WO1998032328A2 - Improvements in and relating to fencing apparatus - Google Patents
Improvements in and relating to fencing apparatus Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO1998032328A2 WO1998032328A2 PCT/NZ1998/000004 NZ9800004W WO9832328A2 WO 1998032328 A2 WO1998032328 A2 WO 1998032328A2 NZ 9800004 W NZ9800004 W NZ 9800004W WO 9832328 A2 WO9832328 A2 WO 9832328A2
- Authority
- WO
- WIPO (PCT)
- Prior art keywords
- fence
- insulator
- fence support
- rod
- support
- Prior art date
Links
Classifications
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01B—CABLES; CONDUCTORS; INSULATORS; SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR THEIR CONDUCTIVE, INSULATING OR DIELECTRIC PROPERTIES
- H01B17/00—Insulators or insulating bodies characterised by their form
- H01B17/14—Supporting insulators
- H01B17/145—Insulators, poles, handles, or the like in electric fences
Definitions
- This invention relates to improvements in electric fencing apparatus. Specifically the invention may be applied to electric fences installed for security reasons.
- Electrified fences have proven very popular and effective in many applications. They provide an effective barrier which may be used, for example to retain livestock or captive persons within a region. Alternatively, electric fencing may be used as a barrier to prevent unauthorised persons from entering a region.
- Electric fencing has proven popular in these applications because of the limited amount of materials required to construct an effective barrier.
- the fence constructed need not be overly robust or strong, as the voltage applied to the fence wires discourages contact with the fence through delivery of a painful shock.
- the supporting rods of an electric fence need to be resilient enough to resist tampering by an intruder, and be able to spring back into its original position after an applied force has been removed from the fence.
- Electric fences also employ insulating devices located on supporting fence posts or rods.
- the insulating devices attach and retain a fence wire to a support rod, while electrically insulating the support rod from the fence wire.
- Electric fence insulators also act to retain the fence wires a certain distance apart from one another to ensure the wires are positioned evenly at regular intervals.
- An important feature of an insulator is its ability to retain the fence wire a set distance from the other fence wires. The insulator must resist forces which may displace the fence wire up or down the support rod, whether these forces result from wind and weather conditions, livestock or an intruder trying to displace fence wires enough to negotiate the fence.
- the method of attaching the insulator to the rod requires holes to be driven through the rod. This makes the fence rod difficult and expensive to manufacture as well as weakening in the rod slightly.
- low grade steel such as mild steel, is used to construct the fence post. Mild steel is used in the main because stronger grades of steel make it extremely difficult to machine or punch the pin or bolt holes into the post.
- a large amount of mild steel is also used to construct a fence post than would normally be required when stronger steel is used. More steel must be used to ensure the fence post possesses the required resilience and strength for security fence applications.
- An alternative to the above insulator and post electric fence system is a clamp on insulator which is attached to a solid metallic rod.
- This system provides the required resilience and strength to the fence rod while allowing high grades of steel to be used to construct a compact rod.
- Clamping insulators may be attached to the fence rod via an enveloping sleeve which has its outer edges pulled tightly together by a screw, or nut and bolt arrangement, or by the inbuilt shape of the insulator.
- an enveloping sleeve which has its outer edges pulled tightly together by a screw, or nut and bolt arrangement, or by the inbuilt shape of the insulator.
- the insulator used is highly susceptible to slipping movement ups and down the fence rod. This allows the fence wires to spread unevenly up and down the length of the rod, possibly creating large gaps in the fence structure. An intruder may also take advantage of this weakness by pushing fence wires apart and passing through the fence without contacting a live electric fence wire.
- the kinked fence rod is substantially straight but shaped with kinks along its length.
- An insulator may be clamped onto the kinked rod with the clamping portion of the insulator shaped to fit around one kink in the rod.
- One or two retaining lug pins are used on the clamp to and hold both sides of the clamp together around a rod held in the insulator.
- the insulator is held in place by the kinked shape of the rod as the kink cannot be forced past either of the retaining pins or the kinked cradling section of the clamp base.
- the fence rod and cradling insulator again involves a number of disadvantages for the fence system manufacture and end user.
- the kinks in the fence rod are manufactured by stamping or pressing the required shape into an initially straight rod.
- the forces applied during the stamping process act to bend the rod from its initially straight shape.
- Rods manufactured using this process may acquire a bend in their overall shape, with the amount of deviation varying from rod to rod.
- an electric fence support for supporting one or more electric fence insulators
- the fence support includes indentations located along the length of the support.
- an insulator capable of attachment to an electric fence support substantially as described above, wherein the insulator includes a locator and a wire retainer,
- the insulator includes one or more lugs that can cooperate with one or more indentations in an electric fence support.
- an electric fence support substantially as described above, characterised in that material is removed from the support to form indentations in the support.
- a security system including electric fence supports and insulators substantially as described above,
- fence supports have indentations located along the length of the support
- the insulators include one or more lugs that can cooperate with indentations in the electric fence supports.
- a method of constructing a security system including at least one electric fence support with indentations located along the length of the support,
- At least one insulator including a locator, a wire retainer and one or more lugs capable of cooperating with one or more indentations in the electric fence support,
- the method of constructing a security system including the steps of:
- an electric fence support may be a solid rod which extends to the height required for an electric fence.
- a solid rod may be easily manufactured and provides a strong resilient fence support.
- other embodiments of the present invention may not use solid rods as fence supports. For example any length of material of any particular cross-section may be used in conjunction with the invention as a fence support.
- the fence rod may be constructed from spring steel.
- Spring steel is a high grade steel which is very strong and resilient. A spring steel fence rod will spring back into its original position after a force is applied to the rod, where in most instances, a rod constructed from lower grade steel would be deformed or bent out of place.
- Alternative embodiments of the present invention may not employ spring steel to construct the fence rod.
- other embodiments may employ lower grades of steel, fibreglass, or other composite materials to form a fence rod.
- indentations may be formed in a fence rod by material being removed from the fence rod rather than reshaping the rod. Removing material from the fence rod ensures that the indentations in the rod are manufactured quickly and precisely. Removing material also ensures that the bending or twisting effect occurring when a rod is stamped, pressed or bent is reduced.
- material removed from the rod forming an indentation may be removed with use of specially hardened cutting tools. These tools are specifically adapted to cut through spring steel to form an indentation where normally tools used with lower grades of steel would easily break or chip.
- an indentation formed in a fence rod may be substantially rectangular in shape.
- the top edge of the rectangular indentation formed may be angled with respect to the bottom edge of the indentation.
- This angling of one indentation edge reduces the stress forces applied to the manufacturing tool when the indentation is formed.
- the top edge of the tool used is angled to a shape corresponding to that of the indentation required. This allows transmission of stress away from the top corner of the tool during the manufacturing process, reducing the chance of the tool breaking when used.
- indentations may be located along the entire length of a fence rod, on both sides of the fence rod. Locating indentations in this manner allows the manufacturing process to form multiple indentations at the same time, thereby balancing the cutting forces applied to either side and end of the rod. This balancing of applied forces reduces the bending effect that indentation manufacturing may have on the fence rod.
- 'groups' or 'sets' of indentations may be formed along the length of a rod.
- Insulators are provided on electric fence systems to retain an electrified fence wire in a certain position relative to a supporting fence rod or post.
- the insulator ensures that the electrical current carried by the fence wire does not leak down through the fence support into the ground, reducing the effectiveness of the electric fence. Consequently electric fence insulators are constructed from electrically insulating materials, and are configured to physically displace the fence wire from the fence support, but still retain the fence wire in position on the fence support.
- the electric fence insulator may be constructed from insulating plastic material. Using plastics material allows the insulator to be manufactured using mass production technology. Plastic materials may be used to form the insulator using injection moulding techniques, ensuring the insulator is manufactured at low cost with high uniformity and reproducibility.
- Alternative embodiments of the present invention may not employ plastics materials to construct the insulator.
- any electrically insulating material may be used to construct the insulator provided the material is physically strong enough to retain a wire in place against a fence rod.
- the insulator includes a wire retainer.
- a wire retainer acts to hold an electric fence wire in place against the insulator and fence rod.
- the wire retainer included in the insulator may consist of two hooked arms positioned side by side, with one arm inverted relative to the other. This configuration of wire retainer allows a fence wire to be threaded through the two arms, where one arm prevents upwards movement of the wire and the other arm prevents downward movement of a wire.
- this embodiment of the wire retainer may be used to attach to fence wire in the middle of a fence, where the fence wire continues on either side of the insulator.
- the person assembling the fence system may easily thread a wire between the two retaining arms to limit movement of the wire up and down the fence rod.
- the wire retainer may be a loop of material terminating against the body of the insulator.
- a fence wire may be threaded through the retaining loop with one end of the wire being wound around the other side of the wire and fixed in place. The other side of the wire may then be pulled tight and threaded through insulators located on other fence rods. It is envisioned this embodiment of the wire retainer may be used where the fence line is to be terminated. However, other embodiments may not employ either of the wire retainer designs disclosed above. It should be appreciated by one skilled in the art that many different types of wire retaining devices may be used, with the invention not necessarily being limited to the embodiments disclosed above.
- the insulator includes a locator to attach the insulator to a fence rod and prevent the insulator from sliding up and down the fence rod.
- the locator may consist of a U-shaped sleeve which fits around a fence rod, with each edge of the sleeve tapering inwards on the open end of the sleeve. A fence rod may be pushed into the sleeve by forcing apart the other sleeve edges slightly and seating the rod against the inner walls of the sleeve.
- a locking device to ensure the fence rod cannot be shifted out of the locator once inserted.
- a locking device may be for example a pin or nut and bolt arrangement passed through the outer edges of the sleeve, or a threaded clamping arrangement which may be tightened to pull the two edges of the sleeve closer together.
- locator being a U- shaped sleeve employing a split pin pushed through holes in either edge of the sleeve to lock a fence rod into the sleeve.
- locator may be used in conjunction with the invention, and should not necessarily be limited to those disclosed above.
- lugs on the inside surface of the U-shaped locator sleeve are provided. These lugs are shaped to fit inside corresponding indentations located in a fence rod.
- the lugs provided may act to engage indentations in a fence rod to prevent the insulator sliding up or down the rod.
- the fence system may be assembled firstly by placing a fence rod in the required position and orientation, then installing insulators at points on the fence rod.
- the sleeved locators of each insulator may be slid onto a fence rod and the lugs on each side of the sleeve pushed into the corresponding indentations of the fence rod.
- a pin may be inserted through a hole in the outer edges of the locator sleeve, locking the rod inside the locator.
- An intruder may try to apply large forces to an insulator by standing on the insulator, trying to spread fence wires to provide a gap in a fence.
- the use of lugs and complementary indentations prevents an intruder from gaining passage through a fence, as the lugs and indentations securely lock the insulator in place.
- the bottom edge of the fence rod in the preferred embodiment is not angled, downward pressure on the insulator is strongly resisted by the lug and indentation combination.
- the invention as disclosed above also prevents the insulator from being twisted in a circular manner.
- the plastic comprising one entire edge of a lug needs to be compressed significantly before any twisting movement occurs in the insulator.
- lugs per insulator and locating sleeve are provided. These three lugs are configured to engaged three complimentary indentations located at the required positions on a fence rod.
- lugs are position on one side of the sleeve, with the third lug being position on the opposite side of the sleeve between the two other lugs.
- This configuration of lugs ensures the insulator is strongly located in one position on a fence rod and can withstand large applied forces before it begins to shift.
- the surface to which a fence rod is secured may be the top of a fence wall or building roof. This allows a small electric fence to be erected on top an existing barrier to provide extra protection to an enclosed area. An intruder firstly needs to scale a tall obstacle, and then contend with wires electrified with high voltages.
- Alternative embodiments of the present invention may not employ walls fence tops, or roofs as the surface to which a fence rod may fixed.
- other embodiments may include fence rods secured to concrete, earthen or wooden surfaces.
- fence rods may be attached to a vertical surface in a horizontal orientation to protect for example, horizontal windows or skylights.
- fixing devices such as angled brackets or metallic saddles may include locating sleeves and lugs to attach the fixing device to the fence rod, and hence to a surface.
- fence rods as disclosed may be constructed using spring steel to provide strong resilient fence rods which do not require large amounts of material to construct the rod.
- the fence rod and insulator system may be easily and cheaply mass produced as well as quickly and simply installed by a fence system user.
- the complimentary lug and indentation locating scheme provides a simple and strong method of holding a insulator in one place on a fence rod.
- a fencing system composed of the elements disclosed above may be easily installed in most locations where required. It may also be employed as an additional barrier to intruders when situated on top of a fence, wall or building roof.
- Figure 1 illustrates a fence support employed in one embodiment of the present invention
- Figure 2 illustrates a cross-sectional view of a locator sleeve and associated lugs employed in one embodiment of the present invention
- Figure 3 illustrates a cross-sectional view of a locator sleeve and attached support rod section employed in one embodiment of the present invention.
- Figure 1 illustrates a fence support used in one embodiment of the present invention, shown by fence rod 1.
- Fence rod 1 includes indentations 2a, 2b and 2c.
- the indentations 2 are positioned at different points and alternate sides along the fence rod 1. This ensures the fence rod 1 is not unduly weakened at one point by the combined reduction of its width by two overlapping indentations 2.
- the fence rod 1 in this embodiment is eight millimetres in diameter.
- the proportion of the indentations 2 are arrived at from a compromise between having the indentations 2 too large and weakening the rod 1 and having the indentations 2 too small resulting in poor insulator retention. It should be appreciated that other rod sizes may be used. However, the applicant has found that larger rod diameters can be expensive.
- Each indentation includes an upper side wall 3 and a lower side wall 4.
- Each upper side wall 3 is angle with respect to the lower side wall 4. This angling of the upper side wall 3 allows a custom designed press tool to be used to form each indentation 2, reducing the stress applied to the tool tip corners during manufacturing of the fence rod 1.
- the feed of the rod is PLC controlled for flexibility of spacing.
- Figure 2 illustrates a rear view of an insulator generally indicated by arrow 20.
- each lug 12 can be clearly seen protruding from the locator sleeve 13. It can be seen that each lug 12 is positioned so that there is no corresponding overlap of lugs 12 on the opposite side of the locator sleeve 13.
- the locator sleeve 13 has an aperture (not clearly shown) through which a pin 14 can pass.
- the pin 14 in this figure is shown attached to the insulator 20. The pin can be readily detached by twisting the pin 14 and used.
- the back of the insulator portion 15 can be seen in Figure 2.
- an insulator finger (not shown) on the front of the back 15 for supporting the fence wire.
- Figure 3 illustrates a cross-sectional view of a locator and fence rod showing lugs engaging the fence rod indentations.
- the fence rod 1 is substantially the same as that disclosed in figure 1, as is the case with the locator 11.
- Lugs 12 on either side of the locator 11 act to engage indentations 2 located on either side of the fence rod 1.
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- Housing For Livestock And Birds (AREA)
- Fencing (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
AU57831/98A AU5783198A (en) | 1997-01-29 | 1998-01-22 | Improvements in and relating to fencing apparatus |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
NZ31414897 | 1997-01-29 | ||
NZ314148 | 1997-01-29 |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
WO1998032328A2 true WO1998032328A2 (en) | 1998-07-30 |
WO1998032328A3 WO1998032328A3 (en) | 1998-11-12 |
Family
ID=19926122
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/NZ1998/000004 WO1998032328A2 (en) | 1997-01-29 | 1998-01-22 | Improvements in and relating to fencing apparatus |
Country Status (3)
Country | Link |
---|---|
AU (1) | AU5783198A (en) |
WO (1) | WO1998032328A2 (en) |
ZA (1) | ZA98536B (en) |
Family Cites Families (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2610224A (en) * | 1947-07-19 | 1952-09-09 | Harold W Norris | Electric fence |
US3654383A (en) * | 1970-06-04 | 1972-04-04 | Dare Products Inc | Self-supporting electric fence post insulator |
FR2562936A1 (en) * | 1984-04-13 | 1985-10-18 | Quenderff Jean Philippe | Method for immobilising the tension wires or the wires of defensive fencings |
ZA944879B (en) * | 1993-07-06 | 1995-07-13 | Guiseppe Pietro Lupini | Electrical fencing |
-
1998
- 1998-01-22 WO PCT/NZ1998/000004 patent/WO1998032328A2/en active Application Filing
- 1998-01-22 AU AU57831/98A patent/AU5783198A/en not_active Abandoned
- 1998-01-22 ZA ZA98536A patent/ZA98536B/en unknown
Non-Patent Citations (1)
Title |
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None |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
AU5783198A (en) | 1998-08-18 |
ZA98536B (en) | 1998-07-23 |
WO1998032328A3 (en) | 1998-11-12 |
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