The invention relates to mail-processing machines with a cyclically operated envelope-turning station which is arranged downstream of an envelope-filling station and of an envelope-closing section, as seen in the mail-conveying direction, and has a turning cylinder which is made to circulate in a correspondingly cyclic manner, of which the axis of rotation is oriented parallel to the mail-conveying direction and which bears, on its circumference, jaws which can be actuated into the open position and into the closed position irrespective of the rotary position of the envelope-turning cylinder and into which filled envelopes, forming the mail, can be conveyed by means of a gripper chain, in the case of the jaws opening horizontally, from the envelope-closing section and from which, following closure of the jaws and rotation of the envelope-turning cylinder, envelopes can be conveyed away again.
Such mail-processing machines, which have been commercially available for some time now, contain in the envelope-turning station, in which, following rotation of the turning cylinder through 180°, filled envelopes are conveyed away again with the address-panel side or envelope-window side oriented upwards, a turning-cylinder mechanism in the case of which, in the vicinity of the circumference of the turning cylinder, strip-like or blade-like jaw parts, which extend in an elongate manner in the direction of the axis of rotation of the turning cylinder or in the mail-conveying direction, are mounted about pivot pins parallel to the axis of rotation of the turning cylinder and are pivoted into the open position and into the closed position, counter to spring prestressing, by means of stationary guides, via links and contact rollers, during rotation of the turning cylinder. This mechanism is known in this field to the person skilled in the art and thus need not be discussed in detail in the present description or in the claims.
In certain cases involving mail processing, it may be desirable, following the insertion of the sets of enclosures into envelopes, for the filled envelopes which leave the envelope-filling station in a horizontally flat state to be conveyed further in a state in which they are standing vertically on edge and to be fed in this way to further processing stations, for example code readers, which respond to codemarks on one side of the envelope or the other, text-reading devices, which evaluate text on the front side and/or the rear side of the envelope, sorting devices, by means of which items of mail supplied in a state in which they are standing on edge are directed into certain compartments via diverters, and the like.
The object of the invention is for an envelope-turning station having the features of the preamble of the attached Patent claim 1 to be configured such that there is no need for a separate processing station for setting the items of mail into an upright position in which they are standing on one of the longitudinal edges, and the items of mail can be removed directly from the envelope-turning station in this position.
This object is achieved according to the invention in that the mail-removal arrangement or an additional mail-removal arrangement is arranged, and can be controlled, in relation to the turning cylinder such that, by means of this arrangement, items of mail which are fed between the open parts of the jaws of the turning cylinder by the mail-feeding arrangement, following closure of the jaws and rotation of the turning cylinder through 90° and/or 270° into a vertical position, are conveyed out from between the parts of the relevant jaw of the turning cylinder and conveyed away in a state in which they are standing on one of their longitudinal edges.
It can be seen that the envelope-turning station specified here on the one hand, can be used exclusively for setting the filled envelopes into a vertical position in which they are standing on the longitudinal edge or else can also be used, by the provision of a conventional mail-removal arrangement and corresponding control means for the respective drives, optionally either for setting the envelopes into an upright position in which they are standing on a longitudinal edge or for conveying away filled envelopes, following rotation of the envelope-turning cylinder through 180°, with an address-panel side or envelope-window side oriented upwards.
Finally, according to the developed embodiments, it is also possible for an envelope-turning station of the type specified here to be designed such that it optionally serves various mail-removal arrangements, of which one conveys away from the turning cylinder, following rotation of the latter through 90°, items of mail which are supplied in a state in which they are standing on the envelope-flap edge, of which the second removes from the turning cylinder items of mail which are turned in a conventional manner through 180°, and of which the third removes from the turning cylinder, and conveys further, items of mail which, following rotation of the turning cylinder through 270°, are retained on the turning cylinder in a downwardly oriented manner.
Moreover, advantageous configurations, improvements and developments of the envelope-turning station proposed here form the subject matter of the claims following claim 1, and, without the wording thereof being repeated here, the contents of these claims hereby expressly form a constituent part of the description.
Various exemplary embodiments are explained in more detail herein below with reference to the drawings, in which:
In general terms, it should be said in advance of a detailed description of the embodiments that the latter are not to be regarded in isolation; rather, the features of these embodiments may also be combined with one another such that, for example, the embodiments according to
The envelope-turning station contains an envelope-turning cylinder 6 which is constructed in a manner which is essentially known per se and which can be made to rotate about the axis of rotation 8 of the turning cylinder, by means of a turning-cylinder drive 7, in certain rotary steps in the clockwise direction, as seen in relation to the illustration according to the figures of the drawing. In specific terms, for this purpose, the turning-cylinder drive 7 contains a coupling which is connected between a drive shaft of the turning cylinder 6 and a driving chain drive 9, can be actuated by control signals of a control device and makes it possible, during continuous driving operation of the chain drive 9, for the turning-cylinder drive 7 to produce the desired rotary steps of the turning cylinder 6 by controlled engagement and controlled disengagement of the coupling.
The turning cylinder 6 bears, on its circumference, strip-like jaws 10 which can be pivoted essentially in the circumferential direction, about pivot pins oriented parallel to the axis of rotation 8 of the turning cylinder, into the open position and into the closed position by means of a pivoting-drive mechanism, which extend in an elongate manner in the mail-conveying direction, which project essentially radically away from the lateral surface of the turning cylinder and which have mutually opposite jaw parts 10a and 10b. In the case of the exemplary embodiments shown, the turning cylinder 6 is provided with four jaws 10 which are distributed uniformly over the turning-cylinder circumference and are spaced apart from one another by an angular distance of 90°. As the modification to this, however, it is also possible for a smaller or larger number of jaws 10 to be distributed over the turning-cylinder circumference.
The pivoting-drive mechanism for the jaws 10 may contain a guide arrangement which is stationary relative to the envelope-turning cylinder 6 and, during rotation of the turning cylinder 6, is followed by contact rollers coupled to the parts of the jaws 10, with the result that the turning-cylinder jaws 10, in certain rotary positions of the turning cylinder 6, are moved into the open position and, during rotation of the turning cylinder 6 between certain rotary positions, are retained in the closed position. This mode of operation is known to the person skilled in the art from turning cylinders of conventional envelope-turning stations.
It should be stated, however, that the pivoting-drive mechanism, for actuating the jaws 10 of the turning cylinder 6, is designed either such that it pivots just one jaw part 10a or 10b into the open position or into the closed position, while the respectively other jaw part l0b or l0a is fixed relative to the turning cylinder 6 or else such that both jaw parts l0a and l0b are designed in a pivotable manner relative to the turning cylinder 6 and are moved towards one another into the closed position, or away from one another into the open position, by a correspondingly designed pivoting-drive mechanism.
As can be seen from
If, then, the gripper chain 5 is brought to a 10 standstill and the gripper 4, which retains the filled envelope or item of mail 4 is opened, the gripper 4 can be drawn off from the item of mail by virtue of the gripper chain 5 being set in operation again. Along with this, or shortly beforehand, by actuation of the controllable coupling of the turning-cylinder drive 7, the turning cylinder 6 is coupled to the continuously acting chain drive 9 and rotation of the turning cylinder 6 is initiated, this resulting in the pivoting-drive mechanism for the jaws 10 moving the latter, if they are located in the open position, into the closed position. The horizontally positioned jaw 10 which is oriented to the left in
If, in certain cases, the mail-removal arrangement 115 is not to remove the item of mail standing on edge, then the turning cylinder 6 is made to rotate anew, as a result of which the parts l0a and l0b of the vertically upwardly oriented jaw 10 close again, grip the item of mail anew and then turn it into that position in which the item of mail, for example the filled envelope, is positioned flatly once again with the envelope flap oriented downwards, and with an address side or envelope-window side oriented upwards, and, following opening of the jaw 10 which is oriented to the right as seen in relation to the illustration of
Corresponding configuration of the pivoting-drive mechanism for the jaws 10 of the turning cylinder 6, that is to say, for example, corresponding profiling of a stationary guide arrangement which can be followed by contact rollers of the pivotable jaw parts, makes it possible to achieve a situation where, as soon as they are positioned vertically, the opening of the jaws 10 is smaller than when they are positioned horizontally, in order that an item of mail which is conveyed upwards, and moved into the vertical position, by rotation of the turning cylinder 6 through 90° does not tilt over, thus preventing correct gripping by the mail-removal arrangement 11, when the jaws open in this position.
It can be seen from
While in the embodiment according to
The design of the envelope-turning station 1 according to
In the case of the embodiment according to
Directing plates 23 and 24 are secured on the framework 30 of the installation part and form a longitudinally running cross-sectionally funnel-like directing channel for the bottom longitudinal edge of the item of mail 2 in the direction of the top side of the top strand of the conveying belt 20. The directing plates 23 and 24 have their top horizontal edges located outside the already mentioned hollow-cylindrical space through which the items of mail 2 pass during rotation of the turning cylinder. The directing plates 23 and 24 prevent the items of mail 2 from tilting or skewing as they are fed on the conveying belt 20 to the pair of rollers 22.
It can be seen that an envelope-turning station 5 according to
The embodiment according to
In the case of the embodiment according to
The pivot pin 26 for the rollers of the conveying belts 25b, it being possible for said rollers to be pivoted relative to the turning cylinder 6, can be pivoted by means of a link 27, of a contact-roller arrangement 28 and of a guide arrangement 29 (indicated schematically and by chain-dotted lines in
In the case of the embodiment which is shown in
It can be seen that, in the case of such an arrangement, the items of mail 2 can be removed from the jaws 10, in the form of the pairs of conveying belts, without provision being made for the jaws to be opened in this position. This results in the advantage that the item of mail, which is to be removed is still reliably retained, during the removal phase, in the state in which it is standing on edge.
A further advantage of designing the jaws 10 as pairs of conveying belts is that, in this case, the jaws, at the same time, form part of the mail-removal arrangement, by means of which the respective item of mail is pushed out of the hollow-cylindrical region through which it passes around the turning cylinder until it can be gripped by a pair of rollers 33, with vertical roller axes, and a conveying belt 34 which runs parallel to the mail-conveying direction P and has horizontal roller axes. The mail-removal arrangement 11 according to
The person skilled in the art can see that, as a modification to the embodiment according to
Finally, it should also be noted that, in order to simplify the illustration in the figures of the drawings, connections to the framework of the turning station which are obvious to the person skilled in the art have been left out, and prestressing means for the spring prestressing, for example, of the jaw parts in the direction towards one another or away from one another, as details which are familiar to the person skilled in the art, have not been depicted.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102004004893 | Jan 2004 | DE | national |