FOUR ROLLER PERISTALTIC PUMP
A peristaltic pump for supplying liquid color to a process machine, comprising a stepper motor including an output shaft, a drive roller mounted on the output shaft, and a collection of planetary rollers positioned about and frictionally contacting driven by the output shaft, for sequentially compressing a flexible tube carrying the liquid color thereby dispensing liquid color from the tube.
This patent application claims the benefit of the priority of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 62/025,542 entitled “Four Roller Peristaltic Pump” filed 17 Jul. 2014 in the name of Stephen B. Maguire. The priority of the '542 application is claimed under 35 USC 119 and 35 USC 120.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ARTKnown peristaltic pumps for pumping liquid color for use by a plastic processing machine, namely a molding press or an extruder, require input of a numerical setting, determined by a mathematical formula that uses three variables, namely:
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- 1. The “shot” weight in grams, or extrusion rate, typically expressed as pounds per hour output by the process machine to which the legal color is to be furnished;
- 2. The percentage, by weight, of legal color to be added to each “shot”; and
- 3. The bulk density of the legal color that is to be added, typically expressed in pounds per gallon.
Using a known prior art peristaltic pump, the operator makes the computation by applying the mathematical formula using a calculator on a cellular phone or a hand-held calculator, and enters the result as a single number into the pump.
Such prior art peristaltic pumps use DC drive gear motors and large pump heads having 3, 4, or 6 rollers for compressing the pump tube.
Tube installation in prior art peristaltic pumps is accomplished by laying the tube into a slot on the top of the pump head, and then pushing or pulling the tube under an overhanging portion of the pump head, while the pump is running, and the rollers are turning, thereby allowing the tube to “walk” into position.
Such prior art peristaltic pump designs use a motor and a gearbox to produce the torque needed to drive the rollers to squeeze the tube, thereby to effectuate the pumping.
In such prior art peristaltic pumps, bearings compress the tube. As the bearings wear and become “sloppy”, the bearings no longer press outward as far as they did when they were new. As a result, such older peristaltic pumps will eventually leak air and not draw the required vacuum. Consequently, pump accuracy is lost.
Many prior art peristaltic pump designs use a hinged door that exposes the entire face of the roller set when the door is opened. In such designs the tubing must be “walked” into place while the rollers are turning. This is not safe.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIn one of its aspects, this invention provides a peristaltic pump for pumping liquid color to a process machine, where the pump preferably includes a pump head having a pump head upper half and a pump head lower half, a mounting bracket with the pump head lower half preferably being secured to the mounting bracket, and the pump head upper half preferably being vertically slidably movable towards and away from the pump head lower half along the mounting bracket. The pump preferably further includes a stepper motor including an output shaft, with a drive roller being mounted on the output shaft, and a collection of planetary rollers positioned about and preferably frictionally contactingly driven by the drive roller in the output shaft for sequentially compressing a flexible tube carrying the liquid color being compressed by the planetary rollers against the pump head upper half, thereby dispensing liquid color or other liquid from the tube.
The pump desirably further includes pump head upper half positioning pins fixedly mounted in the pump head lower half and extending upwardly therefrom, slidably residing in bores formed in the pump head upper half. The pump preferably further includes compression springs positioned about portions of the pins and extending from the pump head lower half, to bias the pump head upper half away from the pump head lower half.
The mounting bracket preferably has a flange extending transversely with the flange at least partially overlying the pump head upper half. A bolt, positioned between the mounting bracket and the pump head upper half, is preferably connected to the pump head upper half. A knob is adapted for manual rotation, with a vertical shaft connected to the knob for rotation unitarily therewith and threadedly engaging the bolt. Upon rotation of the knob in the first direction, rotation of the shaft threadedly engaging the bolt preferably causes the bolt to move away from the knob, pushing the pump head upper half downwardly along the pins and towards the pump head lower half, against bias supplied to the pump head upper half by the compression springs.
In another of its aspects, this invention provides a peristaltic pump for supplying liquid color to a process machine, where the pump preferably includes a stepper motor including an output shaft, a drive roller preferably mounted on the output shaft, and a collection of planetary rollers preferably positioned about and frictionally contactingly driven by the output shaft for sequentially compressing a flexible tube carrying liquid color, thereby dispensing liquid color from the tube.
In still another one of its aspects, this invention provides a peristaltic pump for supplying liquid color to a process machine where the pump includes a motor driving planetary rollers squeezing a tube to output pumped liquid color, and a plurality of buttons for manually entering (i) output rate in pounds per hour of product to be furnished by a process machine receiving the pumped liquid color; (ii) percentage by weight of the pumped liquid color to be added to the plastic resin material consumed by the process machine in the course of producing the plastic product; and (iii) density of the liquid color to be added. The pump further includes a plurality of video-type screens for displaying the manually entered data recited in the preceding sentence and a microprocessor for computing the amount of liquid to be dispensed using the manually entered number and speed of the motor to furnish the computed amount of liquid to be dispensed. The motor is desirably a stepper motor and the stepper motor desirably connects to the planetary rollers via a direct drive.
In still another one of its aspects, this invention provides a peristaltic pump that includes a motor driving planetary rollers squeezing a tube to output pumped liquid, a plurality of buttons for manually entering data, a plurality of display screens for visibly displaying the manually entered data and a microprocessor using the manually entered data to compute the amount of liquid to be dispensed and regulating operation of the motor to furnish the computed amount as dispensed liquid. The data are desirably output rate in pounds per hour of a process machine receiving the pumped liquid, percentage by weight of the pumped liquid to be used by the process machine, and density of the liquid.
In yet another one of its aspects, this invention provides a peristaltic pump for supplying liquid color to a process machine where the invention includes a stepper motor and a plurality of rollers frictionally contactingly driven by the stepper motor for compressing a tube carrying liquid color to dispense liquid color from the tube.
In still yet another one of its aspects, this invention provides a peristaltic pump comprising a stepper motor, a plurality of manually actuated switches for entering numbers, a plurality of screens for visually displaying the manually entered numbers, and a microprocessor using the manually entered numbers to regulate speed of the stepper motor to furnish liquid color at a preselected rate. The pump preferably includes rollers driven by the stepper motor for squeezing a tube to output pumped liquid color. The rollers are preferably frictionally driven by the stepper motor. The rollers are preferably planetary rollers. The switches are preferably push buttons or thumb wheels and may most desirably be digital thumb wheels.
The numbers provided manually to the peristaltic pump are desirably the output rate in pounds per hour of a process machine receiving the pumped liquid color, the percentage by weight of the pumped liquid color to be used by the process machine, and the density of the liquid color to be supplied.
In yet another one of its aspects, this invention provides a peristaltic pump for supplying liquid color to a process machine comprising a stepper motor, a pump head having a groove therein for receiving a liquid color tube, and plurality of rollers frictionally driven by the stepper motor for compressing the tube carrying the liquid color while in the groove to dispense liquid color from the tube. Desirably the pump head has upper and lower portions, with the upper portion being movable vertically to expose the rollers for positioning the tube thereon. The pump desirably further includes an on/off switch for controlling flow of electricity to the stepper motor and a trip for moving the on/off switch to the “off” position whenever the pump head upper portion is raised.
The pump of the invention allows direct entry by an operator or by electric connection to a systems computer of the three variables that are required to determine the amount of liquid color, namely the volume, to be dispensed. The three variables are:
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- 1. The “shot” weight in grams needed to meet the required production, typically expressed as pounds per hour output by the process machine to which the liquid color is to be furnished;
- 2. The percentage, by weight, of color to be added to each “shot”; and
- 3. The bulk density of the color that is to be added , typically expressed in pounds per gallon.
The pump of the invention is a volumetric pump, without load cells for weighing. The pump meters a given volume and therefore requires the third entry to convert weight to the desired output volume. The pump of the invention uses three separate digital displays and separate entry buttons. As a result, operator errors are minimal. The three separate digital displays and separate data entry buttons allow entry of each variable directly via one of the buttons with no further calculation being required by an operator.
The pump of this invention uses a direct drive stepping motor. Stepper motors are inherently more accurately controlled than conventional motors. The pump of this invention also has a small pump head that uses only four (4) rollers.
While hinged and separable housings for liquid color peristaltic pumps are known, the pump of this invention has a housing that separates, with the top half of the pump head rising to expose the rollers, allowing clear access for the liquid-carrying flexible tube to be laid in place over the rollers, without the pump running. Lowering the top half covers the access and compresses the tube so that operation may begin.
The pump of this invention uses a “sun and planet” drive system design to drive the rollers. The motor drives a center drive roller, which is covered with a urethane sleeve that creates friction when pressed against the outer “planetary” rollers. The four outer planetary rollers are held in place to keep them positioned uniformly around the center drive roller.
In the pump of the invention, the outer planetary rollers are retained by the pump head, which has a cylindrical cavity sized to contain the rollers and hold them tightly against the inner drive roller. Preferably dimensions are such that the outer rollers are actually pressed into the center urethane sleeve, compressing the sleeve slightly at points of contact. This assures solid drive friction, which works to maintain the required radially outward force to compress the tubing as the tubing is being contacted by the planetary rollers.
The pump of this invention preferably uses a stepper motor without a gear box. For effective pumping the four roller set need only reach a rotation speed of about 1 turn per second. Speeds greater than this do not result in effective pumping so 60 RPMs is the practical limit of the planetary rollers.
Stepper motors can run much faster than this. For an example, assume that maximum speed of a stepper motor is 300 RPMs. One way to generate the required torque for a pump of this type would be to use a large stepper motor sized for the torque required and run it no faster than 60 RPMs. Another way is to use a much smaller motor, but to gear it down, so that its maximum speed of 300 RPMs can be utilized stepped down through gear reduction to the desired maximum speed of 60 RPMs. Thus by gear reduction, torque increases by a factor of 5. In this way the stepper motor can be ⅕ the size of a conventional stepper motor that would ordinarily be needed to produce the required torque specification and can still achieve the required torque.
Stepper motors with gear boxes attached are more expensive.
In the pump of the invention, a new planetary design of a center roller driving an outer set of rollers through frictional contact results in a 5 to 1 speed reduction without use of a gear box, due to the geometry designed into the pump.
The speed of the outer roller set is calculated using the following formula:
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- C=outer diameter of the center drive roller
- P=inner diameter of the pump head cavity that the roller set is being pressed against, and is rolling against.
- P/C+1=speed reduction.
Using the dimensions of one preferred embodiment of the new pump design:
2.5/0.625+1=5
In this way the pump of the invention produces a 5 to 1 speed reduction and a corresponding increase in torque of 5 times the motor torque rating.
The benefit is low cost. The smaller motor costs less and the required drive circuit costs less.
Stepper motors are inherently more accurate in control then DC drives. But stepper motors have inherently less torque, unless they are large, or have gearboxes attached. The design of the pump of this invention allows a small stepper motor to do the job it otherwise could not do.
The pump of the invention drives the rollers through friction of the center drive roller covered with urethane, pressing into the outer rollers.
The outer rollers could be referred to as “compression” rollers because these rollers compress the pump tube (as is the case with all peristaltic pumps). Since the design of the inventive pump causes these rollers to be pressed outward, there must be a surface provided for the rollers to contact so the rollers are constrained to remain in a perfect circle as they turn. In the area where the tube is compressed, a groove is machined and is just wide enough to retain the tube.
The preferable tubing is 1/16 wall thickness. If compressed enough by the rollers to shut off flow, the tube would in theory be two wall thicknesses (or 0.125) thick at the point of compression. To assure that not even air will flow past such a compression point, the pump of the invention over-compresses the tube. The pump of the invention squeezes the two wall thicknesses into a space only 0.100 deep. So the groove that is machined to retain the tube is machined to 0.100 deep at least at the top dead center position and preferably throughout.
One advantage of the pump of the invention is that there are no bearings to wear out. The 0.100 compression of the tube is machined into the housing and does not change over time.
Control in the pump of the invention uses three separate sets of digital displays; each display has its own set of entry buttons, providing simpler and more intuitive operations.
The tube insertion design of the pump of the invention is an “easy to load” design, requiring that the tube simply be laid over the top of the rollers without the need to work the tube into a compression zone or groove.
Other so-called “easy load” designs use a clam shell, with the top half of the pump swinging open on a hinge point, to expose the top half of the roller set. The pump of the invention uses a sliding pump top that rises to expose the top surface of the roller set. This is safer, with less access to rotating parts. Straight vertical downward movement of the pump head upper half assures more uniform pressure against the tubing when the pump head upper half is lowered into place.
The design of the pump of the invention allows tube insertion without the rollers turning. The pump of the invention has an interlock on the drive motor to assure the motor will not run while the top half of the pump head is raised and rollers are accessible.
Referring to the drawings in general and to
At the left side of the housing is a pump head indicated generally 11 which includes a pump head lower half designated generally 12, a pump head upper half designated generally 14, and a safety guard indicated generally 20 in
Only selected ones of rollers 17 have been numbered in the drawings, and similarly only certain ones of roller pins 19 have been numbered in the drawings, to enhance clarity of the drawing.
As shown in
Formed in pump head lower half 12 and in pump head upper half 14 are a pair of annular surfaces with the smaller annular surface designated 54, as partially shown in
Smaller diameter annular surface 54 in the upper and lower halves 14, 12 of pump head 11 is preferably formed such that smaller diameter annular surface 54 has a shorter length, in the axial direction, than does larger diameter annular surface 56.
Smaller diameter annular surface 54 is designed for and dimensioned to receive annular shoulder 50 of drive hub 23. Shoulder 50 and cast washer 52 are sized such that cast washer 52 of drive hub 23 cannot pass through the inner race of annular ball bearing assembly 50 in a left to right direction in
Smaller diameter annular surface 54 formed in the lower and upper halves 12, 14 of pump head 11 is dimensioned to receive the outer race of annular ball bearing assembly 30. The interior race of annular ball bearing assembly 30 is sized to fit about and to receive shoulder 50 of drive hub 23. Annular ball bearing assembly 30 is held in place by roller plate 24 and screws which pass through apertures in roller plate 24 and fit into appropriate threaded bores formed in the annularly shaped, axially facing surfaces of pump head lower half 12 and pump head upper half 14. These annularly shaped axially facing surfaces define the transition between smaller diameter annular surface 54 and larger diameter annular surface 56. These annularly shaped, axially facing surfaces are not numbered in
Stepper motor 36 is held in place against facing surfaces 58, 60 of pump head upper half 14 and pump head lower half 12 by machine screws that pass through apertures 62, which are formed in the frame of stepper motor 36, and threadedly engage bores 68 in axially facing surfaces 58, 60 of upper and lower halves 14, 12 of pump head 11.
Larger diameter annular surface 56 formed in pump head lower half 12 and pump head upper half 14 define a cylindrical cavity which is sized to retain planetary rollers 17 and to hold them tightly against roller sleeve 22. The dimensions of the assembly are desirably such that planetary rollers 17 are actually pressed into roller sleeve 22, compressing sleeve 22 slightly at the points of contact as depicted in
Roller sleeve 22 is desirably polyurethane and preferably fits tightly on the axially extended portion of drive hub 23, where the axially extended portion has been designated 70 in
Proper alignment of pump head upper half 14 with pump head lower half 12 is assured by dowel pins 38 that are mounted in appropriate bores formed in upwardly facing surface 72 of pump head lower half 12. Steel compression springs 32 are positioned about dowel pins 38, as illustrated in
An important aspect of the invention is safety whereby stepper motor 36 is interlocked with pump head upper half 14 so that whenever pump head upper half 14 is raised and moving parts are exposed, power is cut off to stepper motor 36. This is effectuated by attachment of a pin to pump head upper half 14 where the pin is designated generally 102 in the drawings. A spring loaded safety switch 100 is provided, mounted on bracket 26 as illustrated in
Pin 102 protrudes into and rides within a vertical slot 130 in mounting bracket 26, with spring loaded safety switch 100, pin 102, and slot 130 being configured such that pin 102 releases spring loaded safety switch 100 whenever pump head upper half 14 is in the raised position. When spring loaded safety switch 100 is released, power to stepper motor 36 is cut off by spring loaded safety switch 100, breaking the connection between stepper motor 36 and the power source, which will normally be conventional 115 volt power.
When knob 40 is turned and lowers pump head upper half 14 into position for pumping after a suitable tube has been placed into position on rollers 17, spring loaded safety switch 100 closes and power is once again available to stepper motor 36.
The operation and interplay of spring loaded safety switch 100 and safety pin 102 is best illustrated in
Positioning of pump head upper half 14 at the extreme upper and extreme lower, or open and closed, positions is effectuated by manual rotation of knob 40. In
In
In
Stepper motor drive shaft 138 rotates to turn drive hub 23 which is preferably fixedly mounted on drive shaft 138. As drive hub 23 turns with drive shaft 138, roller sleeve 22, being frictionally adhered to drive hub 23 by tight, sleeve-like fitting, contacts rollers 17 and turns rollers 17 due to the frictional contact therewith. Of course, there is no rotation of rollers 17 and no rotation of the stepper motor drive shaft 138 when pump head upper half 14 is in the position illustrated in
In
Further visible in
A groove is machined into the facing surface of pump head upper half 14, where that facing surface is designated generally 154 in
When liquid color or another liquid is to be pumped, a suitable tube, preferably a ¼ inch outside diameter flexible tube, is connected between the supply of liquid color or other liquid to be pumped and the process machine or other equipment to which the liquid color is to be supplied. An operator then raises pump head upper half 14 by rotating knob 40 until pump head upper half 14 has reached its upper limit of travel. At this point, rollers 17 are exposed and there is clear access for the fluid-carrying tube to be laid in place over rollers 17 without having pump 10 operating. Lowering pump head upper half 14 into its lower extremity position, in contact with pump head lower half 12, covers rollers 17 and compresses the fluid-carrying tube so that operation of the pump may begin. There is no need to run the pump with the rollers turning, to allow the tube to be walked into position. Such procedure is dangerous. This procedure is prevented with the pump of the invention since the interlock between stepper motor 36 and safety switch 100 prevents motor 36 from rotating while pump head upper half 14 is in a position raised from rollers 17 so that rollers 17 are exposed.
In
Comparing
Referring to
During operation, the actual pumping of fluid through the flexible tube begins at the position indicated by dimensional letter “I” in
Pump operation normally begins with an operator turning knob 40 to raise pump head upper half 14 to its fully raised position. The operator then lays the flexible tube, carrying the liquid color from a supply to a process machine, across rollers 17. Once the operator has placed the flexible tube into position on rollers 17 and has lowered pump head upper half 14, by rotation of knob 40, into position, fitting tightly against pump head lower half 12 and thereby squeezing the tube that has been laid into position on rollers 17 into groove 162, the operator then plugs the peristaltic pump into a source of power using a suitable power cord and power cord receptacle 128. The operator then typically moves off/on switch 110 to the “on” position and would enter the data required for the peristaltic pump to successfully provide the required amount of liquid color at the required rate for successful molding or extrusion by an associated process machine.
Specifically, the operator, using one of the sets of buttons 120, would enter the “shot weight” in grams needed to meet the required production. He does this typically by entering a number that would have units associated with it of pounds per hour representing the output by the process machine to which the liquid color is to be furnished. As the operator enters this number using the appropriate set of buttons 120, the number as entered appears on screen 118 associated with that set of buttons 120. By toggling the buttons 120, the operator can adjust the input number indicative of pounds per hour output by the process machine until the desired value appears on the screen.
Next the operator uses a second set of buttons 120 to enter the percentage by weight of color to be added to each “shot” during operation of the extruder or other process machine, such as molding press, to which the liquid color is to be furnished.
Next, using the third set of buttons, the operator enters the density of the liquid color that is to be added. This typically would be a number having units of pounds per gallon. Once again, the number appears on the screen 118 associated with the pair of buttons 120 used by the operator to enter that number.
Next the operator presses the run button 112, whereupon, since the pump head upper half has been lowered into position and the flexible tube has been laid onto rollers 17, pumping begins. Since power has been supplied to the peristaltic pump, power indicator light 114 will be on. Once the operator presses switch 112 to commence pump operation, the run light 116 lights.
During operation, microprocessor 158 portion of peristaltic pump 10 monitors operation such as the speed of rotation of stepper motor 136 and the like and provides data as to the amount of liquid color being provided, with such data being output by microprocessor 158 via a universal coaxial input/output connector 122. Similarly, if it is desired to reprogram microprocessor 158 so that different parameters may be input for pump 10 to process different materials on different cycles at different speeds, microprocessor 158 can accordingly be reprogrammed by a connection of a suitable computer or other input device to universal input/output coaxial connector 122.
In one implementation of the invention, the peristaltic pump is designed to pump using tubing that is ¼ inch thick and has 1/16 inch wall thickness. If such tubing were compressed enough to shut off flow, the tubing would, in theory, be two wall thicknesses thick or 0.125 inches thick at the point of compression. To assure that even air will not flow past this compression point, the peristaltic pump of the invention, utilizing such ¼ inch diameter tubing having wall thickness of ⅙ inch, “over compresses” the tube. Specifically, the two wall thicknesses of the tube are squeezed into a groove only 0.1 inch deep, as indicate by dimensional arrow “J” in
In the preferred implementation of the invention, the pump head upper half has a range of vertical motion of ½ inch.
In the course of design of the peristaltic pump of the invention, as with any peristaltic pump, one selects a desired pump output. In the case of the instant invention, the peristaltic pump is a volumetric pump and hence one chooses a desired volume of liquid to be output over a given time. Assuming the liquid is incompressible, which is the case with liquid color and most other liquids for which peristaltic pumps are used, once a tube size is selected with a given outer diameter and inner diameter, the inner diameter and the speed along the tube of the rollers squeezing the tube (assuming the tube is squeezed “shut” by the rollers at some point) define the volume of liquid produced per unit time.
In the instant invention as implemented in accordance with the drawings and this disclosure, a ¼ inch diameter tube was selected having 1/16 inch wall thickness. For effective pumping using this size of tube, the planetary roller set need only reach a rotation speed of about one turn per second. Based on experimentation, speed greater than this does not pump effectively. As a result, 60 revolutions per minute of the planetary four roller set is the practical design limit of the roller set for a ¼ inch diameter tube and for many other tubes of similar size.
Once the speed of the outer roller set has been selected, the pump of the invention has been designed to utilize a stepper motor. Specifically, the outer diameter of the planetary drive roller mechanism was selected to be 2½ inches. From this, an inner diameter of the pump head cavity that the rollers 17 are pressed against, namely diameter of roller sleeve 22, was selected to be ⅝ inch. When these dimensions are used, the peristaltic pump implemented according to the invention enjoys a 5:1 speed reduction as between the speed of the outer surface of the rollers 17 and the rotary speed of roller sleeve 22 which provides a corresponding increase in torque of five times the stepper motor torque rating. This allows use of a smaller stepper motor which costs less and the required drive circuitry also costs less.
While stepper motors are inherently more accurate to control than are DC drives, stepper motors inherently have less torque, unless the stepper motor is large or has a large gear box attached to it. The instant invention with the design of the peristaltic pump head disclosed herein permits a small stepper motor to be used, thereby reducing the cost of the pump substantially.
Assembly of the peristaltic pump in the preferred manifestation of the invention is effectuated essentially by aligning the components as illustrated in
In the claims appended hereto, the term “comprising” is to be interpreted as meaning “including, but not limited to”, while the phrase “consisting of” is to be interpreted as meaning “having only and no more” and the phrase “consisting essentially of” is to be interpreted to mean the recited elements of the claim and those other items that do not materially affect the basic and novel characteristics of the claimed invention.
Claims
1. A peristaltic pump for supplying liquid color to a process machine, comprising:
- a. a stepper motor;
- b. a plurality of rollers frictionally contactingly driven by the stepper motor, for compressing a tube carrying liquid color to dispense liquid color from the tube.
2. A peristaltic pump, comprising:
- a. a stepper motor;
- b. a plurality of manually actuated switches for entering numbers;
- c. a plurality of screens for displaying the manually entered numbers;
- d. a microprocessor using the manually entered numbers to regulate speed of the stepper motor to furnish liquid color at a preselected rate.
3. The pump of claim 2 further comprising rollers, driven by the stepper motor, for squeezing a tube to output pumped liquid color.
4. The pump of claim 3 wherein the rollers are frictionally driven by the stepper motor.
5. The pump of claim 3 wherein the rollers are planetary rollers.
6. The pump of claim 2 wherein the switches are pushbuttons.
7. The pump of claim 2 wherein the switches are thumbwheels.
8. The pump of claim 6 wherein the thumbwheels are digital thumbwheels.
9. The pump of claim 2 wherein the numbers are (i) output rate in pounds per hour of a process machine receiving the pumped liquid color; (ii) percentage by weight of the pumped liquid color to be used by the process machine; and (iii) density of the liquid color.
10. A peristaltic pump for supplying liquid color to a process machine, comprising:
- a. a stepper motor;
- b. a pump head having a groove therein for receiving a liquid color tube;
- c. a plurality of rollers frictionally driven by the stepper motor, for compressing the tube carrying liquid color while in the groove to dispense liquid color from the tube.
11. The pump of claim 10 wherein the pump head has upper and lower portions, the upper portion being movable vertically to expose the rollers for positioning of the tube thereon.
12. The pump of claim 11 further comprising:
- a. an on/off switch for controlling flow of electricity to the stepper motor;
- b. a trip for moving the on/off switch to the “off” position whenever the pump head upper portion is raised.
13. The pump of claim 11 wherein the rollers are planetary rollers.
14. The pump of claim 12 wherein the rollers are planetary rollers.
15. A peristaltic pump for supplying liquid color to a process machine, comprising:
- a. a stepper motor frictionally driving planetary gears squeezing a tube to output pumped liquid color;
- b. a plurality of switches for manually entering (i) output rate in pounds per hour of product to be furnished by a process machine receiving the pumped liquid color; (ii) percentage by weight of the pumped liquid to be added to the materials to be consumed by the process machine in the course of producing the product; and (iii) density of the liquid color;
- c. a plurality of screens for displaying the manually entered data recited in claim element “b”;
- d. a microprocessor regulating speed of the stepper motor in response to the manually entered data to furnish a preselected amount of liquid color to be dispensed.
16. The pump of claim 1 wherein the rollers are planetary rollers.
17. A peristaltic pump for supplying liquid color to a process machine, comprising:
- a. a stepper motor;
- b. a plurality of planetary rollers frictionally driven by the stepper motor, for compressing the tube carrying liquid color while in the groove to dispense liquid color from the tube.
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 15, 2015
Publication Date: Jan 21, 2016
Inventor: Stephen B. MAGUIRE (West Chester, PA)
Application Number: 14/799,976