OVERHEAD TRAY CONVEYOR AND WASH SYSTEM
20220304544 · 2022-09-29
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65G54/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A47L15/0092
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A47L15/245
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A47L15/24
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A47L15/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
An overhead tray conveyor system conveying tray movers holding trays carrying products to a workstation area for processing. Soiled trays are transferred from the tray movers to a wash system. Once sanitized, the trays are returned from the wash system to the tray movers advancing around a track circuit.
Claims
1. A tray conveyor system comprising: a conveyor having an endless overhead track; a plurality of tray movers, each including: a trolley operable to be advanced by the conveyor on the endless overhead track around a circuit; a tray holder suspended from the trolley and operable to releasably hold a tray; a workstation area along a portion of the circuit at which products on the trays are processed; a wash system including: an entry; an exit; a tray washer; a conveyor operable to convey trays through the washer from the entry to the exit; a wash system entry junction at a position along the circuit downstream of the workstation area at which the trays transfer from the tray holders advancing around the circuit to the entry of the wash system; a wash system exit junction at a position along the circuit downstream of the wash system entry junction at which the trays transfer back onto the tray holders advancing around the circuit.
2. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 1 comprising an infeed conveyor positioned along the circuit between the wash system exit junction and the workstation area to feed products onto the trays.
3. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 1 comprising an ejector at the wash system entry junction for pushing the trays from the tray holder into the entry of the wash system.
4. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 1 wherein the wash system includes pinch rollers at the entry to pull the trays onto the wash system's conveyor from the tray holders at the wash system entry junction.
5. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 1 wherein the wash system includes pinch rollers at the exit to push the trays off the wash system's conveyor and onto the tray holders at the wash system exit junction.
6. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 1 wherein the wash system's conveyor is a powered roller conveyor.
7. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 1 wherein the conveyor comprises an electromagnetic drive including a series of coils forming a stator extending along the endless overhead track and producing electromagnetic fields and wherein the trolleys include permanent magnets having magnetic fields that interact with the stator's electromagnetic fields to produce a force to drive the trolleys along the track.
8. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 1 wherein the tray mover includes: a yoke having first and second arms extending downwardly to distal ends; a connecting member extending downward from the trolley to the yoke; wherein the tray holder has a first tray support rotatably retained in the distal end of the first arm and a second tray support rotatably retained in the distal end of the second arm; a bistable latch latching the first and second tray supports in a stable closed configuration to hold a tray and in a stable open configuration to release or accept a tray.
9. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 8 wherein the bistable latch comprises a first polymagnet in each of the first and second arms and a second polymagnet affixed to each of the first and second tray supports and confronting the first polymagnet and wherein the first and second polymagnets attract each other when the first and second tray supports are rotated to the stable open and closed configurations.
10. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 8 wherein the first and second tray supports are each L-shaped and have a slot to receive and support a corner of the trays.
11. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 10 wherein the first and second tray supports include a pivot pin extending upward from the corner of the L and rotatably retained in the distal ends of the tray holder's first and second arms to rotate about the pivot pin.
12. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 8 comprising an ejector at the wash system entry junction arranged with the tray holder to rotate the first and second tray supports of the tray holder from the stable closed configuration to the stable open configuration to release the tray and to push the tray from the tray holder into the entry of the wash system.
13. A tray conveyor system as claimed in claim 8 wherein the wash system includes pinch rollers at the exit to push the trays off the wash system's conveyor and onto the tray holders at the wash system exit junction and wherein the trays entering the tray holders rotate the first and second tray supports of the tray holders from the stable open configuration to the stable closed configuration to hold the trays.
14. A tray conveyor for conveying trays, comprising: a conveyor having an endless overhead track; a plurality of tray movers, each including: a trolley operable to be advanced by the conveyor on the endless overhead track around a circuit; a tray holder suspended from the trolley; a yoke having first and second arms extending downwardly to distal ends; a connecting member extending downward from the trolley to the yoke; wherein the tray holder has a first tray support rotatably retained in the distal end of the first arm and a second tray support rotatably retained in the distal end of the second arm; a bistable latch latching the first and second tray supports in a stable closed configuration to hold a tray and in a stable open configuration to release or accept a tray.
15. A tray conveyor as claimed in claim 14 comprising an electromagnetic drive including a series of coils forming a stator extending along the endless overhead track and producing electromagnetic fields and wherein the trolleys include permanent magnets having magnetic fields that interact with the stator's electromagnetic fields to produce a force to drive the trolleys along the track.
16. A tray conveyor as claimed in claim 14 wherein the bistable latch comprises a first polymagnet in each of the first and second arms and a second polymagnet affixed to each of the first and second tray supports and confronting the first polymagnet and wherein the first and second polymagnets attract each other when the first and second tray supports are rotated to the stable open and closed configurations.
17. A tray conveyor as claimed in claim 16 wherein the first and second polymagnets are disks with opposite faces and a flat on a peripheral surface to serve as a reference.
18. A tray conveyor as claimed in claim 16 wherein the first and second polymagnets are annular disks with a central bore and wherein the first and second tray supports have a pivot pin received in the central bores.
19. A tray conveyor as claimed in claim 16 wherein the first and second polymagnets are annular disks with a central bore and wherein the first polymagnets are affixed in distal ends of the first and second arms of the yoke and wherein the second polymagnets are affixed to the first and second tray supports.
20. A tray conveyor as claimed in claim 14 wherein the first and second tray supports are L-shaped and mirror images of each other, wherein each has a first leg and a second leg joined at a corner and a pivot pin at the corner extending perpendicularly from the plane of the L and into the distal ends of the first and second arms of the yoke.
21. A tray conveyor as claimed in claim 20 wherein the first and second legs each have a groove sized to receive an edge of the trays.
22. A tray conveyor as claimed in claim 14 wherein the first and second tray supports are operable to counter-rotate together over a limited range of rotation angles.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0012] A hygienic tray conveyor system embodying features of the invention is shown in
[0013] The trays 20 are held by tray movers 22 suspended from and driven in a circuit around an endless overhead track 24 in a conveying direction 26 (counterclockwise in this example). Products P loaded onto the trays 20 are conveyed to a workstation area 28 at which operators butcher or otherwise process the products P and manually remove the processed products from the trays. The workstation area 28 may include a table 30 or other support surface to support the trays 20 during butchering or other processing. Blood and other residual debris (D) soil the trays 20 leaving the workstation area.
[0014] The soiled trays 20′ are transferred off the tray movers 22 and into the wash system 16 at a wash system entry junction 32. The soiled trays 20′ are conveyed through the wash system in a conveyor such as a belt conveyor or a powered roller conveyor. The wash system 16 may include a scraper segment 34 to scrape solid and gelatinous debris from the soiled trays 20′, a wash segment 36, a sanitizing and drying segment 38, and a tray accumulation segment 40. The soiled trays 20′ are rinsed in the scraper and wash segments 34, 36. Once washed, the trays 20 are sanitized and dried with heat in the sanitizing and drying segment 38. The trays 20 are accumulated in the accumulator segment 40 for re-entry onto the tray movers 22 at a wash system exit junction 42. From the exit junction 42, the clean trays 20 are conveyed to the infeed conveyor 12 to receive new products P.
[0015] The tray movers 22 in this example are driven by an electromagnetic drive 44 in the overhead track 24 as shown in
[0016] A connecting member 56 extends downward from the trolley 46 of each tray mover 22 to a yoke 58 as shown in
[0017] A pair of confronting polymagnets 76, 77 at each distal end 62, 63 of the yoke 58 in the tray mover 22 form a bistable latch for the tray holder. The bistable latch affords the tray holder two stable configurations: (1) a stable closed configuration (as in
[0018] The polymagnets 76, 77 are each in the form of annular disks with a central axial bore 78 as also shown in
[0019] The arrangement of the polymagnet pair 76, 77 in
[0020] The transfer of a soiled tray 20′ to the wash system 16 at the wash system entry junction is shown in sequence in
[0021] Once a tray 20 is conveyed through the wash system 16 by the conveyor 84 from the wash system entry junction to the wash system exit junction, it is returned to a tray mover 22 as shown in
[0022] The wash system shown in
[0023] Although the features of the invention have been described in illustrative examples, other versions are possible. For example the overhead tray conveyor does not have to be an electromagnetic conveyor. It could be an overhead chain conveyor advancing the tray movers around the circuit. And bistable latches can be realized without using polymagnets. So, as these few examples suggest, the claims are not meant to be limited to the illustrative features.