The present invention relates to fascines and more particularly to fascines comprising inflatable members.
Fascines are structures comprising at least one, and usually several, elongate members which are used to fill ditches or to level or smooth other discontinuities in or on the ground sufficiently to facilitate the passage of personnel or vehicles across the discontinuity, and sets of such members are commonly carried by tanks and other military vehicles when in the field for the temporary levelling of such discontinuities which would otherwise halt or impede the passage of the vehicles and/or of others which follow. Fascines comprising bundles of high density polyethylene or similar pipes are known from U.S. Pat. No. 4,312,601 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,566,821 and fascines including inflatable members are known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,122,400, U.S. Pat. No. 5,215,401, U.S. Pat. No. 5,406,662, GB2401640 and WO2006/027559.
Inflatable fascine members have the advantage over rigid pipes of reduced weight and of much reduced bulk whilst uninflated; they can be stored and carried uninflated and need be inflated only when required for use, e.g. by a suitable compressor or from cylinders of compressed air or other gas (such as an inert mixture of carbon dioxide and nitrogen) carried for the purpose.
While it is generally possible to traffic fascines composed of inflatable members with tracked vehicles, the ability to traffic with wheeled vehicles is more problematic due to the presence of discrete wheels, axle separation and the potential for tyre slip on the surfaces of the inflated members. The lightweight nature of inflatable fascine members together with their inherently low inertia makes them extremely susceptible to movement as a consequence of dynamic trafficking loads. Depending on how many fascine members are deployed to smooth a given ditch profile or other discontinuity and how efficiently they are anchored, large gaps can open up between adjacent members. These gaps make trafficking with wheeled vehicles very difficult because wheels can drop down between different fascine members and the inflated members can become trapped between adjacent axles. This can immobilise wheeled vehicles and prevent successful crossing of the fascine. It can also result in damage to the fascine members from contact with the undersides of vehicles attempting to cross.
In the example illustrated in the Figures, two bundles each of three conventional sausage-shaped inflated fascine members 1 have been deployed in a ditch 2 and encircled with a sheet 3 of flexible reinforced or geotextile fabric—typically a PVC coated polyester base fabric. The overwrapping sheet 3 can extend across the full width of the fascine or can comprise two separate strips of material as shown in
From the attached end, the or each sheet 3 is draped over the top surface of the whole assembly of members 1 deployed in the ditch. This provides the eventual trafficking surface. The material is wrapped over the fascine following the direction from home bank to far bank, returning underneath the complete fascine assembly and back up onto the home bank surface, all as indicated by the direction of the arrows in
As an alternative to wrapping the members 1 with the sheet 3 in situ in the ditch, deployment of a pre-wrapped fascine into the ditch may be achieved by use of a lightweight mechanical handling device mounted on a vehicle, with the sheet 3 being pulled back onto the home bank surface as the vehicle withdraws and before opening the fascine to traffic.
Laying the second end portion of the sheet onto the home bank allows it to be anchored by the weight of a vehicle approaching to cross, exemplified as a wheeled vehicle 5 of which the front portion is seen in
As the approaching vehicle engages the overwrapped fascine, there is a tendency for the inflated members 1 to be pushed forwards. Local distortion of the fascine members coupled with this forward movement tensions the fabric of the sheet(s) 3 which is consequently pulled tight around the fascine member bundles. The greater this tension the tighter the members 1 are pulled together. This maintains the integrity of the fascine, prevents wheels from falling into gaps between different fascine members and provides an improved surface which facilitates speedier crossing of the fascine by vehicles of all types.
The surface of the or each sheet 3 also serves to provide a sacrificial wear surface which protects the fabric of the inflated fascine members 1 from direct contact with the wheels or tracks of passing traffic. As such these sheets can be treated as disposable items which can be replaced when specified limits of wear and tear have been reached.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0512880.6 | Jun 2005 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB06/02291 | 6/22/2006 | WO | 00 | 11/14/2007 |