US1729327A - Coke-oven-pusher control - Google Patents

Coke-oven-pusher control Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1729327A
US1729327A US282943A US28294328A US1729327A US 1729327 A US1729327 A US 1729327A US 282943 A US282943 A US 282943A US 28294328 A US28294328 A US 28294328A US 1729327 A US1729327 A US 1729327A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
oven
pusher
coke
machine
door
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 - Lifetime
Application number
US282943A
Inventor
Albert H Chalmers
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US282943A priority Critical patent/US1729327A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1729327A publication Critical patent/US1729327A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10BDESTRUCTIVE DISTILLATION OF CARBONACEOUS MATERIALS FOR PRODUCTION OF GAS, COKE, TAR, OR SIMILAR MATERIALS
    • C10B41/00Safety devices, e.g. signalling or controlling devices for use in the discharge of coke
    • C10B41/02Safety devices, e.g. signalling or controlling devices for use in the discharge of coke for discharging coke

Definitions

  • Fig. 2 is a plan of a portion of a battery of ovens, one oven chamber and part of another being shown in horizontal section;
  • Fig. 3 is an enlarged view showing certain of the main operating elements
  • Fig. 4 is a plan of certain of the parts shown in Fig. 3;
  • Fig. 5 is a detail section of a control valve.
  • rep ⁇ resents a conventional type of coke oven structure as a whole which includes a plurality of oven chambers 12 which extend transversely from the pusher side 14 to the discharge side 16.
  • the chambers 12 are closed on the pusher side by means of doors 18 and on the discharge side by means of similar doors 20.
  • the usual form of larry charging car 22 travflames on the discharge side .38
  • the oven is heated in the usual manner and further description will be omitted as the heating apparatus and control therefor forms no part of the invention.
  • a pusher machine indicated generally at 26 travels on a track 28 and is propelled by means of a motor 30 driven by current supplied from the conductor rails 32, the motor being connected by suitable cables p
  • The' pusher machine 26 carries a pusher ram 40 of standard construction arranged to be actuated by a pusher motor 42 and suitable intermediate transmission mechanism of known construction not shown.
  • the motor 42 is under control of a controller 44 and the supply current of the motor and controller from the conductor rails 32 through conductor cable 84 is under control of a switch indicated generally at 46 which is arranged to be actuated by means of compressed air as will hereinafter appear.
  • the pusher vmachine also carries a door lifting member 48 which is actuated by a motor 50 connected to a suitable controller 52.
  • the member 48 carries mechanism of known construction including mechanically actuated hooks 54 adapted to engageextensions 56 on door 18.
  • the hooks 54 are actuated by a motor 58 connected to a controller 60.
  • the pusher machine operator can 34 and'36 with acontroller remove'the door 18 preparatory to actuation y ofthe pusher ram 40.
  • the pusher machine is also provided with a levelling bar 49 adapted to be actuated by a motor 51 under control of controller 53.
  • a known type of door operating machine 62 which carries mechanism of known construction indicated at 64 for removing the doors 20.
  • the ram 40 is then returned to its retracted position and the doors 18 and 20 are.
  • a My improved control apparatus includes rugged and reliable means whereby the operation of the ram 40 is under ⁇ control of the door machine operator located on the discharge side 16 of the oven structure.
  • My apparatus includes a cylinder 66 carried by the pusher machine and having therein a piston 68, the rod 70 of which is arranged to actuate the switch 46 having blades 72 which coact with switch contacts 74 and 76 connected, respectively, with the conductors 78 and 80 leading to the controller 44 and supply wires 34.
  • a counterweighted ,bell-crank 82 pivoted at 84 has a pin slot connection 86 with a rod 88 also connected with piston 68. Normally, this weighted bell-crank tends to hold the switch blades 72 out of engagement with the contacts y74 and 76'.
  • each pipe 102 is connected with a downwardly extending pipe 104 having a control valve
  • Each controlva ⁇ lve 106 connects by means of a pipe 108 with a compressed air or other fluid pressure main 110.
  • Each control valve, 106 is a three-way valve having a plug 112 which when turned to the position of Fig. 5 will permit compressed air or other suitable fluid pressure to flow from pipe 110 to the connections described across the top of the oven by way of the pipes 102 and 96 to the cylinder 66 so as to move the piston 68 and switch blade 72 to the closed position of Fig. 3.
  • the control valve plug 112 of Fig. 5 is turned clockwisel through an angle of degrees, the counterweighted arm 82 will pull the blades 72 to the right and break the motor circuit and the air from cylinder 66 will be discharged through port 114 of the valve 106.
  • the chine opera-tor inadvertently actuating the ram to push the coke from an oven whose vdischarge door 20 has not been previously removed by the operator ofthe door removing machine 62.
  • each control-valve 106 may be automatically actuated by the movement of the' .door machine or by the movement of the door actuating mechanism 64, thus making the operation practically foolproof.
  • a pusher ram and a motor for actuating it carried by said pusher machine, a switch controlling the supply of current to said motor,'a cylinder and a fluid pressure actua-ted piston therein operatively connected with said switch' and a valve located on the side of the oven structure remote from ⁇ the pusher for controlling the supply of Huid pressure to said cylinder.
  • D j The combination wlth a coke oven structure including a battery of coke ovens and a pusher machine movable along one side thereof, a pusher ram and a motor for actuating it carried by said pusher machine, current supply means for said motor, a switch between said current supply means and said motor, a uid pressure actuated device for moving said switch and a valve for controlpling the supply ⁇ of Huid to said device from the side of the oven remote from the pusher machine. f

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Oil, Petroleum & Natural Gas (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Coke Industry (AREA)

Description

sept. 24, 1929.
A. H CHALMERS COKE OVEN PUSHER CONTROL Filed June 5, 1928 2 Sheets-Sheet l /NVENTOR ATT RNEY Sept 24, 1929. A. H. cHALMERs 1,729,327
COKE OVEN PUSHER CONTROL Filed June 5, 1928 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Y@ B w w g man i w K Y n n Il 'ns/l Lr r y Patented Sept. 24, 1929 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE ALBERT H. CHALMERS,
or FAIRvrEw, BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA lCOKE-OVEN-]."USlHIE]R. CONTROL Application led June 5, 1928. Serial N o. 282,943.
practice, such electrical devices have beenextremely troublesome and their operation is seriously interfered with by the falling coke, the risin of the oven an the heat and dust on the pusher side to 'make it almost impossible to properly keep the electrical devices in operative condition. My invention aims to overcome these deficiencies of the prior practice and to provide an extremely simplied yet reliable means for preventing the actuation ofthe pusher ram until the operator on the discharge side of the oven is prepared to have the coke ejected. The invention will be fully apparent from the following specification when read in connection with the accompanying drawings and will be deiined with part-icularity in the ap'- pended claims. In the drawings` Fig. 1'1s an elevation partly in-transverse section showing a conventional form of coke oven and pusher machine equipped with control apparatus embodying the invention;
Fig. 2 is a plan of a portion of a battery of ovens, one oven chamber and part of another being shown in horizontal section;
Fig. 3 is an enlarged view showing certain of the main operating elements;
Fig. 4 is a plan of certain of the parts shown in Fig. 3;
Fig. 5 is a detail section of a control valve.
Referring in detail to the drawings, rep` resents a conventional type of coke oven structure as a whole which includes a plurality of oven chambers 12 which extend transversely from the pusher side 14 to the discharge side 16. The chambers 12 are closed on the pusher side by means of doors 18 and on the discharge side by means of similar doors 20. The usual form of larry charging car 22 travflames on the discharge side .38
Vof
els over the top of the oven structure and is adapted to charge the fuel to the oven chambers 12 through suitable openings 24.
The oven is heated in the usual manner and further description will be omitted as the heating apparatus and control therefor forms no part of the invention.
On the pusher side ofthe oven, a pusher machine indicated generally at 26 travels on a track 28 and is propelled by means of a motor 30 driven by current supplied from the conductor rails 32, the motor being connected by suitable cables p The' pusher machine 26 carries a pusher ram 40 of standard construction arranged to be actuated by a pusher motor 42 and suitable intermediate transmission mechanism of known construction not shown. The motor 42 is under control of a controller 44 and the supply current of the motor and controller from the conductor rails 32 through conductor cable 84 is under control of a switch indicated generally at 46 which is arranged to be actuated by means of compressed air as will hereinafter appear.
The pusher vmachine also carries a door lifting member 48 which is actuated by a motor 50 connected to a suitable controller 52. The member 48 carries mechanism of known construction including mechanically actuated hooks 54 adapted to engageextensions 56 on door 18. The hooks 54 are actuated by a motor 58 connected to a controller 60. By proper manipulation lof the controller 52 and controllerGO, the pusher machine operator can 34 and'36 with acontroller remove'the door 18 preparatory to actuation y ofthe pusher ram 40. The pusher machine is also provided with a levelling bar 49 adapted to be actuated by a motor 51 under control of controller 53.
It is of utmost importance that the pusher ram40 is only actuated after the door 20 on the discharge side 16 of the oven has been removed, otherwise, serious damage will be done to the coke oven structure. On the discharge side 16 of the oven structure, a known type of door operating machine 62 is provided which carries mechanism of known construction indicated at 64 for removing the doors 20.
In normal operation, the doors on opposite ends of any particular oven chamber 12 are removed and the load discharged. llt is customary to work on a regular operating schedule so that the ovens are pushed in a regular sequence but the adjacent ovens are J not pushed consecutively. Therefore, conof the pusher machine 26 removes the door 18 by means of the e door operating member 48 and Ihoolr` mechanism 54, it heilig understood that the doors 18 and 20 which are moved are intended to be those closing the opposite ends of the same oven chamber 12. The operator of the pusher machine 26 then causes the pusher machine to travel along on the tracks 28 a short distance in order` to align the pusher ram 40 with the oven chamber whose doors have just been removed. The ram 40 is then caused to travel forward through the oven chamber 12 so as to eject the coke which falls into a suitable car not shown.
The ram 40 is then returned to its retracted position and the doors 18 and 20 are.
replaced and the emptied oven chamber 12 is charged with coal by the larry car 22 through openings 24. This coal is levelled by means of the levelling bar 49 which opcrates through a suitable opening formed in they door 18. After a given oven chamber is thus worked, the respective operators of the pusher machine 26 and the door operating machine `62 are supposed to move their machines to the next oven on the pushing schedule and repeat the above described operation.
There is a chance, however, that the operator on thepulsherf machine may remove a door which "does not correspond with the oven door removed by vthe operator of the v machine/62 of the discharge side of the oven,
. the result that Ythe coke will bev pushed and the pusher operator not realizing the error may cause the ram 40 to travel with againstnan unremoved door 20. Such an error causes' serious damage because of the pressure'eXe'* don the oven structure by the powerful ram 40.
`Various'means,mostly electric, have been devised for vpreventing pushing of coke until after the door on the discharge side has been removed but such means in practical opera- 65. tion arereadily rendered inoperative or eX- 106 therein.
tremel ineicient by the eXtreme heat of the co re ovens or by accumulations of dust and the action of flame escaping from the oven structure. A My improved control apparatus includes rugged and reliable means whereby the operation of the ram 40 is under` control of the door machine operator located on the discharge side 16 of the oven structure.
My apparatus includes a cylinder 66 carried by the pusher machine and having therein a piston 68, the rod 70 of which is arranged to actuate the switch 46 having blades 72 which coact with switch contacts 74 and 76 connected, respectively, with the conductors 78 and 80 leading to the controller 44 and supply wires 34. A counterweighted ,bell-crank 82 pivoted at 84 has a pin slot connection 86 with a rod 88 also connected with piston 68. Normally, this weighted bell-crank tends to hold the switch blades 72 out of engagement with the contacts y74 and 76'. When fluid pressure is supplied to the cylinder 66, piston 68 is moved to the position indicated in Fig. 3 so as to engage the blades 72 with the contacts 74 and 76 and thus complete the cirfcuit between the current supply 34 and the- 102. On the discharge side of theoven, each pipe 102 is connected with a downwardly extending pipe 104 having a control valve Each controlva`lve 106 connects by means of a pipe 108 with a compressed air or other fluid pressure main 110.
rIihe main 110 extends longitudinally of the oven battery on the discharge side 16. Each control valve, 106 is a three-way valve having a plug 112 which when turned to the position of Fig. 5 will permit compressed air or other suitable fluid pressure to flow from pipe 110 to the connections described across the top of the oven by way of the pipes 102 and 96 to the cylinder 66 so as to move the piston 68 and switch blade 72 to the closed position of Fig. 3. When the control valve plug 112 of Fig. 5 is turned clockwisel through an angle of degrees, the counterweighted arm 82 will pull the blades 72 to the right and break the motor circuit and the air from cylinder 66 will be discharged through port 114 of the valve 106. With the chine opera-tor inadvertently actuating the ram to push the coke from an oven whose vdischarge door 20 has not been previously removed by the operator ofthe door removing machine 62.
It is clear that in normal operation, the pusher machine operator successively connects thecoupling member 92 of the flexible hose with the members 94 of t-he different ovens listed on the 'operating schedule, but if he makes an error and connectsthe hose to the wrong coupling 94, no damage can be done for the supply of Huid pressure foi actuating the .pusher ram will not be available, it -being remembered that the door machine operator on the discharge side 16 only makes the air supply available for the particular oven chamber which has had its door '2Q removed. If" desired, each control-valve 106 may be automatically actuated by the movement of the' .door machine or by the movement of the door actuating mechanism 64, thus making the operation practically foolproof.
While I have` described quite specifically the details of the embodiment of the invention illustrated, it is not to be construed that I am limited thereto since various modifications and substitution of equivalents may be made without departing from the invention as defined in the appended claims.
What I claim is:
1. The combination with a Coke ovenstructure including av battery ofcoke ovens and a pusher machine' movable along one side thereof, a pusher ram and a motor for actuating it carried by said pusher machine, compressed air actuated switch for *controlling said motor and means located on the side of the structure opposite that on which the pusher machine moves for controlling the supply ofl compressed air to said switch.
2. The-combination with a coke oven struc- I ture including a battery/of coke ovens and. r a pusher machine movable along one side:
thereof, a pusher ram and a motor for actuating it carried by said pusher machine, a switch controlling the supply of current to said motor,'a cylinder and a fluid pressure actua-ted piston therein operatively connected with said switch' and a valve located on the side of the oven structure remote from `the pusher for controlling the supply of Huid pressure to said cylinder.
. D j 3. The combination wlth a coke oven structure including a battery of coke ovens and a pusher machine movable along one side thereof, a pusher ram and a motor for actuating it carried by said pusher machine, current supply means for said motor, a switch between said current supply means and said motor, a uid pressure actuated device for moving said switch and a valve for controlpling the supply`of Huid to said device from the side of the oven remote from the pusher machine. f
4. The combination with a coke oven structure including a battery of coke ovens and a pusher machine movable along one 'Side thereof, a pusher ram and a motor for actuating it carried by said pusher machine, current supply means for said motor land a switch between said current supply means and said motor, a fluid pressure actuated device operatively connected to said switch, a
fluid conduit extending across the oven strucmy name.
. ALBERT H. CIIALMERS.
US282943A 1928-06-05 1928-06-05 Coke-oven-pusher control Expired - Lifetime US1729327A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US282943A US1729327A (en) 1928-06-05 1928-06-05 Coke-oven-pusher control

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US282943A US1729327A (en) 1928-06-05 1928-06-05 Coke-oven-pusher control

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1729327A true US1729327A (en) 1929-09-24

Family

ID=23083800

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US282943A Expired - Lifetime US1729327A (en) 1928-06-05 1928-06-05 Coke-oven-pusher control

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1729327A (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2589231A (en) * 1946-01-16 1952-03-18 Koppers Co Inc Pusher machine and coke guide interlock
US2589266A (en) * 1946-01-16 1952-03-18 Koppers Co Inc Automatic interlock for pusher machines and coke guide machines
US2849128A (en) * 1956-10-18 1958-08-26 United States Steel Corp Control system for coke-oven pusher machine and coke-side door machine
US2938640A (en) * 1957-04-25 1960-05-31 Oetiker Hans Safety control system for coke removal plants
US3298546A (en) * 1964-09-01 1967-01-17 Robert E Jones Door operator for a tunnel kiln ceramic plant

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2589231A (en) * 1946-01-16 1952-03-18 Koppers Co Inc Pusher machine and coke guide interlock
US2589266A (en) * 1946-01-16 1952-03-18 Koppers Co Inc Automatic interlock for pusher machines and coke guide machines
US2849128A (en) * 1956-10-18 1958-08-26 United States Steel Corp Control system for coke-oven pusher machine and coke-side door machine
US2938640A (en) * 1957-04-25 1960-05-31 Oetiker Hans Safety control system for coke removal plants
US3298546A (en) * 1964-09-01 1967-01-17 Robert E Jones Door operator for a tunnel kiln ceramic plant

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1729327A (en) Coke-oven-pusher control
US1597365A (en) Gas control for coke ovens
US2391443A (en) Removal of deposits from the interior surfaces of coke ovens
US2589231A (en) Pusher machine and coke guide interlock
US3622019A (en) Apparatus for removing and replacing charging hole covers of a byproduct coke oven
US1500526A (en) Coke-oven interlocking and signaling mechanism
US2596944A (en) Furnace lighter with mechanically interlocked controls
US2849128A (en) Control system for coke-oven pusher machine and coke-side door machine
US1798517A (en) Coke-oven smoke-discharging means
US1730602A (en) Coke-oven apparatus
KR100501503B1 (en) Device for operating the damper and lid of coke oven
US1353557A (en) Multiple electric air and car coupling
US2589266A (en) Automatic interlock for pusher machines and coke guide machines
US2732289A (en) Goeke
US1622902A (en) Material-handling apparatus
US3618794A (en) Method and apparatus to interlock a larry car and a pusher machine
US1229225A (en) Control mechanism for charging and discharging machines.
CN212804778U (en) Pre-buried pipe assembly with decoking structure
US2936911A (en) Duplex scale car dumping system
US1343232A (en) Control apparatus
US1144168A (en) Means for controlling the operation of gas-retorts.
US2239412A (en) Decarbonizer for coke ovens
US3120668A (en) Apparatus for cleaning coke-oven doors and jambs
US1608962A (en) Charging device for coke ovens
US2796995A (en) Door lifting means for horizontal coking chamber ovens