The present invention is intended to disclose a purlin or runner beam with connectable terminals which facilitates considerably the assembly of concrete shuttering for forged parts for floors.
The object of the present invention is to provide a purlin beam to support shuttering panels for reinforced concrete parts for floors, which makes possible rapid assembly with reference to an adjacent purlin beam, each purlin beam comprising a male terminal at one end and a female terminal at the other end, which can easily be connected to one another. The connection of a male end of a purlin beam to the corresponding female end of the adjacent purlin beam is based on the principle of a tilting catch at one end of the purlin beam and a horizontal latch for the connection of the catch situated at the other end of the purlin beam, as disclosed in the applicant's patent No. 200301938 for a “Device for connection of beams for shuttering”.
The purlin beam with connectable terminals which is the subject of the present invention has cast terminals, which for example are made of high-strength malleable cast iron, steel or another material, or which are made of steel plate elements which are incorporated in the ends of the tubular body of the purlin beam. In one of the versions of the invention, one of the terminals has projecting centring areas and a front bridge forming a crossbar for interaction with the catch of the opposite terminal, and there are also heel plates with an arched upper surface which determine the place of support of the terminal of the adjacent beam, which in turn has vertical guides which are designed to be displaced and centred on the centring projections of the female part, and also has the retention catch fitted on its interior.
The centring projections of a terminal can have the structure of simple projections with inner surfaces opposite one another for guiding of the other terminal, and upper intake chamfers, or they can have continuous guides which extend from the top of the part downwards, and are designed to receive a mating vertical guide form of the other terminal, which supports the catch. The vertical guides can also have a structure consisting of angled surfaces which mate with other angled surfaces of the other male terminal, or in general any structure which permits vertical entry of one terminal onto the other with guiding of one part into the other, and with abutments to delimit the vertical position of one beam relative to another adjacent beam connected to the first.
The beams are dismantled by tilting the beam which supports the male terminal or the female terminal of a specific connection. In order to facilitate the dismantling, which will take place by turning the beam at the point of articulation, it must be ensured that the upper end of the support beam of one or the other of the terminals can be turned without interference with the forged floor part of which it has formed the shuttering. For this purpose, there must exist the appropriate arrangement with respect to the point of turning, which permits direct turning of the terminal, or there must be a small recess or curvature in the terminal area of the beam, so as to allow it to be turned without interference.
Drawings which illustrate a preferred embodiment of the invention are appended, in order to assist understanding of it, by way of non-limiting explanatory example.
As will be appreciated from the figures, the objective of the present invention consists of producing a purlin beam for shuttering for reinforced concrete floors according to the general arrangement which can be seen in
The purlin beams 2, 2′, . . . have at one end a connection terminal, for example a male terminal, as indicated by the number 7 in
The male terminals have a structure which can be nested by vertical sliding into a structure with a mating form of the female part, and also have a retention catch 9, which is designed to be connected with a crossbar 10 of the female part, as will be explained in greater detail hereinafter.
The male and female terminals, 7 and 8 respectively, are each preferably produced from cast parts made from high-strength cast iron, steel, or another resistant material, and are joined by being welded to the ends of the respective tubular elements which complete the purlin beam, such as the tubular element 11 represented in the figures. However, these terminals could also be made of plate elements, as will be explained hereinafter.
In the example represented, the female part 8 has guiding projections 12 and 13, provided with upper chamfers 14 and 15, in order to permit entry of the male part 7, which has straight guides 16 and 17, designed to be nested inside the guiding projections 12 and 13. By this means, it is possible to introduce the male part 7 from the upper part and slide it downwards, guided by the projections 12 and 13, until it reaches a position of support of the lower edges 18 on a specific point of the slightly curved front arms 19 and 20 of the female part 8, which arms end in the front crossbar 10, which is designed to retain the catch, as will be explained hereinafter. Optionally, the male part could incorporate the guiding projections, in which case the female part would have the mating straight guides.
Both the male part 7 and the female part 8 have recesses in the rear peripheral edges, in order to assist the welding, as indicated by the numbers 21, 22, 23 and 24.
The female part also has a lower front opening 25 for drainage of the purlin beam.
A similar opening 26 is provided in the lower front part of the male part 7, which also has a large lower extension with a front chamfer 56, in order to improve the guiding during assembly.
In addition, the female part 8 has positioning projections 27 and 28 on its lower rear part,
The tilting catch 29 is fitted in a transverse latch 30 associated with the male part 7, which acts in a mating manner with the crossbar 10 of the female part.
For the purpose of dismantling, during removal from the shuttering, the relative positions will be those which can be seen in
In the figures, the latch 10, 55 for the catch is shown as being integral with the terminal, although it will be apparent that the latch could be produced separately.
It should be explained that although the crossbar for the catch, which is shown as number 10 in the figures, is represented as being integral with its own terminal in a single piece, which is preferably made of cast iron, it could also be incorporated in the form of a separate part, fitted by means of any known system, into the remainder of the single-piece terminal.
Both terminals 64 and 65 are constituted on the basis of plate handled by the habitually known technologies of cutting, forming, drilling and welding, thus constituting the corresponding terminals. The embodiment in
In the example represented in
It will be understood that the invention is not limited to the specific embodiment which has been explained by way of example and represented in the attached drawings. On the contrary, persons skilled in the art will be able to introduce into it multiple variations which will be included in the scope of the invention, provided that they correspond to the characteristics defined in the attached claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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P200501680 | Jul 2005 | ES | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/ES2006/000371 | 6/23/2006 | WO | 00 | 1/24/2008 |