The present invention relates to an apparatus for forming stacks of flat objects, such as printed products.
An apparatus of this type is disclosed in CH-A-567 996 and CH-A-609 306. A stack compartment which can be loaded at the top is closed at the bottom by a stack support. After each bundle has been supplied, the stack compartment together with the stack support is rotated through 180°. The stack compartment is assigned driver arrangements which can be driven in a reciprocating manner in order to push a finished stack away from the stack support.
Another apparatus for forming stacks is disclosed by EP-A-0 586 802 and the corresponding U.S. Pat. No. 5,370,382. Two stack-forming devices arranged beside each other are alternately supplied by means of a gripper conveyor with printed products to be stacked. Underneath a pre-stacking space, each stack-forming device has a compartment whose compartment space is bounded on two mutually opposite sides by guide strips. A compartment base which can be raised and lowered is in each case raised in order to pick up a part stack formed in the pre-stacking space, and then lowered again until the objects arranged on it are arranged below slide plates bounding the pre-stacking space. The compartment base, together with the guide strips, can be rotated through 180° in each case in order to form a finished stack, in which the part stacks are in each case arranged lying on one another offset through 180°. As a result, objects such as folded printed products which have a greater thickness in one edge region than at the opposite edge region can be stacked to form stable stacks. In order to eject a finished stack from the compartment, the compartment base is lowered completely and an ejector is moved into the compartment in the ejection direction.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an apparatus of the described type which ensures the formation of stable stacks with short cycle times under all circumstances.
The above and other objects and advantages of the invention are achieved by the provision of an apparatus which comprises a compartment which defines an upwardly open compartment space and which is bounded by a compartment base. At least one upstream guide element is positioned on the upstream side of the compartment space when viewed in an ejection direction, and at least one downstream guide element is positioned on the downstream side of the compartment space. A drive means is provided for ejecting a stack of printed products from the compartment space in the ejection direction and which comprises a first drive for moving the upstream guide element through the compartment space in the ejection direction, and a second drive for moving the downstream guide element out of the compartment space, and wherein the first drive and the second drive are independently operable.
The compartment is mounted for rotation about a central vertical axis, and the compartment base may be mounted for vertical reciprocation so that it can be raised or lowered by a lifting device.
The compartment space is bounded on all four sides, so that the objects fed into the compartment from above can be guided with play on all sides during their vertical movement in the compartment space. In addition, the stacked objects can nonetheless be held firmly in the compartment space by the upstream and downstream guide elements during any rotation of the compartment and in this way can be prevented from lateral displacement and rotation. Furthermore, the guide elements bounding the compartment upstream as viewed in the ejection direction are used for ejecting the finished stack from the compartment. The means for ejecting the respectively formed stack are thus associated with the compartment. This provides the possibility of beginning the ejection of a stack even while the compartment base is being lowered.
The present invention will be described in more detail using an exemplary embodiment illustrated in the drawings, in which, purely schematically:
First of all, with reference to
As
As revealed in particular by
On two mutually opposite sides outside the compartment space 10′, the compartment 10, the compartment 10 in each case has a carrier 40 with a U-shaped cross section running in the vertical direction. In the free end regions of upper and lower plates 42 fixed to the two carriers 40 and running horizontally and parallel to each other, vertical bearing shafts 44 are freely rotatably mounted, each passing through a hollow bearing shaft 46. The two bearing shafts 44 arranged on one side as viewed in the ejection direction A are each connected to a drive motor 48. The opposite bearing shafts 44 corresponding to these bearing shafts 44 are likewise each connected via a reverse gear mechanism 50 to the associated drive motor 48. The two bearing shafts 44 arranged upstream as viewed in the ejection direction A can thus be driven synchronously and in opposite directions of rotation by means of one drive motor 48 and, likewise, by means of the other drive motor, so can the two bearing shafts 44 placed downstream.
In the upper and lower end region of the bearing shafts 44 placed upstream, in each case first sprockets 52, around which an endless first chain 54 is guided in each case, are firmly seated so as to rotate with the shafts. These four first chains 54 are further guided around second sprockets 56, which are freely rotatably mounted on the bearing shafts 44 placed downstream. The hollow bearing shafts 46 arranged between the two sprockets 56 are firmly connected to the bearing shafts 44 placed downstream so as to rotate with them, and upper and lower third sprockets 58 are firmly seated on 15 said shafts so as to rotate with them. In each case a second chain 60 engages around the said third sprockets 58 and is further guided around fourth sprockets 62 which are freely rotatably mounted upstream on the relevant hollow bearing shafts 46.
The first chains 54 arranged on both sides as viewed in the ejection direction A are each connected to each other via a vertical angle bracket 64. The legs of these two angle brackets 64, projecting at right angles 25 from the first chains 54, form upstream guide elements 66 and, in their positions as shown in
In the same way, two further angle brackets 64′ are fixed to the second chains 60, and form downstream guide elements 70 and, in their positions shown in
In
If, following a rotation, further objects 12 are to be accommodated in the compartment space 10′, the guide elements 66 and guide elements 70 are moved in the direction away from each other again into the position shown in
Since the angle brackets 64 and 64′, and therefore the guide elements 66 and further guide elements 70 formed by these, are driven individually by their own drive motors 48, by activating these drive motors 48, adaptations, in the ejection direction A, to the format of the printed products 12 to be stacked can be performed in the most simple manner.
It is possible to feed the printed products 12 to be stacked directly to the compartment 10 for stacking, for example by means of a clamp transporter or belt conveyor. In a preferred way, however, the compartment 10 shown in
In
Arranged above the compartment 10 is a pre-stacking device 80 with a pre-stack compartment, not shown, which can be closed at the bottom by means of slide plates 82 which can be moved toward each other and away from each other. Above the slide plates 82, fork-like intermediate base elements 84 can be inserted into the pre-stack compartment and withdrawn from the latter again.
At the time in a processing cycle shown in
Even during the lowering of the compartment base 28, as soon as the entire finished stack 76 is located underneath the slide plates 82, the guide elements 66 and further guide elements 70 are moved in the ejection direction A, as shown by
At the time shown in
The cross-shaped design of the compartment base 28 firstly ensures stable supporting of the stacks and secondly, when the compartment base 28 is raised, that the guide elements 66 and, if appropriate, the guide elements 70 will move past the arms of the compartment base 28 extending in and counter to the ejection direction.
A control device, not shown, controls all the drives 5 and functions, so that each finished stack 76 has the predetermined part stacks with the specific number of printed products.
The fact that the guide elements 66 serving as ejection elements are associated with the compartment 10 and thus the ejection operation can already be carried out as the compartment base 28 is lowered, means that shortening of the cycle times as compared with the known prior art is possible with gentle handling of the printed products 12.
In the embodiment of the compartment according to the invention shown in
The compartment according to the invention can be employed in different apparatuses for forming stacks of flat objects. This includes, for example, such apparatuses in which the stacks or part stacks are formed in the compartment itself.
As can be gathered from
The ejection of finished stacks 76 is also possible in the direction counter to the ejection direction A shown in
It is also possible to dispense with the hollow bearing shafts 46 and to arrange the third sprockets 58 firmly on the bearing shafts 44 so as to rotate with them, and to mount the fourth sprockets 62 freely rotatably on the bearing shafts 44.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0051/03 | Jan 2003 | CH | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040140607 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |