The present invention relates to an apparatus and a method for assembling two and three ply temporary road mats.
Temporary road mats are used extensively to allow vehicles and equipment to reach locations not serviced by permanent roads, particularly under conditions where a ground surface would not support the traffic or where the temporary nature of use does not warrant the time and expense of a permanent road. The temporary road mats are generally constructed from multiple layers of heavy wood timbers in crisscrossing layers.
The timber mats are typically laid up by hand on a conveyor, drilled by hand, the timbers are cut to length by hand and the bolts inserted by hand which is very labor intensive and not very precise.
Timber mat production machines are known devices and disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,745,452, U.S. Pat. No. 7,210,211; U.S. Pat. No. 8,066,447 and provide mechanization and automation to part of the production process. The present invention improves upon the known devices.
It is the object of the invention to provide an apparatus for industrialized high volume production of timber mats which offers a higher level of precision and cost savings over manual production.
The object is achieved by an apparatus for producing timber mats including plural layers of timbers that are parallel to each other and offset from each another at uniform intervals in each layer, wherein timbers in adjacent layers are oriented perpendicular to one another forming an array of intersections spaced in longitudinal columns and lateral rows, the apparatus including a timber mat layup table; a first lateral timber input oriented in a first direction and arranged at a first side of the timber mat layup table; a second lateral timber input oriented in a second direction opposite, coaxial and parallel to the first direction and arranged at a second side of the timber mat layup table opposite to the first side of the timber mat layup table; a longitudinal timber input oriented in a third direction perpendicular to the first direction and the second direction and arranged at a third side of the timber mat layup table; a timber mat output oriented in the third direction arranged at a fourth side of the timber mat layup table opposite to the third side of the timber mat layup table; a timber mat drilling table arranged adjacent to the timber mat output on a side of the timber mat output that is opposite to the timber mat layup table; a gang drill arrangement that is movable in the first direction and in the second direction and includes plural drilling heads spaced in the third direction to drill the timber mat including plural layers of mutually perpendicular timbers in a vertical direction at the intersections of the timbers.
The object is also achieved by a method for producing timber mats including the steps: feeding timbers in at least one lateral direction to a timber mat layup table through at least one lateral timber input; feeding timbers in a longitudinal direction perpendicular to the at least one lateral direction to the timber mat layup table through a longitudinal timber input; laying up timbers in at least two layers with the timbers of each layer arranged perpendicular to one another to form a timber mat; moving the timber mat from the timber mat layup table through a timber mat output coaxial and parallel to the longitudinal timber a side of the timber mat layup table that is opposite to the longitudinal timber input to a drilling table arranged adjacent at the mat output opposite to the mat layup table; drilling the timber mat through a gang drill a arrangement at the drilling table which gang drill arrangement is movable back and forth in the lateral direction and includes plural drilling heads spaced in the longitudinal direction to drill the timber mat at intersection points of the timbers.
The invention is described based on advantageous embodiments with reference to drawing figures, wherein:
The timber mats 20 include two or three layers of timbers 21. The timbers are parallel to each another and laterally offset from one another at uniform intervals in each layer. Timbers in adjacent layers are oriented perpendicular to each other. The timbers are typically made from oak and typically 2 inches thick, 8 inches wide and 8-20 feet long. The timber mats typically have a size of 8 feet×14 feet.
The three timber mat inputs 40, 50 and 60 function analogously. Therefore only the function of the second lateral timber input 50 is described in detail in an exemplary manner. A forklift places timbers strapped into bundles approximately 3 ft tall and 4 ft wide on an infeed conveyor 51 illustrated in
The infeed conveyor chain 61 is moved forward and a first bundle of timbers 21 is pulled against a squaring angle 52 at an end of the in-feed conveyor 51 that is proximal to a column de-stacker 55. The bundle which has a maximum height of 29″ is squared and aligned at a squaring angle 52 through moving it against the squaring angle with an in feed conveyor chain 61 running towards the squaring angle.
Then the in feed conveyor 51 is stopped and the first column of the bundle is held at the squaring angle by a pair of grippers 54 of which only one is shown in
The first column of timbers is raised by the pair of grippers 54 until the top timber hits until a vertical limit 57. When the top timber is at a defined height the de-stacker 55 with a finger hook 56 engages the top timber of first the column and pulls the top timber onto a slide 58 rail towards a centering device 59 as illustrated in
After the centering device 59 the timber is pulled by two saw feed hooks 63 onto the sawing table and pulled through the circular saw arrangement 80 including two circular saw blades.
The first column of timbers is then moved up by one timber so that it contacts the limit switch 57 again so that another timber can be fed to the circular saw arrangement.
After the circular saw the timbers continue on a separator feed chain conveyor 64 into a separator 90 typically configured as a Geneva device that picks up one timber at time and flips it over laterally by 180° to separate timbers on the separator feed conveyor coming from the circular saw arrangement as illustrated in
A pick and place arm 100 with a clamping device which laterally clamps the timbers picks up a timber from the Geneva device 90, tilts it slightly so that its rear end in movement direction drags over the layup table 30 or over timbers already placed on the layup table and moves the timber to a defined position on the timber mat layup table 30 and drops it in place as illustrated in
The pick and place arm 100 can is movable to offset the timbers longitudinally by a predetermined amount along their extensions for mat keying. Mat keying helps to connect timber mats with one another.
The laid up timber mat 140 that has two or three layers of timbers that are parallel and spaced in uniform intervals in each layer. An orientation of timbers in one layer is perpendicular to an orientation of timbers in an adjacent layer as illustrated in
A first layer of timbers is fed from the first lateral timber input 40 or the second lateral timber input 50, a second layer of timbers is fed from the longitudinal timber input 60 and an optional third layer of timbers may be fed from the first lateral timber input 40 or the or the second lateral timber input 50. Typically the first layer of timbers will be fed by one lateral timber input and the third layer of timbers will be fed by another lateral timber input as illustrated in
After completion the timber mat is pulled off the timber mat layup table 30 at a timber mat output 70 and moved onto a timber mat drilling table 180 by a connecting chain conveyor 110.
An end position switch for the chain conveyor 110 on the timber mat drilling table 180 assures that the timber mat is positioned correctly.
As illustrated in
For drilling operations the drill head carrier 150 is moved up and down by a hydraulic cylinder on a vertical drill head carrier slide 160. The vertical stroke of the drill head carrier is typically 8 inches to drill through a timber mat which is typically 6 inches thick and to countersink the borehole for a washer and a nut.
The entire arrangement of eleven drill heads is driven back and forth in the feed direction of the timber mat on a horizontal drill head carrier slide 170 between a forward position, a center position, and a rear position in order to laterally offset all drill holes of one row relative to intersection centers of the timbers. The back and forth movement of the arrangement of the eleven drill head is controlled by a drill head offset drive 230.
Additionally each drill head is individually adjustable on a manual drill head adjustment slide 171 by hand by opening and closing a clamping device 172 when the drill head carrier is standing still.
As illustrated in
Each drill head has at least one individual spacer 220 that contacts a timber top surface when the drill head has reached its final depth including the countersinking. The individual air cylinders 190 provide uniform drilling pressure and drill depth for all drill heads irrespective of surface unevenness of the timber mat since each drill head can move independently from the other drill heads and will only come to a stop when its spacer 220 contacts the timber top surface.
The drill diameter is typically ⅜41 and the drill depth is typically 6.5″ to drill up to three timbers each 2″ thick. The drills have counter sinkers at their ends to drill the top timber so a washer and a nut can be recessed therein.
A hydraulic motor moves the drill head frame 190 transversal to the feed direction of the timber mat from one row of intersections to another and down the columns of intersections. A hydraulic cylinder moves the drill head carrier up and down on the vertical drill head slide for drilling insertion holes for the mounting bolts of the mounting bolt assembly 210.
In an advantageous embodiment the drill heads are pivotable about two axes about universal two universal joints 240 and two universal joints 250. The drill heads are gravity positioned about both axes defined by the universal joints 240 and 250. Once the drills have started drilling into the timber mat they can pivot about both axes to correct for uneven fiber distributions in the timbers which tend to fracture drill bits when no pivotability is provided.
The control system features Windows 8 touch screen operations and 1/1000 rev encoders. Eight axes of movement are being controlled. The timber mat production machine includes six ethernet PLCs and twenty I/Os.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application 61/891,161 filed on Oct. 15, 2013 which is incorporated in its entirety by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61891161 | Oct 2013 | US |