It relates to spreaders, more particularly it relates to peat spreaders.
It is an object of the invention to provide a novel drum like granular spreader for containing and moving the drum along the ground with the drum having a plurality of holes about its circumference to of a shape and character to allow materials such as granular peat in a liquid in the drum to gravitate out the holes in the drum, as the drum is rolled along generally parallel to the ground.
Further objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent as the description proceeds and when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:
Referring more particularly to the drawings, spreader 20 has a towable handle 21 and a drum 22 with a pair of wheels 23 and 24 rotatably mounted at the opposing ends 25 ad 26 of the cylindrical drum.
The spreader device 20 is adapted to received a mixture of powdered peat and water in the interior of the drum. The drum 22 is formed of a cylindrical sheet having a plurality of spaced openings or holes 27 extending into the drum with a raised ridge 28 on the inside 28′ of the drum adjacent each opening and formed into an annular ridges or inward projections 28 along the interior 28′ extending into the drum.
These ridges act to engage the peat inside the drum to cause it to be obstructed in path in the drum adjacent the openings or holes to prevent it from sliding past the openings so that it may more readily gravitate out through the openings out of the drum, rather than slide past the openings to thereby distribute the peat more evenly and thoroughly out through the openings onto the ground.
The wheels 23 and 24 for operating the device are fixed to the ends of the drum and act to space the drum above the ground and support the drum, as they rotate along the ground by being towed or pushed by the handle 21 as illustrated by phantom lines 39 as the peat is spread upon the ground by the drum by the peat gravitating out the drum through the openings 27. The wheels having a larger diameter then the drum act to prevent the drum from directly engaging the ground, which ground and materials on the ground otherwise has a tendency to clog the holes or openings and interrupt the spreading operation.
The wheels 23 and 24 have end discs, caps or covers 29 and 29′ mounted centrally in the wheels 23 and 24.
The drum 22 can be turned upright to rest on wheels 30 and 30′ on the ground as illustrated by phantom lines 40, so that the upper end cap 29 can be placed horizontally at the top of the drum 22 for refilling the drum with peat. The upper end cap 29 has a slidable cover 31 pivotally mounted at pivot point 29″ to slide across the opening 32 in the upper end cap 29 to open and close the opening. The cover has a knob which can be threaded into the end disc to lock the cover closed.
The handle has a pair of opposing branch arms 33 and 33′ which extend down on opposite ends of the drum to pivotally mount the arms to the drum. To mount the arms to the drum a center pin 34 extends through the center of the drum and through bores 35 and 35′.
For filling the drum with peat, the second pair of wheels 30 and 30′ are rotatably mounted on a rod 36 and the rod 36 is fixed to the end of the branch arm 33′ of the device. The second pair of wheels 30 and 30′ are rotatably mounted at opposite ends of the rod 36 of the branch arm, so that the drum can be upended onto the wheels 30 and 30′ onto the ground as illustrated by phantom lines 40 in
The second pair of wheels 30 and 30′ are spaced from one another and are mounted centrally on the end disc 29′; and a triangular ground support 37 is also mounted on one edge of the end disc or cover 29′, as illustrated in
Thus it will be seen that providing a novel manuable pushable device for spreading liquified peat onto the ground evenly with relative ease by simply towing the drum by the handle as it rolls on its drum wheels along the ground with the dimpled shape of the openings assisting in interrupting the peat as it is rolled along the interior of the drum which tends to cause the peat to bounce up and drop through the openings rather than simply pass by the openings if the openings do not have a dimpled area adjacent the opening.
It will be obvious that various changes and departures may be made to the invention without departing from the spirit and scope there of accordingly it is not intended that the invention be limited to the specifically described in the specification or as illustrated in the drawings but only as set forth in the appended claims wherein: