This invention relates to rotary mower decks carried by tractors or other grass mowing machines. More specifically, the invention relates to a tensioner arm for tightening and retaining a mower drive belt.
Tractors, utility vehicles or zero turn mowers used for lawn care may carry a mower deck covering two or more rotary cutting blades on the lower ends of vertically oriented spindles. The blade spindles may be rotated by one or more mower drive belts that engage drive pulleys mounted to the spindles above the top surface of the deck, which may be driven by a drive pulley connected to the engine or other power source. Mower drive belt tensioners are used to tension the belts into engagement with the driven pulleys. One or more brackets or other fasteners are used to attach mower drive belt tensioners to the top of a mower deck.
There is a need for a mower drive belt tensioner arm that is lower in cost, and that may be mounted to a mower deck using only the brackets that are necessary to support and connect the mower deck to a tractor or other vehicle. There is a need for a mower drive belt tensioner arm with a belt keeper that is low in cost, and may be installed or manually moved between a locked position and free position without the use of tools.
A mower drive belt tensioner arm includes an elongate body is pivotably mounted between a first end and a second end to a first rear draft tower on a mower deck. A spring connected to the first end of the tensioner arm urges it toward a second rear draft tower on the mower deck. A tensioner pulley is rotatably mounted to the second end of the tensioner arm, along with a pivotable belt keeper that has an interference fit with a slot in the tensioner arm.
In a first embodiment shown in
In a first embodiment, tensioner arm 100 and tensioner spring 108 may be mounted entirely to rear draft tower brackets 106, 110 on the mower deck. The rear draft tower brackets may be sheet metal parts that are welded or fastened to the top and/or rear outer surface of the mower deck, and are required to connect the rear of the mower deck to left and right rear draft links in a four bar linkage supporting the mower deck under the tractor or other vehicle, and for raising and lowering the mower deck between different cutting heights. For example, the tensioner arm may be an elongate body that may be pivotably mounted, between the tensioner arm's first and second ends 100A, 100B, to horizontal surface 106A on left rear draft tower bracket 106. The pivotable mounting may include threaded fastener 119 extending through washer or bearing 120 and into the rear draft tower bracket. The tensioner spring may be connected between first end 100A of the tensioner arm and right rear draft tower bracket 110. Tensioner pulley 112 may be rotatably mounted to second end 1006 of the tensioner arm. The elongate body of the tensioner arm may include step 144 between the first and second ends.
In a first embodiment, tensioner spring 108 may urge tensioner arm 100 and tensioner pulley 112 into a drive belt engaged position. The tensioner spring may pull first end 100A of the tensioner arm in a direction from left rear draft tower bracket 106 toward right rear draft tower bracket 110. This moves the tensioner pulley towards driven pulley 116 and against the mower drive belt, tightening the belt into engagement with driven pulleys 116, 118.
In a first embodiment, an operator may move tensioner arm 100 and tensioner pulley 112 into a drive belt disengaged position. The operator may move first end 100A of the tensioner arm in a direction from right rear draft tower 110 bracket toward left rear draft tower bracket 106. This moves the tensioner pulley away from driven pulley 116 and away from the mower drive belt, releasing the belt from engagement with driven pulleys 116, 118.
In a first embodiment, tensioner arm 100 may include belt keeper 125 which may help prevent derailment of mower drive belt 114 from tensioner pulley 112. The belt keeper may be in the form of a lever that may be manually installed on the tensioner arm, and moved between a locked position and a free or unlocked position, without the use of tools or fasteners. For example, the belt keeper may be a wire form having a first end 130 pivotably mounted to the tensioner arm, a second end 132 removably locked to the tensioner arm using a spring biased and/or interference fit, and an intermediate portion 134 between the first and second ends of the belt keeper, near the perimeter of tensioner pulley 112.
In a first embodiment, tensioner arm 100 may include belt keeper 125 having a first end 130 that may be manually inserted through hole 140 in the second end of tensioner arm 100. After the operator inserts the first end of the belt keeper through the hole, a groove or key feature 138 may trap the first end of the belt keeper in the hole, unless the operator pivots the belt keeper until the feature reaches a mating slot or notch 141 on the other side of the hole.
In a first embodiment, tensioner arm 100 may include belt keeper 125 having a second end 132 that may be engaged to tensioner arm, and having a spring biased and/or interference fit holding the belt keeper in the locked or engaged position. For example, the operator may insert the second end into slot 136, and reversibly stretch or bend the spring loaded belt keeper to slide the second end past shoulder 142 and into the locked or engaged position.
In a first embodiment, tensioner arm 100 may include belt keeper 125 that acts as a lever by pivoting toward the locked or engaged position, in the same direction of travel as mower drive belt 114. For example, when the mower drive belt contacts the belt keeper, the belt keeper may pivot and function as a lever to urge the second end of the belt keeper into the slot in the locked or engaged position.
In a second embodiment shown in
Having described the preferred embodiment, it will become apparent that various modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the accompanying claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3142193 | Polko | Jul 1964 | A |
3543892 | De Baillie | Dec 1970 | A |
4068452 | Schaefer | Jan 1978 | A |
4102114 | Estes | Jul 1978 | A |
4231215 | Klas | Nov 1980 | A |
4511348 | Witdoek | Apr 1985 | A |
4925437 | Suzuki | May 1990 | A |
5012632 | Kuhn | May 1991 | A |
5246403 | Uphaus | Sep 1993 | A |
5361566 | Hohnl | Nov 1994 | A |
5390479 | Hutchison | Feb 1995 | A |
5769747 | Kuhn | Jun 1998 | A |
6176071 | Thorman | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6312352 | Holland | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6602155 | Buss | Aug 2003 | B2 |
6952913 | Crumly | Oct 2005 | B1 |
7913479 | Eavenson, Sr. | Mar 2011 | B2 |
8567166 | Minoura | Oct 2013 | B2 |
9750184 | Reichard | Sep 2017 | B2 |
10306833 | Smith | Jun 2019 | B2 |
20040134176 | Stineman | Jul 2004 | A1 |
20050039430 | Samejima | Feb 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20210131530 A1 | May 2021 | US |