The present invention relates to a device used for laying cables or other slender elements, especially for small-diameter cables or elements and more especially optical fibre cables laid according to the pushing technique or the pushing-carrying technique.
Laying a cable in a tube according to this latter technique generally takes place by injecting a fluid into the tube, the fluid being injected at a speed higher than the laying speed of the cable, mechanical means arranged upstream of the fluid injection being provided for pushing the cable inside the tube. It is common to lay cables using this technique, especially very long optical fibre cables.
However, this technique suffers from a drawback resulting from the required space and the mass of the device including means allowing injection of the carrier fluid as well as means for pushing. This drawback is especially obvious during laying where the introduction site of the cable is located in a confined space or when the tube end, able to receive the cable, terminates very close to a side wall of the introduction chamber, or during laying of small-diameter optical fibre cables and relatively fragile cables.
The device described in document U.S. Pat. No. 5,749,565 describes such a device especially unsuited to laying when the tube which should receive the optical fibre is close to the left wall of the introduction chamber.
In order to avoid this drawback, the invention provides a laying device for laying a cable or other slender element, such as described in claim 1, alternatives or other embodiments being described in the dependent claims.
A preferred embodiment of a device according to the invention is described below, together with the description of some alternative embodiments, with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
The laying device 1 according to the invention consists essentially of an introduction cassette 2 and a driving body 3.
The introduction cassette 2 comprises a first portion 20 and a second portion 21, both said portions being joined for laying, as seen in the
Starting with the insert 22 and its bottom section 220, we can see that the latter comprises a longitudinal groove portion 222 used for guiding the fibre 10 at the inlet of the insert 22. The other side of the bottom section 220 comprises a housing 230 for receiving and attaching the end of the tube 11. The diameters of the groove 222 as well as of the housing 230, which should receive the tube 11, are selected according to the intrinsic diameters of the fibre and the tube 11.
Given that in some laying instances, a fluid is injected under pressure into the tube 11 simultaneously with introduction of the fibre, the insert 22 comprises a fluid introduction chamber, a portion 223 of which is visible in the figure. This fluid introduction chamber 223 is arranged between the groove portion 222 and the housing 230, these three elements being aligned according to the longitudinal axis of the insert 22. The fluid introduction chamber 223 is connected via a port 224 to a fluid supplying chamber 24 recessed in the first portion 20 of the introduction cassette 2. Tightness against fluid leaks is provided by a string seal 225 arranged in a peripheral groove of the fluid introduction chamber 223, as well as by a lip seal 226 providing leak tightness on the fibre side and by an O-ring 227 providing leak tightness on the tube side, these three seals being arranged in adapted housings of the bottom section 220.
The top section 221 of the insert 22 is similar to the bottom section 220 that has just been described, except that it has no port 224 allowing communication between the fluid introduction chamber and the exterior and that housings are provided only for the seals 226 and 227.
The two portions 20 and 21 of an introduction cassette 2 are similar, except that one of the portions, for example the second portion 21 comprises mounting rods 210, whereas the first portion 20 comprises corresponding blind holes 201. Each of the portions 20 and 21 comprises a portion of a housing 23 for receiving the insert 22 when assembled.
When the two portions 20 and 21 of the introduction cassette 2 are assembled, the latter presents an undercut or a side recess 25 upstream from the housing 23 over a portion of the length of the cassette 2 allowing coupling and operating of the driving body 3, as seen below. Also, the introduction cassette 2 presents an introduction opening 26 communicating directly with the groove 222 of the insert 22.
The body 30 of the driving body 3 comprises an open housing 37, arranged between the two wheels 35 and 36 and intended to receive the introduction cassette 2.
This figure, however, shows a carrier fluid supplying device 4 attached under the driving body 3 and able to include a pressure gauge 40. This device is connected from one side to a fluid supplying unit, not illustrated in the figures, and on the other hand to a duct 41 crossing the bottom part of the frame 30 to open onto an open port in the housing 37. When the driving body 3 is mounted on the introduction cassette 2, as seen in
Once this initial operation is completed, the driving body 3 is inserted around the introduction cassette 2, so that the wheels 35 and 36 are arranged on each side of the cable or the slender element 10 to be laid in the undercut 25, then the distance between the axes 31 and 32 is adjusted, respectively between the wheels 35 and 36 according to the diameter of the cable or the element 10 to be inserted in the tube 11, in order to complete the laying device 1, as seen in
Another determining advantage of the laying device 1 according to the invention is visible in comparing
Alternative embodiments of the introduction cassette 2 as well as the driving body 3 could be contemplated, some of these alternatives not illustrated in the figures.
The introduction cassette 2 is illustrated with only one inlet port 26, the insert 22 comprising only one guiding groove 222. Particularly in the case of laying of the optical fibres, there can be one introduction cassette 2 comprising several inlet ports 26, the insert having several grooves 222, all converging to the inlet of the tube 11, so as to deliver simultaneously several optical fibres 11.
Likewise, the laying body 3 has been illustrated with a carrier fluid providing and supplying device 4 on the bottom portion. For some laying cases in which carrier fluid can be dispensed with, this latter device need not be mounted. In some laying cases, only a lubricant can be inserted into the tube 11 simultaneously with the element to be laid 10.
In those cases where it is needed, the carrier fluid can be a dry fluid, for example, dry compressed air or a lubricated fluid, for example compressed air with a lubricant.
For relatively heavy and/or rigid elements to be laid, it is possible to provide an introduction cassette 2 comprising two successive undercuts 25 for receiving two successive driving bodies 3, as illustrated in FIG. 6. Preferably, only one of the axes 31 is directly driven, the other axis 31 being driven via a synchronization belt.
By way of variant, the cassette 2 can comprise a much larger undercut 25, the driving body then comprising two driving tracks instead of the two wheels 35 and 36.
Rather than adjustment of the position of the one axis 31, with respect to the longitudinal centre axis of the device, there can also be symmetrical and simultaneous adjustment means of the gap of the two axes 31 and 32.
Because it is constituted in two separate elements, a laying device according to the invention can therefore be more easily installed, especially in hard-to-access laying work sites. Due to the symmetrical constitution of the introduction cassette 2, the driving body 3 can be mounted from one side or the other of said cassette, so as to be adapted to the layout of the digging or the introduction chamber.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1593/06 | Oct 2006 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH2007/000488 | 10/4/2007 | WO | 00 | 3/19/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2008/040140 | 4/10/2008 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4412672 | Zelins | Nov 1983 | A |
5169126 | Reeve et al. | Dec 1992 | A |
5749565 | Frost et al. | May 1998 | A |
6386512 | Pecot et al. | May 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0292037 | Nov 1988 | EP |
9523988 | Sep 1995 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090236575 A1 | Sep 2009 | US |