US2334362A - Method of conditioning tobacco - Google Patents

Method of conditioning tobacco Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2334362A
US2334362A US396672A US39667241A US2334362A US 2334362 A US2334362 A US 2334362A US 396672 A US396672 A US 396672A US 39667241 A US39667241 A US 39667241A US 2334362 A US2334362 A US 2334362A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
chains
tobacco
conveyor
hands
butts
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US396672A
Inventor
Rush D Touton
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Wurton Machine Co
Original Assignee
Wurton Machine Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Wurton Machine Co filed Critical Wurton Machine Co
Priority to US396672A priority Critical patent/US2334362A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2334362A publication Critical patent/US2334362A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A24TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
    • A24BMANUFACTURE OR PREPARATION OF TOBACCO FOR SMOKING OR CHEWING; TOBACCO; SNUFF
    • A24B3/00Preparing tobacco in the factory
    • A24B3/04Humidifying or drying tobacco bunches or cut tobacco

Definitions

  • This invention relates to an improvement inv apparatus for use in the treatment of tobacco for its conditioning or otherwise.
  • this invention relates to an improvement in apparatus of the type having conveyor means extending generally in a plane, which desirably may be a horizontal plane, and
  • the conveyor means being adapted to carry the hands of tobacco with respect to jets or blasts of conditioned gas.
  • this invention contemplates the provision of means in association with the conveyor means, which will act, when the tobacco is subjected variously to blasts or jets of air, to hold or support the free leaf portions to the end that injury to them will be avoided and that they may be treated more eiectively than heretofore.
  • Figure 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of an apparatus embodying this invention.
  • Figure 2 is a plan view on lines 2-2, Figure 1.
  • Figure 3 is a cross-sectional view of the apparatus shown in Figure 1.
  • 2 indicate a pair of endless chains passing over spaced pairs of sprockets 3, 3 mounted on shafts 4, 4, which are supported in any suitable manner and one of which is adapted to be driven, from any suitable prime mover, through a pulley 5.
  • the chains 2, 2 are spaced apart a distance somewhat greater than twice the length of the v leaf portions of hands of tobacco 5, which it is intended shall be handled by the conveyor, as.
  • the upper reaches of the chains 2, 2 are tight, while the lower reaches are slack and supported by idlers 1, 1.
  • the links of the chains 2, 2 and 8, 8 are out of line and their upper and lower reaches respectively lie together, the lower reaches of chain 8, 8 being weighted down on the upper reaches of chains 2, 2 by the weight of rods 9, 9, which, as described above, are connected to and extend between chains 8, 8, so that the butts I3 of the hands of tobacco 6 may be held between them, as shown in Figure 3, and so that chains 8, 8 will move with the driven chains Extending between chains 8, 8, ⁇ below rods 9, 9,
  • the upper reaches of the chains 2, 2 extend beyond the lower reaches of the chains 8, 8.
  • an endless conveyor belt I5 which passes around pulleys I6, I6, one of which is mounted on shaft 4, so that the belt is driven with the chains 2, 2 and at the same speed.
  • a conveyor belt I1 is positioned be tween the chains 2, 2.
  • the conveyor I'I passes over a pulley I8 on shaft 4 and over idler pulleys I9, I9, arranged so that it Will extend from sprockets 3, about which chains 2, 2 pass, downwardly at a small angle to chains 2, 2, forming a reach 20 and then at a relatively large angle to chains 2, 2 forming a further reach 2l.
  • ducts 22, 22 adapted to receive conditioned gas, as air, from any suitable source through inlets 23, 23.
  • the ducts 22, 22 are provided with nozzles 24, 24, arranged for the discharge of jets or' blasts of conditioned gas.
  • the nozzles are directed from below angularly with respect to the conveyor and as between the ducts are in staggered relation. Jets or blasts of air issuing from the nozzles 24, 24 are adapted enter the nip between the upper reaches of chains 2, 2 and the lower reaches of chains 8, 8 and they are gripped -between the reaches of the chains.
  • the hands are carried by the chains into and out of jets or blasts of air issuing from nozzles 2
  • the guard I4 acts, as is shown in Figure 3, to prevent the leaves from injury by being blown upwardly between the chains or, if the leaves be sufliciently moist, by being blown up and over the chains.
  • the provision of the guard Il serves the purpose of preventing injury to the tobacco leaves and of enabling more eiective use .of treating air by enabling it in part to penetrate the leaves of a hand in its path and by deilecting it in part to the treatment of an oppositely positioned hand.
  • the method of treating tobacco' which comprises supporting hands of tobacco on a conveyor by their butts only with the butts extending in a plane substantially parallel with the plane of travel of the conveyor, directing a forceful jet of gas against one side of the leaf portion of a hand and limiting the movement of the leaf portion under the force of the jet of gas to a plane extending substantially parallel to the direction of trayelof the conveyor.
  • the method of treating tobacco which comprises supporting hands of tobacco on a conveyor by their butts only with the butts extending in a plane substantially parallel with the Plane of travel of the conveyor, directing a forceful jet of gas against one side of the leaf portion of a hand at an angle toward the tip of the leaf portion and limiting the movement of the leaf portion under the force of the .iet 0f gas to extension substantially in line with the butt.
  • the method of treating tobacco which comprises supporting a pair of hands of tobacco on a conveyor by their butts only with the butts extending in a plane substantially parallel with the plane of travel of the conveyor and with their leaf portions extending oppositely toward each other, directing a forceful jet of gas at an angle against one side of the leaf portion of one of the hands toward the tip of the leaf portion and limiting the movement of the leaf portion of said hand under the force of said jet of gas to extension in a direction such that gas is deiiected by said hand and directed against the opposite side of the opposite hand.
  • the method of treating tobacco which comprises supporting hands -of tobacco by their butts only with the butts extending out of the vertical and the leaf portion of the hands respectively being unsupported and out of line with the butt, directing a forceful jet of gas against one side of the leaf portion of the hand from a direction such as to tend to bring the leaf portion in line with the butt and limiting the movement of the leaf portion under the force of the jet of gas to extension substantially in line With the butt.

Landscapes

  • Manufacturing Of Cigar And Cigarette Tobacco (AREA)

Description

Nov. 16, 1943. R D TCU-[ON 2,334,362
METHOD OF CONDITIONING TOBACCO Filed June 5, 1941 2 sheets-sheet 1 Nov. 16, 1943. R. D. ToUToN METHOD OF CONDITIONING TOBACCO Filed June 5, 1941 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 W/V/WESS Patented Nov. I6, 1943 UNITED s'rlrrEs PATENT OFFICE 4 Claims.
This invention relates to an improvement inv apparatus for use in the treatment of tobacco for its conditioning or otherwise.
In general, this invention relates to an improvement in apparatus of the type having conveyor means extending generally in a plane, which desirably may be a horizontal plane, and
adapted or provided with means for the support of hands of tobacco from their butts and having their leaf portions free and extending laterally of the conveyor, the conveyor means being adapted to carry the hands of tobacco with respect to jets or blasts of conditioned gas.
More particularly, this invention contemplates the provision of means in association with the conveyor means, which will act, when the tobacco is subjected variously to blasts or jets of air, to hold or support the free leaf portions to the end that injury to them will be avoided and that they may be treated more eiectively than heretofore.
Having now indicated in a general Way the nature and purpose of this invention, I will proceed to a detailed description of a preferred embodiment thereof with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of an apparatus embodying this invention.
Figure 2 is a plan view on lines 2-2, Figure 1.
Figure 3 is a cross-sectional view of the apparatus shown in Figure 1.
In the several views 2, 2 indicate a pair of endless chains passing over spaced pairs of sprockets 3, 3 mounted on shafts 4, 4, which are supported in any suitable manner and one of which is adapted to be driven, from any suitable prime mover, through a pulley 5.
The chains 2, 2 are spaced apart a distance somewhat greater than twice the length of the v leaf portions of hands of tobacco 5, which it is intended shall be handled by the conveyor, as.
shown in Figure 2.
The upper reaches of the chains 2, 2 are tight, while the lower reaches are slack and supported by idlers 1, 1.
A second pair of endless chains 8, 8, connected by weighted rods 9, passes over spaced pairs of sprockets I0, I0, mounted on shafts Il, Il, suitably supported so that the lower reaches of chains 8, 8 will overlie the upper reaches of the chains 2, 2, throughout a distance between their ends, as shown in Figure 1. The upper reaches of chains 8, 8, which are slack, are supported by idlers I2, I2. The links of the chains 2, 2 and 8, 8 are out of line and their upper and lower reaches respectively lie together, the lower reaches of chain 8, 8 being weighted down on the upper reaches of chains 2, 2 by the weight of rods 9, 9, which, as described above, are connected to and extend between chains 8, 8, so that the butts I3 of the hands of tobacco 6 may be held between them, as shown in Figure 3, and so that chains 8, 8 will move with the driven chains Extending between chains 8, 8, `below rods 9, 9,
and secured to the chains throughout theirv will -freely pass and which desirably will be a material such as' copper screen, though the material need not necessarily be such as to pass air.
At the front or charging end of the machine, indicated by A, the upper reaches of the chains 2, 2 extend beyond the lower reaches of the chains 8, 8. Between the chains 2. 2 and on a level with their upper reaches, is positioned an endless conveyor belt I5, which passes around pulleys I6, I6, one of which is mounted on shaft 4, so that the belt is driven with the chains 2, 2 and at the same speed.
At the discharge end of the apparatus, indicated by B, a conveyor belt I1 is positioned be tween the chains 2, 2. The conveyor I'I passes over a pulley I8 on shaft 4 and over idler pulleys I9, I9, arranged so that it Will extend from sprockets 3, about which chains 2, 2 pass, downwardly at a small angle to chains 2, 2, forming a reach 20 and then at a relatively large angle to chains 2, 2 forming a further reach 2l.
On opposite sides of and below the conveyor formed by the chains 2, 2 and 8, 8 are longitudinally arranged ducts 22, 22 adapted to receive conditioned gas, as air, from any suitable source through inlets 23, 23. The ducts 22, 22 are provided with nozzles 24, 24, arranged for the discharge of jets or' blasts of conditioned gas. The nozzles are directed from below angularly with respect to the conveyor and as between the ducts are in staggered relation. Jets or blasts of air issuing from the nozzles 24, 24 are adapted enter the nip between the upper reaches of chains 2, 2 and the lower reaches of chains 8, 8 and they are gripped -between the reaches of the chains. The hands are carried by the chains into and out of jets or blasts of air issuing from nozzles 2|, 2l, which strike the leaf portions of the hands. Itwill be noted that chains 8. 8 are indented in the butts, as shown at 21, Figure 3.
When a .iet or blast of air from a nozzle 2l strikes the leaf portion of a hand, the guard I4 acts, as is shown in Figure 3, to prevent the leaves from injury by being blown upwardly between the chains or, if the leaves be sufliciently moist, by being blown up and over the chains. Further, under the innuence of the iets VorV blasts of air the leaf portions of the hands will be held against the guard Il and treating air will peneirate into the leaves and, if the guard be foraminous, a portion of the air will be enabled to pass through the leaves, as indicated by arrows x, Figure 3, while, since the air strikes the leaf portions at an angle, a portion of the air will be deiiected and will strike the leaf portions of opposite hands, as indicated by the arrows y, Figure 3.
Thus, it will be observed that the provision of the guard Il serves the purpose of preventing injury to the tobacco leaves and of enabling more eiective use .of treating air by enabling it in part to penetrate the leaves of a hand in its path and by deilecting it in part to the treatment of an oppositely positioned hand.
Finally, it will be noted that the novel arrangement of the pairs of conveyor chains 2, 2 and I, 8, in spaced relation with the provision of charging means between them greatly facilitates the handling of tobacco hands from the case, in which they are generally arranged tip to tip oppositely, as shown in Figure 2, for charging the conveyor.
It will be understood that it is not intended that this invention shall be limited by the above detailed disclosure, since it is contemplated that various modifications in detail may be made without departure from the scope of the appended claims.
What- I claim and desire to protect by Letters Patent is:
1. The method of treating tobacco' which comprises supporting hands of tobacco on a conveyor by their butts only with the butts extending in a plane substantially parallel with the plane of travel of the conveyor, directing a forceful jet of gas against one side of the leaf portion of a hand and limiting the movement of the leaf portion under the force of the jet of gas to a plane extending substantially parallel to the direction of trayelof the conveyor.
2. The method of treating tobacco which comprises supporting hands of tobacco on a conveyor by their butts only with the butts extending in a plane substantially parallel with the Plane of travel of the conveyor, directing a forceful jet of gas against one side of the leaf portion of a hand at an angle toward the tip of the leaf portion and limiting the movement of the leaf portion under the force of the .iet 0f gas to extension substantially in line with the butt.
3. The method of treating tobacco which comprises supporting a pair of hands of tobacco on a conveyor by their butts only with the butts extending in a plane substantially parallel with the plane of travel of the conveyor and with their leaf portions extending oppositely toward each other, directing a forceful jet of gas at an angle against one side of the leaf portion of one of the hands toward the tip of the leaf portion and limiting the movement of the leaf portion of said hand under the force of said jet of gas to extension in a direction such that gas is deiiected by said hand and directed against the opposite side of the opposite hand.
4. The method of treating tobacco which comprises supporting hands -of tobacco by their butts only with the butts extending out of the vertical and the leaf portion of the hands respectively being unsupported and out of line with the butt, directing a forceful jet of gas against one side of the leaf portion of the hand from a direction such as to tend to bring the leaf portion in line with the butt and limiting the movement of the leaf portion under the force of the jet of gas to extension substantially in line With the butt.
RUSH D. TOUTON.
US396672A 1941-06-05 1941-06-05 Method of conditioning tobacco Expired - Lifetime US2334362A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US396672A US2334362A (en) 1941-06-05 1941-06-05 Method of conditioning tobacco

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US396672A US2334362A (en) 1941-06-05 1941-06-05 Method of conditioning tobacco

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2334362A true US2334362A (en) 1943-11-16

Family

ID=23568180

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US396672A Expired - Lifetime US2334362A (en) 1941-06-05 1941-06-05 Method of conditioning tobacco

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2334362A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2418281A (en) * 1944-01-04 1947-04-01 Wurton Machine Company Apparatus for conditioning tobacco
US2566589A (en) * 1944-12-30 1951-09-04 Wurton Machine Company Method for treating tobacco

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2418281A (en) * 1944-01-04 1947-04-01 Wurton Machine Company Apparatus for conditioning tobacco
US2566589A (en) * 1944-12-30 1951-09-04 Wurton Machine Company Method for treating tobacco

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2334362A (en) Method of conditioning tobacco
US2418281A (en) Apparatus for conditioning tobacco
US2137104A (en) Swinging nozzle
US2525348A (en) Belt conveyer cleaner
US1345301A (en) Fruit-peel drier
US2997085A (en) Peeling machine for fruit and vegetables
US2596800A (en) Method and apparatus for drying containers
US2268803A (en) Fruit inspection conveyer
US2187101A (en) Grader
US2073184A (en) Apparatus for cleaning articles of ceramic materials
US937213A (en) Drying and grading apparatus.
US1385218A (en) Fruit-sizing machine
US1884101A (en) Sorting and packing belt
GB287294A (en) Improvements in or connected with rope, chain, belt and like conveyors
US2419933A (en) Egg cleaning machine
US1242034A (en) Fruit-sizing machine.
US1347195A (en) Workshop ventilation
US983076A (en) Drying-machine.
TR23995A (en) MANUFACTURING PROCEDURE AND TASTE OF THIS PROCEDURE DEVICE
US1711508A (en) Scutching machine
US1981197A (en) Method and apparatus for drying fruit
US554838A (en) Wool-drying machine
US2496570A (en) Hemp breaking machine
US2303908A (en) Stemming machine
US2475823A (en) Petal saver and hop cleaner