Claims
- 1. An apparatus for stabilizing a foundation which rests on an underlying surface material and includes an upright wall having a hole opening out of one of its faces, said apparatus comprising: a bracket including a sleeve having an axis and a single rod which is attached firmly to and projects generally radially from the sleeve, the rod being configured to fit snugly within the hole so as to locate the sleeve along that face of the wall out of which the hole opens, with the axis of the sleeve being presented generally vertically; a pier configured in cross-section to fit within and slide easily through the sleeve of the bracket and further being adapted to enter the surface material below the foundation; a jacking apparatus including a lift member and a jack connected to the lift member, the lift member being configured to engage the sleeve of the bracket such that an upwardly directed force may be applied to the sleeve in the direction of the axis of the sleeve, yet being detachable from the sleeve, the jack being located so as to bear against the pier when the pier is within the sleeve and to exert a downwardly directed force on the pier, with that force being resisted by an upwardly directed force applied to the sleeve at the lift member; and securing means for connecting the sleeve of the bracket to the pier so that the pier and the bracket will support the foundation when the jacking apparatus is detached from the bracket.
- 2. An apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the sleeve has a hole which receives one end of the rod and the rod is welded to the sleeve around the hole.
- 3. An apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the jacking apparatus in addition to the lift member and jack includes tie elements which are attached to and extend between the lift member and the jack, and the jack comprises a fluid-operated cylinder attached to the tie elements such that a space exists between the lift member and cylinder, the cylinder including a piston rod that extends into the space where it moves toward and away from the lift member and the bracket when the bracket is engaged with the lift member; and wherein the pier comprises a plurality of pier sections, each of which is small enough to fit into the space between the lift member and cylinder, and means for maintaining the pier sections in end-to-end alignment, whereby the sections may be inserted into the space to be added to the sections that are already driven.
- 4. An apparatus according to claim 3 wherein the pier also includes an end cap which is fitted to the lower end of the lowermost pier section and is slightly wider than the pier sections so as to form a path through which the pier sections easily pass.
- 5. An apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the pier comprises a plurality of tubular pier sections which are cylindrical in configuration and couplings which fit into the ends of the pier sections to join them end-to-end, each coupling being for the most part smaller in diameter than the inside diameters of the pier sections which it couples, but intermediate its ends having an enlarged portion which is slightly greater in diameter than the inside diameter of the pier sections so that when two pier sections are forced together with the coupling between them, the enlarged portion of the coupling will lodge in the inside of the two pier sections and the coupling will maintain the pier sections in alignment.
- 6. An apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the securing means comprises at least one bolt which threads into the sleeve of the bracket and projects into the pier.
- 7. An apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the rod of the bracket is hollow and the securing means includes a pin which extends through the sleeve of the bracket, through the pier, and into the hollow interior of the rod.
- 8. An apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the lift member includes lateral elements which extend along the sides of the sleeve of the bracket and a bottom element which lies beneath the sleeve but does not interfere with the pier when the pier extends through the bracket.
- 9. The combination comprising: a foundation that rests on a surface material and has a wall provided with at least one vertical surface and a generally horizontally extending hole that opens out of the vertical surface; a bracket including a sleeve that lies along the vertical surface of the foundation wall with its axis generally vertical and a single rod that is secured firmly to the sleeve and projects generally radially from the sleeve into the hole in the foundation wall; a pier extending generally vertically through the sleeve and into the surface material and being generally fixed against descent within the surface material; and means connecting the sleeve with the pier, so that the bracket at its rod exerts an upwardly directed supporting force on the foundation wall, whereby the wall is stabilized.
- 10. The combination according to claim 9 wherein means connecting the sleeve with the pier comprises a lift member engaged with the sleeve of the bracket, a fluid-operated cylinder spaced from the lift member and having a piston rod arranged to exert a downwardly directed force on the pier and to apply an upwardly directed reaction force to the bracket, with the reaction force being directed through the lift member.
- 11. The combination according to claim 10 wherein the cylinder is fixed in position with respect to the lift member and has a piston rod that is axially aligned with the sleeve in the lift member and is capable of moving toward and away from the sleeve, the piston rod at its end being configured to engage the end of the pier.
- 12. The combination according to claim 11 wherein the pier comprises a plurality of sections aligned end-to-end, with each section being short enough to fit into the space between the piston rod and the sleeve in the lift member when the piston rod is fully retracted.
- 13. The combination according to claim 9 wherein the pier comprises a plurality of hollow pier sections and coupling elements joining the sleeves together end-to-end, each coupling element being at its ends small enough to fit easily into the hollow interiors of the two pier sections that the coupling joins, but intermediate its ends having an enlarged portion which is slightly larger than the interiors of the two pier sections, so that the enlarged portion lodges in the ends of the two pier sections.
- 14. The combination according to claim 10 wherein the lift member comprises vertical side plates which are spaced apart a distance slightly greater than the width of the sleeve and are located on opposite sides of the sleeve, a bottom plate which is attached to the side plates and extends beneath the sleeve such that the sleeve is against the bottom plate, the bottom plate being contoured so that it does not interfere with the pier that extends through the sleeve, and a cross piece connecting the two side plates above the bottom plate and also being against the sleeve, whereby the side and bottom plates and the cross piece serve to locate the sleeve in the lift member.
- 15. The combination according to claim 14 and further comprising means for temporarily attaching the sleeve to the cross piece to hold the lift member on the bracket.
- 16. The combination according to claim 15 wherein the means for temporarily attaching the sleeve includes a bolt which extends through the cross piece of the bracket and threads into the sleeve.
- 17. The combination according to claim 9 wherein the means connecting the sleeve with the pier comprises a screw that threads through the sleeve and projects into the pier.
- 18. A process for stabilizing a foundation that rests on an underlying surface material and includes an upright wall having vertical surfaces, said process comprising: drilling a generally horizontal hole in the upright wall from one of its vertical surfaces; installing a bracket on the wall by inserting a single rod that forms part of the bracket into the hole, the bracket also including a sleeve to which the rod is firmly secured and from which it projects, the sleeve when the bracket is installed on the wall being generally along that vertical surface of the wall out of which the hole opens; inserting a pier through the sleeve so that the sleeve is directed downwardly along the wall to the surface material on which the foundation rests; contemporaneously applying a downwardly directed force to the pier and a generally equal and opposite reaction force to the bracket, so that the pier is forced downwardly into the surface material; and when the pier encounters a desired amount of resistance, securing the pier to the sleeve of the bracket so that the pier operating through the bracket lends support to the foundation.
- 19. The process according to claim 18 wherein the lift member is configured to form a cradle for the sleeve of the bracket, and the step of engaging the lift member with the sleeve comprises fitting the lift member beneath and along the sleeve of the bracket.
- 20. The process according to claim 18 wherein the step of securing the pier to the sleeve comprises threading a screw radially through the sleeve and into the pier.
- 21. The process according to claim 18 wherein the contemporaneous steps of applying a downwardly directed force to the pier and an upwardly directed reaction force to the bracket include engaging a lift member with the sleeve of the bracket, the lift member having a fluid-operated cylinder attached to it, and with the cylinder, exerting the downwardly directed force on the pier such that the reaction force is transmitted to the sleeve and applied to the bracket.
- 22. The process according to claim 18 wherein the pier comprises a plurality of pier sections fitted together end-to-end, and the downwardly directed force is always applied to the uppermost pier section.
- 23. An apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the single rod which projects from the sleeve of the bracket is circular in cross-section.
- 24. The process according to claim 18 wherein the single rod that forms part of the bracket is circular in cross-section.
RELATED APPLICATION
This application is a continuation-in-part of pending application Ser. No. 803,740 of Dondeville M. Rippe filed Dec. 2, l985, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (9)
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
803740 |
Dec 1985 |
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