The invention relates generally to dispensing of particulate matter, and more particularly to a sensing device for deteiuiining the level of such matter during the course of dispensing the material.
Sand, salt, or a sand and salt mixture, are often dispensed from dump trucks and dump truck snow plows to make roads which have become slippery with snow or ice, or both, less slippery and more safely passable.
When the dump body of a truck is filled and starts out on the road, the dispenser apparatus, of which there may be several types, has a load of the particulate material to dispense out of the truck and spread onto the road. Since the surface of the material in the truck body will become sloped during the natural course of dispensing, generally due to gravity, eventually there will be no material to dispense at the back end of the truck, where the dispenser resides, while there may be as much as 40 or 50% of the capacity of the truck body still occupied by the particulate material. Dispensing may continue until the truck body is empty by tilting the body of the dump truck in a normal fashion.
However, the truck driver cannot see how the load behind him is shaped and can only guess at when he needs to start raising the front of the body to feed the material into the dispensing apparatus. An alternative to guessing is to stop the truck, climb up and view the shape of the load in the truck body.
There are disadvantages to both methods. If the guess is too high about how much material has been dispensed, the driver runs the risk of spilling part of the load by raising the front of the body too early. If it is late, a length of road may be left untreated, thereby creating a dangerous condition. If an automobile driver is confident that an otherwise slippery road has been treated with the usual particulate material he will drive somewhat differently than he would on a known untreated road. Thus, a stretch of unintentionally untreated roadway following after a treated road surface, without warning, can be extra dangerous.
The drawbacks to the visual inspection are several, some of which are also safety related. A snowplow/dump truck stopping in the middle of the road during the plowing and surface treating process is an obvious danger to other traffic. Having to stop and visually inspect the load results also in lost time and unneeded discomfort for the driver during a long period of road clearing and treating.
A purpose of embodiments of the invention is to enable a truck driver to be able to know when the front of the body needs to be raised in order to keep the particulate material flowing until the full load has been expanded, without having to stop until he has reached a safe or purposeful place to stop.
A sensor device which responds to the presence or absence of particulate material at its location in the truck body provides information that is important to the truck driver.
The purposes, advantages, and features of embodiments of the invention will be more clearly perceived from the following detailed description, when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawing, wherein;
With reference now to the drawing, and more particularly to prior art FIGS .1 and 2, there are shown examples of conventional dump trucks 11 and 12. Truck 12 is equipped with snow plow blade 13. Truck 11 could also be equipped with a plow of some known type.
At the back of body 14 of truck 11 are two spreader elements 15 which may be fed by an auger or some other dispensing apparatus (not shown here) with the particulate material in body 14.
At the back of differently shaped body 16 of truck 12 is central spreading apparatus 17, which can also be fed particulate material by a conventional auger dispenser or the like (not shown here).
The trucks shown in
An embodiment of the invention is shown in
The sensor element comprises a relatively stiff rod which can move from side to side by a detectable amount. The rod is shown surrounded by a coil spring and the combination of rod and spring will be referred to as stem 24. At the end of stem 24 is a paddle 25. While the paddle is shown as having vanes, similar to the vanes on a game dart, it can have any shape which will react to force from particulate material pushing against it.
Within casing 21 is a conventional pressure or motion sensor (not shown) and simple circuitry (see
When the circuitry in casing 21 senses force on or motion of paddle 25 by whatever means, it emits a signal over cable 23, which may be connected to signal element 27 in the cab of the truck. By this means, the truck driver will be notified of a change of position of paddle 25 and can act accordingly.
Alternatively, the electrical signal can cause a light, or a sound, or other physical or observable indicator. Element 27 can be any device which provides some perceivable indication that paddle 25 has moved by a predetermined amount or has been subject to a predetermined lateral force.
With reference to
Casing 21 is mounted to tailgate 31 so that the bottom end of paddle 25 is above floor 34 by a few inches, represented by the vertical arrow in
The functioning of switch/transmitter 20 is depicted in
As the load is dispensed, the top surface of the particulate material will take the form shown in
The particulate material continues to be dispensed over time and eventually paddle 25 starts to experience reduced rearward force and tends to start straightening. At or about the time that material 33 ceases to exert any significant force on paddle 25, the switch/transmitter reaches an active or closed position that causes the circuitry in casing 21 to convert the force or movement of stem 24 to a signal. This tells the driver that, even though particulate material continues to be fed out by the dispenser, is it time to, and is safe to, raise the front of body 32 so that material 33 continues to be fed out of the body by auger 35. Note that in the embodiment shown, cable 23 extends out through tailgate 31, and is then fed by an appropriate route to the truck cab.
When the front of the body is raised, material 33 again engages and forces paddle 25 rearwardly, effectively resetting switch/transmitter 20. The next time the signal reaches the driver, body 32 is essentially empty and the driver knows the snow or ice melting effect of his load of material has been ended. The driver then completes his shift or returns to base for another load of particulate material.
Examples of alternative embodiments of the electro-mechanical mechanism inside casing 21 are shown in
An alternative electro-mechanical mechanism is shown in
On/off switch 45 can be a simple push-button mounted in the side of casing 21, which would be engaged to close the circuit just before the truck body is loaded. As loading progresses, arm 24, 63 is swung counter-clockwise and switch 46 is opened.
While the signal generated by circuit 41 by signal producing element 44 is shown by
The structure described above is by way of example only. The truck body may have any suitable shape to function along with an appropriate dispenser and material spreader. The switch/transmitter can be made of any appropriate material that is resistant to the corrosive characteristics of the particulate material and the weather. The particulate material is not limited to sand, or salt, or a mixture thereof, but could be seeds, fertilizer, or any other particulate material that is applied by spreading.