Tool driving or impacting – Impacting devices – Selective axial direction of impact
Reexamination Certificate
2001-03-21
2003-10-28
Rada, Rinaldi I. (Department: 3721)
Tool driving or impacting
Impacting devices
Selective axial direction of impact
C173S210000, C173S001000, C175S019000, C175S057000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06637520
ABSTRACT:
This invention relates to a component mounting method and apparatus for a percussion tool.
This invention has particular application to a component mounting method and apparatus for mounting of porting bodies or the like in hammer drill casings for rock drilling and for illustrative purposes reference will be made to this application. However, it is to be understood that this invention could be used in other applications where location of componentry in other apparatus subject to shock or vibration is required, such as other hammer drills, jackhammers, riveting apparatus and the like.
In hammer drills and other tools a pressurized fluid is used to actuate a piston that oscillates to repetitively strike a working bit or other component. Such tools generally comprise a cylindrical working chamber for the piston. For the most part the chamber is formed in an elongate housing with components such as chucks, porting bodies and the like mounted coaxially with the chamber. The components generally require location at discrete axial positions in the housing.
During operation of the tool there is an extreme amount of vibration, which requires that the components be securely located against this vibration as well as against other axial loads. This has been achieved by many conventional means. For example, the housing may be provided with integrally machined shoulders, grooves to accept a circlip or the like, or threaded engagement with the bore.
Machined shoulders have the disadvantage that the shoulder necessarily results in reduction in the bore and thus the diameter of the piston that may be installed therethrough. This results in a reduction in piston working area, which reduction is greater in proportion than the linear reduction in diameter due to r
2
dependence of area. The percussive force applied by the piston is directly related to the cross-sectional area of the piston, thus the larger the shoulder the lower the percussive output of the tool.
In rock drills of the hammer type, the extreme vibration requires the use of a high compressive force retaining the component in engagement with the shoulder, the clamping force being provided by a threaded component which screws into the housing and clamps down on a compression ring which sits on top of the components to be clamped. The compression ring is needed because it is extremely difficult to manufacture all of the components to the required lengths so that they all clamp together simultaneously.
The torque that must be applied to the threaded component to locate the component against vibration effectively is outside the range of many rigs. As a result the clamping force is often not high enough to eliminate movement of the components. Due to the movement in operation of the components the faces that are clamped are subject to longitudinal wear. The degree of this wear is dependent on the cross-sectional area of the clamping faces. Generally the clamping face of least cross-section is the shoulder in the external cylinder which the assembly sits on. This must be large enough to allow for the wear due to component movement so that the degree of longitudinal wear is minimized. A side effect of increasing the shoulder size is it further restricts the diameter of the piston that can be placed in the assembly.
As a result of the foregoing, current shoulder mounting systems are generally compromises which allow longitudinal wear while maintaining a piston cross-section which provides a resulting percussive output. This system in operation has to be continually checked for wear and wear shims are inserted as the wear increases. The disadvantage of this is the porting or timing of the tool is effected due to the repositioning of the ports through this longitudinal wear.
With reference to the use of grooves in the housing wall to accept a circlip or the like for retention of components, it has been reported that the Ingersoll-Rand Quantum Leap hammer purports to overcome the inherent longitudinal wear of shoulder-dependent location and to offer increased piston diameter.
The disclosed apparatus locates a porting body and upper piston guide assembly by means of a circlip located in a groove formed in the inner wall of the housing. The assembly is clamped against the circlip by a top sub component in a conventional manner.
This arrangement has several inherent disadvantages. Firstly, the groove weakens the housing. Secondly, piston area is only obtained by minimization of the circlip protrusion area, which as has been observed will tend to increase longitudinal wear. Thirdly, in service the circlip is difficult to remove. Lastly, it appears that the reduction of longitudinal wear, if any, has been provided by the use of an intermediate bush compressed by application of relatively extreme torque to the top sub on installation. Many rigs do not deliver sufficient torque at installation to allow the top sub to compress the bush to the extent required to seat the top sub on its stop. When the top sub eventually closes up on its stop in use under operating torque and percussion, the assembly becomes difficult to disassemble.
Threaded engagement of a fully internal component such as a porting body with the bore has the inherent disadvantages of adding to the manufactured cost of the housing and in being substantially impossible to dismantle in the field without a specialized extraction tool.
The present invention aims to alleviate one or more of the above disadvantages and to provide a component mounting method and apparatus for a percussion tool which will be reliable and efficient in use.
With the foregoing and other objects in view, this invention in one aspect resides broadly in a method of mounting a component within a bore of a percussion tool including the steps of:
inserting in said bore an expandable mounting member having an axial tapered recess;
inserting into said recess a tapered spigot portion of the component;
axially urging said spigot portion into said tapered recess to expand said mounting member into frictional engagement with said bore, and
retaining said component in engagement with said mounting member.
The mounting member may be formed of any material dictated by the application to which it is to be put. The mounting member for a hammer drill may for example comprise a substantially annular resilient body of metal. The outer surface of the body may include a substantially cylindrical surface in its expanded attitude whereby the frictional engagement with the bore on expansion occurs over the substantially cylindrical surface.
The body may be formed of a resilient or deformable material, which may be expanded by stretching of the material itself. Alternatively, the body itself may be adapted to allow expansion whilst being formed of an essentially non-expandable material. For example, the body member may comprise a substantially annular body having one or more slots formed therein, whereby expansion of the body may be effected at the slot or slots. Alternatively, the mounting member may comprise a split collet comprising two or more collet portions. wherein the engagement of the mounting member with the bore may be achieved by expansion at the splits.
The mounting member may be located axially in the bore by the initial expansion of the mounting member body into initial engagement with the bore. However, in the case of hammer drills, it is preferred that the body and bore be provided with complementary axial location means. For example, the body may be provided with a locating portion adapted to engage a recess or shoulder provided in the bore on insertion of the mounting member. The locating portion may take any suitable form. For example, the mounting member may be provided with a relatively narrow engagement flange adapted to engage a corresponding recess or shoulder in the bore at a desired location for the mounting member.
Where a locating recess is used, the locating portion may be adapted to engage the recess on initial insertion of the component and expansion of the mounting member. Alternatively, the locating port
Azuko Pty Ltd, ACN
Gifford, Krass, Groh Sprinkle, Anderson & Citkowski, P.C.
Rada Rinaldi I.
Tran Louis
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