ACTIVE SAFETY APPARATUS FOR A DISC CUTTER
20240227230 ยท 2024-07-11
Inventors
Cpc classification
G06V10/751
PHYSICS
F16P3/142
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B26D7/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B26D2210/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B26D1/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B26D7/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B26D5/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An active safety apparatus adapted for a disk or circular knife or saw is based on optical surveillance apparatus. The apparatus provides a precise boundary for a protected volume surrounding the blade. The apparatus creates four corner edges for the protected volume, which is a cuboid or a right frustrum. Appearance of an operator hand, recognized by glove color, in the protected volume causes immediate, active stopping of a servomotor used to rotate the saw blade.
Claims
1. A power-driven disc cutter equipped with active safety apparatus having a rotatable circular blade with a cutting edge at the periphery, a shaft holding the blade held in an arbor attached to a frame and rotated by a motor, the frame supporting an optical imaging portion of the active safety apparatus for surveilling a region including the periphery, wherein the apparatus creates a protective exclusion volume in proximity to the blade, the volume having the shape of either a right frustrum or a cuboid and having corner edges defined by the apparatus; the apparatus is configured to detect an object having predetermined optical characteristics within the exclusion volume and to make a SIGNAL; said SIGNAL is connected to cause a motor control portion of the active safety apparatus to instantly stop the motor, so that, when in use, incursion of the object into the exclusion volume causes the disc cutter to stop rotating.
2. The power-driven disc cutter as claimed in claim 1, wherein each defined corner edge of the exclusion volume comprises an optical axis of a portion of the optical imaging portion of the active safety apparatus.
3. The power-driven disc cutter as claimed in claim 2, wherein the optical imaging portion of the active safety apparatus includes a camera with a lens, and four series of mirrors; each series receiving a bundle of rays from the region at one of four spaced apart positions and directing the bundle laterally and then into a lens of the camera as one of four contiguous bundles of rays; each bundle of rays having an optical axis that defines a corner edge of the exclusion volume; each bundle is focused by the lens onto a position defined upon a surface of an imaging chip of the camera and, when in a first mode, an image of the exclusion volume is obtained from an area defined by the four positions.
4. The power-driven disc cutter as claimed in claim 3, wherein the optical imaging portion of the active safety apparatus includes a control processor capable when in use of determining at least a minimum number of picture elements or pixels having a predetermined set of qualities including color and brightness as indicating a presence of the object inside the exclusion volume and of making the SIGNAL when the minimum number is equalled or exceeded.
5. The power-driven disc cutter as claimed in claim 4, wherein the minimum number of pixels shall be based on a count of contiguous pixels.
6. The power-driven disc cutter as claimed in claim 4, wherein the predetermined quality is a color contrast between a gloved hand and surrounding material.
7. The power-driven disc cutter as claimed in claim 1, wherein the active safety apparatus also accepts a connection to a conductive glove contact as an input for making the SIGNAL.
8. The power-driven disc cutter as claimed in claim 1, wherein the motor is a controllable motor controlled by the motor control apparatus.
9. The power-driven disc cutter as claimed in claim 8, wherein the controllable motor is a servo-motor and the motor control apparatus is capable when in use of causing an active stop of the motor.
10. The power-driven disc cutter as claimed in claim 1, wherein the controllable motor is a braking motor configured to apply an internal brake to a rotor on cessation of a power input and the motor control apparatus comprises an electrically controlled circuit breaker responsive to the SIGNAL.
Description
LIST OF DRAWINGS
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
[0045]
[0046] The apparatus described in these Examples would be suitable as a disc cutter in a poultry meat factory. Such a workstation is shown, in use, in the Youtube video How to cut a whole chicken downloaded on 15 Jul. 2021, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOyc65T50pY.
[0047]
[0048]
[0049] The cover 202 above the cutter blade includes lighting to flood the working area from locations close to the optical axis of each ray path. Enough white light-emitting diodes are used to provide about 1500 lumens of light, to ensure that the video camera or cameras used produce a clear signal with little noise. Shadows are minimized. Good lighting also helps the operator.
[0050] According to the invention, the optical imaging and control apparatus, when in use, creates a protective exclusion volume having well-defined corner edges that contains the cutter blade and reacts instantly to any incursion.
[0051] A colour contrast between the or each gloved worker's hand and the workpiece being cut is preferred. An alarm condition is generated if enough of any object having predetermined optical characteristics; in particular a green or blue glove, is resolved by the camera assembly and recognized to lie within the exclusion volume. It is already conventional for operators to wear blue or green latex gloves in the meat industry.
[0052]
[0053]
[0054] Each optical axis is created by designating a corner of an area for partial readout upon the sensor chip within the camera and each axis is then produced from the chip through a lens and mirrors as shown in
[0055] The shape of the exclusion volume may be, as shown in
[0056] The outer volume 406 surrounding the border 501 of the exclusion volume is also watched in Mode 2. An image of any object having predetermined optical characteristics; in particular the operator's coloured gloved hand or hands, will cause a warning to be emitted by the warning device 105, if the operator's hands come near but are outside the boundary 401 of the exclusion volume. Mode 2 is described below.
[0057] Illustrative timing and dimensions are now given. Assuming that the apparatus of this specification is capable of bringing the cutter blade to a stop in 10 milliseconds after an image of the target item is first evident, a 40 mm distance between blade 112 and an adjacent exclusion volume boundary 401 should protect the operator from contact with a moving blade as long as a hand velocity of 4 metres per second (9 miles per hour) is not exceeded. The inventors are able to adjust all settings by remote re-programming of the processor 102 through an internet connection. For one example, the mean size of items being cut may vary from time to time, and the 40 mm distance may be changed.
[0058] Preferred machine-vision cameras are relatively sensitive, have fast scanning rates, and are colour cameras. The presently preferred type is: Teledyne FLIR Blackfly S USB3 Model: BFS-U3-04S2C-CS: from FLIR Systems UK; 2 Kings Hill AvenueKings Hill, West Malling, Kent ME19 4AQ, United Kingdom. The camera has a 630?630 pixel array on a square image sensor that is about 0.8 cm long on a side. That camera can be operated at up to 522 frames per second and provides for readout from selected areas of the square image sensor. Preferred lenses are used with relatively bright lighting to allow the noise content of the image to be decreased.
[0059] The invention provides two camera configurations capable of creating and monitoring a preferred protective exclusion volume. Both configurations define each corner edge of the exclusion volume as a separate optical axis derived from the optical imaging apparatus.
[0060] In a preferred camera configuration a single machine-vision colour camera employs four separate series or trains of mirrors feeding into a single lens as described below in relation to
[0061] The elevation view of
[0062]
[0063] The exclusion volume 501 is located below the mirror assembly 502, inside the workspace 113 and about the support shaft 114. The edge of the support shaft usually includes a slot 115 to receive the edge of the cutting blade. The volume will be incompletely filled with ray bundles at the end closer to the mirrors because each ray bundle diverges. An optional slant of the exclusion volume is provided; the slant as shown is in order to include the lower part of the volume 113, under the cutter edge. It is thought that the portion of the exclusion volume near the support shaft slot 113, below the cutter disc is the most hazardous volume. Only two edges of the exclusion volume 407 and 408 are shown in
[0064] A second example camera configuration uses four separate cameras, and either a first deflecting mirror array such as mirrors 510, 511, or the four camera lenses are oriented in order to view the exclusion volume directly. In this version, the centre of each image sensor is the origin of one optical axis such as 402, 403, 404 and 405. Providing four optical axes that together define the exclusion volume is the common aspect of both examples. The 275 central quadrant of each sensor (between the centre and a corner) is read out when in Mode 1, and the entire chip is read out when in Mode 2. Hence there are four sensors, one in each camera, to be read from in either mode. It will be appreciated that the first example camera configuration is more likely to provide an economical solution to the problem to be solved for a motor-driven disc cutter especially as camera specifications are improved.
Modes
[0065] Like the Applicants' earlier PCT/NZ2017/050044, the optical imaging and control apparatus switches as quickly as from one frame to the next between Mode 1 and Mode 2. The apparatus optionally scans the exclusion volume under Mode 1 more often, such as 11121112 . . . . Given the rapid frame scan rate of the preferred camera or equivalents, a newly arrived target item will be detected inside the exclusion volume within a few milliseconds.
[0066] Mode 1 will stop the blade by making the SIGNAL along connector 107 if a gloved hand is found inside the exclusion volume, while Mode 2 collects the entire image and emits a visual or aural warning from device 106 if a gloved hand is found. In Mode 1 the processor 102 sets the camera readout parameters so that the only video returned from the camera is that representing the exclusion zone 501, bounded by the four optical axes as corner edges 402, 403, 404 and 405 (
[0067] Although it requires some memory and computation to compare adjacent pixels over an array, the preferred parameter is a count of contiguous pixels having the selected colour using well-known image processing algorithms.
[0068] Another check against spurious responses is that if an aggregation of selected pixels is found, major and minor axes of the aggregation are determined such as in X and Y directions, and both should be greater than 2. That rejects aberrant responses to lines.
[0069] If the count exceeds a predetermined number, and Mode 1 is operational, the processor sends the SIGNAL to the motor controller to cause the motor and hence the blade to stop turning. Any gloved hand inside the exclusion zone 501 is deemed to be in hazardous proximity to the disc cutter blade. Less computation is required to simply count all received pixels that have a selected contrasting colour or other optical characteristic. At this time the invention simply decides if the gloved hand is anywhere within the exclusion volume, or not.
[0070] In Mode 2 the early warning zone 406 is also surveilled. That zone extends outward from the exclusion volume 501 to comprise substantially the entire camera view, including the exclusion volume and a surrounding volume the dimensions of which are limited by the focal length of the lens and the size of the image sensor, or by mirror areas. Activation may be signalled to the operator by (for example) a sound 105, a bright light, or by activating a projected image or laser illumination of the edges 501 of the exclusion volume down from the shroud and on to the workspace. The surrounding volume 406 preferably also has reasonably defined external boundaries since the operator may use it to confirm the position and the functionality of the exclusion volume. Fast and frequent changes of mode ensure that the invention will detect and respond to every incursion.
Drive for the Cutter Blade.
[0071] The currently preferred option for driving the disc cutter in rotation is a servo-motor having a matched controller. A typical rate is 1500 rpm. The preferred Ethernet-compatible motor controller can actively bring rotation to a halt in 10-15 milliseconds after receiving the SIGNAL 107 from the processor 102.
[0072] The inventors currently prefer a Vector Servo-System servomotor having a power rating of 3 KW, rated at 9.5 amps, and running at 1,500 rpm. (Shenzhen Vector Technology Co., Ltd. Beckhoff of Germany is another supplier). The motor is connected to the blade along a shaft passing within a protective cover 207 and a resilient coupling pr flexible joint is preferred. A 1:1 belt drive is an option. The power rating of the motor is sufficient to perform an active stop within an acceptable time. The associated controller provides for an instant stop or quick step electronic step function command which is referred to elsewhere in this document as the SIGNAL. The rotational inertia of a typical blade in operation has been calculated as about 7000 kilogrammes per mm.sup.2.
[0073] A conductive glove, if also used, is connected through an interface to the controller so that a conduction event will always activate the SIGNAL. Some operators will insist on such a backup for their own feeling of security. The sensing method typically looks for passage of current from the conductive glove to the grounded blade which is held at a different electrical potential.
[0074] The motor may be a self-braking induction motor having a single or three-phase connection. Such motors are designed to bring the rotor to a halt within about 100 milliseconds after interruption of power, in this case in response to the SIGNAL. Brands of self-braking motor include Motive.srl and Neri Motori in Italy, and Bodine in the United States. The inventors would include a rotation sensing transducer on the motor shaft and would devote a section of the controller to running a process to determine stopping time and to prevent use of the workstation if the braking performance of the self-braking motor becomes unacceptable. At this time, such motors appear to be not fast enough, although faster self-braking motors may be developed.
Advantages
[0075] The invention allows the operator a longer working career before injury.
[0076] Optical detection of a blue glove in proximity, inside the exclusion volume, does not carry as much urgency to bring the blade to an immediate standstill as would prior-art apparatus reliant on detecting actual contact of a glove with the blade. As a result, peak power requirements are lower.
[0077] The invention brings the intact blade to a stop under active control, over a defined time. That does not require replacement of a sacrificial element destroyed as part of a stopping event.
[0078] The invention provides a defined exclusion volume in a constant position about the working blade, which may also be surrounded by a warning volume.
[0079] In an option, the invention provides a warning before the gloved hand enters the exclusion volume.
[0080] The invention provides a defined exclusion volume having closely controlled edges about the cutter blade.
[0081] The volume may become an exclusion cuboid having parallel sides if the optical parts are adjusted accordingly.
[0082] Finally it will be understood that the scope of this invention as described and illustrated herein is not limited to the specified embodiments described. Those of skill will appreciate that various modifications, additions, known equivalents, and substitutions are possible without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as set forth in the following claims.