The present invention relates generally to-bookbinding machines and material handling machinery and more particularly to a device for transporting printed products.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,196,835, hereby incorporated by reference herein, discloses an improved collating machine which includes a stitcher assembly which stitches a group of signatures while they are moving. A saddle conveyor travels past a collating station and individual signatures are fed from the collating station onto the conveyor to form the group of collated signatures. The conveyor carries the group of collated signatures through the stitcher assembly which binds the signatures in each group together.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,482,141 discloses a method and device for conveying signatures from a blade chain conveyor supporting the signatures directly at a fold line. The signatures are gripped from above by orbitally-rotating clamping pads, which then transfer the signatures to a belt conveyor perpendicular to the blade chain conveyor.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,616,139 discloses a device for removing printed products, having a fold and being transported uniformly spaced and astraddle by a transport device, that has a rotatingly driven gripping device with controlled gripping elements for gripping one of the printed products by the fold on the transport device and removing the printed product while stably holding the printed product.
The present invention provides a gripping device for gripping a printed product including a rotatable first arm having a first gripper pad and a pivot; a rotatable second arm having a second gripper pad and a pivot; a first link connecting the first gripper arm and second gripper arm, and a second link having a spring connected to the first link. A method is also provided.
Grippers may be limited in their ability to grip products with varying thicknesses before a change in setup is required. By advantageously providing a gripping device with a spring link compensating for varying thickness in products, the gripper can grip a single sheet of paper to a book 0.5 inches thick without adjustments or changes in setup.
Furthermore, the clamping force of the gripper may increase as the product thickness increases, allowing the gripper to transport a thicker product.
The present invention also provides a method for gripping a printed product including the steps of:
rotating a first gripper arm having a first gripper pad and a pivot;
rotating a second gripper arm having a second gripper pad and a pivot;
moving a first link downward or upward to open or close the gripper arms;
moving a second link having a spring in the same direction as the first link; and
moving the first and second gripper pads downwardly to grip a printed product;
the second link being connected to the first link.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention will be elucidated with reference to the drawings, in which:
As a printed product 40 is transported along an escalator tucker 12, escalator tucker 12 lifts printed product 40 up to be gripped by grippers 20. Gripper device 14 is timed with escalator tucker 12 via a controller 80 controlling individually driven servo motors 82, 84, although the escalator tucker 12 could be geared to gripping device 14 as well. Gripper 20 removes printed product 40 from escalator tucker 12 and delivers printed product 40 to delivery conveyor 10. Delivery conveyor 10 transports printed product 40 further along. Escalator tucker 12 may be similar to the signature transport device disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2005/0225023, hereby incorporated by reference herein.
The gripper 20 is spring-loaded in an open position, for example, by a cam spring forcing link 30 downwardly in
Spring 52 can compensate for product thickness.
Spring link 32 thus moves in two ways. Spring link 32 moves as a whole when gripper jaw 21 opens and closes before a product is gripped. Spring link 32 also compresses to accommodate thickness of a printed product 40.
Link 34 moves in direction D and pulls spring link 32 downward as gripper 20 opens. (See
As gripper jaw 21 closes, link 34 moves in a direction opposite direction D and pushes spring link 32 upward. (See
The term “thick printed product” is defined as a printed product 0.5″ thick or greater although the present invention is not only applicable to thick printed products.
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3363929 | Nelson | Jan 1968 | A |
4196835 | Schlough | Apr 1980 | A |
4482141 | Moser | Nov 1984 | A |
4730861 | Spencer | Mar 1988 | A |
4768428 | Silvestrini et al. | Sep 1988 | A |
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5253910 | Perrier | Oct 1993 | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080007075 A1 | Jan 2008 | US |