The present invention relates to the field of mail handling, and it relates more particularly to an envelope loader device for a mail handling machine.
A mail handling machine is conventionally made up of three main elements: a mail item feeder; a “postage meter” or franking station for franking the mail items, which station is disposed at the outlet of the feeder (which can optionally incorporate a weigh device); and, disposed at the outlet of the franking station, a device for receiving the mail items once they have been franked by the franking station.
Current machines can frank mixed mail, i.e. mail items of all weights and formats, such mail items being stored flat in the magazine of the feeder in a small-capacity stack (about 200 envelopes of medium thickness) so as to be franked on being individually extracted by the unstacking and selection means of the feeder. Such a small capacity, which is made necessary by said unstacking and selection means, limits the productivity actually achieved by the machine because it requires frequent action from the operator for loading the mail items into the feeder. By way of example, in order to obtain a franking throughput of 15,000 envelopes per hour, it would be necessary to refill the magazine of the feeder 75 times per hour, which, in practice, leaves the operator very little time for performing the other actions (unloading the envelopes, putting them into mail bins per format, etc.) also required in operating the mail handling machine.
There therefore currently exists an unsatisfied need for a solution for feeding a mail handling machine that makes it possible to achieve a loading capacity that is considerably larger than the capacity offered merely by the magazine of the feeder, and that, by freeing up time for action from the operator of the machine, guarantees an actually achievable franking throughput of 15,000 envelopes per hour and higher.
An object of the present invention is to provide a loading device that is simple, compact, and ergonomic, while also having a feed capacity that is considerably higher than a standard feeder magazine, and that is not limited by the downstream functions of envelope unstacking and selection that are performed by the feeder.
These objects are achieved by an envelope loader device comprising a mail-receiving bed provided with conveyor rollers and serving to receive a stack of mail items, jogger means for holding the mail items against a referencing wall, and a drive motor for driving said conveyor rollers in rotation, said envelope loader device further comprising control means for actuating said drive motor and for causing a fraction of said stack of mail items to be ejected as a function of a mail presence sensor mounted at said mail-receiving bed and whose state depends on whether or not mail items are present in a downstream feeder device.
Thus, with this configuration, it is possible to unstack a small stack of envelopes from a much larger stack of envelopes and to feed the feeder automatically with said small stack.
Preferably, the device of the invention further comprises a mail presence sensor whose state depends on whether or not at least one mail item is present on said mail-receiving bed. Said mail presence sensors are chosen from among detectors of the mechanical type, detectors of the magnetic type, and detectors of the optical type.
Advantageously, it further comprises a guillotine door mounted at the outlet of said loader device and whose vertical positioning defines the thickness of the fraction of the stack of mail items that is ejected.
The present invention also provides a method implemented in this loader device, and in which, by acting on control means that act on said drive motor, it is possible to cause a fraction of said stack of mail items to be ejected as a function of whether or not mail items are present in a downstream feeder device, as indicated by a mail presence sensor mounted on said mail-receiving bed. Advantageously, the thickness of said ejected fraction of the stack of mail items is defined by the vertical positioning of a guillotine door mounted at the outlet of said loader device, and the presence of at least one mail item on said mail-receiving bed is detected by a mail presence sensor.
The characteristics and advantages of the present invention appear more clearly from the following description given by way of non-limiting example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
This mail item feeder 10 conventionally comprises a bed 10A for receiving the mail items, and means 10B for unstacking the mail items and for selecting the unstacked mail items one after another. In order to enable the stack of mail items disposed on the mail-receiving bed to be managed correctly, i.e. in order to guarantee that unstacking takes place without jamming and without more than one mail item being selected at a time, the storage capacity of the feeder is limited to a height of about 200 millimeters (mm), which, in practice, corresponds to a storage capacity of about 200 envelopes of standard European format, each of which contains one sheet of paper of A4 format.
In the invention, this capacity is increased considerably by adding, upstream from the feeder, a loader device 12 having a mail-receiving bed 14 provided with a referencing wall 16 and with side jogger moving means 18 for receiving a first stack of mail items of considerable height and for holding said first stack in position. This loader device also has a motor-driven ejection system that is driven by a drive motor 20 (shown in
Operation of the loader device of the invention is explained below with reference to
Switching on the mail handling machine causes the feeder to operate. The feeder then proceeds to unstack its stack of envelopes and to eject the envelopes one-by-one towards the franking station of said machine, so that, 50 seconds later (for a throughput of 15,000 envelopes per hour) the configuration shown in
This re-stocking step is shown in
Once the stack of envelopes has been received by the feeder, the feeder bed finds itself in a position similar to the position of
Thus, with the invention, the envelope feed capacity is increased. The ease of loading is particularly advantageous for the operator since the original capacity of the feeder bed is very small. In addition, the drive mechanism for moving the envelopes is simplified to the maximum extent, making it possible to implement a loader device that is compact.
It should be noted that, in order to simplify the drawings and facilitate understanding, the difference in level between the bed of the feeder and the loader device is accentuated relative to the real difference. It should also be noted that, although the above description is made essentially with reference to a feeder for a mail handling machine, the loader device of the invention is naturally also applicable to any other type of feeder.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06 54934 | Nov 2006 | FR | national |
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3612511 | Godlewski | Oct 1971 | A |
3776544 | Watson et al. | Dec 1973 | A |
3870294 | Donner | Mar 1975 | A |
5996988 | Helmstadter et al. | Dec 1999 | A |
6105952 | Helmstadter et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
7297930 | Defosse | Nov 2007 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 581 392 | Feb 1994 | EP |
2 169 605 | Sep 1973 | FR |
58-140889 | Aug 1983 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080122159 A1 | May 2008 | US |