Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6588688
-
Patent Number
6,588,688
-
Date Filed
Thursday, August 3, 200024 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, July 8, 200321 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 241 35
- 241 186
- 241 242
- 241 243
- 241 223
- 241 34
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A grinder for comminuting waste material comprises a frame structure (18, 20). A grinding rotor (24) is rotatably carried by the frame structure (18, 20.) The grinding rotor (24) carries a plurality of cutting tools (36) cooperating with a counter blade (26, 28) carried by the frame structure (18, 20). Two plate chain conveyors (68, 70) are vertically aligned so that working runs (80, 120) thereof form a converging moving wall funnel positively feeding pieces (146, 148) of material to be comminuted towards a grinding unit (12) formed by the grinding rotor (24) and the counter blade (26, 28).
Description
The present invention relates to a grinder for comminuting waste material.
A known such grinder is shown in U.S. Pat. 5,639,032. This grinder comprises a grinding unit formed by a grinding rotor driven by an electric motor and by a counter blade carried by a machine frame. The waste material to be comminuted is urged to the rotor by means of a box shaped pushing element driven by a hydraulic jack so as to move across the bottom wall of a hopper containing the material to be comminuted.
Such known grinders are useful in connection with waste material of short dimension. However, these grinders are less suitable in connection with long wastes like laths or residual long portions of chip board material as obtained in factories for furniture and the like.
For grinding such elongate wastes there are known in the market grinders, which include two high friction serrated feed cylinders which are vertically aligned and are arranged in front of the grinding unit so as to positively feed the laths or the like towards the grinding rotor by firmly engaging the upper and lower surface thereof.
However, such grinders using a roller pair feed mechanism can grasp a single lath or the like at a given time, only. Also the contact area between the feeding rollers and the piece of waste material is small.
Thus it is an object of the present invention to provide a grinder having a waste material feed unit which can also feed a plurality of waste material pieces and which warrants a good frictional contact of the feed unit to the pieces of waste material.
To this end the invention proposes a grinder for comminuting waste material comprising a frame structure, comprising a grinding rotor journalled in the frame structure, which includes a plurality of cutting tools, comprising a counter blade carried by the frame structure and cooperating with the grinding rotor, and comprising feed means to positively feed waste material to the grinding rotor, wherein the feed means comprise a lower feed conveyor and an upper feed conveyor which are vertically aligned and each comprise an endless transport element running on two spaced return rollers, a lower work run of the upper conveyor and an upper work run of the lower conveyor thus forming a moving wall feeding passage for the waste material to be comminuted.
Further advantageous improvements of the invention relate to the following:
The endless transport element comprises a plate chain. In such a grinder the feed means are of particularly robust and solid construction.
The plate chain comprises plate chain members each having a plate portion and forward and rear hinge portions. This geometry of the single plate chain links is advantageous in view of a compact structure and in view of low production costs, since a separate driving chain is not necessary. The plate chain members can be easily connected by chain pins to form an endless belt like transport means.
Cooperating hinge portions of adjacent plate chain members form a hinge rib of constant cross section. In such a grinder the inward side of the transport means is formed with a plurality of transverse ribs, each of which are partly formed by a given plate chain member and a succeeding or preceeding adjacent plate chain member. The continuous transverse ribs thus at the same time form driving ribs cooperating with a driven return roller.
The plate chain member has a high friction surface. This further improvement is advantageous in view of good frictional contact between the two feed conveyors and the surfaces of the waste material pieces.
In view of obtaining the same advantage in a different way the invention further proposes a grinder, wherein the high friction surface comprises a rib structure, as well as a grinder, wherein the high friction surface comprises at least one spike, as well as a grinder, wherein the high friction surface comprises a rubber coating.
A still further improvement of the invention is a grinder, wherein the return rollers are provided with recesses cooperating with projections formed on the inward surface of the associated transport element. Thus the a driving return roller can transfer high forces to a transport element having matingly equidistant driving ribs on the inward face thereof.
In view of the same effect the invention further proposes a grinder, wherein the return rollers are of polygonal cross section.
A further improvement of the invention is a grinder, wherein the return rollers comprise spaced end plates and shaft rigidly connecting the end plates. This improvement is advantageous in obtaining return rollers of great axial dimension and yet small mass.
A further improvement of the invention relates to a grinder wherein at least one of the conveyors comprises a subframe movably carried by the frame structure. In such a grinder the conveyors can be at least partly adjusted in vertical direction. This allows the grinder to comminute waste materials of varying vertical dimension.
Furthermore a grinder is proposed, wherein the downstream return roller of one of the conveyors is carried by the movable subframe so as to be adjustable in vertical direction. This construction of the grinder allows vertical adjustment of the height of the effective transport gap defined by the two conveyors in a particularly simple way. The drive motors associated to the movable conveyor or the movable conveyors can be located at the upstream return roller, which is at the same time the pivot axis of the subframe. Thus the drive motor of the conveyor need not be moved when the vertical position of the downstream end of the conveyor is adjusted. This allows automatic adjustment of the movable conveyor by the incoming waste material pieces overcoming the weight of the subframe and the components carried thereby (downstream return roller plus transport element).
In a further embodiment the movable subframe is pivotable about the axis of the upstream return roller of the movable conveyor. In such a grinder no complicated guide means need to be provided for the downstream return roller of the movable conveyor.
The invention also considers a grinder, wherein the subframe cooperates with a vertically adjustable abutment member. In such a grinder the minimum width of the distance between the upper and lower conveyors is limited to an adjustable value. At the same time the movable conveyor is free to move in vertical direction when cooperating with waste material pieces of greater height.
The grinder may be provided with a support plate to supports the upper run of at least one of the conveyors. In such a grinder the upper runs of the respective conveyors are vertically supported and run at a predetermined height.
Furthermore a grinder is proposed, wherein at least part of the support plate is made from material cooperating with the associated transport element under low friction. In such a conveyor the lower sides of the transport elements can move across the associated support plate under small friction.
The invention further proposes a grinder, wherein pressure rollers act on the lower run of the upper conveyor, said pressure rollers being biassed by spring elements. This construction allows for increased engaging forces between the two conveyors and the waste material to be comminuted.
The invention furthermore proposes a grinder, wherein at least part of the spring elements comprise gas springs. In such a grinder the force exerted by the springs onto the transport element biassed thereby can be easily adjusted by varying the pressure in the gas spring.
The invention also proposes a grinder, wherein independent identical drive units are provided for the upper and lower conveyors. In such a grinder there is no need for a positive mechanical couppling between the two conveyors. Also the conveyors can run at somewhat different speed if such is required by the geometry of the arrangement of the two conveyors (upper conveyor parallel to the lower conveyor or inclined with respect to the lower conveyor) or by load requirements.
A grinder is preferred, wherein a load sensor cooperates with a motor driving the grinding rotor and wherein the drive units associated to the upper and lower conveyors are energized in accordance with the signal output from said load sensor. In such a conveyor the waste material feed means are automatically stopped when the grinding rotor needs too torque to comminute the waste material in its vicinity. The waste material transport means are automatically restarted, when the grinding rotor is ready to comminute further material.
Further improvements of the invention relate to the grinding rotor running at a speed of 120 to 240 rpm or preferably between 160 and 200 rpm. Operation of the grinding rotor at such rpms is particularly advantageous in connection with alongate waste material pieces consisting of wood, chip board and the like.
The invention will now be explained in more detail referring to the drawings. Therein
FIG. 1
is a lengthwise vertical section through a grinder for comminuting elongate waste wood pieces;
FIG. 2
is a plan view of part of the rotor of the grinder of
FIG. 1
shown in axial section and part of a counter blade cooperating with the rotor to form a grinding nip;
FIG. 3
is a longitudinal vertical section through a plate chain member of a conveyor of the grinder shown in
FIG. 1
, this section being along line III—III of
FIG. 4
;
FIG. 4
is a plan view of the plate chain member of
FIG. 3
;
FIG. 5
is an axial view of an endplate of a return roller of a waste material conveyor shown in
FIG. 1
; and
FIG. 6
is a schematic block diagram of a load sensitive control circuit for drive motors of a waste material transport unit of the grinder shown in FIG.
1
.
In
FIG. 1
a grinder for comminuting elongate waste wood material is generally shown at
10
. The grinder
10
has two main subunits, i.e. a grinding unit
12
and a waste material feeding unit
14
. These two units are arranged in a housing
16
including robust thick side plates
18
interconnected by robust transverse frame members
20
. The side plates
18
and the frame members
20
together form a rigid frame structure. The open sides of this frame structure are closed by sheet metal walls
22
fixed to the frame structure.
The grinding unit
12
comprises a grinding rotor
24
and two counter blades
26
,
28
cooperating therewith.
The grinding rotor
24
includes a core member
30
having a plurality of axially succeeding circumferential ribs
32
of triangular (90° isosceles triangle) cross section. Part of the ribs
32
is milled away to form pockets
34
receiving cutting tools
36
. The latter are of quadratic outline and are fixed in the pockets
34
by means of fixing screws
38
extending through a bore
40
of the cutting tool which is along a diagonal line of the cutting tool. The bore
40
is counterbored from either side to receive a head of the fixing screw
38
. By this construction the cutting tool
36
can be mounted in a pocket
34
in four different positions, in each of which two of the eight cutting edges of the cutting tool
36
are active.
As may best be seen from
FIG. 2
, the counter blade
26
(and
28
) has a zig-zag cutting edge
42
following the contour of the core member
30
under a constant distance S*. The cutting tool
36
is slightly higher than the ribs
32
so that a cutting tool
36
forms a smaller cutting gap s together with the opposing portion of the cutting edge
42
. The difference between S* and s is shown at d in FIG.
2
.
As may also be seen from
FIG. 2
the counter blade
26
is fixed to a blade carrier
48
connected to the side blades
18
by means of screws
50
.
The geometry of the counter blade
28
corresponds to the one of counter blade
26
and need not be described again in detail. The counter blade
28
is fixed to a blade carrier
52
rigidly connected to the housing
16
by means of screws
54
.
A part cylindrical sieve
56
surrounds the grinding rotor
24
extending from the counter blade
26
to the counter blade
28
. The angular extension of the sieve
56
is about 280°. The sieve
56
is provided with openings
58
through which waste material cut into small particles or chips by cooperation of the grinding rotor
24
and the counter blade
26
(and to a lesser degree the counter blade
28
) may pass and exit into a chip collecting chamber
60
formed in a lower portion of the housing
16
. The chip collecting chamber
60
is separated from the remainder of the housing
16
by the counter blade
26
, the blade carrier
48
, the sieve
56
and the upper vertical counter blade
28
together with the blade carrier
52
. Thus the blade carriers
48
and
52
also form walls of the chip collecting chamber
60
.
In the lower most trough shaped portion of the chip collecting chamber
60
a feed screw
62
is provided, which is driven by a motor
64
shown in dashed line, since in reality this motor is arranged above the drawing plane on the outer side of the respective side plate
18
. By rotation of the feed screw
62
the chips having accumulated in the chip collecting chamber
60
are fed to a chip outlet opening
66
provided in the rear side plate
18
. A chip feed pipe which is not shown in the drawings, is connected to the chip outlet opening
66
to feed comminuted waste material to a chip reservoir or a chip briquetting machine, both not shown in the drawings.
The waste material feeding unit
14
comprises as main subunits a lower conveyor
68
and an upper conveyor
70
.
The lower conveyor
68
has a downstream return roller
72
being immediately adjacent to the plate carrier
48
and an upstream return roller
74
being adjacent to a waste entrance opening
76
formed in the left hand end wall of the housing
16
. A chain like transport element
78
runs over the two return roller
72
,
74
, the ends of which are journalled in the side plates
18
.
As may be seen from
FIG. 1
, an upper work run
80
of the lower conveyor
68
is supported by a support plate
81
extending throughout the transverse dimension of the housing
16
and being fixed to the side plates
18
by screws
82
.
The support plate
81
carries a low friction lining
84
cooperating with the lower side of the work run
80
. Thus the work run
80
is firmly supported in vertical direction while running across the support plate
81
under small friction.
As may also be seen from
FIG. 1
, a lower return run
86
of the lower conveyor
68
is slack. There is positive engagement between the inner side of the transport element
78
and the return rollers
72
,
74
as will be explained in more detail below referring to FIG.
5
.
The upstream return roller
74
is driven by a drive unit
88
including an electric motor
90
and an angle reduction gear
98
. The position of the drive unit
88
has been chosen in view of explanation purposes. In reality, the drive unit
88
is arranged on the outward side of the side plate
18
.
Correspondingly, the upper conveyor
70
comprises a downstream return roller
100
and an upstream return roller
102
as well as a chain like transport element
104
running on these rollers.
The transport roller
104
is journalled in the side plates
18
, while the downstream return roller
104
is journalled in longitudinal frame plates
106
, which are interconnected by transverse rods
108
to form a rigid subframe
110
. The left hand ends of the frame plates
106
are pivotally arranged on the end portions of the shaft of the return roller
102
.
Thus the subframe
120
and the components carried thereby (return roller
100
and transport element
104
) are biassed in clockwise direction by gravity.
A lowermost working position of the upper conveyor
70
can be adjusted by means of an abutment member
112
carried by a vertical threaded sleeve
114
carried by a vertical threaded spindle
116
journalled in the housing
16
and having an actuating head
118
arranged above the upper wall of the housing
16
. Thus by turning a wrench cooperating with the actuating head
118
the lowermost operating position of the conveyor
70
can be adjusted.
A lower work run
120
of the transport element
104
is slack and extends along a chain or cable curve under the influence of its weight. An upper return run
122
of the transport element
104
is supported by a support plate
124
having a low friction lining
126
and being secured to the frame plate
106
by screws
128
.
The upstream return roller
102
is driven by a drive unit
130
including an angle reduction gear
132
and an electric motor
134
. The drive unit
130
is identical to the drive unit
88
and under same operating conditions will behave the same way.
The grinding rotor
24
is driven by a high power three phase electric motor
136
via a reduction gear
138
including two pullies
140
,
142
of small and large diameter, respectively, and a belt
144
. The motor
136
and the reduction gear
138
are shown above the housing
16
for explanation purposes. In reality they are carried by the outward side of the side plate
18
.
The grinder described above operated as follows:
Elongate waste wood material like laths or chip board material are supplied to the entrance opening
76
of the housing
16
using appropriate known feed means, i.e. a belt conveyor as schematically shown at
144
, a vibratory chute, a roller conveyor or the like. In
FIG. 1
two elongate pieces
146
,
148
of waste wood are shown being actually fed into the grinder
10
. The pieces of waste material are put onto the belt conveyor
144
without paying attention to their size and position. So, layers of different numbers of elongate pieces arrive at the entrance opening
76
. These layers are contacted by the upper conveyor
70
by an intermediate portion of its lower work run
120
. The incoming upper piece
148
is shown in such position of first contact. Upon further forward feeding of the work piece
148
the latter will be grasped by the outer surface of the transport element
104
. Upon still further forward feeding of the piece
148
the lower work run
120
of the upper conveyor
70
will deform overcoming gravity so as to provide an increasing contact surface between its work run
120
and the upper side of the piece
148
. When the piece
148
approaches the downstream return roller
100
the latter will be elevated such that the combined layer of pieces
146
and
148
can pass between the downstream ends of the two conveyors
68
,
70
. In the end the two pieces
146
,
148
are both fed to the grinding rotor
24
and will both be chipped by the latter.
Typically the distance between the two upstream return rollers
74
and
102
can be chosen to be about 300 mm, while the smallest gap defined between the two downstream ends of the work runs
80
and
120
can be established to be as small as 1 or 2 mm (in the case of comminuting thin plates or veneer material).
In view of increasing the pressure exerted by the work run
120
onto the pieces
146
,
148
pressure rollers
150
,
152
may be provided as indicated in dashed lines. These pressure rollers extend across the entire width of the transport element
104
and are rotatably carried by the piston rods of associated pneumatic jacks
154
,
156
fixed to the side plates
18
, respectively.
If desired, one may also provide further pneumatic jacks
158
fixed to the side plates
1
B, the piston rods of which are pivotally connected to the free ends of the frame plates
106
.
The force provided by the pneumatic jacks
154
,
156
may be adjusted by setting a pressure regulator
162
, by which the jacks
158
,
160
are connected to a pressure air line
164
. Analogously, the pressure jacks
158
are pressurized via a pressure regulator
166
also being connected to the pressure air line
164
.
FIGS. 3 and 4
show details of plate chain members
168
, from which the transport elements
78
and
104
are made. The plate chain members
168
comprise a plate portion
170
and forward hinge portions
172
and rear hinge portions
174
formed integral therewith. As may be seen from
FIG. 4
, the forward and rear hinge portions
172
,
174
are staggered in transverse direction each extending about one quarter of the transversal extension of the plate portion
170
. Thus the hinge portions
172
,
174
, which are of identical cross section, form one continuous hinge rib
176
once two adjacent plate chain members
168
have been connected by a long hinge pin
178
.
In view of increasing the friction between the surface of the transport elements
78
,
104
and the pieces of waste material to be comminuted, the outer surface of the plate portion
170
is provided with a rib structure
180
forming a quadratic lattice. The edges of the individual cells are inclined with respect to the longitudinal and transverse directions by an angle of 45°.
Alternatively or in addition the plate chain members
68
may be provided with outwardly facing spikes
182
which are screwed into corresponding threaded openings formed in the plate portion
170
or fixedly connected thereto e.g. by welding, brazing or glueing.
In a still further alternative it is considered to provide the plate portions
170
with a wear resistant rubber coating. The latter may have a profiled surface being similar to the rib structure
180
shown in FIG.
4
.
As indicated in
FIG. 1
, each of the return rollers
72
,
74
and
100
,
102
comprises two end plates
184
which are interconnected by a shaft
186
, the latter also forming the shaft for journaling the return roller.
If a transport element
78
or
104
is used, which comprises plate chain members
168
as shown in
FIGS. 3 and 4
, the return rollers
72
,
74
and
100
,
102
must be appropriately shaped. As may be seen from
FIG. 5
the end plates
184
are of polygonal contour and at the corners of the polygan there are provided part circular recesses
188
, each of which is dimensioned so as to receive one of the hinge ribs
176
under small play. The thus formed end plates
184
are capable of transmitting high forces to the transport elements.
FIG. 6
shows a block diagram of a control circuit
190
which will avoid running of the grinding rotor
24
and its electric drive motor
136
under overload conditions:
The control circuit
190
comprises a power sensor
192
connected into a three phase supply line
194
of the motor
136
.
The signal output terminal of the power sensor
192
is connected to the input terminal of a window comparator
196
. The latter has a built in hysteresis feature and will supply an output signal “1”, if the input signal has had a phase, wherein it was smaller than 60% of the maximum allowable load of the motor
136
, and has not exceeded a value corresponding to 80% of the nominal load of the motor
136
thereafter. Contrarily, the window comparator
196
will provide an output signal “0” once the signal output from the power sensor
192
has become greater than a signal corresponding to 80% of the nominal load
136
. This output signal “0” will be maintained until the signal output from the power sensor
192
has fallen to a value lower than the output signal corresponding to 60% of the nominal load of the motor
136
. At such time a signal “1” will be output.
The signal output from the window comparator
196
is used to control a relay
198
connected into a supply line
200
for the two motors
96
and
134
.
Claims
- 1. A grinder for comminuting waste material comprising:a frame structure, comprising a grinder rotor journalled in the frame structure, which includes a plurality of cutting tools, comprising a counter blade carried by the frame structure and cooperating with the grinding rotor, and comprising feed means to positively feed waste material to the grinding rotor, wherein the feed means comprise a lower feed conveyor and an upper feed conveyor which are vertically aligned and each comprise an endless transport element running on two spaced return rollers, a lower work run of the upper conveyor and an upper work run of the lower conveyor thus forming a moving wall feeding passage for the waste material to be comminuted, wherein the endless transport element comprises a plate chain comprising plate chain members each having a plate portion and forward and rear hinge portions such that cooperating hinge portions of adjacent plate chain members form a hinge rib of constant cross section.
- 2. The grinder in accordance with claim 1, whereinthe endless transport element comprises a plate chain.
- 3. The grinder in accordance with claim 2, whereinthe plate chain comprises plate chain members each having a plate portion and forward and rear hinge portions.
- 4. The grinder in accordance with claim 3, whereinthe plate chain member has a high friction surface.
- 5. The grinder in accordance with claim 4, wherein the high friction surface comprises a rib structure.
- 6. The grinder in accordance with claim 4, whereinthe high friction surface comprises at least one spike.
- 7. The grinder in accordance with claim 4, whereinthe high friction surface comprises a rubber coating.
- 8. The grinder in accordance with claim 1, whereinthe return rollers are provided with recesses cooperating with projections formed on the inward surface of the associated transport element.
- 9. The grinder in accordance with claim 1, whereinthe return rollers are of polygonal cross section.
- 10. The grinder in accordance with claim 1, whereinthe return rollers comprise spaced end plates and a shaft rigidly connecting the end plates.
- 11. The grinder in accordance with claim 1, characterizedin that at least one of the conveyors comprises a subframe movably carried by the frame structure.
- 12. The grinder in accordance with claim 11, whereinthe downstream return roller of one of the conveyors is carried by the movable subframe so as to be adjustable in vertical direction.
- 13. The grinder in accordance with claim 11, whereinthe movable subframe is pivotable about the axis of the upstream return roller of the movable conveyor.
- 14. The grinder in accordance with claim 11, whereinthe subframe cooperates with a vertically adjustable abutment member.
- 15. The grinder in accordance with claim 1, whereina support plate to supports the upper run of at least one of the conveyors.
- 16. The grinder in accordance with claim 15 whereinat least part of the support plate is made from material cooperating with the associated transport element under low friction.
- 17. The grinder in accordance with claim 1, whereinpressure rollers act on the lower run of the upper conveyor, said pressure rollers being biassed by spring elements.
- 18. The grinder in accordance with claim 17, whereinat least part of the spring elements comprise gas springs.
- 19. The grinder in accordance with claim 1, whereinindependent identical drive units are provided for the upper and lower conveyors.
- 20. The grinder in accordance with claim 1, whereina load sensor cooperates with a motor driving the grinding rotor and drive units associated to the upper and lower conveyors are energized in accordance with the signal output from said load sensor.
- 21. The grinder in accordance with claim 1, wherein the grinding rotor runs at a speed of 120 to 240 rpm.
- 22. The grinder in accordance with claim 21, whereinthe speed of the grinding rotor is between 160 and 200 rpm.
- 23. A grinder for comminuting waste material comprising:a frame structure, comprising a grinder rotor journalled in the frame structure, which includes a plurality of cutting tools, comprising a counter blade carried by the frame structure and cooperating with the grinding rotor, and comprising feed means to positively feed waste material to the grinding rotor, wherein the feed means comprise a lower feed conveyor and an upper feed conveyor which are vertically aligned and each comprise an endless transport element running on two spaced return rollers, a lower work run of the upper conveyor and an upper work run of the lower conveyor thus forming a moving wall feeding passage for the waste material to be comminuted, wherein pressure rollers act on the lower run of the upper conveyor, said press rollers being biased by spring elements.
US Referenced Citations (5)