Elasticated netting

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6263643
  • Patent Number
    6,263,643
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, April 21, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, July 24, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
A machine for automatically loading tubes with elasticated netting in a folded condition comprises an array of fingers which, by reciprocative movement of the tube relatively through the array, will draw off a continuous sleeve of the netting from a spreader device and store it on the tube. Thereafter the fingers and spreader device are raised and the fingers splayed from the tube, enabling the sleeve of netting to be cut above the tube, after which the loaded tube can be removed and replaced by an unloaded one.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to elasticated netting, and more particularly to the automation of the procedure of loading tubes with the netting in a folded condition.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




Elasticated netting is produced as a continuous sleeve which, in its unstressed condition, is only a few centimetres wide. It is used to enclose products such as joints of meat, being expanded to surround a product so that when released it lightly grips the product, the cut-off ends of the sleeve folding themselves around the ends of the product. Elasticated netting thus holds together a body which might otherwise tend to fall apart, such as a joint of meat during cooking, as well as assisting in such processes as the curing of ham.




The commonest way to locate netting around products is first of all to store the netting in a folded condition on a tube the inner diameter of which is large enough for the products to be netted to pass down it. This tube is of course of considerably greater diameter than the unstressed sleeve of netting. A means is employed to grip the netting and then move it from one end to the other of the tube so that the netting folds on the tube like a badly rucked sock. When no more netting can be stored on the tube the sleeve is cut behind the tube and the tube can then be taken away for use in enclosing products. In this way, of course, the length of netting stored on a tube is a multiple of the length of the tube. Products are passed through the tube and as they emerge they draw off enough of the stored netting to enclose them, whereupon the sleeve is cut behind each product.




An example of such a gripping means takes the form of an annular array of fingers surrounding the tube. The fingers are lightly spring-loaded so that their tips will touch the tube, extending therefrom at an acute angle. When the tube is reciprocated axially of the array of fingers the fingers will, on an upstroke of the tube, engage holes in the net and drag it toward the opposite end of the tube. On an downstroke of the tube the fingers will ride over the net. Thus the net is progressively folded along the length of the tube.




The use of the equipment of the immediately preceding paragraph is labour intensive and time consuming. First an operator must take a tube and expand the sleeve around one end of it. He must then pass the tube through the array of fingers until it locates accurately on a platform. Once the tube is loaded with netting he must remove it from the finger array and cut off the sleeve behind the tube.




A principal object of the present invention is to improve upon the above procedure by speeding it up and automating it, thus reducing both labour costs and the down time which currently occurs while awaiting the loaded tubes.




In accordance with one aspect of the present invention there is provided apparatus for the automated loading of elasticated netting in a folded condition onto storage tubes, the apparatus comprising a work station, means for supplying the netting in the form of a continuous sleeve in an unstressed condition toward the work station, means for delivering the storage tubes in sequence to the work station, spreader means for expanding a leading end of the sleeve to a diameter equal to or greater than that of a tube at the work station, said spreader means being displaceable along an axis generally perpendicular to the work station, finger means arranged about said axis, each finger being movable between an operative position in which it may contact a tube at the work station and an inoperative position displaced laterally from said tube, and means for relatively reciprocatively displacing a tube at the work station and said finger means generally along said axis with the finger means in said operative position such that repeated, reciprocative relative movement of the tube and finger means will store in a folded condition on the tube netting introduced to the tube by the spreader means and engaged by the finger means, the finger means being subsequently displaceable to the inoperative position and movable with the spreader means along said axis away from the work station to allow the sleeve to be cut near to the loaded tube and to permit removal of the latter from the work station and its replacement by an unloaded tube.




Preferably the spreader means comprises a shaft portion and a head portion of greater diameter than the shaft portion, the head portion tapering to the shaft portion over a generally frusto conical surface, the diameter of the shaft portion being such that in use the sleeve may pass along it generally in an unstressed condition and means being provided to grasp the shaft portion around the sleeve for purposes of holding the spreader means in an elevated position when a loaded tube is to be removed from the work station.




The finger means preferably comprises an annular array of pivotally mounted fingers spring loaded to extend inwardly of the array and a control ring relatively movable axially of the array and disposed to abut the fingers to displace the same from the operative to the inoperative position when the array of fingers is moved away from the work station.




The head portion preferably has cut-away regions around a cylindrical portion of its length to facilitate engagement of the fingers with netting passed around said cylindrical portion.




Means is preferably provided for holding the spreader means and the finger means in an intermediate position in which the spreader means is in proximity to an upper end of an upright tube at the work station and the finger means is in an operative position with the fingers thereof in contact with the spreader means, the spreader means and finger means are preferably jointly displaceable upwardly from said intermediate position to a raised position in which the finger means is in the inoperative position and the spreader means is above said tube upper end and means is preferably provided for relatively reciprocating the finger means and the workstation along said axis while the spreader means and finger means are in said intermediate position so that the finger means moves relatively along said tube to draw netting over the spreader means and fold it upon said tube.




The finger means may be mounted below a first plate the position of which relative to a second plate is controlled by first ram means and second ram means may be provided for reciprocating the second plate along said axis relative to the work station while a predetermined relationship is maintained between the first and second plates by the first ram means.




Abutment means may be provided on the second plate to arrest upward movement of the control ring as the finger means is raised from the lowered to the raised position by the first ram means, thereby causing abutment of the control ring with the fingers and displacement of the latter to the inoperative position.




Means may be provided for reciprocating the work station toward and away from the finger means.




Conveyor means may be disposed laterally of the work station to convey unloaded tubes in an upright position in sequence to a position laterally alongside the work station and pusher means may be provided operable transversely of the conveyor means to push a leading one of the unloaded tubes onto the work station thereby simultaneously displacing a loaded tube from the work station.




Gripper means may be located to engage between them a rectangular base flange of an upright tube positioned on the workstation, said gripper means being actuable to grip the flange when the tube is so located and to release the flange when the tube is to be displaced off the workstation.




Cutter means is preferably provided operable to cut the sleeve from a loaded tube at the work station when the finger means and spreader means are moved away from the loaded tube, the cutter means being movable through the space vacated by the finger means.




A dolly may be removably locatable on the upper end of a said tube at the workstation, said dolly and the spreader means having male and female formations which will engage in the lowered position of the spreader means to assure coaxial alignment between the spreader means and said tube, said dolly serving also to space the head of the spreader means from said upper end of the tube to prevent nipping of the sleeve therebetween.




In accordance with another aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of loading elasticated netting in a folded condition onto storage tubes utilising the apparatus of the twelve immediately preceding paragraphs, the method comprising locating a leading end of a continuous sleeve of netting on the spreader means with the latter and the finger means in a raised position above the work station, bringing the tubes in sequence to the work station in an upright position so that a tube at the work station is generally coaxially aligned with the spreader means, lowering the spreader means into proximity with the upper end of said tube at the work station, lowering the finger means and bringing the latter to the operative position so that the fingers engage the netting around the spreader means, relatively reciprocating said tube at the work station and said finger means whereby the latter folds netting upon said tube, moving said finger means to the inoperative position, raising the finger means and spreader means above said upper end of the tube, cutting the sleeve above the loaded tube and removing the loaded tube laterally from the work station and locating an unloaded tube at the work station.




The method may comprise simultaneously displacing both the finger means and the workstation toward and away from one another.




Unloaded tubes may be carried to the work station by conveyor means disposed laterally of the work station and pusher means moving transversely of the conveyor may be employed to move a leading one of the tubes on the conveyor from the conveyor onto the work station, said leading tube serving simultaneously to displace a loaded tube from the work station.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




A preferred embodiment of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying diagrammatic drawings, in which:





FIG. 1

is an elevational view of apparatus in accordance with the invention, partially broken away, and





FIGS. 2 and 3

are similar, detailed views on an enlarged scale illustrating components of the apparatus of

FIG. 1

in different phases of operation.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




The apparatus illustrated in

FIG. 1

comprises columns


10


extending between a base


42


of the machine and a fixed top plate


43


. They serve to guide plates


17


,


11


and


13


as the latter are displaced vertically by respective pneumatic rams as will be described. Rams


12


are fixed to plate


13


and can reciprocate plate


11


relative to plate


13


. Rams


41


are fixed to immovable top plate


43


and can reciprocate plate


13


and therefore rams


12


and plate


11


bodily with plate


13


.




Beneath plate


11


and extending downwardly therefrom is an annular array of fingers


14


each having a respective pivotal connection at


15


to plate


11


so as to be displaceable between the generally vertical position shown in FIG.


2


and the inwardly and downwardly directed position shown in FIG.


3


. The fingers


14


are collectively biassed toward the latter position by an annular coil spring (not shown) which engages each finger at


16


.




The array of fingers


14


is coaxially aligned vertically with a further pneumatic ram


18


which carries at its top end plate


17


. The plate


17


serves as a work station.




A conveyor


19


delivers tubes


26


in sequence to a position alongside plate


17


. Each tube


26


has a rectangular bottom flange


30


which holds it upright and abutment of the flanges


30


of adjacent tubes while on the conveyor


19


serves to maintain them in a correctly spaced apart relationship.




At the commencement of operations the plate


17


is in the lowered position shown in FIG.


1


and plate


13


is held by rams


41


in the raised position shown in FIG.


1


. By retraction of rams


12


relative to plate


13


plate


11


is also in a raised position represented by FIG.


2


. As plate


11


moves to the fully raised position the tops of rods


21


extending upward from a control ring


22


encounter a plate


31


which has a fixed position relative to plate


13


. This arrests the control ring


22


and as plate


11


continues upward ring


22


encounters the fingers


14


and displaces them from the position of

FIG. 3

to the position of FIG.


2


.




The shaft


23


of a spreader device


24


has at its lower end an enlarged head


25


. The diameter of this head portion


25


is slightly greater than that of a tube


26


standing on the work station plate


17


. The diameter of the shaft


23


is on the other hand slightly less than that of a sleeve


27


of elasticated netting in the unstressed condition of the latter. Before commencing to operate the machine illustrated the leading end of a continuous sleeve


27


of the netting is passed along shaft


24


and over a frusto conical shoulder


28


between shaft


24


and head


25


, thus expanding the netting until it is stretched over a cylindrical surface


29


of head


25


.




Prior to lifting plate


11


arcuate clamping elements


32


′,


32


″ move oppositely to grip shaft


23


between them so that the spreader device will rise with plate


11


.




It is now possible for pusher means (not shown) operating transversely of the conveyor


19


to push a leading one of the tubes


26


from the conveyor onto the plate


17


. As the tube moves onto the plate its flange


30


locates under L-shaped lugs


33


movable vertically by respective pneumatic rams


34


. When the tube


26


loaded onto plate


17


is coaxial with shaft


23


of the spreader device rams


34


are actuated to cause lugs


33


to clamp the flange


30


of the tube in position on the workstation plate


17


.




Plate


11


is now lowered relative to plate


13


and clamps


32


′,


32


″ released so that the head


25


of the spreader device is located on a dolly


40


(

FIG. 2

) loosely located on top of tube


26


at the workstation. The dolly


40


preferably has a central aperture (not shown) in which a spigot (not shown) projecting from the spreader device


24


will locate when lowered, thus holding the spreader device


24


in coaxial alignment with the tube


26


. The purpose of dolly


40


is also to prevent the netting


25


becoming nipped between head


25


and the top of the tube


26


. The tips of fingers


14


are now in contact with surface


29


and therefore engage the leading end of the netting sleeve


27


which is expanded over head


25


. To ensure such engagement the periphery of the head


25


is cut away at circumferentially spaced positions as at


35


to ensure that at least some finger tips pass through the netting to engage weft threads when the fingers


14


thereafter move downward.




Clamping elements


32


′,


32


″ now move apart so that the spreader device


24


, resting on top of tube


26


at the workstation, can rise therewith. The plate


17


is now reciprocated vertically by the ram


18


and simultaneously the plate


13


is reciprocated vertically by the rams


41


. These movements are synchronised so that the plate


11


together with the fingers


14


descends as the plate


17


rises, and vice versa so that the netting sleeve


27


is dragged over spreader head


25


and onto the tube


26


as the latter rises through the descending array of fingers


14


. As is known per se the fingers engage the netting only when plates


11


and


17


are moving toward one-another and ride over it as the plates


11


and


17


move apart, causing the expanded netting to fold around the tube


26


. The stroke of reciprocation of rams


41


and


18


incrementally reduces as the tube


26


becomes loaded with netting. This can be achieved by reversing the valves controlling the operation of rams


41


and


18


whenever resistance to the upstroke is encountered caused by the netting already folded onto tube


26


. The operation as a whole is preferably controlled by a timer.




Once the tube


26


at the workstation is fully loaded plate


17


is arrested in the lowered position of FIG.


1


and plate


13


is arrested in the raised position of FIG.


1


. Plate


11


is now raised by rams


12


relative to plate


13


so that the netting sleeve is exposed between the top of tube


26


and spreader head


25


, enabling cutter means (not shown) to move in horizontally between columns


10


and cut the sleeve close to spreader head


25


.




Rams


34


are now actuated to cause lugs


33


to release flange


30


of the loaded tube and the pusher means is actuated to move a fresh, unloaded tube onto the workstation plate


17


from conveyor


19


. In so doing it pushes the loaded tube


26


off plate


17


and onto a table


20


on the opposite side of the workstation to the conveyor


19


. There is a step down from the plate


17


to the table


20


which causes the loaded tube


26


to topple, thus ensuring that its base flange


30


is fully separated from that of the newly positioned tube


26


.




With a fresh, unloaded tube


26


in position on workstation plate


17


the whole process is repeated.




It will be understood that the simultaneous movement of plates


13


and


17


toward and away from one another to fold the netting onto a tube


26


is not essential. Either of the plates


13


and


17


might be stationary, only the other moving, but the simultaneous movement of both plates effectively halves the time taken to load a tube with netting.




By means of the machine of the invention tubes loaded with folded elasticated netting may be supplied continuously and automatically to the table


20


, where they are available for use when required.



Claims
  • 1. An apparatus for the automated loading of elasticated netting in a folded condition onto storage tubes, the apparatus comprising:a work station; means for supplying the netting in the form of a continuous sleeve in an unstressed condition toward the work station; means for delivering the storage tubes in sequence to the work station; spreader means for expanding a leading end of the sleeve to a diameter equal to or greater than that of a tub at the work station, said spreader means displaceable along an axis generally perpendicular to the work station; finger means arranged about said axis having at least one finger, wherein each finger is movable between an operative position in which it may contact a tube at the work station and an inoperative position displaced laterally from said tube; means for relatively reciprocatively displacing a tube at the work station and said finger means generally along said axis with the finger means in said operative position such that repeated, reciprocative relative movement of the tube and finger means will store in a folded condition on the tube netting introduced to the tube by the spreader means and engaged by the finger means, the finger means being subsequently displaceable to the inoperative position and movable with the spreader means along said axis away from the work station to allow the sleeve to be cut near to the loaded tube and to permit removal of the latter from the work station and its replacement by an unloaded tube; means for holding the spreader means and the finger means in an intermediate position, in which the spreader means is in proximity to an upper end of an upright tube at the work station and the finger means is in an operative position with the fingers thereof in contact with the spreader means, wherein the spreader means and the finger means are jointly displaceable upwardly from said intermediate position to a raised position in which the finger means is in the inoperative position and the spreader means is above said tube upper end and wherein means is provided for relatively reciprocating the finger means and the workstation along said axis while the spreader means and finger means are in said intermediate position so that the finger means moves relatively along said tube to draw netting over the spreader means and fold it upon said tube; and wherein the finger means is mounted below a first plate the position of which relative to a second plate is controlled by first ram means and wherein second ram means is provided for reciprocating the second plate along said axis relative to the work station while a predetermined relationship is maintained between the first and second plates by the first ram means.
  • 2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the spreader means comprises a shaft portion and a head portion of greater distance than the shaft portion, the head portion tapering to the shaft portion over a generally frusto-conical surface, the diameter of the shaft portion being such that in use the sleeve may pass along it generally in an unstressed condition and means being provided to grasp the shaft portion around the sleeve for purposes of holding the spreader means in an elevated position when a loaded tube is to be removed from the work station.
  • 3. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the finger means comprises an annular array of pivotally mounted fingers spread loaded to extend inwardly of the array and a control ring relatively movable axially of the array and disposed to abut the fingers to displace the same from the operative to the inoperative position when the array of fingers is moved away from the work station.
  • 4. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein the head portion has cut-away regions around a cylindrical portion of its length to facilitate engagement of the fingers with netting passed around said cylindrical portion.
  • 5. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein abutment means is provided on the second plate to arrest upward movement of a control ring as the finger means is raised from the lowered to the raised position by the first ram means, thereby causing abutment of the control ring with the fingers and displacement of the latter to the inoperative position.
  • 6. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising means for reciprocating the work station toward and away from the finger means.
  • 7. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising conveyor means disposed laterally of the work station to convey unloaded tubes in an upright position in sequence to a position laterally alongside the work station and pusher means operable transversely of the conveyor means to push a leading one of the unloaded tubes onto the work station thereby simultaneously displacing a loaded tube from the work station.
  • 8. The apparatus of claim 7, further comprising gripper means located to engage between them a rectangular base flange of an upright tube positioned on the workstation, said gripper means being actuable to grip the flange when the tube is so located and to release the flange when the tube is to be displaced off the workstation.
  • 9. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising cutter means operable to cut the sleeve from a loaded tube at the work station when the finger means and spreader means are moved away from the loaded tube, the cutter means being movable through the space vacated by the finger means.
  • 10. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a dolly removably locatable on the upper end of a said tube at the workstation, said dolly and the spreader means having male and female formations which will engage in the lowered position of the spreader means to assure coaxial alignment between the spreader means and said tube, said dolly serving also to space the head of the spreader means from said upper end of the tube to prevent nipping of the sleeve therebetween.
  • 11. A method of loading elasticated netting in a folded condition onto storage tubes utilizing an apparatus having a work station, means for supplying the netting in the form of a continuous sleeve in an unstressed condition toward the work station, means for delivering the storage tubes in sequence to the work station, spreader means for expanding a leading end of the sleeve to a diameter equal to or greater than that of a tub at the work station, wherein said spreader means is displaceable along an axis generally perpendicular to the work station, finger means arranged about said axis having at least one finger, wherein each finger is movable between an operative position in which it may contact a tube at the work station and an inoperative position displaced laterally from said tube, and means for relatively reciprocatively displacing a tube at the work station and said finger means generally along said axis with the finger means in said operative position such that repeated, reciprocative relative movement of the tube and finger means will store in a folded condition on the tube netting introduced to the tube by the spreader means and engaged by the finger means, the finger means being subsequently displaceable to the inoperative position and movable with the spreader means along said axis away from the work station to allow the sleeve to be cut near to the loaded tube and to permit removal of the latter from the work station and its replacement by an unloaded tube, the method comprising the steps of:locating a leading end of a continuous sleeve of netting on the spreader means with the latter and the finger means in a raised position above the work station; bringing the tubes in sequence to the work station in an upright position so that a tube at the work station is generally coaxially aligned with the spreader means; lowering the spreader means into proximity with the upper end of said tube at the work station, lowering the finger means and bringing the latter to the operative position so that the fingers engage the netting around the spreader means; relatively reciprocating said tube at the work station and said finger means, whereby the latter folds netting upon said tube; moving said finger means to the inoperative position; raising the finger means and spreader means above said upper end of the tube; cutting the sleeve above the loaded tube and removing the loaded tube laterally from the work station; locating an unloaded tube at the work station; carrying unloaded tubes to the work station by conveyor means disposed laterally of the work station; moving a leading one of the tubes on the conveyor from the conveyor onto the work station using a pusher means moving transversely of the conveyor, said leading tube serving simultaneously to displace a loaded tube from the work station.
  • 12. The method of claim 11, further comprising the step of simultaneously displacing both the finger means and the workstation toward and away from one another.
Priority Claims (2)
Number Date Country Kind
9809487 May 1998 GB
9901079 Jan 1999 GB
US Referenced Citations (7)
Number Name Date Kind
3412523 Raymond et al. Nov 1968
3529401 Sartore et al. Sep 1970
3657861 Soodalter Apr 1972
3745611 Patouillard Jul 1973
3805480 Cherio et al. Apr 1974
3858365 Fernandez Jan 1975
3868895 Hart et al. Mar 1975
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number Date Country
1 949 862 Dec 1970 DE
2 162 805 Jul 1973 FR
2 232 951 Jan 1991 GB
6-048403 Feb 1994 JP