GB1593392A - Pipe and cable clamps - Google Patents

Pipe and cable clamps Download PDF

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Publication number
GB1593392A
GB1593392A GB782677A GB782677A GB1593392A GB 1593392 A GB1593392 A GB 1593392A GB 782677 A GB782677 A GB 782677A GB 782677 A GB782677 A GB 782677A GB 1593392 A GB1593392 A GB 1593392A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
clamp
cable
screw
faying
fittings
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
GB782677A
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Balfour Beatty PLC
Original Assignee
BICC PLC
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by BICC PLC filed Critical BICC PLC
Priority to GB782677A priority Critical patent/GB1593392A/en
Publication of GB1593392A publication Critical patent/GB1593392A/en
Priority to HK64481A priority patent/HK64481A/en
Priority to MY204/82A priority patent/MY8200204A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16LPIPES; JOINTS OR FITTINGS FOR PIPES; SUPPORTS FOR PIPES, CABLES OR PROTECTIVE TUBING; MEANS FOR THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16L3/00Supports for pipes, cables or protective tubing, e.g. hangers, holders, clamps, cleats, clips, brackets
    • F16L3/08Supports for pipes, cables or protective tubing, e.g. hangers, holders, clamps, cleats, clips, brackets substantially surrounding the pipe, cable or protective tubing
    • F16L3/12Supports for pipes, cables or protective tubing, e.g. hangers, holders, clamps, cleats, clips, brackets substantially surrounding the pipe, cable or protective tubing comprising a member substantially surrounding the pipe, cable or protective tubing
    • F16L3/123Supports for pipes, cables or protective tubing, e.g. hangers, holders, clamps, cleats, clips, brackets substantially surrounding the pipe, cable or protective tubing comprising a member substantially surrounding the pipe, cable or protective tubing and extending along the attachment surface
    • F16L3/1236Supports for pipes, cables or protective tubing, e.g. hangers, holders, clamps, cleats, clips, brackets substantially surrounding the pipe, cable or protective tubing comprising a member substantially surrounding the pipe, cable or protective tubing and extending along the attachment surface the member being of a material other than metal

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Supports For Pipes And Cables (AREA)
  • Clamps And Clips (AREA)

Description

(54) PIPE AND CABLE CLAMPS (71) We, BICC LIMITED, a British Company, of 21 Bloomsbury Street, London WC1B 3QN, do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement: This invention relates to support clamps for securing pipes, cables and the like, and since the type of article to be gripped with not normally influence the structure of the clamp only cables will be expressely referred to hereinafter. More particularly it relates to clamps of the kind including a flexible member that can be wrapped round a cable and secured by means of end-fittings integral with the flexible member or permanently attached to it and used with a screw which both tightens the clamp round the cable and secures it on a suitable support. One such clamp is sold by the Applicant company (through its subsidiary BICC Components Ltd.) under the Trade Mark "Telcleat".
In accordance with the invention the end-fittings are shaped to provide a pair of faying surfaces (one on each end-fitting) through which the screw will extend and which engage one another when the clamp is wrapped around a cable with a circumference in a certain range in relative positions that differ by displacement in the plane normal to the cable axis dependent on the magnitude of the circumference within that range, the faying surfaces extending substantially from end to each of end-fitting in the direction of said displacement and the faying surfaces being inclined to the screw in the direction such that pressure from the screw tends to displace the end-fittings in the tightening direction. Cables with a circumference somewhat larger than the range referred to can be accommodated by allowing the formation of a gap between the faying surfaces, as in the known clamps in which the end-fittings touch in one fixed relative position only.
Preferably the faying surfaces are planar, and when the clamp is wrapped round a circula cable (with a circumference within the range of the clamp) they will always be non-radial with respect to the cable to a substantial degree. Preferably they approximate to a plane tangential to such a circular cable. The angle between the faying surfaces and the local radius will vary over the area of the surfaces, but is preferably in the region of 45".
To allow for the variation in relative position of the faying surfaces it will normally be necessary for at least one of the apertures for the fixing screw to be wider, in the direction of the length of the flexible member, than the diameter of the screw to be used. Exceptionally in some of the cases in which only discrete cable sizes are to be accommodated a row of separate holes could be used.
Preferably the end-fitting that has a screw-hole that is elongate or otherwise wider than the screw is the one on which the faying surface inclines towards the other end-fitting in a direction away from the cable; the other end-fitting preferably has a round hole to position the screw accurately.
In most cases the end-fittings will also provide abutment surfaces for engagement with a support surface and the screw head; these are preferably planar and preferably parallel to one another when the faying surfaces are in contact with one another.
Each of the end-fittings may also provide a support surface for engagement with the cable; when the faying surfaces are substantially tangential to the cable, one of these may be a continuation of one of the faying surfaces.
The faying surfaces, the abutment surfaces and the support surfaces may each be a real surface (that is a surface bounding the solid material of the end-fittings) but in some cases they may alternatively be virtual surfaces defined by one or more upstanding ribs and/or edges and/or one or more local projections.
Usually the clamp will be moulded in one piece from flexible but resilient material, for example polythene, and in this respect a number of possibilities arise. It may for example be moulded with the flexible strap in a planar configuration, whih considerably simplifies the moulding process, especially if ribs or other gripping formations are to be provided on the strap. Alternatively, it may be moulded with at least part of the strap in an arcuate form, approximately the form it will have when the clamp is in use, thereby simplifying installation. In some cases it may be possible to achieve a beneficial compromise between these two approaches by initially moulding in a planar configuration and subsequently bending to arcuate form and stabilising it that form by heat-treating the strap at a temperature high enough to release stresses but not high enough to risk loss of shape.
The invention will be further described, by way of example, with reference to the drawings in which: Figures 1-3 are mutually perpendicular views of one form of support clamp in accordance with the invention shown in its "as-moulded" condition.
Figures 4-5 are views, corresponding to Figure 2, showing the two end fittings separately; and Figures 6-7 are views, corresponding to Figure 1, illustrating how the clamp accommodates different cable sizes.
The clamp comprises a strap 1 made up of a semicircular part 2 and a flat part 3 which merge with one another, and both of which are flexible enough to be deformed by hand, and two end-fittings 4 and 5 which are relatively rigid.
The end-fitting 4 comprises an extension 6 of the straps inclined at an acute angle (say 45 ) to the flat part 3 and merging into it and a gencrally triangular stiffening flange 7, with an elongate hole 8 passing through both of them, the clear face of the extension 6 providing a faying surface 9.
Somewhat similarly the other end-fitting 5 compriscs a curved extension 10 of the strap which is distinguished from the semicircular pat 2 only by a stiffening flange 11, but in this case the hole 12 is round and lies wholly within the flange, and the faying surface 13 is formed on the flange. This faying surface is parallel to the first faying surface 9 or approximately so when the clamp is undeformed.
In use the clamp is sprung round the cable to be clamped and secured by a screw or other fastener 14 (Figures 6 & 7) inserted through the elongate hole 8 and passing through the round hole 12 to an appropriate support. Depending on the size of the cable, the faying surfaces 9 and 13 may come together in any of the range of positions bounded by those shown in Figures 6 and 7; or if the cable is a little too large for this to happen, the clamp may tighten satisfactorily without the surfaces 9 and 13 touching one another. When the surfaces touch, screw pressure tends to cause sliding towards the Figure 6 position.
This clamp has abutment surfaces 15, 16 and a support surface 17; the proximal part 18 of the abutment surface 9 acts as an additional support surface when the cable gripped is large.
In the particular design shown, the surfaces 19 of the flanges 7 and 11 that are parallel to the screw. axis are rounded, for the sake of saving material, and the free end 20 of the strap extension 6 is also rounded, except that its extremity is truncated to provide a flat surface 21 perpendicular to the screw axis. Also ribs 22 are provided to enhance grip on some cables. These are however not to be considered substantial features of the clamp described.
The clamp shown in the drawings, in a typical size, accommodates cables with a circumference in the range 123-160mm, a range-taking capacity of approximately 37 mm on the cable circumference, compared with around 10-12 mm for a conventional clamp of the most nearly equivalent size, so considerably reducing stockholding requirements.
WHAT WE CLAIM IS: 1. A support clamp including a flexible member that can be wrapped round a cable and secured by means of end-fittings, integral with the flexible member or permanently attached to it, shaped to provide a pair of faying surfaces (one on each end-fitting) through which the screw will extend and which engage one another when the clamp is wrapped around a cable with a circumference in a certain range in relative positions that differ by displacement in the plane normal to the cable axis dependent on the magnitude of the circumference within that range, the faying surfaces extending substantially from end to end of each end-fitting in the direction of said displacement and the faying surfaces being inclined to the screw in the direction such that pressure from the screw tends to displace the end-fittings in the tightening direction.
2. A support clamp including a flexible member that can be wrapped round a cable and secured by means of end-fittings, integral with the flexible member or permanently attached to it, shaped to provide a pair of planar faying surfaces (one on each endfitting) through which the screw will extend
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.

Claims (14)

**WARNING** start of CLMS field may overlap end of DESC **. solid material of the end-fittings) but in some cases they may alternatively be virtual surfaces defined by one or more upstanding ribs and/or edges and/or one or more local projections. Usually the clamp will be moulded in one piece from flexible but resilient material, for example polythene, and in this respect a number of possibilities arise. It may for example be moulded with the flexible strap in a planar configuration, whih considerably simplifies the moulding process, especially if ribs or other gripping formations are to be provided on the strap. Alternatively, it may be moulded with at least part of the strap in an arcuate form, approximately the form it will have when the clamp is in use, thereby simplifying installation. In some cases it may be possible to achieve a beneficial compromise between these two approaches by initially moulding in a planar configuration and subsequently bending to arcuate form and stabilising it that form by heat-treating the strap at a temperature high enough to release stresses but not high enough to risk loss of shape. The invention will be further described, by way of example, with reference to the drawings in which: Figures 1-3 are mutually perpendicular views of one form of support clamp in accordance with the invention shown in its "as-moulded" condition. Figures 4-5 are views, corresponding to Figure 2, showing the two end fittings separately; and Figures 6-7 are views, corresponding to Figure 1, illustrating how the clamp accommodates different cable sizes. The clamp comprises a strap 1 made up of a semicircular part 2 and a flat part 3 which merge with one another, and both of which are flexible enough to be deformed by hand, and two end-fittings 4 and 5 which are relatively rigid. The end-fitting 4 comprises an extension 6 of the straps inclined at an acute angle (say 45 ) to the flat part 3 and merging into it and a gencrally triangular stiffening flange 7, with an elongate hole 8 passing through both of them, the clear face of the extension 6 providing a faying surface 9. Somewhat similarly the other end-fitting 5 compriscs a curved extension 10 of the strap which is distinguished from the semicircular pat 2 only by a stiffening flange 11, but in this case the hole 12 is round and lies wholly within the flange, and the faying surface 13 is formed on the flange. This faying surface is parallel to the first faying surface 9 or approximately so when the clamp is undeformed. In use the clamp is sprung round the cable to be clamped and secured by a screw or other fastener 14 (Figures 6 & 7) inserted through the elongate hole 8 and passing through the round hole 12 to an appropriate support. Depending on the size of the cable, the faying surfaces 9 and 13 may come together in any of the range of positions bounded by those shown in Figures 6 and 7; or if the cable is a little too large for this to happen, the clamp may tighten satisfactorily without the surfaces 9 and 13 touching one another. When the surfaces touch, screw pressure tends to cause sliding towards the Figure 6 position. This clamp has abutment surfaces 15, 16 and a support surface 17; the proximal part 18 of the abutment surface 9 acts as an additional support surface when the cable gripped is large. In the particular design shown, the surfaces 19 of the flanges 7 and 11 that are parallel to the screw. axis are rounded, for the sake of saving material, and the free end 20 of the strap extension 6 is also rounded, except that its extremity is truncated to provide a flat surface 21 perpendicular to the screw axis. Also ribs 22 are provided to enhance grip on some cables. These are however not to be considered substantial features of the clamp described. The clamp shown in the drawings, in a typical size, accommodates cables with a circumference in the range 123-160mm, a range-taking capacity of approximately 37 mm on the cable circumference, compared with around 10-12 mm for a conventional clamp of the most nearly equivalent size, so considerably reducing stockholding requirements. WHAT WE CLAIM IS:
1. A support clamp including a flexible member that can be wrapped round a cable and secured by means of end-fittings, integral with the flexible member or permanently attached to it, shaped to provide a pair of faying surfaces (one on each end-fitting) through which the screw will extend and which engage one another when the clamp is wrapped around a cable with a circumference in a certain range in relative positions that differ by displacement in the plane normal to the cable axis dependent on the magnitude of the circumference within that range, the faying surfaces extending substantially from end to end of each end-fitting in the direction of said displacement and the faying surfaces being inclined to the screw in the direction such that pressure from the screw tends to displace the end-fittings in the tightening direction.
2. A support clamp including a flexible member that can be wrapped round a cable and secured by means of end-fittings, integral with the flexible member or permanently attached to it, shaped to provide a pair of planar faying surfaces (one on each endfitting) through which the screw will extend
and which when the clamp is wrapped round a circular cable with a circumference in a certain range are non-radial to the cable to a substantial degree and engage one another in relative positions that differ by displacement in the plane normal to the cable axis dependent on the magnitude of the circumference within that range, the faying surfaces extending substantially from end to end of each end-fitting in the direction of said displacement and the faying surfaces being inclined to the screw in the direction such that pressure from the screw tends to displace the end-fittings in the tightening direction.
3. A clamp as claimed in Claim 2 in which when the clamp is wrapped round a circular cable with a circumference in the said range the faying surfaces approximate to a plane tangential to such a circular cable.
4. A clamp as claimed in Claim 3 in which the angle between the faying surfaces and a local radius is in the region of 45".
5. A clamp as claimed in any one of Claims 2-4 in which one of the apertures for the fixing screw is elongate in the direction of the length of the flexible member.
6. A clamp as claimed in Claim 5 in which the elongate hole is in the end-fitting in which the faying surface inclines towards the other end-fitting in a direction away from the cable.
7. A clamp as claimed in Claim 5 or Claim 6 in which the other hole is round.
8. A clamp as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims in which the end-fittings also provide abutment surfaces for engagement with a support surface and a screw head.
9. A clamp as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims in which the end-fittings each also provide a support surface for engagement with the cable.
10. A clamp as claimed in Claim 9 in which one of the support surfaces is a continuation of a faying surface that is substantially tangential to the cable.
11. A clamp as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims in which the faying surfaces and (if present) the abutment surfaces and the support surfaces are (all) real surfaces.
12. A clamp as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims moulded in one piece from flexible but resilient material with the strap in a planar configuration.
13. A clamp as claimed in any one of Claims 1-11 moulded in one piece from flexible but resilient material with at least part of the strap in arcuate form.
14. A clamp substantially as described with reference to and as shown in the drawings.
GB782677A 1977-02-24 1977-02-24 Pipe and cable clamps Expired GB1593392A (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB782677A GB1593392A (en) 1977-02-24 1977-02-24 Pipe and cable clamps
HK64481A HK64481A (en) 1977-02-24 1981-12-24 Pipe and cable clamps
MY204/82A MY8200204A (en) 1977-02-24 1982-12-30 Pipe and cable lamps

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB782677A GB1593392A (en) 1977-02-24 1977-02-24 Pipe and cable clamps

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB1593392A true GB1593392A (en) 1981-07-15

Family

ID=9840508

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB782677A Expired GB1593392A (en) 1977-02-24 1977-02-24 Pipe and cable clamps

Country Status (3)

Country Link
GB (1) GB1593392A (en)
HK (1) HK64481A (en)
MY (1) MY8200204A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1993016312A1 (en) * 1992-02-15 1993-08-19 Robert Cyril Lyon Cleat

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1993016312A1 (en) * 1992-02-15 1993-08-19 Robert Cyril Lyon Cleat
GB2278880A (en) * 1992-02-15 1994-12-14 Robert Cyril Lyon Cleat
GB2278880B (en) * 1992-02-15 1995-11-08 Robert Cyril Lyon Cleat

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
HK64481A (en) 1981-12-31
MY8200204A (en) 1982-12-31

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Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PS Patent sealed
PE20 Patent expired after termination of 20 years

Effective date: 19980222