This invention relates to an apparatus for filling containers with rod-shaped articles.
More specifically, this invention addresses the tobacco industry and has for an object an apparatus for filling containers, in particular cardboard boxes, with rod-shaped articles consisting, for example, of cigarettes, filters, filter tubes (tubes of paper with a filter at one end and designed to be filled with tobacco by the smoker).
Hereinafter in this description, reference is made to the handling of rod-shaped articles consisting of cigarettes, without thereby restricting the scope of the invention.
In apparatuses of known type for filling containers with cigarettes, the groups of cigarettes to be packed are usually formed using a vertical hopper into which the cigarettes are fed through an opening at the top of it. The bottom portion of the hopper is divided into a plurality of mouths arranged side by side horizontally and each divided by a plurality of walls into substantially vertical channels arranged side by side horizontally and designed to receive respective stacks of cigarettes reciprocally superposed. Groups of cigarettes, or layers which are then placed on top of one another to form the groups, are pushed axially out of the hopper in succession from the bottom of each hopper mouth by suitable extractor elements which direct the groups to a packing station.
In some cases, especially in apparatuses which operate at high speed, extraction of the cigarettes from the hopper by axial end thrust may damage the cigarettes.
This invention has for an aim to provide an apparatus for filling containers with rod-shaped articles and which handles the articles much more gently than apparatuses known in the prior art.
The invention accordingly provides an apparatus for filling containers with rod-shaped articles, as described in the appended claims.
The invention is described below with reference to the accompanying drawings, which illustrate a non-limiting embodiment of it, and in which:
The apparatus 1 comprises a vertical hopper 3 whose lower portion is equipped with at least one mouth 4 for dispensing cigarettes 2 and preferably subdivided into a plurality of mouths 4 positioned side by side horizontally (four in the embodiment illustrated). Each mouth 4 is subdivided by a plurality of walls 5 substantially vertical and parallel to each other in a plurality of substantially vertical channels 6 positioned side by side horizontally, each of which is designed to accommodate internally a stack 7 of cigarettes 2 reciprocally superposed;
Extractor elements, denoted in their entirety by the numeral 11 (
The extractor elements 11 comprise, for each mouth 4 of the hopper 3, a supporting element consisting of a horizontal plate 13 positioned, at a zone where the cigarettes 2 are unloaded from the mouth 4, below the bottom portion of the mouth 4 itself, and is connected to motor means (schematically represented as a block 13′) which are designed to impart horizontal alternating motion to the plate along a direction F perpendicular to the feed direction A of the upper transport branch 9′ of the belt conveyor 9.
Each plate 13 has a length, measured along the direction A, substantially equal to the length of a bottom portion of the mouth 4 adjacent to it, and a length, measured along the direction F, exceeding twice the length of a cigarette 2. At the two limit stop positions to which it is driven under the action of the respective motor means and which are shown in
The upper surface of the plates 13 defines a plurality of horizontal grooves 15 parallel to the direction F and having substantially in section a substantially semi-circular shape with concavity facing upwards and diameter substantially equal to that of a cigarette 2. The grooves 15 extend substantially along the entire length of the plates 13, in such a way as to affect the parts of the plates located below the bottom portions of the mouths 4, as well as the parts of the plates outside these portions. The transversal arrangement of the grooves 15 is such that each groove 15 is located exactly under the bottom end of a channel 6 and is vertically aligned with the channel 6 itself. The upper surface of each groove 15 is provided with a plurality of holes which can be placed in communication with a suction source, not illustrated.
In the proximity of the belt conveyor 9 there is an apparatus, denoted in its entirety by the numeral 17, for transferring the layers 12 of cigarettes The transfer apparatus essentially comprises a drive or actuating device of basically known type, schematically represented as a block 17, designed to move an articulated arm 18 (also of basically known type) connected thereto at one end of it The other end of the articulated arm 18 supports, through the agency of a connecting bar 19, four pick-up elements, each consisting of a plate 20.
In the embodiment of the apparatus 1 illustrated, there is only one arm 18, but there might be two or more arms 18, for example, positioned parallel to each other.
The plates 20, which are equal in number to the number of mouths 4 of the hopper 3, are provided on their undersides (
In use, when the apparatus 1 is in the operating situation shown in
The motor means 13′ then move the plates 13 along the horizontal direction F and bring them to the position, shown in
While the plates 13 dwell at that position, the actuating device 17 moves the articulated arm 18 so as to bring a plate 20 above each plate 13 in such a way that the grooves 21 on the plates 20 are positioned in contact with respective cigarettes 2 carried by the grooves 15 of the plates 13. The suction applied through the grooves 15 is then switched off and the suction through the grooves 21 is switched on to “capture” the cigarettes 2 housed in the grooves 15. The actuating device 17 then moves the articulated arm 18 again, taking the plates 20 and the cigarettes 2 held by the plates 20 above respective containers 8 carried by the upper transport branch 9′ of the belt conveyor 9. Next, each layer 12 of cigarettes 2 carried by a plate 20 is placed inside one of the containers 8 when the suction applied through the grooves 21 is switched off. The plates 20 are then moved away from the containers 8 by the actuating device 17 and the plates 13, after the cigarettes 2 have been removed from the respective grooves 15 as described above, are moved by the motor means 13′ back to the position initially considered, sliding under the cigarettes 2 waiting at the bottom of the channels 6.
The operations described above are then repeated to place other layers 12 one after the other into each of the containers 8 until the containers 8 are completely full.
The belt conveyor 9 is then started in order to move the full containers 8 away from the filling zone and to convey to that zone the same number of empty containers 8 to be filled in their turn.
From the foregoing, it is clear that in the apparatus 1, the cigarettes 2 are extracted from the hopper 3 without applying any axial thrust on the cigarettes 2 themselves and that when filling the containers 8, the cigarettes 2 are handled very gently.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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B02012A000335 | Jun 2012 | IT | national |