This invention concerns a method and apparatus for handling cartoned goods.
Cartoned goods leave the factory on pallets and reside in a warehouse until purchased by a supermarket or distributor. They are taken from a warehouse rack by a robot selector or a forklift and are loaded onto a truck for transport to the retail premises. Thus the goods remain on pallets from the factory, through the warehouse, on the truck and into the supermarket. The pallets are standard size. 1200×1200 mm and a pallet load may consist of several superimposed layers of cartons. Supermarkets commonly order in multiples of pallet layers. Conventionally a pallet carries only one type of good, for example, a full load of buffer.
If an order from a supermarket is for two pallet layers of margarine, the margarine pallet will leave the warehouse with only two layers. The loader who supervises the composition of the road truck must use the road truck volume as best he may, but presently as much as 6t of the 35t load represents the timber of the pallets. This is uneconomic, the consequence of the carton by carton assembly of a customers order at the warehouse. Systems designers in the distribution business have, sought savings in records, ordering programs and software, but the physical handling of the cartons which compose the individual orders has remained unchanged for a period of years.
International pallets used in air freight do not correspond to the standard pallet in Australia and all goods must be transferred from one to the other. This is all done manually and the volume of work at airports and warehouses causes a correspondingly large number of injuries, such as repetitive strain injury (RSI).
The industry approach has been to use a stacker crane system which moves along shelving and extracts whole pallets of goods sometimes using vacuum heads carried by frames and other structures for guiding the motion of the vacuum head. Such a system is shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,782,564 and 5,102,283. These systems are efficient for bulk transfers but not equipped for part pallet loads.
A forklift is versatile but the application of vacuum handling to forklifts is exemplified by U.S. Pat. No. 4,725,186 where onboard vacuum equipment working continuously is used to handle newsprint rolls. WO 97/13718 takes the handling design further by attaching vacuum pads to the front of a pallet-like structure which can be picked up by a standard forklift. When the forklift reverts to ordinary use, the special handling accessory can be removed and parked until it is needed again. Such special purpose equipment sold as an accessory is useful but not for the layer by layer problem which comes up when pallet loads are divided in wholesale grocery.
WO 01/30675 is more pertinent that the suction devices are able to handle a layer of cartons but the utilisation of the equipment is not discussed.
The method aspect of the invention provides a method of assembling a warehouse order comprising transferring a pallet layer of cartons or part thereof as a group to or from a pallet.
Preferably the pallet size is 1200×1200 mm. One layer may correspond to 1-24 cartons. The transfer may be from a warehouse rack to a pallet. The transfer may be powered by a forklift truck equipped with a vacuum generator.
One apparatus aspect of the invention provides a pick up assembly for cartoned goods comprising:—
The lifting means may be a horizontal head of substantially the same area as a pallet with an array of suction devices projecting downwardly from the mount having ends which lie substantially in a common plane so as to contact the upper surface of the group of cartons on a pallet.
The mount may contain a vacuum chamber common to the array and the chamber may be connectable to a vacuum pump on the forklift truck.
The tubes may terminate in a resilient bellows so as to seal against the carton surface. The devices may be normally closed until the whole assembly is lowered by the forks to displace the tubes causing connection to vacuum. The tubes may ride telescopically on projections extending from the mount, the rise and fall being used to open and close a ball valve situated between the individual tube and the common chamber. This is a convenient arrangement of parts, but clearly any arrangement which will offer lost motion will be useful.
Preferably the vacuum pump is driven by its own motor so that the pump and motor may be accommodated as a unit in a box offering sound proofing.
The box may be mountable on the forklift, for example on the roof above the driver. The pump and the gang lifting means may be connected by a vacuum hose fed from a reel. The reel may take up the rise and fall motion of the fork. Thus the pick up assembly may be supplied with its own vacuum generator unit as retro fittable equipment for a standard forklift truck. As the forklifts are at a standard spacing, the flat rectangular gang lifting part is preferably provided with a pair of parallel shoes into which the forks may slide.
The pick up assembly is capable of lifting cartons made of waxed paperboard, plastic film wrapped articles and cellophane wrapped boxes. The aim is to provide a conversion kit which will offer the warehouse staff a q.d. accessory for a standard forklift. The suction devices will lift goods such as cartons of slightly differing heights because the 20 mm or so of lost motion in the telescoping action copes with minor irregularities. While a pallet size of 1200×1200 mm is a convenient size for the head, a larger size is used for airport operations. A still larger size is useful for flat articles such as glass mdf, plywood, plasterboard and other building panels, sheet metal and the like. The suction devices for larger heads are not so densely packed.
When the assembly is used on a forklift which travels up and down the aisles of a warehouse with racks on one or both sides, the assembly may be modified to allow the head to project into a rack and pick up or put down goods.
A further apparatus aspect provides a forklift truck with a pick up assembly carried in the fork position and a vacuum generator being part of the truck equipment. This may all be original equipment.
Certain embodiments of the invention are now described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:—
All views are diagrammatic.
Referring now to
The 1273×1273 nm pick up assembly 14 is suspended from the forks and is connected by a self-sealing coupling 16 to the hose 18 paid out by the reel. The opposite end of the hose is connected to a vacuum generator 20 housed in a sound proof box 22 mounted on the roof platform. The vacuum pump 24 is proprietary equipment and is belt driven by a standard 24 hp LPG engine. Vacuum exhaust 26 and engine exhaust 28 discharge into the warehouse.
Pick Up Assembly
Referring now to
The bottom plate has a 23×23 array of downwardly projecting sleeves 44. Each sleeve consists of two coaxially overlapping threaded parts. The parts unscrew to admit a steel ball 46. The ball diameter is 2 mm smaller in diameter than the bore of the sleeve. The ends of the sleeve are partially closed in a hemispherical die in order to create an upper seat 48 and a lower seat 50. The lower end of the sleeve carries a rubber bellows 52 intended to contact the top of the carton 54.
The vacuum motor runs continuously but is connected intermittently to the vacuum chamber by the driver. When the operator lowers the head onto a layer of cartons and compresses the bellows about 20 mm to create a seal. When the vacuum is applied, the ball lifts off its lower seat which by gravity is its rest position. The bellows interior is quickly evacuated and a steady vacuum allows the carton to be lifted. The ball floats as air continues to flow around it into the chamber. When the motor is switched off, the vacuum collapses, gravity sends the ball down to the lower seat and the cartons are released.
In use the operator starts with an empty pallet. From his Order list he visits the rack holding cartons of fruit and transfers two layers of cartons to the waiting pallet. He next visits the racks holding cartons of laundry powder and transfers two layers to the same pallet. The pallet is full and a standard forklift removes the full pallet to a waiting road truck. If the pick up assembly is lowered onto a load which is stepped due to previous removal of part of a layer and where only some of the suction devices seal onto the load, in these unsealing devices the ball rises to the top seat and prevents air flow into the vacuum chamber until then motor is switched off.
Sub Assembly
Referring now to
In a non-illustrated version, the sub assembly has a radius arm instead of cross slides.
In the second embodiment shown in
The stacks of cartons on warehouse or coolstore racks will have been unloaded by perhaps a different forklift or a different operator. The pallet stack which the reach truck builds must be orderly resembling a neat cube. The cubes are usually wrapped vertically with plastic sheet to prevent displacement during freighting. This means that the operator needs to be able to execute trimming movements when building a pallet. This version provides a reach facility which extends the fork advance by 300 mm and a slew facility which allows the operator to slew the pick up assembly by 15° on both sides of his advance axis.
In
In
Pallet Assembly
In
Pallet bar 132 is 1600 mm long and supports an pair of pallet tines 134. The tines pick up an empty pallet and the purpose of the pallet assembly is to raise the pallet so that it clears the truck wheels 136 and comes to rest directly beneath the pick up assembly. This sequence is shown in
The pallet bar is L-shaped and has a pair of pivot arms 138, 140 (see
The pallet bar is raised and lowered by a ram 144 attached between the suspension point 130 and a lifter 146 which passes between the pivot arms 138, 140 and acts on upper arm 138. One end of the lifter 146 is connected to the ram 144 and the opposite end has a bifurcation 148 which rides up and down brass wear strip 150 which projects from the swing frame between top and bottom mounts 124. The lifter is bent around swing post 126. The lifter accordingly executes rectilinear motion while the pallet bar is free to swing within an operation arc shown in
I have found the advantages of the, above embodiment to be:—
1. Human handling of cartons is unnecessary with consequent savings in injury claims.
2. The proportion of partially filled pallets on road trucks can be reduced.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003204232 | May 2003 | AU | national |