The present invention generally relates to vibrating screens used in mining or road building material handling and processing.
In the past, vibrating screen machines are normally made of a box-like structure mounted on flexible springs and contain one or multiple layers of screen mesh to sort granular materials. The different sized openings in the mesh allow sizing of materials according to the size of these openings. The box structure usually contains an eccentric weighted shaft that shakes the box and its screen mesh to agitate and separate the granular materials fed into the top of the machine.
Vibrating screens can be categorized in many ways. Horizontal (see
The two designs are used in different applications. The sloped screen decks are desirable in applications where there is a high percentage of “oversize” material that is larger than the openings in the screen cloth. The opening size is determined by the size of the material desired to be removed from the feed material. When too much material is riding on the deck, the material is too deep to efficiently allow fine material to sift through the bed of material and get to the screen cloth for separation. The horizontal screens are more effective when there are difficult conditions requiring more retention time on the screen decks; for example, a high amount of “near size” material. Also, applying water to clean the material is more desirable on horizontal decks, since the sloped decks will wash material down and off the end before it can drop through the screen cloth.
There are many types of triple shaft screens. One could gather a group of prior art sloped screens, each of which has a different single set angle at which the decks are sloped. One thing in common with these sloped machines is that they still utilize a horizontal constructed gear case (See
Typically, the three-shaft vibrating mechanism consists of three eccentrically weighted shafts geared together, so that the center or second shaft rotates counter of the adjacent first and third shafts. This mechanism utilizes a common gear case with common oil splash lubrication for all gears and bearings. All three shafts are geared together on a common horizontal plane to maintain uniform splash lubrication on all three shaft/bearing assemblies.
The counter rotating center eccentric adds or subtracts from the total vibrator thrust, depending on phase with the outer two eccentrics to create the unique oval motion on the vibrating screen box. It is well known that an oval stroke is preferred and that the manner for producing an oval stroke is also well known.
It is well known that a sloped gear case will, at least when the screen is not operating, let lubrication oil pool to the low end, thus increasing the oil depth on the low end. It is also widely believed that since the oil flows to the lower end, there is a danger of starving the bearings toward the high end of oil. It is also believed that simply increasing the amount of oil in the gear case, and thereby increasing the overall oil depth, would create more splash in the upper end, but would flood the lower bearings, causing excessive heat.
It is also widely believed that if a user desires the ability to utilize triple shaft screening over a wide range of angles, that a collection of several sloped screens, each with a single fixed slope angle, be available. However, this can be extremely expensive and difficult to exchange on the machine in which the screen is operating.
Requiring a horizontal mounting plane of the shaft housings for the multiple shaft style screen which is operating on a sloped orientation requires greater distance between the decks directly above and below the shaft housings since all the housings are not aligned along the upper deck.
Consequently, there is a need for a relatively inexpensive way to provide a triple shaft screen to operate over a wide range of screen slope angles and not require different screens built on different slopes for different applications.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a vibrating screen machine with geared counter rotating shafts which can be operated with the counter rotating shafts aligned along the slope of the screen surface, whether horizontally or on a sloped plane, without modifying the oil level or lubrication system when the screen is operated at various sloped angles.
It is a possible feature of the present invention to provide a mechanical means configured to assist in raising and lowering a three-shaft vibrating screen over a wide range of angles.
It is another possible feature of the present invention to provide a means and instructions for measuring the slope angle of a screen over a wide range of angles.
It is another possible feature of the present invention to include a system for or perform the step of determining an amount of airborne and otherwise displaced oil in an operating vibrating screen with an inclined three-shaft gear case.
It is an advantage of the present invention to provide for the ability of deploying a single three-shaft vibrating screen over a wide range of angles.
It is also an advantage of the present invention to provide maximum clearance under the shaft housings running through the screen to the screening surface directly below the shaft housings.
The present invention is an apparatus and method for screening material which is designed to satisfy the aforementioned needs, provide the previously stated objects, include the above-listed features, and achieve the already articulated advantages. For some screening operations, the present invention is carried out in an “oil-starved bearing-less system” in a sense that the oil-starved bearings believed to result from excessive incline of the screen during operation have been eliminated.
Accordingly, the present invention is a system and method for operating three-shaft screening operations over a wide range of screen slope angles.
The present invention is a system for screening material comprising:
The present invention is also a system for screen material comprising:
This invention is further a system for screening material comprising:
The invention may be more fully understood by reading the following description of the preferred embodiments of the invention, in conjunction with the appended drawings wherein:
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The “dead” zones in the gear case are believed to allow oil to be pushed into them, preventing excess turbulence and heat buildup from over-churning the oil. The turbulence and air currents are believed to create these dead zones whether the gear case is mounted horizontally or at some angle θ. With the existence of turbulence and the creation of the dead zones, the gear case is able to provide adequate lubrication at any normal screening slope. A screen with a fixed gear case construction will be able to operate horizontally or at an extended range of slope angles, thus increasing the capabilities and applications a single screen machine can operate in. The term “extended range” is used herein to extend from 0 degrees up to 10-15 degrees or more. A range of 0-3 degrees would not be considered an “extended range”. “Extended range” should be interpreted to cover various ranges and could include a range from 3-15 degrees or any ranges contained within this range.
Also shown are first slope angle determination device 810 and air bubble 812, which assumes a simple level mechanism is used. It should be understood that other more or less sophisticated angle determination devices could be used, including electronic and other mechanisms.
Also shown is tether 822 which could be attached to the top of variable angle screen 800 and hang downward to nearly the bottom of variable angle screen 800 at level termination point 826 and acts like a plumb bob. The location of the free end of tether 822 is adjacent the gauge 824, which provides for measurement of slope angle. The location of the tether attached to the vibrating screen section is shown primarily for illustrative purposes and is not preferred. It may be preferred to deploy a similar system on the base or frame section which would not be vibrating as much as the upper sections of the screen. Also shown is computer/communication electronics module 850 which can provide communication and control for any electronic components on variable angle screen 800. Similarly, the electronics module 850 is shown for illustrative purposes, but it may be preferred to mount it at a lower portion on the screen system which vibrates less.
It should be understood that while the description is focused on three-shaft gear cases, the present invention is intended to include any multiple-shaft gear case from two shafts, three shafts, four shafts or more.
It is thought that the method and apparatus of the present invention will be understood from the foregoing description and that it will be apparent that various changes may be made in the form, construct steps, and arrangement of the parts and steps thereof, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention or sacrificing all of their material advantages. The form herein described is merely a preferred exemplary embodiment thereof.
This application is a continuation of the non-provisional patent application Ser. No. 15/831,632, which was filed on Dec. 5, 2017; which application was a continuation of and claims the benefit of the filing date of non-provisional patent application entitled “VARIABLE SLOPE 3-SHAFT VIBRATING MECHANISM”, having Ser. No. 12/540,120, which was filed Aug. 12, 2009, by Edwin J. Sauser, now issued with U.S. Pat. No. 9,862,003, issued on Jan. 9, 2018; and also claims the benefit of provisional patent application entitled “VARIABLE SLOPE 3-SHAFT VIBRATING MECHANISM”, having Ser. No. 61/088,987, which was filed on Aug. 14, 2008, by Edwin J. Sauser, all applications are incorporated herein in their entirety by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61088987 | Aug 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15831632 | Dec 2017 | US |
Child | 16865846 | US | |
Parent | 12540120 | Aug 2009 | US |
Child | 15831632 | US |