This invention relates to food packaging and more particularly to the successive feeding of food logs through a slicing machine.
It is common to package trays of presliced foods such as cheese and meats including, but not limited to, bologna, ham, beef, chicken, turkey and the like. The product is prepared first as elongate logs which are then sliced into desired thicknesses, e.g. for sandwiches, then in stacked or shingled arrangement, which arrangements are placed in trays and then wrapped and displayed in grocery stores and the like. Alternatively, certain food outlets will sell a prepared sandwich and one or more slices may be placed on a bun which is then wrapped and displayed, e.g. in convenience stores.
Typically, logs are sliced and placed on one end of a first conveyor and the conveyor delivers the slices to a food product applicator. A second conveyor moves cross way to the first conveyor at the same end and the applicator precisely transfers the individual stack or shingled slices onto or into buns and trays being conveyed by the second conveyor.
A problem of the slicing operation is addressed by the first conveyor. The food logs (e.g., of 3′ to 6′ lengths) are fed into the slicer in rapid succession. Nevertheless, there is a delay in the slicing operation as one log is completely sliced, and the following log is fed into the slicer. A portion of the trailing end of the log is not straight, i.e. the butt end and the primary log length do not meet at squared corners but is rounded in some fashion. This causes feeding problems, e.g. for the last inch or so of the log end and the rounded end or a portion thereof is either removed and discarded before slicing or a special feed mechanism takes over for that last end portion. In either event, the slicing operation is momentarily interrupted or at least slowed. An object of the present invention accordingly is to eliminate or alleviate this interruption of food log feeding.
A typical log or log feeding system is comprised of a pair of elongate conveyor loops such as conveyor chains or belts that grip opposed sides of the food log and forces the log on a desired pathway and into a slicer. Such conveyers run up close to the blade of the slicer and then curve away from the log for the return run to the log entry position. The curved path results in the release of the log, e.g., during the last half inch prior to slicing. Thus, as the back or butt end approaches the slicer, at least in the last half inch there is no gripping/holding action. Such loss of gripping at the rear or butt end is further aggravated by the typical shape of the log at the rear end, i.e., it is typically slightly rounded. Whereas a following log's leading end will be pushing against the prior log's butt end, that butt end is free to twist and turn and whatever slices result at the butt end are likely not acceptable.
The present invention resolves this butt end stabilizing problem with circumferentially spaced pinchers that laterally advance into the butt end on demand. The pinchers are configured like the tips of knives with a leading sharp edge and blunt trailing edge, and collectively penetrate into the food log to stabilize its advancement into the slicer. The pinchers do not advance with the log toward the slicer. The log simply pushes through the stabilizing pinchers resulting in a like number of slits at the periphery of the slices that are cut from this butt end. These slits are substantially nonvisible or practically so and are considered acceptable for the otherwise neatly packaged food product as deposited and wrapped.
The invention will be more fully appreciated upon reference to the following detailed description having reference to the accompanying drawings.
Reference is now made to
It will be appreciated that the slicing action of slicer 14 when slicing the non stabilized butt end portion of 12a will now produce nonsymmetrical slices substantially different from the slices sliced from the stabilized log (
Reference is now made to
In a preferred embodiment, the butt end stabilizer 18 is provided only with lateral in and out movement as represented by the arrows in
The butt end of log 12a will nevertheless be stabilized. The configuration of the holding pinchers 18, as will be noted from
The above disclosure is that of a preferred embodiment and those skilled in the art will become aware of numerous variations and improvements without departing from the invention. The claims herein are accordingly intended to broadly encompass the invention, including such variations and improvements and accordingly the terms as used herein are to be given a broad interpretation commensurate with the teachings of this disclosure.