Krones AG has developed special packaging grippers for the beverage industry at its Rosenheim plant. They do not grip packs, but the intermediate layers of the pallet, but also, for example, pallets themselves, cover frames or snap-on lids. The grippers, which utilise the fin-ray effect, look like butterflies flapping their wings when gripping a layer pad, which is why they were given the name "butterfly gripper".
As the cardboard boxes are delivered in stacks, the individual layers are tightly packed together. This makes gripping more difficult. In the past, the intermediate layers were therefore cleanly separated using a brush magazine. They prevented the tightly pressed interlayers underneath from being moved when a layer was lifted. However, such brush magazines cost a lot of money.
The gripper head solves the task without the brush magazine: it lifts the pages upwards and the vacuum underneath is released.
But how does the gripper work technically? The entire assembly is pushed to the side using a tube as a guide. The butterfly function is created by the movement of slide bearings in a kind of pulling effect. Pneumatic cylinders move together and the distance between the individual links is reduced.
The technology is to be further improved in the future. It should be lighter and have an improved design thanks to the use of more plain bearings.
The gripper technology for packing aids must function one hundred per cent, otherwise the system will stop. The requirement is to build a reliable yet inexpensive system.