The present invention relates to machines, which inspect mold numbers defined on the heel of a glass container.
Glass containers or bottles are formed in an I.S. Machine which is a machine made up of a number of identical sections. Each section may produce a number of bottles. Should a formed bottle later fail an inspection, it is helpful to know the mold in which it was formed and accordingly bottles are usually formed with a mold code. One such code is defined by convex dots of glass formed when the bottle is formed in a blow mold. These dots extend about a horizontal plane at the heel portion of the bottle. U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,049,389 and 6,795,176 illustrate a heel code mold number reader. An alternate code can be formed of dots formed on the bottom of the bottle (Japanese publication 61-278740).
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved mold number reader.
Other objects and advantages of the present portion of this invention will become apparent from the following accompanying drawings which illustrate, in accordance with the mandate of the patent statutes, a presently preferred embodiment incorporating the principles of the invention.
The invention will become apparent from the following accompanying schematic drawing which illustrates, in accordance with the mandate of the patent statutes, a presently preferred embodiment.
A bottle to be inspected 10 is supported in a vertical orientation by opposed pairs of belt conveyors 12 at an inspection station. A mold code in the form of convex dots 14 is formed on an annular portion of the heel of the bottle. The bottle is located above a protective window 16 that supports an inner conical reflector 18 with an outer reflecting surface 20 and an outer ring reflector 22 with an inner conical reflecting surface 24. The inner conical reflector and the outer ring reflector are coaxial with the axis 26 of the bottle. A light source 30 directs light coaxially towards the bottle. A coaxial beam splitter 32, located between the light source and the inner conical reflector, directs a part of the beam of light towards a light block or trap 34. The remainder of the light beam reaches the inner conical reflector. A first cone of illumination light 35 is reflected by the inner conical reflector as a second conical illumination beam 36 towards the outer ring reflector. The second conical illumination beam 36 reflects from the outer ring reflector as the third conical illumination beam 38 which is directed towards the annular area of the bottle heel where the dot code is located. This third conical beam of light reflects off the dots retracing its exact path back as the third conical beam, the second conical beam and the first conical beam towards the light source. The beam splitter 32 redirects a portion of the retraced conical beam towards a CCD or similar camera 40 which is capable of imaging the light reflected off of the dot code bumps. An image processor 42 defines the imaged mold code.