The present invention relates to a method and device for controlled filling of a feed channel supplying tobacco articles.
The present invention may be used to particular advantage for filling a cigarette hopper on a cigarette packing machine, to which the following description refers purely by way of example.
A cigarette hopper comprises at least one substantially vertical channel, which receives the cigarettes from a top feed conduit and feeds them by force of gravity to a number of outlets at the bottom of the hopper, where a number of pushers expel groups of cigarettes cyclically from the outlets onto a packing line.
Depending on market demand, the same packing machine may be used to pack different types of cigarettes, normally differing in size (length and/or diameter) or in the characteristics of the tobacco or filter.
To switch over to a new type of cigarette (i.e. at each brand change), the hopper must be cleared of the old brand and filled with the new one. Filling of the hopper must be conducted in controlled manner, in the sense that the cigarettes must be placed inside the hopper in orderly manner and with no undue mechanical stress which might damage the cigarettes (particularly as a result of tobacco fallout from the tips). At present, the hopper is filled manually, i.e. by an operator starting from the bottom and working upwards until the hopper is almost full; and only then can the cigarettes be fed in from the top feed conduit.
Filling the hopper manually is an extremely slow job, obviously requiring the assistance of an operator, so that preparing the packing machine for a new brand involves considerable downtime.
Patent DE684851 describes the controlled filling of a cigarette box using a flexible belt which accompanies the cigarettes during the controlled filling of the cigarette box.
Patent US6540061B1 describes the controlled filling of a cigarette box or hopper. The cigarettes are fed by force of gravity and slide inside separate compartments. As they are fed in, the cigarettes are supported underneath by mechanical supports, which are eased downwards to gradually increase the volume of the compartments until a maximum volume is reached. On reaching the bottom of the box or hopper, the mechanical supports are moved horizontally out of the box or hopper and back up to the start position. In an alternative embodiment for filling a cigarette hopper, a guide member is positioned at the top of the hopper to intercept and support the incoming mass of cigarettes, and is then moved gradually to ease the cigarettes in, and eventually out of the hopper. The guide member is comb-shaped and is moved in and out of the hopper through a comb-shaped wall of the hopper.
Patent US5743067A1 describes a cigarette box filling device, wherein a cigarette hopper has an output opening defined by the outlets of a number of side by side channels for respective columns of cigarettes. The hopper has a box filling device having a horizontal plate for supporting an orderly mass of cigarettes, and which moves vertically along a box, positioned with its inlet facing the output opening, and has side by side seats on top for respective cigarettes. Each outlet faces a rib separating two respective adjacent seats on the plate, and the channels all slope the same way with respect to the plate.
Patent US4366895A1 describes a device for filling a cigarette box divided internally into channels by parallel vertical walls; and the device comprises a number of horizontal supporting members, each for supporting and easing the cigarettes downwards into a respective channel.
The filling devices described above all employ a supporting member for easing in the mass of cigarettes, and which is extracted from the channel once it is full. Since the cigarette feed channel must be sealed off as far as possible from the outside, to prevent uncontrolled escape of the tobacco powder inevitably produced by the cigarettes, extracting the supporting member from the channel once it is full poses various construction problems.
Moreover, the filling devices described above, by employing a large, heavy, rigid supporting member, are bulky and so call for high-performance (i.e. bulky, high-cost) actuators.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and device for controlled filling of a feed channel supplying tobacco articles, designed to eliminate the aforementioned drawbacks, and which at the same time are cheap and easy to implement.
According to the present invention, there are provided a method and device for controlled filling of a feed channel supplying tobacco articles, as recited in the attached Claims.
A number of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
In actual use, hopper 1 is filled completely with cigarettes 7, which are fed from a top feed channel 8 and travel down hopper 1 by force of gravity. As the groups of cigarettes 7 are expelled from outlets 4, cigarettes 7 fall by gravity along hopper 1, and further cigarettes 7 are fed into hopper 1 from feed channel 8.
Top chamber 2 of hopper 1 is divided into two specular halves, each comprising a V-shaped channel 9 which comes out inside bottom chamber 3. More specifically, the two channels 9 have a common inlet at feed channel 8, and a common outlet at bottom chamber 3.
Hopper 1 comprises two filling devices 10, each fitted to a respective channel 9 to fill channel 9 gradually in controlled manner. More specifically, both channels 9 are filled simultaneously by respective filling devices 10.
Each channel 9 is bounded laterally by two opposite, facing walls 11 and 12, and is divided into an initial portion 13 and an end portion 14. Each filling device 10 comprises a rigid, non-deformable lead-in member 15 for gradually filling initial portion 13 of channel 9; and a flexible lead-in member 16 for gradually filling end portion 14 of channel 9.
As shown in
Actuating device 17 comprises a guide 18 extending parallel to and outside channel 9; and a carriage 19 which runs along guide 18 under the control of a known motor (not shown). Carriage 19 supports a rigid arm 20, in turn supporting lead-in member 15 and having one end 21 hinged to carriage 19, and an opposite end 22 hinged to one end 23 of lead-in member 15. End 23 of lead-in member 15 is hinged to arm 20 to allow lead-in member 15 to rotate freely about an axis of rotation 24 perpendicular to the
On wall 12 of channel 9 are formed a catch member 30; and a seat 31 for receiving lead-in member 15 and located immediately downstream from catch member 30. Seat 31 is a negative, in shape, of lead-in member 15, so that, when lead-in member 15 is housed inside seat 31, an outer surface 32 of lead-in member 15 is coplanar with wall 12. In actual use, the end of lead-in member 15 engages catch member 30 mechanically to insert lead-in member 15 inside seat 31.
Lead-in member 16 is flexible and normally wound into a reel 33 about a pin 34 fitted to lead-in member 15; one end 35 of lead-in member 16 is located inside reel 33, and one end 36, opposite end 35, of lead-in member 16 is substantially free and maintained close to end 23 of lead-in member 15.
In actual use, just before end 26 of lead-in member 15 mechanically engages catch member 30, end 36 of lead-in member 16 is fixed to wall 11. End 36 of lead-in member 16 may be fixed to wall 11 by means of a mechanical coupling; in which case, a hook along wall 11 engages an eye on end 36 of lead-in member 16. Alternatively, end 36 of lead-in member 16 may be fixed to wall 11 by a magnetic coupling; in which case, an electromagnet is located on wall 11 and activated to magnetically attract end 36 of lead-in member 16.
When lead-in member 15 rotates about catch member 30 into seat 31, lead-in member 16 unwinds partly off reel 33 and across channel 9 to completely cut off passage along channel 9. More specifically, end 36 of lead-in member 16 contacts wall 11, and end 35 of lead-in member 16 is located close to wall 12. At this point, an actuating device 37 unwinds reel 33 to gradually increase the length of lead-in member 16 inside channel 9 and so ease the mass of cigarettes 7 along channel 9. Actuating device 37 preferably comprises a motor 38, which is connectable to pin 34 to rotate pin 34 to wind or unwind reel 33.
Operation of filling devices 10 in
In
When commencing controlled automatic filling of hopper 1, filling devices 10 are activated and moved from the
At this point, a mass of cigarettes 7 is fed along feed channel 8 onto the two lead-in members 15. It is important to not that, hopper 1 being substantially vertical, cigarettes 7 are maintained on lead-in members 15 by force of gravity.
Once the mass of cigarettes 7 contacts the two lead-in members 15, each actuating device 17 is operated to ease lead-in member 15 along channel 9, substantially in contact with the inner surfaces of walls 11 and 12 bounding channel 9, as shown in
At a certain point in the downward movement of each lead-in member 15 along channel 9, end 26 of lead-in member 15 mechanically engages and locks onto catch member 30 on wall 12, so that lead-in member 15 rotates about end 26 into seat 31 until the outer surface 32 of lead-in member 15 is coplanar with wall 12.
Just before end 26 of lead-in member 15 mechanically engages catch member 30, end 36 of lead-in member 16 is fixed to wall 11. As lead-in member 15 rotates about catch member 30 into seat 31, lead-in member 16 unwinds partly off reel 33 and across channel 9 to completely cut off passage along channel 9. More specifically, end 36 of lead-in member 16 contacts wall 11, and end 35 of lead-in member 16 is located close to wall 12. At this point, actuating device 37 unwinds reel 33 to gradually increase the length of lead-in member 16 inside channel 9 and so ease the mass of cigarettes 7 along channel 9. As the mass of cigarettes 7 is eased along channel 9, lead-in member 16 therefore defines, between ends 36 and 35, a flexible bag containing the mass of cigarettes 7 and resting on walls 11 and 12 bounding channel 9. In other words, by unwinding reel 33, actuating device 37 eases lead-in member 16 along channel 9.
Each lead-in member 16 is unwound off reel 33 until lead-in member 16 comes to rest on walls 6 of bottom chamber 3 of hopper 1; at which point, end 36 of lead-in member 16 is detached from wall 11, and lead-in member 16 is slowly rewound into reel 33 to clear channel 9 and allow cigarettes 7 to drop freely through hopper 1.
In the
In the
In the
In the
In the
In an alternative embodiment not shown, top chamber 2 comprises one vertical channel 9, and hopper 1 comprises one filling device 10 comprising a single rigid, non-deformable lead-in member 15 identical to lead-in member 15 described above.
In the
The above method and device 10 for controlled filling of hopper 1 have various advantages, by being cheap and easy to implement and permitting fast, automatic filling of hopper 1. Moreover, as hopper 1 is being filled, cigarettes 7 undergo no harmful mechanical stress, by being fed gradually and in controlled manner along hopper 1 at all times. Hopper 1 may also be filled in controlled manner with a new brand of cigarettes 7 and cleared of the previous brand of cigarettes 7 simultaneously, thus reducing the downtime involved in preparing the packing machine to pack the new brand of cigarettes 7. Finally, it is important to note that each lead-in member 15 and each lead-in member 16 are kept inside channel 9 at all times, and, at the end of the filling operation, are positioned contacting one of walls 11 and 12 bounding channel 9.
Given the numerous advantages involved, the method and device 10 described may be used for controlled filling of any type of channel 9 supplying cigarettes 7 or other tobacco articles (e.g. portions of filter material or cigars).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
BO2005A/0186 | Mar 2005 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3137110 | Boinnard | Jun 1964 | A |
3565237 | Strydom | Feb 1971 | A |
4365702 | Tolasch et al. | Dec 1982 | A |
4365703 | Hinchcliffe et al. | Dec 1982 | A |
4744453 | Krause et al. | May 1988 | A |
5217101 | Raschka | Jun 1993 | A |
5529164 | Meinke et al. | Jun 1996 | A |
6540061 | Focke et al. | Apr 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
684 851 | Dec 1939 | DE |
1 502 715 | Nov 1967 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060237336 A1 | Oct 2006 | US |