1. Field of the Invention
The invention lies in the field of conveyor technology and relates to a gripper according to the preamble of the independent patent claim. The gripper is suitable for gripping and for the conveying of flat objects while they are held, in particular of printed products such as newspapers, magazines or brochures or of small groups thereof.
2. Description of Related Art
It is known to convey flat objects, in particular printed products such as newspapers, magazines or brochures, in compact conveyor flows, wherein the printed products are conveyed consecutively and aligned essentially parallel to one another, and the conveyor direction is aligned perpendicularly or obliquely (not parallel) to the main surfaces of the printed products. Thereby, the distances between the consecutive printed products is usually significantly smaller that the surface extension. Gripper transporters are applied for example for conveying such compact conveyor flows. These comprise a plurality of grippers which are fastened on a conveyor member, for example on a joint link chain, wherein the chain is revolvingly driven in a channel, and the grippers are designed for gripping a printed product, or a small group of printed products and conveying the product or the products while they are held.
The mentioned grippers usually comprise two clamping tongues, which may be pivoted relative to one another into an open and into a closed configuration with control/cam means arranged along the conveyor path, wherein clamping jaws which are aligned to one another and which are arranged at the distant ends of the clamping tongues, in the open configuration are distanced to one another and not capable of clamping, and in the closed configuration, these clamping jaws are pressed against one another or against a region of a printed product arranged therebetween. For gripping a printed product, a region of this is positioned between the clamping jaws of the open gripper and the gripper is then closed. For the held conveying, the gripper is held in the closed configuration, is advantageously locked in the closed configuration, and is opened or unlocked again for letting go of the printed product.
One example of such a gripper is described in the publication DE-3102242 (or U.S. Pat. No. 4,381,056). The gripper comprises two clamping tongues which are provided with clamping jaws which are aligned to one another. The first clamping jaw is firmly arranged on a gripper body and the second clamping jaw is pivotably arranged in the gripper body with the help of a shaft. The second gripper tongue at its proximal end comprises a spiral spring which is fastened on the shaft and winds around this. The spiral spring remains relaxed as long as the second clamping tongue, when the shaft is rotated relative to the gripper body, moves along with this, which means is accordingly pivoted. If however the clamping jaw of the second clamping tongue bears on the clamping jaw of the first clamping tongue and the shaft is rotated further, the spiral spring tensions and thereby transmits a clamping force onto a printed product clamped between the clamping jaws of the two clamping tongues. A cam lever with a cam roller engages on the shaft of the second clamping tongue for opening and closing the gripper and for chucking the second clamping tongue, and stationary cams are provided along the conveyor path, on which the cam roller rolls. Furthermore, the gripper comprises means with which the second clamping tongue or the shaft is locked in its closed and chucked position relative to the first clamping tongue. For this, in each case a locking element is arranged on the shaft and on the first clamping tongue. As soon as the shaft has reached a predefined rotation position, the locking elements lock into one another. The locking is opened by way of a pawl which is connected to the locking element on the first clamping tongue and which may be activated by a stationary control/cam element.
It is the object of the invention to improve a gripper of the type mentioned above, in particular the gripper according to DE-31202242 described briefly above, to the extent that these grippers may be applied for gripping and conveying a wide spectrum of flat objects. In particular, the grippers according to the invention should be suitable not only for securely gripping thicker and in particular heavier, and also very thin and light, flat objects, and securely conveying them in a held manner, but it should also be suitable for securely gripping flat objects and in particular also groups of flat objects which have regions of different thickness, and securely conveying them in a held manner. Moreover, the gripper according to the invention should also render it possible to grip the mentioned wide spectrum of flat objects in a clamping manner and in a manner such that forces between the clamping jaws of the clamping tongues and the gripped object, or between individual parts of the gripped object, and which act on the printed products in a rubbing and thus smearing manner, may be avoided to a such an extent, that one may also handle printed products on which the printed inks have not yet developed their final resistance to smearing.
One main feature which distinguishes the gripper according to the invention from the known grippers lies in the fact that the distal end of at least one of the clamping tongues of the gripper according to the invention includes two arms, which extend outwards to both sides of the tongue roughly parallel to the pivot axis, and which at their free ends in each case carry a clamping jaw in a manner such that the two clamping jaws are distanced as far as possible from one another. The arms of the at least one clamping jaw thereby are designed in a resilient manner in the direction of the clamping force. Moreover, it is advantageous to direct the two arms, at least of the one clamping tongue slightly towards the other clamping tongue, in a manner such that the two arms on their side facing the other clamping tongue, together form a slightly concave shape.
The clamping jaws which are arranged on the free ends of the arms, advantageously have essentially plane contact surfaces, whose alignment and, as the case may be, shape, may be adapted to the contact surface of the counter clamping jaw or to the clamped in object by way of the clamping force which presses the clamping jaws against one another or against an object clamped in therebetween.
By way of dividing the clamping effect onto two clamping regions which are laterally distanced to one another and which are resiliently connected to one another, one may not only hold a clamped printed product in a more stable manner (less torques acting transversely to the conveyor direction which are to be accommodated by the gripper or the conveyor member), but it is also possible to securely grip an object which has unequal thicknesses in the two clamping regions.
The contact surfaces of the clamping jaws advantageously lie essentially in a plane aligned radially to the pivot axis, wherein not only is the second clamping tongue pivotable about the pivot axis relative to the first clamping tongue, but also the first clamping tongue relative to the gripper body. In a preferred embodiment, the contact surfaces of the clamping jaws of the first clamping tongue lie in a plane aligned radially to the pivot axis, and the contact surfaces of the second clamping tongue form a small angle relative to such a radial plane, in a manner such that the contact surfaces of the clamping jaws of the second clamping tongue are then aligned parallel to the contact surfaces of the clamping jaws of the first clamping tongue when the distance between the contact surfaces of the clamping jaws of the two clamping tongues corresponds roughly to the average thickness of a flat object to be handled.
By way of the arrangement of the contact surfaces of the clamping jaws essentially in a plane aligned radially to the pivot axis, one succeeds in the centre of gravity of a gripped printed product, when it is conveyed hanging freely (first clamping tongue and thus locked second clamping tongue freely pivotable relative to the gripper body), being arranged below the pivot axis, so that at least with such a conveying, no torque is to be taken up by the gripper body or the conveyor element in a plane parallel to the conveyor direction, and the object is not bent. On account of the mentioned alignment of the contact surfaces of the two clamping tongues relative to one another, one succeeds in sliding movements transverse to the clamping movement being reduced to a minimum on compressing a printed product to be gripped between the clamping jaws of the clamping tongues.
Exemplary embodiments of the gripper according to the invention are described in detail by way of the following figures. Thereby, there are shown in
The gripper comprises a gripper body 1 which is assembled on the conveyor element (indicated by the dot-dashed line 2). The first clamping tongue 4 is mounted in the gripper body 1 pivotably about a pivot axis 3. The second clamping tongue 5 is pivotably mounted about the same pivot axis 3 in the first clamping tongue 4. The pivot axis 3 is aligned perpendicularly to the conveyor direction F and the first clamping tongue 4 is the trailing clamping tongue. Both clamping tongues at their distal ends in each case comprise a pair 10 and 11 of clamping jaws which are distanced to one another transversely to the pivot movement or conveyor direction, wherein of each pair 10 and 11, only one clamping jaw is visible in the
The pivot position of the first clamping jaw 4 relative to the gripper body 1 is determined on the one hand by a cam roller 12, which rolls on corresponding stationary cams which are not shown, and on the other hand by an expander spring (not shown), which is arranged between the first and the second clamping tongue and keeps these in a position in which they are as remote as possible from one another, wherein the outermost positions of the two camping tongues 4 and 5 are defined by suitable abutments (for the second clamping tongue: abutment 13) on the gripper body 1. The two gripper tongues are represented in a dot-dashed manner in
The pivot position of the second clamping tongue 5 relative to the first clamping tongue 4 is determined by a cam lever 20. This engages on the shaft 21 and carrier a further cam roller 22, wherein the shaft is rotatably mounted in the first clamping tongue 4 and the second clamping tongue 5 is fastened on the shaft. This further cam roller 22 also rolls on cams (not shown) which are arranged in a stationary manner. If the cams press the further cam roller 22 downwards, then this rotates the shaft 21 in the clockwise direction, so that the second clamping tongue 5 is moved against the first clamping tongue 4. Since the second clamping tongue 5 is fastened on the shaft 21 via a spiral spring 23, the shaft may be rotated further under the tension of the spiral spring 23, even if the second clamping tongue 5 may not be pivoted any further, since its clamping jaws 11 abut on the clamping jaws 10 of the first clamping tongue 4 or on an object which is clamped between the two clamping jaws. The spiral spring 23 is tensioned by way of such a further rotation and a clamping force is built up. The clamping jaws are locked with one another in a predefined rotation position of the shaft 21 relative to the first clamping tongue 4.
For the locking function, a locking pawl 25 with a locking lever 26 and a cam lever 27 is rotatably arranged, for example, on the first clamping tongue 4, and the cam lever 20 fastened on the shaft 21 comprises a locking element 28 which cooperates with the locking lever 26. The locking lever 26 of the pawl 25 is brought from a locking position (
In the condition of the gripper which is shown in an unbroken manner in
The condition of the gripper represented in a dot-dashed manner in
The gripper condition represented in an unbroken manner in
From the
In the preferred embodiment of the gripper according to the invention represented in the
For conveyor devices which are suitable for conveying objects of the format and weight, for example, of newspapers or magazines, it is advantageous to arrange the two clamping jaws of a clamping tongue at least 10 cm from one another.
It is also possible to only equip the one clamping jaw with the arms described above and two clamping jaws, whilst the other clamping tongue is correspondingly wide and comprises a single correspondingly wide clamping jaw.
The clamping jaws 10.1 to 10.4 of the first clamping tongue 4 which are represented in the
The clamping jaw 10.1 according to
A formation 55 which in cooperation with an indentation 56 of the tubular carrier 50 of the clamping jaw 10.1 fixes this on the arm, is additionally represented in
The clamping jaw 10.2 which is represented in
The clamping jaw 10.3 represented in
The clamping jaw 10.4 represented in
The clamping jaws represented in the
It has been found to be advantageous to treat the contact surfaces of the clamping jaws such that they are ink-repelling, which represents a further measure against the smearing of the printed products. Respective treatments are known from other applications (e.g. conveyor belts).
The gripper represented in the
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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610/06 | Apr 2006 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH2007/000172 | 4/7/2007 | WO | 00 | 11/5/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/115421 | 10/18/2007 | WO | A |
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4968081 | Beight et al. | Nov 1990 | A |
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5755436 | Reist | May 1998 | A |
6196538 | Stauber et al. | Mar 2001 | B1 |
6578843 | Honegger | Jun 2003 | B2 |
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7185753 | Hartness et al. | Mar 2007 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
3102242 | Feb 1982 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090272630 A1 | Nov 2009 | US |