The invention concerns a bread slicer with an input compartment for at least one loaf of bread to be sliced and an output compartment for the sliced loaf, each comprising a base. In between said compartments, the slicer comprises a set of blades for slicing the loaf with blades that are arranged substantially parallel to one another.
A thrust means is provided, extending at least on the side of the input compartment and which makes it possible to exert a pushing force on the loaf while the latter is moving through the set of blades by clamping the loaf to be sliced between the thrust means and the base of the input compartment. This base of the input compartment and the thrust means define a passage to guide the loaf to be sliced towards the set of blades. The thrust means comprises a guiding plate having a succession of recesses extending parallel next to one another over the width of the passage.
The slicer also comprises a mobile pusher device making it possible to exert a pushing force on the loaf to be sliced so as to move it along the passage and through the set of blades. Said pusher device can be arranged in a retracted position, at least partially outside said passage, so as to set the latter free for introducing a loaf of bread in said passage.
Such a slicer has already been described in documents GB 538919, GB 2242117, US 2006/0075859 and EP 2039483.
The slicers described in those documents comprise a pusher device which can be positioned outside the passage according to which the loafs of bread are guided towards the set of blades. The construction and drive of these pusher devices are relatively complex and give rise to problems during their operation.
The invention aims to remedy these disadvantages by proposing a bread slicer with a pusher device having a relatively simple design and efficient operation. Moreover, the device according to the invention can be applied in a slicer which is fit for slicing several successive loaves of bread moving, by the force of gravity, towards the set of blades. The invention also makes it possible to build bread slicers which are very compact compared to the existing slicers.
To this end, according to the invention, the pusher device comprises a succession of fingers distributed parallel over the width of the passage and which can be moved through the recesses of the guiding plate so as to set the passage free for moving a loaf through this passage towards the set of blades or to come back from said retracted position towards the passage and to push a loaf through the set of blades.
Advantageously, the fingers of the guiding plate have free ends which can be moved from said retraced position into a position beyond the blades in which the fingers extend between two successive blades.
According to a particular embodiment of the invention, the far ends of the fingers, as opposed to their free ends, are fixed to a rotary shaft which cooperates with drive means to move the pusher device from said retracted position into a position in which the fingers pass through the recesses of the guiding plate and extend at least up to the set of blades and, preferably, between said blades.
According to an interesting embodiment of the invention, said base, extending in the input compartment, is inclined in such a way that a loaf of bread, placed on said base, will move in the direction of the set of blades by the force of gravity.
In an interesting manner, said guiding plate has parallel oblong strips, or tabs, which are separated from one another by said recesses, whereby said strips and fingers are alternately provided in a direction which is substantially parallel if the plane of the set of blades. A space is thereby provided between the strips and the adjacent fingers making it possible to insert a blade of the set of blades between an oblong strip and an adjacent finger.
Other details and particularities of the invention will become clear from the following description, given by way of example only without being limitative in any way, of a few particular embodiments of the machine according to the invention, with reference to the accompanying drawings.
In the different figures, the same reference numbers refer to analogous or identical elements.
The invention generally concerns an automatic machine for slicing one or several loaves of bread. This machine comprises an input compartment where the loaves to be sliced are introduced, separated by a set of blades from an output compartment. Thus, the loaves move through the set of blades, by which they are cut into slices, into the output compartment from which the sliced loaves can be removed.
Said set of blades 4 comprises blades 6 arranged substantially parallel to one another, which are subject to a back and forth movement in their longitudinal direction.
During the movement towards the set of blades 4, the loaf 3 slides onto said base 2 which has a smooth surface. Above said base 2, the slicer comprises a thrust means 9 for the loaf 3 which extends at least on the side of the input compartment 1 to exert a pushing force on the loaf 3 while the latter is moving through the set of blades 4. Thus, the loaf 3, while being sliced by the blades 6, is clamped between the thrust means 9 and said base 2 of the input compartment 1. Said base 2 and the thrust means 9 define a passage 11 in the input compartment 1 for guiding the loaf 3 towards the set of blades 4.
The thrust means 9 comprises a guiding plate 10 with a succession of parallel recesses 12 extending next to one another over the width of the passage 11, as represented in
As the loaf passes through the set of blades 4, it will enter the output compartment 7 downstream of the set of blades 4. The output compartment 7 also has a base 8 which extends in the extension of the base 2 of the input compartment 1 or at a somewhat lower level.
As the loaf is moving through the passage 11, its movement will be stopped as a result of a friction between the guiding plate 9 and the base 2 and/or as a result of its contact with the blades 6. In order to move the loaf 3 through the set of blades 4, a mobile pusher device 14 is provided which allows to exert a pushing force on the loaf 3 in the direction of the blades 6.
Said pusher device 14 comprises a succession of parallel fingers 15 distributed over the width of the passage 11. The fingers 15 have free ends 16 to push against the loaf 3 so as to move it forward through the set of blades 4. The width of the fingers 15, in a direction parallel to the plane of the set of blades 4, is smaller than the distance between two successive blades 6 so as to make it possible for the fingers 15 to extend through the set of blades 4 in order to push the loaf 3 beyond the blades 6 into the output compartment 7.
The far ends of the fingers 15, as opposed to their free ends 16, are fixed to a rotary shaft 17 which cooperates with drive means making it possible to move the fingers 15 in the passage up to in between the blades 6. Said rotary shaft 17 extends substantially parallel to the base 2, to the guiding plate 10 and to the set of blades 4, and it is situated above the guiding plate 10 and outside the passage 11. The pusher device 14 can be moved in particular from a retracted position, in which the loaf 3 can freely move through the passage 11, and a position in which the fingers 15, in particular their free ends 16, pass through all the blades 4. In
As the pusher device 14 moves from its retracted position towards the position in which the free ends 16 of the fingers 15 are situated in the output compartment 7, the fingers 15 move through the recesses 12 between the strips or tabs 13 of the guiding plate 10.
The strips or tabs 13 and the fingers 15 are alternately provided in a direction substantially parallel to the plane of the set of blades 4. Between the strips or tabs 13 and the adjacent fingers 15 is provided a space which is sufficient to allow for the presence, in that space, of a blade 6 of the set of blades 4.
When a loaf of bread 3 to be sliced arrives at the blades 6 while moving along the passage 11, the pusher device 14 will be driven as of its retracted position to put the free ends 16 of the fingers 15 into contact with the loaf 3, as shown in
As represented in
As soon as the loaf 3 has passed the set of blades 4, the pusher device is put back in its retracted position.
Since, according to the invention, the pusher device 14 can be arranged outside the passage 11 of the loaf of bread 3 and can be subjected to a movement through the thrust means 9, it is possible to build bread slicers which are very compact compared to conventional slicers wherein a push rod is provided which cannot pass the thrust means.
Said slicer comprises an input compartment 1 with a base 2 on which several loaves of bread 3 can be placed, as represented in
When the last loaf of the series is situated in front of the blades 6, the operator will activate the pusher device 14 in order to make this last loaf pass through the set of blades 4, as described above, and to slice it, as shown in
Naturally, the invention is not restricted to the embodiments described above and represented in the accompanying drawings; on the contrary, many other variants could be considered while still remaining within the scope of the invention.
Thus, for example, it is possible that the base 2 in the input compartment 1 is not inclined but extends in a substantially horizontal plane. In that case, an operator can introduce the loaf manually up to the set of blades 4 and then activate the pusher device to make the loaf pass through the blades 6 so as to slice it.
The pusher device must not necessarily be fixed to a rotary shaft 17, but it may also be provided with a system which subjects it to a translation, or a combination of a translation and a rotation, between the retracted position and the position in which the free ends 16 of the fingers 15 go through the set of blades 4.
In the embodiments of the slicer according to the invention described above, fingers 15 and strips or tabs 13 are alternately provided along the width of passage 11. It goes without saying that it is also possible that several strips or tabs 13 extend between two successive fingers 15 or that several fingers 15 extend in the recesses 12. Moreover, a strip or tab 13 or a finger 15 must not necessarily extend between two adjacent blades 6 as the loaf is being pushed through the set of blades 4.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2015/5681 | Oct 2015 | BE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2528853 | Brustowsky | Nov 1950 | A |
4662257 | Petersen | May 1987 | A |
4686875 | Rijkaart | Aug 1987 | A |
4759168 | Petersen | Jul 1988 | A |
D545615 | Lin | Jul 2007 | S |
7987757 | Willett | Aug 2011 | B2 |
20060075859 | Willett | Apr 2006 | A1 |
20140208917 | Whitney | Jul 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2039483 | Mar 2009 | EP |
2801455 | Nov 2014 | EP |
538919 | Aug 1941 | GB |
2242117 | Sep 1991 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20170113371 A1 | Apr 2017 | US |