The present invention relates generally to a crane boom for a mobile crane and in particular to a mobile crane boom having arranged on it a self-sufficient energy supply for the generation of hydraulic energy serving to feed various hydraulic loads arranged on the mobile crane boom. Moreover, the present invention relates to a crane boom extension having a self-sufficient energy supply, and to a hydraulic supply of a hydraulic load arranged on a mobile crane boom.
In the use of mobile telescopic cranes or mobile cranes with latticework booms, which in the present invention are collectively referred to as mobile cranes, there is frequently a need for supplying various devices on the main boom, or on an auxiliary boom attached to it, with hydraulic energy.
Usually, the hydraulic supply of all hydraulic loads arranged on a mobile crane is carried out using a single hydraulic pump arranged on the revolving superstructure and driven by a diesel engine also arranged on the revolving superstructure. With the aid of this very powerful hydraulic unit comprising the hydraulic pump and the diesel engine, all hydraulic loads arranged on the mobile crane are fed. Primarily, the hydraulic unit centrally arranged on the revolving superstructure serves to supply hydraulic energy to the pivoting apparatus also positioned on the revolving superstructure. Moreover, the telescopic sections extensible and retractable out of and into the base section are extended and retracted with the aid of the hydraulic unit centrally positioned on the revolving superstructure and with the aid of a hydraulically operable telescoping and locking apparatus arranged on the base section. For this purpose the locking and telescoping apparatus is linked with the hydraulic unit arranged on the revolving superstructure via hydraulic hoses which are wound on a hose drum.
Hydraulically pivotable main boom extensions are also operated with the hydraulic unit centrally arranged on the revolving superstructure. For this purpose, the pivoting cylinder necessary for pivoting the main boom extension up and down is centrally supplied with energy by the hydraulic unit arranged on the revolving superstructure via corresponding hydraulic hoses. In order to ensure secure guiding of the hydraulic hoses, the hoses are therefore wound on a driven or spring biased hose drum from which they are unwound during the telescoping action.
In addition, there is often a great number of additional hydraulic loads of the crane which are fed by the hydraulic unit. Principally, all hydraulic loads of the mobile crane are always fed through a star type hydraulic supply, wherein each individual hydraulic load is connected with the single hydraulic unit arranged on the revolving superstructure with an associated hydraulic line. This central hydraulic supply of the individual hydraulic loads is, however, very complex since each individual load is fed via separate hoses. This considerable technical complexity has had to be accepted, however, since solely the hydraulic unit on the revolving superstructure exists to supply the individual hydraulic loads.
As has been explained, this separate supply of the individual hydraulic loads is very complex and results in problems in particular with hydraulic loads at a great distance from the hydraulic unit due to very long hydraulic hoses. Since, due to the growing requirements on mobile cranes by the modern building industry, boom lengths are increasingly greater and longer, exceeding lengths of 100 meters, problems arise with the supply of piston-cylinder units, for example, those situated at the head of the main boom.
The supply of these hydraulic loads can no longer be economically or technically implemented with the arrangement described, since due to their great own weight as a consequence of the great main boom lengths the hydraulic hoses are so heavy that they tend to break at great heights. While the dimensions of the hoses and in particular their wall thicknesses and their diameters may be extended to a certain degree, this measure is limited by the maximum allowable winding volume.
Another problem arising with the supply of piston-cylinder units at a great height by means of a hydraulic unit centrally arranged on the revolving superstructure is that as a consequence of the hose length to be maintained wound up, for example, on the crane revolving superstructure, the hose is very heavy. The arrangement of very heavy components such as these very heavy hose drums is undesirable because of the maximum allowable axle load of 12 tons in Germany and because of the space needed by the large hose drum.
Indeed, it is known from EP 0 276 612 A1 or from JP 11286395 to provide a working platform being mounted to a telescopic arm with an autarchic hydraulic power unit which is adapted to maintain the working platform in its horizontal position by actuating hydraulic piston cylinder units. However, the arrangement of such a hydraulic power unit on a working platform which is always leveled in its horizontal position comprises the special characteristic, that the hydraulic power unit does only work accurately, when the working platform is really always leveled in its horizontal position. In the event of tilting of the working platform, the hydraulic power unit will tilt together with the working platform which in turn results already in the event of slight deflections from the horizontal position in that the hydraulic pump of the hydraulic power unit will run dry which will in turn result in a malfunction of the hydraulic power unit.
To solve the above described problems in the supply of a piston-cylinder unit arranged on a crane boom centrally supplied by a hydraulic unit arranged, for example, on the revolving superstructure of a mobile crane, according to a first aspect of the present invention, a mobile crane boom is provided having a self-sufficient hydraulic unit arranged on it for supplying at least one hydraulic load arranged on the crane boom with hydraulic energy.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the hydraulic unit is arranged above the first third of the length of the boom—as measured from the pivoting point of the boom on the revolving superstructure. In particular it has been found to be advantageous to arrange the hydraulic unit in the upper half of the boom, while an arrangement in the top third is deemed to be particularly advantageous. If the boom is a telescopic boom, the collar of each telescopic section has been found to be particularly advantageous for the arrangement of the hydraulic unit in the above-mentioned exemplary arrangement areas. Of course, the hydraulic unit can also be arranged at any position within the telescopic sections.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a mobile crane boom is provided having a first boom section comprising a main boom and a self-sufficient hydraulic unit suitable to provide hydraulic energy to at least one hydraulic load arranged on the crane boom. According to the present invention, the hydraulic unit is arranged either at the head of the first boom section or on a second boom section to be attached to the former.
The hydraulic load to be arranged either at the head of the first boom section or on a second boom section attached to it, can be, for example, a piston-cylinder unit, suitable, for example, to pivot up and down the second boom section pivotably arranged on the first boom section.
The invention is therefore based on the idea of ensuring the supply of the hydraulic loads arranged on the mobile crane boom not by means of a hydraulic unit centrally arranged, for example, on the revolving superstructure of the crane which provides each hydraulic load with hydraulic energy via hoses, but to ensure the supply of the hydraulic load by means of a decentrally arranged hydraulic unit which is arranged near each hydraulic load, in particular in the upper reaches of the mobile boom or in the area of the pivot joint of any second boom section, and therefore near the piston-cylinder units to be supplied there.
The section of the mobile crane boom referred to here as the first boom section can be, for example, a telescoping main boom of a telescopic crane or else the main boom of a mobile crane having a latticework boom, wherein each first boom section, i.e. the telescoping main boom or the latticework boom, may, of course, be extended with at least one intermediary portion. At the free end of this at least one intermediary portion, a second boom section may in turn be arranged, which is pivotable with the aid of a hydraulic unit arranged on the first or on the second boom section.
By arranging a hydraulic unit for hydraulic supply near a hydraulic load, such as a piston-cylinder unit, situated at a great height to supply the same, the hydraulic supply lines, hitherto deemed problematical, are eliminated, which would otherwise be necessary between the hydraulic load at a great height and the hydraulic unit centrally arranged, for example, on the revolving superstructure. By arranging a hydraulic unit at a great height, as suggested here, these lines may be eliminated, so that a self-sufficient energy supply for feeding a piston-cylinder unit or any hydraulic load such as a hydraulic motor is provided. There is only an electrical connection between the hydraulic unit and the crane superstructure, such as a bus connection to control the hydraulic unit. Instead of the already mentioned bus connection, it is of course also possible to control the hydraulic unit via a radio link.
The hydraulic unit itself can be, for example, a hydraulic pump driven by an internal combustion engine such as a diesel engine, while for operating the hydraulic pump, an electric motor could also be used, which would, however, necessitate another cable connection to the revolving superstructure.
As described above, the present invention is intended to create, among other things, a possibility to supply hydraulic energy to a piston-cylinder unit arranged at a great height of a mobile crane in order to pivot a main boom extension up and down, without the well known problems arising with hydraulic lines extending between the piston-cylinder unit and a hydraulic unit arranged, for example, on the revolving superstructure of a crane.
It is of course possible to supply hydraulic energy to other hydraulic loads arranged in the area of the hydraulic unit with the aid of the self-sufficient energy supply suggested here. A pulley arranged on the main boom or on the main boom extension, which becomes necessary as a consequence of the cable guiding when the main boom extension is pivoted down, may be folded up and down with the aid of the hydraulic unit.
It is also possible to carry out bolting of the main boom extension of the main boom. For this purpose bolting cylinders are provided, for example, at the foot of the main boom extension which may de activated or deactivated with the aid of the hydraulic unit, in order to release or establish a bolting connection between the main boom extension and the main boom.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the hydraulic unit is arranged on the second boom section, such as a pivotable main boom extension. If between the head of the main boom and a main boom extension one or more intermediate sections are interposed, the arrangement of the hydraulic unit on the second boom section is advantageous in that at the highest point of the first boom section, which in this case ends in the head of the last intermediate portion, there is always a self-sufficient energy supply. The hydraulic unit therefore does not have to be first removed from the head of the main boom and then remounted on one of the intermediary potions, but is always in the desired position due to its arrangement on the main boom extension.
In order to ensure smooth operation of the hydraulic unit arranged on the main boom extension during pivoting up and down of the same, the hydraulic unit is rotatably supported about at least one axis, so that during the whole of the pivoting operation, it is maintained in essentially the same position with respect to the ground. Therefore, since the hydraulic power unit is due to its pivotally arrangement always in its ideal operating position, dry running of the pump of the hydraulic power unit can be avoided, a problem which was already discussed as being problematical at the beginning of the present application.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a hydraulically operable main boom extension is suggested having a self-sufficient energy supply, such as a hydraulic unit. The main boom extension according to the present invention having a hydraulic unit arranged on it, is advantageous in that, when the main boom extension has its own energy supply, additional energy supply lines need not extend from the revolving superstructure of a crane to the main boom extension. The elimination of these supply lines, which would otherwise have to be provided, is advantageous in particular when the main boom extension is not directly arranged on the main boom of a crane, but when between the main boom extension and the main boom one or more intermediate portions are interposed. The hydraulic lines, which otherwise have to be provided in the area of the intermediate portions, can be eliminated which facilitate faster rigging of the crane.
Moreover, such a main boom extension with its own self-sufficient energy supply is much more versatile and can be brought more quickly into an operable state since for operating the main boom extension, i.e. for pivoting it up and down, additional lines for hydraulic supply need not be provided. As a consequence, the main boom extension according to the present invention may be quickly mounted on any main boom without intermediary portions arranged on it, and may be directly pivoted up and down without the provision of additional hydraulic lines.
In order to provide a better understanding and for further explanation, an exemplary embodiment of the present invention will be described in the following with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a is a view of a mobile crawler-type crane having a bipartite latticework boom;
b is a detailed view of the coupling area of the two lattice boom sections of
c, 5d are further views of the mobile crawler-type crane of
Throughout the drawing figures, corresponding parts are designated with the same reference numerals.
As can be seen from
As can be further derived from
According to the present invention, hydraulic unit 19 is arranged within latticework boom 15. As has become obvious from the preceding general description of the invention, hydraulic unit 19 can, of course, also be arranged on first boom section 1, in particular on the head of the innermost telescopic section. Another space-saving possibility to arrange hydraulic unit 19, could be, for example, to position unit 19 within innermost telescopic section 4. In order to always maintain the functionality of hydraulic unit 19 in any position of second boom section 2, hydraulic unit 19 is rotatably supported about axis “B”. Hydraulic unit 19 can be a diesel unit with an associated hydraulic pump, wherein an electric motor could also be used instead of a diesel engine. As can be derived from
The head of first boom section 1 is kinematically coupled with the foot of second boom section 2 or the foot of latticework boom 15 via the two piston-cylinder units 16. In the exemplary embodiment of the present invention shown here, the cylinder of each piston-cylinder unit 16 is pivotably linked to the top side of latticework boom 15 and each associated cylinder at the head of first boom section 1.
On the top side of latticework boom 15, a pulley 17 is also arranged which, with another piston-cylinder unit 21 may be folded against the top side of latticework boom 15 by the operation of hydraulic unit 19.
As initially explained in the present invention, hydraulic unit 19 primarily serves to operate first piston-cylinder units 16 in order to pivot downward second boom section 2 by extending piston-cylinder units 16, as shown in
As initially explained in the description of
Detail “Z” is shown again in
As schematically shown in
The arrangement of hydraulic unit 19 on second boom section 2 is, however, advantageous in that the rigging complexity can be reduced when the mobile crane shown in
a to 5d show various positions of a crawler-type crane having a bipartite latticework boom 1, 2 whose two boom sections 1, 2 are kinematically coupled with the aid of a hydraulic unit 19 and a piston-cylinder unit 16. In
Between the two bottom chords of the two boom sections 1, 2, a first piston-cylinder unit 16 is arranged, whose piston is linked to the first boom section and whose associated cylinder is linked to the second boom section. According to the present invention, as can be seen from
As can be seen in
Hydraulic loads 16, 21 are equipped with load holding valves serving to secure the position of hydraulic load 16, 21, even if the system has been shut down or a line has been broken. The load holding valves 32 are hydraulically releasable, which can be done by direct driving via valve 34 or by a separate control oil line 35.
In the present hydraulic system, only one hydraulic load can be driven at the same time. The hydraulic system shown can be modified, of course, so that a plurality of hydraulic loads can be operated simultaneously.
As an alternative to the hydraulic system shown here, numerous other common control approaches may be used, such as constant pressure systems with DBV or constant-flow systems with a pressure regulator or adjustable pumps. Combinations of the above-mentioned systems are also possible. Moreover, there are various alternatives for the load holding valves 32, such as valves having a tight seat, or dampened lowering valves. Nor is it always necessary to drive each load using a separate switching valve 30. There are a great number of variants also for valves 30, 34 with respect to the switching segments and their driving and resetting.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) from U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/497,107 filed Aug. 22, 2003, which application is incorporated by reference and made a part hereof.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1690181 | Sederholm | Nov 1928 | A |
2188672 | Atkinson | Jan 1940 | A |
2212236 | Hoenecke | Aug 1940 | A |
3061122 | Robbins | Oct 1962 | A |
3608742 | Adolfsson | Sep 1971 | A |
3653193 | Coughran, Jr. | Apr 1972 | A |
3817397 | Wellman | Jun 1974 | A |
3934729 | Wellman | Jan 1976 | A |
3938670 | Wellman | Feb 1976 | A |
3939988 | Wellman | Feb 1976 | A |
3944081 | Wellman | Mar 1976 | A |
4076215 | Landert et al. | Feb 1978 | A |
4193733 | Ullmann | Mar 1980 | A |
4334668 | Caris | Jun 1982 | A |
4394914 | Privat | Jul 1983 | A |
4526413 | Williams | Jul 1985 | A |
4919585 | Ruiz | Apr 1990 | A |
5049027 | Morrison et al. | Sep 1991 | A |
5108252 | Gilmore et al. | Apr 1992 | A |
5360313 | Gilmore et al. | Nov 1994 | A |
5746286 | Mlaker | May 1998 | A |
5769251 | Wada et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
6021825 | Bowling | Feb 2000 | A |
6439408 | Aquino et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6474922 | Bachman et al. | Nov 2002 | B2 |
6688481 | Adner et al. | Feb 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
3411051 | Sep 1985 | DE |
0 276 612 | Aug 1988 | EP |
0672612 | Sep 1995 | EP |
1081088 | Mar 2001 | EP |
1 126 086 | Aug 2001 | EP |
11-286395 | Oct 1999 | JP |
11286395 | Oct 1999 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050098524 A1 | May 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60497107 | Aug 2003 | US |