BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to business forms handling equipment suitable for business
offices, and more particularly, to an apparatus for conveying and sealing collated
form sheets into form sets.
[0002] Continuous business form assemblies have long been considered desirable for mass
mailings and the like. High speed printers have been used for both custom and non-
variable printing of such assemblies. However, certain desirable high speed printers
print with toners which are set or fixed by heat. Such printers are incompatible with
form assembly constructions having heat sealable adhesives. The assembly webs having
the heat sealable adhesives cannot be fed through the printers or other heat generating
equipment because otherwise the webs would prematurely, undesirably, adhere to the
equipment mechanisms. As a result, the webs of such assemblies having adhesive must
be assembled or collated with the printed webs after printing.
[0003] Yet with this sequence of assembly, sheet length differentials occur between the
sheets of the adhesive coated webs, and the printed webs. The heating of the printed
webs during the setting of toners dries the sheets of the printed webs, compounding
a sheet length mismatch. Further, standard sealing equipment cannot accommodate a
two ply collated form.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0004] An object of the inventors which led to the making of this invention was to provide
business form sealing equipment capable of consistently, continuously collating and
sealing form sheets of matched and mismatched form sheet lengths.
[0005] Another object was to provide such equipment of a compactness, reliability and ease
of use suitable for typical business offices and personnel.
[0006] The invention provides such sealing equipment, and proceeds, in part, with a reversal
of sealing and detaching functions of standard sealing equipment. Form sheets are
collated first, which allows sheet length differences to be accommodated, then detached
from their webs, and then sealed. The invention also incorporates the conveying of
the sets of sheets being sealed in an overlapped or shingled manner.
[0007] The present invention is an apparatus for conveying and sealing collated form sheets
into form sets, at least one of the form sheets for each set having heat sealable
adhesive and wherein the apparatus comprises a base, heating means and conveying means
on the base. The heating means constitutes means for heating the heat sealable adhesive
to seal form sheets of the group together. The conveyor means constitutes means for
conveying the groups of form sheets through the heating means. The conveyor means
includes means for aligning the form sheets of the groups before the groups enter
the heating means.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0008] The preferred embodiment of the invention will be described by way of example in
relation to the accompanying drawing, which consists of four views, or figures, wherein:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the preferred embodiment with the infeed portion to
the upper left;
FIG. 2 is a side elevation view of the preferred embodiment, with the frame partially
cut away to reveal internal detail;
FIG. 3 is a top or plan view of the preferred embodiment, with the partial cover shown
in FIGS. 1 and 2 removed to reveal internal detail; and
FIG. 4 is a cross-section view taken along line 4-4 of FIG. 3.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0009] Referring to FIG. 1, the preferred embodiment of the present invention is a sealer/conveyor
10 adapted to operate on 110 Volt current and rest atop feet such as foot 11 on a
mobile stand 12, for general office use. The sealer/ conveyor 10 includes a base or
frame 14, heating structure 16, infeed conveyor structure 18, output conveyor structure
20, and stacking rack 22. Form sheets are fed in groups on the infeed conveyor 18
through the heating structure 16, where they are sealed into form sets, then fed onto
the outfeed conveyor 20, and stacked against the rack 22.
[0010] As shovn only in FIG. 1, the infeed conveyor structure 18 includes an infeed conveyor
of a plurality of conveyor belts such as belt 24 stretched about pulleys such as pulley
26 on pulley shafts such as shaft 28.
[0011] Also as shown only in FIG. 1, a plurality of alignment or nip rollers 30 are mounted
to the base 14, above the conveyor structure 18. The rollers 30 are adapted to be
friction driven by the infeed conveyor belts. Pivotable links 32 provide for rotation
of the rollers 30 about their central axes, and pivoting of the rollers 30 about a
shaft 34. The shaft 34 slides within slotted support brackets 36, for adjustment of
the distance of the rollers 30 to the outermost end 38 of the infeed conveyor structure.
[0012] The sealer/conveyor 10 is usable with a detacher, a collator, or similar machines,
for receiving form sheets from such equipment on the conveyor belts of the infeed
conveyor. The infeed conveyor belts are driven to provide a form speed substantially
less than that of an associated detacher or the like. The sealer/conveyor is attached
by frame hooks 35 to the associated equipment. Form sheets, whether matched or mismatched,
are deposited on the infeed conveyor belts 24. Where mismatching is expected, the
rollers 30 are adjusted to be sufficiently close to the infeed end 38 that the distance
from the end rollers of the detacher or the like to the rollers 30 is less than one
form length.
[0013] As a result of the conveyor speed and position of the rollers 30, form sheets of
a form set arriving mismatched at the rollers 30 are jogged or slid relative to each
other into alignment.
[0014] In more detail, where a plurality of mismatched form sheets are driven onto the conveyor
belts 24, the leading edge of the form sheet which is first to arrive at the rollers
30 will be slowed to the speed of the belts 24 and rollers 30, at the nip of the belts
24 and rollers 30. Remaining form sheets, the leading edges of which have not arrived
at the rollers 30, continue to be driven at higher speed to the rollers 30. As the
leading edge of each remaining form sheet arrives at the nip of the belts 24 and rollers
30, the leading portion of each form sheet is slowed, and each leading edge is substantially
aligned or matched with the leading edge of the first arriving sheet.
[0015] The aligned form sheets continue to move, at the reduced speed of the belts 24 and
rollers 30, into the heating structure 16. As form sheets of further form sets arrive
at the rollers 30, these further form sheets overlap the trailing portions of the
form sheets of preceding form sets. The sealer/conveyor 10 accommodates such overlapped
or shingled form sets, which remain shingled until racked.
[0016] The overlapped form sets move at the speed established by the infeed conveyor structure
18 into the heater structure 16. As shown in FIGS. 2-4, the heater structure 16 includes
vertically spaced upper and lower heating platens 40, 42. Platen or pressure rollers
such as roller 44 include roller segments such as 46 on shafts such as 48. The roller
segments extend through cut-outs in the platens, to drive the shingled form sets through
the heating structure 16, between the platens 40,42.
[0017] As shown in FIG. 2, the platen rollers include idler rollers in the cover 52 of the
heating structure 16, and driving rollers driven by a chain drive 50 from a motor
54. The motor 54 drives a shaft 56 of the output conveyor structure 20, which drives
sprockets such as sprocket 58 mounted along the shafts of the driving platen rollers.
The shaft 56 and sprocket 58 are portions of the drive 50.
[0018] The platens 40, 42 heat by electrical resistance. The speed of each form set through
the heating structure 16 is equal to the speed of the infeed conveyor 18, while the
number of form sets through the heating structure per unit time is determined by the
speed of the detacher or other associated equipment. As an example, each form may
travel through the heating structure 16 at an infeed conveyor speed of thirty feet
per minute, while the form sets may accumulate on the sealer/conveyor at a detacher
speed of up to sixty feet per minute. The length and temperature of the platens 40,
42 are set to soften the heat-sealable adhesive of the form sets, as they pass between
the platens 40, 42.
[0019] As most preferred, the platens 40, 42 soften adhesive on form sets travelling at
the conveyor speed stated as an example, thirty feet per minute, and accumulating
at the detacher speed stated as an example, up to sixty feet per minute. Also as most
preferred, the platens 40, 42 soften adhesive on form sheets of weight from 18 pound
bond to 99 pound index.
[0020] The resulting sealed form seta exit the heating structure 16 onto an output conveyor
of a plurality of output conveyor belts such as 60 stretched about pulleys such as
62, as shown in FIG. 1. The output conveyor belts are driven at the same speed as
the input conveyor belts. At the terminal end of the output conveyor structure 20,
the form sets are driven onto the rack 22. Since the form sets remain shingled on
the output conveyor belts, each form set acts as a guide for movement of following
form sets onto the rack 22. The form sets remain stacked upon the rack 22, in condition
for use, until manually removed.
1. Apparatus for conveying and sealing groups of form sheets into form sets, at least
one of the form sheets for each form set having heat sealable adhesive, the apparatus
comprising:
a base;
heating means on the base for heating the heat sealable adhesive to seal the form
sheets of the groups together; and
conveyor means on the base conveying the groups of form sheets through the heating
means, the conveyor means including means for aligning the form sheets of the groups
before the groups enter the heating means.
2. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 1, the form sheets including leading edges, in which
the aligning means includes means for aligning the leading edges of the form sheets
of the groups before the groups enter the heating means.
3. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 1 in which the conveying means includes means for
providing overlapping of the groups of form sheets into overlapped groups, and in
which the heating means includes means for heating the overlapped groups.
4. Apparatus as claimed in Claim I in which the conveyor means includes an infeed
conveyor, pressure rollers, an output conveyor, and alignment rollers, and in which
the heating means includes heating platens, the heating platens being between the
infeed conveyor and the output conveyor, and the pressure rollers being among the
heating platens.
5. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 4 in which the infeed conveyors, pressure rollers
and output conveyors are drivably adapted to provide constant speed movement of the
groups of form sheets and resultant form sets.
6. Apparatus for conveying and sealing groups of form sheets into form sets constructed
arranged and adapted to operate substantially as herein described with reference to
the accompanying drawings.