[0001] This invention relates to the sorting of articles and particularly, but not exclusively,
to the sorting of mixed cutlery.
[0002] There are numerous organisations which themselves provide, or that furnish facilities
for others to provide, meals for relatively large numbers of people. A good example
of such an organisation is an airline which will usually serve at least one, and often
several, meals on all but the shorter of its flights. It has, in the past, been the
general practice for most airlines to use disposable synthetic plastics knives, forks
and spoons, but these are not popular with the travelling public and constitute a
considerable expense when each individual item is thrown away after a single use.
As a consequence, the employment of traditional metallic items of cutlery is becoming
popular since such items have a much higher prestige value than do plastics knives,
forks and spoons, can readily carry a crest, logo, or other mark identifying the airline
concerned, and generally speaking, have a vastly greater length of useful life than
do their plastics equivalents. However, the re-use of the metallic cutlery necessitates
the employment of metal detectors or other separation thereof from plates, bowls,
food waste and the like after each flight and thorough washing in a commercial washing-up
machine. After washing, the clean and dry cutlery is delivered from the machine in
a mixed arrangement in which the knives, forks and spoons lie at random. Since knives,
forks and spoons are all elongate articles, they can readily be moved from their random
arrangement to one in which they all lie substantially parallel to one another merely
by carrying them along a belt or the like so that they pass between progressively
approaching walls and are delivered through a gate in the required substantially parallel
disposition.
[0003] As is well known, each passenger taking a meal on an aircraft receives his/her cutlery
in a wholly or principally transparent synthetic plastics bag accompanied by a selection
of other items such as, for example, an absorbent paper napkin and sealed salt, pepper,
sauce, sweetener and other containers. Obviously the bag must contain the correct
selection of these items which will usually comprise, as regards the cutlery, at least
one each of a knife, a fork, a dessert spoon and a teaspoon. Preferably, but not essential,
these items of cutlery are all contained in the bag the same way round, that is to
say, with the handle end of each item of cutlery directed towards the same end of
the bag. It is thus necessary that, between the point at which the washed and dried
knives, forks and spoons are delivered in relatively parallel relationship with one
another and the point at which they are re-packed into fresh bags usually with at
least some of the other items of which examples are mentioned above, there should
be apparatus which will identify the individual pieces of cutlery and will sort them
into knives, forks, dessert spoons, teaspoons and any other possible items for delivery
to separate locations, preferably all similarly disposed as regards their handle and
food-engaging ends, so that known machinery that is already in use can receive at
least one article of cutlery from each of said locations and pack the correct selection
of cutlery into a fresh bag together with appropriate other items and seal that bag
ready for re-use by another passenger.
[0004] Various methods have been tried automatically to identify the various cutlery items
and subsequently to sort them into their different catagories. Such methods include
the use of a CCD camera, direct computer recognition and photo-matrix recognition,
but they have proved to be too expensive and/or unreliable in operation. One disadvantage
of purely visual recognition systems is that metallic cutlery, after having just been
cleaned, is in a bright and shiny condition and, since the pieces of cutlery are not
entirely planar, the reflections of the bright lights that are intended to aid the
recognition actually prevent accurate recognition from occurring so that there is
an unacceptably high level of errors. The present invention seeks to provide a method
and apparatus for sorting cutlery and other elongate articles which is reliable, substantially
error-free, relatively inexpensive as compared with prior art proposals and that can
be operated or at least supervised by unskilled staff.
[0005] According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of sorting elongate
articles of dis-similar shape, which method comprises moving successive articles along
a path with their longitudinal axes substantially perpendicular to their direction
of travel and with one end of each article in register with a datum line extending
lengthwise of said path, providing a plurality of energy receivers at different perpendicular
distances from said datum line which distances are such that elongate articles of
different lengths will mask corresponding numbers of those receivers as they travel
past them, whereby the identity of each successive elongate article may be recognised,
and providing sorting means responsive to the article identifying means to direct
articles of each detected shape to a destination individual thereto. This method will
identify and sort various articles, such as metallic knives, forks, dessert spoons
and teaspoons, and apparatus embodying the method will direct them to various storage
locations but will not orientate each elongate article in the same way as regards
its different opposite ends. This is desirable, although not absolutely essential,
for items of metallic cutlery and, in accordance with further features of the invention,
identification of the handle and food/drink engaging ends of the various items is
possible in a basically similar manner to that which merely identifies their nature.
By providing appropriately illuminated photo-electric cells or other energy receivers
in a row which extends perpendicular to the aforementioned datum line and which cells
or other receivers are spaced at appropriate distances from that datum line, the time
of masking of the various cells can be related to a controlled speed of travel of
the articles along said path in such a way that not only will the nature of each item
be identified but also its orientation as regards its handle and food or drink engaging
ends. For example, a dessert spoon will be identified by its length whilst its orientation
will be identified by the fact that the width of its handle in a direction parallel
to the direction of displacement along said path is considerably less than the width
of its bowl. The blade and handle ends of knives are of different widths and the handle
and tine or prong ends of forks are readily identifiable by the pattern of masking
of appropriately disposed photo-electric cells or other receivers as the cutlery passes
them at a controlled speed. The means which is responsive to the identification of
the articles will direct each identified article orientated one way down one chute
to a corresponding destination whereas each similar article which is orientated the
other way round will be directed down an alternative chute to the same destination
but by way of a mechanism that will turn it end-for-end through substantially l80°
before it reaches that destination.
[0006] For a better understanding of the invention, and to show how the same may be carried
into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawing
which is a very diagrammatic plan view of part of an apparatus in accordance with
the invention for sorting articles of cutlery.
[0007] In the use of an apparatus in accordance with the invention, thoroughly washed and
dried but randomly mixed cutlery is fed from a bulk hopper onto a belt where it is
visually inspected by staff who will detect any piece of cutlery that remains dirty
even after the washing operation. Any such piece is manually removed from the belt
for re-washing. The staff may also remove from the belt any broken or badly deformed
piece of cutlery that may, for example, have been accidentally damaged by the handling
machinery or that might have been vandalised by a child or some other user. Occasional
"lost" articles, such as metallic spectacle cases, may also be removed from the belt
during the visual inspection under discussion.
[0008] The overwhelming majority of the pieces of cutlery are clean, dry and undamaged and
pass from the visual inspection belt onto a second belt which advantageously is moving
in a direction perpendicular to the direction of movement of the first mentioned belt.
This second belt has the reference l in the accompanying drawing. The transfer of
the pieces of cutlery from the first belt to the second belt l is accomplished by
known mechanism that separates said pieces and places them on said second belt l in
dispositions in which their longitudinal axes are perpendicular, or substantially
perpendicular, to the length of the supporting suface of the second belt l and to
the direction 2 in which that belt travels at a strictly controlled speed.
[0009] The belt l has a width 3 of l20 mms and is spaced at its left hand edge, considered
in the direction 2, by substantially l6 mms from a datum line 4 that also extends
parallel to the direction 2. The datum line 4 may take the physical form of a planar
wall and may advantageously but not essentially be arranged to move in the direction
2 at the same speed as the belt l. To identify knives, forks and dessert spoons that
are all of the same kind, it is necessary to provide three illuminated photo-electric
cells 5, 6 and 7. The first cell 5 is located at l55 mms from the datum line 4 and
the second cell 6 is located at l40 mms from that line, it being apparent from the
drawing that these two cells 5 and 6 are both beyond the edge of the belt l that is
remote from the edge thereof nearest to the datum line 4. The third cell 7, however,
is located at only l2 mms from the datum line 4 and is thus in the l6 mms gap between
that line 4 and the neighbouring edge of the belt l.
[0010] In the metallic cutlery that is used by a large airline, each knife 8 is l6l mms
in length, each fork 9 is l52 mms in length,. each dessert spoon l0 is also l52 mms
in length and each teaspoon ll is l06 mms in length. Thus, when the separated pieces
of cutlery are moved in the direction 2 by the belt l with each of them substantially
perpendicular to that direction 2 and one end of each piece against the datum line
4, a knife 8 will mask all three of the cells 5 , 6 and 7, either a fork 9 or a dessert
spoon l0 will mask only the cells 6 and 7 but not the cell 5, whilst a teaspoon ll
will mask only the third cell 7 but neither of the two cells 5 and 6. This will occur
in each case whether it is the handle end of the piece of cutlery that is against
the datum line 4 or the opposite end of that piece.
[0011] Since the belt l is moving in the direction 2 at a controlled speed, the times during
which the various cells, 5, 6 and 7 are masked can be employed to detect the difference
between the equal length forks 9 and dessert spoons l0 and the disposition of each
piece of cutlery as regards whether its handle end, or its other end, is against the
datum line 4. The blade of a knife 8 is l3 mms wide whereas the handle thereof is
only l0 mms wide. The handle of a fork 9 is l2 mms wide whereas its opposite end has
four tines or prongs with three spaces between them so that, as these tines or prongs
are interposed between either the cell 6 or the cell 7 and the source of illumination,
they will mask the cell concerned in a rapid four times off interposed between four
times on pattern. A dessert spoon l0 has substantially the same handle width as does
both a knife 8 and a fork 9 but its bowl end has a width of 27 mms and will thus mask
either the cell 6 or the cell 7 for a length of time dependent upon the fixed speed
of travel in the direction 2. A teaspoon ll masks only the cell 7 but its handle has
a width of substantially 9 mms whereas its bowl end has a width, in the direction
2, of substantially 22 mms. It will be apparent that the number of the cells 5, 6
and 7 that are masked by an individual piece of cutlery and the time and/or pattern
of masking produces signals which both identify the piece concerned and also whether
or not its handle end is against the datum line 4 and these signals are fed to a programmable
logic controller (PLC) which has been programmed both to recognise the pieces of cutlery
and their lengthwise orientations and to control displacement thereof to corresponding
destinations.
[0012] There are located, downstream along the belt l from the cells 5, 6 and 7, the entrances
to various chutes and means to displace the identified pieces of cutlery into appropriate
chutes. Such means may be of known construction and may, for example, comprise solenoid-operated
"pushers", electro-magnets which are powered momentarily and move the pieces of cutlery
off the belt l whilst so powered, or other known displacing means. In the example
that is being described, there may be eight chutes corresponding to the knives 8,
the forks 9, the dessert spoons l0 and the teaspoons ll orientated longitudinally
either one way, or the other way, round. If it is desired that the handle ends of
the various pieces of cutlery should enter storage receptacles first, then four of
the chutes will lead directly to those storage receptacles whereas the other four
chutes will include mechanisms for reversing the lengthwise orientation of each piece
of cutlery after it has entered the chute concerned. After having been dealt with
by such a mechanism, a piece of cutlery will be the same way round as other unreversed
pieces entering the corresponding "direct" chute so that the two chutes may converge
into a single delivery to the storage receptacle.
[0013] The mechanisms for reversing the lengthwise orientation of "wrongly" disposed pieces
of cutlery may be of turntable formation with each "turntable" rotatable about a preferably
horizontal or substantially horizontal axis. Purely for example, a wrongly disposed
piece of cutlery entering a length of the corresponding chute carried by the respective
"turntable" will have its presence sensed by a magnetic reed switch or by the masking
of a further photo-electric cell and such sensing will initiate the immediate rotation
of the "turntable" through l80°, preferably with the piece of cutlery held directly
by an electro-magnet, or by an electro-magnetically operated clamp, in the displaceable
portion of the chute only whilst such displacement takes place. As soon as the reversal
of the movable chute portion has taken place, the piece of cutlery is freed and can
continue its journey, under gravity, towards the storage receptacle having the same
lengthwise orientation as do the similar unreversed pieces of cutlery. It is desirable
that the portion of each chute which leads to each reversing mechanism should incorporate
an electro-magnetically or otherwise operated gate or block arranged to prevent a
second piece of cutlery from reaching the reversing mechanism whilst the latter is
performing a reversing operation on a first piece of cutlery. Alternatively, in very
large installations, the reversing mechanisms could be constructed and arranged to
receive a plurality of identical pieces of cutlery and to reverse the lengthwise orientation
of all them in a single operation.
[0014] Known machinery which is already in use takes an appropriate selection of cutlery
from the storage receptacles, for instance, a knife, a fork, a dessert spoon and a
teaspoon, delivers that cutlery to a plastics or other bag together with a paper napkin
and sealed containers of salt, pepper, sugar, sauce and the like and finally seals
the bag ready for delivery to an aircraft and use during a meal on a subsequent flight.
[0015] It is emphasised that what has been described with reference to the accompanying
very diagrammatic drawing is purely by way of example. A fourth photo-electric cell
could be incorporated at a distance from the datum line 4 which is greater than that
of the first cell 5 to sense both the identity, and the lengthwise disposition, of
a larger knife when, as is sometimes the case, two different larger and smaller sizes
of knife are employed. Such a knife is given the reference l2 in the accompanying
drawing. Under these circumstances, appropriate further chutes will be required together
with means to displace the larger knives l2 into them. Instead of using photo-electric
cells and appropriately positioned sources of light, ultrasonic emitters and receivers
could be employed arranged in such a way that interruption of the reception of sound
by any ultrasonic receiver would indicate the presence of an article between that
receiver and the sound source and the length of time and/or the pattern of the interruption
would indicate the lengthwise orientation of the identified article in much the same
way that has been described above. Signals or pulses generated by a shaft encoder
or a linear transducer could be employed to detect the widths of the ends of the cutlery
pieces to identify those pieces and/or to determine their lengthwise orientation,
instead of using the pattern of masking of the photo-electric cells, 5, 6 or 7 or
the pattern of masking of equivalent sound receivers.
[0016] The system could be expanded to detect significantly damaged pieces of cutlery and/or
incorrect pieces and the accompanying drawing shows a long knife l3 which is not a
"brand" companion of the pieces of cutlery 8 to l2 inclusive. The knife l3 is shown
as overlapping the datum line 4 and it will be realised that, if a photo-electric
cell or other detector were to be placed on the datum line 4 it would detect such
a knife l3 and would enable the programmable logic controller to displace that knife
l3 into a "reject" chute. Obviously, the tip of the knife l3 could move along the
datum line 4 and an additional photo-electric cell or other receiver be positioned
beyond both the first cell 5 and the additional fourth cell that has been mentioned
above. Although the method and apparatus of the present invention is ideally suitable
for sorting metallic cutlery, since it is simple and reliable in operation, without
being too expensive, and can be supervised by unskilled staff, it will be appreciated
that it could be employed in sorting and/or grading articles other than pieces of
cutlery. Purely for example, it could be employed in grading root crops, such as carrots,
that are classified by their length and by their crown diameters. Mixed bolts, screws,
studs and the like could be sorted both as regards identification and lengthwise orientation
using a system in accordance with the invention as could many other articles. Obviously,
the numbers and dispositions of the photo-electric cells or other energy receivers
that are used can readily be varied having regard to the size and nature of the articles
to be sorted, only appropriate programming of the programmable logic controller also
being required to suit the particular sorting operation that is to be undertaken.
[0017] It is not necessary that the surface of the belt l which carries the knives, forks,
spoons and other articles should be horizontally disposed and it may be inclined to
the horizontal in such a way that the various pieces of cutlery will all tend to slide
downwardly over that surface into endwise engagement with a planar wall or the like
embodying the datum line 4. If, as mentioned above, the planar surface that embodies
the datum line 4 is the surface of a belt or the like that is movable in the direction
2 at the same speed as the belt l, then there will be no tendency for any piece of
cutlery or other article to slip sideways provided that the inclination of the belt
l to the horizontal is not too great.
[0018] Apparatus in accordance with the invention will operate reliably at a fast speed
that will enable thousands, rather than hundreds, of pieces of cutlery or other articles
per hour to be sorted.
1. A method of sorting elongate articles of dis-similar shape, characterised in that
the method comprises moving successive articles along a path (l) with their longitudinal
axes substantially perpendicular to their direction of travel (2) and with one end
of each article in register with a datum line (4) extending lengthwise of said path
(l), providing a plurality of energy receivers (5, 6, 7) at different perpendicular
distances from said datum line (4) which distances are such that elongate articles
of different lengths will mask corresponding numbers of those receivers (5, 6, 7)
as they travel past them, whereby the identity of each successive elongate article
may be recognised, and providing sorting means responsive to the article identifying
means to direct articles of each detected shape to a destination individual thereto.
2. A method according to claim l, characterised in that said path (l) is afforded
by the upper surface of a belt, and by the provision of means to drive said belt (l)
at a uniform speed in said direction (2).
3. A method according to claim 2, characterised in that the upper surface of said
belt (l) is horizontally or substantially horizontally disposed.
4. A method according to any preceding claim, characterised in that the energy receivers
(5, 6, 7) are in the form of photo-electric cells which are normally illuminated but
which are selectively masked by said elongate articles as the latter are moved lengthwise
along said path (l).
5. A method according to any preceding claim, characterised in that the elongate articles
are pieces of metallic cutlery (8, 9, l0, ll, l2, l3) and that a programmable logic
controller is programmed to recognise the masking patterns produced by the various
pieces of cutlery (8, 9, l0, ll, l2, l3), is linked to the energy receivers (5, 6,
7), and is arranged to operate means to direct the various pieces of cutlery (8, 9,
l0, ll, l2, l3) off said path (l) to destinations corresponding to their recognised
identities.
6. A method according to claim 5, characterised in that said energy receivers (5,
6, 7) are so arranged, and said programmable logic controller is so programmed, as
to recognise not only the identities of the pieces of cutlery (8, 9, l0, ll, l2, l3)
but also their dispositions on said path (l) as regards which end of each such piece
registers with said datum line (4), the programmable logic controller also being so
programmed as to direct a piece of cutlery (8, 9, l0, ll, l2, l3) off said path (l)
to a different receiving station to that of an identical piece of cutlery disposed
on said path (l) the opposite way round.
7. A method according to claim 6, characterised in that means is provided to turn
each piece of cutlery (8, 9, l0, ll, l2, or l3) that is disposed one way round when
it is displaced from said path (l) end-for-end through substantially l80° before it
proceeds beyond this means to its destination, each identical piece of cutlery that
is disposed the opposite way round on said path (l) being displaced from that path
to its destination without such turning.
8. A method according to claim 2 or to claim 2 and any one of claims 3 to 7 inclusive,
characterised in that said belt (l) has a width (3) of substantially l20mm, one edge
thereof being spaced from said datum line (4) by substantially l6mm.
9. A method according to claim 5 or to claim 5 and any one of claims 6 to 8 inclusive,
characterised in that means is provided to recognise and discard from said path (l)
to a corresponding destination bent or otherwise damaged pieces of cutlery and/or
pieces of cutlery which are not "brand" companions of those which the energy receivers
and the programmable logic controller are arranged and programmed to deal with.
l0. Apparatus for sorting pieces of metallic cutlery (8, 9, l0, ll, l2, l3) of dis-similar
shape, characterised in that it comprises a belt (l) along which mixed pieces of cutlery
are movable at a uniform speed with such pieces of cutlery arranged so that their
longitudinal axes extends substantially perpendicular to their direction of travel
(2) along the belt (l), the apparatus also comprising a datum line (4) arranged to
have one end of each such piece of cutlery (8, 9, l0, ll, l2, l3) abutting thereagainst
during movement in said direction (2) and a plurality of energy receivers (5, 6, 7)
at different perpendicular distances from said datum line (4) which distances are
such that the pieces of cutlery (8, 9, l0, ll, l2, l3) of different lengths will mask
corresponding numbers of the receivers (5, 6, 7) as they travel past them, whereby
the identity of each successive piece of cutlery may be recognised, and characterised
in that sorting means responsive to the identification of said pieces of cutlery is
provided to direct each such recognised piece to a destination individual thereto.