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AU2002301629B2 - Surface working device and attachment - Google Patents

Surface working device and attachment Download PDF

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Publication number
AU2002301629B2
AU2002301629B2 AU2002301629A AU2002301629A AU2002301629B2 AU 2002301629 B2 AU2002301629 B2 AU 2002301629B2 AU 2002301629 A AU2002301629 A AU 2002301629A AU 2002301629 A AU2002301629 A AU 2002301629A AU 2002301629 B2 AU2002301629 B2 AU 2002301629B2
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AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
pick
protector
end protector
working element
working
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
AU2002301629A
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AU2002301629A1 (en
AU2002301629C1 (en
Inventor
Michael Andrew Mclean
Mark James Truebody
Steven Lee Weaver
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Sandvik Intellectual Property AB
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Sandvik Intellectual Property AB
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Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from AUPR8512A external-priority patent/AUPR851201A0/en
Application filed by Sandvik Intellectual Property AB filed Critical Sandvik Intellectual Property AB
Priority to AU2002301629A priority Critical patent/AU2002301629C1/en
Publication of AU2002301629A1 publication Critical patent/AU2002301629A1/en
Assigned to SANDVIK INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY HB reassignment SANDVIK INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY HB Request for Assignment Assignors: SANDVIK AB
Assigned to SANDVIK INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AB reassignment SANDVIK INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AB Request for Assignment Assignors: SANDVIK INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY HB
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU2002301629B2 publication Critical patent/AU2002301629B2/en
Publication of AU2002301629C1 publication Critical patent/AU2002301629C1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Description

P/00/011 Regulation 3.2
AUSTRALIA
Patents Act 1990
ORIGINAL
COMPLETE SPECIFICATION STANDARD PATENT Invention Title: SURFACE WORKING DEVICE AND ATTACHMENT Applicant: SANDVIK AB The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to me: 1 Documentl 2 Surface Working Device and Attachment The present invention relates to a surface working device, such as for planing and grading roads, and to an attachment for the same.
Various road maintenance systems exist for working road surfaces.
Such working may for example take the form of grading and planing a road, e.g.
in order to provide a dirt road or the like with a smooth driving surface. It could also take the form of for example ice and snow scraping for keeping roads open in winter conditions, as well as asphalt planing and gravel maintenance.
As shown in Fig. 1, such systems typically include a planing blade 1 which breaks up and smooths the surface of a road. The blade 1 is mounted beneath a vehicle between the vehicle's front and rear wheels F and R.
The planing blade 1 is generally angled to the direction of movement D of the vehicle, this angle (denoted a in Fig. 1) being changed dependent on e.g.
the hardness of the surface being worked.
One such known system is the Sandvik System 2 0 00 TM provided by Sandvik AB of Sandviken, Sweden.
As shown in Fig. 2, this system utilises a cutter board 2 that is attached to the planing blade 1 and has a plurality of rotating picks 3 mounted within it.
The picks 3 break up the road surface as the grading vehicle advances.
Details of this system can be found in EP-A-179034, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
As the planing blade 1 is angled with respect to the vehicle's direction of motion D, the leading edge 4 of the cutter board 2 (corresponding to the leading edge 5 of the planing blade 1) is subject to wear.
In order to counter this, an end protector 6, shown in Fig. 11, has been devised for the cutter board 2.
This end protector 6 is mounted on the cutter board 2 by bolts 7 (only one shown) which extend through bolt holes 8 of the protector 6 and similar bolt holes 9 in the cutter board 2 and in the blade 1.
The end protector 6 protects the leading edge 4 of the cutter board 2 against wear, and can extend the life of the cutter board 2.
W:spmv\SANDVIKendpoectdor.doc 00 The inventors of the present invention have found, however, that 0 0problems can occur when the blade 1 is used to grade or plane hard road surfaces, such as are often found on dirt roads and country tracks.
These problems can include a riding up of the protector 6 over the cutter board 2, so as to expose the leading edge 4 of the cutter board 2 to wear.
Furthermore, the bolts 7 holding the protector 6 in place can sometimes loosen and shear off under the loading actions experienced during use.
_The present invention aims to provide an alternative end protector that is designed to address such problems.
According to the present invention, there is provided a working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle for working a surface, the working element including a body portion having a front surface and spaced apart pick holes, each pick hole having upper and lower ends, and an end protector disposed at least at one end of the body portion, the end protector mounted to at least one of the pick holes which is pick-free and located at the respective end of the body portion, wherein the end protector covers an end edge of the body portion and a portion of the front surface extending from the end edge the working element further including picks mounted to the other pick holes.
From this aspect, therefore, the present invention can be seen to reside in the removal of one or more of the end picks from the working element, e.g.
cutter board, so as to allow the end protector to be mounted to the working element through the unused pick hole or holes.
This may be achieved, for example, by having a fastening member, such as a bolt, extend into and/or through the or each empty pick hole and engage the end protector.
The use of one or more of the pick holes to mount the end protector in place provides a secure attachment that resists riding up of the end protector.
Furthermore, the orientation of the bolt or other fastener within the pick hole helps to reduce the likelihood of bolt shear or the like.
A working element having an end protector attached in accordance with the present invention may provide good protection for the working element when for example it is used in the working of hard surfaces, such as compacted dirt tracks and the like, and may also be used e.g. in mining board systems for e.g. open cut mines, quarries and hard rock mines. It may also however be YV BERH0680703\Spec pga 3AprO8 doc 3a o 0 used with working elements in general across the range of working applications, Ssuch as ice and snow clearing and the like.
In many situations, the use of one pick hole to mount the end protector may be all that is required. For extra stability, however, one or more further pick Yv\BEH-m80703\Speci pg. 3Apr8 doc 4 holes could be used to mount the end protector, so that for example the two pick holes that are closest to the leading edge of the working element could be used.
The attachment of the end protector to the working element may take any suitable form, as may the shape and construction of the end protector.
In one preferred embodiment, the end protector is configured to slide onto the end of the cutter board, and includes at least one hole or slot that extends over a top and/or bottom opening of one of the end pick holes. A fastening element may then extend through the hole/slot and into the pick hole to hold the end protector in place.
For example, a bolt or other fastener may extend through a hole or slot in an upper face of the end protector, downwardly through the pick hole and into a recess in a lower portion of the end protector. In order to secure the fastener, the recess may for example be tapped or a suitable thread could be provided in the hole or slot in the end protector upper face.
Alternatively, the bolt or fastener could extend in the opposite direction, and as a further alternative, the recess could be replaced by a hole allowing the fastener to extend completely through the end protector and to be fastened by further means, such as a nut or the like.
As well as bolts, other fastening means could be used, for example screw, clip and/or bayonet type constructions could be used, and the bolt may be replaced by some other shaft member or stud element. Other fastening systems could include similar systems to those used to hold the picks in place in the holes, e.g. a split spring sleeve mounted on a bolt or shaft/stud element of the end protector which resiliently engages the insides of the pick holes.
In one preferred embodiment, the fastening element has a shank portion of narrower dimensions, e.g. diameter, than a head portion, e.g. so that the fastening element is of a stepped configuration. The stepped portion may provide a sharp transition or a more gradual curved transition.
In this embodiment, the transition, e.g. stepped, section between the head portion and the shank portion, e.g. a bottom surface of the head portion, may bear against the body portion of the working element so as to provide a force between the end protector and the working element in order to hold or assist in holding the end protector in place. This fastening element may screw WIpoovsSANDVIKendprotedtor.doc into the end protector, and may include a threaded portion at the head portion and/or at the end of the shank portion for engagement with a threaded hole or recess in the protector. When the fastening is provided at the head portion, the shank portion need not be sized to extend completely through a pick hole, and may instead merely extend part way into the pick hole.
Although preferably of one piece construction and slidable onto the end of the working element, the end protector may be of e.g. two-part construction, in which case the parts could be connected together on mounting the protector to the working element. They may for example be clamped or bolted together or otherwise fastened. In such situations, the actual fastening element of the end protector need not necessarily extend through the vacated pick hole or holes, rather a stud or the like could extend into or through the pick hole to hold the end protector in place, whilst fastening e.g. the clamping together of the two portions of the end protector, could occur externally of the pick hole.
The end protector may be provided with one or more protective surfaces for protecting the leading edge of the working element on which it is to be mounted. These surfaces may take different forms depending on the use to which the working element is to be put. They may for example vary in size, orientation, number and material. This may depend for example on the type of roads and conditions in which they are designed to be used.
The protective surfaces may be made of a suitably hard material, e.g. a cemented carbide material, such as tungsten carbide, and may form an integral part of or be mounted onto the end protector. The amount of wear-resistant material used, its size and volume may vary depending on the applications and conditions in which it is to be used.
The end protector may include more than one protective surface, so that for example one surface provides more protection when the working blade is oriented in one direction, e.g. angled more towards the direction of travel of the grading vehicle, whilst another surface provides more protection when the working blade is oriented in another direction, e.g. angled more transversely with regard to the direction of movement of the grading vehicle. For example, one surface may provide (the main) protection between about 200 and about 450, whilst another may provide (the main) protection between about 450 and about 900 W;Aprovs\SANDVIKendprOtector.doc In one preferred embodiment, the protecting surface or surfaces of the end protector may include one or more tool elements, e.g. of cemented carbide material. Such tool elements may be configured so as to provide a cutting, rolling and/or other working action to a surface during grading.
The end protector may also be provided with one or more tool portions to replace the pick element or elements that are removed from their holes in order to accommodate the end protector. The tool portions may be configured so as to provide a similar cut as the other picks in the working element. In one embodiment, a tool portion is configured so that in use the front tip of the tool portion is set just above the pick points of the picks.
These tool portions may also provide protection to the leading edge of the working element, e.g. when the working element is in a more transverse orientation with respect to vehicle advance.
The tool portions may take any suitable form, and may have a head that is for example similar to that of the picks. They may also be mounted within the end protector for rotation.
The working element will generally be mounted on the blade or the like so that in use it is angled to the vertical, e.g. it is inclined at an angle of about 200 to the vertical. This can expose the back edge of the working element to wear, and the end protector is preferably configured so as to protect this back edge. In one embodiment, a hardened surface of the end protector, e.g. a tool portion, is configured so that, in use, it extends below the position of the back edge of the working element.
Besides being angled to the direction of travel and to the vertical, the working element (and e.g. the blade to which it is attached) may be positioned in use so that one end is lower than the other, e.g. it is rotated from a horizontal position about an axis extending in the direction of travel of the vehicle or the like to which it is attached. One reason for this is to provide the road surface with a slight angle to provide a run-off for rain. Another situation in which this occurs is when cutting a gutter or similar channel along the edge of a road. The end protector is preferably configured so as to provide protection to the side of the working element during such operations and such blade and working element orientations.
WAprovs\SANDVIKendprotector.doc 0 It should be noted that although mention has mostly been made of the mounting of the working element to a blade, the working element may be mounted to any suitable support and device, and for example may be mounted to a moldboard or the like of a vehicle. It should also be noted that the picks 3 are also often referred to as tools and also as pins or bits.
According to the present invention, there is also provided a working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle, the working element including a N body portion having spaced apart, mutually parallel holes extending generally downwardly therethrough, each of the holes having upper and lower ends, a plurality of picks mounted in some of the holes, and an end protector disposed 0at least at one end of the body portion, the end protector connected by at least one fastener extending through one of the holes which is unoccupied by a pick and which is disposed within the end protector.
According to the present invention, there is also provided a working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle for working a surface, the working element including a body having a plurality of pick holes formed therein for receiving picks, each pick hole having upper and lower ends, at least one end of the body having an end protector mounted thereon, the end protector including a recess for receiving the end of the body such that a pick hole is contained within the recess, and a fastening element having a shank portion extending into said contained pick hole, and a head portion for bearing against said body to urge said body and end protector together; the working element further including picks mounted in at least some of the other pick holes.
According to the present invention, there is also provided a working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle for working a surface, the working element including a body having a plurality of pick holes formed therein for receiving picks, each pick hole having upper and lower ends, at least one end of the body having an end protector mounted thereon, the end protector including a recess for receiving the end of the body such that a pick hole is contained within the recess, and a fastening element having a shank portion extending through a first portion of said body, through said contained pick hole and into a second portion of said body; the working element further including picks mounted in at least some of the other pick holes.
Y :BEHOB0703\Spo pgs 3ApV8.doc 0 According to the present invention, there is also provided an end protector for protecting an end of a working element body, the end protector including a base having a front wall, rear wall and a side wall, a cavity formed between the front an rear walls, the cavity including an upper portion opening into the top wall, and a lower portion opening into the side wall, the upper portion being narrower than the lower portion as viewed in a direction toward the side wall, a threaded hole formed in the top wall between the upper portion N and the rear wall and extending downwardly into the lower portion and receiving a fastener; the fastener including a threaded portion threadedly secured in the top wall.
According to the present invention, there is also provided a method of mounting an end protector to an end of a working element of a surface working device, the working element having a body portion which includes a front surface and a plurality of holes configured for receiving pick elements, each hole having upper and lower ends, the method including the steps of providing at least one of said holes disposed adjacent said end as a pick-free hole, and mounting said end protector thereto, such that the end protector covers an end edge of the body portion and a portion of the front surface extending from the end edge.
According to the present invention, there is also provided a working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle or working a surface, the working element including a body portion having spaced apart pick holes, each pick hole having upper and lower ends, and an end protector disposed at least at one end of the body portion, the end protector mounted to at least one of the pick holes which is pick-free and located at the respective end of the body portion, the working element further including picks mounted to other pick holes; the end protector being mounted to the at least one pick hole by a fastening element extending through the end protector and the at least one pick hole, the fastening element having a shank portion sized to fit into a respective pick hole, and a head portion bearing against said body portion; wherein said head portion includes a threaded portion for engagement with a threaded hole of the end protector.
According to the present invention, there is also provided a working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle for working a surface, the working Y BEHM807031Spec pga 3AprOB.doc 0 element including a body portion having spaced apart pick holes, each pick hole
O
0having upper and lower ends, and an end protector disposed at least at one end of the body portion, the end protector mounted to at least one of the pick holes which is pick-free and located at the respective end of the body portion, the working element further including picks mounted to other pick holes; the end protector is mounted to the at least one pick hole by a fastening element extending through the end protector and the at least one pick hole; wherein said N fastening element extends through a first portion of said end protector, through a respective pick hole, and into a second portion of said end protector.
According to the present invention, there is further provided a working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle for working a surface, the working element including a body portion having spaced apart pick holes, each pick hole having upper and lower ends, and an end protector disposed at least at one end of the body portion, the end protector mounted to at least one of the pick holes which is pick-free and located at the respective end of the body portion, the working element further including picks mounted to other pick holes; said end protector configured to slide onto an end of said working element; wherein said end protector includes a recess therein configured to receive an end of said body portion of said working element.
The present invention can also extend to a blade or other support assembly having such a working element in accordance with the invention described above; a surface working device having any of the preceding features, and a surface working vehicle having such a blade assembly or any of the other preceding features. It further extends to a method of protecting a leading edge of a working element using an end protector as described above in any of its variations.
In all of the above, the mounting of the end protector in a pick hole of the working element has the further advantages that the end protector can be easily removed and replaced, and that the end protector can be retrofitted to existing blade assemblies.
In a preferred embodiment, the end protector can be integral with the working element. Thus, an end protector of suitable shape could be integral with the working element, e.g. it could comprise a suitably hard material Y:BEHK680703Sped pga 3AprO8 doc 9a oo mounted on and about the leading edge of the working element at suitable Slocations.
Also, the working element could include a suitably formed connection portion to which the end protector may be mounted without the use of a pick hole, this portion being part of the body portion of the working element that houses the picks.
Such a portion could include for example a hole or recess for an end IN protector fastening element, such as a bolt, the hole or recess not being for the purposes of mounting a pick, but being provided and configured to receive the fastening element and/or a portion of the end protector.
SEmbodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood that the particularity of the drawings does not supersede the generality of the preceding description of the invention.
In the drawings: Figure 1 is a schematic plan view showing a typical orientation of the blade of a road grader with respect to the wheels of the grader; Figure 2 is a front view of one end of a working element mounted to the base of the blade of Fig. 1; Figure 3 is a cross-section through the working element of Fig. 2 (not to scale); Figure 4 is a side perspective view of an end protector in accordance with one arrangement, mounted on the working element of Fig. 2; Figures 5a-5i are various views of the end protector of Fig. 4; Figure 6 is a side perspective view of an end protector in accordance with a second arrangement; Figures 7-10 are various views of an end protector in accordance with a third arrangement; and Figure 11 is a side perspective view of a prior art end protector as discussed previously.
Referring to Fig. 1, a road grader will typically have a grading blade 1 mounted between its front and rear wheels (F and R respectively).
The grading blade 1 is used to break up a road surface in order to level the surface and provide a suitable driving surface for vehicles.
Y:EM080703Sp pgs 3ApO dom 9b oo The blade 1 is set at an angle to the direction of travel D of the 0vehicle. This angle may be varied depending on the hardness of the road
(N
surface, and so the amount of loading on the blade 1. It will typically range between about 200 and about 900 As shown in Figs. 2 and 3, a working element 2 is mounted to the lower edge of the blade 1 through bolt holes 9 that are provided in an upwardly extending base portion 10 of the working element 2.
IDThe base portion 10 is welded to a body portion 11 that has a plurality of holes 12 therein. These holes are for rotatably mounting a plurality of picks or tools 3.
SSuch an arrangement is disclosed in e.g. EP-A-179034 (filed on 2 September 1985 and entitled "Method and device for working of road surfaces"), the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The picks 3 may take many different forms, and may comprise e.g.
sharp, smooth, conical, flat and/or cylindrical tips 13 made from a suitably hard material, such as a cemented carbide material, e.g. tungsten carbide. They provide a cutting and/or a rolling action or other working action for breaking up the surface of a road that is to be graded.
Y:iEI-80703\Spea pgl. 3Ap08 doc As the blade 1 is angled to the direction of travel D of the road grading vehicle, the leading edge 4 of the working element 2, corresponding to the leading edge 5 of the blade 1, is subject to wear.
In accordance with the present invention, this leading edge 4 of the working element 2 is protected by an end protector 14, shown in Figs. 4 and The end protector 14 is configured so as to be slidably mounted onto the end of the body portion 11 of the working element 2 and to be fastened in place by the use of a fastening element extending through a pick hole 12' at the leading edge end of the body portion 11.
In the shown embodiment, the end protector 14 comprises a main body portion 15 that includes a slot 16 and a recess 17 shaped to compliment the profile of the base portion 10 and body portion 11 of the working element 2.
The end protector 14 can thus slip onto the end of the working element 2 with the end of body portion 11 received in the recess 17 and the leading edge 4 of the working element 5 extending through the slot 16.
The end protector 14 further includes a bolt 18 which in use extends through a top face 19 of the protector 14, through the end pick hole 12' of the body portion 11, and into a tapped hole 20 in a base portion 21 of the protector 14.
This mounting of the end protector 14 provides a strong and stable end protector 14 for the working element 2, and helps to resist any tendency of the protector 14 to ride up the working element 2 and expose its leading edge 4 to wear. Also, due to the mounting of the bolt 18 and the ability of the protector 14 to transfer the load acting on it through its mounting on the body portion 11, there is less load on the bolt 18, and so less chance of the bolt 18 shearing or loosening in use.
The end protector 14 is thus particularly useful in situations where hard surfaces, such as dirt tracks and the like, are being graded. It may, however, also be used in any other suitable situations, such as in ice and snow clearing and the like, where it still provides a secure end protector, which is easily attached to and removed from the working element.
The body 15 of the protector 14 may be made of any suitable material, e.g. steel, and in order to provide protection against wear, the protector 14 may W:provs\SANDVIKeridpotector.doc include suitable arrangements of harder material, such as cemented carbide material, e.g. tungsten carbide, mounted thereon.
In the shown embodiment, the end protector 14 includes cemented carbide elements 22 and 23 to provide the wear protection. These are a convenient way of providing a good volume of wear resistant material where required.
Carbide element 22 provides the main protection for the leading edge 4 of the working element 2, and in the form shown comprises a radial tip element as used in mining to provide a raking action. It may however take any other suitable form. This element tends to provide most protection when the blade angle a is in the region of about 200 to about 450 The carbide element 23 in the form shown also comprises a radial tip element. It also provides some protection for the leading edge 4 (especially when the angle of attack a of the working element 2 approaches 90 e.g.
between about 450 to about 900). It also, however, is used to provide a cutting and/or rolling action in the main working operation so as to replace the pick 3 which would otherwise have been mounted in the pick hole 12'. The front tip of the carbide element 23 may be set so that in use it is just above the pick points of the other picks 3.
In use, the working element 2 tends to be positioned at an angle to the vertical (p in Fig. which is typically about 200. This can cause the rear lower edge of the working element 2 to be exposed, and so the main protective carbide element 22 is mounted so as to extend in use below this rear edge in order to protect this edge from wear.
The carbide element 22 may also be configured to provide some cutting action so as to facilitate the forward movement of the leading edge through the worked surface material.
The upper front surfaces 24,25,26 of the end protector 14 may also be provided with a hardened surface, e.g. a cemented carbide material such as tungsten carbide, in order to further reduce wear problems, when for example the blade digs deeply into a surface, as can sometimes occur.
Besides being angled to the direction of travel of the vehicle and inclined to the vertical, the blade 1 may also be oriented so that the left or right end is higher above, for example, a road surface than the other end (that is the blade W:pmrvsoSANDVIKendprotetor.doc 12 is rotated about an axis extending in the direction of vehicle travel). This may be to provide an incline to the road surface to allow for run-off of rain, or at a greater angle may be to form or redefine a gutter, drain, or other channel along the side of a road. The end protector 14 may be suitably configured, e.g. with regard to the orientation of the carbide element 22 and/or carbide element 23, so as to provide suitable protection to the cutter board 2 when the blade 1 is so oriented.
An alternative manner of obtaining an engagement of the working element and the end protector is provided in a second embodiment of the present invention, as shown in Fig. 6.
As can be seen, the protector 14' of this embodiment is similar to that of the first embodiment, although in this case the protector 14' is designed to fit onto the opposite end of the cutter board 2 from that of the previous embodiment. Thus, it would be used when the blade 1 of Fig. 1 is arranged to face to the right.
In this embodiment, the bolt 18 is replaced by a fastening element 27 having a stepped configuration. Thus, the fastening element 27 has a shank portion 28 of a diameter that allows it to pass through the pick holes 12, and a head portion 29 that is of larger diameter than the shank portion 28 and also is of a larger diameter than the pick holes 12 at their top opening 12a. The fastening element 27 also has a stepped portion 30 as a transition between the shank portion 28 and head portion 29.
The head portion 29 is threaded, and engages a threaded hole 31 in the top face 19 of the end protector 14'. The shank portion 28 is unthreaded., and extends into a recess 32 in the base portion 21 of the protector 14'. The recess 32 may be of a suitable depth so as to provide some clearance between its base and the base of the shank portion 28.
In use, the end protector 14' is slipped onto the end of the body portion 11 of the cutter board 2, and the shank portion 28 of the fastening element 27 is passed through the threaded hole 31, through the pick hole 12', and into the recess 32 in the lower portion of the protector 14'.
The head portion 29 is then screwed into the hole 31, e.g. by engaging a hexagonal socket in the top of the head portion 29. This screwing action forces the stepped portion 30 of the fastening element 27 to bear against the surface W:\povZ\SANDVKendpMteCor.doc 13 1 a (see Fig. 3) of the body portion 11 of the cutter board 2, so as to provide a jacking action and a frictional engagement between the protector 14' and the cutter board 2. Thus, as the fastening element 27 is tightened into place, the end protector 14' is pulled back tight against the working element 2, thereby limiting movement between the two.
In this embodiment, the fastening element 27 comprises a grub screw which has had its shank portion machined so as to remove the thread and to reduce its diameter. A set screw or socket-headed cap screw could also be used.
A washer, such as a spring washer or non-slip washer, may be provided between the stepped portion 30 and the body portion 11 of the cutter board 2.
Also or alternatively, adhesive may be applied to the thread of the head portion 29 so as to fix the fastening element 27 in place.
In this embodiment, the fastening element 27 need not extend fully through the pick hole 12', and may extend only part way into it.
Instead of providing the threaded engagement at the top of the fastening element 27, it could be provided by e.g. tapping the recess 32 and providing a thread at the base of the shank portion 28.
Fig. 7 to 10 show an end protector 14" in accordance with a third embodiment of the present invention, which attaches in a similar manner as the second embodiment, but uses a bolt 33 having a hex end 34, shank 35 and a thread portion 36 therebetween. In use, the base 37 of the thread portion 36 bears against the surface 11 a (see Fig. 3) of the body portion 11 of the cutter board 2, so as to provide a jacking action and hold the board 2 and protector 14" firmly together.
It is to be understood that various alterations, additions and/or modifications may be made to the parts previously described without departing from the ambit of the present invention, and that, in the light of the teachings of the present invention, the shape of the end protector and its connection to the working element could take many other forms.
For example, the end protector could be mounted using the end two pick holes (or more), rather than just the one, in order to provide greater stability. In this case, two tool elements 23 could be provided in order to replace the two missing picks.
W:rpovsSANDVIKendptectdor.do c Also, the working element 2 could be configured with one or more bolt holes on its body portion towards its leading edge, oriented similarly to the pick holes, so that the end protector could be mounted using such a bolt hole rather than one of the pick holes.
The shape of the end protector need not be as shown, and could for example have a protective surface with a shape similar to that of the leading edge portion of the prior art end protector 6, without the need for the prior art flanged portion that extends along the face of the working element 2 for bolting to the working element. It could for example take the form of a simple Ushaped mounting element, the arms of which extend either side of a pick hole for fastening with e.g. a bolt, which could have a protective surface element mounted thereon and a flange element to help prevent any rotation around the fastener.
As mentioned above, the blade 1, as well as facing to the left of the vehicle (as shown in Fig. could also be oriented to face to the right of the vehicle, and both the above embodiments may be provided in either left and/or right-handed forms. The protector may also be suitably configured so that it may be used at either end of the working element 2. In practice, an end protector will be provided at each end of a working element, and will remain on the element until it wears out, at which point it may simply be replaced by a new one.
In the first embodiment, the protector 14 can be seen to provide a "form locked" grip of the body portion 11 of the cutter board 2, and, in order to also provide a frictional force to hold the protector 14 firmly in place, the end protector 14 could provide a clamping action, and accordingly could be provided with some resilience/elasticity. This may be achieved for example by providing a resilient material between the upper and lower portions of the protector which may be compressed as the bolt is fastened. Also, suitable material may be provided within the recess 17 so as to deform and provide frictional engagement of the body portion 11 as the protector is mounted on the body portion 11 of the cutter board 2.
The end protector may take any suitable shape and size for the working element with which it is to be used. Thus, a standard road grading system may use picks having a shank diameter of 22mm, whereas a mining board system W:1proVnSANOVIKendprtector.doc (which must work in harder conditions, e.g. in open cut mines, quarries and hard rock mines) may use picks having a shank diameter of 25 mm and a larger gauge length. The end protector and its fastener will have dimensions to match these values.
W:\prvsSANDVIKendprtector.doc

Claims (14)

1. A working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle for working a surface, the working element including a body portion having a front surface and spaced apart pick holes, each pick hole having upper and Slower ends, and an end protector disposed at least at one end of the body portion, the end protector mounted to at least one of the pick holes (Ni which is pick-free and located at the respective end of the body portion, wherein the end protector covers an end edge of the body portion and a portion of the front surface extending from the end edge, the working element further including picks mounted to the other pick holes.
2. The working element according to claim 1, wherein the end protector is mounted to the at least one pick hole by a fastening element extending through the end protector and the at least one pick hole.
3. The working element according to claim 2 wherein the fastening element extends at an acute angle relative to the body portion of the working element.
4. The working element according to any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein said end protector is configured to slide onto the end edge of said body portion in a direction generally parallel to a lower edge of the body portion. The working element according to any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein the end protector includes a base mounted to the body portion and at least one downwardly projecting tool element disposed on the base adjacent to a pick. Y: BE 580703\Spo pgp 3Apr8 dC 00 6. A working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle, the working c element including a body portion having spaced apart, mutually parallel holes extending generally downwardly therethrough, each of the holes having upper and lower ends, a plurality of picks mounted in some of the holes, and an end protector disposed at least at one end of the body Sportion, the end protector connected by at least one fastener extending Sthrough one of the holes which is unoccupied by a pick and which is 0 disposed within the end protector.
7. The working element according to claim 6, wherein the end protector element includes a downwardly projecting tool element positioned adjacent to a pick.
8. The working element according to claim 6 or 7, wherein the tool element includes a first tool element, the end protector including a second downwardly projecting carbide tool element disposed adjacent to the first tool element.
9. A working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle for working a surface, the working element including a body having a plurality of pick holes formed therein for receiving picks, each pick hole having upper and lower ends, at least one end of the body having an end protector mounted thereon, the end protector including a recess for receiving the end of the body such that a pick hole is contained within the recess, and a fastening element having a shank portion extending into said contained pick hole, and a head portion for bearing against said body to urge said body and end protector together; the working element further including picks mounted in at least some of the other pick holes. Y:\BEHA880703\Spoc pgo 3AprO doc 18 oo 10.A working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle for working a C surface, the working element including a body having a plurality of pick holes formed therein for receiving picks, each pick hole having upper and lower ends, at least one end of the body having an end protector mounted thereon, the end protector including a recess for receiving the IDend of the body such that a pick hole is contained within the recess, and 0a fastening element having a shank portion extending through a first Sportion of said body, through said contained pick hole and into a second portion of said body; the working element further including picks mounted in at least some of the other pick holes.
11.An end protector for protecting an end of a working element body, the end protector including a base having a front wall, rear wall and a side wall, a cavity formed between the front an rear walls, the cavity including an upper portion opening into the top wall, and a lower portion opening into the side wall, the upper portion being narrower than the lower portion as viewed in a direction toward the side wall, a threaded hole formed in the top wall between the upper portion and the rear wall and extending downwardly into the lower portion and receiving a fastener; the fastener including a threaded portion threadedly secured in the top wall.
12.The end protector according to claim 11 further including a tool element projecting downwardly from the base.
13.A method of mounting an end protector to an end of a working element of a surface working device, the working element having a body portion which includes a front surface and a plurality of holes configured for receiving pick elements, each hole having upper and lower ends, the Y:ABEKW8OO3\Spea pgI 3Apr8 doc 19 oo method including the steps of providing at least one of said holes c disposed adjacent said end as a pick-free hole, and mounting said end protector thereto, such that the end protector covers an end edge of the body portion and a portion of the front surface extending from the end edge. ID14.The method according to claim 13, wherein the mounting step includes Sinserting a fastener into said pick-free hole and a hole of said end protector, and securing said fastener to said end protector. method according to claim 14, wherein said inserting step includes inserting a shank of said fastener completely through said working element and threadably securing a lower end of said fastener into said end protector.
16. The method according to claim 15 wherein an upper end of said fastener is threadedly secured to said end protector.
17.A working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle or working a surface, the working element including a body portion having spaced apart pick holes, each pick hole having upper and lower ends, and an end protector disposed at least at one end of the body portion, the end protector mounted to at least one of the pick holes which is pick-free and located at the respective end of the body portion, the working element further including picks mounted to other pick holes; the end protector being mounted to the at least one pick hole by a fastening element extending through the end protector and the at least one pick hole, the fastening element having a shank portion sized to fit into a respective pick hole, and a head portion bearing against said body portion; wherein Y BE'C8O7O3Sped pgaS 3Ap8 doc 0 said head portion includes a threaded portion for engagement with a l threaded hole of the end protector.
18.A working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle for working a Ssurface, the working element including a body portion having spaced apart pick holes, each pick hole having upper and lower ends, and an (-i IDend protector disposed at least at one end of the body portion, the end Cc protector mounted to at least one of the pick holes which is pick-free and (-i 0located at the respective end of the body portion, the working element (-i further including picks mounted to other pick holes; the end protector is mounted to the at least one pick hole by a fastening element extending through the end protector and the at least one pick hole; wherein said fastening element extends through a first portion of said end protector, through a respective pick hole, and into a second portion of said end protector.
19.A working element adapted to be carried by a vehicle for working a surface, the working element including a body portion having spaced apart pick holes, each pick hole having upper and lower ends, and an end protector disposed at least at one end of the body portion, the end protector mounted to at least one of the pick holes which is pick-free and located at the respective end of the body portion, the working element further including picks mounted to other pick holes; said end protector configured to slide onto an end of said working element; wherein said end protector includes a recess therein configured to receive an end of said body portion of said working element. Y:BElAOO703kSpe pgs 3AprO8 doo
AU2002301629A 2001-10-26 2002-10-23 Surface working device and attachment Expired AU2002301629C1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU2002301629A AU2002301629C1 (en) 2001-10-26 2002-10-23 Surface working device and attachment

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AUPR8512A AUPR851201A0 (en) 2001-10-26 2001-10-26 Surface working device and attachment
AUPR8512 2001-10-26
AU2002301629A AU2002301629C1 (en) 2001-10-26 2002-10-23 Surface working device and attachment

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AU2002301629A1 AU2002301629A1 (en) 2003-06-12
AU2002301629B2 true AU2002301629B2 (en) 2008-04-24
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Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1648783A (en) * 1926-01-30 1927-11-08 Austin Machinery Corp Excavator-bucket extension
US4449309A (en) * 1979-03-05 1984-05-22 Gh Hensley Industries, Inc. Flat bottom bucket and digging teeth
US4601119A (en) * 1984-10-01 1986-07-22 Caterpillar Tractor Co. Corner tooth for a bucket

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1648783A (en) * 1926-01-30 1927-11-08 Austin Machinery Corp Excavator-bucket extension
US4449309A (en) * 1979-03-05 1984-05-22 Gh Hensley Industries, Inc. Flat bottom bucket and digging teeth
US4601119A (en) * 1984-10-01 1986-07-22 Caterpillar Tractor Co. Corner tooth for a bucket

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