This application is the U.S. National Stage of International Application Number PCT/FR2013/052042 filed on Sep. 5, 2013 and claims priority under 35 USC §119 to French Patent Application No. 1258778 filed on Sep. 19, 2013. Both applications are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The invention relates to the technical field of stacker devices for stacking postal flats. The invention relates more particularly to a stacker device for stacking flats on edge, which device includes a stacking support that extends along a certain stacking axis for storing flats on edge and in a stack, which flats are inserted successively onto the stacking support. The stacker device further includes a stacking actuator for guiding each flat to be stacked along an insertion axis transverse to the stacking axis, for inserting it at a first end of said stack of flats, and for pushing said first end of the stack while the flat is being inserted along the stacking axis. The stacker device further includes a retaining element that is mounted to move along the stacking axis and that is designed to retain the stack of flats at a second end of the stack that is opposite from said first end, while pushing the stack of flats towards the stacking actuator as the stack of flats is being formed. The invention relates even more particularly to a stacker device for stacking postal flats in a storage container equipping a sorting outlet of a postal sorting machine. Postal flats may be of various sizes, and they may also have a variety of mechanical characteristics, in particular as regards stiffness. Such a mailpiece may, inter alia, be an ordinary letter, a magazine, an envelope with or without a window, a newspaper, or indeed a catalog wrapped in plastic or in paper, with or without gussets. The invention also relates to a storage device for storing postal flats, and to a postal sorting machine.
In sorting outlet containers operating by stacking or by accumulation, the stacking actuator, which is of the type comprising a bucket wheel or a bladed wheel mounted to rotate on a stationary pin or axle, comes to press on the last flat in the stack (by brushing against it) in order to release space into which the current flat to be stacked can be inserted. The front of the stack is held by a retaining element that is mounted to move in translation along the stacking axis. That retaining element is pushed towards the stacking actuator against which the back of the stack bears, the retaining element being pushed by a spring, by a counterweight, or by any other suitable means. As the stack of flats is being formed on the stacking support or surface, the stack gathers weight, thereby requiring a stacking actuator that is powerful enough to press the stack of flats and to release space each time a new flat arrives, into which space the current flat can be inserted. The pressure exerted by said stacking actuator on the uncovered surface of the last flat in the stack tends to damage that flat irreversibly, e.g. by leaving marks, holes, or burns due to considerable friction. In addition, it would be too constraining and difficult technically, on each cycle, to adapt the speed, the power, and the position of the stacking actuator as a function of the loading from the stack.
Known stacker devices, such as those described, for example, in Publications WO 2012/084708 and U.S. Pat. No. 1,898,704 do not procure satisfactory solutions. Each of those devices includes a stacking actuator for stacking flats on a support. The support is mounted to move relative to the stacking actuator along a stacking axis in one direction only, in such a manner that inserting each flat into the stack is facilitated by the movement of the support.
An object of the invention is to remedy those drawbacks by proposing a stacker device that makes it easier to insert flats to be stacked, while also minimizing the risks of them being damaged, while keeping the stack of flats together, and while avoiding the need, for each cycle, to adapt the speed, the power, and the position of the stacking actuator as a function of the loading from the stack. Another object of the invention is to propose a storage device and a postal sorting machine that offer the same advantages.
To this end, the invention provides a stacker device for stacking flats on edge, which device includes:
The basic idea of the invention is thus to apply impulses to the stacking support, the effect of which impulses is to overcome the inertia of the stack, thereby facilitating insertion of the current flat to be stacked, making it possible to limit the pressure that needs to be exerted by means of the stacking actuator on the stack of flats. Thus, the invention contributes to simplifying the stacking actuator and, in practice, to limiting the part it plays to guiding the flats while they are being stacked.
The stacker device of the invention may advantageously have the following features:
The invention also provides a storage device for storing postal flats, which device includes a stacker device as defined above, and the invention also provides a postal sorting machine including a sorting conveyor for directing postal flats towards sorting outlets, each of which sorting outlets is equipped with such a storage device for storing flats.
The present invention can be better understood and other advantages appear on reading the following detailed description of embodiments given by way of non-limiting example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The stacker device of the invention is, in particular, designed to be incorporated into a storage device for a sorting outlet of a postal sorting machine.
In a first embodiment of the invention, and with reference to
In this example, the paddle 3 is substantially perpendicular to the stacking axis D2, i.e. to the stacking support 2. The paddle 3 is designed to move along the stacking axis D2 as the stack of postal flats 100 is being formed on the stacking support 2, i.e. as the thickness of the stack of postal flats 100 increases.
In the example shown, the stacking actuator 4 is a rotary mechanical actuator of the bucket wheel type that, in this example, is mounted to move in rotation about a main axis A that is substantially perpendicular to the stacking support 2 and to the stacking axis D2. The stacking actuator 4 has a hub 6 carried by a pin embodying the main axis A and from which, in this example, two bucket arms 7 extend, each of which is curved in the direction opposite to the direction in which a postal flat 100 to be stacked arrives. The inside zones of the bucket arms 7 define slots 8 suitable for finding themselves, in succession, in the path of the postal flat 100 to be stacked as the rotary actuator 4 rotates, and its slots 8 are designed to guide the front of each postal flat 100 to be stacked. Thus, as the stacking actuator 4 is rotating, the slot 8 takes hold of the postal flat 100 and guides it along the last postal flat 100 in the stack by moving with it until it is fully stacked. In addition, the bucket arm 7 comes to push the back of the stack strongly by brushing against the last postal flat 100 in the stack, and the current postal flat 100 is inserted once a first straight line L1 connecting the main axis A to the top of the bucket arm 7 is perpendicular to the stacking axis D2. The stacking actuator as described may be replaced with any equivalent stacking actuator.
In accordance with the invention, the stacker device 1 includes impulse means 9 that are synchronized with the stacking actuator 4 and that are designed to move the stacking support 2 in translation by applying impulses along the stacking axis D2 when a current postal flat 100 is stacked at the back of the stack. The impulse means 9 comprise a mechanical thrust actuator 10 mounted to rotate about the axis A. For example, it is possible to use a cam 10 (two cams in this example), mounted to rotate about the main axis A, the pin embodying said main axis A being motor-driven so as to drive both the stacking actuator 4 and the cam 10 in rotation. In the example shown, the cam 10 is provided with two eccentric zones 11 that are diametrically opposite each other and that are designed to drive the stacking support 2 by direct contact, so as to move it in translation between the first position and the second position. The cam 10 is offset angularly from the stacking actuator 4 so that a second straight line L2 connecting the main axis A to the tops of the eccentric zones 11 is angularly offset relative to the first straight line L1, about the main axis A, by an impulse angle α. The cam 10 is therefore advanced relative to the bucket arm 7. Thus, as described below, the impulse generated by the cam 10 is slightly earlier than the arrival of the postal flat 100 to be stacked and the application of maximum pressure by the bucket arm 7 on the stack. The inertia from the stack is thus overcome by the impulse caused by the cam 10, thereby relieving the bucket arm 7 correspondingly. The stacker device 1 further includes at least one abutment (not shown) designed to prevent the stacking support 2 from moving, in particular for limiting the extent to which the stacking support 2 can move in the event of a small amount of loading from stacked postal flats 100. The impulse angle α may, in particular, lie in the range 30° to 60° and preferably in the range 40° to 50°. Provision may be made for the impulse angle α to be mechanically adjustable as selected by the operator. Similarly, the cam 10 may be mounted removably so as to be changed in order to adapt the stroke of the stacking support 2 on application of the impulse.
In a variant embodiment that is not shown, the stacking actuator may be provided with a single arm only, in which case the mechanical thrust actuator is provided with a single eccentric zone. Thus, the impulse means enable the stacking support to change positions once per full rotation of the eccentric zone about the main axis.
The impulse means 9 further include return means 12 that act to oppose movement of the stacking support 2 from the first position towards the second position in order to bring it back to the first position. The return means 12 may be constituted by a compression spring 13 that is already pre-stressed before each impulse. Thus, the compression spring 13 is compressed to a greater extent while the stacking support 2 is moving from the first position to the second position under the action of the cam 10 and, by means of the effect of it relaxing, thrusts the stacking support 2 from the second position towards the first position when the cam 10 no longer thrusts the stacking support 2. Naturally, the thrust force from the compression spring 13 is less than the thrust force from the cam 10.
Operation of the stacker device 1 is described below. With reference to
Before a postal flat 100 to be stacked arrives, the bucket arm 7 and the cam 10 are actuated so that they move in rotation about the main axis A to the position shown in
Between the first and second positions, the stacking support 2 is moved by an impulse distance d shown in
The steps described with reference to
In a variant embodiment (not shown), the return means may include or comprise a traction spring provided between the stacking support and the main axis. The traction spring may replace or be combined with the above-described compression spring.
In an embodiment that is not shown, the first and third embodiments may be combined. Thus, a cam may be used indirectly and an actuator arm may be used directly. In a variant embodiment of the invention that is not shown in the figures, a letter-bottom abutment situated at the end of the stacking support that is close to the stacking actuator prevents the postal flats from moving backwards on the stacking support while it is returning from the second position to the first position. In other variant embodiments of the invention that are not shown, the stacking support may further include a crenellated surface making it possible to retain the edges of the postal flats on edge, or a belt made of a material of the adhesive type, so as to prevent the postal flats from slipping over its surface.
The invention makes it possible to achieve the above-mentioned objectives. The stacker device 1; 101; 201 of the invention makes it possible to generate mechanical impulses that are applied to the stacking support 2; 102; 202 so as to overcome the inertia of the stack of postal flats 100 and thus so as to improve the effectiveness and the quality of the stacking of the postal flats 100, regardless of their nature and of the quantity already stacked. The invention also makes it possible to avoid having to over-dimension the stacking actuator 4, 104, 204 and to limit the risk of damaging the postal flats 100, of jamming, or of improper stacking. The stacker device 1; 101; 201 may be incorporated into a storage device and into a conventional postal sorting machine. Naturally, the present invention is in no way limited to the above description of one of its embodiments, which can undergo modifications without going beyond the ambit of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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12 58778 | Sep 2012 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2013/052042 | 9/5/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/044946 | 3/27/2014 | WO | A |
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