The present application claims the benefit of priority of German Patent Application No. 10 2005 057 872.1 filed on Dec. 2, 2005. The entire text of the priority application is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The disclosure relates to an inspection machine used in beverage bottling production operations.
The inspection machine known from EP 0 894 544 A presents, as conveyor, a star wheel whose circumference is fitted with clamp grippers. Each clamp gripper grips a container at approximately half its height from two sides and transports the container along the arched path past an inspection device. The clamp grippers transport the containers without bottom contact. In a bottom inspection device associated with the arched path, a stationary protection or scattering disk is arranged in a stationary manner at an interval below the bottom of the container which moves above it, with an illumination device shining light through the disk. The mechanical force which is required to clamp the containers, particularly bottles, and transport them without bottom contact, through the inspection machine, is exceedingly high. Furthermore, if necessary, the mounting of the clamp grippers has to be retrofitted for other bottle sizes. For the clamp grippers, controls are provided at the star wheel, further increasing the cost of construction.
In the bottle inspection machine known from DE 29 04 126 A, the conveyor comprises a star wheel which grips each bottle at the bottle neck and in addition at a lower place in the area of the lateral wall. Furthermore, guide arcs having different heights are provided for the bottles. Each bottle is transported without bottom contact, above a protection or scattering disk made of glass, through which the illumination device shines light from below. The disk can be rotated for cleaning in a cleaning station, either periodically or as needed. The mechanical force for transporting and positioning the bottles is high. When resetting for other bottle sizes, retrofitting work is required which is time and labor intensive.
In the inspection machine known from DE 297 07 734 U, the transporter presents a disk which can be driven in rotation and presents suction holes, in whose area the containers which are formed in the shape of cans are fixed as a result of a low-pressure application. In each case, the illumination device is accommodated in the housing of a camera of an inspection device, above the disk. The inspection covers the interior, the crimped margin, and the lateral wall of each can.
The inspection machine known from DE 196 24 552 A is arranged between feed and removal conveyors, which are oriented at an angle of approximately 90° with respect to each other, where the conveyor presents, at least along the arched path, belt drives on the interior and the exterior. Each bottle is clamped from two sides in the lateral wall area and transported in a device without bottom contact. In a bottom inspection device, a camera is provided above the bottle mouth, while a stationary illumination device is arranged in a stationary manner below the arched path and directed towards the camera. The mechanical force for transporting the bottles is high. Resetting for another bottle size requires retrofitting work which is time and labor intensive.
The disclosure is based on the problem of providing an inspection machine which has a simple construction and is cost effective, while being functionally reliable.
Because the bottles are transported as they stand on the disk of the conveyor, along the arched path and past the inspection device, of which there is at least one, there is no need for mechanically expensive transport devices, and different container sizes and configurations can be processed in the inspection machine without, or with only negligible, retrofitting work. Because the disk is designed so that it is transparent in at least some areas, the containers, in the inspection device of which there is at least one, are illuminated from below through the disk in such a manner that the inspection can be carried out with high reliability. The containers do not have to be held during the transport, and the transport does not need to take place in a device without bottom contact, which considerably simplifies the mechanical construction effort required for the inspection machine, so that a reliable but cost effective inspection machine is provided. The disk can be driven at a greater speed than a feed conveyor, so that the containers are separated from each other solely by the frictional contact with the upper side of the disk for the inspection(s).
It is advantageous for the transport of the containers to occur not only by means of the disk which can be driven in rotation; in addition to the disk, a star wheel which can be driven in rotation is provided. The construction of the star wheel is simple, because it needs only to have an entrainment effect on the container standing on the disk, without performing a height-wise positioning.
It is particularly advantageous to use a pressure decreasing star as the star wheel in an embodiment. The pressure decreasing star separates the containers, which may be conveyed standing against each other, from each other, at least along the arched path, to assist in the inspection and to ensure a high-quality inspection result.
The external diameter of the disk is advantageously greater than the effective external diameter of the star wheel. In this manner, an arched path for the containers is created which, from the beginning on, has a relatively wide dimension in the radial direction of the disk, and which makes it possible to process different container sizes or shapes without, or with only negligible, retrofitting work. At most, the associated inspection device may under some circumstances have to be radially readjusted, for example, in the case where it must be aligned with the center or the axis of the container.
In an advantageous embodiment, the feed conveyor and a removal conveyor are offset by approximately 180° with respect to each other, so that a 180° arched path is created, along which several inspections of different type can be carried out optionally.
In an advantageous embodiment, the disk, or the transparent area of the disk, is made of glass and/or a plastic, such as, PE (polyethylene). Here the material used can be clear (transparent) or light scattering (semitransparent), where it is advantageous to provide for the possibility of equipping the top side of the disk or of the transparent area of the disk in such a manner that it is very resistant against abrasion or even wear-proof (surface coating or renewable protective film).
In an advantageous embodiment, the conveyor is driven in rotation either continuously or intermittently. In the case of continuous transport, the inspection device in question is triggered precisely when the container is in the correct position for the inspection. During intermittent operation, the container stops with exact positioning in front of the inspection device, which allows more time for the inspection.
In an advantageous embodiment, an inspection device consists of a bottom inspection device which uses illumination from below and inspects the quality (absence of defects) and/or cleanliness of the bottom of the container, for example, a bottle. For this purpose, a camera is used, which is placed above the container end.
In another advantageous embodiment, a device for inspecting the interior of the container and/or a device for inspecting a threading and/or an alkaline solution detector and/or a device for inspecting the mouth sealing surfaces and/or a device for inspecting the carrier ring are integrated in the inspection machine. In this manner, several inspections can be carried out on each container, successfully or partially simultaneously, the overall results of the inspections is evaluated, and, consequently, it is possible to provide the capacity for successfully sorting out any containers that have been found to be defective or soiled upon inspection. In another embodiment, it is also possible to provide optionally, in addition to the illumination device which illuminates the disk from below, other illumination devices above the disk, to be able to further improve the inspection events.
In an advantageous embodiment, at least along the arched path, an external guide for the container is provided, so that, in spite of relatively high transport speeds, the containers cannot drift or tip over. Optionally, when resetting to a container size and/or shape, the external guide can be readjusted or replaced. However, in principle, the external guide can be designed and arranged in such a manner that it allows the processing of different container sizes and/or shapes without retrofitting.
According to another, important concept, the containers are shifted and/or rotated with respect to the disk by means of the conveyor. The transparent material of the disk is advantageously chosen in such a manner that it is not subject to detectable wear resulting from these relative movements. Thus, for example, a disk which is entirely or partially made of PE has been shown to be very advantageous and not to undergo any noteworthy wear, even after a longer lasting transport of empty bottles made of glass or PET. This resistance to wear, which ensures an even illumination of the containers, would even make it possible to drive only the star wheel at the actual transport speed, to push the containers on the top side of the stationary, or slowly running, disk along the arched path, and optionally to rotate them.
Even if the disk runs circumferentially in synchronicity with the star wheel, such relative movements occur between the containers and the disk, if the containers must be rotated intentionally for inspection purposes, and also, or at least, at the time of the transfer from the feed conveyor and the delivery to the removal conveyor. These relative movements occur necessarily due to the simplicity of the conveyor, but, because of the wear resistance of the disk, they have no negative influence on the inspection result in the long run.
In a preferred embodiment, the containers are transported with some separation between them along the arched path, to allow an inspection to be carried out, in which direct contact between the containers would interfere, for example, an inspection of the lateral wall.
In an additional embodiment, a station for multiple wall inspections is provided, at least in the area of the removal conveyor. This station makes use of the separation between the containers that has been produced by the conveyor on the disk, to inspect the containers individually, and optionally repeatedly, in the area of the lateral wall from different directions over the circumference, for example, using a kind of mirror cabinet.
To be able to sort out containers that have been identified as defective and/or soiled during the inspection, a station for sorting out is provided, preferably in the area of the removal conveyor.
The inspection machine can be used without restriction in all the conveyance situations that occur in practice; however, it is particularly preferred for moderate conveyor outputs of up to 8000 containers/hour. Here the containers should be bottles made of glass or plastic, and they should be inspected as empty containers. In that case, a long useful life of the disk is guaranteed, with substantially unchanged optical properties. Moreover, the disk or the transparent area of the disk could be associated at an appropriate position of the machine with a cleaning device, to carry out cleaning processes, either periodically or as needed. The disk would not have to be stopped for this purpose.
An embodiment of the object of the disclosure is explained with reference to the drawings. In the drawings:
An inspection machine M, shown in a schematic top view in
The disk consists in its entirety, or at least in an area which is associated with the arched path 2, of a transparent material. Below the disk 1, an illumination device B is provided (for example, stationary), which shines light from below upward through the disk 1 of each container G, so that the associated inspection device can carry out the inspection with the help of the illumination. The disk 1, or the transparent area 10 (
As mentioned, the containers G are, for example, bottles F made of glass or plastic (PET), and they present in each case a lateral wall 11, a mouth 12, optionally a threading 13, and optionally a holding ring 14. The bottles F stand with their bottom 15 directly on the top side 9 of the disk 1, eccentrically with respect to their axis X. If filled bottles are to be inspected, a closure may optionally be already applied to the mouth 12.
The inspection device A1 shown in
In the embodiment of the inspection machine M, shown in
At least at the time of the transfer from the feed conveyor 3 to the disk 1, and the transfer from the disk 1 to the removal conveyor 4, the containers are also shifted relative to the disk 1.
Particularly when inspecting empty containers, especially bottles F, it has been shown that the resistance to wear of the materials described for the disk or their transparent area 10 allowing the passage of light through the container G, does not allow detectable wear, which could have a negative effect on the optical properties which are important to ensure consistent illumination. For this reason, it is even conceivable, in the embodiment of
The inspection machine M is characterized above all by a mechanically exceedingly simple transport system, which requires no, or no noteworthy, refitting work to reset to other container sizes and/or shapes. As a result, the inspection machine can be manufactured in a very cost advantageous manner. However, it can be advantageous not to use this concept for large output inspection machines, but to use it for conveyance outputs of, for example, at most 8000 containers/hours, where the inspected containers should advantageously be empty.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 057 872.1 | Dec 2005 | DE | national |