Embodiments described herein are directed to a package flattener, hereinafter known as a pouch conditioner, that is utilized to provide a flexible product package with a uniform thickness, as a result of the product package being advanced between a pair of opposed, top and bottom, conditioning belts.
When assembling or palletizing multiple product containers together for storage or shipment, it is often desirable that such containers be of a uniform size and shape. Yet, some types of packaging containers such as flexible pouches, bags, sacks and the like, when filled with granular or particulate product (e.g. sugar, salt, grain, flour, etc.) will often not have a default uniform shape or thickness suitable for their collective stacking or palatizing, despite the package container having a predetermined size and shape. As such, it would be useful to provide a system that is capable of conditioning or flattening such flexible product containers (FPCs), such that they have a uniform thickness prior to their storage or palletization.
Embodiments of the pouch conditioner described herein provide an efficient, flexible, and high-speed system that is capable of imposing a desired uniform thickness upon a given FPC. The pouch conditioner may be a stand-alone system or a component in a larger manufacturing/packaging/palletizing system such as for example of the type shown and described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,024,965 and 4,271,755; the entire contents of each of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Embodiments of the pouch conditioner described herein include a package conveyor for advancing filled FPCs along a packaging line or system. The packaging conveyor advances the FPCs via a bottom conditioning belt toward a conditioning assembly. The conditioning assembly is comprised of a housing containing a belt drive, and a series of rollers about which a top conditioning belt is disposed. The conditioning assembly is positioned a predetermined distance from the bottom conditioning belt so as to form a conditioning gap between the top conditioning belt and the bottom conditioning belt. This distance between the top conditioning belt and the bottom conditioning belt that defines the conditioning gap may be variable along its operational length, which is defined by the distance between the rollers at the gap entrance and gap exit. The FPCs are advanced through the gap via the co-directional movement of the bottom conditioning belt and the top conditioning belt.
In some embodiments, at least some of the rollers of the conditioning assembly, may be independently positioned relative to the bottom conditioning belt so as to allow for variations in the gap distance. In at least one embodiment the conditioning assembly is comprised of five rollers, with the first roller positioned at the gap entrance and the fifth roller positioned at the gap exit. In at least one embodiment a first of the five rollers is positioned further away from the bottom conditioning belt than the other four rollers. In at least one embodiment, a second roller is positioned to be a greater distance away from the bottom conditioning belt than any of the third-fifth rollers, but is closer to the bottom conditioning belt than the first roller. In at least one embodiment each of the third, fourth and fifth rollers are the same distance from the bottom conditioning belt. In at least one embodiment, the conditioning belt in the region extending from the third roller to the fifth roller is parallel to the bottom conditioning belt. In at least one embodiment, the two actuators disposing the roller may compress independently to allow the roller to articulate orthogonally to the roller's axis.
These and other embodiments are shown in the drawings included herewith and described in greater detail below.
An embodiment of the pouch conditioner 10 is shown in
The term “conditioned” as it applies to an FPC 14, refers to the passage of an FPS 14 through a conditioning gap 16 (as defined be the distance between the bottom conditioning belt 12 and the top conditioning belt 18 mentioned above) of the pouch conditioner 10 and as a consequence of that passage having a substantially uniform thickness imposed upon the FPS 14. The manner in which an FPC 14 is conditioned by its passage through the conditioning gap is illustrated in
As shown in
For purposes of illustration and description, in the embodiment shown and described herein, guide plate 26 is shown removed so as to make the position and functioning of the conditioning rollers 30a-30e apparent.
Turning to
Each conditioning roller 30a-30e is couple to each guide plate 24 and 26 by an actuator 36 (in the various figures only one side of the housing interior is shown, thus only the actuator 36 on the side depicted are visible). Each actuator 36 may be individually tuned to optimize the pouch conditioning function. By adjusting the actuators 36 vertical pressure exerted by the associated conditioning roller may be adjusted, the height relative to the bottom conditioning belt 12 (see
Another unique feature that the actuators 36 provide, is a that each of the actuators 36 is provided with an angle of attack 40 of 30 degrees, relative to a horizontal plane 42 (see
In the embodiment shown, the conditioning rollers 30a-30e are provided with a diameter of 2.75 inches, though depending on the application the rollers may range from 2 inches to as much as 5 inches in diameter.
In the embodiment shown, the conditioning rollers 30a-30e are positioned five inches apart as measured from their central axis 45 (i.e. five inches on center). In some embodiments, the conditioning rollers 30a-30e are disposed apart by between 2 inches and 8 inches on center.
By adjusting the actuators 36, each of the conditioning rollers 30a-30e may be vertically repositioned up to two inches, and their angle of attack up to seven degrees.
In the embodiment shown, each of the last three conditioning rollers 30c, 30d and 30e are maintained at the same height 44 relative to the bottom conditioning belt 12 (see
By gradually reducing the height of the conditioning gap 16 from the first conditioning roller 30a to the third conditioning roller 30c, the top conditioning belt 18 will apply a more graduated force to a FPC 14 passing through the gap 16 to ensure that the FPC 14 can pass through the gap 16 at relatively high speed without damage or disruption to the package or product contained therein, and be provided with a consistently reproducible package thickness 48 upon exiting the gap 16. Moreover, since each roller 30a-30e may articulate about the axis of direction of FPC 14 travel, non-uniform shapes or thicknesses may be progressively corrected in two dimensions simultaneously—the direction of travel and ninety degrees thereto—at relatively high speed without damage or disruption to the package.
The many features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the above description. Numerous modifications and variations will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Since such modifications are possible, the invention is not to be limited to the exact construction and operation illustrated and described. Rather, the present invention should be limited only by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
63080277 | Sep 2020 | US |