Not applicable.
Not applicable.
Not applicable.
The invention relates to a drainage channel for surface drainage.
Drainage channels of this kind may be used to drain surfaces where the risk of contamination by soil, (scattered) sand or foliage is relatively slight, so that there is no absolute requirement for the interior of the channel to be readily accessible for cleaning.
For manufacturing such channels with a large nominal width (300 mm) and in large lengths (2 m), the previously known method is not suitable. In that method a core, which is provided to form the channel compartment, is constructed as a delicate hollow body made of sheet metal, within which are movably mounted a set of other cores to form the inlet openings. Such types of apparatus are not only extremely complicated and sensitive, but in addition the required high nominal widths and lengths cannot be produced.
It is an object of the invention to provide a drainage channel wherein a stable channel with large length and large nominal widths can be manufactured by simple means.
This object is achieved by a drainage channel defining a channel compartment and comprising an elongate molded body defining an upper surface over which vehicles can travel and which itself defines inlet openings that open into said channel compartment, side walls, a floor, and end faces adapted for connection to additional drainage installations such that the channel compartment is defined by a ceiling boundary surface nearest said upper surface, side boundary surfaces and a base boundary surface, said ceiling boundary surface being parallel to said upper surface and at least one side boundary surface and at least one of said base boundary surface and said ceiling boundary surface defining a tapering of said channel compartment in a direction from one of said end faces to said other end face. In a second aspect of the invention an apparatus for manufacturing such a drainage channel is provided, comprising a molding box defining at least a floor and side walls; at least one core adapted to be pulled out of said molding box and adapted to form a channel compartment that defines a cross section which tapers along its long direction and which is defined by a planar bottom surface that extends parallel to said floor, and a set of long cores adapted to form inlet openings and to taper as they extend from said floor to said at least one core.
The success of the invention resides in the fact that the channel compartment has a configuration such that a solid core, or else two solid cores taper from the channel ends toward one another, can be used to produce the channel. Whereas in previously known channels care was always taken to delimit the channel compartment by exactly parallel surfaces, with the exception at most of a tilted bottom surface, the present invention takes an entirely different approach. That is, it is accepted that channels abutting one another are offset at their interfaces or (when two cores are used) depressions and elevations and/or constrictions and expansions of the channel compartment will be produced in the long direction of a series of channels. Surprisingly, it has turned out that such steps or changes in cross section have only a negligible influence on the risk of contamination as well as on the hydraulic properties of the drainage channels.
Preferably the inlet openings are shaped so as to taper from the upper surface to the channel compartment. As a result, at the time during manufacture of the drainage channel when removal from the mold occurs, the cores to form the inlet openings need not be pulled back into the core that runs in the long direction of the channel; instead, removal from the mold can be achieved by enlarging the space between this set of cores and the longitudinal core. This design of the inlet openings is also unusual because what was previously desired was precisely the reverse direction of taper of the opening cross sections. Surprisingly, however, it has been found that even with relatively slight expansion of the opening cross sections there is no danger of contamination.
Preferably at least the inlet openings near the channel rims have edges oriented substantially linearly in the long direction of the channel. This maximizes the cross sections of the inlet openings near the channel rims. Furthermore, with this construction lateral inlet openings can be provided in the side walls, which open into the inlet openings adjacent to the rims. Such lateral inlet openings are needed to drain surface layers that are permeable to water. Because the inlet openings adjacent to the rims have edges oriented substantially linearly in the long direction of the channel, the lateral inlet openings can be formed in an especially simple manner, by cores that extend inward from the outside, so that the lateral inlet openings taper in the direction toward the interior.
At the end faces of the drainage channels junctions are preferably provided that can be filled with a sealing material. In this way absolutely leakproof trains of channels can be assembled. In this case it is advantageous for end-face inlet openings to be provided, which open into these junctions. These openings can be used to observe the sealing material that has been introduced. The end-face inlet openings are preferably constructed such that the junctions to be sealed are accessible from above, in order to inject the sealing material by an injection tool and to monitor the process. That is, whereas previously the sealing material was inserted before two adjacent channels were brought together, and the channels were then pushed together in the hope that sealing had been correctly accomplished, this sealing can now be carried out from above while being monitored and, if necessary, the seal can be repaired.
The boundary surface at the ceiling of the channel compartment in a preferred embodiment of the invention is provided with a sheet of reinforcing or filtering textile or similar flat material. This in turn is made possible only by the taper of the channel compartment and the resulting installation procedure, because the set of cores to form the drainage openings is seated on the core that runs in the long direction of the drainage channel, so that the sheet of material can be applied to this contact surface and cast along with the channel.
Preferably the upper surface comprises elevated sections near the edge, which in particular are constructed as continuous marginal strips outside the inlet openings. These marginal strips increase the channel's load-bearing capacity in that, on one hand, the marginal strips are themselves supported by the side walls of the channel and hence can tolerate loads; when a vehicle is driven over the channel in the transverse direction, the tires coming from the side first roll over the marginal region and then, with a reduced surface area, touch the more critical rib region in the middle of the channel. On the other hand, with this preferred embodiment water flowing toward the channel from the side is prevented from overflowing on the opposite side, so that the drainage action of the channel is improved.
The apparatus for manufacturing the drainage channel comprises a molding box that has at least a floor and side walls, at least one core that can be pulled out of the molding box to form an interior channel compartment, the cross section of which becomes smaller in its long direction to form a tapered shape, and a set of cores to form inlet openings, which taper from the floor of the box to the longitudinal core. The arrangement is thus definitely simple. Before the product has completely finished hardening, the channel together with the core is pressed upward. With this procedure it cannot happen that when shrinkage begins, the product shrinks onto the cores of the inlet openings and possibly fractures. The core in turn has an abrasion-resistant surface in the contact area or comprises (as a whole) an abrasion-resistant material. The core is then pulled out of the product.
Manufacture of the mold, in particular with regard to the set of cores to form the inlet openings, is made especially simple if the core has a planar lower surface extending parallel to the floor. In this case the length of all of the cores that form the inlet openings can be equal. The cores to form the inlet openings are fixedly attached to the floor. 1n the interior of some of these cores there are provided press-out rods that can be moved in the vertical direction and are inserted in such a way that no mixture of bonding agents and fillers can flow under the core region. These press-out rods are pressed upward by a device so that they lift up the conical core along with the product.
In the following, preferred embodiments of the invention are described in greater detail by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawing.
In the following description, the same reference numerals are used for identical parts or parts with identical actions.
As shown in the drawings, the drainage channel comprises a body 10 with an upper surface 11, side walls 12, 13 and a floor 14. At end faces 15, 16 other drainage channels of this kind can be connected, or alternatively a catch pit or similar device to guide the water into a drain. At the end faces 15, 16 sealing junctions 17 can be disposed, which are indicated in
The channel compartment 30 has a ceiling boundary surface 31 oriented parallel to the upper surface 11. Lateral boundary surfaces 32, 33 and a base boundary surface 34 are slightly tilted from the one end face 15 to the other end face 16, i.e. are slanted with respect to the associated (plane-parallel) exterior or bottom surfaces of the body 10, so that the height difference shown in
As shown in
In the upper surface 11 of the body 10 inlet openings 20, 20′ are provided, which taper from top to bottom as they pass through the wall, i.e. into the channel compartment 30. The inlet openings 20, 20′ preferably are rectangular in cross section, in particular having edges 21, 21′ at their outer ends that are substantially linear. This construction makes it possible to provide lateral inlet openings 23 (see
In the region of the end-face walls 15, 16 end-face inlet openings 25, 25′ are provided, which extend substantially over the entire interior width of the channel. When two channel bodies 10 are put together, an enlarged inlet opening 25/25′ is produced, through which the sealing junctions 17 are accessible from above, so that the sealing material 18 can be injected from above and in particular can be observed from above. This opportunity for observation applies in particular to the channel compartment 30, and simultaneously enables subsequent repair of damaged regions of the seal.
To reinforce the upper surface 11 of the body 10 a sheet of material 27, e.g. a woven fabric of glass fibers or similar strengthening fabric, is cast along with the body in the region of the ceiling boundary surface 31, i.e. precisely in the region where the tensile stress is highest when a bending load is imposed. The sheet of material 27 can also be a filter material, which prevents solid objects from entering the channel compartment. Cleaning can easily by carried out by suction devices.
The drainage channel described here is manufactured by means of a casting mold such as is described below with reference to
The casting mold comprises a molding box 40 with a floor 41 and side walls 45, 46 as well as end walls 47, 48. Through one end wall 48 a core 42 is inserted into the molding box 40, and can also be pulled out of the molding box 40 (toward the left, in
A set of cores 44 is provided, projecting upward from the floor 41; these serve to form the inlet openings.
To manufacture a drainage channel of the kind described above, the mold shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
103 48 833 | Oct 2003 | DE | national |
103 53 080 | Nov 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2004/011784 | 10/18/2004 | WO | 00 | 4/20/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/040513 | 5/6/2005 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070071554 A1 | Mar 2007 | US |