Not applicable.
Not applicable.
This invention relates to a manner of making and maintaining an outdoor ice surface for winter recreational or sporting events, competitions or automotive vehicle performance validating. In particular, this invention relates to a new approach to create and preserve outdoor ice tracks for purposes of evaluating vehicle performance during cold weather conditions.
A portion of every vehicle's new development cycle includes validating vehicle performance or components for automotive vehicles under cold weather conditions. Therefore, as part of a new vehicle development program, during the winter months, a team of engineers is dispatched to cold weather areas of the Midwest with the vehicles to be tested, to carry out a group of predetermined tests under cold weather conditions so as to evaluate the performance of the vehicles or components thereof under predetermined wintry conditions. For this purpose, most original equipment manufacturers have facilities in cold weather areas in the northern areas of the Midwest where winter conditions provide an appropriate environment to validate the vehicle's performance or components thereof under ice and snow conditions. Obviously, the occurrence and completion of these tests depends almost completely upon the temperament of the environment. Since the performance of these cold weather tests are completely subject to nature's elements, it is not unusual for a team of engineers with the vehicles or components to be tested to arrive at the test site and as a result of either weather changes or surface condition changes, they are unable to carry out the test or must wait for the proper climatic conditions in order to carry out the testing. This results in a significant loss of time by the test team, as well as great expense to the owner of the test facility in an attempt to maintain the surface conditions necessary to complete the testing.
In the past, many of these test sites were prepared prior to arrival of the test team by painting the surface upon which the tests were to be completed with a white paint. Thereafter, water would be floated onto the test track under freezing conditions so that the proper surface conditions could be acquired for testing to begin. Generally, ice thicknesses would be built-up to between five and six inches thick on the test track to prevent the loss of an ice surface during sunny days. Some melting was tolerated because overnight freezing temperatures would refreeze the melted portion. Snow was tolerable since it could easily be swept from the ice and if necessary a single pass of light water spray could recondition the surface to an acceptable frozen condition so that testing could be continued.
Although the white paint was very helpful in maintaining the ice surface, especially during sunny days, there were significant cost problems with the maintenance of the ice surface since the substrate which was normally concrete, had expansion strips buried into the substrate, which is normal, to compensate for expansion of the concrete material during the climatic changes. Unfortunately, the expansion strip was made from some form of an asphalt material which resulted in the expansion strip areas absorbing much more heat than the remainder of the substrate and therefore, the icy surface condition would change very rapidly in the area of the expansion joints and become unusable for purposes of testing the performance of the vehicles or components thereof. Again, as set forth above, the testing had to wait for the appropriate surface conditions to materialize naturally resulting from changing climatic conditions. Further, the use of white paint on a substrate also required high maintenance, in that, chipped areas or cracks acquired during warmer climates would have to be repainted, or resealed and repainted each year before building up an ice surface. Also, under normal conditions it was necessary to repaint the surface at least every other year. Therefore, every other year the painted areas had to be stripped and a new coat of fresh white paint needed to be reapplied. Some facilities just did not choose to incur such annual expense since some of these test facilities are as large as five acres. In such case, on sunny days, testing was limited, especially on asphalt surfaces, where the ice would be partially thawed resulting in unacceptable surface conditions for ongoing tests. It has been known in severe unstable conditions that the complete test team, including vehicles, had to be shipped to further northern areas of the world in order to ensure completion of the test conditions so as to validate the performance of the vehicles or components thereof in these extreme environmental conditions.
What is needed then is a test facility for automotive winter testing that can economically create a frozen surface, maintain and preserve this surface so that the cold weather test can be completed more efficiently without excessive cost and loss of time due to climate changes. Further, the creation of a frozen surface that provides these features is also useful for winter recreational purposes and winter sporting events.
The invention is an apparatus and method of creating and preserving an outdoor frozen surface by dispensing, on a cleared defined outdoor surface, at least one layer of white base paper followed by saturating the at least one layer of white base paper with water at or near freezing conditions. After the saturated layer of water has frozen into a layer of ice to hold the at least one layer of paper to the defined outdoor frozen surface area, a tanker truck is used to continuously dispense water under freezing ambient conditions onto the defined outdoor frozen surface to build up a predefined thickness ice layer on the defined outdoor surface.
It is an object of the present invention to create and maintain a frozen surface for recreational, sporting, or testing purposes wherein the frozen surface degrades as a result of exposure to the sun at a slower rate than prior art frozen surfaces.
It is another object of the invention to create and maintain a frozen surface for recreational, sporting, or testing purposes wherein the frozen surface can be created on asphalt, concrete or grassy surfaces by first placing at least one layer of white paper on the area intended to be used as a frozen surface and thereafter dispensing water onto the layer of paper until a required thickness is attained.
It is a further object of the invention to create and maintain a frozen surface for recreational, sporting, or testing purposes that will be more consistent throughout as a result of exposure to sunlight during daylight hours in the winter time.
It is a further object of the invention to create and maintain a frozen surface that requires less time to construct and is significantly thinner than prior art frozen surfaces yet less susceptible to degradation due to sunlight exposure during daylight hours in the winter months.
It is a further object of the invention to create and maintain a frozen surface that is more economical to maintain than prior art frozen surfaces exposed to sunlight during daylight hours in the winter months.
These objects and other features, aspects, and advantages of this invention will be more apparent after a reading of the following detailed description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings.
In general, the method of the present invention creates and maintains a frozen ice surface which has a much greater resistance to partial thawing as a result of exposure to sun during the daytime so that the surface can continue to be used for its intended purpose without significant loss of time or delay whether such purpose is recreational or otherwise. Initially, the invention was created to facilitate testing vehicles or their components in a cold weather environment. However, the method of the invention is also usable for winter recreational purposes, as well as winter sporting events.
The method of the present invention results in an ice surface which maintains its integrity for longer periods of time resulting in significant savings in the case of automotive vehicle performance testing, as well as assures greater confidence in recreational or sporting events occurring as scheduled and not being canceled due to poor ice conditions. According to an embodiment of the present invention as shown in
For surfaces that have either a concrete 20 or asphalt (not shown) substrate, as shown in
Depending upon the type of substrate used, or the nature of the ice surface to be formed, most areas that have a concrete substrate are adequately covered with a single layer of paper 33 whereafter the water dispensing tanker 50, as illustrated in
In practicing the invention, it has been found that a single layer of paper 33 using a concrete substrate 20 is normally sufficient in order to obtain an ice surface which will reflect the sun during sunny days and maintain the ice surface into a usable condition. It has been found that the ice surface can be maintained in a usable condition two to three times longer than prior art ice surfaces. This is believed to be due to reflective characteristics of the sub-layer of white paper 33 and even if expansion strips are present or darkened concrete sections exist, the paper layer 33 evenly covers any form of expansion strips or darkened surface that may exist in the substrate so that the ice surface will maintain a more even consistency during those daylight hours when the ice is exposed to sunlight. Since the complete test track or frozen surface area 10 has the same basic reflection characteristics, the ice conditions are much more even throughout the total test track area and accordingly, testing of vehicles or components thereof can be continued even during sunny days since the whole test track ice is completely consistent even though the ice thickness is only one-third of the thickness of the prior art surfaces. Further, as in the past, if snow falls, the ice is either broomed or scraped to remove the snow therefrom and it is then ready for use for its intended purpose. In the Preferred Embodiment, the roll of paper 30 is obtained directly from the paper mill and is semi-processed paper approximately 0.022 thick but it is believed that any thickness of paper can be used providing that the consistency is such so that it does not rip or tear while it is being dispensed from the paper laying machine 40. It is possible where the substrate is a concrete 20 material to use more than one layer of paper 33, in that, the additional layer does provide additional reflection characteristics which will help to maintain the ice for a longer period of time. However, a single layer will preserve the ice surface at least two to three times longer, under sunny daylight conditions than prior art surfaces. It is, of course, expected that the temperature during nighttime hours will be below freezing. Clearly, the best conditions are when the temperatures during the night and day stay below freezing.
During test application it was found that when the first layer of paper is dispensed and wetted down by the water there is some bubbling of the paper. This bubbling is subsequently covered with ice as the water source 50 sprays additional water 42 on the paper layer 33 so as to build up the ice to its one and a half to two inch thickness. So the bubbling does not become a problem once the surface is built-up, in that, it is buried deep within the ice.
If the substrate material is an asphalt material, it is recommended that a double layer of paper 33 is used in order to get the reflection characteristic necessary to prevent the ice from melting during sunny days. Again, as with concrete, once the paper is laid down by the paper dispensing apparatus, as shown in
The method used to maintain a frozen surface as disclosed herein has been attempted with plastic and foil layers but neither material results in equivalent ice surface characteristics as those obtained using white base paper.
The invention has also been practiced on a dirt or grassy surface and works equally well but requires a further condition. When it is necessary to create an ice surface on a grassy surface, again, the surface must be clean of debris which could interfere with the use of the ice surface once it has been built-up. However, the first step in creating an ice surface on a grassy substrate is to put down a layer of water 42 with the water source 50, as shown in
Whether the method is practiced on a concrete, asphalt, or grassy substrate, once the environmental conditions are no longer conducive to forming ice, as in the spring time, the paper is gathered and disposed of through acceptable waste disposal facilities.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/884,902, filed on Jan. 15, 2007.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60884902 | Jan 2007 | US |