This invention relates to modular scaffolding systems that are erected as impermanent structures to support platforms. Scaffolding is used, inter alia, in the industrial, commercial, petro-chemical, power source, general industry and residential construction markets.
Tube and coupler scaffolds are so-named because they are built from tubing connected by coupling devices. Due to their strength, they are frequently used where heavy loads need to be carried, or where multiple platforms must reach several stories high. Components of scaffolds include vertical standards having coupling rings or rosettes, horizontal components such as ledgers and guardrails coupled to the coupling rings or rosettes, footings, decks/platforms and diagonal braces. Their versatility, which enables them to be assembled in multiple directions in a variety of settings, also makes them difficult to build correctly.
A conventional rosette 200, as seen in
Disadvantageously, until the wedge 205 is installed there is significant play between the rosette 200 and head of a horizontal member giving rise to safety concerns. Furthermore, once installed, wedges often work free when workers traverse the platform. When these wedges work free, the scaffold can become unstable and collapse. Further, even if the scaffold does not collapse, steel wedges, which as seen in the Figure are not integrated into the head or the ledger, can fall from the scaffold injuring workers below.
What is desired is a hybrid scaffold system that overcomes the disadvantages of the conventional scaffold system.
The invention comprises a hybrid scaffold system that overcomes the safety and flexibility issues inherent in conventional scaffold systems. The ring, collar, rosette or component with similar functionality, is referred to as a rosette with respect to the invention; the vertical standard or component with similar functionality, is referred to as a vertical member with respect to the invention and the ledger, guardrail or component with similar functionality is referred to as a horizontal member. The use of the foregoing terms is not to be interpreted as limiting the scope of the invention.
More specifically, the invention comprises a swing head assembly comprising a swing head and pin, the swing head assembly being coupled to the first end of a first horizontal member. Another aspect of the invention is a swing head assembly at the first end and second end of the first horizontal member. The invention further includes a vertical member made of vertical tubing, including at least one rosette positioned thereon in coaxial alignment with the vertical tubing, the rosette having radially arranged cut-outs or apertures for receiving at least one swing head assembly. The swing head assembly is rotatably coupled to the rosette at a revolution joint.
The invention further comprises the above described first horizontal member having integrated therein at least one swing head assembly at a first end thereof, in combination with a second horizontal member having an internal wedge assembly therein. The radially arranged cut-outs or apertures of a rosette are dimensioned to accept the swing head assembly and also the mating elements, or prongs, of a head coupled to a horizontal member having an internal wedge assembly (internal wedge head). The internal wedge assembly has a rod with a wedge portion at a first end thereof, the rod being coupled at a second end thereof to an internal crank/cam assembly. An external handle is coupled to a crank/cam axle of the internal crank/cam assembly. The internal wedge head has a bore through the body thereof, which the wedge portion wholly or partially extends to lock the internal wedge head to the rosette and wholly or partially retracts to unlock the internal wedge head from the rosette.
Further embodiments include a horizontal member with a swing head assembly at each end, alone and in combination with a rosette, and further in combination with a horizontal member with an internal wedge assembly and internal wedge head.
To those skilled in the art to which this invention relates, many changes in construction and widely differing embodiments and applications of the invention will suggest themselves without departing from the scope of the invention as defined herein and in the appended claims. The disclosures and the descriptions herein are purely illustrative and are not intended to be in any sense limiting.
A more complete understanding of the invention may be obtained by reference to the following Detailed Description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying Drawings, wherein:
The invention comprises a hybrid scaffold system that overcomes the safety and flexibility issues inherent in conventional scaffold systems. The ring, collar, rosette or component with similar functionality, is referred to as a rosette with respect to the invention; the vertical standard or component with similar functionality, is referred to as a vertical member with respect to the invention and the ledger, guardrail or component with similar functionality is referred to as a horizontal member. The use of the foregoing terms is not to be interpreted as limiting the scope of the invention.
Referring now to
With respect to upper extension 401, the flat planes of the top surface and bottom surface are parallel. The planes of the left side and right side, except where the curvature of the front side commences, are substantially parallel. The planes of the top surface and bottom surface are orthogonal to the left side and right side.
With respect to lower extension 402, the flat planes of the top surface and bottom surface are parallel. The planes of the left side and right side, except where the curvature of the front side commences, are substantially parallel. The planes of the top surface and bottom surface are orthogonal to the left side and right side.
With respect to the orientation of the extensions as described herein, the bottom surface of upper extension 401 is apositioned the bottom surface of lower extension 402.
The upper extension 401 and lower extension 402 are connected with a connecting member 405 sandwiched between their respective bottom surfaces proximate the back sides thereof. The connecting member 405 serves as a further connection to a horizontal member.
A front end of upper extension 401 is proximate the front side of the upper extension 401. Proximate the front end of the upper extension 401 is upper extension bore 404 which passes through the top surface, upper extension body and bottom surface. A front end of lower extension 402 is proximate the front side of the lower extension 402. Proximate the front end of the lower extension 402 is lower extension bore 403 which passes through the top surface, lower extension body and bottom surface.
The invention comprises a swing head assembly comprising a swing head and pin, the swing head assembly being coupled to at least the first end of a first horizontal member. Another aspect of the invention is a swing head assembly at the first end and second end of the first horizontal member. The invention further includes a vertical member made of vertical tubing, including at least one rosette positioned thereon in coaxial alignment with the vertical tubing, the rosette having radially arranged cut-outs or apertures for receiving at least one swing head assembly. The swing head assembly is rotatably coupled to the rosette at a revolution joint.
The invention further comprises the above described first horizontal member having integrated therein at least one swing head assembly at a first end thereof, in combination with a second horizontal member having, preferably, an internal wedge head at least at one end thereof. The radially arranged cut-outs or apertures of a rosette are able to receive mating elements, or prongs, of a horizontal member head, the horizontal member having therein an internal wedge assembly, the internal wedge assembly having a rod with a wedge portion at a first end thereof, the rod being coupled at a second end thereof to an internal crank/cam assembly. A crank or handle is coupled to a crank/cam axle of the internal crank/cam assembly, the horizontal member head having at least one or a plurality of mating elements or prongs dimensioned to fit within certain of the cut-outs or grid of apertures formed in the rosette, the internal wedge head having a bore through which the wedge portion wholly or partially extends out of the horizontal member head to lock the horizontal member head to the rosette and wholly or partially retracts into the horizontal member head to unlock the horizontal member head from the rosette. The horizontal member having an internal wedge assembly is as described in Applicant's co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/930,921. As described therein, such horizontal member advantageously allows the user thereof to engage and disengage both wedges coupling a vertical member from a single location.
The invention, as structurally described, functionally allows one to use swing or swing arm horizontal members for cantilevered platforms which can be used, e.g., on off-shore and bridge platforms. The invention facilitates precision angles of horizontal members thus saving time when squaring the base or re-racking the scaffold. The invention facilitates the raising of platforms via swing stage motors or cranes. The invention is configured to enable the erection of suspended platforms in elevated situations.
The invention is seismic qualified due to its novel self-squaring rosette and head combination. The invention is a secondary positive locking design using internal gussets and 360 degree connection rosette designs.
In operation, the invention provides strong, durable load bearing design for light, medium, and heavy duty load capacities. It can be used in flammable and explosive environments due to the nature of its rigid design. Its positive locking design permits it to be assembled in approximately half the time as a conventional scaffold.
The described embodiment of the invention shows a rosette that receives eight horizontal members, but is not limited to such arrangement. The connection of the heads and rosette of the invention is designed to meet 100% tie off requirements and standards. The swing arms of the invention allow the scaffold erector to construct almost any shaped working platform from the air. The swing arms collapse to the main scaffold allowing the scaffold erector to install all the structural components from an existing platform. In the process, the scaffold erector can utilize standard scaffold components such as clamps, tubes, metal planks, horizontal, and vertical scaffold members. After all the structural components are installed, the erector can swing the horizontal components out up to 180 degrees. Hence, in one embodiment, the platform can be cantilevered approximately (10) feet unsupported. Once the erector has the swing arms at a 90 degree position, he can utilize standard scaffold components such as metal planking and tubes and clamps to support and deck of the invention. In this manner, the erector can install an initial smaller platform then “leap-frog” the platform while still suspended. The erector also has the option to build a scaffold from the ground or other elevations then work the structure vertically and upward. A conventional system us unable to provide this flexibility as it must be suspended from structural steel or elevated by swing stage motors. In contrast, using the invention, the erector can build multiple levels from the ground up or suspend from steel if needed or even fly with swing stage motors.
The swing head and connected horizontal member of the invention facilitates the insertion of a lattice bolt/pin at each connection joint. The clevises shape of the swing arm assembly supports the base of the platform thus allowing it to be suspended and elevated via swing stage motors. This is an additional advantage of the invention over a conventional scaffold.
The invention advantageously permits an erector to suspend a platform in an elevated position. By installing the swing arms in their collapsed position it allows the erector to install additional platforms from a safe, stable location.
As noted herein, components of the invention include at least one horizontal member which horizontal member preferably has a swing head at each end thereof, at least one vertical member including at least one rosette coaxially positioned thereon, the rosette having apertures for receiving (i) a pin of the swing head assembly and/or (ii) mating elements or prongs of an internal wedge head coupled to a horizontal member with an internal wedge assembly therein, the internal wedge assembly having a first rod with a wedge portion at a first end thereof, the first rod being coupled at a second end thereof to an internal crank/cam assembly, a crank or handle coupled to a crank axle of the internal crank/cam assembly, the internal wedge assembly further having a second rod with a wedge portion at a first end thereof, the second rod being coupled at a second end thereof to the internal crank/cam assembly. The internal wedge assembly causes the wedge portion to be wholly or partially extendable and retractable into the internal wedge head and/or hollow tube of the horizontal member, wherein, when the mating elements of the horizontal member are received in the radially arranged cut-outs of the rosette, the internal wedge assembly, when actuated, causes the wedge portion to rigidly join the horizontal member to the rosette.
The invention has at least one rosette coaxially attached, via, e.g., a weld, to each vertical member, and a vertical member may have a plurality of evenly or unevenly spaced rosettes coaxially welded along a vertical member. The rosette has a pattern or grid of apertures designed to receive the mating elements, such as prongs at the end of a horizontal member. A head may be located at the end of the horizontal member. The horizontal member is a hollow tube, preferably cylindrical in shape, having a first end and a second end. At the first end and the second end may be fixedly attached, a swing head assembly or wedge head assembly, as more fully described herein.
The embodiments shown and described above are only exemplary. Even though numerous characteristics and advantages of the preferred embodiment of the invention have been set forth in the foregoing description together with details of the invention, the disclosure is illustrative only and changes may be made within the principles of the invention to the full extent indicated by the broad general meaning of the terms used herein. For example, the concepts described herein for coupling horizontal members to vertical members can be adapted to couple bracing members to vertical members or to horizontal members. Coupling includes, but is not limited to attaching, engaging, mounting, clamping, welding, bolting and components used for coupling include bolts and nuts, rivets, clevis, latches, clamps, welds, screw, rivet and the like. Further, a rosette having eight (8) radially arranged cut-outs is described herein for illustrative purposes and a rosette having more or less radially arranged cut-outs is considered to be within the scope of this invention. Also, the invention describes a rosette having a standard diameter of about seven (7) inches, however, any suitable diameter can be used. The rosette can include any suitable cut-out shape that is dimensioned to receive a corresponding pin of the swing head assembly. The vertical member can have any number of coaxially aligned rosettes attached thereto, the vertical spacing of such rosettes being any such distance as is suitable for the intended use.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/337,156 filed on Jan. 26, 2010, entitled “GRIDLOCK SCAFFOLD APPARATUS AND METHOD” and U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/343,087 filed on Apr. 23, 2010, entitled “HYBRID SCAFFOLD SYSTEM”. The present application is related to co-pending application U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/930,921 filed Jan. 20 2011, entitled “SCAFFOLD SYSTEM AND METHOD.”
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4044523 | Layher | Aug 1977 | A |
4587786 | Woods | May 1986 | A |
5961240 | Bobrovniczky | Oct 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110262215 A1 | Oct 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61337156 | Jan 2010 | US | |
61343087 | Apr 2010 | US |