[0001] The present invention relates generally to packaging systems, more particularly to
apparatus and methods for forming packages by sequentially loading and separating
bags from a web in the form of a chain of interconnected and pre-opened bags, and
in particular, but not exclusively, to packaging machines and methods.
[0002] The use of chains of preopened bags to form packages is well known. Such chains of
bags are disclosed and claimed in U.S. Patent Nos. 3,254,828 and 3,815,318. A machine
described in U.S. Patent 4,899.520 includes an ability to use two chains of interconnected
bags while packaging.
[0003] With each of these machines, a pair of drive nip rolls are adjacent a load station.
In the majority of cases, a coil of so-called "bags-on-a-roll" is mounted on a mandrell
to supply a web in the form of a chain of pre-opened bags to be fed through the machine.
During set-up the web is fed from the supply along a path of travel through a so-called
dancer arrangement, then, in some cases, past any accessory devices such as imprinters
or hole punchers that may be provided, and thence through a section of the machine
known as a bagger to the nip rolls. In order to feed the web through the bagger, it
is necessary to open or remove a cover and hand-feed the web over and under rolls
delineating the path of travel to the nips. While some machines such as that shown
and described in Patent 4,928,455 facilitate the feed by having certain of the rolls
elevated when the cover is opened, the feed of the web during set-up is nonetheless
a manual, time-consuming operation.
[0004] It is an object of this invention, to obviate and/or mitigate this and other disadvantages
of the prior art.
[0005] According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a packaging machine comprising
a structure delineating a path of travel for a web in the form of a chain of pre-opened
plastic bags, drive means to feed the web along the path of travel through the machine
to a loading station with the bags each oriented closed end first, characterised by
a web feed mechanism comprising:
(a) opposed conveyor belts respectively position on opposite sides of the path;
(b) opposed pairs of spaced roll members respectively positioned on opposite sides
of the path;
(c) each of the belts being stretched around the roller pair on the like side of the
path and delineating as to each belt a feed reach adjacent the path and a return reach
spaced from the path; and
(d) drive means coupled to at least one of the roller members selectively to rotate
at least one coupled member and thereby cause the feed reaches to move in directions
toward the load station.
[0006] According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a packaging machine
having a web feed mechanism comprising:
(a) a first pair of grooved rolls;
(b) a first set of elastic belts reeved about the first pair of rolls to form a first
web conveyor with the belts, each having a web feed reach extending between the rolls
along a path of travel and opposed return reaches;
(c) a second pair of grooved rolls;
(d) a second set of elastic belts reeved about the second pair of rolls to form a
second web conveyor with the belts, each having a web feed reach extending between
the rolls along a path of travel and opposed return reaches.
(e) first rolls of each pair abutting nip rolls at the downstream ends of the feed
reaches;
(f) second rolls of each pair being an upstream set with the second roll of the first
pair being downstream from the second roll of the second pair;
(g) the feed reaches of the first conveyor having axes locating an imaginary plane;
characterised by
(h) the second roll of the second pair being, at least in part, on the same side of
such imaginary plane as the return reches of the first conveyor such that the feed
reaches of the second conveyor are deflected over and engage surfaces of the second
roll of the first pair.
[0007] According to another aspect of the invention there is provided, apparatus for delivering
a web of pre-opened bags from a supply station to load station, the apparatus comprising:
(a) first web gripping and feed means positioned along a web path of travel for pulling
a web from a supply at the supply station;
(b) a web feed mechanism defining a section of the web path and including a second
web gripping and feed means positioned along the web path of travel near the entrance
to the mechanism; characterised by each of the gripping and feed means being adapted
to isolate web tension producing forces upstream from it from a web section downstream
and vice versa whereby to separate the web path into three sections in each of which
web tension is controlled independently of the other sections.
[0008] According to another aspect of the invention there is provided, a method of feeding
a web through a packaging machine characterised by the steps of:
(a) rotating at least one roll member of a nipped pair of roll members near a load
station to drive a belt wrapped around a pair of roll members along one side of a
web path of travel;
(b) driving an opposing belt wrapped around an opposing pair of roll members along
an opposite side of the web path of travel;
(c) placing the web in contact with certain of the roll members and the belts at a
location spaced from the load station;
(d) threading the belt along the path by placing the web between the opposing roll
members and feeding the web by continuing to drive the belts.
[0009] The preferred embodiment of the present invention comprises a packaging machine for
loading bags having an upstanding support section mounted on a base at a location
offset to one side of the base. A dancer assembly may be mounted on the base. A web
supply positioner may be cantilevered from and connected to a frame of the dancer
assembly. The positioner may project laterally from the dancer assembly frame at a
bag supply station above the one side of the base toward the other side. Because in
the preferred embodiment there is only a single, upstanding support section, a supply
roll for the web can be quickly and easily mounted on the positioner.
[0010] A web dispensing section in the form of a bagger may be mounted on the support section
above the position and the dancer assembly. The bagger may include a web feed mechanism
which extends to a load station. The web feed mechanism and the dancer assembly may
co-act to provide on of the oustanding features of the present invention. Together,
they may segregate the web path of travel into three sections in each of which tension
is controlled without effect on the other sections.
[0011] More specifically, nip rolls of the dancer assembly may feed the web evenly from
the support roll no matter how badly wound that supply roll is. Any irregularities
in the tension caused by a badly wound roll may be isolated from downstream sections
of the web path of travel by the dancer nips. Belts of the web feed mechanism may
grip the web as it enters the feed mechanism with the result that the section between
the dancer and the web feed may have tension maintained by the dancer independent
of any effects on tension in the other two sections. This enhances the operation of
any accessory devices. The third section is in the web feed mechanism where the difference
between the surface speed of the nips adjacent the load station and the belts of the
feed mechanism assures tension control through the feed mechanism independent of web
tension in the upstream sections.
[0012] The dancer assembly may include upper and lower dancer roll sets and upper and lower
dancer frames respectively carrying the upper and lower sets. The frames may be pivotally
connected together and may be selectively, relatively positionable in a web feed position
or in a web tension control range. When the upper frame is in the web feed position,
the upper roll set may be on one side of an imaginary plane located by the axes of
the upstreammost and downstreammost rolls of the lower set. This allows facile feeding
of a web through the assembly for set up. When the upper frame is in the tension control
range, the upper set may be on the opposite side of the imaginary plane.
[0013] In order to sense relative frame pivoting in the tension control range, a segment
of a gear may be connected to the frame pivot and a meshing "pot gear" may be connected
to a potentiometer. At least one of the dancer nip rolls is preferably connected to
a stepper motor. The pot gear may be rotated in response to the relative motion of
the roll sets in the contrbl range and may control the stepper motor via the potentiometer
in response to such roll set motion to control the feed rate of the web from the web
supply. This causes the driven dancer nip roll to feed the web at appropriate rates
while the dancer roll sets maintain proper tension and alignment. The proper tension
and alignment is maintained even when feed of the web is reversed from the load station
for bag separation.
[0014] In the preferred machine, the bagger projects laterally from the support section
toward the other side of the base section in a cantilever fashion. The web feed mechanism
of the bagger may include an opposed pair of sets of elastic conveyor belts respectively
positioned on opposite sides of the web path of travel. Upstream and downstream opposed
pairs of spaced roll members are desirably also respectively positioned on opposite
sides of the path. Each of the sets of belts may be stretched around the roller pair
on the like side of the path to delineate, as to each belt, a feed reach adjacent
the path and a return reach spaced from the path. A stepper motor may be coupled to
one of the roll members of each pair to rotate the coupled members and thereby cause
the feed reaches to move in directions toward the load station for web feed. Preferably,
the stepper motor reverses the direction of the feed reaches for bag tear-off after
a bag has been loaded and as it is sealed.
[0015] Grooves may be provided in the roll members to receive the belts. Each of the grooves
in the downstream roll pair, which are load station nip rolls, may have radial depth
slightly greater than the diameter of the belts so that the linear speed of the belts
is less than the surface speed of the load station nip rolls. Because of this speed
differential, the belts place a drag on the web to help to maintain proper tension
within the web, and the nips function to slightly pre-open each bag.
[0016] Because, in the preferred embodiment, the bags are slightly pre-opened, reliable
full opening at the load station is facilitated. In addition, slightly longitudinal
offset perforations of the front and back of a bag in the web are no longer a problem.
A spark detector that detects perforations for controlling advancement of the web
can now detect the perforations in the back of a bag without hindrance from the front.
To this end, the spark detector may be located a short distance upstream from the
load station nip rolls so that detection of the perforations is at a location where
the bags are partially pre-opened.
[0017] In the preferred embodiment, the upstream roll members are offset longitudinally
of the path of travel. In addition, the rolls of the upstream pair and one of the
downstream rolls may have axes located in a common plane. When the path of the belt
reach travel is horizontal, the common plane may also be horizontal. The belts of
one conveyor may be each in the shape of an elongate oval with their feed reaches
substantially horizontal. The feed reaches of the other conveyor may stretch from
the offset upstream roll, downwardly under the other roll of the upstream pair and
then substantially horizontally forward.
[0018] The described offset arrangement of the upstream roll pair of the preferred embodiment
of this web feed mechanism provides another of the desirable features of a machine
of this invention in that the belts provide self-threading web feed through the bagger
during set-up. Thus, the web feed through the feed mechanism only requires manual
feed of the web to its entrance and "jogging" of the machine to thread the web through
the mechanism. To unthread the machine or to correct a problem if, for example, initial
feeding of a new web has become skewed, the jogging can be reversed to back the web
out of the mechanism.
[0019] The support section may include an internal chamber that provides a portion of an
air manifold. Additionally, the bagger may be connected to the support section by
a tube that also defines an internal chamber. The tube chamber may communicate with
the support chamber to define a further portion of the air manifold. The manifold
may function as a plenum to provide air under substantially uniform pressure to the
packaging machine, even with an inconsistent external air supply.
[0020] The advantages of the preferred embodiment of the invention are that it provides
an improved packaging machine for loading products into bags from a web in the form
of a continuous chain of bags while maintaining proper web alignment and tension as
the web is fed through the machine and a method od packaging.
[0021] An embodiment of the invention will now be described by way of example only, with
reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a side elevational view of a packaging machine embodying the present invention;
Figure 2 is a side elevational view of the packaging machine of Figure 1 with parts
of the bagger broken away and removed and a partial sectional view of a web tensioning
device;
Figsure 2A is an enlarged sectional view of the bagger with parts of the bagger broken
away and removed;
Figure 3 is an enlarged sectional view of a web supply and tensioning device of the
packaging machine;
Figure 4 is a top plan view of the packaging machine of Figure 1;
Figure 5 is a front elevational view of the packaging machine of Figure 1 on a reduced
scale;
Figure 6 is an enlarged sectional view of a bagger of the packaging machine of Figure
1 with parts of the bagger broken away and removed;
Figure 7 is an enlarged elevational view of a nip roll drive assembly of the bagger
of Figure 6;
Figure 8 is a top plan view of the nip roll drive assembly of Figure 7;
Figure 9 is a side elevational view of the drive assembly of the nip roll of Figure
7;
Figure 10 is a cross section view of the nip drive roll assembly of Figure 7 as seen
approximately from the plane indicated by the line 10-10 in Figure 7;
Figure 11 is a top plan view of the web supply and tensioning device of Figure 3 with
parts broken away and removed;
Figure 12 is a front elevational view of the web tensioning device of Figure 3 as
seen from the plane indicated by the line 12-12 of Figure 11;
Figure 13 is a reduced scale side elevational view of the web tensioning device of
Figure 3 illustrating an upper set of dancer rolls in an upright position;
Figure 14 is a front elevational view of the packaging machine of Figure 1 with the
nip drive roll assembly and a sealing section removed;
Figure 15 is an enlarged front elevational view of a frame of the bagger illustrated
in Figure 6;
Figure 16 is an enlarged sectional view of the bagger with parts of the bagger broken
away and removed and illustrating the drive roll assembly mounted in an alternate
location;
Figure 17 is a rear elevational view of a housing for the electronic controls of the
packaging machine;
Figure 18 is a side elevational view of the housing for the electronic controls of
the packaging machine; and
Figure 19 is a top plan view of the housing for the electronic controls of the packaging
machine.
[0022] Referring to the drawings, a packaging machine constructed in accordance with a preferred
embodiment of the invention is illustrated generally at 10. The machine 10 is constructed
to load bags from a web 11 in the form of an interconnected chain of open bags. The
bags are preferably connected together along lines of weakness so that each bag can
be separated from the web after it has been loaded with a product.
[0023] The packaging machine 10 includes an upstanding support frame 12 that sits atop a
base 13. The base 13 is supported by rollers 14 that allow the packaging machine 10
to be moved easily. The packaging machine 10 further includes a bagger 15 that is
cantilever mounted on the support frame 12. The bagger includes a removable housing
or cover 16 that encloses the bagger and covers a bagger web feed mechanism M, Figure
6. A web supply and tensioning device 17 is connected to base 13 below the bagger
15.
[0024] The support frame 12 is preferably a hollow, single-leg frame that is, as is best
seen in Figure 5, laterally offset to one side of the base 13. An enclosed inner chamber
18 (Figure 1) of the support frame forms a portion of an air manifold. A support arm
20 projects laterally from the support frame 12. The arm 20 is the cantilever support
for the bagger 15. The arm 20 is also preferably hollow to provide an air chamber
which is in communication with the chamber 18 to form a further portion of the air
manifold. To this end, the tube 20 projects through and is secured to the stand 12,
Figure 5. Apertures A in the arm 20 provide fluid communication between the chambers
of the stand and the arm.
[0025] An air regulator 21 is connected to the support frame 12 and is connectable to an
external air supply source (not shown). The air regulator allows air from an external
source to enter the air manifold and maintain the air within the manifold at a desired
pressure. A set of connectors 22 are provided along the support arm for connection
of accessories (not shown). If an accessory requires a reduced air pressure, an air
regulator can be attached to a connector in order to adjust the pressure of the air
supplied by the manifold.
The Web Supply and Tensioning Device 17
[0026] As best seen in Figures 3, 11 and 13, the web supply and tensioning device 17 includes
a ]ower frame 30 and a cantilevered supply shaft 31 for carrying a roll of bags R.
A roll positioning hub 32 is mounted on the supply shaft near an end connected to
the frame 30 while a hub assembly 33 is mounted at its opposite end. The two hubs
32, 33 have knobs 34, 35 for clamping of the hubs onto the shaft in adjusted positions
along the shaft. In order to mount a supply roll to the supply shaft 31, the hub assembly
33 is removed from the supply shaft and a supply roll is slid onto the shaft. The
hub assembly 33 is placed back on the supply shaft and is slid up against the supply
roll such that a spring 36 of the hub assembly 33 is against the supply roll in order
to bias the supply roll against the positioning hub 32 while allowing the roll to
rotate freely.
[0027] The tensioning device 17 also includes an upper frame 39 which carries an upper dancer
roll set 40. The upper frame 39 is pivotally connected to the lower frame 30 and is
pivotable with respect to the remainder of the tensioning device about an axis co-axial
with an idler roll 43. The upper dancer roll set has three idler rolls 41a, 41b, 41c.
Three lower idler rolls 42a, 42b, 42c are carried by the lower frame 30 and form a
lower roll set. The upper and lower rolls define a section of a web path of travel
with the lower rolls being respectively laterally offset rearwardly of the path of
travel with respect to the upper rolls.
[0028] With the machine set-up shown in the drawings, the web path of travel begins with
the supply roll R, passes over the idler roll 43 and continues through the web tensioning
device. The idler roll 43 is mounted on the frame 30 along the pivot axis of the upper
dancer roll set 40 and its shaft serves as the pivot for the upper set.
[0029] A segment of a gear 44 is attached to the upper frame 39 so that it pivots with the
upper dancer roll set 40 about the axis of the idler roll 43. The gear segment 44
is in mesh with a "pot gear" 45 that is connected to a potentiometer 46. This pot
gear 45 causes pot rotation in response to the rotation of the gear segment 44 and
thereby "informs" the potentiometer of the position of the upper dancer roll set 40.
[0030] A stepper motor 50 is controlled by the potentiometer 46 and drives a drive roll
51 via a toothed belt 52. The drive roll 51 has an idler roll 53 nipped against it
to form a nip roll assembly. This nip roll assembly contributes to the definition
of the web path of travel and provides one of the features of the invention. This
assembly pulls the web from the supply roll R and functions to isolate tension effects
of the supply roll in the feed section of the path of travel from sections of the
web path which are downstream from the nip assembly.
[0031] The nip roll 53 is biased against the drive roll 51 by two springs 54a, 54b. When
the upper dancer roll set 40 moves up and down, a shaft of the nip roll travels within
a slot 55 provided by the upper frame 39. A second slot is on an opposite side of
the frame 39, but is not illustrated. When the upper dancer roll set 40 is fully raised
into its web feed position, as illustrated in Figure 13, the springs 54a, 54b are
stretched and the nip roll 53 is pulled away from the drive roll 51 to move its axial
shaft into offset end sections of the slots 55 and to horizontal sections of slots
56 defined within the frame This retains the upper set in the position of Figure 13
to facilitate set-up feeding of the web between the nip roll and the drive roll and
through the tensioning device.
[0032] Since physical properties of webs which can be fed through the machine fall in a
wide range, a tension adjustment of the dancer assembly is required. Accordingly,
two counter weights 60a, 60b are provided. Each counter weight has a control knob
61 that threadedly engages a screw 62 located in a corresponding slot defined by the
upper frame 39. By loosening and tightening the knob, the counter weight can be shifted
appropriately along an upper guide portion of the frame 39 to adjust the amount of
tension applied to the web. The counter weights are small and compact as contrasted
with dancer arms used with previous machines.
[0033] In operation, the web is fed from a supply roll R carried by the supply shaft 31
over the idler roll 43 and between the nip roll 53 and drive roll 51. When the upper
dancer roll set 40 is in its web feed position of Figure 13, the web is laid across
the three lower rolls 42a, 42b, 42c. The drive roll shaft is then manually moved out
of the offset sections of the slots 55 and the horizontal sections of slots 56. The
upper dancer roll set is then lowered until the upper dancer rolls 41a, 41b, 41c engage
the web and push it down such that the web is now woven over each lower roll and under
each upper dancer roll in a "zig-zag" fashion.
[0034] When the packaging machine 10 is operating and the web is being drawn through the
bagger 15, the upper dancer roll set 40 moves upwardly thereby causing the gear segment
44 to pivot in conjunction with the upper dancer roll set movement which, in turn,
rotates the pot gear 45. The potentiometer thereby "instructs" the stepper motor to
drive the drive roll 51 to feed the web from the supply roll to increase the volume
of web in the web tensioning device 17. This allows the upper dancer roll set 40 to
move downwardly against the web. This, in turn, causes the segment of the gear to
move the pot gear, which causes the potentiometer to "instruct" the stepper motor
to slow its driving of the drive roll 51. In this manner, the upper dancer roll set
40 moves up and down in a tension control range to control the tension of the web.
The Bagger Feed Mechanism M
[0035] As best seen in Figures 2, 4 and 6, after the web travels under the third upper dancer
roll 41c, it travels upwardly through a second section of the web path to the bagger
15. Optionally, accessory devices (not shown) may be positioned along the second section.
The bagger feed mechanism M functions to isolate downstream tensional effects from
the second section so that the mechanism M and the nip roll assembly of the device
17 cooperate to isolate this second section from up- and downstream tensional forces.
[0036] The feed mechanism M defines a third section of the web path of travel. An idler
roll 71 over which the web 11 is fed delineates the upstream end of the mechanism
M. A second idler roll 72 is further along the web path of travel within the bagger.
A pair of load station nip rolls 73, 74, with the roll 74 being a driven roll, are
positioned adjacent an output end 70b of the bagger 15.
[0037] Grooves 75 are defined in each of the rolls 71, 72, 73, 74. Four lower elastic belts
76 are around the rolls 71, 74 and in their grooves 75 to provide a ]ower web conveyor.
Four upper elastic belts 77 are around the rolls 72, 73 and in their grooves 75 to
provide a co-acting upper web conveyor.
[0038] The upstream rolls 71, 72 are offset, both longitudinally and laterally of the web
path with the axis of the upstream lower conveyor roll 71 located above the plane
of an upper conveyor feed reach 77f. While the location of the lower conveyor roll
71 may be adjusted, in the preferred and disclosed arrangement it is located in a
plane that contains the axes of the upper conveyor rolls 72, 73. Because of the offset
of the roll 71, the lower belts 76 are stretched around and in contact with an underside
of the roll 72. The upper conveyor belts 77 are elpngate oval in shape while belts
76 are otherwise configured because of the contact with the upper belt roll 72.
[0039] The bending of the lower belts 76 over the upstream upper belt roll 72 assures a
positive clamping of a web being fed against the upper roll and positive frictional
engagement of the belt with a web being fed through the bagger. This frictional engagement
at the upper rearward roll 72 contributes to two of the outstanding features of the
invention. First, it isolates downstream tensional forces from upstream sections of
the web and thus, delineates a division between the second and third sections of the
web path of travel. In addition, the assured frictional engagement with the belt permits
the bagger feed mechanism M to grasp a web and self-thread it through the mechanism
M to a load station adjacent the nip rolls 73, 74. Further, by reversing the direction
of belt rotation, one may readily unthread the machine to facilitate change over to
a different web or correct a malalignment should it occur as a web is self threaded.
[0040] The dimensioning of the nip rolls 73, 74 provides another of the outstanding features
of the invention. The radial depth of the grooves 75 in these nip rolls is slightly
greater than the diameter of the belts 76, 77. Thus, the diameters of the rolls 73,
74 are slightly greater than the diametrical dimension of the belts as they are reeved
around. the nip rolls and disposed in the grooves with the result that the lineal
surface speed of the rolls 73, 74 at their line of nip engagement is slightly greater
than the surface speed of feed reaches 76f, 77f. This speed differential provides
several outstanding advantages. First, it provides positive web tensioning through
the third section in the path of travel between the feed reaches 76f, 77f. This assures
proper alignment of the web throughout the bagger feed mechanism M. In addition, since
the upper face of the web, as viewed in Figure 6, contains the open bag fronts, the
speed differential between the nips and the belts slightly pre-opens the bags, greatly
facilitating the speed and completeness of bag opening at the load station.
The Nip Roll Sub-Assembly
[0041] As best seen in Figures 8-10, the upper nip roll 73 is offset rearwardly along the
path of travel with respect to the drive roll 74. The nip roll 73 is nipped against
the drive roll by springs 80a, 80b. A lever 81 is connected to an outer shaft of the
nip roll 73 in a cammed relationship such that movement of the lever selectively from
its position in Figure 10 to its position in Figure 9 will cause the nip roll 73 to
be separated from the drive roll 74 as shown in Figure 9. This separation facilitates
machine service and maintenance.
[0042] The nip roll 73 and the drive roll 74 are connected to a support 73a to form a nip
roll sub-assembly. The nip roll sub-assembly can be mounted in a selected one of two
locations based upon operator choice. Four holes 78 are aligned with either of two
sets of holes 79a, 79b (See Fig. 15) located on the bagger 15. Bolts 79c (two of four
are shown) are used to secure the nip roll sub-assembly in its selected location on
the bagger.
[0043] Figure 16 illustrates the nip roll sub-assembly mounted in its lower position and
connected to the holes 79b. A longer belt 74b is required to connect the roll 74 and
the stepper motor 74a in the lower position than is the case in the upper position.
[0044] A set of three fingers 82 is secured to the support 73a by fasteners 82a, Figure
10. The fingers 82 depend from the support 73a and then extend forwardly through arcuately
curved sections 82b disposed in grooves 83 formed in the upper nip roll 73. The fingers
extend further forwardly and downwardly through a second set of arcuately curved sections
82c which are complementally, closely adjacent the lower nip roll 74. The lower finger
sections 82c serve as web deflectors to deflect the web downwardly and assure appropriate
positioning of each bag to be loaded at the load station.
[0045] A spark gap detector 82d is positioned slightly upstream from the nip rolls 73, 74
and co-acts with the fingers 82 to sense web perforations that delineate lines of
weakness between successive bags. The web normally acts as an insulator preventing
spark travel between the sensor and the fingers. When the perforations pass between
the fingers and the sensor, arcs travel through the web from the sensor to the fingers,
thereby providing a signal for registration of a bag in position to be loaded. Because
the bags are slightly pre-opened by the tension created by the drag of the belts 76,
77, offset perforations at an upstream location in the backs of the bags can be detected
by the sensor.
The Air Knife System
[0046] An air knife 84 is in communication with the air manifold defined by the support
frame 12 and support arm 20. The air knife is commercially available from Exair Corporation,
1250 Century Circle North, Cincinnati, Ohio 45246 under Part No. X032092. An air tube
85 is also in communication with the air manifold. After a bag passes between the
nip rolls 73, 74 and is in a position for loading, a burst of air from air tube 85
opens the bag while a steady, laterally elongate, stream of air from the air knife
completes and maintains the opening of the bag.
[0047] The air from the air knife passes from between upper and lower portions 84a, 84b,
Figure 10. After the air passes between these two portions, it travels over and around
a radiused corner 84c of the lower portion 84b and along a front side of the air knife
and into the bag. Because of the long, lateral dimension of the air knife, it provides
a sheet of air under low pressure thereby creating a thorough side-to-side opening
of the bag.
[0048] While the bag is held open by the air knife 84, a product may be either manually
or automatically loaded into the bag. Once the product has been loaded into the bag,
a solenoid 86 terminates the flow of air through the air knife 84. As the air flow
is stopped, a clamping sub-assembly 90 is moved in against the bag causing the bag
to move against a heater bar sub-assembly 91, Figure 2.
The Clamping and Heater Bar Sub-Assemblies
[0049] The clamping sub-assembly 90 is connected to the machine 10 by guide rods 96, 97.
The sub-assembly 90 includes a support 92 and a seal pad 93 connected to the support,
Figure 2. A seal pad housing 94 is connected to the support 92 via lost motion connections
(one of which is shown at 95). The lost motion connections each include a pin 100
and a spring 101.
[0050] The heater bar sub-assembly 91 includes a heater bar 102 protected by a conventional
Teflon
ยท cover. Upper and lower gripper plates 103, 104 flank the heater bar. Each of the
gripper plates 103, 104 has a flat surface 105. The plates are mounted on the bagger
15 by bolts 106, 107 that are surrounded by springs 108, 109. Upper and lower edges
105a, 105b of the plates are sharpened and serrated.
[0051] A jam prevention system is provided and includes two reflective devices located on
the clamping sub-assembly, a light beam emitter and a light beam receiver. The structure
and operation of the jam prevention system is more fully described in a co-pending
patent application, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference, entitled
"Packaging Machine and Method," filed concurrently herewith and owned by a common
assignee.
[0052] The clamping sub-assembly 90 is moved against the heater bar subassembly 91 by an
air cylinder 110. The air cylinder 110 is in fluid communication with the air manifold
within the support frame 12 and support arm 20. The seal pad housing 94 compresses
against its lost motion connections and the seal pad 93 clamps a loaded bag against
the gripper plates 103, 104 and thence against the heater bar 102. While the loaded
bag is clamped between the sub-assemblies, the stepper motor 74a reverses the web
feed thereby separating the loaded bag from the web.
The Electronic Controls
[0053] Electronic controls for the machine 10 are contained within a housing 120 that is
illustrated in Figures 17-19. The controls include a controller board defining a bus
system and one or more auxiliary boards coupled to the bus system. The housing 120
is a removable section of the bagger 15 and therefore can easily be removed as a unit
for maintenance and service as opposed to individually removing electrical circuit
boards or other components. The structure and operation of the electronic control
system of the machine 10 is more fully described in a co-pending patent application,
which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference, entitled "Bagging Control
Apparatus and Method," filed 27th August 1992 and owned by a common assignee.
[0054] An input module 130 is connected to the support frame 12. The input module 130 includes
a keypad 131 that allows operator input for programming and controlling the machine
10.
[0055] The bagger 15 and input module 130 are individually pivotable as illustrated in phantom
in Figure 1. Two screws 132, 133 are respectively contained within slots 134, 135
located within a portion of a module support bracket 136. By loosening the screws
132, 133, the module can be rotated about an extension of the tube 201 to position
the keypad at a desired orientation.
[0056] Split clamps 137, Figure 5, rotatively fix the bagger 15 at a desire orientation
on the tube 20. Loosening of cap bolts 139 (only one of four being shown in Figure
5) allows the bagger to be rotated to a desired orientation and then clamped in that
orientation.
[0057] Although the preferred embodiment of this invention has been shown and described,
it should be understood that various modifications and rearrangements of the parts
may be resorted to without departing from the scope of the invention as disclosed
and claimed herein.
[0058] Whilst endeavouring in the foregoing specification to draw attention to those features
of the invention believed to be of particular importance it should be understood that
the Applicant claims protection in respect of any patentable feature or combination
of features hereinbefore referred to and/or shown in the drawings whether or not particular
emphasis has been placed thereon.
1. A packaging machine (1) comprising a structure delineating a path of travel for a
web (11) in the form of a chain of pre-opened plastic bags, drive means to feed the
web along the path of travel through the machine to a loading station with the bags
each oriented closed end first, characterised by a web feed mechanism (m) comprising:
(a) opposed conveyor belts (76,77) respectively positioned on opposite sides of the
path;
(b) opposed pairs of spaced roll members (71,72,73,74) respectively positioned on
opposite sides of the path;
(c) each of the belts being stretched around the roller pair on the like side of the
path and delineating as to each belt a feed reach (76f,77f) adjacent the path and
a return reach spaced from the path; and
(d) drive means 74a coupled to at least one of the roller members selectively to rotate
at least one coupled member and thereby cause the feed reaches to move in directions
toward the load station.
2. A machine according to Claim 1, characterised in that the opposed conveyor belts are
each sets of discrete belts.
3. A machine according to Claim 1 or 2, characterised in that the belts of the sets are
elastic bands.
4. A machine of any of the preceding claims, characterised in that one roll member of
one pair is nipped with one roll member of the other pair to form a pair of nip rolls
(73,74) positioned on opposite sides of the path at a downstream location along the
path of travel.
5. A machine according to Claim 4, characterised in that, when a web is being fed along
the path, the belts are fed at a feed rate less than that of the nip rolls whereby
the web is tensioned due to the differential in the feed rates.
6. A machine according to Claim 5, characterised by grooves (75) within the nip rolls
of radial depth greater than the diameter of the belts to produce the feed rate differential.
7. A machine according to any of the preceding claims characterised in that the other
roll of each pair form an upstream pair of roll members (71,72) located upstream along
the path of travel and the roll members of the upstream pair are offset relative to
one another.
8. A machine according to Claim 7, characterised in that the offset is such that a first
of the offset roll members (72) and its associated roll (73) of its opposed pair have
axes located in a plane that contains an axis of the other offset roll member (71).
9. A packaging machine according to any of the preceding claims, further characterised
by:
(a) a base section (13);
(b) an upstanding support section (12) mounted on the base at a location offset to
one side of the base;
(c) a web supply section (17) connected to the base and in cantilever relationship
with the support section and projecting laterally above the one side of the base section
toward the other side;
(d) the web feed mechanism forming a part of a web dispensing section mounted on the
support section above the supply station and projecting laterally from the support
section toward the other side of the base section cantilever fashion; and
(e) web path delineating elements (41c,71) carried by a least one of the sections
to delineate a path of web travel from the supply station to the web feed mechanism.
10. A machine according to Claim 9, characterised in that the dispensing section is rotatively
mounted on the support and a clamp means (137) is interposed between the dispensing
and supporting sections to fix the dispensing section in a rotatively adjusted position.
11. A machine according to Claim 9 or 10 characterised in that the support section includes
an internal chamber (18) and the support section provides at least a portion of an
air manifold.
12. A machine according to Claim 11 characterised in that the dispensing section mounting
is a tube (20) having another internal chamber communicating with the support chamber
to define a further portion of the air manifold.
13. A machine according to any of claims 9 to 12 wherein the web supply section further
includes a further web tensioning system characterised by:
(a) upper (41a,41b,41c) and lower (42a,42b,42c) dancer roll sets;
(b) upper (39) and lower (30) dancer frames respectively carrying the upper and lower
sets;
(c) the frames being pivotally connected together and being selectively relatively
positionable in a web feed position and a web tension control range;
(d) the upper roll set when in the web feeb position being on one side of an imaginary
plane located by the axes of the upstream most and downstream most rolls of the lower
set, the upper set being on the opposite side of the plane when in the tension control
range;
(e) a frame motion-sensing mechanism (44,45,46) operatively connected to the frames
and adapted to sense relative motion of the frames when in the control range; and
(f) a web feed rate control means (51,53) positioned to engage a web being fed along
the path for controlling the feed rate of the web in response to mechanism sensed
relative motion of the frames.
14. A machine according to Claim 13, characterised in that the feed rate control means
comprises a pair of feed nip rolls at least one of which is connected to a stepper
motor (50) and motor output control means for sensing relative loation of the dancer
roll sets in the control range and controlling the motor in response to such location
sensing.
15. A machine according to Claim 14 characterised in that the output control means is
a gear segment (44) connected to the frame pivot to sense relative frame pivoting
in the range, the gear segment being meshed with a pot gear (45) that is connected
to a potentiometer (46).
16. A machine according to any of Claims 13 to 15 characterised in that the rate control
means includes a pair of feed nip rolls, one of the nips rolls including a shaft projecting
into a curved slot (55) in the upper dancer frame, the slot including a feed position
portion (56), and said one of the nip rolls being movable from a tension control range
position to a web feed position wherein a portion of the shaft is in the feed position
retention portion.
17. A machine according to any of the preceding claims characterised in that the web feed
mechanism forms a part of a bagger, including a load station for loading bags, the
load station including an air tube (85) for opening the bags with a burst of air and
an air knife (84) for maintaining an opening in the bags.
18. A machine according to Claim 17, characterised in that said air knife comprises first
and second portions (84a,84b) that define an elongate narrow opening therebetween
to provide a wide stream of air.
19. A packaging machine having a web feed mechanism comprising:
(a) a first pair of grooved rolls (72,73);
(b) a first set of elastic belts (77) reeved about the first pair of rolls to form
a first web conveyor with the belts, each having a web feed reach (77f) extending
between the rolls along a path of travel and opposed return reaches;
(c) a second pair of grooved rolls (71,74);
(d) a second set of elastic belts (76) reeved about the second pair of rolls to form
a second web conveyor with the belts, each having a web feed reach (76f) extending
between the rolls along a path of travel and opposed return reaches.
(e) first rolls of each pair being abutting nip rolls (73,74) at the downstream ends
of the feed reaches;
(f) second rolls of each pair being an upstream set with the second roll (72) of the
first pair being downstream from the second roll (71) of the second pair;
(g) the feed reaches of the first conveyor having axes locating an imaginary plane;
characterised by
(h) the second roll of the second pair being, at least in part, on the same side of
such imaginary plane as the return reaches of the first conveyor such that the feed
reaches of the second conveyor are deflected over and engage surfaces of the second
roll of the first pair.
20. A machine according to Claim 19, wherein the grooves of the nip rolls each have radial
depths greater than the thickness of the belt disposed in that groove as measured
radially of its roll.
21. Apparatus for delivering a web of pre-opened bags from a supply station to load station,
the improved apparatus comprising:
(a) first web gripping and feed means (51,53) positioned along a web path of travel
for pulling a web from a supply at the supply station;
(b) a web feed mechanism (m) defining a section of the web path and including a second
web gripping and feed means (76,77) positioned along the web path of travel near the
entrance to the mechanism; characterised by each of the gripping and feed means being
adapted to isolate web tension producing forces upstream from it from a web section
downstream and vice versa whereby to separate the web path into three sections in
each of which web tension is controlled independently of the other sections.
22. Apparatus according to Claim 21, characterised in that a dancer mechanism (n) controls
tension in a middle one of the three sections, and the first gripping and feed means
includes a powered nip roll set (51,53) having a feed rate responsive to motion of
the dancer mechanism.
23. Apparatus according to Claim 21 or 22 characterised in that the second web gripping
means is a co-acting pair of belt conveyors and a downstream load station nip roll
pair (73,74) has a feed rate greater than that of the conveyors.
24. A method of feeding a web through a packaging machine characterised by the steps of:
(a) rotating at least one roll member of a nipped pair of roll members near a load
station to drive a belt wrappted around a pair of roll members along one side of a
web path of trave;
(b) driving an opposing belt wrapped around an opposing pair of roll members along
an opposite side of the web path of travel;
(c) placing the web in contact with certain of the roll members and the belts at a
location spaced from the load station;
(d) threading the belt along the path by placing the web between the opposing roll
members and feeding the web by continuing to drive the belts.
25. A method according to Claim 24 characterised in that the belts are driven at a surface
speed less than the surface speed of the driven roll member.
26. A method of tension control in a packaging machine utilising webs of pre-opened bags
characterised by:
(a) feeding an elongate web of pre-opened bags from a supply along a first section
of a path of travel through a first web grasping and feeding mechanism by tensioning
the web between the supply and the first mechanism while isolating such tensioning
from downstream path sections;
(b) feeding the web from the first mechanism along a section section of the path through
a second web grasping and feeding mechanism while isolating tension in the second
section from a third downstream section of the web;
(c) controllably tensioning the web in the second section as the web is fed through
the second section; and
(d) applying tension to a third section of the web downstream from the second mechanism.
27. A method according to Claim 26 characterised by applying an accelerating force to
a face of each bag as it approaches the load station while maintaining tension within
the web, thereby slightly pre-opening the bags.