This invention relates to the construction industry and is particularly concerned with pouring, and setting of concrete using a vibrator to agitate a poured slurry of wet concrete.
In the construction industry, it is frequently necessary to lay a large area of concrete. Such areas can include, for example, foundations for buildings, floors, driveways, sidewalks, ramps, etc.
Concrete exhibits characteristics of strength in compression but is poor in tension. To increase strength in tension, it is common practice to prepare a grid of reinforcing bars and then to pour concrete over and around the grid whereby the reinforcing bars improve the strength the poured concrete. After the wet concrete has been poured over and around the grid of reinforcing bars, it is common practice in the art to vibrate the concrete to remove air and voids from the poured mix. In this manner, when the concrete hardens, the slab will be more compact and undesirable pockets within the hardened concrete are avoided and the integrity of the concrete is not compromised.
The most common form of concrete vibrator comprises a metal cylinder within which a shaft carrying an eccentric weight is rotatable to cause the metal cylinder to vibrate. The cylinder is mounted on one end of a flexible drive which serves to rotate the shaft and hence vibrate the cylinder. When the vibrating cylinder is introduced into, and immersed in, the wet concrete mix or slurry, vibrations, which may be in the region of 10,000 per minute, agitate the slurry to extent sufficient to remove air and voids therefrom.
Concrete is a mixture of cement, sand, and stones. Lime is an ingredient in cement and water is mixed with the components of the mixture to activate the lime and form a mix or slurry. With the reinforcing bars immersed in and surrounded by this poured wet mix or slurry, there is a potential problem in that the reinforcing bars may rust. When a steel bar rusts, it expands, and the expansion of the bar within the dried concrete can cause the concrete to crack. To overcome this problem, it has been practice in the art to envelope the reinforcing bars in a plastic-like coating, most commonly an epoxy, which will protect the steel from wet liquid and hence avoid rusting and the subsequent detrimental consequences thereof. Even so, the placing of a rapidly vibrating vibrator within the slurry creates the risk that the vibrator will chip the plastic coating thereby exposing the encased steel to the wet slurry and the prevention of rusting is not eliminated.
The invention involves the creation of vibration in a slurry of poured concrete within which reinforcing bars are located. However, rather than inserting a conventional vibrator into the wet mix, vibrations are imparted to the slurry by vibrating the reinforcing rods themselves.
According to the present invention, there is provided, for vibrating a bar, a vibrator including a vibrator housing, means for vibrating said housing, and means associated with said housing for contacting said bar.
According to a further aspect of the invention, there is provided a vibrator including a vibrator unit, a housing coupled to said unit, and means within said housing for engaging a member to be vibrated whereby vibrations from said vibrator unit may be transmitted to said member.
According to a further aspect of the invention, there is provided a vibrator including a casing, vibration inducing means within said casing, a housing secured to said casing to be vibrated thereby and means within said housing for engaging and vibrating a member.
According to a further aspect of the invention, there is provided a vibrator including an elongated casing, a shaft extending longitudinally within said casing for rotation therein, an eccentric weight associated with said shaft for rotation thereby to create vibrations, a housing secured to said casing, and a plug secured within said housing and having at least one bore arranged to receive one end of a bar.
According to a further aspect of the invention, there is provided a vibrator including a casing, a rotatable eccentric within said casing, a housing secured to said casing, a plug secured within said housing, said plug having at least one bore extending at least partially therethrough and dimensioned to receive one end of a reinforcing bar whereby vibration created by rotation of said eccentric will be transmitted to said reinforcing bar.
According to a further aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of vibrating a member including the steps of placing a vibrator in contact with said member and vibrating said vibrator to vibrate said member.
According to a further aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of vibrating a bar including the steps of seating one end of said bar in a housing and vibrating said housing to impart vibrations said bar.
According to a further aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of setting concrete including the steps of providing at least one reinforcing bar, pouring wet concrete around said bar, at least partially to embed said bar, seating a protruding end of said bar in a vibrator housing, and vibrating said vibrator housing to impart vibrations to said at least partially embedded bar.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring now to the drawings, the vibrator shown in
Alternatively, although not shown in the drawings, the U-shaped straps could be replaced by strips, each strip having one end secured to the housing 1 and the other end to the vibrator cylinder 2. Again, securing can be effected by welding, by bolting, or by any other appropriate means.
Vibration is imparted to the housing 1 by rotating a shaft 7 which extends longitudinally and concentrically within the cylinder 2 and carries an eccentric weight 8 which can either be keyed on the shaft 7 for rotation therewith or, as best shown in
In operation, the shaft 7 is connected to a motor 10 by a flexible drive 6 and the motor 10 may be portable as shown in
The vibrator cylinder is a self-contained unit closed by an end cap 11. Bearings 12 are located within the cylinder 2 and support the shaft 7 to permit free turning of the eccentric weight. A seal 13 serves not only to prevent egress of lubricating fluid from the bearings but also ingress of contaminants such as dust, grit, or like particles which would be deleterious to the smooth running of the bearings.
The housing 1 is shown in the form of rectangular hollow tubular casting of metal which accommodates a plug 14 of firm, but resilient, material. A suitable composition is neoprene which, as will be explained hereinafter, is capable of accommodating a reinforcing bar and imparting vibration thereto while eliminating chatter. The plug 14 is snugly accommodated in the metal housing and is firmly retained in place by bolts 15 or other pin-like retaining elements which extend through holes 16 in the metallic casting and through registering bores 17 in the plug 14. As shown most clearly in
In one embodiment (not shown) the bore is a blind bore having walls and a bottom dimensioned comfortably to accommodate one end of a reinforcing bar. However, in the preferred embodiment, the bore extends completely through the plug 14 but is interrupted by a plate 19 embedded in the plug 14 which provides a common bottom to two concentric mutually opposed bores 18 and 20. As shown in
Additionally, and in order to accommodate rods of further differing diameter, a second plug having longitudinal bore diameters different from those in the plug 14 can be substituted for the plug 14. To accomplish this, it is necessary only for the second plug to have external dimensions the same or very similar to those of the plug 14 and also to having similarly aligned transverse bores similar to the bores 17 to register with the holes 16 and received the retaining bolts 15.
Operation of the above-described vibrator will now be described more particularly with reference to
In
To this end, the construction worker will place the housing 1 over a reinforcing bar 27 and will seat the upper end of that bar in the bore 18 in the plug 14 within the housing. The construction worker will then activate the motor 10, for example by a manual switch 10′, rapidly to rotate the shaft 7 and, by means of the eccentric weight 8, impart vibrations to the reinforcing rod through the intermediary of the plug 14 within the housing 1. The vibrations imparted to the bar 27 are transmitted to the concrete 26 surrounding the bar to enhance both de-aeration and settlement of the concrete. If reinforcing bars of differing diameters extend upwardly out of the stacked blocks shown in
When the desired agitation has been accomplished and voids within the poured slurry eliminated or very substantially diminished, disassembly is effected merely by removing the vibrator from the protruding end of the reinforcing bar. This avoids a problem inherent in vibrators of the type which are themselves immersed in the wet slurry. Such problem arises when a rapidly vibrating vibrator is removed from a wet slurry and the emergence of the vibrator from the surface of the slurry causes wet portions of the surface to fly rapidly upward the outward creating severe splatter.
In the embodiments described hereinabove and with particular reference to
With one exception, the remaining features of construction are essentially the same as in the embodiment described with reference to
Both construction and operation of the embodiment shown in
In the previously described preferred embodiments, the vibrator unit is “coupled” to a reinforcing bar by seating a free end of the reinforcing bar within a portion of the vibrator. Whilst this is a preferred arrangement, it will be appreciated that vibration of a protruding reinforcing bar to de-aerate and settle poured concrete which has not yet set and from which the bar protrudes could be effected by providing the vibrator with an external quick-release clamp-type mechanism design to grasp and hold the reinforcing bar while vibrations are transmitted thereto.
This application is a divisional of application Ser. No. 10/021,905 filed on Dec. 13, 2001 abandoned claims the benefit thereof and incorporates the same by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1770154 | Day | Jul 1930 | A |
1927075 | Thomas | Sep 1933 | A |
1970740 | Day | Aug 1934 | A |
2015217 | Deniau | Sep 1935 | A |
2040666 | Miller | May 1936 | A |
2522906 | Smith | Sep 1950 | A |
3551967 | Williams | Jan 1971 | A |
6239507 | Douthit | May 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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07048927 | Feb 1995 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040208080 A1 | Oct 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10021905 | Dec 2001 | US |
Child | 10836034 | US |