The invention relates to pneumatic ground piercing tools, and in particular, to a moveable chisel head assembly for pneumatic impact tool.
Pneumatic impact ground piercing tools have been commercially useful products for decades. Self-propelled pneumatic ground piercing tools are used to install pipelines, power lines and information transmission cables such as fiber optics installed beneath the ground with a minimal amount of surface disruption. These tools include, as general components, a torpedo-shaped body having a tapered nose and an open rear end, an air supply hose that enters the rear of the tool and connects it to an air compressor, a piston or striker disposed for reciprocal movement within the tool, and an air distributing mechanism for causing the striker to move rapidly back and forth.
In the case of hard or rocky ground, it is often desirable to utilize pneumatic ground tools that incorporate movable bits or chisels at the tapered nose section of the tool to concentrate the striking force. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,273,201 to Randa et al., issued Aug. 14, 2001, the contents of which are incorporated herein for all purposes, discloses a reciprocating (front) head mole with a moveable chisel head that is axially independent of the remainder of the mole. Randa et al. facilitates transfer of striker energy directly to the leading end of the mole thereby improving productivity in hard ground.
In many cases, impact moles are started from pits dug in the earth. The mole is launched when the air valve supplying the mole with compressed air is opened, actuating the striker to begin impacting. The front end of the mole is forced against the sidewall of the launch pit until the mole penetrates the earth far enough so that sufficient friction force is produced between the mole body and the soil to hold the mole in position against the pneumatic reaction forces generated as the striker reciprocates.
Launching larger diameter pneumatic impact tools, for example in the range of 4″ diameter, tend to be considerably more difficult to start than smaller tools with diameters in the range of 2″. As the striker impacts the chisel and then the anvil, it generates a reaction force that first tends to move the movable head or chisel of the tool forward, then pull the tool body along behind. The striker then moves rearwardly in preparation for the next stroke. The difficulty arises as the striker reverses its direction and move forward for the next impact under the action of compressed air in the rear pressure chamber. The reaction force from this operation tends to move the tool body rearwardly. During normal operation when the mole is fully engaged in a borehole, friction between the surface of the tool body and the surrounding soil absorbs this reaction force, allowing the tool to make net forward progress through the ground. However, when the mole is first launched and only the head is engaged by the soil, the reaction forces generated by reciprocation of the striker can cause the movable head to lose engagement with the soil and requires the operator to manually apply an opposing force until the mole has penetrated the earth far enough so that friction between the mole and the soil holds the mole body in place. In soft soil, the friction between the mole body and the soil may not be sufficient to hold the mole in place, making start-up unusually difficult.
Most prior movable chisel-type ground piercing tools have used a metal spring or springs to bias the chisel in a rearward direction to return the chisel to its starting position after being impacted by the striker and partially absorb reaction forces during the forward stroke of the striker that would otherwise tend to make the tool body to move backward, especially during startup. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,095,998 to Hesse et al., issued Mar. 17, 1992, the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference herein for all purposes, discloses such an arrangement. However, the use of springs in this application raises issues of durability and design. Pneumatic impact moles normally operate at a relatively high impact frequency, typically in the range of 250 to 600 impacts per minute. Assuming an average travel rate of 1 foot/minute and 300 foot of boring per day, an impact mole may be subjected to 50 million impacts per year. Under these conditions, a spring is subject to fatigue fractures.
A ground piercing tool according to the invention includes an elongated tubular tool housing with a front anvil having a lengthwise bore through the anvil. A striker reciprocates within an internal chamber of the housing to impart impacts to a front impact surface of the anvil for driving the tool forwardly through the ground. A chisel including a front head and a rearwardly extending chisel shaft slides within the bore of the anvil, the chisel being movable between a rearward most position at which a rear end portion of the chisel shaft protrudes from the bore of the anvil to receive an initial impact from the striker and a forward most position at which the striker impacts on a rear impact surface of the anvil. A distributing mechanism reciprocates the striker in response to a supply of compressed fluid. A front chamber defined by the housing and chisel shaft decreases in volume as the chisel moves forward relative to the housing, and the distributing mechanism includes passages that conduct compressed fluid to the front chamber, which front chamber is configured to form a gas (air) spring using such compressed fluid.
In one aspect, the distributing mechanism includes a fluid inlet tube mounted in the bores of the anvil and striker includes a radial port and the chisel shaft has a radial passage therein that conducts compressed fluid from the radial port of the inlet tube to the front chamber which is configured to form an air spring using the compressed fluid. The invention further provides an improved mechanism for removably securing a movable chisel to the tool body, which mechanism uses a jamb nut mounted between the chisel head and the anvil. These and other features of the invention are described further in the detailed description that follows.
For a more complete understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention, reference is now made to the detailed description of the invention along with the accompanying figures in which corresponding numerals in the different figures refer to corresponding parts, and in which:
While the making and using of various embodiments of the present invention are discussed in detail below, it should be appreciated that the present invention provides many applicable inventive concepts which can be embodied in a wide variety of specific contexts. The specific embodiments discussed herein are merely illustrative of specific ways to make and use the invention and are not to delimit the scope of the invention.
According to the invention, a moveable bit pneumatic ground tool is provided with a variable volume forward chamber that is pressurized with a fluid such as compressed air to form an air spring. The air spring offsets a substantial fraction of the reaction force generated when the striker of the tool is accelerated during the forward stroke of the striker. Reducing the reaction force in this manner substantially reduces the amount of force that must be applied by the operator as the tool is launched and reduces the tendency of the bit to break lose from the surrounding soil and/or to move backwards in the borehole.
Referring now to
Housing 16 is cylindrical and is swaged or machined to a reduced diameter nose 20 at its forward end. However, the anvil may instead be threadedly secured in a threaded front opening of the housing, eliminating reduced diameter nose 20 and use of a swaging process to produce it. Striker 14 slides within housing 16 to deliver forward impacts to a movable chisel shaft 18 and to an anvil 22 press-fitted into the forward end of housing 16. Anvil 22 is preferably a steel tube that fits closely within the front end opening of housing 16; however, “anvil” as used herein also refers to the corresponding portion of a one piece tool body, or a separate piece that is threadedly secured into the housing as described above. A frustoconical front end portion 26 of anvil 22 thereof has an outer surface that engages a like-shaped inner surface of nose 20 of housing 16 to retain anvil 22 in housing 16.
Referring now to
Chisel shaft 18 is slidably mounted in tubular bushing 34 with a small diameter rear end 36 of the chisel shaft extending through the small diameter rearwardly opening section 32 of bore 28. Chisel shaft 18 is slidable in bushing 34 between the position shown in
As illustrated, a stepped chisel head 50 is mounted on the forward threaded end 42 of chisel shaft 18. Chisel head 50 includes an annular wall 53 that forms an axially extending central opening 52. A smaller diameter hole 54 extending forwardly from central opening 52 includes interior threads for securing chisel head 50 onto threaded end 42 of chisel shaft 18. Opening 52 is sized to receive the forward end 56 of bushing 34 and a seal 58 extending around the circumference of forward end 56 of bushing 34 provides a gas tight seal between bushing 34 and the inside wall of central opening 52.
As best illustrated in
Referring to
Referring to
As striker 14 is accelerated from right to left, a corresponding reaction force accelerates tool housing 16 from left to right, tending to drive housing 16 out of the borehole. As striker 14 moves from left to right, air distributing mechanism 12 vents forward striker chamber 82 (
Referring again to
Tool 10 of the invention reduces the likelihood of these undesirable effects by compensating in part for magnitude of the reaction force with an air spring. The gas spring in forward chamber 78 is created when the chamber is pressurized through tube 60. In order for gap 80 to open as striker 14 is accelerated forward, bushing 34 must move toward shoulder 46 of chisel shaft 18, overcoming the pressure in forward chamber 78 as the volume of the chamber is reduced. The force required to overcome the pressure in forward chamber 78 substantially offsets the reaction force accelerating tool housing 16, reducing the amount of force that must be applied by the operator.
For example, in the case of one tool having a body diameter of 2.2 inches and a piston (striker) diameter of 1.614 inches, the reaction force generated when the striker 14 is accelerated is calculated to be 155 lbs, assuming a compressed air pressure of 100 psig. The calculated force to overcome the pressure in forward chamber 78 is 83 lbs., resulting in a net force of 72 lbs required to hold tool housing 16 in place as striker 14 is accelerated from left to right during the forward stroke of the striker. Thus, the operator of tool need only compensate for 72 lbs of force rather than 155 lbs. The effect is magnified in the case of larger diameter ground piercing tools. Further, the reduction in the amount of force required to compensate for the reaction force is accomplished without the use of a metallic spring, alleviating the breakage and design problems associated therewith.
Turning to
Maintaining low pressure on the back side of the shoulder 46 ensures that the pressure supplied to the front side of shoulder 46 applies the maximum amount of force in the rearward direction (to reset the bit shaft). This aspect of the invention can also be used in connection with known designs that use a coil spring (U.S. Pat. No. 5,095,998 cited above) rather than the air spring described herein.