This disclosure claims the benefit of the filing date of International Application No. PCT/EP00/03872, having an international filing date of Apr. 28, 2000, which designated the United States of America, and this disclosure is the United States national stage of that international application. This disclosure further claims priority to Germany patent application 199 19 880.2, filed Apr. 30, 1999, Germany patent application 199 20 905.7, filed May 6, 1999, and Germany patent application 100 02 401.7, filed Jan. 20, 2000.
The invention relates to a process and a device for the attachment of label jackets to products such as bottles.
A corresponding machine is known from European Patent No. 0 584 516. This machine has a revolving table, with dishes that are arranged at regular intervals on a common sector of a circle, for the free standing uptake of bottles. On each one of these dishes, a roll of labeling hose, an installation for the separation of label jackets, and a pair of separating jaws that can be lowered and lifted for seizing the separated label jackets and to pull them over a bottle, are arranged in a manner so that they rotate.
The drawbacks of this construction design are the considerable cost and the fact that replacement of the numerous rolls of label hose is time consuming. Because of the free standing bottles, the speed of revolution and thus the production output are considerably limited. Furthermore, on the one hand, the evenness of the height of attachment of the label jackets to a multitude of bottles is unsatisfactory, and, on the other hand, the operating reliability is critical, especially when the external wall of the bottles are wetted with a fluid. These drawbacks are connected with the fact that a label jacket, at the time when the force of friction between the label and the bottle is greater than between the separating jaws and the label, stops the axial relative movement with respect to the bottle and adheres to it. The height of attachment of the individual jacket labels depends on the individual friction conditions and, therefore, it is not exactly defined. Moreover, the operating reliability is problematic when the separating jaws return to their original upper starting position, because there are still bottles on the support dishes.
The invention is based on the task of providing a process and a device with high fitting precision and operating reliability.
According to the invention, the bottles are seized, before a label jacket is pulled over them, in the area of their mantle surface, until the separating jaw pair which holds a label jacket, coming from above, surrounds, in a manner which is known in itself, at least for a portion of the longitudinal extent of the bottle to be fitted. In the subsequent course of the operation, the holding device for holding the bottles by their mantle surface is temporarily released, and the label jacket is pulled by the separating jaw pair, with simultaneous support of the bottom of the bottle, to the desired final position, where the lowering movement of the separation jacket pair is then stopped, while the label jacket continues to be held at its lower edge with friction lock by the separating jaws. Then the bottle is again seized by a part of its mantle surface which in the meantime has been covered with the label jacket that has been pulled over it, where the label jacket is held by friction lock or pressed against the external side of the bottle. The separating jaw pair releases the hold grip on the forward lower margin of the label jacket only then, and it is then lowered completely under the standing surface of the bottle. During this lowering movement of the separation jaw pair, the label jacket, advantageously, can no longer change its height position on the bottle, so that the position of the label jacket with respect to the bottom of the bottle is maintained uniformly with great precision in the case of a multitude of bottles, that is the height position tolerances of the height of adhesion can be kept in a very small range.
Advantageously, the separation jaw pair is designed in such a manner that its coupling action, with friction lock, is simultaneously applied to the radial internal and the external surface, and, as a result, it is possible to avoid an unnecessary large widening of a label jacket to generate sufficient frictional forces.
Since, in the proposed process, a bottle is supported at all times by its circumference, before, during and after the pull-over application of a label jacket, by an area of its mantle surface, high speeds of rotation can be achieved with an accordingly high production output without tipping of the bottle.
According to an embodiment variant of the invention, the separation jaw pair is lifted into the original upper position, only after the removal transport of the bottles that have been provided with a label jacket from a bottom dead center position, so that, advantageously, no disturbances can be caused by collision with a bottle or jamming of the separation jaws.
A particularly advantageous embodiment is one where the movements in height of the clamp jaw pair for pulling on the label jacket and for the return movement into the starting position is controlled by a cam control, but caused by a working cylinder or another appropriate drive (engine, etc.), because, as a result, the processing times, particularly the return time to the initial position, can be kept shorter than with a pure cam control, because there is no risk of self inhibition. The angle of rotation of the revolving table required for a complete cycle of movement of the clamp jaws is, accordingly, reduced, that is a smaller revolving table diameter is sufficient, with the same output level.
Below, a preferred embodiment of the invention is explained with reference to the figures. In the drawing:
a shows a machine with a revolving table for pull-over application of label jackets to bottles in a simplified diagrammatic top view,
b shows a radial cam assigned to the revolving table for the actuation of gripper clamps provided on the revolving table to hold bottles, as well as star wheels to load and unload the bottles in a top view,
a–2c show a vertical cross section through the revolving table of
a–3c show a diagrammatic top view of a separation jaw pair to seize and pull over label jackets in different operating positions, corresponding to the series of
a shows a partial cross section of
b shows a partial cross section corresponding to
c shows a top view of a label jacket support of
The machine 1 shown in
Both the feed start wheel 5 and the delivery star wheel 6 are equipped at their periphery with seizing devices to seize and hold bottles at their mantle surface (
Above the common transfer point I between the revolving table 3 and the feed star wheel 5, a cutting block 10 is provided on a cross bar 13, where the cutting block is held in fixed position, for the feeding, unfolding of a film hose and for cutting off label jackets E, where the label film hose 11 is pulled off a hose reservoir 12 which is secured laterally to the machine, and, in the process, it is led to the cutting block 10 over several deflection rollers. The above mentioned cross bar 13 can be adjusted, in its height, for adaptation to different label jacket lengths, advantageously by an electromotor adjustment device, which is not shown in detail. The cutting block 10 can be constructed according to the Published German Patent Application DE 2950785 A1.
The revolving table 3, the star wheels 5 and 6, the conveyors 7 and 9, as well as the one-piece endless screw 8 are driven continuously with synchronous speed and positioning with respect to each other, in a circular movement, by individual motor drives or a common machine drive and drive elements. The cutting block 10 has drive devices to effect, synchronously with respect to the movement of the revolving table, the advance, with exact positioning, of the label jacket hose and the cutting off of label jackets E by the cutting tool of the block 10. Reference is made to the above mentioned German Patent Application concerning the exact construction.
The construction of the revolving table 3 is explained in greater detail below with reference to the vertical cross sectional representation shown in
The downward pointing end of the piston rod 36 is secured to slide block 37 which preferably has two parallel bore holes, each of which is penetrated by a guide rod 32, which slide block, on its backside turned toward the main shaft 31, presents an upper and lower guide roller 38 or 39. The guide rollers 38 and 39 are, in each case, rotatably secured to swiveling levers 38b and 39b (
The top guide roller 38 is applied against the control surface of an upper, cylindrically bent, radial cam 40, which is attached to the circumference of a horizontal disk 42. This disk 42 has a pipe-like attachment, which is secured with pivot bearings to the top end of the main shaft 31. At the bottom side of the disk 42, there are several separator bolts 44, which hang downward, and which are displaced at regular intervals over the circumference. At the lower ends of the separator bolts, a circular disk 43, with empty middle, is attached, which carries at its circumference a bottom radial cam 41 for the other guide rollers 39, with central attachment. In addition, the bottom radial cam 41 is held in a position so it cannot rotate by a clamp piece 45 provided on the separator bolts 44. The bottom radial cam 41, which is also cylindrically shaped, has a control surface pointed upward, on which the guide rollers 39 move.
The course of the curves of the two radial cams 40 and 41 can be seen in detail in the development view represented in
In order to prevent the radial cams 40 and 41 from also turning, an angular torque support 46 is attached to the top side of the disk 42, which support is braced by a stationary column 47 arranged; outside of the revolving table 3, vertically on the table top 2.
The bottom dishes 4 which are arranged on a common circle sector of the support disk 30 at a fixed height, and which in each case are surrounded by a centering ring 14 secured by a spring method, whose coaxial height can be moved, and which presents a margin which surrounds and holds the bottle dish 4, and extends above it, and which is adapted to the contour of the bottom of the bottle. This centering ring 14 is coupled with a rod 15 which is led in a manner so it can be shifted in the support disk 30, which projects with its lower end over the bottom side of the support disk 30 and supports a guide roller 17 (
In addition, each bottle dish 4 is associated with two shafts 19a, 19b, which are arranged at an interval, parallel and vertically with respect to each other, with rotatable securing in the carrier disk 30. Each of these shafts supports at its top end a horizontal grip arm 20a and 20b, respectively, which extends outward and which is secured in a manner so it can not be turned, which arms together form controllable grip pincers 20 for seizing and holding a bottle F to be labeled on a bottle dish 4 (
In contrast to the above described embodiment, the counter arms, if appropriately shaped—as shown in
The course of the operation during the passage of a bottle through the machine is described below, essentially with reference to
A bottle F which arrives on the conveyor 7 is seized by the one-piece endless screw 8, introduced in an appropriate position into the feed star wheel 5, seized by the latter's controlled clamps and positioned at the common contact point I on a bottle dish 4 of the revolving table 3, where, at the same time, the centering ring 14 is led upward and the associated gripper clamp 20 is closed. The corresponding clamp of the feed star wheel instantaneously releases the bottle.
At the same time, a spreading jaw unit 50 which is associated with the bottle approaches the cutting block 10 as a result of its upward movement, where the half-shells 54 and the rubber resilient pad 55 are separated from each other at this time. At the same time, the label hose 11 is advanced from above downward, and a label jacket E is cut off, which is then located, with its lower margin, on the application surface 53 of the internal jaws 51a, 51b, that is the half-shells are located within the label jacket and the rubber resilient pad outside. In order to prevent the tipping of the label jacket at the time of the uptake and acceleration in the direction of rotation of the revolving table 3, a concave curved support shell 49 is located at the height of the label jacket E which has just been separated from the hose, which shell moves in the same direction as the revolving table—seen in the direction of rotation—and is applied to the back side of the label, where the support shell 49 is secured with fixed height at the radial external margin of the ring disk 33 by means of a bracket (
Immediately thereafter, the shaft 62 with its control cam 68 is rotated in such a manner that the half-shells 54 are swiveled away from each other and at the same time the rubber resilient pads 55 are swiveled inward and in opposite directions, until the label jacket is clamped at its lower margin, outside and inside, with friction lock. In the case of a stretchable jacket, the latter is expanded in the process to an extent which is larger than the diameter of the bottle.
When passing through sector II (
Even before the delivery star wheel 6 is reached, the spreading jaw unit 50 is now again lowered, until the half-shells are located completely under the bottle dishes 4 (
Then, the pneumatic cylinder 34 is adjusted for lifting, so that the spreading jaw unit 50 again reaches its original upper position before passing the feed star wheel 5 (sector IV).
During the entire treatment process, the bottles are transported without change in height position through the machine.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
199 19 880 | Apr 1999 | DE | national |
199 20 905 | May 1999 | DE | national |
100 02 401 | Jan 2000 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP00/03872 | 4/28/2000 | WO | 00 | 1/16/2001 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO00/66437 | 11/9/2000 | WO | A |
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4412876 | Lerner et al. | Nov 1983 | A |
4620888 | Easter et al. | Nov 1986 | A |
5060367 | Vandevoorde | Oct 1991 | A |
5417794 | Menayan | May 1995 | A |
5483783 | Lerner et al. | Jan 1996 | A |
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6263940 | Menayan | Jul 2001 | B1 |
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6543514 | Menayan | Apr 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2950785 | Jun 1981 | DE |
0 584516 | Mar 1994 | EP |