Not Applicable
Not Applicable.
This invention relates in general to equipment for handling sheet metal and, more particularly, to a machine for positioning empty skids in a stacking machine so that sheet metal panels can accumulate on such skids.
Metal sheet, particularly sheet steel, finds widespread use in manufactured products of many types, among which are housings for a variety of equipment including household appliances and cabinets of one sort or another. The metal sheet comes in large coils produced at rolling mills. In order to render the coiled metal sheet suitable for press work, the metal sheet must be withdrawn from the coil and cut into panels of sizes appropriate for the press work. This normally requires advancing the metal sheet into a shear and severing it transversely into panels, which fall from the shear one after the other. Often the metal sheet is much too wide for the panels required during the press work. In that event, the metal sheet is passed through a slitter which divides it into strips that then pass into the shear where each stroke of the shear blade produces multiple panels—as many as there are strips. The panels drop into a stacking machine where they accumulate in stacks, and when the stacks reach a predetermined number of panels, they are discharged, providing space for more stacks to form.
Each stack weighs far too much for a single individual to lift. To facilitate handling, skids, which are basically small pallets, are placed in the stacking machine where the panels accumulate, and indeed the stacks form on the skids. Each skid is slightly smaller, at least in width than the panels which accumulate on it, and this holds particularly true where the panels are cut from multiple strips that emerge from a slitter.
In this regard, the skids must not project laterally beyond the strips, for if they do they will interfere with dividers that lie along the sides of the strips to insure that the panels cut from the strips drop uniformly and accumulate with the margins of the stacked panels in registration. The stacking machine elevates the skids into the spaces between or along these dividers to receive the initial panels sheared from the strips, and if the skids are positioned improperly, they will interfere with the dividers and damage them. Thus, the operator of the stacking machine must manually position the skids to insure that they clear the dividers before the stacking machine elevates the skids. To be sure, a machine exists which pushes skids onto a stacking machine from one of its sides, and this machine can properly position a single pallet for receiving only a single panel with each stroke of the shear. Such a machine will also push multiple skids onto a stacking machine, each for receiving a different panel cut from a strip that emerges from a slitter. But the skids must be separated in the stacking machine before the machine elevates the skids, and this requires that the operator to reach into the machine and manually position the skids. The effort is taxing and time consuming.
The present invention resides in a skid positioning machine on which empty skids are organized, with the proper spacing between them. The positioning machine sits adjacent to a stacking machine onto which multiple panels severed from side-by-side strips of metal sheet are delivered to accumulate in stacks on skids properly spaced in the positioning machine. Once a set of stacks is completed and the stacks and their skids removed, the skid positioning machine places the empty skids on the stacking machine properly spaced and otherwise properly located laterally. The invention also resides in the process of properly positioning empty skids in a stacking machine.
Corresponding reference numerals will be used throughout the several figures of the drawings.
Referring now to the drawings, a stacking machine A (
Actually, the stacking machine A is located downstream from a feeding machine C, a slitting machine D, and a shear E (FIG. 1). The feeding machine C grips the metal sheet M and advances it in precisely measured increments, with each increment being one of the dimensions of the panels P. As the sheet M advances, the slitting machine D slits it into side-by-side strips N. To this end, the slitting machine D has circular knives 2 arranged in pairs, with one knife 2 of each pair being above the sheet M and the other below the sheet M. The knives 2 of each pair do not align, but instead are slightly offset laterally. Moreover, the spacing between their peripheral surfaces is less than the thickness of the sheet M. As a consequence, the knives 2 of each pair fracture the sheet M, thus forming longitudinally directed slits, and these slits separate the individual strips N which are likewise formed. The strips N pass into the shear E which, once the feeding machine C completes an incremental advance, severs panels P from the strips N. To this end the shear E has a blade 4 which descends across cutting edge 6. As it does it severs panels P from the strips N, and those panels P fall along a shear face 8 below the cutting edge 6. Indeed, the panels P which are severed accumulate on skids S which are supported on the stacking machine A.
Actually, the skids S need not be positioned adjacent to the shear face 8 to receive the panels P. One type of stacking machine has an elevated conveyor which transports the individual panels P severed from the strips N to a downstream location at which they are deposited on skids S, and while the panels P drop along a face in such a machine, they do not fall along a shear face. The positioning machine B may serve to positioning skids S on such modified stacking machines as well.
Considering the stacking machine A first, it includes (
The table 14 has side rails 24 and 26, the former being along the skid positioning machine B and the latter on the opposite side. In addition, the table 14 has cross members 28 which extend between the side rails 24 and 26 and are welded to them so that the table 14 has a good measure of rigidity. The rails 24 and 26 support a succession of conveying rollers 30 which extend between them and form an upwardly presented, yet interrupted, supporting or conveying surface that lies in a horizontal plane irrespective of the elevation of the table 14. The rollers 30 rotate in bearing 32 which are bolted to the rails 24 and 26. While the rollers 30 terminate at the bearings 32 along the rail 24, they extend through the bearings 32 along the rail 26 and beyond the rail 26 they are fitted with sprockets 34 over which a drive chain 36 passes. The drive chain 36 also passes over a sprocket on a reversible motor 40. When the motor 40 is energized, the rollers 30 revolve and move objects, such as the skids S that are supported on them, in either direction, depending on the direction of rotation for the motor 40. Thus, the rollers 30 form a conveyor. The side rail 24 between several of the bearings 32 that are attached to it has V-shaped notches 42 which open upwardly out of the rail 24 and provide lateral access to the spaces between the rollers 30 which are supported on those bearings 32.
In the operation of the stacking machine A, empty skids S are deposited on the rollers 30 somewhere between the ends of the table 14, in a transverse row, there being as many skids S in the row as there are strips N slit from the metal sheet M. Moreover, the skids S are located such that they align with the spaces delineated by the dividers 20, and as such each is offset slightly from the dividers 20. Once the skids S are correctly positioned on the rollers 30 of the table 14, the motor 40 is energized such that the rollers 30 move the skids S upstream to a receiving position adjacent to the shear face 8. Moreover, the jacks 16 elevate the table 14 to position the skids S slightly below the cutting edge 6 of the shear E, yet along the dividers 20. At this juncture the feeding machine C advances the metal sheet M until the strips N at its leading end project beyond the cutting edge 6 of the shear E a prescribed amount, whereupon the advance ceases and the blade 4 of the shear E descends. The blade 4 severs a panel P from each strip N, and those panels P drop along the dividers 20 onto the skids S that are supported on the rollers 30 of the table 14. The feeding machine A, thereupon advances the sheet M still farther an identical amount, and the blade 4 of the shear descends to sever more panels P of sizes equivalent to the previously severed panels P. Those subsequent panels P drop on to the previous panels P. The cycle repeats over and over again, thus creating stacks T of panels P on the skids S. As the stacks T grow the jacks 16 lower the table 14 so that the panels P fall essentially the same distance before coming to rest. The skids S, although slightly smaller than the panels P which accumulate on them, need to be positioned properly on the rollers 30 of the table 14, lest they come against and damage the dividers 20 as the jacks 16 elevate the table 14 and the skids S upon it. The skid positioning machine B serves that end.
The skid positioning machine B is located to the side of the stacking machine A—indeed, opposite the side rail 24 on the table 14 of the stacking machine A (FIG. 1). It allows an operator to position empty skids S on it with the proper spacing between those skids S, and after the empty skids S are so positioned, the machine B moves them over the rollers 30 on the table 14 of the stacking machine A where they are picked up by the rollers 30 as the jacks 16 elevate the table 14. As a consequence, the skids S rest on the rollers 30 properly spaced and positioned so that they will not interfere with the dividers 20.
The skid positioning machine B includes (
In addition to the base 50, the skid positioning machine B has (
The guide assembly 64 also has (
In addition, the skid positioning machine B has (
The cross beam 82 on its underside has a pair for friction plates 88 (
Extending forwardly from the cross beam 82 are transfer beams 94 (
Indeed, when the table 14 is at the proper elevation, the transfer carriage 80 may be displaced from a retracted position (
The transfer beams 94 along their upwardly presented transfer surface are provided with (
Along its sides, slightly to the rear of the cross beam 82, the carriage 80 is fitted (
The transfer carriage 80 is fitted with (
The transfer carriage 80 is moved to and fro over the base 50 by a reversible motor 116 which is mounted on one of the side rails 52 at the front corner of the base 50 toward which that side rail 52 extends. The motor 116 rotates a drive shaft 118 (
When the feeding machine C advances the metal sheet M a predetermined increment, the slitting machine D slits the sheet M into several strips N, depending on the number of opposed knives 2 above and below the sheet M. The advance further projects the strips N beyond the cutting edge 6 of the shear E a distance equal to the incremental advance (FIG. 1). The projecting portions of the strips N extend along the dividers 20. Once the metal sheet M and the strips N forming the end of it come to rest, the blade 4 of the shear E descends across the cutting edge 6 and shears as many panels P as there are strips N from the strips N. The panels P drop downwardly. A skid S lies below each projected strip N on the rollers 30 of the table, and these skids S receive the panels P in the sense that the panels P build up in stacks T on the skids S. The first panels P sheared from the strips N drop directly onto their respective skids S, while the next panels P drop onto the first panels P, and successive panels P accumulate, one on top of the other, until the stacks T so formed possess a requisite number of panels P.
In order to receive the panels P, the skids S need to be positioned on the rollers 30 of the stacking machine A with a reasonable amount of precision. Initially, they need not be positioned adjacent to the shear face 8 along which the panels P drop. Indeed, they may be positioned on the rollers 30 remote from the shear face 8 and then, by rotating the rollers 30 with the motor 40, moved to a position adjacent to the shear face 8. But the lateral positioning of the skids S needs to be performed with reasonable precision. The skid positioning machine B serves that end.
More specifically, as many empty skids S as there are strips N slit from the metal sheet M are placed on the transfer beams 94 of the carriage 80 that forms part of the skid positioning machine A (FIG. 1). Here the empty skids S are separated with the proper spacing and are further located in proper relation with respect to the reference marks m on the beams 94, which marks M may correspond to the center line of the conveying surface formed by the rollers 30 of the stacking machine A. In other words, the distance between each skid S and the reference marks m would be the same as the distance that skid S should be located from the centerline of the conveying surface formed by the rollers 30. With the skids S so positioned, the jacks 16 of the stacking machine A are activated to bring the movable frame 14 to an elevation in which the conveying surface formed by the rollers 30 is below the transfer surface formed by the beams 94 of the positioning machine B. Thereupon, the motor 116 of the positioning machine B is energized. It drives the transfer carriage 80 toward the side rail 24 on the moveable frame 14 of the stacking machine A. The guide assembly 64 moves with it, inasmuch as the friction plates 88 on the carriage 80 clamp the slide 72 of the guide assembly 64, and the slide 72 drives the guide bar 66 forwardly. The front ends of the transfer beams 94 remain between the tabs 70 on the guide bar 66 and thus align properly with the V-shaped notches 42 in the side rail 24 of the stacking machine A. After a short advance, the guide bar 66 comes against the side rail 24 of the stacking machine A, and the guide assembly 64 comes to rest. But the carriage 80 continues to advance, projecting its transfer beams 94 into the stacking machine A with the transfer surface formed by those beams 94 being above the conveying surface formed by the rollers 30. The guide assembly 64, even though it is at rest, does not prevent the further advance of the carriage 80, inasmuch as the friction plates 88 simply slip along the slide 72 as the carriage 80 continues to advance. The carriage 80 comes to rest when the reference marks m along its beams 94 reach and coincide with the centerline for the conveying surface formed by the rollers 30.
At this juncture the jacks 16 of the stacking machine A are activated to elevate the table 14 sufficiently to bring the conveying surface formed by its rollers 30 above the transfer surface on the transfer beams 94, but not so high as to bring the beams 94 into contact with the rollers 30 between which they fit. The skids S come to rest on the rollers 30.
With the skids S now supported by the rollers 30 instead of the beams 94, the motor 116 for the positioning machine B is again energized, but in the opposite direction. It retracts the carriage 80, allowing its beams 94 to withdraw from the spaces between the rollers 30 and the stacking machine A altogether.
The guide assembly 64 likewise retracts, inasmuch as the friction plates 88 of the carriage 80 grip its slide 72. However, the end plate 74 on the slide 72 in time comes against the stop 62 on the base 50, but the carriage 80 continues with its friction plates 88 slipping over the slide 72. In so doing, the retracting transfer beams 94 slide over the guide bar 66 of the guide assembly 64 between the tabs 70 which maintain them in the proper lateral positions.
In the meantime, the motor 40 of the stacking machine is energized such that the rollers 30 which it powers move the empty skids S toward the shear face 8 of the shear E. The skids S, having already been positioned laterally by the positioning machine B, approach the shear face 8 properly positioned laterally. The motor 40 is de-energized when the skids S come to the proper position with respect to the shear face 8. Next the jacks 16 are again activated to elevate the table 14 and the skids S on it. The skids S rise along the dividers 20, but do not interfere with or damage the dividers 20. Indeed, the table 14 brings the skids S to an elevation in which they are ready to receive panels P. It lowers the table 14 and the skids S as the panels P build up on the skids S.
While the panels P accumulate on the skids S, another set of empty skids S is organized on the transfer beams 94 of the positioning machine B so that they may be transferred to the rollers 30 of stacking machine A once the stacks T are complete and they and their skids S are moved out of the stacking machine A by the rollers 30.
The locator bar 100 may be used with the marks m to position the empty skids S, or it may be used in lieu of the marks m.
Some stacking machines, in lieu of a table provided with side-by-side rollers 30, have side-by-side chains which extend transversely with respect to the direction of advance for the metal sheet m and the strips N, that is to say parallel to the shear free 8. The skids S are supported on the chains adjacent to the shear face 8, and once the requisite number of panels P accumulate on them, the chains are activated and move the skid S and the stacks T of panels p on them away, with the direction of discharge being parallel to the shear face 8. But the chains like the rollers 30 have spaces between them and are carried by a table which is elevated and lowered on jacks.
The skid positioning machine B may be used to position skids S on a chain-type stacking machine as well. In such an arrangement, the skid positioning machine B is located at one end of the chain conveyor with its transfer beams 94 arranged and spaced to fit into the spaces between the chains of the conveyor. When the skids S are organized on the beams 94, care must be exercised to insure, not only that the spacing between them is correct, but also that they will locate properly with respect to the shear face when they are transferred to the conveyor chains. Otherwise, the skid positioning machine B operates with a chain-type stacking machine essentially the same as with the roller-type stacking machine A.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3621973 | Carlson et al. | Nov 1971 | A |
3887060 | Kamhues | Jun 1975 | A |
4269556 | Martini | May 1981 | A |
6435352 | Schoenbeck et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040131463 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |