This invention relates to walk-behind or sit-on wet concrete floor trowel machines. Also, to walk-behind or sit-on dry concrete floor polishing machines. More specifically, to trowel-to-polisher conversion machines of slurry polishing by soft means.
The invention aims to save on time and cost of machinery used for concrete floor troweling and consecutive polishing, for which works, in state-of-art practice, at least two different machines are used.
Notably, a trowel machine, with rotary blades and a polisher, with polishing disc. For small jobs, these are configured as walk-behind machines, and for larger ones, as sit-on-machines. Some sit-on polishers are self-driving and some polisher heads comprise multiple disks of different grit or function, such as wiping, wetting, “waxing” with plastic melt to seal, and more.
These two machines have similar or identical construction, power-need and rotational-speed and shortly follow each other (say within a day or so) on a new construction site. By itself, each one is expensive and requires storage space. Their combination is proposed here, using polishing head attachment over the trowel blades or blade replacement with polishing blades. Therefore, it is the object of this invention to resolve the conflicting functional means of troweling and polishing embodied in the same machine.
Furthermore, it is another object of the invention is to provide for soft means polishing with slurry, especially for trowel-to-polisher conversion machines and processes, alas not limited to such conversion machines.
The above problems and others are at least partially solved and the above objects and others realized in a process, which according to the teachings of this invention, uses a concrete floor trowel machine of at least two blades for polishing concrete floors, employing polishing jackets over the trowel blades or replacing said troweling blades with polishing blades or attachments. Additional problems are solved, with trowel blade replacement with polisher disc, which preferably has steel cloth pucks, with or without slurry feed holes. Said cloth may hold dry polishing powder and may comprise the loop part of a hook-and loop (Velcro) attachment, which however is made of stainless steel or other suitable metal. Trowel blade replacement with planetary polisher head is also proposed.
Referring to the drawings:
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Machine 10 has four trowel blades 1, rigidly attached to four spider arms 2, a bumper rim 3, a safety cage 4, a powering engine 5, two handles 6, controls 7, optional stash-away hardware 8 and optional stash away roller 9.
While blades 1 are shown to be short and wide, they can be long and narrow, as they are in most of the modern power trowels. Engine 5 is shown as a gasoline engine. Other engines, including electrical motors are also common however.
The worker walks behind such a machine with the expectation that his footprint will not show off. With proper timing and care, it does not. That is the state of art of concrete floor troweling, alas with much sophisticated machines. Some for instance has four rotary head, each having four trowel blades and the operator sits on the so configured self-propelling machine. Such machines are used for large concrete floor area troweling.
The state of art of the concrete floor polishing is similar, using polisher machines, having rotary disks with polisher heads or pads. For simplicity, such polisher is not illustrated here.
To the skilled in the art, it may be striking the similarity of these two kinds of machines. Even more to the power-trowel operator, who may need to come back the next day with a similar size and speed power-polisher. He would rather switch the power-trowel to polisher mode; say by pulling a polishing jacket over the trowel blades. Such jacket is disclosed next.
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Jacket 20 is cut from consumable plastic mat of hard foam, cloth or sponge consistency, which may comprise plastic insert balls melted with diamond powder at some distribution (not shown for clarity). Underside 21 of jacket 20 polishes the concrete floor wet or dry. A mist system may keep floor wetting uniform, while at dry polishing, a vacuum may sweep up the dust. For such means are common in contemporary polishers, their illustration is omitted here.
The leading and trailing edges of jacket 20 are not distinguished, for these may be interchanged, even in between two polishing steps or passes. Reinforced holes 22 allow for trowel blade attachment, say bay rubber straps (not shown either).
Note that jacket 20 is to be of sufficient but not excessive compressibility and flexibility. It shall be able to hold water, when soaked and its plastic inserts shall be able to melt by friction and seal the pores. The materials shall be the same as used in disc shape on common floor polishers. However, not all blades of a four-blade machine need to have the same composition. For instance, one may be the wetting jacket, the other one, the grit polisher; the next one is the melt sealer, and the last one, the wiper.
Trowel blades are made of sheet metal, including stainless steel. They themselves are flexible enough to attach rigid plastic polisher blocks to function as polisher disks. Such configuration, as another preferred embodiment of this invention is illustrated next.
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Head 30 is shown as being short, for it only needed at the trowel tips, where blocks 35-38 attain the highest speed, and where the trowel is the most flexible.
It shall be obvious to the skilled in the art that blocks 35-38 may be staggered in plane and may have different function, surface feature and composition thereof.
For instance, if blocks 35 are near to the leading edge, hitting first the floor, their job may be hard grit material removal. Behind these, block 36, may have the same function but with smaller grits for smoothing. Block 37 may be the melting resin type with fine diamond powder, while block 38 with magnetized powder or grit.
Just like polisher head block have various surface features, materials and compositions, block 35-38 may have the same variety for the same reason. According to the needs, pads and jackets (say for buffing) may be secured to adjacent blades of the same trowel machine.
In any case, it shall be obvious by now, that trowel jackets and attachments constructed according to the teachings of this invention, can save considerable expenses and time in construction and maintenance jobs. At least as much as employing one machine, instead of two, can save.
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The present invention is described above with reference to a preferred embodiment. However, those skilled in the art will recognize that changes and modifications may be made in the described embodiment without departing from the nature and scope of the present invention. For instance, trowel-to-polisher head conversion is intuitive, and thus hereby instructive, in reverse, that is in polisher-to-trowel conversion configuration. Adding a roller leg to facilitate rolling the machine to stash away, if it has not one already, is also considered instructive. Finally, adding swivel arm attachment, as well as polisher head drivers, to a trowel blade, for a more functional polisher conversion, is also considered within the scope and teachings of this invention. Also within the scope of battery powered electrical walk-behind, sit-on and remote-controlled trowel machine conversions.
Various further changes and modifications to the embodiment herein chosen for purposes of illustration will readily occur to those skilled in the art. To the extent that such modifications and variations do not depart from the spirit of the invention, they are intended to be included within the scope thereof. For instance, said steel wool puck may be made of plastic, at least in part, and may be attached to blades, rather than a disc.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/854,424 of Priority Date Apr. 24, 2013 and Ser. No. 61/960,457 of Priority Date Sep. 19, 2013.