This application is the National Stage of International Application No. PCT/NL2013/050128 filed Feb. 28, 2013, which claims the benefit of Netherlands Application No. 1039439, filed Mar. 6, 2012, the contents of which is incorporated by reference herein.
The invention is related to a sorting device for sorting playing cards, comprising an input bin for accepting a stack of cards, transport means for successively discharging the lowest card from the input bin, at least two receiving bins disposed on top of each other, a conveyor track between the input bin and receiving bins, detection means for detecting each card to be discarded and selection means for selectively receiving, depending on the detected detection value, cards transported in the conveyor track in one of the receiving bins, said selection means being formed by adjustment means for adjusting in height at least one of the receiving bins disposed on top of each other.
Such a sorting device is known from American patent application US 2005/0110210 A1. In FIG. 5 therein, a sorting device is described with four receiving bins, disposed on top of each other and adjustable in height, for selectively receiving cards transported from the input bin via a common conveyor track to the receiving bins. A disadvantage of said prior art sorting device is that, due to the common conveyor track, all cards must be transported sequentially by the common conveyor track in order to arrive at the selected receiving bin. In order to place the cards in one of the four receiving bins disposed on top of each other, the receiving bins must, in the most unfavorable case, be moved up or down over a considerable distance.
That renders said prior art sorting device relatively voluminous and slow.
The invention seeks inter alia to provide a sorting device for cards that is compact and can work rapidly.
According to the invention, this is achieved by extending parts of the conveyor track in opposite directions from the input bin and by disposing receiving bins at each end of both conveyor track parts and disposing the detection means in the input bin.
As a result, a card that is being transported from the input bin in an opposite direction to the preceding card, can already be discharged while the preceding card is still under way.
This makes the sorting device even faster.
In a further form of embodiment, rotating means are present to rotate both of the upper receiving bins with respect to the center of the input bin for a quarter of a turn in a horizontal direction, from a first position in which cards can be received in the receiving bins and a second position in which cards can be removed from the receiving bins.
Hereby it is achieved that the cards in the four cardinal points come to lie in the same orientation in the receiving bins, preferably with the longitudinal side of the cards facing the side of the receiving bins where the cards are removed.
If in the four cardinal points of the sorting device doors are present through which, in opened position, cards can be removed from the receiving bins, as well as ejection means that can be activated in the second position of the first subframe for ejecting sorted cards through the opened doors, the removal is made considerably easier.
It will be noted that, from the international patent application WO 2011/091800 A2, a sorting device for sorting playing cards is known with an input bin and four circumjacent receiving bins. In order to transport playing cards selectively from the input bin to one of the receiving bins, the input bin is rotatably disposed in the center of the receiving bins. For each playing card that is to be discarded in another receiving bin, the input bin is rotated in order to discard the playing card in the desired bin.
Due to the repeatedly required rotational movement of the input bin, the sorting process will also last relatively long in this prior art sorting device.
The invention will be further explained below with reference to an example of embodiment of a sorting device, shown in the figures, for sorting cards.
In that connection, other characteristics and advantages of the invention will be explained.
The sorting device shown in
After inputting a stack of cards, a pressure block 4 is laid in the recess 2 that exerts force on the inserted stack of cards.
Along its circumference, the sorting device 1 is provided with four circularly spaced slots 5. In
A display 6 is disposed at the top of the sorting device, on which score information of a played bridge game is shown. The sorting device can be connected to a computer in order to input card distributions to be played and to store scores that were realized in the computer.
In
Card separation rollers 8, that can be rotatably driven in two opposite directions by a motor 9, are disposed at either side of the sensor array 7 to output the card that in each case is at the bottom of the input bin 3. Cards destined for the east position and for the south position are outputted from the input bin 3 to the right by the card separation rollers 8, visible in
A narrow gap 10 at both output sides of the input bin 3, having a height less than the thickness of two cards lying on top of each other, obstructs any second card that may be carried along.
In conveyor tracks 11 and 12 on either side of the input bin 3, identical card transport systems are disposed. Each of said transport systems consists of driven rollers 13 and 14 around which a conveyor belt 15 is mounted. At the location of the rollers 13 and 14 at the beginning and the end of the conveyor tracks 11 and 12, pressure rollers 16 and 17 form conveyor pinchers with the conveyor belt 15.
A card detector is disposed at the location of the conveyor pinchers, as shown in detail in
Upon the passage of a card from the input bin 3, transported in one of the conveyor tracks 11 and 12 along the light transmitter 20 at the beginning of each conveyor track 11, 12, the light receiver 21 no longer receives light, indicating that the card concerned has arrived in the associated conveyor track. Upon the passage of the trailing edge of a card along the light receiver 21, the stream of light from the light transmitter 20 to the light receiver is re-established, indicating that the card concerned has been transported from the related conveyor track 11,12 and that a following card can be transported in the associated conveyor track 11,12. If a following card is to be transported in another conveyor track, then said transport can already start earlier, to wit when the preceding card has moved outside the reach of the sensor array 7 in the input bin 3.
As a result, the sorting process can run even faster. By using the light-reflecting surfaces 22 and 23, the light transmitter 20 and the light receiver 21 can both be disposed under the conveyor tracks 11 and 12, contributing towards a lower construction height of the sorting device 1.
As shown in
Receiving bins 26 and 28 are adjustably mounted in the subframe 30 in vertical direction. To that end, a lift system consisting of a spindle 31 and a nut 32 are present at each of the receiving bins 26 and 28.
On rotation of the spindle 31 by a motor 33 disposed on the subframe 30, the nut 32 and the thereto fixedly connected receiving bins 26 and 28 move up or down respectively, depending on the rotational direction of the associated motor 33.
On the desired output of a card to a bottom receiving bin 25 or 27, depending on the detection value, the associated upper receiving bin 26 or 28 is positioned in its upper position, lying completely above the associated conveyor track 11 or 12, and an outputted card ends up in the lowest receiving bin 25 or 27 respectively.
If a card is to be transported to the upper receiving bins 26 or 28, depending on the detection value, the associated lift system moves the upper receiving bin, 26 or 28, downwards, the associated receiving bin being positioned so far below the associated conveyor track that a card transported therein ends up in the upper receiving bin, possibly on the cards deposited therein earlier.
After completion of the sorting process, in which all 52 cards have been distributed over the four receiving bins, the subframe 30 is rotated a quarter of a turn in order to bring the receiving bins 26 and 28 into the east position and the west position respectively.
To this end, as can be seen in
A driving wheel 36, fixedly disposed in the main frame of the sorting device 1, brings the subframe 30 into rotation upon being driven by a motor 37, fixedly disposed in the main frame, the receiving bins 26 and 28 coming into the positions shown in
In this position of the subframe 30, the spindles 31 of both lift systems are activated to bring the receiving bins 26 and 28 into a lowest position that corresponds with the height of the fixedly disposed receiving bins 25 and 27.
A toothed relay wheel 38, fixedly disposed in the main frame diametrically opposite driving wheel 36, is briefly driven at the end of the rotation of the subframe 30 by the gear rack 35.
The relay wheel 38 acts together with a gear rack 39 on the top of a second subframe 40 disposed under the subframe 30. This second subframe 40 is rotatable around the same rotation axis as the first subframe 30. Upon brief rotation of the relay wheel 38, the second subframe 40 rotates anticlockwise and the gear rack 39 comes into contact with the driven wheel 36 that thus further rotates the second subframe 40.
In doing so, the connection between the driving wheel 36 and the first subframe 30 is also broken. The second subframe 40 is provided with four curved runs 41 and four run-up cams 42, one for each cardinal point.
The fixed main frame is provided with four slot-shaped output openings 5 and four swing-up doors 43 that can each close off an output opening. Upon rotation of the subframe 40, the run-up cams 42 force the doors 43 up to their opened position and subsequently move follower pins 44, that each run in a curved run 41, outwards in radial direction.
Two ejector pins 45 at each receiving bin are mutually connected by means of gear wheels 46 and are also connected to a follower pin 44.
By the outward movement of the follower pins 44, the ejector pins 45 also move outward and press the sorted cards in the receiving bins 25, 26, 27 and 28 out through the output openings 5. Upon removing the cards, the doors 43 rest on the cards and fall back into their closed position after the cards are removed.
For the sake of completeness, the whole cycle of the rotation of the subframes 30 and 40 is described in detail with reference to
Both subframes 30 and 40 each have a gear rack, 35 and 39 respectively, extending over an arc of approximately 180°. The relay wheel 38 has a toothing over half of its circumference. In abutment to the toothing, the relay wheel 38 is provided with slanting surfaces 48 and 49, of which the surface 49, in the position shown in the figure, is in contact with the top of the subframe 40, outside the gear rack 39.
In its initial position the subframe 40 is in a position where the gear rack 39, at the commencement of its toothing, is in contact with the bottom of the toothing of the relay wheel 38. In this connection, surface 48 is in contact with the bottom of the subframe 30, beyond the gear rack 35 on it. In this initial position, gear rack 39 is free of the driving wheel 36 and gear rack 35 is, in its central part, in engagement with the driving wheel 36.
On activation of the driving of the driving wheel 36, the subframe 35 rotates 90° and gear rack 35 engages with the relay wheel 38 and rotates this to a position where surface 49 abuts the subframe 40. In that connection, the gear rack 35 is released from the driving wheel 36 and gear rack 39 is forced into engagement with the driving wheel 36 and is released from the relay wheel 38. Gear rack 39 now rotates 90° anticlockwise up to the position shown in
By the operation of the relay wheel 38, the driving of both subframes 30 and 40 is realized by one and the same motor 37. By the operation of the surfaces 48 and 49 on the relay wheel 38, the free rotation of subframes 30 and 40 is prevented. Their movement is blocked as it were, so that undesirable rotation in state of rest, for example during transport, is prevented.
The driving wheel 36 consists of two fixedly and mutually connected gear wheels, one gear wheel driving subframe 30 and the other gear wheel driving subframe 40.
After the removal of the cards, both subframes 30 and 40 return to their initial positions for carrying out a following sorting process.
The sorting process is fastest when many cards are discharged directly after each other in the same receiving bin, and, in the most unfavorable case, is somewhat slower when many cards have to be discharged directly after each other and alternately in the lower and upper receiving bin at the same side of the input bin.
It will be clear that many variations of the sorting device are possible without departing from the scope of protection of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1039439 | Mar 2012 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/NL2013/050128 | 2/28/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2013/133696 | 9/12/2013 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1203261 | Powers | Oct 1916 | A |
2081856 | Frick | May 1937 | A |
2922640 | Fornell et al. | Jan 1960 | A |
3022891 | Efram et al. | Feb 1962 | A |
3986612 | Kamm et al. | Oct 1976 | A |
4232861 | Maul | Nov 1980 | A |
5119954 | Svyatsky et al. | Jun 1992 | A |
5190282 | Rabindran et al. | Mar 1993 | A |
5553712 | Tisbo et al. | Sep 1996 | A |
5706954 | Detjen | Jan 1998 | A |
5718427 | Cranford et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
6726205 | Purton | Apr 2004 | B1 |
7537216 | Soltys et al. | May 2009 | B2 |
7686151 | Renz et al. | Mar 2010 | B2 |
7726457 | Maier et al. | Jun 2010 | B2 |
7753189 | Maier et al. | Jul 2010 | B2 |
7959153 | Franks, Jr. | Jun 2011 | B2 |
7976023 | Hessing et al. | Jul 2011 | B1 |
8342526 | Sampson et al. | Jan 2013 | B1 |
8485527 | Sampson et al. | Jul 2013 | B2 |
20050110210 | Soltys et al. | May 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2011019800 | Apr 2011 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20150035230 A1 | Feb 2015 | US |