Liquid color cart and method for liquid color dispensing
09815036 · 2017-11-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01F33/846
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F35/2218
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F35/881
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01G21/22
PHYSICS
International classification
G01G21/22
PHYSICS
Abstract
A portable scale for weighing containers, and includes a weighing tray that may be moved from a weighing position to a non-weighing position by a drive mechanism. When in the non-weighing position, the weighing tray is low to the ground, allowing for easy loading and unloading. When in the weighing position, force is transmitted to one or more load cells located between the weighing tray and a scale assembly, which allows for an accurate measurement of the container and/or its contents.
Claims
1. A cart comprising: a) a weighing tray comprising: i) a horizontal portion for supporting a load to be weighed; ii) parallel wall-like members vertically upstanding from opposite lateral edges of the horizontal portion; iii) projections fixedly connected to and extending outwardly from the wall-like members; b) a scale assembly substantially supporting the weighing tray, said scale assembly comprising: i) a base adapted for facing contact with the horizontal portion when the horizontal portion is in a lowered non-weight measuring position; ii) pneumatic piston-cylinder combinations, piston rods of the piston-cylinder combinations having first ends extending from the cylinders and being fixedly connected to the base, said piston-cylinder combinations lifting the weighing tray and any load resting thereon off the base for measurement of the weight of the load upon receipt of an actuating signal from an electronic controller associatively connected with the cart and lowering the tray and any load resting thereon to contact the base portion upon weighing the load; iii) shelf members fixedly connected to the piston-cylinder combinations; c) load cells connecting the shelf members and the projections; and d) an electronic controller connected to the cart, being in electrical communicative association with said load cells and having a visible output device for displaying weight of a container on said weighing tray.
2. The cart of claim 1 wherein the projections extend laterally from the wall-like members.
3. The cart of claim 1 wherein the projections are at upper vertical extremities of the wall-like members.
4. The cart of claim 2 wherein the projections are at upper vertical extremities of the wall-like members.
5. A cart for weighing a batch of granular plastic resin material in a container consisting of: a) a tray; b) a base; c) pneumatic piston-cylinder combinations, piston rods of the piston-cylinder combinations having first ends fixedly connected to the base, said piston-cylinder combinations lifting and lowering the tray and any load resting thereon from and to the base; d) load cells connected to the base and to the tray; e) an electronic controller in electrical communicative association with said load cells and having a visible output device for displaying weight of the contents of a container on said tray.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS AND BEST MODE KNOWN FOR PRACTICE OF THE INVENTION
(8) Liquid color, when manufactured, is the result of blending a number of different base pigments together to obtain the exact color and shade of color a customer wants. The accurate addition of each component is critical. Generally it is necessary to measure and dispense each component to an accuracy of 1 part per 1000, which is 1/10 of 1.0% of the total blend weight.
(9) The components are generally mixed in a large container, such as a drum or barrel. The empty drum to be filled with liquid color may be a 30 gallon drum that can hold from 300 to 400 pounds, depending on bulk density of the blend. Once filled, the container is then transported to a desired location through the use of a cart or other transport device. This generally requires the now 300 to 400 pound container to be manually lifted onto the cart, which can prove onerous.
(10) The invention provides a cart that is able to measure the components being added to the drum while the drum is loaded on the cart. This allows one to skip the step of having to load a heavy drum on to the cart after it has been filled. Further, the invention allows one to determine the amount of liquid color in the drum without having to transport the drum to a scale, remove the drum from the cart, and place the drum on the scale. As explained in more detail below, this is helpful in determining and correcting any loss-in-weight of the liquid color.
(11) The mechanical design of a cart 10 is illustrated in
(12) Referring to
(13) A column 48 is affixed at its distal end to the rear frame member 40 by bolting or other detachable means and extends upwards. Handles 50 are attached to the proximal end of the column 48. A controller unit 52 is also affixed to the proximal end of the column 48 by means of a mounting bracket 56. The mounting bracket 56 includes an adjustable tray 58 that allows the display monitor 54 of the controller unit 52 to be angled so as to be visible to the user.
(14) As shown in
(15) With particular reference to
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(17) Accuracy in measuring the weight of the material in the drum is important. For example, for a 300 pound batch of the final liquid color product, it is necessary to measure and dispense into drum 100 each component to within three tenths (0.3) of a pound, or 135 grams. In an embodiment of the present invention, load cells 34 on cart 10 can detect accurately to within 5 grams. This is a tighter tolerance then is presently generally available in the industry. More common is 1/5000 of full scale reading, or 36 grams for a 400 pound batch of final product. To obtain such accuracy, cart 10 preferably uses two 90 kg load cells, providing a 180 kg or 400 pound capacity.
(18) Such accuracy is necessary in determining, as the drum is filled, exactly how much liquid color is going in. This is referred to herein as “Gain in Weight” or “GIW”. Similarly, it is important to accurately detect exactly how much liquid color is being removed as the liquid color is pumped out of the drum. This measurement is referred to herein as herein as “Loss in Weight” or “LIW”.
(19) Respecting GIW, as noted above, liquid color, when manufactured, is the result of blending a number of different base pigments together to obtain the exact color and shade of color a customer wants. When using the invention, this manufacturing process proceeds by placing an empty drum on the cart 10, and filling drum 100 with liquid from source drums, each of which contains a single pigment dispersion. Each source drum is fitted with a pump, and the controller unit 52 preferably includes software written to control each pump in such a way as to assure exact amounts are metered from a source drum containing a liquid single pigment dispersion into the blended drum 100 sitting on the cart 10. Examples of such pumps can be found in U.S. Pat. No. 9,188,118, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein. During this process, the weighing tray 14 remains in the weighing position. As each liquid single pigment dispersion component is added to the drum, load cells 34 can provide a continuous reading of the exact weight that has been added. Once the specified weight of the first component is added, the single pigment dispersion component from the next source drum may be added. This process continues until the all of the desired components have been added in the preferred amounts. When all of the components have been added to the drum, it is sealed and tumbled to blend all the single pigment dispersion components into one perfect, fully blended color, ready for use to color molded or extruded plastic parts.
(20) Regarding LIW, the inventive cart 10 is also used to monitor “usage” of finished liquid color product as the liquid color is consumed by the user's process. The cart 10 allows the user to meter exact amounts of liquid color into his process machine for every cycle the machine runs. For example, when molding a 500 gram part that requires 1% liquid, or 5 grams of liquid color per part, the process must accurately meter 5 grams of liquid color for every process machine cycle that produces one of the 500 gram parts. The cart 10 accomplishes this using a very accurate pump, which is designed to repeatedly meter the same amount every cycle. The controller unit 52 of the cart 10 proceeds to adjust that amount as needed by monitoring the readings of the load cells 34 that are part of cart 10 and determining how much weight of liquid color cart 10 is “losing”, on average, with each cycle. While cart 10 cannot reliably detect what is used in one cycle or over a few cycles, over time cart 10 can very accurately determine an average color loss. Based on that average, cart 10 can make small adjustments to the pump to target the exact 5 grams per cycle required for successful manufacture of the 500 gram parts.
(21) The preferred embodiment herein disclosed is not intended to be exhaustive or to unnecessarily limit the scope of the invention. The preferred embodiment was chosen and described in order to explain the principles of the invention so that others skilled in the art may practice the invention. Having shown and described a preferred embodiment of the invention, those skilled in the art will realize that many variations and modifications may be made to affect the described invention. Many of those variations and modifications will provide the same result and fall within the spirit of the claimed invention.