Delivery and ejection device for flat elements into a machine working them

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6672582
  • Patent Number
    6,672,582
  • Date Filed
    Friday, December 14, 2001
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, January 6, 2004
    21 years ago
Abstract
A device for stacking sheets delivered on a first conveyor in a plurality of parallel streams of overlapping sheets, includes a second conveyor moving slower than the first conveyor that compacts the streams as they exit the first conveyor; a third conveyor that receives the streams from the second conveyor; and a plurality of stackers, each aligned with one of the streams exiting the third conveyor, formed of endless belts positionable horizontally which cooperate with stop members to stack the incoming sheets. Completed stacks are then moved downstream on the belt. When sheets in a stream are determined to be defective; its belt for that stream is tilted, and the stream falls onto a fourth conveyor for disposal. A spacer introduces spacing into each stream to delineate portions of the streams which will form successive stacks, includes adjusting devices that lengthen and shorten the second and third conveyors, and a device selectively operable to stop passage of the streams from the second conveyor to the third conveyor. The adjusting devices are coupled to simultaneously lengthen one of the conveyors and to shorten the other conveyor. A drive mechanism for the third conveyor moves the third conveyor at the same speed as the second conveyor receiving the streams from the second conveyor, and faster than the second conveyor when delineated portions of the streams are being delivered to the stackers.
Description




The present invention has as an aim a delivery and ejection device for flat elements into a machine working them, in particular into a packaging production machine intended for the manufacturing of cardboard boxes from a web or sheet material.




Such machines include several stations the ones followed by the others, typically allowing to print the used material, to cut it out according to a reference shape by means of a rotary tool for example, then to reject, on one hand, the inconvenient waste resulting from cutting and, on the other hand, all unsuitable blanks before collecting the other boxes blanks into a delivery station.




The subject of the invention is useful in this last operation. The worked sheets or cardboard web can generally include in their width several identical boxes blanks or cuttings, each one representing the shape and the developed surface of the manufactured packaging. The amount of blanks which can be thus laid out side by side depends of course on the width of the worked support, but also on the maximum suitable format for the machine and on the size of the boxes blanks.




Once achieved, these boxes blanks are laid out, into the delivery station, in parallel lines of streams on conveyor belts. This shingling, that is to say that blanks overlap one another, is due to the fact that the conveyor belts are moving more slowly than the feeding sheets or cardboard web. There are thus as much streams rows as much blanks in the width of the worked support. The streams are then regularly collected by a stacker forming piles which will finally be delivered on a carriage or, by another belt conveyor, towards a storage station for example.




Documents EP 316'477 and EP 317'330 describe similar devices which allow the quick stacking of the downwards part of a single stream of flat elements so as to be piled up. These shingling and sheets stacking devices are working continuously without needing to stop the shingling operation during the pile removal. To do so, these devices include two overlapping conveyors with parallel belts so that the second conveyor is settled onto the longitudinal axis of the first one and can slightly go up and down through the latter. Initially, the two conveyors are moved at the same speed. When the leading part of the stream includes enough sheets to make a pile of several of them, the second conveyor raises itself slightly above the plan of the first one and carries, at high speed, the corresponding stream part to deliver it onto a plate against a stop along which the aforementioned pile will take place. Initially settled in high position, this plate goes down progressively according to the sheets stacking so that the falling height of the sheets is constant in order to ensure a good stacking. The sheets pile must then be lowered until an output level where it will be removed from the plate before this last one can raise again to be able to deliver the next pile of sheets. Meanwhile, the second conveyor was lowered and replaced in its initial position under the new leading edge of the stream which was continuously travelling thanks to the regular drive of the first conveyor. A new operating time can thus start again. The operations intended for the pile formation, its removal from the plate and the raising again of this latter in its initial position must of course succeed quickly enough to avoid, in all cases, the new edge of the stream to be almost engaged and to fall too early from the first conveyor.




Another device intended to form piles of sheets starting from shingling elements is described in the document CH 633'761. It includes several conveyors, each one comprising a rolling conveyor belt arranged into the whole width of the machine. On this width, several parallel shingle stream of blanks can fit here. This device also allows to receive and pile up boxes blanks without decreasing the machine production rate which is secured to it thanks to a braking device which will stop the run of the streams. This stop will temporarily increase the thickness of the streams. The last conveyor belt is settled so that it can turn around its control shaft, which allows, if necessary, to have the streams path deviated onto another waste removal conveyor belt. This path deviation occurs if imperfections in the printing or in the manufacturing of the boxes blanks would have been scanned by control devices located upstream. The piles of each stream are then simultaneously arranged onto a carriage movable into vertical direction, then moved by a push rod onto a transverse conveyor which will remove them.




One disadvantage of this device finds its way by the stripping of the imperfectly printed blanks which must be driven out of the normal path. Depending on the nature and on the origin of the defects, one specifies that the latter can of course modify only one row of blanks, when ignoring the other rows simultaneously produced. However, in this device, the report of a defect on one part of an unspecified stream means not only the stripping of this latter but also the stripping of all other adjacent stream parts which are simultaneously onto the same conveyor belt. It generates a waste, of course undesirable, which can become proportionally significant, especially when carrying out small production series.




The document GB 2'074'990 describes another device allowing the delivery of a certain amount of sheets starting from a stream travelling continuously through a delivery station. As it is the case for almost all delivery devices, it is necessary to enter a stop in the continuous flood of the sheets stream in order to handle with a minimum necessary time for the stripping of the pile and for the replacement of the means used to deliver the next pile. To this end, the device as described in document GB 2'074'990 is made of two en to end telescopic conveyors. Each conveyor is made of an endless belt set into rotation around a plurality of tracks or rollers. The rotation speeds of these belts are interdependent the one from the others. The front end of the first conveyor and the back end of the second conveyor, which faces it, are assembled onto a same carriage which can move longitudinally forwards to backwards into the moving direction of the stream. When the stacking is almost achieved, one must deal with a stop in the stream moved by these two conveyors. To do so, the aforementioned carriage moves towards downstream and the speed of the second conveyor is increased in order to release quickly the second conveyor from its loading and to generate thus a sufficient lack of time allowing the stripping of the pile. Once the delivery support is ready to receive a new pile, the speed of the second conveyor is reduced and the carriage goes back upstream in its initial position.




Although it is running with satisfaction, this device suffers from a first defect related to the carriage size which is necessary dependent from the length of its run. Indeed, as it is performed for this invention, one can note that the length of the carriage must be in all cases more important than the maximum length of its moving. However, if one wants to reach higher production rates, it is also necessary to increase the run of the movable carriage, which means in fact to have to perform with a carriage the more longer and the more imposing. Another defect of this device results from the repeated moving of the carriage. To be able to perform the longest possible stop of the stream, it is necessary to get the carriage back as quickly as possible. However, being at evidence of a relatively large size, this carriage represents also a significant moving entity which, on one hand, requires a powerful moving mechanism and then a braking mechanism which, on the other hand, must be controlled by a massive surrounding carrying structure. Moreover, the inertia strength of this carriage continuously generates strong shocks into the machine frame. The whole range of these undesirable requests and mechanical constraints are dealing with a heavy, cumbersome and expensive equipment.




All these devices also show another disadvantage which finds its way by the stacking. This operation needs a support, movable in the vertical plan, which successively goes from a high initial position, when it is empty and ready to receive a new pile, to a low output position allowing the side unloading of the pile. Although this way of doing is reliable and works well, it needs however a whole range of operations which can only be sequentially carried out. As it seems at first to be impossible to reduce much more the useful time to carry out each separate operation, it is also impossible to reduce the total time needed to discharge the pile and to raise up again the support in its initial position, considering that the support can be raised up again only once the pile is discharged.




Another disadvantage is due to the fact that these devices, either do simply not allow to reject sheets of insufficient quality, or excessively extend this operation to a whole range of the production by eliminating all the sheets within the width of the machine. To carry out this stripping operation, another more accurate solution consists in rejecting the sheets of bad quality one by one, in a quality controlling and stripping device before these ones are shingling. However, located into the production line upstream from the delivery station, such a device is, on one hand, not intended for the stripping of already shingling sheets and, on the other hand, means an additional module for the production line, which is completely dissociated and different from the object of the present invention.




The present invention has as an aim to deal with the above mentioned disadvantages by providing a delivery and ejection device for flat elements which is fast, economic, universal and easy to deal with. With the wording economic, one will understand that this device has to be manufactured at low cost, but must also avoid any kind of waste while quickly sorting the parts which are comprised within the quality standards from those with defects having to be rejected from the production line. With the wording universal, one intends to provide a device which can suit at the same time with a whole range of goods of different formats and ensure an easy way to deal with so as to work with each one of these products while reducing as much as possible the settling operations of the delivery device between two series of different works. Thus, the object of this invention must be easily adaptable so as to deliver as well wide boxes blanks, such as for example 1 or 2 blanks in the whole width of the machine, as smaller boxes blanks numerously divided (for example 10) into the width of the machine. This device must also be able to reject quickly and with less wasting all boxes blanks which are not included within the required quality standards. One will note that to effectively suit this last speed condition, it is at this point already impossible to think of carrying out such a sorting sheet after sheet before the latter are shingling.




To this end, the present invention has as an aim a delivery and ejection device in conformity with what is stated in claim 1.











The invention will be more readily understood from one embodiment without limiting force and illustrated in the accompanying figures wherein





FIG. 1

represents a schematic front view of the device according to the invention in a first situation,





FIG. 2

represents a simplified schematic plan view of the device as shown on

FIG. 1

,





FIG. 3

represents a schematic front view of the device according to the invention in a second situation,





FIG. 4

represents a schematic sectional view, according to the line IV—IV of

FIG. 1

, of a part of the driving mechanism of the device according to the invention,





FIG. 5

represents the downstream part of the device of the invention in a different situation than the one illustrated on

FIGS. 1 and 3

,





FIG. 6

represents a partial sectional profile view, according to the line VI—VI of

FIG. 7

, of an output ramp of piles of sheets,





FIG. 7

represents a detailed partial sectional view of the output track illustrated on FIG.


6


.











In order to define some wording usually used in the following description of the orientation or the localization of some parts of embodiments, one will note that the words “longitudinal” and “transverse” always deal with the main run axis of flat elements into the machine, and that the words “upstream” and “downstream” respectively mean the side which is right next to the machine input and the one which is right next to the machine output.





FIG. 1

represents a schematic front view of a device


20


for delivery and ejection of flat elements, such as cardboard sheets


2


, in a first situation illustrating the moving of a stream


22


of sheets


2


from upstream to downstream in the longitudinal direction of the machine according to the way of run shown by arrow


1


. For practical reasons issued from use tests, a very tight stream of sheets, such-as stream


22


in device


20


, cannot be directly assembled starting from sheets


2


travelling the ones after the others at very high speed. Thus, the delivery device


20


must first of all be preceded by a unit


10


comprising a first stream


12


of sheets


2


, more spaced than those of stream


22


, between a conveying belt


13


moved at reduced speed by a driving roller


14


and a range of pressure rollers


15


pressing and slowing down sheets


2


against the conveying belt


13


when they arrive and shingle at high speed into the unit


10


.




The stream


22


is achieved on a second conveying belt


23


comprised in the delivery and ejection device


20


of sheets


2


. This conveyor belt


23


fills, as well as all conveying belts of this device, the whole width of the machine. It is actuated by a driving roller


24


which makes it turn, at a lower speed than the one of the conveying belt


13


, around a plurality of rollers or idling rollers


25


,


26


,


27


,


28


and


29


.




Driven into the direction shown by arrow


1


, the stream


22


travels then on a third conveyor belt


33


put into rotation by another driving roller


34


which is, as well as the other driving means, completely interdependent. The conveyor belt


33


turns, into the direction of arrows


1


, around other rollers or idling rollers


35


,


36


,


37


,


38


and


39


.




After the conveyor belt


33


a stacker


40


collects the stream sheets


2


on a plurality of tracks


41


, adjustable in the width of the machine, so as to form a pile


42


which, as illustrated on

FIG. 1

, will be finally rejected out of device


20


and of stacker


40


in the direction of arrow


4


by one or more belts


43


provided on each track


41


. The stacking of sheets


2


is carried out on the tracks


41


by displacement of the downstream end of the conveyor belt


33


in the vertical plane so that the height of the falling down of sheets


2


onto the top of the pile is constant. To this end, the roller


36


is interdependent from a lifting platform


50


made up of a frame


51


vertically movable as illustrated by the double arrow


3


. This frame


51


is secured, on each side, to a chain


52


suspended by sprockets


53


. The drive of the chain is achieved by means of an engine


54


coupled to one of the sprockets


53


.





FIG. 2

shows a simplified schematic plan view of the device as shown on FIG.


1


. On this second fig., four illustrated parallel lines


9


of sheets streams are progressing into the direction of arrow


1


of the first conveyor belt


13


towards the other conveyor belts


23


and


33


before stacking distinctly on belts


43


of tracks


41


. To improve the readability of this figure and to avoid its overloading, only one line


9


of shingling sheets was completely drawn. Only the shapes of the three other lines are to be seen. Moreover, the idling rollers of the ends of the conveyor belts are removed and shown here only by their axis in dotted lines. In the following description--and in order to simplify the explanations, one will usually deal with the course and the description of the sequences of only one line


9


of shingling sheets. Hence, it is of course accurate to keep in mind that the same operations are carried out simultaneously and in synchronism onto all the sheets lines travelling towards the conveyor belt


33


, whatever the number of these lines is.





FIG. 3

shows, in a similar way than on

FIG. 1

, the device according to the invention in a second different way from the one illustrated on FIG.


1


. The drawings of these two

FIGS. 1 and 3

will allow to better understand the operating way of the device of the invention which will be described at present. One of the aims stated in all up to date delivery devices consists in being able to have piles of a certain amount of sheets without having to stop the continuous production flood of the sheets delivered upstream by the printing machine. In this presentation, the continuous production of sheets


2


is illustrated by the unit


10


which creates continuously the movable stream


12


. On the conveying belt


23


, this latter is simply tightened into a stream


22


by means of lowering the conveying speed. As this production flood is continuous, it is necessary to enter a stop in this stream


22


which allows to save the useful time, particularly to form the corresponding pile of sheets


42


, to reject this pile out of the stacker


40


and simultaneously replace the stacker parts in a new initial position ready for the delivery of the next pile. To do so, the device of the present invention is equipped with a driving mechanism


60


and a streams stopping mechanism which allows-to vary the useful lengths of the conveying belts


23


and


33


. This mechanism is located, in device


20


, in the middle, between the conveying belts


23


and


33


. It comprises two carriages, an upper one


61


and a lower one


62


, which can move horizontally from upstream towards downstream and inversely. The moving of these two carriages is completely interdependent the one from another so that the speed of one of the carriage is always similar to the speed of the other one and that their moving direction is always in opposition. Such a device is ensured thanks to the engaging of toothed racks, secured to said carriages, onto a pair of toothed wheels turning alternatively into a direction then into another, as described with more details hereafter.





FIG. 4

, illustrating a vertical cut according to line IV—IV of

FIG. 1

, allows to better understand the functioning and the layout of the driving device


60


located between the two main elements which constitute the frame


70


of device


20


. To allow the reading of this fig., one will note that the conveying belts and the sheets streams were not represented. In the upper carriage


61


, the idling rollers


27


and


37


are free rolling and settled between the vertical sides of this carriage. The lower carriage


62


itself holds the idling rollers


29


and


39


. The latter are themselves free rolling and settled on a pair of pneumatic jacks


63


which are fixed against the interior sides of carriage


62


. The layout of these jacks allows to compensate in a independent way lacks of tension which appear in the conveying belts


23


and


33


when the carriages


61


and


62


are moving. Although the latter relocate simultaneously the two pairs of rollers


27


,


37


and


29


,


39


of a same length in an opposite direction, the lengthening or the shortening of the higher part of the conveying belt


33


, for example, between the rollers


36


and


37


cannot be completely compensated by the shortening, respectively the lengthening, of its lower part between the rollers


38


and


39


. This fact results from the geometrical location of the rollers


36


,


37


,


38


and


39


which are showing two unequal angles of opposite edges represented by the rollers


37


and


38


. So, the unequal lengths variations of the conveying belts between these rollers have to be compensated at any time by the moving of the roller


29


actuated by one of the pairs of jacks


63


. The same applies to the conveying belt


23


and to the rollers


26


,


27


,


28


and


29


.




The carriages


61


and


62


slide between the frame


70


, for one side by means of jaws equipped with balls


64


secured against one of the panels of the carriages and slipping each one along a rail


65


interdependent from the aforesaid frame, and for the other side by means of rollers


66


secured against the other panel of carriages


61


,


62


and travelling each one on a running tread


67


secured to frame


70


. The driving of the carriages is carried out by the engaging of toothed racks


68


, secured against the interior panels of the carriages, in the lower part for the carriage


61


and in the higher part for the carriage


62


, with a pair of toothed wheels


69


settled on shaft


71


of an electric engine


72


. Speeds and accelerations of carriages


61


and


62


can thus be precisely controlled thanks to the control flexibility of the electric engine


72


. Moreover, one will ensure as well as possible the load balances of these two carriages in order to compensate the dynamic effects generated when the latter are moving.




In order to create a sharp and precise separation of stream


22


, a grip


75


shuts up on this stream between the rollers


27


and


37


of respective conveying belts


23


,


33


. This grip is made of a transverse bar


76


settled at the ends of the two parallel bent arms


77


and wheeling around a rotation axis


78


crossing the upper carriage


61


. To grip the stream


22


, the two bent arms


77


are wheeling upwards and the transverse bar


76


compresses the stream against a series of support rollers


79


laid out according to one's wishes over the stream


22


between the rollers


27


and


37


.




In a situation initially represented on

FIG. 1

, the conveying belts


23


and


33


have both a constant identical speed so that the travelling of stream


22


of the conveying belt


23


towards the conveying belt


33


is not noticed. When the number of sheets required for a pile is to be found on the conveying belt


33


, the driving mechanism


60


of the carriages


61


and


62


is actuated and involves progressively the downstream and upstream ends of the respective conveying belts


23


and


33


into the direction of arrow


1


until the moving speed is identical to the running speed of the conveying belt


23


. At this time, the grip


75


shuts up on the conveying belt


22


, then the speed of the conveying belt


33


fastens quickly and creates thus the separation of the stream


22


of which the downstream part


32


comes to flow fast into the stacker


40


as illustrated on FIG.


3


. During this operation, the roller


36


of the downstream end of the conveying belt


33


is vertically moved upwards by the elevator


50


so that the drop height of sheets


2


on the top of the forming pile


42


is at any time constant and optimal. Meanwhile, the carriages


61


and


62


did not stop moving, towards downstream for the carriage


61


and upstream for the carriage


62


, at the same speed than the conveying belt


23


while following the continuous progression of the stream


22


. In order to make sure that the whole stream


32


left the conveying belt


33


the high flowing speed of this conveying belt is still maintained for a couple of fractions of seconds after the theoretical flowing of the last sheet of stream


32


. Then this speed decelerates until it is identical again to the one of the conveying belt


23


. At this time the grip


75


opens, releasing the progression of stream


22


on the conveying belt


33


, and the driving of carriages


61


and


62


is gradually slowed down until being reversed for getting the carriages back in their initial respective position. Just after the theoretical flowing of the last sheet of stream


32


on the pile


42


, this pile can be immediately evacuated by the actuation of the belt


43


which carries it towards one of the outputs of the machine. As soon as possible, but even before the carriages


61


,


62


are back into their initial position or before the pile has entirely left the slope


41


, the elevator


50


goes down again while still actuating the downstream end of the conveying belt


33


which gets back in its low position. A new cycle can then start again.




During the stacking phase of sheets


2


of stream


32


, the tracks


41


are generally laid out in a horizontal normal position allowing the delivery of these sheets. One will point out here that there are as many piles


42


than there are lines


9


of streams on the conveying belt


33


which, simultaneously, are assembled on the belts


43


of parallel tracks


41


. However, if a printing defect was scanned for example on the sheets of one or the other of these lines


9


, one or the tracks


41


intended to this line of defect sheets can be swiveled downwards by one or several pneumatic jacks


44


, even before the beginning of the sheets stacking. Thus, only the stream


32


of the line which contains defect sheets will be directly delivered from the stacker onto a reject evacuation belt


90


placed transversely according to the streams travelling. This situation is illustrated on

FIG. 5

where only the downstream part of the device of this invention is shown.





FIGS. 6 and 7

show within details the mechanism which allows at the same time the wheeling of one of the track


41


and the driving into rotation of its belt


43


.

FIG. 6

is a partial sectional profile view of this same track


41


according to the cutting line VI—VI of FIG.


7


. The illustration of

FIG. 6

shows the track


41


in two different positions, one horizontal in continuous feature, and the other vertical or downwards wheeled in mixed feature. This track is made of a reversed U-shaped plate


45


, as it is better shown on FIG.


7


. On this plate are secured rollers


46


, assembled on rotation free ball bearings, around which the belt


43


is travelling. This belt is permanently secured to a ring


47


positioned and settled on an expansible driving shaft


48


whose diameter can increase, allowing thus to firmly maintain the aforementioned ring


47


. When the expansible shaft


48


is set into rotation, it actuates also the ring


47


which, by contact, makes the belt


43


turning around. In order to allow simultaneously the downwards swing of the track


41


by the jack


44


, a ball bearing


49


is assembled on each side of the ring


47


, on a flange


94


, in a groove afforded on each panel of this ring. One part of this ball bearing


49


is interdependent from the ring


47


, whereas the other part, attached to the flange


94


of this same ball bearing is interdependent only from the plate


45


which constitutes the frame of the track


41


. Thanks to this functioning of this ball bearing and thanks to its layout as above described, the plate


45


can then be wheeled downwards or upwards through the jack


44


in a completely independent way from the rotation of belt


43


and its driving system.




To reach a good stacking of sheets


2


on the belts


43


of tracks


41


, a transverse jogger


80


is settled into the stacker


40


and allows to longitudinally align the sheets of pile


42


against front stops


81


. When they leave the conveying belt


33


, the sheets are projected in their fall against the aforementioned front stops


81


. Each stop is secured against the upstream side of a carriage


82


assembled between two side arms


83


of frame


51


. To be able to adjust these front stops according to the format of sheets


2


, the carriage


82


is movable into the travelling direction of the streams by means of a wheel


84


. Each stop


81


is movable and also transversely removable so that it can be correctly positioned in front of the pile which is intended to it. Moreover, each front stop can be equipped with a template, or a shaped element not shown here, allowing to fit as well as possible the shape of the front edge of sheets


2


to be aligned. In the upstream part of the transverse jogger


80


is one or more back stops


85


actuated by a periodic movement oscillating into the direction shown by the double arrow


5


on FIG.


1


. Such an oscillation can be reached for example starting from a eccentric arm


86


related to the axis of an engine


87


. This vibratory back and forth motion allows to unceasingly arrange the sheets


2


when they pile up, by constraining them to pile up correctly against the front stops


81


. The back stops


85


can of course also be equipped with shaped templates and can also be transversely moved just like the front stops. To carry out the transversal alignment of the sheets piles a second jogger device, not shown here but intended to act in a same way, is generally used. However, a specificity of the first jogger device


80


lies in the fact that it is equipped with a plurality of nozzles


88


insufflating air under the sheets


2


during their fall. These air blasts ensure the good piling of piles


42


by preventing the sheets from turning over or from falling under a too strong attacking angle. The air blasts strength, their amount, their position and the orientation of the nozzles are as many easily adjustable parameters selected according to the size of the delivered sheets and to their basis weight. One will also mention that such jogger devices are removable and easily adaptable to the various works to deal with allowing, when one has at least two pairs of them, to prepare them before out of the machine by fitting them for the next work.




Thanks to the device which was now entirely described, one will note that, on one hand, the travelling of elevator


50


depends only on the height of pile


42


and that, on the other hand, without taking into account the real maximum speeds which can be reached by the elevator


50


and by the stripping belt


43


, the minimum necessary waiting time before being able to remove the elevator in its initial position depends only on the height and on the longitudinal dimension of this same pile


42


. Thus, the moving back into low position of the elevator


50


and of the end of the conveying belt


33


can advantageously be carried out as soon as the upstream side of pile


42


has been travelling under the front stop


81


of jogger


80


, thus even before this pile did leave the track


51


on which it was secured.




Many improvements can be brought to the device of this invention within the framework of the claims.



Claims
  • 1. A delivery and ejection device for receiving flat elements from a production machine which produces a plurality of parallel streams of flat elements exiting the machine on a first conveyor moving at a first speed, with the elements in each stream arranged in an overlapping, shingled configuration, the device comprising:a second conveyor moving at a second speed which is slower than the first speed, the second conveyor being positioned to receive the streams from the first conveyor, and as a consequence of the speed difference, to cause an increased overlap of the flat elements in each stream, whereby the streams become compacted as they pass onto the second conveyor; a third conveyor positioned to receive the compacted streams from the second conveyor; a stacking station including a plurality of stack-forming assemblies, wherein each stack-forming assembly: is positioned to receive a respective one of the streams from the third conveyor; is selectively adjustable to a first configuration in which it is operative to compact the stream into a stack and to eject the stack to a position further downstream, and also adjustable to a second configuration in which it is operative to divert the stream to a fourth conveyor when elements in the stream are determined to be defective; and a stream interrupting mechanism that introduces spacing into each stream to delineate portions of the streams which will form successive stacks, the stream interrupting mechanism being comprised of: a first adjusting device that is operative to lengthen and shorten a portion of the second conveyor which carries the streams; a second adjusting device that is operative to lengthen and shorten a portion of the third conveyor which carries the streams, the first and second adjusting devices being operative simultaneously and at the same rate of change, to lengthen the carrying portion of one of the second and third conveyors and to shorten the carrying portion of the other of the second and third conveyors; and a gripping device selectively operable to stop passage of the streams from the second conveyor to the third conveyor, the resulting space introduced between successive elements in the streams serving to delineate the portions of the streams which will form successive stacks; and a drive mechanism for the third conveyor which is operative to move the third conveyor at the same speed as the second conveyor to receive the stream from the second conveyor, and to move the third conveyor faster than the second conveyor when delineated portions of the streams are being delivered to the stacking station.
  • 2. A device according to claim 1, wherein:the second and third conveyors are respectively comprised of: belts having slack therein; drive elements coupled to the respective belts that determine the speeds thereof; a first plurality of idlers which cooperate with the drive element for the first belt to define the configuration of the first belt; and a second plurality of idlers which cooperate with the drive element for the third belt to define the configuration of the third belt; a first one of the first plurality of idlers is located at a fixed position relative to the direction of the streams to define the entry point onto the second conveyor from the first conveyor, a second one of the first plurality of idlers is positionable to define a variable exit point from the second conveyor to the third conveyor, a third one of the first plurality of idlers is movable to provide or take up slack in the belt of the second conveyor when the second idler is being positioned; a first one of the second plurality of idlers is located at a fixed position relative to the direction of the stream to define the exit point from the third conveyor to the stacking station; a second one of the second plurality of idlers is positionable to define a variable entry point from the second conveyor to the third conveyor, a third one of the second plurality of idlers is movable to provide or take up slack when the second idler is being positioned, the second and third ones of the first plurality of idlers comprise the first adjusting device; and the second and third ones of the second plurality of idlers comprise the second adjusting device.
  • 3. A device according to claim 2, wherein the stream interrupting mechanism includes:a linearly movable first carriage; a linearly movable second carriage positioned below the first carriage; and an actuator for the first and second carriages, the actuator being operative to move the carriages simultaneously and at the same speed in opposite directions along axes parallel to the streams.
  • 4. A device according to claim 3, wherein the second ones of the first and second pluralities of idlers are mounted on the first carriage, and the third ones of the first and second pluralities of idlers are mounted on the second carriage.
  • 5. A device according to claim 4, wherein the idlers which are mounted on the second carriage are independently movable relative to the carriage along the axis of movement thereof.
  • 6. A device according to claim 3, wherein the actuator for the first and second carriages includes:a drive motor; a rotatable toothed element coupled to the motor; and first and second rack mechanisms respectively coupled to the first and second carriages, the first and second rack mechanisms being positioned to engage the toothed element at respective positions where the tangential velocities of the toothed element are equal and opposite so that rotation of the toothed element causes equal and opposite linear movement of the first and second rack mechanisms.
  • 7. A device according to claim 3, wherein the gripping devices are respectively comprised of:movable arm assemblies carrying pressure elements positioned in spaced relation to one side of the respective streams; and reaction elements positioned on the opposite sides of the respective streams from the pressure elements to define pinch points with the pressure elements, the arm assemblies each being movable between an idle position at which the pressure elements and the reaction elements are out of contact with the respective streams and an activated position at which the pressure elements and the reaction elements bear against the respective streams and close the pinch points whereby the respective streams are not permitted to pass beyond the pinch points.
  • 8. A device according to claim 7, wherein the pressure elements are mounted on the first carriages.
  • 9. A device according to claim 7, wherein the pressure elements are located below the respective streams, and the reaction elements are vertically aligned with the pressure elements above the respective streams.
  • 10. A device according to claim 1, wherein the gripping devices are respectively comprised of:movable arm assemblies carrying pressure elements positioned in spaced relation to one side of the respective streams; and reaction elements positioned on the opposite sides of the respective streams from the pressure elements to define pinch points with the pressure elements, the arm assemblies each being movable between an idle position at which the pressure elements and the reaction elements are out of contact with the respective streams and an activated position at which the pressure elements and the reaction elements bear against the respective streams and close the pinch points whereby the respective streams are not permitted to pass beyond the pinch points.
  • 11. A device according to claim 10, wherein the pressure elements are located below the respective streams, and the reaction elements are vertically aligned with the pressure elements above the respective streams.
  • 12. A device according to claim 1, wherein each of the stack-forming assemblies is comprised of a surface which is positioned horizontally in the first configuration to receive the elements exiting the third conveyor thereby to form a stack on the surface, and is positioned sufficiently away from horizontal in the second configuration that the elements exiting the third conveyor fall to the fourth conveyor without contacting the surface.
  • 13. A device according to claim 12, wherein each of the stack-forming assemblies is comprised of an endless belt which defines the surface, and which is selectively movable in the downstream direction to eject the stack.
  • 14. A device according to claim 13, wherein each stack-forming assembly is further comprised of:an armature which carries a plurality of rollers operative to support the endless belt; at least one mechanical bearing having first and second rings; and a third ring which is which is mounted on a rotatable shaft and is operative to drive the endless belt, the armature being coupled to the first ring of the mechanical bearing, the second ring of the mechanical bearing being coupled only to the third ring.
  • 15. A device according to claim 1, wherein the stack-forming assemblies respectively include jogging devices in the paths of the respective streams exiting the third conveyor, the jogging devices being operative to arrange the flat elements into piles, the jogging devices being comprised of:front stop members; and rear stop members located upstream from the front stop members, the front stop members being positionable along the respective streams and transversely to the direction of the streams, the rear stop members being movable transversely to the respective streams.
  • 16. A device according to claim 15, wherein:the front stop members include faces which are shaped according to the downstream profiles of the elements in the respective streams; and the rear stop members include faces which are shaped according to the upstream profiles of the elements in the respective streams.
  • 17. A device according to claim 16, wherein the jogging devices and a roller defining the downstream end of the third conveyor are coupled together for simultaneous vertical movement upwards while following the height progression of the stacks on the stack forming assemblies, and for vertical movement downwards while stacks are being ejected.
  • 18. A device according to claim 16, wherein the jogging devices are each equipped with a nozzle operative to provide an air blast toward the front stop members at a height below the plane of the carrying surface of the third conveyor belt.
  • 19. A device according to claim 18, wherein the strength of the air blasts, their amount, their position and the orientation of the nozzles constitute adjustable parameters, selected according to the size and weight of the flat elements.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
2000 2439/00 Dec 2000 CH
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number Date Country
633761 Mar 1982 CH
0316477 Nov 1987 EP
0317330 Nov 1988 EP
2074990 Nov 1981 GB