The present disclosure relates generally to plows and in particular the present disclosure relates to back drag plows.
Plow blades are generally designed to plow material, such as snow, e.g., while the plow vehicle is moving forward. For example, snow plow blades are typically designed to push snow. However, in many applications, the snow must be pulled away from obstacles, such as a garage in some home driveway applications, curbs, parking lot islands, loading docks, etc. In these applications, where snow must be pulled from tight areas, the plow vehicle first must drive over the snow in order to get in position to lower the plow and start back dragging the snow away. This packs the snow into hard-packed icy snow and sticks it to the surface with the weight of the plow vehicle. While pulling the snow backwards, the plow vehicle now moving in reverse again drives back over the snow a second time, packing down the snow in the process even more. When the plow vehicle is moving in reverse, a normal snow plow blade that is curved, e.g., concave forward, for forward plowing now floats over the snow, e.g., typically leaving about 1 inch to about 2 inches of snow that can not be removed from the surface being plowed. Therefore, various back-blade configurations have been implemented for improving snow plowing in reverse.
Plow blades designed for forward plowing often include a trip mechanism that allows a bottom portion of the plow blade, e.g., or the entire plow blade when pushing snow while plowing in the forward direction, to be deflected or tripped when the plow blade hits a permanent object like a manhole, curb, etc. However, plow blades designed for forward plowing are normally not configured to be tripped when the blade hits a permanent object when plowing in reverse. Moreover, the various back-blade configurations designed for plowing in reverse are usually not configured to be tripped when the blade hits an object when plowing in reverse.
For the reasons stated above, and for other reasons stated below which will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading and understanding the present specification, there is a need in the art for alternative plow blades.
One embodiment of the disclosure provides a plow having an upper blade. A lower forward-plowing blade is coupled to the upper blade. The lower forward-plowing blade is configured to engage material to be plowed when the plow is plowing in a forward direction. A back-blade is pivotally coupled to the upper blade and elastically coupled to the upper blade. The back-blade is configured to engage material to be plowed when the plow is plowing in a reverse direction opposite the forward direction.
In the following detailed description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings that form a part hereof, and in which is shown, by way of illustration, specific embodiments in which the invention may be practiced. In the drawings, like numerals describe substantially similar components throughout the several views. These embodiments are described in sufficient detail to enable those skilled in the art to practice the invention. Other embodiments may be utilized and structural, logical, and electrical changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. The following detailed description is, therefore, not to be taken in a limiting sense, and the scope of the present disclosure is defined only by the appended claims and equivalents thereof.
For one embodiment, plow 100 includes a back-blade 118, e.g., as a portion of a back-drag system 120, that is pivotally coupled to plow 100, as shown in
For one embodiment, back-blade 118 spans an entire width W of upper blade 102 so that back-blade 118 is as long as the plow 100 is wide, as shown in
Back-drag system 120 includes one or more biasing systems 138, including one or more biasing elements, such as one or more springs 140, as shown in
For one embodiment, each spring 140 of each biasing system 138 elastically couples strap 126, and thus back blade 118, to a portion of plow 100, e.g., to a rear portion of upper blade 102, as shown in
An end 145 of each spring 140 that is opposite the end of that spring 140 that is coupled to strap 126, e.g., that is opposite the hook 142 of that spring 140, is coupled to the rear portion of upper blade 102. For example, a plate 150 of each biasing system 138 may couple the end 145 of each spring 140 to the rear portion of upper blade 102, as shown in
The one or more biasing systems 138 bias back-drag system 120 into the forward-plowing blade configuration of plow 100 of
For one embodiment, back-drag system 120 is configured to be added to a conventional or stock plow, as received from the factory and configured for forward plowing, without making modifications to the stock plow. That is, back-drag system 120 is backward compatible with a stock plow as received from the factory. For one embodiment, upper blade 102 and lower forward-plowing blade 104 constitute part of the stock plow.
Back-drag system 120 may be secured to a stock plow, e.g., by bolting, with no drilling, welding, cutting, or modifications to the stock plow. For one embodiment, back-drag system 120 may be secured to the stock plow by interposing strap 124 of hinge 122 between upper blade 102 and lower forward-plowing blade 104 and subsequently passing the bolts through existing bolt holes in upper blade 102 and in lower forward-plowing blade 104, as shown in
Moreover, biasing system 138 may be bolted to the rear of upper blade 102, as shown in
For another embodiment, as plow 100 plows in the forward direction with lower blade 104 moving in contact with surface 412 against snow 410, back-blade 118 is biased, e.g., by one or more springs 140 of biasing system 138, so that a bottom edge 119 of back-blade 118 rides in contact with surface 412, e.g., substantially “floats” over surface 412, while exerting substantially little or no force, relative to the weight of blade 100, on surface 412. For other embodiments, a small gap (not shown) may separate bottom edge 119 of back-blade 118 from surface 412 during forward plowing.
For one embodiment, as plow 100 plows in the forward direction, lower forward-plowing blade 104 is angled toward the direction of forward plowing, and back-blade 118 may be angled away from the direction of forward plowing toward the rear of plow 100, as shown in
When it is desired to pull snow 410 (e.g., plow or back blade snow 410 in a reverse direction), such as from adjacent an obstacle, e.g., as a garage door or the like, plow 100 is moved in a direction of arrow 500, as shown in
Note that for one embodiment, during reverse plowing, back-blade 118 may be angled toward the direction of reverse plowing. For example, during reverse plowing, back-blade 118 may be angled away from lower forward-plowing blade 104 by an angle θ2, with respect to lower forward-plowing blade 104, in the direction toward the rear of plow 100, as shown in
For one embodiment, as back-blade 118 pivots, edge 119 is contact with surface 412, and back-blade 118 lifts forward-plowing blade 104 off of surface 412, as indicated by arrow 515 in
During reverse plowing, it is possible that back-blade 118 could strike a permanent or semi-permanent object 550 (
After back-blade 118 moves past the object, the one or more springs 140 return back-blade 118 to the back-blading configuration of
For one embodiment, back-blade 118 may be substantially parallel with forward-plowing blade 104 and/or angled away from the direction of reverse plowing when back-blade 118 stops against the rear portion of forward-plowing blade 104. For example, back-blade 118 may stop against the rear portion of forward-plowing blade 104 when the bolts 130 (
Note that the operations of plow 100 described in conjunction with the above embodiments, e.g., the pivoting of back-blade 118 to the various positions, are instantly automatic by the motion of the plow. For example, there are no controls, hydraulics, or hand operations required.
Although specific embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that any arrangement that is calculated to achieve the same purpose may be substituted for the specific embodiments shown. Many adaptations of the embodiments will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. Accordingly, this application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the embodiments. It is manifestly intended that the embodiments be limited only by the following claims and equivalents thereof.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090044433 A1 | Feb 2009 | US |