This invention relates, generally, to machines that attach a paper or paper-like item to another paper or paper-like item. More particularly, it relates to a machine that deposits a first item on a second item in a predetermined configuration.
Attacher machines are used to merge together two papers or paper-like items in a predetermined configuration. For example, a club may produce a flyer that has a blank rectangular area in the middle of the flyer for receiving a temporary membership card. Accordingly, when a recipient opens an envelope mailed to the recipient by the club, the recipient finds the flyer with the temporary membership card positioned in the center of the flyer. As another example, a bank might mail a credit card to a prospective customer with a page of advertising. The bank may want to position the credit card in the upper right-hand corner of the page.
The attacher machines now in use deliver a membership card, credit card, or other item to be attached to a larger item to a hard nip where a hard nip roller meets and rollingly engages a conveyor means.
The smaller item is typically held by a vacuum to the underside of a vacuum belt that approaches a main belt from an elevated location at a predetermined angle such as thirty degrees (30°), for example. The main belt transports the larger item to the same hard nip, with the main belt typically following a horizontal path of travel. Thus, if the two belts rotate at synchronized speeds, the smaller item will be deposited consistently at the same location on the larger item.
The primary drawback of such attacher machines is that they cannot handle a variety of items of differing thicknesses. The items being attached need not be paper items. For example, one of the items might be a case for holding a CD ROM. Moreover, if the items are paper items, they may range in thickness from thin sheets to paperboard or cardboard and the like.
Thus, if a record company wants to send a promotional CD to a prospective customer as an attachment to an advertising flyer, the thickness of the CD may prevent it from passing through the hard nip. The owner of the attacher machine must adjust the spacing between the hard nip roller and the conveyor means (which is supported by a hard surface therebeneath) that forms the hard nip to accommodate the CDs. Such adjustments of course create down time.
What is needed, then, is an attacher machine that can handle items of differing thickness with no adjustment of the machine when the thickness of items passing through it is changed. Such a machine would require no downtime when a machine goes from attaching thin items such as business cards or credit cards to attaching thicker items such as CDs, or vice versa.
However, in view of the prior art taken as a whole at the time the present invention was made, it was not obvious to those of ordinary skill how the identified needs could be fulfilled.
The long-standing but heretofore unfulfilled need for an improved method for positioning a first item that is substantially flat in predetermined juxtaposition to a second item that is substantially flat is now met by a new, useful, and non-obvious invention. The novel method includes the steps of providing a first conveyor means and adapting the first conveyor means to transport the first item. A first hard nip roller is rotatably mounted on an axle so that the hard nip roller engages a top surface of the first conveyor means and passively rotates in driven relation to the first conveyor means as the first conveyor means rotates. The first conveyor means is supported by a hard surface that confronts the first hard nip roller through the first conveyor means.
A second conveyor means is provided and disposed at a predetermined angle relative to the first conveyor means so that a discharge end of the second conveyor means meets the first conveyor means at the hard nip roller. The second conveyor means is adapted to transport the second item.
A first soft nip roller is mounted on the axle on a first side of the hard nip roller and dimensioned so that the first soft nip roller has a diameter slightly greater than a diameter of the hard nip roller. A second soft nip roller is also mounted on the axle on a second side of the hard nip roller and dimensioned so that the second soft nip roller has a diameter slightly greater than a diameter of the hard nip roller.
The first and second soft nip rollers are spaced apart from one another by a distance less than a width of the second item so that the center of the second item is substantially simultaneously engaged by the hard nip roller and the opposite sides of the second item by the first and second soft nip rollers. The substantially simultaneous engagement separates the second item from the second conveyor means and deposits the second item onto the first item at a predetermined location on the first item.
The first conveyor means is positioned in a substantially horizontal plane and the second conveyor means is positioned above the first conveyor means. The second conveyor means is preferably provided in the form of a vacuum belt and is dimensioned so that the second conveyor means has a width at least slightly less than a width of the second item. Each item of the plurality of second items is positioned on an underside of the second conveyor means so that opposing outboard ends of the second item are engaged by the first and second soft nip rollers when the second conveyor means delivers the second item to the hard nip roller. The engagement of the opposing ends serves to separate the second item from the second conveyor means.
A primary advantage of the novel method is that second items having a wide range of thicknesses may be deposited on top of corresponding first items at a high rate of speed and a low incidence of jamming.
This and other advantages will become apparent as this disclosure proceeds.
The invention includes the features of construction, arrangement of parts, and combination of elements set forth herein, and the scope of the invention is set forth in the claims appended hereto.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring now to
The skewing increases as the respective speeds of the first and second conveyor means increases.
Referring now to
First soft nip roller 22 is also rotatably mounted on axle 16a on a first side of hard nip roller 16. Second soft nip roller 24 is rotatably mounted on axle 16a as well on a second side of hard nip roller 16. First and second soft nip rollers 22, 24 have a common diameter that slightly exceeds a diameter of hard nip roller 16. Thus, as first conveyor means 12 operates, said first and second soft nip rollers rotate passively therewith, conjointly with hard nip roller 16. However, due to their diameter, each of said soft nip rollers creates a flat spot 26 where they abut said first conveyor means 12.
Hard nip roller 16 creates no such flat spot because its diameter is substantially equal to the distance between axle 16a and first conveyor means 12. The respective common diameters of first and second soft nip rollers 22, 24 is slightly greater than said axle-to-first conveyor distance.
First conveyor means 12 is conventional and transports a first plurality of substantially flat items, collectively referred to as first items 28, toward said hard nip roller 16. Each item of said first items rests atop said first conveyor means 12 and therefore must pass under hard nip roller 16 in sequence as said first conveyor means operates.
Second conveyor means 14 is preferably provided in the form of a vacuum belt and transports a second plurality of substantially flat items, collectively referred to as second items 18, toward said hard nip roller 16. In this example, second item 18 is a card such as a business card, a membership card, or the like. Each item of said second items is held by a negative pressure generated by a remote vacuum source to a bottom side of second conveyor means 14 in a well-known way and therefore is delivered at the discharge end 14a of said second conveyor means to said hard nip roller 16 in sequence as said second conveyor means operates.
Each second item 18 has a width that is at least slightly greater than the lateral spacing between first and second soft nip rollers 22, 24. For the same reason, second conveyor means 14 has a width at least slightly less than the width of said second items 18. Accordingly, as best understood in connection with
It will thus be seen that the objects set forth above, and those made apparent from the foregoing description, are efficiently attained and since certain changes may be made in the above construction without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matters contained in the foregoing description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
It is also to be understood that the following claims are intended to cover all of the generic and specific features of the invention herein described, and all statements of the scope of the invention which, as a matter of language, might be said to fall therebetween.
Now that the invention has been described,
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4534550 | Reist | Aug 1985 | A |
4909499 | O'Brien et al. | Mar 1990 | A |