1. Field of the Invention
The invention is situated in the field of materials handling technology and it relates to a method and a device for transporting articles along a conveying track, wherein the articles are held individually and are transported along the conveying track one behind the other and at least to a limited extent independent of one another and wherein the articles pass through an accumulation store during the transportation along the conveying track.
2. Description of Related Art
Conveyance according to the manner mentioned above is known in particular for flat articles, such as newspapers and periodicals, from the publications DE-2822060 (or U.S. Pat. No. 4,201,286), CH-382768 (or U.S. Pat. No. 3,032,341) EP-0276409 (or U.S. Pat. No. 4,892,186), EP-0309745 (or U.S. Pat. No. 4,887,809) or WO-99/33731 (or U.S. Pat. No. 6,357,574). For such transport, each one of the flat articles is conveyed while being held by a holding element such that its principal surfaces are oriented substantially transverse to the conveying direction. The holding elements are movable individually and at least to a limited extent independently of one another along a stretch of rails and they are designed such that they can be driven pushing one another. The dimension of the holding elements parallel to the conveying direction is the same for all holding elements and is advantageously greater than the corresponding dimension of the articles (thickness of the flat articles), so that in pushed operation there are defined distances between holding elements (e.g. distance between the front ends of successive holding elements) or between articles held by the holding elements respectively, which distances in a given system are the smallest possible distances.
In comparison with conveying methods using holding means being arranged equidistantly on a single conveying organ, e.g. on a circulating chain, the conveying methods for flat articles as described in brief above has, inter alia, the following advantages: the distances between the holding elements can be changed locally and independent of one another by very simple means and in particular without transfer of the articles to other holding means; very dense and nonetheless very precisely arranged conveying streams can be formed; and conveying tracks can be designed as accumulation store devices in a very simple manner.
For the formation of an accumulation store, the holding elements are solely banked up along the conveying track, are released from the head of the banked up articles in a controlled manner, and are conveyed onwards. The group of banked up articles, which has a stationary head and a variable length, represents the accumulation store. For realizing such an accumulation store on a conveying track, drives (motor drives or the force of gravity) are to be provided for conveying holding elements with a constant or variable speed and with constant or variable spacings to the tail end of the accumulation store and with variable speed and minimum distances between one another through the accumulation store (supply drive and buffer drive), and for conveying holding elements to be released at the buffer head away from the accumulation store (conveying-away drive). Furthermore, means for banking up holding elements in the accumulation store for releasing them from the accumulation store and for transferring them to the conveying-away drive are to be provided.
Accumulation stores are utilized wherever a unit supplying articles and a unit taking over the articles are to be connected with one another in a flexible manner, such that the units can be operated with respect to their performance (measured in articles per unit of time) within wide limits without any mutual interdependences (uncoupled), and nonetheless without the necessity to take the articles out of a common process-order. When the performance of the unit supplying the articles is greater than that of the unit taking over the articles, the fill level of the accumulation store increases. When the performance of the unit supplying the articles is smaller than the performance of the unit taking over the articles, then the fill level of the accumulation store decreases.
In accordance with the prior art (refer to the publications mentioned above), accumulation stores on conveying tracks equipped for held and independent transportation of holding elements or of articles held by holding elements, respectively, the banking-up means or releasing means respectively comprise a timing wheel arranged at a stationary head of the store. This timing wheel comprises teeth adapted to the holding elements and in rotation it grasps with each of its teeth the respectively first holding element in the accumulation store, in order to separate it from the head of the accumulation store and to transfer it to the conveying-away drive. For a variable release performance (in holding elements or held articles per unit of time) the speed of rotation of the timing wheel is varied as required or the timing wheel is switched (predefined, non-variable speed or standstill).
The present invention is directed toward making transportation and buffering or accumulation as described above more flexible such that the stream of articles or holding elements conveyed away from the head of the accumulation store (with or without articles) can be adapted to a greater degree than is possible with methods and arrangements of the prior art to different conditions prevailing downstream. The application of the method and device according to the invention are to provide a conveying-away stream, which can be supplied directly to a unit imposing conditions on the conveying stream, i.e. if possible without any further transformation or else with a significantly reduced amount of further transformation. In comparison with the prior art, the method and device in accordance with the invention provides, in particular, an increased process density and a reduction in the length of conveying tracks necessary for conveying stream transformations such that conveying/accumulation substantially retain their characteristics, but can be arranged closer to a downstream unit taking over the articles and to the greatest extent can do without any further means for stream transformation.
The method according to the invention consists in essence of releasing and transferring holding elements (with or without held articles) from the buffer storage system to a conveying away-drive, not individually, but in groups. This means that instead of producing a stream of individual holding elements as is known from the prior art, a stream of holding element groups is produced. In the groups of the conveyed away stream, the holding elements have advantageously the minimum possible distance between one another the same as in the accumulation store or in pushed conveying operation. The distances between groups and the conveying away speed are optionally constant or variable as required and the number of holding elements in the groups is constant or variable. At the same time, the articles conveyed away from the head of the buffer are still held individually.
Obviously, when using the method according to the invention it is also possible to establish a conveying-away stream of holding element groups, in which every group comprises solely one holding element. In accordance with the prior art, only conveying-away streams of such a type can be established; according to the invention, which is directed to increased flexibility, establishing a conveying-away stream of the named kind is a special, possible case, for which, however, method and device are not particularly suitable.
The method and the device in accordance with the invention are suitable in particular for supplying groups of articles to units, in which articles are processed in tight groups, for example, are stacked or packed.
The holding element groups, which according to the method of the invention are released from the accumulation store and are transferred to the conveying-away drive, are pre-formed in the accumulation store, where the holding elements are already arranged with minimum distances between one another. In addition to the formation of groups, it is possible to implement further transformations in the accumulation store. Such transformations are aligned to conditions imposed on the conveying-away stream further downstream and comprise, for example, re-orientation of the articles, marking of the articles as members of a specific group, marking of articles as specific group members (e.g., a group member, which is arranged right at the front or right at the back of the group), or formation of sub-groups within the groups.
The device in accordance with the invention serving for serially transporting holding elements or articles held individually by holding elements along a conveying track comprises a plurality of holding elements movable one behind the other and at least partially independently of one another along a stretch of rail defining the conveying track. The device further comprises a supply drive for supplying holding elements to the tail end of an accumulation store, a buffer drive for transporting holding elements from the tail end of the accumulation store towards the head of the accumulation store, and a conveying-away drive for transporting holding elements away from the head, as well as a means for forming holding element groups in the accumulation store and a means for releasing holding element groups from the accumulation store and for transferring the groups to the conveying-away drive.
The force of gravity can be used at least partly as a supply drive, buffer drive, or conveying-away drive. The three drives can be designed as separate drives or as one or two drives, wherein at least one of the drives takes over more than one of the named drive functions. In the same manner, the functions of the named means for forming groups and for releasing and transferring groups can be taken over each respectively by a separate device part or else jointly by the same device part.
As already hinted at in the above sections, neither for the method according to the invention nor for the device in accordance with the invention it is of significance, whether the holding means in the supply stream, in the accumulation store, or in the conveying-away stream are holding articles. In most applications, either all holding elements will be loaded or all holding elements will be empty. However, applications with partially loaded and partially not loaded holding elements are also conceivable.
The method according to the invention and different embodiments of the device in accordance with the invention are described in more detail in connection with the following figures, wherein:
The conveying track is functionally split-up into three parts: a supply track 10, a conveying-away track 11, and between supply track 10 and conveying-away track 11 an accumulation store 12 with a head 13 and a tail end 14, wherein the position of the head 13 on the conveying track is substantially constant and the position of the tail end 14 varies depending on the fill level of the accumulation store 10.
In accordance with the invention, the items released at the head 13 of the accumulation store 10 and transferred to the conveying away system are not individual holding elements 1 or individual held articles 2, but they are holding element groups 15. These groups 15 are pre-formed in the accumulation store 12 prior to their release. For forming the groups and releasing them at the head 13 of the accumulation store 10, two banking-up means 16 are arranged one behind the other in the conveying direction, in a manner that will be described in detail hereinafter.
As in the case of any buffering system, the supply performance (in holding elements per unit of time) on average has to be the same as the conveying-away performance. This condition, the maximum buffering capacity and, of course, also other characteristics of a specific device, impose limits regarding spacings and speeds of supply and conveying-away. Within these limits, spacing and/or speed of the supply are freely selectable. Regarding conveying-away, the spacing within the groups substantially corresponds to the minimum distance, while the distances between the groups are freely selectable. In the accumulation store 12 the distances are equal to the minimum distance and the speed is such that for every group release the corresponding group is present and pre-formed at the head of the accumulation store.
For the supply, the following variants are possible:
For releasing the groups from the accumulation store and for conveying them away, for example, the following variants are possible (distances between groups are distances between the last and the first holding element of successive groups), wherein the groups may be of the same size or may comprise different numbers of holding elements:
As still remains to be demonstrated, devices are particularly simple if the supply speed and the conveying-away speed are equal and also the same as the maximum accumulator speed. In this case, the device in accordance with the invention can be implemented with a single drive for supply, for accumulation store conveyance and for conveying-away, providing the drive is designed such that it slips relative to banked-up holding elements within the accumulation store, or such that holding elements banked-up within the accumulation store, are capable of being temporarily uncoupled from the drive. An example of a conveying system of this kind comprising a drive that runs continuously along the conveying track and to which the holding elements are magnetically coupled is, for example, described in the publication WO-99/33731.
In particular, for supply and accumulation store conveyance the force of gravity can be exploited instead of mechanical means, provided the conveying track is designed to be correspondingly sloping downwards. For the banking-up function, instead of an active banking-up means, another braking effect may be utilized. For example, the force of gravity along a climbing section of the rail stretch, friction between the rail stretch and the holding elements, or solely the momentary lack of a driving force (passive banking-up point).
The articles 2 are fed-in to the unit 3 supplying the articles, e.g. in an imbricated stream or individually, for example, from a storage unit (coil or roll, sheet feeder) to be taken over by the holding elements 1. In the unit 4 to which the articles are delivered, the articles 2 are, for example, released from the holding elements 1 in groups or are processed in groups and conveyed onwards to a transfer point in any kind of order. For empty holding elements 1, a return track for transporting the holding elements back to the unit supplying the articles is to be provided. The unit supplying the articles and the unit taking over the articles (3 and 4) determine the conveying and buffering function of the present invention to a great degree. All the same, they are not part of this invention, the same as the return track for returning the empty holding elements 1.
For implementing the method illustrated in
According to
For equal distances dG between the first holding elements of successive groups, every group needs to be pushed beyond the front banking-up point P.1 by the banking-up means (16.1 or 16.2) such that the first holding element of each group reaches a predetermined starting position. For the same purpose the pre-formed group can be coupled to the conveying-away drive already in a position behind the front banking-up point P.1 (front banking-up point equal to the predetermined starting point), i.e. being released from the accumulation store system through the effect of the conveying-away drive.
The release of a group 15 evolves in the following phases: the front banking-up means is active in the front banking-up point P.1, the rear banking-up means is positioned in the rear banking-up point P.2 and activated for forming the group 15 to be released (a, b); for releasing the group 15, the front banking-up means 16.3 is de-activated and the group is conveyed away (c); when the group has passed the front banking-up point, the front banking-up means 16.3 is re-activated, the rear banking-up means 16.4 is de-activated and, for the release of a next group it is, if so required, moved parallel to the conveying direction (d, e).
For releasing groups of differing sizes, it is also possible to move the front banking-up means 16.3 parallel to the conveying direction instead of the rear banking-up means 16.4; this signifies, that the front banking-up point P.1 has a variable position and the rear banking-up point P.2 is stationary. For releasing groups of a constant size, both banking-up points P.1 and P.2 are stationary.
In the embodiment of the invention according to
A control unit 43 controls the packaging machine 41, synchronises the group conveying means 40 with the packaging machine 41 and controls the accumulation stores 12.1, 12.2, 12.3, and 12 in accordance with a predefined package sequence and the predefined package contents. A device 44 integrated in the packaging machine 41 and serving for printing and positioning cover sheets 45 may also be controlled by the control unit 43.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH01/00393 | 6/26/2001 | WO | 00 | 1/6/2003 |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6321896 | Zuccheri et al. | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6357574 | Eberle et al. | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6464067 | Reist | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6554126 | Muller | Apr 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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382 768 | Dec 1964 | CH |
966 402 | Dec 1960 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030098219 A1 | May 2003 | US |