Device for closing bags
The invention relates to a device for closing bags by means of plastic closing elements (2) which are linked by connecting pins, thereby forming a plate and can be individually and successively separated producing a closing strip directed to a supplying channel (25). Said closing elements are provided with a cracked orifice on one side thereof and placed on the neck of the bag rushed by clamping elements (3) with the aid of the forming punch which is provided with a support for receiving the closing elements (2). Said invention is characterised in that the forming punch (5) is connected to a separating matrix (4) and the supplying channel (25) is arranged on the plane of the closing strip, said plane being perpendicular with respect to the sliding plane of the punch and matrix (4, 5).
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The invention relates to an apparatus for closing bags using plastic closures that are individually separable one after another from a closure strip being conveyed in a feeding channel, said closures having a plate-like shape and being linked to one another by means of connecting tabs, wherein the closures are slid with an opening having a slit on one side onto the neck of a bag by means of a shaped stamp having a holder for receiving the closure, said neck having been gathered into a ruche using gathering means.
It is known to close bags using plate-like closures that have a centrical opening and a slit, by means of a variety of closing apparatuses.
EP 1 075 422 describes a bag closing apparatus using closures that can be torn off individually one after another from a strip of closures, said closures being placed by means of a shaped stamp onto a bag neck that is gathered into a ruche.
It has been found that this system has the shortcoming that the process of tearing individual closures off the feeding closure strip is problematic in the case of higher throughput speeds. An incorrect positioning of the closures can occur in the shaped stamp, so that the process of sliding the closures onto the neck of the bag that has been gathered into a ruche results in a tearing or imprecise closing of the neck of the bag caused by an offset positioning of the closure.
It is an additional shortcoming that the closures may become jammed in the closing apparatus and frequent uneconomical stoppages of the entire line occur at the required high throughput speeds.
It is the object of the invention to create a closing apparatus for bags that permits a simple and accurate separation of the closures from the closure strip at higher speeds and a more economical closing of the bags than is permitted by the prior art, and that no longer has the above shortcomings and provides additional advantages.
This object is met in such a way that the shaped stamp has an associated separating stamp and that the feeding channel with the closure strip lies in a plane orthogonal to the plane of movement of the stamps.
The features of the subclaims represent advantageous improvements and embodiments of the invention.
To meet this object, the shaped stamp together with a separating stamp performs the separation of the closures from the closure strip, the feeding channel for the closure strip being disposed such that the plate plane of the closures extends horizontally. Disposed at the end of the outlet of the feeding channel for the closure strip are the separating stamp and the shaped stamp and located further downstream is an end stop for the closure being separated. This end stop, together with an opposed guide means on the feeding channel, also forms a guide means for the closure in the vertical direction.
The closures are linked to one another by connecting tabs, thereby forming a continuous closure strip in such a way that in the horizontal arrangement one connecting tab is located towards the front and an additional one is located towards the equipment body. The closure strip extends such that the slits of the openings of the closures point away from the equipment stand, i.e., they are located towards the front.
The separating stamp incorporates a separating finger and the shaped stamp has a fork head incorporating preferably four fingers, two fingers of which are disposed in each case in opposed parallel vertical planes and form between them a groove in each case, in which the separated closure is received. The finger pairs of a vertical plane form a recess between them.
The separating stamp and the shaped stamp are disposed and guided in the closing apparatus in such a way that they perform longitudinal movements in the vertical direction independently from one another in such a way that they perform the process of separating the closure from the closure strip, a process of swiveling the partially separated closure, the process of receiving of the closure, and the process of sliding the closure onto the gathered neck of the bag.
The finger of the separating stamp is disposed under the leading connecting tab of the closure being separated, located next to it the finger of the front plane of the shaped stamp facing the feeding channel of the closure strip, so that this finger is positioned centered under the edge facing the closure strip of the closure being separated.
A closing process, also called closing sequence, starts with the closure strip being transported in the feeding channel until the closure to be separated is located in the space between the outlet of the feeding channel and the end stop.
A vertical upward movement of the separating stamp and shaped stamp effects a tearing-off of the leading connecting tab of the closure from the closure strip and simultaneous raising of the front edge having the slit of the opening of the closure. The tearing-off of the leading connecting tab is performed by the finger of the separating stamp and by the pressure of the finger of the shaped stamp located next to it.
The separating stamp is then stopped in this position, the shaped stamp continues to move vertically upward in such a way that the closure is swiveled around the not-yet-separated rear connecting tab in such a way that the fingers of the front plane of the fork head of the shaped stamp push underneath the closure being separated. The rear edge of the closure being separated is advantageously first held in place by an end stop and the swiveling process of the closure being separated is supported. During the continued upward movement of the fork head, the closure being separated is swiveled by 90° with its plate plane from the horizontal into the vertical and received between the two finger pairs of the fork head inside the grooves. In the process, the rear connecting tab is torn off, the closure is now separated from the closure strip and is pushed during a continued upward movement of the shaped stamp with the fork head onto the gathered neck of the bag. The shaped stamp with the fork head is then lowered vertically, during which process the separating stamp is moved back as well.
The leading fingers of the fork head are advantageously longer by approximately two thirds than the rear fingers of the fork head. It is of particular advantage if the leading finger facing the closure strip is slightly longer than the finger located next to it in the same plane, as this permits a precise initial separation of the leading connecting tab.
If is of additional advantage that the fingers of the rear plane of the fork head each have a bezel facing the fingers of the front plane of the fork head, rendering the process of receiving the swiveled closure simple, particularly during the upward movement of the fork head.
The end stop for the rear edge of the closure being separated is located above the plane of the feeding channel, centered between the rear fingers of the fork head and disposed on the closing apparatus towards the equipment stand. In a particularly economic design it is formed by a cylinder head of a cylinder head screw. During the upward movement of the fork head the end stop is received by the recess between the rear fingers of the fork head and thus cannot impede the upward movement but advantageously participate in the swiveling of the closure.
The separating stamp and shaped stamp are disposed such that they and/or their fingers slide on each other or are spaced apart, thus resulting in an advantageous space-saving design.
It is possible to retrofit the inventive closing apparatus for packaging machines and it is also suitable for different gathering systems.
By using the separating stamp, a wide footprint of the shaped stamp and accordingly of the gathering means can be avoided, which would have the disadvantage that the bags would no longer be gathered as tightly and the product would not be packaged tightly enough.
Additional details of the invention will be explained with the aid of example embodiments in the drawings, in which:
Bags 11 of plastic film with packaging content—articles 17 of all kinds, especially bread—are closed in their neck region in each case by means of plastic closures 2 that are individually separable one after another from a closure strip 18, said closures encompassing the bag neck 12 with an opening 16 that is opened on one side of its circumference by a slit 15. A closing apparatus 1 is provided for this purpose in which the neck 12 of the bag is gathered into a ruche 13 by means of known gathering means 3 and one closure 2 is slid in each case in the linear bag passage 24 and in the same plane onto the ruche 13 in an upward movement with its opening 16 that is provided with the slit 15. The linear bag passage 24 lies in the packaging direction 19 of a packaging machine 20.
During the closing process (see
Forming of the ruche takes place in a known manner by means of two pivoting gathering means 3 that can be moved against each other, below which a feeding channel 25 that is oriented transversely to the bag passage 24 is disposed for the closure strip 18, as shown by
An example embodiment of a feeding channel 25 with closure strip 18 is presented in
Adjoining the feeding channel is a stamp that is upwardly movable into the region of the gathering means 3 and separates one closure 2 in each case from the closure strip 18 and slides it onto the ruche 13, said stamp consisting of a separating stamp 4 and a shaped stamp 5. Disposed on the side opposite the outlet of the feeding channel 25 is an end stop 14 for the closure strip 18, so that the space between the outlet of the feeding channel 25 and the end stop 14 creates a space for only one closure 2. To adapt this space to the size of the given closure, the end stop 14 is adjustable. The end stop 14 has, at the same time, a guiding function for the closure 2 together with an opposed guide means 30 disposed on the feeding channel 25.
The separating stamp 4 and shaped stamp 5 are held vertically upwardly movable (see
The separating stamp 4 and shaped stamp 5 are disposed together vertically in a manner so that they can be moved against each other. They may slide on one another or they may be spaced apart. The separating stamp 4 has a finger 4a whose stamp surface is nearly parallel with the plate surface of the closures 2 of the closure strip 18. The finger 4a has the function to separate in each case the connecting tab 2a from the connecting tab 2c of the closure 2′ still located in the feeding channel 25, for which purpose the finger 4a is located under the connecting tab 2a of the closure 2 being separated.
At the upper end of the shaped stamp 5, a fork head 6 is disposed that has four fingers 7, 8, 9, 9′, which are located in pairs in each case in two vertical planes located side by side, and which form in each case, between two fingers 7 and 9, as well as 8 and 9′, grooves 10 to receive the closure 2, like it is shown in
The fingers 7, 8 of the front plane of the fork head 6 project above the fingers 9, 9′ of the rear plane by approximately two thirds of the length of the fingers 9, 9′, in such a way that the length of the finger 7 facing the feeding channel 25 is slightly longer than that of the finger 8 disposed next to it. The fingers 9, 9′ that are disposed behind them each have a bezel pointing towards the fingers 7, 8. The bezels permit an advantageous threading-in of the closure 2, which is received during the upward movement of the fork head 6 by the same in the grooves 10, in such a way that the plate plane of the closure 2 is located between the front plane and the rear plane of the fork head.
Disposed slightly above the plane of the feeding channel 25 on the vertical longitudinal axis of the rear plane of the fork head 6 is an end stop 26, which is advantageously a cylinder head screw. During the upward movement of the shaped stamp 5 with the fork head 6, the end stop 26 is received in a recess 6a between the fingers 9, 9′ of the fork head 6. This can permit an additional guiding of the fork head 6.
During the separation of the connecting tab 2a of the closure 2 from the closure strip 18 in a first phase, which is performed by the separating stamp 4, the closure 2 is bent up with its front edge incorporating the slit 15 of the opening 16, and is supported with its rear edge under the end stop 26, so that a controlled swiveling of the closure takes place about the not-yet-separated connecting tab 2b. This process is supported by the fork head 6, which is also being moved upward, by a leading push of the longer finger 7 approximately under the center of the edge of the closure 2 facing the closure strip 18. Tests have shown that the longer length of the finger 7 is particularly advantageous for the controlled separating, swiveling and receiving of the closure 2 even at high closing speeds.
The continued upward movement of the shaped stamp 5 with the fork head 6 continues to swivel the closure 2 upward and, during the continued upward movement, separates the connecting tab 2b from the closure 2′ held by the feeding channel, and receives in the grooves 10 the closure 2 that has been separated in this manner. The closure 2 is thus swiveled from the horizontal plane of the closure strip 18 by 90° into the vertical plane of the fork head 6, is now held with the fork head 6 and slid onto the ruche 13 in such a way that the lower edges of the grooves 10 exert the closing force onto the closure 2.
The separating stamp remains in this position or returns into its starting position.
During a second phase, which is shown by
An example packaging machine 20 for articles 17, especially for bread, according to
Each bag 11 is filled in the packaging machine 20 with the article 17, for example bread, and then moved with its bag neck 12 against the direction of conveyance, i.e., the packaging direction 19, toward the bag closing apparatus 1 in the linear bag passage 24 in the packaging direction 19 and in the same plane. There, the bag 11 is stopped. The gathering means 3 now gather the neck 12 of the bag into the ruche 13 (see
The first closure 2 is used in each case for closing the neck 12 of the bag immediately after gathering of the ruche during the closing process as described above. After the closing process, the closure 2 encompasses the neck 12 of the bag and lies with its plate plane (transversely/orthogonally) to the direction of the linear bag passage 24 and vertically to the bag support being formed by the conveyor belt.
LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERALS1 Closing apparatus
2, 2′ Closure
2a-d Connecting tabs
3 Gathering means
4 Separating stamp
4a Finger
5 Shaped stamp
6 Fork head
6a Recess
7 Finger
8 Finger
9, 9′ Finger
10 Groove
11 Bag
12 Neck of bag
13 Ruche
14 End stop
15 Slit
16 Opening
17 Article
18 Closure strip
19 Packaging direction
20 Packaging machine
21 Equipment stand
22 Output conveyor belt
23 Product conveyor table
24 Linear bag passage
25 Feeding channel
26 End stop
27 Pusher
28 Bag feeder
29 Spreader plate
30 Guide means
Claims
1. An apparatus for closing bags (11) using plastic closures (2) that are individually separable one after another from a closure strip (18) being conveyed in a feeding channel (25), said closures (2) having a plate-like shape and being linked to one another by means of connecting tabs (2a-d), wherein the closures (2) are slid with an opening (16) having a slit on one side onto a bag neck (12) by means of a shaped stamp (5) having a holder for receiving the closure (2), said neck (12) having been gathered into a ruche (13) using gathering means (3), characterized in that the shaped stamp (5) has an associated separating stamp (4) and that the feeding channel (25) is located in the same plane with the closure strip (18), said plane being disposed orthogonal to the plane of movement of the stamps (4, 5).
2. A closing apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that the separating stamp (4) has at least one finger (4a) and the shaped stamp (5) has a fork head (6) with fingers (7, 8, 9, 9′), and that the shaped stamp (5) and the separating stamp (4) are designed such that first the separating stamp (4) and then the shaped stamp (5) are movable vertically upward initially for a first separation process of the closure (2) from the closure strip (18), after which the shaped stamp (5) during standstill of the separating stamp (4) is subsequently movable vertically upward separately for a swiveling process, for a second separation process of the closure (2) from the closure strip (18), and for receiving the closure (2) in the fork head (6), and the shaped stamp (5) is subsequently vertically movable back down together with the separating stamp (4) into a starting position.
3. A closing apparatus according to claim 2, characterized in that the fork head (6) of the shaped stamp (5) has two fingers (7, 8) in a front plane and two fingers (9, 9′) in a rear plane located parallel to the former, and that the finger pairs (7, 8; 9, 9′) located in one plane are spaced apart by a recess in each case.
4. A closing apparatus according to claim 3, characterized in that a groove (10) for receiving the closure (2) is implemented in each case between two opposed fingers (7, 9; 8, 9′).
5. A closing apparatus according to claim 4, characterized in that the grooves (10) are located in a plane parallel to the front and rear planes of the fork head (6).
6. A closing apparatus according to claim 3, characterized in that the length of the fingers (7, 8) of the front plane is longer by approximately two thirds than the length of the fingers (9, 9′) of the rear plane, and that the finger (7) facing the feeding channel (25) is designed slightly longer than the finger (8) located in the same plane facing away from the feeding channel.
7. A closing apparatus according to claim 3, characterized in that the fingers (9, 9′) of the rear plane incorporate a bezel in each case facing the fingers (7, 8) of the front plane.
8. A closing apparatus according to claim 6, characterized in that the finger (7) facing the feeding channel (25) of the fork head (6) of the shaped stamp (5) is disposed centrically between the tabs (2a, 2b) under the edge being separated of the closure (2).
9. A closing apparatus according to claim 8, characterized in that the finger (4a) of the separating stamp (4) is disposed under the tab (2a) of the closure (2) to be separated during the first separation process.
10. A closing apparatus according to claim 2, characterized in that above the horizontal plane of the feeding channel (25), an end stop (26) is disposed on the vertical longitudinal axis centered between the fingers (9, 9′) of the rear plane of the fork head (6), about which end stop (26) the closure (2) is swiveled from its horizontal plane into the vertical plane of the fork head (6) by means of the vertical upward movement of the fork head (6).
11. A closing apparatus according to claim 10, characterized in that the end stop (26) is the head of a cylinder head screw.
12. A closing apparatus according to claim 10, characterized in that the end stop (26) during advancement of the closure strip (18) is a guide means for the closure (2) being separated.
13. A closing apparatus according to claim 2, characterized in that the separating stamp (4) and the shaped stamp (5) and the finger (4a) of the separating stamp are disposed on the fork head (6) of the shaped stamp (5) sliding on one another or spaced apart in vertical parallel planes.
Type: Application
Filed: Mar 11, 2003
Publication Date: May 18, 2006
Applicant: GEORG HARTMANN MASCHINENBAU GMBH (Delbruck)
Inventor: Johannes Hartmann (Delbruck)
Application Number: 10/533,962
International Classification: B65B 51/04 (20060101);