US2211433A - Sliced bread-loaf fractionating machine - Google Patents

Sliced bread-loaf fractionating machine Download PDF

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US2211433A
US2211433A US242432A US24243238A US2211433A US 2211433 A US2211433 A US 2211433A US 242432 A US242432 A US 242432A US 24243238 A US24243238 A US 24243238A US 2211433 A US2211433 A US 2211433A
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loaf
conveyer
machine
fractions
sliced
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US242432A
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Papendick Elizabeth
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PAPENDICK Inc
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PAPENDICK Inc
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26DCUTTING; DETAILS COMMON TO MACHINES FOR PERFORATING, PUNCHING, CUTTING-OUT, STAMPING-OUT OR SEVERING
    • B26D7/00Details of apparatus for cutting, cutting-out, stamping-out, punching, perforating, or severing by means other than cutting
    • B26D7/27Means for performing other operations combined with cutting
    • B26D7/32Means for performing other operations combined with cutting for conveying or stacking cut product
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26DCUTTING; DETAILS COMMON TO MACHINES FOR PERFORATING, PUNCHING, CUTTING-OUT, STAMPING-OUT OR SEVERING
    • B26D7/00Details of apparatus for cutting, cutting-out, stamping-out, punching, perforating, or severing by means other than cutting
    • B26D7/27Means for performing other operations combined with cutting
    • B26D7/32Means for performing other operations combined with cutting for conveying or stacking cut product
    • B26D2007/327Means for performing other operations combined with cutting for conveying or stacking cut product the cut products being slices of bread
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/202With product handling means
    • Y10T83/2074Including means to divert one portion of product from another
    • Y10T83/2083Deflecting guide

Definitions

  • This invention relates to certain new and useful improvements in sliced bread-loaf fractionating machines and has for its primary object the provision of a machine which will automatically subdivide respective sliced bread-loaves into a plurality of fractions in a simple, speedy, and efficient manner without materially adding to the production cost of the breadloaves, which will fractionate or sub-divide the bread-loaves at high speed in timed relation to the other bread production processes, and which will provide the consumer trade with tasty and fresh fractionated or sub-divided bread-loaves, which may be wrapped or packaged for direct visual inspection.
  • FIG. 1 is a top plan view of a sliced loaf fractionating machine constructed'in accordance with and embodying my present invention
  • Figure 2 is a vertical sectional view of the machine, taken approximately along the line 2-2, Figure 1;
  • Figure 3 is a fragmentary'transverse sectional view of the machine, taken approximately along the line 3-3, Figure 1.
  • A designates a high-speed bread-loaf slicing machine of the vertically reciprocating knife type more specifically described in my co-pending application for Letters Patent, Serial No. 242,430, filed'November 25, 1938, and equipped with a suitable type of loaf speeding conveyer B preferably, though not necessarily, of the chain-driven flight type.
  • a discharge mechanism Extending outwardly from the discharge side of the slicing mechanism A, is a discharge mechanism also of the more or less conventional chaindriven flight type and being driven from a main drive shaft I operatively journaled in the side frames of the slicing machine A and provided at its extended end with a sprocket 2 connected by a suitable sprocket chain 3 to the sprocket 4 and drive shaft 5 of the loaf-wrapping machine D for synchronous operation therewith, as best seen in Figure 1.
  • v I Extending outwardly from the discharge side of the slicing mechanism A, is a discharge mechanism also of the more or less conventional chaindriven flight type and being driven from a main drive shaft I operatively journaled in the side frames of the slicing machine A and provided at its extended end with a sprocket 2 connected by a suitable sprocket chain 3 to the sprocket 4 and drive shaft 5 of the loaf-wrapping machine D for synchronous operation therewith, as best seen
  • the slicing machine A is further provided with a delivery plate 6 extending horizontally forwardly on the discharge side of the slicing machine A for av distance approximately equal to the width of a bread-loaf and terminating at a point spaced slightly upwardly from the upper face of a transfer conveyer table I for permitting flight bars 8 to move upwardly from beneath the table 1 and'forwardly into loaf engagement.
  • each of. opposed parallel side frame extensions 9 Rigidly mounted on the upwardly presented faces of each of. opposed parallel side frame extensions 9, are two spaced upstanding brackets I 0 having a transversely extending horizontal bore Ii and an upwardly opening vertical bore i2, the side walls of each of the bores being provided with suitably threaded set screws i 3, I 4.
  • U-shaped bridge members l6 mounted at its ends in the bores l2" of the transversely aligned bracket members l0 and extending upwardly and transversely over the transfer conveyer C, are U-shaped bridge members l6 and being provided along its bight with a shiftable sleeve member I! provided with a set screw l8 for securing the sleeve member II at any shifted position along the bridge member IS, the sleeve I! further being provided with a preferably integral downwardly extending guide support l9 formed in the shape of an inverted T.
  • , at one end terminate adjacent the discharge side of the slicing machine conveyer and are transversely spaced apart by a distance slightly greater than the length of the entire sliced loaf and extend forwardly in this relationship parallel to the side margins of the transfer conveyer for a distance approximately equal to the width of one loaf and then diverge outwardly from each other to apoint spaced wardly from the discharge end of the transfer conveyer C by a distance approximately equal to the width of a loaf and then extend forwardly again in parallelism with the side margins of the machine, as best seen in Figure 1.
  • the inner guide members 22, 23, are similarly welded or otherwise rigidly mounted on the outwardly presented ends of the guide'support l9 and extend longitudinally therebetween, terminating at one end in a sharpened blade-like wedge 24 extending to a point adjacent the discharge end of the syncing machine A, the guide member 22 extending thence forwardly in uniformly spaced parallelism throughout its length with the side guide 20, the inner guide 23 similarly extending forwardly in uniformly spaced parallelism throughout its entire length with the side guide members 2
  • the wrapping machine D is provided with an outwardly extending conveyer E having a plurality of chain-driven pockets e actuated in step motion by a Geneva drive or other suitable mechanism (not shown).
  • the wrapping machine conveyer E is so adjusted that during each interval of motion a pair Of the pockets e will be moved forwardly and be brought to rest in alignment with the guide members 20, 22, and 2
  • the successive bread-loaves L will be progressed through the slicing knives, and the resulting sliced loaves L divided into fractions 1, Z, by the wedge member 24, the fractions Z, Z, being progressed forwardly under the pressure of successive loaves which are being forced through the slicing machine by the feed conveyer B thereof.
  • the loaf fractions Z, l are successively held firmly between the pairs of guide members 20, 22, and 2
  • a sliced loaf fractionating machine for use with a wrapping machine having an intake conveyer including a plurality of groups of pockets;
  • said fractionating machine comprising slicing means, cdnveying means for advancing the unsliced loaves through the slicing means, means for fractionally dividing each sliced loaf into a plurality of fractions as it leaves the slicing means, transfer conveyer means, means for depositing the divided loaf fractions upon the transfer conveyer, guides associated with the transfer conveyer for shifting the deposited fractions away from each other, and means for progressing the several fractions across the transfer conveyer in axial alignment and simultaneously depositing the several fractions into the several pockets of one of the pocket-groups of said intake conveyer.
  • a sliced loaf fractionating machine for use with a wrapping machine having an intake conveyer including a plurality of groups of pockets;
  • said fractionating machine comprising slicing means, conveying means for advancing theunsliced loaves through the slicing means, means for fractionally dividing each sliced loaf into a plurality of fractions as it leaves the slicing means, transfer conveyer means, means for depositing the divided loaf fractions upon the transfer conveyer, guides associated with the transfer conveyer for shifting the deposited fractions away from each other, and means for progressing the several fractions across the transfer conveyer in axial alignment and simultaneously depositing the several separated fractions of each loaf into successive pockets of said intake conveyer.
  • a pri1- mary conveyer having means for receiving an 'entire sliced loaf, means for subdividing the sliced loaf into a plurality of fractions, a secondary conveyer operatively mounted at the discharge end of the primary conveyer and having a plurality of groups of spaced pockets, intermittent driving means operatively associated with the secondary conveyer for momentarily stopping each group of pockets at the discharge side of the primary conveyer, and means operatively associated with the primary conveyer for simultaneously progressing the several fractions of each subdivided loaf to the discharge side of the primary conveyer and simultaneously discharging said fractions into the pockets.
  • a primary conveyer having means for receiving an entire sliced loaf, means for subdividing the sliced loaf into a plurality of fractions, a secondary conveyer operatively mounted at the discharge end of the primary conveyer and having a plurality of groups of spaced pockets, intermittent driving means operatively associated with the secondary conveyer for momentarily stopping each group of pockets at the discharge side of the primary conveyer, means operatively associated with the primary conveyer for simultaneously progressing the several fractions of each subdivided loaf to the discharge side of the primary conveyer and simultaneously discharging said fractions into the; pockets, and means for driving said primary conveyer in predetermined timed relation to the secondary conveyer.
  • a primary conveyer having means for receiving an entire sliced loaf, means for subdividing the sliced loaf into a plurality of fractions, a secondary conveyer operatively mounted at the discharge end of the primary conveyer and having a plu-' rality of groups of spaced pockets, intermittent driving means operatively associated with the secondary conveyer for momentarily stopping each group of pockets at the discharge side of the primary conveyer, and means operatively associated with the primary conveyer for simultaneously progressing each subdivided loaf to the discharge side of the primary conveyer and simultaneously discharging said fractions into the pockets, said discharge being timed to occur during the stationary interval of the secondary conveyer.

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  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
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Description

Aug. 13, 1940. G. c. PAPENDICK 7 2,211,433
SLICED BREAD-LOAF FRACTIONATING MACHINE Filed Nov. 25, 1938 2 Sheets-Sheet l WWW WM MN- INVENTOR GUSTAV C PAPENDICK ATTORNEY 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 K m mm Mm m 0E .w mm M WP m N m n C A AQ W. lllll Illl llll. lllll |l||| I s w P F p w B Aug 13, 1940. G. c. PAPENDICK SLICED BREAD-LOAF FRACTIONATING MACHINE Filed Nov. 25, 1958 aluh Patented Aug. 13, 1940 UNITED STATES SLICED BREAD-LOAF FRACTIONATIN G CHINE Gustav C. Papendick, Elizabeth Papendick, Papendick, deceased; Inc., St. Louis, Mo., a
University City, Mo.;. executrix oi Gustav (1 assignor to Papendick, corporation of- Missouri Application November 25, 1938, Serial No. 242,432
5 Claims.
This invention relates to certain new and useful improvements in sliced bread-loaf fractionating machines and has for its primary object the provision of a machine which will automatically subdivide respective sliced bread-loaves into a plurality of fractions in a simple, speedy, and efficient manner without materially adding to the production cost of the breadloaves, which will fractionate or sub-divide the bread-loaves at high speed in timed relation to the other bread production processes, and which will provide the consumer trade with tasty and fresh fractionated or sub-divided bread-loaves, which may be wrapped or packaged for direct visual inspection.
And with the above and other objects in view,.
my invention resides in the novel features of form, constructio arrangement, and combination of parts presently described and pointed out in the claims. In the accompanying drawings -(2 sheets)- Figure 1 is a top plan view of a sliced loaf fractionating machine constructed'in accordance with and embodying my present invention;
Figure 2 is a vertical sectional view of the machine, taken approximately along the line 2-2, Figure 1; and
Figure 3 is a fragmentary'transverse sectional view of the machine, taken approximately along the line 3-3, Figure 1.
-'Referring now in more detail and by reference characters to the'drawings; which illustrate a preferred embodiment of my invention, A designates a high-speed bread-loaf slicing machine of the vertically reciprocating knife type more specifically described in my co-pending application for Letters Patent, Serial No. 242,430, filed'November 25, 1938, and equipped with a suitable type of loaf speeding conveyer B preferably, though not necessarily, of the chain-driven flight type.
Extending outwardly from the discharge side of the slicing mechanism A, is a discharge mechanism also of the more or less conventional chaindriven flight type and being driven from a main drive shaft I operatively journaled in the side frames of the slicing machine A and provided at its extended end with a sprocket 2 connected by a suitable sprocket chain 3 to the sprocket 4 and drive shaft 5 of the loaf-wrapping machine D for synchronous operation therewith, as best seen in Figure 1. v I
The slicing machine A is further provided with a delivery plate 6 extending horizontally forwardly on the discharge side of the slicing machine A for av distance approximately equal to the width of a bread-loaf and terminating at a point spaced slightly upwardly from the upper face of a transfer conveyer table I for permitting flight bars 8 to move upwardly from beneath the table 1 and'forwardly into loaf engagement.
Rigidly mounted on the upwardly presented faces of each of. opposed parallel side frame extensions 9, are two spaced upstanding brackets I 0 having a transversely extending horizontal bore Ii and an upwardly opening vertical bore i2, the side walls of each of the bores being provided with suitably threaded set screws i 3, I 4. Shiftably mounted in each of the horizontal bores II, is a guide-supporting rod l5 held firmly in any adjusted position by means of the set screw i3.
Similarly mounted at its ends in the bores l2" of the transversely aligned bracket members l0 and extending upwardly and transversely over the transfer conveyer C, are U-shaped bridge members l6 and being provided along its bight with a shiftable sleeve member I! provided with a set screw l8 for securing the sleeve member II at any shifted position along the bridge member IS, the sleeve I! further being provided with a preferably integral downwardly extending guide support l9 formed in the shape of an inverted T.
Welded or otherwise fixed on the ends of the guide-supporting rod l5, are two opposed side guide members 20, 2|. Similarly mounted upon the ends of the guide supports i9, are two inner guide members 22, .23. The guide members 20, 2|; 22, 23, at their lower margins are all spaced substantially upwardly from the upper face of the transfer conveyertable l to allow the flight bars 8 to pass freely thereunder. The guide members 20, 2|, at one end terminate adjacent the discharge side of the slicing machine conveyer and are transversely spaced apart by a distance slightly greater than the length of the entire sliced loaf and extend forwardly in this relationship parallel to the side margins of the transfer conveyer for a distance approximately equal to the width of one loaf and then diverge outwardly from each other to apoint spaced wardly from the discharge end of the transfer conveyer C by a distance approximately equal to the width of a loaf and then extend forwardly again in parallelism with the side margins of the machine, as best seen in Figure 1.
The inner guide members 22, 23, are similarly welded or otherwise rigidly mounted on the outwardly presented ends of the guide'support l9 and extend longitudinally therebetween, terminating at one end in a sharpened blade-like wedge 24 extending to a point adjacent the discharge end of the syncing machine A, the guide member 22 extending thence forwardly in uniformly spaced parallelism throughout its length with the side guide 20, the inner guide 23 similarly extending forwardly in uniformly spaced parallelism throughout its entire length with the side guide members 2|, the distance between the guide members 20, 22, and 2|, 23, being substantially equal to the desired length of a loaf fraction, all as best seen in Figure 1.
The wrapping machine D is provided with an outwardly extending conveyer E having a plurality of chain-driven pockets e actuated in step motion by a Geneva drive or other suitable mechanism (not shown). The wrapping machine conveyer E is so adjusted that during each interval of motion a pair Of the pockets e will be moved forwardly and be brought to rest in alignment with the guide members 20, 22, and 2|, 23, respectively, substantially as shown in Figure 1.
Meanwhile, the successive bread-loaves L will be progressed through the slicing knives, and the resulting sliced loaves L divided into fractions 1, Z, by the wedge member 24, the fractions Z, Z, being progressed forwardly under the pressure of successive loaves which are being forced through the slicing machine by the feed conveyer B thereof. The loaf fractions Z, l, are successively held firmly between the pairs of guide members 20, 22, and 2|, 23, respectively, and ultimately drop over the edge of the delivery plate 6 and come to rest upon the upwardly presented face of the transfer conveyer table I, from which they are picked up by one of the moving flight bars 8 and rapidly progressed across the transfer conveyer table I in longitudinal alignment and ultimately pushed off into the waiting pockets e of the wrapping machine conveyer E and thereby carried into the, wrapping machine D for conventional handling.
It should be understood that changes and modifications in the form, construction, arrangement, and combination of the several parts of the machine may be made and substituted for those herein shown and described without departing from the nature and principle of my invention.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim and desire to secure by Letters Patent is- 1. A sliced loaf fractionating machine for use with a wrapping machine having an intake conveyer including a plurality of groups of pockets;
said fractionating machine comprising slicing means, cdnveying means for advancing the unsliced loaves through the slicing means, means for fractionally dividing each sliced loaf into a plurality of fractions as it leaves the slicing means, transfer conveyer means, means for depositing the divided loaf fractions upon the transfer conveyer, guides associated with the transfer conveyer for shifting the deposited fractions away from each other, and means for progressing the several fractions across the transfer conveyer in axial alignment and simultaneously depositing the several fractions into the several pockets of one of the pocket-groups of said intake conveyer.
2. A sliced loaf fractionating machine for use with a wrapping machine having an intake conveyer including a plurality of groups of pockets;
said fractionating machine comprising slicing means, conveying means for advancing theunsliced loaves through the slicing means, means for fractionally dividing each sliced loaf into a plurality of fractions as it leaves the slicing means, transfer conveyer means, means for depositing the divided loaf fractions upon the transfer conveyer, guides associated with the transfer conveyer for shifting the deposited fractions away from each other, and means for progressing the several fractions across the transfer conveyer in axial alignment and simultaneously depositing the several separated fractions of each loaf into successive pockets of said intake conveyer.
3. In a sliced loaf handling machine, a pri1- mary conveyer having means for receiving an 'entire sliced loaf, means for subdividing the sliced loaf into a plurality of fractions, a secondary conveyer operatively mounted at the discharge end of the primary conveyer and having a plurality of groups of spaced pockets, intermittent driving means operatively associated with the secondary conveyer for momentarily stopping each group of pockets at the discharge side of the primary conveyer, and means operatively associated with the primary conveyer for simultaneously progressing the several fractions of each subdivided loaf to the discharge side of the primary conveyer and simultaneously discharging said fractions into the pockets.
4. In a sliced loaf handling machine, a primary conveyer having means for receiving an entire sliced loaf, means for subdividing the sliced loaf into a plurality of fractions, a secondary conveyer operatively mounted at the discharge end of the primary conveyer and having a plurality of groups of spaced pockets, intermittent driving means operatively associated with the secondary conveyer for momentarily stopping each group of pockets at the discharge side of the primary conveyer, means operatively associated with the primary conveyer for simultaneously progressing the several fractions of each subdivided loaf to the discharge side of the primary conveyer and simultaneously discharging said fractions into the; pockets, and means for driving said primary conveyer in predetermined timed relation to the secondary conveyer.
5. In' a sliced loaf handling machine, a primary conveyer having means for receiving an entire sliced loaf, means for subdividing the sliced loaf into a plurality of fractions, a secondary conveyer operatively mounted at the discharge end of the primary conveyer and having a plu-' rality of groups of spaced pockets, intermittent driving means operatively associated with the secondary conveyer for momentarily stopping each group of pockets at the discharge side of the primary conveyer, and means operatively associated with the primary conveyer for simultaneously progressing each subdivided loaf to the discharge side of the primary conveyer and simultaneously discharging said fractions into the pockets, said discharge being timed to occur during the stationary interval of the secondary conveyer.
GUsTA'v c. PAPENDICK.
the. several fractions of
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Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2439657A (en) * 1946-09-12 1948-04-13 Hexter Sliced loaf dividing mechanism
US2595013A (en) * 1949-05-25 1952-04-29 Colborne Mfg Company Pie plate depositor
US2600878A (en) * 1945-06-09 1952-06-17 American Mach & Foundry Loaf wrapping machine
US2892531A (en) * 1957-02-19 1959-06-30 American Can Co Apparatus for grouping containers for transfer to stacks
US3402524A (en) * 1952-09-19 1968-09-24 Nat Biscuit Co Apparatus for packaging articles
US3933064A (en) * 1974-04-25 1976-01-20 Package Machinery Company Gum slab feed apparatus
US3946626A (en) * 1974-03-29 1976-03-30 Nabisco Inc. Conveyor system for transferring rigid sheets between right angled conveyors
US4688373A (en) * 1986-06-19 1987-08-25 Parlour Noel S Article orienting, feeding and wrapping apparatus
US5680743A (en) * 1995-03-28 1997-10-28 Jongerius B.V. Method and apparatus for conveying loaves
US20020166431A1 (en) * 2000-01-18 2002-11-14 Benjamin Scott R. Apparatus for sizing and halving food product
US6622458B2 (en) * 2001-11-27 2003-09-23 Atlas Pacific Engineering Company High speed fish canning method and apparatus
US20060000333A1 (en) * 2004-07-05 2006-01-05 Sanji Kawakami Sliced bread packaging method and equipment
US7121066B2 (en) * 2000-02-29 2006-10-17 Rompa Patent Beheer B.V. Installation for slicing and packaging bread

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2600878A (en) * 1945-06-09 1952-06-17 American Mach & Foundry Loaf wrapping machine
US2439657A (en) * 1946-09-12 1948-04-13 Hexter Sliced loaf dividing mechanism
US2595013A (en) * 1949-05-25 1952-04-29 Colborne Mfg Company Pie plate depositor
US3402524A (en) * 1952-09-19 1968-09-24 Nat Biscuit Co Apparatus for packaging articles
US2892531A (en) * 1957-02-19 1959-06-30 American Can Co Apparatus for grouping containers for transfer to stacks
US3946626A (en) * 1974-03-29 1976-03-30 Nabisco Inc. Conveyor system for transferring rigid sheets between right angled conveyors
US3933064A (en) * 1974-04-25 1976-01-20 Package Machinery Company Gum slab feed apparatus
US4688373A (en) * 1986-06-19 1987-08-25 Parlour Noel S Article orienting, feeding and wrapping apparatus
US5680743A (en) * 1995-03-28 1997-10-28 Jongerius B.V. Method and apparatus for conveying loaves
US20020166431A1 (en) * 2000-01-18 2002-11-14 Benjamin Scott R. Apparatus for sizing and halving food product
US6748837B2 (en) * 2000-01-18 2004-06-15 Key Technology, Inc. Apparatus for sizing and halving food product
US7121066B2 (en) * 2000-02-29 2006-10-17 Rompa Patent Beheer B.V. Installation for slicing and packaging bread
US6622458B2 (en) * 2001-11-27 2003-09-23 Atlas Pacific Engineering Company High speed fish canning method and apparatus
US20060000333A1 (en) * 2004-07-05 2006-01-05 Sanji Kawakami Sliced bread packaging method and equipment
US7278250B2 (en) * 2004-07-05 2007-10-09 Daisey Machinery Co., Ltd. Sliced bread packaging method and equipment

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