The present invention is related to the field of replacing underground utilities and specifically to a system and assembly for slitting an underground utility pipe and installing a new utility pipe in place of the old pipe.
The present invention is directed to an assembly comprising an elongate body and a first wing The elongate body has opposed first and second ends and a hollow region extending end-to-end. The first wing is supported on the body. The first wing comprises a recessed inner surface having a sharpened edge and an outer surface having no edge as sharp as the sharpened edge of the recessed inner surface.
The invention is also directed to a system comprising a wire rope, an expander, a rope puller, and an assembly disposed on the wire rope between the expander and rope puller. The wire rope has a first end and a second end. The expander is operatively engaged to the wire rope at its first end. The rope puller is operatively engaged to the wire rope at its second end. The assembly comprises an elongate body and a first wing. The elongate body has opposed first and second ends and a hollow region extending end-to-end The first wing is supported on the body. The first wing comprises a recessed inner surface having a sharpened edge and an outer surface having no edge as sharp as the sharpened edge of the recessed inner surface.
The invention is further directed to an assembly comprising an elongate body and a plurality of wings. The elongate body has opposed first and second ends. The wings are supported on the body. Each wing comprises a recessed inner surface having a sharpened edge configured to cut a pipe and an outer surface having no edge as sharp as the sharpened edge of the inner surface.
Pipe slitting is the process of longitudinally separating an existing in situ ductile pipe, expanding the soil surrounding the periphery of the pipe and simultaneously pulling in a replacement pipe. The existing pipe is most often High Density Polyethylene pipe used for natural gas transmission, though various grades of PVC and thermoplastics may be replaced with the assembly and method of the present invention. Replacement of utilities is often done to replace leaking or aged underground pipes and is an alternative to open cut, trenching, or various forms of boring such as horizontal directional drilling or use of pneumatic impact moles.
Pipe replacement systems operate by passing a wire rope through the old pipe from an entry point to an exit point. At the exit point a slitting tool having exposed blades is attached to the wire rope in series with an expander and a towing member. The new or product pipe is attached to the towing member. A rope puller such as a rotary or hand-to-hand winch is connected to the wire rope near the entry point. The winch pulls the wire rope, pipe slitter, expander, towing member, and new pipe through the ground from the exit point to the entry point. The replacement pipe is towed in during this process. Occasionally, the blades of the pipe slitter may accidentally cut or damage an adjacent utility during the pipe slitting process. Thus, there remains a need for improved devices and methods for the replacement of underground pipes. The present invention provides an assembly and method for reducing the likelihood of damage to adjacent utilities during pipe replacement operations.
Turning now to the figures,
The rope puller 20 may comprise an above-ground rotary or hand-to-hand winch. One such acceptable winch is the Hydroguide® winch manufactured and sold by Hammerhead® Trenchless Equipment. However, one skilled in the art will appreciate that a winch positioned within the entry pit 28 may also be used. One such acceptable winch is the Portaburst® manufactured and sold by Hammerhead® Trenchless Equipment. The winch should be capable of putting the wire rope with sufficient force to pull the pipe slitting assembly 18 and expander 14 through the old pipe 10 and the replacement pipe connector 16 and new pipe 30 through the bore left behind by the expander.
Turning now to
A second wing 50 may be supported on the body 34. The second wing 50 is offset from the first wing 42 about a longitudinal axis 52 of the body 34 by a central angle of 180 degrees. Like the first wing 42, the second wing 50 has a recessed inner surface 54 having a sharpened edge 56. The second wing 50 also has an outer surface 58 that has no edges as sharp as the sharpened edge 56 of the recessed inner surface 54. Both the first wing 42 and the second wing 50 radially project from the body 34 such that both recessed inner surfaces 44 and 54 open towards the first end 36 of the body 34 and will engage the old pipe 10 with their sharpened edges 46 and 56 when pulled to the right in
The sharpened edges 46,56 of both wings have a curved profile that appears generally parabolic when viewed from the side as shown in
The pipe slitting apparatus 18 described herein is shown with two wings supported on the body 180 degrees apart. However, one skilled in the part will appreciate the apparatus may comprise a plurality of wings supported on the body with each wing comprising a recessed inner surface and an outer surface. Each inner surface has a sharpened edge configured to cut the old pipe. Each outer surface has no edge as sharp as the sharpened edge of the inner surface. Each of the plurality of wings may radially project from the body and may be uniformly spaced about the longitudinal axis 52 of the body 34.
Referring to
As shown in
The first end 36 of the body guides the apparatus 18 into the old pipe 10. Accordingly, the first end 36 of the body 34 has an outer cross-sectional profile that is smaller than the inner diameter of the old pipe. The first end 36 of the body 34 may have a circumferentially tapered outer profile 60 configured to guide the body into the old pipe 10. The second end 38 of the body 34 has a larger outer cross-sectional profile than the first end 36. The larger outer profile helps to separate the cut halves of the old pipe and pushes the old pipe into the surrounding soil. As shown in
Turning now to
As shown in
As the jam nut 76 is threaded into the frustoconical section 74, the nut engages thrust washer 96 and pushes the jaws 86 into the tapered hollow region 88 to grip the wire rope 12. The action of tightening jam nut 76 couples the expander 14 to the wire rope 12 and permits the entire assembly to be towed through the ground. The expander 14 is connected to a towing eye 98 of the replacement pipe connector 16 by the clevis 78 and bolt 82.
Turning now to
The new pipe 30 is attached to the replacement pipe connector 16 by placing the new pipe within the hollow region 108 and expanding the puller jaws 104 through use of the threaded shaft 110 as described above. Clamping force between the puller jaws 104 and sleeve 102 may hold the new pipe 30 in place. Alternatively, an adaptor (not shown) may be used to connect the replacement pipe connector 16 to the new pipe, or the new pipe may be fused to the replacement pipe connector
An O-ring 116 may be placed within seal groove 118 to seal the hollow region 108 from debris or other materials present during the replacement operation. Likewise, a second O-ring 120 may be placed within a seal groove 122 formed in the body 100 of the replacement pipe connector 16 to seal the hollow region 124 proximate the nose 126 of the replacement pipe connector 16. O-ring 122 decreases the likelihood of debris entering the hollow region 124 through the space between towing eye 98 and body 100. O-rings 128 are disposed between the jaws 104 and the new pipe 30 and act as circumferential springs that collapse jaws 104 in position when not engaged with the new pipe.
In operation, the wire rope 12 is fed axially through the old pipe 10 from the entry pit 28 to an exit point. The wire rope 12 is threaded through the hollow region 40 of the pipe slitting apparatus 16. The wire rope 12 is then also threaded through the hollow region 88 of the expander and secured to the expander with jam nut 76 and jaws 86. The new pipe 30 is connected to the replacement pipe connector 16 by rotating the threaded shaft 110 to pull the cone 106 toward the second end 114 of the shaft. This causes jaws 104 to expend and grip the new pipe between the jaws and the sleeve 102.
With the new pipe 30 secured within the replacement pipe connector 16, the towing eye 98 is threaded onto the second end of the threaded shaft 110 and pivotally connected to the clevis 78 with bold 82.
Once assembled, the rope puller 20 is engaged to pull the wire rope 12 and the pipe slitting apparatus toward the entry pit 28. As the pipe slitting apparatus 18 is advanced through the old pipe 10 the sharpened edges 46 and 56 on the first 42 and second 50 wings, respectively slit the old pipe 10 into two halves The body 34 and expander 14 push the old pipe outward into the soil surrounding the expander and the new pipe 30 is towed into the bore left behind. When the new pipe 30 reaches the entry pit 28 the replacement pipe connector 16, expander 14, and pipe slitting apparatus 18 are removed from the new pipe.
One of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that while the figures show one configuration for the subject invention, modifications to the particular shape and organization of the pipe slitting apparatus 18 may be taken without departing from the spirit of the disclosed invention. For example, the slitting apparatus 18 may be integrally formed with the expander 14 rather than abutting the nose 64 of the expander. Likewise, the replacement pipe connector 16 may be integrally formed rather than connected to the expander at a clevis joint.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/154,365 filed on Apr. 29, 2015, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62154365 | Apr 2015 | US |