None.
This disclosure relates generally to hydraulic valve circuits used in material handling equipment such as lift trucks and/or lift truck attachments, and more particularly, to hydraulic valve circuits adapted to control a load-gripping force for transversely movable members such as clamp arms.
Lift trucks (or similar materials handling vehicles) used to move loads from one place to another in a warehouse, for example, are typically equipped with attachments having load-lifting members such as clamp arms mounted to a carriage movably attached to a mast of the lift truck. Various different types of attachments may be mounted on the carriage of the lift truck. For example, drum-clamping forks may incorporate contours particularly useful for clamping barrels or drums. Similarly, clamp arms may be engineered differently for handling rectangular or cylindrical loads. More specifically, clamp arms adapted to handle rectangular loads such as stacked cartons or household appliances are generally referred to as carton clamps and rely on clamping forces applied to the sides of the rectangular load for lifting the load. Carton clamp attachments typically include a pair of large blade-shaped clamp members each of which can be inserted between side-by-side stacks of cartons or appliances. The clamp members on either side of the load are then drawn together, typically using hydraulic cylinders for controlling the movement of the clamp members, to apply a compressive force on the load of sufficient pressure to allow for lifting the load using the clamp members compressively engaged with the sides of the load.
Carton clamps are most frequently used in warehousing, beverage, appliance, and electronics industries and may be specifically designed for particular types of loads. For example, carton clamps may be equipped with contact pads that are sized for palletless handling of refrigerators, washers, and other large household appliances (also referred to as “white goods”). In various configurations, carton clamps may be used for handling multiple appliances at one time. Such general types of equipment, as well as those more specifically described hereafter, all constitute exemplary applications in which the hydraulic circuits described herein are intended to be used.
It is highly desirable to control the process by which clamp arms are moved to engage and subsequently lift a load, so as to avoid damaging the load by over-clamping it. Damage to the load may occur in various ways. The operator may use too little clamping force when attempting to grasp and then lift the clamped load. As a result, the load may become dislodged from the clamping members and sustain impact damage. A more likely scenario involves the operator using too much clamping force in an effort to avoid dropping the load. The result of using too much clamping force may be a crushed or deformed load.
As can easily be appreciated, controlling the clamping force of clamp arms can be a highly complex undertaking since different clamp forces will be required to lift different types, or different numbers, of cartons. For example, clamp arms used in the facilities of a large consumer goods supplier may encounter dishwashers, washing machines, clothes dryers, refrigerators, computers, furniture, televisions, etc. A clamp may thus encounter cartons having similar outward appearances and dimensions but containing products having differing optimal maximum clamping force requirements due to different load characteristics such as weight, fragility, packaging, etc. Furthermore, even when a facility warehouses a limited number of types of loads, a clamp may be utilized to simultaneously move four refrigerator cartons, then to move a single dishwasher carton, and finally a single additional refrigerator carton, presenting different load geometries also having differing optimal maximum clamping force requirements, separate from those arising from the characteristics of the loads within the cartons.
Hydraulic control systems for clamp arms therefore typically impose automatically variable limits on the clamping of a load, both on the clamping force and the speed with which the load-engaging surfaces can be closed into initial contact with the load. However, existing control systems for the force applied by load-handing clamps are often insufficient to prevent damage to loads. What is desired, therefore, is an improved control system for variably limiting the clamp force applied by clamps arms to a load being gripped.
For a better understanding of the invention, and to show how the same may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
Affixed to the inner surface of each clamp arm 12 and 14 are a plurality of bladders 20, filled with pressurized hydraulic fluid such as water, and used to sense the force by which the clamp arms 12 and 14 grip a load. As used in this specification, the term “bladder” refers to any apparatus that is filled with a fluid, and in response to external force tends to contract so as increase pressure of that fluid, and in response to increasing internal pressure of the fluid, tends to expand and increase any force against an object against which the bladder presses. Thus, the term “bladder” may include a bellows, a hydraulic cylinder, etc.
As explained in further detail below, as the clamp arms 12, 14 grip a carton, the pressure in the bladders 20 rises and is transmitted through line 22 to a pressure sensing circuit that, when the sensed pressure in the bladders rises above a threshold value, prevents the clamp arms 12 and 14 from applying additional force to the load.
Specifically,
The hydraulic circuit 50 automatically prevents further pressure from being supplied to the cylinders 18 and 19 through the line 72 once a threshold pressure is sensed by the bladders 20 affixed to the clamp arms 12 and 14. Specifically, a fill valve 74 is used to pre-pressurize the bladders 20 to a reference pressure, such as 5 psi for example, using fluid such as water. As the pressurized fluid is supplied to the cylinders 18 and 19, and the clamp arms 12 and 14 have moved inwards to contact the load, the pressure in the bladders 20 increases rapidly and is transmitted through line 76 to a bellows 77 that operates a spring-loaded cam 78. Once this pressure reaches a threshold pressure determined by the force of the spring 79 a rotary valve 80 rotates to a position that prevents pressurize hydraulic fluid from being supplied to the cylinders 18 and 19 through line 70, preventing the cylinders 18 and 19 from further retracting inwards against the load. Those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that, with the rotary valve 80 rotated to a closed position, the cylinders 18 and 19 may still be opened away from the load because check valve 73 permits fluid to be exhausted from the cylinders back to the port 72 of the attachment valve assembly 52. The detailed operation of the hydraulic control circuit 50 is provided in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2013/0058746, filed on Sep. 5, 2012 and published on Mar. 7, 2013, the contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The hydraulic control circuit 50 shown in
However, all bladder will rarely press against the load in unison. For example, one clamp arm may contact the load before the other clamp arm does, because the operator did not approach the load symmetrically, in which case the load may skid across the floor a short distance before the load contacts the other clamp arm. In this case, the pressure in the bladders may spike and interrupt the closing movement of the clamp arms. Furthermore, the clamp arms 12 and 14 typically are configured with a toe-in, which causes the four bladders at the front of the clamp arms 12 and 14 to contact the load before the four bladders at the back of the load do. This, also may cause a pressure spike that prematurely interrupts the closing movement of the clamp arms 12 and 14; since the force on the load is proportional to the number of bladders 20 contacting the load multiplied by the pressure in the bladders 20, the shutoff valve 80 may reach the threshold cut-off pressure before all bladders 20 contact the load to apply the full clamping force to the load.
The issues just mentioned may be ameliorated by including restrictors at the exit of each bladder, which delay the equalization of pressure between the bladders, i.e. the restrictors create a temporary pressure differential between the pressure inside the bladder and the pressure following the exit of the bladder. However, the use of such restrictors tends to cause overshoot of the clamping force beyond what is needed to hold the load while lifting. Referring to
The hydraulic control circuit 400 has an attachment valve assembly 402 that receives pressurized hydraulic fluid from a lift truck via a fluid line attached to connection 404 and returns the hydraulic fluid to the lift truck via a fluid line attached to connection 406. As the clamp arms 12 and 14 are closed so as to grip a load, the ports 408 and 410 of attachment valve assembly 402 deliver high pressure fluid to the rod-side of cylinders 424 and 426 through lines 412 and 414, respectively; as the high pressure fluid retracts the rods of those cylinders to bring the clamp arms 12 and 14 closer together, lower pressure fluid is expelled from the cylinders 424 and 426 and returned to the attachment valve assembly 402 through ports 416 and 418 via lines 420 and 422, respectively. Conversely, when the clamp arms 12 and 14 are opened, to release a load for example, high pressure hydraulic fluid may be provided to the piston-side of the cylinders 424 and 426 via lines 420 and 422, while low pressure fluid is expelled from the cylinders 424 and 426 and returned to the attachment valve assembly 402 though ports 408 and 410.
The hydraulic circuit 400 automatically prevents further pressure from being supplied to the cylinders 424 and 426 through the lines 408 and 410 once a threshold pressure is supplied to the bladders 20 affixed to the clamp arms 12 and 14, and that contact and apply a clamp force to the load. Specifically, a fill valve 430 is used to fill the bladders 20 using fluid such as water. As the pressurized fluid is supplied to the cylinders 424 and 426, and after the clamp arms 12 and 14 have moved inwards to contact the load, the pressure in the bladders 20 is charged through line 432 by a charging system 434 to a threshold pressure. Once the threshold pressure is reached, further pressurized hydraulic fluid is prevented from being supplied to the cylinders 424 and 426 through lines 412 and 414, thus preventing the cylinders 424 and 426 from further retracting inwards against the load.
The charging system 434 is shown schematically in
When pressurized fluid is provided to connection 404 of the control valve assembly 402, so as to initially move the clamp arms 12 and 13 together towards a load, the pressurized fluid forces open one way valves 450 and 452, so as to retract the rods of positioning cylinders 424 and 426 and close the clamp arms 12 and 14 toward the load. The positioning cylinders 424 and 426 are each preferably configured to provide relatively low force at high pressures. Initially, the bladders 20 are in a retracted and/or deflated state so that, when the clamp arms 12 and 14 contact the load, the force against the load rises faster than the force against the bladders. The pressure in line 451 will rise rapidly until it reaches a threshold pressure set by the spring of pressure relief valve 454, at which point the pressure relief valve 454 will open. In an exemplary embodiment, for instance, the spring of pressure relief valve 454 is configured to open the pressure relief valve 454 when the pressure differential across the pressure relief valve 454 is 1700 psi.
Because, up until the point at which the pressure relief valve 454 opens, the force applied by the positioning cylinders 424 and 426 is absorbed primarily by the load instead of the bladders, when the pressure relief valve 454 does open, the pressure in the bladders will begin to increase. This causes a reactionary increase in the pressure of the positioning cylinders, which closes the one way valve 452, locking the positioning cylinders 424 and 426 in place and preventing them from moving apart from each other. The one way valve 450, however, does not close, and thus further pressure provided to line 451 by the lift truck will pressurize the bladders 20 via the bladder charging system 434, causing the bladders to expand and affirmatively increase the gripping force of the clamp arms 12 and 14 against the load (as opposed to pressurizing in reaction to further closing movement of the clamp arms). Stated differently, the bladder charging system 434 increases the gripping force on the load independently of further inward movement of the clamp arms 12 and 14. Clamp pressure, and the corresponding gripping force, may be increased through the bladder charging system 434 until an upper cut-off pressure in line 451 is reached, after which clamp relief valve 460 opens and prevents any further pressure increase in line 451.
When the operator of the lift truck activates the two-way valve 414 to release the load, the pressure in line 453 opens the pilot control valves 450 and 452 so that pressurized fluid may expand the clamp cylinders 424 and 426 so as to move the clamp arms 12 and 14 away from each other, while fluid is exhausted out of line 451. The pressure relief valve 454 will then close. In some preferred embodiments, the attachment valve assembly 402 includes a flow divider circuit 462 that ensures an equal amount of flow between the clamp cylinders 424 and 426, as well as a bypass circuit 464 that ensures that, should a circumstance arise where no fluid is flowing to or from one of the cylinders 424 or 426 (which might arise, for example, when one clamp arm contacts the load before the other clamp arm), that flow to or from one cylinder may be diverted to the other side of the flow divider circuit.
The charging system 434 preferably comprises a first charging cylinder 456 that uses pressurized oil to pressurize water in a second charging cylinder 458, which is connected to the bladders 20. Each of the first and second charging cylinders 456 and 458 have compression springs that, once the operator opens the clamp arms 12 and 14, and thereby opens the one-way valves 450 and 452 to exhaust unpressurized fluid through line 541, de-pressurizes the fluid in the bladders by exhausting fluid from the cylinder 456 back into the attachment valve assembly 402.
Because, up until the point at which the pressure relief valve 454 opens, the force applied by the positioning cylinders 424 and 426 is absorbed primarily by the load instead of the bladders, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the threshold pressure at which pressure relief valve 454 opens is preferably set low enough, so that the force provided by the positioning cylinders 424 and 426 at that pressure will not cause damage to the load. Similarly, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that other charging systems may be used besides the one depicted in
It will be appreciated that the invention is not restricted to the particular embodiment that has been described, and that variations may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims, as interpreted in accordance with principles of prevailing law, including the doctrine of equivalents or any other principle that enlarges the enforceable scope of a claim beyond its literal scope. Unless the context indicates otherwise, a reference in a claim to the number of instances of an element, be it a reference to one instance or more than one instance, requires at least the stated number of instances of the element but is not intended to exclude from the scope of the claim a structure or method having more instances of that element than stated. The word “comprise” or a derivative thereof, when used in a claim, is used in a nonexclusive sense that is not intended to exclude the presence of other elements or steps in a claimed structure or method.
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