PEAR PROCESSING METHOD AND MULTILANE APPARATUS
20210298342 · 2021-09-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65G15/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A23V2002/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A23N4/24
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A23L19/03
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A23L19/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A method for processing pears advancing on housing and centering cups (9) of a multilane belt (7) with its calycine end facing upwards, in order to be cored, pitted and halved the method provides, in a first step, locking each pear against rotation inside its housing and centering cup (9), to measure the distance of the calycine end, and to communicate said distance to a control unit (14) that determines the height position of the endocarp of that pear, and, in a second step, to lower simultaneously, by the control unit (14), a coring rod (24) and a pitting knife (26) from a rest position to the height of the endocarp of the underlying pear, as determined by the control unit (14). A multilane apparatus for processing pears is also disclosed.
Claims
1. A method for processing pears having an endocarp located at a distance from the calycine end depending on the pear longitudinal size, the pears being positioned with their calycine end facing upwards, in order to be cored, pitted and halved on a multilane belt advancing step by step and comprising mesh elements and fruit holding flights, having a plurality of pear housing and centering cups in an apparatus controlled by a control unit, the method comprising: a first step of advancing the multilane belt, in which each pear is blocked against rotation inside its housing and centering cup, and the distance of the calycine end is contactless measured to know the pear longitudinal size, and a second step of advancing the multilane belt, in which a coring rod and a pitting knife are simultaneously lowered, by the control unit, from a rest position to the height of the endocarp of an underlying pear, as determined by the control unit, and each pitting knife is rotated simultaneously with the other pitting knives at different heights according to the longitudinal size of the pear to be pitted.
2. A multilane apparatus for processing pears, comprising on a frame: a control unit, a cutting station including: a coring and pitting substation, that holds coring rods and pitting knives, and a halving substation, that carries halving blades, and a conveyor, having: a multilane belt movable with advancement direction towards the cutting station and being formed by mesh elements and fruit holding flights; a plurality of housing and centering cups in each fruit holding flight suitable for receiving respective pears with calycine end facing upwards; a front wall and a rear wall that are fixed and face each other in each housing and centering cup transversely to the advancement direction of the multilane belt; and a pair of jaw walls hinged around a respective rotation pin, held by the front wall and rear wall, each jaw wall having a gripping surface and a pair of projections equipped with toothed sectors mutually engaged with the toothed sectors of the facing jaw wall, so that the two jaw walls, equipped with bases, are able to rotate in synchronism with each other between an open position in a forward movement towards the cutting station and a clamping position in the cutting station; wherein located before the coring and pitting substation is a measuring substation, including a plurality of contactless distance meters overlying the plurality of housing and centering cups which are positioned in turn below in the advancement of the multilane belt, each contactless distance meter being suitable for measuring its distance from the calycine end of the underlying pear and communicating it to the control unit, suitable to determine the height position of the endocarp of that pear and to control the simultaneous lowering of a coring rod and of a pitting knife from its rest position to the height of the endocarp of the underlying pear, as determined by the control unit.
3. The apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the contactless distance meters are laser measurement sensors.
4. The apparatus according to claim 3, wherein the laser measurement sensors are the ZX1-LD model of the Omron Corporation of Kyoto (Japan).
5. The apparatus according to claim 2, wherein at least one jaw wall has on its side a ratchet mechanism adapted to keep locked the jaw walls both in open position and in clamping position.
6. The apparatus according to claim 5, wherein the ratchet mechanism comprises an arm integral with the jaw wall provided with teeth in its free end, and a hook pivoted on the respective fixed wall of the housing and centering cup and loaded by a spring to engage with the teeth of the arm of the facing jaw wall so as to lock the jaw walls both in open position and in clamping position.
7. The apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the front wall and rear wall of the housing and centering cup are mutually connected with a pair of pins passing through ribbed parts of a funnel located between the front wall and rear wall and shaped according to a profile conjugated to that of a halving blade, a helical spring being abutted between a ribbed part and the facing jaw wall, so that each jaw wall is loaded towards the open position delimited by protrusions at the ends of the front and rear fixed walls.
8. The apparatus according to claim 7, wherein provided in the coring and pitting substation on a plane connected to the frame of the apparatus is, for each housing and centering cup, a pair of pneumatic pistons adapted to push on the bases of both jaw walls in a decentralized position with respect to the rotation pins to bring the jaw walls to the clamping position by acting against the helical springs.
9. The apparatus according to claim 7, wherein provided in the halving substation is a pneumatic piston adapted to act on said hook to bring each jaw wall in the open position with the help of said helical springs.
10. The apparatus according to claim 2, wherein in the coring and pitting substation, each coring rod is coaxial to a lobed shaft carrying a pitting knife, each lobed shaft being pivotably mounted by means of its own pinion bushing unit engaged, like the lobed shafts carrying the other pitting knives, with a rack driven back and forth by means of a first gearmotor.
11. The apparatus according to claim 10, wherein the coring rod slides inside a coaxial duct formed by the lobed shaft in which is provided a fixed spindle adapted to prevent the lifting of core residues inside the coaxial duct by the coring rod when the coring rod and the pitting knife are simultaneously moved upwards to the rest position.
12. The apparatus according to claim 2, wherein in the halving substation the halving blades are mounted on a horizontal rod, vertically movable on lateral guides integral with the frame of the apparatus by means of a second gearmotor to which the horizontal rod is connected with a system of levers.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0023] Further features and advantages of the present invention will become most clear from the indicative, and therefore non-limiting, description of the multi-lane apparatus for processing pears, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which:
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DESCRIPTION OF AN EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION
[0048] Reference is made initially to
[0049] With reference to
[0050] In
[0051] The measuring substation 2 includes a plurality of contactless distance meters 10. The contactless distance meters 10 are mounted by means of an adjustable support 11 to a horizontal support rod 12 fixed to the uprights 13 of the frame 5. The contactless distance meters 10 are equal in number to the rows of housing and centering cups 9 in each mesh element and fruit holding flight 8 of the multilane belt 7. The rows of housing and centering cups 9 are positioned below in turn in the advancement of the multilane belt 7, stopping during the measurement. The contactless distance meters 10 are preferably laser measurement sensors. As an example, the al-LD model from Omron Corporation of Kyoto (Japan) can be taken. The meters 10 are electrically connected to a control unit 14.
[0052] The contactless distance meters 10 are oriented so as to read the center of each housing and centering cup 9. If a pear is positioned in the latter, the laser beam reaches the calycine end of the pear and communicates the distance read to the control unit 14. Knowing the calycine end of the pear allows to know the longitudinal dimension of the pear to be treated, since the distance of the contactless distance meters 10 from the multilane belt 7 of the conveyor 6, where the pear is positioned, is known. The position of the endocarp, or seed cell, can be determined in this way in each pear, since the endocarp in a pear is known to be at a constant distance from the calycine end, with the same longitudinal dimension of the pear. The endocarp position information is transmitted from the control unit to the coring and pitting substation 3 shown for representative clarity with only one coring and pitting device 15 in
[0053] Each coring and destoning device 15, unlike as shown schematically in
[0054] Reference is made now to
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[0056] The fixed spindle 35 serves to prevent the lifting of core residues inside the coaxial duct 34 by the coring rod 24 when the coring rod 24 and the pitting knife 26 are simultaneously moved upwards in the rest position.
[0057] In
[0058] See now
[0059] It must be understood that, in order to satisfactorily carry out the coring, pitting and halving operations, each pear must be adequately held inside its housing and centering cup 9.
[0060] Reference is made to
[0061] As previously said, the multilane belt 7 of the conveyor 6 is equipped with mesh elements and fruit holding flight 8. Each mesh element and fruit holding flight 8 includes a row of housing and centering cups 9. Each housing and centering cup 9 has a pair of fixed side walls 50, 51 arranged transversely to the direction of advance of the multilane belt 7 and a pair of jaw walls 52, 53 orthogonal to the fixed side walls 50, 51. The fixed side walls 50, 51 are connected together by means of pins indicated generically with 62. The jaw walls 52, 53 are substantially in the shape of a vane with concave facing surfaces 54, 55 to adapt to the profile of the pear, and opposite surfaces 56, 57. The jaw walls 52, 53 are preferably made of plastic, to be light and not to cause damage to the fruit that is held by them. The fixed side walls 50, 51 can also be conveniently made of plastic material. Like the concave facing surfaces 54, 55, the internal surfaces 58, 59 of the fixed side walls 50, 51, intended to come into contact with the pears, are also concave. With reference to
[0062] As shown in the front view of
[0063] On the ends of the front and rear fixed walls 50, 51 there are protrusions, indicated generically with 64, which act as an abutment for the jaw walls 52, 53.
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[0065] The jaw walls 52, 53 are normally in the open position in which they abut against protrusions 64 of the fixed walls 50, 51. To pass into the closed or clamping position shown in
[0066] In proximity to the base 74 of the jaw wall 53, in correspondence with the rotation pin 65, an arm 75 is integral with the jaw 53 having a succession of teeth 76 at its free end. A hook 77 is hinged on the respective front wall 50 of the housing and centering cup 9 about a pivot 78, The hook 77 is spring loaded by means of a spring 79 housed in a seat 80 of the front wall 50; the hook 77 engages with the teeth 76 of the arm 75 of the jaw wall 53, so as to lock the jaw wall 53, with which the arm 75 is integral, in the open position as shown in
[0067] With reference to
[0068] It should be understood that the ratchet mechanism 72 allows for the improvement of the prior art multilane belt conveyor because the housing and centering cups for the pears have the jaw walls actually closed against each other during the coring, pitting and halving operations to keep the pears effectively locked in the housing and centering cup. In this way, the coring stem will act exactly in correspondence with the stem—calyx axis of the pear, and the pitting knife will not cause the pear to rotate with consequent damage to the pitting.
[0069] The apparatus described above allows the method for processing pears according to the present invention to be carried out. Pears generally have a central axis of symmetry passing through the stem end and the calycine end. They have an endocarp located at a constant distance from the calycine end with the same longitudinal dimension of the pear. The pears, fed into a feeding station, advance into the apparatus controlled by the control unit 14 on the multilane belt 7 of the conveyor 6. The multilane belt 7 is formed by mesh elements and fruit holding flights 8, having the plurality of housing and centering cups 9 in each of which a pear is positioned with its calycine end facing upwards. On reaching the cutting station 1, the pear in a first advance step of the multilane belt 7 is blocked against rotation inside its housing and centering cup 9 by means of the jaw walls 52, 53 kept in the clamping position by the ratchet mechanism 72. The pear, being placed under the contactless distance meter 10, is measured by verifying the distance of the calycine end of the pear from the contactless distance meters 10, The longitudinal dimension of the pear is thus determined and, therefore, this information is transmitted to the control unit 14 which establishes the height position of the endocarp of the pear which is at that moment in the housing and centering cup 9.
[0070] In a second step of advancing the multilane belt, the pear is locked against rotation inside its housing and centering cup 9 by means of the jaw walls 52, 53, maintained in the clamping position by means of the ratchet mechanism 72, under the coring rod 24 and the pitting knife 26 in the rest position. The control unit 14 simultaneously lowers the coring stem 24 and the pitting knife 26 until reaching the height position of the endocarp of the underlying pear as calculated in the first advancement step of the multilane belt 7. The coring rod 24 crosses the pear from the calycine end to the stem end, at the same time the pitting knife 26 moves to the height of the endocarp and is rotated simultaneously with the other pitting knives. Then, the coring rod 24 and the pitting knife 26 are raised. Any core residues are removed in a return stroke to the rest position.
[0071] In a third advancement step of the multilane belt 7, the housing and centering cups 9 of a fruit holding flight are in the halving substation. Here, the halving blades are lowered and the pears are halved. The pneumatic pistons 82, which are located in the halving substation, act on the protrusion 81 of the hooks 77, opening the ratchet. The jaw walls 52, 53 of the housing and centering cups 9 pass into the open position and the pears are overturned in the end rotation of the multilane belt 7 into a collecting vessel.