US1277573A - Ditching and tile-laying machine. - Google Patents

Ditching and tile-laying machine. Download PDF

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Publication number
US1277573A
US1277573A US9339816A US9339816A US1277573A US 1277573 A US1277573 A US 1277573A US 9339816 A US9339816 A US 9339816A US 9339816 A US9339816 A US 9339816A US 1277573 A US1277573 A US 1277573A
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Prior art keywords
screw
ditching
tile
laying machine
shoe
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US9339816A
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Odilon Baltazar Hannibal Hanneborg
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E02HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING; FOUNDATIONS; SOIL SHIFTING
    • E02FDREDGING; SOIL-SHIFTING
    • E02F3/00Dredgers; Soil-shifting machines
    • E02F3/04Dredgers; Soil-shifting machines mechanically-driven
    • E02F3/06Dredgers; Soil-shifting machines mechanically-driven with digging screws

Definitions

  • Machines of this sort haverequired a large expenditure of power, which however has been reduced gradually by several improvements.
  • shape and ar rangement of the cutting screw and of the shoe receiving its lowermost pivot are of the highest importance, andjmy present invention has for its object to provide a new con. struction of these'machine elements, whereby a considerable economy asto-working and maintenance expenses is obtained.
  • Figure 1 is a vertical longitudinal section through a trench, the screw being shown partly in elevation and partlyin section.
  • Fig. 2 is a horizontal section on the line I-I of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 3 shows in elevation a portion of the screw drawn to a larger scale.
  • Fig. 4 is a plan View corresponding to Fig. 3.
  • Fig. 5 is a plan view of the screw supporting shoe.
  • Figs. 6, 7 and 8 are cross sections on the lines IIII, IIIIII and IVIV in Fig. 5 respectively.
  • the vertical screw shaft 1 is provided on its lower portion (2'. e. that carry ing the screw proper) with a rib 2 of rectangular cross section. coiled helically around the shaft and attached by Welding or by rivets.
  • the shaft with rib may also be made in one piece of cast-steel.
  • the screw threads are attached removably.
  • the screw was made as an integral piece, but as the cutting edges of the screw are comparatively quickly worn off, its diameter is reduced, so that after a short use the worn screw had to be replaced by a new screw. 1
  • the screw projects beneath the soil surface 6 to the desired trench depth. Therefore, when the screw is rotated and sin'mltaneously moved forward in the direction. of the arrow -9, its front part cuts loosethe earth like a knife, which also lifts the loosened earth. the back side of the screw being surrounded by a screen or channel 10- extending up above the soil surface 6.
  • This condition is of the highest importance when the digging takes placein a soil containing clay, because the latter due box a curved tube or channel (not shown) is arranged, through which the drain-pipes may be conducted down to the trench bed according; as the work advances.
  • the bottom pivot 13 of the screw is in well-known manner supported in a shoe 14 moving on the trench bed 7- and having rear side-projections 15-, whereby the shoe is attached to the walls -12-.
  • a tube 16 lubricating oil is conducted down to the shoe and through the channel 17 to the pivot 13.
  • the underside 1.8 of the shoe here is formed as a face which is convex in cross direction.
  • the shoe makes little resistance to the moving forward in the trench bed, and simultaneously the bed obtains the most suitable shape for receiving the drain-pipes.
  • the upper side of the shoe is rounded downward at its front art as shown at 19- in Fig.
  • a rotatable cutting screw arranged vertically and having its screw threads inclined downwardly in a radial direction toward the screw axis at the lower end of the screw and gradually decreasing in such inclination upwardly so as to be inverse in the uppermost portion of the screw.
  • a ditching and tile-laying machine comprising a rotatable cutting screw arranged vertically and having the threads thereof graduated in pitch from the upper end of the screw to the lower end', and inclined downwardly in a radial direction toward the screw axis at the lower end of the screw and gradually decreasing in such inclination upwardly so as to be inverse in the uppermost portion of the screw.

Description

0. B. H. HANNEBORG.
.DITCHING AND TILE LAYING MACHINE.
Patented Sept. 3, 1918.
-., Inv E ntn r APPLICATION FILED APR.25. I9l6.
UBHHurin BE m: g"
DITCHING AND TILE-LAYING MACHINE.
Specification of Letters Patent.
PatentedSept. 3, 11.918.
Application filed April 25, 1916. Serial No. 93,398.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, ODILON BALTAZAR HANNIBAL HANNEBORG, citizen of Norway, residing at Haugrim in Urskog, Norway, have invented new and useful Improvements in Ditching andf Tile-Laying Machines, of which the following is a specification.
For the digging of channels or trenches in the earth in order to lay down tiles or drain-pipes or the like machines havebeen constructed, which are moved forward on wheels upon the soil so as to loosen the earth and lift it-up'by means of a rotating vertical cutter-screw according as the machine moved forward.
Machines of this sort haverequired a large expenditure of power, which however has been reduced gradually by several improvements. In. this respect the shape and ar rangement of the cutting screw and of the shoe receiving its lowermost pivot are of the highest importance, andjmy present invention has for its object to provide a new con. struction of these'machine elements, whereby a considerable economy asto-working and maintenance expenses is obtained.
The invention is illustrate in the accompanying drawing, in which Figure 1 is a vertical longitudinal section through a trench, the screw being shown partly in elevation and partlyin section.
Fig. 2 is a horizontal section on the line I-I of Fig. 1.
Fig. 3 shows in elevation a portion of the screw drawn to a larger scale.
Fig. 4 is a plan View corresponding to Fig. 3.
Fig. 5 is a plan view of the screw supporting shoe.
Figs. 6, 7 and 8 are cross sections on the lines IIII, IIIIII and IVIV in Fig. 5 respectively.
The vertical screw shaft 1 is provided on its lower portion (2'. e. that carry ing the screw proper) with a rib 2 of rectangular cross section. coiled helically around the shaft and attached by Welding or by rivets. The shaft with rib may also be made in one piece of cast-steel. Upon this rib 2- the screw threads are attached removably. Previously the screw was made as an integral piece, but as the cutting edges of the screw are comparatively quickly worn off, its diameter is reduced, so that after a short use the worn screw had to be replaced by a new screw. 1
Experience now has shown, that a fully reliable screw is obtained, when its threads are made of loose shares or knife sections 3- of iron or steel plates. A single share or section of this sort is seen in Figs. 3 and 4. It is attached by three or four bolts lpassing through the plate 3 and the rib -2- so that a continuous helical face is produced, the outer edge 5 of which forms a cutting edge and may be sharpened when necessary.
As shown in Fig. 1 the screw projects beneath the soil surface 6 to the desired trench depth. Therefore, when the screw is rotated and sin'mltaneously moved forward in the direction. of the arrow -9, its front part cuts loosethe earth like a knife, which also lifts the loosened earth. the back side of the screw being surrounded by a screen or channel 10- extending up above the soil surface 6.
As indicated in Fig. 3 the edge 5 of the knife sections is curved somewhat upwardin weilhnown manner. Furthern'iore is seen from Fig. 1., that the screw pitch increases upward, the reason of which is the fact that the earth quantity to be conveyed up to the soil surface 6 increases from the trench bed. -7 to this surface --6.
Such increase inpitch has proved to be important for the easy operation of the screw, because it thereby may work with full eiiiciency in all heights. However, it proved to be still more important to vary the inclination of the threads 3- in radial direction. This variation is clearly seen from the lines direction 8 in 1. The inclination is directed downward toward the screw axis at the lowermost knife section, and upward from this section the inclination decreases graduallv according as one approaches the screw top. where the inclination has become inverse so as to ascend toward the screw axis. It is understood that by this construction the loosened earth, according as it is lifted up, is subjected to a gradual alteration in shape, which has the efi'ect that the earth is made loose and at the same time it is more and more separated from the central portions of the screw accordin as it ascends.
This condition is of the highest importance when the digging takes placein a soil containing clay, because the latter due box a curved tube or channel (not shown) is arranged, through which the drain-pipes may be conducted down to the trench bed according; as the work advances.
The bottom pivot 13 of the screw is in well-known manner supported in a shoe 14 moving on the trench bed 7- and having rear side-projections 15-, whereby the shoe is attached to the walls -12-. Through a tube 16 lubricating oil is conducted down to the shoe and through the channel 17 to the pivot 13. i
It will be clear, that the shane of the shoe -14:- is also of high importance for the working ability of' the machine. After many experiments the shape shown in the drawing was found to be the most advantageous one. The underside 1.8 of the shoe here is formed as a face which is convex in cross direction. Hereby the shoe makes little resistance to the moving forward in the trench bed, and simultaneously the bed obtains the most suitable shape for receiving the drain-pipes. Furthermore the upper side of the shoe is rounded downward at its front art as shown at 19- in Fig.
1 so as to meet together with the underside 8 in a forwardly directed sharp edge -20-- (Fig 5), which may be easily sharpened. The face 19 is provided with a low central rib -21 extending longitudinally and serving to divide the earth. Finally the shoe 14 has inclined sides -22 it being somewhat more narrow in front than in the rear as clearly shown in Fig. 5.
Having now described my invention, what I claim as new and desire to secure by Let ters Patent is: y
1. In a ditching and tile-laying machine, a rotatable cutting screw arranged vertically and having its screw threads inclined downwardly in a radial direction toward the screw axis at the lower end of the screw and gradually decreasing in such inclination upwardly so as to be inverse in the uppermost portion of the screw.
2. A ditching and tile-laying machine comprising a rotatable cutting screw arranged vertically and having the threads thereof graduated in pitch from the upper end of the screw to the lower end', and inclined downwardly in a radial direction toward the screw axis at the lower end of the screw and gradually decreasing in such inclination upwardly so as to be inverse in the uppermost portion of the screw.
In testimony whereof I have signed my name to this specification-in the presence of two subscribing witnesses.
ODILON BALTA ZAR HANNIBAL HANNEBORG Witnesses AXEL LAHN,- MOGENS BUGGEE.
Copies of this patent may be obtained for five cents each, by addressing the Commissioner of Patents,
-Washington, D. C.
US9339816A 1916-04-25 1916-04-25 Ditching and tile-laying machine. Expired - Lifetime US1277573A (en)

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2729437A (en) * 1950-07-28 1956-01-03 Ansbacher Maschinen Und Werkze Apparatus for making cavities for pipes, electric wiring and switches in the masonry of houses and the like
US2970827A (en) * 1958-11-17 1961-02-07 Leon A Dodson Silo unloader
US2979319A (en) * 1958-08-07 1961-04-11 Goodman Mfg Co Mechanical miner having offset rotary heads
US3383783A (en) * 1964-10-14 1968-05-21 Opton F. Smith Tractor type trenching apparatus

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2729437A (en) * 1950-07-28 1956-01-03 Ansbacher Maschinen Und Werkze Apparatus for making cavities for pipes, electric wiring and switches in the masonry of houses and the like
US2979319A (en) * 1958-08-07 1961-04-11 Goodman Mfg Co Mechanical miner having offset rotary heads
US2970827A (en) * 1958-11-17 1961-02-07 Leon A Dodson Silo unloader
US3383783A (en) * 1964-10-14 1968-05-21 Opton F. Smith Tractor type trenching apparatus

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