FOOD PRODUCT SLICER WITH GAUGE PLATE POSITION IDENTIFICATION
20220339813 · 2022-10-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
B26D7/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B26D1/143
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B26D2210/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B26D7/0616
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B26D5/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B26D7/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B26D1/143
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B26D7/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A food product slicer includes a base, a knife mounted for rotation relative to the base, a carriage assembly mounted to the base for reciprocal movement back and forth past a cutting edge of the knife, and an adjustable gauge plate mounted for movement between a closed position that prevents slicing and multiple open positions that permit slicing at respective thicknesses. A slice thickness identification system includes: at least one sensor for determining a position of the gauge plate; and a display for displaying a slice thickness indicator corresponding to the determined position.
Claims
1. A food product slicer, comprising: a base; a knife mounted for rotation relative to the base; a carriage assembly mounted to the base for reciprocal movement back and forth past a cutting edge of the knife; an adjustable gauge plate mounted for movement between a closed position that prevents slicing and multiple open positions that permit slicing at respective thicknesses; a slice thickness identification system including: at least one sensor for determining a position of the gauge plate; and a display for displaying a slice thickness indicator corresponding to the determined position.
2. The food product slicer of claim 1, wherein the at least one sensor comprises a capacitive array sensor.
3. The food product slicer of claim 1, wherein the at least one sensor comprises at least one of an encoder, a potentiometer, a potentiometer, and infrared distance sensor, or an imaging system sensor.
4. The food product slicer of claim 1, wherein the at least one sensor comprises an encoder that is incorporated into a motor that is linked to move the gauge plate.
5. The food product slicer of claim 1, further comprising a controller that is configured to identify slice thickness based upon output from the at least one sensor.
6. The food product slicer of claim 5, further comprising a motor linked to move the gauge plate, wherein the controller is configured to (i) store at least one predetermined slice thickness that is selectable by an operator and (ii) automatically drive the motor to move the gauge plate to achieve the predetermined slice thickness.
7. The food product slicer of claim 1, wherein the controller is configured with an auto-close function by which the controller automatically drives the motor to cause the gauge plate to move to the closed position responsive to a predefined condition.
8. The food product slicer of claim 1, further comprising: a gauge plate drive system including a motor operatively linked for adjusting the gauge plate position and a controller configured to drive the motor responsive to operator selection of a thickness.
9. The food product slicer of claim 8, further comprising: at least one of a touch-screen interface or a knob for enabling operator selection of the thickness.
10. A food product slicer, comprising: a base; a knife mounted for rotation relative to the base; a carriage assembly mounted to the base for reciprocal movement back and forth past a cutting edge of the knife; an adjustable gauge plate mounted for movement between a closed position that prevents slicing and multiple open positions that permit slicing at respective thicknesses; a gauge plate drive system including a motor operatively linked for adjusting the gauge plate position and a controller configured to drive the motor responsive to operator selection of a thickness.
11. The food product slicer of claim 10, further comprising a knob operably connected to the gauge plate drive system.
12. The food product slicer of claim 11, wherein the gauge plate position is adjusted by either (i) manual rotation of the knob by an operator or (ii) the controller effective driving of the motor.
13. The food product slicer of claim 10, wherein the gauge plate drive system further comprises one or more actuatable physical buttons or the controller configured to present on a touch-screen display one or more actuatable buttons.
14. The food product slicer of claim 10, wherein the controller is configured to (i) store multiple predetermined slice thicknesses that are selectable by an operator and (ii) automatically drive the motor to move the gauge plate to achieve the predetermined slice thickness that is selected by the operator.
15. The food product slicer of claim 14, wherein one of the multiple predetermined slice thicknesses is a first section thickness.
16. The food product slicer of claim 15, wherein the controller is configured to drive the motor to move the gauge plate to achieve the first section thickness for a first slice and then drive the motor to move the gauge plate to achieve another predetermined slice thickness for subsequent slices.
17. The food product slicer of claim 10, wherein the controller is configured with an auto-close function by which the controller automatically causes the gauge plate to move to the closed position responsive to a predefined condition.
18. The food product slicer of claim 10, wherein the controller is configured with a slice thickness adjust feature by which the controller automatically adjusts gauge plate position during slicing to achieve a target slice weight.
19. The food product slicer of claim 18, wherein the target slice weight is a target weight range for each slice.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0007]
[0008]
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[0010]
[0011]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0012] Referring to
[0013] Repeatability of slice thickness is the control of slice thickness within a similar product, for example, if a particular machine slices ham at index setting of 4, on the adjustment knob, and that thickness is desirable, the next time a customer comes back to have more ham sliced and that if the index is set on 4 it will cut the same thickness. This theory will also apply from machine to machine repeatability. Prior techniques provided repeatability within a certain degree but not as consistent as desired. The machine to machine repeatability was generally not present.
[0014] Referring to
[0015] Referring to
[0016] One exemplary technique of identifying slice thickness based upon position of the gauge plate is to utilize a capacitive array 112 to detect motion/position. As the slider 94 moves, AC voltages are picked up and interpolated to determine position (e.g., with 0.0002″ accuracy over ˜6 inches). This technique involves a need for zeroing because the capacitive array 112 provides a relative measurement. Zeroing can occur upon slicer power-up automatically or every time the gauge plate is closed completely, as indicated by a gauge plate closed switch 114 tripping to rezero the measuring device. Linear or rotational embodiments are contemplated.
[0017] Another technique of measurement or determination of slice thickness based upon position of the gauge plate is to use an encoder 116. By way of example, an encoder uses a light source and a photodetection device is provided and a disk passes between the light source and light sensor. This disk is “coded” in such a way that provides the software (e.g., in a controller 100) enough information to determine where the disk is rotationally. If the controller 100 knows the rotational position of the indexing cam 90, the controller 100 can interpolate where the gauge plate is (e.g., known points could be stored in memory to match rotational data points of the indexing cam with the corresponding linear data points of the gauge plate). Linear or rotational embodiments are contemplated.
[0018] A small stepper motor 120 could be provided for powered rotation of the knob 74, and thus powered positioning of the gauge plate. In such an embodiment, the gauge plate system can be designed so that there are two possible inputs: (i) the stepper motor 120 can control the gauge plate position or (ii) the operator can manually rotate the knob 74 to control gauge plate position. The stepper motor 120 may include a geared connection 122 to the cam 90 for effecting the powered cam movement. In this embodiment, and encoder internal of the stepper motor could be used for monitoring position of the cam 90, and thus position of the gauge plate.
[0019] The controller 100 can include memory 100a and a stored memory function for one or more high-use thicknesses, which are stored and selected by the operator to quickly and accurately achieve the same slice thickness repeatedly, with the controller 100 responsively driving the stepper motor 120 in accordance with the selection.
[0020] A standard practice for slicing a chunk of meat is to cut off a large unusable section of the chub before slicing. The slicer controller 100 can be programmed to initially drive the stepper motor 120 to move the gauge plate to automatically cut this first section off at a predetermined thickness and then, for the purpose of the next slices, immediately drive the stepper motor 120 to move the gauge plate to a position to achieve a different selected/desired slice thickness without stopping and without operator input. In one operating mode, the controller 100 of the food product slicer 50 stores in the memory a first section thickness, and the controller 100 is configured to drive the motor 120 to the first section thickness for a first slice then adjust the motor 120 to another predetermined thickness, which typically would be less than the first thickness, for the subsequent slices. In embodiments, this operating mode may be selected and/or may be selectively enabled and disabled as desired via the user interface (e.g., touch-screen display 110).
[0021] In combination with a scale, the controller 100 could be configured to automatically adjust slice thickness to achieve and maintain a desired weight per slice. It is often difficult to maintain an exact weight for each slice as most chunks of meat vary in cross sectional area, and for some applications this featured would be desirable. By way of example, the controller could be configured with a thickness adjust feature to adjust gauge plate position to achieve a relatively uniform slice weight (e.g., if the incremental weight of each slice drops below a set range, the gauge plate could be driven to further open until the incremental slice weight comes back in range or if the incremental weight of each slice rises above a set range the gauge plate could be driven to close slightly until the incremental slice weight comes back into range).
[0022] It is to be clearly understood that the above description is intended by way of illustration and example only and is not intended to be taken by way of limitation. Variations are possible.
[0023] For example, various types of sensors could be used for determining the position of the gauge plate, such as a linear potentiometer, and infrared distance sensor, or an imaging system sensor (e.g., camera). In any such case, the sensor may sense the position of the gauge plate directly (e.g., sensing position of the gauge plate itself) or may sense the position of the gauge plate indirectly (e.g., sensing position of some part of the indexing assembly that effects movement of the gauge plate). As previously indicated, the sensor could also be an integrated part of the drive motor (e.g., an encoder that outputs counts or steps corresponding to drive motor rotation, with the controller tracking the step count away from the known zero position of the gauge plate).
[0024] Although a rotatable knob is described above for use in manual adjustment of the gauge plate position, it is recognized that the knob could be eliminated and, for example, buttons (e.g., physical buttons 130 or button images presented on a touch-screen display 110) could be used by an operator to open and close the gauge plate.
[0025] In embodiments, the controller 100 could be configured with advanced functionality, such as an auto-close feature by which the controller automatically causes the gauge plate to close upon a predefined condition (e.g., after a set time period of no slicing or after a programmed slice operation has completed). For example, the controller could be configured to close the gauge plate after a certain number of slices have been cut or after a certain weight of slices has been cut (where the slicer includes a load cell 132 for weighing the sliced product).
[0026] Still other variations are possible.