AUTOMATIC CONE LOADING AND FILLING STATION
A carousel magazine that hold stacked paper or hemp smokable cones. The carousel is indexed with a home position sensor to a set of actuators that is controlled by air or electric to open and close two different tapped holders. For example, the top and bottom gripping actuators can open and close to hand off one cone from a stack of one or more cone one at a time. The top actuator with a tapered cone split holder housing grips the top of the upper most stacked cones while the bottom gripper moves up using a second linear actuator the grab the bottom semi-hard filter assemble to pull the bottom cone from the stack with the top gripper applies presser or friction to the top cone allowing to hand off one cone at a time from top gripper to bottom gripper. The second bottom gripper that has captured the bottom filter assemble of the cone moves in a downward position to place the single cone in a rotating turret assemble that will rotate to a filling station and then rotate to a twisting station for final processing and packaging. The cones can be pulled from a rotating stack or linear stack.
This application claims the benefit of provisional U.S. Patent Appl. Ser. No. 63/361,413, filed Dec. 21, 2021, and incorporated by reference herein.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/856,271, filed Apr. 23, 2020, also incorporated by reference herein, which claims the benefit of provisional U.S. Patent Appl. Ser. Nos. 62/922,056, filed Sep. 23, 2019, and 62/995,884, filed Feb. 19, 2020.
I current novel invention is a carousel magazine that hold stacked paper or hemp smokable cones. The carousel is indexed with a home position sensor to a set of actuators that is controlled by air or electric to open and close two different tapped holders. For example, the top and bottom gripping actuators can open and close to hand off one cone from a stack of one or more cone one at a time. The top actuator with a tapered cone split holder housing grips the top of the upper most stacked cones while the bottom gripper moves up using a second linear actuator the grab the bottom semi-hard filter assemble to pull the bottom cone from the stack with the top gripper applies presser or friction to the top cone allowing to hand off one cone at a time from top gripper to bottom gripper. The second bottom gripper that has captured the bottom filter assemble of the cone moves in a downward position to place the single cone in a rotating turret assemble that will rotate to a filling station and then rotate to a twisting station for final processing and packaging. The cones can be pulled from a rotating stack or linear stack.
Claims
1. Automatic cone loading station the uses two or more tapered split holders computer controlled by actuators to hand off one cone at a time to each actuator with different tapered grippers to load a rotating or linear drive system to weigh, fill and twist a cone of cannabis, hemp, tobacco or a combination a flower or oils. A third actuator is used to raise and lower a bottom actuator gripper to load a cone into a holder. The stacked cone assemble is released by the upper actuator with the top cone tapered into the bottom actuator with a smaller tapered gripper whereby the top actuator closes on the top cone that is stacked with inventory cones to hold the entire stack in place while the bottom actuator pulls the bottom cone from the stack of cones being held by the top actuator to place the bottom cone in a cone holder to be filled with an article. Sensor are employed to determine if a cone it in place, empty or full and to determine if the turret filled with cones in a removable tubular cone holder should index to the fill position if a cone is not detected in the filling zone sensor. A warning will be given to the operator if no cones are detected and the cone filling station is empty. The two actuator that controls the tapered gripping cone holders employ a second linear actuator that pulls a cone from the stack while the gripping actuator grips the filter on the cone that is the hardest section of the cone to grip in a downward motion.
2. Automatic cone loading station as claimed in claim 1, wherein the cones can be pulled from a rotating stack or linear stack.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 21, 2022
Publication Date: Jul 7, 2022
Inventor: John Timothy Sullivan (Marriottsville, MD)
Application Number: 17/581,072