This technology relates to a coupler unit for attaching an accessory such as a bucket to a manipulable boom of a tractor or the like. The coupler is fixed to the end of the boom. The driver manipulates the boom, from the cab, by manually adjusting the hydraulic servo boom-controls on the tractor.
When picking up a bucket, basically two required operations include (a) manipulating the boom so as to physically pick the bucket up off the ground and (b) locking the bucket to the boom. When uncoupling the bucket, the operations are (a) to deposit the bucket on the ground, (b) to unlock the bucket, and then (c) to withdraw the boom.
Traditionally, the task of locking the bucket to the coupler has required the driver to insert e.g a locking-pin into a complementary socket, after the bucket has been assembled onto or into the coupler. This operation, and the operation of releasing the locking-pin, have been difficult to automate without adversely affecting the integrity of the lock. (Herein, to ‘automate’ the operations means to enable the operations to be carried out by the tractor-driver, from the cab of the tractor.)
An aim of the present technology is to provide a coupler in which these tasks are simplified, and in which the operational elements of the tasks are able to take place largely automatically, i.e without the driver needing to get down from the tractor in order to perform tasks actually on the coupler.
In the present design, in order to pick up a bucket from the ground, and to lock the bucket, the operator simply engages the coupler with the hooks and lugs on the bucket. After performing this one simple action, which can be done without the driver getting down from the tractor, the bucket is left safely secured and locked to the coupler.
The technology is described as it relates to a four-point coupler, for example of the European standard configuration. The coupler may be operated with twin hydraulic rams (as in the drawings), or with one single ram. The technology can be adapted to many other coupler formats.
Sheet 1/6:
Sheet 2/6:
Sheet 3/6:
Sheet 4/6:
Sheet 5/6:
Sheet 6/6:
In
The dispositions of the left and right top-hooks 27, and of the bottom-lugs 30, on the back face of the bucket 23, are shown in
The coupler 20 includes a slider-spring 49, which connects the slider 34 to the frame 32, and biasses the slider 34 to move to the right. Thus, the slider-spring 49 urges the slider 34 towards the position in which the bottom-pin 29 of the coupler lies inside the pin-hole 43 of the bottom-lug 30—but, in
In
In
The detailed sequence of operations and interactive movements of the components, which take place when the bucket is being picked up and locked, will now be described with reference to
In
The arrows in several of the views show that the indicated component has moved with respect to its position in the previous view.
In view-A of
View-A. The driver parks the tractor, the coupler 20 being in its bucket-locked-in condition, in which:
View-B. The driver gets down from the cab, and takes the handle 41 in hand,
View-C. The driver pulls the handle 41 out (i.e to the left), against the slider-spring 49:
The lever-spring 47 urges the lever 45 towards the sidebar 38, but
View-D. With the handle 41 pulled out, the driver rotates the handle 41,
View-E. The driver releases the handle 41,
View-F. The driver leaves the handle 41 in the condition as shown in view-E.
The driver—being now in the cab—operates the boom 21 to withdraw the coupler away from the fastening lug 30 (see
(In the views, the away-from-lug movement of the coupler 20 is represented as downwards movement of the fastening lug 30.)
The lever 45, urged by the lever-spring 47, follows the downwards-movement of the bottom-lug 30,
View-G. The driver moves the bottom fastening lug 30 further away.
The lever 45—urged by the lever-spring 47—follows the away-movement of the bottom-lug
View-H. The driver continues to move the bottom-lug 30 further away,
View-I. The driver continues to move the bottom-lug 30 further away,
View-J. The driver moves the bottom-lug 30 now clear of the coupler,
It will be understood that, in View.H and View.I, the rotational movement of View.H and the rightwards movement of View.I, under the urging of the slider-spring 49 and the lever-spring 47, take place more or less simultaneously, rather than sequentially. Also, it should not be regarded that the driver deliberately performs the movements depicted in Views.F,G,H,I separately and sequentially. Rather, the driver simply carries out the one single manipulation of the boom, in which the driver moves the coupler away from the bucket 23. This one manipulation automatically performs the operations shown by the sequence from View.F to View.J, and leaves the bucket 23 resting on the ground.
After the bucket 23 has been detached, the tractor can be driven with no accessory attached. The coupler remains in its latched-open-condition, as shown in
The operation of picking-up and locking a bucket into the coupler will now be described in relation to
View.K. This is the same view as View.J of
The driver can drive the tractor:
View.L. Now, the driver has positioned the tractor adjacent to the new bucket to be attached,
View.M. The driver continues to move the coupler to press the lever 45 against the bottom-lug 30,
View.N. The driver continues to move the coupler to press the lever 45 further against the bottom-lug 30,
View.O. The driver continues to move the coupler to press the lever 45 further against the nose 50 of the bottom-lug 30, moving the lever 45 against the lever-spring 47.
Now, the lever 45 breaks free of, and moves clear of, the lever-face 65 of the cam-unit 36.
View.P. From the position shown in View.K until View.O, the slider 34 was blocked from moving rightwards, by the engagement of the lever-face 65 of the cam-unit 36 against the left side of the lever 45.
Now, with this block removed, the slider 34, urged to the right by the slider-spring 49, moves rightwards,
The importance will now be explained, of the fact that the cam-unit 36 has two abutment faces, being:
1) the plate-face 58 which can contact the left side of the inner-plate 56, and thereby can hold the slider 34 from moving to the right, and
2) the lever-face 65 which can contact the left side of the lever, and thereby equally can hold the slider 34 against rightwards movement.
The layout of the components is such that, when the driver pulls the slider 34 to the left, the driver can rotate the slider until the plate-face 58 overlies the portion of the left side of the inner-plate 56 that lies above the top-wall 63 of the plate-aperture 54. This rotational movement is the movement between View.C and View.D of
The driver leaves the coupler in the condition shown in View.E, and gets back into the cab, and commences to manipulate the boom to withdraw the coupler from the bucket (View.F). As the driver withdraws the coupler, the lever-spring 47 urges the lever into contact with the floor 61 of the channel 60 of the cam-unit (View.G). In View.H the lever has travelled far enough, downwards, that the plate-face 58 breaks contact with the side of the inner-plate 56. Consequently, the cam-unit (and the slider as a whole) move to the right, urged by the slider-spring 49.
But, at this point, the lever 45 occupies the channel 60 of the cam-unit 36. Therefore, the slider moves only a short distance rightwards, until the lever-face 65 contacts the lever 45.
Thus, as the coupler is progressively withdrawn from the bucket fastening lug 30 (View.F to View.I), at first the plate-face 58 holds the slider against rightwards movement, and this condition obtains until the lever is moved into the channel 60. Now, the continuing downwards rotation of the lever, and the slider, releases the plate-face from the inner-plate. Now, the lever-face 65 takes over the task of holding the slider 34 against rightwards movement. Thus, in View.J, the slider is retained in its pulled-out position; rightwards movement of the slider is prevented by the presence of the lever 45 in the channel 60, in that the presence of the lever in the channel blocks the slider from moving rightwards, whereby the coupler is left in its latched-open condition, set ready to accept another bucket.
The task of transferring the blocking function from the plate-face 58 to the lever-face 65 is accomplished simply by moving the coupler progressively away from the fastening lug of the bucket.
Thus, the coupler remains in its latched-open condition until the lever 45 is rotated upwards, out of contact with the lever-face 65 of the channel—which is what happens when the fastening lug of the next bucket enters the coupler.
When the next bucket is to be picked up, the task of releasing the slider from the lever-face 65 of the cam-unit, and of engaging the bottom-pin 29 into the lug-hole 43 of the new bucket, is accomplished simply by moving the coupler progressively onto the nose 50 of the fastening lug 30 of the new bucket. The nose 50 of the fastening lug moves the lever 45 (i.e pushes the lever to rotate the lever towards its up-position in
The designer arranges the configurations of the components such that the bottom-pin 29 is aligned with the lug-hole 43, at the moment when the lever 45 breaks free of the lever-face 65, and emerges from the channel 60.
Thus, in order to release the bucket from the coupler, the driver simply pulls the handle, and sets the slider as in View.E of
As mentioned, the coupler described herein is capable of carrying out its various tasks and operations without the need for a power source—apart from the need to re-energize the springs. The energy needed to re-energize the lever-spring comes from the force supplied by the tractor to move the boom, to cause the bottom-lug to enter the coupler. The energy needed to re-energize the slider-spring is supplied by the driver, upon pulling the slider to the right.
In an alternative coupler, the coupler is designed to enable the operations of picking up the bucket, locking the bucket in, unlocking the bucket, and detaching the bucket from the coupler, all to be performed by the driver, by operating the boom controls in the cab of the tractor. However, this degree of full automation requires a prime-mover, i.e a powered creator of mechanical movement, actually on the coupler. (It will be understood that the coupler technology that is depicted and described herein does not have full automation in this sense, and in particular it does not have a powered prime-mover actually on the coupler.)
Full automation, though easy enough to provide, can be expensive, and is not the preferred option. It is recognized that the less-than-full degree of automation described herein—which stops short of including a powered prime mover actually on the coupler—provides a very favourable compromise between (expensive) full automation and the (inefficient) smaller degrees of automation that can be seen in prior art couplers.
In the examples described herein, the coupler carries out its mechanical operations by releasing energy that is stored on the coupler in e.g a mechanical spring (e.g the slider-spring 49). The release of energy stored in the spring is controlled within and by the coupler, which is arranged to trigger the release at the correct moment. If a powered prime mover were provided, its function could be arranged to be to supply the energy that is needed in order to re-set the coupler, i.e to re-energize the spring or springs.
Of course, full automation can take more expensive forms, in which the designers provide many hydraulic rams, position-sensors, feedback loops, and so on. One of the benefits of the present technology is that there is no need for a powered prime-mover actually on the coupler, in that the driver can very easily re-energize the slider-spring, by manual manipulation of the slider handle. Of course, the driver has to get down from the tractor to do this. However, the time taken is small, and the overall reduction in efficiency can be regarded as trivial; thus, designers might well consider that stopping short of full automation is worth it, to avoid the need for introducing hydraulic components actually onto the coupler.
On the other hand, providing powered hydraulic equipment on tractors is a common everyday thing. Providing just one hydraulic ram, one control-valve, and one set of feed-return lines is as simple as it gets, when it comes to providing automated power. One option for providing full automation would be to provide the power source in the form of a hydraulic ram mounted on the coupler, and operating the ram to re-energize the springs.
It is preferred, therefore, not to implement full automation of the pick-up and put-down tasks, but to arrange for the human driver to provide the input of energy required in order to re-energize the springs, and to re-set the coupler to the latched-open position. Now, the coupler is primed and ready for the task of picking-up and locking-in the next bucket—automatically. Thus, it is arranged that, when the time comes to detach the bucket, the driver gets down from the cab and pulls the slider to the left, by hand manipulation. The driver also rotates the slider. These actions, as described, re-energize the slider-spring, and re-set the various components to the positions they need to be in to enable the coupler to perform the various tasks as described.
Of course, when done manually, the task of re-energizing the coupler springs could be performed by someone other than the driver. The need to provide an assistant to do an occasional task can be a source of huge inefficiency. (An assistant would be needed if, for example, the equipment were so designed that an operation has to be carried out on the coupler simultaneously with the boom being operated by the driver.) (The fact that a piece of farm equipment would require an assistant to be available to perform a regular but small task, would generally count against the adoption of that piece of equipment.)
Besides, it is no bad thing for the driver to be required to pull the slider out by hand. The fact of doing so means that the driver inevitably checks regularly that the slider slides freely, and is not damaged, iced-up, caked with dirt, etc. Again, the driver only needs to get down from the cab in order to pull the slider out. This action releases the present bucket, and re-sets the coupler to its latched-open condition, ready to pick up the next bucket, which will take place at some point in the future. The driver does not need to get down from the cab in order to lock the bucket into the coupler, e.g by inserting a pin; the locking operation is performed automatically on the next bucket simply as a consequence of the fastening lug of the next bucket entering the coupler.
As the locking operation is completed, the slider moves to the right, and the bottom-pin 29 passes through the lug-hole. In fact, the slider-spring slams the slider quite violently to the right, creating a loud bang. The bang signifies that the next bucket has been fully and properly locked into the coupler, and the prudent driver will listen for the bang to signal the bucket-locked-in condition.
Some further aspects of the structure and operation of the coupler will now be discussed.
To release the bucket, the driver grasps the handle 41, and pulls the slider 34 to the left. Depending on the rotational (i.e the up/down) position of the slider (and the handle), the cam-unit 36 might not clear the top-wall 63 of the plate-aperture 54—if so, the driver can (manually) rotate the handle until the cam-unit can pass freely through the plate-aperture 54 (
Now, with the slider pulled fully to the left, the driver rotates the handle towards the up-position of the slider, such that the plate-face 58 of the cam-unit now cannot pass through the plate-aperture 54 (
Thus, the driver pulls the slider to the left, rotating the slider as required, until the plate-face 58 of the cam-unit is pressing against the left side of the inner-plate 56. Then, the driver lets go of the slider; at this time, the slider cannot move to the right, because the plate-face 58 is abutting the inner-plate 56. The driver resumes his seat in the tractor, and now manipulates the boom so as to withdraw the coupler from the bucket.
During this movement of the lever 45 that results from the withdrawal of the bottom-lug, as shown in
As the withdrawal of the bottom-lug continues, the lever-spring 47 moves the lever 45 and the sidebar 38 together, to a point at which the tip 67 of the plate-face 58 breaks contact with the left side of the inner-plate 56. Now, the slider being urged rightwards by the slider-spring, the plate-face of the cam-unit 36 is free to pass rightwards through the plate-aperture 54. However, the slider can move only a small distance rightwards, because the lever 45 lies in the path of the lever-face 65 of the cam unit. (This small distance that the slider moves rightwards is shown in the transition from
Thus, when the bottom-lug 30 is clear of the coupler, although the plate-face 58 no longer blocks the slider from moving rightwards, the task of blocking the slider from moving rightwards has been taken over by the engagement of the lever-face 65 against the lever 45. Thus, the act of withdrawing the coupler from the bottom-lug of the bucket still leaves the slider 34 blocked against rightwards movement—but now the agent that blocks the slider is the engagement of the lever-face 65 against the lever 45.
In
Some of the terms and expressions used herein are illustrated and defined as follows.
The slider-left position of the slider is shown in
In its slider-up rotational position, the slider is blocked from passing through the plate-aperture 54 in the frame. The slider-up position of the slider is shown in
An intermediate up/down rotational position of the slider is shown in
The lever-up rotational position of the lever is shown in
The coupler is capable of adopting three conditions:
(1) the slider-held condition, in which the bottom-lug is entered in the coupler, the slider is in its slider-left and slider-up positions, the lever is in its lever-up position, and the frame-abutment engages the frame. (
(2) the latched-open condition, in which there is no bottom-lug in the coupler, the slider is in its slider-left and slider-down positions, the lever is in its lever-down position, and the lever-abutment engages the lever. (
(3) the accessory-locked-in condition, in which the bottom-lug is locked into the coupler, the slider is in its slider-right and slider-up positions, the lever is in its lever-up position, and both abutments are disengaged. (
The coupler is in its accessory-locked-in condition when the bottom-pin lies inside the lug-hole of the bucket or other accessory, the lever is in its lever-up position, and the slider is in its slider-up position and in its slider-right position (
The coupler is in its latched-open condition when no accessory is present, the slider is in its slider-left position and in its slider-down position, and the lever is in its lever-down position. (
In the several views of
In View.F, the bottom-lug of the bucket is starting to be withdrawn, which enables the lever and the slider to rotate downwards, and thereby allows the coupler to change from its slider-held condition to its latched-open condition. The change to the latched-open condition has been completed in View.I.
In the several views of
The slider-left position is the position of the slider when the coupler is in its slider-held condition, and when the coupler is in its latched-open condition. The slider-right position is the position of the slider when the coupler is in its accessory-locked-in condition.
In the drawings, the plate-face 58 serves as a right-facing lever-abutment, and the lever-face 65 serves as a right-facing frame-abutment. Both are components of the cam-unit 36, which is integrated into the slider 34.
Preferably, the direction of the up/down mode of movement of the slider should be substantially at right angles to the direction of the left/right mode of movement (as in the drawings). Thus, the up/down movements of the slider (and of the lever) can take place independently of, and without affecting, the left/right movements of the slider—and vice versa.
An important safety/security aspect will now be described. It will be noted that the lever-spring 47 only starts to exert its force on the slider, to push the slider towards its down-position, when (i.e after) the lever has made contact with the floor 61 of the channel 60 of the cam-unit. Thus, the plate-face 58 of the cam-unit cannot even start to move free of its contact with the inner-plate 56, until the lever has entered the channel 60 and the lever-spring 47 is pressing the lever against the floor 61 of the channel. It follows that, in the latched-open condition of the coupler, the lever is bound to be in contact with the floor of the cam-unit. Again, the blocking effect of the plate-face 58 against the plate 56 can only start to be released when (i.e after) the lever has made full contact with the floor 61 of the channel 60 of the cam-unit. The safety aspect that arises from this fact can be understood as follows.
It will be understood that, when the coupler has been withdrawn from the bucket, the tractor can now be driven normally, but without a bucket or other accessory being attached to the boom. In fact a considerable time may elapse before the tractor driver has occasion to pick up the next bucket. The designers should see to it that, during that time, the latched-open condition (being the stored energy-condition) of the coupler remains intact. Designers will recognize the possibility that the lever, inadvertently or accidentally, might move clear of the lever-face 65, and thus trigger the slider-spring to pull the slider rightwards—for example if the coupler were to be subjected to a heavy jar. It is recognized that the chances of the lever being jarred clear of the lever-face might or would be dangerously high if the lever were to be only partly in contact with the lever-face, i.e if the lever were not pressed firmly against the floor of the channel. Thus, the fact that the plate-face 58 cannot start to move clear of the left side of the inner-plate 56 until the lever is touching the floor 61 of the channel, makes it (almost) impossible for this dangerous condition to occur.
The reason it might be dangerous if the coupler were to lose its latched-open condition, prior to the next bucket being picked up, is that the driver might not notice the loss of the latched-open condition. If that happened, it might be possible for the driver, upon picking up the next bucket, to think that the bucket has been attached and securely locked into the coupler, whereas in fact the bucket is only precariously resting on the coupler—which of course would be very dangerous. Again, the fact that the lever is fully in position to block rightwards movement of the slider, before the plate-face 58 has even started to move out of its blocking position, removes the danger.
Some further details of the operation of the coupler will now be described.
In the depicted coupler 20, the driver puts the coupler into its slider-held condition (View.E) by manually manipulating the coupler. To do this, first the driver pulls the handle 41 and moves the slider 34 to its slider-left position. At this time, in order for the cam-unit 36 of the slider to pass through the plate-aperture 54 in the inner-plate 56 of the frame, the driver rotates the slider to its slider-down position (View.B).
Once the cam-unit has passed through the plate-aperture 54, the driver rotates the slider upwards to its slider-up position (View.D). Now, the slider cannot pass through the plate-aperture 54; rather, the driver having released the slider, the slider starts to move rightwards under the force of the slider-spring 49—but the plate-face 58 engages against the left side of the inner-plate (View.E), which blocks the cam-unit, and the slider, from moving rightwards away from its slider-left position.
Thus, in the slider-held condition of the coupler (View.E), the lever 45 plays no part in holding the slider in its slider-left position. In the slider-held condition, the bottom-lug 30 is still present within the coupler, and the nose of the bottom-lug holds the lever in its lever-up position. In the slider-held condition of the coupler, it is the engagement of the plate-face 58 of the cam-unit 36 against the left side of the inner-plate 56 that holds the slider in its slider-left position, against the action of the slider-spring 49.
The slider-held condition of the coupler (View.E) is a temporary condition. In both the slider-held condition and the latched-open condition (View.J), the slider is blocked from moving rightwards, under the action of the slider-spring. In the slider-held condition, the slider is blocked by the engagement of the plate-face 58 with the left side of the plate 56 of the frame; in the latched-open condition (View.J), the slide is blocked by the engagement of the lever-face 65 with the left side of the lever 45.
One function of the slider-held condition (View.E) is to hold the slider in its slider-left position temporarily, while the operation of separating the coupler from the bucket is being carried out—thereby putting the coupler into its full latched-open condition (View.J). The change from the slider-held condition of the coupler to the latched-open condition may be equated to the transfer of the blocking function from the engagement of the plate-face 58 of the cam-unit 36 against the left side of the plate 56, to the engagement of the lever-face 65 of the cam-unit against the left side of the lever. This is the change as shown in Views.F-J.
This change, from the slider-held condition to the latched-open condition, is accomplished entirely by the withdrawal of the bottom-lug 30 from the coupler (or rather, by the withdrawal of the coupler from the bottom-lug). That is to say, the driver does nothing in order to effect the change from the slider-held condition (View.E) to the latched-open condition (View.J), other than to manipulate the boom to separate the coupler from the bucket.
The coupler having been set into its slider-held condition, now the driver manipulates the boom, to move the bottom-lug out of the coupler. As the bottom-lug moves out, the lever rotates progressively towards its lever-down position (Views.F-J). The designers arrange for the first part of the downwards movement of the lever to move the lever fully into its blocking position, in which the lever now lies in the path of rightwards movement of the lever-face 65 (View.F-G).
With the lever established in this blocking position, the blocking task can now be transferred from the plate-face 58 to the lever-face 65. The designers arrange for this to be done by the second part of the downwards movement of the lever, as the bottom-lug continues to be withdrawn from the coupler. The descending lever having picked up the slider, the second part of the continuing downwards movement of the lever (under the action of the lever-spring) now also rotates the slider towards its slider-down position (Views.H-I).
In View.H, the slider has rotated far enough downwards that the top-ledge 67 is now below the top-wall 63 of the plate-aperture 54; i.e the right-facing plate-face 58 of the cam-unit is no longer in abutting contact with the left side of the plate 56. The slider-spring urges the slider to move to the right, and the slider moves rightwards (Views.H-I) the short distance until the right-facing lever-face 65 of the cam-unit engages and abuts the left side of the lever 45.
Thus, in Views.I-J, the slider is still held in its slider-left position, but now the slider is so held by the lever-face 65 engaging the lever, rather than by the plate-face 58 engaging the frame.
Thus, the transfer or changeover has now been achieved, from the slider-held condition of the coupler (View.E) to the latched-open condition (View.J). In View.J, the bottom-lug of the bucket has been fully withdrawn from the coupler, and the coupler is in its latched-open condition, ready to pick up the next bucket.
When the time comes to pick up the next bucket or other accessory, again the task of picking up and securely locking the next bucket to the coupler is accomplished entirely by the entry of the bottom-lug of the next bucket into the coupler. That is to say, the driver does nothing in order to effect the change from the latched-open condition (Views.J,K) to the bucket-locked-in condition (View.P), other than to manipulate the boom to move the bottom-lug of the bucket into the coupler.
The cam-unit 36 includes the right-facing plate-face 58 and the right-facing lever-face 65, and is integral with the slider. The two promontories, upon which these right-facing faces are formed, are shown, in the drawings, with left-facing surfaces which lie at an angle to the direction of the left/right movement of the slider. When the driver comes to pull the slider to the left, the driver should first rotate the slider downwards, in order for the promontories of the cam-unit to pass freely through the plate aperture 54. If the driver forgets or otherwise leaves the slider in its slider-up position, while pulling the slider to the left, the intent is that the sloping left-facing surfaces will assist the driver in rotating the slider downwards. But even so, e.g with an inexperienced driver, there can be some difficulty in rotating the slider in such manner as to enable the cam-unit to pass freely through the plate-aperture.
The guide 69 keeps the promontories within the profile of the top-wall 63 of the plate-aperture 54 at all times while the promontories lie to the right of the plate 56. This means that even new drivers will never have difficulty getting the slider into the right position so the promontories pass freely through the plate-aperture. The driver's task—of first pulling the slider to the left, and then rotating the slider to engage the plate-face 58 against the left side of the inner-plate 56—could hardly be simpler.
As mentioned, when picking up the next bucket, the driver manipulates the coupler so that the bottom-lug of the next bucket enters the coupler. The designers have seen to it that, as the bottom lug moves into the coupler, a nose of the bottom-lug engages the lever, and starts to move the lever. (In an alternative, the nose that engages and moves the lever is on a part of the slider other than the bottom-lug.)
The designers have harnessed the incoming movement of the bottom-lug, as the bottom-lug enters the coupler, as the agency that will trigger the release of the slider. Thus, the designers arrange for the incoming nose to move the lever far enough for the lever to clear the lever-abutment.
In the coupler as depicted, when the slider is in its left-position, and the lever is in its down-position, it is the engagement of the left side of the lever with the right side of the lever-abutment, that blocks the slider from moving rightwards. The designers have planned the structure of the coupler to harness the movement of the incoming bottom-lug to move the lever far enough, in its up direction, that the lever is finally pushed clear of the lever-abutment face on the cam unit of the slider. At that moment, the slider-spring slams the slider to its right-position (See
The designers of course must see to it that, at the moment when the lever finally moves into its up-position, i.e moves far enough to clear the lever-abutment, thereby releasing the slider, that the bottom-pin of the slider is, at that moment, aligned with the lug-hole in the bottom-lug of the bucket.
It is important not to release the slider too soon, nor too late, in that the bottom-pin would or might then ‘miss’ the lug-hole. However, there is no need for the bottom-pin to be a tight fit in the lug-hole, and the designers can readily plan the size of the lug-hole to provide a large enough clearance on the bottom-pin to allow for normal manufacturing inaccuracies and misalignments.
Thus, it is an easy matter for the designers to ensure that the lug-hole is always sufficiently well-aligned with the bottom-pin, at the moment of release of the slider, that the bottom-pin never misses the lug-hole, but always enters the lug-hole with clearance to spare. In
Terms of orientation (e.g “up/down”, “left/right”, and the like), when used herein, are intended to be construed as follows. The terms being applied to a device, that device is distinguished by the terms of orientation only if there is not one single orientation into which the device, or an image (including a mirror image) of the device, could be placed, in which the terms could be applied consistently.
The numerals used in the drawings can be summarized as:
The scope of the patent protection sought herein is defined by the accompanying claims. The apparatuses and procedures shown in the accompanying drawings and described herein are examples.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1315938.9 | Sep 2013 | GB | national |
This application is a Continuation-In-Part of U.S. Ser. No. 14/479,876 having a filing date of Sep. 8, 2014, which claims priority from GB-1315938.9 filed Sep. 6, 2013.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5419673 | Merhar | May 1995 | A |
5466113 | Norberg | Nov 1995 | A |
7001136 | Perrin | Feb 2006 | B2 |
7001137 | Perrin | Feb 2006 | B2 |
7674085 | Bystrom | Mar 2010 | B2 |
8549775 | Lanting | Oct 2013 | B2 |
8777546 | Lanting | Jul 2014 | B2 |
9342093 | Villarreal | May 2016 | B2 |
20040228716 | Perrin | Nov 2004 | A1 |
20070297888 | Bystrom | Dec 2007 | A1 |
20120189374 | Lanting | Jul 2012 | A1 |
20160033989 | Villarreal | Feb 2016 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20170328026 A1 | Nov 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 14479876 | Sep 2014 | US |
Child | 15664210 | US |