The present invention relates to a device for fitting multiple-sheet printed products with inserts according to the preamble of patent claim 1.
A device of this type is known, for example, from patent specifications CH 669 944 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,743,005. It has a plurality of identical receiving elements. These are of pocket-like design, are open at the top and have a leading wall and a trailing wall. They are intended to receive in each case one printed product and are fastened in a continuous row on drive mechanisms which circulate endlessly transversely to the opening of the receiving elements. The pockets run one after the other past feed stations for printed products and the inserts, each pocket being provided with a mechanism for opening the printed products. The base of each pocket is formed by a receiving channel with end walls which can be displaced in a controlled manner, transversely to the direction of circulation of the pocket, from a first end position into a second end position, each pocket containing an opening wedge which cannot be moved relative to the pocket and by way of which the printed product carried along by the receiving channel is opened as it is displaced from the first end position into the second end position.
A first feed conveyor feeds the printed product to each pocket, the printed product coming into abutment against the receiving channel located in the first end position and with surface contact against the leading wall. When the receiving channel is displaced, together with the printed product, into the second end position, a triangular extension of a directing plate causes the one, overfold-containing part of the printed product to be lifted off from the part which butts against the leading wall and to be directed behind a directing plate, by way of which the printed product which has been opened in this way can be kept open. With the receiving channel located in the second end position, further feed conveyors introduce inserts into the opened printed product. The receiving channel is then moved back again into the first end position, in which case the printed product closes. A removal conveyor designed as a gripper conveyor is then used to grip and convey away the printed products fitted with inserts.
It is an object of the present invention to develop the device of the type in question such that it is of more straightforward construction and also makes it possible to process printed products with a low level of inherent stability.
This object is achieved by a device as claimed in patent claim 1.
In the operating portion, the circulatory path of the receiving elements slopes such that the printed products come into abutment with surface contact against the trailing wall of the receiving elements and by way of a side edge against the channel-like base. The trailing wall here is preferably inclined such that the printed products, rather than being located in a vertical or more or less vertical, upright position, are located in more of a lying position, in which case even printed products with a low level of inherent stability are not buckled under their own weight. It is thus possible to dispense with a leading wall of the receiving element. The channel-like base is fixed to the trailing wall and extends, together with the trailing wall, over a receiving portion and an insertion portion. Since, in the case of the device according to the invention, the printed products need be moved only in a displacement direction from the receiving portion in the direction of the insertion portion, and not counter to this displacement direction, the relevant displacement means are designed as pushing mechanisms.
Preferred embodiments of the device according to the invention are specified in the dependent patent claims.
The invention will be explained in more detail with reference to exemplary embodiments which are illustrated in the drawing and in which, purely schematically:
a shows the embodiment according to
The device according to the invention which is shown in
The processing conveyor 16 has a plurality of identically designed receiving elements 14 which are driven in the direction of circulation U along a continuous circulatory path 24 and are arranged one behind the other and at right angles to the circulatory path 24. Each receiving element 14 is fastened on a cross-sectionally C-shaped profiled carrier 26 which has its two ends guided via guide rollers—as disclosed, for example, in CH 669 944 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,743,005—in continuous rails (not shown). Furthermore, the profiled carriers 26 are fastened, at their two ends, on a respective drive mechanism 28, for example a chain which is driven in circulation. The chain-dotted line indicates, on the one hand, the circulatory path 24 and, on the other hand, the drive mechanism 28. The latter is guided, at the upstream end of the processing conveyor 16, around a deflecting wheel 30, which is indicated by way of its axle, and, at the downstream end of the processing conveyor 16, around a drive wheel 32, which is indicated by way of its axle. The drive wheel 32 is motor-driven continuously in a known manner. Between the deflecting wheel 30 and the drive wheel 32, a top, active strand 34 and a bottom, return strand 36 run rectilinearly. The active strand 34 defines an operating portion 38, in which the rectilinear circulatory path 24 runs at a constant slope of approximately 45°. This slope may be smaller or greater, but it is always selected such that the printed products 18 fed come into abutment by way of their leading side edge 40, as seen in the feed direction Z, against a channel-like base 42, and with surface contact against a trailing wall 44, of the receiving elements 14.
As can be seen from
Furthermore, the wall 44 has, at a distance from the base 42 and running parallel to the latter and the profiled carrier 26, a cross-sectionally V-shaped bead 54 which projects in the direction of the holding-open element, i.e. counter to the direction of circulation (U). As measured from the base 42, the bead 54 is located approximately a third of the way up the height of the wall 44. The wall 44 forms a single plane above and beneath the bead 54.
Mounted in a displaceable manner in the C-shaped profiled carrier 26, which is open toward the bottom in the operating portion 38, is a carriage 56—the latter may, of course, also be formed differently, for example by a pair of rollers—which engages through the opening in the profiled carrier 26 by way of a stub 58. Fastened on this stub 58 is a pushing mechanism 60 which is produced, for example, from a rod, engages with play around the profiled carrier 26 on the side directed away from the base 42 and has its free end 62 engaging with play in the bead 54.
A roller 64 is mounted in a freely rotatable manner at the free end of the stub 58, and this roller is guided. in a fixed guide track 66. All the rollers 64 are controlled by the same guide track 66 such that, during movement of the profiled carriers 26 and thus receiving elements 14 along the circulatory path 24, the pushing mechanisms 60 execute a movement in the longitudinal direction of the receiving elements 14, as will be explained at a later stage in the text in conjunction with
Furthermore, each wall 44, and thus each receiving element 14, is assigned an opening wedge 68. The latter is located, as seen in the longitudinal direction of the receiving elements 14, between the receiving portion 46 and the insertion portion 48 and is arranged to precede the relevant wall 44, as seen in the direction of circulation U, and to be parallel thereto, a gap 70 being formed in the process. The opening wedge 68 is fastened on the wall 44, for example by means of a retaining bracket, such that a printed product 18 fed to the receiving element 14 can be pushed through without obstruction between the base 42 and the retaining bracket.
The first feed conveyor 10 and the second feed conveyor 12, and possibly further feed conveyors, may be designed, in a known manner, as belt conveyors. Since the printed products 18 and inserts 20 are fed from above, the belt conveyors preferably form a conveying gap which, as seen in the feed direction Z, terminates at a distance from a pair of accelerating rollers 72 (see
The first feed conveyor 10 is intended, for each receiving element 14 running past it, to introduce a printed product 18 into the receiving portion 46. Correspondingly, the second feed conveyor 12 is intended, for each receiving element 14 running past it, to feed an insert 20 - or a plurality of inserts 20—to the insertion portion 48. Since the printed products 18 displaced from the receiving portion 46 into the insertion portion 48 have been opened, the inserts 20 thus pass into the opened printed product 18 between the first product part 18′ and the second product part 18″.
The receiving elements 14 do not have a leading wall preceding the trailing wall 44. This can be seen to particularly good effect in
As seen in the direction of circulation U, the first feed conveyor 10 is located at the start of the operating portion 38, the second feed conveyor 12 is located in a central region of the operating portion 38, and the removal conveyor 22 is located at the end of the operating portion 38. In the present example, the removal conveyor is designed as a gripper conveyor and has individually controllable grippers 76 spaced apart one behind the other on a continuous conveying mechanism 74 which is driven in circulation in the removal direction W. These grippers each coincide with a receiving element 14, grip the printed product 18 fitted with at least one insert 20, and convey it away.
The respective opening wedge 68 is followed in the displacement direction V by the holding-open element 50, which is fastened on the trailing wall 44 of the respectively preceding receiving element 14. The leading surface of the holding-open portion 52 of the holding-open element 50, as seen in the direction of circulation U, is aligned with the corresponding surface of the opening wedge 68, in which case the product part 18″ can slide without obstruction along the relevant surfaces. That end region of the holding-open element 50 which is directed toward the opening wedge 68 is angled slightly, and set back in relation to the abovementioned surface.
The arrow 10 symbolizes the first feed conveyor, which has fed a printed product 18 to the rearmost receiving element 14 in
Arranged in a stationary manner at the start of the operating portion 38 is an opening subassembly 82, of which the construction and functioning will be described at a later stage in the text in conjunction with
The device which is shown in
In the insertion portion 48, where the printed product 18 which has been opened in this way is held open, at least one insert 20 is introduced into this printed product. As the receiving elements 14 are moved further in the direction of circulation U, the relevant printed product 18 is pushed from the insertion portion 48 into the removal portion 78, as a result of which the second product part 18″ falls gradually onto the first product part 18′ and/or the insert 20 until it is fully released from the holding-open element 50, and then the printed product 18 is completely closed. As soon as the printed product 18 fitted with the insert 20 is located in the removal portion 78, the relevant pushing mechanism 60 is moved back counter to the displacement direction V, and the insert-carrying printed product 18 is then gripped at the top side edge 40′ by means of the gripper 76 and conveyed away.
A deflecting wedge 100 is fastened on the wall 44 upstream of the opening wedge 68, as seen in the displacement direction V. By means of this deflecting wedge, the printed product 18 butting against the base 42 and with surface contact against the wall 44 can be lifted off from the wall 44, by way of an end region adjacent to the top side edge 40′, during displacement in the displacement direction V. As can be gathered, in particular, from the plan view in
In
The printed product 18 which is shown in
The rotation of the carrying element 84 is coordinated with the processing conveyor 16 such that an opening mechanism 86 coincides with each receiving element 14. The opening blade 88 here is controlled via the control guide track 96 such that it can act on the overfold 102, but does not come into contact with the receiving elements 14. That embodiment of the opening subassembly 82 which is shown in
An opening subassembly as is shown in
In the case of an embodiment which is shown in
The removal conveyor 22, once again, is designed as a gripper conveyor and has grippers 76 arranged one behind the other on a continuous conveying mechanism 74 which is driven in circulation in the removal direction W. The removal conveyor 22 is arranged to the side of the processing conveyor 16 such that, in order to receive, and transport away, the printed products 18 fitted with inserts 20, the grippers 76, at the end of the operating portion 38, run vertically upward from the bottom at a small distance from the end 106 of the receiving elements 14. The speed of the conveying mechanism 74 and the spacing of the grippers 76 are coordinated with the processing conveyor 16 such that a gripper 76 coincides with each receiving element 14, and thus with each printed product 20 pushed out beyond the end 106 of the receiving element 14. The relevant opened gripper 76 is controlled such that the printed product 18 which is to be gripped is enclosed by it, and prevented from tilting, from beneath and then the gripper closes and conveys the printed product 18 away in a state in which it is held at its side edge 40. Once the printed product 18 has been received, the gripper 76 can be pivoted such that the printed products 18 pass into an imbricated hanging position. The inserts here are also held in a clamped state by the gripper 76.
A third embodiment of the device according to the invention is shown in
The holding-open element 50, together with the opening wedge 68, is controlled, for example by means of a further guide track, such that, upon entry into the operating portion 38, they are located in the insertion portion 48. This position is maintained at least as far as that location of the circulatory path 24 at which the second feed conveyor 12 discharges the inserts 20 to the receiving elements 14. During further movement in the direction of circulation U, the holding-open element 50 and the opening wedge 68 are then moved back into the receiving portion 46 in the direction V′ counter to the displacement direction V.
The guide track 66 controls the movement of the pushing mechanisms 60 such that, once a printed product 18 has been fed into the receiving portion 46 of a receiving element 14, they come into abutment against the trailing edge 80 of the relevant printed product 18 and push the latter in the displacement direction V, during further movement in the direction of circulation U, into the insertion portion 48. The respective printed product 18 here, as has been described above in conjunction with
The removal conveyor 22 is designed in a manner identical to that in the embodiment according to
The first feed conveyor 10 and the second feed conveyor 12 may be designed as gripper conveyors. It is also conceivable for one or more further feed conveyors to be provided downstream of the second feed conveyor 12 in order for different inserts 20 to be fed to the printed products 18.
Of course, the second feed conveyor 12 can be used to feed a single insert 20, or a plurality of inserts 20 at the same time, to each printed product 18.
Multiple-sheet printed products 18 are to be understood as those which have at least two sheets, it being possible for these to be formed by the two parts of a large folded sheet. It is also conceivable for the printed products 18 to comprise a folded part in which a further part is arranged. The printed product may also be formed by a stack of sheets. The insert may be formed in one or more pieces. It may be of the same format as the printed product or of a smaller format. The insert need not be a printed product; it may also be formed, for example, by a CD or the like.
The removal conveyor 22 may also be designed differently. It is thus conceivable, in particular in the case of the embodiment according to
The opening subassembly 82 may likewise be designed differently to the manner shown in
In respect of printed products being opened by means of air nozzles 104, reference is made to EP 0 577 964 A. The latter document also shows that, in this case, a deflecting wedge 100 could be dispensed with.
If a change is made to the format of the printed products which are to be processed, the most which is required of the processing conveyor 16 is for the opening subassembly to be set and adjusted.
In the operating portion, the wall 44 of a receiving element 14 and the associated holding-open element 50, which is arranged on the preceding receiving element 14, run at a small acute angle of approximately 10°, that is to say more or less parallel to one another, the end edge of the base 42 being located approximately in the plane defined by the holding-open element 50. This angle may be selected to be smaller or larger, but it is always selected to be small enough to ensure that printed products with a very low level of inherent stability do not buckle, as they butt against the holding-open element 50, as a result of the dead weight of the second product part 18″.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2132/06 | Dec 2006 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH2007/000502 | 10/11/2007 | WO | 00 | 6/12/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/080236 | 7/10/2008 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3951399 | Reist et al. | Apr 1976 | A |
3955667 | Muller et al. | May 1976 | A |
4058202 | Reist et al. | Nov 1977 | A |
4416448 | Meier | Nov 1983 | A |
4496941 | Clatworthy | Jan 1985 | A |
4709910 | Honegger | Dec 1987 | A |
4729554 | Honegger | Mar 1988 | A |
4743005 | Reist | May 1988 | A |
4867429 | Infanger | Sep 1989 | A |
5104108 | Honegger | Apr 1992 | A |
5112036 | Hatt | May 1992 | A |
5265915 | Seidel et al. | Nov 1993 | A |
5441245 | Fluckiger | Aug 1995 | A |
5443250 | Gosslinghoff | Aug 1995 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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669 944 | Apr 1989 | CH |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090322009 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |