The invention relates to a device for steadying parisons for plastics containers, in particular PET bottle parisons, in the entry region of an entraining device such as a star wheel, an inspection unit and where applicable an ejector unit.
A corresponding inspection and ejector unit for parisons of this kind is known for example from EP 2 845 715 A1. This includes an entraining device, in the form of a star wheel that takes up parisons that arrive at the inspection and ejector unit from a feed device, transports them onward and passes at least some of the parisons on to a device for conveying them away. This inspection and ejector unit further includes a detection device in the form of a camera, by means of which faulty parisons in the star wheel are identified, and a reject device, by means of which parisons that have been identified as faulty are removed from the star wheel.
This inspection and ejector unit has proved its usefulness in practice; however, it has been found that at relatively high transport speeds (that is to say above approximately 30 000 parisons per hour) the parisons can start to wobble or vibrate on entering the star wheel, with the result that in some cases the camera cannot take clear images of the parisons that pass beside or below it, and thus there is a possibility that faulty parisons are not identified as such.
It is thus the object of the present invention to provide a device by means of which the parisons can be steadied, even at relatively high transport speeds, such that the camera of an inspection unit and where applicable an ejector unit can take images of the parisons without blurring.
This object is achieved according to the invention by means of a device for steadying parisons for plastics containers, in particular PET bottle parisons, in the entry region of an entraining device of an inspection unit, having: an overlaid part that has at least a first functional portion and a second functional portion, wherein the second functional portion is arranged downstream of the first functional portion, wherein the first functional portion damps in particular vertical disruptive movements of a parison that has been taken up by the entraining device such that the second functional portion comes into a substantially form-fitting guiding engagement with the parison, this guiding engagement bringing about complete steadying of the parison.
In the present document, the term “form-fitting guiding engagement” is used to mean that the parison can be guided or transported form-fittingly onward along the transport path by suitable devices, without jamming or wedging.
In the present document, the term “complete steadying” is used to mean that the parison no longer performs any disruptive movements, either in the vertical or the horizontal direction. Similarly, rotary and tilting movements of the parison are prevented.
The overlaid part (which is also called a steadying or holding-down block) is advantageously mounted on or above a guide rail that is arranged in a common plane with and alongside the entraining device (that is to say, typically a star wheel).
The overlaid part advantageously has in the first functional portion devices that leave the parison, in particular in the vertical direction, only a small amount of play (or decreasing play) in relation to the underside of a cover plate of the overlaid part.
In the second functional portion, as mentioned above the overlaid part advantageously has devices that preferably come into a form-fitting guiding engagement with the support ring of the parison, with the result that the parison can be guided onward without any further wobbling or disruptive movement. The camera of the inspection unit can then record sharp images of the parison and reject defective parisons with a high degree of reliability.
By means of the device according to the invention, transport speeds of more than 50 000 parisons per hour can be achieved without problems arising in respect of the quality of the images of parisons that are transported past the camera.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the overlaid part has a cover plate that extends over the first and the second functional portion. The cover plate preferably has a length (L) that corresponds to at least twice the support ring diameter of a parison and a width (B) that corresponds to at least one to 1.5 times the width of the support ring diameter. These dimensions have proved particularly suitable in practice, since they are sufficient to bring about complete steadying of the parisons, the overlaid part can be given a form that saves on space, and where appropriate no or only small adjustments are needed to a curved transport path of the parisons.
In a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, two side walls jut (perpendicularly) from the cover plate, in particular in the region of the second functional portion, and preferably each have at their lower end a (horizontally) inwardly directed projection, such that the second functional portion has a cross section substantially in the shape of a C-profile. The support rings of the parisons pass through below these projections or this C-profile, while the mouth of each parison passes through the interior space defined by the C-profile.
In a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, the side edges of the projections run parallel to the side walls, or they have a curvature. With the length (L) of the cover plate that was specified above (and that typically also corresponds to the overall length of the overlaid part), a straight construction of the projections is sufficient, without hindering transport of the parisons along the curved path of the star wheel. However, it is of course also possible to adapt the projections to the peripheral curvature of the star wheel or to a guide rail that runs in a manner corresponding thereto (and on which the support rings of the parisons also partly lie). This is in particular useful if a relatively long embodiment of the overlaid part is selected. The projections, or their side edges, serve to guide the parisons laterally (that is to say in the region of the mouth above the support ring) and help to suppress lateral disruptive and rotary movements.
In a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, there is arranged, at least on a side wall of the overlaid part, a mounting portion by means of which the overlaid part may be secured to a guide device of the inspection unit. The mounting portion preferably takes the form of a block-like structure having a bore that passes right through it, for receiving a securing device (such as a screw). Further preferably, the bore takes the form of an elongate bore in order to enable the overlaid part to be mounted with as much capacity for variation as possible.
In a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, the mounting portion has on its underside a three-point bearing. Preferably, the three-point bearing is milled into the underside of the mounting portion. It serves on the one hand to ensure that the overlaid part does not rotate when the screw is tightened during mounting of the overlaid part on the guide rail. On the other hand, by means of the three-point bearing the required spacing is also provided between the underside of the (inwardly directed) projections and the upper side of the guide rail such that the support rings can be guided in between (and in particular held down) without nonetheless jamming. For this reason, the spacing is typically somewhat larger than the thickness of the support ring of a parison.
In a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, the cover plate has a shoulder on its underside, in the region of the second functional portion, wherein the spacing from the mouth opening of the parison to the underside of the cover plate is larger in the region downstream of the shoulder than in the region upstream of the shoulder (however, this is not imperative for the region of the first guide portion, which has the chamfer that is described below). As seen in cross section, the shoulder occurs after about ⅕ of the length of the second functional portion, preferably after about ¼ of the length of the second functional portion and further preferably after about ⅓ of the length of the second functional portion (in each case as seen in the direction of transport). The purpose of this measure is to prevent the parison, as it leaves the overlaid part or the second functional portion of the overlaid part, from catching, by means of its mouth opening, on the underside of the cover plate and tilting. This would once again have the result that the parison would strike against other parisons and possibly result in a disruption to operation in the inspection unit.
In a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, the cover plate has a chamfer on its underside, in particular in the region of the first functional portion. The chamfer is intended to prevent the parisons from striking against the front or entry edge of the cover plate as they enter the overlaid part and thus resulting in a blockage in the entry region of the inspection unit. The chamfer has an angle α of between 10° and 45°, preferably between 15° and 40° and further preferably between 20° and 35°.
In a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, the overlaid part is milled out of a block.
This type of manufacture has proved to be particularly precise and low in cost. In practice, it has moreover proved favorable when converting to a different size of parison to have overlaid parts that are milled to appropriate dimensions immediately to hand. In principle, however, an adjustable construction of the overlaid part is also conceivable (that is to say having for example an adjustable incline, length and/or width).
In a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, the cover plate has a viewing opening. The latter serves primarily to monitor operation. Instead of a viewing opening, however, it is also possible for a mounting bore for additional securing elements and/or structural elements to be provided (for example where there is an adjustable construction of the overlaid part).
In yet a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, the entraining device includes a star wheel.
Typically, a guide rail runs at an unchanging spacing therefrom, in a manner corresponding thereto (that is to say as an additional support face for the support ring).
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention will be illustrated with reference to the attached drawings for the purpose of better clarity.
In the drawings:
The overlaid part 10 according to the invention is typically arranged very close to the point at which the parisons 2 enter the star wheel 1, in order to steady them as soon as possible for the camera of the inspection unit (which is not illustrated), which is arranged (relatively close) downstream. As can be seen, approximately two parisons 2 pass through the overlaid part 10 at the same time. By means of a mounting portion 15 and a corresponding securing device, the overlaid part 10 is arranged on a guide device 3 (typically a guide rail) on which there is guided a part of the support ring 2a of each parison 2 that does not lie on the upper side of the transport cutout 6.
The diameter DT of the support ring 2a is, as is conventional, larger than that of the mouth opening 2b of the parison 2. The guide rail 3 has a peripheral curvature that corresponds to that of the star wheel 1. The guide rail 3 is mounted, for example by means of screws 7, on a frame part of the inspection unit, it being possible to convert the guide rail 3 to another size of parison, similarly to the feed device 4. The arrow T moreover indicates the direction of transport.
The overlaid part 10 according to the invention is illustrated more closely in
The side walls 13, which jut vertically downward from the cover plate 12 and have the inwardly directed projections 14, then form the second functional portion 11b of the overlaid part 10 according to the invention. Here, the parison 2 comes into a substantially form-fitting guiding engagement that has the effect of holding the parison 2 completely down or steady. The guiding engagement for the parison 2 or the support ring 2a thereof is, in the present case, constructed between the undersides of the projections 14 and the upper side of the guide rail 3 (cf.
Provided on a side wall 13 of the overlaid part 10 (that is to say preferably on the outwardly directed side wall 13) is the block-shaped mounting portion 15, which may be mounted adjustably on the guide rail 3 by means of the mounting or elongate bore 15b and a suitable securing device. Provided on the underside of the mounting portion 15 is a three-point bearing 16. In the region of the second functional portion 11b, the cover plate 12, the side walls 13 and the projections 14 define the interior space 22 through which the mouths of the parisons 2 (that is to say the portions above the support ring 2a) pass.
Once again, the mounting portion 15 is visible, with the elongate bore 15b and the three-point bearing 16 that is arranged on its underside, for twist-free mounting of the overlaid part 10 on the guide rail 3. The side edges 14a of the projections 14 are conventionally constructed to be perpendicular, as can be seen. They ensure lateral guidance of the parisons (that is to say in the region of the mouth, above the support ring 2a) and moreover contribute to damping or suppressing lateral disruptive and rotary movements.
This serves the purpose of ensuring that when the parison 2 leaves the overlaid part 10 it does not catch by means of its mouth or its mouth opening 2b on the exit edge 23 of the cover plate 12 at the end of the second functional portion 11b and cause the parison 2 to tilt and possibly strike against the upstream or downstream parisons 2. By means of the shoulder 17, disruptions to operation of this kind can be reliably avoided. The horizontal underside of the cover plate 21 downstream of the shoulder 17 is typically somewhat longer than the diameter DT of the support ring 2a of a parison 2.
In the region downstream of the shoulder 17, the thickness D of the cover plate 12 is only around half the thickness it had in the region of the horizontal underside 20. Moreover, again visible is the opening 19, constructed as a threaded bore, and the side edge 14a of the projection 14 that juts inward from the side wall 13.
On the underside of the mounting block 15 there is again visible the three-point bearing 16 and the spacing A that is formed by the three-point bearing from the underside of the projection 14. This spacing A is dimensioned such that there may be formed with the support ring 2a of a parison 2 a substantially form-fitting guiding engagement that on the one hand reliably and entirely holds down or steadies the parison and on the other hand causes no jamming or wedging of the parison 2 during transport. An additional three-point bearing 16 (or a corresponding support) may where applicable also be provided on the underside of the opposing side wall 13.
In the present description, moreover, like reference numerals designate the same components throughout.
1 Entraining device (star wheel)
2 Parison
2
a Support ring
2
b Mouth opening
3 Guide device (guide rail)
4 Feed device
5 Adjusting device
6 Transport cutout (of star wheel)
7 Screw
10 Overlaid part
11
a First functional portion
11
b Second functional portion
12 Cover plate
13 Side walls
14 Projections
14
a Side edges
15 Mounting portion
15
a Securing device
15
b Mounting bore
16 Three-point bearing
17 Shoulder
18 Chamfer
19 Viewing opening
20 Horizontal underside of cover plate (upstream of shoulder)
21 Horizontal underside of cover plate (downstream of shoulder)
22 Interior space
23 Exit edge
24 Front edge (entry edge)
A Spacing
B Width
D Thickness
DT Diameter of support ring
L Length
T Direction of transport
α Angle of chamfer
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
01212/15 | Aug 2015 | CH | national |