FORKLIFT REACH MECHANISMS
20230312316 · 2023-10-05
Inventors
- Martin MCVICAR (County Monaghan, IE)
- Robert MOFFETT (County Monaghan, IE)
- Mark WHYTE (County Monaghan, IE)
Cpc classification
B66F9/148
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B66F9/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B66F9/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A forklift reach mechanism (10) has a main support (16) connected between a carriage (14) and a set of forks (48). The carriage is moveable vertically on a mast (12). The main support is lifted by a connecting member (32) that depends from an articulated levelling assembly comprising a pair of arms (22, 24) connected pivotally together and connected at their other ends to the mast and carriage respectively. The levelling assembly causes the distal end of the main support, on which the forks are mounted, to travel horizontally towards or away from the mast as the carriage is raised or lowered. The reach mechanism is operated by an extensible actuating member (36) such as a hydraulic cylinder that acts between the carriage and the connecting member, providing a strong and compact reach mechanism.
Claims
1. A forklift reach mechanism comprising: a vertical mast; a carriage that is movable vertically along the mast; a main support connected at a proximal end thereof to the carriage at a first pivoting connection and connected at a distal end thereof to a forklift assembly; a levelling assembly comprising upper and lower arms pivotally connected at their distal ends, wherein the proximal end of the upper arm is connected to the carriage at a second pivoting connection, and the proximal end of the lower arm is connected at a fixed location relative to the mast below the carriage; a connecting member connected at one end to the levelling assembly adjacent the connection between the upper and lower arms, and at another end to the main support at an intermediate point along the main support between the proximal and distal ends thereof; an extensible actuating member connected between the carriage and the connecting member; wherein the first pivoting connection is below the second pivoting connection on the carriage; wherein the actuating member can be extended or retracted to drive the carriage vertically along the mast, thereby moving the forklift assembly towards or away from the mast.
2. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 1, further comprising a secondary support connected at a distal end to the forklift assembly above the connection with the main support, and connected at a proximal end to one of the carriage, the levelling assembly or the connecting member, the secondary support being extensible and retractable to thereby tilt the forklift assembly by the relative movement between the connection points on the forklift assembly for the main and secondary supports.
3. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 2, wherein the secondary support is pivotally connected at both proximal and distal ends such that it has freedom to pivot both vertically and laterally, allowing the forklift assembly to be shifted sideways relative to the main support.
4. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 1, wherein the connection between the distal end of the main support and the forklift assembly is a sliding connection allowing the forklift assembly to slidably move laterally relative to the main support.
5. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 4, further comprising a side shift actuator operable between the main support and the forklift to shift the forklift assembly laterally relative to the main support along the sliding connection.
6. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 1, wherein a quadrilateral geometry is defined by the four points comprising (a) the first pivoting connection, (b) the second pivoting connection, (c) the connection between the upper arm and the connection member, and (d) the connection between the connecting member and the main support; wherein each of the distances (a)-(b), (b)-(c), (c)-(d) and (d)-(a) is fixed; and wherein the actuation of the extensible actuating member causes the angles at points (a) and (c) to open while the angles at points (b) and (d) close, or vice versa, with the lower arm restraining point (c) to follow an arcuate path relative to the fixed location at which it connects relative to the mast.
7. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 1, wherein the upper and lower arms form a V-shaped assembly whose apex is at the point where the upper and lower arms meet, and wherein the actuation of the extensible actuating member causes the angle at the apex to respectively open or close as the carriage moves up or down the mast.
8. A forklift reach mechanism comprising: a vertical mast; a carriage that is movable vertically along the mast; a main support connected at a proximal end thereof to the carriage and connected at a distal end thereof to a forklift assembly; a levelling assembly connected between the carriage and the mast and to which the main support is connected at an intermediate point between the proximal and distal ends, the levelling assembly being movable to restrain the main support such that as the carriage and the proximal end of the main support are raised and lowered, the distal end of the main support extends and retracts along a generally horizontal path; a secondary support connected at a distal end to the forklift assembly above the connection with the main support, and connected at a proximal end to one of the carriage and the levelling assembly, the secondary support being extensible and retractable to thereby tilt the forklift assembly by the relative movement between the connection points on the forklift assembly for the main and secondary supports.
9. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 8, wherein the levelling assembly comprises a pair of articulated arms connected at their respective proximal ends to the carriage and a fixed point relative to the mast, respectively, and connected to one another at their distal ends.
10. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 9, wherein the levelling assembly further comprises a connecting member that connects the main support to the pair of articulated arms adjacent the connection between the distal ends of the arms.
11. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 8, wherein the secondary support is pivotally connected at both proximal and distal ends with freedom to pivot both vertically and laterally, allowing the forklift assembly to be shifted sideways relative to the main support.
12. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 8, wherein the connection between the distal end of the main support and the forklift assembly is a sliding connection allowing the forklift assembly to slidably move laterally relative to the main support.
13. A forklift reach mechanism according to claim 12, further comprising a side shift actuator operable between the main support and the forklift to shift the forklift assembly laterally relative to the main support along the sliding connection.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0037] The invention will now be illustrated by the following description of embodiments thereof, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
[0045]
[0046]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0047] In
[0048] The mechanism of
[0049] A main support 16 is connected at its proximal end (i.e. the end nearest the carriage) to a first pivoting connection 18 on the carriage 14, and at its distal end (i.e. the end furthest from the carriage) to a pivoting connection 20 on a forklift assembly (not shown but represented by a connecting member 44 that forms part of a forklift carriage).
[0050] A V-shaped levelling assembly is provided by an upper arm 22 and a lower arm 24 connected to one another at their respective distal ends (at the apex of the “V” shape) at a pivoting connection 26. As seen moving from
[0051] A connecting member 32 (not visible in
[0052] It can be seen that a quadrilateral geometry is defined by the four points comprising (a) the first pivoting connection 18, (b) the second pivoting connection 28, (c) the connection 26 between the levelling assembly and the connection member 32, and (d) the connection 34 between the connecting member 32 and the main support 16.
[0053] Each of the distances 18 - 28, 28 - 26, 26 - 34, and 34 - 18 is fixed, and the preferred geometry of this quadrilateral is approximately that of a parallelogram (hence the distance of the connection 34 on the main support is chosen to be approximately the same distance from the first pivoting connection 18 as the length of the upper arm 22).
[0054] An extensible actuating member 36 is connected between the carriage at a connection 38 and the connecting member 32 at a connection 40. The actuating member can be extended (
[0055] It is the action of this actuation member 36 that changes the geometry of the quadrilateral previously described, to implement the reach function shown in the transition between
[0056] The actuation member 36 only requires a very short stroke length to fully raise or lower the carriage, i.e. the length changes by approximately 25% in a complete traversal of the carriage along the mast. This allows for a significantly more compact mechanism than one which must act directly on the carriage.
[0057] It can be seen from the heavy broken line across
[0058] A secondary support 46 is connected at its proximal end to the carriage above the first pivoting connection. This pivoting connection is hidden in
[0059] While the secondary support 46 in this embodiment is extensible-retractable, no extension or retraction occurs in the transition between
[0060] The actuation of the extensible actuating member 36 causes the angles at pivoting connection points 28 and 34 to open while the angles at pivoting connection points 18 and 26 close, or vice versa.
[0061] The lower arm restrains pivoting connection 26 to follow an arcuate path relative to the fixed location at which it connects relative to the mast. The connecting member 32 draws the connecting point 34 on the main support downwards and outwards as a result, implementing the reach function.
[0062]
[0063] The ghosted mechanism of
[0064]
[0065] Thus, in
[0066] The mast 12 shown in
[0067]
[0068] The main support 16 comprises a pair of arms, one at each side (only one visible in
[0069] The secondary support 46 is provided by a pair of hydraulic tilt cylinders parallel to one another and disposed more centrally than the main support arms 16. These cylinders can be extended and retracted in order to tilt the forklift assembly relative to the main support and mast.
[0070] The tilt cylinders 46, being mounted above the main support 16, are in tension rather than in compression, which reduces the required size (a cylinder that is in compression generally needs to be heavier and thicker to prevent buckling).
[0071] Referring to
[0072] The main support bridging structure 50 receives a journaled shaft 52 mounted between a pair of brackets 54 carried on the rear of the forklift assembly 44. The shaft 52 is free to slide laterally within the main support bridging structure 50, so that the forklift assembly can be shifted sideways relative to the main support.
[0073] The shifting force is applied and controlled by a hydraulic side shift cylinder 56 which couples the main support bridging structure 50 to the bracket 54.
[0074] In order to accommodate the sideward motion, the tilt cylinders 46 are each provided with a spherical bearing 58 mounted on a shaft 60 running between two inner brackets 62. Similar bearings are provided at the proximal ends to mount the tilt cylinders to the carriage.
[0075] As seen with reference to
[0076] The side shift is integrated into the forklift assembly, and close to the fork hanging position on the main support, which reduces the stress on this side shift cylinder. This also allows the mast to remain static during the side shift, meaning that the mast can abut against the side of a vehicle during loading and unloading, increasing stability when a heavy lift needs to be side shifted, particularly with the reach mechanism at full extension.
[0077] Referring to
[0078] It can be seen that tilting is thereby integrated into and a function of the supporting connections between the forklift assembly and the mast. Because the tilt cylinders carry part of the load, they remain in tension at all times.
[0079] It can be seen that the point of support between the main support and the forklift assembly, at the journaled shaft 52, is very close to the heel 64 of the forks (i.e. the 90-degree internal angle at the proximal end of the forks). This reduces the load moment as the load is tilted backwards (
[0080]
[0081] A different embodiment is shown in
[0082] Whereas the embodiment of
[0083] Therefore the forklift assembly 44 is again supporte4d by a main support 16 and a secondary support 146, and the secondary support 146 again provides an integrated tilt function that is always in tension, but the secondary support 146 in this case runs from the levelling assembly pivot point 26 (or one of the upper and lower arms 22, 24) to the pivot point 46 positioned on the forklift assembly above the connection point 20 for the main support.
[0084] As in the embodiment of