The several embodiments of the current invention relate to cable mine roof bolts. In particular, the embodiment of the current invention relates to more strongly affixing the head of a cable mine roof bolt to the cable.
Underground mine shafts sometimes experience cave-ins, collapses, or falling rock. Over time, the roofs of underground mine shafts can deteriorate due to the layered and stratified makeup of the earth. With the deterioration, these layers can separate and those at the surface of the mine roof may pull away and collapse into the mine shaft. To maintain the integrity of the ceiling, it is a common practice to drill holes up into the ceiling through several layers of rock until a known stable layer is encountered. Once the hole is drilled, a support, such as a mine roof bolt or cable, may be inserted up into the hole and fixed into place. The other end of the support extends slightly out of the hole and a bolt head on the anchor supports a plate up against the surface of the mine roof.
Frequently, the holes drilled up into the mine roof are slightly over-sized for the anchor being used and frangible pouches containing different constituencies of a multi-constituent adhesive are inserted up into the hole. The support has a bolt head for engagement by a wrench or driver and the support is spun in the hole to tear the pouches and mix the different constituents of the adhesive until it hardens. This adhesive then bonds with the sides of the hole in the mine roof and maintains the mine roof support in position. If the support is merely a straight bolt or a section of cable, then the adhesive alone fixes the support in place. Some mine roof supports combine a mechanically expanding anchor with the adhesive to provide additional anchoring. These mechanically expanding supports may be used in conjunction with either straight bolts or cable bolts.
When straight bolts are used as mine roof supports, it is relatively easy to form them from standard rebar and stamp bolt heads onto the end of the bolt. However, when cables are used, a bolt head must be fastened to the section of cable in order for a wrench or other driver to be able to turn the cable, either for mixing adhesive, or driving a mechanically expanding anchor. A common method for the attachment of a bolt head to a cable uses wedges between the cable and a hollow shaft through the bolt head. A bolt head having a hollow shaft through it has a cable inserted through the hollow shaft. The bolt head is positioned near the end of the cable and the wedges are inserted at an initial position at the opening of the bolt head near the end of the cable and between the cable and the hollow shaft within the bolt head. The cable then is pulled back into the bolt head causing the wedges to be drawn in with the cable and creating a wedging effect between the cable, the wedges, and the bolt head.
While this technique does provide a way of fixing the bolt head to the cable, when the cable is actually used, the connection between the bolt head and the cable may weaken and the bolt head may come loose. This can happen, in particular, when the cable is driven and turned to mix the adhesive, or to drive a mechanical expansion anchor. The torque of turning the cable creates forces within the joint between the bolt head and the cable that are not in the direction that is used to form the joint. In this rotational direction, the joint is less strong and will sometimes loosen. Also, the turning of the bolt head may deform the cable which is comprised of a large number of strands intertwined.
Additionally, some joints formed in this way between the cable and the bolt head can be overcome by the forces of supporting the mine roof ceiling. Once the cable bolt is in place and supporting a plate which in turn supports the ceiling, the ceiling may yield or sag. As the ceiling yields and weight is transferred to the plate supported by the cable bolt, the bolt head of the cable comes under extreme forces. In some cases, the material from which the bolt head is made can yield and the bolt head will deform allowing the bolt head to slip off the cable around the wedges.
For the reasons stated above, it is necessary to make improvements upon prior cable roof bolts, their bolt heads, and the manner in which they are joined. Embodiments of the current invention address the shortcomings of the prior art. These and other improvements will be described below.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,253,960 by Scott is for a “Cable Attachable Device to Monitor Roof Loads or Provide a Yieldable Support or a Rigid Roof Support Fixture”. The invention of Scott comprises a cable attachment assembly having an anchor mechanism for gripping a tension member anchored in a bore hole in a mine roof, and a roof plate mounted on the anchor mechanism in position for observing the support being offered to the mine roof, or the yielding response of the roof plate on the anchor mechanism, or for monitoring the load-yield relationship of the anchor mechanism relative to the tension member.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,511,909, by Calandra, Jr. et al, is for a “Cable bolt and method of use in supporting a rock formation.” In this patent, a flexible multi-strand steel cable of a preselected length is inserted in a bore hole drilled in a rock formation above an underground excavation. The cable includes an anchor end portion positioned in the bore hole for frictionally engaging the cable to the wall of the bore hole. The anchor end portion may also be chemically bonded to the surrounding rock formation. The cable extends out of the bore hole and includes a drive end portion that retains a bearing plate opposite the opening into the bore hole. The drive end portion includes a pair of diametrically positioned jaw members on the cable. The jaw members form a frustoconical outer surface positioned within a tapered bore of a collar. The collar advances on the jaw members to compress them into nonrotational gripping engagement with the steel cable. End portions of the jaw members extend out of the collar on the cable. A torque transmitting device engages the ends of the jaw members removed from contact with the collar to transmit upward thrust and rotation through the jaw members to the cable and place the anchored cable in tension to reinforce the overlying strata of the rock formation.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,230,589 by Gillespie is for a “Mine roof bolt”. In this patent, an improved mine roof bolt is constructed of pre-tensioned, multi-strand steel cable. The bolt head is constructed of a hexagonal- or other drive-headed collar having an internally tapered frusto-conical bore therethrough, and a tapered plug having a frusto-conical outer surface that engages the frusto-conical inner surface of the drive collar. The tapered plug has an internal bore essentially concentric with the outer frusto-conical surface, and is adapted to fit over the multi-stranded steel cable, the hexagonal head drive collar fitting over the tapered plug such that pressing the tapered plug and steel cable into the inner frustoconical bore of the hexagonal-head drive collar causes serrations on the internal bore of the tapered plug to be urged down against, and bite into, the steel cable, resulting in a solid hexagonal head for the cable bolt. The tapered plug is in actuality, a pair of essentially identical diametrically opposed semi-frusto-conical tapered sections that more easily compress together to bite into the multi-strand steel cable. The improved mine roof bolt is intended for use in passive-type mine roof systems.
Embodiments of the cable bolt head of the current invention have several features to address shortcoming of the prior art. The cable bolt head is comprised of several components stacked on top of each other. The first component is a square drive head sized and adapted to fit in common wrenches or drivers used for mine roof bolts. Stacked onto, or adjoined to, this drive head is a reinforcing collar which has a large radius and additional thickness as compared to similar sections in prior art cable bolt heads. Next the cable bolt head has a crimping collar section which is not as large in diameter as the reinforcing collar but may have greater height than the reinforcing collar. In addition to the body of the cable bolt head, there are wedges which may be semi-circular in shape which fit between the cable and the cable bolt head to create a wedging effect. Once the cable is wedged into position within the cable bolt head using the wedges, a crimp is made in the crimping tube to squeeze the crimping tube down on to the cable and provide an additional stronger attachment between the cable bolt and the cable bolt head at the crimp.
The reinforcing collar segment of the cable bolt head is more important once the unit is installed. As the cable bolt head comes under load, the reinforcing collar provides additional material strength to the cable bolt head to prevent yielding of the material which would allow the cable and wedges to pull through the cable bolt head. Additionally, the forces on the upper surface of the reinforcing collar are distributed across its larger area.
As discussed above, the article and method of the present invention overcomes the disadvantages inherent in prior art methods and prior art devices. In this respect, before explaining at least one embodiment of the invention in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and/or to the arrangement of the support structure set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced and carried out in various and diverse ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology employed herein are for the purposes of description and should not be regarded as limiting.
Accordingly, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the concept upon which this invention is based may readily be utilized as a basis for the design of other structures, methods, and systems for carrying out the purposes of the present invention. It is important, therefore, that the claims be regarded as including such equivalent constructions insofar as they do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Furthermore, the purpose of the foregoing Abstract is to enable the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the public generally, and especially including the practitioners of the art who are not familiar with patent or legal terms or phraseology, to determine quickly from a cursory inspection, the nature and essence of the technical disclosure of the application. The Abstract is neither intended to define the invention of this application, nor is it intended to be limiting to the scope of the invention in any respect.
Additional utility and features of this invention will become more fully apparent to those skilled in the art by reference to the following drawings, wherein all components are designated by like numerals and described more specifically.
Referring to
To assemble cable 20, cable bolt head 10, and wedges 70, cable 20 is inserted through the hollow inside of cable bolt head 10, and wedges 70 are positioned alongside cable 20 at the opening at the drive head end of cable bolt head 10. Then cable 20 is pulled back through cable bolt head 10 until cable 20 and wedges 70 lock into the interior of cable bolt head 10. Cable 20, wedges 70, and cable bolt head 10 are locked together through a wedging effect. Once cable bolt head 10 is attached to cable 20, a crimp 60 is created in crimp tube 50 to squeeze crimp tube 50 down onto cable 20. This provides a more resilient connection between cable 20 and cable bolt head 10. The connection at crimp 60 is more resilient against twisting motion when cable bolt 20 is installed in a mine roof bolt hole and turned through engagement of drive head 30. In prior art applications, it is not unusual for a connection at the wedges to loosen with the spinning motion applied to the cable bolt assembly. The spinning creates a twist between the cable and the cable bolt head which can loosen the wedge joint between the cable and bolt head, particularly, if the strands of the cable lose cohesion and yield around the wedges. In addition to preventing twist from being transmitted to the wedge joint, the connection at crimp 60 takes some of the tensile load induced in the cable. Referring now to
Referring now to
Once cable bolt head 10 is assembled with cable 20 using wedges 70, crimp 60 is made in crimp tube 50 to deform crimp tube 50 down onto cable 20. This provides an additional engagement between cable bolt head 10 and cable 20 which isolates, at least partially, the connection at wedges 70 from rotational stresses. In addition to protecting the wedge joint, this crimping joint provides an additional redundant connection between cable bolt head 10 and cable 20 and takes some of the tensile load exerted on cable bolt 20.
Reinforcing collar 40 provides increased strength in cable bolt head 10 in part of the area where the wedge joint is located. When cable bolt head 10 is subjected to high loads bearing down on it from the mine roof, the wedging effect that serves to hold cable bolt head 10 onto cable 20 generates extremely high stresses within cable bolt head 10. Reinforcing collar 40 is located in this area to provide added strength where the stresses from the wedge joint are concentrated.
Some embodiments of cable bolt head 10 may have components made separately and then assembled to form cable bolt head 10.
In the embodiment of cable bolt head 10 shown in
As shown in
In the embodiments shown in
While several embodiments of a cable bolt head have been discussed above in the specification, it should be born in mind that these are not the only embodiments encompassed by the ensuing claims. Neither should the abstract or drawing figures be considered limiting. Rather the abstract is for overview purposes only and the drawing are to provide ease of understanding example embodiments.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application 61/245,355, filed on Sep. 24, 2009, and the teachings in the specification and accompanying submissions for U.S. Provisional Application 61/245,355, are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61245355 | Sep 2009 | US |