The present invention relates generally to an apparatus and method for improving the control and productivity of a concrete screeding machine during the leveling and smoothing of freshly poured concrete that has been placed over a surface.
Screeding devices or machines are used to level and smooth uncured concrete to a desired grade. Known screeding machines typically include a screed head, which includes a vibrating member and a grade setting device, such as a plow or auger device. The screed head is vertically adjustable, such as in response to a laser leveling system, to establish the desired grade at the vibrating member. Examples of such screeding machines are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,655,633; 4,930,935; 6,227,761; 7,044,681; 7,175,363; and 7,396,186, which are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
The present invention provides a screeding machine that comprises a screed head having a vibrating member and a grade setting device. The grade setting device comprises an auger device that has at least two separate spiral or helical flightings disposed on and around and at least partially along a rotatable shaft or body of the auger. The helical flightings are staged or configured or arranged so that at least a portion of the auger has a first flighting portion or region having a first longitudinal spacing between adjacent fins or vanes of the helical flighting or flightings and a second flighting portion or region having a second longitudinal spacing between adjacent fins or vanes of the helical flighting or flightings.
According to an aspect of the present invention, an auger may have three separate and distinct flightings or vanes that are helically disposed along a rotatable shaft or body of the auger. A first one of the flightings may be helically disposed substantially along the entire length of the body, while a second one of the flightings may be helically disposed along a shorter length of the body, such as, for example, along about two-thirds of the length of the body that is encompassed by the first flighting, with the second flighting being spaced from the first flighting. Optionally, a third flighting may be helically disposed along a shorter length of the body, such as, for example, along about one-third of the length of the body that is encompassed by the first flighting (and thus, for example, about half of the length of the body that is encompassed by the second flighting), with the second flighting being spaced from the first and second flightings. In such a configuration, the spacing between the first, second and third flightings may be substantially uniform (i.e., the longitudinal spacing between the first flighting and second flighting is the same as the longitudinal spacing between the second flighting and the third flighting, and is the same as the longitudinal spacing between the third flighting and the first flighting.
Optionally, the longitudinal spacing along the body between adjacent portions of the flightings may be uniform along the body. Thus, the second flighting may only extend partially along a middle region (such as, for example, a middle third) of the body and may be disposed mid-way between the adjacent flighting portions of the first flighting. At a third portion of the body, the second flighting may terminate and a third and fourth flighting may be disposed equally spaced from one another and from the first flighting to provide three flightings at the third portion of the body.
Thus, the present invention provides a staged flighting auger device that has different flighting configurations along its length. For example, at one end or portion of the auger (such as a downstream portion or region or discharge end of the auger), the auger may have a tighter or closer configuration of flightings or vanes, and at another end or portion of the auger (such as an upstream portion or region or end of the auger), the auger may have a more spaced apart configuration of flightings or vanes. The denser configuration is at the downstream end of the auger with the more spaced flighting configuration being at the upstream end of the auger, such that, as more concrete is moved by the auger and the concrete starts to build up as it is moved by the auger, the denser spacing flighting configuration enhances movement of the larger volume of concrete.
These and other objects, advantages, purposes and features of the present invention will become apparent upon review of the following specification in conjunction with the drawings.
Referring now to the drawings and the illustrative embodiments depicted therein, a screeding machine 10 includes a wheeled unit 12 with a boom 14 extending therefrom and supporting a screeding head or assembly 16 at an outer end thereof (
Screeding machine 10 and the screeding head or assembly 16 may be similar in construction and/or operation as the screeding machines and screeding heads described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,655,633; 4,930,935; 6,227,761; 7,044,681; 7,175,363; and/or 7,396,186, and/or U.S. Publication Nos. US-2007-0116520 and/or US-2010-0196096, which are all hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entireties, such that a detailed discussion of the overall construction and operation of the screeding machines and screeding heads need not be repeated herein. For example, the screeding machine may comprise or may utilize aspects of a Somero SXP-D LASER SCREED™ screeding machine. However, clearly this example is not intended to limit the scope of the present application and clearly aspects of the present invention are suitable for use on other types of screeding machines. For example, the screeding head and auger device of the present invention may be suitable for use on a smaller screeding machine, such as a machine of the types described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,976,805; 7,121,762; and/or 7,850,396, which are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entireties. Optionally, although shown in
As shown in
Thus, the first portion of the body 26 has a coarse or spaced apart distribution of the flighting therealong, while the second portion of the body has a reduced spacing or distribution of the flighting therealong and the third portion of the body has a further reduced spacing of the flighting therealong. In the illustrated embodiment of
In the illustrated embodiment of
Optionally, the auger of the present invention may have discontinuous flightings or flighting portions therealong, so that the flightings are spaced equidistant apart along each portion or region of the auger or body. For example, and with reference to
Optionally, and with reference to
Thus, the staged flighting or variable flighting arrangement or configuration of the auger of the present invention provides a coarser or larger spacing of flights or vanes at or near an upstream end of the auger and a finer or closer spacing of flights or vanes at or near a downstream or discharge end of the auger. Thus, during operation of the auger, as the auger is rotated while engaging the concrete surface and excess concrete at the desired grade (with the auger being rotatably driven, such as via a hydraulic motor or the like at an end of the auger, in a direction opposite to the direction of travel of the screed head assembly), the coarser spacing of the upstream end flightings may start to move concrete along the auger and towards the discharge end of the auger. As the concrete accumulates as it moves along the auger, the spacing between the flightings decreases to enhance movement of the additional concrete moved along the auger from the upstream end, and the spacing between the flightings decreases more at or near the discharge end of the auger to further accommodate accumulated concrete and enhance movement of the concrete at or near the discharge end of the auger.
Although shown and described as an auger having three distinct portions or regions with different flighting spacings or gaps, clearly more or less portions may be provided along the auger while remaining within the spirit and scope of the present invention. For example, an auger may only have two flighting sections, with an upstream half of the auger (or other portion or fraction of the auger) having a single flighting arrangement and the downstream half of the auger (or other portion or fraction of the auger) having a dual flighting arrangement. Optionally, for example, an auger may have four or more flighting sections, such as with a single flighting extending the full length of the auger, a second flighting extending about three quarters of the length of the auger, a third flighting extending about half of the length of the auger and a fourth flighting extending about one quarter of the length of the auger. The flightings may be uniformly spaced or the spacing may only be uniform at the first and fourth quarters, and the auger may include transitional sections to join different flighting sections together, such as discussed above, while remaining within the spirit and scope of the present invention. Optionally, the auger may have one or more flightings extending substantially along the length of the auger, with the pitch of the flightings varying from a coarser or larger pitch at or near the upstream end of the auger to a finer or smaller pitch at or near the downstream or discharge end of the auger.
Thus, the present invention provides a staged or varying flighting auger, which provides an increased concrete carrying capacity as excess concrete increasingly accumulates toward the discharge end of the auger. The auger of the present invention may also provide a reduced auger weight from “all full length flights”, because the flights or flightings are added along the direction of concrete flow and movement where they are most needed. The weight of extra flighting is eliminated at the upstream end (in other words, at the starting end of the auger, where overlap normally occurs over the previous pass).
The present invention may also provide for reduced auger flighting wear at the discharge end of the auger. Current augers typically need to be flipped end-to-end to maximize useful life due to uneven wear. The present invention avoids this and thus provides a machine-operator maintenance benefit.
The preferred multiple, staged flighting configuration of the present invention provides a uniform and substantially constant pitch (such as about 9 inches or thereabouts) along the auger. Optionally, the auger of the present invention may provide one or more flightings with a varying pitch of the flighting or flightings along the auger. However, a varying pitch (having a smaller or reduced pitch at or near the discharge end of the auger to provide a denser or closer spacing arrangement of the flighting at or near the discharge end of the auger) may slow down the lateral velocity of the concrete as the flights or vanes get closer together and the concrete moves towards and reaches the end of the auger. The multi-flight staged configurations of the present invention preferably provide equal pitch flighting that provides enhanced concrete movement.
The auger may be mounted at the screed head via any suitable mounting means. Optionally, the auger may be mounted at the screed head via an internal bearing mounting assembly, which rotatably mounts the auger body to a fixed shaft via an internal bearing that is received in the end of the hollow auger body. For example, and with reference to
As best shown in
Thus, the mounting assembly 140 of the present invention provides a sealed bearing within the auger body. The sleeve 152 is inserted into the auger body and may be press fit or welded thereto to fixedly attach the sleeve to the body. In the illustrated embodiment, the sleeve includes a raised shoulder 152a at its outboard end to limit insertion of the sleeve into the body, and the raised shoulder portion may have an outer surface that is generally flush with the outer surface of the body, whereby the flighting 128 may extend over the outer surface of the raised shoulder portion of the sleeve (such as shown in
The potential benefits of the internal bearing mount of the present invention include that the relatively thin vertical structural support and relatively reduced diameter of the stationary shaft at the discharge end of the auger offers less resistance to the movement of concrete away from the end of the auger. Known current pillow-block type bearings are mounted externally at the rotating shafts of current augers and tend to have a higher cross-sectional area than what is provided by the internal bearing mount of the present invention. Also, with the bearing mounted internally inside the auger body or tube, there is reduced exposure to concrete and stone aggregate at the bearings. Current designs typically require a plastic collar on the shaft between the bearing and the end of the auger to help prevent stones from jamming between the rotating parts and destroying the grease seals of the bearings. The internal bearing mount of the present invention may also allow a shaft seal to be included between the stationary shaft and rotating end cap of the auger (not currently shown), further protecting the actual grease seals of the bearing itself. Also, exposure to pressure washing of the screed head at the end of the day by machine operators tends to reduce the life of bearings whenever water gets inside the bearings. The bearings need to be greased to help force out any water after pressure washing is complete. However, the internal bearing mount of the present invention may help reduce the likelihood of failures from water contamination. Optionally, the internal bearing mount of the present invention may include a type of access port with a sealed, yet removable, access cover at the grease fitting to ease the greasing when greasing may be desired or necessary.
The opposite end of the auger (such as the upstream end of the auger) may be mounted via any known mounting means and may be rotatably driven via a hydraulic motor and known pillow-block bearing supporting the auger (not shown). However, optionally, the auger motor may be mounted internally inside the auger itself. In such a configuration, the shaft of the auger motor may remain stationary with the flow of pressurized hydraulic fluid traveling through ports and internal passageways of the stationary motor shaft.
Changes and modifications to the specifically described embodiments can be carried out without departing from the principles of the present invention, which is intended to be limited only by the scope of the appended claims as interpreted according to the principles of patent law.
The present application claims the filing benefits of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/806,672, filed Mar. 29, 2013, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61806672 | Mar 2013 | US |