The present disclosure relates to trowel-blade pitch position adjustment for hydraulically steered, riding power trowels.
The process of finishing concrete through the concrete curing phases with a self-propelled power trowel is ever changing. Riding power trowels are used for finishing concrete surfaces as the concrete is curing and hardening. A typical riding power trowel is a two-rotor device, with each rotor having a plurality of troweling blades extending out in radial fashion, and usually configured such that the working edge of each blade is in a plane normal to the axis of rotation to provide for smooth and flat finishing of the concrete surface below the riding trowel. There is provided a rigid frame that houses the rotor assemblies, and also an engine, usually a gasoline or diesel engine, which provides the motive power for the rotor assemblies and thus the trowel blades. Atop of the engine and the frame assembly is found an operator's seat and the necessary control systems and levers for operation of the machine. These machines are manufactured in a variety of sizes and weights, with the largest of these machines having not just two, but rather three, rotor and troweling blade assemblies.
For purposes of this prior art section and the entire specification, a two-rotor machine will be used as an example. In two-rotor machines, both rotor assemblies rotate in opposite directions, one to the other. This is shown in
In
The hydraulically controlled steering power trowel is formed of the same basic sub-assemblies, including a rigid frame, engine assembly, operator seat and manual trowel blade pitch control systems, all of which are well known in the art. Also included are left control post and right control post that house, respectively, a left control valve assembly and a right control valve assembly. In a typical device, both the left and right control valve assemblies are proportional pressure output hydraulic valves capable of delivering and maintaining a selectable pressure to a dual-action hydraulic cylinder. U.S. Pat. No. 5,876,740 ('740 patent) discloses a hydraulically controlled steering power trowel, and the '740 patent is incorporated herein by reference. It should be understood that designations “left” and “right,” as used here, are arbitrary; and the functions of what are designated in this disclosure as the “left” and “right” may be accomplished, at the designer's preference, by applying the operable principles to any riding trowel regardless of which of the several assemblies is designated “left” or “right.”
The left control valve assembly is operably interconnected between the frame of the power trowel and the left rotor assembly, and is used to adjust the tilt of the left rotor assembly either inwardly toward the center line of the frame, or outwardly away from the center line of the frame. The left control valve assembly is a single-action proportional pressure output valve that is operable to maintain a selectable hydraulic pressure within one or the other sides of the left dual-action hydraulic cylinder and is operably connected to the left rotor assembly to provide a tilting, either in or out from the center line movement for the left rotor assembly.
Hydraulic power is provided by a standard hydraulic pump that is operably connected to the trowel engine.
Again, only one rotor assembly, which in this example is the left rotor assembly, is only tiltable in and out from the center line. This is achieved by use of a universal drive assembly that is provided to interconnect the output drive shaft of the engine assembly to the rotor assembly. The universal drive assembly is capable of allowing the tilt motion for the left rotor either in or out relative to the center line of the power trowel.
Likewise, the right rotor assembly is interconnected by means of a dual-action universal assembly to the output drive assembly of the engine, and is therefore tiltable not only in an in-and-out direction relative to the center line, but it is also capable of being tilted either in a forward or aft direction. The right rotor assembly is provided with a right lever tilt post and a right forward and aft tilt post. Attached to the right lever tilt post is a dual action right tilt cylinder that is interconnected between the frame and the right tilt lever. In a similar manner, a second dual-action cylinder, the right forward and aft tilt cylinder, is interconnected to the right forward and aft tilt post and is anchored to the frame. The right control valve assembly is a dual action control system, and is operable to maintain a selectable hydraulic pressure in either side of both the right tilt cylinder and the right forward and aft cylinder, thus controlling not only the tilt of the right rotor assembly, but also its forward and aft movement.
Both left and right control valve assemblies are fitted with joysticks that are configured such that if they are pushed forward, both rotor assemblies will tilt inwardly to move the power trowel forward, and conversely, if tilted backward toward the operator, they will operate to tilt the rotors outwardly to move the machine backward. The guidance system just described was fully disclosed in the Applicant's '740 patent. What the prior art lacks, however, is a means to monitor and automatically control the pitch position of the individual troweling blades. The prior art is also without a means of disengaging the pitch actuators to allow the blades to “float” in a flat position.
While operating a power trowel for “power troweling,” the trowel operator must constantly change the pitch of the blades on the trowel to get the desired finish results for the concrete. Pitch of the blades, or pitch position, can be described as the angle of the troweling blades from a plane normal to the troweling-blade-assembly axis of rotation. Pitch position can be measured as an angle or a blade height. The common practice when using trowels embodying the prior art is for trowel operators to adjust the pitch position based on the way the concrete looks as the trowel passes over it, or based on the operator's “feel” for how the blades are affecting the concrete. The prior art, utilizing hydraulic cylinders, raise and lower the blades and thus set the pitch position. Disclosed here is a means to monitor and automate pitch position control. This will increase trowel, and trowel operator, effectiveness and efficiency.
While operating a power trowel for panning, a process disclosed here as “power floating,” the trowel is operated with float pans attached to the blades. Power floating depresses the large aggregate in the concrete, removes surface imperfections, creates a smooth surface, brings some mortar to the surface of the concrete, and keeps the surface open, thus allowing water and entrapped air to escape. When float pans are installed, i.e., attached to the blades, it is critical that the blades are flat against the pan so they apply pressure evenly to the pan. If float pans are installed, and the blades are not flat, several issues can arise, including: premature float pan wear; warping of the float pan, which causes the float pan to stick to the concrete; uneven pressure applied to the concrete, which can create imperfections the concrete finish, and which, in turn, affects the flatness of a finished concrete floor. But the present disclosure allows a trowel operator to completely flatten the blades. In the present disclosure, when the pitch position control actuators are disengaged, the blades are allowed to sit perfectly flat against the float pan allowing even pressure to be applied to the pan. This disengagement of the pitch actuators is introduced as “panning mode.”
In one embodiment and the best mode of the present disclosure, smart hydraulic cylinders have been incorporated in the place of standard cylinders. These smart cylinders do not directly control the cylinder; rather, they monitor the cylinder by sending a signal for the true position of the stroke of the cylinder. This position feedback signal from the smart cylinders is used by a control unit for calculating blade pitch position. The operator controls the pitch position with the pitch control buttons and a pitch mode selection switch.
The operator can control the pitch position with two switches: a “single pitch control switch” and a “twin pitch control switch.” The pitch control logic of the control unit provides for multiple operating modes, controlled by a mode selection switch. These modes are disclosed as: “manual pitch” and “synchronous pitch.” In manual pitch mode, when the operator manipulates the twin pitch switch (e.g., up or down), the pitch position of both rotors will be changed simultaneously, but non-synchronously; when the operator manipulates the single pitch switch (e.g., up or down), the pitch of the left rotor will be changed, while the pitch position of the right rotor remains constant. In synchronous mode, when the operator manipulates the twin pitch switch (e.g., up or down), the pitch position of the right and left rotors will be changed simultaneously, and when the twin pitch switch is released, the pitch position of the left rotor is synchronized to the pitch position of the right rotor. This automated matching of left and right side pitch position is introduced as “synchronous-twin-pitch.”
By adjusting the pitch position of the left rotor separately from the right rotor, problem areas in the concrete finishing job can be addressed. This is accomplished by changing the pitch position on the left rotor assembly but not the right. After addressing the problem area, the operator must adjust the pitch position of the left rotor assembly to match the pitch position of the right rotor assembly. With prior art trowels, the operator accomplished this through a sequence of first raising the right rotor to full pitch, and then adjusting the left to match; but this sequence can cause damage to the finish of the concrete without precise adjustment by the operator. The synchronous-twin-pitch function increases the accuracy at which pitch position of the left rotor assembly is synchronized to the present pitch position of the right rotor assembly, eliminating the need for an operator to manually adjust both the left and right rotor assemblies to their upper or lower stops, significantly decreasing the likelihood of damage to the concrete surface.
a is a sectional representational front view of one embodiment of rotor assemblies with the disclosed pitch control system.
b is a sectional representational front view of one embodiment of one rotor assembly with the disclosed pitch control system.
Not shown in the drawings are the hydraulic pump, and the hydraulic hoses and fittings which interconnect both left and right control valve assemblies 24 and 26 to left and right tilting cylinders 44 and 46, as well as right pitch cylinder 48, all shown in
Referring now to
In
The disclosure also includes a first and second pitch position sensor. The pitch position sensor detects and reports the pitch position of at least one of the blades in each of the rotary assemblies. Pitch position 64 is the angle defined by a blade and a plane normal to the axis of rotation AR of rotary assemblies 30 and 32, as shown in and
The trowel and pitch position sensors 62 communicate with the control unit the pitch of each of the blades of each of the rotary assemblies, as shown in
When the operator selects the manual mode, the pitch position of each rotor assembly can be adjusted independently or simultaneously, as described above. When the operator selects the “synchronous mode,” and adjusts the pitch using the twin pitch switch, the synchronous-twin-pitch is enabled and the rotor assemblies automatically adjust to an identical pitch. In one embodiment of this disclosure, the control unit commands both the left and right pitch actuators simultaneously to maintain the same pitch on each rotor assembly throughout the movement. In an alternative embodiment, the control unit will command the first and second pitch actuators incrementally to maintain, though not instantly, the same pitch position on each rotor throughout the movement. Thus, in this seconded described embodiment, the control unit might adjust the first pitch position by two degrees. Then, the control unit will compare the pitch position of both rotor assemblies. It will then adjust the second pitch actuator to match the pitch position of the first assembly. Then, the control unit will again compare the pitch position of the two assemblies; and it will signal the pitch actuators to make incremental adjustments until the pitch of both assemblies is the same.
In one embodiment of the present disclosure, the control unit comprises a high-resolution, touch-screen, LCD display. It serves as the hardware portion of a graphical user interface for operator communication with the control unit. This display provides information to the operator in the form of graphs, pitch degrees, percentage of pitch, pump stroke, engine monitoring functions, operating hours, and time. The operator can control the pitch using buttons on the visual display or with the control buttons described above. The visual display depicts graphs that communicate the pitch position of each rotor assembly. The position is indicated as pitch degrees (or blade height) and percentage of full pitch (or percentage of full blade height). Further, the visual display visually communicates engine safety monitoring features, as well as information about the operating conditions of the trowel. The graphical user interface is menu-based, with submenus for data and control, including pitch calibration, throttle calibration, hours, language of display, engine error codes, and service and diagnostic information.
In one embodiment of the present disclosure, when the trowel is operated for power floating, rather than power troweling, the operator can manipulate a “pitch disengage switch” that disengages the rotor assemblies from the pitch actuators at linkages 70 and 72. The disengaged blades are held in a neutral state, in a flat or “zero pitch” position, such that the blades can move with the float pan without applying undesired pressure on the pan.
In another embodiment of the disclosure, the logic of the control unit provides that the operator can manipulate the twin pitch control switch in combination with the single pitch control switch to disengage the rotor assemblies from the pitch actuators. In this embodiment, the operator may likewise utilize a float pan with the trowel without applying undesired pressure on the pan.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/561,597, filed Nov. 18, 2011, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference
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