This disclosure is protected under United States and/or International Copyright Laws.© 2018, 2019 Scott Berglin. All Rights Reserved. A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material which is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and/or Trademark Office patent file or records, but otherwise reserves all copyrights whatsoever.
This application relates to and improves upon my previous inventions described in: U.S. Pat. No. 7,185,583—“MACHINE FOR PRECISION LOW STRESS CORING AND SLICING OF APPLES AND OTHER SOFT-CORED OR PITTED FRUITS” issued on Mar. 6, 2007, and, U.S. Pat. No. 7,597,920—“METHOD FOR PRECISION LOW STRESS CORING AND SLICING OF APPLES AND OTHER SOFT-CORED OR PITTED FRUITS” issued on Oct. 6, 2009, the contents of which are all hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety as if fully set forth herein.
Machines for coring and slicing (aka: segmenting, or sectioning, or wedging) fresh fruits are well documented in the art. Traditionally, these machines push a whole fruit through a plurality of fixed cutting blades, such that the edible portions of the fruit are channeled toward auxiliary (down-stream) weighing and packaging, while the inedible portions (core, stem, seed-pod, and calyx) are discarded or reserved for other purpose. The format of the fixed blades is usually a radial pattern of equally spaced blades, the outer ends of which are supported by (and attached to) a metal ring. Of necessity, the ring must be strong enough to hold the blades in place, and large enough in diameter to pass a whole fruit through its internal diameter. The number of blades determines the number of slices per fruit.
It is fundamental to the operation of these machines that, 1) the blade-ring, 2) the fruit, 3) the coring tube, 4) the pushing “ram” or “fingers”, 5) any mechanism that places the fruit in position, and, 6) any shoot, funnel or channel that receives the slices—all must be positioned co-axially, and must operate (move) on that common centerline.
Typically, these machines use an outer-frame (exoskeletal) construction, consisting of moving platforms or anchor-plates (stages) with bushings that slide on vertical columns. Each stage performs a sequential step in the slicing process (i.e., positioning or placement, coring, slicing, and channeling). Likewise, each stage uses these peripheral (exoskeletal) center-lines of motion (i.e., vertical columns) to keep the slicing process components in line co-axially.
There are a number of drawbacks to current designs. As a result, improvements can be made to current devices and techniques for coring and slicing (aka: segmenting, or sectioning, or wedging) fresh fruits.
The basic embodiment of the disclosure features an endoskeletal construction, thus eliminating the need for external bushings, linear rails, slicing platforms or swinging arms. In one example, an endoskeletal system consists of a stationary cylinder or spindle cartridge of sufficient diameter to enclose and contain the components that affect the locating, coring, slicing, proportioning, and channeling of fresh-sliced fruit portions. The components reside, each-inside-the-other in a telescoping fashion such that inner components are cylindrically restrained by outer components, and all components are restrained to the common centerline of the stationary cylinder. Each component is activated by one or more linear actuators or air cylinders, such that all components move in sequence, concentrically and coterminously, thus effecting the locating, coring, slicing, proportioning and channeling of the fruit portions.
Whereas the basic embodiment is configured for “coring” (typically: apples, pears, oranges, grapefruit and pineapples), various embodiments relate to “sectioning” fruits that may not or do not, require coring (typically: lemons, limes, kiwi, and some oranges and grapefruit). In such embodiments, the coring function is eliminated by deactivation, and the slicing “ram” or “fingers” push the fruit through a slicing cassette where all blades are terminated at the axis center point by a needle-like pin that pierces the fruit, forcing the whole fruit to become sectioned into portions, without regard to debris, seeds, pods, navels, etc. It should be noted that in such embodiments the deactivated coring tube continues to function as a centering component in the endoskeletal construction. Further, while the invention is described with respect for fruits, the term “fruit” is merely descriptive of one embodiment shouldn't be seen as limiting.
The described systems and techniques provide for “proportioning” the fruit thereafter, into portions created by pin-location, and eccentric coring and slicing. The purpose of proportioning is to channel selected portions (slices) into packages of equal weight. The principle of proportioning an eccentrically sliced fruit is based on the geometric analysis of, by example, any cross-section through an apple that can be represented as a circle divided into twelve (12) radially triangular sections and specifically in the case where the apex of radial slicing is eccentric to the center of the circle. There is a direct correlation between the area of any triangular shape and the weight of its corresponding apple slice. The present disclosure applies this principle to the selection and channeling of specific slices, recognizing that any two twin-opposed slices will be approximately equal in combined weight to any other two twin-opposed slices. By this method, the variation in bag-weights is minimal, justifying a commercially viable alternative to weighing each slice, and therefore very competitive with form-fill-seal packaging machines.
Having thus described various embodiments of the disclosure in general terms, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, which illustrate the embodiments of the disclosure and help to illustrate the endoskeletal construction described herein. In the drawings, identical reference numbers identify similar elements or acts. The sizes and relative positions of elements in the drawings may not be necessarily drawn to scale. For example, the shapes of various elements and angles may not be drawn to scale, and some of these elements may be arbitrarily enlarged or positioned to improve drawing legibility.
The basic embodiment of the disclosure features an endoskeletal construction, thus eliminating the need for external bushings, linear rails, slicing platforms or swinging arms. In one example, an endoskeletal system consists of a stationary cylinder or spindle cartridge of sufficient diameter to enclose and contain the components that affect the locating, coring, slicing, proportioning, and channeling of fresh-sliced fruit portions. The components reside, each-inside-the-other in a telescoping fashion such that inner components are cylindrically restrained by outer components, and all components are restrained to the common centerline of the stationary cylinder. Each component is activated by one or more linear actuators or air cylinders, such that all components move in sequence, concentrically and coterminously, thus effecting the locating, coring, slicing, proportioning and channeling of the fruit portions.
Whereas the basic embodiment is configured for “coring” (typically: apples, pears, oranges, grapefruit and pineapples), various embodiments relate to “sectioning” fruits that may not or do not, require coring (typically: lemons, limes, kiwi, and some oranges and grapefruit). In such embodiments, the coring function is eliminated by deactivation, and the slicing “ram” or “fingers” push the fruit through a slicing cassette where all blades are terminated at the axis center point by a needle-like pin that pierces the fruit, forcing the whole fruit to become sectioned into portions, without regard to debris, seeds, pods, navels, etc. It should be noted that in such embodiments the deactivated coring tube continues to function as a centering component in the endoskeletal construction.
Various embodiments benefit from current art described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,185,583 and 7,597,920, and specifically to the use of pins located in the stem hole and calyx of a fruit to align the core of the fruit with the center axis of slicing. This method of locating a fruit acknowledges that the core of the fruit is not always in the geometric center of the fruit, but the core is always in line with the stem hole and calyx. In the aforementioned patents, the purpose of pin-location is to find, isolate and remove the whole core of the fruit. The current disclosure provides for “proportioning” the fruit thereafter, into portions created by pin-location, and eccentric coring and slicing. The purpose of proportioning is to channel selected portions (slices) into packages of equal weight. The principle of proportioning an eccentrically sliced fruit is based on the geometric analysis of, by example, any cross-section through an apple that can be represented as a circle divided into twelve radially triangular sections and specifically in the case where the apex of radial slicing is eccentric to the center of the circle. There is a direct correlation between the area of any triangular shape and the weight of its corresponding apple slice. The present disclosure applies this principle to the selection and channeling of specific slices, recognizing that any two twin-opposed slices will be approximately equal in combined weight to any other two twin-opposed slices. Thus, in this example, when every 3rd slice (radially) in the mix of twelve eccentrically shaped slices are channeled into 3 bags of 4 slices each, a 6 oz net apple weight will be reduced to 3 bags of 2 oz. each. Likewise, a fifteen slice pattern could be logically proportioned into 3 bags of 5 slices each at a weight of 2 oz per bag. By this method, the variation in bag-weights is minimal, justifying a commercially viable alternative to weighing each slice, and therefore very competitive with form-fill-seal packaging machines.
Through, in part, identification of specific problems with past designs, the presently described systems and techniques were developed. There are four major drawbacks to existing exoskeletal designs—1) the number of components required to produce them, 2) the accuracy required to manufacture and assemble sliding stages of components that won't bind up or seize due to eccentricities, wear, residue build-up or lack of lubrication, and, 4) the slower operating speeds of such systems, due to their threshold of mechanical friction that must be overcome, and the “work” (energy×force) required to reverse the direction of mass (heavy-weighted components) on a continuous and cyclical basis. It is typical in such machinery that an 8 oz apple is sliced by 100 lbs of stainless-steel mechanism operating in a 1 to 2 second cycle of reciprocating motion. Each of these drawbacks is associated with extra cost, or with unnecessary or redundant maintenance and repair, or higher energy usage. These extra costs are significantly reduced or eliminated by an endoskeletal construction method as presented herewith.
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In all cases of
However, a cassette with a rectangular matrix of blades (7) replaces a radial set of blades, with the purpose of coterminously slicing square or rectangular sections into shapes that are similar in appearance to “French Fries”. The rectangular matrix of blades (7) is fitted with the same or similar lower pin (6) used in other embodiments. In this embodiment, the fruit is placed between upper (4) and lower (6) pins in the same way as other embodiments and processed in the same sequence as described in
What is novel in this embodiment is the facility to remove the core of the fruit before slicing, such that no debris, seeds, pods, stem or carpel is passed through the blade matrix, thus assuring that only net edible “fry” cuts channeled to treatment and packaging.
At the extreme geometric condition of two eccentric circles; a) sliced as shown, and, b) where the number of radial slices approaches infinity; it can be proven that the combined area any two twin-opposed triangular sections will equal the combined area of any other twin-opposed triangular sections. That equivalency increases as the number of “slices” increase, and decreases as the number of slices decrease.
In the field of slicing soft cored and pitted fruits, that equivalency need only satisfy the minimum packing-weight requirements as set forth by commercial standards. Therefore, a method of proportioning and channeling selected slices based on their relative radial position, is fundamental to various embodiments, and this principle applies equally well to fruits with concentric cores, or eccentric cores.
Therefore, in the example of
Embodiments of this principle function work equally well with even or odd numbers of slices.
In some aspects, it is important to the design of the Proportioner that the whole core of the fruit (including stem, seeds, pod and calyx) be removed by coring before the fruit is sliced and proportioned, thus assuring that the net packaged weight of all slices is edible. This requires upper and lower pin-location of the fruit.
A stationary cylinder or spindle cartridge (9) and positioned in a fixed location between two plates (10). Twin opposed air cylinders (12) driving the ram's lintel (11) are fixed in position between the plates (10). Also, twin opposed air cylinders (8) driving the coring tube's cylinder rods (7), and lintel (6) are fixed in position between the plates (10). The cylinders (12 and 8) serve two functions; a) to actuate the core tube and ram as needed, and, b) to locate and restrain the stationary cylinder (or spindle cartridge) (9), to the plates (10)—in effect acting as tension bolts.
Two additional cylinders (4) drive the top-locating pin (1) by way of attachment to the top-locating pin's lintel (2) and cylinder rods (3). These cylinders (4) are fixed in position to the upper plate (10) as shown, and they in turn are actuated as needed.
When a fruit (13) is placed by hand or other means, in the proximal area between top-locating pin (1) and bottom-locating pin (20) residing in axial center of slicing cassette (21), the top-locating pin (1) is activated and descends to capture the fruit between the aforementioned pins located in the stem hole and the calyx of the fruit respectively.
When the coring tube (5) is activated, it slides over the top-locating pin telescopically, thus fully piercing the fruit and isolating the core.
When the ram (11) is activated, it slides over the coring tube (5) and pushes the already cored fruit over the bottom pin (20), through the slicing blades in the cassette (21), so that slices (14, 15, 16) are channeled through their respective flutes of the Proportioner (17) and thereafter exit through windows onto swiveling plates (18, 19) or straight through the Proportioner, such that 3 exit zones accumulate equal-combined-weights of multiple fruit portions or slices.
It should be recognized that in most cases of actuation of the air cylinder rods attached to lintels (2, 6, 11), the lintels and the cylinder rods do not provide lateral restraint of, or concentric positioning to the aforementioned pins, core tube, and ram. They only provide linear, coaxial motion. Lateral restraint, concentricity and free bearing (sliding fit) are all provided by the static cylinder or spindle cartridge (9). This principle is novel to, and helps to define, at least some aspects of the endoskeletal method of the present disclosure.
A fixed-in-position “spindle cartridge housing assembly” (1), consisting of the static cylinder or spindle cartridge, plates, and cylinders described in reference to
A top-locating pin assembly or stage (2) consists of air cylinder rods attached to a lintel (above), which is attached to the top-locating pin, such that the top-locating pin slides easily but snuggly through the core tube without binding.
A core-tube assembly or stage (3) consists of air cylinder rods attached to a lintel (above), which is attached to the coring tube, such that the coring tube slides easily but snuggly through the ram without binding.
A ram assembly or stage (4) consists of air cylinder rods attached to a lintel (below), which is attached to the ram, such that the ram slides easily but snuggly through the static cylinder of the “spindle carriage housing assembly” (1).
It should be noted that a soft rubber, urethane or silicone “nose” (5) on the lower end of the ram assembly (4) engages the already-cored fruit and pushes the fruit through the slicing blades without damaging the meat or skin of the fruit.
Apples (1) are positioned by human discretion and oriented by hand so that the calyx of the apple rests on a vertical lower guide pin (5). Concurrently, as part of an automated cycle, an upper guide pin (2), coaxial with the lower guide pin (5), descends into the stem hole until a preset pressure between pins secures the apple in a stationary position, held by a compressive force through its core, as shown in
The operator's hand is removed and the cycle continues such that a thin-walled coring tube (3) descends downward, piloting over the upper guide pin (2) and through the apple (1) in a piercing motion until it reaches the lower guide pin (5), thus separating the core of the apple from the rest of the apple, internally, as shown in
Thereafter, a soft rubber faced ram (4) descends downward, piloting over the core tube (3) as it pushes the apple through a cassette of radial knife blades (19) so as to create a plurality of wedges in a single descent. The apple is guided through its descent, first over the core tube (3), and secondly over the lower guide pin (5). A tapered support pillar under the knives induces the wedges to separate from each other as they descend into a solution of enzymes that immediately seal freshness into the apple by preventing oxygen from reacting with the raw cell structure of the sliced wedges, as shown in
Thereafter, the ram, core tube and upper guide pin (2, 3, & 4) retract to their upper positions allowing the solid apple core (21) to be ejected at a precise moment by air blast or other method, as shown in
At this point the operator is ready to place another apple and the cycle repeats.
An opaque view of the machine 1900 is shown in the upper left corner of
Vertical columns (1) in four corners of the machine, attached to plates on three levels of the machine, providing a ridged frame to which all functional components and ancillary components can be attached and secured. It is important to note that these vertical columns do not move, nor do the plates attached to the columns move. Nor do any other components use these columns to effect motion.
A pneumatic control box (2) attaches to the rear of the machine. It houses the air valves and relay actuators which control the sequence of locating, coring and slicing fruit. An electrical control box (3) is attached above the pneumatic box and is attached to the rear of the machine. It houses the power-supply, program logic circuit (PLC), and electrical relays which define the sequence of operation of the machine. An operator's panel (5) provides buttons for powering up and shutting down the machine, and for pausing the cycle of the machine. Twin-opposed infrared sensors (4) monitor the operators access to the slicing chamber, allowing for fruits to be loaded and recognized, and to prevent objects (or human hands) from entering the machine at an unsafe moment. An air-blast nozzle (6) ejects cores after slicing and signals the end of the cycle.
A main power-switch (1) is turned on to activate the power-supply (2) and the PLC—Programmed Logic Controller (3). Thereafter, the operator deactivates the Emergency Stop Button (4) to make the system ready for operation. When the operator places a fruit in the machine, an IR Curtain recognizes the entry and activates the 2-way relay air valve (5) which in turn lowers the upper locating pin into the fruit. If the pin is miss-located, the operator can temporarily raise the pin by pressing the Retract Button (6). Upon releasing and removing his hand from the machine, the IR curtain acknowledges the departure of his hand and the PLC (3) initiates a signal to the 2nd relay air valve (7) through the safety-relay (11), which activates the coring tube. At a programmed interval after the core tube, the PLC (3) initiates a signal through the safety-relay (11), to the 3rd relay air valve (8) which activates the ram. When the ram reaches the desired depth of stroke (which is adjustable), a Magnetic Sensor (9) on the ram air cylinder reverses signals to the three previous air valves, thus reversing their direction. This exposes the previously captured core of the fruit, which, at this point, is ejected by an air blast initiated by the PLC (3) to the 4th relay air valve (10). At the end of the air blast, the system resets itself for the next placement of fruit, and the cycle repeats.
Power Supplies and PLC's are well known in the automation industry, and available from such companies as IDEC, Eaton, Allen Bradley, Siemens, Omron, Mitsubishi, General Electric and others. Relay Air Valves (known as flow-control valves) are available from Clippard, Bimba, Emerson, and many others.
A machine base (1) is fitted with a blade cassette assembly (6), such that the lower pin (5) and the upper pin (4) are on the common axial centerline (2) with all other components of the endoskeletal spindle cartridge above (not shown).
In this embodiment, fruits are located between an upper pin (4) and a lower pin (5), the heads of which have been fitted with subsurface bearings (10 and 11) which allow the fruit (3) to freely spin around the common centerline (2) of the machine, and the theoretical centerline of the core, established by the pins' respective insertion in the stem hole and calyx of the fruit.
A group of one or more circular knives (7) are mounted on a motorized spindle (13) which, along with a carriage housing (14), comprise a carriage assembly which travels on rails (15) when driven by an oil, air, or air-behind-oil cylinder (16), or other linear actuator. The carriage assembly is normally retracted while fruits are hand loaded. After the fruits are loaded, the carriage assembly advances laterally toward the fruit, such that the spinning circular blades (7) pierce the fruit and spin the fruit at the same time. The circular blades are guided by a fixed set of blade spacers which are permanently attached to static support rods (18) emanating from the machine base (1). The blade spacers (17) keep the blades equally spaced on fixed planes which are normal (90°) to the axis of revolution (2), thus assuring that each blade will track in the same path as the fruit is spun through several revolutions.
At the stop position (12), the blades reach the core diameter, but do not cut through it. The carriage then retracts and the fruit is thereafter cored and forced downward through the blade-cartridge by the ram (19).
The locating, coring, ring cutting, “ramming”, retraction and core expulsion are all controlled by an automation system, such that air pressure provided by relays and electric signaling provided by PLCs (programmable logic controllers) effect ring-cutting after and whilst the fruit is located between pins, but before coring and “ramming”; effectively slicing the fruit in two directions in one loading, to create diced pieces.
While various aspects of the present disclosure have been illustrated and described, as noted above, many changes can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. Accordingly, the scope of the disclosure is not limited by the disclosure of the above examples.
This application claims priority from and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/661,389 filed on Apr. 23, 2018, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2019/028754 | 4/23/2019 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62661389 | Apr 2018 | US |