Belt-driven roller conveyor
10040633 ยท 2018-08-07
Assignee
Inventors
- Michael E. Moser (Hamilton, OH, US)
- Kevin Lawrence Klueber (Indian Springs, OH, US)
- Jonathan Lim (Milford, OH, US)
Cpc classification
B65G23/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G13/07
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A conveyor section for transportation or accumulation of articles such as cartons and totes includes a pair of spaced, opposing side rails, vertical frame members attached transversely between the pair of opposing side rails, and live rollers transversely attached for rotation between the opposing side. An upstream end idler and a downstream end idler both having a vertical axis of rotation are attached at respective upstream and downstream ends of the conveyor section. A drive belt is vertically elongate and supported for horizontal looping between the upstream and downstream end idlers. The drive belt supported and guided by the vertical frame members such that a drive loop side and a return loop side are horizontally positioned under the live rollers. The drive loop side of the drive belt is at selectively engageable to an undersurface of the live rollers. A drive motor is operatively coupled to drive the drive belt.
Claims
1. A conveyor section comprising: a pair of spaced, opposing side rails; vertical frame members attached transversely between the pair of opposing side rails; more than one live roller transversely attached for rotation between the opposing side rails providing a conveying surface for articles; an upstream pulley and a downstream pulley both having a vertical axis of rotation attached at respective upstream and downstream ends of the conveyor section; a drive belt comprising a vertically elongated portion and an upper enlarged head portion and a lower enlarged retaining portion, wherein the drive belt is supported for horizontal looping between the upstream and downstream pulleys and supported by the vertical frame members and having a drive loop side and a return loop side that are horizontally positioned under the more than one live roller with the drive loop side engageable to an undersurface of the live rollers; and a drive motor operatively coupled to drive the drive belt.
2. The conveyor section of claim 1, wherein the upper enlarged head further comprises a wear indicator strip having a different color than an adjacent portion of the upper enlarged head portion.
3. The conveyor section of claim 1, wherein he drive belt further comprises a bundle of longitudinal fibers embedded in the lower enlarged retaining portion of an elastomeric material.
4. The conveyor section of claim 1, wherein the drive belt further comprises vertically aligned stack of strands of longitudinal fibers embedded in an elastomeric material.
5. The conveyor section of claim 1, wherein the drive belt further comprises a bundle of longitudinal fibers embedded in the upper enlarged head portion of an elastomeric material.
6. The conveyor section of claim 1, wherein the conveyor section is curved.
7. The conveyor section of claim 1, further comprising a vertical actuator positioned under the drive belt to selectively raise the drive belt into frictional engagement with the at least one of the more than one live roller.
8. An accumulator conveyor section comprising: a pair of spaced, opposing side rails; vertical frame members attached transversely between the pair of opposing side rails; two or more accumulation zones each comprising: live rollers transversely attached for rotation between the opposing side rails; and an elastomeric transfer belt received over a full lateral width of the live rollers providing a conveying surface for articles; a drive belt that is proximal and mounted to one side rail in driving frictional contact with an underside of the elastomeric transfer belt; a vertical actuator positioned under the drive belt to selectively raise the drive belt into frictional engagement with the transfer belt of a selected one of the two or more accumulation zones; and a drive motor operatively coupled to drive the drive belt.
9. The conveyor section of claim 8, further comprising an upstream end idler pulley and a downstream end idler pulley both having a vertical axis of rotation attached at respective upstream and downstream ends of the conveyor section, wherein the drive belt is vertically elongate and supported for horizontal looping between the upstream and downstream end idler pulleys and supported by the vertical frame members and having a drive loop side and a return loop side that are horizontally positioned under the live rollers.
10. The conveyor section of claim 9, wherein the drive belt comprises an upper enlarged head portion.
11. A conveyor section comprising: a pair of spaced, opposing side rails; vertical frame members attached transversely between the pair of opposing side rails; more than one live roller transversely attached for rotation between the opposing side rails providing a conveying surface for articles; an upstream end idler and a downstream end idler both having a vertical axis of rotation attached at respective upstream and downstream ends of the conveyor section; a drive belt that is vertically elongate and supported for horizontal looping between the upstream and downstream end idlers and supported by the vertical frame members and having a drive loop side and a return loop side that are horizontally positioned under the more than one live roller with the drive loop side engageable to an undersurface of the live rollers, wherein the drive belt comprises a lower enlarged retaining portion; and a drive motor operatively coupled to drive the drive belt.
12. The conveyor section of claim 11, wherein the drive belt further comprises a bundle of longitudinal fibers embedded in the lower enlarged retaining portion of an elastomeric material.
13. The conveyor section of claim 11, wherein the drive belt further comprises vertically aligned stack of strands of longitudinal fibers embedded in an elastomeric material.
14. The conveyor section of claim 11, wherein the conveyor section is curved.
15. The conveyor section of claim 11, further comprising a vertical actuator positioned under the drive belt to selectively raise the drive belt into frictional engagement with the at least one of the more than one live roller.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated herein and constitute part of this specification, illustrate exemplary embodiments of the invention, and together with the general description given above and the detailed description given below, serve to explain the features of the invention.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(20) A conveyor section for transportation or accumulation of articles such as cartons and totes includes a pair of spaced, opposing side rails, vertical frame members attached transversely between the pair of opposing side rails, and live rollers transversely attached for rotation between the opposing side. An upstream end idler pulley and a downstream end idler pulley both having a vertical axis of rotation are attached at respective upstream and downstream ends of the conveyor section. A drive belt is vertically elongate and supported for horizontal looping between the upstream and downstream end idler pulleys. The drive belt supported and guided by the vertical frame members such that a drive loop side and a return loop side are horizontally positioned under the live rollers. The drive loop side of the drive belt is at selectively engageable to an undersurface of the live rollers. A drive motor is operatively coupled to drive the drive belt.
(21) The various embodiments will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts. References made to particular examples and implementations are for illustrative purposes, and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention or the claims.
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(27) In one or more embodiments, the drive belt 102 can have a tensile pull capabilities of at least 450 lbs and a minimum bend radius of at least ten (10) inches. The elastomeric material 154 can be a thermoplastic or polymeric material such as but not limited to a urethane, and can be an elastomer. An endless drive belt 102 made of thermoplastic urethane may be strong in tension and can be easily manufactured in long lengths. Fibers 156, 162 can be formed from an aramid fiber, such as Kevlar, but are not limited thereto. Additional materials for the Fibers 156, 162 that serve as bendable tensile members can include, but are not limited to: steel, polyester, Nylon, Nomex, Vectran, or any other suitable cord materials for belting. Fibers 156, 162 can be separate fibers or fibers twisted together, and can be placed within drive belt 102 during the belt forming process. A coating can be applied to provide increase wear resistance and can comprise, but is not limited to, a layer of woven nylon fabric. Coating can be between about 0.001-0.20 inches thick, such as about 0.005 inches thick. In one or more embodiments, the elastomeric material 154 can be formed from thermoplastic urethane with a durometer of between about 76 and about 95 on the Shore A scale. For instance, elastomeric material 154 can have a durometer of about 85 on the Shore A Scale, but is not limited thereto. Durometer is a measure of hardness of an elastomeric material, and can be measured by a Shore A test instrument that applies an impact force to the urethane material, and measures the hardness of the urethane as an indentation depth resulting from that force. The 85 Shore A urethane material used in the drive belt 102 can be stiff, and can fall between a hard value of 70 Shore A described as a shoe heel, and an extra hard value of 90 Shore A described as a golf ball. This range information can be found at http://www.casterland.com/info-durometer.htm.
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(30) The driving contact between the drive belt 1302 and the transfer belt 1312 is off center and a prototype testing configuration did not include mechanisms to maintain tracking of the transfer belt 1312. However, extended testing has shown that the transfer belt 1312 wears in a uniform manner and maintains tracking.
(31) Testing on two belts was performed to determine whether a transfer belt could be driven by a side mounted narrow drive belt without tracking or uneven wear problem. In particular, the selected transfer belt tested was POLYSPRINT TC PS-06 available from NITTA CORPORATION:
(32) (a) Construction: (1) TPU (Taffeta surface, Green) and (2) Conductive TPU (Textured surface, Black), antistatic;
(33) (b) Available Width: 10 to 450 mm; Available Length: 400 to 100,000 mm; Thickness: 1.4 mm; Joint: Finger Joint (standard dimension: 10 W*30 L) & Skiver Joint;
(34) (c) Tensile strength: 30 N/mm, Elongation at break: 500%, test speed 50 mm/min, ambient condition 23 C., 50% humidity;
(35) (d) Standard elongation: 5%;
(36) (e) Tension at 5%: 0.8 N/mm after 200 hours running-in, ambient condition 23 C., 50% humidity;
(37) (e) Minimum pulley dia. 40 mm
(38) (f) Temperature range: 20 to +60 C.;
(39) (g) Coefficient of friction: 0.6 to 0.7 (Paper)/0.3 to 0.4 (Steel) Green side; 0.6 to 0.7 (Paper)/0.3 to 0.4 (Steel) Black side, Measuring condition: 7 kPA*1 mm/s, ambient condition 23 C., 50% humidity;
(40) (h) Mass 1.5 kg/m2
(41) The specific design and testing parameters for the tested transfer belt were as follows:
(42) Belt type TC, Belt width 838 mm, Belt length 1165 mm, Elongation 4.6%;
(43) Belt Speed V 61.0 m/min;
(44) Total Mass of Conveying Goods 91 kg;
(45) Total Mass of Conveying Goods W.sub.G 889 N;
(46) Total Mass of Belt W.sub.B 15.088 N;
(47) TC Unit mass 1.5 kg/m.sup.2
(48) Carrier Roller Mass WC 400 N Estimation;
(49) Angle of Contact (AOC) on the Drive Pulley 180;
(50) Coefficient of Friction (COF) (between Belt and Plate) a 0.40;
(51) COF (between Belt and Drive pulley) 0.2;
(52) Coefficient by the Drive Pulley Position C.sub.1 0.0;
(53) Startup time t 0.5 s;
(54) Acceleration 2.0 m/s.sup.2, =V/(60t);
(55) Conveyor inclination angle 0.0;
(56) Service Factor (SF) C.sub.2 1.5;
(57) Standard Elongation .sub.0 5.0%;
(58) Tension at .sub.0% To 0.8 N/mm;
(59) Installation parameters were determined as follows:
Effective Tension Te 249 N, Formulation Te=(W.sub.G+W.sub.B+W.sub.C)/20+W.sub.G sin +(M.sub.G+M.sub.B);
Tension2 2To 1228 N, Formulation 2To=Te(K+C1)C2
K={EXP()+1}/{EXP()1};
Elongation [%]4.58, Formulation =(Fa0)/(W2f);
Calculated Motor Power P 253 W, Formulation P=(TeV)/60.
(60) Test setup was designed to test a worst case scenario:
(61) 24 zones;
(62) 34 Width;
(63) 180 FPM;
(64) Heavy duty (HD) drive belt;
(65) Accumulation logic (cycling of drive belt on zone belt);
(66) Two continuously running zones;
(67) Variables included testing two belt manufacturers with product weight increasing as test progressed. Frame rack pushed frame out of square to test effects. Test results indicate that the zone transfer belts for both manufacturers held up better than expected to belt-on-belt contact. IntelliQ HD Drive Belt was observed to have minimum wear with only slight darkening of drive surface. Belt tracking, belt wear, drive torque and accumulation logic were all proved out through the test results for use without product, with light product, and with heavy product.
(68) It must be noted that, as used in this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms a, an and the include plural referents unless the content clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, reference to a colorant agent includes two or more such agents.
(69) Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which the invention pertains. Although a number of methods and materials similar or equivalent to those described herein can be used in the practice of the present invention, the preferred materials and methods are described herein.
(70) As will be appreciated by one having ordinary skill in the art, the methods and compositions of the invention substantially reduce or eliminate the disadvantages and drawbacks associated with prior art methods and compositions.
(71) It should be noted that, when employed in the present disclosure, the terms comprises, comprising, and other derivatives from the root term comprise are intended to be open-ended terms that specify the presence of any stated features, elements, integers, steps, or components, and are not intended to preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, elements, integers, steps, components, or groups thereof.
(72) As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention, which may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed structure.
(73) While it is apparent that the illustrative embodiments of the invention herein disclosed fulfill the objectives stated above, it will be appreciated that numerous modifications and other embodiments may be devised by one of ordinary skill in the art. Accordingly, it will be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and embodiments, which come within the spirit and scope of the present invention.