This application is a 35 U.S.C. §371 National Phase Application from PCT/FR2007/051418, filed Jun. 12, 2007, and designating the Unites States, which claims the benefit of France Patent Application No. 0653270, filed Aug. 3, 2006.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to unstacker apparatus for unstacking flat items, the unstacker apparatus comprising a flat item feed magazine in which the flat items are disposed in a stack and on edge and are moved in a certain direction until they reach an unstacking plate disposed in alignment with said feed magazine, whereupon they are ejected one-by-one in a perpendicular direction that is perpendicular to said certain direction, the unstacker apparatus further comprising a blower member disposed so as to blow a jet of air onto the flat items.
The invention relates more particularly to unstacker apparatus for unstacking postal items of small format and of large format in a postal sorting machine. The blower member contributes to fanning out the postal items at the front of the stack against the unstacking plate, and makes it possible to limit occurrences of bunches of postal items that fail to separate.
2. Discussion of the Background Art
Patent Document FR 2 797 856 discloses apparatus for unstacking postal items that is designed to be mounted on a postal sorting machine. That apparatus 1, described below with reference to
The unstacking plate 6 is provided with an opening in the plane of which a perforated belt 8 is moved, which perforated belt co-operates with a suction nozzle (not shown) mounted behind the perforated belt. In operation, the stack of postal items E is moved by the conveyor belt 2 and by the paddle 3 towards the unstacking plate 6, and the first postal item in the stack comes to bear against the unstacking plate 6. That postal item in the stack, i.e. the postal item that has its large face pressed against the unstacking plate and that is referred to as the “current first postal item” E1, is ejected in the direction P under the combined effect of the suction force from the nozzle and of the movement of the perforated belt 9. That postal item is nipped between motor-driven wheels 9, 10 having vertical axes and made of elastically deformable elastomer so that it is ejected at the outlet of the unstacker apparatus that is situated in the plane of the plate 6.
All of the postal items in the stack are thus successively put into series one behind another in the same way, i.e. the postal item E2 disposed in the stack immediately behind the current first postal item E1, is ejected at the outlet of the unstacker immediately after the postal item E1.
In general, the postal items unstacked one-by-one are conveyed in series and on edge so as to be brought past a read head. An image of the face bearing the destination address of each postal item is extracted by the read head and is processed in an automatic address recognition system by Optical Character Recognition (OCR) so that the postal items are directed to specific sorting outlets.
With the unstacker apparatus of the Patent Document FR 2 797 856, a non-negligible proportion of postal items are observed to be taken in bunches. The term “bunch” is used to mean that a plurality of (generally two) postal items have been ejected simultaneously by the unstacker apparatus. Such postal item bunching give rise to sorting errors that are detrimental to the reliability of the sorting or to the throughput of the sorting machine because detection of such postal items results in them being rejected to a rejects sorting outlet followed by them being sorted manually.
Patent Document EP 0 562 954 discloses a solution to that bunching problem. That solution, presented in
In unstacker apparatus suitable for unstacking both large-format postal items and small-format postal items, the blower strip thus finds itself very high up from the top edges of small-format postal items, and the effectiveness of the jet of air 11 in fanning out small-format postal items properly is therefore diminished. Unfortunately, bunching mainly affects small-format postal items.
An object of the invention is thus to mitigate the above-described drawback by proposing apparatus mainly aimed at limiting the proportion of bunches for small-format postal items, in particular in a sorting machine that is suitable for handling both small-format and large-format postal items.
To this end, the invention provides unstacker apparatus for unstacking flat items, the unstacker apparatus comprising a flat item feed magazine in which the flat items are disposed in a stack and on edge and are moved in a certain direction until they reach an unstacking plate disposed in alignment with said feed magazine, whereupon they are ejected one-by-one in a perpendicular direction that is perpendicular to said certain direction, the unstacker apparatus further comprising a blower member disposed so as to blow a jet of air onto the flat items, said unstacker apparatus being characterized in that said blower member is mounted in a manner such as to be retractable into the unstacking plate.
The blower member can then be disposed at a height appropriate to the size of the small-format postal items without obstructing handling/unstacking of large-format postal items. In operation, the blower member overlies the small-format postal items and retracts when a large-format postal item is pressed against the unstacking plate.
Advantageously, said blower member is mounted to be retracted by moving in translation in said certain direction.
In a first embodiment of the invention, said blower member retracts into the unstacking plate against drive from a resilient return element, and more particularly from a spring. The blower member is then retracted by the thrust force exerted on the blower member by the current large-format postal item to be unstacked.
In another particular embodiment of the invention, said blower member retracts into the unstacking plate under drive from a mechanical control element in response to reception of a signal delivered by a sensor, which sensor is, for example, an optical reflection sensor disposed in the unstacking plate, a mechanical contact sensor, or an optical barrier sensor for detecting the presence of a large-format postal item at the head of the stack of postal items to be unstacked.
The invention also provides a machine for handling postal items, which machine includes unstacker apparatus as defined above.
The invention can be better understood on reading the following description with reference to the drawings. The following description is given merely by way of indication that in no way limits the invention.
In the drawings:
The unstacker apparatus 1 comprises a motor-driven magazine M comprising a conveyor belt 2 and a substantially vertical paddle 3 for pushing postal items (not shown) disposed in a stack and on edge towards an unstacking plate 6, the stack of postal items being in front of the paddle in the longitudinal direction D.
The motor-driven magazine M further comprises a motor-driven drop-forming channel C disposed between the conveyor belt 2 and the unstacking plate 6. The bottom of the drop-forming channel, situated at a distance of about 100 millimeters (mm) below the surface of the conveyor belt 2 and extending over about 100 mm in the direction D, is equipped with a plurality of (e.g. four) conveyor belts 30 taking over from the conveyor belt 2 for the purpose of conveying the postal items in the direction D. The unstacking plate 6 has a fixed position and extends vertically from the bottom of the drop-forming channel C to a height that is higher than the height of the largest format of flat postal items. The plate 6 extends in the unstacking direction P that is perpendicular to the direction D of movement of the postal items through the motor-driven magazine M. In its bottom portion, the unstacking plate is provided with two openings. A perforated drive belt 8 co-operating with a suction nozzle mounted therebehind is mounted to move inside each of the openings. The belt 8 moves in the same plane as the surface of the unstacking plate in the direction P.
In accordance with the invention, a blower member or strip 13 is arranged to be retractable into the unstacking plate 6 above the unstacking perforated belt 8. In
As can be seen in
Therefore, when a small-format postal item PF becomes the first postal item E1, as in
When, as shown in
In a first preferred embodiment of the invention, the blower strip 13 is more particularly a blower strip that is normally in the deployed (proud) position and that retracts into the unstacking plate under thrust exerted by contact by a large-format first postal item that is pushed by the postal items succeeding it in the stack, by the paddle 3 and by the conveyor belts 20.
Naturally, the movement of the blower strip 13 that is described above as being a movement in translation can also be a movement in rotation, e.g. about an axis extending in the unstacking plate.
Another embodiment of the invention is shown in
The sensor 22′ is more particularly a reflex sensor making it possible to detect whether pressing a postal item against the unstacking plate 6′ might be disturbed by the blower strip 13′ in the deployed position. Said sensor 22′ is disposed in the unstacking plate 6′ at the same height as the bottom edge of the blower strip 13′ or immediately therebelow as shown in
Naturally, other sensors can be used, such as a barrier photoelectric cell with a transmitter and a receiver that are disposed at a height h parallel to the unstacking plate or a contact sensor constituted by a finger or switch projecting relative to the unstacking plate.
The drive apparatus 24′ is more particularly a hydraulic piston that moves the blower strip in reciprocating translation as indicated by the double-headed arrow 27′. Retraction of the blower strip is then controlled and driven.
In accordance with the invention, the blower strip can blow continuously or intermittently. In continuous mode, a stream of air is delivered continuously by the blower strip, regardless of whether said blower strip is in the deployed position or in the retracted position. In order to mitigate certain disturbances caused by the jet of air while the blower strip is blowing in the retracted position and that might part the large-format postal item from the unstacking plate, the jet of air can be interrupted whenever the blower strip retracts into the unstacking plate 6. For example, the jet of air can be interrupted by means of a solenoid valve system.
In accordance with the invention, the height h defines a boundary between the size of a large-format postal item GF and of a small-format postal item PF, and is more particularly chosen as a function of the size of the postal items that are most affected by bunching. This height h is about fifteen centimeters (cm).
Naturally, the invention is in no way limited to the details of the above-described embodiments but rather it extends to any variant that is obvious to the person skilled in the art.
Naturally, it is possible, in addition to the retractable blower strip of the invention, to install another blower strip that is identical to the blower strip of the prior art EP 0 562 954 for the purpose of also blowing over the tops of large-format postal items.
The blower strip of the invention can also be locked in the retracted position when unstacking large-format postal items only.
It is also possible to imagine apparatus in which, in response to detection of a large-format postal item approaching the unstacking plate, the blower strip automatically retracts vertically upwards so as to blow over the tops of the large-format postal items.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06 53270 | Aug 2006 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2007/051418 | 6/12/2007 | WO | 00 | 9/7/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2008/015347 | 2/7/2008 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3847383 | Wojtowicz et al. | Nov 1974 | A |
5308052 | Roch et al. | May 1994 | A |
5379992 | Holmes et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
5722811 | Schum et al. | Mar 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 562 954 | Sep 1993 | EP |
1 228 990 | Aug 2002 | EP |
1 416 727 | Nov 1965 | FR |
2 797 856 | Mar 2001 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090148265 A1 | Jun 2009 | US |