The present invention pertains to a manually operated, engine driven vibratory concrete screed and, more particularly, to an improved vibration isolation and control system for such a screed.
Vibratory screeds are used to smooth the surface of freshly poured concrete and eliminate air pockets within the concrete mass. One type of manually operated screed is driven by a small gasoline engine (e.g. 1 to 2.5 horsepower) that turns an eccentric exciter mechanism to impart a high speed vibratory force to a screed blade attached to the exciter mechanism. For example, an engine operating in the range of 5,000–7,500 rpm will generate in a centrifugal force in the range of about 245 lbs. to 550 lbs. This type of vibratory screed includes an operating handle connected through a frame piece to the vibratory exciter and engine. The machine is pulled over the surface of the concrete and a small amount of fresh concrete will build-up behind the blade to ensure that the surface is uniform and depressions are not created. The blade may be up to 24 feet in length and, although vibration of the blade helps make the concrete flow, the operator must still pull the machine. When the build-up of concrete behind the blade is uneven, there is a tendency for one end of the blade to lift and create an uneven surface. The operator must tilt the operating handle downwardly on one side to generate a force sufficient to counteract the upward movement of the blade. This requires the operator to exert a large amount of force on the handle. Also, the screed blade may have to be turned horizontally over the surface of the concrete, as when moving around a curve or a corner, requiring the operator to exert a large amount of force on the handle in a generally horizontal plane.
It is also necessary to isolate the transmission of vibration from the exciter and blade to the operator. Specifically, the frame that carries the operator handle is isolated from its connection to the blade or to the exciter mechanism with rubber or other elastomer vibration isolators. It is desirable to use as soft a vibration isolator as possible to provide maximum vibration isolation for the operator. However, because of the high loads that the operator must impose on the blade for the reasons discussed above, harder vibration isolators are required in order to provide an adequately stiff connection between the operator handle and the blade to transmit the required control force. Soft vibration isolators, e.g. those having a durometer of about 30 provide excellent vibration isolation for the operator, but are too soft to permit adequate force to be transmitted from the handle, through the isolators, to the blade. Soft isolators also amplify the distance through which the operator must move the operating handle to adequately control the blade. The operator handle may be as much as 3.5 feet from the vibration isolators such that a very small amount of movement at the isolator connection is magnified into a large amount of movement where the operator grasps the operating handle.
In accordance with the present invention, a vibration isolation system for a vibratory screed which includes a blade, a vibratory exciter mechanism driven by an engine and attached to the blade, and an operating handle frame connected to the exciter mechanism, comprises a bifurcated frame member having a pair of arms positioned to straddle the exciter mechanism for attachment on laterally opposite sides thereof; an elastomeric vibration isolator captured between each arm and a surface of the exciter mechanism, the isolator being confined to limit vertical compressive movement and to permit substantially greater horizontal shear movement; and a retainer attached to each of the arms or to the exciter, the retainer adapted to engage the isolator to limit the amplitude of horizontal shear movement. Preferably, each arm of the frame member includes an upper attachment surface, and the opposite sides of the exciter mechanism have mounting surfaces that are disposed generally parallel to the upper attachment surfaces, and the isolators are confined between the attachment surfaces and the mounting surfaces.
In a presently preferred construction, the isolators include rigid upper and lower end plates that have threaded connectors attached thereto, and the attachment surfaces and the mounting surfaces are adapted to receive threaded fasteners for attachment to the threaded connectors. Each of the upper attachment surfaces is formed integrally with a retainer. In the preferred embodiment, each of the retainers comprises a downwardly opening cup having an upper base surface that forms the attachment surface and a downwardly divergent side wall that is positioned to engage the isolator to limit the amplitude of horizontal movement. Each of the isolators preferably comprises a cylindrical body, and the retainer cup has a frustoconical shape that is coaxial with the cylindrical axis of the isolator in a no-horizontal-load rest position, the cup wall positioned to engage the isolator under a horizontal shear load to provide the amplitude limit. The elastomeric isolator is preferably made of a natural rubber material having a durometer of about 30.
The apparatus also includes an elastomeric support isolator that is attached at one end to the frame member between the frame arms and at an opposite end to the surface of the exciter mechanism. The exciter mechanism includes an exciter housing that is positioned between the arms of the frame member and has an upwardly extending exciter drive shaft. The engine is positioned directly above the exciter housing and includes a downwardly extending output shaft connected to the exciter drive shaft, and an engine output shaft housing connected to the exciter housing with a flexible connection. The flexible connection includes an elastomer housing and a plurality of elastomer shock absorbers surrounding the elastomer coupling.
A vibratory concrete screed 10 includes a long blade 11 which may be made, for example, from an aluminum or magnesium extrusion. The blade may have a length of up to about 24 feet. The blade 11 is clamped to the underside of an exciter mechanism 12 which includes an eccentric device driven by an engine 13 to impart a horizontal vibratory motion to the blade 11. A supporting frame 14 is attached to the exciter mechanism 12 and includes an operator handle 15. The screed 10 is operated over the surface of freshly poured concrete by the operator pulling the blade from the operator handle 15. The vibration isolation system of the present invention is intended to overcome the problems in prior art devices, discussed briefly above, while providing necessary isolation of vibratory force to the operator. These problems include control of the tendency of the blade to move upwardly when the build-up of concrete behind the blade is uneven, and the need to pull one end of the blade in a circular arc around the opposite end as for movement around a curve. Both of these operations require a large amount of force to be exerted by the operator and, if the vibration isolation device between the operator handle and the exciter is too soft, control becomes difficult. On the other hand, if the vibration isolating device is too hard, then the vibratory forces transmitted to the operator become too great.
The blade 11 is demountably attached to the bottom of the exciter mechanism 12 such that the working face 16 of the blade faces the operator grasping the handles 15, whereby the screed is pulled over the surface of the freshly poured concrete. As best seen in
Referring also to
The main supporting frame 14 includes a bifurcated lower frame member 31 defining a pair of mounting arms 32. Each of the arms 32 terminates in a downwardly opening cup 33 which encloses an elastomeric vibration isolator 34 and provides means for attaching the isolator to the arm 32. The lower ends of the vibration isolators 34 are attached to a mounting surface 35 on the exciter housing 20 on opposite sides of the exciter mechanism. Referring also to
To provide additional support and a more stable connection between the exciter housing 20 and the supporting frame 14, an elastomeric support isolator 44 is attached between the frame member 31 and a rear support surface 45 on the exciter housing 20. The support isolator 44 may be of a construction identical to the vibration isolators 34. The upper end of the support isolator 44 is attached to an intermediate frame portion 46, between the arms 32, with a threaded stud (not shown) attached to the intermediate frame portion and threaded into the upper end of the support isolator 44. Similarly, the lower end of the support isolator 44 is connected to the rear support surface 45 with a machine screw (not shown) extending upwardly through the surface 45 and into threaded engagement with the isolator 44. However, the support isolator 44 need not be and is preferably not confined in a cup, as are the vibration isolators 34. The support isolator assists in transmitting vertical downward movement imposed by the operator on the operator handle to the blade.
It should be noted that the flexible elastomer coupling 24 and the elastomer shock absorbers 26 that comprise the flexible connection between the exciter housing and the clutch housing 25 may be identical to the vibration isolators 34 and the support isolator 44, except that the flexible coupling 24 and shock absorbers 26 are smaller in size. The durometer of these shock absorbers, however, may be somewhat higher for example, about 50.
The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/706,539, filed on Nov. 12, 2003 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,988,851.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060045625 A1 | Mar 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10706539 | Nov 2003 | US |
Child | 11258556 | US |