The present invention relates to a product vending machine tray.
More specifically, the present invention relates to a product vending machine tray of the type comprising at least one channel with an outlet, the channel being designed to house a column of products, and housing conveying means for feeding the products successively to and through the outlet in a substantially straight travelling direction; and a release device for allowing the products successively through the outlet; the release device comprising stop means and retaining means independent of each other and located at the outlet.
Product vending machines are known to comprise a cabinet or similar container defining a space, which is bounded laterally by two lateral walls, is closed at the front by a door, and houses a number of fixed, superimposed trays of the type described above, which extend between the lateral walls to support respective numbers of products, such as bottles or cans. The trays occupy a rear portion of the space, so as to define, between the door and the front ends of the trays facing the door, a drop shaft communicating with a take-out bin normally located at the bottom of the cabinet.
A drawback of vending machines of the above type employing trays of the type described is that the products, as they are fed forward by the relative conveying means in a straight line through the outlet of the relative channel into the drop shaft, tend to tilt forward towards the door, before dropping vertically into the shaft. As a result, they are not only damaged by striking the door, but, in the worst case scenario, which occurs when the products are as tall as the distance between the trays and the door, fall across the shaft and jam between the door and the end of the tray, thus preventing the product from being expelled, and also impairing subsequent operation of the machine.
The above drawback is partially solved by vending machines such as those disclosed, for example, in BE-422127 and WO-01/29788.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a product vending machine tray of the above type, designed to eliminate the above drawbacks completely.
According to the present invention, there is provided a product vending machine tray as claimed in claim 1 and preferably in any one of the following claims depending directly or indirectly on claim 1.
A number of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
Inside space 6, machine 1 houses a number of trays (only one shown in
With reference to
More specifically, each channel 13 (only one shown) only houses one column 15, whereas each channel 14 (only one shown) houses two parallel, offset columns 15.
The bottom wall of each channel 13, 14 is defined by a respective powered conveyor 16 comprising a belt 17 looped about two rollers 18 (only one shown), which are located at the ends of relative channel 13, 14, extend crosswise to partitions 12, and define on belt 17 a top branch for supporting and conveying relative products 2.
Each conveyor 16 feeds relative products 2 in a substantially straight travelling direction D (
The channel 13 shown is located, by way of example, along a lateral end of tray 7 adjacent to a lateral wall 4.
In the example shown, partition 12a of the channel 13 shown is located adjacent to said lateral wall 4, and partition 12b separates channel 13 from an adjacent channel—in the example shown, a channel 14.
As shown in the attached drawings, release device 21 associated with channel 13 comprises a passive member (described below) and an active member, which are located on opposite sides of conveyor 16 at outlet 19, and are mechanically independent of each other. The active member is a stop member comprising a flap 23, which is activated by a respective known actuating device (not shown) connected to a central control unit (not shown), and is defined by a curved member positioned with its concavity facing inwards of channel 13, and hinged centrally to partition 12b to rotate, about a respective axis 24 perpendicular to base 11, between a closed position (
As shown more clearly in
Ribs 29 are substantially in the form of an h turned rearwards of tray 7, and comprise a vertical branch 30 extending the full height of chamber 27 and defining, with a front vertical portion of rim 28, a substantially rectangular front portion 31 of chamber 27. Ribs 29 also comprise a horizontal branch 32 extending rearwards from a mid-point along branch 30; and a further vertical branch 33, which extends downwards from the free rear end of branch 32, defines a rectangular bottom rear portion 34 of chamber 27 with a horizontal bottom portion of rim 28 and a bottom portion of branch 30, and defines an L-shaped rear portion 35 of chamber 27 with a horizontal top portion and a vertical rear portion of rim 28.
Portions 31, 34, 35 communicate via a window 36 formed through the bottom portion of branch 30, and via a window 37 larger than window 36 and formed through branch 33. Windows 36 and 37 have respective bottom edges at the same distance from the horizontal bottom portion of rim 28, so as to define, in the bottom portion of branch 30 and in branch 33, respective supports 38 of equal height and extending vertically upwards from the horizontal bottom portion of rim 28. Portion 31 communicates externally at the top through a window 39 formed through the horizontal top portion of rim 28; and chamber 27 is fitted through with a pin 40, which is located substantially at outlet 19, is perpendicular to partitions 12, is located close to a front bottom corner of portion 31, and is positioned facing window 36 on one side, and a front end of window 39 on the other.
The movable member of release device 21 is defined by a rocker arm 41, preferably made of bent wire or a bent metal rod, which lies in a vertical plane parallel to partitions 12 and travelling direction D, and is housed partly inside chamber 27. Rocker arm 41 extends about pin 40 to oscillate about the axis of pin 40, and comprises a bottom arm 42 housed inside chamber 27 and extending through windows 36 and 37; and a top arm 43 extending through window 39.
As shown in
As shown more clearly in
Rocker arm 41 is movable between a withdrawn rest position (shown by the continuous line in
When rocker arm 41 is in the withdrawn rest position, retaining member 48 is located directly over the front end of conveyor 16, and therefore inside channel 13 and in front of any one of products 2 still fully supported on conveyor 16 and located immediately downstream from flap 23 in the open position.
When rocker arm 41 is in the forward work position, retaining member 48 is located inside drop shaft 8, and is projected, in the plane of conveyor 16, to a distance from the front edge of conveyor 16 substantially equal to the length of portion 47 of top arm 43.
In connection with the above, it should be pointed out that the withdrawn rest position described of rocker arm 41 is one of stable equilibrium, in that, whatever the position of rocker arm 41 within its oscillation range about pin 40, gravitational forces always restore it to its rest position resting on the top ends of supports 38.
Obviously, the same result can also be achieved, for example, by eliminating bottom arm 42, hinging top arm 43 directly to pin 40, and inserting a pull spring between top arm 43 and the rear of plate 26.
In actual use, when the user selects a product 2 from channel 13, conveyor 16 is activated to move the relative column 15 towards relative outlet 19, thus pressing the first product 2 against flap 23 in the closed position. Next, flap 23 is opened in known manner, by operating an actuator (not shown), and moved into the
Once past flap 23, and before being expelled completely from outlet 19, a top portion of first product 2 comes into contact with retaining member 48, which is pushed forward and swings rocker arm 41 about pin 40 into the forward work position.
Top arm 43 of rocker arm 41 comes to a stop against the front end of window 39, thus stopping retaining member 48 and the top portion of product 2 engaged by retaining member 48. The bottom part of product 2, on the other hand, keeps moving forward in travelling direction D on conveyor 16, so that product 2 firsts tilts backwards, and then (
In other words, in addition to retaining member 48 of rocker arm 41 preventing product 2 from tilting forward towards door 5a, portion 47 of top arm 43 also retains product 2 laterally, to prevent it, as it falls, from being tilted towards partition 12a by the lateral thrust exerted by flap 23.
The
The bottom wall of each channel 13 is defined by a track 51, which extends under a respective powered conveyor 52 comprising, in known manner, a cylindrical metal coil 53. Coil 53 extends along relative channel 13, and comprises a number of turns, each adjacent pair of which defines a slot for a respective product 2, which is fed gradually forward in direction D to relative outlet 19 as coil 53 rotates about its axis. Coil 53 comprises an end turn 54 located at relative outlet 19 and having a free end 55, which, for each 360° rotation of coil 53, moves across outlet 19 to first allow the first product 2 in column 15 to move up to outlet 19, and then close relative channel 13 to hold back the products 2 behind the first.
In other words, end turn 54 defines an active stop member forming part of a release device 56 for selectively releasing products 2. Release device 56 allows one product 2 at a time to drop into shaft 8, and also comprises a passive member 57 mechanically independent of the relative active member, i.e. end turn 54.
Passive member 57 is a gate-type member fitted to relative partitions 12 at relative outlet 19, and comprises a movable portion, and a fixed portion supporting the movable portion. The fixed portion is defined by two uprights 58, each of which is defined by a rod extending upwards from a mid-point of respective partition 12, is connected integrally at the bottom to respective partition 12, and has a top hook 59 located above the top edges of partitions 12, and at a height off relative track 51 lower than the height of relative products 2. The movable portion is defined by an elastic crosspiece 60 extending substantially horizontally between hooks 59 and crosswise to direction D, and comprising an elastic member 61 connecting hooks 59 of relative uprights 58; and a tubular body 62 located at outlet 19 and fitted in sliding manner to elastic member 61.
In actual use, when the user selects a product 2 from a channel 13, coil 53 of relative powered conveyor 52 is activated to move the relative column 15 towards relative outlet 19. During this movement, and as the free end 55 of end turn 54 moves crosswise to channel 13 in the plane of outlet 19, thus gradually opening outlet 19, the first product 2 is pushed gradually past the end of relative channel 13.
Before being expelled completely from outlet 19, a top portion of first product 2 comes into contact with tubular body 62, which is pushed forward in direction D and by deformation of elastic member 61 from a withdrawn rest position, which is an undeformed position of stable equilibrium, to a forward position, in which tubular body 62 is located at least partly outside outlet 19.
When deformation of elastic member 61 ceases, tubular body 62 stops, thus stopping the top portion of first product 2. The bottom portion of first product 2, however, keeps moving forward, pushed by coil 53, in direction D, so that first product 2 first tilts backwards, and then drops off the end of track 51 and from under crosspiece 60, which springback of elastic member 61 automatically restores to the withdrawn rest position clear of drop shaft 8.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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TO2009A0180 | Mar 2009 | IT | national |
TO2009A0880 | Nov 2009 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2010/000499 | 3/10/2010 | WO | 00 | 3/20/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/103379 | 9/16/2010 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3828971 | Offutt et al. | Aug 1974 | A |
3840147 | O'Neal et al. | Oct 1974 | A |
4240563 | Lennartson | Dec 1980 | A |
6520373 | Neely et al. | Feb 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
422127 | Jul 1937 | BE |
WO 0129788 | Apr 2001 | WO |
WO 2004006195 | Jan 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120168344 A1 | Jul 2012 | US |