This application claims priority to Italian Patent Application No. BO2007A000126, filed Feb. 27, 2007, which application is incorporated by reference herein.
The present invention relates to a machine for manufacturing and/or packing tobacco products.
In particular, the invention finds application to advantage in machines equipped with devices of which the function is to weld or seal a wrapping material enveloping respective tobacco products.
Conventionally, machines for manufacturing and/or packing tobacco products incorporate feed means by which the selfsame products are directed toward a welding/sealing station.
In the case of cigarette makers, for instance, the aforementioned feed means advance a continuous cigarette rod toward a sealing device that serves to join together the overlapping longitudinal edges of a tubular wrap ensheathing a stream of tobacco filler.
Thus, as the continuous cigarette rod advances, a heater head of the sealing device warms and activates an adhesive applied previously between the overlapping edges of the tubular wrap.
The art field in question also includes machines by which packets of cigarettes enveloped initially in a heat-shrinkable wrapping material are advanced through the sealing station by a conveyor belt or a rotating drum.
The single packets are conveyed normally in an ordered succession and stopped momentarily so that the heater head can engage an end face of the packet for a length of time sufficient to bond the free edges of the overwrap material.
In particular, the welding/sealing head consists in a metal body furnished with a contact surface designed to engage a given portion of the wrap that needs to be welded or sealed.
The welding/sealing head is activated by an electrical circuit that induces a current in the metal body and thus causes it to be heated by the Joule effect.
The electrical circuit is piloted preferably by an electronic control system such as will regulate the current according to the temperature value that should register in the metal body.
The aforementioned temperature value is selected on the basis of the type of material to be heated (packet overwrap, or cigarette rod paper), and the length of time the tobacco product remains in close proximity to the heated contact surface.
Thus, having selected the speed at which products are fed through the welding or sealing station, the temperature at the contact surface of the metal body is regulated accordingly.
Machines of the type in question are affected by an important drawback, however, attributable to the high thermal inertia of the heated metal body, that is to say the capacity of the body to cool down and heat up within a given period of time.
As a result, the times involved in regulating the temperature of the metal body are somewhat lengthy.
Consequently, if the speed at which the products advance should increase, the products will not be welded/sealed correctly until the contact surface is brought up to the appropriate temperature. Conversely, if the products begin to advance more slowly, they will be heated to excess and damaged.
The object of the present invention is to provide a machine for manufacturing and/or packing tobacco products, such as will be unaffected by drawbacks of the type associated with prior art machines.
In particular, the object of the invention is to provide a machine for manufacturing and/or packing tobacco products, equipped with welding or sealing heads in which thermal inertia is minimized.
The stated objects are realized in a machine for manufacturing and/or packing tobacco products in accordance with the present invention, typically a cigarette maker and/or packer, equipped with a welding/sealing head that comprises an electrically conductive heating foil mounted to an electrically insulating backing element; the foil is retained on the backing element by an overlay of ceramic material, this covered in turn by a further overlay of smooth silicone such as can be offered in direct contact to a wrapping material being welded or sealed, without causing damage.
The invention will now be described in detail, by way of example, with the aid of the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to the accompanying drawings, numeral 1 denotes a machine according to the invention, in its entirety, for manufacturing tobacco products and/or packing such products in a wrapping material.
In practice, the present invention is applicable advantageously to tobacco products 2 of varying description, enveloped in a respective wrapping material 2a that presents a given portion 2b needing to be welded or sealed. By way of example, the products 2 in question might be packets 3 of cigarettes, or continuous cigarette rods 4.
To this end,
The overwrap material 3a presents free edges 3b positioned at an end face of the packet 3, which must be sealed by the application of heat.
With reference in particular to
Two such streams 102 are illustrated, each caused to advance together with a web 103 of paper drawn from a roll 104, following a path that passes through a print device 105 and toward a garniture tongue 106 on which the web 103 of paper is wrapped around the stream 102 of tobacco. The web 103 functions as the aforementioned tubular wrap 4a used to fashion the continuous cigarette rod 4. Whilst the present invention is described and illustrated with reference to a twin track type of cigarette-making line with two garniture tongues, it is applicable likewise advantageously to lines having a single garniture tongue.
The continuous rod 4 is advanced by feed means 5 along a respective feed direction D and through a welding/sealing station 6, where the longitudinal edges 4b are joined permanently one to another.
Located beyond the welding/sealing station 6 is a cutting station 107 where the continuous rod 4 is divided up by a rotary cutter device 108 into discrete cigarette sticks 109 of predetermined and constant length, and more exactly, twice the length of the stick that will ultimately form part of a single cigarette 110.
The cigarette sticks 109 are transferred to a filter attachment machine M of conventional type, not illustrated in detail.
In the case of
In both the solutions of
To advantage, the holder element 8 can be coupled to motion-inducing actuator means 16 (
Thus, as each packet 3 in turn is brought to a halt at the welding/sealing station 6, the head 7 will move between an operating position of close proximity to the packet 3, in which the edges 3b of the overwrap material 3a are bonded, and an idle position distanced from the packet 3.
As illustrated to advantage in
More particularly, the foil 9 is electrically conductive and appears substantially as a plate, presenting a first surface 9a breasted with the backing element 10, and a second surface 9b opposite to the first, directed toward the relative tobacco product 2.
Preferably, the foil 9 presents a substantially rectangular peripheral outline (
Moreover, the electrical circuit is coupled to an electronic control system of conventional type governing the electric current, likewise not illustrated in detail, such as will determine the temperature value registering in the foil 9.
In this way, the temperature of the foil 9 can be regulated on the basis of the rate at which the products 2 advance, hence the time for which each product 2 remains exposed to the head 7.
The gauge of the foil 9, preferably a metal, will be less than 0.4 millimeters, and ideally 0.1 mm.
As illustrated to best advantage in
More precisely, the foil 9 presents a central portion 12 appearing as a grid, created by a plurality of through holes 12a.
To reiterate, the first surface 9a is offered to the backing element 10, which appears substantially parallelepiped and rectangular in section.
Advantageously, the backing element 10 is made of an electrical and heat insulating material. In a preferred embodiment, the backing element 10 will be ceramic or silicone, and of thickness between 4 and 5 millimeters.
The backing element 10 is therefore appreciably thicker than the foil 9 (
The foil 9 is anchored to the backing element 10 by means of a first overlay 13 covering the entire second surface 9b presented by the foil 9.
This first overlay 13 consists in a film of ceramic material less than 0.4 millimeters thick, and ideally, 0.1 mm thick
To retain the foil 9 on the backing element 10, the material of the first overlay 13 passes through the holes 12a presented by the pierced structure of the central portion 12, from one face of the foil to the other.
In this situation, the foil 9 effectively remains sandwiched between the backing element 10 and the first overlay 13, both of which are ceramic. As a result, the foil 9 remains electrically insulated and thereby prevented from entering into contact with certain electrically conductive components of the tobacco products 2, like the metal foil paper wrapping contained in cigarette packets 3, which could provide a route for current leakages or short circuits.
Also, the foil 9 is protected from any oxidation that could be caused by the nature of the material from which it is made, and the continual variation in temperature to which it is subject.
Observing
The second overlay 14 consists preferably in a film of silicone having a thickness nominally between 0.01 and 0.1 millimeters, preferably between 0.02 and 0.07 mm, and ideally 0.05 mm.
The second overlay 14 affords a smooth outer surface 15 offered in contact to the predetermined portion 2a of the tobacco product 2.
Advantageously, the second overlay 14 will also be particularly thin, and more precisely, thinner than the first overlay 13. Accordingly, the second overlay 14, like the first, will not impede the transmission of heat to a product 2 breasted with the outer surface 15.
The silicone material utilized for the second overlay 14 affords a particularly smooth and non-abrasive contact surface 15, unlike the ceramic material, which is notoriously porous.
To further advantage, considering the application illustrated in
Significantly, as mentioned above, the heating foil 9 has a low thermal inertia, by virtue of its minimal thickness and its pierced structure.
The temperature of the foil 9 can therefore be regulated swiftly, depending on the speed at which the products 2 advance, so as to ensure that the respective predetermined portions 2a of the products 2 are heated to optimum effect.
In other words, the foil 9 can be brought swiftly to the appropriate temperature for the particular welding or sealing operation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2007A000126 | Feb 2007 | IT | national |