The invention relates to feeding systems for automated mail sorting machines, in particular to an improved pickoff mechanism for a mail feeder.
Pickoff mechanisms have been in use for decades in automated letter sorting machines such as MLOCR and DBCS machines used by the U.S. Postal Service and private presort bureaus, as described, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,109,987 (Daboub) and 6,679,491 (Luebben et al). The feeder section of the machine includes an unloading table where mail for sorting is manually placed edgewise to form a stack. The stack is advanced incrementally towards the pickoff mechanism which functions to feed mail pieces one at a time into a pinch belt conveyor system for sorting.
Known pickoff mechanisms comprise a series of rubber belts wound over a drive roller and a follower roller. The belts engage the endmost mail piece of the stack and rely on friction to pull it sideways off of the stack and into the entry nip of the pinch belt conveyor. Friction is created by the pressure of the mail stack as it advances into contact with the pickoff belts. The stack is carried by a horizontal belt conveyor, and its remote end is supported by a paddle movably mounted on a frame of the feeder. The paddle and belt are synchronized to move the stack forward in increments. This is controlled by a letter present sensor, for example, a mechanical proximity switch using a spring arm which indicates to the feeder controller that the end of the stack is in engagement with the outer face of the pickoff belts.
Some known pickoff designs rely on keeping the stack under pressure against the pickoff belts to create sufficient friction so that the pickoff operation proceeds smoothly at high speed. In one such known device as shown in
In practice, mail pieces are not uniform and sometimes slip against the pickoff belts, delaying feeding of the mail piece to the pinch belts. To remedy this, vacuum-assisted pickoff mechanisms were devised wherein suction is applied to the endmost mail piece through holes in the belts. This prevents slipping of mail pieces to a greater extent, but not entirely. The problem becomes more difficult when the incoming mail in the stack includes mail pieces of different sizes and thicknesses, such that some require more frictional force to feed than others. Present pickoff mechanisms have no means of adjusting to compensate for variations in mail piece characteristics. The present invention seeks to remedy this limitation, and in so doing improved performance of the conveyor as a whole by improving throughput.
The invention provides a pickoff system for removal of mail pieces one at a time from the end of a stack. A pickoff belt mechanism is positioned to frictionally engage an outer surface of a first piece at the end of the stack and transport it transversely to a thickness direction of the stack, which mechanism includes one or more belts mounted on a drive roller at one end driven by a drive motor and a follower roller at a trailing end. A pivot mechanism permits the trailing end to swing towards and away from the stack. A drive is connected to the pivot mechanism to move the trailing end towards and away from the stack, and a controller is connected to the drive to cause the drive to swing the trailing end towards the stack and swing the trailing end away from the stack in a manner effective to improve operation of the pickoff system, i.e., improve both pickoff speed and reliability.
According to one embodiment, a sensor connected to the controller measures pressure exerted by the stack against the pickoff belt mechanism, and the controller is connected to the drive to cause the drive to swing the trailing end towards the stack in response to a decrease in stack pressure, and swing the trailing end away from the stack in response to an increase in stack pressure. In another embodiment, the drive is operated based on a sensor that detects when the first mail piece has moved far enough that a second mail piece behind the first mail piece on the stack can come into contact with the trailing end of the pickoff belt mechanism. The controller causes the drive to swing the trailing end out towards the stack when the sensor indicates the first mail piece has moved far enough that a second mail piece behind the first mail piece on the stack can come into contact with the trailing end of the pickoff belt mechanism. Thereafter it causes the drive to swing the trailing end away from the stack. This event can be based on a timer, or on a further reading from the sensor.
The invention further provides a method for removal of mail pieces one at a time from the end of a stack supported edgewise on a base belt conveyor. Such a method includes a step of advancing the base belt conveyor to bring an endmost mail piece into contact with the a pickoff belt mechanism. The outer surface of the mail piece at the end of the stack is frictionally engaged with the pickoff belt mechanism which includes one or more belts mounted on a drive roller at one end driven by a drive motor and a follower roller at a trailing end, thereby transporting the mail piece transversely to a thickness direction of the stack. The trailing end of the pickoff belt mechanism swings cyclically towards the stack in a manner effective to improve operation of the pickoff belt mechanism by engaging a second mail piece at the end of the stack sooner than by operation of the base belt conveyor alone following removal of the first mail piece, and then swings away from the stack in preparation for pickoff of the next mail piece in the stack.
In a mail processing environment, the stack is typically supported edgewise on a conveyor base belt that advances as needed to bring an endmost (front) mail piece into contact with the belt of the pickoff belt mechanism. The foregoing method is especially useful when the stack contains mail pieces of varying sizes, especially thicknesses. After pickoff, each mail piece is fed directly from the pickoff belt mechanism to a pinch belt conveyor such as is used in a postal sorting machine. The present invention makes it possible to run the base belt conveyor at a constant speed rather than intermittently. These and other aspects of the invention are discussed further in the detailed description that follows.
In the accompanying drawings, wherein like numerals denote like elements:
Referring to
Throughput in a mail sorter 10 is a function both of belt speed and maintaining consistent gap spacing between mail pieces moving on the pinch belt conveyor system. Consistent gap spacing between successive mail pieces improves throughput while maintaining the same belt speed, for example 4m/sec. However, where mail pieces 13 vary in thickness, it can be difficult for the base belt which presents the end of the stack 12 to the pickoff maintain a consistent stack pressure. Feeder 11 according to the invention includes an actively-controlled, variable position pickoff mechanism 20 as described hereafter that can respond to variations in mail piece thickness so that unusually thick mail pieces can be fed into the sorter with less delay and more consistent spacing.
Referring to
A set of vertical guide rollers 25 rollingly support the right side of stack 12 which overhangs the end of pickoff belt mechanism 24 as shown in
The stack of mail 12 is positioned on a horizontal carrier conveyor belt (or base belt) 36. The trailing end of the stack 12 is supported by a paddle 37 that is moved along a guide bar 38 in a manner known in the art to support the stack. The leading end of the stack 12 advances into contact with a pivoting arm mechanism 41 which, when actuated, triggers a contact switch (sensor) 42 that indicates to a system controller 43 that mail is in position for pickoff. Pivoting arm 41 and switch 42 are one form of letter present sensor that could be used.
Drive roller 22 of pickoff belt mechanism 24 is driven by an encoder-equipped electric motor 44. Motor 44 sends a signal to a motor controller 46 indicating the motor speed in revolutions (rpm). Controller 46 relays the signal to feeder controller 43. The encoder is not essential to the present invention, but the belt speed can be used by the controller 43 as an indicator of mail piece slipping such that it will increase the stack pressure temporarily as described below to increase the friction between the mail piece and pickoff mechanism 24.
A trailing end 61 of the pickoff belt mechanism 24 is capable of swinging forward and back in the direction of the mail stack 12. For this purpose, an elongated bar 62 is pivotally mounted at one end on the drive shaft 63 of drive motor 44, and is connected at its other end to trailing end 61 and to the actuator of a linear drive 64. Linear drive 64 is operated by feeder controller 43 and the load on linear drive 64 indicates the stack pressure and is monitored by controller 43. This aspect of the invention can operate based on a simple feedback loop wherein a decrease in stack pressure, such as occurs when the leading mail piece 13A is removed, causes the actuator of linear drive 64 to extend and trailing end 61 to swing out, and an increase in stack pressure causes linear drive 64 to retract so that trailing end 61 swings in. The range of movement of trailing end 61 preferably varies from a rearwardmost starting position wherein trailing end 61 is perpendicular to the direction of travel of the base belt 36 and a number of extended positions wherein trailing end 61 is at an angle of slightly greater than 90° relative to the direction of travel of base belt 36. “Slightly” in this case refers to angles of the magnitudes shown in
In one example of operation, the mail-pieces 13 start lying at the pickoff belts 21 as shown in
As mail piece 13A continues to move, its trailing edge will be detected by the progressive uncovering of the rightmost sets of photocell pairs 32, 33 shown in
When the pickoff reaches a predetermined normal stack pressure and vacuum is generated against mail piece 13B (
For thin mail-pieces 13, it is easier to react to a changing vacuum pressure with the pickoff belt mechanism 24 than to detect the trailing edge and the thickness of the mail piece 13A. The light array 31 will detect all mail pieces 13, but laser distance sensors cannot detect every trailing edge of thin mail pieces. The combination is important; with the combination of signals from pressure sensor 67 and light array 31, controller 43 can determine that a mail piece which has a thickness that not detectable with laser distance sensors was fed to the takeaway conveyor 34. Also, by the foregoing means, the stack pressure can be kept constant easier and faster than in the conventional way. With the system of the invention, it is possible to actively reduce the stack-pressure when increased stack pressure has been detected by moving the pickoff mechanism 24 away from the stack 12.
For thick mail pieces 13, the base belt 36 does not need to accelerate the whole stack 12 in order for pickoff to proceed. The pickoff plane (parallel to the dotted lines in
The actively controlled, variable position pickoff system of the invention is used to reduce mail stack acceleration, increase pickoff rate, make earlier contact with the next mail piece, control the gap between pickoff plane and the next sequential mail piece 13 without moving the whole stack 12, measure stack-pressure at the pickoff 24, and control the stack pressure. The compressibility and inertia of the mail stack 12 causes a spring-like motion when force is applied to it by the base belt 36. The spring-like motion forces the mail to tilt backwards and forwards. This motion creates a gap between the pickoff plane and the leading letter in the stack. As illustrated in
The dotted line on the acceleration side represents traction control in the form a temporary decrease in belt speed which can occur as a result of slipping correction measures, for example, a temporary slowdown of the pickoff belt by the action of controllers 43, 46 when it has been determined that the mail piece is moving slower than the belt. The variable position pickoff plane also presents the leading end of the stack to the pickoff mechanism 24 in a uniform manner. Uniform presentation will create more ideal vacuum pickoff for sequential mail pieces. For purposes of the invention, the pickoff plane is the flat surface of the belts 21 that engage each mail piece 13 as it is presented. The pickoff plane is parallel to and spaced from the lengthwise axis of pickoff mechanism 24 represented by dotted lines in
Although one embodiment of the present invention have been described in the foregoing detailed description and illustrated in the accompanying drawings, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the invention is not limited to the embodiment disclosed but is capable of numerous rearrangements, substitutions and modifications without departing from the spirit of the invention. A controller for purposes of the invention may be a single control unit that operates the various components or two or more controllers that work together as described above. Similarly a “sensor” could be a single sensor, or two or more sensors from which the outputs enable the controller to make a decision based on preprogrammed criteria. These and other modifications are within the scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims.