1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to conveyor and packaging machinery. More specifically, the present invention comprises a device utilizing a non-circular or non-concentric rotating bar or bars to agitate a container and its contents for settling and/or mixing the contents in the container or in packaging within the container.
2. Description of the Related Art
Containers for packaging and shipping various goods are generally sized to be as small as possible while still being capable of carrying or holding the required amount of product therein, in order to have the smallest practicable exterior dimensions for the container for maximizing shipping efficiency. In many instances, the product is not placed efficiently within the container during processing and packing, which results in the container either being underweight, or overflowing if sufficient product has been placed therein. This is particularly true of loose bagged articles, such as individual serving sizes of bagged goods such as potato chips, individual size and larger bags of individual candies, etc., as well as some fresh and frozen fruit and vegetable products and frozen poultry, meat, and fish products which may be packed loosely within a container.
In other instances, two or more varieties of a product may be placed in individual packages or in larger containers, e.g., different types or flavors of candies, snack foods, etc. The different varieties may not be well mixed as they are dumped into the packaging or container by means of conveyors and/or delivery chutes during the packaging operation.
This has led to the development of agitation or vibration devices for shaking, vibrating, and/or agitating the container in order to settle the contents therein. Numerous such devices have been developed in the past, utilizing various principles of operation. One common principle used in such vibrator devices is the eccentric mass, wherein a rotary shaft having an eccentric mass thereon produces a vibration or shaking as it rotates. The problems with this type of device are (1) the eccentric loads placed upon the rest of the structure, which may lead to damage to the structure or alternatively require a considerably heavier and more costly machine; and (2) the inability of such a device to produce a very slow oscillation of the product, due to the very low momentum of the offset mass at very low operating speeds.
Another principle used in vibration producing machines is that of the reciprocating mechanism, in which an arm or rod is reciprocated by an eccentric wheel or linearly reciprocating actuator (hydraulic strut, etc.). The mass may or may not be counterbalanced, as the linear motion of the end of the reciprocating arm is the primary producer of the vibratory or shaking action. While this principle of operation may be used to produce relatively slow movement of the subject container or article, it requires a relatively complex cyclical mechanism to carry out the operation.
The present inventors are aware of various vibratory and/or oscillating devices developed in the past. An example of such may be found in Japanese Patent No. 63-287,539, published on Nov. 24, 1988. According to the drawings and English abstract, this mechanism produces a rocking action to agitate a fluid contained within a cylinder captured between opposed anchors. No further detail is apparent regarding the principle of operation.
Another example of a vibration- or oscillation-producing machine is found in Japanese Patent No. 09-267,802 published on Oct. 14, 1997. This device comprises a machine installed beneath the edge of a truck loading dock or the like, which clamps to the lifting or anchoring pockets of a semitrailer supported shipping container. The device utilizes eccentric weights spun by large electric motors to shake and vibrate the container and its load. The problems with the eccentric mass principle of vibration production have been noted further above.
Thus, an agitation machine solving the aforementioned problems is desired.
The agitation machine is installed either independently or in a conveyor line to shake, vibrate, oscillate, and/or agitate a container or containers in order to compact and settle the contents of the container. The machine includes at least one (and preferably two) elongate rotating bar or rod of non-circular cross section, or of eccentric circular cross section. The bars extend beneath the containers in the direction of travel of the containers across or through the machine, with rotation of the bars resulting in the shaking or oscillating of the containers and resulting settling and compaction of the contents of the containers. The rotating oscillator bars may be adjusted so that their high edges are either in phase or out of phase with one another, respectively producing an alternating lifting and lowering action or a rocking action of the container resting thereon. The rotary speed of the bars may be adjusted as desired.
Several embodiments of the agitation machine are disclosed herein. One embodiment includes two spaced apart conveyors carrying a series of lateral flight bars therebetween. The flight bars convey the containers along the rotating agitator or oscillator bars during operation of the machine. A central runner of variably adjustable height is preferably placed between the two agitator bars, with the runner limiting the low point of the container oscillation, and therefore the amplitude of the oscillation, as the agitator bars lift and lower the container.
Another embodiment dispenses with the flight bar conveyor system, but includes a relatively narrow central conveyor belt between the two non-circular section oscillator bars. The container(s) rest(s) upon the central conveyor to a greater or lesser degree, depending upon the height of the vertically adjustable conveyor. Other embodiments comprise various rotary oscillator bars having different non-circular, or eccentric circular, cross sections.
These and other features of the present invention will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification and drawings.
Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
The present invention comprises various embodiments of an agitation machine which shakes, oscillates, vibrates, and/or agitates a container C placed thereon, to settle the contents of the container.
The agitation machine 10 includes a frame 12 having opposite first and second ends, respectively 14 and 16, and opposite first and second sides, respectively 18 and 20. At least one rotary oscillator bar extends generally from the first end 14 to the second end 16 of the frame 12, with the container C being supported directly upon the oscillator bar or bars. Preferably, parallel first and second oscillator bars, respectively 22 and 24, are installed in the machine 10 and extend generally from end to end of the frame 12 to each side of the centerline of the machine. The oscillator bars 22 and 24 are supported by conventional bearings (not shown) at each of their ends. The oscillator bars 22 and 24 are non-circular in cross section, as may be seen in the end view of
Each of the oscillator bars 22 and 24 is rotated by a corresponding oscillator bar drive motor, respectively 26 and 28. The drive motors are preferably conventional stepper or servo drive motors operated synchronously in order to synchronize the rotation of the two oscillator bars relative to one another. Flexible, synchronous drive members, respectively 30 and 32, extend between the motors 26 and 28 and their respective oscillator bars 22 and 24. The drive members 30 and 32 may comprise toothed belts driven from and driving correspondingly toothed drive wheels or sprockets, as shown in
The use of stepper or servomotors operated synchronously for oscillator bar drive motors 26 and 28 results in the two oscillator bars 22, 24 rotating synchronously with one another. For example, the high point or edge of one of the bars, e.g., the first bar 22, may be oriented upwardly at the same time the flat or low point of the second bar 24 is oriented upwardly, as shown in
While the frequency of the oscillatory pulses is controlled by the rotational speed of the two oscillator bars 22 and 24, the amplitude of the pulses is set by the difference between the height of the highest point or edge and the lowest point or flat of the bars. In the example shown in
It will be noted that the above-described means of selecting or setting the vibratory amplitude of the machine does not provide for adjustment of that amplitude. Accordingly, such amplitude adjustment means may be provided with the machine 10, as shown in
In the geometric configuration illustrated in
To this point, no means has been described for conveying the container C from one end of the machine 10 to the other during its operation. The two rotary oscillator bars 22 and 24 produce a purely lateral motion upon the bottom of the container C as they rotate, while the container support runner 34 remains stationary once its height has been set. Accordingly, the machine 10 includes means for advancing the container(s) C from one end to the other. This is accomplished by opposite first and second flight bar conveyors, respectively 46 and 48, respectively located within the first and second sides 18 and 20 of the frame 12. The flight bar conveyors 46 and 48 are driven by synchronized drive motors 50.
The flight bar conveyors 46 and 48 include at least one (and preferably a series of) flight bar(s) 52 extending therebetween. Thus, as the flight bar conveyors 46 and 48 travel about the inner sides of the frame 12, they carry the laterally disposed flight bars 52 with them. The flight bars 52 engage the trailing end or surface of the container C, to push the container over and along the oscillator bars 22 and 24 and the central container support runner 34. Mutually opposed and laterally adjustable first and second guide bars, respectively 54 and 56, are preferably provided to prevent excessive lateral movement of the container C as it rocks upon the oscillator bars 22 and 24 during operation of the machine.
The container support conveyor 134 is supported by opposite first end and second end rollers, sprockets, etc., respectively 138 and 142, which are in turn supported upon pivotally mounted first and second conveyor support arms 136 and 140. As the container support conveyor 134 is a flexible belt rather than a rigid member as in the case of the container support runner 34 of the first embodiment 10 of
The two conveyor support arms 136 and 140 are pivotally mounted to the frame 12, with the frame 12, conveyor support arms 136 and 140, and the conveyor 134 forming the sides of an adjustable parallelogram. The angles of the parallelogram, and thus the height of the conveyor 134, are adjusted by a conveyor height adjustment actuator 144, corresponding to the runner height adjustment actuator 44 of the embodiment of
In conclusion, the agitation machine in its various embodiments and configurations provides a superior means of shaking, agitating, oscillating, vibrating, or otherwise jostling and stirring a container passing therethrough and the contents within the container. The agitation machine provides agitation without need for mass imbalance and its accompanying vibrational loads that are transmitted to the entire machine. Moreover, the oscillatory speed of the machine may be adjusted within any practicable range as desired. This allows the machine to produce very low frequency rolling actions upon a container to gently mix materials therein, if so desired, or very rapid agitation or vibration of the container if required, or any other vibrational or oscillatory frequency therebetween. Moreover, the use of two oscillator bars allows the bars to be set either in phase with one another to produce purely vertical motion, or out of phase with one another to produce a rocking motion of the container resting thereon. Also, the machine is well adapted for installation in a conveyor line including a container indexing unit at the infeed end of the machine, a container closing and gluing station at the outfeed end, and/or other processing machines in a conveyor line. Accordingly, the agitation machine will prove to be most valuable in the processing of countless goods and products along a conveyor line.
It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/900,324, filed Feb. 9, 2007.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60900324 | Feb 2007 | US |