Conveyor section having a fan for dust removal
10029877 ยท 2018-07-24
Assignee
Inventors
- Clarence C. Allen, Jr. (Mt. Crawford, VA, US)
- Kevin G. Gorby (Harrisonburg, VA, US)
- Micah C. Sundstrom (Staunton, VA, US)
Cpc classification
B08B5/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H31/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2404/262
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H37/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H29/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2301/531
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2301/5112
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2301/121
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2301/152
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2402/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H2404/261
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65H31/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A conveying apparatus includes an upper conveyor and a lower conveyor, the top of the lower conveyor facing the bottom of the upper conveyor and defining with the bottom of the upper conveyor a sheet transport path. An air duct having an opening facing the top of the upper conveyor is mounted over the upper conveyor, and a fan is provided that is in fluid communication with the air duct. The fan draws air through the opening, into the air duct and out an exhaust vent. A housing substantially encloses the upper conveyor and the lower conveyor and is connected to the air duct, and the housing has a bottom opening located below the sheet transport path such that a majority of the air drawn through the opening by the fan passes through the upper conveyor.
Claims
1. A conveying apparatus comprising: an upper conveyor having a top and a bottom; and a lower conveyor having a top and a bottom, the top of the lower conveyor facing the bottom of the upper conveyor and defining with the bottom of the upper conveyor a sheet transport path from an upstream end of the conveying apparatus to a downstream end of the conveying apparatus; an air duct having an opening facing the top of the upper conveyor; a fan in fluid communication with the air duct, the fan being configured to draw air through the opening, into the air duct and out an exhaust vent; and a housing substantially enclosing the upper conveyor and the lower conveyor and connected to the air duct, the housing having a bottom opening located below the sheet transport path such that a majority of the air drawn through the opening by the fan passes through the upper conveyor.
2. The conveying apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the bottom opening of the housing is located below the lower conveyor such that the majority of the air drawn through the opening by the fan first passes through the lower conveyor and the upper conveyor.
3. A conveying apparatus configured to transport sheets along a transport path in a first direction from an input end to a discharge end, the conveying apparatus comprising: a first conveyor having an upstream end, a downstream end, and a first side and a second side extending from the upstream end to the downstream end, the first conveyor comprising a first plurality of contact elements, a second conveyor having an upstream end, a downstream end, and a first side and a second side extending from the upstream end of the second conveyor to the downstream end of the second conveyor, the second conveyor comprising a second plurality of contact elements, the second plurality of contact elements facing the first plurality of contact elements and defining with the first plurality of contact elements a sheet transport path between the first conveyor and the second conveyor, an air duct having an opening spaced from and facing the first conveyor; and a fan in fluid communication with the air duct, the fan being configured to draw air through the opening into the air duct and discharge the air out an exhaust vent.
4. The conveying apparatus according to claim 3, wherein the first plurality of contact elements are belts and the second plurality of contact elements are wheels.
5. The conveying apparatus according to claim 4, wherein the first conveyor is located above the second conveyor.
6. The conveying apparatus according to claim 4, wherein the sheet transport path is substantially horizontal and the air duct opening faces in a downward vertical direction.
7. The conveying apparatus according to claim 3, wherein the sheet transport path lies in a first plane and the air duct opening lies in a second plane substantially parallel to the first plane.
8. The conveying apparatus according to claim 3, wherein the sheet transport path lies in a plane and the air duct is positioned to draw air through the sheet transport path in a direction perpendicular to the plane.
9. The conveying apparatus according to claim 3, including a housing substantially enclosing the first conveyor and the second conveyor, the housing including a first opening at the upstream end of the sheet transport path positioned such that sheets can enter the sheet transport path through the first opening and a second opening at the downstream end of the sheet transport path positioned such that sheets can exit the sheet transport path through the second opening, the housing being connected to the air duct.
10. The conveying apparatus according to claim 9, wherein the conveyor includes a frame, wherein the first conveyor and the second conveyor are supported by the frame, wherein the air duct is mounted on the frame and at least partially supported by the frame, and wherein the housing is mounted on the frame.
11. The conveying apparatus according to claim 3, including a housing substantially enclosing the first conveyor and connected to the air duct, the housing being positioned such that substantially all air drawn through the opening by the fan passes through the first conveyor.
12. The conveying apparatus according to claim 3, including an air filter in the air duct.
13. The conveying apparatus according to claim 3, wherein the conveyor includes a frame, wherein the first conveyor and the second conveyor are supported by the frame, and wherein the air duct is mounted on the frame and at least partially supported by the frame.
14. A conveying apparatus configured to transport sheets along a transport path in a first direction from an input end to a discharge end, the conveying apparatus comprising: a frame having a first side and a second side and a front end and a rear end; an upper conveyor mounted in the frame and having an upstream end at the frame front end, a downstream end at the frame rear end, and a first side and a second side extending from the upstream end to the downstream end, the first conveyor comprising a plurality of belts, each belt of the plurality of belts having a first end located in a middle of the upper conveyor and a second end, the second ends of a first set of the plurality of belts being located at the upstream end of the upper conveyor and the second ends of a second set of the plurality of belts being located at the downstream end of the upper conveyor; a lower conveyor mounted in the frame and having an upstream end at the frame front end, a downstream end at the frame rear end, and a first side and a second side extending from the upstream end of the second conveyor to the downstream end of the second conveyor, the second conveyor comprising a plurality of wheels supported on a plurality of rods extending from the first side of the frame to the second side of the frame, the plurality of wheels being spaced from the plurality of belts to define a sheet transport path between the upper conveyor and the lower conveyor, an air duct mounted on the frame above the upper conveyor, the air duct having an opening above the upper conveyor; a housing supported by the frame, the housing substantially enclosing the upper conveyor and the lower conveyor and being connected to the air duct; and a fan in fluid communication with the air duct, the fan being configured to draw air through the opening into the air duct and discharge the air out an exhaust vent.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) Referring now to the drawings, wherein the showings are for the purpose of illustrating embodiments of the disclosure only and not for the purpose of limiting same,
(9) The frame 60 includes vertical support members 72 and horizontal support members 74 and a plurality of panels 76 mounted between the vertical and horizontal support members 72, 74 to enclose the area around the upper conveyor 56 and the lower conveyor 58. In general, the housing 62 extends from the air duct 64 to a position below the bottom of the lower conveyor 58 so that substantially all the air drawn into the air duct 64 by the fan 68 will first pass through both the lower conveyor 58 and the upper conveyor 56 and past any sheets of material present in the transport path. This flow of air serves both to remove dust loosely attached to the sheets of material and to remove dust in the vicinity of the transport path that is stirred up by scrap removal devices such as the brush 78 illustrated in
(10) The conveyor section 50 includes an upstream end 80 and a downstream end 82, and the sheets travel along the transport path in the downstream direction from the upstream end 80 to the downstream end 82. The housing 60 includes an opening 84 aligned with a nip at the upstream end 80 of the upper conveyor 56 and an opening 86 aligned with the nip at the downstream end 82 of the upper conveyor 56 so that sheets can move smoothly from an upstream conveyor (not illustrated) through the conveyor section 50 and out to a downstream conveyor such as the main conveyor deck of the stacking conveyor 54 shown in
(11) The dust removal system can be used with a variety of upper and lower conveyors. However, a configuration of upper and lower conveyors that is particularly useful with the above-described dust removal system is described below and illustrated in
(12) In
(13) Each of the support shafts 174 includes a plurality of wheels 184. The wheels 184 are fixed against rotation relative to the support shafts 174 and therefore rotate with the support shafts 174. The wheels 184 may be discrete elements that are selectably securable to the support shafts 174, using screws or clamps (not illustrated) so that the number and location of the wheels 184 on the shafts 174 can be adjusted. Alternately, the wheels 184 may be integrally formed with the shafts 174 and thus comprise portions of the shafts 174 that have greater diameters. In other words, each shaft 174 may comprise first portions having a small diameter and second portions having a large diameter, the large diameter portions forming the wheels 184.
(14) The wheels 184 on each of the shafts 174 are evenly spaced in a transverse direction, that is, a direction transverse to the sheet travel direction. However, counting the shafts from front to back in the view of
(15) The wheels 184 are intended to make contact with sheets being transported, and the wheels 184 may therefore sometimes be referred to as contact elements. The radially outer surfaces of the wheels 184 may be referred to as contact surfaces because they are intended to directly contact sheets being transported through the conveyor section 50. These outer surfaces may be knurled to increase friction between the wheels 184 and the sheets. The portions of the wheels 184 facing in the direction of the upper conveyor 56, which portions will directly contact sheets, are described as being located in contact regions. These contract regions of the wheels 184 are the regions of essentially line-contact between the sheets and the wheels 184 (because the sheets are not perfectly rigid, the area of contact is likely to be a small angular portion of the wheels 184 rather than a line). The contact regions therefore lie in a plane or are bounded by a plane, the plane representing the plane of a hypothetical perfectly rigid sheet resting on the surfaces of the wheels 184. Therefore, as the wheels 184 rotate, a given point on the surface of each wheel 184 will rotate into and out of the contact region.
(16) Referring now to
(17) A plurality of pulleys 198 are mounted on the middle transverse shaft 188 and attached to the middle shaft 188 so that they rotate with the shaft when the shaft 188 is driven. The pulleys 198 are evenly spaced along the middle shaft 188 and may be described as being located at numbered locations 1, 2, 3 . . . 31 along the middle shaft 188. The front shaft 186 also includes a plurality of pulleys 198 that are fixed to the front shaft 186 for rotation therewith. The number of pulleys 198 on the front shaft 186 is approximately one half the number of the pulleys 198 on the middle shaft 188, and the pulleys 198 on the front shaft 186 are aligned with every other one of the pulleys 198 on the middle shaft 188. In
(18) The belts 200 of the upper conveyor 56 are examples of sheet contact elements that are configured to make direct contact with sheets traversing the conveyor section 50. The portions of the belts 200 that face the lower conveyor 58 form sheet contact surfaces. These sheet contact surfaces lie substantially in a plane parallel to the sheet transport direction. The portions of the belts 200 that face the lower conveyor 58 are located in a contact region, and all points on the belts 200 travel from contact regions (facing the lower conveyor 58) to non-contact regions (facing away from the lower conveyor 58) as the belts 200 rotate.
(19) In operation, the upper conveyor 56 is positioned relative to the lower conveyor 58 so that the vertical separation between the plane in which the tops of the wheels 184 lie and the plane in which the bottoms of the belts 200 lie are separated by a desired distance based on the thickness of the sheets to be transported. In order to allow adequate control of the movement of the sheets without crushing or damaging the sheets during transport, the vertical separation will be approximately equal to the thickness of the sheets being transported. The sheets will exit an upstream conveyor (not illustrated) and enter a nip at the upstream end 80 of the conveyor section 50 through the opening 84, which nip is defined by the belts 200 of the upper conveyor section 56 and the wheels 184 of the lower conveyor section 58. The lower conveyor drive 181 and the upper conveyor drive 196 are coordinated so that the belts 200 travel at the same speed as the tops of the wheels 184, and this pulls the sheets along the conveyor section 50 from the upstream end 80 to the downstream end 82 and ejects the sheets to a downstream conveyor such as the main conveyor 54 of a stacking system as illustrated in
(20) In many cases, belts provide a greater degree of control over the movement of sheets in a conveyor because a relatively large surface area of the belts remains in contact with the sheets as they move along a conveyor section. At the same time, this greater area of contact may hold scrap against the sheets and prevent the scrap from being removed from the sheets before they are stacked. The inventors have found that using wheels 184 on the lower conveyor 58 makes it easier for scrap to fall from the sheets and out of the sheet transport path (onto the scrap removal conveyors 164, for example) than if belts were used on both the upper and lower conveyors. That is, all lower surfaces of the sheets are free from roller or wheel contact at some time as the sheets traverse the conveyor section 50. This also helps prevent dust from being trapped against the sheets. At the same time, the use of belts 200 on the upper conveyor 56 provides adequate control over the movement of the sheets. And, because the belts 200 are staggered such that no individual belt 200 extends all the way from the upstream end 80 to the downstream end 82 of the conveyor section 50, all upper surfaces of the sheets are free from belt contact at some point as they traverse the conveyor section 50. This arrangement, when used with brushes, blowers, vacuums or other devices for removing scrap from sheets, has been found to improve the scrap removal process.
(21) The present invention has been described herein in terms of a preferred embodiment. Additions and modifications to this embodiment will become apparent to persons of ordinary skill in the art upon a reading of the foregoing description. It is intended that all such modifications and additions form a part of the present invention to the extent they fall within the scope of the several claims appended hereto.