The present invention relates to the field of mining machines. Specifically, the present invention relates to a dipper door and a dipper door trip assembly on a mining machine, such as a rope shovel.
Industrial mining machines, such as electric rope or power shovels, draglines, etc., are used to execute digging operations to remove material from a bank of a mine. On a conventional rope shovel, a dipper is attached to a handle, and the dipper is supported by a cable, or rope, that passes over a boom sheave. The rope is secured to a bail that is pivotably coupled to the dipper. The handle is moved along a saddle block to maneuver a position of the dipper. During a hoist phase, the rope is reeled in by a winch in a base of the machine, lifting the dipper upward through the bank and liberating the material to be dug.
To release the material disposed within the dipper, a dipper door is pivotally coupled to the dipper. When not latched to the dipper, the dipper door pivots away from a bottom of the dipper, thereby freeing the material out through a bottom of the dipper. Current shovels use a dipper door trip mechanism to unlatch and release the dipper door from the dipper. The dipper door trip mechanism includes a latch bar that is moved in and out of an opening in a latch keeper on the dipper. Movement of the latch bar generates significant amounts of friction and wear on surfaces of the latch bar and latch keeper as the latch bar slides in and out of the latch keeper. Thus, current dipper door trip mechanisms employ use of expensive, exotic, high strength materials on the latch bar and/or latch keeper to try and withstand some of the high amounts of friction and wear.
In accordance with one construction, a dipper door trip assembly includes a dipper, a dipper door pivotally coupled to the dipper, a linkage assembly including a sliding latch bar disposed at least partially in the dipper door, and a latch keeper coupled to the dipper. The latch keeper includes a roller that engages and disengages the latch bar.
In accordance with another construction, a dipper door trip assembly includes a dipper, a dipper door pivotally coupled to the dipper, a linkage assembly including a sliding latch bar disposed at least partially in the dipper door, a latch keeper coupled to the dipper that engages and disengages with the latch bar, and means for biasing the latch bar away from the latch keeper.
In accordance with another construction, a mining machine includes a boom, a handle coupled to the boom, a dipper coupled to the handle, a dipper door pivotally coupled to the dipper, and a dipper door trip assembly coupled to the dipper and the dipper door. The dipper door trip assembly includes a trip motor and a linkage assembly coupled to the trip motor, the linkage assembly including a sliding latch bar disposed at least partially in the dipper door. The linkage assembly further includes a pair of link members coupled to the latch bar. The dipper door trip assembly further includes a latch keeper coupled to the dipper, the latch keeper including a roller that engages and disengages the latch bar.
Other aspects of the invention will become apparent by consideration of the detailed description and accompanying drawings.
Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limited.
The mobile base 15 is supported by the drive tracks 20. The mobile base 15 supports the turntable 25 and the revolving frame 30. The turntable 25 is capable of 360-degrees of rotation relative to the mobile base 15. The boom 35 is pivotally connected at the lower end 40 to the revolving frame 30. The boom 35 is held in an upwardly and outwardly extending relation to the revolving frame 30 by the tension cables 50, which are anchored to the gantry tension member 55 and the gantry compression member 60. The gantry compression member 60 is mounted on the revolving frame 30.
The dipper 70 is suspended from the boom 35 by the hoist rope 80. The hoist rope 80 is wrapped over the sheave 65 and attached to the dipper 70 at a bail 110. The hoist rope 80 is anchored to the winch drum (not shown) of the revolving frame 30. The winch drum is driven by at least one electric motor (not shown) that incorporates a transmission unit (not shown). As the winch drum rotates, the hoist rope 80 is paid out to lower the dipper 70 or pulled in to raise the dipper 70. The dipper handle 85 is also coupled to the dipper 70. The dipper handle 85 is slidably supported in the saddle block 90, and the saddle block 90 is pivotally mounted to the boom 35 at the shipper shaft 95. The dipper handle 85 includes a rack and tooth formation thereon that engages a drive pinion (not shown) mounted in the saddle block 90. The drive pinion is driven by an electric motor and transmission unit (not shown) to extend or retract the dipper handle 85 relative to the saddle block 90.
An electrical power source (not shown) is mounted to the revolving frame 30 to provide power to a hoist electric motor (not shown) for driving the hoist drum, one or more crowd electric motors (not shown) for driving the crowd transmission unit, and one or more swing electric motors (not shown) for turning the turntable 25. Each of the crowd, hoist, and swing motors is driven by its own motor controller, or is alternatively driven in response to control signals from a controller (not shown).
With reference to
With reference to
With continued reference to
When the trip motor 120 is activated, the upper link arm 135 is moved (e.g., pivoted by tension applied in an attached rope or chain), causing the connecting rod 140 to move within the dipper door 75. Movement of the connecting rod 140 causes the lever bar 145 to move, which causes the latch bar 150 to move (e.g., slide linearly within the dipper door 75).
As illustrated in
With reference to
With continued reference to
With reference to
Because the end 175 is disposed within the latch keeper 160, the dipper door 75 is locked relative to the dipper 70, and the dipper door 75 is unable to pivot away from the dipper 70. The weight of material (e.g., dirt, debris, etc.) in the dipper 70 presses down on the dipper 70 and the dipper door 75, forcing the end 175 against the roller 170 and inhibiting the end 175 of the latch bar 150 from moving out of the latch keeper 160.
With reference to
Use of the roller 170 eliminates significant amounts of friction and wear on the latch bar 150 and the latch keeper 160, and eliminates the exponential increase in mechanical stresses described above. The roller 170 provides a low friction rolling surface as the latch bar 150 is removed from the latch keeper 160. The roller 170 reduces friction and wear, and also alleviates or reduces the need for expensive and exotic, high-strength materials to be used in the latch bar 150 (e.g., in the insert 180) or the latch keeper 160.
With reference to
The linkage assembly 230 includes a connecting rod 240 coupled to the upper link arm 235, and link members 242, 243, 244 coupled to the connecting rod 240. At least two of the link members 242, 243, 244 are pivotally coupled to one another about a pivot point 245, such that opposing ends 246 of at least two of the link members 243, 244, are movable away from one another (e.g., to a position where the link members 243, 244 are straightened out and aligned along a linear direction) and movable toward one another (e.g., to a position as illustrated in
The link member 243 includes a stop member 248. The stop member 248 is a wedge or other similar structure that engages and contacts an inner wall 249 of the dipper door 75 in a first, latched position (e.g., as illustrated in
With reference to
With continued reference to
As illustrated in
In the latched position (as illustrated in
To release the wedge force, the trip motor 220 is activated. Activation of the trip motor 220 causes movement of the upper link arm 235, which causes movement of the connecting rod 240. Movement of the connecting rod 240 causes movement of the link members (e.g., pivoting of the link members 243, 244 relative to one another) to release the wedge member 248 from the inner wall 249, thereby allowing the latch bar 250 to slide down and away from the latch keeper 160. In some constructions one or more ends of the link members 242, 243, 244 are fixed within the dipper door 75. In some constructions the link members 242, 243, 244 all slide in a translational direction (e.g., away from the latch keeper 160 and to the right in
As discussed above, the latch bar 250 is naturally biased away from the latch keeper 160 due to the orientation of the latch bar 250 within the dipper door 75. Thus, the activation force required to pull the latch bar 250 away from the latch keeper 160 is reduced as compared to a latch bar 250 that is not orientated and naturally biased away from the latch keeper 160.
While the illustrated construction in
In some constructions the latch bar 350 also includes a low-friction insert, such as the insert 180 described above. The insert may be located on the tapered portion 377, on the flat portion 376, or on both of the tapered portion and flat portion 377, 376 to further help facilitate the sliding motion of the latch bar 355.
The illustrated constructions described above utilize a roller 170, an angled latch bar 250, and a tapered portion 377 to facilitate low-friction, low activation-force, and biased motion of a latch bar 150, 250, 350 away from the latch keeper 160. In other constructions a roller or other structure may additionally be used within the latch bar housings 155, 255, 355, or within other areas of the dipper door trip assemblies 115, 215 described above, to further reduce friction and wear within the dipper door trip assemblies 115, 215.
Although the invention has been described in detail with reference to certain preferred embodiments, variations and modifications exist within the scope and spirit of one or more independent aspects of the invention as described.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/912,963, filed Dec. 6, 2013, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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Chilean Office Action for Application No. 2014-002577 dated Aug. 25, 2017 (11 pages with Statement of Relevance included). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150159341 A1 | Jun 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61912963 | Dec 2013 | US |