The invention relates generally to construction equipment and more specifically an improved storage container and trailer assembly that allows a single user to transport a storage container back and forth to a work site easily and efficiently.
A construction industry storage container is commonly referred to as a “job box”. Job boxes can be purchased from various construction supply companies and some retail outlets. Most job boxes fall within a general size range and employ a substantially uniform design and construction. Job boxes are used by contractors and sub-contractors for the purpose of carrying tools and construction supplies to a job site. The job box usually remains at the site until the project is completed.
A typical job box being 36 inches tall, 60 inches long and 30 inches wide, weighs approximately 300 pounds, including the castors. There can be over 200 pounds of construction tools and supplies in the box, making the total weight of the loaded job box over 500 pounds. It takes a minimum of two persons, and as many as four persons, to lift a job box into a truck, even if the box is empty. If a project only requires one tradesman and one job box, loading, transporting, and unloading of that job box still requires at least one additional person, sometimes more. Traditional loading and transportation of a job box to a job site can be an inefficient and costly exercise for contractor or construction company.
A serious problem arises when small independent contractors, tradesmen, or other one-person operations use job boxes. Such individuals cannot employ a job box at a job site without recruiting temporary help to load and unload the box. Small companies or individuals are often restricted to using a pickup truck with a camper shell, or a station wagon, loaded down with all the tools and extra supplies needed for the job. Consequently, it would be advantageous to provide an apparatus and method for transporting a storage container to a job site that can be easily used by an individual.
It is among the principal objects of the invention to provide an apparatus that will allow one individual to conveniently transport and use a construction storage container. The construction storage container and trailer assembly of the present invention allows the tow vehicle's cargo area to remain available for additional construction materials.
Briefly stated, a storage box and trailer assembly is provided having a single rail trailer with a pivotable, single wheel design used primarily to haul a conventional construction site storage container. (“Job Box”). The assembly includes a trailer that can be attached to any tow vehicle. The trailer includes a single, central beam or rail. There is a trailer hitch apparatus at the front end of the rail that attaches to the tow vehicle in a two-point attachment configuration so as to prevent tipping of the trailer. There is a single wheel at the rear end of the rail. The single wheel is pivotable to as to be rotated to a down position to engage the road and rotated to an up and out of the way position when the job box is set at a job site. There is a first cross channel adjacent the front end of the rail and a second cross channel adjacent the rear end of the rail. There are holes formed in ends of each cross channel. The cross channels are positioned so that the support skids on the bottom of each end of the job box rest in the respective channels. The job box caster bolts are introduced through the holes in the ends of the channels and secured in the skids to hold the-job box on the trailer. There is a jack on the bottom of the rail to facilitate the raising of the trailer for attachment to and disattachment from the tow vehicle trailer hitch and to raise and lower the rear wheel assembly. In one aspect of the invention, the jack is movable along the rail to allow positioning at various points under the trailer so as to facilitate raising and lower of the assembly.
The job box is removably attached to the trailer by the casters but in use is left mounted on the trailer. Consequently the heavy job box can be attached to vehicle and detached easily by one person. The combination is sized to pass through a normal sized entry door of residential or commercial construction.
The exemplary embodiment of the job box trailer assembly of the present invention utilizing the job box can also be useful for any type of small item delivery, or sample carrying. This same job box trailer assembly can be easily adapted, with the use of attachments, to recreational uses, i.e. to transport luggage, personal belongings, motorcycles, bicycles, camping equipment or the like.
The exemplary embodiment of job box trailer assembly of the present invention can be adapted to use with any vehicle that can be equipped with an under-frame trailer hitch, Class II–V for pickup trucks, SUV's, and cars of all sizes. It can also be used with a pickup truck having only a step bumper.
The job box trailer assembly of the present invention allows transportation of a job box by an individual without extra help. By utilizing the job box trailer assembly of the present invention to transport the job box, the cargo area of the tow vehicle can be reserved for larger construction supplies.
Referring now to the figures,
A job box 32 is secured to the trailer, as now will be explained. The job box 32, as seen in greater detail in
The box has transverse bottom skids 36, 38 positioned at each end for support. Some models may have a third skid positioned intermediate of the end skids. In the event a three-skid box is employed, trailer 22 can include an intermediate cross channel or the middle skid can be removed. The box should be provided with casters 40, which can be attached with bolts 42 or the like into the bottom of the skids to allow the rolling movement of the box, if the box is employed outside the system of the present invention. When employed in the system of the present invention, the casters provide rolling and support for the assembly sitting on a surface S, as shown in
In the illustrated embodiment, trailer 22 has substantially rigid and stable frame including an elongated center rail 44 with a forward cross channel member 46 and a rear cross channel member 48. The cross channels 46 and 48 are dimensioned to snugly seat transverse bottom skids 36 and 38, respectively, and provide mounting structure for the storage container, as will be explained. There is a set of four caster mounting holes, as shown at 49, in each end of each channel. Referring back to the construction of trailer 22, as shown in
As shown, job box 32 is safely mounted on trailer 22. With the casters removed, 36 seats in channel 46 and skid 38 seats in channel 48. The four casters are positioned under the caster mounting holes 49 in each end of the channels. The caster bolts 40 are inserted up through the casters and caster mounting holes 49 and tightened into the skids. This unique exemplary arrangement, which is detailed in
A two-point trailer hitch assembly 24 is mounted to the bottom side of the forward channel. As best seen in
As seen in
As best seen in
In a preferred embodiment, a U-shaped ball mount 94 as shown in
A standard ball mount 112, with hitch ball 114, is secured in the center hitch receiver 74. The ball 114 is removed and the threaded ball stem 116 is inserted up through hole 102 in the center of cross member 100. The ball 114 is tightened down on the stem to secure the U-shaped ball mount tightly to the ball mount. The ball mount 112 is inserted into the hitch receiver 74 and the U-shaped ball mount is positioned so that braces 108 and 110 securely abut the underside of hitch receiver 72. A locking pin 118 is inserted through the hitch receiver 74 and ball hitch 112 in a conventional manner to secure the U-shaped ball mount in place. Alternatively, the free ends of arms 96 and 98 could be introduced into sleeves 75 and 76 (
It will be noted that the hitch receiver assemblies described, in combination with the two hitches 56 on the trailer, provide a two-point attachment of the trailer 22 to the tow vehicle. This is particularly important when the trailer has only one wheel. The two-point attachment of the trailer to the tow vehicle prevents tipping, wobbling or swaying of the trailer when in use. Consequently, although only two embodiments of a two point hitching assembly are illustrated and described, it will be understood that any two point hitching assembly which can be used with a tow vehicle and the instant trailer is intended to fall within the scope of the invention.
A locking pin 132 is inserted through the locking pin holes in the triangular plates and strut 124 to secure the strut in position. Pin 132 can be removed and the fork and swivel assembly rotated up or down between the plates and secured in the desired position by the reinsertion of the locking pin 132. Wheel assembly 26 is attached to the trailer center rail 44 by an L-shaped frame, indicated generally as 133, that allows the wheel and tire 119 to properly engage the surface during towing while keeping the job box trailer assembly substantially parallel to surface S. Any type of attachment configuration that accomplishes that function is acceptable.
As also shown in
Referring to
The wheel assembly 142 of the exemplary embodiment of
Trailer 202 is constructed similarly to the previously described trailers. In the illustrated embodiment, trailer 202 has substantially rigid and stable frame including an elongated center rail 206 with a forward cross channel member 208 and a rear cross channel member 210. The cross channels 208 and 210 are dimensioned to snugly seat transverse bottom skids 36 and 38, respectively, of a previously described storage container 32. The method and apparatus for securing storage container 32 to the trailer is generally the same as that described for other embodiments of the invention.
There is a hydraulic jack assembly 212 attached to, and extending down from center rail 206. Jack assembly 212, shown in detail in
The carriage includes a first roller mount 221 comprising a first upright 222 attached to side wall 217 and a second upright 223 attached to the other side of side wall 218. A roller 224 extends between the uprights.
Carriage 214 also includes a second roller mount 226 having a first upright 228 attached to side wall 217 and a second upright 230 attached to side wall 218, with a roller 232 extending between the uprights. It will be noted that upright 230 is taller than the other recited uprights and includes a mount 234 for the attachment of a spring, as will be described.
Jack assembly 212 includes a wheel frame 236. Wheel frame 236 includes a first strut 238 and a second strut 240. One end of each strut is pivotably attached to frame 216 by a pivot pin 242 that extends through the sidewalls 217 and 218 of the frame and is properly secured in any acceptable manner, for example, by cotter pins, nuts or any other appropriate securing means.
In the illustrated embodiment, struts 238 and 240 are angled out, creating a substantially A-shaped frame for stability. An axle 244 extends through the terminal ends of the struts for the mounting of wheels 246 and 248. A cross brace 250 extends between struts 238 and 240.
Jack assembly 212 includes a conventional hydraulic cylinder 252. One end of hydraulic cylinder 252 is pivotably attached to side wall 217, adjacent the fore end of the wall. The opposite end of the hydraulic cylinder is pivotably attached to cross brace 250 of wheel frame 236. A hydraulic line 254 connects hydraulic cylinder 252 to a hydraulic pump 256, mounted on the rear of the trailer, as best seen in
A coil spring 260 is connected between mount 234 on upright 230 and axle 244 to exert an upward biasing force on wheel frame 236.
Jack assembly 212 is used to raise or lower the trailer assembly, as described above. However, jack assembly 212 is more versatile, as will be explained. When the
For example, if the job box trailer is resting on all four casters 40, and the user wants to raise the front end of the trailer for mounting, he can slide carriage 214 forward toward the front of the frame. The user then opens pump 256 to allow hydraulic fluid to flow and actuates the pump by pumping handle 258. Hydraulic fluid forces cylinder 252 to extend with sufficient force to overcome the upward biasing force of spring 260. Frame 236 pivots around pivot pin 242 and descends until wheels 246 and 248 engage the supporting surface.
Continued actuation of cylinder 252 forces frame 236 to move toward a vertical position, hence raising the trailer, as shown in
It will be appreciated that the rear end of the job box trailer assembly can likewise be raised and lowered by moving jack assembly 212 along rail 206 toward the rear of the job box trailer, as shown in
Because jack assembly 212 is moveable along the length of rail 206, the job box assembly can be effectively and safely raised and lowered, even if the load weight on the trailer is uneven.
It will be noted that the job box trailer assembly of the present invention can be used by a single individual to transport a job box back and forth to a job site. As can be appreciated from the foregoing description, the job/box trailer assembly of the present invention meets and exceeds the objectives set out above.
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 10/151,401, filed May 20, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,755,433, which claims priority to provisional application Ser. No. 60/294,458, filed May 30, 2001.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2949317 | Zaha | Aug 1960 | A |
3622178 | Tantlinger et al. | Nov 1971 | A |
3787068 | Miller | Jan 1974 | A |
3857582 | Hartog | Dec 1974 | A |
3877714 | Black | Apr 1975 | A |
4042255 | Drewek | Aug 1977 | A |
4053072 | Ross et al. | Oct 1977 | A |
4078821 | Kitterman | Mar 1978 | A |
4150813 | Mena | Apr 1979 | A |
4172604 | Bond et al. | Oct 1979 | A |
4266796 | Riggs et al. | May 1981 | A |
4480851 | St-Pierre | Nov 1984 | A |
4512593 | Ehrhardt | Apr 1985 | A |
4615534 | Blain | Oct 1986 | A |
4664403 | Livingston | May 1987 | A |
4821811 | Swenson | Apr 1989 | A |
4863179 | Isaacs | Sep 1989 | A |
4950010 | Denny | Aug 1990 | A |
5005846 | Taylor | Apr 1991 | A |
5324160 | Smith | Jun 1994 | A |
5397148 | Nelson | Mar 1995 | A |
5476279 | Klemetsen | Dec 1995 | A |
5520404 | Schulte | May 1996 | A |
5531468 | White | Jul 1996 | A |
5562391 | Green | Oct 1996 | A |
5639139 | Rush | Jun 1997 | A |
5664796 | Huyzers | Sep 1997 | A |
5678838 | Taylor | Oct 1997 | A |
5725037 | Faulhaber | Mar 1998 | A |
5725233 | Gee et al. | Mar 1998 | A |
5788135 | Janek | Aug 1998 | A |
6168058 | Janek | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6237953 | Farmer | May 2001 | B1 |
6357778 | Ross | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6755433 | Krauss | Jun 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040207173 A1 | Oct 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60294458 | May 2001 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10151401 | May 2002 | US |
Child | 10835562 | US |