The present invention relates to pneumatic hammers, of the type used for boring into earthen formations.
It is common for such hammers to cycle pneumatic pressure to lift a piston within a casing, and aided by gravity, then drive the piston downward against a bit, which breaks up earthen material to be dislodged and removed from the borehole. In general, valving or porting are used to switch the location of the pneumatic pressure between the retraction phase and the actuation or drive phase of the piston. In order to increase the impacts per unit time, efforts have been made to begin establishing retraction pressure before impact in the actuation phase. Unfortunately, this decreases to some extent the force of impact inasmuch as the initial ramping of the backpressure for retraction counteracts the pneumatic drive pressure applied to the impact.
With the present invention, a sliding valve, preferably a sleeve, reciprocates axially within the piston while surrounding an air supply port in a stationary air feed tube. In this manner, advantage can be taken of passively controlling the position of the sleeve relative to the feed tube and the piston to provide a change in pneumatic air at precisely the moment of impact. This porting delays the compression of the front chamber for retraction of the piston until at or immediately after the piston impacts the bit.
The main concept of the invention can thus be considered as the use of a sleeve carried by and preferably slidable relative to the piston, for controlling air passages associated with a central air feed tube, whereby retraction pressure is applied to the piston substantially at impact. Moreover, it is the impact itself of the piston against the bit, which enhances sliding of the sleeve relative to the piston, over the feed tube, and thereby switches the airflow at the moment of impact.
In a method embodiment, the key steps include positioning a control valve carried by the piston to one limit relative to the piston, for delivering a pneumatic pressure to lift the piston in a retraction phase, upon impact against the bit. Before impact, the control valve is positioned at another limit relative to the piston, for delivering a pneumatic pressure to drive the piston toward the bit in an actuation phase. The impact passively repositions the control valve to initiate the retraction phase.
In an apparatus embodiment, the key features include an air feed passage extending into the piston, a feed port associated with the air feed passage in the piston and remaining within the piston as the piston cycles between the actuation and retraction phases, air delivery passages alignable between the feed port and the front chamber, and a valve for the port in the form of a sleeve slidable between back and front limit positions within the piston. When the piston is advancing toward the bit during the actuation phase the sleeve is at the back limit position, but when the piston impacts the bit the sleeve slides to the front limit position, opening the port and thereby delivering pneumatic pressure from the air feed passage through the air delivery passages to the front air chamber for initiating the retraction phase.
In the preferred embodiment, the feed tube is a cylinder having a closed end mounted for relative axial movement within the piston, and the feed port is defined by at least one aperture in the cylinder wall adjacent the closed end. The piston has an open bottom that extends axially as a central air chamber to the closed end of the feed tube. When the piston is in contact with the bit, the back air chamber supply path in the piston intersects the central air chamber in front of the feed tube without intersecting the feed port. When the piston is in the retracted position to begin the actuation phase the back air chamber supply path intersects the feed port without intersecting the central air chamber. While the piston is moving during the retraction phase from contact with the bit toward the retracted position, the closed end of the feed tube prevents delivery of pneumatic pressure in the central chamber to the back air chamber. The air delivery passage leading from the feed port to the front chamber includes a portion that always confronts the feed tube, but is exposed to pneumatic pressure for retraction, under the control of the sliding sleeve.
The preferred embodiments will be described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
The preferred embodiment will be described with reference to
The hammer 10 comprises a substantially tubular case or casing 12 having upper and lower ends 12a, 12b extending along a longitudinal axis α, along which the actuating or drive piston 14 reciprocates for repeated cycles of impact, retraction, and impact against a bit 16 that is supported in part within the casing and extends in part from the lower end of the casing. In the figures, the hammer is oriented from left to right, but it should be appreciated that in use, the bit 16 at the right projects downwardly into the bore hole and thus in this description references to “top and bottom” or “up and down” or “back and front” mean “left and right” in the figures, respectively. Pneumatic pressure is supplied by a source S above the hammer, and ported through the upper end of the hammer in a conventional manner into top or back air chamber 18, above piston 14.
A sliding sleeve 20 reciprocates axially within the piston 14 while surrounding a stationary air feed tube 22 that is fixed on the hammer axis, and has a closed front end. Pneumatic pressure is supplied to the tube 22 through check valve 28 and via port P1, and is delivered by the tube via port P2 through passages to be described more fully below, to the front or bottom air chamber 24. The check valve 28 is mounted in a counterbore in the feed tube 22 above the pin 29 that attaches the feed tube to the backhead 31. The check valve closes off the central passage of the feed tube so the supply air is routed around the outside of the section, through scallops, into the angled ports P1. Alternating the pressurization of the upper chamber 18 and the lower chamber 24 produces alternation of the actuation or driving phase and the lifting or retraction phase, respectively.
It can thus be appreciated that the position of the sleeve 20 relative to the port P2 of feed tube 22 depends on the movement of the piston 14, and thereby provides a change in pneumatic air path depending on the axial position of the piston. This porting delays the compression of the front chamber 24 for retraction of the piston until at or immediately after the piston 14 impacts the bit 16. Moreover, as will be described more fully below, it is the impact itself of the piston 14 against the bit 16, which enhances sliding of the sleeve 20 relative to the piston, over the feed tube 22 and thereby switches the airflow through port P2.
At a moment shortly following impact, as shown in
At a later point in the cycle, as shown in
One complete cycle of operation will now be described in greater detail. In
As shown in
As shown in
At the moment shown in
According to
As shown in
It can be appreciated that the chamber 26 preferably has a cylindrical center region of greater axial length than the sleeve 20, and the end walls 26a, and 26b are tapered toward the axis. The sleeve 20 also cylindrical, with front and back ends that taper toward the axis at the same angle as the taper on the chamber end walls.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070267205 A1 | Nov 2007 | US |