This disclosure relates generally to cable-suspended, tiltable dumping containers, such as hoppers and buckets, for a wide variety of liquid, semi-liquid and dry bulk materials used for industrial purposes.
More particularly, such a dumping container is movably suspended by a flexible, selectively retractable and extensible cable or other type of line from a support, such as a hoist boom, for selectively raising and lowering the container and its contents and then tilting the container to dump its contents in a particular place.
It is desirable that the tilting of the container be controllable remotely, without the need for an attendant at the dumping location to control the tilting action, nor the need for any additional line to the container, or any powered actuator on the container, to control the tilting action.
An exemplary embodiment of the dumping system is shown in
In the exemplary figures a support, such as an exemplary hoist boom 2, extends from a crane or other type of industrial equipment (not shown) to provide a support for suspending the dumping system by means of a single selectively extensible and retractable cable-type hoist line 4 which vertically supports the dumping container 6. A first pulley 8 is attached by a first attachment element 10 to the container 6 so that the line 4 can be wrapped under the pulley 8. The attachment element 10 preferably is in the shape of a bail which is pivotally attached to the container 6 at two opposed pivot points 12 and 14. The line 4 proceeds from under the pulley 8 to a second pulley 16 attachable by a clevis-type hanger 15 to the support 2 so that the line is wrapped over the pulley 16.
Associated with the second pulley 16 is a selectively actuated line brake 26 which may take different hydraulic, pneumatic, or electrical forms, and which is controlled remotely through a conduit 28 (
Preferably the second attachment element 18 contains a guide pulley 24 under which the line 4 is wrapped on its way from the first pulley 8 to the second pulley 16 for purposes to be explained hereafter. It should be understood that the pulley 24, and the pivotal bail-shaped first and second attachment elements 10 and 18, represent merely preferred embodiments, and may be replaced by other forms of these features in other embodiments of the invention. For example, the first and second attachment elements 10 and 18 may alternatively not be bail-shaped, or one or both of them may be fixedly attached to the container or movably attached slidably or in some other non-pivotal fashion.
When it is desired merely to raise or lower the load, the caliper portions 26a and 26b of the brake 26 are not actuated and the pulleys 16 and 17, over which line 4 is wrapped in multiple turns, turn freely. Therefore, during normal raising or lowering of the container 6 to position it for dumping, the line 4 can be retracted or extended, as the case may be, while the line 4 moves around freely rotating pulleys 8, 24, 16 and 17 of the system to move the container 6 upward or downward in a level attitude as depicted in
When the container 6 is properly positioned for dumping, the brake calipers 26a and 26b can be remotely actuated through control conduit 28, causing the pulleys 16 and 17 to be clamped tightly and thereby preventing rotation of the pulleys 16 and 17. The friction of the multiple turns of the line 4 around the multiple grooves of the pulleys 16 and 17 prevents slippage of the line 4 relative to the clamped pulleys and thereby fixes the length of the line portion 4a between the pulley 16 and the attachment point 18a where the line 4 attaches to the second attachment element 18. Alternatively, sufficient turns around the pulley 16 alone could accomplish the same purpose, rendering pulley 17 unnecessary if desired.
The foregoing braking of the rotation of the second pulley 16 still permits rotation of the first pulley 8, as well as the guide pulley 24. Therefore, the operator can extend line 4 which increases the length of line portion 4b while the length of line portion 4a remains fixed as shown in
It should be understood that other alternative types of line brakes 26 could be used herein. For example, a line-clamping brake could be used instead of a pulley-clamping brake, with the result that the clamped line would frictionally prevent rotation of the second pulley 16. Alternatively, the pulley 16 could itself have an internal brake which prevents rotation of the pulley.
The ability of the preferred second attachment element 18 to be moved in opposite directions toward and away from the first attachment element 10, coupled with the control of such movement by the pulley 24, advantageously keeps the center of gravity of the container always horizontally between the positions of the two line portions 4a and 4b both in the horizontal attitude and in the fully tilted attitude of the container 6, in a manner which optimizes control of the container's suspended horizontal attitude and maximizes the tilting angle which can be obtained to ensure complete dumping of the container's contents. Conversely, the preferred movability of the first attachment element 10 toward and away from the second attachment element 18 facilitates movement of the element 10 out of the way during filling of the container, while further optimizing the positions of the two line portions 4a and 4b both in the horizontal attitude and in the fully tilted attitude of the container 6. The attachment elements 10 and 18 also preferably move relative to each other so that they come into contact with each other in the horizontal attitude of the container 6 as shown in
The terms and expressions which have been employed in the foregoing specification are used therein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions, of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
226557 | Seward | Apr 1880 | A |
376242 | Goetz | Jan 1888 | A |
866628 | Crowson | Sep 1907 | A |
1062208 | Williams | May 1913 | A |
1258833 | Venable | Mar 1918 | A |
1301626 | Watters | Apr 1919 | A |
1377744 | Baker | May 1921 | A |
1514000 | Kjode | Nov 1924 | A |
1717549 | Brosius | Jun 1929 | A |
1869989 | Venable | Aug 1932 | A |
1993800 | Plant | Mar 1935 | A |
2134991 | Whitmire | Nov 1938 | A |
2141702 | Walsh | Dec 1938 | A |
2443537 | Hilgeman | Jun 1948 | A |
2629190 | Berner | Feb 1953 | A |
3036393 | Baird, Jr. | May 1962 | A |
3102752 | Jenkins | Sep 1963 | A |
3424440 | Louis et al. | Jan 1969 | A |
3934917 | Paxton et al. | Jan 1976 | A |
4328987 | Zoudlik | May 1982 | A |
4351417 | Seiz et al. | Sep 1982 | A |
5404978 | Hagiwara | Apr 1995 | A |
5419417 | Madsack | May 1995 | A |
5649729 | Peterson | Jul 1997 | A |
5752334 | Immel | May 1998 | A |
6826466 | Rowlands et al. | Nov 2004 | B2 |
20030024137 | Briscoe et al. | Feb 2003 | A1 |
20030198548 | Stewart | Oct 2003 | A1 |
20130195593 | Knuth | Aug 2013 | A1 |
Entry |
---|
Gar-Bro Manufacturing Co., Concrete Placing Equipment, printed from www.garbro.com/concrete.htm on May 29, 2011, 5 pages, at least as early as 2009. |
Hippo Hopper Self-Dumping Hoppers, Crane Hoppers, printed from www.hippohopper.com/subcategory/tabid/55/Default.aspx?SubcategoryUID=5a9d0 on May 29, 2011, 2 pages, at least as early as 2009. |
Solution Dynamics Inc., Hoist Hopper, printed from www.self-dumping-hoppers.com/index.php?main—page=product—info&cPath=19&p on May 29, 2011, 1 page, at least as early as 2009. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120261372 A1 | Oct 2012 | US |