Not Applicable
These and other features and advantages of the various embodiments disclosed herein are better understood with respect to the following descriptions and drawings, in which common reference numerals are used throughout the drawings and the detailed description to indicate the same elements, and in which:
Common reference numerals are used throughout the drawings and the detailed description to indicate the same elements, and in which: 10 - 1st concrete mixture; 12 - screen assembly; 14 - large aggregate; 16 - 2nd concrete mixture; 18 - wall; 20 - finish coat; 22 - aggregate container; 24 - base; 28 - base legs; 30 - feet; 32 - braces; 36 - screen; 38a, b, c, d - left, right, top, bottom sides of guide frame; 40a, b, c, d - left, right, top, bottom sides of support frame; 42 - screen assembly legs; 44 - connector; 46 - screen openings; 48 - opening formed by funnel members; 50a, b - funnel members; 51 - dispensing plate; 52 - brace; 54 - vibrator; 56 - vibrator control; and 70 - concrete container.
As used herein, the relative directions up and down, top and bottom, upper and lower, above and below are with respect to the vertical axis relative to a horizontal ground surface. The lateral direction is perpendicular to the vertical axis. The inward direction is toward a longitudinal axis extending from the top to the bottom of the screen assembly and through a middle of the screen of that assembly. The outward direction is away from that axis or away from the screen assembly. As used herein, As used herein, the term “about” encompasses a 10% variation, the term “majority” means more than half, and a “substantial majority” or “substantial portion” means 90% or more.
Referring to
The screen assembly 12 is advantageously supported on a base 26. The base 24 has at least three and preferably four base legs 28 supporting the base 24 on the ground or other support surface. The base legs 28 are shown as tubes with a rectangular cross-section but any cross-sectional shape is believed suitable, including cylindrical legs with a circular cross-sectional shape. Optional feet 30 on the bottom end of the base legs 28 may be used to help avoid having the bottom ends of the base legs digging into the ground when the assembly 12 rests on the ground. The feet 30 are shown as rectangular plates, but other shapes could be used, including circular shaped feet.
The top end of the base 32 is preferably horizontal with the base legs 28 each having the same length. The base 32 advantageously has braces 32 extending between one or more base legs 28 to stiffen the base 32 and resist twisting in a horizontal plane and resist lateral movement.
The screen assembly 12 advantageously has a screen 36 with a guiding frame 38 on a top surface of the screen 36 and a support frame 40 on a bottom surface of the screen 36. The screen 36 is shown as a rectangular screen with opposing first and second screen sides, and opposing top and bottom screen ends, and opposing top and bottom screen surfaces. The support frame 40 has a plurality of screen assembly legs 42 extend downward at locations corresponding to the base legs 28. Advantageously, a different connector 44 is optionally interposed between a bottom of each screen assembly leg 42 and the top of the corresponding base leg 28. The connector 44 advantageously comprises a flexible connector such as a spring or similar dampening device. A coil spring and an elastomeric (e.g., rubber) damper are believed suitable, as are other parts that can allow the screen assembly 12 and base 24 to move relative to each other vertically while at least partially restraining lateral movement of the screen assembly. The connectors 44 allow the screen assembly 12 to move and vibrate relative to the base 24 and reduce vibration of the screen assembly relative to the base along the length of the base legs and support legs, and preferably reduce vibration in the lateral directions as well.
The screen 36 is preferably a mesh screen having a plurality of screen openings 4646 of uniform size and preferably formed of woven wire having a diameter of ⅛ to ¼ inch. The screen openings 46 are preferably 0.2 to 0.5 inches square. The size of the screen openings 46 are selected based on the largest size of aggregate desired in the second concrete mixture 16. The screen openings 46 may be formed other ways, as for example a perforated sheet with screen openings 46 of the specified size or shape (e.g., circular openings 46).
The guide frame 38 may extend around a major portion of the periphery of the screen 36 and is located on the top surface of the screen so it can guide the flowable first concrete mixture 10 and the large aggregate 14 after it is separated from the first concrete mixture. The illustrated guide frame 38 has first and second side frame members 38a, 38b extending along opposing long sides of a rectangular shaped screen 36. Top and bottom end frame members 38c, 38d extend along respective top and bottom sides of the screen 36 with the top end frame member 38c advantageously joining the top ends of the side frame members 38a, 38b, and with the bottom end frame member 38d joining the bottom ends of the side frame members 38a, 38b. The bottom end frame member 38d has an opening 48 therein, preferably at its middle and located at the center of the bottom side of the screen 36. The guide frame members 38a, 38b, 38c and 38d are shown as a rectangular frame around the periphery of the rectangular screen 36. The configuration of the guide frame members can vary with the shape of the screen 36.
The guide frame 38 advantageously includes first and second funnel members 50a, 50b lower ends located at opposing ends of the opening 48, with the funnel members extending to the respective first and second guide frame side members 38a, 38b. The top ends of the funnel members 50a, 50b are further apart than the bottom ends of the funnel members at the opening 48, to form a V-shaped funnel that funnels or directs aggregate on the top of the screen 36 toward the opening 48. In the depicted embodiment the bottom ends of the funnel members 50a, 50b are parallel to each other and spaced apart a distance corresponding to a width of the aggregate container 22 into which the large aggregate 14 is placed. The space between these parallel bottom ends of the funnel members 50a, 50b form a spout of the funnel shaped members, and form the opening 48 through which the large aggregate 14 passes after being separated from the first concrete mixture 10.
As best seen in
A brace 52 (
Advantageously, the guide frame 38 has a height extending above the top surface of the screen 36 a distance of about 1-4 inches, and preferably a distance of about 1-2 or about 1-3 inches. Shorter heights are believed usable but aggregate may bounce over the guide frame 38 during use, and wet concrete may flow over the guide frame 38 during use. Greater heights of the guide frames 38 are also believed usable and are advantageous in restraining and guiding thicker flows of wet concrete, but the weight increases and that has adverse effects on the energy required for the vibrating the screen assembly 12. Advantageously, the guide frame 38 is formed of angle iron having a horizontal leg on the top surface of the screen 36 that preferably extend inward toward a center axis of the screen, and having a vertical leg extending upward. While an L-shaped angle iron is preferred, guide channels having other cross-sectional shapes are believed suitable, including other open channel sections and also closed tubular sections such as square and round tubular sections.
The support frame 40 has a shape that preferably matches the peripheral shape of the guiding frame 38, but is slightly larger. The support frame 40 has first and second support frame side members 40a, 40b, respectively, on opposing sides of the screen 36 and extending along the respective sides of that screen, and located on the bottom surface of that screen. The support frame 40 has top and bottom support frame ends 40c, 40d, respectively, with the top support frame end 40c extending between the top end of the support frame side members 40a, 40b and the bottom support frame end 40d extending between the bottom end of the support frame side members 40a, 40b. The bottom support frame end 40d extends continuously and preferably has no opening or gap corresponding to opening 48.
The support frame 40 is advantageously made of angle iron, having one leg extending horizontally along the bottom side of the screen 36, and having a vertical leg extending downward. As seen in
A vibrator 54 is fastened to a top side of the screen assembly 12, preferably fastened to the guide frame top end 38c or the support frame top end 40c, or both. The vibrator 54 is engine powered, electrically powered, hydraulically powered, pneumatically powered, mechanically driven with a linkage or rotating cam, or otherwise moved so as to cause periodic vibrations to the screen assembly 12. As used herein, these various vibrational systems or mechanisms are referred to as a “powered vibrator” 54 and exclude human powered vibrators. Such powered vibrators 54 can operate continuously at over 500 vibrations per minute (full cycle), with vibrational rates of 1000 to 10,000 believed suitable.
An electrically power vibrator 54 provided by Vibco Inc. is believed suitable and it is believed to use a rotating, unbalanced rotor to shake the screen assembly 12. A vibrator control 56 may be mounted on the base 24 and placed in electrical communication with the vibrator 54 (e.g., by an electric cable) to provide power to the vibrator and to adjust the amplitude and optionally the frequency of the vibration produced by the vibrator 54.
The screen assembly 12 advantageously has at least two depending screen assembly legs 42 extending downward at locations corresponding to the location of base legs 28 and connectors 44 at the top end of the base 24 and screen assembly 12. The screen assembly legs 42 are advantageously located in the corners of the support frame 40 where the top support frame 40c connects to the first and second support frame sides 40a, 40b. The screen assembly legs 42 connect to the respective base legs 28 and connectors 44. The screen assembly legs 42 on the top end of the screen assembly 12 are longer than the legs 42 on the bottom of the screen assembly 12 so that the screen assembly 12 and screen 36 is inclined. The inclination can also be achieved by omitting the screen assembly legs 42 on the bottom end of the screen assembly and having the connectors 44 on the base legs 28 connect to sockets in the bottom support frame end 40d.
Referring to
In use, a first concrete screen 10 is provided having cement, water and a first aggregate grade typically having a predetermined maximum aggregate size. The first concrete mixture is advantageously used to form a concrete wall using concrete forms known in the art and/or as described in 9,102,572, 7,781,019 or 5,887,399, or using pneumatic sprayed concrete methods known in the art and/or as described in 8,962,088 or 8,962,087. The first concrete screen 10 is provided by mixing the cement, water and aggregate in a stationary container or in a rotating barrel in a small concrete mixing machine, or in a rotating barrel on a cement truck. A portion of that first concrete screen 10 is retained, or is provided for use as described below.
In use, the vibrator 54 is activated to vibrate the screen assembly 12 and its screen 36, with the vibrator control 56 adjusted to vary the amplitude of the vibration. The first concrete screen 10 is placed on the screen 36, preferably between the middle and top of the screen 36. The first concrete mixture 70 may be placed on or moved to the screen assembly 12 several ways, by shoveling manually or with a machine such as a skip-loader, by placing a discharge end of a trough on a concrete truck so the concrete is discharged onto the screen 36 (
The vibrating screen assembly 12 and vibrating screen 36 cause the non-hydrated first concrete mixture 10 to pass through the screen 36 except for those aggregate in the first concrete mixture that are larger than the screen openings 46 and referred to herein as large aggregate 14. The vibrating screen assembly 12 separates the large aggregate 14 from the first concrete screen 10 to create a second concrete mixture 76 having smaller aggregate with a maximum size determined by the size of the screen openings 46. The large aggregate 14 moves down the inclined screen 36, with the guide frame 38 guiding the larger aggregate and first concrete screen 10 toward the opening 48 at the bottom of the screen assembly and between the lower ends of the funnel members 50a, 50b. The inclination of the screen assembly 12 is selected so that the larger aggregate is separated from the first concrete mixture before the first concrete screen 10 reaches the opening 48. Alternatively phrased, all of the first concrete mixture passes through the screen 36 except for the large aggregate 14 to form the second concrete mixture 76, which falls by gravity into the concrete container 70 located beneath the screen 36. The vibrating screen 36 helps sift the large aggregate 14 from the first concrete mixture 10 and helps dislodge the second concrete mixture from the screen 36 into the concrete container 70. The screen 36 within the guide frame 38 and the concrete container 70 are sized and positioned with respect to one another to increase the volume or amount of the second concrete mixture 76 that falls into the concrete container 70 and to reduce the volume of the second concrete mixture 76 that misses the container 70.
Typically, a predetermined volume or amount of the first concrete mixture is placed onto the screen 36 with the predetermined volume selected to fill the concrete container to a predetermined level suitable for handling. The predetermined volume may be determined by controlling the volume of the first concrete screen 10 placed on the screen assembly 12, or by monitoring the volume of the second concrete mixture 76 in the concrete container visually. The size of the large aggregate 14 affects the volume of the second concrete mixture 76 in the concrete container 76 so placing a fixed amount of concrete on the screen assembly 12 or screen 36 may result in a different volume of the second concrete mixture in the concrete container 70.
The vibration of the screen 36 and screen assembly 12 is manually adjusted by the vibration control 56. The screen assembly 12 and screen 36 are inclined so the first concrete screen 10 slides downward toward opening 48 during vibration. Gravity and vibration urge the first concrete screen 10 downward through the screen openings 46, while the screen openings advantageously prevent passage of all but the large aggregate 74 which continues to move toward the opening 48 with the funnel members 50a, 50b guiding the larger aggregate 14 to the opening 48 as the larger aggregate is separated from the first concrete mixture. The vibrating screen assembly 12 thus separates the large aggregate 74 from the first concrete screen 10 to create the second concrete mixture 76 which passes through the screen 36 and falls downward, preferably into the concrete container 70 beneath the screen 36. The guiding frame 38 guides the first concrete screen 10 downward toward opening 48 and is advantageously high enough to keep the first concrete screen 10 from overflowing the guiding frame and falling onto the ground. As the first concrete mixture separates into the second concrete mixture the screen 36 contains less of the first concrete mixture and more of the large aggregate 14 and the guiding frame directs the large aggregate 14 out the opening 48 bounded by the funnel members 50a, 50b. The guiding frame 38 is advantageously high enough that bouncing aggregate does not bounce over the guiding frame.
Because the screen assembly 12 is inclined, even if the vibration from the vibrator 54 is along the midline plane through the center of gravity of the of the screen assembly 12 so the screen 12 oscillates in a pattern within a plane containing the screen, the inclination will cause vertical and horizontal (lateral) oscillating forces on the screen assembly 12 and the first concrete mixture and the larger aggregate contacting the screen 36 and screen assembly 12. Thus, some bouncing may occur. The larger aggregate 76 advantageously passes through the opening 48 in the bottom guide frame 48d and onto either the ground or into a container where the larger aggregate is collected for further disposition.
The second concrete mixture 46 has the larger aggregate 76 removed and comprises a concrete mixture with smaller aggregate. The size of the screen openings 46 may be varied depending on the nature of the second concrete mixture 76 that is desired. The second concrete mixture 76 is advantageously from the same mix or batch used to form the wall 18, but has the large aggregate 14 removed. If the second concrete mixture 76 is from the same concrete mixture as the wall 18 then the colors will more closely match while the use of smaller aggregate in the second concrete mixture 76 typically results in a stronger and more durable concrete when hardened.
The second concrete mixture 76 may have additional materials added, including retarder, water, and decorative aggregates as described in part in U.S. Pat. No. 8,962,087. The complete contents of each U.S. Pat. and U.S. application identified herein, is incorporated herein by reference.
The concrete container 70 and the second concrete mixture 76 may be moved to the wall 18 and applied to the outer surface of the wall to provide a finish coat. A concrete container 70 in the form of a wheel borrow containing the second concrete mixture provides a convenient manual way of moving the second concrete mixture. Other wheeled concrete containers 70 may be used, and non-wheeled containers such as buckets may also be used by placing funnels below the screen assembly to direct the flow of the second concrete mixture 76 into the concrete container 70. The second concrete mixture 76 may also be moved to the wall by a concrete pumping unit like that described for use with moving concrete to the screen with the second concrete mixture placed into smaller containers for use by workers, or placed into a holding container for further use, or distributed directly onto the wall 18 for further manipulation by workers.
Workers at the wall 18 may apply the second concrete mixture 76 by spraying the second concrete mixture under force (e.g., pump or pneumatic pressure) against the outer surface of the concrete wall (
The screen assembly 12 provides a stiff frame encircling the periphery of the screen 36 that resists bending perpendicular to the plane of the screen 36 by at least a factor of 10 and preferably by a factor of 20 to 30. The first concrete mixture 10 is non-hydrated and heavy, and if the screen 36 curves or dishes or otherwise deforms permanently downward then large aggregate 14 and the first cement mixture will collect in the downwardly deformed portion and further deform any depression. The guide frame 38 and support frame 40 help stiffen the screen 36 to resist deformation, especially during vibration by vibrator 54.
The connectors 44 are configured to isolate the movement and accompanying vibration forces exerted by the vibrating screen assembly 12 on the base frame 12. Allowing vertical and lateral motion as may occur when the connector 44 is a spring may allow the vibrator 54 to exert less force on the screen assembly. Reducing vertical and lateral motion as may occur when the connector 44 is a damper, such as a rubber or elastomeric member may reduce the forces transmitted to the base frame 12 but may require more force to be exerted on the screen assembly. The elastomeric connector 44 may be a solid tube of block of elastomeric material, or it may be an inflated bladder, such as a hollow ball or tube containing air, nitrogen or other gas.
The connectors 44 advantageously reduce the vibration forces that the screen assembly 12 exerts on the base frame 24 sufficiently that the base frame does not walk or move laterally on flat ground more than an inch for every five minutes of operation without any concrete mixture on the screen 36. The connectors 44 may be omitted. If the ground on which the base frame 24 rests is sufficiently flat, the system may work satisfactorily, especially for shorter periods of operation of a minute or so to separate the larger aggregate 74 from small batches of the first concrete mixture 10. But omitting the connectors 44 reduce the vibration forces of the screen assembly 12 and removing the connectors has the undesirable result of having the base frame 24 move or walk so the base frame 24 and the screen assembly 12 supported on the base frame can move relative to the concrete container 70 so that the second concrete mixture 16 does not fall into the concrete container. If the ground on which the base frame 24 rests is inclined the sideways movement of the base frame may be more pronounced. If the ground on which the base frame 24 is uneven so one or more of the base legs 28 are not adequately supported on the ground then the base frame and screen assembly 12 may be twisted and permanently bend.
The angle of inclination θ of the screen 36 and screen assembly 12 is preferably between about 10° to 40° from the horizontal in a downward direction so the larger aggregate 74 moves toward the opening 48 at the bottom of the screen assembly. Larger angles of inclination θ are believed suitable when the first concrete mixture 10 is thinner and less and smaller angles of inclination are believed suitable when the first concrete mixture 10 is thicker and more viscous. The angle of inclination θ may be fixed, or adjustable. An adjustable angle of inclination may be provided by having two base legs 28 on one end of the base frame 24 vertically adjustable, as for example having telescoping legs nested inside one another and fixed in relative position by a pin (e.g., bolt) passing through holes in the inner and outer telescoping legs as in
The vibrating screen assembly 12 provides a fast and efficient way to separate the larger aggregate 74 from the first aggregate mixture 10. The use of a sturdy wire mesh screen 36 relying on gravity and vibration to sift the larger aggregate 74 from the first concrete mixture is believed to result in aggregate with a more uniform maximum size because large sized aggregate is not forced through less sturdy screens. In short, because the screen assembly 12 is heavy and stiff, the screen openings 46 do not allow slightly oversized larger aggregate 74 to be pushed through the screen openings. Similarly, because the screen is machine vibrated there is no need to manually push the first concrete mixture 10 downward through the screen and only gravity and the weight of any concrete mixture above the screen urging larger aggregate 74 against the screen 36 so slightly oversized larger aggregate is not forced through the screen openings 46.
The separation of the larger aggregate 74 from the first concrete mixture 10 without the use of manual force is thus believed to result in a second concrete mixture 16 that has a more consistent maximum size of aggregate. Similarly, using a sturdier and heavier metal frame, and a more sturdy screen 36 held in a stiffer frame screen assembly 12 (via frames 38, 40) than a hand held frame, is believed to result in screen openings 46 that do not vary in size compared to the prior art and that is believed to result in a second concrete mixture 16 that has a more consistent maximum size of aggregate.
The screen assembly 12 may weight over 100 pounds with a distance between the guide side frames 38a and 38b being 3-4 feet or more to accommodate the width of a wheel borrow and 4-5 foot for a larger wheeled, hand drawn wagon, and having a horizontal length between guide end frames 38c, 38d of 3 to 4 feet for the same wheel borrow described immediately above and 5-6 foot for the larger hand drawn wagon. Larger concrete containers 70 can accommodate larger screen assemblies 12.
The reduction in time to separate the larger aggregate 74 from the first concrete mixture 10 to produce the second concrete mixture 16 has many advantages, including more time to apply the second concrete mixture to the wall 18, more time to add additives such as color, decorative materials or other materials to the second concrete mixture that may enhance the performance or appearance of the finish coating applied to the wall 18. The volume of the second concrete mixture 16 that may be produced is significantly greater than the prior art and is more limited by the ability of moving the second concrete mixture from the screen assembly 12 than it is by the time needed to create the second concrete mixture. Because concrete cures and hydrates with time there are advantages in coating a concrete wall 18 with the finish coat 20 in as short a time as possible and for walls with large surface areas in excess of 1000 to 3,000 square feet, it may be difficult to obtain enough of the second, finish concrete mixture 16 as needed to apply the surface finish in a short period of time.
While it is preferable that the wall 18 be poured from the same batch of concrete that the second mixture is created taken from, that need not always be the case. The first concrete mixture may be a separate batch of concrete from that used to form the wall 18, or made at different times and in different than the concrete used to form the wall 18. While the color of the concrete may not match as close as arises when the second mixture is extracted from the same mixture used to make the wall 18, the other advantages of fast and efficient production of much larger volumes of the second concrete mixture 76 as described above still remain. Moreover, the screen 36 and/or the screen assembly may be changed so the screen openings 46 can be changed to alter the size of the large aggregate removed to create the second concrete mixture 76, providing flexibility in the aggregate content of that second concrete mixture. Thus, the present invention includes separating large aggregate 14 from a first concrete mixture to produce a second concrete mixture 16 in a fast, efficient, and large volume process. By changing the screen 36 for one with different sized screen openings 46, the second concrete mixture 16 may be changed. As the screen 36 may be clamped between the guide frame 38 and the support frame 40 by threaded fasteners such as nuts and bolts (bolt heads shown in
The above description is given by way of example, and not limitation. Given the above disclosure, one skilled in the art could devise variations that are within the scope and spirit of the invention disclosed herein. Further, the various features of the embodiments disclosed herein can be used alone, or in varying combinations with each other and are not intended to be limited to the specific combination described herein. Thus, the scope of the claims is not to be limited by the exemplary embodiments.
The present application is a continuation of U.S. Pat. Application No. 16/885,051, filed May 27, 2020, the entire disclosure of which is expressly incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16885051 | May 2020 | US |
Child | 18063520 | US |