The invention relates to a sliding closure for a vessel containing molten metal, having a slider unit guided in a slider housing, said slider unit having a push rod that can be connected to the drive rod of a linear drive via a coupling, wherein a mounting element for the linear drive is provided on the slider housing, said element receiving the push rod and the drive rod on the coupling side.
Slide closures of this type are used, for example, for the continuous casting of steel in order during the casting process to steer the molten flow flowing out of the vessel and, if necessary, to interrupt it. Here it is known that the vessel must periodically be moved to and fro between the casting platform and the plant supplying the molten mass. In order to accelerate the operational procedures linear drives are provided in both stations. Here the latter are respectively pushed into the mounting element of the sliding closure where their drive rod is then coupled to the push rod of the slider unit. In European patent specification EP 0 875 320 a coupling provided for this purpose is described which facilitates the fitting and removal of the linear drive and simplifies the coupling processes.
However, with the known sliding closures of this type there is a risk that during operation, due to the rough method of operation or incorrect handling, the linear drive comes away from its mounting element and so causes severe disruption to the casting operation.
A similar thing can occur with the periodic transport of the vessel between the different stations of the plant. That is to say, there is then a risk that the sliding closure opens unintentionally if it is handled incorrectly during transport. In both cases the consequences are serious, both from a commercial point of view and with regard to the safety of the people employed here.
The object which forms the basis of the invention is to avoid these disadvantages and to provide a sliding closure of the type specified at the start which guarantees a high degree of operational reliability even with the rough operation which is normal at casting plants.
This object is achieved according to the invention in that the mounting element is equipped with a locking device for the linear drive and/or a locking device for the push rod of the slider unit.
In this way, on the one hand it is ensured that the linear drive is held correctly in the mounting element after said linear drive has been drawn into the latter until the sliding closure leaves the one station in order to change over to the other station. On the other hand, it is also ensured that the sliding closure does not open unintentionally during transport from one station to the other.
Furthermore, the invention makes provision such that the locking device for the linear drive has a locking rod attached to it parallel to the axis on the drive rod and which cooperates with a spring-loaded locking catch attached to the mounting element. In the fitted state the latter encompasses the locking rod sliding therein over the whole stroke length of the drive and so causes the latter to sit securely in the mounting element for as long as it is fitted in the latter.
It is advantageous within the context of a simple design for the locking rod to be attached to a flange of the drive rod in the region of its coupling part.
According to the invention the locking rod has on the coupling side a recess which when the drive rod is drawn in can engage with the locking catch and afterwards can be released again from the locking catch. The locking and unlocking of the linear drive takes place automatically when the latter is drawn in and out with the drive rod drawn in.
Advantageously the locking rod has on its end facing away from the coupling a further recess which can be released from the locking catch when the drive rod is drawn out. Here the unlocking of the linear drive also takes place automatically when the latter is drawn out with the drive rod drawn out.
The invention also makes provision such that the locking catch is mounted laterally to the locking rod in a bolt guided within the mounting element, it advantageously being able to be spread open by turning or moving the bolt. Therefore, by operating the bolt the locking of the linear drive can be released at any time as required.
Furthermore, according to the invention provision is made such that the locking device has for the push rod of the slider unit a spring-loaded lever pivotably mounted in the mounting element which is provided with a detent disposed close to the pivot axis and a blocking pin disposed on the lever end facing away from the pivot axis, the detent and the blocking pin projecting into the mounting element and cooperating here with the coupling part of the drive rod or with a stop surface of the push rod. When the linear drive is drawn out of the mounting element the detent, and so the blocking pin, are automatically pivoted inwards by means of which the push rod is locked with the blocking pin. In this way one prevents the sliding closure from opening unintentionally during subsequent transport within the plant.
Alternatively, the locking device for the push rod can have two detents projecting into the mounting element and which are connected to one another by means of a connecting rod rotatably mounted in the mounting element, and which cooperate with stop surfaces of the linear drive and of the push rod which are advantageously formed by a stroke limitation bolt disposed laterally to the latter in the push rod and by a supporting plate of the linear drive that can be pushed into the mounting element. Upon drawing the linear drive into the mounting element the two detents are pivoted outwards and the push rod can move freely within the mounting element. If the linear drive is drawn out, both detents then pivot inwards again to such an extent that the push rod is locked by the detent cooperating with its stop surface.
In the following the invention is described in greater detail by means of a number of exemplary embodiments with reference to the drawings. These show as follows:
In order to move the slider unit 11 to and fro the latter can be connected via a push rod 14 and a coupling 15 to the drive rod 16 of a linear drive 17 in the form of a hydraulic cylinder/piston unit. The linear drive 17 is generally fitted onto the ladle 2 filled with molten metal and equipped with the closed sliding closure 1 when said ladle is brought onto the casting platform. After emptying the ladle the linear drive 17 is taken away from the ladle again. Next the ladle is transported by a crane away from the casting platform to a ladle location. Here the process described is repeated with a drive positioned at the ladle location.
On the slider housing 8, 10 a mounting element 18 receiving the push rod 14 and the drive rod 16 on the coupling side is provided for the linear drive 17. The coupling 15 located here is in the form of a catch coupling. As can be seen from
Disposed in the mounting element 18 there is a locking device 21 for the linear drive 27 which, as can be seen from
The locking catch 23 is mounted laterally to the locking rod 22 in a bolt 25 which is guided within the mounting element 18. Its two catch elements are thus held by the bolt 25. By taking away the bolt 25, if so required the catch elements can be released from the mounting element, by means of which the locking of the linear drive is cancelled.
The locking rod 22 has two recesses in the form of annular grooves 26, 27 which correspond to the stroke end positions of the drive rod 16. The diameter of the annular groove 26 has dimensions such that upon inserting the linear drive 17 in the mounting element 18 with a drawn in drive rod the annular groove 26 can engage with the locking catch 23, whereas when the linear drive 17 is drawn out it can be released from the locking catch 23.
When moving the drive rod 16 the locking rod 22 is also moved, the locking catch 23 encompassing the latter in the region between the annular grooves 26, 27 so strongly that it is then impossible to release the locking rod 22 from the locking catch 23 laterally to its longitudinal axis. Therefore, during its whole working stroke the linear drive 17 remains securely locked, and so automatically acting locking and unlocking is produced which takes place without any manual operation.
The diameter of the annular groove 27 has dimensions such that it can be released from the locking catch 23 when the linear drive 17 is drawn out of the mounting element 18. It is therefore possible, if so required, to remove the linear drive, even when the drive rod 16 is drawn out. Furthermore, the locking rod 22 serves to prevent the drive rod 16 from rotating.
The sliding closure according to
The pivot axis 30 of the lever 29 sits in a bearing block 36 which is attached to the mounting element 18. The lever 29 is acted upon by a spring 37 with an adjustment screw 38 in the inwardly pivoting direction.
If, however, the coupling is released again and the drive rod 16 drawn back, the tappet 31 can then pivot back into its initial position, by means of which the spring-loaded lever 29 pivots back and the blocking pin 32 projects once again into the trajectory of the stroke limitation bolt 34. In this way it is ensured that after the linear drive 17 has been dismantled, the sliding closure does not open unintentionally because then the push rod 14 is locked by the blocking pin 32. With this locking device 28 automatically acting locking and unlocking has in turn been produced.
With the sliding closure according to
The locking device 28 according to
Before inserting the linear drive 17 into the mounting element 18 the detents 47, 48 are pivoted into this mounting element 18. Upon drawing the linear drive into the mounting element the supporting plate 42 strikes the detent 48 with the stop surface 41 and pushes it out to such an extent that the detent 47 connected to it via the connecting rod 39 pivots out of the trajectory of the push rod 14. Therefore, the push rod 14 can move freely for as long as the linear drive 17 is inserted in the mounting element 18.
If the linear drive is drawn out of the mounting element 18, both detents 47, 48 can then pivot back with the result that the detent 47 then projects into the trajectory of the stroke limitation bolt 34 again. It is thus achieved that after the linear drive has been removed, the sliding closure does not open unintentionally during transport because the push rod 14 is then locked by the detent 47 in cooperation with the stop on the push rod.
As can be seen from the figures, the sliding closure according to
Due to the design proposed for the latter, it is also possible, without a great deal of complexity, to incorporate the locking devices subsequently into existing sliding closures.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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01170/07 | Jul 2007 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/005039 | 6/23/2008 | WO | 00 | 1/14/2010 |