Claims
- 1. A method for routing food in a food processing system having a plurality of side-by-side predetermined travel lanes, comprising:
advancing a food item over a first travel lane in the food processing system; then directing the food item through a lateral router guide having a floor and opposing ingress and egress portions; and then releasing the food item from the egress portion so that the food item continues forward to a second travel lane that is laterally spaced apart a distance from the first travel lane.
- 2. A method according to claim 1, wherein the lateral router guide defines a minor portion of the travel distance of the food item in a travel lane, wherein the lateral router guide is located in the line of travel of the food item, between an upstream and downstream portion of the food's line of travel, and wherein the advancing step is carried out by conveying the food item using at least one conveyor with an associated conveyor speed to direct the food item to enter the lateral router guide ingress portion.
- 3. A method according to claim 2, wherein the food item is an elongated food item, wherein the router guide comprises a stationary floor, and wherein the directing step comprises:
receiving the elongated food item into the ingress portion of the router guide; and advancing the elongated food item over the stationary floor of the lateral router guide and out the egress portion of the router guide at least partially responsive to the forward momentum generated by the conveying speed generated upstream thereof.
- 4. A method according to claim 2, wherein the food item is an elongated food item, wherein the router guide comprises a moving floor, and wherein the directing step comprises:
receiving the elongated food item into the ingress portion of the router guide; and advancing the elongated food item over the moving floor of the lateral router guide and out the egress portion of the router guide at least partially responsive to the speed of the moving floor of the router guide.
- 5. A method according to claim 2, wherein the advancing and directing steps comprise causing the food item to travel serially from an upstream floor being disposed at a first height, into a pick-up guide that directs the food item to travel upwardly over an inclined ramp portion associated therewith to then enter the ingress portion of the router guide to exit at the egress portion thereof, and wherein the food item exits the egress portion of the router guide at a height that is greater than the height of the upstream floor.
- 6. A method according to claim 1, wherein the directing step comprises conveying the food item over a diverter conveyor that defines the floor of the lateral router guide, the diverter conveyor providing angularly offset travel paths thereon so as to cause the food to alter its travel direction from the first travel lane to a second laterally offset travel lane as the food travels the length of the diverter conveyor.
- 7. A method according to claim 1, further comprising a pick-up guide with a ramp portion having a floor and upwardly extending sidewalls and a downwardly angled protruding member positioned in a first end portion of the pick-up guide in advance of the ramp portion, the protruding member positioned so that it resides upstream of the ramp portion relative to the direction of travel of the food, wherein the pick-up guide is in cooperating communication with the lateral router guide, and wherein, in operation, the pick-up guide contacts the food and directs the food to travel up the ramp portion thereof and into the lateral router guide.
- 8. A method according to claim 7, wherein the lateral router guide comprises a plurality of separate guide channels sharing a common diverter conveyor floor, each guide channel having a pair of upwardly extending sidewalls that overlie the diverter conveyor floor, wherein, in operation, the router guide defines a plurality of laterally angled travel lanes in the travel path so as to controllably direct the food item to change its lateral travel orientation from the first upstream lane to the second downstream travel lane.
- 9. A method according to claim 7, wherein the router guide comprises a stationary floor that underlies a plurality of separate guide channels, each guide channel having a pair of upwardly extending sidewalls that overlie the floor, wherein, in operation, the router guide defines a plurality of laterally angled travel lanes in the travel path so as to controllably direct the food item to change its lateral travel orientation from the first to the second travel lane.
- 10. A method according to claim 7, further comprising directing a gas to flow upwardly from the floor of the pick-up and/or lateral router guide to inhibit food adhesion thereto.
- 11. A method according to claim 1, further comprising directing a gas to flow downwardly over the food proximate the ingress portion of the router guide to assist in directing the food item off the floor of the pick-up guide onto the floor of the lateral router guide.
- 12. A method according to claim 1, wherein the food item is an elongated food item.
- 13. A method according to claim 12, wherein the elongated food item has a continuous length of at least about 20-50 feet.
- 14. A method according to claim 7, wherein the pick-up guide protruding member comprises a planar edge portion with a forked leading edge having two opposing side portions and central gap space therebetween.
- 15. A method according to claim 14, wherein the central gap space angularly narrows in the direction of travel toward the egress portion of the stationary router guide.
- 16. A method according to claim 1, wherein the advancing step is carried out using a food support floor that defines a gap space that is configured to underlie the food item.
- 17. A method according to claim 16, further comprising:
positioning a pick-up mechanism having an outwardly extending protruding finger so as to be in operative communication with the food support floor; and inserting the finger of the pick up finger into the floor gap space of the food support floor under the food item thereby causing the food to alter at least one of its travel position on the food support floor, its travel direction, or its travel altitude.
- 18. A method according to claim 17, wherein the inserting and positioning steps are carried out in an automated manner to semi-continuously or continuously direct the food to leave from the food support floor and travel into the pick-up mechanism.
- 19. A method according to claim 17, wherein the food is at least partially stuck to or attached to the food support floor, and wherein in response to the step of inserting the finger into the gap space, the food is dislodged from the food support floor.
- 20. A method according to claim 16, wherein the food support floor is configured to move along the travel path in the direction of travel and is defined by a corresponding pair of spaced-apart elongated rods.
- 21. A method according to claim 16, wherein the food support floor is defined by a conveyor that is configured with a upper floor portion having an aperture formed therein that opens to an underlying gap space, wherein the food item spans the upper floor portion aperture and resides above the gap space.
- 22. A method according to claim 17, wherein the food support floor is a moving floor, and wherein, in operation, the food item automatically travels first onto the protruding forward member of the pick-up guide and then enters the router guide.
- 23. A method according to claim 17, wherein the food support floor is a stationary floor, and wherein, in operation, the food item automatically travels first onto the protruding forward member of the pick-up guide and then enters the router guide.
- 24. A method according to claim 1, wherein the first and second travel lanes experience substantially the same environmental conditions.
- 25. A method of moving food items to be cooked or cured through a food processor having an oven, comprising:
concurrently transporting a plurality of strands of elongated food such that the elongated food strands can travel over separate ones of side-by-side selectable pre-determined travel lanes at a first speed; directing the elongated food strands to travel separately through different respective side-by-side pick-up guides, each pick-up guide having a floor, a ramped portion and opposing ingress and egress portions, so that each elongated food strand enters a respective pick-up guide and is directed to follow the ramp and exit from the egress portion thereof; and guiding the elongated food strands separately onto a lateral router guide after the directing step so that the each of the elongated food strands are concurrently translated a lateral distance proximate to but downstream of the pick-up guides to cause the strands to concurrently laterally alter their travel lanes in a predetermined manner.
- 26. A method according to claim 25, wherein the guiding step uses a diverter conveyor that defines the floor of the lateral route guide.
- 27. A method according to claim 26, wherein the diverter conveyor defines a common moving floor for the lateral router guide that is segmented into a plurality of separate side by side guide channels, each having an associated width and upwardly extending walls to separately guide the lateral translation of the respective elongated food strand traveling therein to move along the desired lateral transition travel path.
- 28. A method according to claim 25, wherein the guiding step uses a stationary floor that is segmented into a plurality of separate side by side guide channels, each having an associated width and upwardly extending walls to separately guide the lateral translation of the respective elongated food strand traveling therein to move along the desired lateral transition travel path.
- 29. A method according to claim 25, wherein the elongated food strand is a meat product held in a collagen casing.
- 30. A method according to claim 25, wherein the first and second travel lanes experience substantially the same environmental conditions.
- 31. A method according to claim 25, wherein the food processor includes a plurality of aligned vertical tiers or levels, wherein the elongated food strands travel on each tier greater than one revolution so as to be substantially continuously move through the food processor to produce about 1-10 feet of food per second in a production run.
- 32. A method according to claim 25, wherein the travel lanes each have major portions formed by moving floors, the respective moving floors located at least upstream of the pick-up guides, and wherein for each respective travel lane the corresponding moving floor is configured to provide an axially extending gap space sized and shaped so that, in position, the elongated food resides above the gap space.
- 33. A method according to claim 32, wherein the travel lanes are defined by corresponding pairs of spaced-apart rods, and wherein the elongated food strand spans the gap space defined by the spaced-apart rods.
- 34. A method according to claim 32, wherein the travel lanes are formed from a conveyor with a floor configured to support the food and to provide the underlying gap space.
- 35. A method according to claim 32, wherein the gap space has an associated width that is at least 10-50% the width of the elongated food.
- 36. A method according to claim 32, wherein the pick-up guides include respective forward members that are configured to downwardly extend a distance into the gap space of the moving floor, so that in operation, the elongated food travels first onto the forward member and then enters the pick-up guide before entering the router guide.
- 37. A method of transporting food through a vertically stacked multi-tier food processor having a plurality of predefined side-by-side travel lanes, comprising:
transporting at least one food item over a predetermined travel path in a food processor having a plurality of vertically stacked tiers which are longitudinally spaced apart, wherein a plurality of the tiers have a plurality of side-by-side travel lanes such that the food item travels greater than one revolution in a tier to pass by a reference location a plurality of times before moving to the next predetermined tier, wherein the transporting step comprises transporting the food item on at least one tier such that the food item moves, in serial order, over a first moving floor portion, to a cooperating stationary floor portion, and to a cooperating second moving floor portion before the at least one food item moves to the next predetermined tier.
- 38. A method according to claim 37, wherein the transporting step further comprises directing the food to travel to a cooperating diverter moving floor portion that laterally translates the direction of travel of the food after the cooperating stationary floor portion and before the coopering second moving floor portion.
- 39. A method according to claim 38, wherein the stationary floor portion is provided by a pick-up guide having a forward member that terminates into an inclined ramp portion with upwardly extending sidewalls and an egress upper edge portion, and wherein the diverter moving floor portion is located at a height which is below the egress upper edge portion of the pick-up guide.
- 40. A method according to claim 38, wherein, in operation, the food item is propelled forward to travel upwardly over the inclined ramp over the stationary floor portion of the pick-up guide positioned intermediate the first moving floor portion and the diverter moving floor portion.
- 41. A method according to claim 40, wherein, in operation, the food item exits the egress upper edge portion and falls downwardly onto the diverter moving floor portion.
- 42. A method according to claim 40, wherein the food item is an elongated food item.
- 43. A method according to claim 42, wherein the elongated food item is a meat product held in a casing.
- 44. A method according to claim 36, wherein each tier comprises a plurality of adjacently arranged cooperating conveyors.
- 45. A method according to claim 44, wherein each tier defines a substantially circular perimeter travel path thereabout for the food item.
- 46. A method according to claim 36, wherein the first and second moving floor portions and the diverter moving floor portion are continuous loop conveyors.
- 47. A method according to claim 36, wherein the at least one food item travels at least about 1.5 revolutions in a first tier before moving to a second tier, the at least one food item travels at least about 1.5 revolutions before moving to a third tier, and the at least one food item travels at least about 1.5 revolutions before moving to a fourth tier.
- 48. A method according to claim 46, wherein one of the conveyors conveys at a first speed and another of the conveyors conveys at a second speed different from the first speed on at least one of the tiers.
- 49. A method according to claim 36, further comprising alternating the lateral travel pattern of the at least one food item as it moves between adjacent tiers such that the food item travels from an inside to an outside perimeter on a first tier and then an outside to an inside perimeter on an adjacent tier.
- 50. A method according to claim 36, wherein each tier has a desired temperature associated therewith and the at least one food item is exposed to the tier temperature for a time corresponding to the moving floor speeds as it travels through that tier.
- 51. A method according to claim 37, wherein the at least one food item is an elongated meat product having a contiguous length of at least about 20-50 feet.
- 52. A method according to claim 39, wherein the travel lanes comprise moving floor portions, and wherein each lane includes a moving floor that is configured to provide an axially extending gap space in the direction of travel sized and shaped so that, in position, the food item resides above the gap space.
- 53. A method according to claim 39, wherein the travel lanes comprise stationary floor portions, and wherein each of the moving floor portions are configured to provide a gap space sized and shaped so that, in position, the food item resides above the gap space.
- 54. A method according to claim 37, wherein the travel lanes are defined by corresponding pairs of spaced-apart rods.
- 55. A method according to claim 52, wherein the travel lanes are formed from a conveyor with a floor configured to support the food item on opposing side contact edge portions and to provide the underlying gap space.
- 56. A method according to claim 55, wherein the gap space has an associated width that is at least 20-50% the width of the food item.
- 57. A method according to claim 52, wherein the pick-up guide includes a forward member that is configured to downwardly extend a distance into the gap space of the moving floor, so that, in operation, the elongated food is dislodged from the first moving floor to travel onto the forward member before moving over the stationary floor portion.
- 58. A commercial food processing apparatus comprising:
a housing defining an enclosure and having a food inlet and a food outlet and a predetermined food travel path therethrough; a plurality of stacked tiers residing in said housing, said tiers including:
at least one moving floor configured to move a food product in a predetermined tier travel path, the tier being configured with a plurality of side-by-side travel lanes; a plurality of pick-up guides, a respective one for each of the travel lanes, positioned downstream of and in the predetermined travel path, in cooperative communication with the at least one conveyor, the pick-up guides having upwardly extending opposing sidewall portions and opposing food ingress and egress portions with a ramped portion extending therebetween; and a plurality of router guide channels located downstream of the pick-up guides and in cooperating communication therewith, each guide channel having upwardly extending side walls that overlie a guide channel floor adapted to support the food as the food travels through a respective guide channel, wherein, in operation, the router guide channels guide the food product from a first travel lane into a different predetermined laterally altered travel lane, wherein the guide channels upwardly extending sidewalls define an angular departure from the primary travel direction between the pick-up guides and the portion of the predetermined travel path that is located downstream of the router guide channels, so that, in operation, the at least one food product is directed to travel through a respective guide channel and laterally alter its travel path from a first travel lane to a second predetermined travel lane.
- 59. An apparatus according to claim 58, wherein the guide channel sidewalls are arranged in parallel alignment.
- 60. An apparatus according to claim 58, wherein the router guide floor is stationary.
- 61. An apparatus according to claim 58, wherein the router guide floor is defined by a diverter conveyor that has an associated conveying speed.
- 62. An apparatus according to claim 58, wherein the each tier is configured to move the food product so that it travels in a plurality of different travel lanes before it move to the next tier in the travel path.
- 63. An apparatus according to claim 58, wherein the predetermined tier travel path includes a plurality of substantially circular travel lanes.
- 64. An apparatus according to claim 58, wherein selected adjacent tiers include food transfer regions that are configured to cooperate so as to automatically vertically transfer the food product from one tier to the next.
- 65. An apparatus according to claim 58, further comprising a heating chamber disposed in said housing so as to direct heat to at least one of the tiers, said heating chamber configured to heat the food product as it moves through said heating chamber on the at least one conveyor.
- 66. An apparatus according to claim 58, wherein each tier includes a food transfer region with a drop zone extending about a portion of the predetermined travel path, wherein, in operation, the food product moves a first revolution along a first perimeter travel lane, travels up the pick-up guide over the guide channel in the lateral router guide so as to move a lateral distance over from the first travel lane into a second travel lane, moves about at least one subsequent revolution along at least one subsequent travel lane that is laterally spaced apart and different from the first travel lane, before it approaches the transfer region to travel downwardly through the drop zone to the next underlying tier for further processing.
- 67. An apparatus according to claim 58, further comprising a cooling chamber operably associated with at least one of said tiers.
- 68. An apparatus according to claim 58, wherein said food product is an elongated food product.
- 69. An apparatus according to claim 58, wherein the food product is an elongated meat product held in a casing, the elongated meat product having a length of at least about 20-50 feet.
- 70. An apparatus according to claim 58, wherein at least a portion of the moving floor for a plurality of travel lanes on at least one tier is configured so that each travel lane has an axially extending gap space having an associated width that is sized and shaped so that, in position, the food product resides a distance above the gap space, and wherein the pick-up guide includes an protruding angularly extending member that is sized and configured to enter the gap space.
- 71. A method according to claim 70, wherein a portion of a plurality of the travel lanes are defined by corresponding pairs of spaced-apart rods that define the gap space.
- 72. A method according to claim 70, wherein a portion of a plurality of the travel lanes are formed from a conveyor with a floor configured to support the food product and to provide the underlying gap space.
- 73. A method according to claim 70, wherein the wherein the gap space has an associated width that is at least 20-50% the width of the food product.
- 74. A method according to claim 70, wherein the protruding member is configured to downwardly extend a distance into the gap space of the moving floor to contact the food so that, in operation, the food product travels first onto the protruding member and then enters the pick-up guide ramp.
- 75. A mechanism for directing the movement of a food product, comprising:
a pick-up guide having opposing ingress and egress end portions and a ramp portion extending therebetween, the pick-up guide having a floor and upwardly extending sidewalls on opposing sides thereof, wherein the ingress portion includes an angularly extending protruding forward member, wherein, in position and in operation, the pick-up guide is adapted to accept food being propelled forward at a desired speed and direct the food to change its vertical height as it travels over the length of the router guide.
- 76. A mechanism for altering the lateral direction of travel of a food product, comprising:
a food travel path having a food travel floor that includes a lateral transition zone with a lateral transition floor for supporting the food as it moves through the transition zone, the floor having a predetermined length that is a minor portion of the length of the food travel path; and a plurality of guide channels configured to overlie and cooperate with the floor, the guide channels having upwardly extending sidewalls and opposing forward and rearward portions that are configured to define parallel laterally translating travel spaces therein, wherein the guide channels receive food items therein and move the food items forward in a laterally translated direction relative to the direction at entry thereto as the food item moves from the forward portion to the rearward portion thereof.
- 77. A mechanism according to claim 76, wherein the floor of the lateral transition zone underlying the sidewalls is stationary.
- 78. A mechanism according to claim 76, wherein the floor underlying the lateral transition zone is defined by a diverter conveyor that is segmented by the guide channel sidewalls.
RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/354,097, filed Feb. 4, 2002, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference as if recited in full herein.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60354097 |
Feb 2002 |
US |