GB2098953A - Turning articles in packaging machines - Google Patents

Turning articles in packaging machines Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2098953A
GB2098953A GB8210190A GB8210190A GB2098953A GB 2098953 A GB2098953 A GB 2098953A GB 8210190 A GB8210190 A GB 8210190A GB 8210190 A GB8210190 A GB 8210190A GB 2098953 A GB2098953 A GB 2098953A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
ramp
platform
pushers
article
articles
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB8210190A
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GB2098953B (en
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.)
Baker Perkins Ltd
Original Assignee
Baker Perkins Ltd
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 Baker Perkins Ltd filed Critical Baker Perkins Ltd
Priority to GB8210190A priority Critical patent/GB2098953B/en
Publication of GB2098953A publication Critical patent/GB2098953A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2098953B publication Critical patent/GB2098953B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65GTRANSPORT OR STORAGE DEVICES, e.g. CONVEYORS FOR LOADING OR TIPPING, SHOP CONVEYOR SYSTEMS OR PNEUMATIC TUBE CONVEYORS
    • B65G47/00Article or material-handling devices associated with conveyors; Methods employing such devices
    • B65G47/22Devices influencing the relative position or the attitude of articles during transit by conveyors
    • B65G47/24Devices influencing the relative position or the attitude of articles during transit by conveyors orientating the articles
    • B65G47/248Devices influencing the relative position or the attitude of articles during transit by conveyors orientating the articles by turning over or inverting them
    • B65G47/252Devices influencing the relative position or the attitude of articles during transit by conveyors orientating the articles by turning over or inverting them about an axis substantially perpendicular to the conveying direction

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)

Abstract

Article feeding apparatus includes a series of equally spaced pushers 16 for advancing along a platform a procession of sweets or the like lying flat on the platform. The platform has a downwardly extending convex ramp 34 and as the sweets travel down the ramp they are turned through 90 DEG to an erect position under control of one or more restraining fingers 36 which move in timed relationship with the pushers. A further turnover device may be provided for turning the erected sweets through a further 90 DEG . <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Improvements in packaging machines It is known to apply wrappers and individual sweets and like articles by a primary wrapper and to feed the wrapped articles along a platform as a uniformly spaced procession by a series of regularly pitched pushers which engage behind and advance the individual articles which lie flat on the platform when delivered onto it from the primary wrapper. The purpose of this is to collate the articles into batches, which are thereafter fed to an overwrapper which applies a further wrapper to each collated batch.
If it should be desired to produce over-wrapped batches in which the articles stand erect instead of flat, it is necessary to turn each article in the procession from the flat to the erect orientation prior to collation and this presents a considerable problem in a modern high speed packaging machine which is required to wrap the articles at a speed as high as 1000 articles per minute.
A first approach to the problem is to provide a ramp in the platform, down which the articles are moved by the pushers from an initial higher level, at which the articles are delivered to the platform from the primary level, to a lower level at which collation is effected. It has been found, however, that this alone is insufficient because at high speeds of operation the articles tend to overshoot the ramp and arrive at the lower level of platform in a flat rather than an erect condition. As will be appreciated, failure of only a single article to be turned through 900 as it moves down the ramp will necessitate stoppage of the machine until the fault is corrected.
The invention provides article feeding apparatus comprising a platform having an upper horizontal portion, a lower horizontal portion and an upwardly convex curved ramp leading from the upper to the lower portion, a chain conveyor carrying a series of regularly pitched pushers arranged to feed along the upper portion of the platform and down the ramp a procession of individual sweets or like articles lying flat on said upper portion and restraining means moving in time relationship with and cooperating with the pushers, which include a finger arranged to co-operate with the leading end of each article as it reaches the ram to cause the article to conform with the ramp and turn through 900 to an erect position as it reaches the lower portion of the platform and thereafter to move away from the erected article to free it for continued advance by its pusher.
The resulting means is conveniently constituted by a positively rotated paddle wheel carrying a single blade constituting the finger, which coacts with each article in the procession, or a plurality of equally spaced blades which coact with consecutive articles in the procession.
It is sometimes a requirement that, instead of undergoing overwrapping, batches in which the articles lie flat should be further collated into rectangular assemblies for insertion into display cartoons. This could be achieved by omission of the ramp and the associated turning of the articles but this would not be acceptable for the following reason.
The articles delivered to the platform have the overlap seam in the wrapper applied by the primary wrapper on their top surfaces and the appearance of these seams through the window of a display carton is regarded as objectionable.
The invention accordingly includes the provision of a further turnover device for turning the articles through a further 900, after they have experienced the initial turning through 900 as they pass down the ramp, so that they lie flat in the collated batches with the seams underneath.
One embodiment of the invention will now be described in more detail, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: Figure 1 is a side elevation of the portion of the apparatus which turns sweets, supplied by a primary wrapper, first through 900 and then through a further 900, prior to batching; Figure 2 is a section on the line 2-2 in Figure 1; and Figures 3 to 8 are diagrams illustrating successive stages in the turning operation The apparatus illustrated in Figure 1 includes a platform having an initial horizontal portion 33 which merges, through an upwardly convex curved ramp 34, into a horizontal portion 35 at the lower level than the portion 33.
As described in our co-pending Application No.
82 9352 which claims priority from Application No. 8114733, sweets 11 wrapped in a primary wrapper are delivered from the primary wrapper to the platform and are advanced along the platform as a regularly spaced procession by pushers 1 6 of a chain conveyor, which extend upwardly through a slot 14 in the platform. The pushers 1 6 are pivoted at 21 to the chains 17 of the conveyor, which extend around sprockets, one of which is shown at 18.
Each pusher 1 6 carries a roller 22, which coacts with a cam track 24 and normally maintains the pusher in an upright position. Pegs 26, secured to the chains 1 7 at intervals, engage arcuate slots 27 in the pushers. The pushers have threaded holes 28 which communicate with the slots 27 and when, as illustrated, batches of five sweets are to be collated, a screw 29 is inserted into the hole 28 in each fifth pusher so that its tip precludes movement of the peg 26 in the slot 27 of that pusher.
A hub 37, mounted on a shaft 38, carries four radially projecting blades 36. The shaft 38 rotates at a speed such that it performs a quarter of a revolution for each advance of the chain conveyor through the distance P constituting the pitch of the pushers 1 6. The blades 36 coact with the pushers 1 6 as shown in Figs. 6-8 to ensure that each sweet will be turned through 900 as it descends the ramp 34.
As each sweet reaches the ram 34 one of the blades 36 engages its leading edge of the sweet to ensure that it does not overshoot the ramp. Fig.
3 shows the sweet B about to leave the platform 33 and pass down the ramp 34, sweets C and D having already passed down the ramp and been turned through 900 on to their edges. At this position one of the blades 36 is about to engage the leading edge of the sweet B. Fig. 4 shows the sweet B approximately halfway down the ramp with the blade 36 guiding the leading edge of the sweet in a downward direction towards the portion 35 of the platform. Fig. 5 shows the sweet B turned on to its edge at the base of the ramp and the blade 36 moving away from the sweet.
As the sweet B is moved along the portion 35 of the platform by its pusher away from the ramp, the sweet A is being moved by its pusher towards the ramp and the turnover cycle is repeated, the next succeeding blade 36 ensuring that the sweet A does not overshoot the ramp.
Beyond the shaft 38 is a shaft 39, which rotates at twice the speed of shaft 38 and carries two pairs of diametrically opposed spaced fingers 40 which intermesh with the blades 36 as shown in Fig. 2. These fingers 40 operate to turn the erected sweets 11 through a further 900 as indicated in Figs. 6-8. During this second turning operation the sweets are supported by side guides 41.
Fig. 6 shows the sweet B about to pass down the ramp 34 under the guidance of the pusher 16 and co-operating blade 36. Sweet C has already passed down the ramp and been turned through 900, and sweet D has been turned over through a further 900 by one of the pairs of fingers 50. Fig.
7 shows the sweet B approximately half way down the ramp, and sweet C being moved by its pusher along the portion 35 of the platform towards the fingers 40. Fig. 8 shows the sweet B turned through 900 at the base of the ramp 34 and sweet C being engaged by the fingers 40 to turn it through 900 into the flat state.
Each pusher 1 6 not fitted with a screw 29 tilts rearwardly out of contact with the sweet in advance of it when its roiler 22 leaves the end of the cam track 24. Each pusher 16 fitted with a screw 29, however, continues to engage its sweet until it travels around the end sprocket 18, causing that sweet and the four in front of it to form a batch 50 of five sweets. Pushers without screws advance the sweets in front of them to position Awhile each pusher with a screw advances a collated batch of sweets to position G.
Each collated batch is transferred laterally, after its trailing edge has reached position G, from the portion 35 of the platform buy a cross pusher (not shown), the batches being subsequently assembled for packing, manually or automatically, in display cartons.
As will be appreciated, each of the blades 36 acts as a restraining finger in conjunction with a pusher 1 6 to control the movement of a sweet descending the ramp 34.
The paddle wheel formed by the hub 37 and its blades 36 need not necessarily have four blades.
If it for example, had three blades its speed of rotation would need to be such that each blade moves through 1/3 of a revolution for each advance of the chain conveyor through the pitch distance P. Similarly, if the paddle wheel had a single blade only, its speed of rotation would be such that the blade performs a complete revolution for each advance of the chain conveyor through the pitch distance P.
As an alternative to using one or more blades of a rotating paddle wheel to control the sweets as they descend the ramp 34, it is possible to use a restraining finger, the tip of which is moved in an elliptical path in the vertical plane of Fig. 1, rather than in a circular path as in the case of the blades 36, under cam control or through a suitable linkage.
A restraining finger moving in this fashion but serving a different purpose is described in British Patent Application No. 8206240. For present purposes such finger coacts with each sweet, generally in the manner shown in Figs. 3-5, by engaging the leading end of the sweet to prevent it from over-shooting the ramp, guides it down the ramp and subsequently withdraws from the sweet when it has assumed the erect position.
In the embodiment shown in Fig. 1 , the upper surface of the ramp 34 is a circular arc tangential to the upper surface of the portion 33 of the platform and the length L of the ramp, measured horizontally, is slightly less than the pitch length P.

Claims (6)

Claims
1. Article feeding apparatus comprising a platform having an upper horizontal portion, a lower horizontal portion and an upwardly convex curved ramp leading from the upper to the lower portion, a chain conveyor carrying a series of regularly pitched pushers arranged to feed along the upper portion of the platform and down the ramp a procession of individual sweets or like articles lying flat on said upper portion and restraining means moving in timed relationship with and cooperating with the pushers, which includes a finger arranged to co-operate with the leading end of each article as it reaches the ramp to cause the article to conform with the ramp and turn through 900 to an erect position as it reaches the lower portion of the platform and thereafter to move away from the erected article to free it for .continued advance by its pushers.
2. Apparatus according to claim 1, in which the restraining means is a positively rotated paddle wheel carrying at least one blade constituting the finger.
3. Apparatus according to claim 2, in which the paddle wheel carries a plurality of equally spaced blades which coact with consecutive articles in the procession.
4. Apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the length of the ramp, measured horizontally, is slightly less than the pitch distance between the pushers.
5. Apparatus according to claim 1, which includes a further turnover device located above the lower portion of the platform and operative to turn each erected article through a further 900 as it is advanced by the pushers along said lower portion.
6. Article feeding apparatus according to claim 1, substantially as described herein with reference to the accompanying drawings.
GB8210190A 1982-04-06 1982-04-06 Turning articles in packaging machines Expired GB2098953B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8210190A GB2098953B (en) 1982-04-06 1982-04-06 Turning articles in packaging machines

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8210190A GB2098953B (en) 1982-04-06 1982-04-06 Turning articles in packaging machines

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2098953A true GB2098953A (en) 1982-12-01
GB2098953B GB2098953B (en) 1984-08-01

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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2204550A (en) * 1987-05-09 1988-11-16 Benz & Hilgers Gmbh Apparatus for transport of articles
US5143197A (en) * 1991-02-28 1992-09-01 De La Rue Giori, S.A. Device for turning flat objects, such as for example bundles of notes
WO2002053479A1 (en) * 2001-01-03 2002-07-11 Machinery Developments Limited Loading fork and sweep conveyor
GB2534588A (en) * 2015-01-28 2016-08-03 Vancebuild Ltd Apparatus and method relating to flow wrapping
CN109019050A (en) * 2018-08-03 2018-12-18 泸州品创科技有限公司 A kind of fresh curved billet automation code-disc system of white wine yeast

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2204550A (en) * 1987-05-09 1988-11-16 Benz & Hilgers Gmbh Apparatus for transport of articles
US5143197A (en) * 1991-02-28 1992-09-01 De La Rue Giori, S.A. Device for turning flat objects, such as for example bundles of notes
WO2002053479A1 (en) * 2001-01-03 2002-07-11 Machinery Developments Limited Loading fork and sweep conveyor
GB2534588A (en) * 2015-01-28 2016-08-03 Vancebuild Ltd Apparatus and method relating to flow wrapping
US9751650B2 (en) 2015-01-28 2017-09-05 Vancebuild Limited Apparatus and method relating to flow wrapping
CN109019050A (en) * 2018-08-03 2018-12-18 泸州品创科技有限公司 A kind of fresh curved billet automation code-disc system of white wine yeast
CN109019050B (en) * 2018-08-03 2024-06-04 泸州品创科技有限公司 Automatic code disc system for fresh yeast blank of Daqu liquor

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Publication number Publication date
GB2098953B (en) 1984-08-01

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PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee