US3631768A - Bag-processing machine - Google Patents

Bag-processing machine Download PDF

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US3631768A
US3631768A US877627A US3631768DA US3631768A US 3631768 A US3631768 A US 3631768A US 877627 A US877627 A US 877627A US 3631768D A US3631768D A US 3631768DA US 3631768 A US3631768 A US 3631768A
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bags
severing
bag
abutment
speed
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US877627A
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Josef Breidenbach
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HOLLER GEB GmbH
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HOLLER GEB GmbH
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65BMACHINES, APPARATUS OR DEVICES FOR, OR METHODS OF, PACKAGING ARTICLES OR MATERIALS; UNPACKING
    • B65B43/00Forming, feeding, opening or setting-up containers or receptacles in association with packaging
    • B65B43/12Feeding flexible bags or carton blanks in flat or collapsed state; Feeding flat bags connected to form a series or chain
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B31MAKING ARTICLES OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER; WORKING PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31BMAKING CONTAINERS OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31B70/00Making flexible containers, e.g. envelopes or bags
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B31MAKING ARTICLES OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER; WORKING PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31BMAKING CONTAINERS OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31B2155/00Flexible containers made from webs
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B31MAKING ARTICLES OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER; WORKING PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31BMAKING CONTAINERS OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31B2155/00Flexible containers made from webs
    • B31B2155/001Flexible containers made from webs by folding webs longitudinally
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B31MAKING ARTICLES OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER; WORKING PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31BMAKING CONTAINERS OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31B2155/00Flexible containers made from webs
    • B31B2155/001Flexible containers made from webs by folding webs longitudinally
    • B31B2155/0014Flexible containers made from webs by folding webs longitudinally having their openings facing transversally to the direction of movement
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B31MAKING ARTICLES OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER; WORKING PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31BMAKING CONTAINERS OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31B2160/00Shape of flexible containers
    • B31B2160/10Shape of flexible containers rectangular and flat, i.e. without structural provision for thickness of contents

Definitions

  • the present invention relates .generally to the processing of bags, and more particularly to an apparatus for processing of bags.
  • Apparatus which forms bags at a first operating station from suitable material and advances these bags in form of a chain of connected bags in a predetermined path.
  • a cutting device severs the respectively leading bag from the chain, and the thus-severed leading bag is then advanced to another operating station for further processing, for instance for filling and closing, or for other purposes.
  • the bags must advance past the second processing station at a speed greater than that at which they advance past the first processing station and are supplied by the cutting device for transfer to the second processing station.
  • a transfer device is provided for this purpose which engages the bags at the first speed as they are supplied by the cutting device, and accelerates them to supply them at the higher second speed to the second operating station.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide such an apparatus which is simple in its construction but highly reliable in its operation.
  • a bag-processing machine which comprises first means for advancing bags in a predetermined path and at a first speed past a first operating station.
  • Second means is spaced in direction downstream of the first means and serves to advance the bags in the aforementioned path but at a higher second speed past a second operating station.
  • l provide transfer means arranged intermediate the first and second means and serving to receive the bags from the first means at the first speed, engaging them by suction, and transferring them to the second means at the aforementioned second speed.
  • a further advantage of my novel apparatus resides in the fact that it pennits me to interrupt in a most simple LII manner the supply ofbags'from theffirstfmeansttogtheSecond means if this is necessary or desirable, yfor instance ⁇ if the second means should become temporarily inoperative, or if it is desired to make spot checksat intervals of fthevbagsbeing supplied by the first means, for instancetodetermine whether their seams are properly sealed if ⁇ they are of synthetic plastic material, or for any other purpose. This is accomplished :by momentarily interrupting suction v whereby any :bags supplied by the first means to thetransfer means while-thesuctionis-interrupted, will simply fall-off andcan be collectedgfor inspection or for any. other purposes.
  • FIG. 1 is a simplied rather diagrammaticperspective.view of an apparatus embodying the present invention, with components not essential for an understanding of the invention having been omitted;
  • FIG, 2 is a detail view, on an, enlarged.scale, of thetransfer means used in the apparatus of FIGrl.
  • reference numeral l identifies a supply roll fromwhich a web l2 of materialsuch as, for-instance, synthetic plastic material-is continuously withdrawn over an abutment ll.,Downstream of the abutment. 1-1 there is arranged a folding member 12,l having a generally fork-shaped configuration, and the yweb2 is ,drawn through,the folding member l2 by the action of the withdrawing rollers 13,114 and is thereby folded longitudinally in half into a generally ,V- shaped strip 3.
  • the sealing jawsI 15 serve to provide a plurality of sealed seams extending transversely of the elongation of the strip r3, thereby providing a chain of connected individual bags, .with the widthfofv each bag corresponding to they distance between two adjacent pairsA over the jaws l5. The open side of each of the bagsA faesupwardly in FIG. l.
  • a severing device consisting in the diagrammatically il- Iustrated embodiment of a stationary knife Ablade l6and a rotary knife blade 17 (see also FIG. 2), with the rotation of the knife blade 17 being so selected that -it severs the respectively leading bag 5 from the advancing chain-4 of connected bags.
  • engagement members 21 which may be of known construction and which engage the bags at their lateral edges below the upper open side of the bags.
  • the bags 5 are advanced to a filling station 23 where they are filed with whatever contents they are to accommodate, and thereupon the filled bags are passed to a closing device 24 which closes their upper open ends.
  • the arrangement and construction of the filling station and of the closing device form no part of the present invention and any suitable and well-known type may be utilized. They are illustrated in FIG. 1 only to clarify the further processing steps to which the bags are subjected once they have been released by the belts 19, 20.
  • the severed bags 5 are supplied from the severing device I6, 17 at a first speed imparted to them by the advancing rollers 13, 14.
  • the belts 19, advance at a second speed which is higher than the first speed.
  • This transfer device identified with reference numeral 18 and shown on an enlarged scale in FIG. 2, comprises in accordance with my invention a suction chamber 25 having an open side whose general plane coincides with the general plane of the path in which the severed bags advance from the severing device 16, 17 to the belts 19, 20.
  • a suction-producing device 27, such as a vacuum pump, is diagrammatically illustrated in FIG.
  • the suction chamber is surrounded by a movable wall overlying its open side and being apertured so that, when the bags 5 move onto this movable wall, they are held by suction against the same and are advanced by movement of the movable wall.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 shows the movable wall to consist of a plurality of endless belts or bands 28 which are trained about the rotary rollers 29, 30 and 31 all of which are arranged in axial parallelism with one another.
  • the belts 28 actually are spaced from the wall of the suction chamber 25 and the rollers 29, 30 and 31-of which one, two or all may be driven in suitable manner by any drive means known to those skilled in the art-are rotated continuously in the direction of the arrows associated with them in FIG. 2.
  • the belts 28 are spaced from one another axially of the rollers 29, 30 and 3l at predeten'nined distances which are advantageously constant and identical.
  • the speed at which the belts 28 advance in the sense imparted to them by the rotation of the rollers 29, 30 and 31, is significantly higher than the speed at which the withdrawing rollers 13, 14 advance the web 2 and consequently the bags 5 which are produced from the web 2; it equals the speed of the belts 19 and 20 which in turn equals the speed of advancement of the engaging members 21.
  • the severed bags 5 are engaged by suction by the transfer device 18. More specifically, the leading edge portion of each bag 5 slides onto the belts 28 or analogous wall-defining member before the trailing edge portion of the same bag is yet severed from the chain 4. Because the chain 4 is firmly engaged between the advancing rollers 13, 14 the fact that the leading edge portion of the leading as yet unsevered bag 5 overlies the belts 28 does not permit the chain 24 to be accelerated to the speed of the transfer device 18. This acceleration takes place only after the trailing edge of the leading bag 5 is severed from thev chain 4, whereupon the bag 5, whose leading edge is already held by suction against the belts 28 which slide underneath it during their continued movement,
  • l provide supporting bars or the like 34 extending across the open side of the suction chamber 25 and each located behind one of the belts 28 in registry therewith.
  • the bars or analogous elements 34 are of the same width or at least substantially the same width as the belts 28 and are secured in suitable manner so that the belts 28 slide over them; it is evident that direct physical content is not necessary and that the bars 34 may be slightly spaced from the belts 28.
  • a comblike abutment element 32 is located inwardly of the open side of the suction chamber 25 and provided with teeth or projections 33 which each register with a gap between two adjacent ones of the belts 28.
  • the abutment member 32 can rotate about an axis defined by the shaft 32a so that its projections 33 can extend into the gaps between adjacent ones of the belts 28, and be withdrawn therefrom.
  • the projections 33 serve as abutments for the bags held by suction against the belts 28 and being advanced by the same in direction from the right towards the left-hand side of FIG. 2.
  • Control of the rotation of the member 32 may be effected by suitable control means 35 which is already well known in the art and which in turn may be actuated in dependence upon the particular position of the engagement members 2l to which the bags 5 are supplied by the belts 19, 20. For this reason the control means 35 is actuated by the driving means 36 of the engagement members 21.
  • the apparatus herein disclosed and illustrated by way of an exemplary embodiment provide the advantages which have been set forth in the introductory portion of this disclosure, and avoid the disadvantages of the prior art, but it has the additional feature of aordingat all times a very clear unobstructed view of the accelerating or transfer device 18 so that the proper operation of this device may be ascertained at a quick glance. This is important because the device 18 is an important part of the apparatus of the type under discussion, especially because of the precision of cooperation between the various components of such apparatus which is necessary to assure flawless functioning.
  • abutment means being arranged for movement alternately into abutting position transversely of the advancement of each engaged bag and thereupon into withdrawn position subsequent to abutment with the respective bag.
  • said wall means comprises first wall means defining said internal chamber with the latter having an open side, and travelling second wall means traveling past said open side in close proximity thereto and defining said apertures.
  • said second wall means comprises a plurality of endless belts each having a belt section overlying said open side and extending in direction from said first means towards said second means, said belt sections being spaced transversely of said direction and defining with one another elongated gap-shaped apertures.
  • abutment means comprises an abutment element extending in a plane at least substantially parallel with the general plane of said belt sections and comprising a plurality of projections at least one of which extends into each of said apertures in response to movement of said abutment means from a withdrawn position to an operative abutting position.

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  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
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Abstract

A bag-processing machine comprises a first arrangement for advancing bags in a predetermined path at a first speed past a first operating station. A second arrangement is spaced in direction downstream from the first arrangement and serves to advance the bags in the same path but at a higher second speed past a second operating station. Transfer means is arranged intermediate the first and second arrangements and receives the bags from the first arrangement at the first speed, engages them by suction and transfers them to the second arrangement at the aforementioned second speed.

Description

ReferencesCited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,093,280 6/1963 Simpson....................... 3,400,642 9/1968 Stemmler...
L J m 0 M A u e k Wm aS S. d a h .w M w, m m A l l 969 Dickmann n. mm mm 0 wC 99 66 99 11 Mw 07 Primary Examiner-W Josef Breidenbach Bergisch Gladbach, Germany [2 l] Appl. No. 877,627
Nov. 18, 1969 [45] Patented Jan. 4, 1972 Gebruder Holler GmbH Bergisch Gladbach, Gennany Nov. 19, 1968 Germany P 18 09 659.8
United States Patent [72] Inventor [22] Filed [73] Assignee [32] Priority PATENTEUJAN me 3531.768
INVENTOR Josef BREIDENBACH his ATTORNEY BAG-PROCESSING MACHINE BACKGROUNDOF THE INVENTION The present invention relates .generally to the processing of bags, and more particularly to an apparatus for processing of bags.
Apparatus is known which forms bags at a first operating station from suitable material and advances these bags in form of a chain of connected bags in a predetermined path. A cutting device severs the respectively leading bag from the chain, and the thus-severed leading bag is then advanced to another operating station for further processing, for instance for filling and closing, or for other purposes. Usually, the bags must advance past the second processing station at a speed greater than that at which they advance past the first processing station and are supplied by the cutting device for transfer to the second processing station. A transfer device is provided for this purpose which engages the bags at the first speed as they are supplied by the cutting device, and accelerates them to supply them at the higher second speed to the second operating station. Known transfer arrangements used for this purpose engage the severed leading bags between pairs of rollers and accelerate them prior to releasing them to the arrangement which serves to advance them to and past the second operating station. These arrangements have the disadvantage, however, that if the bags are to be supplied in proper predetermined relationship to the arrangement which advances them to the second operating station-as they must be in order to be in proper position for the further vprocessing which they are to undergo-then the pressure with which the rollers of the respective pairs engage the bags in the transfer device must be precisely adjusted. Accordingly, if different materials are used, that is when the device has been adjusted for bags of one material and is now to be used with bags of another material, or if the surface consistency of the bag material differs, a readjustment of the pressureexerted by the rollers is necessary in every instance. This is evidently both time-consuming and demands a certain amount of skill so that special personnel must be available for carrying out these adjustments.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION lt is, accordingly, an object of the present invention to provide an apparatus for bag-processing purposes which is not possessed of the aforementioned disadvantages,
More particularly it is an object of the present invention to provide such an apparatus which requires no precise adjustment of the transfer means if the material or surface consistency of the material of the bags varies from batch to batch or from case to case.
A further object of the invention is to provide such an apparatus which is simple in its construction but highly reliable in its operation.
ln pursuance of the above objects, and others which will become apparent hereafter, one feature of my invention resides, briefly stated, in a bag-processing machine which comprises first means for advancing bags in a predetermined path and at a first speed past a first operating station. Second means is spaced in direction downstream of the first means and serves to advance the bags in the aforementioned path but at a higher second speed past a second operating station. Finally, l provide transfer means arranged intermediate the first and second means and serving to receive the bags from the first means at the first speed, engaging them by suction, and transferring them to the second means at the aforementioned second speed.
By utilizing suction engagement for the bags I obtain various advantages which cannot behad with the apparatus according to the prior art. Among these is, of course, the fact that there is no need to provide for specific adjustments if the material of the bags varies, or if the surface consistency of the material differs. A further advantage of my novel apparatus resides in the fact that it pennits me to interrupt in a most simple LII manner the supply ofbags'from theffirstfmeansttogtheSecond means if this is necessary or desirable, yfor instance `if the second means should become temporarily inoperative, or if it is desired to make spot checksat intervals of fthevbagsbeing supplied by the first means, for instancetodetermine whether their seams are properly sealed if` they are of synthetic plastic material, or for any other purpose. This is accomplished :by momentarily interrupting suction v whereby any :bags supplied by the first means to thetransfer means while-thesuctionis-interrupted, will simply fall-off andcan be collectedgfor inspection or for any. other purposes.
The novel features which are consideredas characteristic for the invention are set forth in particular-in the appended claims. The invention itself, howeverfboth asto its construction and its method of operation, together-with additional objects and advantages thereof,.willfbe` best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read yin connection with the accompanying drawing.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THEDRAW ING FIG. 1 is a simplied rather diagrammaticperspective.view of an apparatus embodying the present invention, with components not essential for an understanding of the invention having been omitted; and
FIG, 2 is a detail view, on an, enlarged.scale, of thetransfer means used in the apparatus of FIGrl.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Discussing now the drawing in detail, and-rstly FIG. vl thereof, it will be seen thatreference numeral lidentifies a supply roll fromwhich a web l2 of materialsuch as, for-instance, synthetic plastic material-is continuously withdrawn over an abutment ll.,Downstream of the abutment. 1-1 there is arranged a folding member 12,l having a generally fork-shaped configuration, and the yweb2 is ,drawn through,the folding member l2 by the action of the withdrawing rollers 13,114 and is thereby folded longitudinally in half into a generally ,V- shaped strip 3.
Intermediate the folding member ,l2andf the withdrawing rollers 13, 14 there isarranged asealing device comprising the diagrammatically illustrated pairs of sealing jaws 1*5. Such sealing devices are known to those` skilled-in the art and form no part of the present invention. lt is pointed out, however, that they are pressed in known manner ,against the V-shaped strip 3 and that they will usually advance .with the str ip through a predetermined distance, to thereupon return to their starting position. In any case, the sealing jawsI 15 serve to provide a plurality of sealed seams extending transversely of the elongation of the strip r3, thereby providing a chain of connected individual bags, .with the widthfofv each bag corresponding to they distance between two adjacent pairsA over the jaws l5. The open side of each of the bagsA faesupwardly in FIG. l.
Downstream of the withdrawing rollers 1314 there is `arranged a severing device consisting in the diagrammatically il- Iustrated embodiment of a stationary knife Ablade l6and a rotary knife blade 17 (see also FIG. 2), with the rotation of the knife blade 17 being so selected that -it severs the respectively leading bag 5 from the advancing chain-4 of connected bags.
The web 2, which is transformed into, the chain ,4, offbags, advances in direction towards the cutting or severingarrangement 16, 17 under the influence of the withdrawing rollers. 13, 14 at a predetermined first speed.
Downstream of the severing rdevice `ll, -l7 and spaced therefrom is a pair of cooperating endless ybelts 19, ,'20 mounted for rotation about pairs ofrollersyas illustrated-,iin FIGS. l and 2, andwhich advance Ain the direction indicated by their associated arrows at a secondspeed Awhichis higher than the first speed imparted by the rollers-,13; 14.,The belts 19 and 20 are so arranged that they` engage the bags-5 intthe region of their open side, advancing ,them toa furtheradvancing arrangement located downstream of thefbeltsv 119,. Ztl-.and
comprising engagement members 21 which may be of known construction and which engage the bags at their lateral edges below the upper open side of the bags. Now the bags 5 are advanced to a filling station 23 where they are filed with whatever contents they are to accommodate, and thereupon the filled bags are passed to a closing device 24 which closes their upper open ends. The arrangement and construction of the filling station and of the closing device form no part of the present invention and any suitable and well-known type may be utilized. They are illustrated in FIG. 1 only to clarify the further processing steps to which the bags are subjected once they have been released by the belts 19, 20.
As pointed out above, the severed bags 5 are supplied from the severing device I6, 17 at a first speed imparted to them by the advancing rollers 13, 14. The belts 19, advance at a second speed which is higher than the first speed. In order for the severed bags 5 to be brought up to the higher speed so that they can be smoothly engaged by the belts 19, 20 a transfer device is necessary. This transfer device, identified with reference numeral 18 and shown on an enlarged scale in FIG. 2, comprises in accordance with my invention a suction chamber 25 having an open side whose general plane coincides with the general plane of the path in which the severed bags advance from the severing device 16, 17 to the belts 19, 20. A suction-producing device 27, such as a vacuum pump, is diagrammatically illustrated in FIG. l and communicates via suitable conduit means, and a valve 26, with the interior of the suction chamber 25. In accordance with my invention the suction chamber is surrounded by a movable wall overlying its open side and being apertured so that, when the bags 5 move onto this movable wall, they are held by suction against the same and are advanced by movement of the movable wall.
The particularly advantageous embodiment illustrated in FIGS. 1 and 2 shows the movable wall to consist of a plurality of endless belts or bands 28 which are trained about the rotary rollers 29, 30 and 31 all of which are arranged in axial parallelism with one another. In this embodiment the belts 28 actually are spaced from the wall of the suction chamber 25 and the rollers 29, 30 and 31-of which one, two or all may be driven in suitable manner by any drive means known to those skilled in the art-are rotated continuously in the direction of the arrows associated with them in FIG. 2.
lt will be noticed that the belts 28 are spaced from one another axially of the rollers 29, 30 and 3l at predeten'nined distances which are advantageously constant and identical. The speed at which the belts 28 advance in the sense imparted to them by the rotation of the rollers 29, 30 and 31, is significantly higher than the speed at which the withdrawing rollers 13, 14 advance the web 2 and consequently the bags 5 which are produced from the web 2; it equals the speed of the belts 19 and 20 which in turn equals the speed of advancement of the engaging members 21.
lt should be emphasized that in place of the belts 28 a onepiece belt or analogous wall-defining member could also be provided, formed with suitable apertures to permit for suction engagement of the bags 5. Such other possibilities, which also form a part of the invention and which are not to be considered excluded by the fact that I have illustrated a particularly advantageous arrangement, are of course a part of the invention.
Evidently, the severed bags 5 are engaged by suction by the transfer device 18. More specifically, the leading edge portion of each bag 5 slides onto the belts 28 or analogous wall-defining member before the trailing edge portion of the same bag is yet severed from the chain 4. Because the chain 4 is firmly engaged between the advancing rollers 13, 14 the fact that the leading edge portion of the leading as yet unsevered bag 5 overlies the belts 28 does not permit the chain 24 to be accelerated to the speed of the transfer device 18. This acceleration takes place only after the trailing edge of the leading bag 5 is severed from thev chain 4, whereupon the bag 5, whose leading edge is already held by suction against the belts 28 which slide underneath it during their continued movement,
can now be carried along by the belts 28 in direction towards the belts 19, 20.
In order to prevent flexing of the belts 28 and of the bags 5 carried along by the same in direction into the interior of the suction chamber 25, l provide supporting bars or the like 34 extending across the open side of the suction chamber 25 and each located behind one of the belts 28 in registry therewith. 'The bars or analogous elements 34 are of the same width or at least substantially the same width as the belts 28 and are secured in suitable manner so that the belts 28 slide over them; it is evident that direct physical content is not necessary and that the bars 34 may be slightly spaced from the belts 28.
A comblike abutment element 32 is located inwardly of the open side of the suction chamber 25 and provided with teeth or projections 33 which each register with a gap between two adjacent ones of the belts 28. The abutment member 32 can rotate about an axis defined by the shaft 32a so that its projections 33 can extend into the gaps between adjacent ones of the belts 28, and be withdrawn therefrom. When they are extending into these gaps, that is when they are in the position illustrated in F IG. 2, the projections 33 serve as abutments for the bags held by suction against the belts 28 and being advanced by the same in direction from the right towards the left-hand side of FIG. 2. Contact of the leading edge of the bags 5 with the projections 33 serves to align any bag 5 which may be skewed, so that itis in proper position for engagement by the belts 19, 20. Once such contact has taken place, the member 32 rotates about the axis defined by its shaft 32a in a sense withdrawing the projections 33 from the gaps between the belts 28 so that the bag S can continue towards the belts 19, 20 for engagement by the same.
Control of the rotation of the member 32 may be effected by suitable control means 35 which is already well known in the art and which in turn may be actuated in dependence upon the particular position of the engagement members 2l to which the bags 5 are supplied by the belts 19, 20. For this reason the control means 35 is actuated by the driving means 36 of the engagement members 21.
Not only does the apparatus herein disclosed and illustrated by way of an exemplary embodiment, provide the advantages which have been set forth in the introductory portion of this disclosure, and avoid the disadvantages of the prior art, but it has the additional feature of aordingat all times a very clear unobstructed view of the accelerating or transfer device 18 so that the proper operation of this device may be ascertained at a quick glance. This is important because the device 18 is an important part of the apparatus of the type under discussion, especially because of the precision of cooperation between the various components of such apparatus which is necessary to assure flawless functioning.
It is again emphasized that such details as the control of rotation of the rotary knife 17, of the advancing rollers 13, 14, the rollers 29, 30 and 3l, the operation of the vacuum pump 27 and the valve 26 and their construction, the operation and construction of the filling station 23 and the sealing station 24, the guidance and operation of the gripping members 21 are not essential for the purposes of the present invention. All of this can be accomplished with known apparatus in known manner which forms no part of the present invention.
It will be understood that each of the elements described above, or two or more together, may also find a useful application in other types of constructions differing from the types described above.
While the invention has been illustrated and described as embodied in a bag-processing machine, it is not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made without departing in any way from the spirit ofthe present invention.
[claim:
l. In a bag-processing machine, in combination, first means for continuously advancing a coherent chain of bags in a predetermined path and at a first speed; severing means for severing the respectively leading bag from said coherent chain; second means spaced in direction downstream of said first means and said severing means for continuously advancing the severed bags at a higher second speed past an operating station; and transfer means intermediate said severing means and said second means for receiving severed bags from the former, engaging them by suction, and transferring them to said second means at least at said second speed, said transfer means comprising aperture-defining wall means surrounding an internal chamber and at least substantially bridging the space between said severing means and second means, said wall means travelling at least in part in direction from said severing means toward said second means, and suction means for creating suction in said chamber so that, when severed bags advance from said severing means onto said wall means, suction is exerted on them through said apertures and said bags are maintained in position during transfer to said secondrneans.
2. ln a machine as defined in claim l, and further comprising abutment means on said transfer means and arranged for abutting engagement with the severed bags engaged by said transfer means for imparting to such engaged bags a predetermined orientation with reference to said path.
3. In a machine as defined in claim 2, said abutment means being arranged for movement alternately into abutting position transversely of the advancement of each engaged bag and thereupon into withdrawn position subsequent to abutment with the respective bag.
4. ln a machine as defined in claim 2, wherein said wall means comprises first wall means defining said internal chamber with the latter having an open side, and travelling second wall means traveling past said open side in close proximity thereto and defining said apertures.
5. ln a machine as defined in claim 4, wherein said second wall means comprises a plurality of endless belts each having a belt section overlying said open side and extending in direction from said first means towards said second means, said belt sections being spaced transversely of said direction and defining with one another elongated gap-shaped apertures.
6. ln a machine as defined in claim 5, wherein said abutment means comprises an abutment element extending in a plane at least substantially parallel with the general plane of said belt sections and comprising a plurality of projections at least one of which extends into each of said apertures in response to movement of said abutment means from a withdrawn position to an operative abutting position.

Claims (6)

1. In a bag-processing machine, in combination, first means for continuously advancing a coherent chain of bags in a predetermined path and at a first speed; severing means for severing the respectively leading bag from said coherent chain; second means spaced in direction downstream of said first means and said severing means for continuously advancing the severed bags at a higher second speed past an operating station; and transfer means intermediate said severing means and said second means for receiving severed bags from the former, engaging them by suction, and transferring them to said second means at least at said second speed, said transfer means comprising aperturedefining wall means surrounding an internal chamber and at least substantially bridging the space between said severing means and second means, said wall means travelling at least in part in direction from said severing means toward said second means, and suction means for creating suction in said chamber so that, when severed bags advance from said severing means onto said wall means, suction is exerted on them through said apertures and said bags are maintained in position during transfer to said second means.
2. In a machine as defined in claim 1, and further comprising abutment means on said transfer means and arranged for abutting engagement with the severed bags engaged by said transfer means for imparting to such engaged bags a predetermined orientation with reference to said path.
3. In a machine as defined in claim 2, said abutment means being arranged for movement alternately into abutting position transversely of the advancement of each engaged bag and thereupon into withdrawn position subsequent to abutment with the respective bag.
4. In a machine as defined in claim 2, wherein said wall means comprises first wall means defining said internal chamber with the latter having an open side, and travelling second wall means traveling past said open side in close proximity thereto and defining said apertures.
5. In a machine as defined in claim 4, wherein said second wall means comprises a plurality of endless belts each having a belt section overlying said open side and extending in direction from said first means towards said second means, said belt sections being spaced transversely of said direction and defining with one another elongated gap-shaped apertures.
6. In a machine as defined in claim 5, wherein said abutment means comprises an abutment element extendiNg in a plane at least substantially parallel with the general plane of said belt sections and comprising a plurality of projections at least one of which extends into each of said apertures in response to movement of said abutment means from a withdrawn position to an operative abutting position.
US877627A 1968-11-19 1969-11-18 Bag-processing machine Expired - Lifetime US3631768A (en)

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DE19681809659 DE1809659A1 (en) 1968-11-19 1968-11-19 Apparatus for manufacturing packaging bags

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DE (1) DE1809659A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2023592A1 (en)
GB (1) GB1291063A (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4330288A (en) * 1980-02-07 1982-05-18 Russell Robert C Packaging machine with pouch transfer and opening mechanism
US5279095A (en) * 1990-08-22 1994-01-18 Sig Schweizerische Industrie-Gesellschaft Apparatus for spreading open flat bags
WO2006096076A1 (en) * 2005-03-10 2006-09-14 Avalon Engineering Limited Bag loader
CN111688988A (en) * 2019-03-12 2020-09-22 广东阳帆食品有限公司 Fermented soya bean packaging machinery
CN115723378A (en) * 2022-10-21 2023-03-03 浙江松山机械有限公司 Bag making machine for continuous rolling bags

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US4481669A (en) * 1978-06-26 1984-11-06 W. R. Grace & Co., Cryovac Div. Multi-walled plastics bag
US4526639A (en) * 1982-08-02 1985-07-02 Mobil Oil Corporation Apparatus and method for forming and stacking plastic bags
DE4139698A1 (en) * 1991-12-02 1993-06-03 Windmoeller & Hoelscher DEVICE FOR ATTACHING CROSS-WELDING SEAMS AND CROSS-SEPARATING CUTS OR CROSS-PERFORMANCE LINES ON TUBE Lanes
DE29706937U1 (en) * 1997-04-17 1997-06-05 Harro Höfliger Verpackungsmaschinen GmbH, 71573 Allmersbach Cutting and transfer station of a clocked flat bag machine
CN109483941B (en) * 2018-12-11 2021-01-05 武汉工程大学 Automatic folding forming and visual detection device for packaging paper box
CN113968379B (en) * 2021-11-16 2024-09-24 苏州领略智能科技有限公司 Bidirectional carrier tape packaging machine

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US3093280A (en) * 1959-05-22 1963-06-11 Fmc Corp Bag making machine
US3400642A (en) * 1963-11-15 1968-09-10 Winkler Richard Apparatus for folding and gumming the side flaps and folding the bottom flaps in themanufacture of envelopes and the like
US3424113A (en) * 1964-11-04 1969-01-28 Bemis Co Inc Apparatus for bottoming bag tubes
US3438310A (en) * 1965-08-27 1969-04-15 Gen Foods Corp Envelope-forming apparatus and method
US3454447A (en) * 1964-08-05 1969-07-08 Nat Distillers Chem Corp Bag-making machinery

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US3093280A (en) * 1959-05-22 1963-06-11 Fmc Corp Bag making machine
US3400642A (en) * 1963-11-15 1968-09-10 Winkler Richard Apparatus for folding and gumming the side flaps and folding the bottom flaps in themanufacture of envelopes and the like
US3454447A (en) * 1964-08-05 1969-07-08 Nat Distillers Chem Corp Bag-making machinery
US3424113A (en) * 1964-11-04 1969-01-28 Bemis Co Inc Apparatus for bottoming bag tubes
US3438310A (en) * 1965-08-27 1969-04-15 Gen Foods Corp Envelope-forming apparatus and method

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4330288A (en) * 1980-02-07 1982-05-18 Russell Robert C Packaging machine with pouch transfer and opening mechanism
US5279095A (en) * 1990-08-22 1994-01-18 Sig Schweizerische Industrie-Gesellschaft Apparatus for spreading open flat bags
WO2006096076A1 (en) * 2005-03-10 2006-09-14 Avalon Engineering Limited Bag loader
US20090031678A1 (en) * 2005-03-10 2009-02-05 Abalon Engineering Limited Bag loader
US8307862B2 (en) 2005-03-10 2012-11-13 Gea Avapac Limited Bag loader
CN111688988A (en) * 2019-03-12 2020-09-22 广东阳帆食品有限公司 Fermented soya bean packaging machinery
CN115723378A (en) * 2022-10-21 2023-03-03 浙江松山机械有限公司 Bag making machine for continuous rolling bags

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Publication number Publication date
CH491001A (en) 1970-05-31
DE1809659A1 (en) 1970-07-30
FR2023592A1 (en) 1970-08-21
GB1291063A (en) 1972-09-27

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