The present invention relates to ticket dispensing machines, and more particularly to a ticket dispensing machine for handling tickets of unconventional shapes and sizes.
More and more instant lottery tickets are sold in automatic vending machines. Usually, the instant tickets are printed on a long strip, which may be fan-folded, and the individual tickets are separated by perforations. The ticket width typically varies from 2 to 4 inches and the length typically varies from 2 to 12 inches. However, “die cut” tickets which have irregular shapes are becoming increasingly popular.
During the ticket delivery process, the perforation must be placed very accurately under a cutting or separating system that will burst the perforation and send a single ticket to the presentation stage, such as a bin that allows a purchaser to retrieve a purchased ticket through a window, for example.
The exact movement of the ticket depends on the diameter of the feed roller as well as the friction of the drive roller system.
In performing the above functions, there is typically an optical sensor device located at or near position B in
Whether used on the ticket exit side, ticket entry side, or both, optical sensor pairs are highly affected by dust and dirt and are traditionally only used at one location on the entry and exit sides. Further, if a die cut (e.g., not rectangular-shaped) ticket is used, then the sensor will not always sense the presence of a ticket and the controller will sense an error. Ticket processing errors can results in improperly cut tickets, ticket jams and machine shut downs while repairs take place. All such events result in lost revenue from the machine.
In addition to the problems caused by fixed point location of optical sensor pairs, ticket burster machines suffer when attempting to process tickets of different thicknesses. Tickets for a single game may traditionally have nearly the identical thickness, but ticket dispensing machines are being required to process tickets of all shapes, sizes and thicknesses. As stated above, to dispense a ticket, it has to be transported between one or more pairs of rollers. The force between the feed roller pair and/or exit roller pair is called the nip force. The distance between the rollers is fixed, which works very well if only one thickness of ticket is used. However, since tickets can range from 0.006″ to 0.012″ (and pull-tab tickets may even be up to 0.025 inches in some places), traditional systems with fixed roller distances create many problems.
A further issue with maintaining the proper nip force is created by the use of rubber material on the rollers, since this material is susceptible to wear and tear that can reduce its thickness over time, which can change the distance between rollers and thereby compromise the nip force of the rollers.
Further, current ticket bursters suffer from the inability to keep tickets of different shapes and sizes in properly aligned format as they enter the machine. If a die-cut ticket happens to be rotated off the normal plane to the point of ticket entry in the burster machine, the cutter/burster element will not properly align with the ticket perforation, causing uneven ticket cuts and requiring that the machine be shut down.
Even further, the machine of the present invention is typically employed as part of a larger, commercial size ticket dispensing machine. In many cases, four (4) machines are aligned next to each other within the commercial machine so as to facilitate different tickets being offered by the same machine. At times, one or more individual burster machines must be removed and reinstalled for various reasons, typically for field service repair or maintenance. Typically with four machine (i.e., “quad” burster) assemblies, the four ticket bins are connected by a common frame and common drive system, and require a cable to be connected after installation to supply power and communication. To remove the quad burster, one is required to remove screws and lift away the four bins as an integrated assembly, which can be cumbersome. Also, because the four bins are inseparable, the failure of one bin will result in the failure of the remaining three bins. These and other problems are addressed by the present invention.
The present invention provides several improvements over past perforated ticket dispensing machines. The present invention provides, among other things, an independently operable and serviceable ticket burster machine that properly handles tickets of all shapes, sizes and thicknesses. The present invention includes a ticket burster element, an exit sensor with a mechanical flag switch, an inventory flag spanning the entire width of the ticket input slot and having an optical slot switch, a slidable ticket guide, one or more leaf spring arrangements, a moving wall ticket discharge facilitator and versatile and durable rollers.
The exit sensor incorporates a mechanical flag switch that is activated by the ticket media that needs to be detected. In one embodiment of the present invention, the flag switch covers the entire width of the machine. To sense the position of the flag, a Hall effect sensor can be used. The Hall effect sensor is activated by a magnetic field. The magnetic system of the exit flag includes a small magnet attached to the flag, a magnetic conductor attached to the edge of the ticket machine frame, and a Hall effect sensor attached to the ticket machine frame. The magnetic conductor helps with providing a definitive tripping point for the Hall effect sensor, which operates in a binary mode, i.e., with one output that indicates there is a magnetic connection and another output that indicates the lack thereof.
When there is no ticket in the path, the magnet is held by the magnetic force to the magnetic conductor, and the Hall sensor senses a strong magnetic field. When the moving ticket hits the exit sensor flag, it is “kicked” open. This interrupts the magnetic circuit, and once the magnet is a preferred distance (e.g., approximately 0.05 inches) away from the magnetic conductor, the Hall sensor changes its state because the magnetic field drops below the threshold of the Hall sensor. With the present invention, since a magnetic field is used, dirt and dust will have no effect on the function of the exit sensor. Further, since the flag covers the entire exit slot opening of the machine, any die cut ticket will activate the sensor. Even further, since the flag is a mechanical sensor, the ticket material has no effect. Even a soft plastic material will activate the sensor.
The present invention further provides an exit sensor flag that can reach between the exit drive and exit idler roller (inside of the frame toward the exit roller nip point). As such, it is capable of sensing tickets that are curled much more effectively. The closer the ticket can be sensed to the nip, the less it will be affected by curling. Also because there is no obstruction under the roller, the ticket can not hang up and is free to fall.
Another aspect of the present invention incorporates an inventory flag, which can “pre-nip” a ticket during the loading process and also will signal to the controller that the ticket bin still has tickets that can be dispensed. Traditionally, these inventory sensors are only checking one point (similar to the exit sensor), which creates a problem when die cut tickets are used. In one embodiment of the present invention, the inventory flag covers the entire width of the input slot of the machine. As such, any die cut ticket can be sensed. In one embodiment of the present invention, the position of the inventory flag is sensed by an optical slot switch. To make sure the inventory flag will not scratch the ticket, a very light contact force is required. This can be achieved in one embodiment of the present invention by constructing the inventory flag with a center of gravity having a very slight upwards force, so that the edge of the inventory flag on the ticket exit side is higher than the edge of the inventory flag on the ticket input side. The inventory flag can be secured to the inside walls of the machine frame by pivot attachment or cam attachment, for example.
The present invention further provides the ability to maintain high compliance regardless of the thickness of the ticket substrate being processed. The present invention accomplishes this, in part, through the use of a leaf spring arrangement that accommodates media of different sizes and thicknesses. A leaf spring is in contact with both the feed and the exit idler roller shaft. The fixed point of the leaf spring can be offset to give the feed roller more downward force. This is done by securing a spring guide to the inside of the frame at a position closer to the feed rollers than the exit rollers.
In addition to the above, the frame of the present invention can be independently inserted into and retrieved out of a larger ticket dispensing machine. As a result, the removal and installation of each bin is done separately, without the use of tools and without any secondary power cables. The single bin burster is easy to remove, and is relatively light weight such that it can be serviced and inspected quickly. Further, a moving wall can be secured to the larger ticket dispensing machine such that, when a ticket exits any ticket burster within the dispensing machine, it will be guided by the moving wall downwardly into the ticket bin.
The present invention further provides a ticket guide attached to the outside of the frame on the input slot side. The ticket guide is adapted for sliding movement along a horizontal plane and biased in the shut position such that tickets of variable widths can be securely guided with adequate pressure on both sides as they are processed through the machine. Tickets of varying widths can thus be processed with the ticket guide opening as much as necessary to accommodate the width of the ticket. This assists in maintaining proper ticket alignment during processing, which helps eliminate improper cuts and machine shut down.
The ticket burster machine of the present invention provides for controlled delivery of perforated ticket products. As shown in
The frame includes first 46 and second 48 side walls and can further include a back wall 50. The first side wall 46 has an inner 52 and outer 54 surface. The second side wall 48 also has an inner 56 and outer 58 surface. The back wall also has an inner surface 59 and outer surface 60. The inner surfaces of the first side wall 46, second side wall 48 and back wall 50, respectively, define the frame interior 64. A top member 61 also helps define the frame interior.
The ticket burster machine of the present invention includes drive means for driving tickets through the machine. In one embodiment of the present invention, the drive means includes the pair of feed rollers 34, 36 and the pair of exit rollers 38, 40. The drive means can further include, for example, electrically powered motors 63, 65 that drive the feed drive roller 34 and exit drive roller 38, respectively. The feed rollers and exit rollers are driven on substantially cylindrical axles 66 that are rotatably secured at a first end 68 to the first side wall 46 and at a second end 70 to the second side wall 48. In one embodiment of the present invention, the axles 66 are maintained at their respective ends within slots 72 provided within the first 46 and second 48 side walls. In one embodiment of the invention, one or more hubs 74 are provided along the axles 66 of the feed rollers wherein the one or more hubs 74 includes a cylindrical shaft portion 76 that cooperatively mates with the axle and a radially extending head portion 78. The head portion 78 can optionally be provided with an annular groove for receiving a gripping element 82 such as a rubber ring, for example. The gripping element 82 helps to grip the tickets as they pass through the machine. In another embodiment of the present invention, the hubs 74 are not provided on the axles, but rather one or more gripping sleeves 77 are provided over the axles to assist in gripping the tickets. In one embodiment of the present invention, a series of hubs 74 is provided on each of the idler rollers and one or more gripping sleeves 77 is provided on each of the drive rollers, as shown in
One of the challenges with using a rubber compound on the rollers to create enough friction for pulling tickets through the machine is that the rubber compound will age and wear over time, which reduces its diameter and thus its gripping ability. This can also have the effect of not processing the tickets or positioning the perforation properly. In addition, the rubber compound can collect dust that is emitted every time a perforated ticket is burst. As a result, one embodiment of the present invention uses an aluminum oxide or silicon carbide surface treatment on the drive rollers. Both of these materials are very hard, and can be bonded to an aluminum cylinder (i.e., axle). Also, both materials are available in a wide variety of grain sizes. In this embodiment of the present invention, the coatings can be applied at approximately 0.01 inches in thickness. The thickness and grit of the applied material can be selected to produce high friction while improving immunity to paper dust.
In one embodiment of the present invention, one or more printed circuit boards is attached to the frame to carry out instructions provided by a processor or controller connected to the device. The instructions can be stored as part of an operating program contained in a memory accessible by the controller. In one embodiment of the present invention, the electronic communications, controller, memory, programming and printed circuit board(s) can be considered part of the drive means of the present invention.
As further shown in
As shown in
The optical sensor pair includes a transmitter and a receiver, and can sense whether the inventory flag 104 has been pressed down, indicating the entry of a ticket into the input slot 106 of the device. For instance, as shown in
The exit sensor has two functions in a ticket burster machine. First, it needs to sense the edge of a ticket so that it can precisely position the perforation for bursting. Second, it needs to sense that the ticket has been properly dispensed from the machine. Exit sensors operating with optical sensors have been described above, along with their known deficiencies. The present invention helps overcome those deficiencies by providing an exit flag arrangement including an external magnet component. As shown in
As shown in
The exit flag 114 has an inner 119 and an outer 126 surface and is pivotable from a resting position C to an extended position D (see
The Hall effect sensor 116, prior to any ticket passing through the machine, senses a strong magnetic field. When the moving ticket kicks the flag open, the Hall effect sensor senses the lack of a strong magnetic field, and thereby changes its state due to the magnetic field measurement falling below a pre-defined threshold. This change in state results in an electronic communication to the controller to note that the ticket has been properly dispensed. Since a magnetic field is employed, the existence of dust and dirt will have no effect on the operation of the exit flag arrangement of the present invention. Further, since the flag covers the entire opening between the side walls on the exit side of the device, it will be pushed open by a ticket of any shape or size, including die-cut (e.g., irregular, non-rectangular) tickets. Further, since the flag is a mechanical sensor, the ticket media material has no effect on the operation of the device.
As described above, the pair of exit rollers 38, 40 meet at an exit roller nip position 44. In one embodiment of the present invention as shown in
The leaf spring arrangement of the present invention is another element that assists in controlling the processing of tickets through the machine.
As further shown in
A leaf spring 144 engages the downward facing end portion 148 of the leaf spring guide member 142 and has first 150 and second 152 ends. The leaf spring 144 cooperatively engages the feed idler roller axle 66a at or near the leaf spring first end 150 and cooperatively engages the exit idler roller axle 66b at or near the leaf spring second end 152. In one embodiment of the present invention, leaf spring arrangements are provided on the inner surfaces 54, 56, respectively, of the first side wall 46 and the second side wall 48. This balances the load placed on the axles. In one embodiment of the present invention, one or both of the cylindrical axles (on which the rollers are mounted) includes a channel 160 therein for cooperatively engaging the first leaf spring.
As shown in
As further shown in the drawings, one embodiment of the ticket guide arrangement 170 of the present invention comprises: (1) a guide retainer element 176 secured to the back wall outer surface 60; (2) an inventory flag cover 178 secured between the first 46 and second 48 side walls, with the flag cover 178 having at least one side wall arm 180 and upper 182 and lower 184 horizontal platforms extending therefrom; and (3) a ticket guide 186 slidably engaging the guide retainer element 176, with the ticket guide 186 having a left side wall arm 188. The guide retainer element 176 includes a bottom element 300 having left and right side stop flanges (not shown), and further includes a top element 304 having front 306, back 308 and top 310 walls that define a channel 312 for receiving the ticket guide stabilizer arm 314. The ticket guide 186 includes a ticket platform 200 and further includes a ticket roller 202 secured to the left side wall arm 188. The ticket platform 200 is positioned at least partially above the lower horizontal platform 184 of the flag cover 178, and the ticket guide 186 further is secured to a guide arm 320 that is capable of engaging the left and right side stop flanges of the guide retainer element 176. The guide arm 320 is secured to a channel bar 322 that is capable of cooperatively engaging the guide retainer element channel 312.
In operation, the ticket guide 186 is slidable within the guide retainer element 176 such that the ticket platform 200 retains a position at least partially above the inventory flag cover lower platform 184 while the channel bar 322 is retained within the channel 312 of the guide retainer element 176. This helps to maintain the ticket guide in substantially horizontal position as it slides back and forth to accommodate tickets of variable widths. As tickets enter the input side of the machine, they can be securely guided with adequate pressure on both sides from the ticket guide. In combination with the leaf spring attachments, the present invention thus accommodates tickets of varying shapes, sizes, widths and thicknesses with equal adeptness.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the inventory flag cover upper platform 182 is formed with a plurality of openings 325 as shown in
In the embodiment of the present invention as shown in
The moving wall 260 can be operated as a conveyor belt oriented vertically within the media chute. As shown in
In one embodiment of this aspect of the present invention, the wall is not moved as a conveyor, but rather is shaken or vibrated, such as by an electrically powered vibration device, for example. In another embodiment of this aspect of the present invention, the belt incorporates bumps, protrusions or other elements that enhance the friction between the belt and ticket media. In a still further embodiment of this aspect of the present invention, multiple belts are employed.
The invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof The present embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the claims of the application rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced therein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2056657 | Everett | Oct 1936 | A |
3265385 | Schulze | Aug 1966 | A |
3894669 | Wescot | Jul 1975 | A |
3902677 | Wolf | Sep 1975 | A |
3997044 | Schasser | Dec 1976 | A |
4367666 | Toth | Jan 1983 | A |
4788419 | Walters | Nov 1988 | A |
4982337 | Burr | Jan 1991 | A |
5018614 | Ruckert | May 1991 | A |
5082384 | Kakaguchi | Jan 1992 | A |
5160076 | Ford | Nov 1992 | A |
5222624 | Burr | Jun 1993 | A |
5224408 | Steidinger | Jul 1993 | A |
5293796 | Zober | Mar 1994 | A |
5373046 | Okamura et al. | Dec 1994 | A |
5461219 | Cronvall | Oct 1995 | A |
5464142 | Mol et al. | Nov 1995 | A |
5655201 | Islam et al. | Aug 1997 | A |
5785224 | Nowakowski | Jul 1998 | A |
6056150 | Kasper | May 2000 | A |
6152631 | Park | Nov 2000 | A |
6517911 | Matsuki | Feb 2003 | B1 |
6669071 | Menna | Dec 2003 | B1 |
6726077 | Roberts et al. | Apr 2004 | B2 |
7381132 | Roberts | Jun 2008 | B2 |
7386968 | Sperry | Jun 2008 | B2 |
7562798 | Bartolone et al. | Jul 2009 | B2 |
7665394 | Roberts | Feb 2010 | B2 |
7984871 | Nagata | Jul 2011 | B2 |
20020117528 | Turek | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20020166882 | Roberts et al. | Nov 2002 | A1 |
20040000572 | Engelhardt et al. | Jan 2004 | A1 |
20040200874 | Menna | Oct 2004 | A1 |
20050056675 | Bartolone et al. | Mar 2005 | A1 |
20090152292 | Mirkovic et al. | Jun 2009 | A1 |
20090159610 | Woods et al. | Jun 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
WO9522445 | Aug 1995 | WO |
WO9622933 | Aug 1996 | WO |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report and Written Opinion for PCT/US2011/031313, dated Jun. 17, 2011. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120085777 A1 | Apr 2012 | US |