1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to pothole safety guards for lifting machines, and particularly to a safety guard mechanism for a lifting device, such as a scissors-type aerial lift, that uses a helical screw and roller mechanism to deploy the safety guard for preventing the lifting device from tipping over when a pothole or similar tipping hazard is encountered.
2. Description of the Related Art
Aerial platforms allow users to perform work at or lift materials to elevated locations. Typically, a work platform comprises a scissor-style lift on which a platform is secured. The lift and platform are mounted on a motorized chassis or mainframe that is provided with wheels. While positioned on the platform, the user can control the elevation of the platform and the speed and direction of the chassis. When the platform is raised, the center of gravity of the aerial platform is raised, creating a risk that the device will tip over in high winds, or when the wheel slips into a pothole next to the wheel. Other lifting devices, such as backhoes and other construction equipment, have similar problems with stability. Such problems arise when one or more of the wheels hits a pothole, runs off a curb or encounters similar barriers that can cause the work platform to tip over causing damage and perhaps serious injury.
There are numerous anti-tipping deployment schemes, most having a plethora of moving parts that can lead to catastrophic failure of the system should any one of the parts malfunction. Most of the existing systems are linkages, rollers, air springs or springs, hinge pins, bolts and nuts and the like. Many of the functional parts involved in legacy systems are springs or gas springs designed to hold the safety guard when deployed.
If these springs fail when activated, the pothole safety guards will be freely suspended in the air, unable to perform their function. None of the existing designs has a self-lock security against spring failures. The art would certainly welcome an efficient device that would deploy anti-tipping members on a work platform, thereby preventing damage and/or injury.
Thus a safety guard mechanism for a lifting device solving the aforementioned problems is desired.
The safety guard mechanism for a lifting device is a mechanical device that can automatically deploy a safety guard member mounted to the lower surface of the base of a portable aerial lift device or other lifting device when the lift is raised. By lowering the guard member, clearance between the lower surface of the base and the ground is decreased, thereby reducing the chance of tipping if the wheels of the lift device hit a pothole or encounter any other tipping hazard. The mechanism has a helical screw-based mechanical device that includes a mechanical translator reciprocally and slidably coupled to a helically channeled rotator via a roller. The entire assembly interconnects the guard member and a scissors-type lift so that raising the lift drives the lowering of the guard member. In the lowered position, the guard prevents tipping of the lift should one or more wheels enter a pothole or other depression. A helical screw latch is included to provide a self-locking feature.
These and other features of the present invention will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification and drawings.
Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
As shown in
The helical screw-based mechanical device includes a mechanical translator reciprocally coupled to a helically channeled rotator via a roller. The entire assembly interconnects the guard member and a scissors-type lift so that raising the lift causes positive rotation in the rotator to thereby lower the guard member to a deployed or extended position. Conversely, lowering the lift causes negative rotation in the rotator to thereby raise the guard member to a retracted position.
Preferably, at least two guard members SG are disposed on two opposing sides of the vehicle 5 to prevent tipping motion of the vehicle. In the lowered position, the guards SG prevent tipping of the lift should one or more wheels enter a pothole or other depression. A latch for the helically channeled body is included to provide a self-locking feature.
The safety guard mechanism is based on the fact that linear motion in a translation member can result in rotation of a coupled rotation member having appropriately specified screw parameters, such as an appropriately specified helical thread angle. Utilizing the aforementioned principle, linear motion from a linkset slider 15 disposed on vehicle 5 can be translated to rotation of coupled rotator body 25 linked to the safety guards SG to extend and retract the guards SG on aerial lift 5. The rigid translation member 15 travels in the direction of the longitudinal axis of the cylindrical rotator body 25 in
The rotator body 25 can complete an entire 360° revolution about the rotator body longitudinal axis as the translation member 15 linearly travels a distance of one thread lead distance on rotation channel 80a or 80b.
As shown in
The linear channel sections are provided to lock the rotator body 25 in a 0° configuration that retracts the guard member SG, or in a 90° configuration that extends the guard member SG, as the roller 20 travels in the straight channels. Thus, it should be understood that, so long as the translation member 15 is stopped in the lead-out section with the safety guard SG being extended by rotator 25, the safety guard SG has no way to be closed or retracted by external forces, thereby guaranteeing a virtually fool-proof safety lock of the guard SG.
A first embodiment of the safety guard mechanism 10a is shown in
Referring again to
As the roller 20 completes the one-quarter of the screw lead distance and enters the lead-out straight channel at the end of the helical channel, the safety guard SG locks into a 90° fully opened or extended position. So long as the linkset of aerial lift vehicle 5 is raised, the translation member 15 locks the roller 20 in the extended straight channel to keep the safety guard SG in an open, deployed or extended position. It should be clearly understood that when the linkset of aerial lift vehicle 5 is lowered, the motion of translation member 15 reverses travel of the roller 20 through rotator body 25 to retract or close the safety guard SG into a retracted position. The safety guard mechanism 10a uses a minimal number of moving parts to achieve its function. However, the second and third embodiments, described below, obviate the necessity of having an extended straight lead-out channel and long, curved shape of the translation member 15.
A second embodiment of the safety guard mechanism 10b is shown in
Additionally, as shown in
A third embodiment of the safety guard mechanism 10c is shown in
The mechanism 10c, referred to by the inventor as a helical screw latch HSL, may be compact, e.g., four inches in length and 1.75 inches in diameter, with a total weight of approximately 2.50 Lbs. As shown in
Deployment of the safety guard mechanism 10c is shown in
In order to keep the safety guard SG in a retracted configuration, an elongate translation carrier 1510 is pivotally attached to aerial lift vehicle 5 and engages translation member 900 to provide linear motion to the translation member 900 in opposition to spring bias provided by spring 910 inside rotator body 905. Engagement of the translation carrier 1510 to the translation member 900 is retained by linkset coupling member LSC of aerial lift vehicle 5. When the linkset of aerial lift vehicle 5 begins to move in response to a rising platform of aerial lift vehicle 5, the linkset coupling member LSC releases translation carrier 1510, which is free to pivot away from rotator body 905, thereby allowing the force of compression spring 910 to impart kinetic drive to translation member 900, thereby causing rotator body 905 to rotate to deploy the safety guard SG.
Moreover, a sliding channel may be provided in the translation member 900 for engagement with translation carrier 1510 in order to limit vertical displacement of translation carrier 1510 as the translation carrier 1510 pivots. Additionally, while a single translation carrier 1510 is shown, it should be understood that if the sliding position of linkset coupler LSC is quite distant away from the safety guard turning point, multiple linkage systems could be introduced to carry the translation from the linkset sliding coupler LSC down to the rotator 900. As shown in
It should be noted that mechanisms 10b and 10c, a female rotator and male translator may be substituted into the mechanism. Moreover, in lieu of utilizing a compression spring to drive linear motion in the translation member, a suitably configured extension spring may be used.
It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the embodiment described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/006,270, filed Jan. 3, 2008.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090174176 A1 | Jul 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61006270 | Jan 2008 | US |