US2664197A - Vacuo-pneumatic apparatus for separating vegetables, fruits, and/or other bodies - Google Patents

Vacuo-pneumatic apparatus for separating vegetables, fruits, and/or other bodies Download PDF

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US2664197A
US2664197A US202628A US20262850A US2664197A US 2664197 A US2664197 A US 2664197A US 202628 A US202628 A US 202628A US 20262850 A US20262850 A US 20262850A US 2664197 A US2664197 A US 2664197A
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cups
bodies
drum
vacuum
vacuo
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William T Pfister
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01DHARVESTING; MOWING
    • A01D33/00Accessories for digging harvesters
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B07SEPARATING SOLIDS FROM SOLIDS; SORTING
    • B07BSEPARATING SOLIDS FROM SOLIDS BY SIEVING, SCREENING, SIFTING OR BY USING GAS CURRENTS; SEPARATING BY OTHER DRY METHODS APPLICABLE TO BULK MATERIAL, e.g. LOOSE ARTICLES FIT TO BE HANDLED LIKE BULK MATERIAL
    • B07B13/00Grading or sorting solid materials by dry methods, not otherwise provided for; Sorting articles otherwise than by indirectly controlled devices

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  • This invention is a vacuo-pneumatic, automatic, continuous running apparatus for the substantial separation of two classes of bodies one class including a large range having what may be regarded, for the utility of this invention, as having a generally smooth peripheral surface as exampled by numerous varieties of sub-surface, earth grown vegetables, namely, potatoes, turnips, and beets; the other class being such detritus as may be machine dug along with the sub-soil vegetables-if and when such materia is to be treated by the machine of the instant invention.
  • vacuo machine is not confined to the treatment of subsoil vegetables but may be employed for the separation of a large variety of bodies from other surface differentiated bodies-nuts or fruit which can be shaken from their trees and gathered or picked up from the surface soil by appropriate machines.
  • Various industries may produce, or may manufacture divers goods in mass whose pieces or bodies may be separated into size or other grades, or from a by-product or waste or just detritus.
  • a suction mattress preferably having a continuous peripheral or circumferential, effective surface, to which individual bodies, running in large munbers (passing through the machine), will be caused to adhere solely by atmospheric pressure acting on the desired bodies as these are so lodged on the said structure as to effect the functional opening of certain valves.
  • valves form a part of the structure and control the establishment of a desired state of vacuum in pliant-lipped suction pockets or cups going to make the effective object-holding feature of the mattress.
  • the advance here is to enable the economical maintenance of a good degree of vacuum in a chamber of the structure, a degree that will actually (as has been effectively accomplished by apparatus of this invention) hold a good sized potato (for instance) to the mattress structure even as the adhering potato is orbitally moved downwardly in a vertical pathas from a high feeding locale to a lower stripping level as to each piece or body being sorted.
  • an accomplishment of the invention is to provide a running structurehaving a suction mattress and said structure including a hollow, evacuated medium the outer wall of which has a surface system of pockets or cups having feathered edges to effectively and instantly conform to the adjacent and impinging surface of passing smooth-face bodies to be selected from other bodies or material to be continuously treated by passing onto and along'with the running mattress of the structure or machine.
  • a purpose is to provide each suction cup with its own individual vacuum valve device, whereby. when a given cup is sufflciently covered, as by a potato, then and then only will the closed cup or cups be effectively opened to the evacuated chamber of the running structure-which is herein shown as a closed, runningdrum. Such pieces as do not seal a cup but 'do press a valve open will be free to drop off from the cups.
  • Figure 1 is a diagrammatic, vertical crosssection of the apparatus, and illustrates its sorting function.
  • Figure 2 is an elevation of a portion of the sorting mattress cups; carrying a potato.
  • Figure 3 is an axial section of a potato controlled, vacuum valve, in normal closed positionas to the vacuum chamber.
  • Illustrated is one of divers possible combinations embodying the principle of this vacuopneumatic apparatus and showing the discharge belt 2 of a potato digging machine.
  • the belt unloads detritus along with potatoes onto an inclined apron A whose lower end slides the aggregate material onto the top surface of the instant separator whose function is to cause the generally smooth-skinned potatoes to adhere, under atmospheric pressure, onto a presented, external system of pockets, feather-edged cups 3, for instance.
  • In each of said cups are provided means controlled by such of the potatoes as may wholly cover or close a mouth or mouths of adjacent cups of the system.
  • a feature of the invention is a provided means to effectively press oncoming potatoes onto the top cups of the running system to effect the desired closing of the potato engaged cups; said means being here depicted as consisting of a rotary, sponge-like roller R to yieldably contact and press engaged potatoes to cup covering position.
  • a vacuum valve stem 4 having on its lower end a poppet valve 412 which normally closes onto a seat ts in the lower end of a valve shell 5.
  • the shell screws into the wall, in this disclosure, of a running structure consisting of a rotary, closed drum or cylinder I whose periphery is substantially covered from side to side, that is, parallel to its axis. by the system of applied valve shells and their cups 3, which are fixed in any desired manner onto the outer ends of the valve shells.
  • each valve stem Under the head 4h of each valve stem a light effort spring 5 overcomes the tension of a partial vacuum created in the drum ID by way of a hol low, perforated, driving shaft l I having a suitable swivel connection (not shown) to a suction pipe l2 evacuated by any suitable pump, not shown.
  • the head 471. of the valve stem has a screen 4s to reduce dust flow into the stem, this being tubular and having outlet port M2 to the bore of the shell.
  • the sorted potatoes held by contacted cups will pass under the axis of the drum or carrying structure of mattress valves and upon engaging a suitable and fixed stripper S will be pulled from the effective cups and drop onto an adjacent carry-off belt C or other desired disposal means, which may discharge to a pick-up vehicle travelling with the digging machine of which the feeder belt 2 is a part.
  • a feature of the invention is a rotary device such as a roller or brush l3, normally kept wet with water and having the purpose of wetting the lips of the cups as they pass so that sealing effect of a lodged potatoe will be facilitated.
  • Another feature of the invention is that such dust as may enter the tubular valve stems is, instead of being whirled and tumbled in the vacuous chamber of the drum l0, quickly led toward the perforated shaft I I by means of a set of radial partitions Hlp fixed in the drum.
  • the suction pipe [2 takes off the dust and leads it to an air washer or dust trap l5 from which the cleaned air passes to the given air pump which establishes the desired vacuum.
  • a feature is that as the cups pass up from the carry-off belt C they are brushed by' a rotary, suitably driven brush [6, and when desired are washed by jets of water from amanifold i1, and further cleaned and dried by air jets from an air manifold IS.
  • the degree of the vacuum and the size and arrangement of the mattress forming cups will be determined by the kinds and nature of bodies and objects, natural or manufactured, to be sorted in a running mass aggregate. It is possible that a plurality of the vacuo-drums may be associated for successive operation in a given run of materia.
  • Means for continuous sorting of given bodies from an aggregate mass and including a rotary drum and means to exhaust and maintain a. vacuum in the chamber of the drum, means forrunning a body and aggregate stream onto thedrum, and a vacuum mattress on the periphery of the drum and including a system of separated,
  • Vacuo-pneumatic apparatus for running operation of vegetable bodies from a stream of ii detritus and including a hollow running drum rotatable on a horizontal axis, means for maintaining a vacuum in the drum, an external systern of thin, flexible-lipped suction cups on the periphery of the drum having exposed in their cavities valves engageable with and functionally opened to the drum chamber by said bodies as they cover individual cups whereby to hold the efiective bodies as the drum rotates, and means for supplying the stream of bodies to a desired area of the drum.

Description

W. T. PFISTER VACUO-PNEUMATIC APPARATUS FOR SEPARATING Dec. 29, 1953 VEGETABLES, FRUITS, AND/OR OTHER BODIES Filed Dec. 26, 1950 $993162. x Q m mw 7-02,
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Patented Dec. 29, 1953 VACUO-PNEUMATIC APPARATUS FOR SEP- ARATING VEGETABLES, FRUITS, AND/OR OTHER BODIES William '1. Pfister, Los Angeles, Calif.
Application December 26, 1950, Serial No. 202,628
9 Claims. (01. 209-45) This invention is a vacuo-pneumatic, automatic, continuous running apparatus for the substantial separation of two classes of bodies one class including a large range having what may be regarded, for the utility of this invention, as having a generally smooth peripheral surface as exampled by numerous varieties of sub-surface, earth grown vegetables, namely, potatoes, turnips, and beets; the other class being such detritus as may be machine dug along with the sub-soil vegetables-if and when such materia is to be treated by the machine of the instant invention.
But it is to be understood that the vacuo machine is not confined to the treatment of subsoil vegetables but may be employed for the separation of a large variety of bodies from other surface differentiated bodies-nuts or fruit which can be shaken from their trees and gathered or picked up from the surface soil by appropriate machines. Various industries may produce, or may manufacture divers goods in mass whose pieces or bodies may be separated into size or other grades, or from a by-product or waste or just detritus.
More definitely it is an object of the invention to provide an apparatus whose functioning principle involves the employment of a vacuouspneumatic structure wherein is provided a suction mattress, preferably having a continuous peripheral or circumferential, effective surface, to which individual bodies, running in large munbers (passing through the machine), will be caused to adhere solely by atmospheric pressure acting on the desired bodies as these are so lodged on the said structure as to effect the functional opening of certain valves. And which valves form a part of the structure and control the establishment of a desired state of vacuum in pliant-lipped suction pockets or cups going to make the effective object-holding feature of the mattress.
The advance here is to enable the economical maintenance of a good degree of vacuum in a chamber of the structure, a degree that will actually (as has been effectively accomplished by apparatus of this invention) hold a good sized potato (for instance) to the mattress structure even as the adhering potato is orbitally moved downwardly in a vertical pathas from a high feeding locale to a lower stripping level as to each piece or body being sorted.
Further, an accomplishment of the invention is to provide a running structurehaving a suction mattress and said structure including a hollow, evacuated medium the outer wall of which has a surface system of pockets or cups having feathered edges to effectively and instantly conform to the adjacent and impinging surface of passing smooth-face bodies to be selected from other bodies or material to be continuously treated by passing onto and along'with the running mattress of the structure or machine. In this connection, a purpose is to provide each suction cup with its own individual vacuum valve device, whereby. when a given cup is sufflciently covered, as by a potato, then and then only will the closed cup or cups be effectively opened to the evacuated chamber of the running structure-which is herein shown as a closed, runningdrum. Such pieces as do not seal a cup but 'do press a valve open will be free to drop off from the cups.
The invention resides in certain advancements in this art as set forth in the ensuing disclosure and has, with the above, additional objects and advantages as hereinafter developed, and whose constructions, combinations and details of means and the manner of operation will be made manifest in the following description of the herewith illustrative embodiment; 'it being understood that modifications, variations, adaptations and equivalents may be resorted to within the scope, spirit and principles of the invention as it is claimed in conclusion hereof.
Figure 1 is a diagrammatic, vertical crosssection of the apparatus, and illustrates its sorting function. Figure 2 is an elevation of a portion of the sorting mattress cups; carrying a potato. Figure 3 is an axial section of a potato controlled, vacuum valve, in normal closed positionas to the vacuum chamber.
Illustrated is one of divers possible combinations embodying the principle of this vacuopneumatic apparatus and showing the discharge belt 2 of a potato digging machine. The belt unloads detritus along with potatoes onto an inclined apron A whose lower end slides the aggregate material onto the top surface of the instant separator whose function is to cause the generally smooth-skinned potatoes to adhere, under atmospheric pressure, onto a presented, external system of pockets, feather-edged cups 3, for instance. In each of said cups are provided means controlled by such of the potatoes as may wholly cover or close a mouth or mouths of adjacent cups of the system.
A feature of the invention is a provided means to effectively press oncoming potatoes onto the top cups of the running system to effect the desired closing of the potato engaged cups; said means being here depicted as consisting of a rotary, sponge-like roller R to yieldably contact and press engaged potatoes to cup covering position.
Referring to Fig. 3; in the recess of each cup 3 there is exposed the head 4h of a vacuum valve stem 4 having on its lower end a poppet valve 412 which normally closes onto a seat ts in the lower end of a valve shell 5. The shell screws into the wall, in this disclosure, of a running structure consisting of a rotary, closed drum or cylinder I whose periphery is substantially covered from side to side, that is, parallel to its axis. by the system of applied valve shells and their cups 3, which are fixed in any desired manner onto the outer ends of the valve shells.
Under the head 4h of each valve stem a light effort spring 5 overcomes the tension of a partial vacuum created in the drum ID by way of a hol low, perforated, driving shaft l I having a suitable swivel connection (not shown) to a suction pipe l2 evacuated by any suitable pump, not shown. The head 471. of the valve stem has a screen 4s to reduce dust flow into the stem, this being tubular and having outlet port M2 to the bore of the shell.
It is therefore clear that when potatoes lodge on the topmost cups of the mattress formed thereby around the drum the valves will be forced open against their springs 6 and the vacuum opened from the drum to the cups will cause atmospheric pressure to clamp the affected pctatoes solidly onto the respective cups. The result is that as the drum revolves on its horizontal axis the tenaciously, air-pressed potatoes will be carried downwardly in a vertical are by the ro tation of the drum.
Lumps of earth and pieces of rock and gravel, having, almost always, sharply angular facets and indentations, will not be able to effectively close the mouth of an engaged cup. When adapted to vegetable digging machines, as here shown, even large lumps in the detritus which may open a valve will fail to seal the cups to a degree that will cause detritus pieces on the cups to be held but the detritus will freely fall to a dirt conveyor DC suitably driven in a direction away from the lower portion of the drum. At the same time, the sorted potatoes held by contacted cups will pass under the axis of the drum or carrying structure of mattress valves and upon engaging a suitable and fixed stripper S will be pulled from the effective cups and drop onto an adjacent carry-off belt C or other desired disposal means, which may discharge to a pick-up vehicle travelling with the digging machine of which the feeder belt 2 is a part.
A feature of the invention-is a rotary device such as a roller or brush l3, normally kept wet with water and having the purpose of wetting the lips of the cups as they pass so that sealing effect of a lodged potatoe will be facilitated.
Another feature of the invention is that such dust as may enter the tubular valve stems is, instead of being whirled and tumbled in the vacuous chamber of the drum l0, quickly led toward the perforated shaft I I by means of a set of radial partitions Hlp fixed in the drum. The suction pipe [2 takes off the dust and leads it to an air washer or dust trap l5 from which the cleaned air passes to the given air pump which establishes the desired vacuum.
Also, a feature is that as the cups pass up from the carry-off belt C they are brushed by' a rotary, suitably driven brush [6, and when desired are washed by jets of water from amanifold i1, and further cleaned and dried by air jets from an air manifold IS.
The degree of the vacuum and the size and arrangement of the mattress forming cups will be determined by the kinds and nature of bodies and objects, natural or manufactured, to be sorted in a running mass aggregate. It is possible that a plurality of the vacuo-drums may be associated for successive operation in a given run of materia.
Attention is drawn to the great advantage of readily holding the desired degree of vacuum in the drum by reason of use of valves which operate under control of bodies which, per se, are to be sorted. All cup valves not pressed open by the smooth surface bodies to be recovered or by dirt lumps and the like stay closed and conserve the vacuum and those pieces which do not seal on the cups fall away and let the adjacent valves quickly close thus reducing vacuum loss which is easily kept by the respective pump to the necessary tension.
What is claimed is:
1. The combination, in a given-body sorting apparatus, of a horizontal axis, hollow, running drum structure having an exterior mattress, means for maintaining a suction within the interior chamber of said drum structure, and vacuum valves in the cups connecting the said chamber to the cavities of the cues to effect pneumatic adhesion of imposed, cup-closing bodies which are to be sorted, and means for feeding said bodies to a desired area of the drum structure; said cups having flexible, object conformative hps, and presser means for yieldably pressing the sortable bodies onto the cups to close the same and effect operation of the valves by said bodies.
2. The combination of claim 1; and exhaust means connected to the drum structure to facilitate exhaust of incidental dust from the exhausted chamber.
3. The combination of claim 1; and means arranged adjacent to the cups for eventually stripping the bodies from the effective cups.
4. The combination of claim 3; and means arranged adjacent to the drum for brushing and washing the cups of the mattress subsequent to the stripping action.
5. The combination of claim 1; and a water supply means arranged adjacent to the path of and for wetting the lips of the cups to facilitate adhesion of the imposed, covering bodies to be sorted.
6. Means for continuous sorting of given bodies" from an aggregate mass and including a rotary drum and means to exhaust and maintain a. vacuum in the chamber of the drum, means forrunning a body and aggregate stream onto thedrum, and a vacuum mattress on the periphery of the drum and including a system of separated,
individually functioning suction cups having;
flexible lips and each having therein a normallyclosed, repressible vacuum valve operatively con-i trolled by said bodies as lodge on and substan tially seal adjacent cups whereby to evacuate the closed cups by connections thereof leading to the said chamber, and means for pressing said bodies onto the cups.
7. The means as set forth in claim 6; and in'-: cluding a stripping means arranged adjacent the drum for stripping adhering bodies from the.
effective cups. 8. In an apparatus of the class set forth; a
system of flexible wall suction cups each having exposed in the cavity thereof a vacuum valve adapted for repressive engagement with given objects to be taken by and closing the cups, and means for maintaining a vacuum in the suction cups whereby to hold thereto an object which has opened an engaged valve; the cup walls having thinned-lip-ped, object sealed mouths.
9. Vacuo-pneumatic apparatus for running operation of vegetable bodies from a stream of ii detritus and including a hollow running drum rotatable on a horizontal axis, means for maintaining a vacuum in the drum, an external systern of thin, flexible-lipped suction cups on the periphery of the drum having exposed in their cavities valves engageable with and functionally opened to the drum chamber by said bodies as they cover individual cups whereby to hold the efiective bodies as the drum rotates, and means for supplying the stream of bodies to a desired area of the drum.
WILLIAM T. PFISI'ER.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS
US202628A 1950-12-26 1950-12-26 Vacuo-pneumatic apparatus for separating vegetables, fruits, and/or other bodies Expired - Lifetime US2664197A (en)

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Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2812061A (en) * 1953-11-24 1957-11-05 William T Pfister Automatic, pneumatic (pressure-vacuo), object sorting machine
US2843264A (en) * 1954-06-17 1958-07-15 William T Pfister Automatic, vacuo-pneumatic object sorting machine
US2998135A (en) * 1956-03-29 1961-08-29 Gen Electric Article sorting apparatus
US3016141A (en) * 1957-12-05 1962-01-09 John W Lucas Mail sorting apparatus and method
US3259240A (en) * 1963-09-30 1966-07-05 Paul J Schneider Electrical command storage and distribution system
US4143665A (en) * 1977-01-21 1979-03-13 Griffin Lee E Machine for shelling beans or peas and for separating particles therefrom
FR2548055A1 (en) * 1983-06-28 1985-01-04 Kalfon Pierre Olivier Device for removing broken tablets, particularly for the pharmaceutical industry
US20040184899A1 (en) * 2003-02-24 2004-09-23 Antonio Turatti Conveyor of leaves and other products on a belt for laying the same products as a single layer

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US758300A (en) * 1903-06-25 1904-04-26 Southern Cotton Oil Company Machine for cleaning cotton-seed.
US1328735A (en) * 1917-04-12 1920-01-20 James B Harriss Method and apparatus for separating leaves from packages
US1498078A (en) * 1924-02-04 1924-06-17 Arthur L Duncan Peach-pitting apparatus
US1523906A (en) * 1923-07-30 1925-01-20 Anton A Schoenegg Rice separator
US1913876A (en) * 1926-10-04 1933-06-13 Continental Diamond Fibre Co Mica separating and sorting machine
US2054319A (en) * 1930-10-20 1936-09-15 Electric Sorting Machine Compa Sorting apparatus
US2228559A (en) * 1938-08-06 1941-01-14 Electric Sorting Machine Compa Lamp housing for sorting machines
US2444298A (en) * 1943-10-29 1948-06-29 Joseph W Kline Juice extractor with vacuum cup rotor
US2481897A (en) * 1948-03-02 1949-09-13 George R Anderson Device for separating leaves, stems, and other material from hops

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US758300A (en) * 1903-06-25 1904-04-26 Southern Cotton Oil Company Machine for cleaning cotton-seed.
US1328735A (en) * 1917-04-12 1920-01-20 James B Harriss Method and apparatus for separating leaves from packages
US1523906A (en) * 1923-07-30 1925-01-20 Anton A Schoenegg Rice separator
US1498078A (en) * 1924-02-04 1924-06-17 Arthur L Duncan Peach-pitting apparatus
US1913876A (en) * 1926-10-04 1933-06-13 Continental Diamond Fibre Co Mica separating and sorting machine
US2054319A (en) * 1930-10-20 1936-09-15 Electric Sorting Machine Compa Sorting apparatus
US2228559A (en) * 1938-08-06 1941-01-14 Electric Sorting Machine Compa Lamp housing for sorting machines
US2444298A (en) * 1943-10-29 1948-06-29 Joseph W Kline Juice extractor with vacuum cup rotor
US2481897A (en) * 1948-03-02 1949-09-13 George R Anderson Device for separating leaves, stems, and other material from hops

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2812061A (en) * 1953-11-24 1957-11-05 William T Pfister Automatic, pneumatic (pressure-vacuo), object sorting machine
US2843264A (en) * 1954-06-17 1958-07-15 William T Pfister Automatic, vacuo-pneumatic object sorting machine
US2998135A (en) * 1956-03-29 1961-08-29 Gen Electric Article sorting apparatus
US3016141A (en) * 1957-12-05 1962-01-09 John W Lucas Mail sorting apparatus and method
US3259240A (en) * 1963-09-30 1966-07-05 Paul J Schneider Electrical command storage and distribution system
US4143665A (en) * 1977-01-21 1979-03-13 Griffin Lee E Machine for shelling beans or peas and for separating particles therefrom
FR2548055A1 (en) * 1983-06-28 1985-01-04 Kalfon Pierre Olivier Device for removing broken tablets, particularly for the pharmaceutical industry
US20040184899A1 (en) * 2003-02-24 2004-09-23 Antonio Turatti Conveyor of leaves and other products on a belt for laying the same products as a single layer
US6978555B2 (en) * 2003-02-24 2005-12-27 Turatti S.R.L. Conveyor of leaves and other products on a belt for laying the same products as a single layer

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