1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to powered concrete finishing trowels and, more particularly, to hydraulically-driven riding trowels. The invention additionally relates to a hydrostatically driven riding trowel having a coolant system for cooling the trowel's hydraulic fluid. The invention additionally relates to a method of operating such a trowel.
2. Description of the Related Art
A variety of powered machines are available for smoothing or otherwise finishing “wet” or uncured concrete. These machines range from simple hand trowels, to walk-behind trowels, to self-propelled riding trowels. Regardless of the mode of operation of such trowels, the power trowels generally include one to three rotor assemblies that rotate relative to the concrete surface.
Riding concrete finishing trowels can finish large sections of concrete more rapidly and efficiently than manually pushed or guided hand-held or walk behind finishing trowels. Riding concrete finishing trowels typically include a frame having a cage that typically encloses two, and sometimes three or more, rotor assemblies. Each rotor assembly includes a driven shaft and a plurality of trowel blades mounted on and extending radially outwardly from the bottom end of the driven shaft. The driven shafts of the rotor assemblies are driven by one or more engines mounted on the frame and typically linked to the driven shafts by gearboxes or hydraulic pumps and motors of the respective rotor assemblies.
The weight of the finishing trowel, including the operator, is transmitted frictionally to the concrete surface by the rotating blades, thereby smoothing the concrete surface. The pitch of individual blades can be altered relative to the driven shafts via operation of a lever and/or linkage system during use of the machine. Such a construction allows the operator to adjust blade pitch during operation of the power trowel. As is commonly understood, blade pitch adjustment alters the pressure applied to the surface being finished by the machine. This blade pitch adjustment permits the finishing characteristics of the machine to be adjusted. For instance, in an ideal finishing operation, the operator first performs an initial “floating” operation in which the blades are operated at low speeds (on the order of about 30 rpm) but at high torque. Then, the concrete is allowed to cure for another 15 minutes to one-half hour, and the machine is operated at progressively increasing speeds and progressively increasing blade pitches up to the performance of a finishing or “burning” operation at the highest possible speed—preferably above about 150 rpm and up to about 200 rpm.
Power trowels traditionally were powered by a gearbox mechanically coupled to an internal combustion engine and were steered manually using a lever assembly coupled to the gearbox assemblies by linkage assemblies. More recently, larger trowels have been introduced that are potentially fatiguing to steer manually. These trowels typically are steered via hydraulically powered actuators responsive to operator manipulation of joysticks. Some of the hydraulically steered trowels are also powered hydraulically via a hydrostatic drive system powered by the machine's internal combustion engine(s). These trowels can be quite large. Some are capable of finishing swaths of 8 feet wide or even 10 feet wide or wider. They are powered by an engine having an output of over 50 hp, and sometimes in excess of 70 hp, and weigh more than 2,500 lbs.
The hydrostatic drive system of a riding trowel typically includes a cooling system for cooling the hydraulic fluid or oil being pumped through the drive system and the other hydraulically actuated components of the system. (The terms “hydraulic fluid”, “fluid”, and “oil” are used interchangeably throughout this disclosure). Some hydrostatically driven trowels employ a closed loop cooling system including a cooler in the closed loop between the drive motor(s) and drive pump(s) of the hydrostatic drive system. This is in contrast to the vast majority of hydrostatic drives that employ a cooler in an open loop branch of the hydraulic circuit. These riding trowels can be cooled via a closed loop cooler, despite the fact that the pressure at the outlet of the drive pump is far too high to be accommodated by known oil coolers suitable for use in equipment of this type, because fluid flow in the closed loop circuit is unidirectional. The low pressure or “charge” side of the circuit thus never experiences “load” pressure. That side of the circuit instead only reaches “charge” pressure, which is sufficiently low to be tolerated by some oil coolers. The resulting cooling system actively cools the highest flow as well as typically the hottest oil in the circuit.
However, the inventors have discovered that a closed loop cooling circuit alone may provide insufficient cooling of some larger hydrostatically driven riding trowels, particularly if the machine is operated for prolonged periods of time under extreme operating conditions such as under high ambient temperatures and/or on a surface having a high coefficient of sliding friction. Specifically, the inventors have discovered that the high duty cycles under heavy loads experienced by the hydrostatic drive system of a riding trowel can increase the temperature in the reservoir due to hot oil leakage from the pumps and motors. As there is no cooling in the open loop, the reservoir temperatures can rise to above 93° C. (200° F.). Hydraulic fluid viscosity drops with temperature, reducing the volumetric efficiencies of the system's charge pump and reducing the lubrication boundary layer for the parts to slide against each other in the tandem pump. The inventors have discovered that the fluid viscosity can drop so much in a power trowel having a single cooler that cavitation can occur. Accelerated piston shoe wear and even failure in the axial piston pump and other failures may occur. The inventors thus have discovered a need to prevent detrimental effects to a hydrostatically driven riding trowel that could result from overheating of the system's hydraulic fluid.
This need theoretically could be met by providing a larger oil cooler in the system's closed loop circuit. However, no known oil coolers on the market today have been found to be suitable to provide adequate cooling of the existing hydrostatic drive system during prolonged operation under extreme operating conditions in which the oil temperature in the reservoir is undesirably high.
Oil overheating and resultant viscosity drop also theoretically could be avoided by providing larger-capacity drive pumps and drive motors and otherwise “sizing up” components of the trowel's hydrostatic drive system. However, such a “sizing up” would add considerable cost to the overall system. It also would add weight, which is detrimental because adding weight to a riding trowel increases the time the concrete must cure before a finishing operation can commence. For example, a machine that currently weighs 2,700 lbs. that is modified to have larger-capacity pumps and hydraulic motors likely would weigh in excess of 3,300 lbs.
Therefore, the need remains to provide adequate cooling of hydraulic fluid in a hydrostatic drive system of a hydrostatically driven concrete finishing trowel.
The need additionally exists to provide adequate hydraulic fluid cooling in a hydrostatically driven riding power trowel that does not significantly increase the cost or weight of the machine.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, one or more of the above-identified needs is met by providing at least two coolers in a cooling system of a hydrostatically driven riding concrete finishing trowel. In the most typical case in which the first or primary cooler is a closed loop cooler, the second or auxiliary cooler may take the form of an open loop cooler disposed in a flow path connecting one or more low-pressure outlets of the hydrostatic drive system to a reservoir. The closed loop cooler actively drops the temperature of the oil within the hydrostatic drive system. The cooling of the open loop cooler supplements the cooling of the closed loop cooler by reducing oil temperature in the reservoir, thus allowing the drive pump(s) and motor(s) to operate at continuous load cycles not previously considered attainable.
In one possible configuration, the machine includes a frame, at least first and second rotor assemblies extending downwardly from the frame, each of the rotor assemblies having a shaft that supports a plurality of blades, an engine, and a hydraulic circuit including a reservoir and a hydrostatic drive system. The hydrostatic drive system is coupled to the engine, to the rotor assemblies, and to the reservoir. It includes a drive motor that is coupled to at least one of the rotor assemblies, a drive pump that is driven by the engine and that delivers pressurized fluid to the drive motor, and a charge pump that is connected to the reservoir and that delivers hydraulic fluid to the drive pump. First and second coolers such as oil coolers cool hydraulic fluid flowing through the hydrostatic drive system.
The first cooler may be a closed loop oil cooler located in a flow path connecting an outlet of the drive motor to an inlet of the drive pump, and the second cooler may be an open loop cooler in a flow path connecting the hydrostatic drive system to the reservoir.
The hydraulic circuit may additionally include an auxiliary pump and an auxiliary control circuit that selectively couples hydraulically actuated devices of the trowel to the auxiliary pump and to a drain flow path. At least a portion of the drain flow path may be fluidically coupled to an inlet of the open loop oil cooler.
A bypass/case drain valve may be provided to permit hydraulic fluid flowing out of the hydrostatic drive system to bypass the open loop oil cooler at startup when case pressure is non-negligible and fluid temperature is low.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, a method of operating a hydrostatically driven riding concrete finishing machine is provided.
In one implementation, the method is carried out on a concrete finishing machine having an engine and first and second rotatable rotor assemblies that support the concrete finishing machine on a surface to be finished. The method comprises driving a drive pump of a hydrostatic drive system via operation of the engine, delivering pressurized hydraulic fluid to a drive motor of the hydrostatic drive system from the drive pump, thereby causing the drive motor to drive at least one of the rotor assemblies to rotate, and delivering hydraulic fluid from the drive motor to the drive pump. The method additionally comprises draining leakage hydraulic fluid from the hydrostatic drive system, and pumping make-up hydraulic fluid to the hydrostatic drive system. The method further includes cooling hydraulic fluid flowing through the hydrostatic drive system in first and second coolers.
The cooling step may maintain the temperature of hydraulic fluid within the hydrostatic drive system beneath 200° F. throughout at least substantially an entire operating range of the concrete finishing machine.
The cooling step may comprise cooling hydraulic fluid within a closed loop circuit of the hydrostatic drive system via the first cooler and cooling hydraulic fluid drained from the hydrostatic drive system via the second cooler.
The method may additionally include controlling hydraulic fluid flow to and from hydraulically actuated devices of the concrete finishing machine via operation of an auxiliary hydraulic circuit. In this case, hydraulic fluid flowing from the auxiliary hydraulic circuit may be cooled in the second cooler.
These and other aspects, advantages, and features of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings. It should be understood, however, that the detailed description and accompanying drawings, while indicating preferred embodiments of the present invention, are given by way of illustration and not of limitation. Many changes and modifications may be made within the scope of the present invention without departing from the spirit thereof. It is hereby disclosed that the invention include all such modifications.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which like reference numerals represent like parts throughout, and in which:
Still referring to
The trowel 20 can be transported around the worksite by front and rear wheel assemblies 58 located generally centrally of the frame 20 and spaced longitudinally from one another so as to be positioned in front of and behind the operator's seat 36, respectively. Each wheel assembly includes two laterally spaced wheels 60 and 62 that are coupled to one another by a hydraulic cylinder 64 that can be actuated to raise and lower both wheels 60, 62 in unison. Further details of an acceptable wheel assembly and its operation can be ascertained from U.S. Pat. No. 8,414,219, the subject matter of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Both rotor assemblies 32 and 34 are driven indirectly by an engine (shown highly schematically at 70 in
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The drive systems for the left and right rotor assemblies 32 and 34 are generally mirror images of one another. The left drive pump 110 and the left drive motor 114 are hydraulically coupled to one another in a closed loop circuit. Specifically, the left drive pump 110 has a low-pressure inlet coupled to an outlet of the left drive motor 114 via a shared low pressure flow path that includes upstream and downstream portions 120 and 124 which are coupled to one another by a connecting portion 126. The left drive pump 110 also has a high-pressure outlet coupled to the inlet of the left drive motor 114 by a dedicated high-pressure flow path 128. The pressure in that flow path 128 is maintained at a desired value by a relief valve 130. That value typically is above 3,000 psi and is more typically between 5,000 and 6,000 psi.
The drive system for the right rotor assembly 34 similarly includes the right drive pump 112 and the right drive motor 116, which are hydraulically coupled to one another in a closed loop circuit. Specifically, the right drive pump 112 includes a low-pressure inlet coupled to the outlet of the right drive motor 116 by the downstream portion 122 of the shared low pressure flow path. The high-pressure outlet of the right drive pump 112 is coupled to the low pressure inlet of the right drive motor 116 by a high pressure flow path 132. Pressure in that flow path 132 is maintained at a designated value by a relief valve 134. That value may be, but is not necessarily, the same as the value maintained by the relief valve 130 for the left drive pump 110.
As is typically the case in hydrostatic drive systems, the hydrostatic drive system 102 is not truly closed loop but, instead, must be continuously charged with makeup fluid from the charge pump 118 while leakage fluid flows to the reservoir 106. The leakage fluid is directed to the reservoir 106 through one or more case drains 140 in the casing 108, and thence through a drain flow path 142 having an inlet coupled to the case drains 140 and an outlet coupled to the reservoir 106. The charge pump 118 has an inlet connected to the reservoir 106 via an inlet flow path 144 and an outlet connected to a relief valve 148 that sets the charge pressure for the left and right drive pumps 110 and 112. That charge pressure typically is between 200 and 500 psi and more typically of about 300 psi. The outlet of the relief valve 148 communicates with the downstream portion 122 of the shared low pressure flow path by a feed flow path 150.
As should be apparent from the foregoing, the hydrostatic drive system 102 is unidirectional so that one portion of the hydraulic circuit is always at a relatively high “load” pressure and one portion is always at a relatively low “charge” pressure. This characteristic permits the inclusion of an oil cooler 160 in the low-pressure or charge portion of the hydraulic drive system 102. In this embodiment, that oil cooler 160 is located in the connecting portion 126 of the shared low pressure flow path leading from the outlets of the drive motors 114 and 116 to the inlets of the pumps 110 and 112. The oil cooler 160 may, for example, comprise a radiator-type fluid-to-air heat exchanger. An acceptable oil cooler is available commercially from AKG Thermal Systems of Mebane, N.C. (USA) under the model No. 3703.927.1000. The AKG cooler is an air-cooled cooler rated for pressures of up to 360 psi. The cooler 160 provides a temperature drop (ΔT) at maximum fluid flow rates through the cooler 160 of about 8° F.
In order to provide supplemental cooling and prevent undesired drops in oil viscosity arising from overheating of the oil, a second oil cooler 170 is provided in the cooling system of the hydraulic circuit 100. While it is conceivable that the cooler 170 could be formed somewhere in the closed loop circuit, the oil cooler of the exemplary embodiment is provided in an open loop circuit connecting the drain flow path 142 to the reservoir 106. Inserting the cooler 170 in or downstream of flow path 142 is beneficial because the fluid entering the drain flow path 142 from the case drains 140 in the casing 180 typically is the hottest fluid in the hydraulic circuit 100 from which one receives the most efficient cooling. The open loop oil cooler 170, like the closed loop oil cooler 160, comprises a radiator-type fluid-to-air heat exchanger. It is located in a combined drain flow path 172 connecting the drain flow path 142 and an auxiliary drain path 190 (described below) to the reservoir 106. An acceptable oil cooler is a commercially available from AKG Thermal Systems of Mebane, N.C. (USA) under the model No. 3703.927.1000. The AKG cooler is a fan-cooled cooler rated for pressures of up to 360 psi. The cooler provides a temperature drop (ΔT) at maximum fluid flow rates through the cooler of 5° F.
The open loop oil cooler 170 is neither required nor even desired at start-up under cold-weather operating conditions, when the oil viscosity is higher than optimal. In order to bleed off case pressure in the system at startup and permit the oil to rapidly warm, a bypass/case drain valve 174 is provided in the circuit 100 to permit oil to bypass the open loop oil cooler 170 under low-temperature operating conditions when the pressure in the casing 108 is non-negligible. In the illustrated embodiment, the bypass valve 174 is a check valve provided in a bypass flow path 176 connecting one of the case drains 140 of the casing 108 to the reservoir 106 in bypass of the open loop oil cooler 170. The valve 174 is set to close and prevent bypass flow at pressures below about 25 psi, which typically exist at oil temperatures above about 50° F.
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Finally, first and second drive motor drain paths 240 and 242 drain leakage fluid from the left and right drive motors 114 and 116, respectively, to the auxiliary drain flow path 190.
In operation of an exemplary machine by a 74 hp diesel engine and exhibiting a circuit efficiency of approximately 80%, 10-15 hp is converted into heat. Some of this heat is transferred to the hydraulic fluid, causing the fluid temperature in the hydraulic circuit 100 to rise. The fluid flow splits between the open and closed loop circuits of the hydraulic circuit 100. For example, the drive pumps 110 and 112 may generate a flow of approximately 28 gpm through the two drive motors 114 and 116, while the auxiliary pump 180 may generate a flow of approximately 6 gpm through the control manifold assembly 182. The charge pump 118 also generates a flow of approximately 6 gpm, exchanging fluid between the open and closed loops of circuit 100 to make up for the leakage flow from the hydrostatic power system 102. This charge pump 118 return flow is directed through drain path 142 to combine with the auxiliary pump return flow from auxiliary drain flow path 190. Therefore, the closed loop oil cooler 160 experiences a flow rate of approximately 28 gpm, and the open loop cooler 170 experiences a flow rate of approximately 12 gpm. Fluid is cooled in both coolers 160 and 170. That cooling, coupled with natural convection in the reservoir 106, transfers enough heat from the hydraulic fluid to maintain the fluid temperature in all portions of the hydraulic circuit 100 at an acceptably low level, preferably below 100° C. (212° F.) and more preferably below 93° C. (200° F.).
The benefits of incorporating both coolers 160 and 170 into the hydraulic circuit 100 as described above can be appreciated by comparing
As one would expect, hydraulic fluid temperatures in the reservoir 106 and in the hydrostatic drive system 102 initially increase sharply from at or near ambient temperature to an operating temperature. The steady state reservoir temperature is on the neighborhood of 90-95° C. (194-203° F.). This temperature, being about 65° C. (145° F.) above ambient, is relatively high but acceptable. Fluid temperature remains at or near that operating temperature during normal operation of the trowel. However, after a prolonged period of operation at high duty cycles beginning at about points 306 and 308 on curves 302 and 304 in
In contrast, the family of curves of
Turning now to
It is to be appreciated that many changes and modifications could be made to the invention without departing from the spirit thereof. For example, it is conceivable that one or more additional coolers could be provided in the circuit 100. It is also conceivable that additional drive motors and drive pumps could be provided, particularly in a system having more than two rotor assemblies. Hence, while some of these changes are discussed herein, other changes will become apparent from the appended claims. It is intended that all such changes and/or modifications be incorporated in the appending claims.
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4461341 | Morrison | Jul 1984 | A |
4676691 | Morrison | Jun 1987 | A |
5816740 | Jaszkowiak | Oct 1998 | A |
6048130 | Allen | Apr 2000 | A |
6053660 | Allen | Apr 2000 | A |
6089786 | Allen | Jul 2000 | A |
6106193 | Allen et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
7690864 | Allen | Apr 2010 | B2 |
8360680 | Allen et al. | Jan 2013 | B2 |
8388264 | Grahl | Mar 2013 | B2 |
8414219 | Lickel et al. | Apr 2013 | B2 |
Entry |
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Allen Engineering Corporation, Operations—Parts Manual HDX750 Hydra-Drive Extreme (HDX) Series Riding Trowel Publication, Dated Jan. 2012 (82 pages). |
Wacker Neuson CRT60 Schematic, Dated May 18, 2011 (1 page). |
Skid-Steer Schematic With Open-Loop Cooler, Dated Prior to Feb. 1, 2015 (1 page). |