The present invention relates to a cigarette maker.
In a typical cigarette making machine, shredded tobacco is directed normally along a feed duct to an infeed hopper, from which it is taken up by a picking or carding unit and fed into a descending channel or chute.
At the bottom end of the chute, the tobacco is transferred by a toothed outfeed unit onto a feed conveyor and then carried by this same conveyor toward the bottom end of an ascending channel or riser, of which the top end is enclosed by an air-permeable transport belt.
An air current set up in the ascending channel, generated at least in part by suction through the permeable belt, ensures that the lighter particles of tobacco consisting in dust and relatively minute shreds are directed upwards, whereas any heavier particles such as scraps and stems, stones, metal or plastic fragments and the like, are caused to drop by gravity into a collection vessel at the bottom end of the ascending channel, from where they are rejected.
Whilst the method outlined above is effective enough, it can present certain drawbacks inasmuch as the carding unit is susceptible to damage from the heavier particles, and in particular the metal or plastic foreign matter.
The object of the present invention is to provide a cigarette maker that will be unaffected by the drawbacks in question, and will also be of simple and economic embodiment.
The stated object is realized according to the present invention in a cigarette maker comprising: an infeed hopper, a pneumatic feed duct carrying a flow of shredded tobacco to the hopper, a carding unit by which the tobacco is taken up from the hopper and released as a flow of divided particles directed first through a descending channel then through an ascending channel, toward an aspirating outfeed conveyor belt placed at the top end of the ascending channel.
The machine disclosed includes a separator device for the removal of foreign matter from the flow of shredded tobacco, comprising means by which to form and feed a carpet of tobacco, descending conveyor means into which tobacco is directed by the forming and feeding means in free fall, an outfeed duct interposed between the outlet of the descending conveyor means and an inlet connecting with the hopper, and means by which to generate a stream of air directed along the outfeed duct.
The invention will now be described in detail, by way of example, with the aid of the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
The tobacco 3 is directed from the hopper 2 down into a feed chamber 6 occupied by a carding unit 7 equipped with a carding drum 8 driven in rotation about a horizontal axis 9 and turning counter-clockwise as seen in
The top end of the riser 15 is enclosed by an aspirating transport belt 16 made of air-permeable material such as will attract the tobacco particles and gather them progressively into a continuous stream 17 providing the filler for the manufactured cigarettes (not illustrated).
18 denotes a separator device, shown in
More exactly, and with reference to
The first section 20 of the separator device 18, which is coupled directly to the feed duct 4, comprises means, denoted 23 in their entirety, by which to form and feed the tobacco as a carpet 24 of predetermined thickness S.
The forming and feeding means 23 of the first section 20 comprise a substantially horizontal looped conveyor belt 25 passing around two return pulleys 26, of which at least one is power driven, and a tray 27 caused to vibrate through the agency of respective actuator means shown schematically as a block denoted 28.
The vibrating tray 27 is inclined, presenting a transverse dimension that increases along the feed direction followed by the tobacco carpet 24, as discernible in
In the embodiment of
The bottom outlet end of the vertical duct 30 is connected to the inlet end of the ascending outfeed duct 22 by way of a bend 32 in which foreign matter is able to accumulate before dropping through a reject duct 33 into a collection vessel 34.
The embodiment of
Finally, the embodiment of
In operation, a relatively compacted mass of shredded tobacco 3 flowing from the upstream unit or machine 5 along the feed duct 4 at a first velocity V1 is deposited on the top branch of the conveyor belt 25, which will be driven at a second velocity V2 slower than the first V1. The tobacco 3 settles on the belt, spreading gradually to form a carpet 24 of relatively limited thickness S.
The carpet 24 runs off the belt 25 and onto the vibrating tray 27, whereupon the vibratory motion has the effect of advancing the tobacco 3 while loosening the constituent particles and stems, which are thereupon distributed transversely to the feed direction in such a way as to form a layer of thickness S1 reduced further from the thickness S of the carpet 24 formed initially.
In all of the embodiments illustrated, the fact of isolating the conveyor belt 25 and the vibrating tray 27 from the pneumatic pressure of the feed duct 4 is instrumental in enabling a reduction in the rate at which the tobacco 3 advances, from a given first velocity V1 to a predetermined second velocity V2.
In effect, the tobacco advances along the feed duct 4 at a relatively high velocity V1, determined by the associated pneumatic circuit, whereas during its passage along the belt 25 and thereafter along the tray 27, the first velocity V1 can be reduced to a lower velocity V2 in order to facilitate the removal of foreign matter. Together with the steps of gradually disentangling the tobacco and reducing the thickness S of the carpet 24 and the subsequent drop down the descending conveyor means 29, this slowing effect favors the separation of foreign bodies from the flow of tobacco 3 at the moment of its passage adjacent to the vent 31a of the blower means 31.
Finally, it will be self-evident that the unit or module 19 is easily deployed, whether as a first time installation or retrofitted to a cigarette maker 1 already in commission without any separator device 18.
The inclusion of the unit 19 by no means excludes the possibility of the machine 1 being equipped with a second separator device installed downstream of the carding unit 7. Indeed in this instance, the presence of a second separator will help to obtain an extremely thorough winnowing action on the flow of tobacco ascending through the riser 15.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2004A000358 | Jun 2004 | IT | national |