An ice re-surfacing machine for skating rinks and the like has two basic parts. The first is the main wheeled body driven over the ice, usually on standard rubber tires. The body generally includes motive power, an operator's seat and controls, a collection system and storage bin for ice cuttings, water tanks for the ice-washing and ice-making process, and a hydraulic arms system for carrying and positioning the ice re-surfacing apparatus.
The second part is the apparatus that re-surfaces the ice in a single pass. This structure, which is towed over the ice by the main body, is generally referred to as the “conditioner,” but sometimes is called the “sled”. The conditioner, carried at the back of the main body on hydraulically activated arms, is essentially an open-bottomed steel box that allows the re-surfacing components access to the ice surface when lowered into operating position and pulled across the ice. A runner and side plate on each side, parallel to the direction of travel, supports the conditioner in operation and confines the ice chips and water used in re-surfacing.
The majority of imperfections created in the ice surface by ice-skating are limited to one to two millimeters of ice depth. The conditioner holds a large blade, usually steel, that shaves a very thin layer off the ice surface. Generally, the blade is attached to a supporting draw bar, which is mounted to the conditioner frame.
Ice cuttings generated by the shaving blade must be removed from the surface as the blade is pulled along. Mounted forward of and parallel to the blade is a screw conveyor, variously known as a “horizontal conveyor” or “horizontal auger” or “horizontal screw.” The horizontal conveyor comprises a cylindrical shaft onto which a helical flange, referred to as a “flight,” is wound around and attached, similarly to the thread on a wood screw. The helical flight converts the rotational spin of the shaft into linear motion parallel to the shaft.
In most ice-resurfacing machines, the horizontal conveyor is configured so that flights on the left side move ice shavings from the outside toward the center of the conveyor, and flights on the right side move ice shavings from the outside toward the center as well. In the center of the horizontal conveyor, flat plates mounted parallel to the rotational axis of the shaft, called “paddles”, connect to the left side and right side auger flights. The paddles are part of the “slinger”, which transfers ice shavings to a vertical conveyor. In operation, the blade shaves the ice, creating particles that build up in front of the blade and are caught in the flights of the horizontal conveyor. The horizontal conveyor's rotating flights move the ice particles to the center, where the slinger throws them onto the vertical conveyor.
The vertical conveyor is designed to accept the stream of ice cuttings thrown from the slinger of the horizontal conveyor and move them upward for placing into the ice cuttings storage tank in the main body. The vertical conveyor is also a screw type conveyor, similar in design and function to the horizontal conveyor. All of the helical flights are wound around the central shaft in the same direction, imparting a continuous upward movement of ice cuttings from the bottom of the conveyor to the top. At the top, slinger paddles sweep the cuttings into the storage tank. The vertical conveyor is encased in a close fitting metal tube running the length of the auger. A lower aperture, facing the slinger of the horizontal conveyor, receives ice cuttings from the slinger, whereby the cuttings begin ascending on the flights. An aperture at the top faces the ice cuttings storage tank. The vertical conveyor slinger paddles throw the ice cuttings into the tank.
Behind the blade and draw bar is a wash water system that discharges cold water through a manifold that sits parallel to the blade. The wash water system includes a rubber squeegee mounted on the bottom of the back wall of the conditioner and a suction pump with an intake that projects nearly to the surface along that back wall. In operation, cold water from a tank in the main body is discharged onto the ice surface just behind the blade assembly, and is constrained by the side runners and the squeegee as the machine moves forward. By regulating the flow of water and the suction of the collection pump, the operator maintains a wash water pool of constant size behind the blade assembly. This moving pool floats contaminants off the ice surface and floods any deep grooves and pits in the ice surface, then is collected and returned to the water tank.
The last part of the conditioner is the ice maker, mounted to the back wall of the conditioner. A discharge manifold sprays multiple small jets of hot water from a tank in the main body onto the outside back wall of the conditioner, where it forms a continuous sheet of water cascading down onto the ice across the conditioner's entire width. Finally a cloth water spreader, called a “mop”, evenly spreads and polishes the ice making water into a smooth surface.
Conventional ice re-surfacing machines shave the ice by forcing a blade forward through the ice as the machine travels forward. The cutting edge must part the ice on its cutting plane by brute pressure alone. Since ice is very hard, blades dull rapidly. Also, because the high cutting pressure strongly opposes the forward motion of the blade, strong propulsion and guiding forces are required to push the blade downward as well as forward. The present invention employs ultrasonic vibration of the blade to reduce the pressure required to force the blade through the ice and improve the quality of the ice cut.
The ice resurfacing machine of the present invention applies ultrasonic frequency vibration to the ice cutting blade. In one embodiment, piezoelectric transducers, driven by an ultrasonic frequency generator, are mounted to the blade or the draw bar. The vibrating cutting edge causes microscopic splits and fractures in the ice, softening the ice just forward of the blade. The cutting edge of the blade moves forward and backward with each vibration cycle, causing the blade to cut the ice in tightly controlled, chopping pulses tens of thousands of times per second.
A schematic of a standard ice resurfacing machine is shown in
A conventional ice shaving blade is shown in
Blade (15) has a cutting edge (17) machined into its forward edge at an angle of about 25 degrees. Insert (18) made of hardened tool steel is forged into the body of blade (15), enabling the blade to hold a sharp edge much longer than carbon steel would. Carbon steel with the needed dimensions is too flexible to maintain a flat and even cut along the ice surface, however, and the blade is typically mounted to a heavy steel draw bar.
As seen in
The present invention improves the performance of the ice shaving blade by inducing high-frequency vibrations in the blade during shaving operations. The vibration frequency is preferably in the ultrasonic range of 20,000 to 100,000 Hertz, which provides high motion cycling with less energy dissipation into heat that is characteristic of higher frequency vibrations. Various known types of transducers may be employed to impart the high frequency vibrations. In one embodiment, solid state piezoelectric transducers are attached for this purpose. Piezoelectric transducers are available in a variety of shapes, sizes and operational characteristics.
Vibration of the transducer is instigated and controlled by a standard ultrasonic frequency generator (50), which preferably is variably controlled, inside the main housing. The frequency generator is connected to a power source (51) which may be a battery or a generator associated with the drive engine. Control functions may be located within reach of the operator. A safety mechanism that turns off the vibrator when the blade is not in operating position is desirable.
Preferably, the system will produce ultrasonic vibration of the blade assembly in the most energy efficient way possible. The ideal vibrational frequency for use with a specific blade/draw bar assembly will depend on the assembly's weight and shape. The blade/draw bar assembly weight and shape is model specific and different for each manufacturer. So the ideal vibrational frequency for a specific model of machine will be determined experimentally.
Vibration may be imparted in the shaving blade by a single transducer or by a plurality of transducers as shown, for example, in
The configuration and materials common in current ice re-surfacing machines are generally well-suited to application of the inventive concept. Ice shaving blades and draw bars are made of steel that is a good transmitter of the desired vibrations to the cutting edge, and they are tightly bound together so vibration energy readily passes from the draw bar to the blade. Connection of the draw bar to the conditioner frame with mounting pins generally isolates the dissipation of vibration energy to the conditioner frame. Depending upon a particular machine's specific configuration, sound isolating materials or lubrications may advantageously be applied at the connection point between the draw bar and the conditioner frame.
The invention is also suitable as a retrofit modification for existing ice resurfacing machines, on which draw bars and shaving blades are removable and replaceable. A new draw bar or blade with transducers can easily be inserted into the conditioner, and available signal generators are compact enough to be placed somewhere in the main body housing with wire connectors to the transducers. Alternately, a kit of one or more transducers may be affixed to the existing draw bar, with wires run to the signal generator.
The foregoing description of a preferred embodiment of the invention has been presented and is intended for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive nor limit the invention to the precise form disclosed and many modifications and variations are possible in the light of the above teachings. The embodiment was chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application and to enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiments disclosed for carrying out the invention.
This Application claims the benefit of priority of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/951,933, filed Jul. 25, 2007.
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3622205 | Zamboni | Nov 1971 | A |
3917350 | Bricher | Nov 1975 | A |
6530768 | Harrop | Mar 2003 | B1 |
7364240 | Seely | Apr 2008 | B2 |
7510247 | Pirila | Mar 2009 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090188135 A1 | Jul 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60951933 | Jul 2007 | US |