The present invention relates to a granulator mill which comprises a mill housing in which a rotary knife unit is disposed, and a receptacle box for ground material, the receptacle box being removably secured in the mill housing.
Granulator mills of various constructions and sizes are previously known in the art. Small-scale granulator mills, which are easily transported, are generally built on a wheeled chassis. The granulator mill has a mill housing with a rotary knife unit and a number of fixed knives. On the underside of the mill housing, there is a grill or screen which determines particle size of the ground material so that excessively large particles are prevented from entering into a receptacle box for ground material—the granulate box—which is disposed beneath the mill housing.
On the upper side of the mill housing, there is an infeed section or hopper via which the plastic material that is to be ground or granulated is fed in. The infeed hopper is of such a length and height that the interior of the mill housing is inaccessible to the mill operator. The infeed hopper serves a further function, namely to prevent material which is in the process of being ground from being ejected out rearwardly.
The above-mentioned grill or screen that separates the interior of the mill housing from the granulate box guarantees that only particles of a certain maximum size may pass. On the other hand, there is no lower size limit for the particles which pass through the grill. In the grinding process proper, a wide range of particle sizes occurs, ranging from extremely small dust particles up to the maximum particle size that may pass through the grill. This implies that the ground material that arrives in the granulate box also displays a corresponding particle size distribution. In particle the smaller particle fractions may cause severe problems in pollution if they were to get outside the granulate box.
In many prior art mills, it is common practice that the granulate box is suspended in the mill housing on its underside, quite simply in that the mill housing has been provided with sliding beads or strips along which the granulate box is slidable. Such a design and construction does not permit sealing of the interior of the granulate box and naturally entails that quite large quantities of, above all, fine particle fractions “leak out” from the mill housing and the granulate box. Considerable problems involving pollution and fouling occur.
In older prior art mills, it is also common practice that the granulate box is emptied manually, quite simply by lifting down from the mill housing. This also gives rise to considerable inconvenience when the granulate box is emptied, since fine particulate fractions eddy up into the air.
The present invention has for its object to design the granulator mill intimated by way of introduction such that the drawbacks inherent in prior art technology are obviated, in particular problems involving pollution and fouling of the ambient surroundings of the granulator mill. In particular, the present invention has for its object to design the granulator mill so that at a satisfactory sealing is obtained between the mill housing and the granulate box, at the same time as the design and construction are simple and economical in manufacture and easy to serve and operate.
The objects forming the basis of the present invention will be attained if the granulator mill intimate by way of introduction is characterised in that the mill housing displays sections which extend interiorly in the receptacle or granulate box and seal against inner surfaces therein.
The present invention will now be described in greater detail hereinbelow, with particular reference to the accompanying Drawings. In the accompanying Drawings:
In the following description, positional indications will be employed. These refer to the situation where the granulator mill is located in its normal position of use. In this context, the term “front” relates to that side of the mill which is turned to face towards the mill operator, while the term “rear” relates to that side of the mill which is turned to face away from the mill operator.
The mill housing 1 has a first end wall 4 and a second end wall 5. The two end walls 4 and 5 are united by the intermediary of a front transverse section 6 and a rear transverse section 7. The end walls have edge surfaces 15 (
In its most generic form, the present invention entails that the mill housing 1 has sections 8 which extend interiorly in the granulate box 2 and seal against inner surfaces 9 therein.
The granulate box 2 has a front wall 20 which, in the closed position of the granulate box (
It will further be apparent from
In
It will be apparent from
The variation illustrated in
For suspending the granulate box 2 on the mill housing 1, but also for sealing along the upper edge of the rear wall 17 of the granulate box, the rear wall has, along its upper edge, an inwardly bent flange 18 which serves the function of sealing- and support surface (see
In a comparison between
Mounting of the granulate box 2 on the mill housing 1 takes place in the reverse sequence.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0401813-1 | Jul 2004 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE05/01013 | 6/28/2005 | WO | 12/14/2006 |