Launching system for robotic sausage loading machine
10787318 ยท 2020-09-29
Assignee
Inventors
- Nicholas J. Milo (Vesuvius, VA, US)
- Keith W. Hopkins (Waynesboro, VA, US)
- George E. Reed (Waynesboro, VA, US)
Cpc classification
B65G43/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B19/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G2201/0202
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B35/243
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G17/063
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G15/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G47/31
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G41/001
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65G37/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B19/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G41/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G43/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G15/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A system, and associated method, for launching and delivering separated food product in organized groups to a robotized packaging station for the product. The system initiates the delivery via a metered hopper of food product delivering the product to a launch V-belt that aligns the product end to end. A successive singulator belt, positioned adjacent to and receiving product from the launch belt, further organizes the product into a single file alignment. An optional separator belt may follow the singulator belt to create gaps between successive product units. The product is then delivered to a pick belt for product to be provided to the packaging robot. The system product information is from a single (per product delivery line) sensor, enabling intergrated end-to-end control from hopper to robot, and a nearly continuous motion of said pick belt.
Claims
1. A food product handling device for de-linked tubular food products, the handling device comprising: a metering hopper configured to receive and deliver de-linked tubular food products; a singulator for orienting the tubular food products in a single-file line with little or no overlap, the singulator configured to allow only one unit of the tubular food products to move through the singulator at a time, the singulator comprising a V-shaped conveyor belt system; a launcher for supplying the randomly and loosely oriented tubular food products from the metering hopper to the singulator; a pick belt conveyor receiving the de-linked tubular food products from the singulator into respective product compartments positioned along the pick belt conveyor, and transporting the de-linked tubular food products to a loading machine; and a product sensor positioned to sense product units of the de-linked tubular food products before the product units are delivered to the pick belt conveyor, the product sensor configured to deliver a signal to a controller for the pick belt conveyor, thereby allowing indexing of the pick belt conveyor product compartments to anticipate the arrival of product units from the singulator and receive the product units into respective product compartments as the product units are delivered, the product sensor further configured to deliver the signal to the controller to operate the pick belt conveyor in a nearly continuous motion.
2. The device as in claim 1, further comprising a separator belt positioned between the singulator and the pick belt conveyor, wherein the product sensor is located to sense the product units on the separator belt.
3. The device as in claim 1, further comprising a variable incline supply conveyor located within the metering hopper.
4. The device as in claim 3, wherein the pick belt conveyor product compartments are configured to be in an extended condition for receiving the de-linked tubular food products respectively delivered thereto, the extended condition being created by an end turn of the pick belt conveyor.
5. The device as in claim 2, further comprising a variable incline supply conveyor located within the metering hopper.
6. The device as in claim 1, wherein the V-shaped conveyor belt system includes a pair of conveyor belts oriented relative to one another in a V-shaped configuration between the pair of conveyor belts so that only one unit of the tubular food products may move through the conveyor belt system at a time.
7. The device as in claim 1, further comprising an excess conveyor operably associated with the singulator to recirculate un-oriented de-linked tubular food products from the singulator to the metering hopper.
8. The device as in claim 1, wherein the product sensor is positioned at a feed end of the singulator.
9. A food product handling device for de-linked tubular food products, the handling device comprising: a metering hopper configured to receive and deliver de-linked tubular food products; a first singulator configured to orient a first plurality of de-linked tubular food products in a first single-file line; a second singulator configured to orient a second plurality of de-linked tubular food products in a second single line; a first launcher configured to supply the first plurality of de-linked tubular food products from the metering hopper to the first singulator; a second launcher configured to supply the second plurality of de-linked tubular food products from the metering hoper to the second singulator; a first pick belt conveyor configured to receive the first plurality of de-linked tubular food products from the first singulator into respective first product compartments positioned along the first pick belt conveyor, one of the de-linked tubular food products per compartment, and transport the first plurality of de-linked tubular food products to a loading machine; a second pick belt conveyor configured to receive the second plurality of de-linked tubular food products from the second singulator into respective second product compartments positioned along the second pick belt conveyor, one of the de-linked tubular food products per compartment, and transport the second plurality of de-linked tubular food products to the loading machine; a first product sensor positioned to sense first product units of the first plurality of de-linked tubular food products before the first product units are delivered to the first pick belt conveyor, the first product sensor configured to deliver a first signal to a controller for the first pick belt conveyor, thereby allowing appropriate indexing of the first pick belt conveyor to receive the first product units into respective first compartments of the first product compartments as the first product unit is delivered; and a second product sensor positioned to sense second product units of the second plurality of de-linked tubular food products before the second product units are delivered to the second pick belt conveyor, the second product sensor configured to deliver a second signal to a controller for the second pick belt conveyor, thereby allowing appropriate indexing of the second pick belt conveyor to receive the second product units into respective second compartments of the second product compartments as the second product units are delivered; each of the first and second singulators comprises a V-shaped conveyor belt system.
10. The device as in claim 9, wherein the V-shaped conveyor belt system of each of the first and second singulators includes a pair of conveyor belts oriented relative to one another in a V-shaped configuration that only allows one unit of tubular food products to move through the associated conveyor belt system at a time.
11. The device as in claim 9, further comprising: a first separator belt positioned between the first singulator and the first pick belt conveyor, the first product sensor being located to sense the first product unit on the first separator belt; and a second separator belt positioned between the second singulator and the second pick belt conveyor, the second product sensor being located to sense the second product unit on the second separator belt.
12. The device as in claim 9, further comprising first and second variable incline supply conveyors located within the metering hopper.
13. The device as in claim 9, wherein the first product compartments are configured in a first extended condition for receiving the first product units delivered thereto, and wherein the second product compartments are configured in a second extended condition for receiving the second product units delivered thereto.
14. The device as in claim 9, wherein the first product sensor and the second product sensor are positioned at respective feed ends of the first singulator and the second singulator.
15. The device as in claim 9, wherein the first and second product sensors further are configured to deliver the signals to the controllers to operate the first and second pick belt conveyors in nearly continuous motion.
16. The device as in claim 9, further comprising an excess conveyor configured to recirculate de-linked tubular food products from the first and second singulators to the metering hopper.
17. The device as in claim 9, wherein: the first pick belt conveyor comprises first carrier walls oriented transversely to a first transport direction of the first pick belt conveyor, the first carrier walls dividing the first pick belt conveyor into the first product compartments; and the second pick belt conveyor comprises second carrier walls oriented transversely to a second transport direction of the second pick belt conveyor, the second carrier walls dividing the second pick belt conveyor into the second product compartments.
18. The device as in claim 9, further comprising: a first elevated supply conveyor configured to supply the first plurality of de-linked tubular food products from the metering hopper to the first launcher; and a second elevated supply conveyor configured to supply the second plurality of de-lined tubular food products from the metering hopper to the second launcher.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENT(S) AND EMBODIED METHOD(S) OF THE INVENTION
(8) Reference will now be made in detail to exemplary embodiments and methods of the invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which like reference characters designate like or corresponding parts throughout the drawings. It should be noted, however, that the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details, representative devices and methods, and illustrative examples shown and described in connection with the exemplary embodiments and methods.
(9) This description of exemplary embodiment(s) is intended to be read in connection with the accompanying drawings, which are to be considered part of the entire written description. In the description, relative terms such as horizontal, vertical, up, down, upper, lower, right, left, top and bottom as well as derivatives thereof (e.g., horizontally, downwardly, upwardly, etc.) should be construed to refer to the orientation as then described or as shown in the drawing figure under discussion. These relative terms are for convenience of description and normally are not intended to require a particular orientation. Terms concerning attachments, coupling and the like, such as connected and interconnected, refer to a relationship wherein structures are secured or attached to one another either directly or indirectly through intervening structures, as well as both movable or rigid attachments or relationships, unless expressly described otherwise. The term operatively connected is such an attachment, coupling or connection that allows the pertinent structures to operate as intended by virtue of that relationship. Additionally, the words a and an as used in the claims means at least one.
(10)
(11) The metering hopper 12 supplies the launcher 14 with the de-linked tubular food products 2 using an elevated supply conveyor 13 equipped with an incline angle adjustment. In the first exemplary embodiment, the metering hopper 12 is positioned above the launcher 14. The launcher 14 is configured to transport the randomly and loosely oriented tubular food products 2 to the singulator 16. The singulator is known in the art as a mechanism for orienting tubular food products 2 in a single-file line with little or no overlap. An exemplary singulator is the ARB singulator available from Nercon Engineering & Mfg., Inc. The singulator separates the tubular food products, such as sausages, and loads them onto the pick belt conveyor 20.
(12) As is known, many industrial activities require a fixed number of articles that are generally fed randomly and are loosely ordered to be automatically sorted and oriented in a single-file line so that they can thereafter be handled more easily in an automatic or semi-automatic way. The machines carrying out this operation are known as singulators. In other words, the singulator 16 is particularly intended for the singulation of loose tubular food products, such as de-linked sausages, arranged loosely in a plane, i.e. orienting the de-linked tubular food products in a single-file line, with the products 2 not overlapping or partially overlapping each other.
(13)
(14) The launcher 14 comprises a V-shaped conveyor belt system 15. The tubular food products 2 drop at a set rate onto the V-shaped conveyor belt system 15 of the launcher 14. The V-shaped conveyor belt system 15 corrals the food products 2 in an aligned manner at the bottom of trough defined between two parallel V configured conveyor belts 15.sub.1 and 15.sub.2. The V-shaped launcher 14 is configured to align the tubular food products 2 before transferring them to the singulator 16. The singulator 16 comprises a V-shaped conveyor belt system 17. In turn, the V-shaped conveyor belt system 17 includes a pair of conveyor belts 17.sub.1 and 17.sub.2 oriented relative to one another in a V-shaped configuration so as to form a narrow V-shaped configuration between the conveyor belts 17.sub.1 and 17.sub.2 that only allows one unit of the tubular food products 2 to move through the conveyor belt system 17 at a time. In other words, a transverse distance between the conveyor belts 17.sub.1 and 17.sub.2 of the singulator 16 is substantially smaller than a transverse distance between the conveyor belts 15.sub.1 and 15.sub.2 of the launcher 14. The surplus food products 2 fall or tumble into a chute 23 and then to the excess conveyor 22 and are returned to the hopper 12. The singulator 16 may include an additional conveyor, a separator, after the narrow V-portion with a faster surface speed, about twice the speed of the singulator, to create a gap between successive food product units.
(15) The singulator 16 orients the tubular food products 2 in the single-file line, and advances and discharges the tubular food products 2 one-by-one to the pick belt conveyor 20. The pick belt conveyor 20 includes a continuous conveyor feed belt 26 provided with closely located carrier walls 28 oriented transversely to the transport direction 21. The carrier walls 28 divide the conveyor feed belt 26 into transverse compartments (or buckets) 30 configured to contain only one food product 2 at a time. Each of the carrier walls 28 is configured to contain only one of the food products 2, which has dropped down to one of the transverse compartments 30 of the conveyor feed belt 26 from a feed-end 19.sub.F of the singulator 16, in the transport direction 21 for delivery of the food products 2 to the loading station 24.
(16) The product sensor 18 at the feed-end 19.sub.F of the singulator 16 signals the continuous conveyor feed belt 26 of the pick belt conveyor 20 to advance (or index) the next available empty compartments 30 on the conveyor feed belt 26 to the position in front of the feed-end 19.sub.F of the singulator 16. By virtue of sensing the product before it arrives into a pick belt food compartment, the system controller can anticipate the arrival of food product, and cause the pick belt to be incremented to a position to receive a product. By sensing between product intervals and product delivery rates, the pick belt can mimic nearly continuous movement even though it is simply regularly incrementing. Owing to the nearly continuous movement of the pick belt conveyor 20, the robotic loader 24 is more easily and reliably controlled.
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(18) The tubular food products 2 are fed to the loading machine 24 by the conveyor feed belt 26 and the tubular food products 2 are staged in the desired grouping, for example by an index lug chain as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,458,995 incorporated herein by reference. The loading machine 24 comprises a robot (not shown) that picks a group of tubular food products 2 using vacuum and moves it toward one of pockets in a packaging machine (not shown). On the way to the pocket, a picking tool actuates and groups the food products 2 into, for example, two groups of four tubular food products 2. Once grouped, the robot places the grouped food products 2 into corresponding pockets in a packaging machine.
(19) The feeding of the robot with the food products 2 that are orderly, evenly spaced, and in a nearly continuous passing movement solves at least two problems. First, it eliminates the need for robot vision. Second, it enables one robot to handle multiple food products at once, thereby eliminating the need for multiple robots to obtain the throughput required.
(20) A method to provide conveyor/singulator/picking synchronization is as follows: Simple indexing of the pick belt conveyor 20 for indexed launch feed. Pick timing is windowed to allow least disruption for pick motion. Use of the product sensor 18 upstream of the singulator 16 to append an appropriate motion on the pick belt conveyor 20 that will yield smoothest motion (i.e., nearly continuous) and/or determine best picking moment from the pick belt conveyor 20.
(21) Graphically the above described method is illustrated in
(22) Normally, the product sensor 18 pulses on and off for each sausage 2 that passes by. If for some reason there is no gap between the sausages, then the product sensor 18 will appear to have latched on longer than a typical sausage (food product 2) pulse. When this occurs, the controller will detect that the product sensor 18 has been on longer than one sausage passing and will then cause the pick belt conveyor 20 to index more than one flight. This will create the necessary flight for the additional product that passed by the product sensor 18. The number of flights index edge will depend on the length of a sensor pulse. If the length of the sensor pulse exceeds a maximum, the system 10 is configured to stop and handle this condition as a possible jam that can be cleared out automatically or manually. Moreover, the system 10 is setup to index at a typical rate for the sausages that are detected from the product sensor 18. There may be an instance when the sausage rate may surge higher than a typical rate. When this occurs the product sensor 18 will see a pulse from the product sooner than expected. In this case, the response of the system 10 will be similar to that of a latched on condition described above. The pick belt conveyor 20 will be indexed for two flights to account for the extra sausage product detected.
(23) Various modifications, changes, and alterations may be practiced with the above-described embodiment, including but not limited to the additional embodiment shown in
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(25) The metering hopper 112 supplies the first launcher 114.sub.1 with the de-linked tubular food products 2 using a first elevated supply conveyor 113.sub.1 having an adjustable incline angle, and the second launcher 114.sub.2 using a second elevated supply conveyor 113.sub.2 also having an adjustable incline angle. In the second exemplary embodiment, the metering hopper 112 is positioned below the first and second launchers 114.sub.1 and 114.sub.2. The first and second launchers 114.sub.1 and 114.sub.2 are configured to transport the randomly and loosely oriented tubular food products 2 to the first and second singulators 116.sub.1 and 116.sub.2, respectively. The singulator is known in the art as a mechanism for orienting tubular food products 2 in a single-file line with little or no overlap. The first and second singulators 116.sub.1 and 116.sub.2 singulate the tubular food products, i.e., deliver one-at-a-time, and deliver them onto the separator belts which each deliver spaced apart product to first and second pick belt conveyors 120.sub.1 and 120.sub.2, respectively.
(26) The metering hopper 112 with the first and second elevated supply conveyors 113.sub.1 and 113.sub.2, respectively, in accordance with the second exemplary embodiment of the present invention at opposite limits of an adjustment are shown in
(27) Each of the first and second launchers 114.sub.1 and 114.sub.2 is similar to the launcher 14 and comprises first V-shaped conveyor belt systems 115.sub.1 and 115.sub.2, respectively, as best shown in
(28) Each of the first and second singulators 116.sub.1 and 116.sub.2 orients the tubular food products 2 in the single-file line, and advances and discharges the tubular food products 2 one-by-one to the first and second separator 119, and pick belt conveyors 120.sub.1 and 120.sub.2, respectively, as illustrated in
(29) The foregoing description of the exemplary embodiment(s) of the present invention has been presented for the purpose of illustration in accordance with the provisions of the Patent Statutes. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. The embodiments disclosed hereinabove were chosen in order to best illustrate the principles of the present invention and its practical application to thereby enable those of ordinary skill in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as suited to the particular use contemplated, as long as the principles described herein are followed. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this invention pertains. Thus, changes can be made in the above-described invention without departing from the intent and scope thereof. It is also intended that the scope of the present invention be defined by the claims appended thereto.