The invention relates to an airless blaster arrangement for surface treatment of objects with blasting agents with a blasting agent supply tube, an impeller consisting of several radially-arranged thrower blades that are attached to at least one side disk, whereby a blasting agent discharge area is enclosed between each pair of thrower blades.
To treat object surfaces, blasting agent particles are accelerated to a high speed by means of impeller wheels that have an abrasive effect upon impact to the object, i.e., that remove rust, scale, or old paint layers, or that cause a change in structure to surface layers, during shot-peening, for example. The known impeller wheels are so shaped that the blasting agent is guided through a blasting agent supply tube to a distributor or an impeller, so that it is accelerated. The distributor or impeller is surrounded by a stream guide shell aperture that includes a stream guide shell aperture orifice. The blasting agent is transported through the stream guide shell aperture orifice into the inner blasting agent discharge area between the thrower blades. There, it is passed to the outer blasting agent discharge area because of inertia and gravity forces along with the imparted radial speed, and finally to the periphery of the impeller wheel, where it is decelerated by the peripheral speed of the edge of the impeller wheel.
Experiments have shown that the flow paths of the blasting agent are influenced by strong turbulence within the interior of a blast turbine, and strongly deviate from the flow relationships of the assumed model and the design of the known airless blaster arrangement. These turbulences strongly brake the motion of the blasting agent within the airless blaster arrangement, and also cause increased wear because of strong scattering. Thus, wear of the theoretically blasting agent-free rear sides of the thrower blades may be found which is attributed to chaotic motion of the blasting agent, particularly in the blasting agent discharge area between two thrower blades.
This problem is also based on the conventional airless blaster arrangement disclosed in the German Patent No. DE 195 36 723 A1. This reference recommends implementing the impeller as an auxiliary impeller wheel. This achieves an eccentric supply of the blasting agent. The blasting agent should move along a circular path before its entry into the blasting agent discharge area, and should perform a spiral-shaped movement upon leaving the distributor through the stream guide shell aperture orifice, whereby impact of the blasting agent onto the thrower blades is to be substantially prevented. Additional auxiliary thrower blades are necessary for the further channeling of the movement of the blasting agent, based on the state of the art, by means of which the number of wear parts is increased. Also, only this channeling reduces the effects of chaotic blasting agent motion without significantly treating the causes. The stream guide shell aperture is still required in order to influence the position and width of the blasted sector.
The German Patent No. DE 198 38 733 C1 specifies another arrangement based on the principle of an eccentric supply of the blasting agent in which the supply aperture of the blasting agent supply tube opens eccentrically to the auxiliary impeller wheel so that the blasting agent is transferred directly into the blade chamber of the auxiliary impeller wheel. The above-mentioned disadvantages of a mere weakening of a chaotic blasting agent motion and the requirement for a stream guide shell aperture also apply in this case.
It is therefore the object of the invention to develop a airless blaster arrangement of the type mentioned at the outset in such manner that the blasting agent is passed via a defined flow motion into the blasting agent discharge area, and friction and wear caused by turbulent motion are reduced.
This object is achieved by the invention in that a distributor with an essentially star-shaped cross-section guide path formed from several guide paths extends coaxially from the impeller wheel and is connected to it so that it rotates with the impeller wheel, whereby a guide blade of each distributor is connected to a thrower blade of the impeller wheel, and whereby a blasting agent guide channel formed between each guide blade opens into an inner blasting agent discharge area of the impeller wheel.
It has been shown that a positioned flow path may be achieved by eliminating additional elements such as stream guide shell aperture and impeller. The blasting agent passes into the distributor with the eccentrically-positioned stream guide channels and is passed through a longer path. Resultantly, the turbulence still present in the narrow blasting agent guide channels is reduced and the blasting agent is forced into guided movement. Because of the fixed connection between the distributor and the impeller wheel, impact surfaces along the flow direction are avoided after the blasting agent has been guided into the blasting agent guide channels. Instead of this, a slight redirection of the blasting agent is achieved over large radii and angles. The guide blades are directly connected to the thrower blades. The blasting agent guide channels of the distributor open like a funnel into the blasting agent discharge area of the impeller wheel and simulate a natural flow movement.
The following is achieved by the flow of the blasting agent according to the invention: a pre-defined amount of blasting agent is fed in a charge from the supply tube into a blasting agent guide channel. This batch of blasting agent is stored in a designed, pre-determined flow path until entry into the blasting agent discharge area since turbulence no longer occurs, for which it requires a specific, empirically-determined pause interval.
The time point and/or the location at which the batch may be influenced by means of a lateral and/or locally-controlled introduction of blasting agent from the supply tube into one of the blasting agent guide channels at which the batch passes into the blasting agent discharge area and is subsequently impelled. Thus, the stream guide shell aperture to limit the blasted sector, as required according to the state of the art, may be omitted. The flow speed may, for example, may be altered by the rotational speed of the impeller wheel, whereby place and time of the spin-off may be influenced.
In an especially advantageous embodiment of the invention, the blasting agent supply tube is positioned at an angle of 45–90° to the rotation axis and opens at the circumference of the distributor in at least one blasting agent guide channel. Thus, the function of the blasting agent batch occurs simultaneously in one charge. This function may occur very quickly with a rotating distributor: the lateral open blasting agent guide channel, just like a transporting wheel, grabs a batch from the supply tube and continues to rotate. The guide blades extending backwards with the rotation briefly stop the flow out of the supply tube for a moment until the next empty blasting agent guide channel is in front of the supply tube.
Another exemplary embodiment of the invention, in which the blasting agent supply tube may be displaced at least along a batch of the axis of the distributor, is also advantageous. In contrast to changing rotational speed, this possesses the advantage that the effects of a displacement of the supply point may be directly determined, while one must await achieval of the new rotational speed each time the rotational speed is changed.
The quantity of blasting agent that is impelled from each rotating thrower blade, and thereby the sector blasted by the airless blaster arrangement, are influenced by the length of the given batch. It is therefore advantageous if the blasting agent supply tube includes an aperture nozzle whose inner dimension is adjustable, so that charges of varying lengths of blasting agent that lead to an alteration in the blasting image length may be stored.
For a full understanding of the present invention, reference should now be made to the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments of the invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to
As
The distributor 20 is preferably in the form of a helical gear or a worm conveyor. It is likewise possible to drill the distributor 20 either along a portion of its length or over the entire length. This achieves the fact that the blasting agent guide channels 22 are positioned oblique to the rotation axis 40, and that an axial forced flow in the direction of the impeller wheel 10 is created in the rotating distributor 20 by the increase of the guide blades 21, even when the rotation axis 40 is positioned horizontally.
The impeller wheel 10 is formed together with the spiral distributor 20 as a pump wheel, and, at high speed, operates as an air pump so that blasting agent may be sucked up from the charge point along the blasting agent guide channels 22.
In the embodiment example according to
There has thus been shown and described a novel airless blaster arrangement which fulfills all the objects and advantages sought therefor. Many changes, modifications, variations and other uses and applications of the subject invention will, however, become apparent to those skilled in embodiments thereof. All such changes, modifications, variations and other uses and applications which do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention are deemed to be covered by the invention, which is to be limited only by the claims which follow.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101 35 845 | Jul 2001 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE02/02671 | 7/22/2002 | WO | 00 | 2/6/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO03/011525 | 2/13/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2092201 | Boesger | Sep 1937 | A |
2363437 | Peterson | Nov 1944 | A |
2369408 | Rosenberger | Feb 1945 | A |
3368308 | Physioc, III | Feb 1968 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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195 36 723 | Sep 1995 | DE |
198 38 733 | Aug 1998 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040156718 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |