This invention relates to heavy equipment. The invention has particular application to draglines and other equipment having extended booms with tubular chords or lacings. The invention may be used to repair old booms or in the manufacture of new booms.
Dragline excavators have long booms which comprise a number of main tubular chords connected by tubular lacing. The tubular lacing is connected to the main chords at cluster joints.
Aside from the limited maintenance schedules which generally preclude lowering the boom and the outage cost associated with such an operation, lowering the boom is viewed by operators as a dangerous exercise exposing the operator to a potentially high risk event with significant financial consequences.
Conventional tubular boom structures typically have about 10% of the welds hidden from view by the overlapping nature of the cluster joint design. This makes routine inspection impossible. Even locating cracks by pressurizing chords of the boom and finding air leaks can be difficult.
Numerous failures of cluster joints on tubular booms have occurred throughout the world, some leading to catastrophic collapse of the boom.
Failures of cluster joints may be initiated by the growth of fatigue cracks at welds connecting the secondary lacings and the main chord. These regions are associated with high stress concentrations arising from the cluster geometry as well as the presence of weld beads. Where clusters have been weld repaired in situ, the fatigue life of the joint can be reduced due to incomplete penetration of the weld, inclusion of contaminants, irregular internal and external weld geometry and the generation of high residual stresses due to the welding process. If a failure at a cluster involves the main chord material it can be necessary to cut a window to gain access to the main chord and allow for repair of the chord through the window. After the repair is completed the window must be re-inserted and welded in place. This repair is difficult to conduct and causes damage to the cluster as a consequence of the constraints of the repair i.e. weld profile grinding or post weld dressing techniques are difficult to apply.
There is a need for dragline booms that have increased service lives. There is also a need for methods for repairing failures or defects in dragline booms in situ or when the boom is lowered, which avoid at least some of the disadvantages of current methods.
Exemplary embodiments are illustrated in referenced figures of the drawings. It is intended that the embodiments and figures disclosed herein are to be considered illustrative rather than restrictive.
Throughout the following description specific details are set forth in order to provide a more thorough understanding to persons skilled in the art. However, well known elements may not have been shown or described in detail to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the disclosure. Accordingly, the description and drawings are to be regarded in an illustrative, rather than a restrictive, sense.
This invention relates to a construction for dragline booms and similar boom structures. The construction may be applied to newly fabricated booms and also has application in repairing existing booms. The construction may be retrofitted to existing booms. The construction comprises a curved spade plate that provides an interface between a main chord of a boom and tubular lacing at a cluster joint. The curved spade plate connector can be accurately manufactured to match the cluster geometry. Use of the curved spade connector thereby avoids the need for complex three-dimensional weld geometry where the lacings come together with the chord. In some embodiments, the curved spade plate is connected to the tubular lacing members with plugs that fit into the tubular lacing members and can be rotated to provide axial and rotational alignment to corresponding connection features on the curved spade plate before they are welded in place.
A method for repairing a boom using a spade plate connector as described herein advantageously permits cutting away the lacings from the chord, thereby providing access to remove damaged or previously-repaired material. The exposed chord can be inspected and fully weld repaired before installing the spade plate. The method may be applied to a tubular dragline boom, for example to a Bucyrus™ type boom with tubular cluster joints, and presents a new method for repairing these clusters in a manner that can be performed efficiently and that can provide significantly improved fatigue life as compared to currently-used repair techniques. In some embodiments the method involves inserting plugs into ends of the cut-off lacing members, adjusting rotations and/or extensions of the plugs to align connecting features on the plugs with corresponding connecting features on the curved spade plate and then welding the plugs to the lacing members and to the curved spade plate. The curved spade plate is also welded to the main chord of the boom to provide a connection between the main chord and the lacing members.
One aspect of the invention provides a curved spade joint connector that has application in tubular dragline booms, for example on Bucyrus™ draglines. The cluster joints may be installed in situ without requiring lowering of the boom if adequate jigging is engineered to support the joint in this condition. Connectors as described herein may be installed during manufacture of a boom or installed during a repair, either in situ, or with the boom lowered.
Another aspect of the invention provides a boom, for example a dragline boom, comprising a cluster joint made with a spade connector as described herein. The boom may have a plurality of main chords. Lacing members may extend between spade connectors on different ones of the main chords. In some embodiments, the boom comprises a plurality of tubular main chords each having a plurality of cluster joints spaced apart along it. Each of the cluster joints comprises one or more spade connectors as described herein. Lacing members extend between the spade connectors on different ones of the main chords.
In the illustrated embodiment, lacing members 12 are coupled to spade plates 15 by way of coupling members 16 that are initially (until welded in place) rotatable and axially extendable relative to lacing members 12. Coupling members 16 may, for example, comprise plugs insertable into the bores of lacing members 12. Coupling members 16 may comprise slots 16B dimensioned to receive tabs 15B. In some alternative embodiments, coupling members 16 comprise sleeves 16A having inner diameters dimensioned to receive lacing members 12.
Cluster joint 10 has a number of advantages over prior art cluster joints as illustrated, for example in
As illustrated in
The curved plate geometry of connector 15 facilitates self-alignment of connector 15 to the axis of the main chord 14. Geometric details 27 (see
Where a cluster joint uses two spade plates (as shown for example in
Connector 15 may be prepared for welding attachment to main chord 14 by bevelling or chamfering edge 15A to facilitate attachment to main chord 14 with a full penetration weld.
In the illustrated embodiments, connector 15 is aligned along the axis of the primary member or chord 14. This reduces the exposure of weld transverse to the longitudinal axis of the primary member thereby increasing the fatigue life of connector weld 25.
A connector 10 may be installed at a cluster joint of a dragline boom by cutting out sections of the lacing members 12 that meet at the cluster joint. The primary member (e.g. main chord 14) can then be weld repaired to a high quality since there is ample access to the location at which the lacing members were formerly attached to the primary member. Each lacing member is cut back to the correct length to so that the plug 16 can mate with the appropriate tab of curved spade plate connector 15. Connector 15 is then positioned on the main chord 14 of the boom. At a suitable point after the spade connector 15 has been positioned on the main chord so that it aligns with the plugs 16, connector 15 is welded to main chord 14. Then the secondary lacing members 12 are connected to the spade plate connector 15 by welding plugs 16 onto lacing members 12 and by welding plugs 16 to connector 15. After welding, the welds may be profile ground to further reduce stress concentration effects associated with the weld profile. Further post-weld dressing such as shot or ultrasonic peening may be applied to improve the life of the repaired material by inducing a surface layer of residual compressive stress.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to the illustrated embodiments thereof, it should be understood that numerous other modifications and embodiments can be devised by those skilled in the art that will fall within the spirit and scope of the principles of this invention. For example, the features described herein and/or shown in the accompanying drawings may be combined in any suitable combinations or sub-combinations including those that are described herein. Further, the embodiments and features may be modified and/or added to ways that would be inferred by those skilled in the art from this description and/or the accompanying drawings.
For example
In other non-preferred alternative embodiments, connector plates may have the form of flat plates bent along one or more discrete bend lines to provide a concave face and a convex face as opposed to being continuously curved as illustrated, for example, in
An advantage of the embodiments illustrated in the drawings is that, after repair, main chord 14 is exposed (where it was previously covered by the cluster joint) and therefore easily accessed for inspection and any necessary future repairs.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119 of U.S. Application No. 61/859,235 filed 28 Jul. 2013 and entitled STRUCTURAL CONNECTORS FOR DRAGLINE BOOM AND MAST TUBULAR CLUSTERS AND METHODS FOR REPAIR, REINFORCEMENT AND LIFE EXTENSION OF DRAGLINE BOOMS AND MASTS which is hereby incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
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Number | Date | Country |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20150030378 A1 | Jan 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61859235 | Jul 2013 | US |