This invention relates to a form-fill-seal packaging machine of the so-called vertical pillow type.
Snack foods such as potato chips are usually packaged by means of a packaging machine of the so-called vertical pillow type. A packaging machine of the vertical pillow type is provided with a former such as described in Japanese Patent Publication Tokkai 7-315313, having a funnel-shaped tube placed above the former for guiding articles to be packaged. Recently, snack foods are coming to be sold in relatively small quantities. This means that bags for containing smaller quantities of food than before must be produced but since the average size of the articles to be packaged is not made any smaller simply because a smaller quantity of them is to be packaged, the ratio of the bag opening to the article size becomes smaller.
If the bag opening becomes smaller, an accordingly smaller tube must be employed to fill the bag with articles dropped from above. If the inner diameter of the tube is made smaller, however, the articles dropping therethrough are more likely to become clogged, sometimes by forming what are commonly referred to as bridges. It now goes without saying that such bridges formed inside the tube prevent a smoothly continuous packaging operation.
It is therefore an object of this invention to provide a packaging machine designed such that articles do not become clogged so easily inside the article-guiding tube even while being dropped into a relatively small bag.
Article-supplying assemblies for a vertical pillow type packaging machine of this invention are comprised of a first substantially cylindrical member extending vertically downward, a guiding member connected to the first substantially cylindrical member for guiding an elongated sheet of bag-making material from a front side to move downward along the first substantially cylindrical member, a second substantially cylindrical member inserted into the interior of the first substantially cylindrical member, and a funnel member for receiving articles falling from above, this funnel member being connected to the second substantially cylindrical member along a junction line, extending upward from the second substantially cylindrical member and allowing the received articles to fall through the first substantially cylindrical member downward, wherein the junction line is at a highest point on the front side and at a lowest point on a back side opposite the front side, the ratio of the height difference between the highest and lowest points of the junction line with respect to the diameter of the cylindrical member being equal to or greater than 1.4.
The invention relates also to packaging machines of a so-called vertical pillow type comprised not only of any of such article-supplying assemblies characterized as above but also of a former which includes the guiding member and the first substantially cylindrical member, a longitudinal sealer for longitudinally sealing mutually overlapping side edges of the bag-making material into a tubular form, and a transverse sealer for transversely sealing the tubularly formed bag-making material and cutting the bag-making material transversely to separate an individual packaged product.
It is by means of a former 1 that the film F is bent into a tubular form. The packaging machine employs pull-down belts 51 to pull the film F downward while holding side surfaces of the film F by supplying a negative pressure in a known manner and the longitudinal sealer 50 seals over the mutually overlapping side edge parts of the film in the longitudinal direction.
As shown in
Portions of three examples of packaging machines with different designs embodying this invention are shown in
The former 1 and the collector structure 2 are fastened by means of a fastening tool (not shown) such that they are affixed to each other in a correctly positioned relationship according to this invention.
Article-supplying assemblies according to this invention may be characterized in different ways. According to one embodiment of the invention, the junction line 23 of the collector structure 2 and the ridgeline 12 of the former 1 along which the former 1 contacts the collector structure 2 are arranged such that not only is the junction line 23 always above the ridgeline 12 all around the second substantially cylindrical part 21 but also the height difference between them (shown by letter Y in
Effects of this aspect of the invention is explained next by way of three Test Examples (1, 2 and 3) and one Comparison Example, Text Examples 1 and 2 being as shown in
On each of these Comparison and Test Examples, the ratio h/D of the height difference h between the highest point on the junction line 23 on the front side and its lowest point on the back side with respect to the diameter D of the first substantially cylindrical part 11 was measured as a parameter. These ratios were 1.3, 1.7, 2.3 and 3.1 as shown in Table 1 below.
For all of the Examples above, the same former 1 as shown in
Table 1 shows clearly that clogging occurred frequently with Comparison Example but it was less than half with Test Examples 1, 2 and 3. It seems to indicate that the value of Y is preferably about 30 mm and ratio h/D should be greater than about 1.6.
Since Test Example 3 with Y=150 mm shows a significant decrease in the frequency of clogging but the processing efficiency is low, it is necessary to set Y less than about 170 mm (with h/D about equal to 3.1) and it is generally desirable to set Y to be less than 150 mm (with h/D about equal to 2.8).
In the above, the invention was explained by way of only a few examples but it should be clear to a person skilled in the art that many modifications and variations are possible within the scope of the invention. For example, there is no limitation intended on the diameter of the tube. Similar results may be expected for bags with width about 160 mm or less (corresponding to the tube diameter of about 102 mm or less). Thus, such modifications and variations are intended to be within the scope of the invention. The invention is applicable also for other kinds of pillow type packaging machines.
As remarked above, there is more than one way to characterize article-supplying assemblies of this invention. Since the clogging would be more likely to take place if all of the articles of a batch supplied together started to fall through the first substantially cylindrical part 11, the invention generally aims to cause some of the articles in a batch to start falling through the first substantially cylindrical part 11 by reaching the junction line 23 much sooner than some others, or to increase the effective sectional area through which the articles enter the first substantially cylindrical part 11. One way of accomplishing this is to tilt the funnel member 22 as shown enlarged in
In summary, many modifications and variations are possible within the scope of this invention and all such modifications and variations that may be apparent to a person skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-049575 | Feb 2004 | JP | national |
This is a divisional of application Ser. No. 11/122,561 filed May 4, 2005, which is currently pending and is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 10/871,821 filed Jun. 17, 2004, which is abandoned.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11122561 | May 2005 | US |
Child | 11607415 | Dec 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10871821 | Jun 2004 | US |
Child | 11122561 | May 2005 | US |