The present disclosure relates to a machine. An embodiment of the present disclosure relates to a lock for a boom of a work vehicle.
Work vehicles may have a linkage between the vehicle's chassis and a work tool. This linkage may include a boom which may be raised or lowered, such as by an actuator such a hydraulic cylinder. A boom lock may be utilized to lock the boom in a particular position or prevent the boom from moving in a particular direction or beyond a certain range or point. As one example, a boom lock may be utilized on a raised boom to prevent the boom from lowering.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, a work vehicle may include a chassis, a linkage, and a locking pin. The linkage may include an upper link pivotally connected to the chassis, a lower link pivotally connected to the chassis, and a boom. The boom may include an upper arm, a lower arm, a front arm, and a locking tab. The upper arm may be pivotally connected to the upper link. The lower arm may be pivotally connected to the lower link. The front arm may be pivotally connected to a work tool assembly. The locking tab may be affixed to one of the front arm and the lower arm and protruding from one of the front arm and the lower arm in a direction away from the work tool assembly. The locking pin may be connected to the chassis and extend laterally relative to the chassis from a retracted position to an extended position. The locking pin may be positioned outside a travel path of the locking tab when the locking pin is in the retracted position and positioned to intersect the travel path of the locking tab when the locking pin is in the extended position.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, a lever may be accessible from an operator's station of the work vehicle and configured to actuate the locking pin between the retracted position and the extended position.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, a hollow cylinder may be disposed on the chassis and extend through a portion of the chassis, with the locking pin disposed within the hollow cylinder.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the locking pin may be included in a lock assembly which includes a lever accessible from within an operator's station of the work vehicle. The lock assembly may be configured such that rotation of the lever in a first direction moves the locking pin toward the extended position and rotation of the lever is a second direction opposite the first direction moves the locking pin towards the retracted position.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the locking tab may be integrally formed with the boom.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the locking tab may protrude downwardly and rearwardly from a pivotal connection between the boom and the lower link when the linkage is in a boom locking position. The locking tab may be in contact with the locking pin when the locking pin is in the extended position and the linkage is in the boom locking position.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, a method of operating a boom lock of a work vehicle, the work vehicle including a linkage with an upper link pivotally connected to a chassis, a lower link pivotally connected to the chassis, and a boom with an upper arm pivotally connected to the upper link, a lower arm pivotally connected to the lower link, and a front arm pivotally connected to a work tool assembly, which includes raising the linkage above a boom locking position, extending a locking pin laterally relative to the chassis from a retracted position to an extended position, and lowering the linkage until it is in the boom locking position where a locking tab protruding outwardly from the lower arm away from the front arm is in contact with the locking pin.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the extending may be performed by an operator within an operator's station of the work vehicle.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the extending may be performed by actuating a lever accessible from within an operator's station of the work vehicle.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, operating a boom lock of a work vehicle may include raising the linkage until the locking tab is not in contact with the locking pin, retracting the locking pin from the extended position to the retracted position, and lowering the linkage below a boom locking position.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the locking tab may be integrally formed with the boom.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, a work vehicle may include a chassis, a linkage including an upper link, a lower link, and a boom, a locking tab, and a locking pin. The upper link may be pivotally connected to an upper rear portion of the chassis at a first end and pivotally connected to a boom at a second end opposite the first end. The lower link may be pivotally connected to an upper front portion of the chassis at a first end and pivotally connected to the boom at a second end opposite the first end. The boom may include a forked shape with a front arm at its forward end which forks into an upper arm and a lower arm at its rearward ends. The front arm may be positioned forward of the upper arm and the lower arm and pivotally connected to a work tool assembly at one end. The upper arm may be positioned above the lower arm and rearward of the front arm when the linkage is at a position where the work tool assembly is resting on the ground. The upper arm may be fixedly connected to the front arm at a first end and pivotally connected to the upper link at a second end opposite the first end. The lower arm may be fixedly connected to the front arm at a first end and pivotally connected to the lower link at a second end opposite the first end. The locking tab may extend a distance from a pivotal connection between the boom and the lower link in a direction away from the front arm and be connected to at least one of the lower arm and the lower link. The locking pin may be connected to the chassis and laterally extendable relative to the chassis from a retracted position to an extended position. The locking pin may be positioned to be outside a travel path of the locking tab when the locking pin is in the retracted position and positioned to intersect the travel path of the locking tab when the locking pin is in the extended position.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the locking tab may be fixedly connected to the lower arm.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the locking tab may be integrally formed with the lower arm.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the locking tab may be fixedly connected to the lower link.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the locking tab may be integrally formed with the lower link.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the lever may be connected to the locking pin and accessible from within an operator's station of the work vehicle. The lever may be configured such that actuation of the lever moves the locking pin between the retracted position and the extended position.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the locking tab may protrude downwardly and rearwardly from a pivotal connection between the boom and the lower link when the linkage is in a boom locking position. The locking tab may be in contact with the locking pin when the locking pin is in the extended position and the linkage is in the boom locking position.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, a hollow cylinder may be disposed on the chassis and extend through a portion of the chassis, with the locking pin disposed within the hollow cylinder.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, the locking pin may be included in a lock assembly which also includes a lever accessible from within an operator's station of the work vehicle. The lock assembly may be configured such that rotation of the lever in a first direction moves the locking pin toward the extended position and rotation of the lever is a second direction opposite the first direction moves the locking pin towards the retracted position.
The above and other features will become apparent from the following description and accompanying drawings.
The detailed description of the drawings refers to the accompanying figures in which:
Like reference numerals are used to indicate like elements throughout the several figures.
The work vehicle 100 is equipped with a multiple member linkage 104. A work tool 106 is pivotally connected at a forward portion of the linkage 104, while a rear portion of linkage 104 is pivotally connected to a chassis 108 of the work vehicle 100. The work tool 106 is illustrated as a bucket, but may be any number of work tools such as forks, a blade, an auger, a drill, or a hammer, just to name a few possibilities. The linkage 104 may be raised or lowered by a pair of lift cylinders 110, and the work tool 106 may be tilted by a pair of tilt cylinders 112. Each of the lift cylinders 110 and the tilt cylinders 112 are double-acting hydraulic cylinders actuated by the flow of pressurized hydraulic fluid from a hydraulic control valve, which in turn is controlled by an operator in operator station 114. The retraction of the lift cylinders 110 lowers the linkage 106 to a ground level position, as shown in
The linkage 104 includes a boom 116, an upper link 118, and a lower link 120, of which there are one on each of the left and right sides of the work vehicle 100. The boom 116, upper link 118, and lower link 120 are each weldments comprising multiple pieces of steel (some of which are formed) joined by welds, but in alternative embodiments these may be formed in an alternative manner (e.g., a solid sheet of steel, a casting) or of alternative materials. The configuration of linkage 104 may also be referred to as a modified radial lift linkage, or a vertical lift linkage. The linkage 104 may also include other components, including additional members in some embodiments.
A rearward portion of the upper link 118 pivotally connects to the chassis 108 near an upper and rearward portion of the chassis 108, substantially about the first axis 122 although the exact axis of rotation may vary with manufacturing variations. A forward portion of the upper link 118 pivotally connects to the boom 116 substantially about the second axis 124. In this embodiment, the upper link 118 has a boomerang shape, with a first end of the boomerang curved about the first axis 122, the second end of the boomerang curved about the second axis 124, and a crosstube 126 intersecting the upper link 118 near its center. As used herein, and as can be seen in
The boom 116 forms a forked shape, with a front arm 116a forming its forward portion and splitting into an upper arm 116b and a lower arm 116c for its rearward portion. The front arm 116a of the boom 106 pivotally connects to the work tool 104 substantially about the third axis 128. The upper arm 116b of the boom 116 pivotally connects to the upper link 118 substantially about the second axis 124. The lower arm 116c pivotally connects to the lower link 120 substantially about a fourth axis 130.
The lower link 120 is a straight bar, which has a rearward portion pivotally connected to the boom 116 substantially about the fourth axis 130 and a forward portion pivotally connected to the chassis 106 substantially about a fifth axis 132.
The linkage 104 may be referred to as a modified radial linkage (or the work vehicle 100 may be referred to as a modified radial machine) due to its performance characteristics when being raised and lowered. Certain skid steers may utilize a single rigid member for a linkage, with a first end of the member pivotally connected to near the rear of the chassis of the skid steer and the second end pivotally connected to the work tool. When such a linkage, which may be referred to as a radial linkage or a radial boom, is raised or lowered, the second end of the boom traces an arc as the boom rotates about its first end. By contrast, when the linkage 104 is raised or lowered, the third axis 128 does not trace an arc but instead traces a path which is closer to a vertical line than that of a radial linkage due to the kinematics of the boom 116, the upper link 118, and the lower link 120.
The linkage 104 includes a tab 134, which may also be referred to as a locking tab, which is a plate affixed to the lower arm 116c of the boom 116. The lower arm 116c comprises a box shape, with two substantially vertical sheets of steel spaced apart, and the tab 134 is affixed to the medial vertical sheet. The tab 134 protrudes outwardly from the lower arm 116c in a direction opposite the work tool 106. The tab 134 protrudes outwardly from the lower arm 116c a distance beyond the fourth axis 130 and the pin interconnecting the lower arm 116c and the lower link 120. In alternative embodiments, the tab 134 may be affixed to a different portion of the lower arm 116c or may instead be connected to the lower link 120 instead of the boom 116.
As shown in
The operator may then actuate the boom lock 136, such as by turning or sliding a lever or pin which may be reached by the operator while remaining within the operator station 114, causing the boom lock 136 to move from an unlocked position to a locked position where the boom lock 136 is in the travel path of the tab 134, as is shown in
After actuating the boom lock 136 to the locked position, the operator may command the linkage 106 to lower until the tab 134 is in contact with the boom lock 136 and the linkage 106 is in the boom lock position, as is shown in
Locking pin 138 may be moved by an actuation assembly 144, which is pivotally connected to locking pin 138 on the medial side of locking pin 138 as shown in
While the disclosure has been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and foregoing description, such illustration and description is not restrictive in character, it being understood that illustrative embodiment(s) have been shown and described and that all changes and modifications that come within the spirit of the disclosure are desired to be protected. Alternative embodiments of the present disclosure may not include all of the features described yet still benefit from at least some of the advantages of such features. Those of ordinary skill in the art may devise their own implementations that incorporate one or more of the features of the present disclosure and fall within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.