The present invention relates to inspection machines, which inspect glass bottles made in a glass-forming machine such as an I.S. (individual section) machine.
The process of making a glass bottle must be precisely controlled if the creation of bottle defects which would require the rejection and removal of formed bottles is to be minimized. In this process it is desirable to identify a defective bottle as quickly as possible and the ideal time is the time between the removal of a formed bottle from the machine and the time when the bottle enters the Lehr where it will be annealed. During this period of time the surface temperature of the glass bottle is very hot and camera based inspection systems are available that can record and evaluate the surface temperature of the bottle. Such systems also can present a color-coded representation of the heat pattern on the bottle surface.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a representation of the formed bottles that will provide valuable information to the plant.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following portion of this specification and from the accompanying drawings, which illustrate a presently preferred embodiment incorporating the principles of the invention.
A bottle 10 formed in a glass forming machine is conveyed on a conveyor 12 from the machine to a Lehr. The bottle is viewed at an inspection station by a camera based inspection system 14 which includes a camera 16 which transmits an image of the bottle to a CCD storage device 18 The storage device stores the image 20 so that it can be evaluated. As shown, a plurality of data points A1,A2, B1,B2, C1,C2, etc. . . . , are selected at each of a plurality of vertical locations within an area of interest on the formed bottle. A vertical strip of data 20 is defined and stored representing that averaged data; Aave., Bave., Cave., for a particular bottle made in a particular mold of the machine (the bottle carries a mold number which will be read and assigned to each inspected bottle). The computer supplies the computer screen 22 with “N” (“N” can be selected by the operator) adjacent vertical data strips 20/1, 20/2 . . . , 20/N (the current data strip (20/N) and the last N−1 consecutive data strips), hereinafter referred to as a mold/time picture.
As shown in