The present invention relates generally to a mail inserter and, more particularly, a device that can selectively transport or deskew and accumulate elements of a mailpiece.
A typical mailing machine has a mail inserter section 3 where a pack of insert material 20 is inserted into an envelope 30, as shown in
Before the accumulated documents are folded into a pack or moved into a receiving envelope, the individual sheets must be aligned to one another. However, one or more of the sheets may be skewed when they are released. This means that the leading edge of one sheet may not be registered to the leading edge of the others. In prior art accumulators, the sheets are aligned against one or more side guides parallel to the moving direction of the sheets. The sheets are typically urged to register against the side guides by a system of light drive forces. These accumulators are inadequate when transporting media of variable widths and thickness. The fixed side guides cannot accommodate variable widths and the light drive forces may not be sufficient to accelerate thick materials without slippage.
It is thus desirable and advantageous to provide a method and system for aligning the insert materials in an accumulator where the leading edge of an individual sheet can be aligned independently of side registration devices.
The present invention provides a transport module in a mailing machine to deskew and accumulate sheets of insert materials before the sheets are inserted into an envelope for mailing. The transport module uses a plurality of retractable gates to stop the insert materials as they are separately moved into the transport module by a plurality of endless belts. A plurality of idlers are used to apply normal forces on the belts at various locations to provide traction between the sheet and the belts for moving the sheet forward. If a released sheet is skewed when it enters the transport module, one of the corners on the leading edge of the sheet encounters one of the side gates in the transport module. The advancing sheet may be able to align itself by an angular motion using the contact point as the center of rotation. As such, the leading edge can be registered against the retractable gates at both sides of the leading edge. However, this is possible only if the traction between the sheet and belts is greater than the moment associated with the friction between the sheet and the existing stack as the skewed sheet experiences the angular motion. According to the present invention, the normal forces applied to the advancing sheet are dependent upon the location of the idlers. In particular, the normal forces are distributed such that the normal forces are stronger at locations nearer to the retractable gates than the normal forces at locations farther from the retractable gates. Furthermore, a number of pivotable hold-down mechanisms are disposed near the retractable gates to prevent the leading edge from buckling up.
Additionally, the transporting module can be programmed to selectively skip the accumulation mode so that insert materials can be moved into the envelope without being stacked up before insertion. Insert materials such as booklets, folded sheets, cards, mailpieces or other envelopes can be conveyed through the transport module to the waiting envelope. These insert materials can be conveyed through the transport module with or without the sheets to be accumulated.
a is a schematic representation of a mailing machine, according to the present invention.
b is a schematic representation of a different mailing machine, according to the present invention.
a is a schematic representation showing a sheet of insert material being released into an accumulation section of a mailing machine.
b is a schematic representation showing the sheet of insert material aligning itself against a plurality of registration gates.
c is a schematic representation showing a sheet of insert material being released into an accumulation section of a mailing machine, wherein the sheet is skewed.
d is a schematic representation showing the skewed sheet experiencing an angular motion after one of the leading-edge corners is stopped by one of the side gates.
a is a schematic representation showing the normal forces applied on different locations of a driving belt.
b is a schematic representation showing a plurality of idlers being used for providing the normal forces.
a shows the transport module being used as a conveyor.
b shows the dual-function of the transport module, according to the present invention.
The present invention provides a transport module 100 for use in a mailing machine, which allows a sheet of insert material to align itself when it is released and moved into the transport module. The transport module, according to the present invention, can be programmed to function like an accumulator. It can also be programmed to function like a simple conveyor. These two functions can exist alternately in a continuous operation. The transport module 100 is capable of transporting insert materials of various thickness, lengths and widths. The transport module 100 can be used to provide insert materials to a mail inserter section 300, with or without a folder/feeder 200, as shown in
When the transport module 100 is used as an accumulator, the sheets released into the transport module are registered against a plurality of registration gates so that they form a stack in the transport module. These registration gates are retractable such that when the accumulation of a stack is completed, the gates are retracted to allow the stack of insert material to move forward to the next section of the mailing machine.
The movement of a released sheet in the transport module 100 is shown in
As shown in
After one corner of a skewed sheet is stopped by a registration gate at a contact point as shown in
Assuming that the frictional coefficient between the belts and the sheet is ubp and the frictional coefficient between two sheets of insert material is ubp, self-alignment of the insert materials in the accumulator is possible if
where Dnm is the distance between point (0,0) and point (xn, ym). As shown in the above equation, the term Fnm Dnm becomes more dominant when the distance Dnm becomes greater. In order to reduce the dominant factors attributable to the normal forces at such locations as (Xn, y4) and (xn, y5), as shown in
According to the present invention, normal forces Fnm are provided by a plurality of idlers 131, 132, 133, 134, 135 at points (xn, y1), (xn, y2), (xn, y3), (xn, y4), (xn, y5), respectively, as shown in
The retractable gates 110 that are used for leading edge registration are shown in
As shown in
When the transport module 100 is used as a conveyor, it typically allows insert materials to be conveyed from the upstream direction to the inserting station where the insert materials are inserted into a waiting envelope. As shown in
b illustrates the dual-nature of the transport module, according to the present invention. As shown, the upstream feeder 90 delivers a plurality of sheets 10 to be accumulated, a folded sheet 8 and a booklet 7 to the transport module 100. The transport module 100 is programmed to accumulate all the sheets 10 into a stack 12 before inserting the stack 12 into the envelope 30. However, the folded sheet 8 and the booklet 7 are separately and sequentially moved by the transport module 100 into the envelope 30 after the stack 12 has been inserted.
It is understood that the range of thickness, widths and lengths of the insert material is dependent upon the dimensions and design of the transport module and the dimensions of the envelope 30. One skilled in the art can reduce or increase the number of belts, the number of idlers to suit the need. Thus, although the invention has been described with respect to one or more embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing and various other changes, omissions and deviations in the form and detail thereof may be made without departing from the scope of this invention.