Hopper for shredding fibrous material
10974254 ยท 2021-04-13
Inventors
- David Gerald Farrington (Murfreesboro, TN, US)
- Roger Boyd Moore (Lebanon, TN, US)
- Paul Wesley Rigsby (Nashville, TN, US)
Cpc classification
B02C19/0056
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05B7/144
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C2201/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05B7/145
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C21/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05B7/0093
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B02C21/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C19/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Systems for shredding fibrous material are described. In some embodiments, the system includes a cart that includes a hopper that includes an auger motor for shredding fibrous material and a blower motor configured to blow the shredded fibrous material onto structures for fireproofing. The cart may include a handle, one or more wheels, and/or forklift apertures to aid in transport.
Claims
1. A system for shredding fibrous material comprising: a cart comprising a cart left side, a cart right side, a cart length extending from the cart left side to the cart right side, a cart front, a cart rear, a cart width extending from the cart front to the cart rear, a cart top, a cart bottom, and a cart height extending from the cart top to the cart bottom; a handle extending upwardly from the cart bottom and located on the cart right side; a plurality of lockable caster wheels extending downwardly from the cart bottom and located on the cart right side, the plurality of lockable caster wheels configured to allow the cart to be moved along the ground; a pair of left wheels extending downwardly from the cart bottom and located on the cart left side, the pair of left wheels configured to allow the cart to be moved along the ground; a pair of front forklift access apertures located on the cart front and a pair of rear forklift access apertures located on the cart rear and aligned with the front forklift access apertures, the front and rear forklift access apertures configured to allow forks of a forklift to extend across the cart; a hopper located above the cart bottom and comprising a left wall, a right wall, a bin length extending from the left wall to the right wall and parallel to the cart length, a front wall, a rear wall, a bin width extending from the front wall to the rear wall and perpendicular to the bin length and parallel to the cart width, a bottom, a top, a height extending from the bottom to the top and perpendicular to the bin length and bin width and parallel to the cart height, the front, rear, left and right walls separating a hopper interior from a hopper exterior; a pair of augers located in the hopper interior and configured to shred fibrous material; an auger motor configured to rotate the augers in opposite directions and at different speeds; a hopper interior outlet located below the pair of augers in the hopper interior; and a blower comprising a blower motor configured to blow shredded fibrous material received from the hopper interior outlet out a system outlet, the system outlet in communication with the hopper interior outlet and configured to attach to a hose, wherein the front wall of the hopper comprises a rotatable shelf, the rotatable shelf configured to rotate from a deployed configuration in which the rotatable shelf is oriented horizontally to an inbound configuration position in which the rotatable shelf rotates toward the hopper interior.
2. The system of claim 1 wherein the cart rear side further comprises a silencer tube in communication with the hopper interior outlet and the system outlet, the silencer tube configured to transport material received from the hopper interior outlet to the system outlet.
3. The system of claim 1 wherein the system further comprises a hose connected to the system outlet and a pressure relief valve located downstream from, and in communication with, the hopper interior outlet and upstream from, and in communication with, the system outlet, the pressure relief valve configured to allow air to escape from the system and alleviate pressure build up in the hose.
4. The system of claim 1 further comprising a variable frequency AC drive configured to adjust the speed of the blower motor.
5. The system of claim 1 wherein the handle is U-shaped and removable.
6. The system of claim 1 wherein each of the front and rear forklift apertures are the same size and have four sides.
7. The system of claim 1 wherein the system further includes a remote start button and an audible alarm, and further wherein actuating the remote start button is configured to actuate the audible alarm and then cause the auger motor to rotate the augers after actuating the audible alarm.
8. The system of claim 7 wherein the remote start button is water resistant.
9. The system of claim 1 wherein the system further comprises a filter housing and an air filter located in the filter housing, the air filter configured to filter particulates from air before air enters the blower.
10. The system of claim 1 wherein the caster wheels are located directly below the handle.
11. A method of spraying dry fibrous material for fireproofing comprising the steps of: a) providing the system of claim 1, wherein the system further comprises a hose connected to the system outlet; b) loading fibrous materials into the hopper interior; c) using the auger motor to rotate the augers and shred the fibrous material; and d) using the blower motor to blow the shredded fibrous material out the hopper interior outlet, out the system outlet, and into the hose; and e) spraying the shredded fibrous material onto a building structure to enhance the fire safety of the building structure.
12. The method of claim 11 wherein the method further comprises, prior to step b), placing bags comprising the fibrous material on the rotatable shelf when the rotatable shelf is in the deployed configuration.
13. The method of claim 11 wherein the method further comprises transporting the cart along the ground using the caster wheels and the left side wheels.
14. The method of claim 1 wherein the method further comprises placing forks of a forklift through the forklift access apertures and moving the cart using the forklift.
15. The system of claim 1 wherein the front and rear forklift access apertures are configured to allow forks of a forklift to extend parallel to the cart width.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(11) With reference to
(12) Referring further to
(13) Preferably, the hopper interior 32 includes a hopper interior outlet 34 located below the shredders 60 and 66 and the hopper interior outlet 34 is upstream from a hose 108 attached to system outlet 72 so that the material 70 shredded by the shredders 60 and 66 is transported out the hopper interior outlet 34 and ultimately to system outlet 72 and then to the hose 108 so that the material 70 may be sprayed onto building structures. Preferably, the system 10 further includes a blower 48 downstream from the hopper interior outlet 34 so that material 70 transported from the hopper interior outlet 34 is blown through the hose 108 and sprayed onto the building structures for fireproofing or insulation purposes.
(14) The system 10 may also include an air filter 38 that filters air intake to the blower 48. The air filter 38 may consist of polyester/plastic element that removes particles from the air stream down to 5 microns, for example. The hopper 12 may be attached to, or integrally a component of, a cart 36 that further includes, among other things, a blower 48, an airlock assembly 40, an airlock DC motor 42 (also referred to herein as the auger motor), a blower AC motor 50, a silencer tube 80, and caster wheels 52. The cart 36 includes a cart left side 90, a cart right side 92, a cart length 94 extending from the cart left side 90 to the cart right side 92, a cart front 96, a cart rear 98, a cart width 100 extending from the cart front 96 to the cart rear 98, a cart top 102, a cart bottom 104, and a cart height 106 extending from the cart top 102 to the cart bottom 104. The caster wheels 52 that are attached to the bottom of the right side of the cart 36, may be swivel locking, and the right side of the cart 36 may further include a U-shaped handle 64. The handle 64 may be removable using pins 122, as best seen in the exploded view of
(15) The feed auger screw 60 may be responsible for feeding material 70 to the main auger screw 66 in a cascading fashion. The main auger screw 66 accepts material 70 from the feed auger screw 60. Its function is to move material 70 out the hopper interior outlet 34 and toward the airlock assembly 40.
(16) Material 70 churned by the main auger screw 66 may exit out the hopper interior outlet 34 and into the rotating disk 124. The rotating disk 124 has protruding carbide tips 126 that shred and shoot the material 70 into the pie wedged opening of the sealed round airlock chamber 40. The airlock chamber 40 may be comprised of an eight spoke paddle wheel 114 with rubber wipers that seal against the outer wall of the round airlock chamber 40. As the paddle wheel 114 rotates the material 70 is accepted in the pie wedged opening in the two o'clock position. The blower 48 creates an air stream through the silencer tube 80 at the seven o'clock position, as best seen in
(17) A pressure relief valve 74 may actuate when the pressure of a packed hose of the sprayer operator reaches more than 5 PSI. Examples of pressure relief valves include the Apollo (Matthews, N.C.) 13-213-B05 Safety Valve, 1-1/4 NPT inlet X 1-1/2 outlet, 5 PSI.
(18) Optionally, the electrical box 56 consists of a back panel and electrical components that provide necessary power to run the AC and DC motors 42 and 50.
(19) Optionally, the system 10 includes an emergency stop 58 configured to stop all power and movement of the machinery.
(20) Optionally, the system 10 includes a main disconnect 68 which serves as a power switch to turn power on/off to the motors 42 and 50.
(21) Optionally, the system 10 includes a watertight industrial remote start pendant 76 that allows the sprayer operator to control the function of the motors 42 and 50. For example, to start the feed auger screw 42 and main auger screw 48, the sprayer operator must press the start button 82 for five seconds that will alert, via an audible alarm 46, the material operator that the motors 42 and 50 are about to start and to stand clear. The start button 82 initiates the start of the motors 42 and 50 and the stop button 84 initiates the stop of the motors 42 and 50.
(22) The system 10 may include a variable frequency AC drive, which is used to adjust the speed of the blower AC motor 50 which is displayed in Hertz (Hz).
(23) The system 10 may include a 120V outlet, which is used in the event a water pump needs to be used to increase water pressure.
(24) The airlock DC motor 42 is responsible for rotating the feed auger screw 60, main auger screw 66 and airlock assembly 40 through a series of belts and pulleys. The DC drive 54 controls the speed of the airlock DC motor 42.
(25) The system 10 may further include a slideable safety guard in the form of a tray 118 that includes a handle 120, as best seen in
(26) The system 10 may also include a PLC 128 (Programmable Logic Controller), which is a programmable controller that is used to control the functions of the system 10. The PLC 128 is used to accept inputs from various switches/sensors and then makes decisions and control outputs based on the programmed logic. The system 10 may use the PLC 128 to accept inputs from the remote start pendant 76 and the DC drive start and stop switches 82 and 84, respectively. The outputs of the PLC 128 are used to turn on the audible alarm 46 for five seconds before starting the augers 60 and 66. The PLC 128 outputs are also used to start and stop the DC drive 54 which controls the augers 60 and 66. The PLC 128 allows for future flexibility. Input and outputs can be added.
(27) The system 10 may also include VFD (Variable Frequency Drive) to allows fine tuning of blower 48 speed and auto-compensates for incoming voltage differences without the need to manually select input voltage range. This keeps from destroying motors 50 if operator does not select the proper input voltage setting. (200-24010%). It also allows gradual ramp up and ramp down of blower motor 50 to minimize startup torque.
(28) TABLE-US-00001 Part List System 10 Blower AC Motor 50 Hopper 12 Casters 52 Hopper Front wall 14 DC Drive 54 Hopper Rear wall 16 Electrical Box 56 Hopper Left wall 18 Emergency Stop 58 Hopper Right wall 20 Feed Auger Screw 60 Hopper Top 22 Forklift Access 62 Hopper Bottom 24 Handle 64 Hopper Bin Length 26 Main Auger Screw 66 Hopper Bin Width 28 Main Disconnect 68 Hopper Height 30 Material 70 Hopper Interior 32 System Outlet 72 Hopper Interior Outlet 34 Pressure Relief Valve 74 Cart 36 Remote Start Pendant 76 Air Filter 38 Rotatable Shelf 78 Airlock Assembly 40 Silencer tube 80 Airlock DC Motor 42 Start Button 82 Airlock Gearbox 44 Stop Button 84 Audible Alarm 46 Variable Frequency AC Drive 86 Blower 48 120 V Outlet 88 Hose 108 Cart left side 90 Belt 110 Cart right side 92 Pulley 112 Cart length 94 Paddle Wheel 114 Cart front 96 Housing 116 Cart rear 98 Slideable Safety Guard 118 Cart width 100 Handle of Slideable Safety Guard 120 Cart top 102 Pins 122 Cart bottom 104 Rotatable Disk 124 Cart height 106 Carbide tips 126 Programmable Logic Control 128
(29) Having now described the invention in accordance with the requirements of the patent statutes, those skilled in the art will understand how to make changes and modifications to the disclosed embodiments to meet their specific requirements or conditions. Changes and modifications may be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. In addition, the steps of any method described herein may be performed in any suitable order and steps may be performed simultaneously if needed. Use of the singular embraces the plural.
(30) Terms of degree such as generally, substantially, about and approximately as used herein mean a reasonable amount of deviation of the modified term such that the end result is not significantly changed. For example, these terms can be construed as including a deviation of at least 5% of the modified term if this deviation would not negate the meaning of the word it modifies.