The present invention is generally related to devices that can be used to stack trailers, specifically flatbed trailers that are commonly used for transporting items as part of a tractor-trailer rig.
It is often necessary to stack one or more empty flatbed trailers on top of a bottom flatbed trailer that is attached to a tractor for transport of the stacked trailers on top of the tractor-trailer rig to another location. For instance, multiple flatbed trailers may be stacked one on top of another and then all of them may be lashed together prior to the stack of flatbed trailers being transported to another location. Previously it has been necessary to use either overhead lifts, such as gantry cranes, or multiple front-end loader devices operated by multiple workers, such as two or four forklifts, in order to lift one or more flatbed trailers and stack the one or more trailers on top of another flatbed trailer that is part of a tractor-trailer rig used to transport the entire stack to another location. It has also previously been shown that parking a flatbed trailer over a lift device that is situated in an underground pit is another possible solution for elevating an empty flatbed trailer prior to stacking it on top of another flatbed trailer. However, overhead lifts such as gantry cranes are expensive and are not specifically designed for the lifting and stacking of flatbed trailers. Operation of multiple front-end loaders or forklifts for lifting and stacking flatbed trailers is cumbersome and difficult to accomplish without accidents and problems. Using a lifting device located in an underground pit to stack trailers is both expensive with regard to initial construction and requires significant permanent alteration to the location where the device is installed. What is needed is a more efficient and simpler way to lift and stack flatbed trailers on top of each other for subsequent connection and transport as a stack of trailers.
The present invention is a trailer stacking device that provides a much more efficient and helpful way to lift and stack multiple empty trailers on top of each other than has previously been devised in the prior art. The trailer stacking device has applicability with regard to lifting and stacking multiple trailers for subsequent storage or transport. The trailer stacking device is comprised of four masts that may be used to lift, manipulate in various directions, and then stack flatbed trailers so that the end result is that multiple trailers are stacked in piggyback fashion one on top of the other. In most embodiments, two of the four masts of the trailer stacking device are moveable masts that are moveably positioned on, and configured to move to-and-fro along, sets of tracks that will run generally parallel to the sides of the trailers to be stacked. In such embodiments, the other two masts are stationary masts that will typically be rigidly affixed in place in connection with the ground (it should be noted that the term “ground” as used herein also includes a paved parking lot, car park, road surface, and any similar relatively flat asphalted or paved surface where vehicles can be driven or parked). The trailer stacking device is further comprised of guide rails for tractor-trailer rigs that are rails which are rigidly affixed to the ground a set distance apart, with the guide rails being useful for the positioning of flatbed trailers between the four masts prior to and during trailer stacking operations.
Each of the four masts of the trailer stacking device features a lift frame comprised of two vertical lift beams and a support frame that may be vertically raised to an upper position or lowered to a lower position. The support frame of each of the four masts further features extendable lateral arms with attached trailer supports that can be extended laterally away from the support frame to an extended position wherein the trailer supports are positioned beneath the trailer to be stacked. Once the lateral arms are extended to the extent necessary for the attached trailer supports to be located below the edges of a trailer to be stacked, the trailer can be raised or lowered as the support frames attached to the lateral arms are all four concurrently moved up or down along the vertical length of the lift beams of the four masts. Thus, the concurrent raising and lowering of the support frames of the four masts allows for one or more trailers to be lifted and stacked in succession. Once a first trailer is lifted to an upper position by the upward vertical movement of the support frames of the four masts, a second trailer can be pulled by a tractor into place below the first trailer, and then the support frames holding the first trailer aloft can be lowered until the first trailer comes to rest on top of the second trailer. At this point the first trailer may be lashed to the second trailer and then the stacked trailers may be pulled away for transport by the tractor attached to the second trailer. Alternatively, the trailer stacking process may be repeated again with the elevation of the already-stacked first and second trailers in order to subsequently lower them onto the back of a third trailer for subsequent lashing together and transport of the stacked trailers by a tractor connected to the third trailer.
In addition to the lateral extension or retraction of the lateral arms and their attached trailer supports that will come into direct contact with the trailers during lifting and stacking operations, the support frames of each mast also provide the ability to adjust horizontally to different positions along the length of a trailer to be elevated. Moreover, the horizontal movement of the trailer supports of the four masts can be accomplished either in concert or entirely independent of each other, which allows for much more precise alignment of the trailer supports that serve as the masts' lifting contact points with the corresponding best “pick up points” along a trailer's body/rails. This is important because it means that the trailer stacking device can be adapted to lift and stack various types of trailers that have varying configurations. The location of the optimal pickup points along the length of a trailer's body will vary from trailer to trailer, so being able to horizontally reposition the four support frames and their corresponding trailer supports to desired locations along the length of a trailer to be stacked can be very beneficial. This ability to horizontally shift the masts' support frames and corresponding trailer supports also means that the trailer supports can be moved to positions where they will not encounter interference from objects affixed to trailers such as toolboxes and cross braces, etc. While horizontal movement of the moveable masts alongside the lengths of a trailer positioned within the guardrails may sometimes be enough to align the support frames and the corresponding trailer supports of the masts with the optimal trailer pick up points, the ability to horizontally move the support frames yields the ability to fine-tune placement of the trailer supports in relation to the length of the trailer body prior to lifting and stacking operations.
Furthermore, the device also features means for automatically accommodating the forward pitching/rolling movement of trailers when they are lowered and their wheels come into contact with another trailer below. For instance, when a first trailer held aloft is lowered by downward movement of the support frames to the point where its wheels come into contact with the top of a second trailer below, there is commonly a forward pitching or jolting movement of the first trailer as its wheels roll slightly forward on the top of the second trailer. This forward lurching motion of the trailers is due to the inherent geometry of the axle support mechanisms. The trailer stacking device is designed to accommodate such abrupt forward pitching/rolling motion of a trailer when it is being set down onto the ground or onto another trailer below during stacking operations.
Additional features of the device are described herein, and an understanding of the operation, function, and components of the embodiments of the device described herein may be facilitated by review of the appended drawings and review of the detailed description below.
The disclosed invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which show important sample embodiments, wherein:
In the illustrated embodiment of
As further shown by
A primary difference between the moveable masts 30 and the stationary masts 40 is that the moveable masts 30 include repositioning means such as multiple track wheels 21 that allow the moveable masts 30 to be moved horizontally back and forth to selected locations along the mast tracks 20, while the stationary masts 40 are rigidly kept in a set location by rigid affixation means, such as bolting in place. The stationary masts 40 will typically be bolted into the ground by means of one or more screw plates 51 that are rigidly attached to the base frame 56 and permanently affixed to the ground at set locations using bolts. It should also be noted that the moveable masts 30, while horizontally repositionable along the lengths of the mast tracks 20 by means of the track wheels 21, may nevertheless be temporarily held in place for lifting and stacking operations using a downwardly deployable mast stand 23 as illustrated in
It should also be noted that many of the features and components of the trailer stacking device 100 illustrated in the supporting drawings could take different forms without departing from the scope of the invention disclosed herein. For instance, the movement of the moveable masts 30 along the mast tracks 20 has been illustrated as being accomplished by multiple wheels that would be connected by an axle to a motor or engine wherein the wheels are in rolling contact with two rails that are provided by each of the mast tracks 20. However, while a preferred embodiment involves use of motor-driven, track mounted wheels, the movement of the masts 30 could also be accomplished by a track arrangement such as a continuous track system or caterpillar track system attached to the bottom of the masts 30, a hydraulic or pneumatic piston style device for pushing or pulling the masts 30, a belt and pulley type system, or many other alternatives. In fact, a prototype of the device has recently been constructed using a combination of track-mounted wheels and a motor-driven caterpillar type drive that actuates movement of the moveable masts to desired positions along the length of the mast tracks.
Furthermore, the horizontal actuators 37, 47 and the lateral actuators 36, 46 have been illustrated as hydraulic piston style actuators, while the vertical actuators 39, 49 have been described as potentially being a cord/belt and pulley type system, but it is not required that such actuators 36, 46, 37, 47, 39, 49 be hydraulic actuators or pulley systems. In reality, all of those actuators 36, 46, 37, 47, 39, 49 could be hydraulic actuators, linear actuators, electric rod actuators, pneumatic pistons, motors, motors with a gear box and chain, or many other alternatives. For example, in a prototype of the device recently constructed, the vertical raising and vertical lowering of the support frames 60, 70 of the masts 30, 40 has been accomplished using a single primary hydraulic cylinder that accomplishes the vertical actuation rather than a belt and pulley type vertical actuator, so those types of structures would be interchangeable for purposes of the inventive concept. The essence of all of the actuators 36, 46, 37, 47, 39, 49 is that they are components or systems that are able to effect the vertical, lateral, and horizontal movements necessary to raise and lower support frames, side shift the support frames, and extend or retract the lateral arms and their trailer supports, all for the purposes of positioning the support frames and trailer supports in relation to trailers to be lifted and stacked on top of other trailers. Therefore, the embodiments illustrated in the drawings and discussed above should not be understood as strictly limiting since many of the components providing means for movement could be substituted with similar components providing similar mechanical functionality without departing from the scope of the invention hereby disclosed.
Likewise, the air cylinders 81, 82, 91, 92 discussed above could be replaced by mechanical springs, hydraulic cylinders, or other similar devices so long as the means allows for the trailer supports 35, 45 to float forward in response to an abrupt horizontal force or instantaneous forward movement of a trailer that is in contact with the trailer supports 35, 35. The main functionality of the air cylinders 81, 82, 91, 92 is to provide the ability of the trailer supports 35, 45 to float forward with the trailer if it lurches forward when being set down. Using springs, hydraulic pistons, or hydraulic actuators would work in much the same manner as the air cylinders.
As can be understood from a review of the drawings and the above detailed description, the trailer stacking device 100 and its four masts 30, 40 may be used to lift and position trailers so that they may be stacked one on top of the other. The stacked trailers are typically lashed, tied, or chained together for subsequent storage or transport.
Additional variations and alternative embodiments of the trailer stacking device that are not illustrated in the drawing figures but which can be understood from the figures and the above description involve use of either two or three primary masts rather than the four primary masts that have been illustrated and described above for the preferred embodiments. It would be possible to use a combination of only two of the masts that could be located on the same side of a trailer that is to be stacked. In such embodiments, the masts, support frames, lateral arms, trailer supports, and all of the actuators would have the same basic structure as the masts 30, 40 and their components that have been described above. Two moveable masts 30, two stationary masts 40, or a combination of a moveable mast 30 and a stationary mast 40 could be used in such an embodiment that has only two primary masts. Alternatively, an embodiment incorporating three masts where one mast is located on either side of a trailer and a third mast is moveable to a position either at the back or on one side near the back of the trailer would also be within the scope of the invention hereby disclosed. In all such alternative embodiments, mast tracks could be located on one or both sides of the location where the trailer would be located during stacking operations, or the mast tracks could be located near the location where the rear of the trailer would be located during stacking operations.
An additional aspect of the disclosed trailer stacking device that may not be immediately ascertainable from the figures alone is that the individuals masts 30, 40 and their corresponding individual support frames 60, 70 may be independently operated during, prior to, and after trailer stacking operations. While lifting of trailers using two or more masts 30, 40 will normally involve raising the respective support frames 60, 70 in unison with each other, it is also possible to separately and independently raise or lower the support frames 60, 70 using the individual vertical actuators 39, 49. Likewise, it is possible to use a horizontal actuator 37, 47 to independently side-shift/horizontally move one of the support frames 60, 70 without simultaneously horizontally moving all of them. Further, while the moveable masts 30 have generally been illustrated as being approximately laterally aligned with each other or across from each other with respect to the guardrails 10, to the extent an embodiment of the device is comprised of more than one moveable mast 30, it is not required that they be laterally aligned with each other in order to accomplish trailer lifting, and in fact it may sometimes be necessary to have moveable masts 30 positioned at locations where they are not directly across from each other while being used to lift a trailer. The main point being that however many masts 30, 40 and whatever combination of types of masts are used in an embodiment, the masts and their components are independently operable, though they will frequently be operated in concert with each other for lifting and stacking operations.
The embodiments and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention may be best understood and appreciated with reference to the drawings, descriptions, and claims. Where used in the various figures of the drawings, the same numerals designate the same or similar parts. Furthermore, when the terms “along”, “atop”, “top”, “bottom”, “forward”, “backward”, “front”, “back”, “first”, “second”, “third”, “end”, “ends”, “side”, “sides”, “edge”, “edges”, “horizontal”, “lateral”, “length”, “vertical”, “perpendicular”, “parallel”, and similar terms are used herein, it should be understood that, unless otherwise specifically stated or otherwise made specifically clear by context, these terms have reference only to the structure shown in the drawings as it would appear to a person viewing the drawings, and such terms are utilized in order to facilitate describing the invention and in order to facilitate a better understanding of the invention.
Although the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments, this description is not meant to be construed in a limiting sense. Various modifications of the disclosed embodiments, as well as alternative embodiments of the invention, will be apparent to persons skilled in the art upon reference to the description of the invention that is provided in this specification. It is, therefore, contemplated that the appended claims will cover such modifications and variations that fall within the scope of the invention.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/245,446 filed on Sep. 17, 2021, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63245446 | Sep 2021 | US |