Claims
- 1. A method of supporting a roof, particularly a roof of an underground excavation such as a mine, comprising the steps of providing a hollow prop casing composed of at least two non-loadbearing telescopable sections, erecting the prop casing and telescoping it apart until it bears upon the floor and upon the roof to be supported; biasing the sections of the prop casing in the telescoped-apart position against the floor and the roof, respectively, so that the prop casing is thereby held in place, but without having any loadbearing function; and only thereafter filling the prop casing with a hardenable substance in flowable condition so that the prop casing acts as a form for the hardenable substance until the latter, upon hardening thereof, forms a solid column which by itself is able to support said roof.
- 2. A method as defined in claim 1, wherein the step of filling comprises injecting the flowable substance under pressure into the prop casing.
- 3. A method as defined in claim 1, wherein the step of filling comprises injecting a viscous slurry of quick-hardening concrete into the prop casing.
- 4. A method as defined in claim 1; and further comprising the step of embedding reinforcements in said substance.
- 5. A method as defined in claim 4, wherein the step of embedding comprises disposing reinforcing elements within the hollow prop casing prior to the step of erecting the same, so that the reinforcing elements become surrounded by said substance when the prop casing is filled with the same.
- 6. A method as defined in claim 5, wherein the reinforcing elements are variable in length; and further comprising the step of varying the length of the reinforcing elements in conformity with the telescoping-apart of the prop casing.
- 7. A method as defined in claim 1, wherein the step of filling comprises forming a slurry from two components which, when mixed, harden to form said column, and admitting the slurry into the prop casing.
- 8. A method as defined in claim 7, wherein the prop casing has an inlet port and the slurry is admitted into the prop casing under pressure via an injecting device which is releasably connectable to the prop casing to communicate with said inlet port.
- 9. A method as defined in claim 8, wherein the components are water and cement powder and are fed separately to the injecting device and admixed therein to form the slurry to be admitted.
- 10. A method as defined in claim 9; and further comprising the step of regulating the rate at which the water and cement powder are fed to the injecting device.
- 11. A method as defined in claim 1, wherein the step of filling comprises injecting a viscous slurry of quick-hardening concrete into the prop casing; and further comprising the step of vibrating the slurry in the prop casing to compact the slurry.
- 12. A method as defined in claim 1; further comprising the step of confining between the floor and a lower end of the prop casing a support which maintains the lower end out of contact with the floor but transmits pressure between them; and, when the prop casing and column are later to be removed while being subjected to pressure by the ceiling, removing the support so that the prop casing and column can downwardly recede from the roof.
- 13. A method as defined in claim 1; and further comprising the step of protecting said column against damage due to roof pressure in excess of its load-supporting capacity, by confining between the floor and a lower end of the column an overload protection device which yields to roof pressure at a pressure level lower than said load-supporting capacity.
- 14. An arrangement for supporting a roof, particularly a roof of an underground exacavation such as a mine, comprising a hollow prop casing composed of at least two telescopable sections which can be telescoped apart subsequent to erection of the prop casing so as to bear upon the roof and a floor beneath the same, said sections having sufficient strength to be self-supporting but not to support the roof; means for biasing said sections in their telescoped-apart condition against the floor and the roof, respectively, so that the sections are thereby held in position without, however, supporting any load; and means for filling the prop casing with a hardenable substance in flowable condition so that the prop casing acts as a form which contains said substance until the latter, upon hardening thereof, forms a solid column which by itself is able to support said roof.
- 15. An arrangement as defined in claim 14, wherein said sections are of a light-weight material to facilitate their handling.
- 16. An arrangement as defined in claim 14, wherein said sections are of synthetic plastic material.
- 17. An arrangement as defined in claim 14, said filling means further comprising an injecting device having holding members which are engageable with one of said sections so as to releasably retain said injecting device on said prop casing during filling of the same.
- 18. An arrangement as defined in claim 17, said holding members being arms which are pivotable relative to one another to and from a position in which they embrace said prop casing.
- 19. An arrangement as defined in claim 18, said one section having a filling port and said injecting device having an outlet which registers with said port during filling of the casing.
- 20. An arrangement as defined in claim 19; further comprising a circumferentially incomplete spring clamp dimensioned to embrace said one section intermediate the same and said injecting device and having a hole adapted to register with said outlet and said port, said clamp being turnable on and about said one section upon completion of the filling so that said hole moves out of registry with the port and the same is covered by a portion of the clamp to prevent outflow of the injected hardenable substance.
- 21. An arrangement as defined in claim 17, said injecting device having a trigger which controls the flow of said material from said injecting device to said port.
- 22. An arrangement as defined in claim 21, said injecting device having at least two inlets; and further comprising conduit means communicating with said inlets for feeding water and quick-hardening cement powder to the respective inlets.
- 23. An arrangement as defined in claim 21, said injecting device having at least two inlets; and further comprising conduit means communicating with said inlets for feeding water and quick-hardening cement powder to the respective inlets so that the water and cement powder become mixed in said injecting device and form a slurry.
- 24. An arrangement as defined in claim 21; and further comprising valve means in said conduit means for regulating the flow of water and cement powder through the same.
- 25. An arrangement as defined in claim 22; and further comprising pump means connected to said conduit means for supplying said cement powder to the same.
- 26. An arrangement as defined in claim 14, said prop casing having an end portion which is located adjacent to the roof which said prop casing is in erected condition; and further comprising means in said end portion for venting air from said prop casing during filling of the same.
- 27. An arrangement as defined in claim 14; and further comprising means for reinforcing said substance upon filling of the same into said prop casing.
- 28. An arrangement as defined in claim 27, said reinforcing means comprising length-variable reinforcing elements located in said prop casing and being variable in length in correspondence with the telescoping of said sections.
- 29. An arrangement as defined in claim 28, said reinforcing elements comprising a first set of rigidly connected reinforcing rods extending lengthwise in one of said sections, a second set of rigidly connected reinforcing rods extending lengthwise in the other of said sections, and means connecting the reinforcing rods of each set to one another.
- 30. An arrangement as defined in claim 29, said sections having respective end walls which in use face said roof and said floor, respectively, and each of said sets being connected to the respective end wall.
- 31. An arrangement as defined in claim 14, said substance comprising two components which, when mixed together, harden to form the solid column in said prop casing; and wherein said filling means comprises an injecting device for injecting at least one of said components into said prop casing.
- 32. An arrangement as defined in claim 14, said substance comprising two components which, when mixed together, harden to form the solid column in said prop casing; and wherein said filling means comprises an injecting device for injecting a mixture of said components into said prop casing, said injecting device having a pair of inlets for the respective components.
- 33. An arrangement as defined in claim 14; further comprising overload protection means adjacent a free end of at least one of said sections projecting in part axially beyond the same and being yieldable to pressure acting lengthwise of the prop casing so as to protect the column formed in said prop casing from pressure in excess of its load-bearing capacity.
- 34. An arrangement as defined in claim 33, wherein said overload protection means further comprise means preselecting the pressure at which yielding is to occur.
- 35. An arrangement as defined in claim 34, wherein the last-mentioned means comprise a friction-locking device.
- 36. An arrangement as defined in claim 33, wherein said overload protection means comprises an upright tubular element including a circumferential wall having an upper end in which a lower end portion of the pit prop casing in receivable, and a lower end engageable with the floor, and a core received within said tubular element for supporting said lower end portion from below, said core being dimensioned to yield to pressure transmitted from the roof by shifting toward said lower end under simultaneous plastic deformation of said wall.
- 37. An arrangement as defined in claim 36, said core having a circumferential edge face which is arcuately rounded in direction from an upper to a lower axial endface of the core.
- 38. An arrangement as defined in claim 36, said core tapering frustoconically in direction toward said lower end, and said tubular element having an upper portion of a larger inner diameter, a lower portion of a smaller inner diameter, and a shoulder connecting said portions and on which said core is seated prior to shifting toward said lower end.
- 39. An arrangement as defined in claim 36, said core having two axially spaced parts which taper frustoconically toward said lower end and an intermediate part which connects said axially spaced parts, said tubular element having an upper portion, an intermediate portion and a lower portion of progressively smaller diameter, said intermediate portion merging into said upper and lower portions via respective shoulders on which said axially spaced parts of said core are respectively seated prior to shifting toward said lower end.
- 40. An arrangement as defined in claim 33, wherein said overload protection means comprise an upright tubular element including a circumferential wall, a friction ring and a support for said prop casing carried by said friction ring, said friction ring having an outer diameter slightly greater than the inner diameter of said tubular element and being press-fitted into the latter and being yieldable to pressure transmitted from the roof by shifting toward a lower end of said tubular element against the constraint of the friction between the contacting external and internal surfaces of said ring and said wall, respectively.
- 41. An arrangement as defined in claim 33, wherein said overload protection means comprise an upright tubular element having a circumferential wall bounding an interior which has a larger upper inner diameter and a smaller lower inner diameter and a shoulder therebetween, and a ring received in said interior and having a lower cutting edge seated on said shoulder and facing towards a lower end of said tubular element, said ring being yieldable to pressure transmitted from the roof and resisting such yielding by penetration of said cutting edge into the material of said wall.
- 42. An arrangement as defined in claim 41, wherein said ring has an outer circumferential surface and an inner circumferential surface and a lower end of the ring is provided with a bevel extending from said inner to said outer circumferential surface to form said cutting edge.
- 43. In an arrangement for supporting a roof, particularly of an underground excavation, with a pit prop which bears upon the roof and the floor of the excavation, a device for removing the pit prop while the same is under pressure, comprising an upright tubular element having a circumferential wall of non-loadbearing sheet material provided with an upper open end dimensioned to receive a bottom end portion of a pit prop, and also having a lower end engageable with the floor, said wall also having at least two oppositely located holes; and a wedge member received in said holes extending across the interior of said element and adapted to support the pit prop, said wedge member having a wider end and also having a narrower end which projects from one of said holes so that on application of an inwardly directed force said wedge member may be expelled from at least said one hole, thereby permitting a pit prop to descend toward said lower end of said tubular element.
- 44. In an arrangement for supporting a roof, particularly of an underground excavation, with a pit prop which bears upon the roof and the floor of the excavation, a device for removing the pit prop while the same is under pressure, comprising an upright tubular element having a circumferential wall of non-loading sheet material; a slidable support for the lower end of a pit prop received in the interior of said tubular element and subdividing the interior into an upper compartment for accommodating the lower pit prop end, and a lower compartment; an elastically distendable bladder accommodated in said lower compartment; and valve means communicating with the interior of said bladder for filling the same with hydraulic fluid which in use carries said support and a pit prop resting on the same, and for venting hydraulic fluid from said bladder to permit the support and pit prop to descend when the pit prop is to be removed.
- 45. In an arrangement for supporting a roof, particularly of an underground excavation, with a pit prop which bears upon the roof and the floor of the excavation, a device for protecting the pit prop against roof pressure in excess of its load-bearing capacity, comprising an upright tubular element of non-loadbearing sheet material having a lower end adapted to engage the floor, and an upper open end in which a lower end portion of a pit prop is receivable; and means in said tubular element supporting the pit prop therein and yieldable axially of said element in direction to the floor in response to roof pressures upon the pit prop which are lower than the load-bearing capacity of the same by a preselected extent.
- 46. A device as defined in claim 45, said tubular element having a larger upper and a smaller lower inner diameter, and said means comprising a core member received in the part of said element having said larger inner diameter and having an outer diameter corresponding to said larger inner diameter, said core member having a part-spherical outer circumferential surface in engagement with an inner surface of said tubular member so as to plastically deform the circumferential wall of said tubular members when yielding in said axial direction, whereby the pressure required to cause such yielding is predetermined by the resistance of said wall to plastic deformation.
- 47. A device as defined in claim 45, said means comprising a core tapering frustoconically in direction toward said lower end, and said tubular element having an upper portion of a larger inner diameter, a lower portion of a smaller inner diameter, and a shoulder connecting said portions and on which said core is seated prior to shifting toward said lower end.
- 48. A device as defined in claim 45, said means comprising a core having two axially spaced parts, which taper frustoconically toward said lower end and an intermediate part which connects said axially spaced parts, said tubular element having an upper portion, an intermediate portion and a lower portion of progressively smaller diameter, said intermediate portion merging into said upper and lower portions via respective shoulders on which said axially spaced parts of said core are respectively seated prior to shifting toward said lower end.
- 49. A device as defined in claim 33, wherein said means comprise a friction ring and a support for said prop casing carried by said friction ring, said friction ring having an outer diameter slightly greater than the inner diameter of said tubular element and being press-fitted into the latter and being yieldable to pressure transmitted from the roof by shifting toward a lower end of said tubular element against the constraint of the friction between the contacting external and internal surfaces of said ring and said wall, respectively.
- 50. A device as defined in claim 33, wherein said wall bounds an interior which has a larger upper inner diameter and a smaller lower inner diameter and a shoulder therebetween, and a ring received in said interior and having a lower cutting edge seated on said shoulder and facing towards a lower end of said tubular element, said ring being yieldable to pressure transmitted from the roof and resisting such yielding by penetration of said cutting edge into the material of said wall.
- 51. A device as defined in claim 50, wherein said ring has an outer circumferential surface and an inner circumferential surface, and a lower end of the ring is provided with a bevel extending from said inner to said outer circumferential surface to form said cutting edge.
- 52. A method as defined in claim 1; and further comprising the steps of placing between the prop casing and the floor an apertured support; and admitting some of said hardenable substance onto said support and about a lower end of the prop casing, so that the substance surrounds said lower end and penetrates through said support to form on hardening a base which reinforces the floor against pressures transmitted to it from the roof via the prop casing.
- 53. A method as defined in claim 52, wherein the step of admitting comprises providing said lower end with at least one aperture through which some of the hardenable substance filled into the prop casing can flow out onto said support.
- 54. A method as defined in claim 52, wherein the step of admitting comprises spraying said hardenable substance onto said support and about said lower end.
- 55. A method as defined in claim 1; and further comprising the step of placing between the prop casing and the roof an apertured support; and admitting some of said hardenable substance onto said support and about an upper end of the prop casing, so that the substance surrounds said upper end and penetrates through said support to form on hardening a reinforcement for the roof in the region of said upper end.
- 56. A method as defined in claim 1, wherein an additional prop casing is erected, biased and filled at a distance from the first-mentioned one, said prop casing being located at opposite sides of an underground passage; further comprising the steps of placing between said prop casings and at least one of said roof and floor an apertured support which spans the spacing between said casings; and admitting some of said hardenable substance onto said support and also about the ends of said casings which are proximal to said support, so that said substance penetrates said support and, upon hardening, forms a reinforcement extending between and connecting said casings.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This is a continuation-in-part of copending application Ser. No. 850,096, filed Nov. 8, 1977.
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
850096 |
Nov 1977 |
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