The present invention refers to a display assembly for items which may be purchased by length, in particular such a display assembly for department stores and shopping centres, as well as to the delivery and sales method associated therewith.
As known, in business products which are not sold by unit or by weight, but have a purchase price proportional to the length thereof exist. Such products are typically cordage of a various nature (natural fibres, synthetic fibres, metal strands, . . . ), metal chain, electric wires for electric systems, hoses and so on.
The display and management of these products implies some problems connected with the management of the reels, whereon these products are wound for transportation from the manufacturer to the retailer, and with the delivery of the length desired by the purchaser upon the retailing.
In order to simplify the approach, in many cases one tends to define standard item lengths, so as to create packages—containing that item in a predefined length—which can then be more practically sold by unit. One can think of packages of ready-made extension wires, or of packages of precut irrigation pipes or similar cases. Of course this solution in many cases is not at all appreciated, neither by the seller—who has to manage a plurality of stocked items—nor by the purchaser who is forced to compromise purchases which are often unsatisfactory.
The alternative proposed so far at the current state of the art, is to provide display assemblies wherein the individual items are wound in long length on corresponding reels, from which the user takes and cuts the desired length.
This implies cutting to measure the product and keeping somehow track of the withdrawn length, so that at the payment point (typically at the check outs of the store) the purchase can be correctly recorded. Evidently, in small stores, with a strongly personalized service, that is not a problem, because the operator who provides to deliver the product, cut it and record it is always the same. In the context of department stores and large-scale retail trade, instead, this process implies drawbacks, especially because it would be appreciated that the user could help himself without having to resort to any operator.
It normally happens that the user must involve an operator who goes to the display assembly, where the various reels of products are installed, he performs the cut to measure (based on the user's indications) and delivers the product together with a paper support whereon he writes the identification code of the specific product and the measure of the cut product. With the product and the paper support, the user goes to the point of payment, where another operator completes the recording. That implies the action of at least one operator at the display assembly and one operator at the point of payment.
In other cases, it is provided to equip the display assembly, in correspondence of each reel of product, with a pre-printed paper support, whereon the product code is already indicated, typically in the form of the bar code thereof. In these cases, the user can also deliver and cut independently the desired product length (which length he can measure with a metre or other tool made available at the display assembly) and mark the measure on the respective pre-printed paper support. With the filled-out paper support, the user then goes to the point of payment, where an operator enters the measurement and records it. In this case only one operator is necessary at the point of payment. However, problems of trust towards users exist, both in terms of filling-in correctness, and in terms of measuring skill. Moreover, a problem of management of the pre-printed paper supports exists, which supports represent further items to be managed in the warehouse and which hence imply additional logistics and replenishment problems for the shopping centre.
In order to help at least the product measuring phase, sometimes the availability of tools has been offered which are easier to use than a traditional self-retracting measuring tape: U.S. Pat. No. 4,537,106 represents an example thereof. This document provides to arrange a counting device in front of the product reels, so as to count the product length as it is wound off the reel. This device is nevertheless little effective and intuitive, it is cumbersome to operate and does not solve the problem of making fully automatic the sales process.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,129,796 concerns instead an apparatus mounted on a counter, which is used to perform the labelling of lengths of cordage to be sold in retail. The configuration of this apparatus is ill suited to a use by a nonspecialised user; moreover, it is bulky and complex and it hence cannot be easily associated with a modular display assembly for large stores.
The object of the present invention is hence to provide a solution which solves all the drawbacks cited above, offering a display assembly for products sold by measure which makes the delivery and purchase process as automatic, simple, reliable as possible, preferably with no assistance from operators. A further object of the invention is to provide a system which is suited to the development of additional functions, such as the of the real-time economic estimation of warehouse and the automatic identification of the reorder point/levels, as well as the opportunity to assist the management of other products sold by unit.
Said objects are achieved trough an improved display assembly and a delivery method of items sold by length, according to the independent claims herewith attached. The dependent claims describe preferred features of the invention.
Further features and advantages of the invention will in any case be more evident from the following detailed description of some preferred embodiments, given purely by way of non-limiting example and illustrated in the attached drawings, wherein:
On the display assembly there is furthermore arranged at least one counting device 10, 100, apt to measure the length of a thread-like product which is dragged through there, and an associated viewing and printing device 110.
For such purpose, counting device 10, 100 is mounted on the display assembly downstream of reels B, in the unwinding direction of the product to be sold by measure. The thread-like product is arranged so as to unwind from reel B, enter a measuring passage of counting device 10, 100, come out from a dispensing window and then end with a terminal portion which can be handles by the user's hands.
In the two embodiments illustrated in
For example, in the embodiment illustrated in
As an alternative, the counting device can be mounted on a pantograph-like support, so as to be able to be displaced both horizontally and vertically opposite desired reel B. A further simplified embodiment provides for the counting device to be mounted in an orientable way in a fixed position on the display (for example at one end of a shelf), possibly assisted by a rotary transfer pulley which allows to align the path of the thread-like product with the direction of the tension applied thereto during dispensing.
Preferably, as will also be highlighted further on, the counting device is installed aboard a carriage 120 in turn provided, on the side thereof facing towards the shelf, with a product recognition sensor. Thereby, it is provided a system for the automatic recognition of the product opposite which the counting device is stationing and which is presumably about to be dispensed. For example, the recognition sensor is an optical reader for a bar code arranged on the sliding rail of counter 10, 100 arranged in correspondence of each reel; instead of a bar code, a small transponder (RFID) can be provided, to be read through an antenna arranged aboard carriage 120.
According to the invention, there is furthermore provided at least a viewing device 110 apt to show the user some indications useful for the dispensing of the product sold by length, such as the type of chosen product, the unitary price, the dispensed length, the overall price and more, according to the manner illustrated in the following. Viewing device 110 is associated with a logic processing unit (not shown)—with which the processing necessary for the operation of the apparatus is performed—and with a printing unit 112 (preferably integral with the viewer, as shown in
Each counting device 10, 100 could comprise an own embedded viewing device. Alternatively, preferably a single viewing device 110 is provided for the entire display assembly (
In this case, electric connection wires are furthermore provided between the individual counting devices 100 and the logical unit of viewing device 110. Such electric wires (not shown) are made to pass inside a section bar of each support shelf, until they converge to device 110. Wherever it is deemed convenient, instead of the electric wires it is possible to use any one of the wireless data transmission techniques, for example data transmission through the Bluetooth® protocol, so as to connect the individual counting devices 100 with the processing logic unit (installed in the viewing device 110 or in another position).
According to another advantageous aspect of the invention, a data input unit is furthermore provided, through which the user enters some parameters useful for the operation of the entire system or, optionally, launches requests for information or for assistance which are supplied through viewing device 110 or printing unit 112. Preferably, according to the embodiment illustrated, the data input unit is in the form of a touch-screen coinciding with the screen of viewing device 110.
In the following the various components are illustrated in greater detail.
Such device substantially comprises a supporting carriage 120 whereon a counting drum 121 is mounted in a rotary manner and an actuation lever 122 provided with engagement counterrollers 123 and 124 is also mounted in a rotary manner.
Carriage 120 is slidably mounted on a horizontal rail of each support shelf.
Actuation lever 122 is mounted pivoting on carriage 120, in a front position (with respect to the user's use position) with respect to counting drum 121, i.e. on the side opposite to the rail with respect to drum 121. On lever 122 the two counterrollers 123 and 123 are mounted idle, with rotation axes parallel to those of drum 121 and arranged at a certain mutual distance. For example, without this being considered limiting, the two counterrollers have a diameter of about 3 cm and are arranged at a mutual distance of 5-8 cm along lever 122, so as to engage with a drum 121 having a diameter of about 12-15 cm determining an arc subtended between the two counterrollers of the order of 40-45°.
Between the two counterrollers 123 and 124 and drum 121 the threadlike product (cordage, chain, wire, tubular element, . . . ) object of the purchase from the display assembly is meant to transit. In order to improve the surface coupling with the product, the surface of the drum and of the counterrollers is preferably lined with rubber or treated, so as to increase the friction coefficient without, however, creating excessive roughness which could impair the integrity of the product.
Actuation lever 122 is hinged in the point marked as 125 in
Preferably, lever 122 is configured so that, with a preset non-operational orientation, halt element 127 intercepts the path of the thread-like product coming from gap I. Thereby, when the lever is in the non-operational position (opening), the thread-like product finds an abutment on halt element 127 and cannot freely transit throught carriage 120 and hence counting device 100. For such purpose, for example, halt element 127 is in the shape of a simple platelet (as visible in the drawings) which closes the passage between gap I and opening 121a on the bottom of carriage 120: the thread-like product which passes between drum 121 and counterrollers 123 and 124, in its downward fall (due to simple gravity), is hence hindered by halt platelet 127 and cannot come out of device 100. Such operation mode has the function which will be better illustrated in the following.
The lever is preferably kept in two stable positions, open and closed, by suitable elastic retaining means (not shown). Typically, the open position of
Counting device 100 furthermore comprises a detection device of the rotation of drum 121. For example an optical revolution-counting sensor 128 arranged in the proximity of a flange 129 of drum 121 is provided. On the flange marks or holes are obtained, at a constant pitch from one another, which can be detected by the revolution-counting sensor 128 so as to obtain a signal proportional to the rotation of drum 121.
Many other different detection devices can be implemented to obtain a signal proportional to the rotation of drum 121.
Sensor 128 is connected to an electronic unit, for example an electronic circuit 130 mounted on the same carriage 120, meant to transfer the signal which indicates the extent of the rotation of drum 121 to the logical unit which controls the system and interacts with viewing device 110. The rotation signal is used to have an indication of the length of the dispensed thread-like product, which is caused to transit in counting device 100 adhering to drum 121, so that the peripheral displacement of drum 121 matches exactly the length of product which has travelled thereabove.
The rotation detection made on the flange of drum 121 is advantageous because it allows to detect an amplified displacement, performed on a portion of drum where the radius is longer than the radius of the sliding area of the thread-like product: that ensures greater accuracy and measuring certainty.
Preferably, finally, carriage 120 is provided with a feed knob or wheel 131 which is integral with the rotation axis 125 of drum 121. Knob 131 can be used by the user to manually cause a rotation of drum 121 in some operation steps, typically in the initial step starting the device, as shown in the following.
With reference to the sequence illustrated in
Initially the user moves counting device 100 to be opposite reel B from which he wants to take the thread-like product by measure. Then he adjusts the orientation of viewing device 110 so as to be able to observe it easily from the position in which he finds himself opposite the display assembly. Through a suitable graphic interface, the user enters data relative to the choice of the shelf and of the individual reel of product. For example, as exemplifyingly illustrated in
This choice is useful for two reasons. On the one hand, to provide confirmation information to the user and, on the other hand, to possibly provide a correction parameter to the logical processing/counting unit. As a matter of fact, based on the user's choice, the logical processing unit identifies the specific product in an own, internal database and displays on viewing device 110 the name of the chosen product and the unitary price thereof: the user can thus have confirmation of the purchase he is making. Conversely, the choice of the product is used by the logical processing unit also to possibly use correction parameters when counting the dispensed measure, which is obtained based on the rotation signal coming from drum 121: based on the fact that a tape, a rope or a chain (which have different thicknesses, flexibility and friction coefficients) are dispensed, it may indeed be necessary to use a correction factor to obtain the correct measurement based on the rotation of drum 121.
In case on carriage 120 a product detection sensor is installed, the user does not have to make a choice. More simply, when the user opens actuation lever 122 to introduce the product, the counting device automatically sends a signal to the logical processing unit, determining which counting device (of the various ones possibly found on the same display assembly) is operational and the type of product which has been recognised and is being dispensed.
Once the confirmation of the correct product has been received, through the input unit the user sets the desired measure of length, for example through the same touch-screen interface which shows a length expressed in digital numbers (
Preferably, the microswitch or other more precise displacement sensor (for example a magnetic sensor of the angular rotation of the lever) is capable of determining if upon procedure start a product is already inserted in the counting device, arranged between drum 121 and counterrollers 123, 124. Since counting resetting would be erroneous, should the sensor detect product presence in the device, before allowing procedure start, through viewing device 110 the user is prompted to fully remove the product and to reintroduce it after procedure reset.
With lever 122 in an open orientation, the thread-like product can be introduced in the counting device, until it abuts against halt element 127 (the user can realise this observing from above or from a small window found on the side of carriage 120).
At this point the user can close counting device 100, pushing lever 122 towards drum 121, so as to free the path towards the exit of opening 121a (
Any rotation of drum 121, after having set the product on viewing device 110 and having closed lever 122, is detected by sensor 128 and translated into a linear measurement of the product by the logical processing unit.
In the initial step, the user can cause drum 121 to rotate by acting on knob 131, so as to cause the thread-like product to flow. Once the product has crossed window 121a and has arrived visible below counting device 100, it can also be grabbed by hand and dragged more comfortably to the desired measure, leaving free knob 131.
If upon procedure start the desired measure is set, the user can detect on viewing device 110 a top-down counting of such preset measure, as the counting device detects the progressive dispensing of the product.
Once the desired measure has been reached, the user ends the withdrawing of the product an provides to cut the same. Typically the cut can occur by a suitable tool made available in the proximity of the display assembly—in the proximity of the exit 121a of counting device 100, i.e. in the proximity of the position in which the automatic length counting has occurred.
Once the product has been cut, the user interacts again with the viewing device, for example pushing a suitable button on the touch-screen, signalling the end of the operation. Thereby, the measure of dispensed product is ultimately recorded by counting device 100 and a corresponding receipt is printed by printing unit 112 (
Preferably, for reasons of safety and recording correctness, the logical processing unit resets the entire process, preventing receipt printing, whenever lever 122 is displaced from its working (closed) position illustrated in
The receipt reports the data necessary for completing the payment operations at the check-out. For example it may report a bar code directly readable by the optical scanner of the checkout, as well as other uncoded information, such as the product code and name, the dispensed length and the unitary/overall cost.
The user hence, delivering at the checkout the receipt completes the automatic purchase process, without any operator having had to intervene in any way.
Having the information relative to the dispensed and sold amount, the logical unit aboard the system according to the invention makes it possible for various other automatic actions which improve the functioning of the display and the sales process to occur. For example, the data of dispensed product can be sent to a recording system wherein the amounts and values of goods initially loaded on the display assembly are compared, so as to be able to have in real time the currently residual value (warehouse), the reorder point thresholds, the statistics on product rotation within the stock (useful for marketing operations) or other.
Moreover, if carriage 120 or counting device 110 is provided with product recognition sensor, it is possible to perform a similar dispensing and sales process even for other unitary products displayed on the same display assembly. These unitary products (such as tools, consumable materials, unitary packages of metal nuts and bolts, . . . ) are thus assembled in a minimal package, barely sufficient to add a recognition code readable by the recognition sensor. The user can hence move the individual packages in front of the sensor installed on counting device 100 and obtain all the information on the product directly on viewer 110, whereon he can furthermore confirm the purchase to obtain the printout of the receipt to take to the checkout.
In order to complete automatically the evaluation operations of the display assembly, the logic installed on the recording device (coinciding with the viewing device in the described embodiments) preferably provides also a goods loading procedure. In other words, an operator can enable a specific procedure through which he loads the amounts of products on the display assembly and at the same time records them on the recording device.
In
In such case, it is to be noted that the carriage 200 whereon the counting device is housed is suitably protected from intrusions by a bodywork 201.
In this case, the configuration of the counting device still has a counting drum 221 whereon two counterrollers 223 and 224 rest. These last ones are mounted at the ends of a connecting rod 222′ hinged pivoting on a lever 222. Said last one is rotatingly hinged on axis 225 and biased towards drum 221 through elastic means E.
Knob-shaped means 231, for a manual rotation action, are provided integral in rotation with one of the counterrollers (instead of with the drum as in the preceding embodiment), preferably with upper counterroller 223. These knob-shaped means 231 make up the only moving part which protrudes from protection bodywork 201, through arched slits 203 (
In order to make easier and more visible the introduction and removal of the thread-like product, a dispensing window 221a is provided on the front side of bodywork 201, instead of in the lower portion (as in the preceding embodiment described above).
Since, in both cases, the cutting module of the product is arranged behind counting drum 121, 221, the cutting occurs upstream of the measuring position: this constant measuring offset is set in the logic of the measuring system, so that the counting and the overall recording of the dispensed product takes into account this length of product upstream of the detecting position.
As can be well understood, with the display assembly provided with the counting and recording system according to the invention, the objects set forth in the premises are perfectly achieved.
As a matter of fact, the display assembly according to the invention, allows to install a plurality of reels of products sold by length and to provide a product dispensing and recording tool which is easily used by the purchaser, without any operator's intervention. The display assembly according to the invention requires only a software configuration of the logical processing unit, to supply the data and the relative prices of the products mounted on the reels: for such purpose one can act through the same input unit (graphic interface) used by the purchasers (in “administration” mode) or by connecting a portable computer (with suitable communications protocol software) to the logical processing unit according to ways known per se.
The extreme construction simplicity of the counting device and the interaction thereof with the associated viewing/input device and the printing unit, makes extremely intuitive the dispensing and recording operations for the user and greatly reduces any possible maintenance activity. Which contributes to high effectiveness and productivity of the display assembly according to the invention.
The dispensing of a full recording receipt eliminates also any further burden by the staff at the checkout point, so that the purchase can occur without employing additional resources with respect to the traditional purchases of the products solds by unit.
Finally, the availability of reliable and automatic data on the shelf products and of the dispensed amounts, opens the system to important developments in the commercial process, in terms of sales simplicity, automatisation of the reorders and statistics for marketing purposes.
However, it is understood that the invention is not limited to the particular embodiments illustrated above, which make up only non-limiting examples of the scope of the invention, but that a number of variants are possible, all within the reach of a person skilled in the field, without necessarily departing from the scope of the invention.
For example, as seen above, halt means 127 can be replaced or assisted by a presence sensor, which detects the position of the thread-like product within the counting device and automatically resets the condition of the logical unit to start the length counting. The residual product detection in the counting device dos not allow the zeroing of the counting process and the starting of the dispensing procedure, until the user has reset the system in the desired starting conditions.
The counting device can furthermore be provided with halt means acting on drum 121, so that the halting of the drum can be automatically controlled—and so the dispensing of the product—when the logical processing unit detects that the desired product length has been dispensed (previously set on the viewing device by the user). That would enable the user to not even monitor the top-down counting displayed on the viewing device, but to simply remove the thread-like product until the rotation of the drum is automatically blocked by the braking means upon reaching the desired length. Moreover, it is understood, that the counting of the desired product measure need not occur in a top-down manner, but can appear on the viewer in a manner simply proportional to the dispensed length, starting from zero: in such case the halt is fully arbitrary and user-defined.
Moreover, advantageously, the rotation sensor or alternative measuring means of the rotation can be configured to determine also the direction of rotation of the drum. That allows to send to the logical processing unit both a positive and a negative measuring signal: thereby the user can also go back in the product dispensing, for example by partly rewinding the thread-like product reel, should he change his mind or should he have to remedy erroneous excessive pulling out. The correct product measuring and recording, in substance, occurs regardless of the dispensing/rewinding mode chosen by the user.
Although in the description reference has always been made to fully manual dispensing, the opportunity of motorizing the rotation of the counting drum or of one of the counterrollers falls within the teachings offered here. In such case the control software comprises a part of motorization management, which saves the user to have to pull the thread-like product from the dispensing window. The motor can then be controlled by the user through the touch-sensor display.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2012A000173 | Feb 2012 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2013/051045 | 2/8/2013 | WO | 00 |