This invention relates to packaging of articles and more particularly to apparatus and methods for packaging articles in a wide variety of article count and final groupings for cartoning.
In packaging equipment it is common and necessary to deposit stacks of articles, such as pouches, into article buckets which are then conveyed to transport the stacks to a loading apparatus where the stacks of pouches are loaded into packages, such as cartons. The stack counts and the number of stacks that are loaded into a single carton will vary.
More particularly, it will be appreciated that the positional requirements of the article buckets at product receipt and then carton loading are not always equal. In the past, with a fixed pitch article bucket conveyor, the bucket pitch at receipt had to be equal to the bucket pitch at carton loading. This is often not desirable, such as when the contents of several buckets must be inserted into one carton, requiring the buckets or separate groups thereof to be spaced differently upon cartoning than when receiving products or product stacks.
Several methods are previously known; one such method uses article buckets which are conveyed on an untimed or so-called “floating bucket” conveyor between product receipt and carton loading. Prior to the empty buckets arriving at product receipt, the buckets are queued up ahead of a metering section as the floating bucket or untimed conveyor continues to run beneath the buckets driving them in the direction of the metering section. Once at the metering section the buckets are engaged by lugs that drive the buckets in time through the product receipt area where the product is fed into the buckets. Once the buckets are loaded they are released from the metering lugs and once again conveyed by the floating bucket or untimed conveyor. The filled buckets arrive at a second queue just ahead of carton loading. In a manner similar to bucket loading at the product receipt area, the queued, now filled, buckets are driven into a metering section by the floating bucket or untimed conveyor where metering lugs engage the buckets and drive them in a timed manor through carton loading. The metering or bucket pitch and pattern at carton loading can and often is different than that at bucket loading. Once the product has been loaded in the cartons the buckets are released from the metering lugs and the empty buckets are once again conveyed by the floating bucket conveyor to repeat the process. The untimed-timed-untimed-retimed nature of this method, requiring that buckets be queued and metered has some rate and flexibility drawbacks. Bucket queues on untimed free running conveyors, by their very nature, will have buckets colliding with one another resulting in some abrupt accelerations and uncontrolled behavior. This is detrimental to product handling including the handling of pouches and of articles susceptible to damage from rough handling.
As further background, the following U.S. patents are herewith incorporated herein by express references if fully set forth and expressed herein:
The invention in a preferred embodiment contemplates apparatus and methods for filling an article bucket with articles to be packaged on a pitch suitable for the receipt of product from a variable count direct drop knife such as that in U.S. Pat. No. 5,575,187 and subsequently adjusting the pitch and grouping of the filled article buckets on a conveyor, referred to as a pitch-less conveyor, to a pitch and grouping defined by the carton size and transfer guide pitch via the combination of a bucket conveyor operable to drive buckets in a common path but wholly independent of position of other buckets in the path.
This invention thus contemplates the combination of a “pitch-less” conveyor, defined as an article bucket conveyor system where each article bucket can move in a common path but independent of every other bucket traveling in a single path, free of collisions with other buckets, completely flexible, and without extraneous bucket metering devices at respective stations, together in a packaging system where product loading and product cartoning operation require different systems pitch.
Through the application of independently controlled moving magnet linear motors, article buckets are programmed to move independent of one another in a single path, providing a pitch-less conveying system capable of performing differently and positioning buckets in different pitches at respective product receipt and carton loading. The benefits of such a system are numerous, such as higher speeds, greater through put, smaller foot print, lower accelerations, greater flexibility, lower change over times, improved conversion reliability, reduced scrap and greater up time.
Since the moving elements on bucket assemblies are independently controlled, the article buckets can be programmed to move in a non-linear fashion to optimize it's synchronization with an adjacent process. For example, the bucket can be slowed and grouped at short pitch as the pouches are transferred to a variable count direct drop knife so to increase the time available for the product drop thus providing for higher stack counts than are achievable by a fixed pitch constant velocity conveyor. At the same time, such a conveyor is capable of providing grouping combinations of buckets arriving at a cartoning station independently of initial bucket pitch and loading movement at a receiving station.
In more detail, this invention is comprised of an oval track of linear motors with a plurality of independently driven carts to which article buckets are mounted. Each cart and article bucket assembly is independently controlled to move in a common path with a plurality of other cart and bucket assemblies, but wholly independent of movement or pitch of other buckets in the path.
Turning now to the Figures, there are shown cartoning systems according to the invention in several different embodiments (10, 11 and 12 respectively), as in respective
Variable count direct deposit knife 14 is as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,575,187, incorporated herein by express reference and as if fully set out expressly herein. Suffice to say, knife 14 in all embodiments 10, 11, and 12 includes a rotary hub 22 carrying a plurality of vertically extending suction cup holders 23 conveying suction cups 24 for movement in a circular path as hub 22 turns counterclockwise in the direction of arrow A as viewed in
While particular cutting elements of knife 14 are detailed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,575,187, and are not shown here in the Figures, pouches in the form of an elongated, uncut train or bandolier are fed to knife 14 which is operable to separate individual pouches P for dropping at load station 16 into buckets 18, as will be appreciated and consistent with the disclosure of U.S. Pat. No. 5,575,187.
As well, it will be appreciated that rotary feeding of pouches in the same situational orientation would be accomplished without any knife function where individual precut pouches are transferred and dropped or deposited as shown herein.
Such knife 14, as noted above is attended by certain operational limitations. With particular reference to
In such apparatus, there is no way to deposit pouches into buckets unless the buckets are fixed at contact pitch. Otherwise, pouches P could be dropped into areas with no buckets to receive them, requiring rejection or waste.
As shown in
It will be further appreciated that, as shown in
As a result, buckets 18 can be grouped at a constant fixed pitch and motion through station 16 (
Thus respecting
With further reference to
Turning to
In this regard, it will be appreciated that the respective cartons are conveyed by or via a carton conveyor, at programmed pitch F (
Turning to
In
In
Accordingly, the cartons C-1, C-2, C-3 are positioned on the carton conveyor (not shown) at a constant pitch F, such as that shown in
Any suitable mechanism such as a barrel loader (not shown) or other devices can be used to transfer items and article stacks from the buckets, across the guides and into the cartons of embodiments 10, 11, and 12. Accordingly, it will be appreciated that product load or deposit into the buckets requires the buckets be on constant pitch at constant speed while product cartoning requires grouping of respective buckets with pitch of the bucket groups the same as each other, but with different numbers of buckets in the group depending on the desired cartoning of the contents of one or more buckets into respective cartons.
In this connection, it will be appreciated the invention in whichever embodiment provides significantly more flexibility and speed than in such prior system or the prior floating bucket system as described above.
The same apparatus can be used in cartoning items in one or more stacks into cartons of varied width and with any programming and perhaps guide changes, the invention providing and accommodating different bucket spacing requirements at the product load end than the specific bucket groupings required at the other cartoning end.
In use, buckets 18 are brought beneath knife 14, by operation of conveyor 30 at a fixed constant first pitch for receiving products such as pouches P dropped from knife 14. Preferably, buckets 18 are contiguous at this station.
After a bucket 18 is filled with a predetermined number of pouches, the assemblies 20 are conveyed by conveyor 30 in a downstream direction, during which individual buckets are formed into one of a variety of groups such as three bucket groups (
Conveyor 30 is thus programmed to move buckets at a first one pitch under knife 14 in a downstream direction and in groups of one or more multiple buckets at a second or different pitch, equal to and corresponding to that of cartons moving approximately alongside the groups, and as illustrated in the drawings.
Thus, conveyor 30 is operable to convey buckets along a path and in variable pitch and orientation with movement of buckets in the groups downstream of knife 14 separate and independent from movement and pitch of buckets at the knife 14.
These and other advantages and modifications will become readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope of the invention and applicant intends to be bound only by the claims appended hereto.
Application claims the benefit of the filing date of Dec. 6, 2013 of U.S. Provisional Patent Application, Ser. No. 61/912,658, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61912658 | Dec 2013 | US |