Machine for sealing variable-height parallelepipedal cartons

The machine is provided with a carton support and advancement base and a sealing head superimposed to said support base and vertically displaceable with respect to the same. In order to adjust automatically the height of the sealing head to the variable height of the cartons there are provided sensing means mounted on said support base in such a position as to be engaged by the carton bottom to cause the consequent rising of the sealing head from a minimum-height position.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
The present invention relates to a machine for sealing variable-height 
parallelepipedal cartons. 
In the Italian Pat. No. 946715 and in the U.S. Pat. No. 4,060,442, both in 
the name of the same Applicant, there are disclosed sealing machines of 
the kind including a carton support and advancement base, an upper sealing 
head superimposed to said support base in a vertically displaceable manner 
and, usually, a lower sealing head included in said support base. 
In order to be able to adjust automatically the vertical position of the 
upper sealing head to the variable height of the cartons to be sealed, 
such machines are arranged so that on the inlet end of the upper sealing 
head, which is normally urged by gravity to a minimum-height position, 
there is mounted a sensor formed by a sensing lever which can be engaged 
by the front wall of the incoming cartons. Through a suitable pneumatic 
device the above cited sensing lever is able, when engaged, to cause the 
upper sealing head to rise up to a sufficient height for the disengagement 
of the sensing lever, that is to such a height as to allow the manual or 
mechanical introduction of the cartons between the support base and the 
upper sealing head. As a result of the disengagement of the sensing lever, 
the upper sealing lever stops its rising motion and rests by gravity on 
the top of the carton, applying therein the closing means, for example a 
strip of adhesive tape, as the carton is manually or mechanically advanced 
along the support base. 
Such known machines have the only disadvantage that the sensing lever is 
mounted on the upper sealing head, so that during working it is maintained 
by the same weight of the sealing head in close proximity to the closed 
upper flaps of the cartons. It has been possible to verify experimentally 
that, due to unavoidable flap forming and/or positioning irregularities, 
this may cause unwanted actuations of the sensing lever and, thus, 
irregular operations of the sealing head. As a final consequence, the 
cartons sometimes go out of the machine without being carefully sealed. 
Object of the present invention is to realize a sealing machine with 
automatic adjustment to different height cartons, in which the above said 
disadvantage does not occur. 
According to the invention, such an object is attained by means of a 
machine, comprising a carton support and advancement base, an upper 
sealing head superimposed to said support base in a vertically 
displaceable manner from a minimum-height position, and sensing means 
engageable by the carton body to cause said sealing head to rise 
automatically from said minimum-height position to a sufficient height to 
allow the introduction of the carton between said support base and said 
sealing head, characterized in that said sensing means are mounted on said 
support base in such a position as to be engageable by the bottom of the 
carton. 
Otherwise stated, the machine according to the invention therefore provides 
for the mounting of sensing means no longer on the vertically displaceable 
sealing head, but on the same carton support base, so that it is the 
carton bottom which engages said sensing means to cause the sealing head 
to rise up to the desired height. The result is that the operation of the 
sealing head is no longer influenced by the more or less regular status of 
the carton top, while the carton bottom, made regular by the weight of the 
packed products, in turn causes a correct engagement of the sensing means 
and, therefore, a constant and regular operation of the machine. 
Preferably, said sensing means are constituted by a lever having two 
sequentially attainable positions, in one of which said rising of the head 
is caused and in the other of which, subsequently to the introduction of 
the carton between the support base and the sealing head, the sealing head 
is caused to go down again on the carton top. 
Otherwise, it may be foreseen to use two levers arranged in succession 
along the carton advancing path. 
The features of the present invention will be made more apparent by the 
following detailed description of non-limiting example in the accompanying 
drawings. in which:

DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
The sealing machine shown in the drawings comprises a base 1 formed by a 
rectangular frame 2 with end extensions 3 and by a succession of idle 
rollers 4 rotatably supported by the said frame and relevant extensions. 
The rollers 4 define a plane intended for support and advancement of 
parallelepipedal cartons 5, which have previously been filled and closed 
but are still to be sealed with adhesive tape on the top and under the 
bottom thereof. 
In a suitable central space 6 of the succession of rollers 4 there is 
housed a lower sealing head 7, which has the function of applying a strip 
of sealing adhesive tape along the split which divides the closed lower 
side flaps of the carton bottom. The structure of said sealing head will 
not be described in detail herein, since it is of a type well known in the 
art; it will however be useful to point out that said sealing head 
comprises a pair of conveying belts 8 which, suitably motorized, are able 
to engage the bottom of the cartons to cause the advancement thereof (from 
right to left in FIGS. 1 to 4). 
There is superimposed to the lower sealing head 7 an upper sealing head 9, 
which is vertically displaceable along two lateral uprights 10 under the 
effect of its own weight, which urges it to a minimum-height position 
(FIG. 1), and of a pair of pneumatic cylinders 11 which, when so actuated, 
are able to raise it up to a desired height (FIG. 3). The upper sealing 
head 9 will not be described in detail herein either, since it is in turn 
of a type well known in the art; for the purposes of the present 
description it will be sufficient to state that the upper head also 
comprises a pair of motorized conveying belts 12 engageable with the 
carton top for advancement purposes and further includes at its inlet end 
a roller (or a pair of aligned rollers) 13, against which the front wall 
of the carton can abut during the rising of the sealing head 9 (FIG. 3). 
Sensing means arranged along the carton support and advancement plane, just 
before the roller 13 of the head 9, and suitably fixed to said plane 
provide for the control of the rising of the upper sealing head 9. Said 
sensing means are illustrated in detail in FIGS. 5 to 9 and comprise a 
lever 14 pivoted at 15 on a support member 16 fixed to the base frame 2 
and urged by a spring 17 towards a rest position represented in FIGS. 1, 5 
and 6; in said position the lever 14 clearly projects above the carton 
support and advancement plane (FIG. 1). 
There is fixed to the lever 14 a pawl 18 which, in case of displacement of 
the same lever from said rest position to the complete-engagement position 
of FIG. 8 (under the action of the superimposed carton bottom, as shown in 
FIG. 4), engages in the intermediate position of FIG. 7 (to which the 
lever is forced by the same carton bottom when the front wall of the same 
carton abuts against the roller 13 of the upper sealing head 9, as 
illustrated in FIG. 3) an articulated arm 19 which operates as actuating 
member for a pneumatic valve 20 destined for the control of the cylinders 
11. More precisely, when the lever 14 is in the position of FIG. 7, the 
pawl 18 causes the arm 19 to rotate about its hinge point 21 (against the 
action of a suitably arranged spring), thus causing the same arm to thrust 
the rod 22 of the valve 20 to switch the latter from a rest condition, in 
which the valve connects to exhaust the lower chambers of the cylinders 11 
(and thus allows in turn the sealing head 9 to be maintained by its own 
weight in the minimum-height position of FIG. 1), to a work condition in 
which the valve connects said lower chambers of the cylinders 11 to a 
compressed air supply, thereby allowing the sealing head 9 to rise. 
As may be seen from FIG. 9, the articulated arm is actually formed by two 
pieces 23 and 24, which are pivoted to one another at 25 and are 
resiliently urged in such a way as to be maintained normally in the 
aligned position of FIGS. 7 and 8, while being however foldable in the 
direction illustrated in FIG. 9. On the contrary, any folding in the 
opposite direction is prevented by a tab 26 of the foldable piece 23, 
which tab, when the arm is straight, abuts against the adjacent piece 24 
(FIGS. 7 and 8). Another lever 27, which can be viewed in FIGS. 1, 3 and 
4, has in turn the function of actuating the conveying belts 8 and 12, 
when said lever is pushed down by the incoming cartons. 
The following mode of operation of the machine illustrated in the drawings 
results from the described arrangement. With the machine at rest, the 
upper sealing head 9 is kept by its own weight in the minimum-height 
position of FIG. 1, that is at a height lower than the minimum height of 
the cartons to be sealed. In this condition, the incoming carton, manually 
thrusted by the operator or otherwise urged to advance, firstly depresses 
the lever 27, thus actuating to rotation the conveying belts 8 and 12 of 
the two sealing heads 7 and 9. The carton stops its advancement against 
the roller 13 of the upper sealing head 9 (situation illustrated in 
dash-dot lines in FIG. 3), while depressing partially the lever 14 
(suitably shaped with two differently inclined parts) up to bring it to 
the position of FIG. 7. Through the articulated arm 19 the pawl 18 then 
causes the switching of the valve 20, which feeds compressed air to the 
lower chambers of the cylinders 11 with consequent or raising rising of 
the upper sealing head 9. As soon as the latter has arrived at a height 
corresponding to that of the carton (situation illustrated in solid lines 
in FIG. 3), the carton may be introduced between the head 9 and the 
underlying support plane, thus engaging the conveying belts 8, which 
convey it forwards, and simultaneously further depressing the lever 14 up 
to bring it to the position illustrated in FIGS. 4 and 8. The pawl 18 thus 
releases the arm 19 and the valve 20 is allowed to return to rest, 
connecting again to exhaust the lower chambers of the cylinders 11. The 
upper sealing head 9 is therefore left free to rest on the top of the 
carton, engaging it by means of its conveying belts 12 and applying 
thereto an upper sealing tape, as well as the lower sealing head 7 
provides the carton bottom with a lower sealing tape. When the bottom of 
the advancing carton disengages the lever 14, the latter goes back to the 
rest position of FIG. 5, but this does not cause any consequence for the 
valve 20 and, therefore, for the sealing head 9, since the articulation 
between the two parts 23 and 24 of the articulated arm 19 allows the pawl 
18 to pass without any switching of the valve 20 (FIG. 9). When the carton 
has left the space between the upper sealing head 9 and the support plane 
defined by the rollers 4, the head 9 finally returns to the rest position 
of FIG. 1.