The present application claims priority to PCT International Application No. PCT/IB2015/058272 filed on Oct. 27, 2015, which application claims priority to Italian Patent Application No. BO2014A000606 filed Oct. 31, 2014, the entirety of the disclosures of which are expressly incorporated herein by reference.
Not Applicable.
The invention concerns a packaging machine with a horizontal-axis carousel, which falls within International Classification B65B11/28, particularly suitable for packaging rolls of paper, or stacks or packs of paper serviettes, or other solid products of variable size, the machine being equipped for this purpose with means to enable rapid and simplified adjustment of the dimensions of the seats of the carousel, to adapt them to the variable sizes of the products to be packaged.
It should be noted that in the definition of the seat of the carousel, the term ‘longitudinal walls’ will be use to referred to the walls opposite to each other and parallel to the axis of the carousel, designed to support the product laterally and the distance between which varies with the diameter or height of the product, while the term ‘transverse walls’ will be use to referred to those perpendicular to the axis of the carousel, usually positioned between said longitudinal walls, designed to cooperate with the ends of the product and the distance between which varies with the length of the product.
Patent EP 165.204 is cited as known state of the art. This patent describes a carousel provided with seats with one of the longitudinal walls fixed and the other oscillating on an axis parallel to that of the carousel and therefore easily adaptable to products of variable width, and provided with opposite transverse walls, of which the certain ones, are supported by a secondary carousel internally facing the main one and mounted on a shaft coaxial with and inside that of the main carousel and which can be made to slide axially upon command, while the outer transverse walls are supported by telescopic arms that longitudinally carry a pinion mechanism with two opposed racks. One of these racks is integral at the end of said telescopic arm with the outer transverse wall, while the other rack is connected to said secondary carousel. To reduce the distance between said two transverse walls of the seats, it is necessary to axially move the secondary carousel away from the main one for the inner transverse wall to approach the outer one, which is automatically moved towards the inner transverse wall by said rack and pinion mechanism, with an equal and self-centring displacement. In this solution, the machine's zero reference is constituted by the transverse centre-line plane of the seats of the carousel, with respect to which the centre line of the reel from which the packaging material is unwound must be kept longitudinally aligned, and so the support means of the reel must also be equipped with systems for the self-centring positioning of the reel.
Packaging machines are also known of the type described, for example, in British Patent GB 527 982, in which the transverse walls of the seats that are internal and close to the carousel are kept fixed, while as the length of the product to be packaged varies, the distance between said inner transverse walls and the outside ones is varied, the latter being associated with common support means for this purpose, for example a secondary carousel, such that by modifying its axial distance from the main carousel that supports the longitudinal walls and the fixed, inner transverse ones of the seats, it is possible to adapt the internal dimensions of the seats to the changes in length of the products to be packaged. In this last case, the machine's zero reference is constituted by said inner transverse walls of the seats, with respect to which the side of the reel of packaging material facing the main carousel is kept fixed.
The publications of patent applications JP 2003/128005 A and EP 0 888 968 A are also cited as known state of the art.
All of the known solutions considered above have strengths and weaknesses, but all have drawbacks of limited accessibility to the seats from the inside and from the other side of the main carousel, are constructively complex and do not have seats than can be adjusted in a simple, rapid, precise and centralized manner, nor modular characteristics that, as well as rendering production of the machine more economic, allow them to be easily set up for clockwise or anticlockwise rotation of the carousel, with product unloading to the right or to the left of the carousel, according to the user's lay-out requirements.
The invention intends to overcome the limits of the known art with a horizontal-axis carousel packer, particularly for packaging rolls or packs or stacks of paper serviettes or other products of variable size, the characteristics and advantages of which will become clear from the following description of a preferred embodiment, shown by way of non-limitative example in the figures of the seven accompanying sheets of drawings.
From
The reel 6 of flexible packaging material, usually a heat-sealable film of width related to the length of the products P, is arranged to the left of the conveyor 3 with its axis parallel to that of the carousel 2. The reel 6 has its left side Z is in a fixed position closely correlated to that of end stop 4 or equivalent feed means of the product P and the table of the carousel 2, which, taken together, form the ‘zero’ reference of the packaging machine. The film 106 unwound from the reel 6 is conveyed, by known means schematically indicated by R in
From
From
Since the height of the feed conveyor 3 should preferably remain unchanged, to simplify adjustment of the size of the seats S as the size of the product P to be packaged varies, provision has been made such that walls 7 of the seats are fixed and walls 7′ are adjustable in their distance from walls 7, so that when wall 7 of a seat laterally reaches conveyor 3, it is always aligned to be coplanar with the active surface of the conveyor, whatever the size of the products P to be packaged. Since the discharge conveyor 18 of packaged products must also preferably remain with a fixed height position as the size of the products varies and because the seats S reach the corresponding station at the three o'clock position, with the lower wall 7′ varying its height as the size of the product changes, provision has been made that the longitudinal structure 19 of the final folding and sealing device T is mounted with the possibility of oscillating its end next to the discharge conveyor 18 about a transverse axis 20 and is connected to raising and lowering means 21, controllable manually or in a semi-automatic or automatic manner, to be able to align the active surface of the transfer means 13 of the apparatus T each time to be coplanar with wall 7′ of the seat S in the unloading step.
For the above reasons regarding the zero reference Z of the machine, as the length of the products P varies, the position of the transverse walls 8′ of the seats S, those closest to the platform of the carousel 2, does not change, while it must be possible to adjust the distance of these from the opposite transverse walls 8.
In the description that follows, it is illustrated how by acting on two different points of any of the four seats S of the carousel, located in a convenient position for the operator, it is possible to perform said adjustments of the distance between walls 7, 7′ and between walls 8, 8′ of all the seats S of the carousel 2 in a centralized, rapid and precise manner to adapt them to the variations in size of the products P.
In
A small bracket 28, fastened with screws to the outer face of the wall 7 that is closest to the carousel's axis, which is parallel to axis 102 and not far from the table 22 of the carousel 2, projects towards the inner space of the seat S and carries, on the protruding part, a perpendicularly fastened appendage 29 that enters the seat S and which supports the fixed inner transverse wall 8′ of the seat S, provided with an internal projection 108′ to correctly halt the product P inserted into the seat S. The transverse wall 8 of the seat S, the distance of which from said fixed transverse wall 8′ must be adjustable as the length of the product P varies, and which is also provided with an internal projection 108 aligned with internal projection 108′ for correctly halting the product P inserted into the seat S, is fixed on the appendage 30 of a small bracket 31 next to previously mentioned bracket 28, but which unlike the latter carries a slide 32 on its foot that is parallel to the axis 102 of the carousel 2 and which slides on a small rectilinear guide 33 fastened with screws on the outer face of the fixed wall 7 of the seat S. Bracket 31 carries a short appendage 34, fixed laterally and extending towards the carousel's axis, which supports an internal thread 35 cooperating with a screw 36, also parallel to the axis 102 of the carousel and rotationally supported at one end by a support 37 fastened on the neutral zone of the end facing wall 7, where the screw 36 has a head 136 for rotation, while the other end of the same screw 36 passes through a bushing 38 supported, for example, by the carousel table 22 or by another component described further on, and emerges at the back of the table 22 with a segment on which a pinion 39 is fitted. It is clear from
It is understood that the scope of the invention also covers the implementational variant whereby the screws 36, 36′, 36″ and 36′″ can each be equipped with two segments having reverse threads, one of which is reserved for the movement of transverse walls 8, while the other can be assigned to the self-centring movement of transverse wall 8′ should this also be made movable with internal thread and guide/slide means similar to those serving said movable transverse wall 8. In this case, it is clear that as the length of the products P changes, the position of the end stop 4 (indicated in
It can be noted in
The transfer boxes 48, 48′, 48″, 48′″ are placed on the inner side of the foot 123 of each fixed bracket 23 that carries the fixed longitudinal wall 7 of each of the four seats S, this foot 123 also carrying a rotatably mounted control rod 49 that has an outwardly pointing head, with a recessed hexagonal shape for example, and is connected to a drive output of the respective bevel gearbox 48, 48′, 48″, 48″, all so that by acting on any head of the four control rods 49, 49′, 49″, 49′″ that is in the most convenient position for the operator, the operator can simultaneously and rapidly adjust the distance between the movable wall 7′ and the associated fixed longitudinal wall 7 of all four seats S of the carousel 2 with precision and by the same amount.
By observing the various drawings in
As mentioned at the beginning of this description, one of the objects of the invention is to ensure that the carousel can be set up for loading from the left, with unloading on the right, or, having the carousel always pointing with its face with the seats S in the same direction in space, ensure that the same carousel can be set up for loading from the right and unloading on the left, as shown in
It is understood that carousel machines with a number of seats other than four and that use the innovative solutions set forth herein also fall within the scope of the invention. Finally, it is understood that the description refers to a preferred embodiment of the invention, to which numerous variants and constructional changes may be applied, all without departing from the guiding principle of the invention, as described, illustrated and hereinafter claimed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2014A0606 | Oct 2014 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2015/058272 | 10/27/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2016/067195 | 5/6/2016 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4509310 | Focke | Apr 1985 | A |
4790115 | Focke | Dec 1988 | A |
4909020 | Focke | Mar 1990 | A |
5775063 | Ikai | Jul 1998 | A |
6067780 | Gentili | May 2000 | A |
6098371 | Cassoli | Aug 2000 | A |
8568080 | Paganini | Oct 2013 | B2 |
20020116895 | Antoniazzi | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20090025337 | Skarin | Jan 2009 | A1 |
20100107559 | Schroeder | May 2010 | A1 |
20140033657 | Cere' | Feb 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 165 204 | Dec 1985 | EP |
0 888 968 | Jan 1999 | EP |
527 982 | Oct 1940 | GB |
2003 128005 | May 2003 | JP |
Entry |
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International Search Report for International Application No. PCT/IB2015/058272, dated Feb. 4, 2016, 5 pages. |
Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority for International Application No. PCT/IB2015/058272, dated Feb. 4, 2016, 7 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170225810 A1 | Aug 2017 | US |