Patents by Inventor Larry L. Nelson
Larry L. Nelson has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
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Patent number: 5188504Abstract: Numbers of similar, loaded envelopes having side edge folds and end edge folds joining two rectangular panels are arranged in a stack in a drawer-like portable holder having a side opening. The drawer is installed with the envelopes disposed as a vertical slack in an elevator compartment. An elevator platform at the bottom of the stack is urged upwardly. Each successive top envelope is transferred from the stack to rollers that impel the envelope forcibly against a barrier wall to jog the load against a side edge fold. Cutters sever the other side edge fold and both end edge folds. A vacuum cup moves one of the panels to engage between stripper rollers that draw the entire envelope and the load apart. Conveyors take the separated envelope to a trash receiver and take the load to a receiver tray. There are various electrical driving, timing and performance checking devices, some optically responsive.Type: GrantFiled: November 15, 1991Date of Patent: February 23, 1993Assignee: Systems Mailing Research, Inc.Inventor: Larry L. Nelson
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Patent number: 5096360Abstract: Numbers of similar, loaded envelopes having side edge folds and end edge folds joining two rectangular panels are arranged in a stack in a drawer-like portable holder having a side opening. The drawer is installed with the envelopes disposed as a vertical stack in an elevator compartment. An elevator platform at the bottom of the stack is urged upwardly. Each successive top envelope is transferred from the stack to rollers that impel the envelope forcibly against a barrier wall to jog the load against a side edge fold. Cutters sever the other side edge fold and both end edge folds. A vacuum cup moves one of the panels to engage between stripper rollers that draw the entire envelope and the load apart. Conveyors take the separated envelope to a trash receiver and take the load to a receiver tray. There are various electrical driving, timing and performance checking devices, some optically responsive.Type: GrantFiled: December 27, 1989Date of Patent: March 17, 1992Assignee: Systems Mailing Research, Inc.Inventor: Larry L. Nelson
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Patent number: 5061146Abstract: Numbers of similar, loaded envelopes having side edge folds and end edge folds joining two rectangular panels are arranged in a stack in drawer-like portable holder having a side opening. The drawer is installed with the envelopes disposed as a vertical stack in an elevator compartment. An elevator platform at the bottom of the stack is urged upwardly. Each successive top envelope is transferred from the stack to rollers that impel the envelope forcibly against a barrier wall to jog the load against a side edge fold. Cutters sever the other side edge fold and both end edge folds. A vacuum cup moves one of the panels to engage between stripper rollers that draw the entire envelope and the load apart. Conveyors take the separated envelope to a trash receiver and take the load to a receiver tray. There are various electrical driving, timing and performance checking devices, some optically responsive.Type: GrantFiled: January 22, 1990Date of Patent: October 29, 1991Assignee: Systems Mailing Research, Inc.Inventor: Larry L. Nelson
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Patent number: 4921388Abstract: Numbers of similar, loaded envelopes having side edge folds and end edge folds joining two rectangular panels are arranged in a stack in a drawer-like portable holder having a side opening. The drawer is installed with the envelopes disposed as a vertical stack in an elevator compartment. An elevator platform at the bottom of the stack is urged upwardly. Each successive top envelope is transferred from the stack to rollers that impel the envelope forcibly against a barrier wall to jog the load against a side edge fold. Cutters sever the other side edge fold and both end edge folds. A vacuum cup moves one of the panels to engage between stripper rollers that draw the entire envelope and the load apart. Conveyors take the separated envelope to a trash receiver and take the load to a receiver tray. There are various electrical driving, timing and performance checking devices, some optically responsive.Type: GrantFiled: August 8, 1988Date of Patent: May 1, 1990Assignee: Systems Mailing Research, Inc.Inventor: Larry L. Nelson
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Patent number: 4113105Abstract: A device for checking supposedly emptied envelopes for documents, as the envelopes are fed in spaced end-to-end relationship past an inspection station, consists of three sensors at the inspection station arranged along a line perpendicular to the envelope path to sense the opacity of each envelope along three zones located respectively near the top, near the bottom and near the center of the envelope. The output of the center sensor serves as a reference for the top and bottom sensors and a signal processing circuit connected with the sensors produces a suspect signal, indicating the suspected presence of a document in an envelope, when the output of either the top or bottom sensor compares unfavorably with that of the center sensor for an amount of time sufficient to make the device insensitive to short duration opacity differences caused by overlapping envelope seams.Type: GrantFiled: March 7, 1977Date of Patent: September 12, 1978Assignee: Docutronix, Inc.Inventors: John R. DeHart, Larry L. Nelson, William H. Krehl
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Patent number: 4016980Abstract: A device for inspecting envelopes for enclosed contents consists of a conveyor for feeding the envelopes one at a time past an inspection station whereat the opacity of an envelope is sensed at two zones spaced from one another along a line perpendicular to the direction of envelope movement. The signals produced by the sensors are processed to produce a signal indicating the suspected presence of a document within an envelope as a result of differences in the opacities sensed by the two sensors and caused by such enclosed document, the system however compensating for opacity changes caused by seams in the envelopes and by differences in the opacities of the materials from which different envelopes are made. A gate mechanism operable in response to the production or non-production of a suspect signal as each envelope passes the inspection station segregates envelopes suspected of containing documents from those not so suspected.Type: GrantFiled: May 9, 1975Date of Patent: April 12, 1977Assignee: Docutronix, Inc.Inventors: John R. DeHart, Larry L. Nelson