Trenching and edging system

Excavating – Ditch filler

Reexamination Certificate

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Reexamination Certificate

active

06457267

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to a trenching and edging device for digging trenches and for edging the soil for beds for flowers, shrubbery, mulch, etc.
Small trenching machines find application in those circumstances where it is necessary to dig a relatively narrow trench. This could be the case where cable TV is being buried to provide service to a residence or business, or could be when it is necessary to run a gas line, waterline, or other utility to a home or office. Further uses of such a trench could be for running irrigation line or what is known as radio or “invisible” fencing used to keep pets within a confined area, the pet then wearing a cooperating collar which is activated to shock the animal in the event the animal comes too close to the buried line.
Edging machines find use with landscapers and homeowners for defining a bed used for ornamental plantings, shrubbery, flowers, mulch, or the like and serve to form the defined edge of a bed to be created by cutting the soil to a depth, typically several inches, and then lifting the soil and moving it outwardly to form a mounded periphery for the bed. Generally, it is desirable that the turf adjacent the bed have a distinct, clean break between it and the bed. This provides for a clean definition of the bed which is desired for aesthetic and maintenance purposes.
Trenching machines and edging machines are known. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,939,854, issued to Boren, discloses a trencher having a digging depth adjustment configuration including a rotatable handle in order to accomplish such depth adjustment. U.S. Pat. No. 4,002,205, issued to Falk, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,226,248, issued to Pollard, both disclose bed edge forming machines for forming the edge of a bed.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,320,451, issued to Garvey, et al, discloses a tiller having a cable-laying attachment and also a provision for carrying a spool of cable, and a feed tube through which the cable is inserted into a trench. U.S. Pat. No. 5,009,270, issued to Vangsgard, discloses a sod-cutting machine having an adjustable depth adjustment, and U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,958,457, issued to Doskocil, and 4,979,573, issued to Williamson, both disclose devices using caster wheels for steering. The Doskocil device includes rear-mounted casters.
In view of the foregoing known devices, there still exists a need for a combination trenching and edging device which is designed to facilitate movement and steering of the device and which also can be used to dig at varying depths.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is, therefore, the principal object of this invention to provide a combination trenching and edging system.
Another object of this invention is to provide an edging machine having readily variable digging depth adjustment capability.
Another object of this invention to provide a combination trenching and edging system having improved steerability during use.
Yet another object of the present invention is to provide an improved edging blade design.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide a edging blade which, during use, defines a groove in the soil for receiving conduit, tubing, wire, or the like.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an edging blade having self-sharpening cutting edges.
A further object of the present invention is to provide an edging blade which forces soil outwardly from the blade during use.
A still further object of the present invention is to provide a trenching machine and a method for digging a trench, laying conduit wire, cable or the like in the trench, and backfilling the trench after laying the wire or cable, all in a single pass.
Generally, the present invention includes a trenching and edging system which is portable, and operable by a single user. The present invention includes a soil bed edge-forming machine, having a frame and a motor and wheels connected to the frame. A digging blade is drivingly connected to the motor, and a digging depth adjustment member is connected to the digging blade, with the adjustment member being rotatable for allowing selective digging depth adjustment of the digging blade into the soil.
More specifically, the trenching and edging machine of the present invention includes steerable casters mounted on the rear of the machine which, together with a single front wheel, allow for a tight turning radius when using the machine, thereby facilitating maneuverability of the machine. The machine also includes a blade height adjustment which allows the trenching blade or edging blade height, and, accordingly, the digging depth, to be readily adjusted in substantially infinite variation between the raised and lowermost position. The machine is further capable of digging a trench, laying wire, cable, tubing, etc., and backfilling the trench in a single pass.
Another feature of the machine is a edging blade which includes spring steel digging fingers having carbide tips. As the edging blade is used, it forms a generally-perpendicular wall adjacent the edge of the bed and mounds the dirt towards the bed in an outwardly angled, tapered fashion, opposite the generally-perpendicular wall. At the base of the wall, adjacent the mounded dirt, a groove is formed which is generally below the elevation of the mounded dirt. This groove can be used for the laying of cable, herbicide, pesticide, and/or fertilizer lines, irrigation lines, radio or invisible fencing for pets, etc.
Moreover, the present machine includes a blade guard system which covers the trencher blade regardless of the digging depth of the trencher blade and which also covers the blade when the blade is in the fully raised state, such as would be the case when the machine is being transported.


REFERENCES:
patent: 917821 (1909-03-01), White
patent: 2903077 (1959-09-01), Kamlukin
patent: 2928479 (1960-03-01), Petersen
patent: 2997276 (1961-08-01), Davis
patent: 3132539 (1964-05-01), Hotz
patent: 3442335 (1969-05-01), Silbereis et al.
patent: 3496973 (1970-02-01), Ballard
patent: 4002205 (1977-01-01), Falk
patent: 4043399 (1977-08-01), Morrison
patent: 4094362 (1978-06-01), Hild
patent: 4188934 (1980-02-01), Reinhardt et al.
patent: 4346764 (1982-08-01), Rossi
patent: 4421178 (1983-12-01), Vandelli et al.
patent: 4503630 (1985-03-01), Riley
patent: 4545438 (1985-10-01), Giovanni
patent: 4625810 (1986-12-01), Edmission
patent: 4825569 (1989-05-01), Porter
patent: 4914840 (1990-04-01), Porter
patent: 4939854 (1990-07-01), Boren
patent: 4958457 (1990-09-01), Doskocil
patent: 4979573 (1990-12-01), Williamson
patent: 5009270 (1991-04-01), Vangsgard
patent: 5226248 (1993-07-01), Pollard
patent: 5228221 (1993-07-01), Hillard et al.
patent: 5320451 (1994-06-01), Garvey et al.
patent: 5355597 (1994-10-01), Pollard
patent: 1082908 (1984-03-01), None

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