RIGHT ANGLE TURNING DEVICE FOR AN INSERTER SYSTEM AND CORRESPONDING METHOD

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20030022780
  • Publication Number
    20030022780
  • Date Filed
    December 29, 1999
    24 years ago
  • Date Published
    January 30, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
An apparatus, and corresponding method, for accumulating and directionally reorienting the movement of a stack of sheets after first folding the stack, each sheet of the stack being fed from a feed conveyor along a feed path. The apparatus includes a turnplate, for receiving each of a series of sheets which are there accumulated into a stack of sheets. Stops protrude from a sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate, which holds the stack of sheets edge aligned against the stops. The apparatus also includes a chute pusher disposed so as to have a pusher tab movable across the sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate, for pushing the stack of sheets along the sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate in a chute direction at substantially ninety degrees from the feed path; a chute feed nip, disposed at the edge of the turnplate toward which the pusher tab pushes, for grabbing the stack of sheets and driving it onward in the chute direction; a chute, disposed so as to receive the stack of sheets being provided in the chute direction by the chute feed nip, the chute having a chute stop disposed a distance along the chute approximately equal to a half-width of the stack of sheets, for continuing to receive the stack until it stops at the chute stop and then to provide a buckle in the stack that is caused to protrude from the chute under the continuing action of the chute feed nip, until the stack is clear of the chute feed nip; a folder nip, disposed to grab the buckle in the stack, for providing the stack folded in half; and a diverter, rotatably disposed to receive the stack folded in half, for directing the stack to either of two different directions, depending on the orientation of the diverter. In addition, it includes a sensor such as a bar code reader for sensing information about directing the stack to either of the two different directions.
Description


TECHNICAL FIELD

[0002] The present invention relates generally to machinery for assembling multi-sheet mailing pieces and inserting them into envelopes and, more particularly, to an improved right-angle-turning (RAT) device adapted for use in such a mailing system.



BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

[0003] A production mailing system typically includes a series of modules which perform different functions, such as a cutter (for slicing a continuous paper web into sheets) or a burster (for separating a paper web having transverse perforations into sheets), an accumulator for accumulating all the sheets intended for a particular recipient, and an inserter for putting the collected sheets into an envelope. Frequently, a right-angle-turning (RAT) module will be placed between the accumulator and the inserter. However, conventional right-angle-turners are insufficiently versatile in coping with oversized or otherwise irregular collections of sheets.



SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

[0004] Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an improved right-angle-turner which can selectively divert oversized or irregular sets of sheets out of a primary or standard paper path into a secondary paper path for special handling, in order to minimize paper jams and consequent downtime. Preferably, the device also folds each set of sheets.


[0005] Briefly, this diversion is accomplished by an apparatus and corresponding method, the apparatus including: a receiving means, for receiving the sheet and redirecting it in a chute direction at substantially ninety degrees from the feed path; a chute means, for grabbing the redirected sheet and for causing the sheet to form a buckle along a line located at approximately halfway across a width of the sheet and extending along a length of the sheet; a folder nip, disposed to grab the buckle in the sheet, for providing the sheet folded in half; and a diverter, rotatably disposed to receive the sheet folded in half, for directing the sheet to either of at least two final directions, depending on its orientation.


[0006] In a further aspect of the invention, the chute means includes: a chute feed nip, disposed at the edge of the turnplate toward which the pusher tab pushes, for grabbing the sheet and driving it onward in the chute direction; and a chute, disposed so as to receive the sheet being provided in the chute direction by the chute feed nip, the chute having a chute stop disposed a distance along the chute approximately equal to a half-width of the sheet, for continuing to receive the sheet until it stops at the chute stop and then to provide a buckle in the sheet that is caused to protrude from the chute under the continuing action of the chute feed nip, until the sheet is clear of the chute feed nip.


[0007] In a still further aspect of the invention, the receiving means includes: a turnplate for receiving the sheet, the turnplate having stops protruding from a sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate, for holding the sheet edge aligned against the stops; and a chute pusher disposed so as to have a pusher tab movable across the sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate, for pushing the sheet along the sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate in a chute direction at substantially ninety degrees from the feed path.


[0008] In another aspect of the invention, the apparatus also includes a means for acquiring information about whether to divert the sheet, and the diverter is rotated into an orientation depending on the acquired information. In particular, the means for acquiring information can be a bar code reader that scans the sheet to determine to which final path to direct the sheet.


[0009] The present invention accomplishes all of the above processing not only on a single sheet by single sheet basis, but for stacks of sheets that it forms by accumulating a series of sheets being provided over the feed path. In case of processing a stack of sheets, the entire stack is folded, i.e. the sheets are folded collectively, as a stack.







BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0010]
FIG. 1A is a block diagram showing the present invention in the larger context of a mailing system;


[0011]
FIG. 1B is a perspective view of a right angle folding and turning (RAFT) device according to the present invention, viewed in its operational configuration (with its access panel closed);


[0012]
FIG. 2 is a perspective view of the inside of the RAFT device;


[0013]
FIG. 3 is a cross sectional side view of the inside of the RAFT device;


[0014] FIGS. 4-9 illustrate the folding and turning of sheets by the RAFT device; and


[0015]
FIG. 10 is a flow chart indicating the steps of the method of the present invention for folding a sheet (or a stack of sheets), after receiving the sheet (or a series of sheets) from a feed direction, and providing the folded sheet (or the folded stack of sheets) in a different, final direction.







DETAILED DESCRIPTION

[0016] Referring now to FIG. 1a, a right-angle folding and turning (RAFT) module 10 according to the present invention is shown in the larger context of a mailing system, including an input module 11a that inputs and preferably collates sheets of a mail piece; a chassis 11b that accepts the sheets and may insert additional sheets; a feed conveyor 11c that feeds the sheets including any additional sheets (inserts) to the RAFT module 10. Except for sheets that are indicated (by for example a bar code) to require alternate processing, the RAFT module 10 provides the sheets, stacked and folded, to a main path conveyor 11d that then conveys the sheets to an insertion engine 1g. Those sheets that are indicated as irregular and so as requiring alternate processing are provided by the RAFT device 10 to an alternate path conveyor 11e that then provides the irregular sheets to an alternate processing module 11f, from which the irregular sheets are then provided to the insertion engine 11g. The insertion engine inserts the sheets into an envelope, providing stuffed envelopes to an output module 11h typically at a rate of 5 envelopes per second. The output module 11h seals, weighs, stacks and adds indicia to the stuffed envelopes.


[0017] Referring now to FIG. 1b, the RAFT module is generally indicated as reference numeral 10 and is shown being fed by feed conveyor 11c, and providing sheets to either the main path conveyor 11d, or the alternate path conveyor 11e. The sheets provided to either the main path conveyor 11d or the alternate path conveyor 1e are folded, as will be described below. A bar code reader 12 (FIG. 1a), not shown, instructs the RAFT 10 whether to fold a stack of sheets and provide the folded stack to the main path conveyor 11d, or to provide a folded stack of sheets to the alternate path conveyor 11e. An access panel 16 can be lifted as shown by arrow 16a so as to provide access to the inside of the RAFT module 10. The RAFT module includes a drive motor 14, which is typically a stepper motor, that provides torque to a drive gear 15, which then transmits the torque by a belt 15a to other gears connected to nips used in grabbing the stack for further processing, as will be described below.


[0018] Referring now to FIG. 2, the access panel 16 is shown in the open position allowing access to the inside of the RAFT module 10. Sheets are provided by the feed conveyor 11c (FIG. 1b) shown by the arrow 22. The sheets are propelled, as will be described below, until hitting stops 20. The sheets accumulate until all of the sheets that are to be folded together, i.e. as a stack, rest on the stops 20. Then chute pushers 23 direct the stack of sheets toward a fold nip 21, after which the stack of sheets is folded, as will be described below.


[0019] Referring now to FIG. 3, inside the RAFT module 10, the chute pusher 23 is shown propelling the accumulated stack of sheets along a chute guide 31, to a chute feed nip 32a. A nip is in general provided by two counter-rotating cylinders or discs disposed so as to have parallel axes of rotation and to have their rotating surfaces meet along a line of contact. When a sheet or a stack of sheets is fed into the line of contact, i.e. between the two counter-rotating cylinders or discs, the stack of sheets is grabbed or nipped and pulled through the line of contact. In the case of the chute feed nip 32a, a stack of sheets to be included in an envelope is pulled through the line of contact corresponding to the chute feed nip 32a and into a buckle chute 33. Referring now also to FIGS. 4-7, as the stack 41 continues to be pulled through the chute feed nip 32a, it strikes a stop 33a. However, the chute feed nip 32a continues to drive the stack 41 into the buckle chute 33, the stack 41 buckles along a buckle line 70 (FIG. 7). Because of the action of the chute feed nip 32a continuing to feed paper into the buckle chute 33, the buckle line 70 moves toward a folder nip 32b.


[0020] Referring now to FIGS. 8 and 9, a diverter 34 next directs a stack in either of two opposite directions. FIG. 8 shows a stack of sheets 82a in the course of being pulled by the folder nip 32b toward the diverter 34a and moving in a direction 81 following an already folded stack of sheets 82b. FIG. 9 shows a stack of sheets 92a being pulled through the folder nip 32b and diverted by the diverter 34 so as to move in an opposite direction 91 following another stack of sheets 92b.


[0021] Referring again to FIGS. 4-6, the feeding of the stack of sheets 41 into the buckle chute 33 is shown in more detail, beginning with the stack of sheets 41 moving in the direction indicated by arrow 43 (FIG. 4) under the action of a feed path nip 40 onto the surface of a turnplate 42 through which the stops 20 protrude. The stack of sheets 41 continues in the direction indicated by arrow 44 (FIG. 5) until striking the stops 20. Then the chute pushers 23 drive the stack of sheets 41 in the direction indicated by arrow 45 (FIG. 6) into the chute feed nip 32a.


[0022] Referring again to FIGS. 8 and 9, in the preferred embodiment, the diverter 34 is caused to rotate so as to assume a position that will guide a stack of sheets in the direction indicated by either arrow 81 (FIG. 8) or arrow 91 (FIG. 9) depending on bar codes provided with a sheet in the stack of sheets 82a 91a. A bar code reader 12 (FIG. 1a) is disposed within the RAFT module so as to properly orient the diverter 34, according to such a bar code.


[0023] Referring now to FIG. 10, a flow chart is shown indicating a method according to the present invention for folding and turning sheets as part of the operation of the mailing system. The method is for either receiving a single sheet provided in a feed direction, turning it and then providing it in a final different direction; or for receiving a series of sheets and accumulating the sheets in a stack of sheets, folding the stack of sheets collectively, and providing the folded stack of sheets in a final direction different from the feed direction.


[0024] The method includes a first step 101 in which a series of sheets is received, as it is provided in a feed path direction, and accumulated into a stack of sheets. In the next step 102, the stack of sheets is redirected in a chute direction at 90° from the feed path. Next, in a step 103, the redirected stack of sheets is grabbed (by a nip) and propelled so as to continue in the chute direction toward a stop in the chute. Then, in a step 104, the stack of sheets is propelled against the stop, causing the stack of sheets to buckle along a line located at approximately half way across a width of the stack of sheets. In a next step 105, the buckle in the stack of sheets is grabbed (and the stack of sheets is propelled in a diverter direction, with the stack now folded in half). Finally, in a step 106, the stack is diverted to either of at least two final directions, based on information provided with a sheet in the stack, or otherwise associated with the stack.


[0025] As indicated above, in the preferred embodiment the information about whether to divert a stack is provided by a bar code on a sheet in the stack, the bar code being read by a bar code reader 12 (FIG. 1). A stack can also be diverted to one or the other of at least two final directions based on the color of a sheet in the stack, or upon the weight of a sheet in the stack, with sensors used to sense the distinguishing characteristic in each case.


[0026] It is to be understood that the above-described arrangements are only illustrative of the application of the principles of the present invention. Numerous modifications and alternative arrangements may be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention, and the appended claims are intended to cover such modifications and arrangements.


Claims
  • 1. An apparatus for accumulating and directionally reorienting the movement of a sheet fed from a feed conveyor along a feed path, the apparatus comprising: a) a turnplate for receiving the sheet, the turnplate having stops protruding from a sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate, for holding the sheet edge aligned against the stops; b) a chute pusher disposed so as to have a pusher tab movable across the sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate, for pushing the sheet along the sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate in a chute direction at substantially ninety degrees from the feed path; c) a chute feed nip, disposed at the edge of the turnplate toward which the pusher tab pushes, for grabbing the sheet and driving it onward in the chute direction; d) a chute, disposed so as to receive the sheet being provided in the chute direction by the chute feed nip, the chute having a chute stop disposed a distance along the chute approximately equal to a half-width of the sheet, for continuing to receive the sheet until it stops at the chute stop and then to provide a buckle in the sheet that is caused to protrude from the chute under the continuing action of the chute feed nip, until the sheet is clear of the chute feed nip; e) a folder nip, disposed to grab the buckle in the sheet, for providing the sheet folded in half; and f) a diverter, rotatably disposed to receive the sheet folded in half, for directing the sheet to either of two opposite directions, depending on the orientation of the diverter.
  • 2. An apparatus as in claim 1, further comprising a means for acquiring information about whether to divert the sheet, and wherein the diverter is rotated into an orientation depending on the acquired information.
  • 3. An apparatus as in claim 2, wherein the means for acquiring information about whether to divert the sheet is a bar code reader disposed so as to be able to read a bar code on the sheet.
  • 4. An apparatus for accumulating and directionally reorienting the movement of a sheet fed from a feed conveyor along a feed path, the apparatus comprising: a) a receiving means, for receiving the sheet and redirecting it in a chute direction at substantially ninety degrees from the feed path; b) a chute means, for grabbing the redirected sheet and for causing the sheet to form a buckle along a line located at approximately halfway across a width of the sheet and extending along a length of the sheet; c) a folder nip, disposed to grab the buckle in the sheet, for providing the sheet folded in half; and d) a diverter, rotatably disposed to receive the sheet folded in half, for directing the sheet to either of at least two final directions, depending on its orientation.
  • 5. An apparatus as in claim 4, wherein the chute means comprises: a) a chute feed nip, disposed at the edge of the turnplate toward which the pusher tab pushes, for grabbing the sheet and driving it onward in the chute direction; and b) a chute, disposed so as to receive the sheet being provided in the chute direction by the chute feed nip, the chute having a chute stop disposed a distance along the chute approximately equal to a half-width of the sheet, for continuing to receive the sheet until it stops at the chute stop and then to provide a buckle in the sheet that is caused to protrude from the chute under the continuing action of the chute feed nip, until the sheet is clear of the chute feed nip.
  • 6. An apparatus as in claim 5, wherein the receiving means comprises: a) a turnplate for receiving the sheet, the turnplate having stops protruding from a sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate, for holding the sheet edge aligned against the stops; and b) a chute pusher disposed so as to have a pusher tab movable across the sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate, for pushing the sheet along the sheet-receiving surface of the turnplate in a chute direction at substantially ninety degrees from the feed path.
  • 7. An apparatus as in claim 5, further comprising a means for acquiring information about whether to divert the sheet, and wherein the diverter is rotated into an orientation depending on the acquired information.
  • 8. An apparatus as in claim 7, wherein the means for acquiring information about whether to divert the sheet is a bar code reader disposed so as to be able to read a bar code on the sheet.
  • 9. A method for accumulating and directionally reorienting the movement of a sheet fed from a feed conveyor along a feed path, the apparatus comprising: a) receiving the sheet and redirecting it in a chute direction at substantially ninety degrees from the feed path; b) grabbing the redirected sheet, continuing to propel it in the chute direction, pushing it against a stop and so causing the sheet to form a buckle along a line located approximately halfway across a width of the sheet and extending along a length of the sheet; c) grabbing the buckle in the sheet and propelling the sheet in a diverter direction, the sheet folded in half; and d) diverting the sheet to either of at least two final directions, including a main path direction.
  • 10. A method as in claim 9, further comprising the step of acquiring information indicating whether to divert the sheet from the main path direction, and wherein in the step of diverting the sheet, the diverting is based on the acquired information.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED PATENTS

[0001] U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,641,158, GELB, IFKOVITS & STENGL (1997), and U.S. Pat. No. 5,833,232, IFKOVITS, JANATKA, STENGL & ZUZICK (1998), the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference.