US2937428A - Apparatus for making a soap cake - Google Patents

Apparatus for making a soap cake Download PDF

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US2937428A
US2937428A US721166A US72116658A US2937428A US 2937428 A US2937428 A US 2937428A US 721166 A US721166 A US 721166A US 72116658 A US72116658 A US 72116658A US 2937428 A US2937428 A US 2937428A
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cake
soap
wheel
ram
machine
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US721166A
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Pocidalo Adolphe
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DES FLEURS Inc
FLEURS Inc DES
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FLEURS Inc DES
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D13/00Making of soap or soap solutions in general; Apparatus therefor
    • C11D13/14Shaping
    • C11D13/18Shaping by extrusion or pressing
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D13/00Making of soap or soap solutions in general; Apparatus therefor
    • C11D13/28Embossing; Polishing

Definitions

  • One of the objects of the present invention is to provide a machine which, when fed with a series of soap blanks, will automatically form an upper cake hal-f, a lower cake half, place a printed or otherwise formed indicia on one of those halves, on the side thereof towardthe adjacent half, and then press the two halves together so that a completed cake of soap is formed with indicia between the halves. It is intended that the soap be of a transparent character so that the indicia may be read in the completed cake but the character of the soap has practically nothing to do with the apparatus and method for making the soap cake.
  • Another and more specific object of the invention is to provide a rotatable indexing plate and a rotatable carrier wheel for forming the upper half of the soap cake and a like set of one indexing wheel and one carrier wheel for forming the lower half of the cake, together with common drive means for driving all of the rotatable wheels in timed relationship, separate ram means for forming the upper and lower cake halves respectively from soap blanks, separate ram means for operating a die cutting device for cutting and depositing indicia between the cake halves from a continuous strip of indicia, ram means for pressing the upper and lower cake halves together, and ram means for ejecting the finished soap cake from the machine, together with control means for operating all said ram means simultaneously and in timed relationship with said wheel drive means.
  • Fig. 1 is a top plan View of an advertising soap forming and assembly machine embodying my invention
  • Fig. 2 is a sectional view taken along the line 2 2 of Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 3 isv a fragmental sectional view, enlarged, taken along the line 3-3 of Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 4 is a fragmental sectional view, enlarged, taken along the line 4-4 of Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 5 is a fragmental sectional view, enlarged, taken along the line ⁇ 5 5 of Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 6 is a central sectional view, enlarged, taken through the shearing die head of Fig. 4;
  • Fig. 7 is a side elevational view, enlarged, of the rollup advertising tape index linkage mechanism takenalong the line 7-7 of Fig. 8;
  • Fig. 8 is a top plan view (diagrammatic) of the gear train which drives the machine, this gear train lying directly under the table top or base plate of Fig. l
  • Fig. 9 is a top view of the advertising soap product showing how the center paper of advertising material shows through the clear soap Surrounding it;
  • Fig. 10 is a cross sectional view taken along the line 10-10 of Fig. 9; l
  • Fig. 11 is a control diagram of the electrical and pressure iiuid actuating means for operating the machine.
  • Fig. 1 To further explain the details of the machine mechanism and method of manufacturing the advertising soap, attention is called to Fig. 1. For the time being it will be assumed that the movements to be described are actuated by satisfactory actuating mechanisms later described.
  • the left half of the machine in Fig. 1 will be described first. Starting in the upper left-hand corner of the drawing, the raw blanks or rough chunks of clear soap formula 1, are gravity fed down the chute 2.
  • the soap blanks 1 are individually picked up from the gravity chute by the Y notched indexing wheel 3 by the notches 5.
  • the left index wheel-4 revolves in a clockwise direction.
  • the right hand indexing wheel 35 revolves in a counter-clockwise direction.
  • the soap blankpick-up wheel is intermittently driven by the drive gears and power source shown in Fig. 8, which will be described later.
  • the cycle at the left half of the machine, Figs. l and 2 is that the clockwise rotating soap blank pick-up wheel 3 transfers the soap Iblank 1 as it rests on the under ange 4a of guide rail 4 to a position over one of the openings; 12 of the carrier star wheel 7.
  • the operations thus far described can be more clearly understood by referring to the enlarged cross sectional view in Fig. 3.
  • the soap blank is now rotated by the carrier wheel 7 continuing in a counter-clockwise indexing direction, as the soap blank 1 rides on the under slide surface 13, shown in Fig. 3.
  • the carrier index wheel 7 transfers the soap blank 1 to a position under the first pressing ram 8, Fig. 2, and positions the blank 1 by gravity fall onto the bottom ram anvil 9 attached to lower hydraulic plunger cylinder assembly 10.
  • This station in the cycle can best be seen in Fig. 4, where printed advertising matter is on a continuous tape rolled on a reel 16, carried rotatably on shaft 16a and having a certain amount of spring frictional tension (not shown) exerted on the shaft which in turn is mounted in bracket 106 on table 6.
  • a ratchet indexing wheel 17, has circumferentially spaced spikes 18 on its periphery which fit into mating holes in the tape 15.
  • the ratchet linkage 19 is actuated by other moving parts of the machine not shown in this view.
  • this ram is another lower ram 40 exactly like ram 10 previously described.
  • the blank drops through a hole in the slide plate 13a onto ram 40.
  • the upper cake half is formed by the upper and lower rams meeting together while the soap is confined in one of the openings 32a so that an upper half of the cake is formed exactly like the lower half previously described.
  • Further indexing of the wheel 32 carries the upper cake half to the center of the machine shown in Figs. ⁇ l and 2.
  • the soap blank operational carrier wheel 7 carries the pressed lower half section of soap 1, with the advertising piece 26, adhered to its tacky top surface to the center station of Fig. 2.
  • An upper half cake 33 arrives at the center station at the same time by the timing of the machine.
  • the upper and lower rams 27 and 28, respectively, of cylinders 29 and 30, come together within the contines of opening 12 in carrier wheel 7, pressing the two half sections of soap together.
  • Plates 13 and 13a have openings for operation of rams 27 and 28.
  • the upper ram 27, during this operation ejects the top soap section 33 from the cavity 31 of the carrier wheel 32 into the opening 12 of the carrier wheel 7 which at that movement is in direct vertical alinernent.
  • the pressing rams 27 and 28 then withdraw to their respective retracted positions and the carrier wheels 7 and 32 index to their next respective positions, as indicated.
  • Wheel 7 carries the finished product to a station beneath cylinder 41, shown in Figs. l and 5, where the ram 42 of cylinder 41 ejects the finished product through an opening in plate 13 into chtite 107 onto a moving belt 43, which carries the product away from the machine to further operations of processing and wrapping.
  • Fig. l it may be observed that there are four rotating members above the surface of the machine table and super-structure 6. These rotating members are 3, 7, 32 and 35 and are driven by the gears 44, 45, 46 and 47, respectively, of Fig. 8 through shafts 44a, 45a, 46a and 47a.
  • Fig. 8 it can be seen that there are also intermediate gears 48, 49, 50, 51, 52 and 53, which interconnect the direct driving gears 44, 45, 46 and 47.
  • the main drive gear 54 rotates at a constant speed through a drive motor 83, later described.
  • Gear 54 in turn, intermittently drives gear 55, through a Geneva locking gear, commonly used in intermittent motion applications. Geneva gear 55 and intermediate gear 52 are keyed to the same shaft.
  • FIG. 8 Another motion necessary to the main indexing functions of the machine may also be seen in Fig. 8.
  • This is the linkage which operates the advertising tape ratchet wheel 20, shown in Fig. 4.
  • the rotation of the Geneva drive wheel 55 also causes the crank 56 to actuate the arm linkage 57, at each rotation of the wheel 54.
  • the movement of this linkage 57, and its function can best be understood by referring to Fig. 7, which is a side view of the mechanism of Fig. 8 taken in the direction of the arrows on line 77.
  • linkage 57 is pulled through its crank arm connection with Geneva gear 54, it rotates the bar 58, by way of crank arm 59, and double ball and socket linkage 60.
  • the bar 58 oscillates through a sufficient angle to move the arm 61, attached to the linkage 19, which operates the ratchet 17.
  • Arm 59, bar 58 and arm 61 are inter-keyed to move or oscillate as one unit.
  • a single phase, 110 volt-220 volt, 60 cycle current supply 64 commonly referred to as an Edison system, furnishes the electrical power to the machine.
  • the operation of the machine is initiated by engaging the three blade knife switch 65.
  • Current across the two outer lines 66 and 67 supplies 220 volts, while the current supply across the center conductor 68 to either of the outer conductors 66 and 67, respectively, is 110 volts.
  • current is supplied to the air pump motor 69, through the conductors 66 and 67, across the normally closed contacts 70, of the relay 71, creating air pressure by way of the pump 74 into the air supply tank 75.
  • Air pressure builds up in the tankl 75, creating pressure above the exible diaphragm 76, of the pressure switch 77.
  • air pressure on top of the diaphragm 76 forces the attached under switch 80 to close its contacts, thus supplying current from the left common supply conductor 66, through conductor 81 to the relay coil 73, and simultaneously to pilot light 82, completing the respective circuits and energizing the relay coil 73, and pilot light 82, through the common ground conductor 68.
  • the indicator pilot light 82 is now lit and the machine is ready to start.
  • the main drive motor 83 of the machine is started by pressing the start button 84. Pressing the start button 84 completes the circuit from the left conductor 66 to the relay coil 86, of the relay 87, by way of conductors S8 and 89 through the new closed contacts 72, of relay 71 to the common ground conductor 68. Contacts 90, 91 and 92 of relay 87 close on energizing the coil 86, of relay 87.
  • the instant relay 87 is energized by pressing the start button 84, contacts 90, now being closed, furnishes a holding circuit from conductor 88 by way of the bypass conductor, across contacts and conductor 93, bridging the gap of the start button contacts 84.
  • the pressure in the tank 75 may periodically be built up through motor control relay 71, as required by the control pressure switch 80.
  • Motor 83 drives shaft 54a and gear 54 of Fig. 8.
  • cam 95 is attached to the driven shaft of motor 83.
  • pressure builds up inthe tank 75, escaping through the pipe line 96, to the solenoid control valve 97, it can be seen that the air passes around the spool valve 98, to the open cylinder supply line 99.
  • the common air supply line 99 is arranged to force the pistons of each of the air cylinders 8, 10, 29, and 30, to the retracted position, as shown.
  • normally open switch 100 closes to energize the coil 10d of electrically operated valve 97. In the de-energized position, the valve 97 is held in the position shown by spring 102.
  • stop button 85 is pushed, breaking the current to relay coil 86, of relay 89, and, consequently, opening all of the contacts 90, 91 and 92, of this relay, discontinuing current to the motor 83 by way of conductor 66, through contacts 92.
  • the cam 106 also driven by the shaft of motor 83, is in its switch-closed position, the motor will continue to run until normally closed switch 107 opens. This corresponds to open position of switch 100. This synchronization is provided so that the main motor drive will stay in cycle when all of the operational air cylinders are in the retracted position.
  • Apparatus for forming a composite soap cake having an upper cake part and a lower cake part comprising means for successively forming a series of separate lower cake parts, means for feeding said lower cake parts serially to an assembly station and including a lower plate over which said means slidably moves said lower cake p-arts, means for successively forming a series of separate upper cake parts, means for feeding said upper cake parts serially to said assembly station, said last named means including an upper plate over which said last named means slidably moves said upper cake parts, said upper plate overlying said lower plate at said assembly station and having a through opening there permitting an upper cake part to drop down upon a lower cake part, means coordinating each upper cake part to move in timed relation to a lower cake part and to a position at said assembly station with said cake parts in vertical registration, and means at said assembly station for pressing said cake parts together While the latter are in registration.
  • Apparatus for forming a composite soap cake having an upper cake part and a lower cake part comprising a frame, two carrier wheels mounted on said frame for rotation about vertical axes, each of said wheels having a plurality of soap blank receiving openings extending vertically entirely through said wheel, said openings being evenly spaced at predetermined intervals circumferentially about each said wheel, means for rotating said wheels an interval at a time with a dwell period between each rotation, said wheels having overlapping portions positioned to bring openings in the two wheels into direct vertical alinement at an assembly station during each dwell period, means for feeding soap blanks into said openings in said wheels at loading points removed from said -assembly station, means for forming a cake part adjacent each of said wheels between said loading point and assembly station, each of said last named means cornprising upper and lower coacting abutments, at least one of said abutments being movable and being vertically alined with one of said carrier wheel openings at a forming point during a dwell period, at least said
  • cake iinishing means comprising coacting abutments respectively above and below the overlapping portions of said wheels at said assembly station, at least one of said last named abutments being movable and vertically alined with said wheel openings alined at said assembly station, said last named movable abutment having a head movable through said alined opening in one of said wheels and into said alined opening in the other of said wheels to press said upper and lower cake parts into an integral finished soap cake, and means for causing relative approach movement between said last named coacting abutments during a dwell period.
  • said indicia member inserting means comprises means for holding an indicia bearing member alined above an opening in said carrier wheel associated with said lower cake part, and movable abutment means for moving said indicia bearing member into said alined opening during a dwell period.
  • said indicia member inserting means comprises a tape bearing indicia, means for feeding said tape closely adjacent and above an opening in said carrier wheel associated with said lower cake part, a die plate between said tape and said opening, a die head reciprocably mounted for movement through said die plate and into the alined opening beneath it, said die head and die plate coacting to cut a piece out of said tape upon downward movement of said die head, and means for causing a downward stroke of said die head into the alined opening during a dwell period.

Description

May 24, 1960 Filed March 13. 1958 A. POCIDALO APPARATUS FOR MAKING A SOAP CAKE 3 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTOR.
ADOLPHE. Po c l DALO May 24, 1960 A. PQCIDALO APPARATUS FOR MAKING A SOAP CAKE Filed March 15. 1958 3 Sheets-Sheet 3 Figure 11 INVENTOR.
Avon-vae Po en cabo BY 59d', 'anm United States Patent O APPARATUS FOR MAKING A SOAP CAKE Adolphe Pocidalo, Cleveland, Ohio, assigner to Des Fleurs, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio, a corporation of Ohio Filed Mar. 13, 1958, Ser. No. 721,166
6 Claims. (Cl. 25d?) This invention relates to improvements in apparatus.
for making a soap cake enclosing indicia.
One of the objects of the present invention is to provide a machine which, when fed with a series of soap blanks, will automatically form an upper cake hal-f, a lower cake half, place a printed or otherwise formed indicia on one of those halves, on the side thereof towardthe adjacent half, and then press the two halves together so that a completed cake of soap is formed with indicia between the halves. It is intended that the soap be of a transparent character so that the indicia may be read in the completed cake but the character of the soap has practically nothing to do with the apparatus and method for making the soap cake.
Another and more specific object of the invention is to provide a rotatable indexing plate and a rotatable carrier wheel for forming the upper half of the soap cake and a like set of one indexing wheel and one carrier wheel for forming the lower half of the cake, together with common drive means for driving all of the rotatable wheels in timed relationship, separate ram means for forming the upper and lower cake halves respectively from soap blanks, separate ram means for operating a die cutting device for cutting and depositing indicia between the cake halves from a continuous strip of indicia, ram means for pressing the upper and lower cake halves together, and ram means for ejecting the finished soap cake from the machine, together with control means for operating all said ram means simultaneously and in timed relationship with said wheel drive means.
Other objects and advantages will be apparent from the accompanying drawings and description and the essential features thereof will be set forth in the appended claims.
In the drawings, Fig. 1 is a top plan View of an advertising soap forming and assembly machine embodying my invention; y
Fig. 2 is a sectional view taken along the line 2 2 of Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 isv a fragmental sectional view, enlarged, taken along the line 3-3 of Fig. 1;
Fig. 4 is a fragmental sectional view, enlarged, taken along the line 4-4 of Fig. 1;
Fig. 5 is a fragmental sectional view, enlarged, taken along the line `5 5 of Fig. 1;
Fig. 6 is a central sectional view, enlarged, taken through the shearing die head of Fig. 4;
Fig. 7 is a side elevational view, enlarged, of the rollup advertising tape index linkage mechanism takenalong the line 7-7 of Fig. 8;
Fig. 8 is a top plan view (diagrammatic) of the gear train which drives the machine, this gear train lying directly under the table top or base plate of Fig. l
Fig. 9 is a top view of the advertising soap product showing how the center paper of advertising material shows through the clear soap Surrounding it;
Fig. 10 is a cross sectional view taken along the line 10-10 of Fig. 9; l
ICC
Fig. 11 is a control diagram of the electrical and pressure iiuid actuating means for operating the machine.
To further explain the details of the machine mechanism and method of manufacturing the advertising soap, attention is called to Fig. 1. For the time being it will be assumed that the movements to be described are actuated by satisfactory actuating mechanisms later described. The left half of the machine in Fig. 1 will be described first. Starting in the upper left-hand corner of the drawing, the raw blanks or rough chunks of clear soap formula 1, are gravity fed down the chute 2. The soap blanks 1 are individually picked up from the gravity chute by the Y notched indexing wheel 3 by the notches 5. The left index wheel-4 revolves in a clockwise direction. The right hand indexing wheel 35 revolves in a counter-clockwise direction. The soap blankpick-up wheel is intermittently driven by the drive gears and power source shown in Fig. 8, which will be described later.
The cycle at the left half of the machine, Figs. l and 2, is that the clockwise rotating soap blank pick-up wheel 3 transfers the soap Iblank 1 as it rests on the under ange 4a of guide rail 4 to a position over one of the openings; 12 of the carrier star wheel 7. The operations thus far described can be more clearly understood by referring to the enlarged cross sectional view in Fig. 3. The soap blank is now rotated by the carrier wheel 7 continuing in a counter-clockwise indexing direction, as the soap blank 1 rides on the under slide surface 13, shown in Fig. 3. The carrier index wheel 7 transfers the soap blank 1 to a position under the first pressing ram 8, Fig. 2, and positions the blank 1 by gravity fall onto the bottom ram anvil 9 attached to lower hydraulic plunger cylinder assembly 10. Slide plate 13is cut away above anvil to permit the soap cake to drop, The ram 11 piston operated from cylinder 8 and the anvil plunger 9 piston operated from lower cylinder 10 come togetherl conning and compressing the soap in opening 12 and forming the soap blank 1 to lill the lower portion of the confining opening 12 in the carrier wheel 7. This operation forms the lower half of 'the soap cake. Plungers 1'1 and 9 withdraw from the mold cavity 12 leaving the Iformed half cake of soap sticking to the sides of the confined area 12.
The left carrier Wheel 7, next indexes the formed half cake under the advertising placement ram 14, Fig. 1. This station in the cycle can best be seen in Fig. 4, where printed advertising matter is on a continuous tape rolled on a reel 16, carried rotatably on shaft 16a and having a certain amount of spring frictional tension (not shown) exerted on the shaft which in turn is mounted in bracket 106 on table 6. A ratchet indexing wheel 17, has circumferentially spaced spikes 18 on its periphery which fit into mating holes in the tape 15. At the proper synchronized moment in the operational cycle, the ratchet linkage 19 is actuated by other moving parts of the machine not shown in this view. The linkage 19 pulls down on the ratchet and pawl assembly 20, to rotate the ratchet wheel 17 in a clockwise direction, pulling the advertising tape 15 under the shearing die head 14. VThe remaining selvage tape or Waste is rolled uponto reel 62, Fig. 4. The shaft 62a of this reel is driven by a light torque continuously driven motor 21 through a slip clutch (not shown) in the direction of the arrow of Fig. 4. The motor and clutch drive 21 is shown in Fig. 1 in the lower left hand corner of the View. The holes in the advertising tape 15, which mate with the sprocket spikes 18, can best be seen in Fig. 5, which is a sectional view of Fig. l taken in the direction of the arrows along the line 5 5. Further details of the paper shearing ram 14 are shown in Fig. 6. This view also shows how the tape 15 is guided under the die head 14, by right and left flanged rollers 22 and 23, respectively, as well as the upper and lower horizontal guide plates 24 and 25,
respectively. In this same Fig. 6 it can be seen by the dotted lines that when the die head 14, pierces through the tape 15, pushed down by ram 14a, the advertising piece 26, sheared through die plate opening a, is forced down onto the tacky surface of the formed half cake 1. At this point, lower ram 14b makes an upward stroke limited to just firmly engage the underside of half cake 1. Plate 13 is cnt away for operation of ram 14b upwardly.
The ram 14, having been retracted through the program timed cycle of the machine, not shown, the next operation in the cycle is performed.
Before describing this next operation, reference should be had to the right-hand half of Fig. 1. Here, the soap blanks 33, preferably about the size of a half dollar and about a quarter inch thick, are fed down the chute 34 to the indexing wheel 35 which receives them in notches 37. The indexing wheel rotates in a counter-clockwise direction by means later described and carries the soap blanks over a flange 36a like 4a and along the guide rail 36 to a position over one of the openings 32a in a carrier wheel 32 which is like wheel 7 earlier described. Slide plate 13a is directly beneath wheel 32. This carrier wheel rotates in a clockwise direction as viewed in Fig. l and carries the soap blank beneath a forming ram 39 which is exactly like the ram 8 previously described. Beneath this ram is another lower ram 40 exactly like ram 10 previously described. The blank drops through a hole in the slide plate 13a onto ram 40. Here the upper cake half is formed by the upper and lower rams meeting together while the soap is confined in one of the openings 32a so that an upper half of the cake is formed exactly like the lower half previously described. Further indexing of the wheel 32 carries the upper cake half to the center of the machine shown in Figs.` l and 2. Referring to the center of Fig. 2, the soap blank operational carrier wheel 7 carries the pressed lower half section of soap 1, with the advertising piece 26, adhered to its tacky top surface to the center station of Fig. 2. An upper half cake 33 arrives at the center station at the same time by the timing of the machine. At this operation in the program timed cycle, the upper and lower rams 27 and 28, respectively, of cylinders 29 and 30, come together within the contines of opening 12 in carrier wheel 7, pressing the two half sections of soap together. Plates 13 and 13a have openings for operation of rams 27 and 28. The upper ram 27, during this operation ejects the top soap section 33 from the cavity 31 of the carrier wheel 32 into the opening 12 of the carrier wheel 7 which at that movement is in direct vertical alinernent. The pressing rams 27 and 28 then withdraw to their respective retracted positions and the carrier wheels 7 and 32 index to their next respective positions, as indicated. Wheel 7 carries the finished product to a station beneath cylinder 41, shown in Figs. l and 5, where the ram 42 of cylinder 41 ejects the finished product through an opening in plate 13 into chtite 107 onto a moving belt 43, which carries the product away from the machine to further operations of processing and wrapping.
In Fig. l it may be observed that there are four rotating members above the surface of the machine table and super-structure 6. These rotating members are 3, 7, 32 and 35 and are driven by the gears 44, 45, 46 and 47, respectively, of Fig. 8 through shafts 44a, 45a, 46a and 47a. In Fig. 8 it can be seen that there are also intermediate gears 48, 49, 50, 51, 52 and 53, which interconnect the direct driving gears 44, 45, 46 and 47. The main drive gear 54 rotates at a constant speed through a drive motor 83, later described. Gear 54, in turn, intermittently drives gear 55, through a Geneva locking gear, commonly used in intermittent motion applications. Geneva gear 55 and intermediate gear 52 are keyed to the same shaft.
Another motion necessary to the main indexing functions of the machine may also be seen in Fig. 8. This is the linkage which operates the advertising tape ratchet wheel 20, shown in Fig. 4. Referring again to Fig. 8, the rotation of the Geneva drive wheel 55 also causes the crank 56 to actuate the arm linkage 57, at each rotation of the wheel 54. The movement of this linkage 57, and its function can best be understood by referring to Fig. 7, which is a side view of the mechanism of Fig. 8 taken in the direction of the arrows on line 77. As linkage 57 is pulled through its crank arm connection with Geneva gear 54, it rotates the bar 58, by way of crank arm 59, and double ball and socket linkage 60. The bar 58, in turn, oscillates through a sufficient angle to move the arm 61, attached to the linkage 19, which operates the ratchet 17. Arm 59, bar 58 and arm 61 are inter-keyed to move or oscillate as one unit.
In Fig. 1l a single phase, 110 volt-220 volt, 60 cycle current supply 64, commonly referred to as an Edison system, furnishes the electrical power to the machine. The operation of the machine is initiated by engaging the three blade knife switch 65. Current across the two outer lines 66 and 67 supplies 220 volts, while the current supply across the center conductor 68 to either of the outer conductors 66 and 67, respectively, is 110 volts. On engaging blade switch 65, with the supply lines 64, current is supplied to the air pump motor 69, through the conductors 66 and 67, across the normally closed contacts 70, of the relay 71, creating air pressure by way of the pump 74 into the air supply tank 75. Air pressure builds up in the tankl 75, creating pressure above the exible diaphragm 76, of the pressure switch 77. When the pressure builds up to a predetermined value, as shown by the gauge 78, and controlled by the reaction spring 79, air pressure on top of the diaphragm 76 forces the attached under switch 80 to close its contacts, thus supplying current from the left common supply conductor 66, through conductor 81 to the relay coil 73, and simultaneously to pilot light 82, completing the respective circuits and energizing the relay coil 73, and pilot light 82, through the common ground conductor 68. The air supply to the machine is now up to pressure and the pump motor stops by discontinuance of the supply current through contacts 70, which opened at the instant relay 71 was energized through coil 73. At the same instant, relay contacts 72 closed. The purpose of this function will be explained later.
The indicator pilot light 82 is now lit and the machine is ready to start.
The main drive motor 83 of the machine is started by pressing the start button 84. Pressing the start button 84 completes the circuit from the left conductor 66 to the relay coil 86, of the relay 87, by way of conductors S8 and 89 through the new closed contacts 72, of relay 71 to the common ground conductor 68. Contacts 90, 91 and 92 of relay 87 close on energizing the coil 86, of relay 87. The instant relay 87 is energized by pressing the start button 84, contacts 90, now being closed, furnishes a holding circuit from conductor 88 by way of the bypass conductor, across contacts and conductor 93, bridging the gap of the start button contacts 84. Relay contacts 91, now being closed, current is paralleled to relay coil 86 by also carrying the current to conductor 89 through the closed contacts 91 to the common ground conductor 68. This means that relay 71 can now drop in or out of the circuit without affecting relay 87. In this way, the pressure in the tank 75 may periodically be built up through motor control relay 71, as required by the control pressure switch 80. As the contacts 92, of relay 87 close, current is supplied from the conductor 66, across contacts 92, thence by way of conductor 94 to the main machine drive motor 83, completing the circuit to the 220 volt line conductor 67, at the extreme right. Motor 83 drives shaft 54a and gear 54 of Fig. 8.
Now, the cam 95 is attached to the driven shaft of motor 83. As pressure builds up inthe tank 75, escaping through the pipe line 96, to the solenoid control valve 97, it can be seen that the air passes around the spool valve 98, to the open cylinder supply line 99. It can also be seen that the common air supply line 99 is arranged to force the pistons of each of the air cylinders 8, 10, 29, and 30, to the retracted position, as shown. When cam 95 is driven to the opposite position by motor 83, normally open switch 100 closes to energize the coil 10d of electrically operated valve 97. In the de-energized position, the valve 97 is held in the position shown by spring 102. ln the energized position, the valve spool 98 is forced to the right, allowing air to be exhausted from line 99 through exhaust port 103. In the energized position, the air supply line `96 is connected with the cornmon extended cylinder supply line 105, thus forcing all the cylinders to drive their pistons outwardly. When the cam 95 revolves so that switch 100 is in the un-energized position, the spring 102 forces the spool valve to the left, the position shown in Fig. 11. As air :fills the opposite ends of the cylinders 8, 10, 29 and 30, through line 96 and thence through 99, respectively, line 105 evacuates the air in the exhaust side of the cylinders through exhaust port 104. lt can, therefore, be understood from this explanation that alternate switching of the switch controls 100 make the cylinders 8, 10, 29 and 30 operate up and down in a synchronized cycle in timed relation with gear 54. Although only four air cylinders are shown in the control circuit, it is intended that all air cylinders of the machine including 14a, 14b, 39, 40 and 41 operate in a like manner and all simultaneouslyl on their outward piston stroke away from the retracted position shown in the drawings.
To shut the machine olf, stop button 85 is pushed, breaking the current to relay coil 86, of relay 89, and, consequently, opening all of the contacts 90, 91 and 92, of this relay, discontinuing current to the motor 83 by way of conductor 66, through contacts 92. However, if the cam 106, also driven by the shaft of motor 83, is in its switch-closed position, the motor will continue to run until normally closed switch 107 opens. This corresponds to open position of switch 100. This synchronization is provided so that the main motor drive will stay in cycle when all of the operational air cylinders are in the retracted position.
What is claimed is:
1. Apparatus for forming a composite soap cake having an upper cake part and a lower cake part comprising means for successively forming a series of separate lower cake parts, means for feeding said lower cake parts serially to an assembly station and including a lower plate over which said means slidably moves said lower cake p-arts, means for successively forming a series of separate upper cake parts, means for feeding said upper cake parts serially to said assembly station, said last named means including an upper plate over which said last named means slidably moves said upper cake parts, said upper plate overlying said lower plate at said assembly station and having a through opening there permitting an upper cake part to drop down upon a lower cake part, means coordinating each upper cake part to move in timed relation to a lower cake part and to a position at said assembly station with said cake parts in vertical registration, and means at said assembly station for pressing said cake parts together While the latter are in registration.
Apparatus for forming a composite soap cake having an upper cake part and a lower cake part comprising a frame, two carrier wheels mounted on said frame for rotation about vertical axes, each of said wheels having a plurality of soap blank receiving openings extending vertically entirely through said wheel, said openings being evenly spaced at predetermined intervals circumferentially about each said wheel, means for rotating said wheels an interval at a time with a dwell period between each rotation, said wheels having overlapping portions positioned to bring openings in the two wheels into direct vertical alinement at an assembly station during each dwell period, means for feeding soap blanks into said openings in said wheels at loading points removed from said -assembly station, means for forming a cake part adjacent each of said wheels between said loading point and assembly station, each of said last named means cornprising upper and lower coacting abutments, at least one of said abutments being movable and being vertically alined with one of said carrier wheel openings at a forming point during a dwell period, at least said movable abutment fitting into said wheel opening with slight clearance, means for holding a blank in its associated opening between said loading point and said forming point,
'Y means for causing relative approach movement of each pair of coacting abutments against a soap blank between them and inside an opening in the associated wheel during a dwell period, cake iinishing means comprising coacting abutments respectively above and below the overlapping portions of said wheels at said assembly station, at least one of said last named abutments being movable and vertically alined with said wheel openings alined at said assembly station, said last named movable abutment having a head movable through said alined opening in one of said wheels and into said alined opening in the other of said wheels to press said upper and lower cake parts into an integral finished soap cake, and means for causing relative approach movement between said last named coacting abutments during a dwell period.
3. The combination of claim 2 wherein there are at least two of said predetermined intervals on one of said carrier wheels between said forming point and said assembly station, and indicia member inserting means positioned there at a distance from said forming point which is an integral multiple of said interval, said inserting means having operative means for placing an indicia bearing member on that side of a cake part which engages against its associated cake part in a finished soap cake.
4. The combination of claim 3 wherein said indicia member inserting means comprises means for holding an indicia bearing member alined above an opening in said carrier wheel associated with said lower cake part, and movable abutment means for moving said indicia bearing member into said alined opening during a dwell period.
S. The combination of claim 3 wherein said indicia member inserting means comprises a tape bearing indicia, means for feeding said tape closely adjacent and above an opening in said carrier wheel associated with said lower cake part, a die plate between said tape and said opening, a die head reciprocably mounted for movement through said die plate and into the alined opening beneath it, said die head and die plate coacting to cut a piece out of said tape upon downward movement of said die head, and means for causing a downward stroke of said die head into the alined opening during a dwell period.
6. The combination of claim 2 including drive means for said carrier wheels and drive means for said movable abutments, and control means for causing simultaneous relative approach movement of each pair of coacting abutments during the dwell period of said wheel drive means.
References Cited in the le of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS Baldanza May 5, 1957
US721166A 1958-03-13 1958-03-13 Apparatus for making a soap cake Expired - Lifetime US2937428A (en)

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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3271834A (en) * 1964-05-23 1966-09-13 Mazzoni Carlo Machines for stamping tablets of substances having a pasty consistency
US3277533A (en) * 1962-04-28 1966-10-11 Tavannes Machines Co S A Apparatus for molding plastic articles
US3293693A (en) * 1963-04-12 1966-12-27 Standard Pressed Steel Co Apparatus for forming plastic locking inserts in nuts
US4714420A (en) * 1982-12-20 1987-12-22 Ptp Patentierte Technologische Prozesse Ag Plant for the continuous and automated manufacturing of agglomerated sintered, vulcanized and pressed articles
EP0280181A2 (en) * 1987-02-25 1988-08-31 Krupp Corpoplast Maschinenbau Gmbh Apparatus for manufacturing hollow articles from thermoplastic material
US4773843A (en) * 1987-02-25 1988-09-27 Krupp Corpoplast Maschinenbau Gmbh Apparatus for treating blanks of plastic material

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1764009A (en) * 1926-04-17 1930-06-17 Spencer D Embree Sectional soap cake and method of making same
US2313160A (en) * 1937-09-03 1943-03-09 Wilbur S Mayers Machine and method for forming and welding hollow glass blocks
US2379793A (en) * 1943-01-08 1945-07-03 Elmo F Brennom Method of manufacturing transparent bodies with items embedded therein
US2478812A (en) * 1942-04-15 1949-08-09 Libbey Owens Ford Glass Co Apparatus for manufacturing hollow glass building blocks
US2743478A (en) * 1951-10-31 1956-05-01 Rca Corp Automatic molding apparatus
US2811744A (en) * 1951-05-12 1957-11-05 Curtiss Wright Corp Apparatus and method for ink recordation on molding resinous plastic articles

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1764009A (en) * 1926-04-17 1930-06-17 Spencer D Embree Sectional soap cake and method of making same
US2313160A (en) * 1937-09-03 1943-03-09 Wilbur S Mayers Machine and method for forming and welding hollow glass blocks
US2478812A (en) * 1942-04-15 1949-08-09 Libbey Owens Ford Glass Co Apparatus for manufacturing hollow glass building blocks
US2379793A (en) * 1943-01-08 1945-07-03 Elmo F Brennom Method of manufacturing transparent bodies with items embedded therein
US2811744A (en) * 1951-05-12 1957-11-05 Curtiss Wright Corp Apparatus and method for ink recordation on molding resinous plastic articles
US2743478A (en) * 1951-10-31 1956-05-01 Rca Corp Automatic molding apparatus

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3277533A (en) * 1962-04-28 1966-10-11 Tavannes Machines Co S A Apparatus for molding plastic articles
US3293693A (en) * 1963-04-12 1966-12-27 Standard Pressed Steel Co Apparatus for forming plastic locking inserts in nuts
US3271834A (en) * 1964-05-23 1966-09-13 Mazzoni Carlo Machines for stamping tablets of substances having a pasty consistency
US4714420A (en) * 1982-12-20 1987-12-22 Ptp Patentierte Technologische Prozesse Ag Plant for the continuous and automated manufacturing of agglomerated sintered, vulcanized and pressed articles
EP0280181A2 (en) * 1987-02-25 1988-08-31 Krupp Corpoplast Maschinenbau Gmbh Apparatus for manufacturing hollow articles from thermoplastic material
US4773843A (en) * 1987-02-25 1988-09-27 Krupp Corpoplast Maschinenbau Gmbh Apparatus for treating blanks of plastic material
US4775311A (en) * 1987-02-25 1988-10-04 Krupp Corpoplast Maschinenbau Gmbh. Apparatus for producing hollow bodies of thermoplastic material
EP0280181A3 (en) * 1987-02-25 1991-04-24 Krupp Corpoplast Maschinenbau Gmbh Apparatus for manufacturing hollow articles from thermoplastic material

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