APPARATUS FOR THE STORAGE OF DOUGH PRODUCTS IN A FERMENTATION CHAMBER

Dough products are stored in a fermentation chamber on a rack system in which in each of a multiplicity of horizontal planes located one above the other, the palettes carrying the dough products are substantially contiguous and are pushed from rack to rack section from the upstream side to the downstream side upon the insertion of a palette at the upstream side. The empty palettes are recirculated below the palettes carrying the dough products and the displacement is effected solely by pressing of each upstream palette against the next downstream palette.

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Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

[0001] My present invention relates to an apparatus for the storage of dough products in a fermentation chamber, especially for the production of bread, rolls and other yeast-containing or risable dough products which, as part of the production process, usually require storage for a predetermined time period in a fermentation chamber prior to baking. More particularly the invention relates to a storage facility of this type in which the dough products are placed upon horizontal palettes which can be disposed one above another in superposed planes.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

[0002] It is known to store dough products, for example for bread, rolls and other rising bakery items, usually made with yeast, on displaceable multilevel racks which can be inserted into a fermentation chamber and such that the dough products lie on palettes at the respective levels or forming the respective tiers of the multitier rack. It is also known to displace dough products on conveyor belts through a fermentation chamber. In the first case, considerable work is involved in moving around the racks and in the second case the conveyor apparatus can be complex and expensive and can require significant amounts of space for a given output of the system.

OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION

[0003] It is, therefore, the principal object of the present invention to provide an improved apparatus for the storage of dough products for a limited period of time in a fermentation chamber which has technically inexpensive apparatus, has more efficient utilization of space and requires significantly less manpower than earlier systems.

[0004] Another object of the invention is to provide an improved apparatus for the storage of dough products in a fermentation chamber which is more reliable and less costly than earlier systems and which requires less floor space or has a smaller footprint than some earlier systems.

[0005] It is also an object of the invention to obviate drawbacks of earlier systems for the storage of dough products in a fermentation chamber.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

[0006] These objects and others which will become apparent hereinafter are attained, in accordance with the invention which provides a plurality of cabinet sections each with a multiplicity of palettes disposed one above the other and adapted to receive the dough products, the palettes being horizontally shiftable in their respective cabinets and the palettes being so closely juxtaposed, i.e. substantially contiguous in each plane, so that a shifting of the palettes in a given plane at the charging side of the apparatus will result in a horizontal shift of all of the palettes in that plane to transfer a palette at the discharge side of the system to a discharge means. With such an apparatus, the loading device or means at the upstream side of the row of cabinets can insert a palette or tray loaded with dough products into the first cabinet or rack, thereby shifting the palette previously therein and all other palettes in the same horizontal plane toward the downstream end where the palettes from the last cabinet or rack is deposited on the discharge means which enables the palette to be carried away.

[0007] With this apparatus, therefore, the insertion of a palette or tray at the upstream side in one plane shifts all of the palettes in this plane and discharges a palette at the discharge side. This is accomplished without conveyor belts and without manual intervention between the ends of the system.

[0008] It has been found to be advantageous in each of the cabinet sections to provide a plurality of palettes or trays in stacked relationship, i.e. one above the other, so that each of the palettes or trays can be shifted horizontally. The several cabinet sections or racks should then be particularly close together so that each palette can bear upon the next between the upstream and downstream sides. The cabinet or rack sections are also provided close together so that the guides for the palettes in each plane can be flush with each other.

[0009] It has been found to be advantageous to provide at the charging side of the system and at the discharge side of the system respective elevator arrangements for loading the palettes onto the respective planes and receiving the palettes from the respective planes. The elevators can vertically shift the palette and align them in the guides for the respective planes. The palettes can also be returned from the discharge side to the charging side without an additional conveyor belt by providing a space below the stack of palettes in the racks or cabinets for enabling the palettes to push one another from the discharge side to the charging side, thereby again doing without a conveyor belt. An empty palette thus emerges from the return path at the charge side and can be reloaded with the dough products for insertion into the fermentation chamber.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING

[0010] The above and other objects, features, and advantages will become more readily apparent from the following description, reference being made to the accompanying drawing in which:

[0011] FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic side elevational view of an apparatus for the temporary storage of dough products in a fermentation chamber;

[0012] FIG. 2 is a plan view, also in highly diagrammatic form, of this apparatus;

[0013] FIG. 3 is a detail showing the junction between two cabinets and the flush arrangement of the U-section or channel guides for the palettes;

[0014] FIG. 4 is a section taken along the line IV-IV of FIG. 3; and

[0015] FIG. 5 is a section taken along the line V-V of FIG. 4.

SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION

[0016] Within a fermentation chamber which can also be used as a baking chamber, if desired, at the downstream end, racks 26 (FIGS. 3 and 4) can be provided with U-shaped or channel guides 25 to define a cabinet 3 with a succession of sections.

[0017] The dough products 30 (FIG. 3) which are to rise in the fermentation chamber, are carried by flat palettes or trays 2 which can be rectangular in the preferred shape and are guided in the channels 27 of horizontal guide sections 25 secured by bolts or rivets 28 to the uprights 26 of the racks.

[0018] The cabinet 23 has a charging side 4 at which the palettes 2 are fed to the storage rack. At the discharge side 5 at the opposite end of the rack or cabinet, the palettes are removed from the rack or cabinet, the dough products 30 having risen sufficiently or, if baking is involved, having been at least partly baked.

[0019] The cabinet 3 has a multiplicity of superposed horizontal planes 6 which can correspond to the horizontal median plane through the channel-shaped guides 25 which are of U-section as can be seen from FIG. 5. Such guides engage the opposite narrow edges of the palettes 2 as they slide along the respective planes in the respective channels 27 in the direction of arrow 31, i.e. from the right to the left in FIGS. 1 and 2. In each of the planes 6 there are nine contiguous palettes 2, i.e. palettes which lie close together along their longitudinal edges and abut one another.

[0020] In FIG. 2 the nine contiguous palettes have been represented at 2a-2i.

[0021] If the palette 2a at the upstream or inlet side is thus pushed in the direction of the arrow 32 previously mentioned, each palette of the nine contiguous palettes pushes the palette ahead of it in the same direction so that all of the remaining palettes are advanced by one palette width and the palette 2i closest to the discharge side 5 is pushed out of the cabinet 3 and can be removed.

[0022] Since the cabinet 3 has a large number of planes 6 disposed one above the other in each of which a row of palettes lie, in each of the cabinet sections 7 there are a multiplicity of palettes with those at the upstream cabinet section 7a being loaded in succession by a loading unit 8, also referred to as a charging unit, provided with an elevator 9 with a vertically-shiftable charging head capable of alignment with the channels 27 of a respective plane 6 and the insertion of a new palette with fresh dough products 30 thereon. With each such loading all of the palettes of that plane are advanced to the discharge side and the palette in the same plane from the last cabinet section 7i is discharged. The palettes can be loaded from bottom to top or top to bottom by the elevator and the charging unit 10.

[0023] On the discharge side 5 there is also an elevator 11 and a discharge unit 12 which can be raised and lowered by the elevator to receive the palettes which are forced out of the last cabinet section 7i of the series of such sections 7a-7i. The devices 10 and 13 are, of course, synchronized to operate in the same plane and to move from plane to plane together.

[0024] A grabbler 14 can remove the dough products which have risen sufficiently from the palettes at the discharge end and the empty palettes 2 can be returned to the charging side 4 along a return path 15, likewise by pushing one palette against the other, below the palettes which carry the dough products. In the return the palettes 2 are advanced cyclically as well with each discharged palette being pressed onto the path 15 to advance all of the other palettes therealong.

[0025] The empty palettes, upon arrival at the upstream cabinet section 7a can be loaded at 16 with dough products and fed to the charging unit 10. Between the charging station 6 and the recycle unit 16, a storage facility 17 can be provided for the palette 2 and, as has been shown in FIG. 2, adjacent the charging station 8 two additional units 18 and 19 can be provided for supplying palettes filled with dough products at the charging side.

[0026] From FIG. 2 it can be seen that the leading edge 2″ of one of the palettes 2 can press upon the trailing edge 2′ of the palette 2 immediately ahead of it (FIG. 4) and further that the guides 25 are flush with one another at their ends or edges 25′, 25″.

Claims

1. An apparatus for storing dough products in a fermentation chamber, comprising:

a plurality of cabinet sections arrayed in succession in a fermentation chamber for such dough products from an upstream charging side to a downstream discharging side; and
a plurality of flat palettes forming respective trays for carrying dough products to be stored in said fermentation chamber for a certain period of time and received in said cabinet sections and lying in a common horizontal plane, all of the palettes in said common horizontal plane being horizontally shiftable relative to the respective cabinet and being substantially contiguous so that, upon insertion of a palette into a cabinet section in said plane at said charging side all of the other palettes in said plane are shifted toward said discharging side.

2. The apparatus defined in

claim 1 wherein said palettes are rectangular.

3. The apparatus defined in

claim 2 wherein each of said cabinets is provided with a multiplicity of said palettes in vertically spaced relationship and said palettes of all of said cabinet sections lie in respective horizontal planes with the palettes in each of said planes lying in close proximity to one another whereby upon insertion of a palette into a cabinet section in said plane at said charging side all of the other palettes in the respective plane are shifted toward said discharging side.

4. The apparatus defined in

claim 3 wherein each of said cabinet sections' respective guides are provided for the palettes in each of said planes and the guides in each plane are flush with one another.

5. The apparatus defined in

claim 3, further comprising a charging unit at said upstream charging side and a discharging unit at said discharging side, each of said units having an elevator and means displaceable by said elevator into alignment with a respective plane for feeding a palette in said plane at said upstream charging side and removing a palette in said plane at said downstream discharging side.

6. The apparatus defined in

claim 3 wherein said elevators are synchronized with one another.

7. The apparatus defined in

claim 5, further comprising means below said planes for displacing said palettes from said downstream discharging side to said upstream charging side.
Patent History
Publication number: 20010025571
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 30, 1999
Publication Date: Oct 4, 2001
Applicant: BERND DITRICH
Inventor: BERND DITTRICH (MARL)
Application Number: 09303472