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This invention relates generally to motor powered floor finishing machines and, more particularly, to an improved abrasive for attachment to a drive plate for such machines, the abrasive being especially adapted for removing mastics, sealers, glue, or most any thin film topical coating from concrete floor surfaces.
The prior art includes many patents and publications describing tools for machining stone or concrete floors. Included are machines for grinding and polishing, as well as for milling or crushing floor surfaces. Further, there are machines especially adapted for cleaning concrete surfaces by removing coatings on them. Such machines typically carry one or more rotatably mounted, motor driven drive plates that, in turn, carry one or more abrasive elements attachable to the motor driven drive plate and adapted to be rotated in relation to a floor surface. The abrasive elements affixed to the drive disc typically include abrasive pads or bars that are made to engage the concrete surface as the drive plate is being driven and the machine is being moved across the floor surfaces. Typical of such patents are the Van Vliet U.S. Pat. No. 7,377,838, the Palushaj U.S. Pat. No. 7,690,970 and the Anderson U.S. Pat. No. 7,563,156,. A major manufacturer and supplier of concrete and stone grinding and polishing machines is Scanmaskin Sverige AB of Lindome, Sweden.
Prior art machines employ a wide variety of abrasive tools bonded, bolted or otherwise affixed to a circular disc where the abrasive tools have a planar floor-engaging surface. While such tools perform well as far as grinding and polishing concrete and stone floors, they tend not to be particularly effective in removing paint or glue that had been used in adhering commercial carpeting or tile to concrete floors. Once the carpeting or tile is removed, the underlying concrete floor retains a residue of adhesive material that must be removed prior to polishing the concrete floor.
It is the purpose of the present invention to provide an improved abrasive element attachable to a drive plate for a floor-finishing machine that is especially designed to aid in removing paint, mastic, glues, coatings, sealers, or adhesive residues that may be present on a hard surface.
In accordance with the present invention, a motorized floor finishing machine comprises one or more circular drive plates having a central hub projecting out from a first major surface of the circular plate and adapted to be attached to a motor driven drive shaft. Attached to a second major surface of the circular plate is an abrasive assembly that may comprise a mounting bracket and an abrasive member affixed to the mounting bracket. Alternatively, the abrasive element may be directly attached to the drive plate. The abrasive member comprises a metal bar having a generally circular cross-section over a predetermined arc and where the metal bar has diamond particles adhered by brazing on its arcuate exterior surface.
It has been found that when cylindrical abrasive tools are mounted with their longitudinal axis parallel to the plane of the drive plate they are considerably more effective in grinding away thin coatings and adhesives than are conventional abrasive tools exhibiting a flat floor engaging surface.
The foregoing features, objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment, especially when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like numerals in the several views refer to corresponding parts.
The description of the preferred embodiment is intended to be read in connection with the accompanying drawings, which are to be considered part of the entire written description of this invention. In the description, relative terms such as “lower”, “upper”, “horizontal”, “vertical”, “above”, “below”, “up”, “down”, “top”, and “bottom”, as well as derivatives thereof (e.g., “horizontally”, “downwardly”, “upwardly”, etc.), should be construed to refer to the orientation as then described or as shown in the drawings under discussion. These relative terms are for the convenience of description and do not require that the apparatus be constructed or operated in a particular orientation. Terms, such as “connected”, “connecting”, “attached”, “attaching”, “join”, and “joining”, are used interchangeably and refer to one structure or surface being secured to another structure or surface or integrally fabricated in one piece, unless expressly described otherwise. As used herein, the term “floor treating machine” is meant to include floor grinding, floor polishing, floor burnishing, floor scrubbing and swing machines.
Referring to
The second major surface 18 of the drive plate 12 may have a plurality of symmetrically arranged recesses, as at 20, milled inward from the surface 18 to form pockets for receiving abrasive assemblies 22 therein. Alternatively, the second major surface of the drive plate may be flat and void of pockets.
Referring to
The abrasive element itself preferably comprises a steel cylinder, the arcuate surface of which is covered by diamond crystals imbedded in a braze alloy which may be applied in the manner described in the Lowder et al U.S. Pat. No. 3,894,673.
Without limitation, the abrasive element 26 preferably comprises steel cylinder and may have a length dimension in a range of from 0.5 inch to 4 inch with a diameter in the range of 0.5 inch to 1.75 inch.
The abrasive assemblies 22 are shown mounted in the pockets 20 of the drive plate 12 by bolts 34, which pass through apertures 36 drilled through the brackets 24 and into tapped holes (not shown) formed in the pockets of the drive plate 12. As already mentioned, the abrasive elements can be directly bolted onto the drive plate 12.
When removing mastic, sealers, glue, or most any thin film topical coating, one of the challenges is surface contact between floor and tool, which generates heat. This heat melts the surface coating, which gums up and clogs the abrasive tool.
The use of a cylindrical diamond coated surface reduces the contact area with the floor thereby reducing generated heat. Moreover, the active contact spot is in a line, or row of diamonds, which leads to the tool performing a cutting and scraping job as opposed to grinding, the former being more desirable for coating removal. This row of diamonds has a much greater number of cutting elements than the surface of a conventional rectangular bar segment that has diamonds sporadically embedded and is therefore more efficient and effective.
Another advantage of the round, cylindrical tool is the wear pattern that occurs during use. As a rectangular bar segment wears, the full surface is in contact with the floor, which not only generates friction and heat, but also directs the abrasive action downwards as opposed to more laterally interfacing with the floor with a single row of diamonds as the tool wears out, as is the case with the cylindrical tool of the present invention.
This invention has been described herein in considerable detail in order to comply with the patent statutes and to provide those skilled in the art with the information needed to apply the novel principles and to construct and use embodiments of the example as required. However, it is to be understood that the invention can be carried out by specifically different devices and that various modifications can be accomplished without departing from the scope of the invention itself.