This application is the national phase of international application PCT/IB02/01235 filed Apr. 15, 2002 which designated the U.S. and that international application was published under PCT Article 21(2) in English. This application claims priority to Italy Patent application number BO2001A 000225 filed Apr. 17, 2001.
The present invention relates to a unit for feeding cigarettes to a packaging machine, or packer.
In conventional systems for the manufacture and packaging of cigarettes, a cigarette maker is connected by way of a feed channel to the top inlet of a hopper containing a mass of cigarettes. The hopper presents a plurality of outlets from which groups of cigarettes are collected cyclically and fed to the wrapping line of a cigarette packer.
The hopper functions conventionally as a temporary storage unit operating between the feed channel, which supplies a continuous flow of cigarettes, and the aforementioned outlets, from which the groups of cigarettes are collected cyclically.
In systems of the type mentioned above, which are typified by high operating speeds, a considerable number of cigarettes will be collected cyclically at a relatively high frequency. Consequently, successive collection cycles tend to create somewhat sizeable voids in the mass of cigarettes occupying the hopper, especially in the part of the hopper disposed nearest to the outlets. These voids generate imbalances during a given collection cycle that are unable to self-correct, with the result that the cigarettes are caused to assume an incorrect positional arrangement likely to jeopardize the outcome of the next cycle. In particular, a few cigarettes can become lodged transversely to the remainder and thus occasion a jam internally of the hopper.
The problem in question can be remedied, according to one prior art solution, by using a hopper of which the part directly above the outlets is oversized volumetrically. This ensures that the imbalances mentioned above will have little effect on the mass of cigarettes located above the outlets since the overall volume of the voids created in the mass is negligible in relation to the volume of the mass of cigarettes lying above the outlets.
The solution in question betrays a drawback nonetheless, deriving from the fact that the cigarettes immediately adjacent to the outlets of the hopper are compressed by the considerable mass of cigarettes lying above the outlets. Consequently, the cigarettes risk being crushed and damaged, shedding a part of the tobacco filler from the non-tipped ends or losing their correct cylindrical shape.
The object of the present invention is to provide a unit for feeding cigarettes to a packer machine in which the relative hopper is unaffected by the above noted drawbacks.
The stated object is realized according to the present invention in a unit for feeding cigarettes to a packer machine, comprising a hopper designed to contain a mass of cigarettes, presenting a top feed inlet and a plurality of bottom outlets, ejector means associated with each outlet and capable of movement cyclically in such a way as to remove respective groups of cigarettes from the mass, and container means by which the groups are taken up and transferred to the packer machine, characterized in that it comprises compensating means located internally of the hopper and serving to vary the capacity of the selfsame hopper in response to the change induced in the mass of cigarettes by the removal of the groups.
The invention will now be described in detail, by way of example, with the aid of the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to
The unit 1 comprises a hopper 3 containing a mass 4 of cigarettes 2 conveyed to the top inlet 5 of the selfsame hopper 3 by way of a horizontal channel 6 linked to an upstream machine, namely a cigarette maker (not illustrated).
The horizontally disposed cigarettes 2 advance side by side and transversely to their respective axes as they proceed through the hopper 3, which presents a substantially symmetrical structure, relative to a vertical longitudinal axis A, comprising a top part 7 and a bottom part 8 delimited vertically by a front wall 9 and a rear wall 10.
It will be seen in
The bottom part 8 of the hopper affords a plurality of bottom outlets 11 equispaced one from the next and numbering six in the example of
Also illustrated in
Located on the opposite side of the hopper 3 from the conveyor 16, as discernible in
Each of the finger pushers 21 comprises a plurality of prongs 23 equal in number to the number of the aforementioned channels 15 of the outlets 11, which are able thus during the forward stroke to engage a group 24 of cigarettes 2 formed on the base plate 12 of the relative outlet 11 and direct it into a respective box 18 on the conveyor 16, by which the groups 24 are transferred to the packer.
Referring to
The first legs 27 and 28 of the channels 25 and 26 are compassed by respective first pairs of fixed outer side walls 32 and fixed inner side walls 33, whilst the second legs 29 and 30 are compassed by second pairs of outer side walls 34 and inner side walls 35.
The top part 7 of the hopper 3 presents a structure of substantially rhomboidal geometry, with the aforementioned vertical axis A constituting an axis of symmetry and coinciding with the greater diagonal of the rhomboidal figure.
As discernible from
Each second plate 39 is pivotably associated by way of a fixed hinge with the end of a short fixed section 40 presented by the respective inner side wall 35. The fixed sections 40 are rigidly associated with the bottom ends of the inner side walls 33 presented by the respective first legs 27 and 28.
The first plates 36, the wedge 38 and the second plates 39 present a transverse dimension, that is, normal to the viewing plane of
The articulated mechanism 42 is symmetrical in relation to the vertical axis A of the hopper 3 and comprises a guide rod 43 of which the axis is disposed vertical and parallel to the hopper axis A. The rod 43 is fixed by a bottom end to the wedge 38 and carried freely in a support and slide element 44 connected to the hopper 3 in a manner not indicated.
The articulated mechanism 42 is capable of movement between a first upper limit position illustrated in
In moving toward the first upper limit position aforementioned, the two pairs of first and second plates 36 and 39 pivot one toward the other, rotating about the common hinge, and the wedge 38 assumes a raised position of maximum distance from the hopper outlets 11.
In moving toward the second lower limit position aforementioned, the two pairs of first and second plates 36 and 39 pivot away from one another, rotating about the common hinge to assume a position substantially of mutual alignment, and the wedge 38 assumes a lowered position of minimum distance from the hopper outlets 11.
The movement of the articulated mechanism toward the second lower limit position occurs by gravity.
With the movement of the articulated mechanism 42, the rod 43 likewise is caused to assume two limit positions, one raised and one lowered, the latter determined by an annular stop 43a.
A sensor 45 mounted to the rod 43 serves to identify the position assumed by the selfsame rod 43 relative to the support and slide element 44.
Still in
The two pulleys denoted 48 are positioned lower than the remaining two pulleys 49 and serve each to establish a surface interconnecting the respective second leg 29 and 30 and a side wall 50 of the bottom part 8 of the hopper 3.
The pulleys 49 uppermost connect with the bottom ends of the outer side walls 32 presented by the two divergent legs 27 and 28 of the hopper 3.
One of the two pulleys 48 and 49 of each belt conveyor 47, for example the pulley denoted 48 as shown in
The articulated mechanism 42 and the guide rod 43 combine with the belt conveyors 47 to establish compensating means 53 by which the capacity of the hopper 3 can be varied so as to accommodate the change induced in the mass 4 of cigarettes 2 as a result of the removal of groups 24 by the transfer device 19.
In operation, the mass 4 of cigarettes 2 advancing along the feed channel 6 enters the hopper 3 through the inlet 5. Let it be supposed, at first, that the hopper 3 is filled completely and to its maximum capacity as illustrated in
The actuator 22 of the transfer device 19 makes its forward stroke, with the result that six groups 24 of cigarettes 2 are ejected from the outlets 11 and directed into the corresponding boxes 18; as the transfer device 19 returns to its initial position with the prongs 23 retracted from the channels 15 of the outlets 11, the absence of the cigarettes 2 just removed will occasion a reduction in the part of the mass 4 of cigarettes 2 occupying the bottom part 8 of the hopper 3. This reduced mass is nonetheless compensated instantly by the articulated mechanism 42 which, moving under the force of gravity, assumes the position of
As a result, the mass 4 of cigarettes 2 occupying the second legs 29 and 30 of the hopper will be made to advance more quickly along these same legs, through the agency of the conveyors 47. The mass 4 of cigarettes 2 thus generates a transverse thrust on the movable wall 41, so that the pairs of first and second plates 36 and 39 will gradually regain the position occupied initially, with the rod 43 in the raised position; the hopper 3 resumes the configuration of maximum capacity, having compensated the void created following the ejection of a part of the mass 4 of cigarettes 2 by the transfer device 19 and obviated the possibility that any imbalances caused by the transfer in the bottom part 8 of the hopper 3 will affect the top part 7 of the hopper 3 and the infeed channel 6.
It will be seen from the foregoing description that the conveyors 47 are driven continuously and their speed is variable according to the change induced in the mass 4 as a result of cigarettes 2 being removed by the transfer device 19.
In particular, as discernible from
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2001A0225 | Apr 2001 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB02/01235 | 4/15/2002 | WO | 00 | 9/8/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/083502 | 10/24/2002 | WO | A |
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5224811 | Sigrist et al. | Jul 1993 | A |
6065358 | Shepherd | May 2000 | A |
6446632 | Focke | Sep 2002 | B1 |
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485240 | May 1938 | GB |
782792 | Sep 1957 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040104240 A1 | Jun 2004 | US |