The invention relates to postal sorting machines as currently operated by the U.S. Postal Service (USPS).
Daboub, et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,109,987 May 5, 1992, incorporated by reference herein, describes a multilevel sorting machine of a type which is now in widespread use in various forms, with specific machines known as DBCS, MLOCR and more recently MLOCR with extended capability that can handle a wider range of mail piece sizes. It is well known in the art that such machines include a mail piece feeder, a transport section which transports a singulated stream of mail pieces from the feeder section on a pinch belt conveyor, and a stacker section which includes a row of stackers equipped with gates that are operated by the control system to divert a mail piece from the passing stream. The divert gates are operated on the basis of scanned address information gathered as the mail piece is entering the transport section from the feeder.
Daboub, et al. is one early example of a multi-level stacker section. The transport section includes a mechanism for routing mail pieces to one of two or more vertical levels on which a row of stacker pockets is located, each level having its own pinch belt transport. There are commonly rows of stacker pockets on both the front and back of the stacker section.
In the development of such multi-level sorters, it was found beneficial to provide shelves or horizontal diverter panels between levels on each side of the sorter. This is presently deemed an essential safety feature for such sorters. It prevents human workers from reaching up into the moving parts of the stacker section on the level above. The present invention relates to improvements in such panels.
A diverter panel of the invention is configured for horizontal installation between stacker levels of an automated mail sorting machine. It comprises an elongated rectangular panel made of a substantially flat plate made of clear plastic. The plate has fasteners mounted at its front corners for mounting the panel to a frame of the sorting machine, and a rear upright flange extending from the plate along the length thereof, the flange having a bottom edge which can be supported on a horizontal beam of the sorting machine. The panel is rigid enough such that vibration of the sorting machine does not cause significant movement of the panel when secured at its corners using the fasteners and with the rear flange supported by the beam of the sorting machine. An opening in the rear flange and an adjacent portion of the plate allows a drive shaft to pass through the panel, and a contact pad is configured for engagement with a plunger of an interlock switch, which pad is formed by an outwardly projecting portion of the rear flange. The pad and rigid nature of the panel prevents the plunger of the interlock switch from tripping the interlock switch. These and other aspects of the invention are described further in the detailed description that follows. It is to be understood that terms used in the present invention, such as “stackers”, should be given their meanings recognized in the postal sorting art, if applicable, not more general definitions found in dictionaries.
In the accompanying drawings, where like numerals denote like elements denote multiples of a component:
Panel 12 is mounted at its front corners by screws 15 to holes in vertical beams 16 forming part of the stacker frame. Its rear lengthwise edge is supported in an outwardly facing channel 19 in a horizontal I-beam 20 forming part of the stacker frame. A plunger 21 of the interlock switch 22 extends through a hole in an upper outwardly extending horizontal flange 23 of beam 20. The right angled rear edge 24 of the prior art panel 12A of
The form of diverter panels has varied from one model of sorting machine to the next, and it is known to employ a panel that is both transparent and substantially rigid. However, in the DBCS 990 line of letter sorting machines, the panels 12A used have been subject to frequent failure. One mode of failure is that the rear edge 24 comes loose from the interlock switch plunger 21 as described above. If a shutdown occurs, mail in transit on the conveyor at the time of shutdown has to be manually removed and re-sorted. The existing panel 12A also has a tendency to work itself completely loose and fall off, again causing interlock shutdown. The resilient, flexible nature of the plastic used to make the wimpy panel 12A causes it to vibrate more than it should despite use of a rectangular protrusion that forms a pair of ribs along a central portion of the panel running in its lengthwise direction, to which reinforcement 27 was later added to no avail.
Referring to
In the embodiment of a panel 12C of the invention shown in
Panels 12B and 12C also have central lengthwise reinforcement ribs 36 which are thicker than those of the prior panel 12A, and an additional molded reinforcement bar 39 extending in a lengthwise direction between edge 34 and the rectangular figure formed by ribs 36. A reinforcement at this location has proven more effective at preventing unwanted movement of edge 34. Ribs 36 and bar 39 are formed in a manner similar to pads 35 and 35a as areas wherein the plastic of the plate is offset or bent outwardly forming a projection but has the same thickness as the rest of the plate. Rounded, vertically projecting walls 41 surrounding openings 28 provide additional stability, whereas panel 12A provides only a thin edge with no vertical extension at the same locations. Ribs 36, bar 39 and walls 41 all extend downwardly when the panel 12B or 12C is installed.
Although several embodiments of the present invention have been described in the foregoing detailed description and illustrated in the accompanying drawings, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the invention is not limited to the embodiments disclosed but is capable of numerous rearrangements, substitutions and modifications without departing from the spirit of the invention. Such modifications are within the scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims.
This application claims priority of U.S. provisional application No. 61/079,274 filed Jul. 9, 2008.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61079274 | Jul 2008 | US |