US3825246A - Gathering machine and control therefor - Google Patents

Gathering machine and control therefor Download PDF

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Publication number
US3825246A
US3825246A US00131257A US13125771A US3825246A US 3825246 A US3825246 A US 3825246A US 00131257 A US00131257 A US 00131257A US 13125771 A US13125771 A US 13125771A US 3825246 A US3825246 A US 3825246A
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Prior art keywords
gathering
station
feed
stations
feeding
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US00131257A
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C Hofschild
R Bryson
F Elia
D Brothers
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AB Dick Co
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Harris Intertype Corp
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Application filed by Harris Intertype Corp filed Critical Harris Intertype Corp
Priority to US00131257A priority Critical patent/US3825246A/en
Priority to CA134,594A priority patent/CA998143A/en
Priority to GB717772A priority patent/GB1373036A/en
Priority to IT22543/72A priority patent/IT950868B/en
Priority to DE2216243A priority patent/DE2216243C2/en
Priority to JP3356972A priority patent/JPS5433199B1/ja
Priority to CH499172A priority patent/CH554244A/en
Publication of US3825246A publication Critical patent/US3825246A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Priority to CA249,271A priority patent/CA1017766A/en
Assigned to HARRIS GRAPHICS CORPORATION reassignment HARRIS GRAPHICS CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST. Assignors: HARRIS CORPORATION
Assigned to AM INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED, A DE. CORP. reassignment AM INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED, A DE. CORP. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST. Assignors: HARRIS GRAPHICS CORPORATION
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H43/00Use of control, checking, or safety devices, e.g. automatic devices comprising an element for sensing a variable
    • B65H43/02Use of control, checking, or safety devices, e.g. automatic devices comprising an element for sensing a variable detecting, or responding to, absence of articles
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41FPRINTING MACHINES OR PRESSES
    • B41F13/00Common details of rotary presses or machines
    • B41F13/54Auxiliary folding, cutting, collecting or depositing of sheets or webs
    • B41F13/64Collecting
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H39/00Associating, collating, or gathering articles or webs
    • B65H39/02Associating,collating or gathering articles from several sources
    • B65H39/04Associating,collating or gathering articles from several sources from piles
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H39/00Associating, collating, or gathering articles or webs
    • B65H39/02Associating,collating or gathering articles from several sources
    • B65H39/04Associating,collating or gathering articles from several sources from piles
    • B65H39/045Associating,collating or gathering articles from several sources from piles by collecting in rotary carriers
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H2301/00Handling processes for sheets or webs
    • B65H2301/40Type of handling process
    • B65H2301/43Gathering; Associating; Assembling
    • B65H2301/432Gathering; Associating; Assembling in pockets, i.e. vertically
    • B65H2301/4321Gathering; Associating; Assembling in pockets, i.e. vertically and dropping material through bottom of the pocket
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H2301/00Handling processes for sheets or webs
    • B65H2301/40Type of handling process
    • B65H2301/43Gathering; Associating; Assembling
    • B65H2301/437Repairing a faulty collection due to, e.g. misfeed, multiplefeed

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT 22 F'ld A.5, 197l 1 1? pr Gathering machine in which a gathering station and PP N 131,257 feed stations are moved relatively'to each other to v 0 feed items in sequence to the gathering station. If a 52 US. Cl .L 270/58 270/54 271/64 misses a feed dwnstream Stations v 'feedin ,the se uence'are shut off until the roup is [51] m. Cl. B65h 39/02 2 g q g I 58 Field of Search 270 54, 58, 57, 56;.
  • the present invention relates to a machine for gathering or collating a plurality of items into a single group, particularly to such a machine for assembling the items in a predetermined sequence-One type of machine in which the present invention may be embodied is a newspaper stuffing machine adapted to collate the folded sections of a newspaper and the invention is herein described as embodied in such a machine.
  • Skewed papers are conventionally manually removed and then discarded, manually completed by inserting the missing section, or broken down and returned to the hoppers. Moreover, if a hopper misfeeds, certain conventional machines will stop until the operator locates the pocket, corrects the fault and restarts the machine. This results in lost machine time.
  • An object of the present invention is to provide a new and improved machine and method for collecting items into a group in which the'feeding of the items to the group is terminated when one of the items is not fed at its proper time and in which the group is again moved by hoppers for feeding the items and feeding restored with the item which was missed thereby enabling the group to be completed before the group is discharged from the machine.
  • Another object of the presentinvention is to provide a new and improved gathering orcollating machine in which-a movable station for collecting a group of items fed from feed stations and the feed stations are relatively moved to feed the items to the movable station prior to the discharge of the group from the machine.
  • a still further object of the present invention is to provide a new and improved gathering or collating machine, such as a newspaper stuffing machine, for assembling items into a group in which feeding stations for the items and a gathering station are relatively movable to feed the items to the gathering stations in a predetermined sequence with the machine being capable of delivering a plurality of sequencesof said items to said gathering station and in which the feeding of items to a gathering station is terminated when one ofthe feeding stations fails'to feed an item until the gathering station is disposed to again receive the item which was missed, the feeding of the sequence then being resumed.
  • a new and improved gathering or collating machine such as a newspaper stuffing machine
  • a still further object of the present invention is to provide a new and improved machine for assembling items into a group in which a plurality of gathering stations are moved through a closed path to receive items from feed stations disposed-adjacent the path, the machine having a delivery station where .the collected items at a gathering station are to be discharged, the machine being so constructed and arranged so that if a feed station fails to feed an item to a gathering station as it moves thereby, the downstream feed stations are prevented from feeding items to the gathering station to which the misfeedoccurred and the items which are in the gathering station are not delivered at the delivery station but are again moved by the feeding means and feeding of the sequence of items to the gathering station re-initiated with the missed item.
  • a new and improved assembling machine such as a newspaper stuffing machine
  • FIGfl is a simplified schematic top view of a newsaper stuffing machine
  • FIG. 2 is a simplified vertical sectional view through a feed station in the machine of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is a simplified sectional and diagrammatic view of a delivery station of the machine of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 4 is a perspective view of a pocket of the machine of FIG. 1 with parts cut away;
  • FIG. 5 is a circuit diagram in block-form showing a control system for the presentinvention.
  • FIG. 6 is a diagram of another machine which may embody the present invention.
  • FIGS. 1-4 a known newspaper stuffing machine of the general type shown in US. Pat. No. 2,911,213, whose disclosure is incorporated herein by reference, is illustrated in simplified form.
  • the machine comprises a rotary turret, generally designated by reference numeral 10, which includes a framework 11 which supports a series of circumferentially arranged V-shaped pockets 12 which constitute a gathering location.
  • Turret includes a central hub 13 which is rotatable about the axis of a central post 14.
  • Rotation of the hub 13 about the post 14 moves the pockets 12 in a circular path about the post.
  • the mechanism for rotating the turret about the post includes a main motor 16 which drives a bevel gear 17.
  • the gear 17 meshes with a ring gear affixed to the turret 10. In FIG. 1, it will be assumed that the turret is rotated in a counterclo ckwise direction.
  • a plurality of conventional stationary feeding stations 21a-21f are supported in a conventional manner above the path of the pockets 12. These feeding stations are indicated in blocked out line form in FIG. 1 and while five such feeding stations have been illustrated, it will be understood that additional feeding stations or fewer stations may be present.
  • Each of the feeding stations includes a conventional horizontal type hopper 19 (see FIG. 2) in which newspaper sections are stacked and a conventional mechanism for feeding the bottom one of the newspaper sections stacked in the hopper to deliver it into the open upper end of a pocket 12 passing therebeneath.
  • the newspaper sections in each hopper are commonly referred to as inserts.
  • the mechanism for feeding inserts at each of the feeding stations may comprise a rotatable drum 22 having gripper means including a finger 23 which when actuated by a suitable mechanism operates to clamp onto the edge of an insert to cause it to move with the drum whereby the drum is able to pull the insert from the hopper.
  • Drum 22 is rotated in synchronism with the movement of the pockets by means of a shaft 24 drivingly connected to the hub portion of the turret as by a gear 26 engaging ring gear 18.
  • Each hopper 19 includes a framework 27 for holding a stack of inserts 30.
  • the bottom one of the stack of inserts is supported on a ledge 28, which is part of the framework 27 and on a movable shoe 29.
  • the shoe 29 is fixed to a shaft 31 mounted in the framework 27 of the hopper and the shaft is rotated to swing the shoe outwardly to release the edge of an insert.
  • Conventional mechanism effects rotation of the shaft 31 in synchronism with movement of the turret.
  • a calipering type sheet detector 34 is positioned to sense the presence or absence of an insert or the existence of more than one insert on the drum 22 at a predetermined time in the feed cycle.
  • a switch 36 closes the circuit to the detector 34 only during the portion of the cycle when the insert is to be sensed. If an insert is missing, a missed feed is signaled, while if more than one insert is present, a double feed is signaled.
  • the outside section or jacket of the newspaper into which the other sections are to be inserted is fed at the station 21a.
  • the jacket is opened up by conventional mechanism so that the other inserts will be dropped into the open jacket.
  • a cam 45 which extends around the turret normally operates a cam follower associated with each pocket to move the cam follower 46 upwardly to rotate the back wall 50 of the pocket to open the bottom of the pocket to allow the assembled newspaper to drop downwardly to delivery conveyors 51 as shown in FIG. 3.
  • the hoppers downstream of that station where the misfeed occurred are prevented from feeding an insert to the pocket which failed to earlier receive an insert and when the pocket arrives at the position for delivering the paper to the conveyors 51, the cam 45 is prevented from opening the pocket.
  • the movable back wall 50 of each pocket is supported between arms 60, 61 on the turret.
  • the arms may be swung about a shaft 62 in a conventional manner to move the wall angularly about the lower front corner of the pocket during the jacket opening operation or to position the sections against one of the pocket walls.
  • the back wall 50 is supported between arms 60, 61 by a shaft 58 which is rotatable in the arms 60, 61 to swing the lower end of the rear wall away from the front wall 50a of the pocket to drop the insert into the delivery conveyors.
  • the shaft 58 is biased to move the lower front end of the back wall 50 against the front wall to close the pocket by a spring 63 connected to an arm 64 on the inner end of the shaft 58.
  • the shaft 58 is rotated in a direction to open the pocket by a mechanism comprising an arm 65 fixed to the outer end of the shaft 58.
  • a cam follower plate 66 which supports the cam follower 46.
  • a catch mechanism 69 mounted on the cam follower plate 66 transmits clockwise motion of the cam follower plate 66, as the latter is viewed in FIG. 4, to the arm 65 to rotate the shaft 48 and the rear wall of the pocket to discharge an assembled newspaper.
  • Catch mechanism 69 includes a bell crank lever 70 having an arm 70a which is received in a notch 65a in the upper end of the arm 65 to push the arm 65 in a clockwise direction as the'cam follower plate 66 is rotated clockwise.
  • the bell crank lever 70 is biased into engagement with the notch a by a spring 72 connected between an arm b of the bell crank lever and,
  • cam 76 remote from the shaft 84 is biased upwardly to the inactive cam position by a spring 88 which acts through a rod 90, the lower end of the rod 90 being tied to the free end of the recycle cam76.
  • the hoppers of the machine will notfeed to the pocket until the pocket reaches the station where the misfeed occurred. That hopper will then be actuated to feed a section and the other hoppers will feed in sequence unless another misfeed occurs.
  • the cam 45 extends co-extensive with the path of the pockets 12 and the cam followe r46 is biased bainst the cam by a spring 92. Consequently, when the pocket rides off the recycle cam and the cam follower 66 rides off the high portion of the cam 45 for activating the cam plate 66 at the delivery station, cam follower plate 66 will move counterclockwise under the bias of the spring and the spring 7-2 will return the bell crank lever 70 to its position where the end of arm 70a is received in the notch 65a in the lever arm 65 to reset the mechanism.
  • a control system for recycling a partially assembled group of inserts includes a memory 138 which has an addressable storage memory location for storing'coded data for each pocket.
  • the memory is addressable by a plurality of address counters 146, one for each hopper.
  • Each hopper has a unique code in the form of binary data stored in a code register 139 and if a miss occurs, the hopper code is read into the storage location for the pocket which does not receive an insert because of the miss. This code is then utilized to prevent feeding of other inserts to the pocket and to operate the recycle inserts to the hopper at the station that originally misfed.
  • the suckers 33 each has a vacuum applied thereto during the proper portion of the hopper feed cycle through a respective solenoid valve 99 shown in FIG. 5 of the drawings.
  • the solenoid valve 99 has a position enabling vacuum to be supplied to the sucker 33 in the proper time of the cycle and one which shuts off the vacuum supply.
  • the valve is controlled by a flip-flop 168 which when in its set condition positions the valve to supply vacuum when in a reset condition positions the solenoid valve 99 so that no vacuum can be applied to the sucker 33 to render the sucker ineffective to pull an insert from the hopper and thus prevent feeding.
  • the flip flops are illustrated as boxes and have set and reset inputs extending from top and bottom, respectively, of the left side of the box and set outputs extending from the top and bottom, respectively, of the right-hand side of the box..
  • station 21c station 21c, with the understanding that other feed stations are controlled in the same manner.
  • the control system must determine whether an insert is to be fed to the pocket at the station and if it is to be fed, whether, in fact, an insert was fed. If an insert is to be fed to a pocket and a malfunction occurs so that an insert is not fed from the hopper, a mis-switch of the caliper detector 34 will be closed and will set a flip-flop 112 at the time in the cycle when the caliper detector is conventionally activated to detect the presence or absence of an insert on the drum 22.
  • the control circuitry at each feeding and delivery station also includes a synchronizing switch 114.
  • the synchronizing switch 114 at each feed station is operated once in-each hopper feed cycle to transfer the setting of the flip-flop 112 to a readout flip-flop 115.
  • the synchronizing (sync) switch 114 for each feed station also has contacts l14b which set a sync flip-flop 116 to condition the circuitry to request instructions for an approaching pocket and so that the scanner 120 can transfer information between the memory 138 and the feed station.
  • the misswitch 110 sets the flip-flop 112.
  • this information is to be transferred to memory and instructions are also to be sought to determine whether or not a vacuum-inhibit operation is to occur.
  • the closing of sync switch contacts 114a, 11% connects the output of the flip flop 112 to the flip-flop 115 and applies a potential through contacts ll4b to the set terminal of flip-flop 116.
  • the flip-flops 115, 116 are self-resetting flip-flops which are set by a negative-going signal and, consequently, are actuated to their set state only when the sync switch contacts 114a, 11.4b are opened.
  • the flip-flops 115, 116 are connected to scanner terminals 120b, 1200, respectively, through AND gates 117, 119 which must be conditioned before signals can be applied to the scanner terminals from the flip-flops. These gates are controlled by a control flip-flop 122 which is set when signals appear on a scanner terminal 120a and on the set output of flip-flop 116. These signals are applied to the inputs of an AND gate 123 whose output sets the flip-flop 122.
  • the flip-flop 122 also controls AND gates 124, 125 between terminals 120d, 120e of the scanner and the set and reset inputs of flip-flop 168, respectively, for controlling the vacuum to the feed station sucker 33.
  • gates 124, 126 connecting the set terminals of the flip-flops 115, 116 to the scanner will be disenabled and there will be no inputs to the scanner from these flip-flops. Also, gates 117, 119 between the scanner 120 and the set and reset inputs of a feed flipflop 168 are disabled.
  • the scanner provides an output on terminal 120a to set the control flip-flop 122 if the sync flip flop 116 is set. Then it scans terminal 120b and if a signal is applied thereto from the flip-flop 115 indicating a miss, the signal is applied through an AND gate 128 to set a miss flip-flop 130.
  • the flip-flop 130 is reset when the output of AND gate 128 is lost when the scanner steps to terminal 1206.
  • the gate 128 is used to prevent the miss signal from setting the flip-flop 130 in the event that the miss signal is a result of earlier no-feed instructions from the memory.
  • the flip-flop 130 When the flip-flop 130 is set, it conditions an AND gate 134 to enter a code number for the feed station from the code register 139 into the memory 138 via a read-in circuit 140.
  • the storage location in the memory 138 for information set by the read-in circuit 140 is determined by an addressing circuit 142 which effects a read-in of the information to an address supplied through OR gating 144.
  • the OR gating 144 has an input from each of the address counters 146.
  • the address counter 146 for a feed station will be set to the address corresponding to the storage location for the pocket at the hopper at the time a miss signal occurs and the hopper number is now read into the storage location for the pocket at the hopper.
  • the address from the counter is supplied to the OR gating 144 for the addressing circuit 142 through an adder 147 and AND gating 148 activated by the output from an OR gate 149 which is now activated because it has an input connected to the set output of the flip-flop 130. Accordingly, the code number of the hopper 136 has been stored in the storage location for the pocket to indicate a miss has occurred at the hopper.
  • the scanning terminal 120C When the scanner 120 steps to scan terminal 1200, the scanning terminal 120C will have a signal therein indiciating that sync flip-flop 116 has been set and this will be transmitted to set an instruction storage flip-flop 150 for effecting a determination of whether or not the vacuum should be inhibited during the next cycle portion for gripping an insert and to step the address counter 146 by one increment. Since the miss which has just been stored, assuming it was a miss, is for the pocket which has now moved from the hopper and the insert which is next to be fed has already been delivered by the vacuum sucker 33, the circuitry must check the memory to determine whether or not the second following pocket is to receive an insert and not the immediately following pocket.
  • the setting of the flip-flop 150 to check for a vacuum-inhibit signal steps the counter 146 by a count of l and an increment of 1 must, therefore, be added to the address in the counter to address the storage location for the pocket for which a feed or no-feed check is to be made. Accordingly, adding circuit 147 is disposed between the counter and the gating 148 and when a 1 signal appears on an input 151, the circuit will add a l to the address in the counter. This will cause the memory to address the proper location in the memory for the pocket whose vacuum must be inhibited at this time if there is to be a no-feed.
  • the set output of instruction flip-flop 150 provides a logic 1 signal to the adding circuit 147 and to an OR gate 149 whose output gates the address counter 146 to the addressing circuit 142 and also activates a readout circuit 152 for the memory to read for the storage location selected by the address counter 146.
  • the storage location is read into a readout register 156. If the insert is to be fed, there will be no number registered in the storage location or in the readout register 156 and a feed of the insert is to be signaled. To this end, the readout register 156 has OR gating 157 connected to the stages of the readout register.
  • the output of the OR gate 157 which is applied to an input 160a of a NAND circuit 160, is a logic 0. Consequently, a logic 1 appears on the output of the NAND gate 160.
  • the NAND gate 160 has its output connected to one input of AND gates 161, 162 having outputs connected to the set and reset terminals, respectively, of a feed flipflop 166.
  • the gates 161, 162 are conditioned to pass a signal to the feed flip-flop 166 by the instruction flipflop 150. If there is a logic 1 on the output of NAND gate 160 calling for a feed, the AND gate 161 will be activated to set the flip-flop 166 and to produce a feed signal on its set output.
  • This output is applied to scanner terminal d and scanned by the scanner 120 and used to set the feed flip-flop 168 at the feed station for effecting operation of solenoid valve 99 to supply vacuum tothe sucker 33.
  • the output of NAND gate 160 is connected to the gate 162 through an inverter l so that the feed flip-flop 166 will be reset if there is a logic 0 on the output of NAND gate 160 indicating that no feed is to take place.
  • the memory location will have a code number stored therein and the output readout register 156 will have a number registered therein when the location is read. Consequently, there will be a 1 input to input 160a of the NAND gate 160 from the OR gate 157.
  • the other input 16% of the NAND gate will have a logic 1 thereon since it is connected to the output of a comparator circuit 169 to which the hopper register 139 of each feed station is connected through an instruction AND gate 170 and through OR gating 171.
  • the AND gate 170 is activated by the set output of the instruction flip-flop so that the comparator 169 compares the number in the output register with the number in the station code register 139.
  • the comparator output will be a logic 0 and the logic 0 signal on the input 16% of the NAND gate 160 will cause a logic 1 output from the gate 160 to provide a feed signal.
  • the scanner 120 will respond to the feed or dont feed signal when it scans its terminals 120d, 1201: and set the feed flip-flop 168 to the corresponding condition.
  • a no-feed signal is given to prevent the hopper from feeding an insert because of a previous miss
  • the miss signal which results from the intentional no-feed has to be prevented from destroying the information in the memory and entering erroneous information as to where the initial miss occurred.
  • the dont feed signal from the memory is not for the insert which will next be calipered, the blanking of the miss signal has to be delayed one cycle. Accordingly, a dont feed signal enters a count of 1 into a three-stage shift register 171. This register is shifted one stage each time that the terminal 1200 has an input thereon when it is scanned.
  • the third stage of the shift register has a connection to the AND gate 138 and normally has a logic 1 thereon unless the shift last stage is set to a logic 1. At this time the signal becomes a logic to close the gate 128 to prevent the miss signal from activating the circuitry.
  • the memory has been illustrated as the type of memory in which the information readout of the memory is read back into the memory through the read-in circuit 140.
  • This automatic read-in is shown as being accomplished .through a circuit 172 which can inhibit the reading in of the number stored in the readout register when a logic 0 is applied to the inhibit circuit.
  • the comparator'output supplies logic 1 input to the inhibit circuit 172 to enable it to read the information back into the memory as long as it is not the same as the number hopper code register. If it is, the comparator has a logic 0 output. Consequently, when a number is read out of a pocket address, it is immediately read back into the pocket address unless his the same as the feed station code addressing the memory. If it is the same .as the feed station code being checked, the comparator circuit 169 will have a logic 0 on its output which inhibits.
  • circuit 172 from reading the output register back into the memory location and, in effect, the number is erased from the pocket storage location.
  • a code in the memory location for the pocket will effect operation of the recycle cam at the delivery station 41.
  • This cam is controlled in a manner similar to the feedstations when a miss feed has occurred.
  • the control circuitry for the recycle cam ineludes a sync switch 114 which operates during each part of the machine cycle in which a pocket is approaching the delivery station to request instructions concerning. delivery.
  • the actuation of switch 114' sets a bistable flip-flop 175 to provide a flag or signal requesting a check of the memory 138 to see if the contents of the pocket should be recycled.
  • the flip-flop 175 has a set terminal connected to a terminal 120;) of the scanner and when this terminal is scanned, a pocket address counter 146' for the delivery station is incremented and AND gating 148' is activated so that the counter addresses the memory. Also, the signal from the terminal 120p activates to read the storage location for the pocket into the memory readout register 156 and-resets the sync flip-flop 175. None further happens if there is no code read into the readout register and the newspaper is delivered as it moves past the delivery station. If, however, a code does appear in the readout register 156, a signal will be on a scanner terminal r connected to the output of OR gate 157.
  • This signal will cause the setting of a recycle flip-flop 177 for energizing the recycle ,solenoid 78 to operate the recycle cam to prevent delivery of the contents in the pocket as it moves past the delivery station.
  • the flip-flop 177 may be reset by a switch at the delivery station which is closed when the pocket moves by the delivery station.
  • each caliper detector 34 has a set of double contacts which are closed if the detector senses a double sheet. Each time the detector senses a double sheet, it provides an output to step a respective counter by an increment to register an incremental count of l therein.
  • the counter 190 is reset after a predetermined number of feed or machine cycles, for example, 1,000, by a counter 191.
  • the counter 191 is stepped once for each feed cycle of the feeding stations. It will be understood that the counter 191 may be driven from any part of the machine to provide a time period dependent on machine speed within which less thana predetermined number of doubles are to be fed by any station.
  • an output signal from the counter will provide a stop signal to a control circuit 192 for stopping the machine and preferably for lighting an indicator light at the feed station which causes the machine to stop.
  • agroup of inserts being assembled at a movable gathering location is completed before it leaves the machine if a miss occurs at a feed station.
  • the code number of the station is stored in a memory location unique to the gathering location and this stored data prevents the delivery of a partially assembled group from the machine as well as preventing the feeding of additional inserts to the location until the location is again in position to receive the inserts in sequence beginning with the missed insert.
  • FIG. 6 schematically illustrates the layout of a newspaper stuffing machine having ten feed stations with feed stations 200, 201, 202 and 203 having continuous feed conveyors 203 for feeding newspaper jackets to the stations so that more than one newspaper per revolution may be assembled and delivered to a pocket as it moves through the closed path.
  • the newspaper jackets may be opened in a conventional manner atstation 200a, 201a, 202a and 203a and inserts feed at feed stations 200b, 201b, 202b and 203b.
  • the jackets fed at stations 200, 203 may also receive an additional insert at a feed station 200C and 203e, respectively.
  • the assembled newspapers are then delivered at delivery stations 200d, 201d, 202d and 203d.
  • the machine may be operated to feed inserts at any or all of the jacket feed stations 201, 202, 203 so that all the deliveries are not used to selectively effect an assembling of one, two or three newspapers instead of one or four.
  • jackets could be fed at only the feed station 200 and the newspaper delivered with nine or less inserts at delivery 203d which is the natural machine delivery.
  • a miss at one feed station will normally prevent the feeding of inserts until the pocket returns to that station and the code for the feed station will operate as before to prevent delivery from the machine at any delivery or the feeding of inserts at other feed stations.
  • stations 200a, 203a and stations 200b, 203b could be respectively given the same code number so that if a miss occurred, for example, at feed station 200a, the inserts would be fed to the partially assembled group at feed station 203a and the completed newspaper delivered at delivery 203d.
  • the feed stations 201, 202 and the feed stations 201a, 2020 could respectively be given the same code numbers if the same newspaper were being assembled by the feed stations 201, 201a and feed stations 202, 202a.
  • a gathering apparatus for forming groups of sequentially fed items in which each item is fed sequentially to a gathering station for forming one of said groups
  • said apparatus including delivery means for deliveringan assembled group of items from the apparatus and further comprising a plurality of movable gathering stations, feeding means for feeding said items in a predetermined sequence to said gathering stations as said gathering stations move sequentially past a plurality of feed stations including an initial feed station and a terminal feed station for respectively feeding the first and terminal items of an initial sequence of items to form a group at a gathering station, said feeding means being operable to feed a repeat sequence of items to a gathering station after the gathering station moves past said terminal station beginning with any item of the sequence, means for concurrently moving each of said plurality of gathering stations along a closed path and for moving a plurality of said gathering stations in turn past each of said feed stations to sequentially position said gathering stations at said feed stations in sequence to receive an initial sequence of items and for concurrently operating said feed stations to feed items to different gathering stations at respective feed stations and for moving at least incomplete groups past said
  • said delivery means effecting delivery of an assembled group at a delivery station along said path downstream of said terminal station and including delivery control means responsive to said control means for rendering said delivery means ineffective to deliver a partially assembled group from said machine whereby the partially assembled group remains in said closed path.
  • said second means includes memory means for storing electrical signals and means responsive to said first means for setting said memory means to record a misfeed to a gathering station and third means responsive to stored signals recorded in said memory means for controlling said feeding means to prevent feeding to the gathering station while continuing the feed to other gathering stations to which a misfeed has not occurred until the gathering station to which a misfeed was occurred is again relatively positioned with respect to said feeding means to receive the item of the sequence which was misfed.
  • said memory means is settable to indicate the identity of the feeding station which misfed and the gathering station affected by the misfeed.
  • said memory means has memory location for each of said gathering stations and said second means includes means for storing data in said memory means indicating the identity of a feeding station at which a misfeed occurred at the memory location for the gathering station affected by the misfeed.
  • said third means comprises addressing means for signaling the identity of the gathering location approaching a feed station for addressing and reading the data stored in said memory location for the gathering station and actuating means responsive to the data stored in said memory means for controlling the feed of an item to the gathering station by the feed station being approached by the gathering station.
  • said delivering means effecting delivery of an assembled group at a delivery station along said path after a gathering station passes said terminal station and said delivery means including delivery control means responsive to said control means for rendering said delivery means ineffective to deliver a partially assembled group from said machine whereby the partially assembled group remains in said closed path and said delivery control means comprises means responsive to said memory for controlling said delivery means.
  • feeding means including a plurality of feed stations and a plurality of gathering stations to which items for forming a group are to be fed sequentially as the gathering stations and feed stations move relatively to each other with each feed station feeding a particular item of the sequence to the gathering stations, said feed stations including an initial feed station for feeding the initial item of the sequence and a terminal station spaced from the initial feedstation in the direction of relative movement of said gatheringstations past said feed stations for feeding the terminal item of a sequence, said apparatus being operable to feed said items in a repeat sequence after a gathering station has relatively moved past said a terminal station, means for moving each of said gathering stations along a closed path and for concurrently moving a plurality of gathering stations past said feed stations and for feeding and driving said feed stations to feed different locations concurrently, each of said feed stations having associated therewith detecting means for providing an electrical signal indicating a misfeed to a gathering station, memory meanscompris ing a memory store for each gathering station for storing a misfeed code indicating the feed station and gathering
  • said apparatus includes delivery means for delivering an assembled group of items from said machine after it passes said terminal station and delivery control means responsive to the first said control means for effecting operation of said delivery means to prevent discharge of an incomplete group from said machine.
  • said delivery control means comprises means responsive to data stored in said memory in response to a misfeed to prevent delivery of the items from thevgathering location at said delivery means.
  • each feed station has an address counting means for counting the gathering stations to provide an identification of the gathering station approaching the feed station and said second circuit means is responsive to said address counting means for reading the store corresponding to the approaching gathering station.
  • a method of sequentially assembling items into groups which comprises relatively and concurrently moving a plurality of feed stations and a plurality of gathering stations to sequentially position each gathering station at a feed station to receive an item from the moving the incomplete group for which a misfeed has occurred again past feed stations for repeating the feeding of the items in sequence, and resuming the sequential feeding of items in response to the stored data when the gathering station for which a misfeed occurred is again positioned at a feed station for feeding the item of the sequence which was misfed.
  • feeding means comprising feed stations for feeding respective items of said sequence for feeding a first sequence of items to a gathering location and for subsequently feeding an item misfed during the initial sequence, means for moving a plurality of gathering stations past said feeding means and for driving said feeding means to feed said gathering stations, detecting means for monitoring the feed of items from each feed station to said gathering stations and providing a signal indicating a misfeed toa gathering location, means responsive to said monitoring means for storing coded data indicating the item which was misfed for the gathering location to which the item was misfed including memory means in which said coded data is stored, and feed control means responsive to the stored coded data in said memory means foreffecting operation of said feeding means to subsequently effect a feeding of the misfed item to the gathering location which was misfed.

Abstract

Gathering machine in which a gathering station and feed stations are moved relatively to each other to feed items in sequence to the gathering station. If a feed station misses a feed, downstream stations for feeding the sequence are shut off until the group is again positioned to receive the missed item of the sequence. Feeding of the sequence is then reinitiated. When a station feeds double items at a rate greater than a predetermined rate, a control operation is performed.

Description

United Stat s Patent i191 Elia et al.
[4 July 23, 1974 [54] GATHERING MACHINE AND CONTROL 2,911,213 11/1959 Zuercher et a1, 270/57 THEREFOR 2,997,293 8/1961 3,466,026 9/ 1 969 [75] Inventors: Frederick J. Elia; Donald C. 3,525,51 3 1970 Brothers, both of Easton; Clewell E f 'f fi g 7 Primary Examirier-Robert w. Michell ryson as a 0 Assistant Examiner-Yance Y. Hum [73] Assignee: Harris-Intertype Corporation,
Cleveland, Ohio 1 ABSTRACT 22 F'ld: A.5, 197l 1 1? pr Gathering machine in which a gathering station and PP N 131,257 feed stations are moved relatively'to each other to v 0 feed items in sequence to the gathering station. If a 52 US. Cl .L 270/58 270/54 271/64 misses a feed dwnstream Stations v 'feedin ,the se uence'are shut off until the roup is [51] m. Cl. B65h 39/02 2 g q g I 58 Field of Search 270 54, 58, 57, 56;. 28 m posltlond fecewe the Item Q F F 209/72; 40/79; 271/57 quence. Feeding of the sequence 1S then reinitiated. J When a station feeds double items at a rate greater [56] Rfrences Cited 'tfzha'nadpredetermined rate, a control operation is per- UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,721,737 10/1955 Hammer et a1. 270/ 58 15 Claims, 6 Drawing Figures Zia. 1 F7 a 2 '15 v 4 a J 1. t /Z I I V r I v 2/ h l v 0 a 26 g4 /a 1 f?) 24 i =0 T? I /6' a 2/6. L i
The present invention relates to a machine for gathering or collating a plurality of items into a single group, particularly to such a machine for assembling the items in a predetermined sequence-One type of machine in which the present invention may be embodied is a newspaper stuffing machine adapted to collate the folded sections of a newspaper and the invention is herein described as embodied in such a machine.
In gathering items to form an assembly or group, e.g., in gathering newspaper sections to form a complete newspaper, the items to be assembled are stored in hoppers at feed stations and a collecting or gathering station conventionally moves past the hoppers in se-' completed. One of the problems encountered in newsa paper stuffing machines and other machines for gathering and collating items to form a group or assembly is the failure of one of the hoppers to feed as the gathering station moves under the hopper. This results in an assembly or group which is incomplete and this assembly must be rejected'from the group of completed articles being delivered from the machine. Conventionally, in a newspaper stuffing machine, the newspaper will be -kicked'so that it assumes a skewed position in the stream of papersbeing delivered from the machine. Skewed papers are conventionally manually removed and then discarded, manually completed by inserting the missing section, or broken down and returned to the hoppers. Moreover, if a hopper misfeeds, certain conventional machines will stop until the operator locates the pocket, corrects the fault and restarts the machine. This results in lost machine time.
An object of the present invention is to provide a new and improved machine and method for collecting items into a group in which the'feeding of the items to the group is terminated when one of the items is not fed at its proper time and in which the group is again moved by hoppers for feeding the items and feeding restored with the item which was missed thereby enabling the group to be completed before the group is discharged from the machine.
Another object of the presentinvention is to provide a new and improved gathering orcollating machine in which-a movable station for collecting a group of items fed from feed stations and the feed stations are relatively moved to feed the items to the movable station prior to the discharge of the group from the machine.
A still further object of the present invention is to provide a new and improved gathering or collating machine, such as a newspaper stuffing machine, for assembling items into a group in which feeding stations for the items and a gathering station are relatively movable to feed the items to the gathering stations in a predetermined sequence with the machine being capable of delivering a plurality of sequencesof said items to said gathering station and in which the feeding of items to a gathering station is terminated when one ofthe feeding stations fails'to feed an item until the gathering station is disposed to again receive the item which was missed, the feeding of the sequence then being resumed.
A still further object of the present invention is to provide a new and improved machine for assembling items into a group in which a plurality of gathering stations are moved through a closed path to receive items from feed stations disposed-adjacent the path, the machine having a delivery station where .the collected items at a gathering station are to be discharged, the machine being so constructed and arranged so that if a feed station fails to feed an item to a gathering station as it moves thereby, the downstream feed stations are prevented from feeding items to the gathering station to which the misfeedoccurred and the items which are in the gathering station are not delivered at the delivery station but are again moved by the feeding means and feeding of the sequence of items to the gathering station re-initiated with the missed item.
It is a still further object of the present invention to provide a new and improved assembling machine, such as a newspaper stuffing machine, for assembling items into a group with the items being fed from feeding stations to a gathering station movable past the feeding stations in sequence and in which the identity of a feeding station which fails to feed an item to the gathering station as it moves thereby is stored in a memory at an address which corresponds to the gathering stations in the sequence and re-initiates the feeding to the gathering station when it again is in a position to receive the missed item.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a new and improved gathering machine in which a control function isperformed if a feeding station is malfunctioning at a rate greater than a predetermined rate.
Further objects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following detailed description thereof made with reference to the accompanying drawings forming a part of the specification for all matter disclosed therein and in'which:
FIGfl is a simplified schematic top view of a newsaper stuffing machine;
FIG. 2 is a simplified vertical sectional view through a feed station in the machine of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a simplified sectional and diagrammatic view of a delivery station of the machine of FIG. 1;
FIG. 4 is a perspective view of a pocket of the machine of FIG. 1 with parts cut away;
FIG. 5 is a circuit diagram in block-form showing a control system for the presentinvention; and
FIG. 6 is a diagram of another machine which may embody the present invention.
Referring now to the drawings and more particularly to FIGS. 1-4, a known newspaper stuffing machine of the general type shown in US. Pat. No. 2,911,213, whose disclosure is incorporated herein by reference, is illustrated in simplified form. The machine comprises a rotary turret, generally designated by reference numeral 10, which includes a framework 11 which supports a series of circumferentially arranged V-shaped pockets 12 which constitute a gathering location. Turret includes a central hub 13 which is rotatable about the axis of a central post 14.
Rotation of the hub 13 about the post 14 moves the pockets 12 in a circular path about the post. The mechanism for rotating the turret about the post includes a main motor 16 which drives a bevel gear 17. The gear 17 meshes with a ring gear affixed to the turret 10. In FIG. 1, it will be assumed that the turret is rotated in a counterclo ckwise direction.
A plurality of conventional stationary feeding stations 21a-21f are supported in a conventional manner above the path of the pockets 12. These feeding stations are indicated in blocked out line form in FIG. 1 and while five such feeding stations have been illustrated, it will be understood that additional feeding stations or fewer stations may be present. Each of the feeding stations includes a conventional horizontal type hopper 19 (see FIG. 2) in which newspaper sections are stacked and a conventional mechanism for feeding the bottom one of the newspaper sections stacked in the hopper to deliver it into the open upper end of a pocket 12 passing therebeneath. The newspaper sections in each hopper are commonly referred to as inserts.
As illustrated in FIG. 2, the mechanism for feeding inserts at each of the feeding stations may comprise a rotatable drum 22 having gripper means including a finger 23 which when actuated by a suitable mechanism operates to clamp onto the edge of an insert to cause it to move with the drum whereby the drum is able to pull the insert from the hopper. Drum 22 is rotated in synchronism with the movement of the pockets by means of a shaft 24 drivingly connected to the hub portion of the turret as by a gear 26 engaging ring gear 18.
Each hopper 19 includes a framework 27 for holding a stack of inserts 30. The bottom one of the stack of inserts is supported on a ledge 28, which is part of the framework 27 and on a movable shoe 29. The shoe 29 is fixed to a shaft 31 mounted in the framework 27 of the hopper and the shaft is rotated to swing the shoe outwardly to release the edge of an insert. Conventional mechanism effects rotation of the shaft 31 in synchronism with movement of the turret. When the shoe 29 is swung outwardly, an insert is pulled downwardly by a sucker 33 to move the insert into position to be gripped by the finger 23.
As the. drum rotates, the finger 23 pulls the insert from the hopper. When the leading edge of the insert is in a position such that the insert will drop into a pocket 12 beneath the drum, the finger 23 is opened in a conventional manner to release the insert and effect delivery to the pocket. A calipering type sheet detector 34 is positioned to sense the presence or absence of an insert or the existence of more than one insert on the drum 22 at a predetermined time in the feed cycle. A switch 36 closes the circuit to the detector 34 only during the portion of the cycle when the insert is to be sensed. If an insert is missing, a missed feed is signaled, while if more than one insert is present, a double feed is signaled.
In the illustrated embodiment, if the machine is being used to insert sections into a newspaper, the outside section or jacket of the newspaper into which the other sections are to be inserted is fed at the station 21a. As the pocket which receives the jacket moves to station 21b, the jacket is opened up by conventional mechanism so that the other inserts will be dropped into the open jacket.
As the pocket moves past the other feed stations and to a delivery position 41, between stations 21 f and 21a, (see FIGS. 3 and 4), a cam 45 which extends around the turret normally operates a cam follower associated with each pocket to move the cam follower 46 upwardly to rotate the back wall 50 of the pocket to open the bottom of the pocket to allow the assembled newspaper to drop downwardly to delivery conveyors 51 as shown in FIG. 3.
In accordance with the present invention, if the sheet detector at a station detects that there has been a misfeed, i.e., a failure to feed, the hoppers downstream of that station where the misfeed occurred are prevented from feeding an insert to the pocket which failed to earlier receive an insert and when the pocket arrives at the position for delivering the paper to the conveyors 51, the cam 45 is prevented from opening the pocket.
Referring to FIG. 4, the movable back wall 50 of each pocket is supported between arms 60, 61 on the turret. The arms may be swung about a shaft 62 in a conventional manner to move the wall angularly about the lower front corner of the pocket during the jacket opening operation or to position the sections against one of the pocket walls.
The back wall 50 is supported between arms 60, 61 by a shaft 58 which is rotatable in the arms 60, 61 to swing the lower end of the rear wall away from the front wall 50a of the pocket to drop the insert into the delivery conveyors. The shaft 58 is biased to move the lower front end of the back wall 50 against the front wall to close the pocket by a spring 63 connected to an arm 64 on the inner end of the shaft 58.
The shaft 58 is rotated in a direction to open the pocket by a mechanism comprising an arm 65 fixed to the outer end of the shaft 58. Immediately inwardly of the arm 65 is a cam follower plate 66 which supports the cam follower 46. A catch mechanism 69 mounted on the cam follower plate 66 transmits clockwise motion of the cam follower plate 66, as the latter is viewed in FIG. 4, to the arm 65 to rotate the shaft 48 and the rear wall of the pocket to discharge an assembled newspaper. Catch mechanism 69 includes a bell crank lever 70 having an arm 70a which is received in a notch 65a in the upper end of the arm 65 to push the arm 65 in a clockwise direction as the'cam follower plate 66 is rotated clockwise. The bell crank lever 70 is biased into engagement with the notch a by a spring 72 connected between an arm b of the bell crank lever and,
cam 76 remote from the shaft 84 is biased upwardly to the inactive cam position by a spring 88 which acts through a rod 90, the lower end of the rod 90 being tied to the free end of the recycle cam76.
When the camfollower 74 is moved downwardly, the arm 70a.of the catch'mechanism 69 is moved out of contact with the notch 65a in the lever arm 65 on the shaft 48 'so that when the cam follower 46 is actuated upwardly to rotate the cam follower plate 66 in a pocket opening direction, the motion of the cam follower plate is not transmitted to the lever arm 65 and the pocket is not opened so that the sections in the pocket are again moved past the hoppers.
As will be explained in more detail hereinafter, the hoppers of the machine will notfeed to the pocket until the pocket reaches the station where the misfeed occurred. That hopper will then be actuated to feed a section and the other hoppers will feed in sequence unless another misfeed occurs.
In the illustrated embodiment, the cam 45 extends co-extensive with the path of the pockets 12 and the cam followe r46 is biased bainst the cam by a spring 92. Consequently, when the pocket rides off the recycle cam and the cam follower 66 rides off the high portion of the cam 45 for activating the cam plate 66 at the delivery station, cam follower plate 66 will move counterclockwise under the bias of the spring and the spring 7-2 will return the bell crank lever 70 to its position where the end of arm 70a is received in the notch 65a in the lever arm 65 to reset the mechanism.
As previously indicated, if one of the hoppers should fail to feed, this failure will be detected by the respective insert detector 34 and the hoppers or stations downstream of the one which failed to feed an insert to a particular pocket will be prevented from feeding in serts to that pocket until the pocket is recycled.
Referring to FIG. 5, a control system for recycling a partially assembled group of inserts is schematically illustrated and includes a memory 138 which has an addressable storage memory location for storing'coded data for each pocket. The memory is addressable by a plurality of address counters 146, one for each hopper. Each hopper has a unique code in the form of binary data stored in a code register 139 and if a miss occurs, the hopper code is read into the storage location for the pocket which does not receive an insert because of the miss. This code is then utilized to prevent feeding of other inserts to the pocket and to operate the recycle inserts to the hopper at the station that originally misfed. For example, if a section was not fed at station and reset signals and external control signals for controlling the vacuum for the sucker 33 for removing the bottom insert of a hopper. The suckers 33 each has a vacuum applied thereto during the proper portion of the hopper feed cycle through a respective solenoid valve 99 shown in FIG. 5 of the drawings. The solenoid valve 99 has a position enabling vacuum to be supplied to the sucker 33 in the proper time of the cycle and one which shuts off the vacuum supply. The valve is controlled by a flip-flop 168 which when in its set condition positions the valve to supply vacuum when in a reset condition positions the solenoid valve 99 so that no vacuum can be applied to the sucker 33 to render the sucker ineffective to pull an insert from the hopper and thus prevent feeding. In the present application the flip flops are illustrated as boxes and have set and reset inputs extending from top and bottom, respectively, of the left side of the box and set outputs extending from the top and bottom, respectively, of the right-hand side of the box..
It will be assumed that the station shown in FIG. 5 is station 21c, with the understanding that other feed stations are controlled in the same manner.
As a pocket approaches a feed station, the control system must determine whether an insert is to be fed to the pocket at the station and if it is to be fed, whether, in fact, an insert was fed. If an insert is to be fed to a pocket and a malfunction occurs so that an insert is not fed from the hopper, a mis-switch of the caliper detector 34 will be closed and will set a flip-flop 112 at the time in the cycle when the caliper detector is conventionally activated to detect the presence or absence of an insert on the drum 22.
The control circuitry at each feeding and delivery station also includes a synchronizing switch 114. The synchronizing switch 114 at each feed station is operated once in-each hopper feed cycle to transfer the setting of the flip-flop 112 to a readout flip-flop 115. The synchronizing (sync) switch 114 for each feed station also has contacts l14b which set a sync flip-flop 116 to condition the circuitry to request instructions for an approaching pocket and so that the scanner 120 can transfer information between the memory 138 and the feed station.
, In more detail, if a miss has occurred, the misswitch 110 sets the flip-flop 112. When the sync switch 114 operates, this information is to be transferred to memory and instructions are also to be sought to determine whether or not a vacuum-inhibit operation is to occur. At this point in the hopper cycle, the closing of sync switch contacts 114a, 11% connects the output of the flip flop 112 to the flip-flop 115 and applies a potential through contacts ll4b to the set terminal of flip-flop 116. The flip-flops 115, 116 are self-resetting flip-flops which are set by a negative-going signal and, consequently, are actuated to their set state only when the sync switch contacts 114a, 11.4b are opened. The flipflops 115, 116 and 112'fself-reset a predetermined time after the set signal is removed. During the time the flipflops 115,116 are set, the information can be transmitted by the scanner to the memory. Also, the circuitry maydetermine whether ornot a vacuum-inhibit is to be signaled at this time.
, The flip-flops 115, 116 are connected to scanner terminals 120b, 1200, respectively, through AND gates 117, 119 which must be conditioned before signals can be applied to the scanner terminals from the flip-flops. These gates are controlled by a control flip-flop 122 which is set when signals appear on a scanner terminal 120a and on the set output of flip-flop 116. These signals are applied to the inputs of an AND gate 123 whose output sets the flip-flop 122. The flip-flop 122 also controls AND gates 124, 125 between terminals 120d, 120e of the scanner and the set and reset inputs of flip-flop 168, respectively, for controlling the vacuum to the feed station sucker 33. Consequently, if the flip-flop 116 has not been set to indicate that a sync signal has occurred, gates 124, 126 connecting the set terminals of the flip-flops 115, 116 to the scanner will be disenabled and there will be no inputs to the scanner from these flip-flops. Also, gates 117, 119 between the scanner 120 and the set and reset inputs of a feed flipflop 168 are disabled.
During the scan, the scanner provides an output on terminal 120a to set the control flip-flop 122 if the sync flip flop 116 is set. Then it scans terminal 120b and if a signal is applied thereto from the flip-flop 115 indicating a miss, the signal is applied through an AND gate 128 to set a miss flip-flop 130. The flip-flop 130 is reset when the output of AND gate 128 is lost when the scanner steps to terminal 1206. As will be explained hereinafter, the gate 128 is used to prevent the miss signal from setting the flip-flop 130 in the event that the miss signal is a result of earlier no-feed instructions from the memory.
When the flip-flop 130 is set, it conditions an AND gate 134 to enter a code number for the feed station from the code register 139 into the memory 138 via a read-in circuit 140. The storage location in the memory 138 for information set by the read-in circuit 140 is determined by an addressing circuit 142 which effects a read-in of the information to an address supplied through OR gating 144. The OR gating 144 has an input from each of the address counters 146. The address counter 146 for a feed station will be set to the address corresponding to the storage location for the pocket at the hopper at the time a miss signal occurs and the hopper number is now read into the storage location for the pocket at the hopper. The address from the counter is supplied to the OR gating 144 for the addressing circuit 142 through an adder 147 and AND gating 148 activated by the output from an OR gate 149 which is now activated because it has an input connected to the set output of the flip-flop 130. Accordingly, the code number of the hopper 136 has been stored in the storage location for the pocket to indicate a miss has occurred at the hopper.
When the scanner 120 steps to scan terminal 1200, the scanning terminal 120C will have a signal therein indiciating that sync flip-flop 116 has been set and this will be transmitted to set an instruction storage flip-flop 150 for effecting a determination of whether or not the vacuum should be inhibited during the next cycle portion for gripping an insert and to step the address counter 146 by one increment. Since the miss which has just been stored, assuming it was a miss, is for the pocket which has now moved from the hopper and the insert which is next to be fed has already been delivered by the vacuum sucker 33, the circuitry must check the memory to determine whether or not the second following pocket is to receive an insert and not the immediately following pocket.
The setting of the flip-flop 150 to check for a vacuum-inhibit signal steps the counter 146 by a count of l and an increment of 1 must, therefore, be added to the address in the counter to address the storage location for the pocket for which a feed or no-feed check is to be made. Accordingly, adding circuit 147 is disposed between the counter and the gating 148 and when a 1 signal appears on an input 151, the circuit will add a l to the address in the counter. This will cause the memory to address the proper location in the memory for the pocket whose vacuum must be inhibited at this time if there is to be a no-feed. The set output of instruction flip-flop 150 provides a logic 1 signal to the adding circuit 147 and to an OR gate 149 whose output gates the address counter 146 to the addressing circuit 142 and also activates a readout circuit 152 for the memory to read for the storage location selected by the address counter 146. The storage location is read into a readout register 156. If the insert is to be fed, there will be no number registered in the storage location or in the readout register 156 and a feed of the insert is to be signaled. To this end, the readout register 156 has OR gating 157 connected to the stages of the readout register. If all the registers are in their reset state, the output of the OR gate 157 which is applied to an input 160a of a NAND circuit 160, is a logic 0. Consequently, a logic 1 appears on the output of the NAND gate 160. The NAND gate 160 has its output connected to one input of AND gates 161, 162 having outputs connected to the set and reset terminals, respectively, of a feed flipflop 166. The gates 161, 162 are conditioned to pass a signal to the feed flip-flop 166 by the instruction flipflop 150. If there is a logic 1 on the output of NAND gate 160 calling for a feed, the AND gate 161 will be activated to set the flip-flop 166 and to produce a feed signal on its set output. This output is applied to scanner terminal d and scanned by the scanner 120 and used to set the feed flip-flop 168 at the feed station for effecting operation of solenoid valve 99 to supply vacuum tothe sucker 33. The output of NAND gate 160 is connected to the gate 162 through an inverter l so that the feed flip-flop 166 will be reset if there is a logic 0 on the output of NAND gate 160 indicating that no feed is to take place.
If no feed is to take place, the memory location will have a code number stored therein and the output readout register 156 will have a number registered therein when the location is read. Consequently, there will be a 1 input to input 160a of the NAND gate 160 from the OR gate 157. The other input 16% of the NAND gate will have a logic 1 thereon since it is connected to the output of a comparator circuit 169 to which the hopper register 139 of each feed station is connected through an instruction AND gate 170 and through OR gating 171. The AND gate 170 is activated by the set output of the instruction flip-flop so that the comparator 169 compares the number in the output register with the number in the station code register 139. If the numbers are different, a 1 appears at the output of the comparator 169 so that a 1 appears at the input 16% of the NAND gate to make the output of the NAND gate a logic 0 to reset the feed flip-flop 166 to give a dont feed signal. This is appropriate since the storage location will have a hopper number therein only if there has been a previous miss and a dont feed signal is to be given unless the number in the storage is the same as the station code where the check is now being made. If these are the same, then a feed is to occur since it is this hopper which missed initially. In this case, the comparator output will be a logic 0 and the logic 0 signal on the input 16% of the NAND gate 160 will cause a logic 1 output from the gate 160 to provide a feed signal. The scanner 120 will respond to the feed or dont feed signal when it scans its terminals 120d, 1201: and set the feed flip-flop 168 to the corresponding condition.
If a no-feed signal is given to prevent the hopper from feeding an insert because of a previous miss, the miss signal which results from the intentional no-feed has to be prevented from destroying the information in the memory and entering erroneous information as to where the initial miss occurred. Since the dont feed signal from the memory is not for the insert which will next be calipered, the blanking of the miss signal has to be delayed one cycle. Accordingly, a dont feed signal enters a count of 1 into a three-stage shift register 171. This register is shifted one stage each time that the terminal 1200 has an input thereon when it is scanned. The third stage of the shift register has a connection to the AND gate 138 and normally has a logic 1 thereon unless the shift last stage is set to a logic 1. At this time the signal becomes a logic to close the gate 128 to prevent the miss signal from activating the circuitry.
The memory has been illustrated as the type of memory in which the information readout of the memory is read back into the memory through the read-in circuit 140. This automatic read-in is shown as being accomplished .through a circuit 172 which can inhibit the reading in of the number stored in the readout register when a logic 0 is applied to the inhibit circuit. The comparator'output supplies logic 1 input to the inhibit circuit 172 to enable it to read the information back into the memory as long as it is not the same as the number hopper code register. If it is, the comparator has a logic 0 output. Consequently, when a number is read out of a pocket address, it is immediately read back into the pocket address unless his the same as the feed station code addressing the memory. If it is the same .as the feed station code being checked, the comparator circuit 169 will have a logic 0 on its output which inhibits.
the circuit 172 from reading the output register back into the memory location and, in effect, the number is erased from the pocket storage location.
From the foregoing, it can be seen that when a miss is registered at a hopper for a pocket, the code stored in the memory location for that pocket will cause a shut off of all feed stations until the pocket returns to the feed station where the miss occurred. When this happens, the comparator output will call for a feed and prevent the hopper code from being read back into the memory location so that the downstream feed stations will no longer be prevented from feeding.
in addition, a code in the memory location for the pocket will effect operation of the recycle cam at the delivery station 41. This cam is controlled in a manner similar to the feedstations when a miss feed has occurred. The control circuitry for the recycle cam ineludes a sync switch 114 which operates during each part of the machine cycle in which a pocket is approaching the delivery station to request instructions concerning. delivery. The actuation of switch 114' sets a bistable flip-flop 175 to provide a flag or signal requesting a check of the memory 138 to see if the contents of the pocket should be recycled. The flip-flop 175 has a set terminal connected to a terminal 120;) of the scanner and when this terminal is scanned, a pocket address counter 146' for the delivery station is incremented and AND gating 148' is activated so that the counter addresses the memory. Also, the signal from the terminal 120p activates to read the storage location for the pocket into the memory readout register 156 and-resets the sync flip-flop 175. Nothing further happens if there is no code read into the readout register and the newspaper is delivered as it moves past the delivery station. If, however, a code does appear in the readout register 156, a signal will be on a scanner terminal r connected to the output of OR gate 157. This signal will cause the setting of a recycle flip-flop 177 for energizing the recycle ,solenoid 78 to operate the recycle cam to prevent delivery of the contents in the pocket as it moves past the delivery station. The flip-flop 177 may be reset by a switch at the delivery station which is closed when the pocket moves by the delivery station.
For certain types of gatherers, it is advantageous to have information concerning the feeding by a feed station of two inserts to a pocket instead of one insert. These are known as doubles. When assembling newspapers, the feeding of doubles normally need not be corrected unless the rate of double feeds at a particular station is such that there may be an insufficient number of inserts for the required number of newspapers if the rate of double feeds continues.
In accordance with one feature of the illustrated machine, each caliper detector 34 has a set of double contacts which are closed if the detector senses a double sheet. Each time the detector senses a double sheet, it provides an output to step a respective counter by an increment to register an incremental count of l therein. The counter 190 is reset after a predetermined number of feed or machine cycles, for example, 1,000, by a counter 191. The counter 191 is stepped once for each feed cycle of the feeding stations. It will be understood that the counter 191 may be driven from any part of the machine to provide a time period dependent on machine speed within which less thana predetermined number of doubles are to be fed by any station. For example, if the counter at a feed station reaches a maximum count, for example, 20, before it is reset, an output signal from the counter will provide a stop signal to a control circuit 192 for stopping the machine and preferably for lighting an indicator light at the feed station which causes the machine to stop.
From the foregoing it can be seen that in the illustrated machine, agroup of inserts being assembled at a movable gathering location is completed before it leaves the machine if a miss occurs at a feed station. When a miss occurs, the code number of the station is stored in a memory location unique to the gathering location and this stored data prevents the delivery of a partially assembled group from the machine as well as preventing the feeding of additional inserts to the location until the location is again in position to receive the inserts in sequence beginning with the missed insert.
While an addressable memory has been used as a storage, it will be understood that circulating or shift registers may also be used.
It will be understood that the present invention may take many forms. For example, FIG. 6 schematically illustrates the layout of a newspaper stuffing machine having ten feed stations with feed stations 200, 201, 202 and 203 having continuous feed conveyors 203 for feeding newspaper jackets to the stations so that more than one newspaper per revolution may be assembled and delivered to a pocket as it moves through the closed path. The newspaper jackets may be opened in a conventional manner atstation 200a, 201a, 202a and 203a and inserts feed at feed stations 200b, 201b, 202b and 203b. The jackets fed at stations 200, 203 may also receive an additional insert at a feed station 200C and 203e, respectively. The assembled newspapers are then delivered at delivery stations 200d, 201d, 202d and 203d. It will be understood the machine may be operated to feed inserts at any or all of the jacket feed stations 201, 202, 203 so that all the deliveries are not used to selectively effect an assembling of one, two or three newspapers instead of one or four. For example, jackets could be fed at only the feed station 200 and the newspaper delivered with nine or less inserts at delivery 203d which is the natural machine delivery.
In the machine diagrammed in FIG. 6, a miss at one feed station will normally prevent the feeding of inserts until the pocket returns to that station and the code for the feed station will operate as before to prevent delivery from the machine at any delivery or the feeding of inserts at other feed stations. It will be recognized that if like newspapers were being assembled, for example, at feed stations 200, 200a, 200b and at feed stations 203, 203a and 203b, stations 200a, 203a and stations 200b, 203b could be respectively given the same code number so that if a miss occurred, for example, at feed station 200a, the inserts would be fed to the partially assembled group at feed station 203a and the completed newspaper delivered at delivery 203d. Similarly, the feed stations 201, 202 and the feed stations 201a, 2020 could respectively be given the same code numbers if the same newspaper were being assembled by the feed stations 201, 201a and feed stations 202, 202a.
Having described my invention, 1 claim:
1. In a gathering apparatus for forming groups of sequentially fed items in which each item is fed sequentially to a gathering station for forming one of said groups, said apparatus including delivery means for deliveringan assembled group of items from the apparatus and further comprising a plurality of movable gathering stations, feeding means for feeding said items in a predetermined sequence to said gathering stations as said gathering stations move sequentially past a plurality of feed stations including an initial feed station and a terminal feed station for respectively feeding the first and terminal items of an initial sequence of items to form a group at a gathering station, said feeding means being operable to feed a repeat sequence of items to a gathering station after the gathering station moves past said terminal station beginning with any item of the sequence, means for concurrently moving each of said plurality of gathering stations along a closed path and for moving a plurality of said gathering stations in turn past each of said feed stations to sequentially position said gathering stations at said feed stations in sequence to receive an initial sequence of items and for concurrently operating said feed stations to feed items to different gathering stations at respective feed stations and for moving at least incomplete groups past said feed means for a repeat sequence, and control means for said feeding means including first means for monitoring the feed of items from each of said feed stations to a gathering station at the feed station and second means responsive to a feeding malfunction at any of said feed stations for terminating the feeding -of items to the misfed gathering station as the misfed gathering station is moved past any remaining stations for completing the remaining items of the sequence and any feed stations of said feed means for feeding previously fed items of the sequence while maintaining feeding to other gathering stations and for actuating said feed means to resume feeding to the misfed gathering station beginning with the item fed by the station which initially misfed.
2. In an apparatus for assembling items as defined in claim 1 and wherein said gathering station and feed stations are relatively movable through a closed path while the gathering station is positioned for conveying "iterns rece ived fiierein, said delivery meanseffecting delivery of an assembled group at a delivery station along said path downstream of said terminal station and including delivery control means responsive to said control means for rendering said delivery means ineffective to deliver a partially assembled group from said machine whereby the partially assembled group remains in said closed path.
3. In an apparatus as defined in claim 1 wherein said second means includes memory means for storing electrical signals and means responsive to said first means for setting said memory means to record a misfeed to a gathering station and third means responsive to stored signals recorded in said memory means for controlling said feeding means to prevent feeding to the gathering station while continuing the feed to other gathering stations to which a misfeed has not occurred until the gathering station to which a misfeed was occurred is again relatively positioned with respect to said feeding means to receive the item of the sequence which was misfed.
4. In an apparatus as defined in claim 3 wherein said memory means is settable to indicate the identity of the feeding station which misfed and the gathering station affected by the misfeed.
5. In an apparatus as defined in claim 4 wherein said memory means has memory location for each of said gathering stations and said second means includes means for storing data in said memory means indicating the identity of a feeding station at which a misfeed occurred at the memory location for the gathering station affected by the misfeed.
6. In an apparatus as defined in claim 5 wherein said third means comprises addressing means for signaling the identity of the gathering location approaching a feed station for addressing and reading the data stored in said memory location for the gathering station and actuating means responsive to the data stored in said memory means for controlling the feed of an item to the gathering station by the feed station being approached by the gathering station.
7. In an apparatus for assembling items as defined in claim 3 and wherein said gathering stations and feed stations are relatively moved through a closed path while the gathering stations are maintained in a position for conveying items received therein, said delivering means effecting delivery of an assembled group at a delivery station along said path after a gathering station passes said terminal station and said delivery means including delivery control means responsive to said control means for rendering said delivery means ineffective to deliver a partially assembled group from said machine whereby the partially assembled group remains in said closed path and said delivery control means comprises means responsive to said memory for controlling said delivery means.
8. in a gathering apparatus comprising feeding means including a plurality of feed stations and a plurality of gathering stations to which items for forming a group are to be fed sequentially as the gathering stations and feed stations move relatively to each other with each feed station feeding a particular item of the sequence to the gathering stations, said feed stations including an initial feed station for feeding the initial item of the sequence and a terminal station spaced from the initial feedstation in the direction of relative movement of said gatheringstations past said feed stations for feeding the terminal item of a sequence, said apparatus being operable to feed said items in a repeat sequence after a gathering station has relatively moved past said a terminal station, means for moving each of said gathering stations along a closed path and for concurrently moving a plurality of gathering stations past said feed stations and for feeding and driving said feed stations to feed different locations concurrently, each of said feed stations having associated therewith detecting means for providing an electrical signal indicating a misfeed to a gathering station, memory meanscompris ing a memory store for each gathering station for storing a misfeed code indicating the feed station and gathering station at which the misfeed occurred, and control means comprising first means for setting said memfeed station and concurrently driving the feed stations to feed items to different gathering stationsat different feed stations to initially form the groups, detecting a misfeed at any feeding station, continuing the relative movement of the feeding stations and gathering stations on the detection of a misfeed and storing electrical data indicating the gathering station for which the misfeed occurred and the and the item of the sequence which was misfed, electrically utilizing said .data to prevent the feeding of the remaining items of the sequence to the gathering station to which a misfeed occurred as it sequentially moves by the remaining feed stations of the sequence while maintaining the feed toother gathering stations for which a misfeed has not occurred and ory store for a gathering location in response to said electrical signal indicating a misfeed from a feed station to the gathering station, and second means for reading said store for the gathering location each time a gathering station is being positioned to receive a feed at a feed station to determine whether a misfeed has previously occurred to the gathering station for preventing a feed to a previously misfed gathering station until the previously misfed gathering station is again positioned to receive the misfed item of the sequence and for then reinitiating the feed of the remainder of the sequence to the previously misfed gathering stationand for clearing the memory store of the misfeed code.
9. In an apparatus as defined in claim 8 wherein said apparatus includes delivery means for delivering an assembled group of items from said machine after it passes said terminal station and delivery control means responsive to the first said control means for effecting operation of said delivery means to prevent discharge of an incomplete group from said machine.
10. In an apparatus as defined in claim 9 wherein said delivery control means comprises means responsive to data stored in said memory in response to a misfeed to prevent delivery of the items from thevgathering location at said delivery means.
1]. in an apparatus as defined in claim 10 wherein each feed station has an address counting means for counting the gathering stations to provide an identification of the gathering station approaching the feed station and said second circuit means is responsive to said address counting means for reading the store corresponding to the approaching gathering station.
12. A method of sequentially assembling items into groups which comprises relatively and concurrently moving a plurality of feed stations and a plurality of gathering stations to sequentially position each gathering station at a feed station to receive an item from the moving the incomplete group for which a misfeed has occurred again past feed stations for repeating the feeding of the items in sequence, and resuming the sequential feeding of items in response to the stored data when the gathering station for which a misfeed occurred is again positioned at a feed station for feeding the item of the sequence which was misfed.
13. A method as defined in claim 12 wherein a code indicative of the item of the sequence which was misfed is electrically stored in a memory store corresponding to the gathering station for whcih the misfeed occurred and as the gathering station approaches a feed station thereafter, the step of electrically reading the store to determine if the gathering station is approaching a feed station for feeding the misfed item of the sequence and resuming the sequential feeding to the gathering station if the feed station is one for feeding the misfed item of the sequence. 7
14. A method as defined in claim 13 wherein a code unique to the feed stations is stored in a store corresponding to the gathering station positioned at the feed I station when a misfeed occurs and feeding to the gathering station by other stations is prevented and feeding reinitiated by comparing the stored code with a code for the feed station being approached by the gathering location.
15. In an apparatus for gathering a plurality of sequentially fed items into a group, a plurality of gathering stations each of which is movable along a closed path, feeding means comprising feed stations for feeding respective items of said sequence for feeding a first sequence of items to a gathering location and for subsequently feeding an item misfed during the initial sequence, means for moving a plurality of gathering stations past said feeding means and for driving said feeding means to feed said gathering stations, detecting means for monitoring the feed of items from each feed station to said gathering stations and providing a signal indicating a misfeed toa gathering location, means responsive to said monitoring means for storing coded data indicating the item which was misfed for the gathering location to which the item was misfed including memory means in which said coded data is stored, and feed control means responsive to the stored coded data in said memory means foreffecting operation of said feeding means to subsequently effect a feeding of the misfed item to the gathering location which was misfed.

Claims (15)

1. In a gathering apparatus for forming groups of sequentially fed items in which each item is fed sequentially to a gathering station for forming one of said groups, said apparatus including delivery means for delivering an assembled group of items from the apparatus and further comprising a plurality of movable gathering stations, feeding means for feeding said items in a predetermined sequence to said gathering stations as said gathering stations move sequentially past a plurality of feed stations including an initial feed station and a terminal feed station for respectively feeding the first and terminal items of an initial sequence of items to form a group at a gathering station, said feeding means being operable to feed a repeat sequence of items to a gathering station after the gathering station moves past said terminal station beginning with any item of the sequence, means for concurrently moving each of said plurality of gathering stations along a closed path and for moving a plurality of said gathering stations in turn past each of said feed stations to sequentially position said gathering stations at said feed stations in sequence to receive an initial sequence of items and for concurrently operating said feed stations to feed items to different gathering stations at respective feed stations and for moving at least incomplete groups past said feed means for a repeat sequence, and control means for said feeding means including first means For monitoring the feed of items from each of said feed stations to a gathering station at the feed station and second means responsive to a feeding malfunction at any of said feed stations for terminating the feeding of items to the misfed gathering station as the misfed gathering station is moved past any remaining stations for completing the remaining items of the sequence and any feed stations of said feed means for feeding previously fed items of the sequence while maintaining feeding to other gathering stations and for actuating said feed means to resume feeding to the misfed gathering station beginning with the item fed by the station which initially misfed.
2. In an apparatus for assembling items as defined in claim 1 and wherein said gathering station and feed stations are relatively movable through a closed path while the gathering station is is positioned for conveying items received therein, said delivery means effecting delivery of an assembled group at a delivery station along said path downstream of said terminal station and including delivery control means responsive to said control means for rendering said delivery means ineffective to deliver a partially assembled group from said machine whereby the partially assembled group remains in said closed path.
3. In an apparatus as defined in claim 1 wherein said second means includes memory means for storing electrical signals and means responsive to said first means for setting said memory means to record a misfeed to a gathering station and third means responsive to stored signals recorded in said memory means for controlling said feeding means to prevent feeding to the gathering station while continuing the feed to other gathering stations to which a misfeed has not occurred until the gathering station to which a misfeed was occurred is again relatively positioned with respect to said feeding means to receive the item of the sequence which was misfed.
4. In an apparatus as defined in claim 3 wherein said memory means is settable to indicate the identity of the feeding station which misfed and the gathering station affected by the misfeed.
5. In an apparatus as defined in claim 4 wherein said memory means has memory location for each of said gathering stations and said second means includes means for storing data in said memory means indicating the identity of a feeding station at which a misfeed occurred at the memory location for the gathering station affected by the misfeed.
6. In an apparatus as defined in claim 5 wherein said third means comprises addressing means for signaling the identity of the gathering location approaching a feed station for addressing and reading the data stored in said memory location for the gathering station and actuating means responsive to the data stored in said memory means for controlling the feed of an item to the gathering station by the feed station being approached by the gathering station.
7. In an apparatus for assembling items as defined in claim 3 and wherein said gathering stations and feed stations are relatively moved through a closed path while the gathering stations are maintained in a position for conveying items received therein, said delivering means effecting delivery of an assembled group at a delivery station along said path after a gathering station passes said terminal station and said delivery means including delivery control means responsive to said control means for rendering said delivery means ineffective to deliver a partially assembled group from said machine whereby the partially assembled group remains in said closed path and said delivery control means comprises means responsive to said memory for controlling said delivery means.
8. In a gathering apparatus comprising feeding means including a plurality of feed stations and a plurality of gathering stations to which items for forming a group are to be fed sequentially as the gathering stations and feed stations move relatively to each other with each feed station feeding a pArticular item of the sequence to the gathering stations, said feed stations including an initial feed station for feeding the initial item of the sequence and a terminal station spaced from the initial feed station in the direction of relative movement of said gathering stations past said feed stations for feeding the terminal item of a sequence, said apparatus being operable to feed said items in a repeat sequence after a gathering station has relatively moved past said terminal station, means for moving each of said gathering stations along a closed path and for concurrently moving a plurality of gathering stations past said feed stations and for feeding and driving said feed stations to feed different locations concurrently, each of said feed stations having associated therewith detecting means for providing an electrical signal indicating a misfeed to a gathering station, memory means comprising a memory store for each gathering station for storing a misfeed code indicating the feed station and gathering station at which the misfeed occurred, and control means comprising first means for setting said memory store for a gathering location in response to said electrical signal indicating a misfeed from a feed station to the gathering station, and second means for reading said store for the gathering location each time a gathering station is being positioned to receive a feed at a feed station to determine whether a misfeed has previously occurred to the gathering station for preventing a feed to a previously misfed gathering station until the previously misfed gathering station is again positioned to receive the misfed item of the sequence and for then reinitiating the feed of the remainder of the sequence to the previously misfed gathering station and for clearing the memory store of the misfeed code.
9. In an apparatus as defined in claim 8 wherein said apparatus includes delivery means for delivering an assembled group of items from said machine after it passes said terminal station and delivery control means responsive to the first said control means for effecting operation of said delivery means to prevent discharge of an incomplete group from said machine.
10. In an apparatus as defined in claim 9 wherein said delivery control means comprises means responsive to data stored in said memory in response to a misfeed to prevent delivery of the items from the gathering location at said delivery means.
11. In an apparatus as defined in claim 10 wherein each feed station has an address counting means for counting the gathering stations to provide an identification of the gathering station approaching the feed station and said second circuit means is responsive to said address counting means for reading the store corresponding to the approaching gathering station.
12. A method of sequentially assembling items into groups which comprises relatively and concurrently moving a plurality of feed stations and a plurality of gathering stations to sequentially position each gathering station at a feed station to receive an item from the feed station and concurrently driving the feed stations to feed items to different gathering stations at different feed stations to initially form the groups, detecting a misfeed at any feeding station, continuing the relative movement of the feeding stations and gathering stations on the detection of a misfeed and storing electrical data indicating the gathering station for which the misfeed occurred and the and the item of the sequence which was misfed, electrically utilizing said data to prevent the feeding of the remaining items of the sequence to the gathering station to which a misfeed occurred as it sequentially moves by the remaining feed stations of the sequence while maintaining the feed to other gathering stations for which a misfeed has not occurred and moving the incomplete group for which a misfeed has occurred again past feed stations for repeating the feeding of the items in sequence, and resuming the sequential feeding of items In response to the stored data when the gathering station for which a misfeed occurred is again positioned at a feed station for feeding the item of the sequence which was misfed.
13. A method as defined in claim 12 wherein a code indicative of the item of the sequence which was misfed is electrically stored in a memory store corresponding to the gathering station for whcih the misfeed occurred and as the gathering station approaches a feed station thereafter, the step of electrically reading the store to determine if the gathering station is approaching a feed station for feeding the misfed item of the sequence and resuming the sequential feeding to the gathering station if the feed station is one for feeding the misfed item of the sequence.
14. A method as defined in claim 13 wherein a code unique to the feed stations is stored in a store corresponding to the gathering station positioned at the feed station when a misfeed occurs and feeding to the gathering station by other stations is prevented and feeding reinitiated by comparing the stored code with a code for the feed station being approached by the gathering location.
15. In an apparatus for gathering a plurality of sequentially fed items into a group, a plurality of gathering stations each of which is movable along a closed path, feeding means comprising feed stations for feeding respective items of said sequence for feeding a first sequence of items to a gathering location and for subsequently feeding an item misfed during the initial sequence, means for moving a plurality of gathering stations past said feeding means and for driving said feeding means to feed said gathering stations, detecting means for monitoring the feed of items from each feed station to said gathering stations and providing a signal indicating a misfeed to a gathering location, means responsive to said monitoring means for storing coded data indicating the item which was misfed for the gathering location to which the item was misfed including memory means in which said coded data is stored, and feed control means responsive to the stored coded data in said memory means for effecting operation of said feeding means to subsequently effect a feeding of the misfed item to the gathering location which was misfed.
US00131257A 1971-04-05 1971-04-05 Gathering machine and control therefor Expired - Lifetime US3825246A (en)

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US00131257A US3825246A (en) 1971-04-05 1971-04-05 Gathering machine and control therefor
CA134,594A CA998143A (en) 1971-04-05 1972-02-14 Gathering machine and control therefor
GB717772A GB1373036A (en) 1971-04-05 1972-02-16 Gathering machine
IT22543/72A IT950868B (en) 1971-04-05 1972-03-29 PROCEDURE AND EQUIPMENT FOR ASSEMBLING OBJECTS IN A PRE-ESTABLISHED SEQUENCE HAVING DEVICES TO PREVENT THE OMISSION OF OPERATION IN PARTICULARLY USEFUL IN MACHINES OR NEWSPAPER PRESSERS OR SIMILAR
DE2216243A DE2216243C2 (en) 1971-04-05 1972-04-04 Collator
CH499172A CH554244A (en) 1971-04-05 1972-04-05 DEVICE FOR COLLECTING A SET, ESPECIALLY A NEWSPAPER, AND PROCEDURES FOR YOUR OPERATION.
JP3356972A JPS5433199B1 (en) 1971-04-05 1972-04-05
CA249,271A CA1017766A (en) 1971-04-05 1976-03-31 Gathering machine and control therefor

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Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3953017A (en) * 1973-05-07 1976-04-27 Harris-Intertype Corporation Gatherer system
US3972521A (en) * 1975-02-28 1976-08-03 Harris Corporation Bindery system capable of testing its own inspection and control devices
US4034974A (en) * 1974-03-07 1977-07-12 Harris Corporation Collating system
US4116427A (en) * 1976-02-19 1978-09-26 Grapha-Holding Ag. Apparatus for stuffing newspapers or the like
US4373710A (en) * 1980-08-22 1983-02-15 Nolan Systems, Inc. Apparatus for inserting supplementary material into newspaper jackets
DE3411984A1 (en) * 1983-03-29 1984-10-11 Stobb Inc., Clinton, N.J. METHOD AND DEVICE FOR SUMMARY OF A VARIETY OF BOWS
US4477067A (en) * 1982-05-10 1984-10-16 Harris Graphics Corporation Method and apparatus for assembling sheet material assemblages
US4479643A (en) * 1982-09-27 1984-10-30 Harris Graphics Corporation Method and apparatus for transferring newspapers from pockets to an overlapped stream
US4709910A (en) * 1986-02-14 1987-12-01 Ferag Ag Removable divider wall cell wheel apparatus for processing printed products
US4729554A (en) * 1986-02-14 1988-03-08 Ferag Ag Method and apparatus for inserting at least one insert into preferably folded printed products
US4932645A (en) * 1989-03-29 1990-06-12 Am International Incorporated Method and apparatus for controlling a multiple delivery collator in response to a downstream fault condition
US4974824A (en) * 1986-11-06 1990-12-04 Am International Incorporated Method of distributing a newspaper with inserts
US5280895A (en) * 1991-04-24 1994-01-25 Ferag Ag Method and apparatus for producing groups from different printed products
US5527025A (en) * 1995-03-14 1996-06-18 Am International, Inc. Apparatus and method for forming sheet material assemblages
WO2006043947A1 (en) * 2004-10-18 2006-04-27 Dwayne Glowner Method and apparatus for handling inserts for printed materials

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN104030079B (en) * 2014-06-11 2016-02-24 南京理工大学 Text collator

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US2911213A (en) * 1958-01-16 1959-11-03 T W & C B Sheridan Co Error control mechanism for stuffing machine
DE1436061A1 (en) * 1961-10-30 1970-03-26 Baeuerle Gmbh Mathias Feed unit with a feed roller designed as a friction roller

Cited By (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3953017A (en) * 1973-05-07 1976-04-27 Harris-Intertype Corporation Gatherer system
US4034974A (en) * 1974-03-07 1977-07-12 Harris Corporation Collating system
US3972521A (en) * 1975-02-28 1976-08-03 Harris Corporation Bindery system capable of testing its own inspection and control devices
US4116427A (en) * 1976-02-19 1978-09-26 Grapha-Holding Ag. Apparatus for stuffing newspapers or the like
US4373710A (en) * 1980-08-22 1983-02-15 Nolan Systems, Inc. Apparatus for inserting supplementary material into newspaper jackets
US4477067A (en) * 1982-05-10 1984-10-16 Harris Graphics Corporation Method and apparatus for assembling sheet material assemblages
US4479643A (en) * 1982-09-27 1984-10-30 Harris Graphics Corporation Method and apparatus for transferring newspapers from pockets to an overlapped stream
DE3411984A1 (en) * 1983-03-29 1984-10-11 Stobb Inc., Clinton, N.J. METHOD AND DEVICE FOR SUMMARY OF A VARIETY OF BOWS
US4709910A (en) * 1986-02-14 1987-12-01 Ferag Ag Removable divider wall cell wheel apparatus for processing printed products
US4729554A (en) * 1986-02-14 1988-03-08 Ferag Ag Method and apparatus for inserting at least one insert into preferably folded printed products
US4974824A (en) * 1986-11-06 1990-12-04 Am International Incorporated Method of distributing a newspaper with inserts
US4932645A (en) * 1989-03-29 1990-06-12 Am International Incorporated Method and apparatus for controlling a multiple delivery collator in response to a downstream fault condition
EP0389745A2 (en) * 1989-03-29 1990-10-03 Am International Incorporated Method and apparatus for controlling a multiple delivery collator in response to a downstream fault condition
EP0389745A3 (en) * 1989-03-29 1991-05-15 Am International Incorporated Method and apparatus for controlling a multiple delivery collator in response to a downstream fault condition
US5280895A (en) * 1991-04-24 1994-01-25 Ferag Ag Method and apparatus for producing groups from different printed products
AU653803B2 (en) * 1991-04-24 1994-10-13 Ferag Ag Method and apparatus for producing groups from different printed products
US5527025A (en) * 1995-03-14 1996-06-18 Am International, Inc. Apparatus and method for forming sheet material assemblages
WO2006043947A1 (en) * 2004-10-18 2006-04-27 Dwayne Glowner Method and apparatus for handling inserts for printed materials

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CA998143A (en) 1976-10-05
GB1373036A (en) 1974-11-06
JPS5433199B1 (en) 1979-10-18
CH554244A (en) 1974-09-30
DE2216243A1 (en) 1972-10-19
IT950868B (en) 1973-06-20
DE2216243C2 (en) 1983-08-04

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