Apparatus for making a stream of tobacco shreds

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6701933
  • Patent Number
    6,701,933
  • Date Filed
    Friday, January 14, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 9, 2004
    20 years ago
  • CPC
  • US Classifications
    Field of Search
    • US
    • 131 108
    • 131 841
    • 131 1092
    • 131 110
    • 131 844
    • 131 282
    • 131 843
    • 131 287
    • 198 3704
    • 406 88
    • 406 94
    • 406 95
    • 241 41
  • International Classifications
    • A24C513
    • A24C539
    • Term Extension
      3
Abstract
A device for creating a spread-out stream of tobacco fibers includes a concave-curved guide track along which the fiber stream of tobacco fibers are conveyed. The guide track has a generatrix based on a uniform generating curve. At least one air jet has an air flow opening interrupting the guide track so that air exiting the air flow jet acts in a conveyance direction of the fiber stream for spreading out the tobacco fibers.
Description




CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS




Priority is claimed with respect to German application No. 199 01 087.0 filed in Germany on Jan. 14, 1999, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The invention relates to a device for creating a spread-out fiber stream of tobacco fibers along a concave-curved guide track provided with air flow openings acting in the transport direction of the fiber stream.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




A guide track of the type mentioned at the outset is part of a so-called distributor of a cigarette string machine. The guide track, together with an essentially parallel directed air flow, constitutes a so-called moving bed. Tobacco in the form of a loosened and spread-out tobacco stream is moved along close to the guide track and transferred to a suction string conveyor which forms the tobacco fibers into a tobacco string.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




An object of the invention is to optimize the effectiveness, or respectively the conveying capacity, of the moving bed in respect to the energy outlay for the air flow supplied.




Moreover, it is an object to improve the guide track constituting the moving bed in respect to its construction, handling and exchangeability, or respectively installation and removal.




The above and other objects are accomplished in accordance with the invention by the provision of a device for creating a spread-out stream of tobacco fibers, comprising: a concave-curved guide track along which the fiber stream of tobacco fibers are conveyed, the guide track having a generatrix based on a uniform generating curve; and at least one air jet having an air flow opening interrupting the guide track so that air exiting the air flow jet acts in a conveyance direction of the fiber stream for spreading out the tobacco fibers.




Thus, in accordance with the invention the generatrix of the guide track, which is interrupted by the air flow openings designed as air jets, is based on a uniform generating curve.




For optimizing the conveying and spreading effect it is another aspect of the invention that the air jets terminating in the sliding surface of the guide track extend continuously over the width of the guide track.




In accordance with an advantageous embodiment, a close-lying wall flow (Coanda effect) is achieved in that the downstream wall of the air jet, in relation to the conveying direction of the fiber stream, makes a transition in the form of a continuous convex curve into the concave sliding surface of the guide track.




According to a further feature of the invention, the sliding surface of the guide track is interrupted by several air jets, which follow each other in the conveying direction of the fiber stream, which increases and complements the conveyance by the moving bed.




Preferably, the air jets are connected to a common pressure chamber.




In accordance with a preferred embodiment, the guide track is put together from individual segments, whose respectively adjoining border surfaces form nozzle walls of the air jets. In this way it is possible to design and assemble the guide track flexibly, or respectively to replace it in partial areas when it is worn, wherein an optimal orientation of sliding surface walls and air jets is always assured.




The advantageous effects of the construction of the guide track in segments are further increased by a production-specific further development, in that the guide track segments are embodied as extruded sections, whose wall sections defining the sliding surface of the guide track form an upstream and a downstream located nozzle wall, in respect to the conveying direction of the fiber stream, on two successive air jets.




The invention presents the advantage that, because of the continuous transition along the sections of the guide track which are interrupted by an air jet, the tobacco meets the air flow directly at the outlet of the air nozzle, i.e. at a location at which the air flow still has its maximum flow speed and can accelerate the tobacco fibers accordingly. In this way it is possible to operate the air supply at a low air pressure, or respectively with a respectively reduced blower output, which improves the effectiveness and the economy of the energy generation and the energy output.




Furthermore, an economical production-related advantage results from the use of individual segments, which are put together to form a guide track, whose simple exterior contours actually predestine them for being manufactured by means of the efficient extrusion process.




The invention will be explained in greater detail in what follows by means of an exemplary embodiment represented in the drawings.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a schematic longitudinal section through a distributor of a cigarette string machine.





FIG. 2

is an enlarged section of the distributor with a conventional guide track for the tobacco.





FIG. 3

is a guide track of the distributor embodied in accordance with the invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT





FIG. 1

is a section through that portion of a distributor of a cigarette string machine which is required for understanding the invention. A variety of ways are known for the upstream located tobacco delivery to a reservoir and the removal of the tobacco from the tobacco reservoir, for example by means of a steep conveyor, and need not be described here. Reference is made, by way of example, to U.S. Pat. No. 4,185,644, which is incorporated herein by reference.





FIG. 1

shows a retaining chute


1


with a tobacco supply


1




a


and a removal device


2


consisting of a removal roller


3


and a beater roller


4


. A batch


6


of tobacco fibers taken out of retaining chute


1


by removal device


2


reaches a delivery chute


7


, which narrows funnel-like into the shape of a conduit, in which an acceleration means


8


, which constitutes a pre-sifter in the form of air jets


11


arranged in a pressure chamber


9


, blows a sifting air flow transversely in respect to the conveying direction of tobacco batch


6


. The sifting air flow separates light tobacco fibers


12


from heavier tobacco fibers


13


(tobacco ribs) and conveys the light tobacco fibers away transversely in the direction of arrow


14


.




Some of the light tobacco fibers


12




a


drop downwardly along with the heavier tobacco ribs


13


. Through a cellular wheel sluice


16


they reach a sifting chute


17


, in which the heavier tobacco ribs


13


drop further down and are removed. The lighter tobacco fibers


12




a


rise upwardly under an injection effect of an air flow out of a nozzle


18


constituting a post-sifter, and are returned into the stream of the lighter fibers


12


. In the illustrated example, the tobacco fibers


12


and


12




a


are transferred with the aid of further air nozzles


19


of a pressure chamber


19




a


onto a guide track


21


in the form of a sliding surface


21




a


. There the tobacco fibers are built up into a tobacco stream


22


of loosened and spread-out tobacco fibers, wherein the air flow and the tobacco particles form a wall flow moving closely along the sliding surface


21




a


of the guide track


21


. To aid in the continued conveyance of the spread-out and loosened tobacco stream


22


along guide track


21


, air flow nozzles


23


supplied with air from a pressure chamber


23




a


, and further air flow nozzles (not shown) arranged in the course of the guide track


21


are provided.




The loosened and spread-out tobacco stream


22


reaches a suction strip conveyor


26


in a strip build-up zone


24


, to which a suction draft for forming and maintaining a tobacco string is applied from the direction of the back by the suction effect of an under pressure chamber


27


. Excess air flow escapes through a screen


28


into an expansion chamber


29


.




The suction strip conveyor


26


rotates in a tobacco conduit


31


, which is laterally bordered by two conduit cheeks


32


and


32




a


. The end section of sliding surface


21




a


of guide track


21


is oriented on one of the conduit cheeks


32


, so that a gap-free smooth transition of guide track


21


into tobacco conduit


31


is assured.




The end section of the guide track


21


comprises a guide body


34


, which can be pivoted away on a pivot axis


33


in order to assure better access to the device in case of malfunctions.





FIG. 2

illustrates a conventional guide track


21


wherein sliding surfacc


21




a


consists of sliding plates, or respectively sliding bodies


37


, set off in steps in the conveying direction (arrow


36


) of the tobacco stream. As can be seen, air flow nozzles


23


terminate on the respective steps in guide track


21


. This known construction has the result that in the area of a step, between two sliding plates, the tobacco stream meets the air flow coming from the air flow nozzles only at the end of a relatively long free trajectory, where the air flow has already lost approximately two-thirds of its exit velocity. In order to accelerate the tobacco stream to a predetermined value, the flow speed of the air flow must therefore be increased by an increase in the blower output, which negatively affects the overall power economy of the system.




Referring to

FIG. 3

, there is shown an arrangement in accordance with the invention. In

FIG. 3

the generatrix of the guide track


21


, or more accurately, the guide surface


21




a


, is based on a uniform generating curve, so that individual segments


38


of the guide track adjoin each other continuously. Air flow nozzles


23


, designed as air jets extending vertically in respect to the drawing plan, are formed at the respective joints of the individual segments


38


, whose downstream wall


38




a


, in relation to the conveying direction (arrow


36


) of the fiber stream, makes a transition into the concave sliding surface


21




a


of the guide track


21


in a steady convex curvature, so that an unbroken continuous wall flow of blown air and tobacco is formed on sliding surface


21


. Individual segments


38


have an upstream wall


38




b


, in relation to the conveying direction, which forms the opposing wall of each flow nozzle or air jet


23


. The tobacco stream and the air flow meet directly in the area of the outlet openings of the air jets, so that the air flow meets the tobacco stream at its maximum outflow velocity at each air jet.




The individual segments


38


are produced as extruded sections, whose respectively adjoining border surfaces always assure optimal flow conditions.




The invention has been described in detail with respect to referred embodiments, and it will now be apparent from the foregoing to those skilled in the art, that changes and modifications may be made without departing from the invention in its broader aspects, and the invention, therefore, as defined in the appended claims, is intended to cover all such changes and modifications that fall within the true spirit of the invention.



Claims
  • 1. A device for creating a spread-out stream of tobacco fibers, comprising:a concave-curved guide track along which the fiber stream of tobacco fibers are conveyed, the guide track having a generatrix based on a uniform curve, a portion of the concave-curved guide track being formed by a convex sliding surface, the guide track having a width; and at least one air nozzle having an air flow interrupting the guide track so that air exiting the nozzle acts in a conveyance direction of the fiber stream for spreading cut the tobacco fibers, wherein the nozzle has a downstream wall, in relation to the conveyance direction of the fiber stream, which makes a transition into the guide track in a steady convex curvature, the at least one nozzle terminating in the sliding and extending continuously over the width of the guide track.
  • 2. The device in accordance with claim 1, wherein the at least one nozzle comprises a plurality of nozzles following each other in the conveying direction of the fiber stream and that interrupt the sliding surface.
  • 3. The device in accordance with claim 2, wherein the guide track comprises a plurality of individual guide track segments having respectively adjoining border surfaces that form nozzle walls of the nozzles.
  • 4. The device in accordance with claim 3, wherein the guide track segments comprise extruded sections, whose wall sections, which border the sliding surface of the guide track, form an upstream nozzle wall and the downstream nozzle wail, in relation to the conveying direction, at two successive nozzles.
  • 5. The device in accordance with claim 2, further comprising a common pressure chamber connected with the plurality of nozzles.
  • 6. A device for creating a spread-out stream of tobacco fibers, the device receiving tobacco from an inlet portion and supplying tobacco to an outlet portion, comprising:a concave curved guide track along with the fiber stream of tobacco fibers are conveyed, the guide track having a sliding surface extending from the inlet portion to the outlet portion, the sliding surface being formed with a generatrix based on a uniform curve; and at least one air nozzle having an air flow opening interrupting the sliding surface so that air exiting the nuzzle acts in a conveyance direction of the fiber stream for spreading out the tobacco fibers, wherein the nozzle has a downstream wall, in relation to the conveyance direction of the fiber stream, which makes a transition into the concave-curve guide track in a steady convex curvature such that air exiting the nozzle achieves the Coanda effect.
  • 7. The device of claim 6, wherein the guide track comprises discrete guide track elements.
  • 8. The device of claim 7, wherein the nozzle has an upstream wall and the guide track has a width, wherein adjacent guide track elements define the upstream and downstream walls of the nozzle, the nozzle being continuous over the width of the guide track.
  • 9. A device for creating a spread-out stream for tobacco fibers, comprising:a concave-curved guide track along which the fiber stream of tobacco fibers are conveyed, the guide track having a generatrix based on a uniform curve, a portion of the concave-curved guide track being formed by a convex sliding surface: and at least one air nozzle haying an au flow opening interrupting the guide track so that air exiting nozzle acts in a conveyance direction of the fiber stream for spreading out the tobacco fibers, wherein the nozzle has a downstream wall, in relation to the conveyance direction of the fiber stream, which makes a transition into the guide track in a steady convex curvature such that air exiting the nozzle achieves a Coanda effect.
  • 10. The device in accordance with claim 9, wherein the guide track has a width, and the at least one nozzle terminates in the sliding surface and extends continuously over the width of the guide track.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
199 01 087 Jan 1999 DE
US Referenced Citations (7)
Number Name Date Kind
4185644 Heitmann et al. Jan 1980 A
4306358 King, Jr. Dec 1981 A
4564027 Heitmann Jan 1986 A
5148816 Heitmann Sep 1992 A
5941520 Stephan et al. Aug 1999 A
5967146 Orihara et al. Oct 1999 A
6371125 Schmidt Apr 2002 B1
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
4113465 Oct 1992 DE
0649605 Oct 1994 EP