Not applicable.
The terms “air/vacuum”, and ““vacuum/air” and “air/vacuum stream”, etc. are used synonymously and interchangeably herein to denote a moving stream of air, at sub-atmospheric pressure, drawn by a vacuum pump. Such moving “air/vacuum” streams are conventionally used to convey granular plastic resin material in facilities in which the granular plastic resin is molded or extruded into finished or semi-finished plastic parts.
“Receiver” is a term used in the plastics industry to denote devices that temporarily hold granular plastic resin material before that granular plastic resin material is loaded into a hopper for subsequent processing by a compression or injection molding press or an extruder. As used herein, the term “process machine” denotes collectively such compression molding machines, injection molding machines and extruders.
Receivers typically include a vacuum chamber that effectively pulls granular plastic resin material into the receiver due to the vacuum that exists within the vacuum chamber. A vacuum pump is connected to the receiver to create the vacuum required within the vacuum chamber to pull granular plastic material into the receiver. This facilitates moving the granular plastic resin material from a remote location to a hopper, to be fed by the receiver, with the hopper being typically located over a process machine. The receiver and the vacuum pump are typically part of a larger resin conveying system that conveys the granular plastic resin from a supply to the receiver.
Receivers may be located over surge bins or over other temporary storage units in addition to hoppers.
Receivers load in cycles. Specifically, the receiver loads with granular plastic resin material and then dumps the granular plastic resin material as one operating cycle. Accordingly, the receiver requires some sort of a collection bin or surge hopper below the receiver to receive the granular plastic resin material as it is fed to the process machine.
Typically the vacuum source is remote, namely it is not integrated into the receiver itself. The receiver, in its most simple, elementary form, is a simple chamber that has a vacuum line connected to it to pull air from the chamber to create a vacuum inside the chamber. The vacuum then draws granular plastic resin material into the chamber portion of the receiver. The receiver accordingly has a material line connected to it for granular plastic resin material to flow in or, more accurately, to be pulled in by the vacuum, into the chamber portion of the receiver. The receiver typically has a valve or gate at the bottom of the receiver to allow the granular plastic resin material to drop out of the bottom of the receiver when the vacuum is broken or removed or when the valve or gate is otherwise opened electrically or pneumatically. Since the receiver has a storage area with a relatively large volume and cross-sectional area relative to the conduit through which the air/vacuum and granular material mixture travels, when the mixture reaches the receiver storage area, speed of the moving air/volume stream drops. The kinetic energy of the stream is no longer sufficient to carry the granular resin, so the resin falls to the bottom of the receiver.
All known receivers have these characteristics in common.
An important characteristic of the inventive low profile receiver is the very low profile the receiver offers when installed. Process machines often have a number of auxiliary items mounted above the throats of the process machines. These may include magnetic drawers; additive feeders; simple material hoppers; large drying hoppers; gravimetric blenders; and other devices. A receiver is typically mounted on top of this collection of equipment. Such a stack-up of items may interfere with overhead restrictions or limitations such as the ceiling or a mezzanine in a plastics processing facility. Access to the receiver for service may also be a problem. Safety issues arise with excessive height.
In the low profile receiver according to the invention, in one configuration the receiver adds only 7 inches of height. This is to be contrasted to current receiver designs that require from 15 to 25 inches of added height due to their configuration.
The low profile receiver of the invention includes a filter blow off, which clears the entire filter effectively. The cleaning is so effective that it virtually eliminates periodic filter cleaning that is required by conventional filter blow off designs in known receivers.
True full range cloth filters, when used in conventional receivers always clog, and accordingly, conventional receivers most often use only metal screens for filters. The metal screen stops the granular resin material pellets, but does not stop or catch dust and fines. The passage of dust and fines requires an additional filter at the vacuum pump to catch the dust and the fines which otherwise would damage the vacuum pump.
The low profile receiver of the invention includes a full cloth filter that stops dust and fines; the full cloth filter is easily cleaned every cycle by the filter blow off device.
In one of its aspects, this invention provides a receiver having a horizontally elongated body with an interior chamber. A horizontal granular plastic material inlet conduit communicates with the interior chamber of the elongated body. A horizontal vacuum outlet conduit connects to the elongated body. A removable dust and material fines, preferably cloth, filter is positioned between the inlet and outlet conduits and collects dust and material fines before the dust and material fines can enter the vacuum outlet conduit leading to the vacuum pump. With the cloth filter catching the dust and material fines, no filter is required at the vacuum pump.
The receiver further includes a blaster for directing an air blast at the filter in order to clean the filter of retained dust and material fines. An outlet dump flap extends the longitudinal length of a lower extremity of the longitudinally elongated housing portion of the receiver in which the granular resin material is stored. The outlet dump flap is movable between an open position at which granular plastic material in the housing can flow freely downwardly out of the housing, and a closed position at which the dump flap defines a part of the bottom of the chamber. With the dump flap extending the horizontal longitudinal length of the housing, the housing empties essentially instantaneously when the dump flap moves to the open position. As a result, the receiver empties much faster than know receivers.
The receiver body is preferably wider than it is high and preferably has a generally convex triangular transverse cross-section.
In yet another one of its aspects, this invention provides a method for temporary storage of granular resin material prior to processing thereof into a finished or semi-finished product by molding or extrusion. The method includes feeding an air/vacuum stream carrying the granular resin material in a first horizontal direction into a chamber under vacuum. The method proceeds by reducing velocity of the air/vacuum stream in the chamber, thereby causing granular material entrained the stream to fall to the chamber bottom. The method proceeds with passing the stream in a second horizontal direction through a filter and releasing the stream from the chamber in the first horizontal direction. A flap defining a bottom of the chamber swings to an open position in response to the weight of the material, permitting granular material to fall from the chamber.
In still another one of its aspects, this invention provides a receiver that has a longitudinally elongated body having an interior chamber extending the length of the body. A horizontal conduit is provided for inlet of an air/vacuum stream carrying granular resin material and communicating with the interior chamber of the elongated body. A horizontal air/vacuum outlet conduit is connected to the interior chamber of the elongated body. A dump flap extends horizontally along a lower extremity of the interior chamber and is movable between an open position at which granular plastic material in the chamber can flow freely downwardly out of the chamber, and a closed position at which the flap defines a bottom portion of the chamber.
In this aspect of the invention, the receiver has a dump flap extending the horizontal length of the chamber interior and further includes a dust and material fines filter between the inlet and outlet conduits for collecting dust and material fines before entering the vacuum outlet conduit, and further includes a blaster for directing an air blast at the filter to clean the filter of retained dust and material fines. The dump flap is movable rotationally between open and closed positions; the body of the receiver is wider than it is high; the dump flap swings under the influence of gravity to a closed position when the chamber is empty; the filter is a cloth filter; the inlet for the granular plastic material is in a lateral, vertically extending surface of the receiver.
In still further portions of this aspect of the invention, the outlet for the air/vacuum stream is in the lateral surface of the receiver; the body of the receiver has a convex triangular cross-section; the chamber has at least one convex wall; the chamber is longer than it is high, and the chamber is longer than it is wide.
In yet another one of its aspects, this invention provides a method for temporary storage of granular resin material prior to processing thereof into a finished or semi-finished product by molding or extrusion, where the method includes feeding an air/vacuum stream carrying the granular resin material horizontally into a chamber under vacuum. The method proceeds with reduction of velocity of the stream in the chamber, thereby causing granular material entrained in the stream to fall to the chamber bottom. The method next continues to draw the stream from the chamber thereby maintaining vacuum in the chamber. The method may conclude by releasing the vacuum horizontally from the chamber. A flap defining a bottom of the chamber swings to an open position due to the weight of the granular material resting in the bottom of the chamber, permitting granular material resting on the flap to fall from the chamber. In this aspect of the invention, desirably the air/vacuum stream passes through a cloth filter. Most desirably, the passing of the stream through the cloth filter is performed before releasing the vacuum from the chamber. Further desirably the stream passes horizontally through a cloth filter perpendicular to the stream.
In still another one of its aspects, this invention provides a receiver having a horizontally elongated chamber, where the chamber has a convex triangular cross-section. The chamber includes a dump flap defining a bottom vertex of the triangular cross-section. A horizontal air/vacuum resin material mixture inlet connects to the chamber while a horizontal air/vacuum outlet leads from the chamber and is connected to the chamber. A modular control section is removable from the housing within which the chamber resides, and manually actuable clips releasably retain the control segment in engagement with the housing.
In still another one of its aspects, this invention provides a receiver having an longitudinally elongated body, with an interior chamber extending the length of the body. A horizontal conduit for inlet of an air/vacuum stream carrying granular resin material communicates with the interior chamber of the elongated body. A horizontal air/vacuum outlet conduit connects to the interior chamber of the elongated body. A dust and material fines filter between the inlet and outlet conduits is provided for collecting dust and material fines and is positioned for filtration of the stream before entering the vacuum outlet conduit. The receiver yet further comprises a blaster for directing an air blast at the filter, in a direction opposite to that of the vacuum/air stream when it flows through the filter, to clean the filter of retained dust and material fines, and a dump flap extending horizontally along a lower extremity of the interior chamber, where the dump flap is movable between an open position at which granular plastic material in the chamber can flow freely downwardly out of the chamber, and a closed position at which the dump flap defines a bottom portion of the chamber.
In the preferred embodiment of the receiver, the dump flap is pivotable between a closed position and a housing open position. The outlet dump flap is weighted to swing to a closed position under the force of gravity and to remain closed in response to vacuum drawn within the receiver, allowing the receiver to fill. Once the vacuum draw to the housing portion of the receiver, in which the granular resin material conveyed into the receiver by an air/vacuum stream collects, is shut off, there is no internal vacuum force retaining the receiver dump flap in the closed position. The weight of the granular resin material on the dump flap causes the dump flap to move to the open position and the granular resin material falls downwardly, out of the receiver, due to gravity.
Referring to the drawings and particularly to
A control section 17 of receiver 10 is maintained within a control section wrapper 18, where the control section wrapper 18 is illustrated in
Receiver 10 further includes a horizontal outlet line 28 via which an air/vacuum stream is drawn from receiver 10 by a vacuum pump, which is not illustrated in the drawings. In
As illustrated in
Still referring principally to
Respective left and right sides 36 of housing 20 are denoted 36L and 36R for the left and right sides of receiver 10, where the left side of receiver 10 is the side visible in
In
In
Continuing to refer to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
In
Referring to
Referring principally to
Still referring to
First compartment 110 is effectively at ambient pressure, while second compartment 112 must be maintained air tight. As such, compartment 112 is preferably fabricated by welding first and second intermediate plates 46, 48, horizontal support plate 80 and the unnumbered and unshown top plate, as well as sides which are not shown in the drawing, in order to assure air tightness of second compartment 112. Such air-tight construction is required in order for blow-back device 60, described below, to function properly.
Further visible in
Surrounding outlet line 28 is a spacer 104 held in place by a cotter pin 106 with respect to outlet line 28. Spacer 104 is preferably resilient and serves to maintain the required air tight joint where outlet line 28 passes through rear plate 52 and through front housing plate 50. Front housing plate 50 shown in
Referring to
The required air/vacuum stream is drawn through filter 22 by the action of a vacuum pump drawing the air/vacuum stream through outlet line 28. Viewing
The weight of any granular resin material residing in open interior 102 of housing 20 causes dump flap 16 to rotate to the position illustrated in
Referring to
As noted, dump flap 16 has two triangular portions, denoted 16A and 16B respectively, which are at either end of the dump flap 16. Triangular portion 16A is illustrated in
Preferably there is a three wire cable connected to the receiver control, leading to the receiver from a power unit which desirably provides power to the vacuum pump creating the vacuum to draw the air-material mixture into the receiver. Two of the wires from the power supply are preferably in the vacuum pump control, which supplies the required 24 volts to receiver. The third wire is a signal wire. When the receiver requires granular resin material and the dump flap is closed, this third wire provides power to the signal line and the microprocessor knows to turn receiver 10 on.
Each receiver 10 preferably includes such a microprocessor. Additionally, there is a microprocessor preferably provided in power unit. The microprocessor in the receiver preferably detects that the dump flap has closed and tells the power unit associated with the vacuum pump to run for a set time period, which has been previously computed and entered into the microprocessor. Otherwise receiver 10 may run until a high material level sensor in receiver 10 is covered, indicating receiver 10 is full of granular resin material. A timer portion of the microprocessor acts as a safety time-out so that receiver 10 does not run forever in the event of a blockage of granular resin material or in the event that no granular resin material is available from the source.
Housing top 42 and housing sides 36L, 36R are all curved outwardly. This outward curvature of housing top 42 and housing sides 36L, 36R resists the atmospheric pressure producing force against those sides 36L, 36R and housing top 42. The force of the atmospheric pressure tends to push the housing top 42 and housing sides 36L and 36R inwardly due to the vacuum (actually slightly sub-atmospheric pressure) present within the housing portion of receiver 10 during operation. The curved, convex shape of sides 36L, 36R and housing top 42 facilitate the small size, compact design and high capacity characteristics of receiver 10.
Dump flap 16 and particularly triangular portions 16A, 16B of dump flap 16 are configured for pivotal movement of dump flap 16 about pins 68. As noted above, the configuration and weighting of dump flap 16, and particularly the weighting of left and right triangular portions 16A, 16B and longitudinal portion 16C of dump flap 16, cause dump flap 16 to rotate into the closed position shown in
Air cylinder 14 effectively controls flow of air and the air or vacuum and resin material mixture through receiver 10. As illustrated in
During operation, as receiver 10 is receiving granular resin material entrained in the vacuum/air stream coming in through material inlet tube 12, dump flap 16 is retained in closed position due to the suction force of the vacuum pump drawing through outlet line 28. Once vacuum is shut off, either through shut off of the vacuum pump, or through actuation of air cylinder 14 closing outlet line 28 and thereby precluding further draw of vacuum through receiver 10, or if the weight of the granular resin material becomes great enough to overcome the vacuum suction tending to keep dump flap 16 in the closed position, dump flap 16 moves to an open position as dump flap 16 is forced open by the weight of resin material within receiver 10.
During operation dump flap 16 opens due to the weight of the granular resin material pellets residing within housing 20 of receiver 10 and resting on dump flap 16. Without the weight of the granular resin material, or once the granular resin material has flowed out of the receiver, the dump flap swings closed due to the force of gravity and the configuration of the dump flap, particularly the geometry of dump flap left and right triangular portions 16A, 16B, and longitudinally extending portion 16C. In the normal hanging position, dump flap 16 is closed, with the exception of a slight gap between the flap surface and the edge of the opening to the open interior 102 of housing 20.
Dump flap 16 may be held open by a pile of granular resin material when the receiver dumps a load of granular resin material onto a pile of granular resin material that has just fallen out of receiver 10 and, for example, is resident in a hopper, not shown in the drawings and not a part of receiver 10, located below dump flap 16. In such case, when granular resin material is dumped, dump flap 16 opens and the granular resin material may not have room to flow completely out of receiver 10, due to presence of the previously dumped pile(s) being immediately below receiver 10.
As granular resin material is used by an associated process machine, any granular resin material remaining in receiver 10 flows out. When the pile of previously dumped granular resin material below receiver 10 drops to a level below dump flap 16, dump flap 16 swings shut and another batch of granular resin material may be loaded into receiver 10. Vacuum pulls dump flap 16 tight to create a vacuum seal allowing the vacuum feed of an air/vacuum stream carrying granular resin material into the open interior 102 of housing 20.
In
Specifically, a vacuum/air stream carrying granular resin material enters receiver 10 via inlet tube 12 as indicated by dotted line and arrows A. The vacuum/air granular material mixture passes into the interior of housing 20, where the granular resin falls out of the vacuum/air stream in a downward direction due to the force of gravity because the air/vacuum stream, having entered a larger air space volume, namely the open interior of housing 20, is at a greatly reduced velocity from the air/vacuum stream velocity in a conduit leading to inlet tube 12.
At the lower velocity, the granules of resin material fall out of the air/vacuum stream. This flow of the granular resin material downwardly is indicated by longer dotted lines and arrow B in
A major advantage of material inlet tube 12 and outlet line 28 being horizontal, and entering and leaving receiver 10 respectively through apertures formed in vertically extending surfaces of receiver 10, results in receiver 10 having a very low height, thereby providing room for other components in a plastic resin processing facility.
As discussed above and from the foregoing description of the exemplary embodiments of the invention, it will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art to which the invention pertains that the principles and particularly the structures disclosed herein and the methods of use thereof can be used for applications other than those specifically mentioned. All such applications of the invention are intended to be covered by the appended claims unless expressly excluded therefrom.
The invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics of the invention. The disclosed embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive with the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description. All changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced therein.
As used in the claims herein, the term “comprising” means “including” while the term “consisting of” means “including so much and no more” and the term “consisting essentially of” means including the recited elements and those minor accessories required and known to be used in the art to facilitate the invention as claimed. The scope of the invention is, therefore, indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description and all changes which come within the range of equivalency of the claims are to be considered to be embraced within the scope of the claims.
This patent application is a 35 USC 120 division of co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/012,001 filed 1 Feb. 2016 in the name of Stephen B. Maguire, and published on 6 Jul. 2017 as U.S. patent publication 2017/0190518 A1. Application Ser. No. 15/012,001 is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 29/550,569 filed 5 Jan. 2016. The instant application claims the priority of the 1 Feb. 2016 filing date of the '001 application under 35 USC 120 and by virtue of such priority claim the instant application also claims the priority of the 5 Jan. 2016 filing date of co-pending application Ser. No. 29/550,569 under 35 USC 120.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2161190 | Paull | Jun 1939 | A |
3111115 | Best | Nov 1963 | A |
3115276 | Johanningmeier | Dec 1963 | A |
3209898 | Beebe et al. | Oct 1965 | A |
3348848 | Lucking et al. | Oct 1967 | A |
3470994 | Schnell et al. | Oct 1969 | A |
3486309 | Wild | Dec 1969 | A |
3570542 | Otto et al. | Mar 1971 | A |
3829165 | Boon | Aug 1974 | A |
3959636 | Johnson et al. | May 1976 | A |
3985262 | Nauta | Oct 1976 | A |
4019641 | Merz | Apr 1977 | A |
4026442 | Orton | May 1977 | A |
4108334 | Moller | Aug 1978 | A |
4148100 | Moller | Apr 1979 | A |
4194859 | Boon | Mar 1980 | A |
4219136 | Williams et al. | Aug 1980 | A |
4227893 | Shaddock | Oct 1980 | A |
4294020 | Evans | Oct 1981 | A |
4354622 | Wood | Oct 1982 | A |
4402436 | Hellgren | Sep 1983 | A |
4454943 | Moller | Jun 1984 | A |
4475672 | Whitehead | Oct 1984 | A |
4498783 | Rudolph | Feb 1985 | A |
4525071 | Horowitz et al. | Jun 1985 | A |
4564374 | Hofmann | Jan 1986 | A |
4581704 | Mitsukawa | Apr 1986 | A |
4705083 | Rossetti | Nov 1987 | A |
4756348 | Moller | Jul 1988 | A |
4793711 | Ohlson | Dec 1988 | A |
4830508 | Higuchi et al. | May 1989 | A |
4848534 | Sandwall | Jul 1989 | A |
4850703 | Hanaoka et al. | Jul 1989 | A |
5110521 | Moller | May 1992 | A |
5116547 | Tsukahara et al. | May 1992 | A |
5132897 | Allenberg | Jul 1992 | A |
5143166 | Hough | Sep 1992 | A |
5147152 | Link | Sep 1992 | A |
5148943 | Moller | Sep 1992 | A |
D331248 | Yeh | Nov 1992 | S |
5172489 | Moller | Dec 1992 | A |
5178652 | Huttlin | Jan 1993 | A |
5180407 | DeMarco | Jan 1993 | A |
5225210 | Shimoda | Jul 1993 | A |
5252008 | May, III et al. | Oct 1993 | A |
5261743 | Moller | Nov 1993 | A |
5285930 | Nielsen | Feb 1994 | A |
5340949 | Fujimura et al. | Aug 1994 | A |
5341961 | Hausam | Aug 1994 | A |
5423455 | Ricciardi et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
5651401 | Cados | Jul 1997 | A |
5843513 | Wilke et al. | Jan 1998 | A |
5767453 | Wakou et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
5767455 | Mosher | Jun 1998 | A |
5780779 | Kitamura et al. | Jul 1998 | A |
5791830 | Fort et al. | Aug 1998 | A |
5884654 | Oike | Mar 1999 | A |
6068429 | Schultheis | May 2000 | A |
6089794 | Maguire | Jul 2000 | A |
6152656 | Curtis et al. | Nov 2000 | A |
6364579 | Gerber | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6379086 | Goth | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6413020 | Davison | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6486481 | Tigera | Nov 2002 | B1 |
6638344 | Horton et al. | Oct 2003 | B2 |
6936085 | DeMarco | Aug 2005 | B2 |
7066689 | Maguire | Jun 2006 | B2 |
7407346 | McConnell | Aug 2008 | B2 |
7459003 | Crockett et al. | Dec 2008 | B2 |
7550023 | Schuster et al. | Jun 2009 | B2 |
8070844 | Maguire | Dec 2011 | B2 |
D651623 | Stillwell | Jan 2012 | S |
D696318 | Ludwick | Dec 2013 | S |
8753432 | Maguire | Jun 2014 | B2 |
D726793 | von Wyl | Apr 2015 | S |
D736281 | Phillips | Aug 2015 | S |
D781358 | Pichler | Mar 2017 | S |
20020190146 | Irwin | Dec 2002 | A1 |
20050039816 | Maguire | Feb 2005 | A1 |
20050120881 | Sporre et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20060086070 | Althouse et al. | Apr 2006 | A1 |
20060093444 | McConnell | May 2006 | A1 |
20060147278 | Boring et al. | Jul 2006 | A1 |
20070039290 | Lee | Feb 2007 | A1 |
20110229276 | Eder | Sep 2011 | A1 |
20120160866 | Maguire | Jun 2012 | A1 |
20120301230 | Marchesini | Nov 2012 | A1 |
20140201944 | Maguire | Jul 2014 | A1 |
20140205386 | Maguire | Jul 2014 | A1 |
20150110565 | Harris | Apr 2015 | A1 |
20160122137 | Schilling | May 2016 | A1 |
20160214793 | Maguire | Jul 2016 | A1 |
20160280473 | Veselov | Sep 2016 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
3541532 | May 1986 | DE |
3923241 | Jan 1991 | DE |
4323295 | Feb 1995 | DE |
0507689 | Oct 1982 | EP |
0318170 | May 1989 | EP |
0587085 | Mar 1994 | EP |
0743149 | Nov 1996 | EP |
2109840 | May 1972 | FR |
2235775 | Jul 1974 | FR |
2517087 | May 1983 | FR |
2081687 | Feb 1982 | GB |
01-235604 | Sep 1989 | JP |
04-201522 | Jul 1992 | JP |
06-114834 | Apr 1994 | JP |
11-320610 | Nov 1999 | JP |
10-2014-0085858 | Jul 2014 | KR |
10-1576702 | Dec 2015 | KR |
Entry |
---|
Brochure entitled “Plastic Molders and Extruders: published by Maguire Products, Inc., 1995”. |
Five page brochure entitled “Blending power: GXB Blender the Better Alternative” of Mould-Tek, circa 1998. |
Two page brochure entitled “Mould-Tek Bulk Handling Systems” published by Mould-Tek Industries, Inc. in Canada, circa 1993. |
Advertisement entitled “Machinery and Systems for Extrusion is Our Only Business” by Process Control Corporation, circa 1993. |
Advertisement entitled “Weigh Blender Delivers Unmatched Accuracy” by Universal Dynamics, Inc., circa 1993. |
Advertisement entitled “A Full Line-up of Blender Solutions . . . Priced Right” by HydReclaim, circa 1993. |
Advertisement entitled “New From HydReclaim—Now Processors Can Economically Achieve Continuous Gravimetric Blending” by HydReclaim, circa 1993. |
Article entitled “Control Loading Systems” from Plastics Technology, Oct. 1995, p. 41. |
Advertisement “Introducing our 400 VME-II Gravimetric Blender” by HydReclaim Corporation, circa 1993. |
Four page brochure entitled “Gravimix Better Quality through Research”, circa 1993. |
Four page brochure entitled “Conomix Plus Volumetric Blender” dated Aug. 1993. |
Four page brochure entitled “Conair Franklin Autocolor Y Mezclador” dated Mar. 1995. |
Two-sided flyer entitled “GB 140 Series Compact Auto Weigh Blender” published by Conair Franklin in the United States, Jun. 1994. |
Six page brochure entitled “Piovan Gravimetric Blenders MDW” published by Piovan Sri, Oct. 1993, Venezia, Italy. |
Four page brochure entitled “When you Weigh it All Up . . . ” published by Ferlin Trading, Holland, circa 1993. |
Thirty-two page color catalog entitled “Maguire Color Blending Equipment” published by Maguire Products, Inc., 1993. |
Sheet of 2 photographs of Mould-Tek gravimetric blender, circa 1993. |
Sheet of 2 photographs of Motan gravimetric blender and feeding system with Maguire Products, Inc. controls, circa 1993. |
Sheet of 3 photographs of UNA-DYN gravimetric blender, circa 1993. |
Sheet of 2 photographs of Maguire Products, Inc. gravimetric blender with Conair hoppers and feeding system, circa 1993. |
Sheet of 1 photograph of Hydracolor gravimetric blender, circa 1993. |
Two-sided flyer entitled “Gravimix, The New Gravimetric Blending Generation” published by Ferlin, De demsvaard, Holland, circa 1993. |
Two-sided color brochure entitled “Convey, Blend, Dry” published by Novatec, Inc., undated. |
Three page two-sided color brochure entitled “Accuracy, flexibility and performance are at your fingertips with ConveyPacer III Series “S” Controller” of Mould-tek, 1999. |
Seven page two-sided color brochure plus cover entitled “Exac-U-Batch Series Weigh Scale Blenders: Engineered to be the ultimate blend of precision and control!” of Mould-tek, 2000. |
Three page two-sided color brochure entitled “We have the building blocks to integrate your entire plastics bulk handling system.” of Mould-tek, 1999. |
Four page two-sided color brochure entitled AEC Whitlock: Vacuum Conveying Systems: VacTrac™ Series of AEC, Inc., 1991. |
One page color brochure entitled “AEC Engineering What's Next: One Touch. Two Wires. Total Control.” of AEC, Inc., 2000. |
One page two-sided color brochure entitled Vactrac™ Series Vacuum Conveying Controls of AEC, Inc., 2000. |
One page two-sided color brochure entitled “Vacuum Conveying Systems: VacTrac™ Series 8-Station SMART™ Control” of AEC, Inc., 1997. |
Two page two-sided color brochure entitled “Model GXB-2202 Exac-U-Batch Gravimetric Scale Blender: Accurate weigh scale blending under precise computer control” of Mould-tek, 2000. |
Forty-four page two-sided brochure including cover and back pages entitled “Maguire: Auxiliary equipment for the plastics industry” of Maguire Products, Inc., Oct. 2000. |
Two page two-sided color brochure entitled “WDMR Series Compact Dryers” of AEC Whitlock, 1998. |
Two page two-sided color reprint entitled “10 most frequently asked questions about Dryers” by Joseph Dziediz, AEC/Whitlock, from Plastics Technology, Jan. 1998. |
Two page two-sided color brochure entitled “Drying Systems: WD Series High Capacity Dehumidifying Dryers” of AEC Whitlock, 1997. |
Three page two-sided color brochure entitled “Portable Drying and Conveying Systems: Nomad™ Series Portable Dryers”, AEC Whitlock, 1998. |
Two page two-sided color brochure entitled “Drying Systems: WD Series Dehumidifying Dryers” of AEC Whitlock, 1997. |
Five page two-sided color brochure entitled “AEC Auxiliaries as Primary”, AEC, Inc., 1999. |
19 page document entitled “Model MLS—Clear Vu Eight Component Vacuum Loading System: Operation Manual” of Maguire Products, Inc. dated May 4, 1999. |
One page two-sided color brochure entitled “Maguire Clear-Vu™ Loading System” of Maguire Products, Inc. |
Eight page two-sided color brochure entitled “Novatec Inc. Material Conveying Solutions for the Plastics Industry”, 1999. |
Two page two-sided color brochure entitled Maguire Model MPM Pre-Mixers of Maguire Products, Inc., Apr. 1997. |
One page, two-sided color brochure entitled “Bulk handling power: the manufacturer of the world's most advanced blender gives you the same performance in bulk handling systems” of Mould-Tek, dated Apr. 1999. |
Instructions for the Model GVL Glass-Vu Loader, Model: GVL-10, Maguire Products Inc., Oct. 6, 2009 (15 pages). |
Model MLS Clear Vu® Eight Component Vacuum Loading System, Installation-Operation-Maintenance, Maguire Products, Inc., Jul. 25, 2010 (30 pages). |
MPL Series—ML Series® Venturi Loaders Instruction Manual, Maguire Products, Inc., Aug. 9, 2010 (23 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20180079603 A1 | Mar 2018 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 15012001 | Feb 2016 | US |
Child | 15827724 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 29550569 | Jan 2016 | US |
Child | 15012001 | US |