US2945427A - Wiper blade attachment for screed boards - Google Patents

Wiper blade attachment for screed boards Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2945427A
US2945427A US706952A US70695258A US2945427A US 2945427 A US2945427 A US 2945427A US 706952 A US706952 A US 706952A US 70695258 A US70695258 A US 70695258A US 2945427 A US2945427 A US 2945427A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
screed
screed board
concrete
main plate
board
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
US706952A
Inventor
Joseph C Gerk
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.)
DELBERT M COX
THOMAS A COX
Original Assignee
DELBERT M COX
THOMAS A COX
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 DELBERT M COX, THOMAS A COX filed Critical DELBERT M COX
Priority to US706952A priority Critical patent/US2945427A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2945427A publication Critical patent/US2945427A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E01CONSTRUCTION OF ROADS, RAILWAYS, OR BRIDGES
    • E01CCONSTRUCTION OF, OR SURFACES FOR, ROADS, SPORTS GROUNDS, OR THE LIKE; MACHINES OR AUXILIARY TOOLS FOR CONSTRUCTION OR REPAIR
    • E01C19/00Machines, tools or auxiliary devices for preparing or distributing paving materials, for working the placed materials, or for forming, consolidating, or finishing the paving
    • E01C19/22Machines, tools or auxiliary devices for preparing or distributing paving materials, for working the placed materials, or for forming, consolidating, or finishing the paving for consolidating or finishing laid-down unset materials
    • E01C19/42Machines for imparting a smooth finish to freshly-laid paving courses other than by rolling, tamping or vibrating

Definitions

  • This invention relates generally to the art of finishing concrete paving. More particularly, the invention has reference to a wiper blade attachment, which is connectable to the existing screed board of a conventional concrete paving finishing machine,'such as the apparatus used in paving concrete-surfaced roads.
  • fresh concrete When paving by means of a machine of the type stated, fresh concrete is poured alongside an existing, hardened, concrete grade slab. Thus, when the fresh concrete sets, said fresh concrete and the existing slab will define a continuous paved surface.
  • the present screed boards being flexible, do not follow the irregularities of hardened concrete, whenever it is necessaly, as indicated above, to use an existing, hardened concrete slab as a grade line.
  • the wiper blade attachment constituting the present invention is proposed,'and has as its main purpose the clearing of the fresh concrete off the old grade slab ahead of the screed board.
  • the wiper blade attachment it is proposed that the exceedingly expensive and timeconsuming procedure described above, necessary at the present time for the successful operation of present-day concrete finishing machines, will be completely eliminated.
  • Another important object is to provide a device as ment 18 constituting the present invention.
  • Still another object is to provide a device as stated which will be characterized by the simplicity of the operation thereof.
  • Yet another object is to so design the attachment as to permit its connection to a conventional screed board with minimum modification and redesign of said screed board.
  • Figure 1 is a perspective view of a wiper blade attachnient according to the present invention, showing a fragmentary portion of the screed board with the attachment secured thereto, the parts appearing in their operative position in respect to the surface of the paving;
  • Figure 2 is a front elevational view of the device, and of the adjacent end portion of the screed board to which it is connected, the scale being enlarged slightly above that of Figure 1;
  • Figure 3 is a horizontal sectional view, substantially on line 3-3 of Figure 2;
  • Figure 4 is a vertical sectional view, substantially on line 4-4 of Figure 2.
  • A is the freshly poured concrete, over which is moving the screed board or strike-off.
  • B there has been designated the old grade slab, and at 10 the line of division between the slabs, that is, the plane in which the slabs A, B abut one another.
  • the screed board 12 comprising a conventional part of the concrete finishing machine, has reversely extending bottom and top flanges 14, 16 respectively, and moves over the freshly poured concrete A, so as to provide a finished surface thereon. It has been found, as previously described herein, that the freshly poured concrete C is moved onto the old slab B, which of course is fully hardened, and works under the screed board, causing the same to raise, as a result of which the finished surface of the fresh concrete becomes ofl grade. Further, the present screed board, being inflexible, will not follow the irregularities of hardened concrete whenever it is necessary, in the manner shown in the drawing, to use the existing slab as a grade line.
  • the wiper blade attach- This includes a side wing 20 which is disposed in a vertical plane, is progressively reduced in height in a direction from its inner to its outer or distal end, and is wholly fiat, the plane thereof being oblique to the path of forward movement of the concrete finishing machine.
  • the wing 20, at its proximal end, is secured by a weld 22 to the outer side edge of a rectangular, vertically disposed, main plate 24 of the wiper blade attachment constituting the present invention.
  • the main plate'24 is in face-to-face contact with the screed board 12, at one end of the screed board, with said main plate and screed board having registering outer side edges, as clearly shown in Figure 3.
  • nuts 32 providing threaded bores 'or openings in the screed board receiving the bolts 28.
  • Nuts 34 are applied to the bolts, bearing against the nuts 32, and of course jamb nuts, not shown, could be applied also to the bolts for the purpose of preventing accidental loosening of the nuts 34.
  • the nuts 28 would be left sufiiciently loose to permit up-and-down movement of the main plate 24, for a purpose to be made presently apparent.
  • Brackets 36 Spot-welded or otherwise fixedly secured to the front surface of, and projecting forwardly from, main plate 24- are transversely spaced, identical angle brackets 36, disposed below corresponding angle brackets 38 spot-welded to screed board 12 above main plate'24.
  • Registering openings of the horizontal, forwardly projecting legs of the respective brackets 36, 38 receive bolts or pins 40, the heads of which bear against the undersides of brackets 36, and the shanks of which extend through compression, coil springs. 42 held under compression between each bracket 36 and the bracket 38 above the same.
  • Nuts 44 are threaded upon the upper ends of the bolts, bearing against nuts 45 that are in contact with the top surfaces of the horizontal legs of brackets 38, and that are also threadedly engaged with the bolts 40.
  • the main plate 24 is resiliently biased in a downward direction upon the screed board by springs 42, and is guided in its, upward and downward movement through the provision of the guide means including'slots 26 and bolts 28.
  • Designated at 46 is the arm of the concrete finishing machine that carries the power lift shaft 48, also a conventional part of said machine.
  • the power lift shaft 48 has wound thereabout the lift chain 50 connected to apertured ear 52 extending upwardly from flange 16.
  • the screeding operation must be halted every five to eight feet, more or less, since the excess concrete moves to and beyond the side edge of the screed board, onto the hardened slab B, and working under the screed board lifts the sameenough to make the new slab A oif grade, rather than completely flush with the level of the old slab B.
  • the wing 20 is positioned upon the, old slab, in direct contact therewith, being held in contact with the old slab B by means of the downward pressure exerted through the medium of the spring 42. Therefore, the main plate 24, the bottom edge of which is flush with the bottom edge of the wing 20,. is in direct registration with the bottom edge of the screed board, all as clearly shown in Figures 2 and 4. It follows that as long as the wing 20 remains in contact with the old slab B, the bottom edge of the main plate 24 will be on grade with the slab, and this will be true also of the bottom edge of the screed board, assuming that no fresh concrete works under the screed board proper.
  • the invention prevents the fresh concrete from. working under the screed board.
  • wing 20 projects forwardly, at an angle of 45, approximately, to the parallel planes of the; screed board and of the main plate 24 (see Figure. 3-). Therefore, the fresh concretev C, as it tends to move beyond the registering side edges of the main plate and screed board, moves. into the, path of the wing 20.
  • the device can be attached to an existing machine with maximum ease and speed, as will be readily apparent from the description and illustration hereinbefore provided.
  • the combination, with the screed board of a concrete paving finishing machine, of a wiper blade assembly for cleaning excess concrete from an adjacent, previously paved surface in advance of the screed board comprising a. Wing projecting forwardly laterally from the screed board; and means connecting the wing to said screed board, including a main plate mounted on the screed board for up-and-down movement in face-to-face contact with the scred board, saidvmain plate being connected at one side to the wing, and resilient, yielding means interposed between the main plate and the screed board and tensioned to bias the main plate in a downward direction.
  • the combination, with the screed board of a concrete paving finishing machine, of a wiper blade assembly for cleaning excess concrete from an. adjacent, previously paved surface in advance of the screed board comprising. a wing projecting forwardly laterally from the screed board; and means, connecting the wing to said screed board, including a main plate mounted on the screed board for up-and-down movement in face-toface contact with the screed. board, said main plate being connected at one side to the win-g, and resilient, yielding means interposed between the main plate and the screed board and tensioned to bias the main plate in a downward direction, the main plate and wing having registered bottom edges.
  • the combination, with the screed board of a concrete paving finishing machine, of a wiper blade assembly for cleaning excess concrete from an adjacent, previously paved surface in advance of the screed board, comprising a wing projecting, forwardly laterally from the screed board; and means connecting the wing to said screed board, including a main plate mounted 'on the screed board for up-and-down movement in face-to-face contact withv the screed board, said main plate being connected at one side to the wing, and resilient, yielding means interposed between the main plate and the screed board and tensioned to bias the main plate in a downward direction, the main plate. and wing having registered bottom edges, and means for limiting the up-and-down movement of said main plate comprising the provision in said. main. plate. of a plurality of normally vertically extending elongated slots, and a bolt for each of said slots, saidbolts. being. secured to said screed board and extending. through. said slots.

Description

July 19, 1960 J. c. GERK WIPER BLADE ATTACHMENT FOR SCREED BOARDS 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed Jan. 3, 1958 INVENTOR. Iosem-a C- G- EEK -rroquevs uly 19, 19 J. c. GERK 2,945,427
' WIPER BLADE ATTACHMENT FOR SCREED BOARDS Filed Jan. 3, 1958 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTOR.
J'bSEPH C. GEEK.
ATTORNEVS United States Patent 9 WIPER BLADE ATTACHMENT FOR SCREED BOARDS Joseph C. Gerk, Denver, Colo., assignor of one-fourth to Thomas A. Cox, and one-fourth to Delbert M. Cox,
both of Denver, Colo.
Filed Lian. '3, 1958, Ser. No. 706,952
6 Claims. (Cl. 94-45) This invention relates generally to the art of finishing concrete paving. More particularly, the invention has reference to a wiper blade attachment, which is connectable to the existing screed board of a conventional concrete paving finishing machine,'such as the apparatus used in paving concrete-surfaced roads.
When paving by means of a machine of the type stated, fresh concrete is poured alongside an existing, hardened, concrete grade slab. Thus, when the fresh concrete sets, said fresh concrete and the existing slab will define a continuous paved surface.
In this connection, when the conventional paving machines are screeding, the excess fresh concrete falls upon the existing, hardened, concrete grade slab and works under the screed board. This causes the screed board to raise. As a result, the freshly poured concrete is off grade.
During the screeding operation, it has been found that the raising of the screed board, and the resultant surfacing of the fresh concrete off grade, occurs over a distance of about every five to eight feet of forward movement of the machine. In order to get the screed board back on grade, it is necessary that the machines forward motion be stopped. Then, the screed boards are lifted by means of the powered lift shaft used for this purpose, and the machine is backed to a point where the concrete is on grade. Thereafter, a worker cleans the fresh conorete oif the old grade slab, and the machine is then brought forward another five to eight feet beyond its previous furthest point of advance, at which time the procedure must be repeated.
The present screed boards, being flexible, do not follow the irregularities of hardened concrete, whenever it is necessaly, as indicated above, to use an existing, hardened concrete slab as a grade line. I i
I In view of the difliculties which have been noted, the wiper blade attachment constituting the present invention is proposed,'and has as its main purpose the clearing of the fresh concrete off the old grade slab ahead of the screed board. By using the wiper blade attachment, it is proposed that the exceedingly expensive and timeconsuming procedure described above, necessary at the present time for the successful operation of present-day concrete finishing machines, will be completely eliminated.
In this-way, it is proposed to eliminate the necessity of having a worker attend the machine to clean the old grade slab, and to further eliminate the necessity of stopping and reversing the machine to keep the surface on grade. It is estimated, as to this, that by achievement of this object the footage covered by a machine in any given period can be increased from 10. to 40 percent through the use of'the wiper blade attachment. This increasedfootage, plus the elimination of the wages of a single worker, presently requiredto cleanthe fresh concrete from the old grade slab, readily indicates the savings and economies which may be etfected through use of the wiper blade attachment.
Another important object is to provide a device as ment 18 constituting the present invention.
2,945,427 Patented July 19, 1960 ice stated which will be characterized by the swiftness and ease with which it may be attached to existing machines.
Still another object is to provide a device as stated which will be characterized by the simplicity of the operation thereof.
- Yet another object is to so design the attachment as to permit its connection to a conventional screed board with minimum modification and redesign of said screed board.
Other objects will appear from the following description, the claims appended thereto,'-and from the annexed drawing, in which like reference characters designate like parts throughout the several views, and wherein: I
Figure 1 is a perspective view of a wiper blade attachnient according to the present invention, showing a fragmentary portion of the screed board with the attachment secured thereto, the parts appearing in their operative position in respect to the surface of the paving;
Figure 2 is a front elevational view of the device, and of the adjacent end portion of the screed board to which it is connected, the scale being enlarged slightly above that of Figure 1;
Figure 3 is a horizontal sectional view, substantially on line 3-3 of Figure 2; and
Figure 4 is a vertical sectional view, substantially on line 4-4 of Figure 2.
Referring to the drawing in detail, designated at A is the freshly poured concrete, over which is moving the screed board or strike-off. At B there has been designated the old grade slab, and at 10 the line of division between the slabs, that is, the plane in which the slabs A, B abut one another.
The screed board 12, comprising a conventional part of the concrete finishing machine, has reversely extending bottom and top flanges 14, 16 respectively, and moves over the freshly poured concrete A, so as to provide a finished surface thereon. It has been found, as previously described herein, that the freshly poured concrete C is moved onto the old slab B, which of course is fully hardened, and works under the screed board, causing the same to raise, as a result of which the finished surface of the fresh concrete becomes ofl grade. Further, the present screed board, being inflexible, will not follow the irregularities of hardened concrete whenever it is necessary, in the manner shown in the drawing, to use the existing slab as a grade line.
Accordingly, there is provided the wiper blade attach- This includes a side wing 20 which is disposed in a vertical plane, is progressively reduced in height in a direction from its inner to its outer or distal end, and is wholly fiat, the plane thereof being oblique to the path of forward movement of the concrete finishing machine.
The wing 20, at its proximal end, is secured by a weld 22 to the outer side edge of a rectangular, vertically disposed, main plate 24 of the wiper blade attachment constituting the present invention. The main plate'24 is in face-to-face contact with the screed board 12, at one end of the screed board, with said main plate and screed board having registering outer side edges, as clearly shown in Figure 3.
Formed in the main plate 24 are parallel, vertical slots- Welded to the back surface of the screed board 12, in
registration with openings 31, are nuts 32, providing threaded bores 'or openings in the screed board receiving the bolts 28. Nuts 34 are applied to the bolts, bearing against the nuts 32, and of course jamb nuts, not shown, could be applied also to the bolts for the purpose of preventing accidental loosening of the nuts 34. In a typical working arrangement, the nuts 28 would be left sufiiciently loose to permit up-and-down movement of the main plate 24, for a purpose to be made presently apparent.
Spot-welded or otherwise fixedly secured to the front surface of, and projecting forwardly from, main plate 24- are transversely spaced, identical angle brackets 36, disposed below corresponding angle brackets 38 spot-welded to screed board 12 above main plate'24. Registering openings of the horizontal, forwardly projecting legs of the respective brackets 36, 38 receive bolts or pins 40, the heads of which bear against the undersides of brackets 36, and the shanks of which extend through compression, coil springs. 42 held under compression between each bracket 36 and the bracket 38 above the same. Nuts 44 are threaded upon the upper ends of the bolts, bearing against nuts 45 that are in contact with the top surfaces of the horizontal legs of brackets 38, and that are also threadedly engaged with the bolts 40.
By reason of this arrangement, it will be seen that the main plate 24 is resiliently biased in a downward direction upon the screed board by springs 42, and is guided in its, upward and downward movement through the provision of the guide means including'slots 26 and bolts 28.
Designated at 46 is the arm of the concrete finishing machine that carries the power lift shaft 48, also a conventional part of said machine. The power lift shaft 48 has wound thereabout the lift chain 50 connected to apertured ear 52 extending upwardly from flange 16.
As previously mentioned herein, ordinarily the screeding operation must be halted every five to eight feet, more or less, since the excess concrete moves to and beyond the side edge of the screed board, onto the hardened slab B, and working under the screed board lifts the sameenough to make the new slab A oif grade, rather than completely flush with the level of the old slab B.
By reason of the invention, the wing 20 is positioned upon the, old slab, in direct contact therewith, being held in contact with the old slab B by means of the downward pressure exerted through the medium of the spring 42. Therefore, the main plate 24, the bottom edge of which is flush with the bottom edge of the wing 20,. is in direct registration with the bottom edge of the screed board, all as clearly shown in Figures 2 and 4. It follows that as long as the wing 20 remains in contact with the old slab B, the bottom edge of the main plate 24 will be on grade with the slab, and this will be true also of the bottom edge of the screed board, assuming that no fresh concrete works under the screed board proper.
The invention prevents the fresh concrete from. working under the screed board. As will be noted, wing 20 projects forwardly, at an angle of 45, approximately, to the parallel planes of the; screed board and of the main plate 24 (see Figure. 3-). Therefore, the fresh concretev C, as it tends to move beyond the registering side edges of the main plate and screed board, moves. into the, path of the wing 20. Wing 20, precedingthe main plate and screed board, continuously pushes, this excess concrete back, in front of the screed board, and completely prevents excess concrete from moving onto the old slab in an, area in which it would? work under the screed board;
In this way, the fresh concrete is continuously cleaned off; the old slab, and is returned into a position. where it can be worked into the new pouring. This; feature eliminates completely the-necessity o having a; worker. attend the machine to clean the old. grade slab, and further eliminates the necessity of stopping and reversing the machine for the purpose of putting it back on grade- In this way, it is proposed and is estimated. thatthe footage covered by the machine in any given period: can
time the Wages of a worker can be eliminated. Still fur ther, the device can be attached to an existing machine with maximum ease and speed, as will be readily apparent from the description and illustration hereinbefore provided.
It is believed apparent that the invention is not necessarily confined to the specific use or uses thereof described above, since it may be utilized for any purpose to which it may be suited. Nor is the invention to be necessarily limited to the specific construction illustrated and described, since such construction is only intended to be illustrative of the principles, it being considered that the invention comprehends any minor change in construction that may be permitted within the scope of the appended claims. I
What is claimed is:
1. The combination, with the screed board of a concrete paving finishing machine, of a wiper blade assembly for cleaning excess concrete from an adjacent, previously paved surface in advance of the screed board, comprising a. Wing projecting forwardly laterally from the screed board; and means connecting the wing to said screed board, including a main plate mounted on the screed board for up-and-down movement in face-to-face contact with the scred board, saidvmain plate being connected at one side to the wing, and resilient, yielding means interposed between the main plate and the screed board and tensioned to bias the main plate in a downward direction.
2. The combination, with the screed board of a concrete paving finishing machine, of a wiper blade assembly for cleaning excess concrete from an. adjacent, previously paved surface in advance of the screed board, comprising. a wing projecting forwardly laterally from the screed board; and means, connecting the wing to said screed board, including a main plate mounted on the screed board for up-and-down movement in face-toface contact with the screed. board, said main plate being connected at one side to the win-g, and resilient, yielding means interposed between the main plate and the screed board and tensioned to bias the main plate in a downward direction, the main plate and wing having registered bottom edges.
3. The combination, with the screed board of a concrete paving finishing machine, of a wiper blade assembly for cleaning excess concrete from an adjacent, previously paved surface in advance of the screed board, comprising a wing projecting, forwardly laterally from the screed board; and means connecting the wing to said screed board, including a main plate mounted 'on the screed board for up-and-down movement in face-to-face contact withv the screed board, said main plate being connected at one side to the wing, and resilient, yielding means interposed between the main plate and the screed board and tensioned to bias the main plate in a downward direction, the main plate. and wing having registered bottom edges, and means for limiting the up-and-down movement of said main plate comprising the provision in said. main. plate. of a plurality of normally vertically extending elongated slots, and a bolt for each of said slots, saidbolts. being. secured to said screed board and extending. through. said slots.
References Cited in the file of this patent 7 UNITED STATES PATENTS Clausen May' 20, 1930 1,817,161 Mosel Aug. 4, 1931 1,914,950 Kanen. June. 20, 1933 2,187,080. Heltzel Ian. 16, 1940 2,194,754 Johnson Mar. 26, 1940 2,197,878. Robinson Apr. 23, 1940 2,413,632 Jackson Dec. 31, 1946
US706952A 1958-01-03 1958-01-03 Wiper blade attachment for screed boards Expired - Lifetime US2945427A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US706952A US2945427A (en) 1958-01-03 1958-01-03 Wiper blade attachment for screed boards

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US706952A US2945427A (en) 1958-01-03 1958-01-03 Wiper blade attachment for screed boards

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2945427A true US2945427A (en) 1960-07-19

Family

ID=24839770

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US706952A Expired - Lifetime US2945427A (en) 1958-01-03 1958-01-03 Wiper blade attachment for screed boards

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2945427A (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3051062A (en) * 1959-09-11 1962-08-28 Jaeger Machine Co Screed unit and suspending means
US3094048A (en) * 1959-04-13 1963-06-18 Chain Belt Co Pavement surface finishing apparatus
US3125935A (en) * 1964-03-24 Screed with wing attachment
US3246583A (en) * 1962-10-15 1966-04-19 Albert C Schiller Joint rake
US3712189A (en) * 1971-08-11 1973-01-23 Schneider Simpson Screed extension assembly for asphalt paving machine
US3732024A (en) * 1971-03-01 1973-05-08 J Gendrich Leveler for paving machine
US6595719B1 (en) * 1999-06-15 2003-07-22 Sumitomo (Shi) Construction Machinery Co., Ltd. Screed device in a road-paving vehicle such as asphalt finisher

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1759251A (en) * 1927-10-04 1930-05-20 Andrew J Clausen Scraper mechanism
US1817161A (en) * 1928-03-10 1931-08-04 Jaeger Machine Co Machine for spreading and surfacing construction material
US1914950A (en) * 1930-08-21 1933-06-20 Kanen Max Spreader for road surfacing fluid
US2187080A (en) * 1935-11-21 1940-01-16 John N Heltzel Road building machine
US2194754A (en) * 1938-02-28 1940-03-26 Clarence G Schulze Mechanical cement finisher
US2197878A (en) * 1937-07-24 1940-04-23 Samuel S Robinson Surfacing machine
US2413632A (en) * 1942-04-13 1946-12-31 Jackson Corwill Concrete placement apparatus

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1759251A (en) * 1927-10-04 1930-05-20 Andrew J Clausen Scraper mechanism
US1817161A (en) * 1928-03-10 1931-08-04 Jaeger Machine Co Machine for spreading and surfacing construction material
US1914950A (en) * 1930-08-21 1933-06-20 Kanen Max Spreader for road surfacing fluid
US2187080A (en) * 1935-11-21 1940-01-16 John N Heltzel Road building machine
US2197878A (en) * 1937-07-24 1940-04-23 Samuel S Robinson Surfacing machine
US2194754A (en) * 1938-02-28 1940-03-26 Clarence G Schulze Mechanical cement finisher
US2413632A (en) * 1942-04-13 1946-12-31 Jackson Corwill Concrete placement apparatus

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3125935A (en) * 1964-03-24 Screed with wing attachment
US3094048A (en) * 1959-04-13 1963-06-18 Chain Belt Co Pavement surface finishing apparatus
US3051062A (en) * 1959-09-11 1962-08-28 Jaeger Machine Co Screed unit and suspending means
US3246583A (en) * 1962-10-15 1966-04-19 Albert C Schiller Joint rake
US3732024A (en) * 1971-03-01 1973-05-08 J Gendrich Leveler for paving machine
US3712189A (en) * 1971-08-11 1973-01-23 Schneider Simpson Screed extension assembly for asphalt paving machine
US6595719B1 (en) * 1999-06-15 2003-07-22 Sumitomo (Shi) Construction Machinery Co., Ltd. Screed device in a road-paving vehicle such as asphalt finisher

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6497531B2 (en) Concrete curing machine
US7748789B2 (en) Pavement profiler
US3817644A (en) Machine for vibrating, leveling and screeding concrete in a form
US2945427A (en) Wiper blade attachment for screed boards
US4284273A (en) Apparatus for raking and levelling sand in a pit
US2949068A (en) Road and sidewalk jointer
US1637998A (en) Cube and gutter form
US2615262A (en) Cutting attachment for land-clearing equipment
US3257917A (en) Road building machine
US2911892A (en) Surfacing machine control means
DK167539B1 (en) SELF-DRIVING APPARATUS FOR RETRACING AND RE-REDUCING A RAILBALL BODY
US3624936A (en) Ballast regulator
US2426702A (en) Machine for surface-finishing road paving
US2957396A (en) Concrete road finishing machine
US2252717A (en) Road spreader
DE3032495C2 (en)
US4706395A (en) Ballast dressing unit on machines which dress and re-distribute railway road bed ballast
US3125935A (en) Screed with wing attachment
US3220323A (en) Pavement finishing apparatus
US2313342A (en) Earth handling machine and berm finisher
US2695552A (en) Apparatus for concrete finishing
DE1759744C3 (en) Road paver for paving concrete
US3800880A (en) Cleaning attachment for rotary tiller
US1550027A (en) Finishing machine
GB2080374A (en) Apparatus for Levelling a Surface