The present invention relates to a tip holder for mounting at an outflow opening of a rotor of a vertical shaft impact crusher, said rotor comprising a vertical rotor wall segment having a first wall portion being substantially tangential in relation to the rotor and a second wall portion being angled in relation to said first wall portion, said tip holder comprising a holding part for holding a wear tip.
The present invention also relates to a method of mounting a tip holder to an outflow opening of a rotor of a vertical shaft impact crusher, said rotor comprising a vertical rotor wall segment having a first wall portion being substantially tangential in relation to the rotor and a second wall portion being angled in relation to said first wall portion, said tip holder comprising a holding part for holding a wear tip.
Vertical shaft impact crushers (VSI-crushers) are used in many applications for crushing hard material like rocks, ore etc. U.S. Pat. No. 3,154,259 describes a VSI-crusher comprising a housing and a horizontal rotor located inside the housing. Material that is to be crushed is fed into the rotor via an opening in the top thereof. With the aid of centrifugal force the rotating rotor ejects the material against the wall of the housing. On impact with the wall the material is crushed to a desired size. The housing wall could be provided with anvils or have a bed of retained material against which the accelerated material is crushed.
The rotor of a VSI-crusher usually has a horizontal upper disc and a horizontal lower disc. The upper and lower discs are connected with a vertical rotor wall. The upper disc has an aperture for feeding material into the rotor. The material lands on the lower disc and is then thrown out of the rotor via openings in the rotor wall. The vertical rotor walls are provided with wear tips of a hard material, such as a hard metal or a ceramic, to protect them from wear caused by the material leaving the rotor at a high speed.
The wear tips described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,154,259 are fixed to holes in the upper and lower discs.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,174,697 describes impeller shoes for a rotor. The impeller shoes, which each have a hard metal tip, are bolted to a horizontal impeller disc.
GB 2,198,060 describes a carrier body. The carrier body, being a substantially plate shaped body, holds a hard metal tip at one end thereof. At a second end thereof the carrier body is bolted to the rotor wall by a through bolt. The bolt fixing the carrier body in position is subjected to heavy wear.
The wear tips described above are quite difficult to replace when they have become worn out. The down time related to maintenance work is thus rather long. In some cases a bolt wear protection plate is required to protect the bolt holding the wear tip.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a tip holder which decreases the down time required for maintenance of the rotor.
It is another object of the invention to provide a tip holder which makes it possible to reduce the number of wear plates required to protect the tip holder.
A further object of the invention is to provide a tip holder that allows a higher rotor speed and thus increases the velocity of the material ejected from the rotor.
These objects are achieved with a tip holder according to the preamble and characterised in that a fastening means is attached to the holding part, the fastening means being adapted to extend along said first wall portion and through said second wall portion from one side thereof, a fixing means being detachably fixable to the fastening means at the other side of said second wall portion.
An advantage with the tip holder according to the preamble is that it is easy to mount and to dismount. Inside the rotor a bed of material is built up against the wall segment. Since the fastening means extend along a first wall portion the tip holder may be dismounted without having to remove the bed beforehand. The fact that the fixing means are attached to the fastening means at the other side of the second wall portion decreases the wear and damage to the fastening means. The removal of the fixing means thus becomes easier which further decreases the down-time required for maintenance. With fixing means located inside the bed of material as in many prior art crushers there is always a risk that the fixing means are worn down such that the tip holder falls out of the rotor. This risk is also decreased with the present invention since the fixing means need not be put inside the bed of material. The fastening means must be kept intact both for easy removal of the tip holder and for the possibility of putting the tip holder back at another location in the rotor.
A further advantage is that since the fixing means are detachably fixed at the other side of the second wall portion they are much less subjected to wear. Thus no wear plates protecting the fixing means is required. The absence of such protecting wear plates makes the rotor lighter and allows for a higher rotor speed. Also the lower wear and the absence of said protecting wear plates will allow the tip holder to locate the wear tip at the absolute periphery of the rotor, thus further increasing the peripheral speed of the wear tip and increasing the speed of the material ejected from the rotor.
According to a preferred embodiment the fastening means extends along the radially inner side of said first wall portion. In this way the fastening means are protected from rocks bouncing back from the crusher wall. Also the fastening means assist in building a stable bed of rocks inside the rotor against the rotor wall.
Preferably the tip holder comprises a securing means for removably securing the tip holder to a free vertical edge of said first wall portion. An advantage with this is that the tip holder will be firmly secured at the free edge. There is thus no risk that the tip holder gets bent due to rocks bouncing back from the rotor wall. Still more preferably said securing means comprises a hook adapted for gripping said edge of said first wall portion. A hook makes it easy to provide a strong securing of the tip holder to the first wall portion. The mounting and dismounting of the tip holder also becomes easier since simply sliding the tip holder in or out of position along the first wall portion will make the hook grip or release the vertical edge.
According to a preferred embodiment the fastening means comprises at least one shoulder adapted to hold a horizontal wear plate in position. The shoulder assists in holding the wear plate in position and also allows the wear plate to get in close contact with the first wall portion located behind the fastening means. This improves the function of the wear plates and decreases the wear on the rotor walls. Still more preferably the fastening means comprises a lower shoulder and an upper shoulder each being adapted to hold a horizontal wear plate in position. An advantage with this is that the tip holder may hold both an upper and a lower horizontal wear plate in position. It is also possible to change the position of the individual tip holders in the case several tip holders are mounted at one rotor opening.
Preferably the fastening means comprises a threaded bar intended for extending along said first wall portion and through a hole in said second wall portion. A threaded bar makes the tip holder cheap to manufacture and provides a simple and efficient way of fixing the tip holder. The hole needed in the second wall portion is made by simply drilling a hole. Still more preferably the fixing means comprises a nut which is adapted to provide a tensile stress in the threaded bar when fixing said fixing means to the threaded bar at said other side of the second wall portion. The tensile stress makes the tip holder fit tightly to the rotor opening. The risk that the tip holder would come loose of the rotor is thus reduced. It is also easy to advice a person mounting the tip holder to apply a certain momentum to the nut to obtain a desired fixing force. In the event securing means and/or hooks described above are used as described above the tensile stress tightens the tip holder between the free vertical edge of the first wall portion and the second wall portion.
According to a preferred embodiment the fastening means comprises a surface adapted for the application of a force in a direction parallel to said first wall portion. By applying a force or a strike to the surface the frictional forces of the bed of retained material may be loosened such that the tip holder may easily be removed without having to pick away the entire bed. This makes removal much quicker in cases where the bed of material located against the tip holder is very hard and/or tenacious.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method of mounting a tip holder which method decreases the down time required for maintenance of the rotor.
This object is achieved with a method according to the preamble characterised in that in that
the tip holder is guided along said first wall portion such that a fastening means attached to the holding part extends along said first wall portion and passes through said second wall portion from one side thereof, and
a fixing means is fixed to the fastening means at the other side of said second wall portion.
An advantage of this method is that the mounting is very quick and provides a proper position of the tip holder at the outflow opening. Another advantage is that a bed of material that has built up inside the rotor against a rotor wall and a tip holder that is to be replaced need not be removed before a new tip holder is put in place by sliding it into position.
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereafter.
The invention will hereafter be described in more detail and with reference to the appended drawings.
The upper disc 2 has a central opening 8 through which material to be crushed can be fed into the rotor 1. The upper disc 2 is protected from wear by upper wear plates 10 and 12. The upper disc 2 is protected from rocks impacting the rotor 1 from above by the top wear plate 3. As is better shown in
The upper and lower discs 2, 4 are separated by and held together by a vertical rotor wall which is separated into three wall segments 20, 22 and 24. The gaps between the wall segments 20, 22, 24 define outflow openings 26, 28, 30 through which material may be ejected against a housing wall.
At each outflow opening 26, 28, 30 the respective wall segment 20, 22, 24 is protected from wear by three wear tips 32, 34, 36 located at the trailing edge of the respective wall segment 20, 22, 24.
A distributor plate 38 is fastened to the centre of the lower disc 4. The distributor plate 38 distributes the material that is fed via the opening 8 in the upper disc 2 and protects the lower disc 4 from wear and impact damages caused by the material fed via the opening 8.
During operation of the rotor 1 a bed 40 of material is built up inside the rotor 1 against each of the three wall segments 20, 22, 24. In
Each wall segment 20, 22, 24 is provided with a cavity wear plate 44, 46, 48, each preferably having three cavity wear plate portions. The cavity wear plates 44, 46, 48 protect the rotor 1 and in particular the wear tips 32, 34, 36 from material rebounding from the housing wall and from ejected material and airborne fine dust spinning around the rotor 1.
In
As can be seen in
In
As can be seen in
When mounting a tip holder 50 of the type described above the tip holder 50 is first allowed to slide along the first wall portion 20a. Thus the plate 60 and the threaded bar 62 are guided in a direction parallel to the first wall portion 20a until the hooks 56, 58 engage the free edge 76 and in such a way that the bar 62 passes through the hole 72. The nut 78 is screwed onto the part of the bar 62 extending on the outside of the second wall portion 20b. The nut 78 is a domed nut and thus protects the end portion of the threaded bar 62 from wear and from being hit by rocks. The risk that the end portion of the threaded bar 62 would be damaged such that dismounting the nut 78 becomes difficult is thus minimized. The nut 78 is tightened such that a certain, desired tension is obtained in the parts of the tip holder 50 that are located between the nut 78 and the hooks 56, 58. The nut 78 being located on the second wall portion 20b is protected by the first wall portion 20a from abrasive particles that often swirl around the rotor 1. Thus there is a limited risk that the nut 78 is worn down during operation of the crusher.
When a worn tip holder 50 is to be replaced a bed of material 40 has built up against the inside of the wall segment 20. The worn tip holder 50 may be released according to the following method. Firstly the nut 78 is unscrewed a few turns such that it is not tightly fixed to the bar 62. A hammer or similar tool is used to imply a force or a strike on the nut 78 and thus to the end part of the threaded bar 62 in the direction shown with an arrow H in
In
In
It will be appreciated that numerous modifications of the embodiments described above are possible within the scope of the appended claims.
The tip holder may be applied both to wall segments consisting of one physical sheet of metal that has been bent to form a first and a second wall portion and to wall segments were the first and second wall portions are made of separate pieces.
In an alternative embodiment the hooks 56, 58 are broadened such that the two hooks together form an elongated, continuous flange extending along the entire length of the holding part 52. Such a flange would thus grip the entire free edge 76 of the first wall portion 20a and thus provide a very firm fastening of the tip holder.
The two hooks 56, 58, or the above mentioned flange, may also extend further along the first wall portion 20a in the direction of the second wall portion 20b.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02025328 | Aug 2002 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE03/01317 | 8/27/2003 | WO | 00 | 7/29/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2004/020100 | 3/11/2004 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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0187252 | Jul 1986 | EP |
388825 | Sep 1990 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050269438 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |