Claims
- 1. A slow speed hammermill having a housing with an inlet for receiving oversized wood chips and a rotor assembly disposed within the housing for reducing the oversized wood chips to wood chips having a desired size comprising:
- a plurality of hammers attached to the rotor assembly;
- a screen bar assembly having a plurality of screen bars spaced from each other and secured within the housing adjacent to the rotor assembly;
- the rotor assembly having a generally cylindrical configuration with a longitudinal axis of rotation extending through the housing;
- the screen bar assembly having a generally semicircular configuration with a radius of curvature compatible with the configuration of the rotor assembly;
- the screen bars extending substantially parallel with the longitudinal axis of the rotor assembly;
- each screen bar inclined at an angle relative to the longitudinal axis of rotation of the rotor assembly; and
- a beveled surface formed on one edge of each screen bar adjacent to the rotor assembly whereby the hammers cooperate with the beveled edges of the screen bars to form wood chips having the desired size.
- 2. The slow speed hammermill of claim 1 wherein the plurality of hammers comprise fixed hammers.
- 3. The slow speed hammermill of claim 1 wherein the plurality of hammers comprise swing hammers.
- 4. The slow speed hammermill of claim 1 wherein the plurality of hammers comprise flexible hammers.
- 5. The speed hammermill of claim 1 wherein each hammer comprises a first opening with a first support rod extending therethrough and a second, enlarged opening with a second support rod extending therethrough.
- 6. A method for manufacturing equipment for producing resized wood chips from oversized wood chips comprising the steps of:
- forming a housing having an upper housing assembly with an inlet for receiving the oversized wood chips, a lower housing assembly with an outlet for the resized wood chips, and a path for movement of wood chips from the inlet to the outlet;
- rotatably securing a rotor assembly extending longitudinally through the housing between the upper housing assembly and the lower housing assembly with the rotor assembly having a plurality of hammers attached thereto for use in resizing oversized wood chips;
- installing a screen bar assembly formed from a plurality of screen bars and having a radius of curvature corresponding approximately with the exterior of the rotor assembly with the screen bar assembly extending between the upper housing assembly and the lower housing assembly to partially restrict the path after the oversized wood chips which have been impacted by the rotor assembly;
- orienting each of the screen bars with a positive sweep angle relative to the direction of rotation of the rotor assembly; and
- forming a beveled surface on each of the screen bars with the beveled surface spaced radially from the rotor assembly.
- 7. The method of claim 6, further comprising:
- forming a plurality of mesh blocks having a length, width and thickness;
- forming a notch in a portion of each mesh block to receive a portion of one of the respective screen bars therein; and
- selecting the length of the mesh blocks to correspond generally with the desired size of the resized wood chips.
- 8. The method of claim 6 further comprising the step of orienting each screen bar with a spacing of approximately three inches between adjacent screen bars to decrease the quantity of fines and undersized wood chips produced by cooperation between the flexible hammers and the screen bar assembly while at the same time controlling the quantity of oversized chips produce by such cooperation to within acceptable limits.
- 9. The method of claim 6 further comprising the steps of forming a plurality of flexible hammers and attaching the flexible hammers to the rotor assembly whereby at least a portion of each flexible hammer may move radially inward and radially outward relative to the rotor assembly.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a division of pending U.S. Application Ser. No. 08/791,101, filed Jan. 24, 1997, entitled "Slow Speed Hammermill for Size Reduction of Wood Chips," by James C. Elliott and John R. Blake, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,842,693.
US Referenced Citations (31)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (3)
Entry |
Jeffrey.RTM. Wood and Bark Hogs and Shredders, Catalogue 24591, Jeffrey/ Dresser,1991 (pp. 1-8). |
Flextooth.RTM. Crushers, Catalogue 24994, Jeffrey/ Indresco, 1994 (7 pages). |
Jeffrey.RTM. Type AB Hammermills, Catolog 25294, Jeffrey/Indresco, 1994 (pp. 1-8). |
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
791101 |
Jan 1997 |
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