The present invention relates generally to pultruded-composite components and more particularly to the application of pultruded-composite components for a sheet pile system, such as for a retaining wall.
The use of sheet pile systems for retaining walls is know in the art. Examples of such systems include U.S. Pat. No. 6,135,675 to Moreau, U.S. Pat. No. 5,145,287 to Hooper et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 4,690,588 to Berger. Wood, steel, aluminum, and vinyl have traditionally been used to construct retaining walls. Each of these materials, however, has certain limitations. For example, wood is subject to rotting and insect infestation, and thus, has a relatively short life span as compared to the other materials. Steel is subject to corrosion, and because of its weight, requires additional equipment and manpower to install, thus increasing its overall cost. Aluminum, although lighter than steel and easier to install, is also subject to corrosion in certain applications. Vinyl, although lightweight and resistant to corrosion, lacks the strength of the other materials, and thus, is usually required to be used in conjunction with one or more of the other materials.
Composite components have been introduced to replace wood, steel, aluminum, and vinyl sheet pile components. Composite materials may be manufactured using a pultrusion process. In one type of pultrusion process, glass fibers are pulled through a resin bath where the glass fibers become saturated with a liquid thermosetting resin. Next, the coated fibers are formed to the proper shape using a forming guide or die. Finally, the reinforced material may be drawn through a heated curing die. Composite sheet pile components are stronger, easier to install, and longer lasting than their wood, steel, aluminum, and vinyl counterparts.
In a typical sheet pile retaining wall installation, pilings are driven into the ground using a vibratory hammer, vibratory plate compactor, jackhammer with a sheet shoe, or a drop impact hammer, among others. One or more pilings may be driven into the ground at the same time. Adjacent pilings may be interconnected to form a continuous wall. For example, a piling may have a “male” connector on one end and a “female” connector on the other end. The male connector of a first piling is mated with the female connector of a second piling, and the male connector of the second piling is mated with the female connector of a third piling, and so on, to form the retaining wall. One or more rows of horizontal supports, known as wales or walers, may be placed across the front or back face of the wall to lend additional support. Also, a cap and cap channel may be placed on the top of the wall.
The cap with a cap channel and wales may be connected to a tieback system, which secures the retaining wall. A tieback system normally includes a series of anchor members (or deadmans) and tieback rods. In a seawall application, for example, the tieback system has an anchor located on the land side of the seawall. One end of a tieback rod is attached to the anchor. The other end of the tieback rod passes through the pilings and is secured with a fastener on the sea side of the seawall. In most seawall applications, the tieback rod also passes through the cap and cap channel or wale. Thus, the cap, cap channel, and wale aid in distributing the retaining force exerted by the tieback system over the face of the seawall.
Prior art retaining wall typically use metallic (for example, galvanized, stainless steel, and resin treated steel, etc.) tieback rods. The metallic tieback rods are treated to resist corrosion, however, the metallic tieback rods inevitably corrode over time. The corrosion of the metallic tieback rod may also adversely affect the anchors and retaining wall to which the tieback rod is attached.
Thus, there is the need for a composite tieback rod that better resists the effects of corrosion, that will not adversely affect the anchors and retaining wall to which it is attached, and may be used in a tieback system having composite components.
Furthermore, prior art retaining walls typically use wooden wales. In addition to rotting and insect infestation mentioned above, the use of wooden wales present other problems. For example, the tieback rod and its fastener may protrude from the wale. The exposed end may damage anything coming into contact with the wale. For example, boats pulling up next to a seawall may be scratched, gouged, or even punctured by the tieback rod end protruding from the wale. To overcome this problem, countersink holes may be drilled into the wooden wale such that the tieback rod end and the fastener do not protrude past the face of the wale. However, drilling countersink holes increases the labor necessary to install the wale.
Thus, there is a need for a composite wale that resists rotting, insect infestation, and corrosion (among others), and that is formed with a recess that prevents a tieback rod end and its fastener from protruding beyond the face of the wale. Furthermore, a need exits for a retaining wall system that includes sufficient structural capabilities, which resists rotting, insect infestation, corrosion, and other detrimental effects, and which is lightweight and easy to install.
The present invention relates to a wale for use in bracing a retaining wall. The wale is comprised of a back wall, a front wall having a channel formed therein, and a plurality of connecting walls connecting the back and front walls to form at least one chamber therebetween. In one embodiment, the wale is of unitary construction and the plurality of connecting walls include top and bottom walls which form a single chamber between the back and front walls. In an alternative embodiment, the wale is of a unitary construction and the plurality of connecting walls include a top, upper reinforcing, lower reinforcing, and bottom walls, which form a plurality of chambers between the back and front walls. The wale may be made from a pultruded composite material, such as a fiberglass reinforced plastic (FRP) resin impregnated composite.
The present invention also relates to a retaining wall system comprised of a plurality of anchors, a plurality of tieback rods, a plurality of tieback fasteners, a plurality of pultruded, composite, inter-locking sheet pilings, and a cap member comprised of the same material as, and operable to cover the top of, the sheet pilings. The retaining wall system also includes a cap connector operable to join at least two adjacent cap members. The cap, alone or in combination with a cap channel, and/or a wale member are operable to distribute a force exerted by the anchors, tieback rods, and tieback fasteners along the plurality of sheet pilings. The wale member is constructed of the same material as the sheet pilings, and adjacent wale members are joined by a wale splice.
The retaining wall system's tieback rods may have a first end and a second end, the first end being secured to one of the anchors and a second end being secured by a tieback fastener on the opposite side of the retaining wall relative to the anchor after passing through the sheet pilings. Alternatively, the second end of the tieback rod (after passing through the sheet piling) may further pass through a cap or a wale before being secured by the tieback fastener on the opposite side of the retaining wall relative to the anchor. The tieback rod is comprised of a composite pultruded material and may be of unitary construction.
To enable the present invention to be easily understood and readily practiced, the present invention will now be described for purposes of illustration and not limitation, in connection with the following figures wherein:
It should be noted, that other composite materials, non-unitary construction methods, and other manufacturing techniques may be used while remaining within the scope of the present invention. For example, thermoset resin systems (such as isopolyester, vinylester, epoxy, polyurethane, and phenolic, among others) may be used with various reinforcement materials (such as e-glass, s-glass, a-glass, carbon, graphite, and Aramid, among others) while remaining within the scope of the present invention. Additionally, thermoplastic systems may also be used while remaining within the scope of the present invention.
In the current embodiment, wale 10 is substantially C-shaped and is comprised of a back wall 12 which is connected to a front wall 14 by a plurality of connecting walls: a top wall 22, a bottom wall 24, an upper reinforcing wall 26, and a lower reinforcing wall 28. The front wall 14 is comprised of a top portion 16, a C-shaped channel portion 18, and a bottom portion 20. The channel portion 18 is of a sufficient depth such that when secured to a retaining wall by a tieback rod and fastener, the tieback rod end and fastener will not protrude from the channel portion 18.
The back 12, front 14, and connecting 22, 24, 26, 28 walls may form one or more chambers 30, 32, 34 within the wale 10. In the current embodiment, three chambers 30, 32, 34 are shown. The upper chamber 30 is defined by the back wall 12, top wall 22, top portion 16, channel portion 18, and upper reinforcing wall 26. The middle chamber 32 is defined by the back wall 12, upper reinforcing wall 26, channel portion 18, and lower reinforcing wall 28. The lower chamber is defined by the back wall 12, bottom wall 24, bottom portion 20, channel portion 18 and lower reinforcing wall 28. It should be noted that the number, shape, and manner of defining the chambers may be varied while remaining within the scope of the present invention. As an example, reinforcing walls may connect the channel portion 18 to the top 22 and bottom 24 walls instead of to the back wall 12.
In the current embodiment, wale splice 36 is placed over the joint where wale 10A abuts wale 10B. Splice hole 38A is aligned with a wale hole in wale 10A. Splice hole 38B is aligned with a wale hole in wale 10B. Bolts (not shown in
In the current embodiment, holes 38A, 38B are elliptical slots disposed vertically to permit adjustment of the wale splice 36. It should be noted that other opening shapes (such as horizontally disposed elliptical slots and round holes, among others) may be used while remaining within the scope of the present invention. It should also be noted a tieback rod end, may be used to secure the wale splice 36 to the wale 10A, 10B.
In one embodiment, the retaining wall system 40 is constructed according to the following layout. One or more anchors 50 are placed into the ground behind where the retaining wall is to be installed. The anchors 50 are inter-connected using one or more connecting boards 52. One or more template supports 48 are driven into the ground (in front of the anchors 50) in the approximate location of where the sheet pilings 60 are to be located. The template supports 48 act as an installation guide for the sheet pilings 60. The template supports 48 may be connected to each other by one or more inside wales 46. The sheet pilings 60 are driven into the ground in front of and next to the template supports 48. A portion of each sheet piling 60 is left exposed above the mud line 58. The sheet pilings 60 are inter-connected with each other to form the retaining wall. Once the sheet pilings 60 are installed, the template supports 48 and inside wales 46 are removed. Alternatively, the template supports 48 and inside wales may be abandoned in place, or may be secured to the retaining wall.
The tieback system 41 is connected to the retaining wall. For example, a first end of a tieback rod 54 is attached to an anchor 50. One or more caps 44 are placed on the top of the sheet pilings 60. A second end of the tieback rod 54 passes through the retaining wall sheet pilings 60 and the cap 44. A cap channel 80 is then placed horizontally across the face of the cap 44; the second end of the tieback rod 54 passing through the cap channel 80. The second end of the tieback rod 54 is secured by a tieback fastener 74 (such as a bolt, washer and bolt combination, etc.) positioned within cap channel 80. A backfill material 56 is then placed between the anchors 50 and the sheet pilings 60. The backfill 56 is used to cover and provide additional strength to the tieback system 41.
In the current embodiment, one end of the tieback rod 54 is secured to an anchor 50, while the second end passes through the sheet piling 60 and the center chamber 32 of the wale 10, and is secured with a tieback fastener 74. In the current embodiment, a washer and nut combination is used to secure the second end of the tieback rod 54. The second end of the tieback rod 54 and the tieback fastener 74 do not protrude out of the channel 18 of the wale 10. It should be noted that a tieback system 41 which utilizes both a wale 10 and a cap/cap channel combination may be is used while remaining within the scope of the present invention.
In the current embodiment (as best illustrated in
In the current embodiment, approximately one-half of the length of cap splice 70 is inserted into one cap (for example 44A) and the other one-half of cap splice 70 is inserted into the adjacent cap (for example 44B). Each cap section (e.g., 44A, 44B) is then fastened to the cap splice 70, and thus, to each other. In the current embodiment, self-tapping screws are used to connect a cap 44 to a cap splice 70. It should be noted that the placement and number of fasteners used may be dictated by design considerations, and other fastening means may be used while remaining within the scope of the present invention.
Cap splice 70 may also connect adjacent caps 44 that abut each other at an angle. As illustrated in
In the current embodiment, cap splice 70 is substantially an elongated square, approximately 32 inches in length. It should be noted that other shapes (for example, that used in
Referring now to
In the current embodiment, all components of the retaining wall system, including the tieback system 41, sheet pilings 60, caps 44, wales 10, wale splices 36, cap channels 80, cap spacer tubes 76, cap splices 70, sheet piling connectors 68, template supports 48, and inside wales 46, among others, are comprised of composite materials (such as, FRP), are of unitary construction, and are formed using a pultrusion process. The retaining wall system of the present invention is lightweight, easy to install, and provides sufficient structural capabilities, resists rotting, insect infestation, corrosion, and detrimental effects. It should be noted, that other opposite materials, non-unitary construction methods, and other manufacturing techniques may be used while remaining within the scope of the present invention.
The above-described embodiments of the invention are intended to be illustrative only. Numerous alternative embodiments may be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the following claims.
The present invention is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/199,852 entitled “Wale and Retaining Wall System” filed 19 Jul. 2002 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,893,191 and assigned to the same assignee as the present invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040013476 A1 | Jan 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10199852 | Jul 2002 | US |
Child | 10619131 | US |