This application is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 12/147,117 filed Jun. 26, 2008, and entitled IMPROVED HAMMER MILL HAMMER, and is hereby incorporated by reference herein its entirety.
Not Applicable
The present invention relates to hammer mills. More particularly, this invention relates to an improved two or three piece hammer that reduces hole elongation and side loading of the hammer.
Hammer mills have long been used for grinding or comminution of materials. A typical hammer mill comprises a rotor mounted on a rotor shaft inside a housing. A rotor 1100 according to the prior art is illustrated at rest in
Numerous industries rely on hammer mill grinders or impact grinders to reduce material to a smaller size. For example, hammer mills are often used to process forestry products, agricultural products, minerals, and materials for recycling. Specific examples of materials processed by hammer mills include grains, animal food, pet food, feed ingredients, mulch, wood, hay, plastics, and dried distiller grains. Hammer mills heretofore have long been employed to effect size reduction in such diverse materials as scrap metal, paper, animal and human feed, or anything else that needs to be reduced in size.
Standard hammers, when grinding a product in a hammer mill, impact the product to be pulverized to create a smaller average size particle. This impact forces material against a perforated screen area that also cuts and sizes the product. Inside the typical hammer mill, numerous forces act. A force exists toward the tip of the hammer, where the hammer impacts the material to be comminuted. Also present inside the mill is a axial force, parallel to the rotor shaft, on a side of the hammer due to the material entering the mill. The combination of these two co-existing forces cause elongation to the pivot hole in the hammer, decreased life, and the eventual failure of the hammer. Accordingly there is a need for a hammer mill design to compensate for impact loading, side loading, wear, and hole elongation. There are also tub grinders and impact crushers that use the hammer setup.
Manufacturing methods utilizing forgings, rolling, and casting are well known in the art to improve the life and functionality of the hammer.
The two pieces are preferably forged together in a similar manufacturing process as that disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,728,975, hereby incorporated in its entirety by reference.
Treatment Methods such as welding weld material to the end of the hammer blade are well known in the art to improve the grinding functionality and life of the hammer. These methods typically infuse the hammer edge, through welding, with a metallic material resistant to abrasion or wear such as tungsten carbide. See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,419,173, incorporated herein by reference, describing methods of attaining hardened hammer tips or edges, as are well known by those skilled in the art.
Increasing the hammer strength with the addition of edge weld and increasing the hardness of the hammer material decreases the fatigue strength of the hammer when subjected to dynamic loading. In the prior art, the roundness of the rod hole deteriorates, leading to elongation of the hammer rod hole. Elongation of the hammer rod hole continues until the material yields and yielding in operation causes failure/fracture of the hammer at the rod. The fracture is catastrophic and causes mechanical failure in the mill, damage to the housing, screens and other hammers, as well as safety concerns to workers near mills. Design changes including making the hammer wider at the rod, such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,140,569 which is hereby incorporated by reference, have been attempted but still experience field failure due to the side loading of the hammer.
Rod-hole deformation is overcome by providing a two- or, optionally, three-piece design. It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an end bearing structure comprising a race with an integrated spacer, and a hammer blade with an integrated bearing surface. An additional object is to provide an optional third piece comprising a separate liner installed between the bearing and race surfaces in order to mitigate elongation of the hammer blade pivot hole immediately adjacent to the pivot rod, the liner can also serve as a coating to reduce the friction and wear between the race and the blade to increase service life in elevated dynamic loading situations. A further object is to improve the ease and safety of installation and maintenance of hammer blades within a hammer mill. Still another object is to eliminate unnecessary spacers between the hammer blades when installed onto the pivot rods.
Effecting the above objects results in a stronger bearing structure designed to deflect and lessen the dynamic side loading on the hammer blade when in motion and under load. Reduction in wear on the leading, bottom, and trailing edges of the hammer by infusing an unyielding material ultimately increase the life cycle of the hammer blade and reduces costs associated with replacement and maintenance of the hammer mill.
In a hammer mill, including a housing defining a hammer mill grinding chamber with at least one inlet and one outlet, a rotor is disposed centrally in the housing for rotation about a rotor axis of rotation. A screen is disposed at a predetermined radial location relative to the rotor's axis of rotation. Operatively, pivotally attached to the rotor is a plurality of hammers grouped in sets and disposed periodically about the rotor's axis of rotation. All hammers within a single set have a common axis of rotation lying parallel to the rotor's axis of rotation. The hammers' axes of rotation are disposed at a common radial distance relative to the rotor's axis of rotation. At least one of the hammers in each group has an opening in one end corresponding to the common hammer axis of rotation.
The present invention may be manufactured using methods of forging, casting or rolling, as are well known by those having skill in the art.
The hammers require no new installation procedures or equipment. The present invention eliminates the need to utilize spacers. This is accomplished through a variable length race with an integrated spacer. The width of the race with the integrated spacer may range from one quarter to ten inches. This design feature reduces installation time and improves the overall safety to the personnel assembling or maintaining the hammer mill due to the lessening of the need to align hammers, spacers and rods during installation. The installation is also safer for users as with a typical setup, rods must be forced through holes using impact devices while the operator manually holds the spacers. Utilizing the incorporated spacers the operators' hands are clear from pinch points within the mill.
Established forging techniques, well known in the art of fitting two-piece bearing like structures together, are used in the manufacture of the two-piece end bearing structure disclosed herein.
The inner race, with the integrated spacer, augments the two-piece end bearing structure by maintaining a predetermined distance between one or more hammer blades when installed on the pivot rod within the hammer mill. The inner race also improves the two-piece end bearing structure by assisting in the dispersal of anticipated dynamic forces that ultimately affect the hammer blade assembly and the hammer mill pivot rod. This additional feature reduces fatigue, and stress and enhances resistance to deformation and inordinate wear acquired through use. The life of the hammer blade assembly is, therefore, extended.
Installation of hammers with races integrated with the spacer is also made easier and quicker, whether the installation is initial or replacement. It is also predicted to improve the safety of this procedure in the field by reducing the number of parts and alignment issues associated with existing hammer blades and hammer mills.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
a is a perspective view of an individual race without an integrated spacer;
b is a cross sectional view of the individual race without the integrated spacer;
c is a perspective view of the individual race with the integrated spacer;
d is a cross detail of the individual race with the integrated spacer;
Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate identical or corresponding parts throughout the several views,
a and b illustrate an inner bearing race 16, which in use, is disposed within and concentric to the outer bearing race 14, as shown in
c and d illustrate an inner bearing race assembly 17, comprising the inner bearing race 16 and a spacer 18. In the preferred embodiment, these two parts: the inner bearing race 16 and the spacer 18, are integral. That is, they are made from the same mass of material to form the inner bearing race assembly 17.
The outer surface of the inner bearing race 16, with or without the integral spacer 18, is convex to mate with the concave inner surface 15 of the outer bearing race 14 as illustrated in
The inner race 16 without the integral sleeve 18 is shown installed in the hammer mill hammer blade body 11 in
The inner bearing race assembly 17 is shown installed in the hammer mill hammer blade body 11 in
In
The inner race 16 is manufactured utilizing a lathe. The inner race 16 is preferably made of 1030, 1040, 52100 or similar carbon steel, but the present invention is not limited to a particular race material. The inner race 16 is manufactured to needed width when incorporating the integrated spacer 18 design. The arc of the inner race 16 is designed so as to conform to the material malleability characteristics of the hammer blade body 11.
The hammer mill hammer blade 11 is manufactured by forging to required dimensions, coining the hammer blade 11 for tolerances, and drilling the hole 12 to its required tolerance. The hammer blade 11 is forged and machined with a cylindrical hole 12 with excess material around the hole 12 on both sides of the hammer blade 11.
An initial step in assembling the inner bearing race 16 to the hammer blade 11 is to heat the hammer blade 11, thus allowing the cooled inner bearing race 16 to be placed inside the hole 12 as depicted in
The next step in the manufacturing process is to final forge the hammer blade 11 and move excess material around the hole 12 in contact with the inner race 16, thus making the hammer blade 11 form a cup around the outer race 14.
The next step is to heat the hammer blade 11 and utilizing a forging press or drop hammer forging, wherein two dies are pressed together. The dies are manufactured to hold the inner race 16 center and the material of the hammer blade 11 is rolled at 45° to 60° relief to match the curvature of the inner race 16. The end result is that of
The next step is heat treatment and loading of the hammer blade assembly 10. The heat treatment process at designated temperature creates expansion and contraction throughout the forged part. The material deformation stress is relieved and the inner race 16 outside diameter reduces and the hammer blade inside diameter increases. The forged hammer cup 15 loses 10% of the original deformation. At this point, the hammer mill blade body 11 may pivot about the inner race 16 about the pivot axis 820 with approximately 1-2 degrees of movement. In some applications that race will be manufactured with 0 degrees of movement after heat treatment to increase start-up behavior in some mills, the hammer mill blade body 11 will still achieve full pivot when loaded. In other applications, the outside hammer will be manufactured to achieve full rotation after heat treatment for mills with high start-up impact loading
Full pivot of the hammer mill blade body 11 is achieved when loaded into the hammer mill. A loading, preferably greater than 100 ft·lbs, deforms the material on a 11 45-60 degree relief until the material of the hammer mill blade body 11 reaches its yield point. At this point, the inner race is fully set, and any side loading of the hammer mill blade body 11 is relieved by rotation, and the load is transposed to a linear load on the rod 24 on which the hammer blade assembly 10 is mounted. This change in directional force, as well as the increase in bearing surface relative to the prior art, reduces the working stress of the hammer blade body 11 well below the yield point so the hammer blade body 11 experiences no inelastic deformation and failure as seen with hammers 1400 in the prior art. Even toward the end of the hammer assembly's life the inner race 16 will be able to rotate approximately 15° .
Although only an exemplary embodiment of the invention has been described in details above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible without materially departing from the novel teachings and advantages of this invention. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this invention as defined in the following claims.
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2272118 | Imse | Feb 1942 | A |
2404775 | Ehmann | Jul 1946 | A |
2462138 | Spangenberg | Feb 1949 | A |
2647695 | Rogers | Aug 1953 | A |
2728975 | Potter | Jan 1956 | A |
2763439 | Mankoff | Sep 1956 | A |
2952901 | King | Sep 1960 | A |
3186651 | Briolini | Jun 1965 | A |
3482789 | Newell | Dec 1969 | A |
3738586 | Fabert, Jr. | Jun 1973 | A |
3818746 | Fujita | Jun 1974 | A |
4337559 | Rangel | Jul 1982 | A |
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7419109 | Ronfeldt | Sep 2008 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0015693 | Sep 1980 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120037737 A1 | Feb 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12147117 | Jun 2008 | US |
Child | 13282768 | US |