The present application is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/157,783, filed on Jun. 22, 2005, which is incorporated herein by reference.
I. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to the field of mail sorting and, more particularly, to a storage bin or tray for receiving and storing mail items, typically letters and flat pieces of mail, in a mail sorting machine having a bucket carousel.
II. Discussion of the Background Art
In modern mail sorting machines, mail items are conveyed by a bucket carousel above a plurality of storage bins or trays constituting sorting outlets of the sorting machine. The mail items are dropped from the buckets into the storage trays by opening the bottoms of the buckets, for example as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,290,025.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,648,284 discloses a storage tray for mail items dropped from a bucket carousel of a mail sorting machine. Storage trays of this type have a bottom constituted by a wall inclined between two diametrically opposite corners of the tray, enabling the mail items to be stacked in the bottom of the tray, and enabling the stack of mail items in the bottom of the tray to be held in position, more effectively than when the bottom of the tray is oriented horizontally or perpendicular to the side walls of the tray.
Unfortunately, with trays of the above type, the mail items (in particular open items like magazines) tend to bounce off a side wall of the tray before being jogged into alignment in the bottom of the tray. More specifically, a mail item dropped into the tray tends to turn before it is jogged against a side wall of the tray, which can be detrimental to the remainder of the mail sorting process. In addition, the stability of the stack, and thus how well it stays together, is guaranteed only for flat mail items that are homogeneous, even though current sorting machines are required to sort mail items that are heterogeneous, i.e., of widely differing sizes. Furthermore, the arrangement of such a tray does not make it possible for the stack of mail items to be extracted automatically from the storage tray, which can be necessary during unstacking operations at the inlet of the sorting machine.
Another type of storage bin, disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2006/0113362, and shown in
While this latter type of bin offers some improvement in terms of preserving the sequence of mail items during automatic bin conveying and bin handling operations, certain extreme stacking conditions have been noted that can affect the quality of the mail stack in such a bin. Some of the conditions that can occur to the mail stack include curving, curling, folding, nesting, and flipping of the mail. These conditions can cause problems with downstream handling of the mail and can require human intervention in order to preserve the integrity of the output. Moreover, the probability of finding folded flimsy mail items is higher at the bottom of the stack in the bin than at the top of the bin because the mail item's leading edge will sometimes come in contact with the wall of the bin prior to contacting the previous mail item.
More specifically, as illustrated in
It is an object of the present invention to overcome one or more of the above-mentioned drawbacks by providing a mail storage tray for a sorting system that takes advantage of the average mail drop path to improve the condition of the mail stack in the tray, thereby facilitating automated tray handling and unloading operations.
To this end, the invention provides a storage tray for storing mail items in the sorting outlets of a mail sorting machine having a carousel with buckets that hold mail items and move in a transport direction such that the mail items describe an arcuate path when released from the buckets. The storage tray includes a bottom surrounded by side walls defining a horizontal top portion of the tray and a horizontal bottom portion of the tray, wherein the bottom of the tray includes a landing wall and a jogging wall intersecting in the bottom portion of the tray, the landing wall extending from the jogging wall in a first direction towards the top portion of the tray at an angle relative to the horizontal bottom portion of the tray, and the jogging wall extending away from the landing wall in a second direction along a generally curved path toward the top portion of the tray. The shape of the jogging wall preferably corresponds generally to the average path of a mail item released from a bucket carousel of a sorting machine.
In a particular embodiment of the storage tray, the jogging wall is made up of multiple segments arranged at angles relative to one another to approximate a parabolic shape.
In yet another particular embodiment of the storage tray, a first segment of the jogging wall intersects the landing wall at an angle of inclination that is preferably greater than 70 degrees relative to the horizontal bottom portion of the tray and, more preferably, between about 75 degrees and about 85 degrees.
In yet another particular embodiment of the storage tray, upper edges of the landing wall and the jogging wall are preferably offset vertically and, more preferably, an upper edge of the first segment extends at least as high as an upper edge of the landing wall.
The invention also provides a mail sorting system having a carousel with buckets that hold mail items and move in a transport direction such that the mail items describe an arcuate path when released from the buckets and a plurality of mail storage trays in stationary positions beneath the mail bucket carousel. In this aspect of the invention, each of the storage trays includes a bottom surrounded by side walls defining a horizontal top portion of the tray and a horizontal bottom portion of the tray, wherein the bottom of the tray includes a landing wall and a jogging wall intersecting in the bottom portion of the tray, the landing wall extending from the jogging wall in a first direction towards the top portion of the tray at an angle relative to the horizontal bottom portion of the tray, and the jogging wall extending away from the landing wall in a second direction along a generally curved path toward the top portion of the tray. The shape of the jogging wall preferably corresponds generally to the average path of a mail item released from a bucket carousel of a sorting machine.
In a particular embodiment of the mail sorting system, the jogging wall is made up of multiple segments arranged at angles relative to one another to approximate a parabolic shape.
In yet another particular embodiment, a first segment of the jogging wall intersects the landing wall at an angle of inclination that is preferably greater than 70 degrees relative to the horizontal bottom portion of the tray and, more preferably, between about 75 degrees and about 85 degrees.
In yet another particular embodiment, upper edges of the landing wall and the jogging wall are preferably offset vertically and, more preferably, an upper edge of the first segment extends at least as high as an upper edge of the landing wall.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent to those of skill in the art as the description that now follows is read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated herein and form part of the specification, illustrate various embodiments of the present invention and, together with the description, further serve to explain the principles of the invention and to enable a person skilled in the pertinent art to make and use the invention. In the drawings, like reference numbers indicate identical or functionally similar elements. A more complete appreciation of the invention and many of the attendant advantages thereof will be readily obtained as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The mail storage tray 30 is a box-like container made up of four side walls 32 surrounding a bottom of the tray. The bottom of the tray 30 is made up of two walls—a landing wall 34 and a jogging wall 36—that intersect at or near a horizontal bottom portion 38 of the tray. The landing wall 34 extends from the jogging wall 36 in a first direction towards a top portion 40 of the tray 30 at an angle α relative to the horizontal bottom portion 38 of the tray. The jogging wall 36 extends away from the landing wall 34 in a second direction along a curved path towards the top portion 40 of the tray 30.
In operation, a mail item 16 fed into the mail sorting machine at a feeder station (not shown) is deposited lengthwise into a bucket and conveyed in the bucket 18 toward a specific mail storage tray 30 based on addressee information. The mail item 16 is held substantially upright in the bucket 18 at a certain angle of inclination matching the angle of inclination of the bucket. For example, looking at
The buckets 18 move on the carousel 20 at a predetermined speed, e.g., at about 1 meter per second (1 m/s).
As the bucket 18 containing a mail item 16 approaches the stationary tray 30, the bottom of the bucket opens and the mail item drops out of the bucket. The forward momentum of the mail item 16 and the influence of gravity causes the mail item to describe a path that is substantially parabolic, as shown by the dashed line labeled “b” in
In an embodiment of the present invention, the landing wall 34 is oriented generally or almost parallel to the major plane of the bucket 16 and the jogging wall 36 is made up of segments that, together, describe a generally parabolic path corresponding substantially to the average parabolic path of a mail item dropped from a bucket. More specifically, the jogging wall includes a plurality of straight segments 36a, b and c oriented to define a generally parabolic shape in cross-section. A first segment 36a of the jogging wall 36 extends from the landing wall 34 at a first angle γ relative to the horizontal lower portion 38 of the tray in a counterclockwise direction looking at
Referring still to
Referring still to
While a preferred embodiment of the invention has been described herein, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various modifications and changes can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as claimed. For example, while a multi-segmented jogging wall with three segments forming an approximation of a parabolic arc is shown, it will be appreciated that any number of segments can be used to define a generally parabolic shape in cross-section. While the jogging wall can be smoothly curved, it is preferred to form the wall using a plurality of straight segments to reduce the probability of imparting a curvature to the mail as the tray fills. It will also be appreciated that one or both of the jogging wall and the landing wall can have a crenellated shape in profile, or have a plurality of slots formed therein, e.g., as shown in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/157,783 referenced above, to make it possible to use a device constituted by extraction fingers (not shown in the figures) to pass under the stack of heterogeneous mail items and thus to extract the mail items while also keeping the stack together. The example of the automatic or manual extraction process can be implemented between the first sorting pass and the second sorting pass in the sorting machine, or during transfer from the storage tray to another bin or tray dedicated to delivery. In a particular embodiment of the storage tray of the invention, a bar code is written on the storage tray in order to identify it, and in order to make it possible to monitor the sequence of the storage bins in the sorting machine.
In a particular embodiment of the storage tray of the invention, the tray is made up of four side walls oriented perpendicular to one another to define upper and lower horizontal portions of the tray. In yet another particular embodiment, shown by broken lines at 42 in
In yet another particular embodiment of the storage tray of the invention, the bottom of the storage tray made up by the landing wall and the jogging wall is configured as a removable insert suitable for placement at the bottom of a storage bin or tray having a flat bottom, for example.
The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded in an illustrative rather than a restrictive sense, the invention being limited only by the appended claims.
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