1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is directed to conveyor systems, and more particularly to systems for facilitating loading of conveyors.
2. Description of Related Art
Conveyors are used to transport goods and packages in all types of environments and experience especially heavy use in manufacturing and shipping industries. In addition, characteristics of the flow of goods and packages along such conveyor systems, such as timing and positioning of the goods and packages, must often be tailored to the needs of the manufacturer or shipper. Accumulator conveyor systems are divided into zones in which a driving force may be selectively applied to a conveying surface which provides each package with a stopping position. As a result, packages or goods may be accumulated in successive zones for eventual discharge from the conveyor.
As an example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,862,907 to Taylor (“Taylor”) discloses an accumulation conveyor 10 that is divided into a plurality of accumulating zones A, B, C, D and E, as shown in
Despite improvements in the control systems of conveyors, conventional conveyors have other areas in which improvements are needed. For instance, when a driver places a package or load with a forklift on an infeed conveyor zone, a sensor at the downstream end of the zone detects the placement and wakes up the zone. The rollers of the zone then begin to turn as the load is lowered onto the conveying surface. This has the drawback of putting pressure on the sides of the forks of the forklift, making it difficult for the forklift to disengage from the load. In another scenario, the forklift is placing the load into an intermediate zone which adds the complication of possibly having an upstream load move into the intermediate zone.
One conventional way to avoid these problems is to apply a zone stop signal to the module that controls the loading zone and the upstream zone, if one is present. This requires the zone stop signal to be activated in some manner, such as through a photoelectric eye aimed horizontally across an approach path of the forklift. The zone stop 1) stops the rollers in the loading zone and 2) stops the upstream zone (if present) from conveying the load into the loading zone. Backing the forklift away from the conveyor unblocks the photoelectric sensor allows the conveyor to commence normal operation.
However, the photoelectrical eye must often be installed in several zones as an aftermarket assembly with external controls and wiring. This can be a complex and expensive undertaking.
Therefore, it would be advantageous to have a conveyor and loading zone system that provides for loading at multiple zones of the conveyor without extensive external controls and wiring. It would be further advantageous if the loading zone system were operable with a zero-pressure accumulation conveyor system.
The above needs are met, and other advantages are achieved, by providing a conveyor system that includes a zoned conveyor surface and a loading sensor. The loading sensor is configured to detect placement of a load into the zone. A loading timer is activated by loading detection by the sensor and while activated, a controller system halts movement of the zone. This stops movement of the zone, facilitating placement of the load in the zone. Also, a sensor blocked signal may be sent to the upstream zone to stop movement of any loads in the upstream zone into the zone while loading. Normal movement in the upstream zone is handled by triggering a travel time for a predetermined period of time, during which the loading timer is overridden so that the upstream load travels normally downstream.
In one embodiment, the present invention includes a conveyor system for conveying a plurality of loads. The conveyor system includes a conveying surface configured to carry the loads in at least a downstream direction. The conveying surface is divided into a plurality of zones. A loading sensor of the conveyor system is associated with at least one of the plurality of zones and is configured to detect placement of one of the loads in the zone. Also included is a loading timer that is configured to be activated by the loading sensor when it detects placement of the load into the zone. The loading timer is configured to be activated for a predetermined time period thereafter. A controller system is configured to control movement of each of the zones of the conveyor independently and to halt movement of the zone in response to the loading timer being activated. Advantageously, this provides time for the load to be placed in the zone without the zone moving.
In another aspect, the conveyor system may also include a travel timer. The travel timer is configured to be activated by movement of one of the loads in an upstream one of the zones. It remains activated for a second predetermined time and the controller system is configured to deactivate the loading timer during this second predetermined period of time. This allows normally moving package to not be interrupted by loading until they are conveyed downstream.
Additionally, the loading sensor may be further configured to detect movement of the load along the conveying surface into the zone. In this instance, the controller is configured to continue conveying the load detected moving along the conveying surface while the travel timer is activated if the downstream zone is open.
In another aspect, the loading timer may restart after each blockage.
The controller system may be further configured to halt movement of an upstream one of the zones in response to the loading timer being activated. This stops loads from being conveyed into the zone while it is being loaded.
To ensure that loads are detected to activate the loading timer, the loading sensor may be placed between the upstream and downstream ends of the zone. Further, the loading sensor could be placed near the middle of the zone. Alternatively, the sensor could be placed at the downstream end of the zone.
In another aspect, a second loading sensor could be added to detect placement of the load in the zone. For example, the first loading sensor could be positioned near a downstream end, allowing it to sense, normally conveyed loads, and the second loading sensor positioned at an edge of the zone. The second sensor could sense the presence of loading equipment, such as a forklift, and trigger the loading timer.
In another embodiment, the present invention may include a sensing module for controlling the application of a drive force to a respective accumulating zone of an accumulation conveyor. Included in the sensing module are a body and a logic circuitry at least partially within the body. A sensor of the sensing module is coupled to the logic circuitry. The sensor provides a product sensed signal to the logic circuitry when a product is within its accumulating zone. Control connections are connected in communication with the logic circuitry. The control connections include an upstream product detect signal input adapted to receive a product detect signal downstream output from an upstream sensing module. A downstream product detect signal input is adapted to receive a product detect signal upstream output from a downstream sensing module. A product detect signal upstream output is adapted to transmit a product detect signal to an upstream module. A product detect signal downstream output is adapted to transmit a product detect signal to a downstream module. A drive/no drive force selection output is in communication with the drive force that selectively enables and disables the drive force for the respective accumulating zone. A loading timer is configured to be active for a predetermined period of time after activation. The logic circuitry is configured to activate the loading timer in response to the product sensed signal and to communicate the no drive force election output during the predetermined period of time.
The present invention has many advantages. For example, the use of the loading timer enables a delay that allows loading of packages into zones on the conveyor system. The use of additional sensors, such as the side sensor in an intermediate loading zone, or a repositioned sensor at the infeed end, facilitates detection of loading and triggering of the loading timer. Use of the travel timer, on the other hand, ensures that normally traveling packages are not interrupted by normal package tracking triggering of the loading timer. Overall, the conveyor loading system allows the conveyor to detect loading of packages and to halt the zone in which loading is occurring, and to stop downstream movement of packages upstream to avoid a collision during loading.
Having thus described the invention in general terms, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, which are not necessarily drawn to scale, and wherein:
The present invention now will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which some, but not all embodiments of the invention are shown. Indeed, this invention may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will satisfy applicable legal requirements. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
A zero-pressure accumulation conveyor 10 includes an upper (top) conveying surface 12 and a lower (bottom) surface 13 defined, in this case, by the tops and bottoms, respectively, of a plurality of rollers 14, as shown in
The terms package, load, carton, object, etc., as used herein denote something carried by the conveyor 10 and in and of themselves should be considered interchangeable. Therefore, these terms should not be considered limiting to the invention.
The conveyor 10 is divided into a plurality of accumulating zones identified by the letters A, B and C such that there are three accumulating zones. The conveyor 10 has a direction of product flow over the upper conveying surface 12 which is arbitrarily chosen as from accumulating zone A towards accumulating zone C. Therefore, accumulating zone A is the first accumulating zone, generally known as the infeed end accumulating zone, while accumulating zone C is the last accumulating zone, generally known as the discharge end accumulating zone.
It should be noted that the number of zones illustrated in
Referring again to
The side rail 19 supports a plurality of zone controllers 21A, 21B and 21C and a plurality of drive motors 22A, 22B and 22C. Each controller is paired with an adjacent one of the drive motors, with each controller/drive motor pairing positioned in a respective one of the zones A-C, as is indicated by the reference numbers. Side rail 19 further supports a disconnect and power supply panel 23 which is positioned in the embodiment illustrated in
Each logic module 20 includes a housing or casing 24 that encloses electrical logic circuitry that receives various input signals and transmits various output signals based on internal evaluations as per the exemplary chart in
The casing 24 of each module 20 includes a pair of bores 26 extending therethrough that allow the casing to be mounted to a center rail 29 underneath the rollers or conveying surface 12 of its respective one of the zones, as shown in
The sensor 28 is used to determine the presence or absence of an item or package within the respective accumulating zone and to send a signal to its respective logic circuitry indicating the same. The sensor may be a photoelectric sensor, a proximity sensor, an ultrasonic sensor, or any other type of sensor that is capable of detecting the presence or absence of an item within the respective accumulating zone and providing a signal indicative of the same to the logic circuitry. Different types of sensors, and different types of conveying surfaces, may require different positioning of the sensors. For instance, each sensor 28 may be mounted on one of the side rails 18, 19 and have a field of view in the cross-conveyor direction. Such side mounting would be advantageous when belt conveying surfaces are used because the belt would otherwise block the view of a sensor mounted under the conveying belt surfaces.
Each logic module 20 is in communication with its neighboring or adjacent module, both in the upstream direction and the downstream direction relative to conveyor flow, where possible, through communications cables 42. Therefore, module 20B is in communication with upstream module 20A and downstream module 20C, as shown in
Each zone controller 21 has logic circuitry specific to controlling the operation of a respective one of the motors 22 in its zone. Each controller 21 includes a pair of power connections 50 on its upstream and downstream sides. Attached to the power connections 50 are power supply lines 46 that connect the controllers in a series ending in the power supply panel 23. Notably, the zone controller 21 at a discharge end 120 has an open power connection (zone C in the embodiment illustrated in
The power supply panel 23 may include one, or more, connections 48 for attachment of the corresponding number of power supply lines 46, allowing the panel to be positioned in any selected upstream (single output as shown in
Each drive motor 22 could be 208, 230 or 460 volt, ½ horsepower motor that has a torque rating of at least 100 in-lb and preferably about 687 in-lb (for a conveyor load rating of 3,000 lb), or even higher depending upon the desired loads to be moved by the conveyor. Such motors have a life expectancy when used in the present system of about 100,000 hours which is advantageous for low-maintenance and downtime on conveyors that experience heavy use and move heavy loads. Each drive motor 22 also includes a drive shaft 52, and, if necessary, a gearbox or reducer 54 for reducing the output speed of the drive motor at the shaft 52. The reducer 54 illustrated in
The conveyor system 10 of the present invention also has a drive assembly that includes a non-slip coupling 56 that connects the end of the motor shaft 52 to a driven roller 58 of the rollers 14. The remaining ones of the rollers are slaved to the driven roller 58 by a chain drive system wherein individual chain loops 60 extend about sprockets fixed to adjacent pairs of the slaved rollers. In this manner, driving of the driven roller 58 by the motor 22 also drives the remaining rollers 14 and causes objects supported on the rollers to move in the upstream or downstream direction. Of course, with the use of alternative conveying surfaces, chain drives may not be necessary, or optimal, such as with belt conveyors. In a belt conveyor, the driven roller drives a belt wrapped around a second, non-driven roller and the length of belt between the rollers defines the zone. Such an alternative conveying surface, however, would still benefit from the use of a non-slip coupling which has several advantages independent of the type of conveying surface.
Advantageously, unlike conventional drive systems, the conveyor 10 does not require extended chains, belts or shafts because power from a single motor need not be transmitted along the entire conveyor. In addition, the present conveyor system does not require the use of clutches to selectively transmit power to the different zones. A non-slip transmission system allows greater amounts of the power generated by the motor 22 in each of the zones to be transmitted to the conveying surface 12 (thereby increasing conveyor load capacity), reduces the noise associated with clutch engagement and eliminates the dust generated by clutch-driven systems. Particularly advantageous is a combination of the non-slip transmission with the soft-start, variable power control of the zone controllers 21A-C which replaces the hard start caused by relatively low slip clutches. Notably, non-slip is used herein to refer to connections in which no slip occurs, which excludes even low-slip clutches. Non-slip also excludes other apparatuses that experience slip during power transmission, such as fluid power transmissions.
Non-slip couplings and transmissions can include hard connections, wherein the drive shaft 52 of the motor 22/reducer 54 is coupled directly to the driven roller 58, such as by a collar or key and slot combination. Alternatively, a soft coupling, such as an elastic or flexible coupling, may be used that transmits power without slip, but facilitates a soft-start of the upper conveying surface 12. In addition, a combination of connections could be used to form a non-slip coupling or connection between the driven roller 58 to the drive shaft 52 if space constraints dictate that the motor be placed in an irregular position. For instance, the drive motors 22 could be placed beneath the lower conveying surface (i.e., below the plurality of rollers 14 in the illustrated embodiments) in each of the zones A-C so as to minimize the lateral profile of the conveyor 10. Of course, such a motor placement would limit the length of the legs 16 and inhibit conveyor configurations wherein the upper conveying surface 12 is very close to the floor.
The aggregation of accumulation modules 20A-C and controllers 21A-C of
It should be noted that although accumulation control is embodied in circuitry in separate modules and controllers in the illustrated embodiments, such circuitry could be combined in a single unit. Also, it should be noted that the modules and controllers could also be embodied in software, hardware, firmware, or combinations thereof and still execute accumulation control. However, the positioning and hardware circuitry of the embodiments illustrated (and other embodiments wherein the control logic and power control system for each zone is contained within the zone and easily connectable to upstream and downstream zones) herein are preferred for reasons of durability and the ease of adding additional zones, or combining zones, to increase the length of the conveyor system.
The logic circuitry flow of the various inputs and outputs of each module 20 is depicted in the aforementioned chart of
In combination one, when the subject module sensor 28 is CLEAR and the downstream module sensor 28 is also CLEAR, and the zone stop input is OFF, the subject module zone output state is RUN. A BLOCKED state of the subject module sensor 28 in combination two still results in a RUN for the module zone output state. So does a CLEAR state of the subject module sensor 28 and BLOCKED state of the downstream sensor 28 in combination three. Notably, combinations one, two and three depict uninhibited movement of a zone-sized or smaller package's movement with the subject zone input state OFF. The subject module is configured, however, to change its output state to STOP if the downstream sensor state is BLOCKED, as shown in combination four.
Combinations five, six, seven and eight illustrate zone outputs of the subject zone module 20 with the subject zone stop input state ON. Combination five shows the subject module sensor 28 as being CLEAR and the downstream sensor as being CLEAR, with the resultant output of the subject module zone output being RUN. In combination six, the subject module sensor 28 is BLOCKED and the downstream sensor state is CLEAR, the subject module zone output state is STOP. Thus, a package in the subject zone is stopped in response to the subject zone having the stop input state ON. In combination seven, the subject module sensor 28 is CLEAR and the resulting subject module zone output state is RUN, even with the downstream sensor is BLOCKED. Finally, with the subject module sensor 20 state being BLOCKED and the downstream module sensor 20 being BLOCKED, the subject module zone output state is STOP.
With reference now to
Referring to
Assuming, that immediate discharge of package P1 from the conveyor 10 is not desired,
Again, the sequence of events described above with reference to
Referring to
Since module 20D is still receiving its own product detect signal and a downstream product detect signal, zone D remains stopped. This produces a gap between the packages approximately equal in length to the length of the zones, hence the term singulation. Once however, the package P1 has cleared the module 20E, the module 20E stops sending a product detect signal to the adjacent upstream module 20D causing the module 20D to send a drive signal to start the drive motor 22 for its zone, zone D. The package P2 continues to advance through zone D while zone C is still stopped since the zone D module 20D is still detecting a package. As the package P2 clears the module 20D, the product detect signal to the adjacent upstream module 20C ceases allowing the package P3 to begin its travel down the conveyor. The package P2 is discharged from the conveyor as explained above with reference to package P1, likewise with package P3.
Typically, the package P1 will have been discharged from the conveyor and thus will have traveled past the module 20E before the expiration of the jam timer, and thus the product detect signal is never sent to the adjacent upstream module 20D. At this point, since module 20D is no longer receiving a product detect signal from the adjacent downstream module 20E, zone D becomes active through the module 20D outputting a drive signal, thus advancing package P2. This process continues upstream until the packages have been discharged from the conveyor.
In
Again, with the jam protection enabled while in the slug mode, if a package becomes jammed at any zone for a predetermined time period (e.g. 6 seconds) or longer, packages on the upstream side of the jammed package will stop in sequence until the jammed package is dislodged or removed. The zone containing the jammed package will continue to drive, in many cases dislodging the jammed package without outside help. The zones will return to normal operating mode once the jam is cleared.
Finally, with reference to
In another embodiment, the present invention includes a conveyor loading system 32 that can include a loading timer 33, a wake up eye 34, a side sensor 31, a travel timer 36 and selected components of the control system of the conveyor 10, such as the sensors 28, the logic modules 20, the zone controllers 21 and the communication lines 42, as shown in
The loading timer 33 is configured to activate when its logic module's sensor 28 is blocked by placement of a load into its respective zone on the conveyor 10, as shown in
The loading timer 33 is configured to remain activated even if the sensor 28 becomes clear. This allows for the temporary shifting of the package by the forklift 4 as the package or load is positioned during placement on the conveyor 10. Further, the loading timer 33 is preferably configured to reset itself if the sensor 28 is clear and then blocked again, ensuring that a full timer length is available for adjustment of the package location.
The loading timer 33 is further configured to not be invoked when a package blocks the module's sensor 28 while it is being transported normally along the conveyor 10. This avoids a disruption of product flow on the conveyor 10.
The travel timer 36 is configured to activate when the adjacent upstream zone sensor state changes from BLOCKED to CLEAR. Under normal operation conditions, this will occur as the package advances out of the upstream zone and into the loading zone. Generally, the travel timer should be set to expire after allowing enough time for the leading edge of the package to reach the loading zone's sensor 28.
The module 20 of the loading zone is configured to detect the status of the travel timer 36 before detecting the status of the loading timer 33. If the travel timer 36 is active, then the controller system will ignore the loading timer 33, essentially assuming that package being detected in the loading zone is being driven into the zone from upstream on the conveyor 10, and the module 20 therefore does not invoke the loading timer 33. Alternatively, if the travel timer 36 has not been activated, the module 20 is configured to assume that the package has been placed by the forklift 4.
The wake up eye 34 of the conveyor loading system 32 is positioned at the infeed end 118 of the conveyor 10, as shown in
If the wake up eye 34 is not present or not flagged, the travel timer 36 is inactive when the forklift 4 and/or package blocks the sensor 28. This invokes the loading timer 33 and the module 20's output is set to OFF for the duration of the timer, allowing positioning of the package or load.
In yet another aspect, as shown in
In another aspect, a dual transducer may be used that includes one or more additional sensors, such as the side sensor 31, as shown in
The conveyor loading system 32 of the present invention includes logic illustrated by
If the travel timer 36 is not active (“NO”), the logic module 20 proceeds to a step 133 and invokes the loading timer 33. The logic module 20, in a step 134, stops the zone drive with the drive controller 21. Also, the logic module transmits a blocked message upstream in a step 135, stopping the upstream zone. During stoppage, the logic module 20 is configured to continuously check, in a step 136, whether the loading timer 33 has expired (is no longer activated). If it has not expired (“NO”), the logic continues to execute step 136. If it has expired (“YES”), the logic refreshes a sleep timer in a step 137, thereby putting the conveyor 10 zone back into sleep mode.
The zone loading system 32 operates to distinguish zone loading from normal operation and controls the conveyor 10 accordingly. When loading at the zone at the infeed end 118, as shown in
Loading at an intermediate zone is illustrated in
The present invention has many advantages. For example, the use of the loading timer 33 enables a delay that allows loading of packages into zones on the conveyor system 10. The use of additional sensors, such as the side sensor 31 in an intermediate loading zone, or a repositioned sensor 28 at the infeed end 118, facilitates detection of loading and triggering of the loading timer 33. Use of the travel timer 36, on the other hand, ensures that normally traveling packages are not interrupted by normal package tracking triggering of the loading timer 33. Overall, the conveyor loading system 32 allows the conveyor 10 to detect loading of packages and to halt the zone in which loading is occurring, and to stop downstream movement of packages upstream to avoid a collision during loading.
Many modifications and other embodiments of the inventions set forth herein will come to mind to one skilled in the art to which these inventions pertain having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is to be understood that the inventions are not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed and that modifications and other embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims. Although specific terms are employed herein, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for purposes of limitation.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060289279 A1 | Dec 2006 | US |