The present invention relates to a cigarette manufacturing method and machine.
In cigarette manufacturing machines, shredded tobacco is normally fed via an input hopper to a gravity channel connected via a carding unit to a basin, from which extends upwards an upflow channel closed at the top end by a conveyor belt permeable to air. In the upflow channel, an upward air current, at least partly produced by suction through the conveyor belt, draws up the light part of the tobacco comprising powder and relatively minute shreds, while any heavier parts, such as lumps, woody parts, or foreign bodies (stones and similar) fall by gravity into the basin and are rejected.
Though widely used and relatively effective, the above method may result in problems caused by the heavier parts, particularly the foreign bodies, damaging the carding unit.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a cigarette manufacturing method and machine designed to eliminate the aforementioned drawback, and which are cheap and easy to implement.
According to the present invention, there is provided a cigarette manufacturing method as claimed in claim 1 and, preferably, in any one of the following Claims depending directly or indirectly on claim 1.
According to the present invention, there is also provided a cigarette manufacturing machine.
A number of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
As shown in
Output conduit 14 comprises an input portion, which forms a top extension of cleaning tower 13 and winds about a suction cage 15 rotating about a substantially horizontal axis 16 and shielded partly by a bottom plate 17. Suction cage 15 defines, with its free outer portion, part of the lateral surface of output conduit 14, and is powered so that the part of its surface contacting shredded tobacco stream 4 flowing along output conduit 14 rotates about axis 16 in the same direction as direction 11. At its output end, output conduit 14 is closed by a slide valve 18 rotating about an axis 19 parallel to axis 16.
As shown in
As shown in
Just above basin 23, upflow channel 22 communicates with an intake header 30 for a secondary-air stream 30a, which “bubbles” along upflow channel 22 and is preferably pumped along header 30 from the outside. Alternatively, the secondary air may simply be drawn in from outside by the low pressure generated inside cleaning tower 13 by the primary air drawn by suction system 20.
As shown in
As shown in
The shredded tobacco stream 4 reaching the input of input conduit 9 is therefore substantially all drawn, by the primary-air stream drawn through suction cage 15, onto the underside of conveyor belt 7, to form mat 6, along channel 2, which, as stated, comprises, in succession, input conduit 9, flared conduit 10, output conduit 14, hopper 42, box 43, conveyor 44, tray 46, gravity conduit 48, conveyor 50, and upflow conduit 51. As it flows along channel 2, shredded tobacco stream 4 expands sharply inside flared conduit 10, which has the effect of breaking up any lumps in the tobacco, and of freeing the rest of the tobacco of so-called “heavy” parts defined by any remaining lumps and/or woody tobacco parts and/or foreign bodies.
Expansion is enhanced by supplying further air by means of auxiliary pneumatic circuits 32 and 33, of which at least auxiliary pneumatic circuit 32 may be dispensed with when working with particularly light shredded tobacco.
The heavy parts are eliminated at node 12, by the secondary-air stream flowing from header 30 up along upflow channel 22 allowing the “light” parts in shredded tobacco stream 4 to “float” through node 12 to output conduit 14 and hopper 42, while the heavier parts drop in the opposite direction down upflow channel 22 into basin 23.
Obviously, the specific weight and nature of the parts deposited in basin 23 depend on the speed of the secondary air flowing along upflow channel 22; which speed can be regulated, for a given flow rate along header 30, by actuator 27. In this connection, it should be pointed out that the sinusoidal shape of lateral walls 24 an 25, by producing significant turbulence inside upflow channel 22, not only assists in separating the heavy from the light parts and in feeding the light parts up along cleaning tower 13, but also exponentially enhances the effect of actuator 27 varying the section of upflow channel 22.
As shown in
Cleaning tower 13 tapers downwards, and is defined at the bottom by a basin 54 closed at the bottom by a rotary slide dump valve 55. Above base 54, cleaning tower 13 is defined laterally by a lateral wall 56 beneath suction cage 52, and by a lateral wall 57 beneath flared conduit 10. Lateral wall 57 has a number of holes 58, through which an air stream 59 is directed to blow shredded tobacco stream 4 from flared conduit 10 to suction cage 52. In an alternative embodiment not shown, lateral wall 56 also has holes for the passage of air stream 59.
As it flows along channel 2, shredded tobacco stream 4 expands sharply inside flared conduit 10, which has the effect of breaking up any lumps in the tobacco, and of freeing the rest of the tobacco of so-called “heavy” parts defined by any remaining lumps, woody tobacco parts, and/or foreign bodies. The heavy parts are eliminated in cleaning tower 13 by force of gravity, so that the “light” parts of shredded tobacco stream 4 are captured by suction cage 52, while the heavier parts drop down along cleaning tower 13 into basin 54. Obviously, the specific weight and the nature of the parts deposited in basin 54 depend on the flow rate and speed of air stream 59 through holes 58 in lateral wall 57.
In other words, in manufacturing machine 1 described, the shredded tobacco stream 4 reaching carding units 45 and 49—of which, carding unit 45 may be dispensed with—is substantially clean and poses no threat to carding units 45 and 49.
Moreover, given the expansion inside flared conduit 10 and the amount of air available through input unit 3 and cleaning tower 13, cleaning of shredded tobacco stream 4 on manufacturing machine 1 is far superior to that achievable, on known manufacturing machines, immediately upstream from upflow conduit 51; and the shredded tobacco stream 4 reaching carding units 45 and 49 is more uniform. Finally, it should be stressed that, in manufacturing machine 1, the shredded tobacco stream 4 flowing along channel 2 is substantially cleaned at the expense of primary air produced in the tobacco plant anyway, and normally for other purposes, outside manufacturing machine 1. Consequently, cleaning shredded tobacco stream 4 on manufacturing machine 1 involves no additional power equipment which is not already provided for, for other purposes, in the tobacco plant.
The above obviously also applies to any machine producing multiple cigarette rods, in which the end portion of channel 2 is defined in known manner by a number of parallel upflow conduits 51 closed at the top by respective conveyor belts 7.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2003A0124 | Mar 2003 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/50383 | 8/20/2003 | WO | 00 | 3/22/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/077970 | 9/16/2004 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3624748 | Strydom | Nov 1971 | A |
3871385 | David | Mar 1975 | A |
3881498 | Wochnowski | May 1975 | A |
4442848 | Seragnoli | Apr 1984 | A |
4889138 | Heitmann et al. | Dec 1989 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
496 801 | Apr 1930 | DE |
955846 | Apr 1964 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060225748 A1 | Oct 2006 | US |