The present invention is directed to a mounting support and actuator for a lower tool of an indexing packaging machine, in which web material is indexed using an indexing advancing mechanism for situating the packages being formed at a forming station and a sealing or sealing/vacuum forming station. At each station, a lower tool is raised toward an upper, stationary tool for performing the requisite tasks at the respective station. Hithertofore, the lower tool has been raised by a complicated linkage mechanism, consisting of cams, links, connecting members, chains, and activators, that maintains and ensures the parallelism of the lower tool with the upper tool, which parallelism is critical to the proper functioning of the apparatus and formation of acceptable packages. Examples of these prior-art structures are shown, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,170,611 and 5,517,805. However, these prior-art, lower-tool activating mechanisms, owing to their weight and complexity, require large and heavy side support plates on the packaging machine in order to support and bear the heavy load and forces thereof, with such forces sometimes exceeding 10,000 pounds during the raising of the lower tool. Moreover, owing to the complex and sensitive nature of these prior-art lower-tool activating and support mechanisms, downtime of the packaging apparatus is not uncommon in order to fix or fine tune a problem thereof.
Because of the above-mentioned drawbacks, it would be highly advantageous to provide a support and actuator for the lower tools of a packaging machine that require less load-bearing for the packaging machine frame, and which is less complicated and less prone to downtime.
It is, therefore, the primary objective of the present invention to provide a new mounting and actuating structure for the lower tool of each station of an indexing packaging machine that is less complicated and requires considerably less frame load-bearing.
It is the primary objective of the present invention to provide such a mounting and actuating structure for the lower tool of an indexing packaging machine that consists of a piston-cylinder arrangement mounted in a suspended manner.
Toward these and other ends, the present invention consists of a piston-cylinder arrangement having donut-shaped or annular piston head that has a ratio of outer diameter to inner diameter that is less than two, and which drives a relatively oversized hollow piston rod or shaft having a protruding mounting portion that projects upwardly and outwardly from the main cylinder, to the upper end of which is mounted an upper mounting plate connected to the lower tool of a station of a packaging machine. The oversized piston rod or shaft ensures stable and tilt-free mounting of the lower tool that ensures the parallelism thereof with the upper stationary tool, while providing more than the necessary force for activating the lower tool. Since the overall actuating and mounting structure of the invention is considerably lighter than that of the prior art, and since the side plates of the packaging machine frame are no longer are required to bear an extremely heavy load of the lower-tool mounting and actuating structure, the side plates may be made considerably thinner as compared to the prior art since they need only support the weight of the station, and not the forces associated with, and generated by, the operation of the machine during tool activation.
The invention will be more readily understood with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring now to the drawings in greater detail, and to
The piston-cylinder mounting support and actuator 10 is mounted in a suspended manner to the frame 12 via four, corner mounting rods 40, as best seen in FIGS. 1 and 4-8. Each corner rod 40 has an upper end 40′ mounted in a carrier block portion 42, which carrier block, in the conventional manner, supports and adjustably positions the upper tool in the longitudinal direction for accommodating different molds used in the multi-packaging machine 14. The carrier block 42 is conventionally mounted for sliding movement in carrying bars 44, 46 secured to the side plates 50, 52 of the frame 12, as is well-known and conventional, so that both the upper and lower tools 16, 18 are moved in unison to adjust to the mold positioned in the machine. Lower ends 40″ of the mounting rods 40 are located in corner openings 56 in the upper plate 30, and are affixed therein, preferably by bolts, as best seen in
The mounting rods 40 also stabilize the lower tool 18 by preventing rotation of the upper plate 20, as best seen in
In a preferred embodiment, the diameter of the piston rod or shaft 24 is preferably between seven and eleven inches. In one preferred embodiment, the outer diameter of the piston rod 24 is 8⅝ in., while the outer diameter of the annular piston 32 is approximately 13¼ in. with the inner diameter of the annular piston being 8⅝ in. Preferably, the range for the outer diameter is between 13⅛ in. and 13⅜ in., while the range for the inner diameter is between 8½ in. and 8¾ in. Also, the range for the outer diameter of the piston rod is between 8½ in. and 8¾ in.
While a specific embodiment of the invention has been shown and described, it is to be understood that numerous changes and modifications may be made therein without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
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