The present invention relates to a granulator mill which comprises a mill housing with an openable section and a fixed section, a rotor which is rotary inside the mill housing and has a number of blades for co-operation with at least one fixed blade mounted in the mill housing, and a discharge section whose interior is discrete from the interior of the mill housing by means of a grid through which granulate passes from the mill housing to the discharge section.
In the employment of granulator mills within the plastics industry for recycling or reuse of plastics, it is necessary to carefully clean the interior of the granulator mill before a change can be made to a new plastics quality or plastics colour. This entails demands, on the one hand, that the interior of the mill housing must be accessible, as well as the interior of the receptacle section in which the finished granulate is collected and from which the granulate is conveyed off, as a rule via a conduit. For this reason, mill housings have previously been constructed to be openable so that a part is openable in relation to that part in which the rotor of the granulator mill is journalled. In these prior art constructions, the openable part is pivotal about a horizontal axis and suspended in its lower edge.
Constructions of this type entail demands for auxiliary tools on opening and closing the openable part, since this is so heavy that it cannot be handled manually.
The openable part further has a very limited opening angle because of the suspension in an area beneath the mill. The reason for this is that the substrate on which the granulator mill stands quite simply prevents opening of the openable part to any larger opening angle.
Further, it has often been necessary in these prior art constructions first to dismantle the discharge section in order to be able to get at the openable part at all.
Taken as a whole, prior art mills have been difficult to access interiorly so that, as a result, cleaning of a mill has proved to be circumstantial and time-consuming.
Problem Structure
The present invention has for its object to design the granulator mill intimated by way of introduction so that the drawbacks inherent in prior art technology are obviated. In particular, the present invention has for its object to realise a granulator mill in which the openable part may readily be opened and closed manually without auxiliary tools or aids, where considerably greater access is afforded to the interior of the mill in the open state than has been possible hitherto, and also where the discharge section and grid are readily accessible for cleaning.
Solution
The object forming the basis of the present invention will be attained if the granulator mill intimated by way of introduction is characterised in that the openable part of the mill housing is connected to the fixed part by the intermediary of a pivot device with a substantially vertical pivot axis in the normal position of use of the granulator mill.
As a result of these features, the advantage will be afforded that the openable part may readily be opened manually, since its point of gravity does not undergo any change in height on opening and closing. Further, the pivoting about the vertical axis permits the opening angle to be made considerably greater, for which reason accessibility is correspondingly improved.
According to expedient and advantageous embodiments of the present invention, the discharge section and the grid are suitably fixed in and supported by the openable part of the mill housing and are pivotal together therewith.
As a result of these features, it is possible, in a simple and convenient manner to gain access also to these components for cleaning.
The present invention will now be described in greater detail hereinbelow, with particular reference to the accompanying Drawings. In the accompanying Drawings:
In
In order to avoid the use of mechanical aids on opening and closing the openable part 2 of the mill housing, this is arranged in such a manner that it substantially does not undergo any vertical displacement during an opening and closing cycle. This is realised in that the openable part 2 is secured in the fixed part 1 of the mill housing by means of a pivot device which is disposed, in the vertical direction, to keep the point of gravity of the openable part 2 substantially constant and which, to this end, is provided with a substantially vertical pivot axis 9 illustrated by broken lines in
The pivot device with the substantially vertical pivot axis 9 has mutually pairwise engaging guide surfaces, on the one hand on the fixed part 1 of the mill housing and, on the other hand on its openable part 2. These guide surfaces are at right angles to the pivot axis 9 and are disposed, on the one hand on projecting lugs 10 on the fixed part 1 of the mill housing and, on the other hand on projecting lugs 11 on the openable part 2 of the mill housing. In the illustrated embodiment (
The pivot axis 9 is defined by a cylindrical pin which constitutes the physical pivot shaft between the fixed part 1 and the openable part 2. This implies that the pivot shaft (not shown on the Drawings) guides the openable part 2 in a direction towards and away from the rotor of the granulator mill of which only one stub shaft 12 is shown in
It will be apparent from
Internally in the rotor, but also internally in the mill housing, there is a space in which the comminution proper of the plastic material into granulate takes place. Where this comminution has proceeded sufficiently, the finely-divided particles or granulate pass through a grid 15 which may have varying mesh size. This grid 15 surrounds the rotor along a part of its periphery. On the underside or outside of the grid, there is a receptacle section 16 in which the granulate is collected and from which the granulate is conveyed off via an outlet 17. The receptacle section 16 has, in the axial direction of the rotor, approximately the same extent as the blades 13 and 14.
According to the present invention, both the grid and the receptacle section 16 are secured in and carried by the openable part 2 of the mill housing and they are, therefore, pivotal together with it. However, it is also conceivable that the receptacle 16 may be arranged on the fixed part 1 of the mill housing.
The grid 15 extends about the periphery of the rotor and in under it and at least up to a vertical line through the centre of the rotor shaft, but preferably also a short distance past this vertical line. In order not to impede the opening capability of the openable part 2, the part 18 of the grid 15 located under the rotor is disposed in a tangential plane to the circumference of the rotor, this tangential plane being at right angles to the pivot axis 9. This part 18 of the grid 15 may, therefore, suitably be substantially planar.
As is apparent from
In
It will also be apparent from the Figures that the receptacle section 16 is placed beneath the openable part 2 of the mill housing. Suitably, the receptacle section 16 may be guided in a pair of sliding rails or grooves 32 on the underside of the openable part 2 so that the receptacle section 16 may thereby readily be drawn out from or slid into position again beneath the openable part 2.
In the open state of the openable part 2, approximately ¾ of the periphery of the rotor is free and readily accessible for cleaning. Further, after lifting off the grid 15, it is simple to gain access to the inside of the openable part 2 in the plates 19 but also the interior of the receptacle section 16.
In
In order to realise reliable engagement between the guide surface and the seat use is made of bolts 23 which, with their one end, are secured in the fixed part 1 of the mill housing and which, with their other end, extend through a projecting edge portion 24 of the openable part 2. The bolts 23 may be secured in the fixed part 1 of the mill housing and may, therefore, also be designated pin bolts which extend through apertures 25 in the projecting edge portion 24. On the outside of this edge portion, use is made of a locking rail 26 which has keyway-shaped apertures 27. After release of the nuts 28 on the bolts 23, the locking rail 26 may be moved downwards so that it can be removed from the nuts in that these pass through the greater part of the apertures 27.
Reference numeral 29 (
The present invention may be further modified without departing from the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0103499 | Oct 2001 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE02/01836 | 10/9/2002 | WO | 00 | 4/19/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/033156 | 4/24/2003 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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469926 | Oct 1993 | SE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050006509 A1 | Jan 2005 | US |