Patent Document

RELATED APPLICATIONS 
   The following application includes common inventorship, and has common drawings, detailed description, filing date and assignee and relates to insertion systems: U.S. application Ser. No. 11/084,396, for PAPER HANDLING SYSTEM MATERIALS EXIT PATH ARRANGEMENT. 
   FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
   The present invention relates to paper handling systems, such as paper handling equipment, and more particularly to a folder and insertion system with a common feed path arrangement for various materials to be processed. 
   BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
   Insertion equipment desirably is capable of reliably handling a large variety of materials that are to be processed. The materials may be sheets to be folded, pre-folded and unfolded inserts, return or enclosure envelopes, and the enclosure envelope into which the materials are to be inserted. These materials may be of different sizes, thickness and types such as glossy pamphlets, advertising brochures or very thin sheet materials. Additionally the envelopes into which the materials are to be inserted can have different shaped envelope flaps, envelope throat profiles and envelope flap glue lines. Reliably processing such a range of materials is difficult and has led to equipment being designed with separate dedicated feed stations and transport paths for various categories of materials to be processed. Moreover, dedicated material feed stations in an insertion system can be difficult to position without blocking vital subsystems or must be remotely located in a difficult to access areas of the equipment. 
   SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
   It is an object of the present invention to provide materials handling equipment, such as a folder and/or inserter system or other paper handling equipment, with a common feed path arrangement for various types of materials to be processed. 
   It is a further object of the present invention to provide material handing equipment that has material inputs located in a common area for operator convenience, to improve access to subsystems, reduce cost, and improve system versatility. 
   The present invention allows enclosure envelopes, unfolded sheets of paper, and folded sheets of paper and other inserts such as pamphlets, to be fed from a common material feed area with a common feed transport path. By allowing materials to be fed from a single area in the system, access to the various feed bins is improved, vital subsystems are not blocked, and the common material loading station improves convenience to the operator. Cost savings can also be realized since the transport subsystems are used for both the enclosure envelope and the contents to be inserted. This allows for the loading of all materials to be used in the creation of a mailpiece to be placed into feed bins all located in a common feeder station. 
   The feed arrangement provides a face down, horizontal envelope insertion system having a common area feed station for enclosure envelopes, sheets, and insert materials. This is facilitated by a paper path that includes material moving from the common feed station that can be transported into the folder and be folded in a variety of ways, or can entirely bypass the folder without bending. The feed path arrangement also provides a suitable transport path for envelopes from the common feed station to the insertion area while allowing for proper material sequencing without process interruption. 
   A materials handling system embodying the present invention includes a feeder station having a plurality of material feeders and an insertion subsystem. Each of the plurality of feeders are connected to a common material transport path. A first material transport path is connected to the common material transport path and to the insertion subsystem. A second material transport path is connected to the common material transport path and to the insertion subsystem. A third material transport path is connected to the first material transport path and to said insertion subsystem. 
   In accordance with an aspect of the present invention the second material transport path includes a materials processing subsystem. One such materials processing subsystem is a folder subsystem. 
   In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, a materials handling system includes a feeder station having a plurality of material feeders and an insertion subsystem. Each of the plurality of feeders are connected to a common material transport. The common materials transport sequentially transports materials fed from each of the plurality of feeders. The common materials transport includes a pre-fold accumulator transport having a pre-fold accumulator gate. The pre-fold accumulator gate is operable to be positioned to stop ongoing transport and to accumulate materials being sequentially transported by the pre-fold accumulator transport and operable to be positioned to allow ongoing transport of materials being sequentially transported by the pre-fold accumulator transport. A first diverter is connected to a first material transport and to a second material transport. The diverter is operable to selectively divert materials being transported by the pre-fold accumulator transport to said first or to the second material transport. The first and the second material transport are each connected the insertion subsystem. The second material transport includes a folder subsystem. A second diverter is connected to the first materials transport and to a third material transport. The second diverter is operable to selectively divert materials traveling along the first materials transport to the third material transport which is connected to the insertion subsystem. 
   In materials handling system of the type having a feeder station having a plurality of material feeders and an insertion subsystem, a method embodying the present invention includes feeding materials from each of the plurality of feeders onto a common material transport path. Materials on the common transport path are selectively transported onto a first material transport path connected to the common material transport path. Materials on the first transport path are transported to the insertion subsystem. Materials on the common transport path are selectively transported onto a second material transport path. The second transport path includes a folder subsystem and is connected to the common material transport path and to the insertion subsystem. Materials on said second transport path are transported to the insertion subsystem. Materials on the first transport path are selectively transported onto a third material transport path connected to the insertion subsystem. Materials on the third transport path are transported the insertion subsystem. 

   
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     Reference is now made to the various figures wherein like reference numerals designate similar items in the various views and in which: 
       FIG. 1  is a diagrammatic view of a folder inserter system with a common material feed arrangement embodying the present invention and illustrating the envelope transport path from a detachable shingled envelope feed tray to the insertion subsystem; 
       FIG. 2  is a diagrammatic view of the system shown in  FIG. 1 , illustrating the transport path for material to be folded by folder subsystem from a detachable stack feed tray, through the folder subsystem to the insertion subsystem and the transport path for an envelope from the insertion subsystem through the envelope flap sealer subsystem and through the letter exit to the letter stacker; 
       FIG. 3  is a diagrammatic view of the system shown in  FIG. 1 , illustrating the transport path for material that will not be folded by the folder subsystem from a detachable shingle material feed tray to the insertion subsystem; 
       FIG. 4  is an enlarged diagrammatic view of the envelope flapper subsystem, insertion subsystem, moistener subsystem, sealer subsystem and exit portions of the system shown in  FIG. 2 , illustrating the transport path for letter size envelopes including the path to the letter envelope exit and to the letter stacker; and, 
       FIG. 5  is an enlarged diagrammatic view of the envelope flapper subsystem, insertion subsystem, moistener subsystem, sealer subsystem and exit portions of the system shown in  FIG. 1 , illustrating the transport path for flats type materials from the insertion subsystem to the flats exit and to the flats stacker. 
   

   DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
   Reference is now made to the various figures and more particularly to  FIG. 1 . A folder inserter system  2  includes vertical tower feed station  4  with a common material feed area. The tower feed station  4  provides a common feed area having detachable feed trays and associated feed mechanisms. The feed station  4  includes four separate detachable feed trays  6 ,  8 ,  10  and  12  for envelopes, sheets and inserts. Detachable feed tray  6  is a shingle envelope feed tray. Detachable feed tray  8  is a stacks sheet feed tray. Detachable feed tray  10  is a stacks sheet feed tray. Detach able feed tray  12  is a shingle insert feed tray. Various numbers and types of detachable feed trays and associated feeder mechanism can be included in the vertical tower feed station  4 . The envelope transport path is depicted by the line  13  with arrowheads from detachable shingle envelope feed tray  4  through various subsystems to the insertion subsystem. 
   Although the detachable feed trays show in  FIGS. 1-3  are shown as having envelopes, sheets and inserts, each of these feed trays can feed other types of materials, which can be loaded (depending on the feed tray type) in a stacks or shingle orientation depending on the material involved. Thus, many types of material can be fed by any feed station mechanism. The materials can be, for example, pamphlets, brochures, return envelopes, cards, booklets, slips and checks. Moreover, permanent feed trays or bins of material to be processed can be part of the machine itself rather than detachable feed trays. Also, while identical feed mechanisms are shown for each of the four feeders  6 ,  8 ,  10  and  12  specifically designed feeders dedicated to processing particular materials can also be made part of the vertical tower feed station  4  if required for any particular application. 
   Each of the four feeder mechanisms such as feeder  14 , includes a feed head mechanism in the vertical tower and an associated detachable feed tray such as detachable feed tray  6 . The mechanisms in the vertical tower for each of the feeders are identical in structure, as previously noted; however, this does not need to be the case. When requirements dictate, the feeder and detachable or fixed materials feed tray or bin can be designed to accommodate specific materials and applications. The material (envelopes) in the detachable feed tray  6  are fed from the tray by the singulator arrangement including a drive roller  18  and retard roller  20 . The material is fed from the tray, as depicted by line  13 , along the feed head exit guide  22  by take away rollers  24  and associated idler roller  24   a  to a vertical common feed path  26  by the tower drive rollers  28 ,  30 , and  32 , with their associated idler rollers respectively  28   a ,  30   a , and  32   a.    
   As the material exits the vertical tower transport path  26 , it is moved onto the pre-fold accumulator drive belt arrangement shown generally at  40 . The material is driven by the drive belt  42 , which operates in conjunction with a series of idler rollers  44   a ,  46   a ,  48   a ,  50   a  and  52   a  to move the material toward the pre-fold accumulator gate  54 . The pre-fold accumulator gate  54  is selectively activated to accumulate material when in the blocking position. When in the non-blocking position as shown in  FIG. 1 , the pre-fold accumulator gate  54  allows accumulated material or non accumulated materials, as the case may be, to pass by the pre-fold accumulator gate  54  to other subsystems in the machine. The material, after passing the pre-fold accumulator gate  54  (when it is in its non-blocking position), will be transported through one of three transport paths to the insertion subsystem  55 : the folding subsystem shown generally at  56 ; the folder bypass path  57  and the post accumulator transport path  58 ; or the folder bypass path  57  and the envelope transport path  60 . The path of travel of the materials depends on the position of the fold/no fold bypass gate  62  and the envelope bypass gate  64 . 
   Fold/no fold bypass gate  62  is selectively activated to divert material from the pre-fold accumulator drive arrangement  40  into the folder subsystem  56  and thereafter to the post accumulator transport path  58  or to bypass the folder subsystem  56 . When the fold/no fold bypass gate  62  is positioned to bypass the folder subsystem  56 , material from the pre-fold accumulator drive arrangement  40  may be transported onto the post fold accumulator transport path as shown in  FIG. 3  or onto the envelope transport path as shown in  FIG. 1 . The transport path as shown in  FIG. 3  from detachable shingle feed tray  12  to the insertion subsystem  55  depicted by the line  65  with arrowheads with the envelope bypass gate  64  is positioned so as not to divert materials being transported into the envelope transport path  60 . For the transport path  13  shown in  FIG. 1 , the envelope bypass gate  64  is positioned so as to divert materials being transported into the envelope transport path  60 . 
   Where the envelope bypass gate  64  is selectively positioned to divert materials (envelopes) to move from the pre-fold accumulator transport arrangement  40  to the envelope transport path  60 , the envelope follows the path of travel as depicted by the line  13  through the envelope flap flapper subsystem  66 . In the flapper subsystem  66  the envelope flap is opened by the action of controlled drive roller  68  and idler roller  68   a  along with flapper roller  70  and flapper idler roller  70   a . The drive roller  68  is controlled to stop and reverse direction of rotation so as to transport the envelope with its flap open and trailing the body of the envelope. The envelope is transported toward the insertion subsystem  55  as depicted by line  13 . 
   As is more clearly shown in  FIG. 5 , from the insertion subsystem  55 , oversized envelopes with their materials, or stiff letter size envelopes or other materials, depending on the particular application, are moved along the flats envelope transport path depicted by line  71  with arrowheads to exit the machine. Letter-size envelopes, as shown in  FIG. 4 , are transported along the curved letter size envelope transport path depicted by line  73  with arrowheads to exit the machine. Over size materials are often referred to as flats. In the United States, mail pieces are considered to be flats when the mail piece exceeds at least one of the dimensional regulations of letter-sized mail (e.g. over 11.5 inches long, over 6 inches tall, or over ¼ inch thick) but does not exceed 15 inches by 11.5 by ¾ inch thick. Flats include such mail as pamphlets, annual reports and the like. It should be recognized that what constitutes letter sized mail pieces and oversized mail pieces varies from country to country. Moreover, the dimensions of the folder inserter system  2 , such as the dimensions of the various transport paths and machine exits, can be designed to accommodate different sized items. Thus, “letter size” and “flats” terminology are used for convenience are not required sizes for the system to operate properly. The system  2  is capable of processing ranges of materials of differing size in the different transport paths. 
   Line  75  with arrowheads in  FIG. 2  depicts the transport path for material to be folded by the system from the detachable stacks feed tray  10  to the insertion subsystem  55 . Material to be folded are shown as being moved from the detachable stack feed tray  10  in the direction of line  75  transported along the vertical tower common feed path  26 , the pre-fold accumulator transport arrangement  40  and, whether or not accumulated into multiple materials such as sheets, past the fold/no fold bypass gate  62  into the folder subsystem  56 . In folder subsystem  56  the material is folded in folders  74  and  76  by controlled rollers or by other conventional means such as buckle chutes. It should be recognized that other materials processing subsystems can be employed with or replace the folder subsystem  56 . Examples of such other subsystems are printing subsystems, paper perforation subsystems, stapling subsystems, hole punch subsystems and the like. 
   Materials are selectively moved from the various feeders onto the common transport path  26  and onto the pre-fold accumulator drive belt transport  42 . Depending on the particular materials and process to be implemented, three separate transport paths are provided to the insertion subsystem  55 . The materials may be selectively transported into the folder subsystem  56  or directed for ongoing transport depending on the position of the fold/no fold bypass gate  62 . Materials directed for ongoing transport will either: travel along the folder bypass path  57  and the post accumulator transport as shown in  FIG. 3  (portion of line  65  to the right of envelope bypass gate  64 ); or, as shown in  FIG. 1  along the folder bypass path  57  and the envelope transport path  60  (portion of line  13  to the right of envelope bypass gate  64 ). The path of travel for this material directed for ongoing transport depends on the position of the envelope bypass gate  64 . Thus all materials are transported along a common transport path and then selectively directed onto one of three different transport paths as they are moved to the insertion subsystem  55 . This transport arrangement from a common feed area to the insertion subsystem provides enhanced flexibility of operation of the system and facilitates the utilization of a common feed area. 
   The material exits the folder subsystem  56  and is transported along the post-fold accumulator transport  58  by the post fold accumulator transport belt  59  and its associated rollers idler  61   a ,  63   a  and  67   a  to the insertion subsystem  55 . The material traveling along the transport path depicted by line  75  ( FIG. 2 ), or as the case may be, line  65  ( FIG. 3 ), is controlled to accumulate as illustrated by the portion  75   a  of line  75  and  65   a  of line  65 , as the case may be. This is achieved by stopping the rotation of controllable drive rollers  78  and thus stopping the movement of the materials through the nip of controllable drive rollers  78  and idler roller  78   a  when desired to accumulate material. The material or accumulated material is driven into the envelope  80 , shown at the insertion subsystem  55  with the envelope flap  80   b  positioned around the envelope positioning roller  82  and the body of the envelope  80   c  having the address or window side of the envelope facing downward. The throat of the envelope  80   d  is extended by mechanical fingers, not shown, to enable insertion of the material into the envelope  80 . 
   After the material is inserted into the envelope  80  as shown in  FIGS. 2 and 4 , the envelope exit drive rollers  86  and  88 , in conjunction with idler rollers  86   a  and  88   a , drive the envelope along the insertion deck  90  past an envelope flap glue line moistener subsystem shown generally at  92 . A flats bypass gate  94  is shown positioned to cause an envelope, when driven along the insertion deck  90 , to move along the curved envelope letter size transport path as depicted by line  73 . The moistener subsystem  92  can be any of a variety of standard moistening arrangements to moisten the envelope flap glue line for sealing to the body of the envelope. As an envelope is driven into and along the curved letter transport path, the envelope is driven by a series of drive rollers  98 ,  100 ,  102 ,  104  and  106  and associated idler rollers  98   a ,  100   a ,  102   a ,  104   a  and  106   a.    
   When an envelope body  80   c  is captured between drive roller  104  and its corresponding idler roller  104   a , at a particular point, depending upon the size of the envelope, driver roller  104  will stop and reverse direction of rotation. The direction of rotation is reversed to drive the envelope to exit the machine along the letter size exit transport path as depicted by line  108  with arrowheads. The envelope flap  80   b  is caused to move against the body of the envelope  80   c  and is sealed in the sealer subsystem  110  by the force of drive roller  106  and sealer idler roller  106   a . In this manner, a letter size envelope is transported from the insertion subsystem  55  along the curved letter size transport path into the sealer subsystem  110  and then along the letter size envelope exit transport path  108 . The envelope body  80   c  exits the machine exit  107  into the letter stacker  112  the along the exit transport path  108 . The envelope exits the machine with the address or window side of the envelope facing upward. This is a reversal of the orientation of the body of the envelope  80   c  from the envelope body orientation at the insertion subsystem  55 . This change in orientation to exit the machine with the address or window side of the envelope body facing upward, facilitates further processing of the envelope, such as by a mailing machine or other device, stacker, printer, scanner and the like. If the envelope or other material is to be rejected for some reason, the envelope drive roller  104  would not change direction and the material would be caused to exit the machine along reject transport path  114 , through the reject exit  115  to a reject bin, not shown. 
   Line  71  with arrowheads depicts an envelope path of travel for a flats type envelope  80 F from the insertion subsystem  55  being transported along insertion deck  90  past the moistener subsystem  92  and being directed by the flats bypass gate  94  through the flats exit  120  and into the flats stacker  122 . The flats envelope  80 F is transported from a suitable detachable feed tray to the insertion subsystem  55  along the transport path depicted by line  13 . The designations  80 Fb,  80 Fc and  80 Fd correspond to letter size envelope  80  part designations Without inserts, the flats envelope  80 F is sufficiently flexible to accommodate the curved portions of the transport path  13 . The exit transport path depicted by line  71  may be employed for various materials depending on the application. For example, a stiff letter size envelope that is not sufficiently flexible with the inserts to be transported along the curved letter size transport may be directed along exit transport path  71 . As can be seen, the flats bypass gate  94  is positioned in  FIG. 5  to cause the flats material to be driven along the flats exit transport path  71  to exit the flats exit  120  into the flats stacker  122 . It should be noted that in this embodiment, the flats envelope flap is not sealed. A sealer can be added at the flats path exit  120  or at another suitable point in the machine to operate independently or in conjunction with moistener subsystem  92 , depending upon the particular design of the system. 
   From the insertion subsystem  55 , three transport paths and three separate exit paths are provided and utilized depending on the nature of the material and the process to be achieved. The material can, as is shown in  FIG. 5 , move along the insertion deck  90 , the flats transport path  71  and through flats exit  120  into stacker  122 . This is a straight transport path. The material can as is shown in  FIG. 4 , pass along the insertion deck  90 , along curved letter size transport path  73 , exit transport path  108  and through letter exit  107  into stacker  112 . The material can, as is shown in  FIG. 4 , pass along the insertion deck  90 , along curved letter size transport path  73 , reject transport path  114  and through reject exit  115  into a reject bin not shown. This combination of transport exit paths provides enhanced flexibility of the operation of the system. 
   It should be recognized while specific belt and drive roller transport arrangements are shown in  FIGS. 1-5 , other suitable transport arrangements can be employed. Moreover, the orientation, shape and arrangement of the various transport paths can be modified to accommodate different types of materials and applications. Also, the various subsystems can be replaced by different conventional subsystems or by other materials processing subsystems. Thus, while the present invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiment, but, on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.

Technology Category: b