The present invention relates to rubber applicators that apply melted rubber to cracks or joints in pavement.
Rubber applicators are mobile devices that are rolled along cracks in pavement to apply melted rubber to fill the cracks. They typically have a vat for holding rubber blocks, and a heating element to melt the rubber and keep it at a desired temperature during the application process. It is desirable for rubber applicators to avoid overheating or burning the rubber in the vat, to be easy to clean and maintain, and to avoid concentrating a flame to single spot beneath the vat. It is also desirable to provide a rubber applicator in which the heating element is unlikely to blowout.
An applicator for applying melted rubber to pavement comprises a melting vat having a substantially planar bottom with a surface area, and a wide-area a heating element beneath the melting vat having a surface area at least half the surface area of the planar bottom of the melting vat. A double-walled construction of the vat includes exhaust holes in the outer wall that allow exhaust to evenly melt rubber in the vat, to reduce burning of the rubber and flame blowouts, and to improve fuel efficiency.
In one embodiment, vat 11 may be double-walled, i.e., comprised of inner 21 and outer 22 walls as shown in
Vat 11 includes a solid metal bottom 36 having a surface area. Beneath the bottom, the applicator includes a tray 14 that holds a wide-area heating element 15 having a surface area sized to be more than half the surface area of the planar bottom of the melting vat and positioned beneath the melting vat bottom 36. Tray 14 is slidably removable from the applicator. Tray 14 is shown removed from the applicator, while tray 16 is shown inserted into the applicator. Tray also holds fuel inlet port 23 which provides fuel to heating element 15 via fuel hose and regulator 21.
In one embodiment, heating element 15 in tray 14 may comprise an aluminum oxide ceramic heating blanket, and be covered by an expanded metallic grid 16 to keep it in place over a 2.5″ deep air tight pan. Metallic grid 16 may be held in place by Z-channel 17 which is attached to tray support 41. The perimeter of the Z-channel may be secured by #12 self-tapping screws while fully compressing the ceramic heating blanket 15 at the perimeter to create a gasket seal. When inserted into the applicator, heating element 15 may be slightly spaced from the bottom of vat 26 to thereby permit fuel exhaust to flow upwards between the inner wall 21 and outer wall 22 of vat 11, and to exit through the exhaust holes 13. This upward flow of heated exhaust imparts heat to rubber in vat 11 both from the vat bottom 36 and inner walls 21. This improves the even heating of the rubber, and reduces hotspots and burning of rubber, which consequently improves the quality of applied rubber, and makes the interior of the vat easier to clean between uses.
Tray 14 also includes ignitor button 18 which via wires 20 is in electrical communication with a battery-powered spark ignitor which extends through the front the shelf 14 to engage heating element 15. As shown in
Also shown in
Referring to
While the invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the foregoing drawings and description, the same is to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive in character, it being understood that only illustrative embodiments thereof have been show and described and that all changes and modifications that are within the scope of the following claims are desired to be protected.
All references cited in this specification are incorporated herein by reference to the extent that they supplement, explain, provide a background for or teach methodology or techniques employed herein.
This application claims the benefit of Provisional Application No. 62/919,015 filed 22 Feb. 2019, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20200270825 A1 | Aug 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62919015 | Feb 2019 | US |