CA2352223A1 - Surface cleaning apparatus using abrading particulate cleaning material - Google Patents

Surface cleaning apparatus using abrading particulate cleaning material Download PDF

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Publication number
CA2352223A1
CA2352223A1 CA002352223A CA2352223A CA2352223A1 CA 2352223 A1 CA2352223 A1 CA 2352223A1 CA 002352223 A CA002352223 A CA 002352223A CA 2352223 A CA2352223 A CA 2352223A CA 2352223 A1 CA2352223 A1 CA 2352223A1
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Canada
Prior art keywords
cleaning
chamber
work surface
impeller
housing
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Abandoned
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CA002352223A
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French (fr)
Inventor
Dusan Mrak
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Individual
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Individual
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Publication of CA2352223A1 publication Critical patent/CA2352223A1/en
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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24CABRASIVE OR RELATED BLASTING WITH PARTICULATE MATERIAL
    • B24C5/00Devices or accessories for generating abrasive blasts
    • B24C5/06Impeller wheels; Rotor blades therefor
    • B24C5/066Housings; Accessories therefor, e.g. liners
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24CABRASIVE OR RELATED BLASTING WITH PARTICULATE MATERIAL
    • B24C3/00Abrasive blasting machines or devices; Plants
    • B24C3/02Abrasive blasting machines or devices; Plants characterised by the arrangement of the component assemblies with respect to each other
    • B24C3/06Abrasive blasting machines or devices; Plants characterised by the arrangement of the component assemblies with respect to each other movable; portable
    • B24C3/065Abrasive blasting machines or devices; Plants characterised by the arrangement of the component assemblies with respect to each other movable; portable with suction means for the abrasive and the waste material

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Cleaning In General (AREA)

Abstract

An abrasive cleaning apparatus (22) comprising a housing (52) defining a closed chamber (56) with a pair of rotating impellers (66) therein. Abrasive cleaning material is directed into the chamber where blades of the impellers contact the material and throw the material through an open front (58) of the chamber against the surface to be cleaned. The waste material removed from the surface being cleaned is drawn through an outlet port (136) to a cyclone separating chamber (112) where the material is separated and directed back to the operating chamber, and the waste material is delivered to a waste location.

Description

SURFACE CLEANING APPARATUS USING ABRADING
PARTICULATE CLEANING MATERIAL
Field of the Invention The present invention relates to an apparatus and method for abrasive cleaning, and more particularly to such an apparatus which is particularly adapted for cleaning a surface, such as a metallic surface, 5 by use of particulate material.
Background There are in the prior art various machines which are capable of cleaning large metal surfaces, such as the side surface of the hull of a ship. The process in cleaning the surface generally consists of 10 propelling abrasive material toward the surface to be cleaned.
Effective cleaning occurs when the abrasive material repetitiously strikes the surface at sufficiently high velocities. The abrasive material can be steel shot, which impacts the surface and removes matter adhering to the surface such as paint, rust, barnacles or any other 15 material. This material on the surface becomes particulate material which must be removed from the cleaning apparatus.
The steel shot or grit used in the apparatus of the present invention is common in the art. The individual steel shot pieces are generally about 1116" in diameter with a course grainy exterior. It is 20 advantageous that the cleaning apparatus use the least amount of shot per unit of surface area cleaned.
When the shot impacts the surface, the paint and other surface material that are removed and ground shot that results, can be hazardous to breath and harmful to the environment.
25 In order to accomplish the cleaning task properly, it is desirable that the apparatus be able to be located in a cleaning position so that it SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) will clean the surface area very close to the water line. A similar situations exist when the surface of a tank, building or other structure is being cleaned, and it is necessary to clean at various locations which are proximate to other objects, ground surfaces, etc.
5 It is an object of the present invention to provide a relatively compact, light weight cleaning apparatus which in addition to cleaning effectively, is able to be positioned at locations to accomplish cleaning of surface areas which would otherwise (with some prior art machines) be either difficult to clean or even inaccessible.
10 It is a further object of this invention to provide a dust collecting means to remove particulate that has been sufficiently ground up so that the still useful particulate cleaning can be recycled and redirected to the surface to be cleaned.
It is another object of the present invention to reduce the Ibs.
15 pounds of abrasive used per hour, thus cleaning more surface area per pound of abrasive.
It is still another object of the invention to provide a system of maintaining a perimeter to limit dust loss from the internal workings of the sand blasting apparatus.
20 It is still another object of the invention to use adjustment cylinders to align the cleaning apparatus.
It is still another object of the invention to have a painting system employed that paints the freshly cleaned surface shortly after it has been cleaned before rust develops.
25 It is still another object of the invention to have the task of painting the surface be accomplished in an automated manner.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will SUBSTIME SHEET (RULE 26) become apparent from the remaining portion of the specification.
Background Art The current methods of removing paint from a surface such as a hull of a ship consist of covering a ship with plastic material to 5 substantially keep shot and debris therein. A person in protective clothing wields a hose that dispenses shot material at the surface to remove the paint. This method has severe disadvantages. There plastic covering is very expensive not very effective in keeping debris contained. Further the vessel must be dry docked which is expensive 10 and not always an option at certain ports.
A search of the patent literature has a number of patents directed toward these problems, these being the following:
U.S. 4,932,167 (Carpenter) shows several embodiments of an abrasive cleaning machine. Figs. 5 and 6 show such a machine 15 adapted to clean a vertical surface. There is a "throwing wheel 90"
which rotates to engage the particles and causes these to travel in a downward path to strike the vertical surface 232 that is being cleaned.
The particles rebound from this surface and follow a path that is away from the surface and then upwardly to flow into an upper hopper 234.
20 From the hopper 234, the abrasive material flows into a supply passage 240 to be engaged by a "accelerator wheel 180" which directs the particulate material back into the veins of the throwing wheel 90.
Fig. 6 shows an embodiment which operates in substantially the same way as the machine shown in Fig. 5, except that the throwing wheel 90 25 is at a lower location and it rotates in such a manner to engage the particulate at a lower location and it rotates in such a manner to SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) engage the particulate abrasive material and throw this upwardly to the surface 280 where the material upwardly rebounds away from the surface 280 and to fall into the hopper 282, from which the particulate material is again directed into the feed wheel. In both of these 5 embodiments there is an alternative path. In Fig. 5 this is a passageway 248 which directs the particles back into the feed wheel or accelerator wheel 180. It is stated that there is a vacuum line 252 by which the returning abrasive particles are cleaned by means of air drawn therethrough. This passageway 252 is shown at the bottom of 10 the machine, and presumably these would be directed to the upper part of the passageway shown at 252 where it could be presumed that the particles flow back into the hopper 234.
U.S. 4,941,296 (Carpenter) shows an apparatus similar to, or substantially the same as, what is shown in U.S. 4,932,167.
15 U.S. 4,416,092 (Nelson) shows a cleaning apparatus having a rotating drum 22 having four radially extending blades 24. There is a hopper 30 which delivers the abrasive material downwardly through a slot 36 in which is a butterfly valve 56. The abrasive material flows downwardly, as indicated by the arrow 38 where it is engaged by the 20 blades 24 against the surface 40. There is a "recovery path" indicated by the arrows 44. Apparently the velocity of the particles striking the surface 40 is sufficient so that without any additional force applied to the particles these are carried back to the hopper 30.
U.S. 4,092,942 (Kuroniji et al.) shows an apparatus for shot 25 blasting the bottom of a ship or the like. This apparatus is carried by a tracked vehicle and has an upwardly directed barrel 38 through which the shot is discharged. There is an impeller 33 which directs the shot SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) upwardly against the surface to be cleaned.
U.S. 4,149,345 (Atsuchi) discloses an abrasive cleaning apparatus where compressed air is discharged through a tube 70 into a nozzle 30 so that a lower pressure is created in the sand hose 60 to 5 enter into the space 45 downstream of the tube 70.
U.S. 3,900,969 (Diehan) illustrates a blast cleaning machine where there is a wheel 16 which is a centrifugal blasting wheel.
Particulate material is fed into the center of wheel 30 from a supply hopper 32. The particulate material is thrown by the blast wheel 16 10 through a blast corridor 36 upwardly against the surface to be cleaned, with the particulate material rebounding into a rebounding corridor 38 where it is deflected back to the hopper 32. Air is drawn through an upper inlet 42 to flow through the rebound corridor 38 and thence upwardly through a chamber 36 where the dust particles and fine 15 abrasives are drawn out through an exhaust port 48.
U.S. 3,900,968 (Shigyo) shows a cleaning machine where there is a rotary impeller 4 which receives the particulate material from a hopper 8. The material is directed from the impeller against the surface to be cleaned, and it drops downwardly through a shoot 21 to 20 be deposited into a circular conveyor housing 22 that is rotatably mounted about a horizontal axis of rotation. There are blades 28 connected to the conveyor runner that are circumferentially spaced along the entire inner periphery of the runner. The material is carried to an upper location where it is redeposited into the hopper.
25 U.S. 5,885,141 (Watkin) shows an abrasive cleaning apparatus where there is a blast wheel 12 which rotates about a horizontal axis.
Abrasive material is fed from a storage hopper 15 through a feed SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) passage 25 to the hub 27 at the center of the last wheel 12. The blast wheel has a plurality of circumferentially spaced blades 31 which extend radially outwardly from this hub 27. The abrasive material is fed onto the inner end of the blades 31 and is displaced along the 5 blades in response to the rapid rotational movement of the wheel. As seen in Fig. 3, the abrasive material from the wheel, as indicated by the arrows 38 travel to the vertical surface 36, and the rebounding abrasive material along with the dust and debris travels back to the wheel as particulate material. The particulate material collides with the 10 blades 31 which deflects the mixture upwards into a rebound corridor 16. This creates a flow of the particulate material vertically upwardly through the chamber 32 to be deflected by a baffle 45 to pass over divider wall 46 down to a filter 14. The particulate material flows downwardly at 51 and is subjected to an air stream indicated by the 15 arrows 53 which separates the relatively light dust and debris. The abrasive material falls into the storage hopper 15 and is again fed to the blast wheel 12.
U.S. 5,319,893 (Hockett) shows a cleaning apparatus with a recovery system. A cleaning material such as sand, water or the like 20 are discharged from a plurality of rotatable nozzles to impact the surface. A fluid seat provides a seal between the housing and the surface and a vacuum source is connected to the housing for withdrawing the impacted cleaning material.
U.S. 4,693,041 (Dickson) shows a surface blasting apparatus 25 where there is a storage compartment 34 for the stored abrasive 40 which flows downwardly to be engaged by a wheel assembly 78 which repels the abrasive stream 126 to the surface 128 to be cleaned. The SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) cleaning material plus the debris that is removed rebounds upwardly to strike an upwardly curved wall 136 with the abrasive and the debris forming a horizontal stream 140 to drop downwardly toward the hopper to be recirculated. There is a dust collector 164 from which arrows 5 drawn through an exhaust opening 166.
U.S. 4,319,436 (VanFossen) shows a portable blasting device where there is a hopper 10 from which the steel shot is fed through a tube 14 to a blast wheel (not shown) to be discharged through a blast corridor 14 against the surface to be cleaned. The shot rebounds to 10 pass upwardly through a corridor 26 to be returned to the hopper 10.
U.S. 4,294,188 (Ashworth) shows an apparatus for cleaning the hulls of ships where the cleaning apparatus is mounted to a boom 14 that is in turn connected to an upper boom 15.
U.S. 4,286,417 (Shelton) shows a blasting machine where there 15 is a support structure with a moveable boom with the blasting machine on its outer end. Means are provided to sense the positions of the blasting machine relative to the surface for treatment. Movements of the blasting machine away from the desired position are sensed and compensated to adjust the blasting mechanism toward the intended 20 position.
U.S. 4,132,039 shows a lightweight hand operated abrasive blasting apparatus where an air stream with particulate abrasive material is carried into the cleaning apparatus to a center of an impeller which centrifugally repels the abrasive against the work surface. There 25 is a vacuum tube which draws the material away.
U.S. 4,020,596 (Bergh) shows a portable blast cleaning unit where the material is directed into two abrasive throwing wheels 16 SUBSTIME SHEET (RULE 26) WO 00/32357 PC'T/US99/28018 which direct the abrasive material against the surface where it is rebounded and directed back to a feed hopper.
U.S. 3,934,272 (Diehn et al.) shows a portable upblast cleaning head where there is an impeller wheel which directs the abrasive 5 material upwardly (see Fig. 2) the rebounding material drops into a chamber to be returned to a hopper where the material 18 is again directed back to the wheel.
U.S. 3,900,969 (Diehn) shows a surface blasting system which the blasting particles are propelled by impeller wheel 16, and bounce 10 off of the work surface 12. The debris, and the abrasive pass into chamber 38, in which the abrasive bounces off surface 40 into the storage chamber 32 while the debris and air accumulate in chamber 46 to the exit.
U.S. 3,624,967 (Kamper et aL) shows a cleaning machine 15 where the blasting material is propelled by pressurized air.
U.S. 2,036,615 (Wean) shows a system for treating sheet material so as to clean a surface. The material is passed to blast wheels 10 and 11 which impel abrasive material against the sheet to remove contaminating surface material.
20 U.S. 3,900,969 (Diehn) shows a device for abrasive cleaning of a surface. The abrasive materials fed from supply hopper 32, to rotary impeller 16, which impels it to the surface being treated. Then the particulate rebounds off surface 12 and rebounds off areas 26 into the supply hopper 32. The exhaust port 48 sucks out the dust particles.
25 U.S. 4,532,878 (Shiraishi) uses a brush to clean the surface.
U.S. 4,688,289 (Urakami) is designed to treat a wall surface.
There is shown a system to cause the apparatus to adhere to a wall SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) surface by suction means. There are sealing means 44 and a vacuum means to accomplish this. Flexible tube 56 is connected to a low-pressure zone.
U.S. 4,890,567 (Caduff) uses an ultrasonic transducer with a 5 high-pressure fluid spray for cleaning a ship's hull. The feature of interest is the use of magnets to hold the machine on the surface to be treated.
U.S. 4,789,037 (Kneebone) discloses a magnetic track system for moving a cleaning apparatus along a metallic surface. There is a 10 fan or pump 70 to direct a fluid against the surface. There is no particle blasting mechanism disclosed.
U.S. 3,922,991 {Woods) uses brush means to clean the surface by high-pressure fluid. It uses a magnetic attachment to adhere to the metallic surface.
15 U.S. 2,104, 062 (Temple) uses chain members 45 to beat against the surface of the ship to clean the same.
U.S. 3,609,916 (Hammelmann) uses a compressed fluid that directs water against the ship's hull. Blasters 13 and 14 are offset as shown Fig. 22 blasting fluid against the surface 8.
2o Summary of the Present Invention The abrasive cleaning apparatus and method of the present invention is adapted to be used in a variety of applications and environments. A typical use of the present invention for which it is particularly adapted is to clean large surface areas which are generally 25 vertically aligned and also large surface areas where accessibility close to perimeter locations is desirable. Thus, the present invention SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) can very advantageously be used in, for example, cleaning the surfaces of the hull of a ship. The abrasive cleaning apparatus of the present invention comprises a housing having a front portion, a back portion, and also having top, bottom and side wall portions, where the 5 wall portions collectively provide interior surface portions that defne an operating chamber to contain cleaning material therein.
The apparatus has an open front portion, and the top, bottom and side wall portions have a front perimeter portion that defines a general impact region at the front opening. The perimeter portion is 10 arranged to be positioned adjacent to a work surface portion of a work surface to be cleaned, which (as indicated above) could be the surface of a hull of a ship.
There is at least one impeller which has a plurality of impact surfaces and which is positioned in the operating chamber at an 15 operating location to rotate about an axis of rotation. The impeller has its axis of rotation oriented and its impact surfaces positioned so that with the impeller rotating, as the cleaning surfaces impact the cleaning material in the operating region, portions of the cleaning material are directed toward the impact region to strike against the work surface 20 portion so that the material striking against the work surface portion rebounds back into the operating chamber.
The housing is arranged so that with the perimeter portion being engaged with the work surface, the operating chamber is substantially closed. The interior surface portions of the housing are arranged to 25 cause portions of the cleaning material that rebound from the work surface into the operating chamber to come in contact with the surface portions of the impeller and be caused to be redirected so that SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) WO 00/32357 ' PCT/US99/28018 quantities of the cleaning material move into the operating location of the impeller to be impacted again by the impeller and directed toward the impacted region.
Thus, portions of the cleaning material remain in the chamber 5 and are repetitively directed against the work surface to be cleaned.
The perimeter portion of the impeller is arranged so that as the impeller rotates, at the time when the impact surfaces are moving in a direction toward the impact region, the impact surfaces are aligned to impart an upward component of motion of the cleaning material in its 10 path toward the impact region.
In one embodiment, the axis of rotation of the impeller is generally vertically aligned, but with an alignment component with an upward and rearward slant.
fn another arrangement (or as an added feature in the 15 arrangement), the impact surfaces slant from the axis of rotation in a manner that during the time period when the impact surfaces are traveling toward the impact region, the impact surfaces have an upward and rearward slant relative to the axis rotation of the impeller.
!n the preferred form, there are first and second impellers 20 rotatably mounted in the operating chamber at first and second operating locations spaced laterally from one another. In one version, each of the first and second impellers has an upper and a lower set of impact surfaces spaced vertically from one another.
The back wall portion in a preferred form has its surface portion 25 formed in two convexly curved surface portions extending at least partially around rear portions of the circular path of travel of radially outward portions of the impact surfaces of the impellers.
SUBSTIME SHEET (RULE 26) Also, in the preferred form, the side wall portions of the housing extend in a forward and outward direction so as to diverge outwardly from one another toward the impact region.
In the preferred embodiment, there is a cleaning material inlet to 5 direct cleaning material into the operating chamber, and a waste outlet system to remove waste material from the cleaning chamber toward a disposal location. The waste removal system comprises a waste outlet positioned to receive a flow of air and waste material from the operating chamber, a waste separator to receive the flow of air and 10 waste material to separate waste material from particulate cleaning material. The removal system is adapted to be connected to a low-pressure source to cause an outflow of waste material from the separating chamber toward a waste disposal location.
In a preferred form, the separator has a separation chamber, 15 and the waste removal system has a conduit defining a flow passage from the waste outlet and leading to the separation chamber to cause a circumferential air flow in the separating chamber to separate more dense particulate material from the waste material. The separator further comprises a cleaning material outlet to return particulate 20 cleaning material in the apparatus.
In one form, the waste removal system comprises two waste outlets and two conduits defining passageways which deliver a flow of air and waste material to the separating chamber. The two passageways direct their air flow into the separating chamber to cause 25 the circumferential flow in the separating chamber.
The perimeter portion comprises a yielding seal perimeter having an engaging surface to engage the work surface and being SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) yielding so as to conform to deviations of the contour of the work surface. fn one form, the perimeter portion comprises a first inner perimeter work surface engaging portion and a second outer perimeter work surface engaging portion spaced outwardly from the first inner 5 work surface engaging portion.
Also in a preferred form the housing has a containing structure positioned below the bottom wall of the housing that defines a collecting chamber. The containing structure has a forward edge portion located below a perimeter portion of the bottom wall portion of 10 the housing so as to form with a portion of the work surface below the perimeter portion of the bottom wall an enclosed collecting area. Thus, any material passing by the perimeter portion of the bottom wall is collected in the collecting area. The apparatus has a return passageway connected to a low pressure source to withdraw material 15 collected in the collecting chamber. This material is, in the preferred form, recirculated in a manner to be directed back to the operating chamber.
There is a positioning and alignment section adapted to be mounted to a base location and having an operating end to carry the 20 cleaning apparatus to a location adjacent to the work surface and to align and move the cleaning apparatus along the work surface. The apparatus further comprises position sensing means mounted to the housing and arranged to detect a position of the perimeter portion where part of the perimeter portion is spaced away from the work 25 surface. The control system is responsive to this sensing means to cause the position and alignment section to properly position the housing so that the perimeter portion is in proper sealing engagement SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) with the work surface.
Also, in one embodiment the positioning and alignment section has a section portion to position a surface treatment apparatus and to move the surface treatment apparatus along the surface to be cleaned.
5 There is a control means that has storage capacity to receive information relating to positioning of the cleaning apparatus, and to transmit this information to a control means for the surface treatment apparatus to cause the surface treatment apparatus to be positioned at locations that are coordinated with the locations of the cleaning 10 apparatus on the work surface so that the surface treatment apparatus is able to be properly positioned in appropriate surface locations which previously have been cleaned by the cleaning apparatus.
In the method of the present invention, the apparatus is provided as described above. The housing is positioned so that the 15 perimeter portion is positioned against the work surface to be cleaned.
The particulate cleaning material is directed into the operating chamber, and the impeller is positioned in an operating location in the chamber and rotated so that its impacted surfaces direct the particulate material to the impact region. As the particulate material rebounds 20 from the work surface back into the operating chamber, the material rebounds off the interior surfaces of the chamber and portions of this material are contacted by the impeller surfaces to be directed repeatedly against the work surface being cleaned. It is believed that other features of the method of the present invention are apparent from 25 the above description. Further, other features of the present invention will be apparent from the following detailed description.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) Brief Description of the Drawings Figure 1 is a side view of the apparatus of the present invention in its operating position;
Figure 2 is a rear view of the apparatus of Figure 1;
5 Figure 3 is a front view of a cleaning apparatus itself;
Figure 4 is a horizontal sectional view of the cleaning apparatus taken at line 4-4. in Figure 3;
Figure 5 is a side view of the cleaning apparatus and positioning and alignment system;
10 Figure 6 is a top view of the cleaning apparatus and positioning and alignment system;
Figures 7A and 78 are side views of the cleaning apparatus and positioning and alignment system positioned to clean two surfaces at different slanted positions;
15 Figures 8A and 8B are top views of the cleaning apparatus and positioning and alignment system adapted to clean two surfaces at different slanted positions;
Figure 9 is a front view of the cleaning apparatus, where the components of the separation system of the cleaning apparatus are 20 shown in cross section;
Figure 9a is a top view of winglets that are rigidly attached to the impellers;
Figure 10 is a horizontal sectional view of the separation system;
25 Figures11A and11B are side cross-sectional views of the peripheral engagement enclosure system;
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) Figure 12 is a top view of the peripheral engagement enclosure system;
Figures 13 is a rear view of a second embodiment of the apparatus of the present invention in its operating position;
5 Figure 14 is a top view of the second embodiment of the apparatus of the present invention in its operating position;
Figure 15 is a front cross-sectional view of the second embodiment of the cleaning apparatus itself;
Figure 16 is a side view the second embodiment of the cleaning 10 apparatus and positioning system;
Figure 17 is a front view of the sandblasting chamber showing the inner and the outer rubber gaskets;
Figure 18 is a vertical cross-sectional view of the apparatus of the present invention;
15 Figure 19 is a cross-sectional view of the gasket sytem;
Figure 20 is a top view of the cleaning apparatus;
Figure 21 is a top cross-sectional view of the abrasive particulate injection system;
Figure 22 is a front elevational view of a third embodiment 20 suspended from an upper location and positioned for cleaning a surface area, where the front of the machine would be positioned against the surface area to be cleaned;
Figure 23 is a side elevational view of the third embodiment shown in Figure 21;
25 Figure 24 is a side elevational view taken from the same location as Figure 23, except showing the machine tilted at an angle to clean a slanted surface;
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) Figure 25 is a side elevational view of a an embodiment similar to Figures 22 - 24 except the impeller arrangements are tilted;
Figure 26 is a side view of a fifth embodiment;
Figure 27 is a cross sectional plan view of the fifth 5 embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 28 is a front' view of the fourth embodiment;
Figure 29 is a front view of an alternative blade configuration;
Figure 30 is a front view of a split blade configuration;
10 Figure 31 is a side view of a sixth embodiment;
Figure 32 is a top view of the sixth embodiment;
Figure 33 is a cross-sectional view of the double gasket system take at line 33 in Figure 31.
Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiment 15 Throughout this description reference is made to top and bottom, front and rear. While the apparatus of the present invention is particularly well adapted to clean a vertical or near vertical surface, it could also function and /or be adapted to function in numerous positions and orientations. These orientation terms, such as top and 20 bottom, are obviously used for aiding the description and are not meant to limit the invention to any specific orientation.
With reference to Figures 1 and 2, the main components comprise the positioning system 20, an alignment system 21 and the cleaning apparatus 22.
25 The positioning system 20 consists of a mechanical arm 23 and wheeled platform 24. The mechanical arm 22 is pivotally mounted on SUBSTITUTE SNEET (RULE 26) wheeled platform 24 at pivot points 26a and 26b. The mechanical arm 23 can be an arrangement of parallel four-bar linkages where, for example arm components 28 and 29 are parallel and have pivot points 26a and 26b pivotally connected to the wheeled platform 24. The arm 5 components also have pivot points 34a and 34b pivotally connected to the juncture location 36. The points 26a, 26b, 34a and 34b are symmetrically positioned in a manner that allows the juncture location 36 to transverse and not to rotate providing a consistent base for the next arm components.
10 This parallel four-bar linkage arrangement can continue through the linkages throughout the mechanical arm 23. The arm components 30 and 31 are pivotally connected to 35a and 35b respectively, and also connected to pivot points 38a and 38b at juncture location 37. So juncture location 37 will also traverse and not rotate. The arm sets 39 15 and 40 have a similar arrangement and connection as arm components 31 and 32. Thus, as seen in Figure 5, points 42a and 42b of juncture location 41 can be substantially vertical assuming deflection throughout mechanical arm 23 is minimal. In one form, the arm 39 can telescopically extend thereby moving the cleaning system in a 20 transverse direction to and from the surface to be cleaned.
As seen in Figures 5-8, the cleaning apparatus 22 is mounted to the alignment system 21. The alignment system 21 comprises a U-frame 44, a horizontal alignment hydraulic cylinder 46 and vertical alignment hydraulic cylinder 48.
25 The alignment system 21 can position the cleaning apparatus 22 to be properly positioned so that the perimeter edge 64 is in contact with the surface 51. This system is pivotally attached to the juncture SUBSTITUTE SHEEP (RULE 26) location 41 of the mechanical arm 23 at pin 43 (see Fig. 5). The U-frame 44 can pivot about pin 43 to rotate in the horizontal plane. This movement is carried out by extending and contracting horizontal alignment cylinder 46 which is pivotally connected to the juncture 5 location 41 at point 45 and pivotally connected to the U-frame 44 at point 47.
As seen in Figures 8A and 8B, the mechanical arm 23 is not perpendicular to the surface 51 in the horizontal plane. In order to maintain contact of the perimeter edge 64 to the surface 51, the 10 cleaning apparatus must rotate in the horizontal plane. As seen in Figure 8a when the horizontal alignment hydraulic cylinder 46 extends, it rotates the U-frame 44 clockwise which in turn rotates the cleaning apparatus 22. Likewise in Figure 8b to keep the perimeter edge 64 in contact with the surface 51 the horizontal alignment hydraulic cylinder 15 46 is contracted which rotates the U-frame 44 counter clockwise to the position shown in Figure 8b.
The vertical alignment of the cleaning apparatus 22 can be accomplished by the alignment system 21 by extending or contracting vertical alignment cylinders 48 which are pivotally attached to the U-20 frame 44 at point 49 and pivotally attached to the cleaning apparatus 22 at point 50.
To adjust the cleaning apparatus to accommodate vertical alignment, hydraulic cylinders 48 can rotate the cleaning apparatus 22.
As seen in Figure 7a, if the surface 51 is an inverted steep slope, such 25 as the lower portion of a ship near the water line, the cleaning apparatus 22 must rotate clockwise for the perimeter edge 64 to keep in contact with the surface 51. If the slope of the surface 51 is as SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) shown in Figure 7B, the operator of the machine can retract the vertical alignment hydraulic cylinder 48 which rotates the cleaning apparatus 22 counter clockwise.
As seen in Figure 5, the cleaning apparatus 22 has a front end 5 60 and rear end 62. There is a housing 52 that is rectangular in shape and a horizontal axis 63 extending from the rear end 62 to the front end 60. As seen in Figure 4, in the interior portion of the housing 52 is a chamber wall 54 which defines an operating or containing chamber 56. At the front portion of this containing chamber 56 is a forward open 10 region 58, which functions as an impact region where the abrasive cleaning material impacts the surface to be cleaned. Around the perimeter of this forward open region 58 is a perimeter edge portion 64 to provide a seal with the surface to be cleaned.
As seen in Figure 3, in the inner central portion of the cleaning 15 apparatus 22 are two impeller sets 66. Each impeller set 66 comprises an upper impeller 68, a lower impeller 70 and a shaft 72. The impeller sets have a center axis about the center of rotation of the impeller sets 66. Each set of impellers 68 and 70 are fixedly mounted to its related shaft 72 which is joumally mounted to the upper wall 74 of housing 52 20 where the shaft extends therethrough and is connected to a motor 76 that rotates the shaft 72 and the impellers 68 and 70. Each shaft 72 also is rotatably mounted to the lower wall 77 of housing 52 and extends therethrough to a disk brake system 78. The rear wall 80 of the housing 72 is contoured to redirect the abrasive particles, and this 25 will be described in more detail later herein.
As seen in Figure 9, the upper impeller 68 comprises of a plurality of blades 82, a core 84 and a circular support disk 86 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) WO 00/32357 PC'f/US99/28018 extending circumferentially around the outer edge of the blades. Each blade 82 has a contact surface 83 and is rigidly attached to the impeller core 84. Positioned on top of the blades 82 is the support disk 86 to which each blade is additionally rigidly attached. On top of the 5 support disk are winglets 88. These small winglets 88 can be slight upward extensions of the blades 82 that are on the upper portion of support disk 86 and have a contact surface 87, a lower surface 89 where the winglets 88 assist in directing abrasive material toward the forward open region 58 (see Figure 9a).
10 The lower impeller 70 comprises a plurality of blades 90, an impeller core 92 and a lower circular support disk 94 similar to the disk 86. The blades 90 each have a contact surface 91 and are rigidly attached to the impeller core 92 and are also attached to the lower support disk 94 and beneath the support disk are lower winglets 96.
15 Like the upper winglets 88, these winglets 96 can be slight downward extensions of the blades 90 that extend downwardly from the lower support disk 94. It is believed that these lower winglets 96, which are similar to the upper winglets 88, help to come into forceful contact with the abrasive material and thrust them to the forward open region 58.
20 The blades 90 are angled or slanted moderately in an upward and rearward direction relative to the forward circular path of travel, with respects to the central axis of the impeller sets 66. While the impeller sets 66 are spinning as shown in Figure 4, the contact surfaces 91 of the lower blades 90 direct the particulate material in a 25 forward and upward direction. Various angles have been experimented with the angle between the contact surface 91 with respects to the longitudinal axis of the impeller core 92, and a range of SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) five degrees to ten degrees would have good results; however about 6.5-7.0 degrees gives the abrasive particles sufficient lift without projecting the abrasive particles in too large of an angle in the vertical direction.
5 There is a space between the upper impeller 68 and the lower impeller 70. It is believed that with this space between impellers 68 and 70, the air currents developed from the spinning blades are more conducive for launching the shot to the more forward open region 58.
Further, by separating the upper impeller from the lower impeller it is 10 easier to manufacture the lower portion of the blade assembly with the angles described supra. The impeller sets 66 spin in the direction indicated at arrows 67.
As mentioned previously, the rear wall 80 of the housing 52 functions to redirect the abrasive particles and can be considered as a 15 rebounding section 80 in that the particulate material that is impacted by the impellers 68 and 70 is directed toward the forward open impact region 58. This will be described more fully later herein.
When the abrasive particles circulate in the containing chamber 56 the particles will wear down and combine with material that has 20 been removed from the surface 51. This material comprising the debris ground down by the action of the abrasive particle material is referred to as "ground waste material". This ground waste material has either a larger particle diameter to mass ratio or a smaller density than that of the abrasive particulate cleaning material. The effect of this is 25 that the ground waste material is more readily carried by the air currents and further so that these can be removed from the chambers.
As seen in Figure 9, the feed and recirculating system 108 is a SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) multipurpose section which performs a variety of functions, namely:
~ feeds abrasive material from a supply location to the operating chamber 56;
~ withdraws waste material and some of the smaller size abrasive material from the operating chamber 56;
~ separates the lower density waste material from the reusable abrasive material;
~ discharges the waste material to a collecting location; and ~ recirculates the still useable abrasive material back to the operating chamber 56.
This multipurpose infeed and separating section 108 comprises first a core subsection 109 which communicates with the other subsections of the section 108. This core section 109 comprises a housing 110 which defines a separating chamber 112. The housing 110 in turn comprises an upper cylindrical portion 114 and a lower conical portion 116.
There is an abrasive feed section 117 comprising a box-like rectangular abrasive container 120, defining a containing chamber 122. There is a feed auger 124 which feeds abrasive particulate material in the separating chamber 112 through an outlet opening 126 that opens into the tower part of the separating chamber 112 that is in the lower conical portion 116 of the housing 110.
At the lower apex end of the lower conical portion of the housing 110 there is an outlet conduit 126 having a relatively short length and opening into the operating chamber 56.
To remove the particulate waste material and some of the smaller abrasive material from the operating chamber 56, there is SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) provided a withdrawal conduit 130 which has an inlet opening 132 in the top wall of the housing 52. The opening 132 leads into a passageway 134 defined by the conduit 130 and leads to an outlet opening 136. As can be seen in Fig. 10, the withdrawal passageway 5 134 has an upper horizontal discharge portion 137 which leads into the opening 136 in a direction which is offset from the center of the cylindrical housing portion 114 so as to direct the flow of air that carries the waste material and some particulate material into the upper portion of the separating chamber 112 in a manner to create a swirling flow 10 pattern. This "cyclone" type of flow pattern causes the more dense particulate material to move further to the radially outward portion of the chamber 112 and to drop down along the sidewall portion 114 and along the lower conical shaped wall portion 116 into the feed outlet conduit 126. Thus, the particulate abrasive material which is still 15 usable is recirculated back into the operating chamber 56.
To remove the waste material from the separating chamber 112, there is provided a discharge conduit 138 that has an inlet opening 140 formed in a central part of a cover or lid 141 of the housing 110. This inlet opening 134 leads into a discharge passageway 142 of the 20 conduit 148 which leads to a vacuum source, indicted schematically at 134 and also to a deflecting location 164 (also shown schematically).
The vacuum source could be incorporating into the separating system where the air flow is separated from the collected waste material that is directing to the deflecting location.
25 There is a pressure tube 149 which extends from a pressure source, indicated schematically at 150 downwardly through an inlet portion of the aforementioned discharged conduit 148 and into a SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) central portion of the housing 110. This tube 149 could alternately serve as a feed tube to direct cleaning material into the chamber. This injection of pressure into the chamber 112 creates a greater pressure differential between the interior of the chamber 112 and the vacuum 5 source 134 to enhance the discharge of the waste material. Further, it is surmised that this downward flow of pressurized air enhances the action of the air flow in the separating chamber 112. It will be noted from looking at Fig. 10 that the feed conduit 126 is offset from the central axis of the housing 110. Thus, the conical wall portion 116 of 10 the housing 110 has its central axis of the cone slanted in a downward and rearward direction, and the conical sidewall 116 itself is contoured so that there was a downward conversing slant in a rearward direction.
With regard to the positioning of the components of the infeed and separating section 108, it can be seen that the housing 110 is 15 located on the top wall 62 at a forward central location. The feed conduit 126 is at the rear part of the housing 110 and approximately between the two centers of rotation of the impellers located in the operating chamber 52. The inlet opening 132 of the withdrawal tube is located at the forward edge of the top wall 62 of the housing 52 and 20 moderately to one side of a longitudinal center line of the housing 52.
The abrasive feed section 117 is located on top of the wall 132 at a forward and side location.
As seen in Figure 6, located on the perimeter end 64 is a perimeter engagement system 144. This engagement system 144 is a 25 system of fingers 146 that maintain contact with the surface 51.
Shown in Figure 11A and 11B is a hatch view of the engagement system 144. The fingers 146 have a forward section 147 and rearward SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) section 149. Each finger comprises a central layer 148, rigid members 150, sheath 152 and encasement 154. The central layer 148 has a contact portion 149 that is adapted to engage the surface 51. The central portion can made from be a rubber based material that is 5 resistant to wear and will not damage the surface 51. The rigid members 150 provide rigidity for the fingers 146 and are positioned on either side of the central layer 148. Surrounding the rigid members are the two sheaths 152 that are made from a material with a relatively low coefficient of friction that allows the fingers 146 to slide in the housing 10 156. In the rearward section of the fingers 146 is an encasement 154.
As seen in Figure 12 the encasement surrounds four fingers holding them adjacent to each other. At the rearward end of the encasement 154 is a base portion 158.
Surrounding all of the fingers is a housing 156. This housing is 15 located on the perimeter edge 64 of the housing 52. The housing 156 has an inner wall 160, a back wall 162 and an outer wall 164. Located on the forward portions of the outer wall 164 and the inner wall 160 is a containing lip 166. This lip is perpendicular to the inner and outer walls 160 and 164 and is adapted to engage the encasement 154 to keep 20 the fingers from extending out of the housing 156.
Springs 168 are positioned in between the base portion 158 and the back wall 162 and bias the fingers toward the surface 51. The cleaning apparatus 22 is positioned by the positioning system 20 to be in close proximity of the surface 51 and the alignment system 21 25 functions to keep the contact portion 149 of the fingers 146 in constant contact with the surface. The springs allow motion of the fingers so the operator can position the cleaning apparatus in a range of near the SUBSTITUTE SHEEP (RULE 26) surface 51.
The encasement 154 holding one or more fingers 146 comprises an engagement section 170. Each engagement section 170 can move independently of other engagement sections. This 5 allows the engagement system 144 the ability to remain in contact with a surface that has irregularities and is not perfectly flat.
Second Embodiment of the Present Invention:
A second embodiment is shown in Figs. 13 - 21. In the following text, there will first be a description of the general operations 10 of the second embodiment of the present invention followed by an introduction to the basic components of the second embodiment and finally a detailed description of the same.
The apparatus 200 comprises a positioning system 202, a first alignment system 204, a cleaning system 206, a second alignment 15 system 208 and a painting system 210.
As shown in Figure 13, the apparatus 200 is cleaning and painting the surface 212 simultaneously. The positioning system 202 comprises a wheeled vehicle 214, a first boom system 216, a second boom system 218 and a control unit (or otherwise known as control 20 system which is not shown).
The basic operations of the second embodiment of the apparatus of the present invention is such that the positioning system 202 will move very slowly in the longitudinal direction generally parallel to the surface to be cleaned (indicated at arrow 220). During the 25 cleaning operation the positioning system 202 will slowly lower the first boom system 216 and telescopically retract the same so the cleaning SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) system 206 will travel substantially downward in the vertical direction as indicated by arrow 222. The cleaning system 206 has sensing devices (discussed more completely herein) that detects the transverse distance from the wall 212 to the cleaning system 206. The 5 information from the sensing devices of the cleaning system 206 is relayed back to the control unit of the positioning system 202 and this information is stored therein. Some manual intervention may be required in controlling the direction of the cleaning system 206 so that no portions of the wall 212 are missed (or unnecessarily cleaned again 10 by the cleaning system 206). The surface 212 is shown herein as that of a hull of a boat and hence will be curved in the transverse direction.
Therefore the precise location of the positioning system 206 is recorded in the control system in all three orthogonal directions (i.e. the longitudinal, the vertical and the transverse).
15 Therefore as the wheeled vehicle 214 travels in the longitudinal direction indicated at arrow 220 this movement of the wheeled vehicle 214 is recorded in a control system as well.
After the surface 212 is cleaned it should be shortly painted thereafter before any rust can form thereon. The painting system 210 20 is controlled by the control system of the positioning system 202.
Because the control unit has a precisely mapped out contour of the surface 212 that it obtained from the data input from the cleaning system 206, and further because the control unit knows precisely how tar the wheeled vehicle 214 has traveled in the longitudinal direction, 25 the control unit can direct the travel of the painting system 210 to follow the substantial downward motion as indicated by arrow 224 and keep the painting system at the correct distance from the surface . In SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) general, this is accomplished because the positioning system 202 records the wheeled vehicle's 214 exact position and the control unit records the exact position of the cleaning system 206 with respect to the position of the positioning system 202. The control unit further can 5 detect the exact position of the painting system 210 (i.e. the location and the longitudinal direction, the vertical direction in the transverse direction) with respect to the positioning system 202 Therefore, as the positioning system 202 moves longitudinally in the direction indicated at arrow 220 the control unit can subtract the distance the wheeled 10 vehicle 214 travels to determine the precise location of the painting system 210. The painting system will recorded its exact position by noting the exact position of the second boom 218 in the control system. As a painting system 208 travels in the direction indicated at arrow 224, as it gets to the bottom shown at broken line in Fig. 13, the 15 control system will reposition the cleaning system 210 to move in the longitudinal direction in order to begin painting a new strip on the surface 212 that has not yet been painted.
There will now be a discussion of the positioning system 202 which comprises a wheeled vehicle 214, a first boom system 216, a 20 second boom system 218 and a control unit (not shown). The wheeled vehicle 214 comprising, body 226 and wheels 228. The wheels 228 are connected to a driveshaft and motor to propel the wheeled vehicle 214. To help keep the wheeled vehicle 214 in a well-defined position, tracks 230 can be employed as shown in Fig. 14. The wheels 228 25 have precisely calibrated distance/rotation parameters defined so that the positioning system 202 would know it's exact location with respects to is previous locations. Alternatively, or in conjunction with the tracks, SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) a guide system 231 can be employed which is a conventional positional tracking system where a tracking tape 233 is fixed to the dock and a sensor within the positioning system 202 will accurately track itself along a tracking tape and further recorded its precise 5 distance along a tracking tape 233.
As seen in Fig. 13, the first boom system 216 comprises a boom 234, actuator 236 and a rotating system 238. The boom 234 can telescopically extend from its longitudinal axis. The boom 234 comprises a base end 240, extension end 242, extension tip 244, and 10 a plurality of extension members 246. The boom 234 rotates in a vertical plane about points 262 when the actuator 236 extends. The actuator 236 preferably is hydraulic. The rotating system rotates the boom 234 about a vertical axis. The actuator 236, the rotation system 238 and the boom 234 with the ability to telescopically extend, allow 15 three degrees of freedom of motion, which in turn allows the positioning system 202 to place the clean system 206 in any location limited by the maximum length of the boom 234.
The second boom system 218 comprises a second boom 248, a second actuator 250 and a second rotating system 252. The boom 20 248 also can telescopically extend from its longitudinal axis and it comprises a base end 254, and extension end 256, extension tip 258, and a plurality of extension members 260. The boom 248 rotates in a vertical plane about point 263 when he actuator 250 extends. The actuator 250 is also preferably hydraulic. The rotating system rotates 25 the boom 248 about a vertical axis. Similar to the first boom system 216, the actuator 250, the rotation system 252 and the boom 248 with the ability to telescopically extend, allow three degrees of freedom of SUSSTITUtE SHEET (RULE 26) motion, which in tum allows the positioning system 202 to place the clean system in any location limited by the maximum length of the boom 248. Therefore the location of extension point 258 where the painting system 210 is located it is precisely recorded with respect to 5 the location and orientation of the positioning system 202. The boom system of the first embodiment could likely be employed with the operation discussed below.
There will now be a more detailed discussion of the overall operations of the apparatus 200. The cleaning system will engage the 10 surface 212 at point 232 while the positioning system 202 is at location 235. As indicated previously while the cleaning system 206 sweeps down the surface 212 from point 232 the exact location of the first boom system 216 is recorded in a control unit, this information being:
the degrees of rotation of the boom 238, the angle of the boom 238 15 with respect to the horizontal plane, and the telescopic extension of the boom 234.
Continuing the explanation of the overall operating procedure in more detail, as shown in Fig. 13 the vehicle 225 is at location point 268 and the painting system 210 has just passed location 266. A brief time 20 before, (for example one-hour) the vehicle 225 was at location 235 and the cleaning system 206 was located at location 266 and the control unit of the positioning system recorded the precise location of 266 with respect to the location of the vehicle 225 at location 235 (this information being: the degrees of rotation of the boom 238, the angle 25 of the boom 238 with respect to the horizontal plane, and the telescopic extension of the boom 234) Now when the vehicle 225 is at the location 268 as shown in SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) Fig. 13 and the painting system 210 is at location 266, the control unit can determine the absolute location of the surface to be painted or treated relative to the car 226 at location point 266 by first recalling the location of point 266 and then subtracting the distance 270 which is 5 only the longitudinal distance difference from when the positioning system 202 first recorded location 266 from the cleaning system 206 and the present location of the positioning system 202 at point 26.
There will now be a detailed discussion of the cleaning apparatus of the second embodiment as seen in figs. 15 -- 21. As 10 seen in Figure 16, the cleaning system of the second embodiment has a front-end 264, a rear end 266, an upper portion 268, and a lower portion 270.
The general components of the cleaning system 206 as seen in Fig. 15 are: the housing 272, abrasive material feed and recirculatory 15 system 274, the separation and waste disposal system 276, the impeller system 278 and fnally the recirculatory system 280.
The housing 272 is generally rectangular or box like in shape and has a front open portion 282 and a front perimeter edge 284 surrounding the open portions 282. The housing has a top wall portion 20 a bottom wall portion, a rear wall portion and two side wall portions, with interior surface portions thereof comprising an interior surface 286 which defines an operating chamber 288.
Positioned within the chamber 288 is the impeller system 278 which comprises a first impeller set 290, a second impeller set 292, a 25 braking system 294 (see Fig. 16), and a motor system 296.
The first impeller set 290 comprises a first upper impeller 298 and a first lower impeller 300, and the second impeller set 292 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) comprises a second upper impeller 302 and a second lower impeller 304. The operations and configurations of the impeller sets 290 and 292 are similar to the impeller sets 66 of the first embodiment and the detailed description of those impeller sets 66 apply to the impeller sets 5 290 and 292 of the second embodiment. Likewise the alignment system 21 in the first embodiment is the same as the alignment system 204 in the second embodiment. Therefore a detailed discussion of the alignment system 204 will also not be presented with the understanding that the alignment system 21 of the first embodiment 10 can be implemented in the second embodiment.
The separating system 276 of this second embodiment is rather similar to the feed and separating section 108 of the prior embodiment, except that the main feed system for the abrasive particulate material is made a part of an abrasive material feed and recirculating system 15 274 of this present embodiment.
This separating waste disposal system 276 performs the following four functions in generally the same manner as the feed and recirculating separating section 108, these being the following:
~ withdrawing the waste material and some abrasive cleaning 20 material from the operating chamber;
~ separating the lower density waste material from the smaller abrasive particulate material;
~ discharging the waste material to a collection location;
~ recirculating the still useable abrasive material back to the 25 operating chamber.
Thus, there is a core section 309 comprising a housing 310 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) defining a separating chamber 312, and having an upper and generally cylindrical sidewall portion 314 and a lower conical sidewall portion 316. There is a waste material withdrawal system 318 which comprises three waste material inlets formed in the upper wall of the 5 main housing. These inlets are left and right end inlets 320 and 322 at forward side portions at the top wall of the housing, these leading to, respectively, left and right transverse passageways 324 and 326 defined, respectively, by conduits 328 and 330 positioned a short distance above the top wall of the housing. There is also in the top 10 wall the center waste material inlet 332 which leads into inner ends of the two passageways 324 and 326.
The center portion of the passageway 324 communicates with an inlet 336 of a passageway 338 defined by a conduit 340 leading to the separating chamber 310. In like manner, there is an inlet 342 15 leading to a passageway 344 defined by a conduit 346 also leading into the separating chamber 310. An upper horizontal portion 348 of the conduit 340 leads into an opening 350 in the separating chamber 310 along an alignment axis which is illustrated in Fig. 20 which is off-center from the housing 310. In like manner, an upper horizontally 20 extending portion 352 of the conduit 346 discharges through an opening 354, along an alignment axis which also is offset form the center of the housing 310. It can be seen that the alignment axis of the passageway of sections 348 and 352 are such that these induce a flow, as seen in Fig. 20 in a counter clockwise direction in the 25 separating chamber 312.
Extending upwardly from a lid or cover 356 of the housing 310 is a discharge conduit 358 similar to the aforementioned discharge SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) conduit 140 of the earlier embodiment. This discharge conduit 358 leads to a vacuum source 360 which in turn leads to a collecting location 362. In reviewing the overall arrangement of the waste material withdrawal and disposal system and of the separating housing 5 310, it becomes evident that this is rather similar to the withdrawal and disposal system of the prior embodiment. More specifically, the lower pressure created by the vacuum source 362 causes air flow through the inlets 320, 322 and 332 and into the separating chamber 312 to cause the cyclone like flow within the separating chamber 312. This 10 causes the more dense abrasive particles to migrate to the outside of the chamber 312 and then descend downwarldy through a lower end opening 366 and through a tube 368 back into the main chamber. The less dense waste material is drawn into the passageway 360 to the vacuum source 362 where the waste material can be separated and be 15 collected at the aforementioned collecting location 364.
The aforementioned abrasive feed and material recirculating system 274 comprises a box-like abrasive material container 370 located above the main housing. This container 370 comprises a surrounding wail structure 372, a !id 374 and a bottom wall 376.
20 Mounted to the lid 374 is a pneumatic suction pump 378 which is attach to the outlet 380 of a abrasive material recirculating line 382 which extends from the vacuum pump 378 downwardly along the outside of the main housing to a vacuum tube inlet 384 located in a chamber 386 which is defined by a lower housing section 388.
25 To describe this lower housing section 388, reference is made to Figs. 15 and 18. With reference to Fig. 18, the housing section 388 has its top planar wall provided by the lower forward portion 390 of the SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) bottom wall of the main housing, and has a back wall 392 at the rear edge of the upper wall 390 and extending downwardly from the bottom wall of the main housing. As can be seen in Fig. 15, the two side walls 394 of the housing section 388 are provided as downward extension of 5 the two sidewalls of the main housing, and there are two bottom wall sections 396 (see Fig. 15} which slant downwardly toward one another to a center location 398 which is the location at which the circulating tube inlet 384 is positioned.
In operation, when smaller particulate abrasive material enters 10 the chamber 386, it is drawn into the tube inlet 384 and through the force of the vacuum pump 378 it is discharged from the pump into the container 370 for the abrasive particulate material.
At the a laterally outward location of the container 370, there is formed in the bottom wall 376 an opening 400 which leads to an 15 elongate feed passageway 402 which extends from the opening 400 toward a center location at 404 and that turns downwardly into the passageway 406 to discharge at 408 into the main operating chamber.
To cause movement of the particulate abrasive material which descends through the opening 400 into the chamber upstream portion 20 402, there is provided a pressurized tube 410 connected to a pressure source indicated at 412. This tube 410 leads to a solenoid valve 414 and thence through a laterally extending tube section 416 that has an outlet end 418 at an upstream end of the passageway 402. The solenoid valve 414 is opened and shut to cause pulses of pressurized 25 air to flow into the passageway 402 to move the abrasive particulate material through the passageway 404 to its end middle location at 405 and thence down the passageway 406 and into the main chamber.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) The aforementioned perimeter portion 284 of the main housing will now be described with reference to Figs. 15, 17 and 18. With reference to Fig. 15, it will be called as earlier in this description the main housing 272 was depicted as having a generally rectangular or 5 box-like configuration having a front end portion 282 and a perimeter edge portion 284. As can be seen in Fig. 15, this main housing 272 comprises a top wall 426, a bottom wall 428, and two sidewalls 430.
The perimeter edge portion 284 comprises an inner surrounding gasket portion 432 and an outer surrounding gasket portion 434. (See 10 Fig. 19). The forward edge of the top wall 428 has bonded or otherwise joined to the top surface, an elongate mounting member (mounting strip) 436 extending along the entire front edge of the top wall 426. This mounting strip 436 has a uniform cross section "Z"
configuration, and can be made as an extrusion of plastic or metal.
15 More particularly the member 436 has top and bottom flanges 438 and 440, respectively. The top flange 438 has bonded to its top surface the aforementioned upper gasket 434, and there is an upper protective strip 442 bonded to the rear top surface portion of the upper outer gasket 434. The flange 438 and the protective strip 442 are 20 dimensioned and positioned so that the forward part 444 of the gasket 434 extends outwardly from the strip 442 and flange 434.
The lower gasket 432 is similarly arranged, except that on its Power side there is the forward edge portion 446 of the top wall 426 and an upper protective strip 448. The lower flange 440 is bonded, welded 25 or otherwise joined to the top wall 426. Thus, it can be seen that the outer and inner gaskets 434 and 432 are spaced a short distance from one another held securely in place, and extend forwardly beyond there SUBSTITUFE SHEET (RULE 26) mounting components so that these flexible rubber gaskets forms a sealing function around the entire perimeter of the main housing 272.
The inner and outer gaskets 434 and 432 are mounted to the sidewalls 430 in substantially the same way as they are to the top wall 5 426. However, the outer and inner gaskets 434 and 432 are arranged somewhat differently at the location of the bottom wall and the edge portions of the walls 394 and 396 that define the bottom housing section 388.
As can be seen in Fig. 19, the inner rubber gasket 432 has an 10 upper rear surface portion thereof bounded directly to the forward portion of the bottom wall front portion 390, and there is a lower protective strip 450 is bonded to the rear lower surface portion of the gasket 432. The Lower gasket 434 located at the lower wall portions 396 is similarly bonded to the lower forward surface of the wall 15 members 396 and also has a protective strip 452 bonded to the lower rear surface portion thereof.
In operation, as the cleaning apparatus is moving over the surface which is being cleaned, with the gaskets 432 and 434 remaining in contact with the surface being cleaned, some of these 20 smaller particulate abrasive material may move past the inner gasket 432 into the channel defined by the inner and outer gasket strips 432 and 434. As these collect in the side channels and drop down to the lower chamber 386, these particles migrate toward the center location of the lower chamber 386 and then are drawn into the inlet 384 of the 25 recirculating tube 382 to be moved back to the box-like abrasive material container 370.
The sensing system 488 comprises four sensing members 490, SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) 492, 494 and 496 (see Figs. 16, 17 and 20) which are similar so only sensor 492 will be described in detail. As seen in Figure 16, the sensor 492 has a body 498 and an extension member 500 that has a front portion 502 with a contact surface 504. Th extension member 5 500 further has a base portion 506 that telescopically extends in the body 498. Located within the body are standard transducers that detect the position of the extension member 500 with respects to the body 498 and this information is relayed to the control unit of the positioning system 212. As seen in Figure 17, the sensors 490, 492, 10 494 and 496 are located in the corners of the housing 272. A laser sensor that detects distance could be employed for sensors 490, 492, 494 and 496.
In operation, the contact surface 504 is in contact with a surface to be cleaned. If the cleaning system moves away from the surface it 15 is cleaning, the sensors will detect this and the control system will reposition the system to be repositioned in close proximity to the wall.
Further, if a corner of the housing 272 lifts away from the surface to be cleaned the control system will adjust the first alignment system 204 in order to place the corner back flush with the surface to be cleaned.
20 For example, if the upper left corner of the housing 272 lifts away from the surface to be cleaned the sensor 494 will detect this and the control system will adjusts first alignment system 204 in order to reposition the upper left corner of the housing 272 so the outer surrounding gasket portion 434 will be in contact with the surface to be 25 cleaned.
A third embodiment is shown herein. With reference to Figures 22 and 23, it can be seen that the apparatus 610 of the present SUBSTfTUTE SHEET (RULE 26) invention comprises a cleaning unit 612, an abrasive containing and feed section 614, a control unit 616, an adjustable positioning mechanism 618 interconnecting the control unit 616 and the abrasive containing and feed section 614, and a winch assembly 620 by which 5 the machine is raised or lowered.
The cleaning section 612 comprises a rectangular shaped housing section 622 in which is positioned a dispensing disk 624, that has a radially downwardly and outwardly sloping surface, and a pair of rotating turbines or impellers 626 positioned on opposite sides of the 10 dispensing disk 624, with each turbine being rotated by an electric motor 628. Positioned above the dispensing disk 624 is a shield 360 which has a downwardly facing concavely curved surface.
The housing 622 has its entire front area open, with the front opening being designated 632. The housing 622 comprises side walls 15 634, a top wall 636, a bottom wall 638, and a back wall 640. There are two pair of magnetic wheels 642 spaced vertically from one another, with each pair of wheels 642 being positioned on the outer surface of a related side wall 634. These wheels 642 are positioned so that they will become magnetically attached to a related metallic surface, so as 20 to position the open front 632 of the housing 622 immediately adjacent to the surface to be cleaned, with the perimeter edge portions 644 of the housing 622 the surface being cleaned.
The abrasive feed and containing section 614 comprises a rectangularly shaped container 645 having an inlet 646 through which 25 the abrasive particles can be deposited in the container. At the lower front corners of the container 644 there are discharge nozzles 648 through which the particulate material is discharged onto the SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) dispensing disk 624. There is a slanting wall portion 650 which has two side sloping sections that lead from a center location downwardly toward the nozzles 648 to enhance the feeding of the particulate material into the nozzles 648.
5 As will be disclosed hereinafter, the particulate material falls from the nozzles 648 onto the dispensing disk 624 which directs the particulate material outwardly into the impellers 626. The abrasive particles are discharged from the impellers 626 at a high velocity with a portion of the particulate material passing into the open front area 632 10 and striking the surface to be cleaned.
To continue with the description of the present invention, the control unit 616 is positioned in a suitable housing 652. This is a radio controlled unit which would in turn control the positioning mechanism 618 and the winch assembly 620.
15 The aforementioned positioning mechanism 618 comprises first an elbow connection 654 which interconnects the lower end of the housing 652 to a connecting member 656 at the top of the container 644. This enables the entire cleaning section 612 along with the containing section 614 to move angularly from the position of Figure 23 20 to the position of Figure 24.
There is an actuating mechanism 658 which comprises a piston and cylinder unit 660 with the cylinder of the unit 660 pivotally connected at 662 to a upper back end 664 of the abrasive feed and container section 614. The upper end of the cylinder and piston unit 25 660 is pivotally connected at 666 to the control unit 616. It can be seen in Figure 24, that by extending the cylinder and piston unit 660, the cleaning section 612 and the containing and feed unit 614 can be SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) moved about the elbow 654 either forwardly or rearwardly, so that the cleaning section 612 can be properly aligned with the surface to be cleaned.
The winch assembly 620 comprises a winch 670 which operates 5 through a pair of pulleys 672, each of which is attached to a related cable 674. Alternatively, a single cable 674 and pulley 672 could be used.
To describe the operation of the apparatus 610, an abrasive particulate cleaning material is loaded through the opening 646 into the 10 container 644. The container 644 would is provided with a suitable feed mechanism to cause the abrasive material to flow through the outlet nozzles 648. This feed mechanism could be, for example, a rotating screw type feed mechanism, or other device already know in the prior art. To operate the machine, the cable or cables 674 are 15 anchored by their upper ends to a suitable support that is aligned with the surface to be cleaned. The cleaning section 612 is positioned against the metallic surface to be cleaned, and the magnetic wheels 642 become magnetically attached to the surface so as to properly position the front opening 632 at the surface to be cleaned. The radio 20 frequency remote control sends the appropriate signal to the control unit 616 to cause the electric motors 628 to start rotating the turbines 626. When the turbines 626 are up to speed, the feed mechanism in the abrasive feed and container unit 614 to cause the feed mechanism therein to discharge the particulate abrasive cleaning material at a 25 proper rate.
The abrasive cleaning material, as shown in Figure 22, strikes the dispensing disk to be deflected outwardly into the turbines or SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) impellers 626. The rotating turbines 626 in turn project the particulate abrase material against the surface to be cleaned. It can be appreciated that the surface to be cleaned substantially closes the front opening 632 so that the abrasive particles are captured in the 5 chamber defined by the housing 622. The action of the turbines 26 maintains the particles in a highly agitated condition by causing them to rebound off the walls of the housing 622, off the reflecting shield, and also off the dispensing disk. As this continues, the material that has been removed from the surface that is being cleaned is reduced to 10 relatively small particulates of size.
There are suitable vacuum outlets 676 which draw the smaller particulate matter out, with these vacuum outlets 676 being attached to a suitable conduit that gathers the small particulate material at a suitable collecting location.
15 In the cleaning process, the particular abrasive material also tends to break down after a number of impacts into small particles, and these also are drawn out through the vacuum outlets 676. Makeup abrasive material is discharged into the chamber defined by the housing 622 as needed.
20 As the cleaning process continues, the winch can be operated to raise or lower the apparatus, and the upper anchoring end of the cable or cables 674 can be moved laterally as needed.
The rotating deflector enhances the cleaning action by moving the particles outwardly toward the turbines and toward the surface 25 being cleaned.
Figure 25 is a fourth embodiment showing different methods of positioning components so that these can be slanted at different SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) angles to provide different patterns of dispersion. The turbines 688 are slanted in a forward direction about 15° from a vertical axis. This directs the shot particulate upward to the forward open region 690.
Figure 26 shows a fifth embodiment of the present invention 5 where the abrasive cleaning section 700 is mounted to an extendible boom 702 which in turn is carried by a vertically adjustable support mechanism 704 that rides on a wheeled platform 706. With reference to Figures 27 and 28, it can be seen that the abrasive cleaning Section 700 comprises a housing 708 that has a pair of side walls 710 and a 10 back wall comprising two circularly and cylindrically curved portions 712 that meet at an adjoining edge 713.
Concentrically mounted within each curved portion 712 is an impeller 714, with each impeller 714 having six blades 716. The interior end 718 of each blade is offset from the center of rotation 720 15 so that as the impeller 714 rotates, its blades 716 have a slant that is radially outward and moderately rearward, relative to the direction of rotation. In this manner, the abrasive particles are discharged from the impeller in an outward direction. The particles that are directed rearwardly are in turn redirected by the interior curved surfaces 722 of 20 the curved sections 712 to be directed outwardly through the forward open end 724 of the housing 710.
As in the third and fourth embodiments, there are magnetic wheels 726 that adhere to the metal surface 728 which is being cleaned. Also, the forward open end 724 has a perimeter seal 730 to 25 limit the escape of particulate matter outwardly around the perimeter edge 732 of the housing 710.
With reference to Figure 29, it can be seen that each impeller SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) 714 has a related electric motor 734 that rotates the impeller, indicated in Figure 27.
There is a feed hopper 736 that directs the abrasive particulate material through two downwardly and laterally slanting feed tubes 738.
5 Each feed tube feeds the abrasive particulate matter downwardly and outwardly into the path of the rotating impellers 714.
As can be seen in Figures 27 and 28, there is an outlet conduit 740 that has an inlet end 742 and leads to a vacuum source. The suction draws the dust particles into the inlet 742 to be collected for 7 0 disposal. To prevent the larger particles from entering into the inlet 742, there is provided a protective inlet cover 744 which has a curved configuration and is spaced a short distance away from the inlet 742 so as to leave an annular gap 746.
When some of the particulate matter has been broken down to 15 very fine particles (more in the form of dust), this particulate matter is drawn into the tube 740. Also, the material which has been removed from the surface 728 that is being cleaned is drawn into the tube 740 when it has reached a very small particle size.
As shown in Figure 28, each of the blades 716 is at a slant 20 relative to its longitudinal axis of its impeller 716 in a manner that the leading surface of each blade 716 slants upwardly and rearwardly relative to the direction of rotation of the blade. Thus, the slanted blades 716 impart an outward and somewhat upward direction of motion to the particles impacted by the blades 716.
25 Figure 29 shows a modifred configuration where the blades 716b are without a slant.
Figure 30 shows yet another configuration where there is an SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) upper set of blades 716c and another lower set of blades 716d. It is believed that by having a space between the upper blades 716c and the lower blades 716d provides a desirable airflow that assists the particulate material to propel forward with less wind resistance.
5 ~ Figure 31 shows a sixth embodiment which is most similar to the second embodiment described supra (see Figures 13- 20). In general, this embodiment has the separation container 800 that is pivotally attached to the arm assembly 803 about point 805. Likewise the separation container 800 could be hung from the arm assembly 10 803. The separation container 800 houses the separation system 801 and the recirculation system 804. The shot feed system 851 is now housed with in the jib 834 of the arm assembly 803. The recirculation system 804 recovers shot that slips into the gasket chamber 830 of the housing 806; but the recovered shot is not available to the operating 15 chamber 838 but rather recoverable by a service man in between service runs.
The separation container 800 comprises a cyclone separation system 801 and a recirculation system 804. The operation of the separation chamber 802 is similar to the separating chamber 312; the 20 main difference is that the inlet opening 804 which is located on the top wall of the housing 806 leads to a passageway 808 defined by the conduit 810 which is made of flexible hosing. In a like manner, the inlet opening 812 leads to a passageway 814 defined by a conduit 816 that also leads to the separation chamber 802. The conduit 816 is 25 made from flexible tubing to allow for movement between the separation container 800 with respects to the cleaning system 817.
As seen in Figure 31 the transparent tube 818 is attached to the SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) lower portion of the separation cylinder 802 and defines a compartment 819. Heavier shot will fill this compartment 819 in a similar manner using the "cyclone system" as described in the second embodiment. In some applications where the usable shot is generally 5 not extracted through the conduits 810 and 816 there is minimal usable shot that is worth recovering. In this case the reusable shot is recovered in the transparent tube 817. The rate of the amount of shot filling the tube 817 can give the operator an indication of the activity in the operating chamber 822. For example, if the tube is filling up too 10 quickly, this can be an indication that there is too much shot in the operating chamber 822.
The recirculation system 804 comprises an abrasive material container 820 that is similar to the box-like abrasive material container 370 of the second embodiment (see Figure 15) except that the shot is 15 not immediately returned to the operating chamber 822 but rather stored until the jib compartment 838 is refilled with shot. The recirculating line 824 is similar to that of abrasive material recirculating line 382 in Figure 15 except it extends to the box-like abrasive material container 820 that is located on the arm assembly 803. The vacuum 20 pump 826 creates a low pressure which withdraws shot that leaked into the gasket chamber 830 through recirculating line 824 into the abrasive material container 820. When the operator is finished with several cleaning runs and brings the cleaning system in for a reloading of shot, he can remove the hatch 832 and recover the shot.
25 In general the shot feed system 833 of the sixth embodiment comprises a chamber 838 in the jib 834 which houses shot particulate;
compressed air from a pressure source 848 biases the shot through SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) passage way 854 into the operating chamber 822.
The arm assembly 803 comprises an upper jib 834 which has an inner surface 836 that defnes a chamber 838. The chamber has an upper portion 840 and a lower portion 842. Located at the upper 5 portion 840 is an infeed opening 844 with a lid 846 that can seal the chamber 838 when it covers the opening 844.
To cause movement of the particulate abrasive material that is housed in the chamber 838 to the operating chamber 822, there is provided a pressurized tube 846 connected to a pressure source 10 schematically shown at 848. This tube 846 leads to a solenoid valve 850 and then through a discharge nozzle 852. The solenoid valve 850 is opened and shut to cause pulses of pressurized air to flow into the passageway 854 that is defined by conduit 856 to move the abrasive particulate material through the passageway 854 into the main 15 operating chamber 822. The teaser tube 857 is additionally in communication with the solenoid valve 850 and will disperse air through the small holes 858 to facilitate movement of the shot particulate.
The gasket system 860 of the sixth embodiment is shown in 20 Figure 33 and comprises a perimeter tubing 862 and a support plate 864. The perimeter tubing 862 comprises an engagement portion 864, an inner chamber 866 and a extension 868. The perimeter rim 869 of the housing 838 has a plurality of holes that are adapted to allow passage of a bolt therethrough. The perimeter tubing 862 is positioned 25 around the perimeter of the housing 838 and the support plates 864 are positioned on the extension 868 of the perimeter tubing 866 in a manner so the perimeter tubing is located between the support plates SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) 864 and the perimeter 869. The support plates 864 and the extension 868 of the perimeter tubing 862 have a plurality of holes that correspond in position to the holes of the perimeter 869 so that a bolt can pass therethrough and hold the perimeter tubing 862 in place. In a 5 double gasket system as shown in Figure 33 the perimeter 869a is a portion of 'Z' shaped member 871 which has flange 873 that is bolted to the inner portion of perimeter edge 869b.
The chamber 866 of the perimeter tubing 862 is sealed and filled with gas. When pressure is applied to the contact surface 872 of 10 the engagement portion 864 the contact surface will flex a few inches and the pressure in the chamber 866 will increase and hence increase the force on the contact surface. This allows the cleaning apparatus to have a few inches of transverse travel and still maintain a seal between the operating chamber 822 and the surface to be cleaned.
15 While the invention is susceptible of various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and described in detail. It should be understood, however, that it is not intended to limit the invention to the particular forms disclosed, but, on the contrary, the intention is to cover 20 all modifications, equivalents and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims.
SUBSTfTUTE SHEET (RULE 26)

Claims (20)

I Claim:
1. An abrasive cleaning apparatus comprising:
a) a housing having a front portion, a back portion and having a back wall portion, a top wall portion, a bottom wall portion, and side wall portions, which wall portions have interior surface portions that define an operating chamber to contain cleaning material therein, said apparatus having an open front portion, said top wall, bottom wall and side wall portions having a front perimeter portion defining a general impact region at the front opening, said perimeter portion being arranged to be positioned adjacent to a work surface portion of a work surface to be cleaned;
b) at least one impeller which has a plurality of impact surfaces and which is positioned in said operating chamber at an operating location to rotate about an axis of rotation;
c) said impeller having its axis of rotation oriented and its impact surfaces positioned so that with the impeller rotating, as the cleaning surfaces impact cleaning material in the impact region, portions of the cleaning material are directed toward the impact region to strike against the work surface portion so that material striking against the work surface portion rebounds back into the operating chamber;
d) the housing being arranged so that with the perimeter portion being engaged with the work surface, the operating chamber is substantially closed, the interior surface portions of the housing being arranged region to cause portions of the cleaning material that rebound from the work surface into the operating chamber to come in contact with the surface portions and be caused to be redirected so that quantities of the cleaning material move into the operating location of the impeller to be impacted again by the impeller and directed toward the impacted plane;
whereby portions of the cleaning material remain in said chamber and are repetitively directed against the work surface to be cleaned.
2. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the perimeter portion and impeller are arranged so that as the impeller rotates, at the time when the impact surfaces are moving in a direction toward the impact region, the impact surfaces are aligned to impart an upward component of motion of the cleaning material in its path toward the impact region.
3. The apparatus as recited in claim 2, wherein the axis of rotation of the impeller is generally vertically aligned with an alignment component with an upward and rearward slant.
4. The apparatus as recited in claim 2, wherein the axis of rotation of the impeller is generally vertically aligned, and the impact surfaces slant from the axis of rotation in a manner that during the time period when the impact surfaces are traveling toward the impact region, the impact surfaces have an upward and rearward slant relative to the axis of rotation of the impeller.
5. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein there are first and second impellers rotatably mounted in the operating chamber at first and second operating locations spaced laterally from one another.
6. The apparatus as recited in claim 5, wherein each of the first and second impellers has an upper and a lower set of impact surfaces, spaced vertically from one another.
7. The apparatus as recited in claim 5, wherein radially outwardly portions of the impact surfaces of each impeller move in a circular path of travel, said back wall portion having its surface portion formed in two convexly curved surface portions extending at least partially around rear portions of the paths of travel of the surfaces of the first and second impellers.
8. The apparatus as recited in claim 5, wherein the side wall portions of the housing extend in a forward and outward direction so as to diverge outwardly from one another toward the impact region.
9. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein there is a cleaning material inlet to direct cleaning material into said operating chamber, and a waste outlet system, to remove waste material from the operating chamber toward a disposal location, said waste removal system comprising a waste outlet positioned to receive a flow of air and waste material from the operating chamber, a waste separator to receive said flow of air and waste material to separate waste material from particulate cleaning material, said waste removal system adapted to be connected to a low pressure source to cause an outflow of waste material from the separating chamber toward a waste disposal location.
10. The apparatus as recited in claim 9, wherein the separator has a separation chamber said waste removal system having a conduit defining a flow passage from said waste outlet and leading to said separation chamber to cause a circumferential airflow in said separating chamber to separate more dense particulate material from the waste material, and further comprising a cleaning material outlet to return particulate cleaning material.
11. The apparatus as recited in claim 10, wherein said waste removal system comprises two waste outlets and two conduits defining passageways which deliver a flow of air and waste material to the separating chamber, said two passageways directing airflow into the separating chamber to cause said circumferential flow in the separating chamber.
12. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the perimeter portion comprises a yielding seal perimeter having an engaging surface to engage the work surface and being yielding so as to conform to deviations of the contour of the work surface.
13. The apparatus as recited in claim 12, wherein said perimeter portion comprises a first inner perimeter work surface engaging portion and a second outer perimeter work surface engaging portion spaced outwardly from the first inner work surface engaging portion.
14. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the housing has a containing structure positioned below the bottom wall of the housing and defining a collecting chamber, said containing structure having a forward edge portion located below a perimeter portion of the bottom wall portion of the housing so as to form with a portion of the work surface below the perimeter portion of the bottom wall, an enclosed collecting area so that material passing by the perimeter portion of the bottom wall is collected in said collecting chamber, said apparatus having a return passageway connected to a low pressure source to withdraw material collected in said collecting chamber.
15. The apparatus as recited in claim 14, wherein material collected from the collecting chamber is recirculated in the apparatus in a manner to be directed back to the operating chamber.
16. The apparatus as recited in claim 12, wherein there is a position and alignment section adapted to be mounted to a base location, and having an operating end to carry the cleaning apparatus to a location adjacent to the work surface and to align and move the cleaning apparatus along the work surface, said apparatus further comprising position sensing means mounted to said housing and arranged to detect a position of the perimeter portion where part of the perimeter portion is spaced away from the work surface, a control system responsive to said sensing means to cause the position and alignment section to properly position the housing so that the perimeter portion is in proper seating engagement with the work surface.
17. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein there is a first positioning and alignment section structure to which the cleaning apparatus is mounted, to position the cleaning apparatus against the work surface and move the cleaning apparatus over the work surface, said apparatus further comprising a surface treating apparatus to perform a surface treatment on the work surface which has been cleaned by the cleaning apparatus, said positioning and alignment section having a section portion to position the surface treatment apparatus in an operating position and move the surface treatment apparatus.
18. The apparatus as recited in claim 17, wherein there is a control means that has storage capacity to receive information relating to positioning of the cleaning apparatus, and to transmit this information to a control means for the surface treatment apparatus to cause said surface treatment apparatus to be positioned at locations that are coordinated with the locations of the cleaning apparatus on the work surface so that the surface treatment apparatus is able to be properly positioned in appropriate surface locations that previously have been cleaned by the cleaning apparatus.
19. A method of abrasive cleaning of a work surface, comprising:
a) providing a housing having a front portion, a back portion and having a back wall portion, a top wall portion, a bottom wall portion, and side wall portions, which wall portions have interior surface portions that define an operating chamber to contain cleaning material therein, said apparatus having an open front portion, said top wall, bottom wall and side wall portions having a front perimeter portion defining a general impact region at the front opening;
b) positioning the housing so that said perimeter portion is adjacent to a work surface portion of the work surface to be cleaned;
c) providing particulate cleaning material in the operating chamber;
d) positioning at least one impeller which has a plurality of impact surfaces is in said operating chamber at an operating location, and rotating the impeller to rotate about an axis of rotation, with axis of rotation being oriented and its impact surfaces positioned so that with the impeller rotating, as the cleaning surfaces impact cleaning material in the impact region, portions of the cleaning material are directed toward the impact region to strike against the work surface portion so that material striking against the work surface portion rebounds back into the operating chamber;
e) arranging the housing so that with the perimeter portion being engaged with the work surface, the operating chamber is substantially closed, and arranging the interior surface portions of the housing to cause portions of the cleaning material that rebound from the work surface into the operating chamber to come in contact with the surface portions and be caused to be redirected so that quantities of the cleaning material move into the operating location of the impeller to be impacted again by the impeller and directed toward the impacted plane;
whereby portions of the cleaning material remain in said chamber and are repetitively directed against the work surface to be cleaned.
20. The method as recited in claim 19, wherein the cleaning material is directed through a cleaning material inlet into said operating chamber, said method further comprising removing waste material from the operating chamber toward a disposal location, by causing a flow of air and waste material from the operating chamber through a waste outlet to a waste separator to separate waste material from particulate cleaning material, said waste and causing an outflow of waste material from the separating chamber toward a waste disposal location.
CA002352223A 1998-11-23 1999-11-23 Surface cleaning apparatus using abrading particulate cleaning material Abandoned CA2352223A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (5)

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US10960998P 1998-11-23 1998-11-23
US60/109,609 1998-11-23
US14841199P 1999-08-11 1999-08-11
US60/148,411 1999-08-11
PCT/US1999/028018 WO2000032357A1 (en) 1998-11-23 1999-11-23 Surface cleaning apparatus using abrading particulate cleaning material

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CN105583736A (en) * 2015-04-30 2016-05-18 黄尚进 Casting rust remover
CN104772707A (en) * 2015-04-30 2015-07-15 黄尚进 Injection polishing structure
CN110281161A (en) * 2019-05-07 2019-09-27 昆山新东久机械有限公司 A kind of shot-blast cleaning machine

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US3660943A (en) * 1970-01-26 1972-05-09 Carl W Barnthouse Shot blast chamber and impeller liners
US4329819A (en) * 1980-04-18 1982-05-18 Ervin Industries, Inc. Centrifugal blasting apparatus
US5584748A (en) * 1995-01-10 1996-12-17 Nelco Manufacturing Corp. Blast wheel having a rotatable shaft with radial discs and blades dovetailed across the discs
US5938509A (en) * 1996-07-15 1999-08-17 Center For Advanced Ship Repair And Maintenance, Inc. Apparatus for abrasive blasting of ship bottoms; method and apparatus for testing blasted surfaces
US5779524A (en) * 1996-10-21 1998-07-14 Swain; Jon M. Adjustable cage assembly for mobile surface abrading apparatus

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