WO1988002335A1 - Apparatus for continuously packaging a product - Google Patents

Apparatus for continuously packaging a product Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1988002335A1
WO1988002335A1 PCT/NL1987/000022 NL8700022W WO8802335A1 WO 1988002335 A1 WO1988002335 A1 WO 1988002335A1 NL 8700022 W NL8700022 W NL 8700022W WO 8802335 A1 WO8802335 A1 WO 8802335A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
wheel
package
filling
product
pouch
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/NL1987/000022
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Rijk Van Der Haar
Ewoud Alphonsus Van Der Berg
Original Assignee
Douwe Egberts Koninklijke Tabaksfabriek-Koffiebran
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Douwe Egberts Koninklijke Tabaksfabriek-Koffiebran filed Critical Douwe Egberts Koninklijke Tabaksfabriek-Koffiebran
Priority to AT87906110T priority Critical patent/ATE64907T1/en
Priority to DE8787906110T priority patent/DE3771209D1/en
Publication of WO1988002335A1 publication Critical patent/WO1988002335A1/en

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65BMACHINES, APPARATUS OR DEVICES FOR, OR METHODS OF, PACKAGING ARTICLES OR MATERIALS; UNPACKING
    • B65B43/00Forming, feeding, opening or setting-up containers or receptacles in association with packaging
    • B65B43/42Feeding or positioning bags, boxes, or cartons in the distended, opened, or set-up state; Feeding preformed rigid containers, e.g. tins, capsules, glass tubes, glasses, to the packaging position; Locating containers or receptacles at the filling position; Supporting containers or receptacles during the filling operation
    • B65B43/54Means for supporting containers or receptacles during the filling operation
    • B65B43/60Means for supporting containers or receptacles during the filling operation rotatable
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65BMACHINES, APPARATUS OR DEVICES FOR, OR METHODS OF, PACKAGING ARTICLES OR MATERIALS; UNPACKING
    • B65B43/00Forming, feeding, opening or setting-up containers or receptacles in association with packaging
    • B65B43/42Feeding or positioning bags, boxes, or cartons in the distended, opened, or set-up state; Feeding preformed rigid containers, e.g. tins, capsules, glass tubes, glasses, to the packaging position; Locating containers or receptacles at the filling position; Supporting containers or receptacles during the filling operation
    • B65B43/50Feeding or positioning bags, boxes, or cartons in the distended, opened, or set-up state; Feeding preformed rigid containers, e.g. tins, capsules, glass tubes, glasses, to the packaging position; Locating containers or receptacles at the filling position; Supporting containers or receptacles during the filling operation using rotary tables or turrets

Definitions

  • This invention relates to an apparatus for continuous packaging a product, in particular to an apparatus for filling pre-fabricated packages with a product.
  • several operations can be performed, such as, for example, picking up empty packages from a supply line, positioning and spacing the empty packages as desired, supplying dosed quantities of product being packaged, filling the packages with the product, closing the filled package, and carrying off the same.
  • further operations may be performed in the packaging apparatus.
  • the present invention provides an apparatus for continuously packaging a product, characte ized by a package supplying wheel mounted for rotation about its axis and including carrying means for picking up and carrying along an at least partially preformed package at its circumference; and a filling wheel mounted for rotation about its axis ,said filling wheel cooperating with said package supplying wheel at its circumference and including carrying means for taking over such package from the package supplying wheel and carrying the same along at its circumference, and further including filling means for filling the package with a product as it is being carried along.
  • all operations on the package including filling and closing it, are effected in an uninterrupted passage of the package through the machine, with the package continuing to move through the machine as the various operations are carried out. Owing to there being no periods of standstill, it is thus possible to achieve a high productio capacity.
  • the pre-formed package can be more or less stiff, for example, it may take the form of a carton.
  • the apparatus according to the invention is excellen ly suitable for handling, at a high capacity, a flexible package that is supplied in flat condition, such as a bag or pouch.
  • additio elements such as, for example, closing elements, as it traverses the machine.
  • means may be provided for performing particular operations on the empty or filled package, such as stretch ing/positioning elements to be inserted in ⁇ -to the package being conveyed, folding or pleating means, and closing means.
  • a further important advantage of the apparatus according to the invention is that it can be extended with one or more further processing wheels cooperating with the package supplying wheel or with the filling wheel, with the uninterrupted movement of the empty and filled package throughout the entire packaging machine being maintained.
  • a product wheel may be provided for cooperation with the filling wheel, which before supplying the product to the filling wheel brings it into a quantity, form or condition suitable for packaging.
  • This product wheel may be arranged to cooperate at its circumference, like the package supplying wheel, with the filling wheel, which travels at the same peripheral velocity.
  • the product wheel is arranged coaxially with the filling wheel, and is moved at the same rotational velocity with it, for example, by the two wheels being fixedly interconnect ⁇ ed.
  • the filling for the package can be introduced into the package either from a place located more centrally in the filling wheel (for example, radially to the wheel in an outward direction), or be shifted iivto the package in an axial direction relative to the wheel.
  • FIG. 1 gives a side-elevational overall view of the apparatus according to the invention, showing, among other parts, a package supplying wheel and a filling wheel;
  • Fig. 2a is a perspective view of a carrier .of the package supplying wheel of Fig. 1, with the moving parts thereof in the starting position;
  • Fig. 2b diagrammatically shows ,in side-elevational view the way in which a pouch lies on the carrier of
  • Fig. 2a; Fig. 3 is a perspective view of the carrier of
  • Fig. 2a with the moving parts thereof in the end position;
  • Figs. 4, 5 and 6 show, in perspective view, a carrier and a filling nozzle of the filling wheel shown in Fig.
  • Fig. 7 is a perspective view of a compression chamber of a product wheel cooperating with the filling wheel
  • Figs. 8-10 are perspective views, showing a portion of an operating wheel for fully folding down the flap of a pouch , in three successive stages as the pouch flap is being folded;
  • Figs. 11-12 are perspective views, showing portions of the operating wheel in two successive stages during the application of a closure tape.
  • Fig. 1 shows a pouch reservoir 51 containing a stack of empty pouches 50, stacked in flat condition, of a type as used for packaging cut tobacco (shag).
  • This pouch of flexible material has 'a rectangular pocket portion which is to be filled with tobacco.
  • the back of the pocket portion is extended and serves as a flap which is folded across the front of the pocket portion after the pocket has been filled.
  • the pocket of the pouch has a rectangular bottom and also rectangular sidewalls which in the empty, flat pouch are folded inwardly or outwardly.
  • a gripper wheel 54 Disposed under the pouche reservoir 51 are two continuously rotating draggers 52, which periodically, one after the other, supply one pouch from reservoir 51 between two moving conveyor belts 53.
  • a gripper wheel 54 Disposed at the end of the conveyor belts is a gripper wheel 54, rotatable about its axis and provided with carrier tables 55, uniformly spaced about its circumference, and each cooperating with a movable clamp 56.
  • Each pouch supplied by conveyor belts 53 is held between a carrier table and a clamp of the gripper wheel, and taken along to a package supply wheel 10, with which the gripper wheel 54 cooperates at its circumference.
  • Supply wheel 10 is mounted for rotation about its axis and rotates along with gripper wheel 54 continuously and at the same circumferential velocity.
  • a carrier 11 Spaced uniformly about the circumference of the supply wheel are carriers 11, in this case eighteen in all.
  • the carriers shown in more detail in Figs. 2a and 3, have at their outward side a plurality of suction orifices 12 that can be connected to a source of vacuum.
  • a pouch conveyed by gripper wheel 54 approaches the circumference of supply wheel 10
  • the pouch is released by clamp 56 and taken over from carrier table 55 of the gripper wheel by the opposite carrier 11 of the supply wheel, and is retained thereon by the suction orifices.
  • Carrier 11 comprises a movable carrier table 15 and a narrower fixed carrier table 14 located in opposition thereto in the middle of a long side.
  • the perforated top thereof is at the same, ' or substantially at the same level as the top of the fixed table 14, as shown in Fig. 2a.
  • Fig. 2b shows the location of pouch 50 in this position of tables 14,15: the pocket portion of the pouch lies on the movable table 15, with the flap side of the pouch facing up, and the flap proper resting on the fixed table 14.
  • the fixed table 15 " is moved slightly downwardly relatively to the fixed table 14, as a result of which the pocket portion of the pouch is opened a little.
  • a pair of stretching fingers 13 mounted on opposite sides of the fixed table 14 are then advanced into the opened pouch pocket down to the bottom of the pocket. Subsequently, the stretching fingers are moved laterally apart up to the pocket sides. During this movement, the folds in the bottom and the sides of the pocket are unfolded into a rectangular shape. Owing to these movements of the stretching fingers 13, not only is the pouch unfolded and stretched, but also possibly shifted somewhat relatively to tables 14,15, as a result of which the pouch comes to lie in the proper position and orientation on the carrier.
  • a pair of folding blocks 16 Disposed on opposite sides of the movable carrier table 15 and the fixed table 14 are a pair of folding blocks 16, which at the sides facing the tables are provided with a resilient layer 17. Blocks 16 are now moved towards the tables 14 and 15, whereby the pouch sides, both the pocket portion and the flap, are clamped between folding blocks 16 and profiled side edges of the stretchin fingers 13. As a result, sharp folds are formed in these side edges.
  • the various movements of the carrier, i.e. the movable table 15, stretching fingers 13 and folding blocks 16 are indicated by arrows in Fig. 2a, and Fig. 3 shows the position of these parts at the end of their movement.
  • the movable parts of the carrier 11 return to the starting positions illustrated in Fig. 2a. It is noted that all these operations on the pouch are carried out while supply wheel 10 rotates at a constant velocity, with the movable parts of the carriers 11 each completing a cycle during one single revolution of the wheel.
  • a filling wheel 20 cooperating with the supply wheel at its circumference and rotating at the same peripheral velocity.
  • the filling wheel is provided at its circumference with eighteen carriers 21.
  • carrier 21 comprises a carrier table 22 with suction orifices, on which lies a pouch 50.
  • the pouches were lying with the flap portion up on the supply wheel, they come to lie with the flap portion down on the carrier table of the filling wheel, that __, with the pocket portion up.
  • a turning element or folding strip 24 and a closing strip 25 are movable towards and away from the carrier table, with the respective heads 28 and 29 of these strips sliding through slots in the carr table.
  • a movable suction bar 23 provided with a suction slit, to which a partial vacuum can be connected.
  • two indenting fingers 26 are movable towards and away from the carrier table and provided with a profiled head 27.
  • a filling nozzle 57 including a bottom plate 58 and a top plate 59 parallel thereto.
  • the bottom plate 58 is fixedly arranged at a level slightly above the upper surface of the carrier table 22 and is fixedly connected on two sides with upright sidewalls 60.
  • the top plate 59 is at one end fixedly connected to an upright slide 61, and both are movable upwardly, with the top plate 59 moving parallel to, and away from, the bottom plate 58 to form a rectangular aperture defined by the two plates 58,59 and sidewalls 60.
  • closing strip 25 and indenting fingers 26 is movable towards and away from the filling nozzle 57.
  • the various possible movements of the parts of the carrier and of the nozzle are indicated by arrows in Fig. 4.
  • the carrier table 22 When the carrier table 22 has taken a pouch from the supply wheel, the condition of carrier 21 and filling nozzle 57 is as shown in Fig. 4, with the opening of the pouch being directed to the filling nozzle.
  • the carrier 21 is then moved towards the filling nozzle, and during a first part of this movement carrier table 22 is shifted to move the flap part of the pouch under the bottom plate 58 of the filling nozzle.
  • the suction bar 23 is also swung over the carrier table carrying the pouch , so that the suction slit of the suction bar comes to rest on the upper edge of the pouch pocket. After subatmospheric pressure has been connected to the suction slit, the suction bar 23 is lifted a little to open the pouch pocket. During further movement of the carrier to the filling nozzle 57, the pouch pocket is shifted over both plates 58,59 until the front sides of these plates reach the bottom of the pouch pocket. After the suction bar 23 has returned to its starting position, the top plate 59 is removed from the bottom plate 58, whereby the filling nozzle is opened and the pouch pocket is tensione over plates 58,59.
  • a weighedquantity of tobacco is shifted by an ejector 31 (Fig. 6) up to the bottom of the pouch.
  • the situation is then as illustrated in Fig. 5.
  • the tobacco is shifted further by the ejector and at the same time the carrier member 21 is returned from the filling nozzle to its starting position, and the now filled pouch moves off plates 58,59.
  • the closing strip 25 is moved upwards, whereby the head 29 slides upwards through the slot in the carrier table 22 to above the surface of carrier table 22.
  • the suction bar 23, now serving as a closure strip is swung away, and the pouch is pinched shut behind the tobacco filling therein between the suction bar 23 and closing strip 25.
  • the indenting fingers 26 are then moved towards the pouch , and the heads 27 form a dent in the sides of the filled pouch a short distance under the closed edge thereof. During this indentation, air can escape from the pouch pocket through the edge which is not yet completely pressed shut at this moment; thereafter the pocket edge is completely pinched shut between closing strip 25 and suction bar 23, and is sealed air-tight by electrically heating the head of the closing strip 25.
  • the folding strip 24 is moved upwardly, whereby the head 28 rises above the surface of the carrier table.
  • the pouch flap is turned up to a position at right angles to the pocket portion between suction bar 23, closing strip 25 and folding strip 24, and the situation as illustrated in Fig. 6 is reached.
  • the closing strip 25, the suction bar 23 and the folding strip 24 are returned to their starting positions.
  • the tobacco shifted into the pouch comes from a product wheel 30 disposed coaxially with, and next to the filling wheel 20 , and has the same rotational velocity as the falling wheel.
  • the roduct wheel contains eighteen identical compression chambers 32 (Fig. 1) spaced uniformly about its circumference and each cooperating with a carrier 21 of the filling wheel. Details of a compression chamber 32 are shown diagrammatically in Fig. 7.
  • the compression chamber comprises a stationary frame 62 which includes a bottom plate 33.
  • the front part 33a of bottom plate 34 constitutes the bottom of a compression space. Resting on bottom plate 33 is ejector 31, already described with reference to Fig. 6.
  • a compression frame 34 At the level of the front bottom plate portion 33a, there is arranged a compression frame 34, of inverted-U shape, which is movable vertically up and down.
  • a wall plate 35 which is stationary relatively to the compression frame and is provided at its lower end with a rectangular outlet 36.
  • the compression chamber further comprises a closure flap 37, which pivots about a shaft 38, and is shown in Fig. 7 in the open position.
  • Ejector 31 can be moved to and fro between bottom plate 33 and flap 37.
  • flap 37 In the closed position of flap 37, after rotation about its shaft 38, flap 37 together with the front of ejector 31 closes frame 32 at the rear.
  • This compression space is then closed, except for aperture 36, which however is also closable at the front of wall plate 35 by means of slide 61 (Fig. 6) of top plate 59.
  • Frame 34 further comprises a pair of T-shaped side compression rams, mounted in the long legs of the compression frame so as to be retractable and extendable in the horizontal direction. In the retracted position (shown in Fig. 7), the front of each ram 39 is flush with the inner wall of the relevant long leg of frame 34.
  • the length of stroke of frame 34 and/or rams 39 is adjustab from the outside, for example, by means of a hand wheel or servomotor.
  • the stroke rate is also controll ble, in particular of the compression frame.
  • a measuring means which passes this data to the servomotor other control means which controls the degree of compression of the product in the compression chambers depending on the thickness of the pouch measured by the measuring means.
  • a magnetic ring 63 Secured on top of frame 62 is a magnetic ring 63, which gives access to a filling space defined by the upright walls of frame 62 and the opened flap 37.
  • the magnetic ring 63 serves as a dragger for picking up and carrying along a transport container which can be retained on the ring by magnetic force.
  • a worm 65 which serves to supply transport containers 64, each filled with a weighed quantity of tobacco.
  • These containers are of cylindrical shape with a closed bottom and an open top.
  • the cylindrical wall of containers 64 rests against worm 65 in the helices thereof, and their bottoms slide over a guide 66.
  • containers 64 are moved to the forward end of the worm in equidistantly spaced relationship and at the same uniform velocity.
  • the arrangement is such that the containe at the forward end of the worm is picked up from guide 66 by the magnetic ring 63 of the compression chamber of the product wheel which is just over this container.
  • frame 34 is moved downwards in a direction towards the centre of the product wheel, whereby the tobacco is compressed further in the same direction.
  • the compression frame is first moved down relatively rapidly, whereafter in a slower movement the tobacco is more strongly compressed. If desired, the compression frame is thereafter moved upwards a few millimeters.
  • the side rams 39 are moved towards each other into the compression chamber, whereby the tobacco is also compressed in a lateral direction. The result is that ultimately the tobacco has been pressed in three directions essentially perpendic to each other.
  • top plate 59, frame 34, side rams 39, ejector 31, and flap 37 are returned to their starting positions as illustrated in Fig. 7. It is noted that all of the above operations take place as the wheel is rotating at a constant speed, namely, each during a portion of a revolution thereof.
  • the empty container 64 still present on the compression chamber is removed during the downcoming movement of the compression chamber and of the product wheel, whereaft the container returns to a weighing machine, where it is re-filled with a weighed quantity for it to be ultimate re-placed on guide 66 for a new cycle.
  • the filling opening may be at the side rather than at the top of frame 62.
  • the magnetic ring 63 is also disposed at the side of frame 62, and the containers on the various compression chambers have a horizontal and mutually parallel position. The tobacco should then be positively discharged from the container into the compression chamber. This construction may be attractive to limit the radial dimensions of the product wheel with the containers placed thereon.
  • the containers are placed at the side of the compression chambers facing the wheel axis, and the tobacco falls from a full container into the compression chamber in a low position of the compression chamber on the product wheel.
  • the filled pouches with a perpendicu- larly folded flap, contained in the filling wheel 20 are transferred from the filling wheel to an operating wheel 40 (Fig.l) rotating along with the filling wheel at the same peripheral velocity, and in which the pouch flap is folded fully against the pocket portion of the pouch and subsequently fixed thereon with a short piece of adhesive tape.
  • the operating wheel 40 comprises eighteen pouch carriers 41 uniformly spaced over its circumference. Trained about rollers outside the operating wheel is an endless compression belt 42, which is in contact with a portion of the circum ⁇ ference of wheel 40, at which point it travels along with the wheel at the same velocity.
  • a closure tape unit 70 Arranged stationarily within operating wheel 40 is a closure tape unit 70, which contains a plurality of supply rolls 71 with webs of closure tape material and a sticking apparatus 72.
  • the entire unit 70 is secured to pivoting arms 73, which are pivotable about a vertical shaft 74 mounted aside of the wheel.
  • the entire closure tape unit 70 can be pivoted to the- outside through the open side of the operating wheel, which renders the unit readily accessible, for example, for placing fresh supply rolls in it.
  • the pouch in recess 44 (Fig. 8) rests partly on an edge 47 at the underside of the carrier table, and for another part on a carrying strip 46 which is movable relatively to the carrier table.
  • a full pouch laid in recess 44 stands slightly proud of the top surface of the carrier table, the pouch is held down against the carrier strip 46 and the lower edge 47 of the carrier table by the compression belt 42, which presses against the carrier table and rotates along with it.
  • the carrier table further comprises a movable folding strip 45 for completing the folding of the flap onto the pouch pocket.
  • a filled pouch with a perpendicularly folded pouch flap is transferred by the carrier table 22 from the filling wheel 20 into recess 44 of the carrier table of the operating wheel 40. This takes place at a position slightly upstream of the point where the compression belt 42 comes to contact the operating wheel, so that the pouch can be freely laid into the carrier table, but immediately thereafter is firmly held by the compressi belt.
  • the pouch flap points in a direction towards the wheel centre.
  • the carrier strip 46 supports the pouch at a position close to the flap. This situation shortly after placing the pouch into the operating wheel is illustrated in Fig. 8.
  • the folding strip 45 is now moved to the pouch and tilted whereby the pouch flap is folded until it makes an acute angle with the pouch pocket (Fig. 9).
  • the movement of the folding strip 45 is now temporarily interrupted, and the carrier strip 46 is removed from under the pouch to an ultimate position under edge 47 of the carrier table. This causes the pouch to rest on the folding strip 45 and the lower edge 47 of the carrier table.
  • the folding strip is now again rotated further until the pouch flap fully contacts the pouch pocket, whereby the position of Fig. 10 is reached.
  • the sticking apparatus 72 comprises a rotating drum formed by a pair of segments 75, each in the form of a half ring, and a slide 76 reciprocatable radially between the two segments 75, which slide is provided on opposite sides with heads 87 and 88.
  • the circumference 77 of the .segments and the end faces 84 and 85 of the slide heads are provided with apertures which are connected to a source of vacuum to retain adhesive tape material on to these parts.
  • Fig. 11 also shows the pouch carrier 51 of Fig. 10, viewed -from a bottom position.
  • a web of adhesive tape 80 is supplied to segments 75, and held thereon by a partial vacuum.
  • This web which is composed of separate sheets of material taken from supply roll 71, is provided with an adhesive on the side away from the segments, except for a narrow marginal strip 81.
  • the cutting wire 79 serves to cut off a piece 82 from the tape 80 at the moment when the forward end of this tape is one of the heads 78 of the slide.
  • adhesive tape 82 with a non-adhesive gripping portion 83 is held on the end face 84 of head 87 by partial vacuum and taken along.
  • head 87 is also moved radially outwardly between the segments 75. In the outermost position of head 87, the latter presses the adhesive tape in the middle of the pouch over and into contact with the pouch flap and the pouch pocket, and sticks it thereto.
  • holes for the passage of the slide head are provided in folding strip 45 and carrier table edge 47.
  • Fig. 12 shows the situation at the moment when the adhesive tape is being pressed against the pouch by the slide head 87.
  • the opposite slide head 88 is then in a position in which, at this moment, the upper surface is flush with the circumferential path of segments 75.
  • the leading end of the web of adhesive tape 80 thus lies flat against the outer circumference of the segments 75 and slide head 88.
  • the supply velocity of the adhesive tape 80 is considerably lower than the circumferential velocity "f the segments and the slide, as a result of which these elements slide under the tape.
  • the forward displacement of the adhesive tape is, all in all, only about equal to twice the width of the piece of tape 82 to be severed.
  • cutting wire 79 moves downwards through tape 80 into a slot 86 formed in the slide head.
  • a piece of tape 82 is cut off, whereby, owing to a loop reduction in the supply of the tape the latter, at the moment of cutting, has a velocity equal to that of the segments at the circumference Subsequently, the situation is repeated as described with reference to Fig. 11.
  • a take-out wheel 90 provided along its circumference with ten take-out members 91, each provided with suction heads 92 connected to a source of vacuum.
  • a filled and closed pouch is taken from operating wheel 40 by a take-out member 91 passing opposite the pouch at the moment when the pouch comes clear of compression belt 42.
  • the take-out member turns the pouch 180° about its longitudinal axis, the vacuum is released in the take-out member, and the pouch is discharged onto a belt or chain conveyor travelling under the take-out wheel.
  • the apparatus according to the invention is excellently suitable for being extended v ancillary operating wheels, for example, an additional wheel for applying an inner seal along the top of the pocket portion of the pouch.
  • the apparatus can be so modified, without departing from the scope of the invention, that the pouch . is held at the circumference of the wheels in an upright position.

Abstract

A package supplying wheel (10) is mounted for rotation about its axis and includes carrying means for picking up and carrying along an at least partially pre-formed package at its circumference. A filling wheel (20), mounted for rotation about its axis, cooperates with the package supplying wheel at its circumference and includes carrying means for taking over a package from the package supplying wheel and carrying the same along at its circumference. Filling means are provided for filling the package with a product as it is being carried along. The machine is designed to avoid the need of intermittent movement as a product is being handled or operated upon during its passage through the machine.

Description

Title: Apparatus for continuously packaging a product.
This invention relates to an apparatus for continuous packaging a product, in particular to an apparatus for filling pre-fabricated packages with a product. In such an apparatus, several operations can be performed, such as, for example, picking up empty packages from a supply line, positioning and spacing the empty packages as desired, supplying dosed quantities of product being packaged, filling the packages with the product, closing the filled package, and carrying off the same. Depending on the nature of the package and the product being package or on other requirements, further operations may be performed in the packaging apparatus.
Many packaging machines have been designed for continuously producing filled packages in large series in a manner in which the required movements of the empty and/or filled package in the machine are carried out intermittently. This means that, as it is being operated upon, the package is stationary in the machine, is then moved within the machine to a next operating station for undergoing a next operation, again while it stands still, etc. The many intermittent movements and treatments of the package limit the production speed of the machine.
There has also been proposed an apparatus for packagi products in a non-intermittent manner. In it, the product is conveyed in the form of an object or article on a continuously rotating drum, and then, on a second drum, wrapped with packaging material. The packaging material is supplied as an endless web, and this machine is accord¬ ingly not arranged for handling and filling pre-fabricated packages, nor is it designed for packaging some bulk products which do not permit being packaged by being wrapped with a sheet of packaging material in a commercial ly acceptable manner, such as, for example, compressed cut tobacco. It is accordingly an object of the present invention to provide an apparatus that is suitable for packaging continuously and at a high rate, both objects or articles and bulk material in pre-fabricated packages . For this purpose the present invention provides an apparatus for continuously packaging a product, characte ized by a package supplying wheel mounted for rotation about its axis and including carrying means for picking up and carrying along an at least partially preformed package at its circumference; and a filling wheel mounted for rotation about its axis ,said filling wheel cooperating with said package supplying wheel at its circumference and including carrying means for taking over such package from the package supplying wheel and carrying the same along at its circumference, and further including filling means for filling the package with a product as it is being carried along.
In the apparatus according to the invention, all operations on the package, including filling and closing it, are effected in an uninterrupted passage of the package through the machine, with the package continuing to move through the machine as the various operations are carried out. Owing to there being no periods of standstill, it is thus possible to achieve a high productio capacity.
Owing to the use of pre-fabricated packages in the machine, delaying factors during packaging, as arise in packaging machines in which the packages are first made in these machines themselves, are also avoided. In addition, the fact that the production of empty packages is independent of that of the filled packages greatly increases flexibility in operation and workshop layout.
The pre-formed package can be more or less stiff, for example, it may take the form of a carton. On the other hand, and unlike packaging machines of the prior art, the apparatus according to the invention is excellen ly suitable for handling, at a high capacity, a flexible package that is supplied in flat condition, such as a bag or pouch. Naturally, it is not necessary in all cases for the pre-formed package to be in ready form immediately when introduced into the apparatus: if necessa the package itself can be changed or provided with additio elements, such as, for example, closing elements, as it traverses the machine. In the package supplying wheel and/or the filling wheel, means may be provided for performing particular operations on the empty or filled package, such as stretch ing/positioning elements to be inserted in^-to the package being conveyed, folding or pleating means, and closing means.
A further important advantage of the apparatus according to the invention is that it can be extended with one or more further processing wheels cooperating with the package supplying wheel or with the filling wheel, with the uninterrupted movement of the empty and filled package throughout the entire packaging machine being maintained. Thus additionally a product wheel may be provided for cooperation with the filling wheel, which before supplying the product to the filling wheel brings it into a quantity, form or condition suitable for packaging. This product wheel may be arranged to cooperate at its circumference, like the package supplying wheel, with the filling wheel, which travels at the same peripheral velocity. Preferably, however, the product wheel is arranged coaxially with the filling wheel, and is moved at the same rotational velocity with it, for example, by the two wheels being fixedly interconnect¬ ed. In this construction, the filling for the package can be introduced into the package either from a place located more centrally in the filling wheel (for example, radially to the wheel in an outward direction), or be shifted iivto the package in an axial direction relative to the wheel.
Another processing wheel cooperating with the filling wheel can serve for carrying out operations on the filled package before or after it has been closed". This processing wheel can be arranged so that the operations on the package are carried out from the outside of the wheel, or alternatively, from a place located closer to the wheel axis. Although the invention has many uses, it will be described hereinafter, by way of example, with particular reference to an apparatus for packaging cut tobacco in pouches, and with reference to the accompanying diagramm drawings. In said drawings, Fig. 1 gives a side-elevational overall view of the apparatus according to the invention, showing, among other parts, a package supplying wheel and a filling wheel;
Fig. 2a is a perspective view of a carrier .of the package supplying wheel of Fig. 1, with the moving parts thereof in the starting position;
Fig. 2b diagrammatically shows ,in side-elevational view the way in which a pouch lies on the carrier of
Fig. 2a; Fig. 3 is a perspective view of the carrier of
Fig. 2a with the moving parts thereof in the end position; Figs. 4, 5 and 6 show, in perspective view, a carrier and a filling nozzle of the filling wheel shown in Fig.
1, with the moving parts thereof, respectively, in the starting position, in an intermediate position as a pouch is being filled, and in a further position as a flap of the pouch is being folded to a perpendicular position relative to the body of the pouch ;
Fig. 7 is a perspective view of a compression chamber of a product wheel cooperating with the filling wheel;
Figs. 8-10 are perspective views, showing a portion of an operating wheel for fully folding down the flap of a pouch , in three successive stages as the pouch flap is being folded; and
Figs. 11-12 are perspective views, showing portions of the operating wheel in two successive stages during the application of a closure tape.
Referring to the drawings, Fig. 1 shows a pouch reservoir 51 containing a stack of empty pouches 50, stacked in flat condition, of a type as used for packaging cut tobacco (shag). This pouch of flexible material has 'a rectangular pocket portion which is to be filled with tobacco. The back of the pocket portion is extended and serves as a flap which is folded across the front of the pocket portion after the pocket has been filled. The pocket of the pouch has a rectangular bottom and also rectangular sidewalls which in the empty, flat pouch are folded inwardly or outwardly.
Disposed under the pouche reservoir 51 are two continuously rotating draggers 52, which periodically, one after the other, supply one pouch from reservoir 51 between two moving conveyor belts 53. Disposed at the end of the conveyor belts is a gripper wheel 54, rotatable about its axis and provided with carrier tables 55, uniformly spaced about its circumference, and each cooperating with a movable clamp 56. Each pouch supplied by conveyor belts 53 is held between a carrier table and a clamp of the gripper wheel, and taken along to a package supply wheel 10, with which the gripper wheel 54 cooperates at its circumference. Supply wheel 10 is mounted for rotation about its axis and rotates along with gripper wheel 54 continuously and at the same circumferential velocity. Spaced uniformly about the circumference of the supply wheel are carriers 11, in this case eighteen in all. The carriers, shown in more detail in Figs. 2a and 3, have at their outward side a plurality of suction orifices 12 that can be connected to a source of vacuum. When a pouch conveyed by gripper wheel 54 approaches the circumference of supply wheel 10, the pouch is released by clamp 56 and taken over from carrier table 55 of the gripper wheel by the opposite carrier 11 of the supply wheel, and is retained thereon by the suction orifices.
Carrier 11 comprises a movable carrier table 15 and a narrower fixed carrier table 14 located in opposition thereto in the middle of a long side. In the starting position of the movable table 15, the perforated top thereof is at the same, 'or substantially at the same level as the top of the fixed table 14, as shown in Fig. 2a. Fig. 2b shows the location of pouch 50 in this position of tables 14,15: the pocket portion of the pouch lies on the movable table 15, with the flap side of the pouch facing up, and the flap proper resting on the fixed table 14. During the further rotation of the supply wheel, the fixed table 15" is moved slightly downwardly relatively to the fixed table 14, as a result of which the pocket portion of the pouch is opened a little. A pair of stretching fingers 13 mounted on opposite sides of the fixed table 14 are then advanced into the opened pouch pocket down to the bottom of the pocket. Subsequently, the stretching fingers are moved laterally apart up to the pocket sides. During this movement, the folds in the bottom and the sides of the pocket are unfolded into a rectangular shape. Owing to these movements of the stretching fingers 13, not only is the pouch unfolded and stretched, but also possibly shifted somewhat relatively to tables 14,15, as a result of which the pouch comes to lie in the proper position and orientation on the carrier. This is of importance in order that subsequent operations on the pouche may be carried out accurately and flawlessly, in particular on the subsequent operating wheels.* Disposed on opposite sides of the movable carrier table 15 and the fixed table 14 are a pair of folding blocks 16, which at the sides facing the tables are provided with a resilient layer 17. Blocks 16 are now moved towards the tables 14 and 15, whereby the pouch sides, both the pocket portion and the flap, are clamped between folding blocks 16 and profiled side edges of the stretchin fingers 13. As a result, sharp folds are formed in these side edges. The various movements of the carrier, i.e. the movable table 15, stretching fingers 13 and folding blocks 16 are indicated by arrows in Fig. 2a, and Fig. 3 shows the position of these parts at the end of their movement. After carrying out the described operations on the pouch , the movable parts of the carrier 11 return to the starting positions illustrated in Fig. 2a. It is noted that all these operations on the pouch are carried out while supply wheel 10 rotates at a constant velocity, with the movable parts of the carriers 11 each completing a cycle during one single revolution of the wheel. In addition to supply wheel 10 and coaxially therewit there is arranged a filling wheel 20 cooperating with the supply wheel at its circumference and rotating at the same peripheral velocity. The filling wheel, too, is provided at its circumference with eighteen carriers 21. When a pouch on carrier 11 of the supply wheel approaches the filling wheel, the partial vacuum on the suction orifices in this carrier 11 is released, and at the same time a partial vacuum is applied to suction orifices in the carrier 21 of the filling wheel 20, rotating in opposition to the pouch , whereby the pouch is now taken along by the latter carrier.
The construction of the carrier 21 of the filling wheel is more clearly shown in Figs. 4, 5 and 6. In Fig. 4, carrier 21 comprises a carrier table 22 with suction orifices, on which lies a pouch 50. As the pouches were lying with the flap portion up on the supply wheel, they come to lie with the flap portion down on the carrier table of the filling wheel, that __, with the pocket portion up.
Disposed under carrier table 22, in juxtaposition to each other, are a turning element or folding strip 24 and a closing strip 25, both movable towards and away from the carrier table, with the respective heads 28 and 29 of these strips sliding through slots in the carr table. At the back of the carrier table is a movable suction bar 23 provided with a suction slit, to which a partial vacuum can be connected. Provided on opposite sides of the carrier table are two indenting fingers 26 movable towards and away from the carrier table and provided with a profiled head 27. Provided at the front of the carrier table is a filling nozzle 57 including a bottom plate 58 and a top plate 59 parallel thereto. The bottom plate 58 is fixedly arranged at a level slightly above the upper surface of the carrier table 22 and is fixedly connected on two sides with upright sidewalls 60. The top plate 59 is at one end fixedly connected to an upright slide 61, and both are movable upwardly, with the top plate 59 moving parallel to, and away from, the bottom plate 58 to form a rectangular aperture defined by the two plates 58,59 and sidewalls 60. The carrier table 22, together with suction bar 23, folding strip
24, closing strip 25 and indenting fingers 26, is movable towards and away from the filling nozzle 57. The various possible movements of the parts of the carrier and of the nozzle are indicated by arrows in Fig. 4. When the carrier table 22 has taken a pouch from the supply wheel, the condition of carrier 21 and filling nozzle 57 is as shown in Fig. 4, with the opening of the pouch being directed to the filling nozzle. The carrier 21 is then moved towards the filling nozzle, and during a first part of this movement carrier table 22 is shifted to move the flap part of the pouch under the bottom plate 58 of the filling nozzle. During this movement, the suction bar 23 is also swung over the carrier table carrying the pouch , so that the suction slit of the suction bar comes to rest on the upper edge of the pouch pocket. After subatmospheric pressure has been connected to the suction slit, the suction bar 23 is lifted a little to open the pouch pocket. During further movement of the carrier to the filling nozzle 57, the pouch pocket is shifted over both plates 58,59 until the front sides of these plates reach the bottom of the pouch pocket. After the suction bar 23 has returned to its starting position, the top plate 59 is removed from the bottom plate 58, whereby the filling nozzle is opened and the pouch pocket is tensione over plates 58,59. Through the resulting rectangular filling opening-, a weighedquantity of tobacco is shifted by an ejector 31 (Fig. 6) up to the bottom of the pouch. The situation is then as illustrated in Fig. 5. Subsequent the tobacco is shifted further by the ejector and at the same time the carrier member 21 is returned from the filling nozzle to its starting position, and the now filled pouch moves off plates 58,59. The closing strip 25 is moved upwards, whereby the head 29 slides upwards through the slot in the carrier table 22 to above the surface of carrier table 22. At the same time, the suction bar 23, now serving as a closure strip, is swung away, and the pouch is pinched shut behind the tobacco filling therein between the suction bar 23 and closing strip 25. The indenting fingers 26 are then moved towards the pouch , and the heads 27 form a dent in the sides of the filled pouch a short distance under the closed edge thereof. During this indentation, air can escape from the pouch pocket through the edge which is not yet completely pressed shut at this moment; thereafter the pocket edge is completely pinched shut between closing strip 25 and suction bar 23, and is sealed air-tight by electrically heating the head of the closing strip 25.
Before the closing strip 25 and suction bar 23 return to their starting positions, the folding strip 24 is moved upwardly, whereby the head 28 rises above the surface of the carrier table. As a result the pouch flap is turned up to a position at right angles to the pocket portion between suction bar 23, closing strip 25 and folding strip 24, and the situation as illustrated in Fig. 6 is reached. Before the pouch is now transferred from the filling wheel 20 to an operating wheel 40 to be described hereinafter, the closing strip 25, the suction bar 23 and the folding strip 24 are returned to their starting positions. The tobacco shifted into the pouch comes from a product wheel 30 disposed coaxially with, and next to the filling wheel 20 , and has the same rotational velocity as the falling wheel. The roduct wheel contains eighteen identical compression chambers 32 (Fig. 1) spaced uniformly about its circumference and each cooperating with a carrier 21 of the filling wheel. Details of a compression chamber 32 are shown diagrammatically in Fig. 7.
The compression chamber comprises a stationary frame 62 which includes a bottom plate 33. The front part 33a of bottom plate 34 constitutes the bottom of a compression space. Resting on bottom plate 33 is ejector 31, already described with reference to Fig. 6. At the level of the front bottom plate portion 33a, there is arranged a compression frame 34, of inverted-U shape, which is movable vertically up and down. Provided at the front of the compression frame 34 is a wall plate 35, which is stationary relatively to the compression frame and is provided at its lower end with a rectangular outlet 36. During the vertical movement of the compression frame 34, it slides at the front past wall plate 35, with the insides of the long legs of the U-shape along the sides of bottom plate 33, and at the rear along the two upright walls of frame 62. (For clarity, the left-hand sidewall of frame 62 has been omitted in Fig. 7).
The compression chamber further comprises a closure flap 37, which pivots about a shaft 38, and is shown in Fig. 7 in the open position. Ejector 31 can be moved to and fro between bottom plate 33 and flap 37. In the closed position of flap 37, after rotation about its shaft 38, flap 37 together with the front of ejector 31 closes frame 32 at the rear. In this way the actual compression chamber or compression space is formed, which is defined by the inner walls of frame 34 and wall plate 35, the front part 33a of bottom plate 33, the front of ejector 31, and flap 37. This compression space is then closed, except for aperture 36, which however is also closable at the front of wall plate 35 by means of slide 61 (Fig. 6) of top plate 59. Frame 34 further comprises a pair of T-shaped side compression rams, mounted in the long legs of the compression frame so as to be retractable and extendable in the horizontal direction. In the retracted position (shown in Fig. 7), the front of each ram 39 is flush with the inner wall of the relevant long leg of frame 34. Preferably, the length of stroke of frame 34 and/or rams 39 is adjustab from the outside, for example, by means of a hand wheel or servomotor. Preferably, the stroke rate is also controll ble, in particular of the compression frame. It is possible to measure the thickness of the ultimately produced filled pouch at one or more places, using a measuring means which passes this data to the servomotor other control means which controls the degree of compression of the product in the compression chambers depending on the thickness of the pouch measured by the measuring means. Secured on top of frame 62 is a magnetic ring 63, which gives access to a filling space defined by the upright walls of frame 62 and the opened flap 37. The magnetic ring 63 serves as a dragger for picking up and carrying along a transport container which can be retained on the ring by magnetic force.
As shown in Fig. 1, disposed under product wheel 30 is a worm 65, which serves to supply transport containers 64, each filled with a weighed quantity of tobacco. These containers are of cylindrical shape with a closed bottom and an open top. The cylindrical wall of containers 64 rests against worm 65 in the helices thereof, and their bottoms slide over a guide 66. As the worm rotates, containers 64 are moved to the forward end of the worm in equidistantly spaced relationship and at the same uniform velocity. The arrangement is such that the containe at the forward end of the worm is picked up from guide 66 by the magnetic ring 63 of the compression chamber of the product wheel which is just over this container. The rotational speeds of worm 65 and product wheel 30 are attuned to each other so that each next container advanced by the worm is taken up by the next compression chamber of the product wheel. A container conveyed by the product wheel rotates with the wheel upwardly, whereby the container is reversed, i.e., it comes to be with the open end down. The compression chamber 32 is then in a situation as illustrated in Fig. 7, in which flap 37 is opened and the opening 36 at the front of wall plate 35 is closed by the slide 61 of the top plate 59 of the filling nozzle. The tobacco falls from the container into the open compression space, whereafter the flap 37 is closed. As the flap is closed, the tobacco is already compressed somewhat, mainly in the forward direction against the rear wall of plate 35. The tobacco is now fully confined within the compression chamber.
Subsequently, frame 34 is moved downwards in a direction towards the centre of the product wheel, whereby the tobacco is compressed further in the same direction.
Preferably, the compression frame is first moved down relatively rapidly, whereafter in a slower movement the tobacco is more strongly compressed. If desired, the compression frame is thereafter moved upwards a few millimeters. When the compression frame occupies this deepest or nearly deepest position, the side rams 39 are moved towards each other into the compression chamber, whereby the tobacco is also compressed in a lateral direction. The result is that ultimately the tobacco has been pressed in three directions essentially perpendic to each other.
At this moment the opening 36 at the outside of the plate is opened by lifting top plate 59 with slide 61 to a position as shown in Fig. 6. Thereafter, the ejector 31 is moved forwardly, whereby the compressed tobacco is shifted from the compression chamber through opening 36 between the top and bottom plates 58,59 of the filling nozzle, and then into a tobacco pouch as described hereinbefore with reference to Fig. 6.
Finally, top plate 59, frame 34, side rams 39, ejector 31, and flap 37 are returned to their starting positions as illustrated in Fig. 7. It is noted that all of the above operations take place as the wheel is rotating at a constant speed, namely, each during a portion of a revolution thereof. The empty container 64 still present on the compression chamber is removed during the downcoming movement of the compression chamber and of the product wheel, whereaft the container returns to a weighing machine, where it is re-filled with a weighed quantity for it to be ultimate re-placed on guide 66 for a new cycle.
Forms of the compression chamber other than that shown are possible. For example, the filling opening may be at the side rather than at the top of frame 62. In that case, naturally, the magnetic ring 63 is also disposed at the side of frame 62, and the containers on the various compression chambers have a horizontal and mutually parallel position. The tobacco should then be positively discharged from the container into the compression chamber. This construction may be attractive to limit the radial dimensions of the product wheel with the containers placed thereon.
In another possible embodiment, the containers are placed at the side of the compression chambers facing the wheel axis, and the tobacco falls from a full container into the compression chamber in a low position of the compression chamber on the product wheel.
Returning now to the filled pouches with a perpendicu- larly folded flap, contained in the filling wheel 20, these pouches are transferred from the filling wheel to an operating wheel 40 (Fig.l) rotating along with the filling wheel at the same peripheral velocity, and in which the pouch flap is folded fully against the pocket portion of the pouch and subsequently fixed thereon with a short piece of adhesive tape. The operating wheel 40 comprises eighteen pouch carriers 41 uniformly spaced over its circumference. Trained about rollers outside the operating wheel is an endless compression belt 42, which is in contact with a portion of the circum¬ ference of wheel 40, at which point it travels along with the wheel at the same velocity.
Arranged stationarily within operating wheel 40 is a closure tape unit 70, which contains a plurality of supply rolls 71 with webs of closure tape material and a sticking apparatus 72. The entire unit 70 is secured to pivoting arms 73, which are pivotable about a vertical shaft 74 mounted aside of the wheel. As a result, the entire closure tape unit 70, can be pivoted to the- outside through the open side of the operating wheel, which renders the unit readily accessible, for example, for placing fresh supply rolls in it.
The pouch in recess 44 (Fig. 8) rests partly on an edge 47 at the underside of the carrier table, and for another part on a carrying strip 46 which is movable relatively to the carrier table. As a full pouch laid in recess 44 stands slightly proud of the top surface of the carrier table, the pouch is held down against the carrier strip 46 and the lower edge 47 of the carrier table by the compression belt 42, which presses against the carrier table and rotates along with it. The carrier table further comprises a movable folding strip 45 for completing the folding of the flap onto the pouch pocket.
A filled pouch with a perpendicularly folded pouch flap is transferred by the carrier table 22 from the filling wheel 20 into recess 44 of the carrier table of the operating wheel 40. This takes place at a position slightly upstream of the point where the compression belt 42 comes to contact the operating wheel, so that the pouch can be freely laid into the carrier table, but immediately thereafter is firmly held by the compressi belt. As the pouch is being placed on the operating wheel, the pouch flap points in a direction towards the wheel centre. The carrier strip 46 supports the pouch at a position close to the flap. This situation shortly after placing the pouch into the operating wheel is illustrated in Fig. 8.
The folding strip 45 is now moved to the pouch and tilted whereby the pouch flap is folded until it makes an acute angle with the pouch pocket (Fig. 9). The movement of the folding strip 45 is now temporarily interrupted, and the carrier strip 46 is removed from under the pouch to an ultimate position under edge 47 of the carrier table. This causes the pouch to rest on the folding strip 45 and the lower edge 47 of the carrier table. The folding strip is now again rotated further until the pouch flap fully contacts the pouch pocket, whereby the position of Fig. 10 is reached.
As the pouch rotates further along on the operating wheel, while being held by the compression belt 42, the pouch flap is taped to the pouch pocket by the sticking apparatus 72 of" the closure tape unit 70. As shown in Fig. 11, the sticking apparatus 72 comprises a rotating drum formed by a pair of segments 75, each in the form of a half ring, and a slide 76 reciprocatable radially between the two segments 75, which slide is provided on opposite sides with heads 87 and 88. The circumference 77 of the .segments and the end faces 84 and 85 of the slide heads are provided with apertures which are connected to a source of vacuum to retain adhesive tape material on to these parts. Dispose aside of the segments and the slide is a cutting wire
79, gripped between two grips and arranged to be electrical heated. The wire makes a circular movement towards and away from the segments. Fig. 11 also shows the pouch carrier 51 of Fig. 10, viewed -from a bottom position. A web of adhesive tape 80 is supplied to segments 75, and held thereon by a partial vacuum. This web, which is composed of separate sheets of material taken from supply roll 71, is provided with an adhesive on the side away from the segments, except for a narrow marginal strip 81. The cutting wire 79 serves to cut off a piece 82 from the tape 80 at the moment when the forward end of this tape is one of the heads 78 of the slide. In Fig. 11, adhesive tape 82 with a non-adhesive gripping portion 83 is held on the end face 84 of head 87 by partial vacuum and taken along. During this rotating movement of the slide, head 87 is also moved radially outwardly between the segments 75. In the outermost position of head 87, the latter presses the adhesive tape in the middle of the pouch over and into contact with the pouch flap and the pouch pocket, and sticks it thereto. To enable the slide head to stick the adhesive tape to the pouch , holes for the passage of the slide head are provided in folding strip 45 and carrier table edge 47.
Fig. 12 shows the situation at the moment when the adhesive tape is being pressed against the pouch by the slide head 87. The opposite slide head 88 is then in a position in which, at this moment, the upper surface is flush with the circumferential path of segments 75. The leading end of the web of adhesive tape 80 thus lies flat against the outer circumference of the segments 75 and slide head 88.
The supply velocity of the adhesive tape 80 is considerably lower than the circumferential velocity "f the segments and the slide, as a result of which these elements slide under the tape. In each complete revolution of the segments, the forward displacement of the adhesive tape is, all in all, only about equal to twice the width of the piece of tape 82 to be severed. At the moment when the slide head 88 has come under the leading end of the adhesive tape, cutting wire 79 moves downwards through tape 80 into a slot 86 formed in the slide head. Thus a piece of tape 82 is cut off, whereby, owing to a loop reduction in the supply of the tape the latter, at the moment of cutting, has a velocity equal to that of the segments at the circumference Subsequently, the situation is repeated as described with reference to Fig. 11.
Next to, and rotating along with, operating wheel 40 is a take-out wheel 90, provided along its circumference with ten take-out members 91, each provided with suction heads 92 connected to a source of vacuum. A filled and closed pouch is taken from operating wheel 40 by a take-out member 91 passing opposite the pouch at the moment when the pouch comes clear of compression belt 42. The take-out member turns the pouch 180° about its longitudinal axis, the vacuum is released in the take-out member, and the pouch is discharged onto a belt or chain conveyor travelling under the take-out wheel.
It will be clear that, in the above example, the carriers are in fact combined carrying and operating means.
As stated before, the apparatus according to the invention is excellently suitable for being extended v ancillary operating wheels, for example, an additional wheel for applying an inner seal along the top of the pocket portion of the pouch.
Although, in the example described, the pouch- is situated in a horizontal position at the circumference of the wheels concerned, the apparatus can be so modified, without departing from the scope of the invention, that the pouch . is held at the circumference of the wheels in an upright position.

Claims

A
1. Apparatus for continuously packaging a product, characterized by a package supplying wheel mounted for rotation about its axis and including carrying means for picking up and carrying along an at least partially pre-formed package at its circumference; and a filling wheel mounted for rotation about its axis, said filling wheel cooperating with said package supplying wheel at its circumference and including carrying means for taking over such package from the package supplying wheel and carrying the same along at its circumference, and further including filling means for filling the package with a product as it is being carried along.
2. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the carrying means of the supply wheel include a portion that is movable relatively to the remaining portion for at least partially opening the package carried by the carrying means .
3. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 or 2, characterize in that the supply wheel is provided adjacent each carryin means with stretching elements movable towards and away from each other in the package on the carrying means for bringing the package iivto a desired position relative to the carrying means.
4. Apparatus as claimed in claim 3, characterized in that the supply wheel further comprises folding elements cooperating with said stretching elements for folding a portion of the package located between a stretching and a folding element.
5. Apparatus as claimed in any of claims 1 to 4 , characterized in that the filling means comprise a filling nozzle for filling the package to be shifted about the filling nozzle.
6. Apparatus as claimed in claim 5, characterized in that the filling nozzle comprises filling elements movable away from each other for pulling the package shifted about the filling elements into a taut condition.
7. Apparatus as claimed in any of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the filling wheel comprises closing means for closing the filled package.
8. Apparatus as claimed in any of claims 1 to 7, characterized in that the filling wheel comprises indenting fingers for folding portions of the formed package inwardly.
9. Apparatus as claimed in any of claims 1 to 8, characterized in that the filling wheel comprises a turning element for. at least partially folding a closure flap of the filled and closed package.
10. Apparatus as claimed in any of the preceding claims, characterized in that the apparatus further comprises a product wheel rotatable about its axis and including compression chambers for receiving the product in units to be packaged and compressing the same, and discharge means for removing the compressed product from the compression chambers to the filling wheel.
11. Apparatus as claimed in claim 10, characterized in that the compression chambers at the circumference of the product wheel are each provided with dragging means for piσking-up and carrying along a transport container filled with product, supplied to the product wheel.
12. Apparatus as claimed in claim 11, characterized by a worm disposed in the vicinity of the product wheel for the transportation of the containers in equidistantly spaced relationship and at the same velocity in the helices of the worm to the product wheel.
13. Apparatus as claimed in any of claims 10 to
12, characterized in that the compression chambers include one or more movable means for opening and closing the compression chambers.
14. Apparatus as claimed in any of claims 10 to
13, characterized in that the compression chambers include a reciprocating compression member for compressing the product within the compression chamber.
15. Apparatus as claimed in claim 14, characterized in that the compression chambers include a second compress member for compressing the product within the compression chamber in a direction perpendicular to the direction in which the product is first compressed.
16. Apparatus as claimed in claim 14 or 15, character ized in that one or more of the compression members is or are coupled to an adjusting mechanism for adjusting the length of stroke of the compression member.
17. Apparatus as claimed in claim 16, characterized in that the adjusting mechanism includes control means for controlling different stroke velocities of the com- pression member over different portions of the length of stroke thereof.
18. Apparatus as claimed in claim 10, characterized in that said discharge means include an injector for removing the compressed product from the compression chamber.
19. Apparatus as claimed in any of claim 10 to
18, characterized in that the product wheel is disposed coaxially with the filling wheel.
20. Apparatus as claimed in any of the preceding claims, characterized in that the apparatus further comprises an operating wheel rotatable about its axis and cooperating at its circumference with the filling wheel for taking over the filled package from the filling wheel and performing operations thereon as it is carried along by the operating wheel.
21. Apparatus as claimed in claim 20, characterized by an endless compression belt disposed in the vicinity of the operating wheel for holding the package between the travelling compression belt and the rotating operating wheel over a portion of the circumference of this wheel.
22. Apparatus as claimed in claim 20 or 21, character ized in that the operating wheel comprises a folding member for pressing a closing flap of the package against the filled package.
23. Apparatus as claimed in claim 22, characterized by a taping apparatus disposed stationarily within the circumference of the operating wheel for applying adhesive tape to the package and the closure flap thereof at the side of the package facing the wheel axis.
24. Apparatus as claimed in claim 23, characterized in that the taping apparatus is secured to a pivoting arm disposed outside the operating wheel for pivoting the taping apparatus into or out of the operating wheel.
25. Apparatus as claimed in any of claims 20 to
24, characterized in that the apparatus further comprises a take-out wheel mounted for rotation about its axis and cooperating with the operating wheel at its circum¬ ference, said take-out wheel comprising means .for taking over the package from the operating wheel and depositing the same on to a belt or chain conveyor.
*****
PCT/NL1987/000022 1986-09-25 1987-09-24 Apparatus for continuously packaging a product WO1988002335A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AT87906110T ATE64907T1 (en) 1986-09-25 1987-09-24 APPARATUS FOR CONTINUOUS PACKAGING OF A PRODUCT.
DE8787906110T DE3771209D1 (en) 1986-09-25 1987-09-24 APPARATUS FOR CONTINUOUSLY PACKAGING A PRODUCT.

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
NL8602426A NL8602426A (en) 1986-09-25 1986-09-25 DEVICE FOR THE CONTINUOUS PACKING OF A PRODUCT.
NL8602426 1986-09-25

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1988002335A1 true WO1988002335A1 (en) 1988-04-07

Family

ID=19848595

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/NL1987/000022 WO1988002335A1 (en) 1986-09-25 1987-09-24 Apparatus for continuously packaging a product

Country Status (3)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0283493B1 (en)
NL (1) NL8602426A (en)
WO (1) WO1988002335A1 (en)

Citations (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB320116A (en) * 1928-07-06 1929-10-07 Claud Carew Gibson A method and apparatus for packing materials
CH252037A (en) * 1946-02-01 1947-11-30 Schweiz Ind Ges Process and fully automatic system for the production of filled and closed packages.
GB652405A (en) * 1938-11-04 1951-04-25 Cons Packaging Machinery Corp Improvements in or relating to a machine for opening and squaring the bottom of a bag
GB772960A (en) * 1954-06-22 1957-04-17 Rose Brothers Ltd Improvements in the packaging of articles in pre-formed bags
GB817808A (en) * 1956-02-11 1959-08-06 Wilheim Quester Improvements in or relating to a method for automatically packaging fibrous material,for example, tobacco
US3382974A (en) * 1966-02-11 1968-05-14 Barry Wehmiller Co Rotary pocketed wheel conveyor apparatus
US3726748A (en) * 1971-06-17 1973-04-10 Koehring Co Trapped cam assembly
FR2228666A1 (en) * 1973-05-07 1974-12-06 Serlachius Oy
US4108221A (en) * 1976-08-06 1978-08-22 Gerhart Engineering & Machine Co. Container filling machine
NL7903533A (en) * 1978-05-06 1979-11-08 Meyer Alfons METHOD AND DEVICE FOR AUTOMATICALLY FILLING OF BAGS IN A FILLING STATION.
FR2493805A1 (en) * 1980-11-07 1982-05-14 Thimon Ets Folding feed for container blanks - has powered rotary conveyor with gripping jaws to pass containers to working stations
GB2130547A (en) * 1982-11-24 1984-06-06 T W Forages Limited Packaging fodder
FR2550972A1 (en) * 1983-08-24 1985-03-01 Amada Co Ltd

Patent Citations (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB320116A (en) * 1928-07-06 1929-10-07 Claud Carew Gibson A method and apparatus for packing materials
GB652405A (en) * 1938-11-04 1951-04-25 Cons Packaging Machinery Corp Improvements in or relating to a machine for opening and squaring the bottom of a bag
CH252037A (en) * 1946-02-01 1947-11-30 Schweiz Ind Ges Process and fully automatic system for the production of filled and closed packages.
GB772960A (en) * 1954-06-22 1957-04-17 Rose Brothers Ltd Improvements in the packaging of articles in pre-formed bags
GB817808A (en) * 1956-02-11 1959-08-06 Wilheim Quester Improvements in or relating to a method for automatically packaging fibrous material,for example, tobacco
US3382974A (en) * 1966-02-11 1968-05-14 Barry Wehmiller Co Rotary pocketed wheel conveyor apparatus
US3726748A (en) * 1971-06-17 1973-04-10 Koehring Co Trapped cam assembly
FR2228666A1 (en) * 1973-05-07 1974-12-06 Serlachius Oy
US4108221A (en) * 1976-08-06 1978-08-22 Gerhart Engineering & Machine Co. Container filling machine
NL7903533A (en) * 1978-05-06 1979-11-08 Meyer Alfons METHOD AND DEVICE FOR AUTOMATICALLY FILLING OF BAGS IN A FILLING STATION.
FR2493805A1 (en) * 1980-11-07 1982-05-14 Thimon Ets Folding feed for container blanks - has powered rotary conveyor with gripping jaws to pass containers to working stations
GB2130547A (en) * 1982-11-24 1984-06-06 T W Forages Limited Packaging fodder
FR2550972A1 (en) * 1983-08-24 1985-03-01 Amada Co Ltd

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0283493A1 (en) 1988-09-28
NL8602426A (en) 1988-04-18
EP0283493B1 (en) 1991-07-03

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