Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6752056
-
Patent Number
6,752,056
-
Date Filed
Tuesday, March 5, 200222 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, June 22, 200420 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Shoap; Allan N.
- Nguyen; Phong
Agents
- Townsend and Townsend and Crew LLP
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 083 98
- 083 932
- 083 86
- 083 99
- 083 100
- 083 102
- 083 417
- 083 355
- 083 104
- 083 109
- 053 123
- 053 513
- 053 157
- 053 517
- 053 435
- 053 3891
- 053 3893
- 053 3894
- 053 3892
- 414 21
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International Classifications
-
Abstract
The invention relates to an apparatus for cutting food products. The apparatus includes a support for a food product, a blade, and an intercalated sheet feeding device, which guides a free end of a continuous strip by using compressed air.
Description
The present invention relates to an apparatus for the slicing of food products in accordance with the preamble of claim
1
.
Such apparatuses are generally known from the prior art (cf. U.S. Pat. No. 3,019,578) and serve to slice a food product and to separate the cut product slices from one another by intercalated layers, for example inserted paper sheets. It has, however, generally proved to be problematic to achieve a proper insertion of the intercalated sheet at the slicing speeds usual today.
It is the object of the present invention to improve an apparatus of the kind first mentioned such that a proper insertion of intercalated sheets is possible between individual, cut product slices even at very high slicing speeds with low constructive effort.
This object is solved by the features of claim
1
and in particular by the intercalated sheet feeding device having a compressed air device which introduces compressed air into a region between a continuous strip and a cutting plane. In accordance with the invention, the compressed air is thus introduced between the continuous strip and the cutting plane such that a partial vacuum can be produced between the continuous strip and the product located on the product support by use of the hydrodynamic paradox. An air flow is thus produced between the surface of the product located in the cutting plane and the continuous strip which has the effect that the pressure becomes lower in this region between the continuous strip and the food product than the air pressure outside this region and thus also the air pressure at the other side of the continuous strip. The continuous strip is thereby sucked toward the surface of the product located in the cutting plane. The continuous strip can, however, not contact the product since the continuously supplied air flow prevents this.
The apparatus of the invention has an extremely simple constructional design and needs only a few mechanically moving parts.
Advantageous embodiments of the invention are described in the description, the drawing and the dependent claims.
In accordance with a first advantageous embodiment, the intercalated sheet feeding device can have at least one air outlet which is orientated approximately at a right angle to the cutting plane. Such an orientation of the air outlet has shown unexpectedly good results, even though one would expect that an air flow orientated in this manner would not bring the continuous strip into contact with the product in the direction of the cutting plane, but would prevent such a contact.
In accordance with a further advantageous embodiment, the intercalated sheet feeding device can have at least one air outlet which—seen in the cutting plane—extends approximately over the whole region of the product support. It is ensured in this way that the desired suction of the continuous strip is ensured over substantially the whole width of the food product to be sliced.
The intercalated sheet feeding device preferably has a substantially horizontal outlet for the continuous strip which is preferably arranged in the region of the cutting plane. Such an arrangement has proved to be advantageous in particular with a product support arranged at a slope with respect to the horizontal axis (angle of inclination, for example, around 40°), since it is hereby ensured that the continuous strip first exits in the horizontal direction, but is subsequently sucked parallel to the cutting plane by the partial vacuum produced. It is particularly advantageous if the exit of the continuous strip and the air outlet of the intercalated sheet feeding device are mutually orientated at an acute angle of around 30° to 40°, in particular around 35°, since particularly good results were able to be achieved therewith in trials.
The intercalated sheet feeding device can have an outlet for the continuous strip which can simultaneously serve as a counter blade for the continuous strip. A separate cutting device can be provided for the cutting off of a section of the continuous strip. It is, however, also possible to separate a section of the continuous strip by the cutting procedure, that is by the knife rotating in the cutting plane.
In accordance with a further advantageous embodiment of the invention, the intercalated sheet feeding device can have at least one drive roll or drive roller which effects the feed of the continuous strip. The exit of the continuous strip can be provided either beneath the product supply or also above the product to be sliced.
In accordance with a further advantageous embodiment of the invention, the intercalated sheet feeding device is arranged above the product support so that the intercalated sheet material is supplied from the top to the bottom in front of the product. This embodiment has the advantage that cutting residues and contamination arising during cutting cannot enter into the region of the intercalated sheet feeding device. Furthermore, a simpler replacement of an empty roll of intercalated sheet material is possible.
The present invention is described below purely by way of example by means of an advantageous embodiment and with reference to the enclosed drawing.
FIG. 1
shows the side view of an apparatus of the invention in schematic form.
FIG. 2
shows a perspective view of the apparatus in schematic form
FIGS. 1 and 2
are collectively referred to as “the Figures” below.
The Figures schematically show an apparatus for the slicing of food products, in particular sausage, ham, cheese and the like, comprising a product support
10
on which a schematically represented food product
12
is arranged. The product support
10
is arranged at an angle of around 40° to the horizontal axis and the food product
12
is supplied in the direction of a cutting plane S from a feed device (not shown).
A knife
14
that is formed as a rotary cutting knife, on the one hand rotates around its own axis or rotation and, on the other hand, is driven in a planetary orbit in the cutting plane S. In this way, individual product slices can be cut off the product
12
by the product feed device (not shown) being moved forward accordingly. The cut product slice then falls onto a conveyor belt
16
on which a stack of product slices or a shingled arrangement of product slices can be formed.
An intercalated sheet feeding device
20
is provided, which guides the free end
22
of a continuous strip
24
in front of the front end of the product support
10
, to provide each cut product slice with an intercalated sheet. The continuous strip
24
can, for example, be a paper web which is unwound from a reel
26
and is guided around deflecting rolls
27
and
28
. A driven roll
30
is provided, which is arranged in the region of a drive block
32
, for the feed of the continuous strip
24
.
As the Figures show, the drive block
32
has a slanted supply plane
34
which extends at an angle of around 20° to the horizontal axis. The supply plane
34
merges into an outlet
36
which extends substantially horizontally and whose outer edge
38
is in the cutting plane S and serves as a counter blade for the cutting of the free end
22
of the continuous strip
24
by the knife
14
.
The intercalated sheet feeding device
20
furthermore has a compressed air device
40
which comprises a compressed air rail
42
. Compressed air is supplied toward the continuous strip
24
, preferably over the whole effective width of the product support
10
, by the compressed air rail
42
, with the air outlet
43
of the compressed air rail
42
and the outlet
36
of the intercalated sheet feeding device
20
being mutually orientated at an angle of around 35°. Compressed air is in this way introduced into a region between the free end
22
of the continuous strip
24
and the cutting plane S, whereby an air flow
44
arises which produces a pressure P
2
between the product
12
and the free end
22
of the continuous strip
24
which is lower than the air pressure P
1
in the region in front of the free end
22
of the continuous strip
24
. In this way, a force F is produced which presses the free end
22
of the continuous strip
24
in the direction of the product
12
. A sticking of the continuous strip to the product
12
can, however, not take place, since the air flow
44
prevents this.
In operation, the product
12
is advanced by the feed device from the position shown in the Figures by a distance corresponding to the slice width, whereupon the cutting knife
14
orbits in a planetary manner in the cutting plane S and thereby separates a product slice form the product
12
. After this cutting procedure, the knife
14
separates the free end
22
of the continuous strip
24
at the edge
38
of the intercalated sheet feeding device
20
serving as the counter blade. At the same time, the cut product slice falls onto the conveyor belt
16
, with the cut section of the continuous strip
24
sticking to the underside of the product slice when it meets the conveyor belt
16
.
When the cutting knife
14
is retracted for the next cutting cycle, the driven roll
30
of the intercalated sheet feeding device
20
is actuated, whereupon the continuous strip
24
is conveyed and rolled off the reel
26
so far that its free end
22
is located in the position shown in the Figures. A state is in turn achieved by the simultaneously supplied compressed air such as is shown in the Figures and was described above.
Claims
- 1. An apparatus for the slicing of food products, the apparatus comprising:a product support for supporting a food product; a knife capable of moving in a cutting plane to cut the food product; and a sheet feeding device which guides a free end of a continuous strip in front of a front end of the product support, wherein the sheet feeding device comprises a compressed air device positioned to introduce compressed air into a region between the continuous strip and the cutting plane.
- 2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the knife is positioned to cut both the food product and the continuous strip in the same cutting plane.
- 3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the sheet feeding device includes a drive block and a drive roll, and wherein the continuous strip is fed between the drive block and the drive roll.
- 4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the sheet comprises paper.
- 5. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the compress air device is positioned to introduce the compressed air into the region between the continuous strip and the cutting plane so that the air flow from the compressed air device is parallel to the cutting plane.
- 6. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the compressed air device is positioned to introduce compressed air into a region between the continuous strip and the food product.
- 7. An apparatus for the slicing of food products, in particular sausage, ham, cheese and the like, comprisinga product support (10), a knife (14) rotating in a cutting plane (S) and an intercalated sheet feeding device (20) which guides the free end (22) of a continuous strip (24) in front of the front end of the product support (10) to me available an intercalated sheet between cut product slices, characterized in that the intercalated sheet feeding device (20) comprises a compressed air device (40) which introduces compressed air into a region between the continuous strip (22, 24) and the cutting plane (S), wherein the intercalated sheet feeding device produces a partial vacuum (P2) between the continuous strip (22, 24) and the product surface located in the cutting plane (S).
- 8. An apparatus in accordance with claim 7, characterized in that the intercalated sheet feeding device (20) has at least one air outlet (43) which is orientation approximately at a right angle to the cutting plane (S).
- 9. An apparatus in accordance with claim 7, characterized in that the intercalated sheet feeding device (20) has at least one air outlet (43).
- 10. An apparatus in accordance with claim 7, characterized in that the intercalated sheet feeding device (20) has a substantially horizontal outlet (36) for the continuous strip (24) which is arranged in the region of the cutting plane (S).
- 11. An apparatus in accordance with claim 7, characterized in that an outlet (36) of the continuous strip (24) and an air outlet (43) of the intercalated sheet feeding device (20) are mutually orientated at an angle of between about 30° to 40°.
- 12. An apparatus in accordance with claim 7, characterized in that the intercalated sheet feeding device (20) has an outlet (36) for the continuous strip.
- 13. An apparatus in accordance with claim 7, characterized in that the intercalated sheet feeding device (20) has a drive roller (30) which feeds the continuous strip (24).
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
199 26 461 |
Jun 1999 |
DE |
|
PCT Information
Filing Document |
Filing Date |
Country |
Kind |
PCT/EP00/05130 |
|
WO |
00 |
Publishing Document |
Publishing Date |
Country |
Kind |
WO00/76733 |
12/21/2000 |
WO |
A |
US Referenced Citations (12)
Foreign Referenced Citations (6)
Number |
Date |
Country |
1940063 |
Jun 1966 |
DE |
3727358 |
May 1988 |
DE |
3249925 |
Jun 1990 |
DE |
4125539 |
Feb 1993 |
DE |
4402923 |
Aug 1995 |
DE |
19646619 |
May 1998 |
DE |