The invention relates to fill and packaging apparatus. The invention relates to an apparatus that produces food products and places the food products in packaging.
In the production of packaged food products, a typical arrangement comprises a food product patty former, such as a FORMAX F26 or MAXUM700 food patty forming machine, a sheet interleaving device and a take away conveyor to produce a stream of stacked patties with interleaved paper separators. Such an arrangement is disclosed for example in U.S. Pat. No. 3,952,478 or U.S. Ser. No. 60/540,022, filed Jan. 27, 2004, both herein incorporated by reference. The stacks are transported away from the patty-forming machine and manually placed into packaging.
The packaging of the stacked patties is labor-intensive.
The present inventors have recognized the advantage of reducing the reliance on manual labor in packaging food products and particularly stacked food products. The present inventors have recognized that it would be advantageous to automate the packaging of food products, particularly stacked food products.
The invention provides an automated system for loading food products into packaging. The invention is particularly adapted to effectively load food product stacks into packaging.
The invention provides an apparatus for loading food product into open top containers arranged in a row and movable into a loading station. The apparatus includes a conveyor having a retractable and extendable or movable conveying surface, the conveying surface arranged above the loading station and having an end region positionable over the row of containers and retractable to deposit food products into the containers; and a pushing device arranged above the row of containers and adapted to push food product into the row of containers as the conveying surface end region is retracted. The apparatus can also comprise a guiding device arranged with the pushing device, the guiding device arranged to capture the food products on the conveyor, the pushing device arranged to push food products from within the guiding device into the row of containers.
According to another aspect, the invention provides an apparatus for loading food product into open top containers arranged in a row and movable into a loading station. The apparatus includes a conveyor having a retractable and extendable, or movable conveying surface, the conveying surface arranged above the loading station and having an end region positionable over the row of containers and retractable to deposit food products into the containers; and a guiding device arranged above the row of containers and adapted to guide food products into the row of containers as the conveying surface end region is retracted.
According to another aspect of the invention, the guiding device comprises a plurality of guide cylinders, the guide cylinders movable from an elevated position to a first lowered position to capture the food products on the conveyor, and to a second lowered position below the conveyor and adjacent to the row of open top containers.
The guide cylinders can each comprise a pair of facing concave guides that are displaceable away from each other to open up a clearance between the facing concave guides at a bottom of the guide cylinders.
The apparatus can comprise a movable plunger within each guide cylinder, the movable plunger movable to an elevated position within the guide cylinder to a lowered position with respect to the cylinder to expel food product from the guide cylinder.
The apparatus can comprise a splash plate located below the conveying surface and having an opening corresponding in a vertical alignment with each guide cylinder, the opening sized and shaped to receive a bottom portion of each guide cylinder when moved downward.
The apparatus can receive food patties from a food patty-molding machine or slices from a food product-slicing machine.
According to a preferred embodiment, the guiding device comprises a center plate pivotally supporting pivot bars and opposing arcuate guides carried by the pivot bars, the arcuate guides forming a guide cylinder openable to capture a stack on the conveying surface and closable to guide said stack in vertical downward movement. The guiding device includes a main pneumatic cylinder and an elevated plate supported by the main pneumatic cylinder between an elevated position and first lowered position. The guide cylinder is supported by the elevated plate and the guide cylinder is moved down onto the conveying surface to capture a stack thereon by action of the main pneumatic cylinder.
The guiding device can include an intermediate plate supporting the guide cylinder and supported by the elevated plate via a guide pneumatic cylinder, actuation of the guide pneumatic cylinder moving the guide cylinder from a position above the conveying surface to a second lowered position wherein an end of the guide cylinder is below the conveying surface.
The pushing device can comprise a rod connected to a plunger within the guide cylinder, the rod extending axially into the guide cylinder and slidable with respect to the guide cylinder. The rod is connected to a pusher drive plate, the pusher drive plate connected to the elevated plate via a pusher pneumatic cylinder, actuation of the pusher pneumatic cylinder moving the plunger with respect to the guide cylinder.
The apparatus of the invention allows for rapid loading of food products, particularly stacks of food products into product packaging. The apparatus of the invention allows for maintaining a neat verticality of the stacks being loaded into the packaging.
Numerous other advantages and features of the present invention will be become readily apparent from the following detailed description of the invention and the embodiments thereof, from the claims and from the accompanying drawings.
While this invention is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms, there are shown in the drawings, and will be described herein in detail, specific embodiments thereof with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the invention to the specific embodiments illustrated.
The packaging station 60 can be a packaging machine such as a Multivac R530, available from Multivac, Inc. of Kansas City, Mo., U.S.A. At the loading station 61, the shuttle conveyor 52 delivers rows of stacks 17 into containers 62 in the form of a group of rows of pockets 62a, 62b, 62c formed in a lower web of film 63 by the packaging machine 60. Downstream of the loading station 61, in the direction D shown in
Two spaced-apart, side-by-side carriages 97 are provided. Each carriage 97 is connected to a corresponding front end sideplate (not shown). The rollers 90, 91, 92, 93 are effectively connected to the side-by-side carriages 97 (only one shown), via the front end sideplates. The carriages 97 are connected to a parallel pair of endless positioning belts 98 (only one shown). A servomotor 112 is operatively connected to the positioning belts 98, via drive pulleys 99, to drive an upper surface 98a of the belts 98 in either an advancing direction or a retracting direction. The servomotor 112 thus controls the retraction and extension of the end region 100 via movement of the carriages 97. Another servomotor 114 is operatively connected to the drive roller 89 and controls the circulation speed of the conveying belt 80. A more detailed description of a shuttle conveyor and servomotor drive components is presented in U.S. Pat. No. 6,669,005, and is herein incorporated by reference.
A controller 150, such as a programmable logic controller (PLC), a microprocessor, a CPU or other control device, is signal-connected to the servomotors 112, 114. The controller 150 synchronizes movement of the end region 100 of the conveyor 80 via the servomotor 112, and the speed of the belt 80 via the servomotor 114, with the movement of the web of film 63 of the packaging machine 60.
The loading apparatus 160a is shown in
As illustrated in
A movable guide plate 210 is located below the intermediate plate 204. Two guide cylinders 216, 218 are mounted to the intermediate plate 204 and include rods 216a, 218a fastened to the guide plate 210.
A plunger drive plate 230 is located above the intermediate plate 204. A plunger cylinder 234 is mounted to the plunger drive plate 230 and includes a rod 234a fastened to the guide plate 210 via a length adjustable fastener plate assembly 235 similar to the fastener plate assemblies 205.
As also shown in
The central plate 247 is supported on a plurality of posts 260 that are fixedly connected to the guide plate 210.
The arcuate guides 240 are grouped in opposing pairs to form guide cylinders 266. Although the guide cylinders shown have substantially circular cross sections, the invention is not limited to such shape. Substantially rectangular cross section cylinders or other shape cross section cylinders are also encompassed by the invention. Within each guide cylinder 266 is a reciprocal plunger 270. The plunger is supported on a plunger rod 272 that is fastened at its upper end to the plunger drive plate 230.
In operation, as shown in
As shown in
The pivot cylinders 260, 262 are then actuated to reorient the arcuate guides 240 to a vertical orientation to make the guide cylinders 266 conform closely to the perimeter of the stacks 17, and to guide the stacks 17 for vertical downward movement.
As shown in
As shown in
As can be seen by viewing
Hydraulic shock absorber cylinders 230a, 230b are adjustably fixed to the plunger drive plate 230 and have an impact pin that extends downwardly. These hydraulic shock absorbers are set to strike the guide plate 210 at a bottom of travel of the plunger drive plate 230 to effect a “knock” or rapid deceleration of the plungers 270 at their end of travel to assist in discharging the stacks 17 and separating the stacks 17 from the plungers 270.
The splash plate 275 preferably is composed of plastic, and acts as a debris and spray shield for surrounding areas below the shuttle conveyor.
After the loading apparatus 160a has discharged the stacks 17, all the pneumatic cylinders are reversed in operation simultaneously, except the pneumatic cylinders 160, 162, to return to the position and configuration shown in
As can be understood from
As illustrated in
As shown in
Rather than being fed by a patty forming apparatus, the system according to the invention can alternatively be fed by a slicing machine and which cuts slices from a loaf and deposits the slices on an output conveyor assembly, forming stacked drafts. The slicing machine can be of a type as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,649,463; 5,704,265; and 5,974,925; as well as patent publications EP0713753 and WO99/08844, herein incorporated by reference. The slicing machine can also be a commercially available FORMAX FX180 machines, available from Formax, Inc. of Mokena, Ill., U.S.A. The conveyor assembly 16 can be one as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,763,748, herein incorporated by reference. The conveyor assembly can include a staging conveyor to deliver rows of stacks to the shuttle conveyor 52, such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,810,149, herein incorporated by reference.
An off loading conveyor 1005 of a staging conveyor 1004 such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,810,149 or as commercially available as a FORMAX AUTOLOADER, from Formax, Inc. of Mokena, Ill., U.S.A.
The stacks 17 are deposited onto a movable conveyor 1010 having a driven endless belt 1012 with a top conveying surface 1014 that moves to the left as shown in
The loading apparatuses 160a, 160b, 160c are arranged above the conveying surface 1014 above the splash shield 275 and the rows of pockets 62a, 62b, 62c as per the first described embodiment.
In operation, rows of stacks 17 are loaded onto the conveying surface 1014 from the off loading conveyor 1004. The surface 1014 delivers the stacks to their positions as shown in
The off loading conveyor 1004 is stopped and the indexing conveyor is controlled to drive the conveyor 1010 to the right at the same speed as the conveying surface 1014 is driven to the left. The stacks are thus effectively stationary with respect to the apparatuses 160a, 160b, 160c. When the leading edge 1034 of the conveying surface is removed from beneath the first captured row of stacks 17, the loading apparatus 160a drives the guide cylinders 266 downward to the holes 274 in the splash plate 275, past the conveyor 1010. The loading apparatuses 160b and 160c are similarly operated once the leading edge 1034 passes from beneath the respective captured rows of stacks 17. Once each row of containers 62a, 62b, 62c is filled, the loading apparatuses 160a, 160b, 160c respectively retract the guide cylinders 266 and plungers 270 upwardly as previously described. Alternately, once all three rows of containers 62a, 62b, 62c are filled the apparatuses 160a, 160b, 160c can all retract their perspective rows of guide cylinders 266 and plungers 270. The conveyor 1010 can be shifted to the left by operation of the indexing conveyor 1030 and the off load conveyor 1014 can begin again to load rows of stacks onto the conveying surface 1014. A new set of empty containers 62 corresponding to the rows 62a, 62b, 62c are indexed to positions beneath the apparatuses 160a, 160b, 160c.
As can be seen in the figures, wherever rods penetrate plates and are movable with respect thereto, a plastic bushing, sleeve, bearing or guide is provided to reduce friction and noise, and to ensure smooth operation of the apparatus.
Although pneumatic cylinders are used in the preferred embodiment to cause movement of the guide cylinders and plungers, such pneumatic cylinders could be replaced with a variety of types of drives all within the scope of the invention. Servo motor drives, hydraulic drives, linear actuators, and other drives are all encompassed by the invention.
From the foregoing, it will be observed that numerous variations and modifications may be effected without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is to be understood that no limitation with respect to the specific apparatus illustrated herein is intended or should be inferred. It is, of course, intended to cover by the appended claims all such modifications as fall within the scope of the claims.