This invention pertains generally to cigarette-making machines and, more particularly, to semi-automatic and fully automatic machines for making cigarettes in a multiple lengths.
Various types of manual, semi-automatic and automatic cigarette-making machines are known in which loose tobacco is compacted into a rod-like shape and transported into a hollow cigarette tube to prepare a cigarette. In many of these cigarette-making machines loose tobacco is first placed into a compacting chamber in which a reciprocating compacting member engages and compresses the loose tobacco into the rod-like shape on an injection spoon at the bottom of the compacting chamber. The compressed tobacco rod-like shape is then transported by the injection spoon which moves across the compacting chamber to carry the rod-like tobacco shape into a hollow cigarette tube positioned outside the cigarette-making machine and adjacent the chamber.
In fully manual cigarette-making machines both the compressing of the loose tobacco into a rod-like shape and the transporting of the rod-like tobacco shape into a hollow cigarette tube are performed by manually operating a crank on the machine. In typical semi-automatic cigarette-making machines, the loose tobacco in the compacting chamber is compressed manually by operating a crank to compress the loose tobacco between the leading edge of a compacting member and an injection spoon located in the compacting chamber to form the rod-like tobacco shape. Upon completion of the compressing step, typically a motor is automatically triggered to cause the injection spoon to move across the compacting chamber transporting the rod-like tobacco shape into the hollow cigarette tube. Finally, in fully automatic cigarette-making machines, both the compressing of the loose tobacco into a rod-like shape and the transporting of the rod-like tobacco shape into a hollow cigarette tube are performed by triggering one or more motors which first drive a compressing member to form a rod-like tobacco shape on an injection spoon and then drive the injection spoon (or other transporting component) to carry the rod-like tobacco shape into a hollow cigarette tube.
While it is well-recognized that commercially manufactured cigarettes come in various different lengths, semi-automatic and fully-automatic cigarette-making machines currently can only make cigarettes of a single length which generally corresponds to the length of the compacting chamber. Therefore, in order to make cigarettes of multiple lengths, different semi-automatic and fully-automatic machines specifically designed to make each desired cigarette lengths must be used. This is inconvenient, wasteful and uneconomic.
It is therefore an object of present embodiments to provide semi-automatic and fully-automatic cigarette-making machines that can make cigarettes of different lengths.
Embodiments of the invention include semi-automatic and fully-automatic cigarette-making machines having a compacting chamber for receiving loose tobacco and a compacting member of a width corresponding to that of the chamber which moves from the top to the bottom of the chamber to compact the loose tobacco into a compressed tobacco rod-like shape and withdraws. In semi-automatic cigarette-making machines, the compacting member is operated manually to first compress the loose tobacco and then it is manually withdrawn. In fully-automatic cigarette-making machines, the movement of the compacting member to compress the loose tobacco is motor driven, as is the withdrawal of the compacting member. In both fully-automatic and semi-automatic machines, once the compacting member is withdrawn, the compressed tobacco rod-like shape is automatically transported through a nipple extending from the side of the machine in communication with a passage in the injection end of the compacting chamber. The opposite end of the compacting chamber is closed.
In both the semi-automatic and the fully-automatic embodiments, the nominal or maximum length of the tobacco-receiving, tobacco-receiving opening of the compacting chamber is defined by a rectangle extending between the top and the bottom of the chamber and between the ejection and opposite closed end of the chamber. The distance between the injection and the opposite closed end corresponds to the maximum cigarette tube length that can be filled by the machine.
In order to accommodate both the first longer cigarette tube length and a second shorter cigarette tube length, a tab is introduced into the chamber opposite the chamber closed and extending between the top and the bottom of the chamber. This tab reduces the length of the chamber available for receiving loose tobacco so that a shorter cigarette tube of this reduced length may be used with the machine. Two common cigarette tube lengths are 84 mm and 100 mm. In order to accommodate these cigarette tube lengths, the nominal length of the compacting chamber will be about 100 mm and the reduced chamber length will be about 84 mm. As explained below, embodiments can accommodate more than two cigarette tube lengths.
Accommodating differing cigarette tube lengths by reducing the length of the compacting chamber presents at least two challenges. First, the compacting member will have a width corresponding to the nominal width of the compacting chamber. If a tab is introduced to reduce the length of the chamber, this tab will interfere with the compacting movement of the compacting member. In embodiments this problem is solved by forming a slot extending from the compacting edge of the compacting member and positioned along the compacting member to receive the tab. Thus, when the compacting member is operated, it will be able to move from the top to the bottom of the compacting chamber to compact only the tobacco in the reduced chamber length while receiving the tab in the compacting member slot. When more than two cigarette tube lengths are to be accommodated, additional slots will be provided extending from the compacting edge of the compacting member to receive additional tabs.
The next significant challenge relates to manipulating the tab within the confined and component-filled interior of the cigarette-making machine. Tab controls are accessible in embodiments from a convenient location on the outside of the machine and preferably employ a flat linkage which consumes little space and ensures reliable operation.
In order to aid in understanding embodiments of the invention, it will now be described in connection with exemplary embodiments thereof with reference to the accompanying drawings in which like numerical designations will be given to like features:
The embodiments described below are not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the precise structures and operation disclosed. Rather, the described embodiments have been chosen to explain principles of the invention and their application, and the operation and use of embodiments of the invention in order to best enable others skilled in the art to follow its teachings.
Referring now to the figures,
Cigarette-making machine 10 is operated by placing loose tobacco (not shown) through compacting chamber access opening 14 and into compacting chamber 18. The hollow cigarette tube may be placed onto the nipple either before or after this step.
Machine 10 may optionally also include a protective system door 26 to protect a user's fingers from injury at the compacting chamber during the tobacco compressing process. Door 26 is pivotally attached along its bottom edge 28 to the front 30 of the machine housing by way of hinge members (not shown). Door 26 may include a downwardly directed pin on its bottom surface 32 and machine 10 may include a pushbutton switch 16 (or other pressure operated switch) located on top surface 12 positioned to be engaged by the pin when the door is closed.
When it is desired to use a machine provided with the optional protective system, door 26 is first pivoted away from compacting chamber access opening 14 so that the compacting chamber can be filled with tobacco, and then pivoted toward the compacting chamber access opening. As the door reaches its rest position blocking entry from above to the access opening (and therefore preventing the user's fingers from reaching into the compacting chamber), the pin on the bottom surface of the door presses down upon pushbutton switch 16 to begin the automatic operation of the cigarette-making machine. If the door is raised before completion of the tobacco injection cycle, automatic operation of the machine is paused until the door is again closed. In alternative embodiments, the pushbutton switch may protrude above top surface 12 so that a bottom surface portion of the door will press down upon and operate the protruding pushbutton switch.
The protective system may be utilized as either an interlock system to prevent any motor-driven automatic operation of a cigarette-making machine if door 24 is not closed (and therefore blocking accidental access to the chamber access opening) or it may act as both a protection system as described and as a trigger system to initiate automatic motor-driven operation when the door is closed.
While the compacting member is disposed in this initial rest position, loose tobacco is placed into the compacting chamber and rests upon an injection spoon 38 in its initial position at the bottom of the chamber. Once the tobacco is in place, the compacting member moves across the compacting chamber, coming to rest at its fully extended position (shown in broken lines in
The movement of the compacting member to its final extended position to compress the loose tobacco as well as the return of the compacting member to its initial position is achieved in the illustrated embodiment by a compacting drive mechanism 42 which may be driven through the rotation of a driveshaft 44 of electric motor 41 (mounted below plate 43), as can be seen in
In a fully automatic machine, illustrated driveshaft 44 may be the shaft of a motor as already noted. In a semi-automatic machine or in a fully manual machine, the driveshaft may be manually operated by rotating from above as in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 2,731,971. The teaching and disclosures of this patent are incorporated herein by reference. Whether manually operated or motor driven, movement of the compacting member across the compacting chamber as illustrated, for example, in
Compacting drive mechanism 42 includes a cam 46 affixed to driveshaft 44 as can best be seen in
As best can be seen in
The dual toggle joint assembly also includes upper links 66a and 66b which are respectively connected at their first ends 63a and 63b to knee pivots 62a and 62b and, at their second opposite ends rotatably pinned to plate 43 by bolts 65a and 65b.
Guide stud 52 on transverse link 54 extends into curved recess 48 of cam 46, as shown in
Returning to
Following this placement of the compacted rod-like tobacco shape in the hollow tube, the process is reversed so that the injection spoon is withdrawn from the now filled cigarette tube and returned to its initial position within the compacting chamber and then the compacting member is retracted from the compacting chamber so that it returns to its initial position depicted in
The illustrated embodiment also includes an optional self-cleaning generally horizontal slot 100 running across compaction chamber plate 34. Preferably, slot 100 will be generally perpendicular to the face of the plate and of a length equal to or greater than the width of the compacting member, although the slot may be angled with respect to the plate face and it may have intervening strengthening portions as shown. The height of the slot may vary but it should be sufficiently narrow to ensure that little or no loose tobacco can escape from the slot as the compacting member moves in the compacting chamber. Also, the slot may be angled from the horizontal across the plate.
The function and operation of self-cleaning slot 100 is to remove fines and other materials that accumulate on the surface of the compacting member adjacent the slot. Thus, as the compacting member is retracted from the compacting chamber, its outer surface moves across self-cleaning slot 100 causing accumulated tobacco fines and gummy materials to be scraped-off against the edges of the slot so that these materials are ejected from the compacting chamber through the slot and fall to the bottom of the cigarette making machine where they will not cause any difficulties. The self-cleaning slot thus helps ensure long-term continued operation of the cigarette-making machine without undue friction due to build-up of fines and gummy materials.
Turning now to
A retractable sizing member 120 is captured between the top surface of plate 43 and the underside of the machine housing top surface 12. The retractable sizing member has a tab 122 at its proximal end 124 that may be moved into or out of compacting chamber 18 as desired, to vary the length of the chamber to correspond to two differing cigarette/cigarette tube lengths. If it is desired to produce cigarettes in more than two lengths, multiple retractable sizing members may be used. The multiple retractable sizing members may be lined up side-by-side and structured/supported in the same fashion as retractable sizing member 120.
As can be seen in the enlarged partial view of
Sizing member 120 can be seen in the sectioned views of
The sizing member linkage is confined laterally by way of cooperation between the side edges of slot 154 and a channel 156 cut into the back surface of the housing in a flat portion 158 of the housing above compacting chamber access opening 14 (
As can also be seen in
Thus, the illustrated embodiment of the invention can produce cigarettes of two different lengths. The longer length will be made by withdrawing the sizing tab from the compacting chamber as illustrated in
When a cigarette of a second shorter length is to be filled, the sizing tab will be moved into the compacting chamber by moving control arm 136 toward the back wall of the machine to the position illustrated in
As noted above, two or more retractable sizing members may be employed in embodiments to produce three or more different cigarette lengths by incrementally adjusting (shortening) the effective width of the compacting chamber to correspond to the different cigarette lengths. Thus,
In another aspect, a method of using the improved injector-type cigarette-making machine is provided. In this method, loose tobacco is placed in the compacting chamber and a paper cigarette tube of a selected length is disposed on the nipple of the machine. Once the tube and tobacco are in place, the user operates the retractable sizing member described above to set the length of the compacting chamber to a size corresponding to the length of the cigarette tube. Loose tobacco is then placed in the compacting chamber. If a protective door is present, the door is opened before inserting the tobacco. In a fully automatic machine, the machine is then turned on by pressing the appropriate switch or, if a protective door is present, by closing the protective door. In a semi-automatic machine, the machine is manually operated to move the compacting member across the compacting chamber to form a tobacco rod and then a motor is triggered to operate the tobacco spoon for inserting the tobacco rod into the cigarette tube. In a fully manual machine, both the compacting and the inserting steps are manually controlled.
All references, including publications, patent applications, and patents, cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each reference were individually and specifically indicated to be incorporated by reference and were set forth in its entirety herein.
The use of the terms “a” and “an” and “the” and similar referents in the context of describing embodiments (especially in the context of the following claims) are to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural, unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. It should be understood that the illustrated embodiments are exemplary only, and should not be taken as limiting the scope of the invention. All methods described herein can be performed in any suitable order unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context. The use of any and all examples, or exemplary language (e.g., “such as”) provided herein, is intended merely to better illuminate the invention and does not pose a limitation on the scope of the invention unless otherwise claimed. No language in the specification should be construed as indicating any non-claimed element as essential to the practice of the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160205994 A1 | Jul 2016 | US |