The present invention relates to a system and method for providing reinforcement and/or moisture protection at discrete locations on a wooden cargo-carrying floor of a cargo-carrying body.
In the past decade and still today, the research and development effort for new products in the manufacturing industry of conventional laminated hardwood floor are mainly focused on the development of a floor using composite material which will increase the durability, the strength and the moisture protection of the cargo-carrying trailer/container floor. The weight of the new composite floor should, at minimum, have the same weight or preferably have less weight. Furthermore, all of the objectives should be reached at the lowest manufacturing cost.
Solutions to resolve these problems have been proposed by many in this field, and more recently by Padmanabhan U.S. Pat. No. 5,928,735 and Tunis U.S. Pat. No. 6,601,357.
Padmanabhan applies a reinforced thermoplastic ply to the entire bottom of the floor. Because reinforced ply increases the strength and stiffness of the trailer floor, the hardwood portion of the floor can be thinner. The result is a stronger and lighter trailer floor. The reinforced ply provides also a water impervious layer protecting the entire bottom part of the floor from moisture coming from the road.
Tunis provides a solution for moisture protection only. The thermoplastic ply is not reinforced and has as its sole purpose the protection of the floor from the attack of water spray and moisture over time. The thermoplastic ply covers the entire bottom surface of the floor.
The above-mentioned patents implicitly appear to be based on the same assumption: the entire area of the laminated hardwood cargo-carrying floors is exposed equally over the time to the same accumulation of the effects of stress and/or moisture attack. Based on that assumption, all the proposed solutions taught in the above-mentioned patents require necessarily that the remedy needs to be applied to the entire surface of the bottom part of the laminated hardwood floor. Furthermore, the reinforced and/or impervious moisture ply has the same thickness or the same degree of reinforcement or moisture protection all over the bottom floor.
In reality, different sections of the laminated hardwood cargo-carrying floor are not subject to the same accumulation effect of stress or exposition of moisture over time.
The present invention is directed to a system and method for providing reinforcement strength or moisture protection at discrete locations on a wooden cargo-carrying floor of a cargo-carrying body such as that of either a transport vehicle or a transport container, which reduces the cost associated with such manufacture, and provides at least equal if not better results.
A cargo-carrying floor surface reinforcing system for a cargo-carrying body comprising:
The following description of the invention will be better understood by reading the following text in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
a) is a side view of a truck with a trailer, which side view will be useful for making reference to most of the Figures following.
b) is a bottom view of a cargo-carrying flooring section showing four regions on the bottom surface of the flooring section which provide moisture protection at locations along the outer board areas proximate trailer wheel positions.
c) is a bottom view of a cargo-carrying flooring section showing two large regions on the bottom surface of the flooring section providing moisture protection to the extensive areas proximate the front and back sides of the flooring section and showing the location of trailer wheels in relation to the flooring section.
d) is a bottom view of a cargo-carrying flooring section of a trailer showing two long regions on the bottom surface of the flooring section providing water protection along the two outer board areas extending longitudinally from the front side to the back side of the flooring section and showing the location of trailer wheels in relation to the flooring section.
a) is a bottom view of a cargo-carrying flooring section showing a region of ply laminated onto wood extending longitudinally from the front side to the back side of the flooring section along the center board area providing strength protection, showing the location of trailer wheels in relation to the flooring section.
b) is an expanded lateral cross-sectional view of the flooring section illustrating the evenness of the flooring section at the joint between laminated wood board and typical wood board and
a) is a side view of a trailer showing three areas along the flooring section: a low stress accumulation area, a medium stress accumulation area and a high stress accumulation area, which Figure will also be useful when making reference to
b) is a side view of a cargo-carrying body showing an area proximate the front side of the flooring section which is not reinforced, a center area reinforced with a thin ply and an area proximate the back side of the flooring section reinforced with a thicker ply. In this case, the cargo-carrying body is made of continuous sections, and the thickness of the cargo carrying body is reduced by an amount equivalent to that of the thickness of the ply, resulting in an overall thickness for the cargo-carrying body that is even.
c) is a similar view as
a) is a side view of a cargo-carrying body showing three areas along the cargo-carrying flooring section: an area proximate the front side of the flooring section which is not reinforced, a center area reinforced with a thin ply and an area proximate the back side of the flooring section reinforced with a ply of equal or greater thickness than that of the center area. All three areas are not of the same total thickness—this results in an uneven bottom surface of the flooring section.
b) is a side view of a cargo-carrying body where the cargo-carrying body has a thickness at the front and a thickness at the back, providing a wedge-shaped cargo-carrying body, but where the reinforced ply has an even thickness.
As mentioned in the Summary of the Invention and making reference to
a) and 4a) are side views of a trailer with a truck which will be useful for understanding the descriptions of the present invention.
In order to describe the advantages of the present invention, a discussion of the history of exposure to the elements and stress of a hardwood cargo-carrying floor of a cargo-carrying trailer follows.
Stress Exposure
The front part of the floor has less passages of a lift truck than the rear or back (in the context of the present invention, the words “rear” and “back” are used interchangeably.) In North America, most trailers or containers are loaded from the rear to the front, exposing the rear to more passages of a forklift. In fact, the first 4 feet of the floor will almost never support the stress of the passage of the forklift comparatively of the last 4 feet where the number of passage will be 10 to 12 times more than the front. It can also be observed that the middle area of the laminated hardwood floor will support more passage than the outer area along the wall. The consequence is that the middle area at the rear of the floor suffers more damage than any other region of the floor. In fact, trailer manufacturers put more cross members at the rear instead of the front. Also, sometimes, a threshold plate can be installed on top of the first foot of the rear floor section to help to protect the floor from frequent passages of the forklift.
Moisture Exposure
Exposure to moisture coming from the road damages cargo-carrying (trailer/container) floors. Different regions of the floor incur different degrees of water damage. In reality, the bottom part of the floor at the rear or/and above the wheels is exposed to a great deal more direct and intensive water spray than any other area of the trailer.
Assuming that the effect of the stress and/or the moisture attack does not have the same impact on different areas of the laminated hardwood floor, the present invention offers a novel method for the application of reinforcement and/or moisture protection which reduces cost and offers superior protection and reinforcement.
Thus, the present invention teaches the application of reinforcement at discrete locations, and teaches the application of moisture protection at other discrete locations. This new philosophy to resolve the problem related to reinforcement and/or moisture protection of a laminated hardwood floor will create a variety of designs that will use several combinations of reinforcements and/or impervious moisture protection on the bottom of the laminated hardwood floor. These new innovative designs, which will maximize the use of a reinforced and/or moisture protection ply at the appropriate area on the bottom of the laminated hardwood floors, will reduce the total cost of manufacturing. These designs will have a significant economic advantage compared to the solution offered in the past. Economically speaking, it does not make sense to reinforce and/or protect from moisture the entirety of the bottom of a floor with the same type of reinforcement having the same strength and stiffness and/of having the same moisture protection durability.
Thus, the purpose of the invention is to offer a more economic product optimizing the design using reinforced and/or moisture protection layers having appropriate levels of reinforcement and/or moisture protection on the bottom of the trailer floors. Several combinations of reinforcement and moisture protection are thus now available.
The following is a non-exhaustive description of preferred embodiments of the invention, through some examples.
In rainy conditions, the parts of trailer that receive the greater exposure to moisture are above the wheels of the truck and the trailer itself. Intensive water spray and sand of rock coming from the wheels diminishes drastically the durability of a traditional under coat. In practice, after two years, the undercoat is literally washed-out from the bottom of the floor. One solution would be to glue (PUR, Epoxy, etc.) a plastic ply (or any other material), or to apply other materials such as tar or a resin, having a strong abrasive resistance onto the bottom surface of the floor but only along the regions above the wheels of the truck and the trailer itself.
A trailer floor is usually composed of eight boards having a width of about one foot. The boards along the outside wall are called outer boards and the six boards in the middle are called center boards. The outer boards, because they are along the wall, suffer less from the passage of the forklift compared to the center boards. When the forklift goes in and out of the trailer, it travels mainly in the middle of the trailer. Even when a pallet is placed along the trailer wall, the wheels of the forklift do not go completely over the outer boards along the wall. Modern forklifts are equipped with side shifts to prevent the forklift from hitting and damaging the wall of the trailer.
As previously mentioned, the rear of a trailer supports more passages of a forklift than any other part of a trailer floor.
b) shows such an arrangement, where the floor is continuous, front to back.
As shown in
The end result is a floor having the same thickness everywhere, but with three regions of varying strength and stiffness: a front region with minimum strength and stiffness, a middle region with intermediate strength and stiffness, and a rear region with maximum strength and stiffness. In this case, the cost is almost 35 to 45% less than the case where a continuous reinforced impervious layer is applied over the entire bottom surface of the cargo-carrying flooring section.
Examples 2 and 3 can be combined in a way such that the outer board and the front area of the flooring section are not reinforced. The cost of this option would be approximately less than half of the cost of applying a continuous reinforced impervious layer is over the entire bottom surface of the cargo-carrying flooring section.
In example 3, the different combinations of the thickness of the laminated hardwood floor and of the reinforced ply have the same total thickness, making the overall thickness of the floor all the same. End users and trailer manufacturers, where the floor is discontinuous, dislike having transversal joints between sections for several reasons. One reason is that the transversal joint can create problems with the forks of the forklift. The forklift can hit the joint and rap up the surface of the floor. For this reason, an end user may prefer to have a continuous even top surface, a surface contained within a single plane, over the entire length of the trailer but a bottom surface that is not even, viz. does not lie within a single plane. In this case (see
When the bottom surface is uneven, the cross member will not be at the same level. This problem has been pointed out to trailer manufacturers and it appears that the difference of level on the cross member does not represent a problem. In fact, the cross member can follow the different levels of the uneven bottom floor of the floor or wedges of appropriates thickness can be placed at desired locations to compensate for the uneven floor. In both cases the top surface of the floor will be in level making the floor parallel with the roof of the trailer.
In order to overcome a stability issue, wedges of appropriate thickness can be placed at desired locations to minimize the effects of an uneven floor, particularly at the front and at the centre.
Another design would be to take a floor as designed in examples 2, 3 and 4 and add a ply of moisture protection where protection is needed. A reinforced ply usually has the characteristic of being impervious to water. As such we do not need to double up on the protection by applying a moisture protection ply onto the reinforced ply. Moisture protection ply is necessary only where wood is exposed to excessive water spray: above the wheel.
The previous examples have clearly shown all the possibilities which are now available when changing the basic assumption: over time, all parts of the floor are not subject to the same accumulation effect of stress and moisture attack. From this, it makes more sense economically to reinforce and protect only those regions of the floor that need reinforcement or protection. A composite floor having reinforced ply and/or moisture protection only where it is needed will be as good as a composite floor having reinforced ply and/or moisture protection everywhere but will cost less. This cost advantage will be a strong and important one upon commercialization of the product.
Although the present invention has been explained hereinabove by way of a preferred embodiment thereof, it should be pointed out that any modifications to this preferred embodiment within the scope of the appended claims is not deemed to alter or change the nature and scope of the present invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060101754 A1 | May 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60626931 | Nov 2004 | US |