The invention relates to product baggers of the type in which an indefinite length shingled bag assembly is fed to a workstation where products are placed in lead bags, and to related methods.
Foods products, such as meat, cheese and the like, are conventionally packaged in plastic bags using an automated bagger of the type described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,837,023. The bagger feeds empty lead bags mounted on tapes in a shingled bag assembly along a workstation surface. The lead bag in the assembly is inflated and a product is inserted into the bag. The filled bag is then stripped from the bag assembly and sealed and the tape is drawn into a tape slot extending across the workstation surface and wound onto a reel under the workstation. Winding of the tape feeds the next bag in the shingled assembly to the workstation surface, the bag is inflated by an air blast and the cycle is repeated.
When the lead bag is feed along the workstation surface, the leading end of the bag activates a trigger extending above workstation surface adjacent the slot. Trigger activation sends a signal to the bagger to halt feeding the bag assembly. This prevents the bagger from winding unfilled bags attached to the tape around the reel and prevents bag waste.
During high-speed operation of the bagger, a bagger operator will load product into a moving lead bag before the bag activates the trigger. The operator will rapidly load product into the moving lead bag as soon as the bag is inflated and then remove the loaded bag from the workstation to prepare for loading the next bag. The leading ends of the bags do not engage the trigger.
The operator may during high speed loading, accidentally move the product against the trigger as the product is moved into a moving lead bag. Accidental activation of the trigger deactivates the bagger and slows product packing. The operator must wait for the bagger to resume feeding the bag assembly before product packaging can resume.
In the case of baggers that include printers, accidental activation of the trigger will further slow operation of the bagger as the printer must reset before product packaging can resume.
Therefore, there is a need for an automated bagger and method that allow efficient, high-speed loading of moving bags delivered to a workstation without inadvertent deactivation of the bagger. The bagger must shut down when a lead bag is not loaded.
The invention is an automated bagger and method for improved high-speed bagging. The bagger has a sensor located in the tape slot below the workstation loading surface, out of the path of the product during loading into a bag. Loaded of products cannot stop the bagger.
If the bagger draws a lead bag on the bag assembly from the workstation into the tape slot, the sensor detects the leading end of the bag in the slot and stops the bagger reel from further feeding the bag assembly. The location of the sensor below the loading surface prevents accidental halt of bag feeding during high-speed operation of the bagger.
The invention improves bagging speed and efficiency.
Other objects and features of the invention will become apparent as the description proceeds, especially when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings illustrating the invention.
The bagger 10 disclosed herein relates to the bagger of Glatfelter U.S. Pat. No. 6,837,023, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety
Each bag 24 is made from thin plastic film and has opposed rectangular sides 28 (See
As shown in
Strips 22 extend through the slot 46 and are wound on reel 48. A drive motor (not illustrated) rotates reel 48 in the direction of arrow 50 to feed assembly 18 from box 20, through printer assembly 16 and to station 14.
Bagger 10 includes an air nozzle 52 located below surface 15. The nozzle is connected to a source of compressed air. During operation of the bagger, the nozzle 52 continuously blows compressed air through an opening in station 14 toward the open lead end of each bag 24. The air blast from nozzle 52 inflates the lead bag, as illustrated in
Micro-switch 54 is mounted on workstation 14 and is electrically connected to sensor 56 located in workstation 14 at slot 46 under work surface 15. Sensor 56 may be an optical sensor that faces the slot and detects a bag 24 fed into the slot. As a lead portion 36 of a bag 24 passes in front of sensor 56, the sensor detects the presence of the lead portion and sends a signal to activate switch 54 to stop rotation of reel 48 and further feeding of bag assembly 18 through bagger 10.
The operation of bagger 10 will now be described.
An indefinite length of bag assembly 18 is folded in box 20 so that when a length of the assembly is pulled from the box toward optional printer assembly 16, as illustrated in
The lead end of the bag assembly is fed around roller 40, and through optional bag printer assembly 16. The lead end is then fed around roller 42, around workstation edge 44, along surface 15 and into slot 46. The bags at the end of the assembly extending past printer assembly 16 are stripped away and the two adhesive strips 22 are attached to reel 48 so that rotation of the reel 48 by the drive motor in the direction of arrow 50 feeds the bag assembly 18 from box 20 past printer assembly 16 and to station 14 in the direction of arrow 26.
The control circuitry for bagger 10 activates the motor to rotate reel 48 and feed bag assembly 18 downstream across surface 15. The air blast from nozzle 52 inflates the moving lead bag as shown in
In the event a product is not placed in a lead bag, the bag is fed into slot 46 and triggers sensor 56 to stop feed of the bag assembly. Upon removal of the bag the sensor is deactivated and bag feeding and loading recommence.
While I have illustrated and described a preferred embodiment of my invention, it is understood that this is capable of modification, and I therefore do not wish to be limited to the precise details set forth, but desire to avail myself of such changes and alterations as fall within the purview of the following claims.
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