The invention relates to a mail processing machine having an envelope
turning station which operates cyclically, is connected downstream of a stuffing
station and an envelope closing section in the conveying direction of the goods
for despatch and which has a turning cylinder which is accordingly set rotating
cyclically, whose axis of rotation is oriented parallel to the conveying direction
of the goods for despatch and which, on its circumference, bears tongs which can
be actuated in an open position and in a closed position as a function of the rotational
position of the envelope turning cylinder and into which, by means of an intermittently
driven gripper chain and with the tongs opened horizontally, filled envelopes as
goods for despatch can be conveyed from the envelope closing section and from which,
following the closure of the tongs and rotation of the envelope turning cylinder
through 180°, envelopes can be conveyed away again with an address field side or
envelope window side pointing upwards,
Such mail processing machines, which have been on the market for some
time, contain in the envelope turning station a turning cylinder mechanism whose
construction is known to those skilled in the art, in which, close to the circumference
of the turning cylinder, strip-like or leaf like tongs parts which are elongated
in the direction of the turning cylinder axis of rotation and in the direction of
conveyance of the goods for despatch are mounted about pivot axes that are parallel
to the turning cylinder axis of rotation and, via links and sensing rollers, can
be pivoted into the open position and into the closed position counter to spring
prestress by means of stationary slotted guides during the rotation of the turning
cylinder. This mechanism is known to those skilled in the art in this field and
therefore does not require any more detailed discussion in the present description
and in the claims.
If, in the known mail processing machines of the type described briefly
at the beginning, items of goods for despatch having a different longitudinal format
in relation to the conveying direction of the goods for despatch are to be processed
and, in particular, are to be turned in the envelope turning station, in order that
the tongs of the envelope turning cylinder do not miss the longitudinal edge of
the goods for despatch or of the filled envelope adjacent to its axis of rotation,
it is necessary for the position of the envelope turning station to be coordinated
with the respective longitudinal format of the goods for despatch, that is to say
the envelope turning station therefore has to be moved closer in the direction of
the stuffing station and the envelope closing section for smaller longitudinal formats
or, in the case of larger longitudinal formats, goods for despatch that are to be
processed must be moved further away from the stuffing station and the envelope
closing section.
This setting of the mail processing machine in order to take account
of the longitudinal format of the items of goods for despatch, by moving the turning
station together with the stuffing table, complicates the construction of the envelope
turning station and its support and the construction of the drive for the envelope
turning cylinder.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to simplify
the construction relating to setting a mail processing machine of the type defined
in the precharacterizing clause of Claim 1 in the region of the envelope turning
station to different longitudinal formats of the items of goods for despatch to
be handled, and to simplify and cheapen the construction of the envelope turning
station and its drive.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by the features
specified in the characterizing part of Claim 1.
Advantageous refinements and developments of the mail processing machine
specified here are the subject-matter of patent claims subordinate to Claim 1, whose
content is hereby expressly made a constituent part of the description without repeating
the wording at this point.
In the following text, an exemplary embodiment will be explained in
more detail with reference to the drawing, in which:
- Fig. 1
- shows a schematic elevation of a mail processing machine of the type specified
here; and
- Fig. 2
- shows a schematic perspective view of the front end, in the conveying direction
of the goods for despatch, of the mail processing machine according to Fig. 1 in
the region of the stuffing station, the closing section and the envelope turning
station.
Fig. 1 shows an insert collating track 1, along which the upper runs
of circulating, endless conveyor chains or conveyor belts are guided, which are
fitted with conveyor fingers 2, pairs of conveyor fingers 2, which are here located
beside one another in accordance with the arrow V in relation to the conveying direction
of the goods for despatch, in each case defining in front of themselves insert conveying
compartments, into which inserts can be inserted in a known way by means of insert
discharge stations lined up in a row along the insert collating track, so that,
ultimately, at the front end of the insert collating track 1, a complete set of
inserts to be put into an envelope is assembled in each conveying compartment.
The conveyor fingers 2 moved by the conveyor chains or conveyor belts
along the insert collating track 1 transfer the sets of inserts from the insert
collating track 1 to a stuffing station 3, from which, in a drive pause of the conveying
fingers 2, the sets of inserts are inserted into envelopes 5 provided open opposite
the insertion apparatus 4 in an operating stroke oriented parallel to the double
arrow K, transversely with respect to the conveying direction of the goods for despatch,
by means of an insertion apparatus 4.
The envelopes 5 from an envelope supply are separated in an envelope
feeder station 6 and, with the envelope flap in the open position, are inserted
horizontally into grippers 7 belonging to an endless, cyclically or intermittently
driven gripper chain 8 running beside the insert collating track 1 and parallel
to the latter, after which the grippers 7, controlled by slotted guides, grip the
edge of the envelope leading in the conveying direction of the goods for despatch,
and the envelope is then drawn as far as a position in front of the insertion apparatus
4 in movements of the circulating gripper chain 8 corresponding to the cycle rate.
The gripper chain 8 is laid over sprockets, of which a driven sprocket is indicated
at 23. The sprockets are mounted and supported on a stuffing table or can be displaced
in the direction of the double arrow F with respect to the stuffing station 3 and
the insert collating track 1 by means of a drive, not illustrated.
Depending on the format of the envelope or item of goods for despatch
to be processed, the gripper chain 8 is brought into appropriate positions by controlling
the longitudinal displacement drive of the stuffing table, so that the set of inserts
assembled in the insert conveying compartments can be inserted properly into the
filled envelope 5 by the insertion apparatus 4 of the stuffing station 3, which
is done during brief opening of the gripper 7 holding the envelope 5 to be filled
in the stuffing station. The relevant gripper 7 is then closed again and pulls the
now filled envelope, that is to say the item of goods for despatch, out of the stuffing
station 3 over an envelope closing section, indicated only symbolically at 10 in
the drawing figures, for closing the envelope flap by turning it over onto the upwardly
pointing rear wall of the envelope, into the envelope turning station designated
generally by 11.
In the latter, the gripper 7 clamping the filled envelope is opened
in the respectively desired position after the gripper chain 8 has been stopped
on account of the longitudinal format-dependent displacement, carried out previously,
of the stuffing table together with the gripper chain unit, after which the gripper
chain 8 is started up again in order to pull the gripper 7 away from the filled
envelope, that is to say from the item of goods for despatch, and to release the
envelope to be handled by the tongs of the envelope turning cylinder, as will be
described in more detail in the following text.
The envelope turning station 11 contains an envelope turning apparatus
12 having an envelope turning cylinder 13 which can be set rotating at the cycle
rate and which can be rotated about an axis of rotation that is parallel to the
conveying direction of the goods for despatch, corresponding to the arrow V, this
axis of rotation being placed approximately in that plane which is defined by the
surface of the stuffing table 14 and of the turning table for the goods for despatch,
designated by 15.
As soon as a pair of strip-like or leaf-like turning cylinder tongs
parts 16 extending radially outwards from the turning cylinder circumference substantially
in axial planes in relation to the turning cylinder axis of rotation come into the
horizontal position identified by A in Fig. 2, they are brought into the open position
by means of slotted guide control, as was described briefly at the start for known
turning cylinder constructions, so that the free space between the open tongs is
located substantially above the level of the envelope turning table 15, and a filled
envelope can be pulled by gripper tongs 7 between the turning cylinder tongs 16
located in the position A, with its longitudinal edge lying close to the cylinder
axis of rotation.
Then, if the turning cylinder 13 is set rotating by a drive mechanism
indicated generally at 17, the turning cylinder tongs located in the position A
close, grip the filled envelope pulled into them and, following the rotation of
the turning cylinder 13 through 180° in the anticlockwise direction with respect
to the situation shown in Fig. 2, deposit it on the envelope turning table 15 in
a horizontal position B, in such a way that the closed envelope flap now comes to
lie pointing downwards, and an address area side or envelope window side of the
filled envelope points upwards. In the position B, the relevant turning cylinder
tongs are opened again, so that the envelope turned and deposited on the envelope
turning table 15 can now be conveyed away by an envelope onward conveying apparatus
indicated schematically at 18.
It can be seen from Fig. 2 that, in the embodiment shown here of a
mail processing machine of the type specified here, the envelope turning table 15
is fixed to a frame indicated schematically at 19 and belonging to the mail processing
machine, just like the stuffing station 3. The envelope turning station 11 and its
envelope turning cylinder 13 are therefore mounted on the mail processing machine
in a stationary manner with respect to the stuffing station 3 in relation to the
conveying direction of the goods for despatch, corresponding to the arrow V.
If, by using the mail processing machine, sets of inserts and envelopes
with a longitudinal format which is different from a standard size are to be processed
in the direction of the conveying direction of the goods for despatch, corresponding
to arrow V, that is to say, for example, having a greater longitudinal format, as
is made dear in Fig. 1 for envelopes 5a indicated by dash-dotted lines, care must
be taken that the tongs 16 of the turning cylinder 13 always grip the filled envelope,
that is to say the item of goods for despatch, reliably in the holding position
A. According to the construction specified here, this is achieved not, for example,
by the entire turning station being designed to be displaceable with respect to
the upstream processing stations of the mail processing machine, but by the cyclically
driven gripper chain 8, with its grippers 7, pulling filled envelopes so far into
the envelope turning station 11 that the filled envelopes can be gripped reliably
by the tongs 16 of the turning cylinder irrespective of the envelope longitudinal
format in relation to the conveying direction of the goods for despatch, which is
ensured by the aforementioned displacement of the stuffing table 14, with the gripper
chain unit mounted thereon, in a manner dependent on the longitudinal format of
the goods for despatch.
The gripper is then opened and, by means of the gripper chain 8, is
pulled off the filled envelope, which is then gripped by the tongs 16 of the envelope
turning cylinder 13 and turned over through 180° into the position B by the latter.
A drive sprocket 23 of the gripper chain 8, which is not shown in
detail in the drawing, is coupled via a clutch that can be actuated under control
to a continuous drive output of the drive system of the mail processing machine
or, according to a preferred embodiment, can be coupled to an intermittent drive
output of the drive system of the mail processing machine, in order in the manner
just described to continue the transport of a filled envelope into the envelope
turning station 11 until the tongs grip the filled envelope to be turned over their
entire length on the longitudinal edge adjacent to the envelope turning cylinder
axis of rotation, the said envelope projecting to a different extent beyond the
ends of the tongs 16 in the conveying direction of the goods for despatch, depending
on the longitudinal extent.
In Figs 1 and 2, the drive for the gripper chain 8 is indicated symbolically
at 9 and contains the mechanical drive connection to the drive system of the mail
processing machine and, if appropriate, also a clutch that can be activated under
control for one of the embodiments previously mentioned or else a selectively controllable,
separate drive, according to a third but less preferred embodiment.
A signal line 27 leads control signals from a control device 24 to
a clutch that can be actuated under control and belongs to the drive member of the
envelope turning cylinder 13, the envelope turning cylinder drive being coupled,
via the toothed belt drive or chain drive 17 already mentioned previously, directly
to a continuously revolving main shaft 28 of the drive system of the mail processing
machine. It can be seen that, advantageously, this drive connection of the envelope
turning cylinder 13 to the main shaft 28 of the drive system of the mail processing
machine does not have to have any capability of displacement of this drive device
in order to adjust to different envelope longitudinal formats, which simplifies
and cheapens the construction of the drive for the envelope turning cylinder considerably.
The control device 24 therefore supplies control signals via the signal
line 27 to the clutch that can be actuated under control belonging to the drive
of the envelope turning apparatus 12, in order to move the tongs 16 of the latter
through 180° from the position A into the position B in the anticlockwise direction
in relation to the illustration of Fig. 2 at quite specific times, it being possible
for this rotational movement also to be carried out in a number of steps, in order
to fill a plurality of tongs 16 provided on the circumference of the turning cylinder
13 with items of goods for despatch.
The control device 24 can either be programmed as a function of the
longitudinal formats of the items of goods for despatch to be processed, in such
a way that it performs the appropriate control of the longitudinal displacement
of the stuffing table 14. However, the control device 24 can also be controlled
by sensor sensing signals which register the movement of the items of goods for
despatch and also their formats.
The outward delivery apparatus 18 can also be actuated cyclically
by control signals from the control device 24, in such a way that items of mail
for despatch inserted into the outward delivery channel 30 after being turned can
be conveyed away, for example by means of interacting rollers and conveyor belts,
as soon as the tongs 16 of the turning cylinder 13 have been opened again in the
position B.
The bottom of the outward delivery channel 30 can contain a deflection
plate which can be opened under control in order to divert an item of goods for
despatch to be separated out into a diverter channel. In the embodiment illustrated
in Fig. 2, however, such a diverter channel 31 is provided in the region of an outward
delivery channel 32, the diverter channel 31 being closed by a deflection plate
33, which can be moved into the open position by means of a drive 35 that can be
controlled by the control device 24 via a signal line 34, so that items of goods
placed in an envelope and moved along the outward delivery channel 32 by an outward
delivery apparatus 36 can be deflected into the diverter channel 31,
The outward delivery apparatus 36 can be started up as required by
the control device 24 via a signal line 38 by means of a drive 37.
If a monitoring device or a sensor device from upstream processing
stations of the mail processing machine reports that a filled envelope, for example,
does not contain the required number of inserts or contains wrong inserts, then
the relevant item of goods for despatch must be separated out and deflected away
via the diverter channel 31. In this case, when such a feedback signal occurs, the
control device 24 controls the controllable clutch of the turning cylinder drive
12 via the signal line 27 in such a way that, after a filled envelope has been conveyed
in between the tongs of the turning cylinder 13 in the position A of the tongs,
the turning cylinder is not set rotating, so that the tongs remain open. The gripper
chain 8 is then started up by means of appropriate control signal output via the
line 25 to the drive 9, so that that gripper 7 which has conveyed the wrongly filled
envelope into the envelope turning station, after moving through into the release
position, then moves away from the faulty envelope and sinks below the level of
the envelope turning table, and the next gripper 7 with its end formed as conveying
fingers pushes the faulty envelope out between the tongs 16 of the turning cylinder,
which have remained open, and conveys it to the outward delivery apparatus 36, which
is then started up by the drive 37 on the basis of appropriate application of signals
via the line 38. That gripper 7 which has performed the action of pushing the faulty
envelope or wrongly filled envelope through and out between the tongs 16 of the
turning cylinder 30, which have remained open, can already again be one which pulls
a properly filled envelope into the turning station 11. After separating out a faulty
item of goods for despatch, the control device 24 returns to the regular control
rhythm again, in which filled envelopes are turned through 180° in the turning station
11.