This application is the U.S. national phase of International Application No. PCT/SE2008/050717 filed 16 Jun. 2008 which designated the U.S. and claims priority to Swedish Patent Application No. 0701683-5 filed 10 Jul. 2007, the entire contents of each of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention concerns an arrangement for the attachment of a wear lining element onto a surface that is exposed to wear in a supporting construction according to the introduction to claim 1. The invention concerns also a wear lining element for a rotary grinding drum according to the introduction to claim 16
Wall sections that are part of, for example, rotary grinding drums, chutes, channels and similar constructions are subject to wear, and are for this reason provided on their surface that is exposed to wear with a wear lining of wear-resistant material in order to increase the ability of the wall to withstand wear, abrasion, impacts and blows. This wear lining material is normally constituted by an elastomeric material, but it may also consist of other suitable materials with high resistance to wear, such as highly alloyed steel. A wear lining is normally divided into smaller units, known as segments, in the form of wear lining elements that in order to form a cladding are brought into contact next to each other on the side of the supporting construction that is exposed to wear. The wear lining elements are fastened to the support with the aid of fixing screws or bolts that are inserted into special attachment holes arranged in the supporting construction.
Since the wear lining elements are normally brought into contact with the side of the wall or the supporting construction that is exposed to wear while it is mounted using the said attachment holes from the opposite side of the supporting construction, known as the tensioning side, there are major problems associated with adapting each individual wear lining element such that the attachment means are located in the centre of each attachment hole before the wear lining element can be lowered into place.
Since the wear lining elements are relatively heavy, lifting aids, such as the arm of a crane or similar, are required. When installing lining into a rotary grinding drum for which the wear lining elements need to be replaced at relatively frequent intervals, the wear lining elements are lifted into the drum from one end and placed into position inside the drum, on its inner surface. Even if the crane operator is skilled, the actual adaptation of the wear lining elements to the inner surface of the drum is work that is both dangerous and time-consuming.
As has been mentioned above, one of the problems that are most difficult to solve when using wear lining elements as wear protection, is the technology for the rapid and efficient placement and fastening of the wear lining elements in question onto the supporting construction surface, i.e. onto the surface that is to be protected from wear. The known methods that have been suggested include providing the wear lining element with attachment holes such that a certain part of the mounting operation can take place from the side of the wear fining element that faces outwards, and making it possible to adapt the wear lining element such that the relevant attachment holes of the wear lining element and those of the supporting construction are located immediately above each other. In the said position, i.e. when the two holes are located immediately above each other, attachment means are introduced from the side of the wear lining element that is exposed to wear, i.e. from the wear side, in through the two holes such that it becomes possible to access the attachment means from the lower surface of the supporting construction, or more accurately, from the tensioning side of this surface. Such arrangements are known from, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,036,127 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,082,646. The disadvantage of this prior art technology is that the wear of the wear lining elements increases due to the cavities that are formed. In particular, wear increases in those zones of the wear lining element that demonstrate holes. The lifetime of the wear lining elements can be increased by avoiding holes in the surface exposed to wear.
One of the problems that is difficult to master when using wear lining elements, in addition to that of the alignment during attachment, is that of achieving wear lining elements with as low an amount as possible of metallic material, without compromising on the requirement that it is to be possible to attach the elements in question rapidly and securely onto the supporting construction, i.e. the surface that is to be protected from wear.
One aim of the present invention, therefore, is to achieve an arrangement for the attachment of wear linings and wear lining elements onto the side of a supporting construction that is exposed to wear such as, for example, the wall or inner surface of a rotary grinding drum, which attachment arrangement leads to improved use and greater freedom during the construction and design of the rubber part, together with rapid and safe attachment of the wear lining elements onto the supporting construction. A further aim of the present invention is to achieve a wear lining element for a rotary grinding drum.
The aim of the invention is achieved with the aid of an arrangement that demonstrates the properties and characteristics that are specified in claim 1, and with the aid of a wear lining element of the type specified in claim 16.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention are made clear by the non-independent claims.
An embodiment of the invention will be described below with reference to the attached drawings, of which:
An extended wear lining element of the type that is intended to be placed in a row one after the other in order to form a cladding on the inside of a supporting construction generally denoted by 2 is shown in
As is made most clear by
In order to agitate the charge of ore in the rotary grinding drum the upper surface 4 forms ridges 6 that extend axially along the rotary grinding drum and that protrude in towards the centre of the drum. Lifting loops 8 are arranged on the said upper surface 4 in a valley part 7 that is located at a significantly lower height between two parallel ridges 6, which lifting loops are intended to interact with a hook or similar lifting means that is a component of a lifting accessory such as a crane, with the purpose of facilitating the handling of the wear lining element 1, principally due to the good balance that is obtained in this way. Attachment means 9 are arranged at the bottom of the wear lining element 1 intended for mounting of the wear lining element onto the supporting surface 5 of the supporting construction following introduction of the attachment means into attachment holes 10 arranged in the supporting construction 2. When the said attachment means 9 has been inserted into the attachment hole and extends out from the opposite side of the attachment hole 10, i.e. the side that faces away from the supporting surface 5 of the supporting construction 2 and forms a tensioning surface, the wear lining element 1 can be fastened onto the supporting surface 5 through the attachment means being brought into interaction with the tensioning surface through a fastening means that is a part of the attachment means. The said fastening means may be constituted by, for example, a nut and its associated washer.
Each attachment means 9 comprises, according to the invention, a number of parts that can be united by interacting fixing and locking means 12, which parts are principally constituted by a holder 13 that is fixed attached to the wear lining element and that protrudes from the bottom 3 of the wear lining element, and two parts that can be united with the holder in a manner that allows them to be removed intended to be supported by the holder in a retentive manner. One of these two unitable parts forms a guide 14 for the insertion or direction of the wear lining element towards the supporting surface 5 of the supporting construction 2 through interaction with the attachment holes 10 of the supporting construction 2. The second of these unitable parts forms a mounting 15 in order to fix and hold in place by pressure the wear lining element 1 against the supporting surface 5 of the supporting construction 2 through interaction with the tensioning surface 11 of the supporting construction 2. The guide 14 and the mounting 15 are shown in more detail in
With reference also to
In a first alternative embodiment, the temporary locking means 28 can comprise a first lock member 29 in the form of a U-shaped element and a second lock member 30 in the form of a hole in the guide 14 that corresponds to one of the legs or shanks of the U-shaped element.
As is shown in the enlargement of details in
The first lock member 29 can in a third alternative embodiment comprise a key that has been given U-shaped forked shanks at one of its ends, which shanks are to engage with the guide 14 in a manner that provides locking through surrounding at an angle greater than 180° a sector of a circle of a circumferential track arranged in the guide. This means that the forked shanks are sprung shanks, and have such a length that they snap onto the said circumferential track.
The present arrangement is not limited to that which has been described above and shown in the drawings: it can be changed and modified in a number of different ways within the framework of the innovative concept specified by the attached patent claims. It should be understood, for example, that it would be possible to replace the mounting 15 and its associated fastening means 16 by a suitable screw or bolt provided with a casing.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0701683 | Jul 2007 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE2008/050717 | 6/16/2008 | WO | 00 | 12/17/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/008810 | 1/15/2009 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4065064 | Anthony | Dec 1977 | A |
4424938 | Day | Jan 1984 | A |
4580734 | Eroskey et al. | Apr 1986 | A |
4583575 | Lundmark | Apr 1986 | A |
4848681 | Eriksson et al. | Jul 1989 | A |
5431351 | Lejonklou | Jul 1995 | A |
5516051 | Brisbois et al. | May 1996 | A |
6036127 | Moller | Mar 2000 | A |
6082646 | Clarke et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100127109 A1 | May 2010 | US |