The invention relates generally to guardrails (also referred to as fences or barriers) placed alongside roads and highways to stop errant vehicles, and more particularly to an improved support post for use in constructing such guardrails.
Safety barriers and guardrails are installed alongside highways and roads as a means of stopping out-of-control vehicles. They may be strategically located alongside curves and in zones where a steep drop, oncoming traffic, or other hazard awaits. A primary consideration in constructing prior art barriers and guardrails is the ability to withstand vehicle impact, including impact from large trucks and buses which may be travelling at speed, to stop the vehicle.
Concrete safety barriers are quite strong, but do not yield to absorb vehicle kinetic energy. Consequently, they can be unsafe to passengers in a vehicle hitting the barrier, particularly if the vehicle is a small vehicle or a heavy truck. Also, they are expensive to make and transport.
Guardrails constructed by driving a plurality of vertical posts into the ground at spaced intervals and connecting horizontal rails to the vertical posts are also known. The horizontal rails are typically a series of W-beams bolted to the posts, or cables arranged to extend through U-bolts or eye-bolts connected to the posts. The rails are commonly offset from the vertical posts by spacer blocks respectively fastened to the posts, wherein the W-beams or U-bolts or eye-bolts are fastened to the spacer blocks.
Vertical guardrail posts in widespread use include hot-formed steel I-beams, shown in
Cold-formed steel posts are also known, particularly in Europe. These include C-channel, U-channel, and sigma channel cross-sections as depicted in
A highway guardrail post of the present invention generally comprises an elongated one-piece roll-formed metal body including a front wall defining an attachment face, a pair of opposing side walls orthogonal to the front wall, a first pair of inverted corners respectively connecting the pair of side walls to the front wall, and a second pair of inverted corners respectively extending from the pair of side walls and terminating in a pair of spaced rear edges to define a rear access opening opposite the front wall. The guardrail posts may be manufactured by roll-forming a metal sheet or coil and cutting the roll-formed metal sheet or coil into lengths.
The invention also encompasses a guardrail assembly generally comprising a plurality of guardrail posts as summarized above, and a horizontal rail connected to the front wall of each of the plurality of guardrail posts.
The invention further provides a method of making a plurality of guardrail posts generally comprising the steps of (i) providing an elongated rectangular sheet or coil of metal having a longitudinal central axis and a pair of lateral edges parallel to and equidistant from the central axis; (ii) feeding the sheet or coil of metal lengthwise into a roll-forming machine, wherein the roll-forming machine is configured to form a plurality of right-angle bend pairs, each bend pair being arranged symmetrically about the central axis, wherein the plurality of bend pairs includes, in order of progression from the central axis toward the pair of lateral edges, a first pair of internal bends, a first pair of external bends, a second pair of internal bends, a third pair of internal bends, and a second pair of external bends; and (iii) cutting the roll-formed sheet or coil of metal into lengths.
The invention will be explained further with reference to drawing figures in which:
In the present specification, the term “inverted corner” refers to a junction between two adjacent walls (e.g. front wall 12 and side wall 14) wherein each wall includes a respective bend (e.g. bends 26 and 28) such that a corner bend where the walls meet (e.g. bend 30) points toward an interior region of guardrail post 10. In the embodiment shown, bends 26, 28 and 30 are right-angle bends, however other angles may be used, so long as the corner bend 30 points inward rather than outward.
As seen in
In one embodiment, a distance Dl between attachment face 12A and a plane P1 containing rear edges 22 may be equal to a distance D2 between respective external faces 14A and 16A of side walls 14 and 16. In this way, the overall dimension of guardrail post 10 front-to-rear may be the same as its overall dimension side-to-side. In the same embodiment, or in an independent embodiment, the width W1 of each of the pair of side walls 14, 16 may be greater than the width W2 of front wall 12. In the same embodiment, or in an independent embodiment, the rear access opening 24 may have a width W3 equal to the width W2 of front wall 12.
As shown in
Reference is made now to
Methods of making guardrail posts 10, and constructing guardrail assemblies 40, will now be described.
Reference is made now to
The method of making guardrail posts 10 also comprises the step of cutting the roll-formed sheet or coil of metal 80 into lengths corresponding to the height of each guardrail post. By way of example, sheet or coil 80 may be an initial length of material that is cut into a plurality of 75-inch (1.91 meter) or 72-inch (1.83 meter) lengths after roll-forming. If the roll-forming machine is equipped with a cut-off mechanism, then the lengths may be cut as the roll-formed sheet or coil is discharged from the roll-forming machine.
Holes 32 may be formed by a drilling, milling, or punching operation performed at spaced intervals along sheet or coil 80 prior to, during, or after roll-forming. Each of the plurality of holes is located between the first pair of internal bends 26, such as along the central axis.
With respect to moisture-proofing, it is advantageous that sheet or coil 80 be pre-galvanized before roll-forming, thereby obviating the need for the finished posts to be dipped after roll-forming. Sheet or coil 80 may be cold-rolled steel, 3 mm thick, and may be hot dip galvanized. Of course, other materials and treatments may be used.
Guardrail assembly 40 is constructed by driving guardrail posts 10 vertically into the ground at spaced intervals, and then connecting horizontal rail 50 to the posts as described above. Guardrail posts 10 may be driven the same way guardrail posts of the prior art are driven, which typically involves the use of an automated post driver. Pilot holes may be provided in the ground to locate each post prior to engagement by the automated post driver. Guardrail posts 10 of the present invention have improved performance during installation over prior art guardrail posts because front wall 12 and side walls 14, 16 will deflect inward when a large rock or other obstacle is encountered, but the overall post will remain straight, making it easier to pull the post out of the ground than a prior art post, which will bend under the same circumstances and become difficult to extract.
It will be appreciated that access opening 24 in each post 10 gives an installer easy access to the interior of the post so that the installer may tighten nut 56 onto threaded fastener 54, or drive a fastener to attach spacer block 64, as the case may be. In a current embodiment, the access opening is at least 2.75 inches (70 mm) wide.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12700474 | Feb 2010 | US |
Child | 13450585 | US |