The invention relates to earth moving equipment and machinery and in particular to the retention of for example teeth on such earth moving machinery. In particular, the invention relates to new power operated locking systems in such teeth, operated by remote wireless for moving individual locking mechanisms between locked and unlocked positions. The locking system according to the invention is concealed entirely within the components of the earth moving machinery such as tooth mounts and the teeth themselves, so that the locking systems are not exposed in the environment in which the machinery is used.
Many machines particularly earth moving machines, include ground engaging tools for performing tasks like digging, tilling, ripping, loading, and/or excavation tasks and the like. Such ground engaging tools often include a shovel or scoop with one or more lips with edges on them. If such lips are left unprotected, contact with soil, rock and other materials may damage or wear the edges of the lips. Repairing or replacing the lip of such a ground engaging tool due to wear or damage of the edge may involve significant expense. Accordingly, many ground engaging tools include ground engaging members such as teeth, adaptors, and shrouds which are mounted to the lip to shield the edge of the lip from contact with soil, rock, and other materials.
In most cases such teeth and adaptors were secured to the shovel by some form of wedge-like device. In many cases such wedges were secured in place manually, often by simply hammering. In other cases, various different locks or wedge systems were developed, in which the wedging was effected by means of some form of threaded mechanism. The threaded mechanism, in turn, was operated by hand, or with a wrench.
It will be understood that even the more complex threaded mechanisms for locking the teeth on the adaptors, still had to be accessible from the exterior of the tooth or adaptor or both. This was admitted as a possible cause of problems, due to the harsh environment of alternately moving the shovel into the earth or debris and then removing it again. The teeth and the mechanisms were subject to extreme abrasion and forces operating first to push the teeth on and then pull the teeth off the adaptors and so on.
As and when the teeth have to be replaced, then the shovel would have to be cleaned up to make the removal mechanism accessible. In the event that the locking mechanism had become damaged due to use, then removing such locking mechanism in turn became a problem.
The present invention overcomes these problems concealing the entire locking mechanism within the body of the adaptor and of the tooth, and making the locking mechanism independently responsive to wireless technology from outside the tooth and adaptor.
The present invention provides a shovel for earth moving equipment of the type having a shovel lip and a plurality of ground engaging tool bits removably attached to said lip and comprising: a tool bit mount on said shovel lip, a tool bit releasably carried on said tool bit mount; a lock receiving recess in the interior of said tool bit mount; a power operated tool bit lock received in said lock receiving recess in said tool bit mount, said power operated tool bit lock incorporating a moveable lock member, and an electrical power operated drive operable to drive said lock member between two positions, a lock receiving socket in the interior of said tool bit oriented to register with said lock receiving recess in said tool bit mount to receive said lock member, a remote control device operable from adjacent to said shovel lip exterior to said tool bit mount and said tool bit and signal said electrical power operated drive means.
The invention also provides a tool lock which is provided with integral power operated locking and unlocking mechanisms, which are independently and separately operable by wireless remote technology and is therefore both hammerless and requires no hand tools for securing for example a tooth or an adaptor, to a ground engaging system.
The lock utilizes an internal motor, and sensing system operated by remote wireless technology such as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, RFID, and/or other wireless transmitting signal to unlock and lock the mechanical hammer less locking system. The wireless transmitting signal is transmitted via a handheld device such as a mobile phone, tablet, key fob, and/or other such handheld devices, for the locking (installation), and unlocking (removal) of the power operated locking system within the tool bit mount and tool bit.
The motor and drive and electronic response circuits are all contained within the power operated locking device.
Thus each power operated device contains its own integral motor and drive and locking member which is movable between locking and unlocking positions by the motor, and are all contained within the interior of the body of each of the tool bit mounts and/or adaptor, and are not accessible from the exterior.
The locking assembly has a steel bar or lock, that after the tooth or adaptor is positioned, is activated by a remote wireless signal and slides out from the assembly, locking the tooth to the adaptor, or locking the adaptor to the shovel.
The wireless transmitting signal is transmitted to the locking assembly, which is housed, encased, and/or shrouded within the adaptor nose or other tool bit mounting system. There may be twenty or more such teeth, and adaptors, on a shovel, for example.
Each locking assembly will respond to a specific unique coded signal from the wireless transmitter device, using current encoding signal systems.
In this way the operator can open one such locking device at a time.
Preferably, each locking member is operated by its own individual rack and pinion gear system driven by its own individual motor and battery.
It will, of course, be understood that the shovel or other piece of equipment also has individual tooth mounts or adaptors or connectors secured to it, each of which has a suitable interior recess for receiving a power operated lock of the type described.
The invention also provides a method of locking and unlocking a tool bit on a shovel. The various features of novelty which characterize the invention are pointed out with more particularity in the claims annexed to and forming a part of this disclosure. For a better understanding of the invention, its operating advantages and specific objects attained by its use, reference should be made to the accompanying drawings and descriptive matter in which there are illustrated and described preferred embodiments of the invention.
As already explained the invention provides a power operated lock for use on earth moving machinery.
Such machinery has some kind of shovel or scrapers, (
The lip of such a shovel is provided with teeth.
To secure the teeth, the shovel lip will have a series of mounting members. These may be themselves removable adaptors, or may be welded to the lip at spaced intervals. There may be twenty such mounting members on a shovel, for example, the number depending on the size, and the design of such a shovel. These mounting members usually carry removable adaptors. Teeth are then secured on the adaptors. In most case both the adaptors, and also the teeth are held on the shovel by some kind of lock or wedge. These typical locks or wedges are exposed at least in part to the outside environment around the teeth and adaptors. As a result, during use of the shovel, these locks and wedges are exposed to extreme wear and stresses as the shovels are moved into the earth, and when the earth is tipped out if the shovel, for example. When teeth, or even adaptors, become damaged or worn they must be replaced. This involves removing the wedge, discarding the damaged component and replacing it with a new one.
Often the wedge itself is damaged or difficult to dislodge.
In a typical shovel there may be for example twenty separate adaptors, carrying twenty separate teeth. The locking devices can be such that they will fit both the locking of the adaptors on the shovel mounting members, and also locking of the teeth on the adaptors.
The present invention provides a locking device for such a purpose, i.e. locking either teeth on their adaptors, or locking the adaptors on tool mounts on the shovel. Each locking device is concealed within the adaptor or tooth or tool mount and is self-contained and carries its own internal power operated mechanism.
The teeth and adaptors are formed with internal cavities or recesses. One of the cavities will receive the locking device within it, in the interior of the adaptor or mount. The other tool, either the adaptor or the tooth itself, is provided with an interior socket, which will register with the interior cavity formed in the mount or adaptor. By wireless remote technology, the locking device can be activated so as to lock the adaptor on the mount, or to lock the tooth on the adaptor. The locking devices themselves remain entirely concealed within the mount or adaptor, and are therefore protected from damage in use in the environment.
The internal power operated mechanism incorporates known wireless technology, and can be activated by a wireless remote control.
The adaptor (10) in this case is designed to support a tooth (14). The tooth (14) has a hollow interior (15) which fits over the leading portion (16) of the adaptor (10).
The leading portion (16) of the adaptor has a body with a transverse cylindrical lock receiving recess (18), in one side.
The adaptor body has a longitudinal axis, extending in the direction of the shovel movement. The cylindrical lock receiving recess is located on an axis normal to longitudinal axis. In this way the locking device will extend outwardly and inwardly in a transverse direction to the axis of the adaptor.
The recess (18) has a rim (20) with two linear portions.
The tooth (14) has a hollow body (15) with an interior hidden lock receiving socket (42) within the hollow body.
A locking device (24) fits within the interior recess (18) of adaptor (10).
The locking device (24) is shown in more detail in
The locking device (24) has a generally cylindrical body (26), defining a hollow interior (28). A sliding lock member (30) of partly cylindrical shape is slidable within the interior (28) of body (26). The lock member (30) is attached to a linear gear rack (32) formed with gear teeth.
A drive gear (34) engages the gear teeth on the rack (32). Gear (34) is driven by an electric motor (36). Motor (36) is controlled and powered by circuits and battery (38), located within the interior of body (26).
Sealing rings (40) are provided as needed on body (26).
Tooth (14) has a hollow interior (15) (
Again, the socket (42) in the tooth is aligned transverse to the longitudinal axis of the tooth. Thus when the tooth is fitted over the adaptor, the recess (18) and the socket (42) are both aligned with one another and are aligned transverse to the longitudinal axis of the tooth and the adaptor.
Small diameter access drillings (44) are formed in adaptor (10) and in tooth (14), aligned with one another. Drillings (44) connect with the inner end of recess (18) to enable service persons to reach the locking device (24) from outside the tooth (14).
It will thus be seen that the locking device (24) is entirely concealed within the body of the adaptor (10), and the tooth (14), and is not exposed on the exterior of either. In this way, the service life of the locking device (24) is greatly extended, and in practice it's operation by remote wireless technology, enables much quicker attention to servicing of the teeth on the shovel.
In operation the locking device is first inserted in the cylindrical recess (18) of the adaptor (10), with its lock member (30) retracted.
The tooth is then fitted over the leading end (16) of the adaptor (10). The tooth is slid on the adaptor (10) until the lock receiving recess (18) aligns with and registers with the lock receiving socket (42). At this point, the locking device is entirely concealed within and protected by the body of the adaptor (10), and is inaccessible manually from the exterior of the adaptor (10) or the tooth (14). Using a suitable remote wireless device (W) (
In order to remove the tooth, the motor is then activated in reverse. This will retract the lock member (30) from the lock receiving socket (42) in the tooth back into the body (26).
The tooth can then be removed from the adaptor.
Locking of the adaptor on its shovel using such a locking device (24) will involve essentially the same operations.
It will be appreciated that the power operated lock as described is capable of attaching removable attachments on earth moving machinery, whether such removable device is a tooth adaptor, or is a tooth itself, or of some other nature. Reference is therefore made in the claims to a releasable tool bit, it being the intention that this wording is generic to both the adaptor, and the tooth itself.
It is believed that the wireless technology involved in controlling each individual tooth lock, is well-known in the electronics art and requires no special description. It will, of course, be understood that each lock shall have its own unique signal. The operator of the equipment will have a hand-held device (W) capable of sending the separate individual signals, coded for the specific tool locks on the equipment.
The method of the invention is self-explanatory from the above.
Thus the locking of the tooth on the adaptor, or the locking of the adaptor on the support on the shovel, takes place by simply operating the hand held device (W), and moving the locking member along an axis which is transverse to the axis of the tooth or the adaptor. This is achieved without hammering of the tooth or the adaptor, or attempting to operate a threaded locking device or wedge, as was the case in earlier shovels.
While the recess (18) is shown in the adaptor, and the lock socket in the tooth, this arrangement could be reversed in some cases.
It will also be appreciated that while extensive reference has been made to ground engaging system and earth moving equipment, the invention is not necessarily limited solely to earth moving equipment. Other forms of power operated scoops and lifting devices are used, for example, when clearing a construction site, or removing debris from a collapsed building, to give only a few examples.
The foregoing is a description of preferred embodiments of the invention only, and is not thereby limited to such embodiments.
This application is based on U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 62/459,027 title “POWER OPERATED LOCKING DEVICE EARTH MOVING EQUIPMENT AND METHOD” filed Mar. 9, 2017 the priority of which is claimed.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62469027 | Mar 2017 | US |