This application is a national stage entry of PCT/IB2013/002132, filed on Sep. 24, 2013, which claims priority to and the benefit of Switzerland Patent Application No. 1723/12, filed on Sep. 24, 2012, and Switzerland Patent Application No. 1724/12, filed on Sep. 24, 2012, the entire contents of each of which are incorporated herein by reference.
This application is related to the following commonly-owned copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/430,163, filed on Mar. 20, 2015, entitled “STRAPPING DEVICE HAVING A PIVOTABLE ROCKER.”
The present disclosure concerns a strapping device, such as a mobile strapping device, for strapping packaged goods by way of a strap, which has a tensioning apparatus for applying a strap tension to a loop of a strap, wherein the tensioning apparatus is provided with a tensioning wheel which can be rotationally driven about a tensioning axis in a motorized manner, being configured to engage with the strap, the tensioning apparatus furthermore having a tensioning plate, wherein it is provided during a strapping process performed by the tensioning apparatus that a segment of strap is located between the tensioning wheel and the tensioning plate and makes contact with both the tensioning wheel and the tensioning plate, and moreover the tensioning wheel or the tensioning plate is arranged on a rocker which can pivot in a motorized manner about a rocker axis in order to either increase or decrease a distance between the tensioning wheel and the tensioning plate by way of a pivoting motion. The strapping device moreover has a connecting device, such as a welding mechanism, to produce a connection, especially a friction welded connection or other welded connection, with the two superimposed regions of the loop of strap by way of a welding element, which can undertake a local heating of the strap.
Such mobile strapping devices are used for the strapping of packaged goods by way of a plastic strap. For this, a loop of the particular plastic strap is placed about the packaged goods. As a rule, the plastic strap is pulled off from a supply roll. After the loop has been placed completely about the packaged goods, the end region of the strap overlaps with a segment of the loop of strap. The strapping device is now placed at this two-ply region of the strap, the strap being clamped in the strapping device, a strap tension is applied to the loop of strap by way of the tensioning apparatus, and a closure is produced on the loop between the two layers of strap by frictional welding (or other welding technique). In this process, pressure is applied to the strap with a frictional shoe oscillating in the region of the two ends of the loop of strap. The pressure and the heat created by the motion melt the generally plastic strap locally within a short time. This produces a lasting connection between the two layers of strap, one which can only be loosened with great force. Essentially at the same time or afterwards, the loop is separated from the supply roll. The particular packaged goods have now been strapped.
Such strapping devices are intended for mobile use, during which the device is taken by the user to the particular place of use, where one should not be dependent on the use of energy supplied from the outside. The energy required for the intended use of such strapping devices in order to tension a strap about any given packaged goods and produce a closure is generally provided by an electric storage battery or by pressurized air in the case of known strapping devices. This energy produces the strap tension applied by way of the tensioning apparatus to the strap and a closure on the strap. Furthermore, such strapping devices are configured to join together only weldable plastic straps.
For mobile devices, a low weight is of special importance, in order to physically burden the user of the strapping device as little as possible when using the device. Likewise, for ergonomic reasons, the weight should be distributed as uniformly as possible over the entire strapping device, especially in order to avoid a concentration of weight in the head region of the strapping device. Such a concentration results in difficult handling of the device.
Furthermore, the most ergonomical and user-friendly handling of the strapping device is always desired. In particular, the possibility of wrong operation and malfunction should be kept as low as possible.
Therefore, the problem which the present disclosure is supposed to solve is to create a mobile strapping device of the mentioned kind which, despite the possibility of an at least predominantly automated and rapid production of strapped packages has a high functional safety and good handling qualities. In particular, but not exclusively, the problem is addressed to mobile strapping devices. This problem is solved by the present disclosure in a strapping device of the mentioned kind by only a single motor, with whose driving movements in identical directions of rotation the tensioning wheel for tensioning the strap can be placed in rotation and also the rocker can pivot about the rocker axis in motorized or pneumatically driven manner such that the distance between the tensioning wheel and the tensioning plate is altered by this pivoting motion, in particular, increased.
With the solution according to the present disclosure, only a single motor is required for both the tensioning process of the strap by the tensioning wheel and also the lifting of the rocker of the tensioning apparatus each time by a single motorized movement. According to the present disclosure, the same only one direction of rotation of the motor, such as an electric motor, can be used for this. The present disclosure thus enables an expansion of the functions which can be executed with only a single motor, whose benefits are especially tangible in a portable mobile strapping device. Since in embodiments according to the present disclosure the pivoting or lifting of the rocker is no longer done manually but by motor, the hand-operated lever thus far needed for a movement of the rocker of the tensioning wheel and the transmission mechanism from lever to tensioning wheel can be eliminated in feasible embodiments of the present disclosure. Thus, the present disclosure enables not only a greater degree of automation in strapping devices, but also a reduction in the weight of such mobile strapping devices despite the higher degree of automation.
Moreover, with the present disclosure it is possible not only to reduce the number of motors in strapping devices, but also in certain embodiments of the present disclosure an at least almost fully automated strapping process is made possible, in which the welding mechanism and its infeeding or transfer to the strap as well as the severing of the strip to separate a closed loop of strap from the strap supply is accomplished with the driving movements of only a single motor of the strapping device. Strapping devices in which both the tensioning process and the moving of the welding mechanism into the welding position, and also a driving of the welding shoe and a driving of the cutting blade is undertaken with only a single motor, are known from WO 2009/129633 A1. Reference is hereby made to WO 2009/129633 A1 in regard to the entire solution and its content is incorporated by reference.
One feasible embodiment of the present disclosure can specify that, in a gearing, especially in a gearing of the tensioning device, either an operative connection of the motor with the tensioning wheel or an operative connection of the motor with the rocker can be created alternately. In these solutions, the operative connection of the electric motor to either the rocker or the tensioning wheel should be produced by at least one shifting process and thus each time only one of the two functions can be executed. Since shifting processes are especially easy to implement, i.e., with little design expense, such a solution can be implemented purely mechanically and nevertheless be weight saving and functionally safe.
The at least one shifting process can occur in one embodiment by two clamping mechanisms of a locking mechanism, which can be brought alternately into locking engagement with at least one gear element of a gearing of the tensioning apparatus each time, in order to transmit by the blocking of the particular gear element the motorized driving movement with identical direction of rotation of the driving movement provided by the motor to the tensioning wheel or in the form of a lifting or lowering movement to the rocker. The gearing of the tensioning apparatus can be, in particular, a single or multiple-stage planetary gearing. The clamping mechanisms in such embodiments of the present disclosure thus act advantageously on two gear elements of the planetary gearing.
An especially economical design solution to create the pivoting movement can call for providing a gear element of the planetary gearing which is blocked against rotational movements, with which the driving movement of the motor is also transmitted to the tensioning wheel, as an abutment for a gear element which can rotate about the rocker axis. In such a solution, the planetary gearing can thus be used both for the driving movement of the tensioning wheel and for the driving movement of the rocker. Such solutions make due with an especially small number of structural parts, despite the very different transmission systems required for the two functions.
In another embodiment of the present disclosure, which also has independent significance, the motorized driving movement of the only one motor can be used not only to drive the tensioning wheel during the tensioning of the strap but also for a lifting of the rocker for the variable pressing of the tensioning wheel against the strap being tensioned, in dependence on the strap tension. The pressing in dependence on the strap tension and thus the increasing of the pressing force of the tensioning apparatus against the strap in dependence on the strap tension can also be of independent significance. The dependency is organized in this case such that, with increasing strap tension, the pressing force exerted by the tensioning wheel on the strap also increases. Since with increasing strap tension the danger also increases of a slippage occurring between the tensioning wheel and the strap, one can counteract the danger of slippage by providing an increasing pressing force. In this embodiment, the same direction of turning of the motor is used as for the tensioning. The motorized driving movement during the tensioning of the strap can utilized such that, during the tensioning process of the strap by way of the tensioning wheel engaging with the strap and rotating against a strap tension, a counterforce acting from the strap to the tensioning wheel is utilized to increase the pressing force of the tensioning wheel in the direction of the tensioning plate or the pressing force of the tensioning plate in the direction of the tensioning wheel.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, it should be made possible with little design expense and easy operating capacity to maintain and release a force resulting from the strap tension and operating reactively on a gearing in order to transfer a driving movement to the tensioning wheel. The present disclosure thus concerns a locking device for use in a strapping device, with which a rotatable wheel can be clamped, which is provided for transmission of a driving movement, especially a gearing wheel of a tensioning apparatus of the strapping device. The locking device according to the present disclosure should have at least one clamping body which can pivot about an axis and is arranged at a distance from the wheel, which can be pivoted from a release position into a locking position in which it bears—by a portion of an arc-shaped contact surface—against an essentially planar peripheral clamping surface of the wheel, i.e., one which is free of form-fitting elements, wherein the clamping body has a pivot radius which is greater than a distance from the pivot axis of the clamping body to the peripheral clamping surface of the wheel, and the rotating of the clamping body about the pivot axis during the movement from the release position to a clamping position occurs in the opposite direction of turning to that of the wheel being clamped.
With such a locking device, one can accomplish very functionally secure locking of rotating gear wheels in a simple designed manner. The locking in the direction of turning of the wheel can be maintained with little force expenditure. The clamping force of the clamping body even increases automatically if one should try to turn the wheel further by increasing the torque.
The locking mechanism according to the present disclosure can be used with advantage especially for the releasable locking of a wheel of a gearing which belongs to a gearing by which a driving movement is supposed to be transmitted to a tensioning wheel of the tensioning apparatus of a strapping device. In this context, it can be provided especially for the clamping of a wheel of a planetary gearing by which the driving movement is to be transmitted to the tensioning wheel. With or at least assisted by a clamping of the wheel being clamped, one can define one of at least two takeoff directions of the gearing, in particular a takeoff direction of the gearing toward the tensioning wheel, so that the strap can be tensioned.
Moreover, it can be advantageous with a loosening of the clamping to also remove at least partly, or entirely, the strap tension acting on the tensioning wheel and the gearing. Since with such locking mechanisms relatively low release forces are needed to remove the clamping, even for high strap tension values, the present disclosure produces especially functionally safe and easy to operate strapping devices. The low operating and activating forces make it possible to do without a rocker handle, with which large torques have been produced heretofore in known strapping devices for lifting the rocker from the taut strap. Instead of a long rocker handle, one can now use a button or switch with which the tension releasing process occurs.
Other embodiments of the present disclosure will emerge from the claims, the specification, and the drawing.
The present disclosure shall be explained more closely with the help of sample embodiments represented schematically in the figures. There are shown:
The strapping device 1 shown in
With the strapping device 1, one can tension a loop of plastic strap B, not otherwise shown in
During use of the indicated embodiment of tensioning device, two layers of the strap are situated between the tensioning wheel 7 and the tensioning plate and are pressed by the tensioning wheel 7 against the tensioning plate. By rotation of the tensioning wheel 7, it is then possible to provide a sufficiently large strap tension to the strap loop for packaging purposes. The tensioning process and the tensioning device and rocker 8 advantageously designed for this shall be explained more closely below.
After this, a welding of the two layers can be done in familiar fashion at a location of the strap where the two layers of the strap loop are superimposed on each other, by way of the friction welding device 12 of the strapping device. In this way, the strap loop can be permanently closed. In the sample embodiment shown here, the friction welding and separating mechanism 12 is actuated by the same only one motor M of the strapping device with which all other motor-driven movements are also performed. For this, in familiar manner, there is provided a not otherwise depicted freewheeling in the direction of transmission from the motor M to the places where the motorized driving movement occurs, which has the effect that the driving movement is transmitted in the particular desired rotary driving direction to the corresponding functional unit of the strapping device and no transmission occurs in the other particular rotary driving direction of the motor.
The friction welding device 12 for this is provided with a welding shoe 13, shown only highly schematized, which is moved by way of a transmission mechanism 14 from a position of rest at a distance from the strap to a welding position in which the welding shoe is pressed against the strap. The welding shoe pressed by mechanical pressure against the strap in this way and the simultaneously occurring oscillating movement of the welding shoe with a predetermined frequency melts the two layers of the strap. The locally plasticized or melted regions of the strap B flow into one another and after a cooldown of the strap B there is produced a connection between the two strap layers. Insofar as is necessary, the strap loop can then be separated from the supply roll of strap by way of a cutting device of the strapping devices 1, not otherwise depicted.
The infeed of the tensioning wheel 7 in the direction of the tensioning plate 9, the rotary driving of the tensioning wheel 7 about the tensioning axis 6a, the lifting of the tensioning wheel from the tensioning plate, the infeed of the friction welding device 12 by way of the transmission mechanism 14 of the friction welding device 12 as well as the use of the friction welding device 12 in itself and the activating of the cutting device occur by use of only a single common electric motor M, which provides each time a driving movement for these components of the strapping device. For the power supply of the motor M, a replaceable storage battery 15 is arranged on the strapping device, especially one which can be removed for recharging, which serves to store up electrical energy. A supply of other external auxiliary energy such as pressurized air or other electricity can be provided, but does not occur in the case of the strapping device per
As shown in
As is likewise shown in
On the drive shaft of the motor, situated behind the toothed belt drive for the welding mechanism as seen from the motor M, there is a bevel gear 19, which belongs to a bevel gearing of the tensioning apparatus, as does a second bevel gear 20 meshing with it. On the same shaft where the second bevel gear 20 is arranged there is also located a first gear 21 of another toothed belt drive 22, which is furthermore led across a second gear 23. The first gear 21 of the toothed belt drive 22 is arranged on the shaft 24 firmly against rotation.
On the other end of the shaft 24 is mounted the rocker 8 of the strapping device, being part of the tensioning apparatus 6 and also carrying an upstream gearing from the tensioning wheel 7, in the present case a planetary gearing 26, for which suitable bearing sites can be provided on the rocker 8. The rocker 8 is shoved onto the shaft 24 such that the rocker 8 is arranged and supported so that the rocker 8 can pivot about the longitudinal axis of the shaft 8. The longitudinal axis of the shaft 24 is thus at the same time the rocker pivot axis 8a, about which the rocker 8 can swivel.
The planetary gearing 26 can be configured as a single or multiple-stage planetary gearing, in particular, a two or three-stage planetary gearing. From an end face of the gear 23 facing the tensioning wheel 7, there sticks out an externally toothed input sun gear 30 belonging to the planetary gearing 26, whose axis of rotation is identical to the axis of rotation 6a of the input gear 23. On a shaft of the gear 23 on which the sun gear 30 is also configured in the sample embodiment, a freewheeling 45 is provided, which only enables one rotary direction of the sun gears 30, namely, the rotary direction which is provided for the driving of the tensioning wheel. The sun gear 30 is led through a ring gear 27 and through a central recess of a planet carrier 25, which are likewise part of the planetary gearing 26. Looking from the input side of the planet gear, the planet carrier 25 is arranged behind the ring gear 27 on the axle of the planetary gearing 26 corresponding to the tensioning axis 6a. The planet carrier could also be configured as a clamping, coupling or spur gear.
The ring gear 27 has at its outer circumference a cam 27c, which engages with an abutment 46 secured to the base plate 4 of the strapping device. The internally toothed ring gear 27 is supported in this way so that the cam 27c can execute slight relative movements within its engagement with the abutment 46, for example, in a recess 46a of the abutment. Furthermore, the ring gear 27 has a ring-shaped shoulder 27a, on which a roller bearing 28 is arranged for the mounting of the planetary gearing 26.
The planet carrier 25, whose axis is aligned with the tensioning axis 6a, engages by its three planet gears 25b with an internal toothing of the input ring gear 27 of the planetary gearing 26. The planet gears 25b of the planet carrier 25 furthermore engage with the sun gear 30, from which they can obtain a driving movement and transmit it, appropriately stepped down, to the ring gear 27. Thus, given a rotationally fixed arrangement of the planet carrier 25, a rotational movement of the sun gear 30 can be converted into a rotational movement of the ring gear 27. In the sample embodiment, a first clamp 29 of a locking mechanism is configured as a pivoting cam, which can be brought into contact with a clamping surface 25a on the outer circumference of the planet carrier 25 or pivoted away from the clamping surface 25a with a spacing. The cam is arranged so that, upon contact of the cam with the clamping surface 25a by a rotation of the input planet carrier 25 in the rotary direction provided for the planet carrier 25, the clamping action is further intensified. By an infeeding of the cam onto the clamping surface 25a by a corresponding shifting movement, the planet carrier 25 can be blocked against rotation. By another shifting movement, the cam 29 can be moved away from the clamping surface 25a, thereby releasing the planet carrier 25 for rotational movements. The shifting movement can trigger a pivoting motion of the clamp 29 about a shift axis 143, which is produced by activating a button 44.
The sun gear 30 is furthermore arranged in the region of the axis of rotation 31 of a ring gear 32, whose nontoothed external surface 32a is coordinated with a second clamp 33. The axis of rotation 31 is identical to or aligned with the tensioning axis 6a. The clamp 33 interacting with the outer surface 32a can essentially be configured in the same way as the first clamp 29 as a shifting cam, which can move between two end positions, whereby in the one position the ring gear 32 is blocked against rotation and in the other position the ring gear 32 is released for rotational movements. Moreover, an internal toothing of the ring gear 32 engages with three planet gears 34, which are mounted at the end face of the following planet carrier 35, facing the ring gear 32. The planet gears 34 of the planet carrier 35 furthermore engage with the sun gear 30 of the input gear 23, which protrudes into the ring gear 32.
The locking device in the embodiment being described is configured so that always only one of the gears 25, 32 is clamped against rotation and the other gear 25, 32 is free for rotational movements. Thus, depending on the positions of the locking devices 29, 33, it is possible for a rotational movement of the gear 23 and the sun gear 30 to result in either a rotation of the planet carrier 35 about the tensioning axis 6a and axis of rotation 31 by virtue of a movement of the planet gears 34 in the internal toothing of the ring gear 32. Or the rotation of the sun gear 30 depending on the positions of the locking device results in a rotation of the ring gear 32. If the planet carrier 25 is not clamped by the locking mechanism, the rotating sun gear entrains the planet gears 25b so that the planet carrier 25 rotates and the ring gear 27 remains stationary. On the other hand, if the ring gear 32 is not clamped, a rotation of the sun gear 30 results in an entrainment of the planet gears 34, which in turn set the ring gear 32 in a rotational movement. Since the resistance to rotation in the further course of the planetary gearing 26 is greater toward the tensioning wheel 7 than the torque needing to be overcome in order to set the ring gear 32 in rotation, the ring gear 32 will primarily rotate in this case and the tensioning wheel 7 at least for the most part will not rotate.
At the other end face of the planet carrier 35, turned toward the tensioning wheel 7, there is arranged rotationally firm on the planet carrier 35 another sun gear 36, which meshes with planet gears 41 of another planet carrier 42. A further sun gear 43 directed toward the tensioning wheel 7 and connected rotationally firm to the planet carrier 42 is led through a recess of the additional planet carrier 37, configured as a ring gear. The sun gear 43 stands in meshing engagement with planet gears 38 of the additional planet carrier 37, facing the tensioning wheel 7 The planet gears 38 of the second planet carrier 37 mesh in turn with an internal toothing of the tensioning wheel 7 and drive the latter in its rotational movement about the tensioning axis 6a. This rotational movement of the tensioning wheel 7, provided with a fine toothing on its external circumferential surface, is utilized to grasp the strap B with the circumferential surface and pull back the strap of the strap loop, thereby increasing a strap tension in the strap loop.
The third planet carrier 37 has a shoulder 37a on its outer surface, which can be brought into contact against a stop element 39 by a rotational movement. The stop element 39 itself is fixed not to the rocker, but to the base plate 4 or some other carrier, which does not participate in the pivoting motion of the rocker 8. Thus, the stop element 39 is stationary in regard to the shoulder 37a.
In use when strapping packaged goods, the strapping device 1 behaves as follows: after a loop of a customary plastic strap has been placed around the particular packaged goods, this is placed inside the strapping device in the region of the end of the strap where the strap loop is double-ply for a certain length, and the end of the strap is secured in the strapping device by a strap clamp, not otherwise depicted. A section of the strap B immediately next to the strap loop is placed in double layer on top of the tensioning plate 9 of the tensioning apparatus 6. The rocker 8 with the tensioning wheel 7 and the upstream gearing 26 is situated in its upper end position, in which the tensioning wheel 7 is arranged at a spacing (by its greatest design spacing) from the tensioning plate 9, so that the largest possible opening gap is produced, enabling an easy, comfortable and thus also rapid placement of the strap in the tensioning apparatus. After this, the rocker is lowered onto a tensioning plate 9 opposite the tensioning wheel 7 and pressed against the strap arranged between the tensioning plate 9 and the tensioning wheel 7. Both this transfer movement of the tensioning wheel and the magnitude of the pressing force exerted on the strap by the tensioning wheel at the start of the tensioning process can be produced in the described embodiment of the present disclosure by one or more prestressed spring elements 44 (not shown). By activating a button 10, the spring element can be released and the entire strapping process triggered with its consecutive steps of “tensioning”, “closing”, “cutting”, releasing the tension of the strap in the region of the tensioning apparatus, and “lifting of the rocker”, for which no further intervention by the user of the strapping device need occur.
After the tensioning wheel 7 is moved automatically from the open position to its tensioning position (see the tensioning position in
In the just described “tensioning” operating state of the strapping device, the driven tensioning wheel 7 in engagement with the strap produces a corresponding, oppositely directed counterforce on the tensioning wheel 7, depending on the resistance resulting from the strap tension and acting on the tensioning wheel 7. This counterforce acts in the reverse direction of transmission of the motorized driving movement on all gearing elements of the multistage planetary gearing that are involved in the transmission of the driving movement. If a different type of gearing from a single or multiple-stage planetary gearing is used, the counterforce resulting from the already applied strap tension and put into the respective gearing via the contact with the tensioning wheel is also available for use in accordance with the present disclosure. According to the present disclosure, this counterforce can be used to improve the conditions of the process, especially the functional safety even when the applied strap tension is high. Thus, in order to use this counterforce for the following described purpose, it would be possible in theory to use each of these gear elements for this, in particular, to pick off and employ the mentioned counterforce at each of these gear elements.
In the sample embodiment, the planet carrier 37 is used for this. The planet carrier 37 is buttressed in this case via the stop element 39 against the base plate 4, so that the entire tensioning apparatus 6 is pressed about the rocker axis 8a against the strap in proportion to the force of resistance (strap tension). The tensioning wheel 7 is thus pressed against the strap B proportionally to the strap tension. The strap tension generated by the tensioning process is utilized in advantageous manner to increase the pressing force of the tensioning wheel 7 on the strap B as the strap tension increases steadily, so that the danger of a “slip-through” or a slippage of the tensioning wheel 7 during the tensioning process, which also increases with increasing strap tension, can be counteracted.
For this, the planet carrier is configured with the engaging element 37a, which interacts with the stationary stop element 39. The engaging element, configured as a cam and arranged on the outer circumference of the planet carrier and projecting essentially radially from it, is buttressed against the stop element 39. As can be seen from
After the ending of the tensioning process and the following welding process to form the closure and also after a motorized driven cutting process by a cutting device, not otherwise depicted, integrated in the strapping device, a quick and uncomplicated removal of the strap from the strapping device should be possible. To accomplish this, there is provided a motorized lifting movement of the tensioning wheel 7 from the clamping position. For this, the button is activated and for as long as the button 10 is activated the rocker also remains in the open position, in which a sufficient spacing is created between the tensioning plate 9 and the tensioning wheel 7. By releasing the button 10, the rocker is closed, for example, by spring force.
In the sample embodiment, to accomplish this at first the operative connection between the electric motor M and the tensioning wheel 7 is released and an operative connection is created between the electric motor M and the rocker 8. This is accomplished by switching the clamps 29, 33. The previously existing clamping of the ring gear 32 is lifted in that the second clamp 33 is removed from the outer surface 32a of the ring gear 32 and in this way the ring gear 32 is released for rotational movements. Basically at the same time or shortly thereafter, the first clamp 29 is lowered onto the clamping surface 25a of the planet carrier 25 and brought to bear against it in clamping fashion. In this way, the input planet carrier 25 is fixed and locked against a rotational movement about the tensioning axis 6a, along which the entire planetary gearing is situated.
In this way, the tensioning wheel 7 can turn freely without being driven and no longer has an operative connection to the electric motor M or the sun gear 30, such as might transmit a driving movement. A driving movement of the electric motor M with the same rotary direction as during the tensioning process is now utilized, thanks to the locking of the input planet carrier 25 of the planetary gearing, so that the planet gears 25b of the spur gear 25 entrain the input ring gear 27 in their rotational movement. The input ring gear 27 thus executes a rotational movement by virtue of the rotating planet gears 25b. The bearing and abutment of the ring gear 27 on the abutment element 46 leads to a pivoting motion of the ring gear 27 about the rocker axis 8a. The input ring gear 27, which is also connected rotationally firm to the rocker 8 thanks to the clamping, entrains the rocker 8 during this movement. This results in a lifting of the rocker 8 and the tensioning apparatus 6 secured to it, including the tensioning wheel 7. The rotational movement of the rocker 8 can be limited by an end stop or an end position sensor, which shuts off the motor M after reaching an end position in the opened position of the rocker 8 and triggers an arresting of the rocker. Thanks to the motorized lifting movement of the rocker 8 against the direction of action of the spring element 44, the spring element 44 also is once more provided with a greater prestressing force. The strap B can now be removed from the strapping device 1.
The strapping device is now ready for a new strapping process, which can occur in the same way as the previously described strapping process. In order to lower the rocker 8 after introducing a new piece of strap B in the strapping device 1, the spring element 44 must be released again, which can be done for example via an operator button on the strapping device. In the sample embodiment, the previously actuated button 10 is released for this. The spring force then swivels the rocker, now in the opposite direction, against the tensioning plate and clamps the strap for the next tensioning process with an initial pressing force between the tensioning wheel 7 and the tensioning plate 9. The variable pressing force in the rest of the tensioning process increases in the manner described.
In
The embodiment likewise shows a pivoting rocker 80 of the tensioning apparatus 86, driven by motor about a rocker pivot axis 80a. In contrast with the previously explained sample embodiment, here it is not the tensioning wheel 87 but instead the tensioning plate 89 which is arranged on the pivoting rocker 80, whose rocker pivot axis 80a runs parallel to the tensioning axis 86a. The motorized driving movement with the direction of rotation which is used for rotational movements about the tensioning axis 86a is also used in this sample embodiment for the pivoting motion of the rocker 80. The rocker pivot axis 80a in this embodiment as well runs essentially parallel to the tensioning axis 86a, about which the tensioning wheel can rotate. The rotational movement of the motor is transmitted, behind a point at which the motorized driving movement is utilized for the welding mechanism, across a bevel gear pair 99, 100 to a planetary gearing 106 and from this it goes further to the tensioning wheel 87. A freewheeling 125 arranged on the shaft of an input sun gear 110 ensures that the input side of the planetary gearing 106 can only turn in one rotary direction. The planetary gearing 106 is provided with gear elements which can be optionally arrested by way of a locking mechanism having two clamps 29, 33, as in the previously described sample embodiment, so that the driving movement can be transmitted either to the tensioning wheel 87 or to the rocker 80.
In order to open the tensioning apparatus 86, the ring gear 107 is released via the locking device, i.e., the clamp 33 is not in clamping engagement with the ring gear 107. The tensioning wheel 87 can in this way turn freely without an operative connection with the motor M. Optionally, strap tension still acting on the tensioning wheel 87 from the strap B from the previous tensioning process is released in this way by the tensioning wheel 87 and the gearing 106 upstream from the tensioning wheel. With the clamp 29, the spur gear configured as a planet carrier 105 is locked, and its axis of rotation is aligned with the tensioning axis 86a, i.e., the axis of rotation of the tensioning wheel 87. The motorized driving movement transmitted from the bevel gear 100 to the input sun gear 110, thanks to the removable rotary arresting of the planet carrier 105 performed by way of the clamp 29, does not lead to a rotation of the planet carriers 105 but instead to rotational movements of the planet gears 105b of the planet carrier 105. The internal toothing of the ring gear 109 which engages with these planet gears 105b places the latter in rotational movement. As is especially seen in
The rotational movement of the ring gear 109 and the engagement of the ring gear 109 with the circular arc segment 150 results in a rotational movement of the connection shaft 151 about the connection axis 151a. A spur gear 152 arranged at the other end of the connection shaft 151 engages with an external toothing 117c of the planet carrier 117 and in this way transmits the rotational movement about the connection axis 151a to the planet carrier 117. In relation to the tensioning axis 86a, the connection axis 151a is situated on one side and the rocker pivot axis 80a on the other side of the tensioning axis 86a, the rocker pivot axis 80a being located on the side of the head end of the strapping device.
The planet carrier 117 belongs to the drive train provided for the driving movement of the tensioning wheel 87. The operative connection of this drive train to the motor M is momentarily broken thanks to the above described shifting process of the locking mechanism. Thus, at the above-described moment in the process there is no operative connection of the motor M with the tensioning wheel 87 to drive the latter. As a result of the rotary movement transmitted to the planet carrier 117, the planet carrier 117 rotates about the tensioning axis 86a and entrains a dog 80c of the rocker 80 by a cam 117a arranged on its outer circumferential surface. As a result, the rocker 80, appearing as an arc in plan view, is rotated and opened.
The rocker 80, able to turn about the rocker axis 80a and having the approximate shape of an arc segment, is arranged with its lower free end underneath the tensioning wheel 87, so that the tensioning plate 89 arranged in the region of the free end of the rocker 80 can likewise be arranged directly beneath the tensioning wheel 87. In order to arrange the tensioning plate 89 with a spacing from the tensioning wheel 87, the previously described motorized driven movement of the rocker 80 is used in the rotary direction along arrow 112 (
In order to tension the strap B arranged between the tensioning wheel 87 and the tensioning plate 89, the ring gear 107 is clamped on its outer circumferential surface by way of the clamp 33 to prevent rotational movements. The planet carrier 105 is not clamped, and so it can turn, as can the connection shaft 8. The motorized driving movement from the sun gear 30 in the planetary gearing 106 arranged on the tensioning axis 86a is transmitted through the planet carrier 105 and the ring gear 107 to the planet gears 114 of the second planet carrier 115 and sets the latter in rotation. A sun gear, not recognizable in the representation of
In the previously described operating mode of “tensioning”, in which the tensioning wheel 87 engages with the strap B, a force of resistance in the form of a restoring moment acting from the strap B on the rotating tensioning wheel 87 is produced by virtue of the strap tension. Its magnitude is variable and proportional to the magnitude of the applied strap tension. This force of resistance works opposite the motorized driving moment which arises in the gear elements participating in the transmission of the driving movement. In the sample embodiment, the planet carrier 117 is braced by a cam 117b, having the function of an end stop, against the rocker 80. The planet carrier 117 rotating by the motorized driving movement in a suitable rotary direction lies by its cam 117b against a dog 80b of the rocker and thereby turns it in a motion according to arrow 113 (
In
The clamping element 33 is mounted so that it can pivot about the shifting and pivoting axis 143, where the shifting axis 143 of the clamping element 33 runs parallel to the axis of rotation of the gear 107 being clamped. The shifting axis 143 runs in the region of one end of the camlike clamping element 33. In the region of the other end of the clamping element there is provided an arc-shaped contact surface 33a, which is provided for a contact with the clamping surface 107b of the gear being clamped. Due to the circular shape of the clamping surface 109b as well as the arc shape of the contact surface 33a in side view, an essentially linear contact comes into being when the clamping element 33 contacts the circumferential surface 107b, and this line of contact runs perpendicular to the plane of the drawing in
As emerges from
In the sample embodiment of the present disclosure discussed here, it is not absolutely necessary, if the wedge effect is strong enough, to maintain the position of the cam in its clamping position by outside measures. This already occurs simply due to the fact that the gear 107 can only turn in one rotary direction and this is in fact blocked in removable fashion by the clamp 33. In sample embodiments of the present disclosure, the camlike clamping element is held in position by the spring force of a spring element 159. For this, the spring element 159 lies against the clamping element above the shifting axis 143 and turns or holds the clamping element 29 in its clamping position. In order to remove the clamping element from its clamping position, the spring force must be overcome with a switch 160. Using the switch 160, both clamps 29 and 33 can be activated at the same time. Depending on the arrangement of the switch/button, a pulling or pressing of the switch can overcome the spring force and release the ring gear 107 from the clamp 33 and lock the planet carrier 105. In the other movement of the switch/button, the clamp 29 and the planet carrier 105 are again released via the spring force, while the clamp 33 locks the ring gear 107.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1723/12 | Sep 2012 | CH | national |
1724/12 | Sep 2012 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2013/002132 | 9/24/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2014/072775 | 5/15/2014 | WO | A |
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