The invention relates to a flexible mounting or suspension of the colter of a snowplough that gets in contact with the surface to be ploughed, the colter including a blade as its extension. The suspension for the colter is at a tilt or a cutting angle suited for the purpose. When the snowplough is ploughing uneven ground, the colter must adjust to the roughness of ground. The flexible material of the colter is not enough alone, so the suspension of the colter must also be flexible. The need of flexibility grows with the width of the snowplough and the demands of the ploughing cleanliness.
In using flexible colters of polyurethane or rubber, the load of the colter against the surface to be ploughed must be small, but the colter must stay in same colter angle during flexing movement. The smallness of vertical force pressing the colter is important in order to minimize wear and tear of the colter and to lengthen the life of the colter. A correct position keeps the cutting of colter edge sharp without rounding the lower surface. Rounding of colter lower surface makes the cutting edge of the coulter rise from the ground, so that snow getting under the colter lifts the colter to glide on the snow layer. The result is weakened ploughing quality.
Backing of the colter in its movement direction against a spring is known for instance from publications DE 881200, GB 1060335, GB 784049. In these publications, the colter is a plate of large size, which must always be replaced as a whole when sufficiently worn out. For the colter plate, a quite long backward directed steering box portion is arranged, which keeps the colter in the desired direction.
In using an additional colter, this colter must have same possibilities to follow the roughness of surface as the first colter.
Previously known is a suspension of a colter, where the whole plough, that is the blade and colter, is divided into transverse elements which are flexing vertically on levers or on flexible attachments. The disadvantages of this solution are the relatively heavy elements, which cause the colters to have a wearing load and hard strokes on obstacles during ploughing, because of the mass of elements. The moving of the elements gives cause to discontinuity on the blade surface and restricts the blade forming. The circle curve is almost the only possible cross-section of the blade, if the motion is dimensioned to follow the curve. The direction of the evasive movement by means of lever mechanisms is in a relatively great angle in regard to the driving motion direction and thus disadvantageous.
Previously known is also a solution where the colter is divided into separately suspended elements, which suspended elements function simply as steered by springs or separate elements, as in GB 784049. There are wearing parts in the control mechanisms. Colters resting merely on springs have too great colter forces and often insufficient control, which lead to rapid wearing and blade bottom rounding. Known is also a solution where the colter is suspended on springs of elastic rubber or of plastic.
The disadvantage of said solutions is weak control, whereby the colter wears out into a wrong form. Another disadvantage appears in speedy ploughing, and the attendant risk connected to overheating of spring material and to loss of spring material firmness due to inside frictions.
For suspension of an additional colter a further solution is known, where the additional colter is furnished with its own mechanisms both for the vertical and evasive backward motion of the colter. This is an expensive solution containing many parts.
By means of the solution according to this invention, most of the above noted disturbances of the colter suspension are avoided. The suspension according to this invention is characterized in that to a spring organ a detachable colter is attached, as an extension and to which a moving plate attached to the colter element is fitted. This moving plate is located in an open space between the attached colter and a covering plate located at a distance from the colter, whereby the moving plate is fitted to glide in the open space.
The advantage of the suspension according to this invention is that each colter, and that to it a possibly connected additional colter, is built as a flexible unit, which due to its flexible attachment gets in contact against the surface. The additional colter can be fixed to the attachments of the colter, whereby the additional colter follows the colter motions. This approximate control is sufficient when both colters are flexible. The additional colter has a stabilizing extra impact on the actual colter. At the same time, the sequential colters give in the manner of the boggie each other the control to keep the colters in a desired working direction.
In the following the invention is disclosed with reference to the enclosed drawings, where:
In the following the invention is disclosed with reference to the enclosed drawing, where
As extension of colter 1 there is a moving plate 13, which can move between the surface of fixed blade 3 and a cover plate 12. Colter 1 is attached to a moving plate 13 and to the flexing lower end of a spring organ 9. The upper end of spring organ 9 at fixing points 11 is attached to horizontal beam 2 by means of a distance piece 18. Spring organ 9 is a leaf spring bent into U-shape. Cover plate 12 is attached immovable in regard to fixed blade 3. Moving plate 13, cover plate 12, and fixed blade 3 are all at least partly overlapping each other.
The U-shape of spring organ 9 tends to open; and when functioning as a colter backing, the U-shape tends to narrow, in other words fixing points 10 and 11 (
The colter 1 is attached at least between the ends of two leaf springs of spring organ 9 bent into U-shape and running in a colter direction, while the other spring ends are attached to the plough body. U-shaped leaf springs function as rough straight-through mechanisms. The holding power in the direction of motion caused by bumpy surface is smallest, and at its greatest in the direction that keeps the colter in a desired position. The arrangement presses the colter with a relatively small load against the surface being ploughed, and at the same time keeps the colter steady in the cutting position.
The advantage of prestressed spring suspension is the possibility of relatively small growth of the springback factor, while the spring route gets longer and at the same time for the colter an operating area is achieved at once after the limitation without any additional routes of motion, which would demand additional height for plough lifting, for instance in a transporting position.
Advantageously the plough is formed of several colter elements side by side, which have separated flexing arrangements. Then only relatively small masses have to back up on hitting an obstacle. Even the ploughing result weakens only at the backed up colter. Blade portion 3 can be continuous along the whole plough width.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20041314 | Oct 2004 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI2005/000434 | 10/11/2005 | WO | 00 | 1/3/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/040396 | 4/20/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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881200 | Jun 1953 | DE |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080250675 A1 | Oct 2008 | US |