The present invention relates to sheet material feeders, for example hoppers for feeding sheet material such as signatures, individual sheets or inserts from a pile.
German Patent Application No. 197 38 920 for example discloses a feeder for taking a signature from a pile of signatures using a suction device, which passes the signature to a rotating drum. Grippers on further opening drums then open the signatures as the signatures are transported to a saddle-back conveyor.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,213,457 discloses an apparatus for feeding flat products from a pile using a sucker and conveying belts. The flat products are then passed to a feeder conveyor, either directly or via a gripper drum running at a stable surface speed ten percent greater than the speed of the flat products.
A problem with conventional feeders is that the separation process for the bottom sheet material is prone to difficulties at high speeds. For example, inertial forces and vacuum building for the suckers creates limits on the speed for the feeder.
The present invention provides a sheet material feeder comprising: a sheet material holder for holding a pile of sheet material; a rotating drum for transporting the sheet material from the pile; and an acceleration device receiving the sheet material from the rotating drum at a first speed and releasing the sheet material at a second speed greater than the first speed.
By providing an acceleration device in conjunction with the rotating drum, the drum can rotate at a slower speed to remove the sheet material from the pile, while the acceleration device provides for increased delivery of the sheet material. Thus for a particular feeder speed, removal of the sheet material can occur more effectively due to the lower rotating drum speed.
The acceleration device preferably includes a plurality of variable-speed belts, and may further include two intake nip rollers and two output nip rollers over which the belts run. The surface speed of the output nip rollers is then greater than the surface speed of the input nip rollers.
The rotating drum preferably includes a plurality of grippers, so that more than one sheet material is obtained from the stack per revolution of the drum.
The grippers preferably include a first gripper part and a second gripper part, each gripper part being individually actuable.
The holder may include an adjustable bottom tray, and a restrictor.
A caliper and pressure roller may be provided to interact with the gripper drum prior to the acceleration device. The roller may be eccentrically mounted.
Preferably, the drum further includes suckers. The suckers thus are no longer separate from the drum, and may be actuated by rotation of the drum.
The present invention thus also provides a sheet material feeder comprising: a sheet material holder for holding a pile of sheet material; and a rotating drum for transporting the sheet material from the pile, the rotating drum including at least one sucker rotating with the drum for contacting the sheet material.
By having the sucker rotate with the drum, complex reciprocating parts such as independent suck bars and lift feet may be eliminated.
The present invention will be described with respect to a preferred embodiment in which:
The feeder further includes a rotating drum 30 having a plurality of grippers 32 and suckers 34, which can be connected to cam followers and moved and actuated by cams adjustable for various sheet material 10 lengths. Each gripper 32 has a first gripper part 35 and a second gripper part 36, which pivot about a pivot point 38 and each of which may have its own cam. The two gripper parts 35, 36 may be spring-forced together, so that the cams for each part operate to open the spring. A plurality of grippers 32 and suckers 34 may be spaced axially on the drum 30, the grippers 32 and suckers 34 preferably alternating and being spaced axially apart.
The suckers 34 can take suction from an adjustable vacuum pad on drum 30, which may be connected to a vacuum source apart from drum 30.
Interacting with an outer surface of drum 30 is an eccentrically-mounted rotating pressure roller 40, located in front of an acceleration device 50. Acceleration device 50 includes two take-off belts 52, 54, which are spaced axially in radial gaps in the drum 30, and thus spaced axially with respect to grippers 32 and suckers 34 as well. Belts 52, 54 are driven by input rollers 56, 57 and/or output rollers 58, 59 and have a variable speed. Preferably the surface speed of belts 52, 54 at input rollers 56, 57 is equal to the surface speed of the drum 30, which may rotate at a constant speed. The belts accelerate through the device 50, so that the surface speed of the belts 52, 54 at the output rollers 58, 59 is greater than at the input rollers 56, 57. The variable-speed drive for the rollers may include elliptical gears, a Geneva mechanism, or a separate servo-drive. Holding devices also could be provided on the belts.
FIGS. 2 to 13 show the gripping of a bottommost one of the sheet material 10 for one set of grippers 32 and suckers 34.
Sucker 34 then pulls sheet material 10 to gripper 32, which then grips the front edge of sheet material 10, as shown in
Once the sheet material is gripped the vacuum to sucker 34 is cut and gripper 32 moves counterclockwise to free the sheet material 10 from sucker 34, as shown in
Sheet material 10 is then pressed against the outer surface of drum 30 by pressure roller 40, while grippers 32 still grip sheet material 10, as shown in
Since many grippers 32, for example 4, 6 or 8, may be spaced circumferentially about the drum 30, the drum 30 can pull off a plurality of pieces of sheet material 10 per revolution at a speed slow enough to ensure good transfer from the holder 20, while acceleration device 50 ensures that feeder throughput is not degraded.
While the present invention has been described with respect to a preferred embodiment, a similar device could be used for example in a forced shingling device (where the drum would rotate in the opposite direction and shingle the sheet material 10). The feeder could be used in a saddle stitcher or for perfect binding.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/437,577, filed on May 14, 2003, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10437577 | May 2003 | US |
Child | 11825856 | Jul 2007 | US |