US3928753A - Small object counting apparatus - Google Patents

Small object counting apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3928753A
US3928753A US435499A US43549974A US3928753A US 3928753 A US3928753 A US 3928753A US 435499 A US435499 A US 435499A US 43549974 A US43549974 A US 43549974A US 3928753 A US3928753 A US 3928753A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
drum
objects
hopper
pick
channels
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US435499A
Inventor
William D Kivett
Robert J Champion
Jesse P T Harris
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AMPAK Inc A CORP OF DE
ENGINEERING DEV ASSOCIATES Inc
ENGINEERING DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATES Inc
Original Assignee
ENGINEERING DEV ASSOCIATES Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by ENGINEERING DEV ASSOCIATES Inc filed Critical ENGINEERING DEV ASSOCIATES Inc
Priority to US435499A priority Critical patent/US3928753A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3928753A publication Critical patent/US3928753A/en
Assigned to NORDSON CORPORATION reassignment NORDSON CORPORATION MERGER (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: DOMAIN INDUSTRIES, INC.
Assigned to AMPAK, INC., A CORP. OF DE. reassignment AMPAK, INC., A CORP. OF DE. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST. EFFECTIVE DATE: OCTOBER 27, 1988. SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS Assignors: NORDSON CORPORATION
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06MCOUNTING MECHANISMS; COUNTING OF OBJECTS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G06M1/00Design features of general application
    • G06M1/08Design features of general application for actuating the drive
    • G06M1/10Design features of general application for actuating the drive by electric or magnetic means
    • G06M1/101Design features of general application for actuating the drive by electric or magnetic means by electro-optical means
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06MCOUNTING MECHANISMS; COUNTING OF OBJECTS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G06M7/00Counting of objects carried by a conveyor

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT Small objects such as pharmaceutical capsules from a production stream, are counted with speed and accuracy.
  • the objects are delivered to a hopper from which they are picked up by a rotating suction drum and transported through an orientation means to an object pick-off or drum stripping means. Following separation from the drum, the objects pass sequentially through an electro-optical sensing device which delivers electrical pulses to an electronic counter means which has the ability to display both count and rate of count.
  • the counted objects are delivered to a suitable batch container.
  • an apparatus or machine for this purpose should be capable of counting the various small objects at rates in the range of 200,000 per hour and with a typical accuracy of plus or minus 0.01%.
  • the apparatus should be able to handle a range of object sizes and shapes as well as objects possessing different degrees of translucency. In the interest of economy, the apparatus should occupy only a minimum of floor space which, in the case of the invention, is only 2 square feet approximately. It should be easy to operate with a minimum number of simplified controls and should possess an ability to visually display both the object count and the rate of count.
  • the apparatus should also have the ability to process gelatin capsules and the like without damaging them in any way.
  • the invention actually cleans the product during the counting process by removal of dust and product deionization.
  • the apparatus should also be reasonably rugged and durable and should require minimum maintenance. In furtherance of these two objectives, the present invention features an absence of vibratory components which naturally tend over a long period of time to destroy a machine.
  • the object of the invention is to provide a small object counting apparatus which possesses all of the above-enumerated desirable features, plus others that will become apparent during the course of the following detailed description.
  • the invention for example, embodies a unique mechanical arrangement and coacting electrical controls whereby the statistical chance for simultaneous occurrence of electrical pulses being delivered to a counter by the electro-optical sensor is reduced substantially to zero.
  • Another unique feature of the invention resides in the provision of a slow-acting automatic intensity control circuit which adjusts the brightness of each individual light source to maintain just enough brightness to be detectable at the associated phototransistor. This allows faithful detection of transparent objects which may produce only partial light beam interruption as well as objects having a greater degree of opacity.
  • Another significant feature of the invention embodied in the controls thereof is the ability of the apparatus to count objects up yto within a small number, typically 20, of a desired total, and then to automatically slow down drum rotation to provide a mere trickle count up to the exact total, whereupon the object transporting drum is stopped and the flow of objects into the hopper may also be stopped upon reaching the desired count.
  • the appparatus embodying the invention possesses flexibility of operation and control, simplicity, compactness and economy, both in terms of manufacturing and usage including maintenance.
  • FIG. l is a perspective view of an apparatus for counting small objects in accordance with the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a fragmentary perspective view of the apparatus
  • FIG. 3 is a fragmentary vertical section taken through a rotary suction drum, hollow shaft and associated parts;
  • FIG. 4 is a fragmentary vertical section taken transversely through the drum, object sensing unit and other associated parts;
  • FIG. 5 is an enlarged fragmentary cross section through the sensing unit taken on line 5-5 of FIG. 4;
  • FIG. 6 is a fragmentary exploded perspective view showing elements of the electro-optical sensing unit.
  • FIG. 7 is a schematic view of a circuit for automatically adjusting the brightness of light sources in the object sensing unit in accordance with variations in the translucency of objects being counted.
  • FIG. 1 embodies a floormounted housing 10 to enclose a rotary drum drive motor and associated controls and the like, to be described.
  • the central section of the apparatus including frame sides 11 which form a partial enclosure for the small object supply, transporting and pick-off means, all to be described in detail.
  • this section of the apparatus and mounted thereon is an ionization chamber or section 12, and on top of this is mounted the object counter and display unit of the invention designated generally by the numeral 13.
  • the entire apparatus is typically constructed to be no more than about 40 inches in height by about 20 inches wide by approximately 20-inches deep, front-to-back. The apparatus is therefore very compact so that it will occupy the absolute minimum of floor space.
  • a horizontal axis rotating transport drum 14 for the small objects being counted and the opposite end plates 1S of the drum carry shaft sections 16, one of which is hollow with a through bore 17, as shown in FIG. 3.
  • the opposite end shaft section 16, FIG. 4 is solid.
  • a pair of axially aligned bearings 18 for the drum shaft sections 16 are securely mounted as at 19 through a rigid plate on the outer sides of frame elements ll.
  • the hollow shaft section 17 projecting from one end of the drum 14, FIG. 3, is enclosed by a cup-like housing 20 snugly fitted on the adjacent bearing 18.
  • a tubular sleeve 2l secured to the housing 20 is adapted to connect to any external source of vacuum, not shown in the drawings.
  • the hollow drum 14 which is subjected to vacuum through the hollow shaft 17 during rotation is provided with a plurality of equidistantly circumferentially spaced spiral rows of small suction apertures 22.
  • the suction transport drum 14 may have six spiral rows of apertures with ten apertures per row, and each adjacent pair of apertures separated circumferentially of the drum by 6. The importance of the spiral rows of apertures is in connection with the delivery of individual small objects sequentially and nonsimultaneously to pick-off channels, yet to be described.
  • the drum 14 rotates during the operation of the apparatus under the influence of a drive pully 23 connected to the solid shaft end of the drum, the pulley being connected with a transmission belt 24, in turn driven by an electric motor 25 contained within the housing together with a motor control assembly 26 shown diagrammatically in FIG. 2.
  • inclined hopper tray 27 at the product input side of the drum 14 is suitably supported between the frame sections ll with its leading transverse edge 28 disposed close to the periphery of the drum 14 somewhat below the horizontal rotational axis thereof.
  • the hopper tray receives gelatin capsules or like small articles directly from a production stream, and the product readily gravitates down the inclined tray to pile up in a mass behind the rotating suction drum.
  • a single inclined comb-like orientation plate 29 having equidistantly spaced slots 30 is fixedly and interchangeably mounted between the frame sides ll.
  • the slots 30 correspond in number to the apertures 22 of each spiral row of apertures and one slot 30 is aligned with one aperture of each row.
  • the slotted member 29 will allow the passage of one and only one capsule beyond it and any other objects which might be adhering to the drum will be rejected and will fall back into the tray or hopper.
  • the slots 30 are sized, therefore, to allow passage through them of only one object at a time of a given size.
  • the plate 29 may be replaced in the apparatus by different plates having different sizes of slots so that the apparatus may be capable of counting various small objects differing in shape and size.
  • the lower edge of the plate 29 is disposed close to the periphery of the rotating drum.
  • ionization chamber l2 Located above the slotted member or plate 29 is the aforementioned ionization chamber l2 which is a box-like housing having a bottom wall 3l provided with a plurality of transversely elongated slots 32, most of which are above the hopper portion of the apparatus but several of which are on the downstream side of the plate 29 remote from the hopper.
  • a stationary metal plate 33 within the ionization chamber 12 is connected by a wire 34 with an AC high voltage source 35.
  • the wire 34 may extend through a conduit 36 receiving forced air from a suitable blower, not shown. Such air is delivered into the ionization chamber and picks up charged ions from a multitude of dependent needles 37 on the plate 33.
  • the ionization means serves several important purposes simultaneously during the operation of the apparatus.
  • an object pick-off and sensing assembly designated broadly by the numeral 38.
  • This is a very essential and important component of the invention and it includes a fixed pick-off bar 39 having plural parallel equidistantly spaced channels or troughs 40 formed therein corresponding in number and spacing with the slots and the apertures 22 in each spiral row.
  • the product intake end 41 of the pick-off bar 39 is arranged close to the periphery of the drum so that the pick-off bar will scrape off and remove the capsules being transported by the suction apertures 22.
  • One capsule or object will be separated from each aperture 22 and will be delivered to one of the channels of the pick-off bar, which channels are inclined so that the small objects therein will gravitate downwardly.
  • a relatively shorter inverted and mating pick-off bar cover 42 is fixedly mounted thereon and this cover has inverted channels 43 which register in assembly with the channels 40, see FIG. 5. Openings 44, for a purpose to be described, are formed through the top of the pick-off bar cover, and the top of the cover also has a continuous longitudinal recess 45 parallel to the drum axis for receiving and seating a tranparent plate 46 in covering relation to the openings 44.
  • the pick-off bar 39 near its lower discharge end has slots 47 leading from its channels or troughs 40 and adjacent these slots the bottom of the pick-off bar 39 has a recess 48 similar to the recess 45 to receive and seat another transparent plate 49.
  • Channels bars 50 facing in opposite directions, FIG. 4, are secured to the top and bottom, respectively, of cover 42 and pick-off bar 39 and these channel bars receive spacer plates 51 which are apertured at 52 adjacent to each slot 47 of the pick-off bar and each opening 44 of the pick-off bar cover 42.
  • the channel bars 50 are similarly apertured at 53 in alignment with the apertures 52, as clearly shown in FIG. 5.
  • Circuit panels 54 such as printed circuit elements, are mounted above and below the two spacers 51 in the electro-optical sensor which forms a part of the assembly 38.
  • the upper panel 54 carries a plurality of infrared light point sources 55 corresponding in number to the channels or tunnels formed by the opposing pickoff bar 39 and cover 42, as shown in FIG. 5.
  • the lower panel 54 carries a like number of phototransistors 56 or equivalent elements and these phototransistors are optically aligned through the described openings and transparent plates 46 and 49 so that the phototransistors may be sensitive to infrared light generated by the sources 55 or the interruption of such light beams by capsules gravitating through the inclined tunnels designated 57 in FIGS. 4 and 5.
  • the upper and lower units of the electro-optical sensing means are enclosed and protected by suitable covers 58.
  • the aforementioned counter and display assembly 13 at the top of the ionization chamber l2 is essentially conventional equipment like the motor control assembly 26 and need not be described in any great detail. It accepts the electrical signals generated by the described electro-optical sensing means of the pick-off assembly 38 which occur somewhat sequentially due to the spiral arrangement of apertures rows 22. Processing of these signals in the unit 13 to assure non-simultaneous occurrence is conventionally carried out.
  • An electronic counter and comparator means allows totalization of the counted objects and comparison of the total with a preselected number.
  • a precount counter of the unit 13 senses when the count of the objects is within a small number, typically twenty, of a desired total.
  • Outputs from the counter assembly 13 to motor control assembly 26 allow stopping of the drum 14, and auxiliary outputs will stop the flow of objects to the input hopper 27 when the desired count is reached.
  • An internal time base in conjunction with another counter circuit allows display of the object passage rate in thousands per hour with an averaging time of typically 30 seconds.
  • the motor control assembly 26 allows interfacing between drum drive motor 25 and the counter assembly outputs, as well as providing a manually adjustable drum drive speed.
  • a notable feature of the invention resides in the ability of the sensing unit 38 to compensate automatically for any variations in the translucency of the light paths between the elements 55 and 56 caused by dust accumulating on the plates 46 or for similar reasons. This feature enables the apparatus to count objectsv having different degrees of translucency.
  • This important feature is embodied in the electronic circuit illustrated in FIG. 7 of the drawings. Referring to this figure, the light emitter or point source 55 illuminates phototransistor 56 across one of the viewing channels 40, FIG. 5. The phototransistor 56 conducts, causing the voltage at ⁇ the base of a transistor 59 to decrease toward zero volts. Transistor 59 is an emitter-follower, whereby the voltage at its emitter is equal to its base voltage minus 0.7v. This emitter voltage is fed through the time constant networkcomposed of capacitor 60 and resistors 61 and 62 to transistor 63. 1
  • This transistor 63 conducts current through another resistor 64 and light emitter 55.
  • the amount of conduction current and thus the intensity of brightness is proportional to the voltage applied to the time constant network.
  • the time constant network is adjusted so that the source current can respond only to slowly varying changes in time constant input voltages, typically more slowly than about 2 seconds.
  • the brightness is automatically adjusted to maintain about +I .l volts at the emitter of transistor 59. This is +1 .l volts is also coupled through diode 65 and resistors 66 and 67 to produce about +0.4 volts at the base of second transistor 68. This +0.4 volts is too small' to cause conduction of transistor 68, and its collector voltage is about volts. If an object 69, such as vpharmaceutical capsule, rapidly interrupts the beam between infrared light emitter 55 and phototransistor 56, the voltage at the base and emitter of transistor 59 increases toward +5 volts. If the time of interruption of the light beam is of the order of a fraction of a second, no change in the light source brightness is produced through transistor 63 because of its relatively long time constant.
  • the increasing voltage at transistor 59 emitter is also coupled through diode 65 to the base of transistor 68. If the increase is as much as 0.3 volts, this transistor will conduct to a saturation point. Its collector voltage then changes rapidly from +5 volts to near 0 volts.
  • This change to 0 volts triggers integrated circuit 70. Once triggered, this circuit generates one pulse at its pin numbered 8 of a fixed time duration. This time duration, set by capacitor 7l and resistor 72, typically 70 milliseconds, is designed to be longer than the maximum interruption time of the object 69 being counted as it passes between the elements 55 and 56. This insures that only one fixed time pulse at the pin num- 'bered 8 of element 70is generated for each beam interruption.
  • Integrated circuit 73 is arranged as a differentiator, forming one very short duration pulse which occurs at the positive-going transition of the millisecond input pulse, before mentioned.
  • the output zero-going pulse is typically 70 l09 seconds.
  • Objects such as capsules 69 enter the hopper formed by tray 27 and adjacent side walls from a production stream, and are picked up at the suction ports 22 of the rotating transport drum 14.
  • a comb-like element 29 strips excess picked-up objects from each suction port, so that only one object will be transported by one port beyond the element 29.
  • Static charges and dust are removed from the objects during pick-up and transport, both by the overhead ionized air bath from slots 32 and the vacuum being drawn through the ports 22.
  • the objects are carried by the drum 14 to the pickoff and sensing assembly 38 where they are scraped from the drum at 41.
  • FIG. 4 and slide through the viewing channels 40 of pick-off bar 39 with an air-assist from the overhead chamber 12.
  • the generally sequential pasaage ofy objects through the channels 40 produces sequential beam interruptions between the elements SSand 56 of each channel and sequential electrical pulses into the counter assembly 13. These pulses may overlap in time due to various uncertainties involved in object passage through the channels 40. However, the beginning of occurrence of the pulses, occupying an extremely brief period of time, is utilized. Statistically, the chance of simultaneous occurrence of the beginning pulse of any one channel with that of another channel, and thus not being distinguishable as two separate counts, is virtually zero. Consequently, these short beginning pulses are serially counted in one direct electronic counter. ⁇
  • This process continues with the drum 14 rotating at a selected fast speed, picking up and discharging objects through the channels 40, and with the count accumulating until reaching a count of, typically, 2O less than the quantity selected by the front panel switches on counter assembly 13, see FIG. l. At this count, signals are sent out by the counter assembly to slow down drum rotation and interrupt the object input drive system, not shown. The action continues as before, but at a greatly reduced speed until exactly the desired object count is obtained. At this time, the drum drive is caused to stop completely.
  • An apparatus for counting large quantities of small objects with accuracy comprising an object infeed hopper, a horizontal axis object transport drum having plural spiral rows of suction ports mounted for rotation at the object discharge end of the hopper, means to turn the drum on its horizontal axis in one direction, means to create a partial vacuum in the drum during its rotation so that said suction ports may pick up objects from the hopper, an excess object rejection device tixedly mounted relative to the periphery of the drum and spaced from the hopper and allowing only one object to be transported by each suction port of the drum beyond said device, an object pick-oft ⁇ member fixedly mounted at the side of the drum remote from the hopper and spaced from said device and having inclined object guidance channels corresponding in number to the number of suction ports in each spiral row on said drum, said pick-off member removing objects from said suction ports with a scraping action during rotation of the drum and causing such objects to slide through said channels, electro-optical object sensors on the pick-off member adjacent to each channel thereof responding to the sequential
  • An apparatus for counting large quantities of small objects with accuracy comprising an object infeed hopper, a horizontal axis object transport drum having plural spiral rows of suction ports mounted for rotation at the object discharge end of the hopper, means to turn the drum on its horizontal axis in one direction, means to create a partial vacuum in the drum during its rotation so that said suction ports may pick up objects from the hopper, an excess object rejection device xedly mounted relative to the periphery of the drum and spaced from the hopper and allowing only one object to be transported by each suction port of the drum beyond said device, an object pick-off member tixedly mounted at the side of the drum remote from the hopper and spaced from said device and having inclined object guidance channels corresponding in number to the number of suction ports in each spiral row on said drum, said pick-off member removing objects from said suction ports with a scraping action during rotation of the drum and causing such objects to slide through said channels, electro-optical object sensors on the pick-off member adjacent to each channel thereof responding to the sequential passage
  • said brightness control circuit additionally comprising a single pulse generator which generates a pulse of a longer time duration than the maximum light beam interruption time of an object being counted thus insuring that only a single fixed time pulse is generated for each beam interruption, said brightness control circuit additionally comprising a differentiator circuit adapted to form short duration pulses which may be gated into a single counter circuit.

Abstract

Small objects, such as pharmaceutical capsules from a production stream, are counted with speed and accuracy. The objects are delivered to a hopper from which they are picked up by a rotating suction drum and transported through an orientation means to an object pick-off or drum stripping means. Following separation from the drum, the objects pass sequentially through an electrooptical sensing device which delivers electrical pulses to an electronic counter means which has the ability to display both count and rate of count. The counted objects are delivered to a suitable batch container.

Description

United States Patent Kivett et al.
SMALL OBJECT COUNTING APPARATUS Inventors: William D. Kivett, Taylors; Robert J. Champion; Jesse P. T. Harris, both of Greenville, all of S.C.
Engineering Development Associates, Incorporated, Mauldin, S.C.
Filed: Jan. 22, 1974 Appl. No.: 435,499
Assignee:
U.S. Cl. 23S/92 PK; 2.35/92 V; 23S/92 R; 235/98 C; 221/211 Int. Cl.2 G06M 3/00 Field of Search 23S/92 PK, 98 C, 92 V; 221/211, 7; 198/287 References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 9/1936 Hanson 22l/2l1 [2/1939 Day ..221/21] Chilson 221/2] 1 [45] Dec. 23, 1975 2,632,588 3/1953 Hoar 23S/92 PK 3,206,062 9/1965 Rappaport 221/211 3,285,387 11/1966 Ochs 198/287 3,789,194 1/1974 Kirby 235/92 PK Primary Examiner-Joseph M. Thesz, Jr. Attorney, Agent, or Firm-B. P. Fishbume, Jr.
[57] ABSTRACT Small objects, such as pharmaceutical capsules from a production stream, are counted with speed and accuracy. The objects are delivered to a hopper from which they are picked up by a rotating suction drum and transported through an orientation means to an object pick-off or drum stripping means. Following separation from the drum, the objects pass sequentially through an electro-optical sensing device which delivers electrical pulses to an electronic counter means which has the ability to display both count and rate of count. The counted objects are delivered to a suitable batch container.
4 Claims, 7 Drawing Figures US. Patent Dec. 23, 1975 sheet10f4 fl G I RUN Hom STOP POWER iN/UWM I um www U.S. Patent Dec.23, 1975 sheet20f4 3,928,753
SMALL OBJECT COUNTING APPARATUS BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The pharmaceutical industry, due to an ever-increasing demand for more reliable and uniform products, is experiencing an increasing need for automation processing and handling equipment. Among the specific needs being encountered by the industry is the necessity for a high speed apparatus to receive gelatin capsules or medicinal tablets from a production stream and to count them accurately in great number while delivering them to suitable batch containers.
Ideally, an apparatus or machine for this purposeshould be capable of counting the various small objects at rates in the range of 200,000 per hour and with a typical accuracy of plus or minus 0.01%. The apparatus should be able to handle a range of object sizes and shapes as well as objects possessing different degrees of translucency. In the interest of economy, the apparatus should occupy only a minimum of floor space which, in the case of the invention, is only 2 square feet approximately. It should be easy to operate with a minimum number of simplified controls and should possess an ability to visually display both the object count and the rate of count. The apparatus should also have the ability to process gelatin capsules and the like without damaging them in any way. The invention actually cleans the product during the counting process by removal of dust and product deionization. The apparatus should also be reasonably rugged and durable and should require minimum maintenance. In furtherance of these two objectives, the present invention features an absence of vibratory components which naturally tend over a long period of time to destroy a machine.
Accordingly, the object of the invention is to provide a small object counting apparatus which possesses all of the above-enumerated desirable features, plus others that will become apparent during the course of the following detailed description. The invention, for example, embodies a unique mechanical arrangement and coacting electrical controls whereby the statistical chance for simultaneous occurrence of electrical pulses being delivered to a counter by the electro-optical sensor is reduced substantially to zero. Another unique feature of the invention resides in the provision of a slow-acting automatic intensity control circuit which adjusts the brightness of each individual light source to maintain just enough brightness to be detectable at the associated phototransistor. This allows faithful detection of transparent objects which may produce only partial light beam interruption as well as objects having a greater degree of opacity.
Another significant feature of the invention embodied in the controls thereof is the ability of the apparatus to count objects up yto within a small number, typically 20, of a desired total, and then to automatically slow down drum rotation to provide a mere trickle count up to the exact total, whereupon the object transporting drum is stopped and the flow of objects into the hopper may also be stopped upon reaching the desired count. In general, the appparatus embodying the invention possesses flexibility of operation and control, simplicity, compactness and economy, both in terms of manufacturing and usage including maintenance.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWING FIGURES FIG. l is a perspective view of an apparatus for counting small objects in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a fragmentary perspective view of the apparatus;
FIG. 3 is a fragmentary vertical section taken through a rotary suction drum, hollow shaft and associated parts;
FIG. 4 is a fragmentary vertical section taken transversely through the drum, object sensing unit and other associated parts;
FIG. 5 is an enlarged fragmentary cross section through the sensing unit taken on line 5-5 of FIG. 4;
FIG. 6 is a fragmentary exploded perspective view showing elements of the electro-optical sensing unit; and
FIG. 7 is a schematic view of a circuit for automatically adjusting the brightness of light sources in the object sensing unit in accordance with variations in the translucency of objects being counted.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION Referring to the drawings in detail wherein like numerals designate like parts throughout, the complete apparatus as depicted in FIG. 1 embodies a floormounted housing 10 to enclose a rotary drum drive motor and associated controls and the like, to be described. Above the housing 10 is the central section of the apparatus including frame sides 11 which form a partial enclosure for the small object supply, transporting and pick-off means, all to be described in detail. Above this section of the apparatus and mounted thereon is an ionization chamber or section 12, and on top of this is mounted the object counter and display unit of the invention designated generally by the numeral 13. It may be pointed out here that the entire apparatus is typically constructed to be no more than about 40 inches in height by about 20 inches wide by approximately 20-inches deep, front-to-back. The apparatus is therefore very compact so that it will occupy the absolute minimum of floor space.
Mounted between the intermediate vertical frame sides l 1 or plates is a horizontal axis rotating transport drum 14 for the small objects being counted and the opposite end plates 1S of the drum carry shaft sections 16, one of which is hollow with a through bore 17, as shown in FIG. 3. The opposite end shaft section 16, FIG. 4, is solid. A pair of axially aligned bearings 18 for the drum shaft sections 16 are securely mounted as at 19 through a rigid plate on the outer sides of frame elements ll. The hollow shaft section 17 projecting from one end of the drum 14, FIG. 3, is enclosed by a cup-like housing 20 snugly fitted on the adjacent bearing 18. A tubular sleeve 2l secured to the housing 20 is adapted to connect to any external source of vacuum, not shown in the drawings.
As an important feature of the invention, the hollow drum 14 which is subjected to vacuum through the hollow shaft 17 during rotation is provided with a plurality of equidistantly circumferentially spaced spiral rows of small suction apertures 22. In the illustrated embodiment, the suction transport drum 14 may have six spiral rows of apertures with ten apertures per row, and each adjacent pair of apertures separated circumferentially of the drum by 6. The importance of the spiral rows of apertures is in connection with the delivery of individual small objects sequentially and nonsimultaneously to pick-off channels, yet to be described. The drum 14 rotates during the operation of the apparatus under the influence of a drive pully 23 connected to the solid shaft end of the drum, the pulley being connected with a transmission belt 24, in turn driven by an electric motor 25 contained within the housing together with a motor control assembly 26 shown diagrammatically in FIG. 2.
As inclined hopper tray 27 at the product input side of the drum 14 is suitably supported between the frame sections ll with its leading transverse edge 28 disposed close to the periphery of the drum 14 somewhat below the horizontal rotational axis thereof. The hopper tray receives gelatin capsules or like small articles directly from a production stream, and the product readily gravitates down the inclined tray to pile up in a mass behind the rotating suction drum.
At the top of the drum, a single inclined comb-like orientation plate 29 having equidistantly spaced slots 30 is fixedly and interchangeably mounted between the frame sides ll. The slots 30 correspond in number to the apertures 22 of each spiral row of apertures and one slot 30 is aligned with one aperture of each row. As an individual capsule or like small article in the tray 27 is picked up by one of the suction apertures 22 and conveyed upwardly by the drum, the slotted member 29 will allow the passage of one and only one capsule beyond it and any other objects which might be adhering to the drum will be rejected and will fall back into the tray or hopper. The slots 30 are sized, therefore, to allow passage through them of only one object at a time of a given size. The plate 29 may be replaced in the apparatus by different plates having different sizes of slots so that the apparatus may be capable of counting various small objects differing in shape and size. The lower edge of the plate 29 is disposed close to the periphery of the rotating drum.
Immediately above the slotted member or plate 29 is the aforementioned ionization chamber l2 which is a box-like housing having a bottom wall 3l provided with a plurality of transversely elongated slots 32, most of which are above the hopper portion of the apparatus but several of which are on the downstream side of the plate 29 remote from the hopper. A stationary metal plate 33 within the ionization chamber 12 is connected by a wire 34 with an AC high voltage source 35. The wire 34 may extend through a conduit 36 receiving forced air from a suitable blower, not shown. Such air is delivered into the ionization chamber and picks up charged ions from a multitude of dependent needles 37 on the plate 33. These charged ions travel through the exit slots 32 at the bottom of the ionization chamber and are sprayed onto the small objects being transported. This ionized air bath assists in removing any static charge and/or dust from the objects, tends to blow rejected objects back toward the hopper and away from the plate 29, agitates the objects resting in the hopper, and assists the objects in passing through channels of the pick-off means and electro-optical sensor, yet to be described. Therefore, the ionization means serves several important purposes simultaneously during the operation of the apparatus.
At the discharge side of the drum 14 remote from the hopper or tray 27, there is mounted in the intermediate section of the apparatus defined by the frame sides 11 an object pick-off and sensing assembly designated broadly by the numeral 38. This is a very essential and important component of the invention and it includes a fixed pick-off bar 39 having plural parallel equidistantly spaced channels or troughs 40 formed therein corresponding in number and spacing with the slots and the apertures 22 in each spiral row. The product intake end 41 of the pick-off bar 39 is arranged close to the periphery of the drum so that the pick-off bar will scrape off and remove the capsules being transported by the suction apertures 22. One capsule or object will be separated from each aperture 22 and will be delivered to one of the channels of the pick-off bar, which channels are inclined so that the small objects therein will gravitate downwardly.
Toward the discharge end of the pick-off bar 39, FIG. 4, a relatively shorter inverted and mating pick-off bar cover 42 is fixedly mounted thereon and this cover has inverted channels 43 which register in assembly with the channels 40, see FIG. 5. Openings 44, for a purpose to be described, are formed through the top of the pick-off bar cover, and the top of the cover also has a continuous longitudinal recess 45 parallel to the drum axis for receiving and seating a tranparent plate 46 in covering relation to the openings 44. Similarly, the pick-off bar 39 near its lower discharge end has slots 47 leading from its channels or troughs 40 and adjacent these slots the bottom of the pick-off bar 39 has a recess 48 similar to the recess 45 to receive and seat another transparent plate 49.
Channels bars 50 facing in opposite directions, FIG. 4, are secured to the top and bottom, respectively, of cover 42 and pick-off bar 39 and these channel bars receive spacer plates 51 which are apertured at 52 adjacent to each slot 47 of the pick-off bar and each opening 44 of the pick-off bar cover 42. The channel bars 50 are similarly apertured at 53 in alignment with the apertures 52, as clearly shown in FIG. 5.
Circuit panels 54, such as printed circuit elements, are mounted above and below the two spacers 51 in the electro-optical sensor which forms a part of the assembly 38. The upper panel 54 carries a plurality of infrared light point sources 55 corresponding in number to the channels or tunnels formed by the opposing pickoff bar 39 and cover 42, as shown in FIG. 5. Similarly, the lower panel 54 carries a like number of phototransistors 56 or equivalent elements and these phototransistors are optically aligned through the described openings and transparent plates 46 and 49 so that the phototransistors may be sensitive to infrared light generated by the sources 55 or the interruption of such light beams by capsules gravitating through the inclined tunnels designated 57 in FIGS. 4 and 5. The upper and lower units of the electro-optical sensing means are enclosed and protected by suitable covers 58.
The aforementioned counter and display assembly 13 at the top of the ionization chamber l2 is essentially conventional equipment like the motor control assembly 26 and need not be described in any great detail. It accepts the electrical signals generated by the described electro-optical sensing means of the pick-off assembly 38 which occur somewhat sequentially due to the spiral arrangement of apertures rows 22. Processing of these signals in the unit 13 to assure non-simultaneous occurrence is conventionally carried out. An electronic counter and comparator means allows totalization of the counted objects and comparison of the total with a preselected number. A precount counter of the unit 13 senses when the count of the objects is within a small number, typically twenty, of a desired total. This allows generation of a signal by the unit 13 to slow down drum rotation by motor control assembly 26 and allow a trickle count of objects up to exactly the desired count or total. Outputs from the counter assembly 13 to motor control assembly 26 allow stopping of the drum 14, and auxiliary outputs will stop the flow of objects to the input hopper 27 when the desired count is reached. An internal time base in conjunction with another counter circuit allows display of the object passage rate in thousands per hour with an averaging time of typically 30 seconds. The motor control assembly 26 allows interfacing between drum drive motor 25 and the counter assembly outputs, as well as providing a manually adjustable drum drive speed.
A notable feature of the invention resides in the ability of the sensing unit 38 to compensate automatically for any variations in the translucency of the light paths between the elements 55 and 56 caused by dust accumulating on the plates 46 or for similar reasons. This feature enables the apparatus to count objectsv having different degrees of translucency. This important feature is embodied in the electronic circuit illustrated in FIG. 7 of the drawings. Referring to this figure, the light emitter or point source 55 illuminates phototransistor 56 across one of the viewing channels 40, FIG. 5. The phototransistor 56 conducts, causing the voltage at` the base of a transistor 59 to decrease toward zero volts. Transistor 59 is an emitter-follower, whereby the voltage at its emitter is equal to its base voltage minus 0.7v. This emitter voltage is fed through the time constant networkcomposed of capacitor 60 and resistors 61 and 62 to transistor 63. 1
This transistor 63 conducts current through another resistor 64 and light emitter 55. The amount of conduction current and thus the intensity of brightness is proportional to the voltage applied to the time constant network. The time constant network is adjusted so that the source current can respond only to slowly varying changes in time constant input voltages, typically more slowly than about 2 seconds.
operation, the brightness is automatically adjusted to maintain about +I .l volts at the emitter of transistor 59. This is +1 .l volts is also coupled through diode 65 and resistors 66 and 67 to produce about +0.4 volts at the base of second transistor 68. This +0.4 volts is too small' to cause conduction of transistor 68, and its collector voltage is about volts. If an object 69, such as vpharmaceutical capsule, rapidly interrupts the beam between infrared light emitter 55 and phototransistor 56, the voltage at the base and emitter of transistor 59 increases toward +5 volts. If the time of interruption of the light beam is of the order of a fraction of a second, no change in the light source brightness is produced through transistor 63 because of its relatively long time constant.
The increasing voltage at transistor 59 emitter is also coupled through diode 65 to the base of transistor 68. If the increase is as much as 0.3 volts, this transistor will conduct to a saturation point. Its collector voltage then changes rapidly from +5 volts to near 0 volts.
This change to 0 volts triggers integrated circuit 70. Once triggered, this circuit generates one pulse at its pin numbered 8 of a fixed time duration. This time duration, set by capacitor 7l and resistor 72, typically 70 milliseconds, is designed to be longer than the maximum interruption time of the object 69 being counted as it passes between the elements 55 and 56. This insures that only one fixed time pulse at the pin num- 'bered 8 of element 70is generated for each beam interruption.
Integrated circuit 73 is arranged as a differentiator, forming one very short duration pulse which occurs at the positive-going transition of the millisecond input pulse, before mentioned. The output zero-going pulse is typically 70 l09 seconds.
Ten of the above-described automatic brightness control circuits are employed in the counting system. Output pulses from each circuit are parallel gated (summed) into one stream by other conventional circuits, not shown, and then fed to one counter circuit as a time-serial series of pulses to be counted, as indicated generally at 74 in FIG. 7. v
Summary of Operation Objects, such as capsules 69, enter the hopper formed by tray 27 and adjacent side walls from a production stream, and are picked up at the suction ports 22 of the rotating transport drum 14. A comb-like element 29 strips excess picked-up objects from each suction port, so that only one object will be transported by one port beyond the element 29. Static charges and dust are removed from the objects during pick-up and transport, both by the overhead ionized air bath from slots 32 and the vacuum being drawn through the ports 22.
The objects are carried by the drum 14 to the pickoff and sensing assembly 38 where they are scraped from the drum at 41. FIG. 4, and slide through the viewing channels 40 of pick-off bar 39 with an air-assist from the overhead chamber 12. The generally sequential pasaage ofy objects through the channels 40 produces sequential beam interruptions between the elements SSand 56 of each channel and sequential electrical pulses into the counter assembly 13. These pulses may overlap in time due to various uncertainties involved in object passage through the channels 40. However, the beginning of occurrence of the pulses, occupying an extremely brief period of time, is utilized. Statistically, the chance of simultaneous occurrence of the beginning pulse of any one channel with that of another channel, and thus not being distinguishable as two separate counts, is virtually zero. Consequently, these short beginning pulses are serially counted in one direct electronic counter.`
This process continues with the drum 14 rotating at a selected fast speed, picking up and discharging objects through the channels 40, and with the count accumulating until reaching a count of, typically, 2O less than the quantity selected by the front panel switches on counter assembly 13, see FIG. l. At this count, signals are sent out by the counter assembly to slow down drum rotation and interrupt the object input drive system, not shown. The action continues as before, but at a greatly reduced speed until exactly the desired object count is obtained. At this time, the drum drive is caused to stop completely.
During counting, the rate of object passage is visually displayed on the front panelof the counter assembly 13. Controls on the counter assembly allow manual starting, stopping of counter, pausing and, resuming operation without resetting the count.
It is to be understood that the form of the invention herewith shown and described is to be taken as a preferred example of the same, and that various changes in the shape, size and arrangement of parts may be resorted to, without departing from the spirit of the in vention or scope of the subjoined claims.
We claim:
l. An apparatus for counting large quantities of small objects with accuracy comprising an object infeed hopper, a horizontal axis object transport drum having plural spiral rows of suction ports mounted for rotation at the object discharge end of the hopper, means to turn the drum on its horizontal axis in one direction, means to create a partial vacuum in the drum during its rotation so that said suction ports may pick up objects from the hopper, an excess object rejection device tixedly mounted relative to the periphery of the drum and spaced from the hopper and allowing only one object to be transported by each suction port of the drum beyond said device, an object pick-oft` member fixedly mounted at the side of the drum remote from the hopper and spaced from said device and having inclined object guidance channels corresponding in number to the number of suction ports in each spiral row on said drum, said pick-off member removing objects from said suction ports with a scraping action during rotation of the drum and causing such objects to slide through said channels, electro-optical object sensors on the pick-off member adjacent to each channel thereof responding to the sequential passage of objects through the channels and producing sequential electrical pulses representative of the number of objects passing through the channels, counter means electrically coupled to said electro-optical sensors for totalizing the number of objects sequentially passing through all of said channels until a present count is obtained, means arranged above said hopper, drum and pick-off member for directing ionized air downwardly to agitate and clean objects resting in the hopper and for aiding the passage of objects through said object guidance channels, and said last-named means comprising an ionization chamber having a slotted bottom wall, a metal plate having a multiplicity of dependent needles positioned within said chamber above said slotted bottom wall, means for applying high voltage alternating current to said plate, and means for directing air forcibly into said chamber.
2. The apparatus of claim l, and said excess object rejection device comprising a comb-like member extending axially of said drum for substantially its entire length and having' plural equidistantly spaced equal width slots formed therein and said slots corresponding in number to the suction ports in each spiral row and aligned with the ports circumferentially of the drum.
3. An apparatus for counting large quantities of small objects with accuracy comprising an object infeed hopper, a horizontal axis object transport drum having plural spiral rows of suction ports mounted for rotation at the object discharge end of the hopper, means to turn the drum on its horizontal axis in one direction, means to create a partial vacuum in the drum during its rotation so that said suction ports may pick up objects from the hopper, an excess object rejection device xedly mounted relative to the periphery of the drum and spaced from the hopper and allowing only one object to be transported by each suction port of the drum beyond said device, an object pick-off member tixedly mounted at the side of the drum remote from the hopper and spaced from said device and having inclined object guidance channels corresponding in number to the number of suction ports in each spiral row on said drum, said pick-off member removing objects from said suction ports with a scraping action during rotation of the drum and causing such objects to slide through said channels, electro-optical object sensors on the pick-off member adjacent to each channel thereof responding to the sequential passage of objects through the channels and producing sequential electrical pulses representative of the number of objects passing through the channels, counter means electrically coupled to said electro-optical sensors for totalizing the number of objects sequentially passing through all of said channels until a present count is obtained, said electro-optical sensors each comprising a light source disposed on one side of each guidance channel and a photo-sensitive element on the other side of each channel optically aligned with the light source for that channel, each channel having a light transmitting passage extending thereacross adjacent to said light source and photo-sensitive element, and an automatic brightness intensity control circuit for each light source electrically connected with the source and the associated photo-sensitive element, whereby a reliable count for objects of varying translucency may be had, each brightness control circuit being a transistorized circuit including a time constant network constructed so that the source current can respond only to relatively slowly varying changes in time constant input voltages.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, and said brightness control circuit additionally comprising a single pulse generator which generates a pulse of a longer time duration than the maximum light beam interruption time of an object being counted thus insuring that only a single fixed time pulse is generated for each beam interruption, said brightness control circuit additionally comprising a differentiator circuit adapted to form short duration pulses which may be gated into a single counter circuit.

Claims (4)

1. An apparatus for counting large quantities of small objects with accuracy comprising an object infeed hopper, a horizontal axis object transport drum having plural spiral rows of suction ports mounted for rotation at the object discharge end of the hopper, means to turn the drum on its horizontal axis in one direction, means to create a partial vacuum in the drum during its rotation so that said suction ports may pick up objects from the hopper, an excess object rejection device fixedly mounted relative to the periphery of the drum and spaced from the hopper and allowing only one object to be transported by each suction port of the drum beyond said device, an object pick-off member fixedly mounted at the side of the drum remote from the hopper and spaced from said device and having inclined object guidance channels corresponding in number to the number of suction ports in each spiral row on said drum, said pick-off member removing objects from said suction ports with a scraping action during rotation of the drum and causing such objects to slide through said channels, electro-optical object sensors on the pick-off member adjacent to each channel thereof responding to the sequential passage of objects through the channels and producing sequential electrical pulses representative of the number of objects passing through the channels, counter means electrically coupled to said electro-optical sensors for totalizing the number of objects sequentially passing through all of said channels until a present count is obtained, means arranged above said hopper, drum and pick-off member for directing ionized air downwardly to agitate and clean objects resTing in the hopper and for aiding the passage of objects through said object guidance channels, and said last-named means comprising an ionization chamber having a slotted bottom wall, a metal plate having a multiplicity of dependent needles positioned within said chamber above said slotted bottom wall, means for applying high voltage alternating current to said plate, and means for directing air forcibly into said chamber.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, and said excess object rejection device comprising a comb-like member extending axially of said drum for substantially its entire length and having plural equidistantly spaced equal width slots formed therein and said slots corresponding in number to the suction ports in each spiral row and aligned with the ports circumferentially of the drum.
3. An apparatus for counting large quantities of small objects with accuracy comprising an object infeed hopper, a horizontal axis object transport drum having plural spiral rows of suction ports mounted for rotation at the object discharge end of the hopper, means to turn the drum on its horizontal axis in one direction, means to create a partial vacuum in the drum during its rotation so that said suction ports may pick up objects from the hopper, an excess object rejection device fixedly mounted relative to the periphery of the drum and spaced from the hopper and allowing only one object to be transported by each suction port of the drum beyond said device, an object pick-off member fixedly mounted at the side of the drum remote from the hopper and spaced from said device and having inclined object guidance channels corresponding in number to the number of suction ports in each spiral row on said drum, said pick-off member removing objects from said suction ports with a scraping action during rotation of the drum and causing such objects to slide through said channels, electro-optical object sensors on the pick-off member adjacent to each channel thereof responding to the sequential passage of objects through the channels and producing sequential electrical pulses representative of the number of objects passing through the channels, counter means electrically coupled to said electro-optical sensors for totalizing the number of objects sequentially passing through all of said channels until a present count is obtained, said electro-optical sensors each comprising a light source disposed on one side of each guidance channel and a photo-sensitive element on the other side of each channel optically aligned with the light source for that channel, each channel having a light transmitting passage extending thereacross adjacent to said light source and photo-sensitive element, and an automatic brightness intensity control circuit for each light source electrically connected with the source and the associated photo-sensitive element, whereby a reliable count for objects of varying translucency may be had, each brightness control circuit being a transistorized circuit including a time constant network constructed so that the source current can respond only to relatively slowly varying changes in time constant input voltages.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, and said brightness control circuit additionally comprising a single pulse generator which generates a pulse of a longer time duration than the maximum light beam interruption time of an object being counted thus insuring that only a single fixed time pulse is generated for each beam interruption, said brightness control circuit additionally comprising a differentiator circuit adapted to form short duration pulses which may be gated into a single counter circuit.
US435499A 1974-01-22 1974-01-22 Small object counting apparatus Expired - Lifetime US3928753A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US435499A US3928753A (en) 1974-01-22 1974-01-22 Small object counting apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US435499A US3928753A (en) 1974-01-22 1974-01-22 Small object counting apparatus

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3928753A true US3928753A (en) 1975-12-23

Family

ID=23728651

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US435499A Expired - Lifetime US3928753A (en) 1974-01-22 1974-01-22 Small object counting apparatus

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3928753A (en)

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4241293A (en) * 1979-08-15 1980-12-23 Pennwalt Corporation Scanner for detecting and indicating missing and wedged articles in slat-type counting machine
US4396828A (en) * 1980-09-26 1983-08-02 Programs & Analysis, Inc. Pill counter
US4869394A (en) * 1986-04-28 1989-09-26 Hurst Kerney J Article counting device
US5463839A (en) * 1994-08-04 1995-11-07 The Lakso Company Apparatus for packaging a predetermined quantity of objects and a counting device therefor
WO1996004171A1 (en) * 1994-08-04 1996-02-15 Stokes-Merrill Corporation Apparatus and method for automatically counting and packaging discrete objects
US5774518A (en) * 1997-01-30 1998-06-30 Kirby; John Discrete tablet counting machine
US6667473B1 (en) * 2002-03-26 2003-12-23 Innovation Associates, Inc. Tablet monitoring system
US20040026442A1 (en) * 2002-08-09 2004-02-12 Mckesson Automation Sys Inc Vacuum pill dispensing cassette and counting machine
US20040099683A1 (en) * 2002-08-09 2004-05-27 Shows Paul Randall Dispensing device having a storage chamber, dispensing chamber and a feed regulator there between
US20050224510A1 (en) * 2004-03-15 2005-10-13 Remis Steven J Vacuum based pill singulator and counter based thereon
US20100155196A1 (en) * 2008-12-22 2010-06-24 Makoto Takayanagi Parts feeder
US7831334B2 (en) 2002-08-09 2010-11-09 Mckesson Automation Systems Inc. Method of transporting vials and cassettes in an automated prescription filling apparatus
US20130175288A1 (en) * 2012-01-09 2013-07-11 Marchesini Group S.P.A. Method For Providing A Tablet Supply Channel For A Unit For Releasing Tablets, A Tablet Releasing Unit, And Use Of A Slot Miller For Providing The Tablet Supply Channel For The Tablet Releasing Unit
US11673166B2 (en) 2018-03-14 2023-06-13 Monsanto Technology Llc Seed imaging
US11724287B2 (en) 2018-06-11 2023-08-15 Monsanto Technology Llc Seed sorting

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2054320A (en) * 1932-02-15 1936-09-15 Electric Sorting Machine Compa Sorting apparatus
US2183606A (en) * 1939-12-19 High speed differentially function
US2324823A (en) * 1941-09-25 1943-07-20 Chilson Francis Counting and filling machine
US2632588A (en) * 1952-01-30 1953-03-24 Jr John Hoar Counting and packaging apparatus
US3206062A (en) * 1962-09-06 1965-09-14 Rappaport Max Tablet counter and packaging unit
US3285387A (en) * 1965-03-30 1966-11-15 Anchor Hocking Glass Corp Vacuum hopper
US3789194A (en) * 1970-09-08 1974-01-29 Kirby Lester Electronics Ltd Relating to counting machines

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2183606A (en) * 1939-12-19 High speed differentially function
US2054320A (en) * 1932-02-15 1936-09-15 Electric Sorting Machine Compa Sorting apparatus
US2324823A (en) * 1941-09-25 1943-07-20 Chilson Francis Counting and filling machine
US2632588A (en) * 1952-01-30 1953-03-24 Jr John Hoar Counting and packaging apparatus
US3206062A (en) * 1962-09-06 1965-09-14 Rappaport Max Tablet counter and packaging unit
US3285387A (en) * 1965-03-30 1966-11-15 Anchor Hocking Glass Corp Vacuum hopper
US3789194A (en) * 1970-09-08 1974-01-29 Kirby Lester Electronics Ltd Relating to counting machines

Cited By (26)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4241293A (en) * 1979-08-15 1980-12-23 Pennwalt Corporation Scanner for detecting and indicating missing and wedged articles in slat-type counting machine
US4396828A (en) * 1980-09-26 1983-08-02 Programs & Analysis, Inc. Pill counter
US4869394A (en) * 1986-04-28 1989-09-26 Hurst Kerney J Article counting device
US5463839A (en) * 1994-08-04 1995-11-07 The Lakso Company Apparatus for packaging a predetermined quantity of objects and a counting device therefor
WO1996004171A1 (en) * 1994-08-04 1996-02-15 Stokes-Merrill Corporation Apparatus and method for automatically counting and packaging discrete objects
US5774518A (en) * 1997-01-30 1998-06-30 Kirby; John Discrete tablet counting machine
US6667473B1 (en) * 2002-03-26 2003-12-23 Innovation Associates, Inc. Tablet monitoring system
US7303094B2 (en) * 2002-08-09 2007-12-04 Kevin Hutchinson Vacuum pill dispensing cassette and counting machine
US7506780B2 (en) 2002-08-09 2009-03-24 Mckesson Automation Systems Inc. Vacuum pill dispensing cassette and counting machine
US9037285B2 (en) 2002-08-09 2015-05-19 Mckesson Automation Systems, Inc. Automated apparatus and method for filling vials
US7014063B2 (en) 2002-08-09 2006-03-21 Mckesson Automation Systems, Inc. Dispensing device having a storage chamber, dispensing chamber and a feed regulator there between
US20060157492A1 (en) * 2002-08-09 2006-07-20 Mckesson Automation Systems, Inc. Dispensing device having a storage chamber, dispensing chamber and a feed regulator there between
US20040026442A1 (en) * 2002-08-09 2004-02-12 Mckesson Automation Sys Inc Vacuum pill dispensing cassette and counting machine
US7831334B2 (en) 2002-08-09 2010-11-09 Mckesson Automation Systems Inc. Method of transporting vials and cassettes in an automated prescription filling apparatus
US7789267B2 (en) 2002-08-09 2010-09-07 Mckesson Automation Systems, Inc. Vacuum pill dispensing cassette and counting machine
US7584018B2 (en) 2002-08-09 2009-09-01 Parata Systems, Llc Dispensing device having a storage chamber, a dispensing chamber and a feed regulator there between
US20040099683A1 (en) * 2002-08-09 2004-05-27 Shows Paul Randall Dispensing device having a storage chamber, dispensing chamber and a feed regulator there between
US7753229B2 (en) 2002-08-09 2010-07-13 Mckesson Automation Systems Inc. Vacuum pill dispensing cassette and counting machine
US8348094B2 (en) 2004-03-15 2013-01-08 Parata Systems, Llc Vacuum based pill singulator and counter based thereon
US20080061074A1 (en) * 2004-03-15 2008-03-13 Parata Systems, L.L.C. Vacuum Based Pill Singulator and Counter Based Thereon
US20050224510A1 (en) * 2004-03-15 2005-10-13 Remis Steven J Vacuum based pill singulator and counter based thereon
US20100155196A1 (en) * 2008-12-22 2010-06-24 Makoto Takayanagi Parts feeder
US8308024B2 (en) * 2008-12-22 2012-11-13 Trinc.Org Parts feeder
US20130175288A1 (en) * 2012-01-09 2013-07-11 Marchesini Group S.P.A. Method For Providing A Tablet Supply Channel For A Unit For Releasing Tablets, A Tablet Releasing Unit, And Use Of A Slot Miller For Providing The Tablet Supply Channel For The Tablet Releasing Unit
US11673166B2 (en) 2018-03-14 2023-06-13 Monsanto Technology Llc Seed imaging
US11724287B2 (en) 2018-06-11 2023-08-15 Monsanto Technology Llc Seed sorting

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3928753A (en) Small object counting apparatus
US4136778A (en) Linen sorter
US4036365A (en) Linen sorter with a conveyor mounting individual linen pickers
US8417375B2 (en) Counting machine for discrete items
US3730386A (en) Article arranging and counting machine
US2540059A (en) Method of and apparatus for measuring and filling powders volumetrically
US3789194A (en) Relating to counting machines
GB2486939A (en) Method and apparatus for dispensing items
CN218431988U (en) Intelligence material quantitative packaging machine
CN209667399U (en) A kind of go chess piece picks installation automatically
US3706027A (en) Materials counting system utilizing permanent magnets and their associated fields
US3510632A (en) Digital stretch and speed indicating apparatus
EP0173160A3 (en) Apparatus and method for producing weighed charges of loosely aggregated filamentary material from compacted bales of the material
US3266664A (en) Article counting device
GB2229279A (en) Monitoring a fibre-flock stream
US4881062A (en) Yarn break detector for spinning and weaving machines
US3820197A (en) Machine for opening cotton bales
EP0086289B1 (en) Apparatus for detecting cracked grain of unhulled rice or hulled rice
GB1181282A (en) Improvements in or relating to Cleaning devices for Threshing and the like Machines
US2988197A (en) Sorting apparatus
US4590364A (en) Container counting apparatus
ES8106861A1 (en) Dispensing means for dragee-like goods
JPS6272090A (en) Supplying device for fixed quantity of solid
US3395269A (en) Article counting machine with means for preventing miscount of overlapping and irregularly shaped articles
ES426227A1 (en) Apparatus for feeding particles of glass into crucibles for extrusion of glass filaments

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: NORDSON CORPORATION, AN OH CORP.

Free format text: MERGER;ASSIGNOR:DOMAIN INDUSTRIES, INC.;REEL/FRAME:004071/0608

Effective date: 19821112

AS Assignment

Owner name: AMPAK, INC., A CORP. OF DE.

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST. EFFECTIVE DATE;ASSIGNOR:NORDSON CORPORATION;REEL/FRAME:004994/0177

Effective date: 19881027