the length of shoe 40 should be maintained at a minimum consistent with rela-tively fast solidification of the grid strip in order to assure close sliding contact between them. Furthermore, a longer shoe requires the application of a greater clamp-ing force to the drum to obtain the proper close fit therebetween and results in excessive friction. A rela-tively narrow orifice slot is also desirable to prevent - 25 the temperature of the drum from becoming excessively high at the section thereof contacting the shoe. Further-more, it is important that the upstream end of the shoe and the portion of the drum in contact therewith be main-tained at temperatures sufficiently low to prevent the pressurized molten lead from leaking out therebetween.
The amount of molten lead delivered by the pump must be sufficiently in excess of the amount required to fill the grid cavity to maintain the temperature of the lead in the orifice slot sufficiently high to melt and wash away the lead that solidifies against the outer smooth sur-face portions of the drum. In addition, the pressure on the molten lead in the orifice slot must be sufficiently high to force the lead up into any voids or past any lead blockages that might occur in the cavity grooves 44,46 as they rotate upwardly past the orifice slot.
The shoe 88 shown in FIGS. 7 and 8 differs only slightly from shoe 40 previously described. In shoe 88 two molten lead passageways 90,92 extend trans-versely through the shoe. At one end these passageways are plugged. At the opposite end one of these passage-ways is connected to an inlet pipe extending from pump 66 and the other passageway is connected to an outlet pipe extending to the restriction valve 72. At the curved surface 94 of the shoe 88 an orifice slot 96 similar to orifice slot 60 is machined. However, orifice ~147~9 slot 96 is closed at its opposite ends. A plurality of two sets of oppositely inclined passageways 98,100 ex-tend, respectively, from passageways 90,92 to the ori-fice slot 96. Thus, referring to FIG. 8 and assuming that passageway 90 is the inlet passageway and passage-way 92 is the outlet passageway, the molten lead is directed as a continuous stream which flows upwardly through the inclined passageways 98 into the orifice slot 96 and then downwardly from orifice slot 96 into the discharge passageway 92 and back to the lead pot through the restriction valve 72. It will be observed that, whether the lead passageways through the shoe are formed in the manner illustrated in FIGSo 1 through 6 or in the manner illustrated in FIGS. 7 and 8, the ori-fice slot is connected in series relation with the in-let and the outlet of the lead recirculation path. Thu~, the hot molten lead continuously recirculates throughout the entire length of the orifice slot. This constant flow of molten lead at high temperature and superatmos-pheric pressure prevents e~cessive chilling and leadbuild up on the locali~ed surfaces of the drum against which the molten lead is directed. It also insures that the solidified lead scraped off the drum by the down-stream edge of the orifice slot will be melted, broken up or otherwise removed to prevent clogging of the 13, ~1477~9 orifice slot and incomplete filling of the grooves form-ing the battery grid cavity.
The arrangement shown in FIG. 9 differs from that shown in FIG. 1 in that the shoe 40a is located at the top side of drum 24 rather than at the bottom side thereof. When the shoe is located so that it is not partially submerged in the molten lead in pot 14, the temperature thereof is maintained at the relatively high value required by means of auxiliary heaters 102. In other respects the construction and operation of the modification shown in FIG. 9 are substantially the same as in the embodiments previously described.
In each of the embodiments illustrated it will be noted that the drum is located out of contact with the molten lead in the lead pot. This is desirable not only from the standpoint of maintaining the drum at a desir-ably low temperature to produce rapid solidication, but also because, if the drum is wetted by the lead bath, oxides and other contaminants form, collect or build up on the outer peripheral surface of the drum. It will also be noted that the lead flows between the lead pot and the orifice slot in the completely closed path. This substantially completely eliminates the tendency for the formation and entrainment of oxide films and particles in the molten metal being cast.

lA

Claims (12)

1. A machine for continuously casting battery grids comprising a rotary drum having a cylindrical outer sur-face, means for rotating the drum in one direction at a predetermined speed, said outer surface having a cavity recessed therein which conforms to the desired battery grid pattern, a fixedly supported shoe having an arcuate surface thereon extending around a relatively short arcuate segment of the outer cylindrical surface of the drum in close fitting sliding relation, said shoe hav-ing a passageway therein for molten lead, a portion of said passageway comprising an orifice slot extending directly to and transversely of said arcuate surface and communicating with a circumferential segment of the peripheral surface of the drum across substantially the full width of the grid cavity, a pot for molten lead, means for directing molten lead from said pot to said passageway in an amount substantially in excess of that required to progressively fill the grid cavity as the drum rotates past the orifice slot, means for directing the excess lead from the passageway back to the lead pot, means for maintaining the molten lead in the orifice slot and grid cavity at superatmospheric pressure to insure complete filling of the grid cavity, means for maintaining the outer peripheral surface of the drum at a temperature sufficiently below the melt-ing temperature of the lead so that a portion of the lead tends to solidify against the periphery of the rotating drum within the circumferential extent of the orifice slot, the downstream side of the orifice slot being de-fined by a transversely extending edge adapted to scrap the solidified lead from the outermost surface of the drum and means for causing the molten lead to flow through the orifice slot at a sufficiently high velocity to at least partially remelt and wash away the lead accumulat-ing at said downstream edge of the slot for return to the lead pot.
2. A machine as called for in claim 1 wherein said means for maintaining the lead in the orifice slot at superatmospheric pressure comprises flow restricting means for preventing free flow of the lead from the orifice slot back to the lead pot.
3. A machine as called for in claim 1 wherein both the drum and shoe are located such as to be out of physi-cal contact with the lead in the lead pot and means for maintaining the shoe at a selected elevated temperature to maintain the lead in the orifice slot at a desired casting temperature and means for maintaining the periph-eral surface of the rotating drum at a sufficiently low temperature to promote relatively rapid and complete solidification of the lead in the portion of the grid cavity extending between the downstream edge of the ori-fice slot and the downstream end of the shoe.
4. A machine as called for in claim 1 wherein said passageway has an inlet and an outlet connected in series relation with said orifice slot to assure a continuous flow of molten lead throughout the length of the orifice slot.
5. A machine as called for in claim 1 wherein the orifice slot extends transversely of the shoe at a loca-tion closer to the upstream end of the shoe than the down-stream end of the shoe.
6. A machine as called for in claim 5 including means for cooling the upstream end portion of the shoe to prevent egress of lead from between the drum and the up-stream end of the shoe and means for cooling the down-stream end portion of the shoe to a greater extent than the upstream end portion of the shoe.
7. A machine as called for in claim 1 wherein said passageway has an inlet and an outlet located on opposite sides of said orifice slot and spaced radially outwardly therefrom, said inlet being connected to the orifice slot by a radially inwardly inclined passageway section and said outlet being connected to the orifice slot by a radially outwardly inclined passageway section so that the molten lead flows into the orifice slot in a direc-tion towards the periphery of the drum and flows out of the orifice slot in a direction away from the periphery of the drum.
8. The method of continuously casting battery grids around a rotating cylindrical drum having a grid cavity recessed into the outer peripheral surface there-of by directing molten lead from a lead pot to succes-sive segments of the peripheral surface of the rotating drum through an orifice slot in a fixed shoe having a relatively short, circumferentially extending, curved surface conforming to and positioned against the per-iphery of the drum in close sliding engagement, said slot extending transversely across substantially the entire width of the grid cavity directly adjacent the periphery of the drum, which includes the steps of continuously directing molten lead through said shoe to said orifice slot and into the portion of the grid cavity rotating past the slot in an amount substantially in excess of that required to fill said portion of the cavity; maintaining the lead in said slot at superatmos-pheric pressure to insure complete filling of the grid cavity; controlling the temperature of the drum so that a portion of the lead tends to solidify against the periphery of the rotating drum within the circumferential extent of the orifice slot; causing the downstream edge of the slot to scrap the solidified lead from the outer-most surface of the drum; causing the excess molten lead to flow back to the lead pot; and directing the molten lead through the slot at a sufficiently high velocity to at least partially remelt and wash away the lead accumu-lating at the downstream edge of the slot.
9. The method called for in claim 8 wherein said lead in said slot is maintained at superatmospheric pres-sure by restricting the free flow thereof back to the lead pot.
10. The method called for in claim 8 including the step of cooling the drum to a sufficiently low tempera-ture to insure rapid and complete solidification of the battery grid as it emerges from the downstream end of the shoe.
11. The method called for in claim 8 wherein the drum and shoe are maintained out of physical contact with the lead in the lead pot.
12. The method called for in claim 11 wherein the orifice slot is located circumferentially between the up-stream and the downstream ends of the shoe and including the step of cooling the shoe on both the upstream and the downstream sides of the orifice slot, the shoe being cool-ed on the downstream side of the orifice slot to a greater extent than on the upstream side thereof.
CA000357129A 1979-08-09 1980-07-28 Machine and method for continuously casting battery grids Expired CA1147799A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US6536579A 1979-08-09 1979-08-09
US6,065,365 1979-08-09

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1147799A true CA1147799A (en) 1983-06-07

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CA000357129A Expired CA1147799A (en) 1979-08-09 1980-07-28 Machine and method for continuously casting battery grids

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JP (1) JPS5837057B2 (en)
BE (1) BE884625A (en)
CA (1) CA1147799A (en)
DE (1) DE3028957C2 (en)
FR (1) FR2462950A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2055646B (en)
IT (1) IT1145698B (en)

Families Citing this family (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS58141839A (en) * 1982-02-19 1983-08-23 Hitachi Ltd Method and device for casting metallic strip
CN103056346B (en) * 2012-12-28 2015-08-05 上海素朴智能设备制造有限公司 Automatic cast welding machine leading portion auxiliary units and method
CN104139174B (en) * 2014-08-08 2016-04-06 重庆远风机械有限公司 The rotation mould of battery grid continuous casting equipment cleans assembly
CN114749638A (en) * 2022-05-24 2022-07-15 天能电池集团股份有限公司 Quick aging device and method for plate grid

Family Cites Families (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR1488705A (en) * 1967-10-26
US1636242A (en) * 1921-01-03 1927-07-19 Hazelett Storage Battery Compa Apparatus for and method of forming storage-battery grids
US3455371A (en) * 1964-08-14 1969-07-15 Gen Motors Corp Battery grid casting method and machine
GB1243351A (en) * 1967-10-25 1971-08-18 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd An apparatus for producing grids of storage batteries
CA934522A (en) * 1971-04-13 1973-10-02 H. Smith Carleton Method and apparatus for casting metal grids such as lead battery plates
US3789909A (en) * 1972-11-07 1974-02-05 Gen Motors Corp Dip casting method using transpirationally cooled mold having relieved impervious outer layer
DE7825546U1 (en) * 1978-08-28 1979-11-08 Accumulatorenwerk Hoppecke Carl Zoellner & Sohn, 5000 Koeln DEVICE FOR THE CONTINUOUS PRODUCTION OF GRIDS FOR LEAD ACCUMULATORS

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GB2055646B (en) 1983-02-09
DE3028957C2 (en) 1983-11-17
JPS5630063A (en) 1981-03-26
FR2462950A1 (en) 1981-02-20
GB2055646A (en) 1981-03-11
DE3028957A1 (en) 1981-02-26
IT8049437A0 (en) 1980-08-06
FR2462950B1 (en) 1983-06-24
BE884625A (en) 1981-02-04
IT1145698B (en) 1986-11-05
JPS5837057B2 (en) 1983-08-13

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