Patents Assigned to Ashlock Company
-
Patent number: 5224409Abstract: An apparatus for producing helical slices of an object, such as a potato. The apparatus includes a rotatably mounted knife assembly having one or more sets of knife blades arranged in a spiral pattern. Each set of knife blades produces a set of helically shaped potato slices. The spiral arrangement of each blade set reduces the torque needed to slice an object using the knife assembly. In a preferred embodiment, the inventive apparatus includes two sets of slicing blades, for producing two sets of intertwined helical product slices. A curved separator tube, which extends downward from the slicing blade area, disentangles the pair of intertwined slices having the smallest radius, as the blade assembly and the separator tube rotates as a unit.Type: GrantFiled: June 27, 1991Date of Patent: July 6, 1993Assignee: Ashlock CompanyInventors: Frederick J. Cimperman, Klaus Silbermann
-
Patent number: 5074203Abstract: An apparatus for severing fragments (such as fleurettes) from a one-piece core of an article, such as a cauliflower, as the article is translated between stations along a process path. In a preferred embodiment, the article is translated through a sequence of stations, including a coring station, along the process path. At the coring station, the article is held in a fixed position by an impaling knife or pin, while one or more rotating coring knives are lowered into engagement with the article by a pivoting arm mechanism. The pivoting arm mechanism causes each rotating knife to trace out a generally helical path as it cores the article.Type: GrantFiled: October 10, 1990Date of Patent: December 24, 1991Assignee: Ashlock CompanyInventors: Thomas W. Hirtle, Frederick J. Cimperman, Klaus Silbermann
-
Patent number: 5009909Abstract: A method and apparatus for severing fragments (such as fleurettes) from a one-piece core of an article, such as a cauliflower, as the article is translated between stations along a process path. In a preferred embodiment, the article is loaded on a rotary table at a first station, then deleafed (or otherwise trimmed) at a second station, then aligned by a set of alignment rollers while translating through third and fourth alignment stations, then cored at a fifth coring station, and finally unloaded at a sixth station. At the coring station, the article is held in a fixed position by an impaling knife (or pin) while a set of rotating coring knives are lowered into engagement with the articles by a pivoting arm mechanism. The pivoting arm mechanism causes each rotating knife to trace out a generally helical path as it cores the article.Type: GrantFiled: August 5, 1988Date of Patent: April 23, 1991Assignee: Ashlock CompanyInventors: Thomas W. Hirtle, Frederick J. Cimperman, Klaus Silbermann
-
Patent number: 4925691Abstract: A method and apparatus for pitting olives and then slicing the pitted olives. In a preferred embodiment, each olive is carried in a cup positioned between a coring knife and a pitting knife in a manner so that the longitudinal axes of the cup and the knives coincide. As the cup and knives rotate around a drive shaft along parallel circular paths, a system of cams extends and retracts the knives relative to the cup, in order to pit the olive. After the pitting operation, the cup (containing a pitted olive) continues to rotate along its circular path past a set of slicing knives or water jet cutters. The slicing elements are oriented substantially parallel to the plane of the cup's circular path, so that the slicing elements will sever the olive cleanly into slices as the cup translates past them. In the inventive method and apparatus, both the pitting and slicing operations are performed on each olive while the olive is held in a known orientation.Type: GrantFiled: September 2, 1988Date of Patent: May 15, 1990Assignee: Ashlock CompanyInventor: Fred J. Cimperman
-
Patent number: 4876954Abstract: A method and apparatus for pitting olives and then slicing the pitted olives. In a preferred embodiment, each olive is carried in a cup positioned between a coring knife and a pitting knife in a manner so that the longitudinal axes of the cup and the knives coincide. As the cup and knives rotate around a drive shaft along parallel circular paths, a system of cams extends and retracts the knives relative to the cup, in order to pit the olive. After the pitting operation, the cup (containing a pitted olive) continues to rotate along its circular path past a set of slicing knives. The slicing knives are oriented substantially parallel to the plane of the cup's circular path, so that the slicing knives act as wedges to sever the olive cleanly into slices as the cup translates past the slicing knives. In the inventive method and apparatus, both the pitting and slicing operations are performed on each olive while the olive is held in a known orientation.Type: GrantFiled: January 13, 1988Date of Patent: October 31, 1989Assignee: Ashlock CompanyInventor: Fred J. Cimperman
-
Patent number: 4871568Abstract: A method and apparatus for pitting olives, in which each olive is held between a pair of matching knives as the knives are rotated along parallel circular paths by a rotating drive shaft. The knives may both be coring knives or may both be pitting knives, and are aligned so that their longitudinal axes coincide and the common longitudinal axis is substantially perpendicular to the plane of the olive's circular path. As the knives rotate along parallel circular paths, they are translated by cams along their common longitudinal axis so as to penetrate opposite ends of the olive simultaneously and then to push the pit out through one end of the olive. The coring knife embodiment of the invention leaves a clean bore through the pitted olive after removal of the core (including the pit), and prevents the pit from tearing away an irregularly shaped olive portion during removal.Type: GrantFiled: March 23, 1988Date of Patent: October 3, 1989Assignee: Ashlock CompanyInventor: Fred J. Cimperman