The present application incorporates U.S. application Ser. No. 13/872,737, filed Apr. 29, 2013, entitled Adjustable Anvil for Comminuting Apparatus and U.S. application Ser. No. 13/872,876, filed Apr. 29, 2013 entitled Mounting Block for Attaching a Reducing Element to a Rotary Drum, herein by reference for all relevant and consistent purposes.
The field of the disclosure relates generally to cutting assemblies used in comminuting apparatus and, more specifically, to adjustable cutting elements secured by adjustable fasteners.
Comminuting apparatus such as grinders and chippers are used to mechanically grind, chip or shred material to reduce the size of the material. Such apparatus may be used to reduce the size of arboraceous material, such as tree limbs, stumps or brush, or other material (e.g., building materials, fibrous organic or inorganic materials, etc.) in land-clearing, municipal waste, recycling, repurposing, and composting operations. One common type of reducing machine is known as a horizontal grinder. A horizontal grinder may include a power in-feed mechanism that forces larger material (e.g., wood-based material such as tree trunks, tree branches, logs, etc.) into contact with a rotating comminuting drum. The larger material is contacted by reducing elements, such as teeth, grinding elements, or “knives”, carried by the comminuting drum, and portions of the material are forced past a shear edge defined by an anvil of the horizontal grinder.
Upon passing the shear edge of the anvil, the material enters a chamber, which in the case of a horizontal grinder may be defined at least in part by a sizing screen that extends around a portion of the comminuting drum. Within the chamber, the material is further reduced by the reducing elements carried by the comminuting drum. Once the material within the chamber is reduced to a certain particle size, the material is ultimately discharged from the machine. An example of a horizontal grinder is disclosed in US Patent Publication No. 2009/0242677, which is incorporated herein by reference for all relevant and consistent purposes.
Conventional comminuting apparatus generally rely on clamps to secure the knives within the comminuting drum. In operation, the loading experienced by the reducing elements may cause the reducing elements to slip out of the comminuting drum and contact the anvil, resulting in a catastrophic failure. Some comminuting apparatus use serrations or grooves to limit such problems. However, such apparatus restrict a user's ability to adjust and/or maintain a given bite size of the comminuting apparatus through the wear life of a given reducing element, as serrations and grooves only permit incremental adjustment of the length of the knives. Further, such apparatus can require complex and costly manufacturing processes.
A continuing need exists for a comminuting apparatus that adequately secures cutting elements and allows the bite size of a comminuting apparatus to be easily maintained through a reducing element wear cycle by adjustment of the cutting elements.
This section is intended to introduce the reader to various aspects of art that may be related to various aspects of the disclosure, which are described and/or claimed below. This discussion is believed to be helpful in providing the reader with background information to facilitate a better understanding of the various aspects of the present disclosure. Accordingly, it should be understood that these statements are to be read in this light, and not as admissions of prior art.
In one aspect, a cutter for use with a comminuting apparatus is provided. The cutter includes a body, a body slot, and a bore hole. The body has first and second opposing surfaces, a first edge adjoining the first and second surfaces, and a cutting edge opposite the first edge. The body extends from the cutting edge to the first edge. The body slot extends through the cutter body from the first surface to the second surface. The bore hole is enclosed by the first and second surfaces, and extends from the body slot to the first edge.
In another aspect, a cutter assembly for use with a comminuting apparatus is provided. The assembly includes a cutter, a first fastener, and a second fastener. The cutter includes a body, a body slot, and a bore hole. The body has first and second opposing surfaces, a first edge adjoining the first and second surfaces, and a cutting edge opposite the first edge. The body extends from the cutting edge to the first edge. The body slot extends through the cutter body from the first surface to the second surface. The bore hole extends within the cutter body from the body slot towards the first edge. The first fastener extends through the body slot of the cutter and is configured to secure the cutter to a rotatable drum. The second fastener extends through the bore hole and into the body slot.
Various refinements exist of the features noted in relation to the above-mentioned aspects of the present disclosure. Further features may also be incorporated in the above-mentioned aspects of the present disclosure as well. These refinements and additional features may exist individually or in any combination. For instance, various features discussed below in relation to any of the illustrated embodiments of the present disclosure may be incorporated into any of the above-described aspects of the present disclosure, alone or in any combination.
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the drawings.
An embodiment of a comminuting apparatus for reducing the size of material is generally indicated at 5 in
The in-feed system 13 of the comminuting apparatus 5 includes an endless conveyor (e.g., a belt, a chain drive, etc.) 15 to move the material toward a comminuting drum 25 (
The comminuting drum 25 carries a plurality of cutting assemblies 3 (e.g., teeth, blades, knives, grinding elements, etc. and combinations of these elements). During operation, the comminuting drum 25 rotates about an axis of rotation in direction R25 such that the tips of the cutting assemblies 3 define a circumferential reducing path 39. The apparatus 5 may also include a sizing screen 10 (e.g., in the case of a horizontal grinder) that at least partially surrounds the comminuting drum 25, but it is understood that such a sizing screen 10 would not necessarily be needed should the comminuting apparatus instead be a chipper. A reducing chamber 35 may be defined in the region proximate the comminuting drum 25 (e.g., between the comminuting drum 25 and the sizing screen 10, in the case of a horizontal grinder).
As shown in
Referring now to
In the embodiment shown in
In alternative embodiments, one or more of mounting block 45, third fasteners 85, fourth fasteners 81, support plate 51, clamping plate 44, and spacers 52a, 52b, and 52c may be omitted from cutting assembly 3. In embodiments where mounting block 45 is omitted from cutting assembly, cutting element 42 may be secured directly to comminuting drum 25 via first fasteners 88, as described below.
In the embodiment shown in
Referring now to
The cutting-element body 46 includes first and second opposing surfaces 54 and 56, a first edge 58 adjoining the first and second surfaces 54 and 56, and a cutting edge 55 opposite the first edge 58. Cutting edge 55 is configured to contact and comminute material to be reduced to an appropriate size. It is to be understood that the cutting edge 55 may be in the form of shear edge, a grinding edge, or other surface that facilitates the cutting and/or size reduction of a material being processed and/or recycled. Also, it is to be further understood that the cutting edge 55 may, for example, be a single continuous edge, be defined via a series of teeth (not shown), or have any other suitable configuration that enables comminuting apparatus 5 to function as described herein. The cutting-element body 46 extends a length L46 from cutting edge 55 to first edge 58 along an orientation B (shown in
Body slots 48 extend through cutting-element body 46 from first surface 54 to second surface 56. Body slots 48 also extend a length L48 in the direction of orientation B. In the embodiment shown in
Body slots 48 include opposing first and second ends 62 and 64. First and second ends 62 and 64 are sized and shaped complementary to an outer peripheral surface 66 of first fasteners 88. First and second ends 62 and 64 are configured to engage first fasteners 88 so as to restrict movement of cutting element 42 along orientation B. In the embodiment shown in
Each body slot 48 corresponds to a bore hole 50 extending from the second end 64 of a respective body slot 48 towards first edge 58 of cutting-element body 46. Each bore hole 50 is configured to receive and engage a second fastener 90. Bore holes 50 are enclosed by first and second surfaces 54 and 56, and are completely defined within cutting-element body 46. In the embodiment shown in
Bore holes 50 are sized and shaped complementary to an outer peripheral surface of second fasteners 90. In the embodiment shown in
Referring now to
Mounting block 45 is secured to comminuting drum 25 via fourth fasteners 81. Each fourth fastener 81 extends through a corresponding through-hole 67 on mounting block 45, and into a corresponding through-hole (not shown) on comminuting drum 25. A lock nut 84, in the illustrated example, is used to secure fourth fastener 81 and mounting block 45 to comminuting drum 25. Alternatively, for example, the comminuting drum 25 may have threaded holes (not shown) associated therewith to permit the attachment of a given fourth fastener 81.
In alternative embodiments, cutting element 42 may be secured directly to comminuting drum 25 via first fasteners 88. In such embodiments, first fasteners 88 may extend through a corresponding body slot 48 of cutting element 42, and into a corresponding through-hole (not shown) on comminuting drum 25. First fasteners may be secured to comminuting drum using a lock nut similar to lock nut 84. Alternatively, comminuting drum 25 may have threaded holes (not shown) associated therewith to permit the attachment of a given first fastener 88.
Second fasteners 90 extend through a corresponding bore hole 50 in cutting element 42, and into the body slot 48 corresponding to the bore hole 50. Second fasteners 90 may extend into body slots 48 a distance D1 (shown in
In the embodiment shown in
For example, in the embodiment shown in
Alternatively, instead of using the lock nuts 96 with the second fasteners 90, two different fastener sets (not expressly shown) may be employed. A first set of fasteners (e.g., second fasteners 90) may be employed to maintain a distance between comminuting drum 25 and first fasteners 88. A second set of fasteners (not shown) may be employed to maintain a distance between first edge 58 of cutting element 42 and first fasteners 88.
In yet other alternative embodiments, bore holes 50 may be unthreaded, and two or more lock nuts may be used to secure second fasteners 90 to cutting element 42. For example, a first lock nut 96 may be secured to the portion of second fastener 90 extending into body slot 48. A second lock nut 96 may be secured to second fastener 90 adjacent the first edge 58 of cutting element 42.
Each second end 94 of second fasteners 90 engages a surface 60 (shown in
The distance that second fasteners 90 extend into body slots 48 may be adjusted based upon a desired distance between the cutting edge 55 of cutting element 42 and the second end 94 of second fastener, hereinafter referred to as the “effective length” L47 of the cutting element 42. Similarly, the distance that second fasteners 90 extend into body slots 48 may be adjusted based upon a desired distance D3 (shown in
For example, to account for a decrease in the length L46 of cutting-element body 46 following sharpening of cutting element 42, the distance D1 that second fasteners 90 extend into body slots 50 may be adjusted to maintain a constant effective length L47 of the cutting element 42 and/or to maintain a constant distance D3 between cutting edge 55 of cutting element and shell 4 of comminuting drum 25, thereby maintaining a constant bite size of comminuting drum 25. Referring to
Alternatively, the bite size of comminuting drum 25 and the effective length L47 of cutting element 42 may be varied for a desired application. For example, as shown in
In accordance with embodiments of the present disclosure, a constant effective length of the cutting element and/or a constant bite size of a comminuting drum may be maintained after sharpening one or more cutting elements by adjusting the position of one or more fasteners extending through a corresponding bore hole in a cutting element. Alternatively, the effective length of a cutting element and the bite size of a comminuting drum may be varied by adjusting the position of one or more fasteners extending through a corresponding bore hole in a cutting element. The fasteners used to adjust the position of the cutting element may be used to securely fasten the cutting element within the comminuting drum, and to prevent the cutting element from sliding into or out of the comminuting drum during operation.
The embodiments described herein provide several advantages over conventional apparatus used for comminuting material. For example, the fasteners used to adjust the effective length and the bite size of the comminuting apparatus also function to securely fasten the cutting element within the comminuting drum, and prevent the cutting element from sliding into or out of the comminuting drum during operation. The fasteners also provide a continuous adjustment path (as opposed to an incremental adjustment path resulting from serrations or grooves), and also prevent failure that might otherwise result from cutting elements sliding out of comminuting drum during operation. Accordingly, the user may vary the effective length of the cutting element, as well as the bite size of the comminuting drum, to vary performance of the apparatus or to off-set a decrease in the overall length of cutting element resulting from wear or sharpening.
As used herein, the terms “about,” “substantially,” “essentially” and “approximately” when used in conjunction with ranges of dimensions, concentrations, temperatures or other physical or chemical properties or characteristics is meant to cover variations that may exist in the upper and/or lower limits of the ranges of the properties or characteristics, including, for example, variations resulting from rounding, measurement methodology or other statistical variation.
When introducing elements of the present disclosure or the embodiment(s) thereof, the articles “a”, “an”, “the” and “said” are intended to mean that there are one or more of the elements. The terms “comprising,” “including,” “containing” and “having” are intended to be inclusive and mean that there may be additional elements other than the listed elements. The use of terms indicating a particular orientation (e.g., “top”, “bottom”, “side”, etc.) is for convenience of description and does not require any particular orientation of the item described.
As various changes could be made in the above constructions and methods without departing from the scope of the disclosure, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description and shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
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