The present invention generally relates to trench boxes and methods for moving same. This invention further relates to an apparatus for lifting a trench box out of a construction trench, or sliding or pushing a trench box along the floor of the trench with an attachment to the arm of an excavator.
Numerous assemblies have been conceived for shoring the sidewalls to a construction trench. Griswold U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,019,329 and 4,058,983, for example, both disclose a boxlike construction, with a pair of spaced apart sidewalls for vertical disposition in a newly dug trench or ditch. A plurality of spreader pipes connect the sidewalls while allowing for some limited pivotal movement therebetween. To remove an assembled Griswold box from its trench after project completion, a plurality of lifting rings 82 are provided for sliding along one or more spreader pipes 18 of this prior art configuration. With a crane hook and some cable threaded through its lifting rings, the Griswold apparatus can be extracted from the hole in which it was used.
An improvement to basic trench box designs is disclosed in Kundel U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,533,838 and 5,669,738. Therein, a modular trench box design can be assembled from a plurality of vertical sheeting panels slid downwardly into a spaced-apart guide frame. In order to remove this box design from its trench after project completion, there are provided aligned circular apertures and inserts on multiple upper sheeting panels. A lifting insert fits in said apertures for removing the trench box with a crane or other mechanical lifting apparatus.
A further improvement to trench box designs is shown and described in Kundel U.S. Pat. No. 6,443,665. For this design, a plurality of stacked panels 20 are slid downwardly over a hook or J-shaped connector at opposite ends of each panel to form a pair of trench box sidewalls spaced apart by support bars 50. Once fully assembled, this box is moved into proper position in a trench with chains hooked through D-rings 37 on the connector frames using the boom of a backhoe. Thereafter, the chains are removed and the box pound down into its desired depth in the trench.
Another more mechanically complicated trench box configuration entails a shape with sidewalls, through which conduit may be continuously laid. The separated sides to the box and method of Hatch U.S. Pat. No. 4,714,381 may be advanced by pulling the box forward and tapping it down at one end with the arms of an excavator. Burdine U.S. Pat. No. 5,336,023 teaches a self-propelled trench box having rotatable drive tracks hydraulically driven like the tracks on a military tank. Multiple lift tubes 48 on each sidewall panel serve as lifting locations for removing the box from its trench by hook up to a crane or backhoe. And finally, Wilkinson U.S. Pat. No. 5,931,608 shows a trench shoring transport device that includes a wheeled frame. Below that frame which is adjustable in width, there is suspended one or more trench boxes that can be raised at opposite ends with one or more hydraulic arms. In one preferred embodiment, these hydraulic arms remain attached to respective auxiliary spreaders at opposite trench box ends.
At the present time, there are no easily adaptable attachments for the arm of an excavator for lifting and/or moving a trench box from a first position to a second position along the trench. In any cases, an excavated trench tends to be substantially elongated and continuous in order to lay utilities, such as, for example, lengths of water lines, sewer pipe, cable or electric lines. After work within the immediate trench box area has been completed and the box should be moved along the length of the trench, but not yet fully re-moved from the trench, workers have been observed using the excavator shovel or bucket end to forcibly push or pull the box forward, along the substantially horizontal trench floor. Sometimes, the excavator bucket face (or teeth end) is used for partially lifting the box up and away from the mud of trench sidewalls and/or floor. Then with these same bucket teeth, the trench box proper is either pulled toward or pushed away by the excavator arm. That prior practice is fundamentally unsafe. The trench box itself can easily slip from the excavator bucket during transit.
Ideally, what would be desirable is an attaching apparatus to an excavator that easily, yet fairly quickly, secures to the working end of the excavator area. That attachment is shaped so that it can be easily maneuvered between the spreader bars at the forward end of a typical trench box design. Then by mere manipulation of the excavator arm, the attaching apparatus is positioned between, then rotated downward so that the lower hook ends of the attachment engage against one of said trench box spreader bars. Another surface of that same attachment contacts with or otherwise engages the adjacent spreader bar for moving the box forward. In a preferred embodiment, this engagement would not have to lock on to any portion of the trench box. On the contrary, after the box has been moved from its first location to its next, the attachment can be easily and rapidly removed from between adjacent spreader bars merely by maneuvering or tilting the excavator arm and attachment backwards a few degrees, then pulling the attachment back, out from between the pair of spreader bars and away from the trench box once relocated at its second working position.
An object of the present invention is to provide an excavator arm attachment that easily mounts to an excavator that digs trenches for various construction and/or utility servicing applications. That attachment need not be permanently secured to the excavator arm but rapidly connectable to and from same. Such an attachment should be easy to use and yet outperform (for safety and speed) the alternative of merely moving a trench box along using the bucket teeth or face otherwise attached to that same excavator arm.
Another object of this invention is to provide an attachment that more safely transports (or moves) an assembled trench box from a first working position to a second working position along the same, substantially horizontal trench floor. Even though the attachment needs connecting to an excavator arm after a sufficient length of working trench has been dug and cleared away, the ease of operating this attachment and the means by which it more safely and accurately moves assembled boxes along their trench box floor should soon make this attachment part of the excavator operator's standard equipment.
These and other advantages of the present invention are achieved with an apparatus and method for moving, with an excavator arm, a trench box having a pair of adjacent spreader bars at one or both ends. The apparatus may have face-plate with a bracket side for connecting to the excavator arm and a trench box engagement side having at least a pair of spaced apart, hooking forks. The hooking fork engages with both a first spreader bar of the box and an adjacent second spreader bar when used to move the trench box along the trench floor.
Further features, objectives and advantages of the present invention will become clearer when referring to the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments made with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring now to the accompanying Figures, there is shown a preferred embodiment of the trench box moving apparatus according to the present invention. In these Figures, the trench box 10 being moved consists of left and right sidewalls 12 and 14, respectively, held apart at the forward end of the box with a plurality of preferably cylindrical spreader bars 20, 22. As shown, trench box 10 includes a pair of spreader bars at both its forward end 16 and rear end 18.
The pair of spreader bars critical for moving the trench box 10 according to this invention is in most cases substantially oriented vertically, with the lower or first forward spreader bar 20 at the front end 16 of the trench box 10 being situated a set distance directly below the upper or second forward spreader bar 22. In many commercial varieties of trench boxes, the first and second spreader bars at the forward end are typically spaced vertically at a distance ranging anywhere from about 17 to 43 inches (from center to center of each spreader bar). More frequently, the set distance between the first spreader bar 20 and the second spreader bar 22 is about 19 inches (again, measuring center to center). Typically, the spreader bars 20, 22 have a diameter between 4 to 10 inches, with the preferred diameter being 8 inches.
In the embodiments depicted in the accompanying Figures, each of the spreader bars at both the forward and rear ends (16 and 18, respectively) of trench box 10 are cylindrical tubes that can be made to create a trench box with an adjustable width between. These spreader bars each connect to their respective trench box sidewalls with a bar-to-box fitting 24 standard for the industry.
The apparatus of this invention is meant for first connecting to an excavator, generally 30. The extendable lift arm 32 of that excavator is partially shown in some of the Figures. It typically includes a hydraulic cylinder 34 from which a hydraulic piston 36 extends and retracts. With such movement, the excavator operator can cause the lift arm 32 to move the lift arm link pins 38 back and forth. When connected to a typical excavator bucket (via bucket links and pins), the excavator operator can force the teeth of a typical bucket attachment downwardly for digging out the trench in which persons may perform their assigned tasks.
In one preferred embodiment of this invention, apparatus 40 has an excavator arm connecting mechanism, or bracket end 42 extending from one side of a face-plate 41. The bracket end 42 includes a plurality of apertures 44 through which link pins 38 extend for at least temporarily connecting the apparatus 40 to the lift arm 32. Link pins 38 are preferably quick disconnecting bolts or pins. However, a standard threaded nut and bolt or locking pin can be used in place of each quick disconnect.
A preferred embodiment of the apparatus 40 has, on the opposite side of the face-plate 41 from the bracket end 42, a plurality of hooking forks 50. As shown in the Figures, apparatus 40 has two spaced apart hooking forks 50, though it is to be understood that the apparatus may have more than two spaced forks, or it could have one continuously wide fork that extends along the length of an engagement region 58 (shown by broken line between the sidewalls 12, 14) of the forwardmost, first spreader bar 20 when used to move the trench box 10 according to the invention. Further, each hooking fork 50 has a lower arcuate or arch-like engagement surface 52. That surface serves to engage the outer perimeter of the first spreader bar 20 at the first spreader bar engagement region 58. Ideally, with the cylindrically shaped first spreader bar 20, the lower arch-like engagement surface 52 confines the first spreader bar 20 and limits forward and backward movement of the apparatus 40 relative thereto.
In
In these embodiments, first spreader bar 20 is located substantially directly below the second spreader bar 22. Should a trench box employ an alternative geometry, the side views to an alternate embodiment of this invention can be similarly modified so as to compliment the location and relationship of the first spreader bar engagement region 58 relative to the second spreader bar engagement region 60. Further, it is to be understood, should the cross-sectional shape of the spreader bars be other than circular, the lower and upper engagement surfaces 52 and 53, respectively, can be modified to best complement the different shape. Still further, though preferred, the first spreader bar engaging region 58 does not always have to serve as a substantially horizontal stopping region for the apparatus, and the second spreader bar engagement region 60 does not always have to serve as a substantially vertical lifting point for the apparatus. Instead, they can be interchanged. Notably, if the arch-like engagement surface is reversibly interchanged with the concave second engagement surface 52, the apparatus would best be used on the spreader bars at the rear 18 of the trench box 10 to take advantage of the torque caused by the weight of the box.
To move a trench box 10 using the apparatus 40, it is anticipated that a team of workers working in the dug trench will first detach the excavator bucket from its lifting arm and connect the apparatus 40. Preferably, the apparatus 40 is temporarily attached to the lifting arm 32 at its bracket end 42 using removable locking pins 38. Then, with nominal movement of the arm 32, apparatus 40 can be fairly easily positioned (or maneuvered), at least partially between the first and second forward spreader bars of trench box 10. By mere rotational and downward movements, the hooking forks 50 of the apparatus 40 are then readily positioned over the first forward spreader bar 20 at the first engagement region 58. As the lifting arm continues to rotate, it then contacts the engagement region 60 of the second spreader bar 22. After the apparatus has been safely guided between the adjacent spreader bars 20, 22 at the forward end 16 to this trench box, raising and extending the excavator arm outward (that is, away from the direction of the excavator operator) will cause the trench box to lift and advance, along the trench floor from a first working location to the desired second location. It is important to note, as the engaged apparatus is raised by the excavator arm, the torque caused by the weight of the trench box is used to further force the apparatus against the spreader bars, thereby sustaining the “grip” of the apparatus with the box in the lifting and moving process.
Once the trench box is positioned at the desired second location, the excavator operator simply rotates the apparatus in the opposite rotational direction to disengage the hooking forks 50, then slightly lifts and withdraws the apparatus from between and away from the forward spreader bars 20, 22. Next, by removing the link pins 38, the apparatus is easily removed from the excavator arm and replaced with the next needed attachment.
In some respects, the apparatus and method of this invention are best suited for pushing the trench box along its trench floor, as well as lifting the trench box from the trench, with the arm of an excavator. And, because the apparatus is only temporarily substituted for the excavator bucket, the trench box can be more safely and accurately repositioned in and around the trench than by an operator who only uses that very same bucket to crudely nudge the trench box along the trench floor.
The present invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from its spirit or essential characteristics. The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects only as illustrative, not restrictive. The scope of the invention is, therefore, indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description. All changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4019329 | Griswold | Apr 1977 | A |
4058983 | Griswold | Nov 1977 | A |
4714381 | Hatch | Dec 1987 | A |
5336023 | Burdine | Aug 1994 | A |
5533838 | Kundel | Jul 1996 | A |
5669738 | Kundel | Sep 1997 | A |
5735642 | Barringer | Apr 1998 | A |
5931608 | Wilkinson | Aug 1999 | A |
6007271 | Cole et al. | Dec 1999 | A |
6443665 | Kundel, Sr. | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6808360 | Patterson | Oct 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080050213 A1 | Feb 2008 | US |