Lift trucks use an attached clamping device to handle rolls of various paper types. The ability of such clamping devices to lift and move a roll of paper without damage is highly dependent upon the contact pads used. Contact pads are used with a paper roll clamp and make actual contact with the outside cylindrical surface of the paper roll. A textured, curved contact surface is usually designed into the load-engaging front surface of the contact pad in order to balance the needs of load holding and damage prevention.
Handling paper rolls often results in abrasion or wearing of the rear surface of the contact pad. Normal wearing of the contact pad is due to sliding the rear surface of the contact pad along a paved ground surface. Contact pad service life can be dramatically reduced by such wear, thereby requiring frequent replacement.
In one embodiment, this invention relates to a contact pad having a load-engaging front surface, and an oppositely-facing cast metal rear surface having at least one depression and a tile embedded within the depression such that the tile has an exposed surface with a wear element welded on the exposed surface.
In another embodiment, the wear element is hard surfacing. In another embodiment, the foregoing tile is a mild steel tile embedded within the depression.
This invention also relates to a method for manufacturing a contact pad having a load-engaging front surface and an oppositely-facing rear surface including the steps of embedding a mild steel tile within a contact pad casting pattern such that the embedded tile has an exposed weldable surface, casting the contact pad from ductile cast iron, and applying a wear element on the weldable surface.
In another embodiment, the applying step includes applying hard-surfacing on the weldable surface.
The foregoing and other objectives, features, and advantages of the invention will be more readily understood upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the drawings which form a part of the disclosure herein, each contact pad 10 has a front, or load-engaging, surface 12 as best shown in
The tile 16 in this embodiment is preferably constructed with dual bores or holes 24, each capable of accepting a nail 26 or other stabilizing element.
Alternatively,
As a further alternative,
The manufacturing process herein provides manufacturing cost advantages for the fabrication of the contact pads. A purpose of the tile 16 is to facilitate application of a wear element or hard-surfacing 34 on a cast contact pad using common weld practices. Without the tile 16, applying a wear element 34 directly on to the ductile iron contact pad 10 would involve uncommon and specialized welding procedures. Therefore, the tile 16 provides a surface that allows for the application of the wear element 34 thereby allowing a contact pad 10 to be refurbished with the application of additional wear element, such as hard-surfacing, when previously-applied hard-surfacing is worn down from use.
To manufacture such a contact pad, a sand casting (not shown) with a negative imprint or cavity of the contact pad 10 is used. The sand casting is constructed with means to pour molten metal into the cavity and means to allow air to escape to create the sand casting pattern. The sand casting pattern may be created in two halves such that the plane where the two halves meet creates the parting line and runs along a central plane of the final cast pattern. The sand casting may include depressions such as 15 to indicate the positions in which one or more of the tiles 16 should be placed. The purpose of such depressions is to aid a manufacturer in locating the positions where individual tiles should be placed.
Prior to pouring molten metal into the sand casting, one or more pre-made tiles 16 are placed within the depressions in one of the two halves of the sand pattern. The tiles may be secured by pushing a nail 26 or other connector through the one or more holes 24, into the sand casting. Such securement is to avoid movement of the tile as molten metal flows over and around the tile. The securement thereby provides a reliable and low cost means of providing stability. However, the depressions 15 also aid the manufacturer in keeping a tile in place as molten metal is poured into the casting pattern, as will be described. Therefore, in some embodiments of the invention the tiles are placed within depressions without the use of nails 26 or other connectors.
After placing the tiles in position, to form the final casting pattern, the two blocks of the sand casting are assembled together to create a fully enclosed cavity, the cavity thereby having the dimensions of the desired contact pad. Gates and risers (not shown) are added to provide the means for pouring in the molten metal and allowing air to escape. Molten metal is poured into the final casting pattern and the ductile iron surrounds and captures the tile(s) within the cast contact pad and the tile(s) become part of the final casting.
The final cast contact pad can then be separated from the sand casting mechanically by impact or shaking.
After the final contact pad has been cast, each tile, and in some embodiments the tip of the nail(s), can be ground down or finished so that the top of the tile is flush with the surrounding cast surface, as shown in
Primary benefits to casting the tile directly into the contact pad are cost efficiency and retainment. Conversely, machining features to accommodate mechanically fastening a wear tile to a contact pad, and the related fasteners, are costly and do not reliably retain the wear tile.
The terms and expressions which have been employed in the foregoing specification are used therein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention in the use of such terms and expressions of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow.
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Entry |
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International Search Report prepared by the US Patent and Trademark Office for PCTUS2016/069384, dated Mar. 10, 2017, 3 pages. |
Written Opinion prepared by the US Patent and Trademark Office for PCTUS2016/069384, dated Mar. 10, 2017, 8 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170267505 A1 | Sep 2017 | US |