The present invention relates to a method and a unit for grouping products into groups containing a given number K of products.
More specifically, the present invention employs a unit for forming groups of products, the unit being of the type comprising a production machine for producing the products; a group-forming machine for forming the products into groups of K products; and a transfer assembly for transferring the products from the production machine to the group-forming machine; the transfer assembly comprising a first output conveyor of the production machine, and a second input conveyor of the group-forming machine; the first and second conveyor moving respectively in a first and second direction opposite each other, and respectively comprising first and second pockets with a first and second spacing respectively.
Though suitable for any type of product, the present invention may be used to advantage in the tobacco industry, on a cellophaning-cartoning unit, to which the following description refers purely by way of example, and for packing, on a group-forming machine defined by a cartoning machine comprising an input pocket conveyor, groups of K packets of cigarettes produced on a production machine—in this case, a cellophaning machine—comprising an output pocket conveyor.
The output and input pocket conveyors of known units of the type described above used to form a single transfer pocket conveyor for transferring packets directly from the cellophaning machine to the cartoning machine in a single orderly succession.
Such a solution had the obvious advantage of maintaining precise timing of the two machines, but also the obvious disadvantage of failing to compensate for any voids, i.e. empty pockets, along the transfer conveyor, and so preventing the formation of incomplete groups on the cartoning machine.
To eliminate the above drawback, it has since been proposed to keep the output and input conveyors separate, and to connect them with the interposition of a FIFO (first-in-first-out) interoperational store, which receives a first orderly succession of packets in time with the cellophaning machine, and in which the packets are formed into queues, from which the packets are withdrawn by the input pocket conveyor of the cartoning machine and again formed into a second succession in time with the cartoning machine.
This provides for compensating for any voids along the output conveyor of the cellophaning machine, but results in a loss of synchronization of the two machines. Moreover, at relatively high production speeds, withdrawing the packets from the queues formed in the interoperational store is neither straightforward nor easy, and may easily result in damage to the packets.
DE2618905 discloses a bar item transverse conveyor having an intermediate conveyor with movable reversal point between feed and discharge conveyors.
DE1124584 discloses a device for transferring items between two belt conveyors having different feeding speeds.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and a unit for grouping products, which provide for maintaining synchronization of the production machine and the group-forming machine, while at the same time compensating for any voids coming off the production machine.
According to the present invention, there are provided a method and a unit for grouping products as claimed in the accompanying Claims.
The present invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawing, which shows a schematic side view, with parts removed for clarity, of a preferred embodiment.
Number 1 in the accompanying drawing indicates as a whole a cellophaning-cartoning unit for packets 2 of cigarettes, which comprises a known cellophaning machine 3, from an output 4 of which packets 2 are fed in an orderly succession to an output pocket conveyor 5; and a known cartoning machine 6, an input 7 of which receives an orderly succession of packets 2 from an input pocket conveyor 8.
Output conveyor 5 and input conveyor 8 form part of a transfer assembly 9 for transferring packets 2 from cellophaning machine 3 to cartoning machine 6.
Output conveyor 5 comprises a chain 10 looped about two pulleys 11 and 12, of which pulley 11 is a drive pulley, and which are mounted to rotate continuously about respective fixed parallel axes 13 and 14, and define, along chain 10, a top branch 15 divided by two idle guide pulleys 16 and 17 into a horizontal input portion 18, aligned with output 4 and connected to output 4 at a transfer station 19, and into a horizontal return portion 20. Pulleys 11, 12, 16 and 17 are supported in fixed positions by a frame 21, and pulleys 11 and 12 define, along chain 10, a horizontal bottom conveying branch 22 parallel to input portion 18 and return portion 20 of top branch 15.
Chain 10 is fitted with cup-shaped pockets 23 equally spaced along chain 10 to successively receive packets 2 issuing from output 4. More specifically, chain 10 is fed forward by pulley 11 at a speed V1 equal to the speed of packets 2 at output 4, and in time with cellophaning machine 3, so that each packet 2 travelling through output 4 is inserted, by a known transfer member (not shown) at transfer station 19, into a relative pocket 23 starting along input portion 18 of top branch 15 of chain 10.
Input conveyor 8 comprises a chain 24 looped about two pulleys 25 and 26, of which pulley 25 is a drive pulley located directly beneath pulley 11. Pulleys 25 and 26 are supported in fixed positions by frame 21, are fitted to frame 21 to rotate continuously about respective fixed axes 27 and 28 parallel to each other and to axes 13 and 14, and define, along chain 24, a top conveying branch 29 and a bottom return branch 30, both horizontal and parallel to bottom branch 22 of output conveyor 5. More specifically, top branch 29 is parallel to, faces, and is located directly beneath bottom branch 22 to define, with bottom branch 22, a horizontal channel 31 of constant height.
Chain 24, in use, is fed forward by pulley 25 at a speed V2 which, along top branch 29, is equal to and opposite speed V1 of bottom branch 22. Chain 24 is fitted with cup-shaped pockets 32 substantially similar to pockets 23 and spaced along chain 24 with the same spacing as pockets 23 along chain 10. Chain 24 is fed forward by pulley 25 in time with both chain 10 and cartoning machine 6, the input of which faces and is adjacent to pulley 25 at a transfer station 33 where, in use, a known radial expulsion member (not shown) expels packets 2 successively from relative pockets 32 into input 7 of cartoning machine 6.
A horizontal guide 34 is fitted along channel 31, and a carriage 36 of a pocket transfer member 37 is run along the guide at speed V1 or V2 by a motor 35. In addition to carriage 36, the pocket transfer member also comprises a wheel 38 fitted to carriage 36 to rotate continuously, under the control of a motor 39 and at a peripheral speed equal in absolute value to V1 and V2, about an axis 40 movable with carriage 36 and parallel to axes 27 and 28. Wheel 38 has a number, in particular an even number, of peripheral cup-shaped pockets 41 substantially similar to pockets 23 and 32 and spaced about axis 40 with the same spacing as pockets 23 and 32 along respective chains 10 and 24.
In connection with the above, it should be pointed out that each of pockets 23, 32, 41 is a straightforward cavity for receiving, but not retaining, a relative packet 2. Consequently, pulley 11 is provided, along its periphery contacting chain 10, with a fixed outer plate 42 for retaining packets 2 inside pockets 23; and wheel 38 is provided, along its periphery interposed between bottom branch 22 and top branch 29, with an outer plate 43 integral with carriage 36 and for retaining packets 2 inside pockets 41. The packets 2 travelling along bottom branch 22 are retained inside relative pockets 23 by a flexible retaining member 44, which is parallel to guide 34, extends, tangent to the output end of plate 42, from a spring winding device 45 fitted in a fixed position to frame 21 between pulleys 11 and 25, and has one end connected by a bracket to carriage 36.
In actual use, before starting up cellophaning-cartoning unit 1, transfer member 37 is normally set to an intermediate position along channel 31. When the unit is running, if a sensor 46, positioned facing input portion 18 of top branch 15 of output conveyor 5, detects packets 2 coming off cellophaning machine 3 are inserted successively into all of pockets 23, motor 35 of carriage 36 is left idle, and only motor 39 is operated to keep carriage 36 stationary in its set position along guide 34 and only rotate wheel 38 about axis 40. Wheel 38 is kept in time with output conveyor 5 and input conveyor 8, so that each packet 2 travelling along output conveyor 5 inside a relative pocket 23 engages a relative pocket 41 on wheel 38 at the point of tangency between wheel 38 and bottom branch 22 of output conveyor 5. Since, as shown in the attached drawing, each pocket 23 is detached from flexible retaining member 44 at the point of tangency with wheel 38, and since pockets 23 have no retaining members or devices for retaining relative packets 2, each packet 2 is transferred by gravity from relative pocket 23 to relative pocket 41 at said point of tangency, and is again transferred by gravity from relative pocket 41 to relative pocket 32 at the point of tangency between top branch 29 and wheel 38.
Conversely, if a void, i.e. an empty pocket 23, is detected along output conveyor 5, sensor 46 memorizes the location of the void and, as the void approaches the point of tangency with wheel 38, stops motor 39 and starts motor 35 to connect carriage 36 to top branch 29 of input conveyor 8 and move said point of tangency up to the next occupied pocket 23. At this point, motor 35 is stopped, and motor 39 is started again to continue transfer at the new point of tangency, thus compensating for the void and ensuring all the pockets 32 downstream from wheel 38 along top branch 29 of input conveyor 8 are filled.
Obviously, if there are a number of consecutive voids along bottom branch 22 of output conveyor 5, carriage 36 is moved, with wheel 38 stationary and at speed V2, leftwards in the drawing and is stopped in front of the first next occupied pocket 23.
If carriage 36 is moved too far to the left for further successive voids to be compensated, or if so decided by the operator or a control program, the non-compensated voids are transferred successively to top branch 29. Just before or just after the voids are transferred to top branch 29, carriage 36 is moved rightwards, with wheel 38 stationary and at speed V1, to create, along top branch 29, further voids adjacent to those not compensated, and to form, on top branch 29, a total number of K consecutive voids, where K is the number of packets 2 forming a carton (not shown) formed on cartoning machine 6.
In other words, leftward movement of carriage 36 at speed V2 is equal in length to the same number of spaces between pockets 23 as the number of detected empty pockets 23; whereas rightward movement at speed V1 is equal in length to such a number of spaces between pockets 32 as to form, on top branch 29, a group of K consecutive empty pockets 32 in time with cartoning machine 6.
The sequence of K consecutive voids fed to cartoning machine 6 must obviously be in time with cartoning machine 6 to allow carriage 36 to move rightwards along guide 34 back into at least a central position along guide 34, and also to allow cartoning machine 6 to perform a complete no-load cycle without generating any rejects.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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B02005A 000335 | May 2005 | IT | national |