The invention relates to an injection device comprising a plurality of parallel hollow needles that are reciprocatingly movable in a longitudinal direction thereof relative to a product carrier, and a supply system for supplying, into the hollow needles, a liquid that is to be injected into the product.
A typical example of an injection device of this type is a pickling machine for injecting brine into meat or other food (see for example DE 197 26 187 C1).
In some instances of application, the brine, or more generally, the liquid to be injected, has a relatively high viscosity, or it contains dispersed suspended particles, so that the needles may easily become clogged. For this reason, time-consuming interruptions of the operation are necessary relatively frequently, in order to clean the needles with a scavenging liquid, for example (see also DE 195 30 046 C2).
It is an object of the invention to provide an injection device which permits a simple and quick cleaning of the needles.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by the features that each hollow needle has associated therewith a cleaning needle that is insertable into the hollow needle, and that a drive system is provided for moving the cleaning needles between a cleaning position in which they are inserted into the hollow needles, and an injection position, in which they clear the hollow needles for supplying the liquid.
Thus, for cleaning the hollow needles, it is only necessary to activate the drive system in order to introduce the cleaning needles into the hollow needles, so that any contaminations that may stick to the interior of the hollow needles will be removed. When the cleaning needles are withdrawn again, the injection process may directly be continued.
Useful details and further developments of the invention are indicated in the dependent claims.
Preferably, the hollow needles are formed as so-called cannula, i.e. as needles from which the liquid to be injected does not exit laterally, but only axially through an open end of the needles. The contaminations that have been removed by means of the cleaning needles may then simply be pushed out through the open end of the hollow needles, and there is no risk that lateral exit openings of the hollow needles become clogged.
The hollow needles may, as usual, be provided on a needle carrier that is arranged vertically movably above an intermittently operated conveyer. The supply system for the liquid is then integrated into the needle carrier and may for example be formed by a valve system that is controlled by a relative movement between the needle carrier and a strip-off member that engages the product while the needle carrier is lowered and the needles penetrate further into the product, and which retains the product when the needles are pulled upwardly. When, during the upward stroke of the needle carrier, the strip-off member reaches its lowermost position relative to the needle carrier, the valve interrupts the supply of brine, so that the brine will be injected-only in the operating phases in which the needles actually penetrate the product. Then, the cleaning needles are preferably mounted to a separate cleaning carrier that is movable relative to the needle carrier.
When the liquid is injected only during the downward stroke of the needle carrier, the cleaning needles may plunge into the hollow needles already during the upward stroke of the needle carrier. Preferably, however, the upward stroke of the needle carrier is also used for the injection. In this case, the cleaning needles may plunge-in only when the hollow needles are in a position above the product, because otherwise the supply of brine to the product would be interrupted prematurely.
Preferably, a control system is provided which synchronizes the movement of the cleaning carrier with the movement of the needle carrier and preferably also with the cycle of the conveyer. Since the inward and outward plunge movement of the cleaning needles takes a certain time, it is convenient that the cleaning process is not executed in each cycle of the needle carrier, but, for example, only in every fifth cycle. Then, the cycle time of the cleaning carrier is an integral multiple of the cycle time of the needle carrier.
The time during which a new product is fed into a processing position below the needle carrier by means of the conveyer may be utilized for the cleaning process. Then, the control system may provide that the cycle or the conveying speed of the conveyer is somewhat delayed during the cleaning cycles, so that sufficient time is available for the cleaning process.
An embodiment example will now be explained in conjunction with the drawings, wherein:
Each needle carrier 10 has a set of hollow needles 16 that extend downwardly and in parallel to one another through a strip-off member 18 and each have an open lower end. The top ends of the hollow needles 16 open into a brine chamber 20 which is supplied with brine through a brine inlet port 22 and a brine valve 24. For controlling the brine valves 24, a cam-type control mechanism 26 is provided, which is actuated by the strip-off member 18.
Two cleaning carriers 30, each of which carries a set of cleaning needles 32, are mounted above the needle register 10 to mounting structures 28 that are fixed relative to the frame. Each of the cleaning needles 32 is associated to one of the hollow needles 16 and passes in liquid-tight manner through the top wall of the brine chamber 20. In the condition shown in
The frame 11 carrying the two needles carriers 10 is adapted to be lifted and lowered relative to the conveyer 12 by means of a mechanical, hydraulic or pneumatic drive mechanism 34. The strip-off member 18 is guided on the frame 11 to be movable in vertical direction and is elastically, e.g. pneumatically, biased into the lower end position shown in
An electronic control system 38 controls the working cycles of the conveyer 12, the drive mechanism 34 for the needle carriers and the drive mechanism 36 for the cleaning carriers 30.
The pickling machine operates as follows. In
In order to prevent the hollow needles 16 from becoming clogged, a cleaning process is executed from time to time, as is illustrated in
The cleaning needles 32 are replaceably held in the cleaning carriers 30 with thickened heads, so that they may be exchanged upon demand.
In principle, the cleaning process may be executed in each cycle of the needle carriers 10. In practice, however, it is generally sufficient to execute the cleaning process in larger intervals, for example, only in every fifth cycle of the needle carriers. Since the cleaning process commences only after the hollow needles 16 have been withdrawn again from the product items 14, the brine can also be injected into the product items 14 during the upward stroke of the needle carriers 10, without the supply of brine to the hollow needles 16 being interrupted by the cleaning needles 32. Since, however, the lifting and lowering of the needle carriers 30 takes a certain time, the time required for the working cycles with cleaning operation may be somewhat larger than the time for the working cycles without cleaning operation. For this reason, the control system 38 is arranged such that in the cycles, in which the cleaning process is to take place, the conveying speed or the conveying cycle of the conveyer 12 is somewhat delayed, so that the cycles of the conveyer and the needle carriers 10 remain synchronized with one another. Nevertheless is it possible to deposit the product items 14 on the conveyer 12, by means of a supply mechanism which has not been shown, with a fixed cycle rate, while assuring that the product items will have uniform spacings on the conveyer 12, so that they may be brought under the needle carriers 10 in the correct positions. This has been exemplified in
In
Thus, the working cycles of the conveyer 12 have different durations, depending upon whether or, not a cleaning process takes place. In contrast, the working cycles of the supply mechanism (left curve in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 029 158.6 | Jun 2004 | DE | national |