US2329966A - Floating tank roof seal - Google Patents

Floating tank roof seal Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2329966A
US2329966A US380326A US38032641A US2329966A US 2329966 A US2329966 A US 2329966A US 380326 A US380326 A US 380326A US 38032641 A US38032641 A US 38032641A US 2329966 A US2329966 A US 2329966A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
roof
seal
primary seal
fabric
clamping members
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
US380326A
Inventor
John H Wiggins
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
Priority claimed from US337021A external-priority patent/US2318135A/en
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US380326A priority Critical patent/US2329966A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2329966A publication Critical patent/US2329966A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D88/00Large containers
    • B65D88/34Large containers having floating covers, e.g. floating roofs or blankets
    • B65D88/42Large containers having floating covers, e.g. floating roofs or blankets with sealing means between cover rim and receptacle
    • B65D88/46Large containers having floating covers, e.g. floating roofs or blankets with sealing means between cover rim and receptacle with mechanical means acting on the seal

Definitions

  • This invention relates to floating tank roof seals of the general type that comprise an annular side wall shoe carried by the floating roof and arranged in sliding engagement with the wall of the tank, and a primary seal, usually constructed from gas-tight fabric, attached to said side wall shoe and to the peripheral portion of the roof, my present application being a division of my pending application Serial No. 337,021, led May 24, 1940.
  • the primary object of my present invention 1s to provide an means of inexpensive construction, for connecting the primary seal in a gas-tight manner to the floating roof.
  • Other objects or desirable features of my invention will be hereinafter pointed out.
  • Figure 1 of the drawing is a fragmentary top plan view of a tank roof seal embodying my present invention.
  • Figure 2 is a vertical sectional view, taken on the line 2-2 of Figure l;
  • Figure 3 is a detail sectional view, illustrating the clamping means used to attach the primary seal to the floating roof, and showing the opposed elements of said clamping means spaced a art.
  • I designates a tank side wall of circular form
  • 2 designates a floating roof of the pontoon type, pan type, or any other type, arranged inside of said tank, so as to float on the liquid in the tank.
  • A designates a side wall shoe arranged vertically in sliding engagement with the tank side wall
  • B designates a primary seal usually formed from gas-tight fabric attached to the shoe A and to the peripheral portion of the fioating roof 2, so as to form a closure for the annular space between said roof and the side wall shoe
  • C designates a secondary seal or auxiliary seal usually formed of fabric arranged adjacent the top edge of the shoe A and adapted to press against the tank side wall I, so as to seal the joint or space between said wall and the shoe
  • D designates the swinging hangers on the roof 2 arranged so that rollers or friction-reducing devices 3 at the upper ends of said hangers bear against the inner face of the tank side wall
  • 4 designates vertically-adjustable rods or links suspended from the upper ends of the hangers D and attached to the inner side of the shoe A, so as to suspend said shoe from the hangers in such a way as to insure proper co-operation or coaction of the shoe A with the side wall I of the tank
  • 3a in Figure 2 design
  • the bottom edge or inner edge of the primary seal B is secured to the oating roof 2 by a novel method that is characterized by arranging said lprimary seal between opposed clamping members 5 on the floating roof, and retaining devices for said clamping members, then manipulating one or both of said clamping members in such a way as to cause a plastic or semi-plastic substance, such as cement, to form a gas-tight, plastic seal between the roof 2 and the bottom edge of said primary seal B.
  • Said opposed clamping members w1ll usually comprise an annular-shaped member x2li rigidly attached to the oating roof 2, and' formed from a fiat, vertically-disposed ring, or from the upright leg of a stationary angle* shaped member on the roof, and a co-acting movable clamping member 25, formed preferably by a plurality of segmental-shaped members that are adapted to be drawn towards the stationary clamping member 24 by tightening the nuts on bolts 26 that pass horizontally through the members 24 and 25.
  • the clamping members 24 and 25' are arranged in spaced relationship, they co-act with the roof 2 to form a trough that is adapted to receive a quantity of cement 21, or other suitable plastic or semi-plastic material.
  • the bottom edge portion of said seal is positioned between the memso bers 24 and 25 at a poi/nt above the bolts 2s,
  • FIG. 2 of the drawing illustrates the fabric clamping means on the roof after the movable clamping members 25 have been tightened. It will 55 be observed that my improved method does not contemplate the use of bolts or similar retaining or fastening devices that pass through the fabric from which the primary seal is constructed. Instead. the bottom edge of the primary seal is arranged above the bolts 26 of the fabric clamping means on the roof.
  • the support G is composed of a plurality of relatively thin or light-weight metal plates with small gaps between their ends, as shown in Figure 2, arranged around the entire circumference of the roof, and provided with downwardly bent portions 28, as shown in Figure 3, positioned inside of the trough-like structure formed by the opposed members 24 and 25 on the roof that reeeive and embrace the bottom edge portion of the primary seal B.
  • Said plates are installed by positioning the bent lower end portions 28 of same between the members '24 and 25 before the nuts on the bolts 26 are tightened, with the result that when the clamping members 25 are moved towards the stationary clamping member 24, the cement 2l will be spread on or distributed over the surface of said plates positioned between the clamping members 24 and 25.
  • 'Ihe plates from which the supporting means G is formed do not have to be shaped or bent to conform to the curvature of the clamping member 24, because said plates are sufllciently thin and short to take the curvature of the stationary clamping member 24 when the movable clamping members 25 are tightened.
  • a gas-tight fabric element a part to which said element is detachably connected, provided with opposed clamping members, disposed so as to co-act with said part to form an annular trough in which an imperforate portion at the bottom edge of said fabric element is positioned, adjusting devices for causing said clamping members to tightly grip said fabric element, a plastic or semi-plastic sealing substance in said trough that produces gas-tight joints between said clamping members and fabric element and between the edge of said element and the bottom of the trough, and supporting plates for the fabric element positioned between the same and one of said clamping members and projecting upwardly beyond the top edge of said clamping member.

Description

Sept. 21, 1943. J. H. wlGGlNs FLOATING TANK ROOF SEAL original Filed May 24, 1940 INVENTOR JOHN H. W/GGIMS Mz/M ATTORNEY Patented Sept. 21, 1943 FLOATING TANK ROOF vSEAL lJohn H. Wiggins, Chicago, Ill.
Original application May 24, 1940, Serial No.
Divided and this application February 24, 1941, Serial No. 380,326
1 Claim.
This invention relates to floating tank roof seals of the general type that comprise an annular side wall shoe carried by the floating roof and arranged in sliding engagement with the wall of the tank, and a primary seal, usually constructed from gas-tight fabric, attached to said side wall shoe and to the peripheral portion of the roof, my present application being a division of my pending application Serial No. 337,021, led May 24, 1940.
The primary object of my present invention 1s to provide an eficient means of inexpensive construction, for connecting the primary seal in a gas-tight manner to the floating roof. Other objects or desirable features of my invention will be hereinafter pointed out.
Figure 1 of the drawing is a fragmentary top plan view of a tank roof seal embodying my present invention.
Figure 2 is a vertical sectional view, taken on the line 2-2 of Figure l; and
Figure 3 is a detail sectional view, illustrating the clamping means used to attach the primary seal to the floating roof, and showing the opposed elements of said clamping means spaced a art.
pIn the accompanying drawing, which illustrates my invention, I designates a tank side wall of circular form, 2 designates a floating roof of the pontoon type, pan type, or any other type, arranged inside of said tank, so as to float on the liquid in the tank. A designates a side wall shoe arranged vertically in sliding engagement with the tank side wall, B designates a primary seal usually formed from gas-tight fabric attached to the shoe A and to the peripheral portion of the fioating roof 2, so as to form a closure for the annular space between said roof and the side wall shoe, C designates a secondary seal or auxiliary seal usually formed of fabric arranged adjacent the top edge of the shoe A and adapted to press against the tank side wall I, so as to seal the joint or space between said wall and the shoe, D designates the swinging hangers on the roof 2 arranged so that rollers or friction-reducing devices 3 at the upper ends of said hangers bear against the inner face of the tank side wall, 4 designates vertically-adjustable rods or links suspended from the upper ends of the hangers D and attached to the inner side of the shoe A, so as to suspend said shoe from the hangers in such a way as to insure proper co-operation or coaction of the shoe A with the side wall I of the tank, and 3a in Figure 2 designates compression springs that push the hangers outwardly.
The bottom edge or inner edge of the primary seal B is secured to the oating roof 2 by a novel method that is characterized by arranging said lprimary seal between opposed clamping members 5 on the floating roof, and retaining devices for said clamping members, then manipulating one or both of said clamping members in such a way as to cause a plastic or semi-plastic substance, such as cement, to form a gas-tight, plastic seal between the roof 2 and the bottom edge of said primary seal B. Said opposed clamping members w1ll usually comprise an annular-shaped member x2li rigidly attached to the oating roof 2, and' formed from a fiat, vertically-disposed ring, or from the upright leg of a stationary angle* shaped member on the roof, and a co-acting movable clamping member 25, formed preferably by a plurality of segmental-shaped members that are adapted to be drawn towards the stationary clamping member 24 by tightening the nuts on bolts 26 that pass horizontally through the members 24 and 25. When the clamping members 24 and 25'are arranged in spaced relationship, they co-act with the roof 2 to form a trough that is adapted to receive a quantity of cement 21, or other suitable plastic or semi-plastic material. To clamp the primary seal to the roof the bottom edge portion of said seal is positioned between the memso bers 24 and 25 at a poi/nt above the bolts 2s,
and thereafter the nuts on said bolts are tightened so as to draw the movable clamping members 25 towards the stationary clamping member 24. This operation virtually pumps the cement 35 2l upwardly into engagement with the bottom edge of the primary seal and into the joints between the clamping members 24 and 25 and the primary seal, and forces the cement into all crevices or joints in the clamping means on the roof or in the bottom edge portion of the primary seal B that is embraced by said clamping means, thus producing a plastic seal between the roof and the bottom edge of the primary seal. Moreover, the act of tightening the clamping members 25 tends to smooth out any wrinkles that may exist in the lower edge portion of the primary seal and so thoroughly coat the fabric which constitutes the primary seal B, that there is an absolutely gas-tight joint between said fabric, the top surface of the oating roof, and the parts on the roof that grip said fabric. Figure 2 of the drawing illustrates the fabric clamping means on the roof after the movable clamping members 25 have been tightened. It will 55 be observed that my improved method does not contemplate the use of bolts or similar retaining or fastening devices that pass through the fabric from which the primary seal is constructed. Instead. the bottom edge of the primary seal is arranged above the bolts 26 of the fabric clamping means on the roof.
In order to insure the primary seal B remaining in the position it is intended to occupy and prevent said primary seal from assuming the form of a loop or pocket having an open end disposed so as to catch rain water or dirt, I support the fabric constituting the primary seal, in such a way that relative movement between the roof and the tank side wall, during the rise and fall of the roof, causes said fabric to fold or double upon itself, as shown in Figure 2, without, however, producing a pocket or loop open at its upper end. During the operation of attaching the primary seal B to the roof, as explained above, I install a supporting means G that projects outwardly and upwardly from the outer edge of the iioating roof, and which is of such construction and arrangement that it will not interfere with the movement of the roof inwardly and outwardly towards and away from the side wall of the tank. Preferably, the support G is composed of a plurality of relatively thin or light-weight metal plates with small gaps between their ends, as shown in Figure 2, arranged around the entire circumference of the roof, and provided with downwardly bent portions 28, as shown in Figure 3, positioned inside of the trough-like structure formed by the opposed members 24 and 25 on the roof that reeeive and embrace the bottom edge portion of the primary seal B. Said plates are installed by positioning the bent lower end portions 28 of same between the members '24 and 25 before the nuts on the bolts 26 are tightened, with the result that when the clamping members 25 are moved towards the stationary clamping member 24, the cement 2l will be spread on or distributed over the surface of said plates positioned between the clamping members 24 and 25. 'Ihe plates from which the supporting means G is formed do not have to be shaped or bent to conform to the curvature of the clamping member 24, because said plates are sufllciently thin and short to take the curvature of the stationary clamping member 24 when the movable clamping members 25 are tightened.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:
The combination of a gas-tight fabric element, a part to which said element is detachably connected, provided with opposed clamping members, disposed so as to co-act with said part to form an annular trough in which an imperforate portion at the bottom edge of said fabric element is positioned, adjusting devices for causing said clamping members to tightly grip said fabric element, a plastic or semi-plastic sealing substance in said trough that produces gas-tight joints between said clamping members and fabric element and between the edge of said element and the bottom of the trough, and supporting plates for the fabric element positioned between the same and one of said clamping members and projecting upwardly beyond the top edge of said clamping member.
JOHN H. WIGGINS.
US380326A 1940-05-24 1941-02-24 Floating tank roof seal Expired - Lifetime US2329966A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US380326A US2329966A (en) 1940-05-24 1941-02-24 Floating tank roof seal

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US337021A US2318135A (en) 1940-05-24 1940-05-24 Seal for floating tank roofs
US380326A US2329966A (en) 1940-05-24 1941-02-24 Floating tank roof seal

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2329966A true US2329966A (en) 1943-09-21

Family

ID=26990499

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US380326A Expired - Lifetime US2329966A (en) 1940-05-24 1941-02-24 Floating tank roof seal

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2329966A (en)

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2540802A (en) * 1947-07-24 1951-02-06 John H Wiggins Sealing structure for floating tank roofs
US2630937A (en) * 1947-08-28 1953-03-10 Chicago Bridge & Iron Co Seal support for floating roof tanks
US2751109A (en) * 1951-02-02 1956-06-19 Moorex Ind Inc Sealed structural joint
US2754026A (en) * 1953-01-29 1956-07-10 John H Wiggins Sealing mechanism for floating tank roofs
US3178050A (en) * 1960-01-21 1965-04-13 Container Patent Co G M B H Connections between rigid and flexible bodies
US4116358A (en) * 1977-05-16 1978-09-26 Aerojet-General Corporation Weather and vapor seal for storage tank
US4317528A (en) * 1979-08-21 1982-03-02 Mesa Industries, Inc. Floating roof tank sealing methods and apparatus
US4341323A (en) * 1981-03-10 1982-07-27 Mobil Oil Corporation Seal for floating roof tanks
US11548725B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2023-01-10 Industrial & Environmental Concepts, Inc. Cover systems, tank covering methods, and pipe retention systems

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2540802A (en) * 1947-07-24 1951-02-06 John H Wiggins Sealing structure for floating tank roofs
US2630937A (en) * 1947-08-28 1953-03-10 Chicago Bridge & Iron Co Seal support for floating roof tanks
US2751109A (en) * 1951-02-02 1956-06-19 Moorex Ind Inc Sealed structural joint
US2754026A (en) * 1953-01-29 1956-07-10 John H Wiggins Sealing mechanism for floating tank roofs
US3178050A (en) * 1960-01-21 1965-04-13 Container Patent Co G M B H Connections between rigid and flexible bodies
US4116358A (en) * 1977-05-16 1978-09-26 Aerojet-General Corporation Weather and vapor seal for storage tank
US4317528A (en) * 1979-08-21 1982-03-02 Mesa Industries, Inc. Floating roof tank sealing methods and apparatus
US4341323A (en) * 1981-03-10 1982-07-27 Mobil Oil Corporation Seal for floating roof tanks
US11548725B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2023-01-10 Industrial & Environmental Concepts, Inc. Cover systems, tank covering methods, and pipe retention systems

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2329966A (en) Floating tank roof seal
US2536019A (en) Floating roof tank
US1698158A (en) Floating roof for oil tanks
US2523292A (en) Floating roof seal
US2287211A (en) Floating tank roof
US5036995A (en) Peripheral seal for floating tank cover
US2471404A (en) Seal for floating roofs
US4353477A (en) Floating roof metallic shoe secondary seal
US3833944A (en) Fluid containing structure
US2180587A (en) Floating roof seal
US2314805A (en) Floating tank roof seal
US2072798A (en) Sealing means for floating roofs for tanks
US4154359A (en) Shoe type seal for floating tank roof, or the like
US2987215A (en) Variable volume storage tanks
US3795339A (en) Seal ring for a floating tank roof
US2318135A (en) Seal for floating tank roofs
US3075668A (en) Resilient foam seal for floating roof
US2354629A (en) Top seal for floating tank roof side wall shoes
US2318134A (en) Seal for floating tank roofs
US1662225A (en) Floating deck for liquid-storage tanks
US2603382A (en) Clamping ring for metal drum
US3275183A (en) Secondary seal
US3390803A (en) Expansion joint for floating roof sealing assembly
US1767142A (en) Floating-deck tank
US2327083A (en) Side wall seal for floating tank roofs