Push fit anode plug and holder for sacrificial anodes

11708638 · 2023-07-25

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A system consisting of a pencil-type sacrificial anode rod and a companion plug for use in, e.g., marine engines, generators, and other machinery or fluid-containing components requiring the presence of sacrificial anodes to prevent galvanic and electrolytic corrosion. The anode rod is securely held in the plug via a push-to-connect mechanism that allows the anode rod to rotate when acted on by a torsional force. This mechanism allows for extraction of the plug through pure tensile forces on the anode rod, thus preventing the breaking of stuck anode rods through torsional forces or stuck anode rods being left behind in engine components due to unthreading of the anode rod from the plug. Electrical continuity between the anode rod and plug is continuously maintained via metal-to-metal contact.

    Claims

    1. A sacrificial anode assembly comprising: a sacrificial anode rod; and a companion plug having an outer threaded circumference configured to thread into a structure for containing fluid within a system, the companion plug having a plug cavity in which the sacrificial anode rod is received, wherein the sacrificial anode rod is secured within the plug cavity via a retention apparatus configured to: permit the sacrificial anode rod, upon becoming stuck and unable to rotate within the structure due to internal corrosion, to be pulled out of the structure by a linear pulling force exerted by the companion plug as the companion plug is unthreaded from the structure, the force being applied through the retention apparatus to the sacrificial anode rod, and permit free rotation of the companion plug relative to the stuck sacrificial anode rod as the companion plug is unthreaded to avoid exerting torsional force on the stuck sacrificial anode rod that would otherwise cause the sacrificial anode rod to break.

    2. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the plug cavity of the companion plug is straight, tapered, or has a profile corresponding to a profile of a shank of the sacrificial anode rod, and houses either one or more retention points and retention apparatuses to secure the sacrificial anode rod to the companion plug.

    3. The assembly of claim 1, wherein a shank of the sacrificial anode rod is straight, tapered, or has a profile corresponding to a profile of a plug cavity of the companion plug.

    4. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the retention apparatus comprises non-integral components.

    5. The assembly of claim 4, wherein the non-integral components include one or more retaining rings.

    6. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the retention apparatus comprises integral components.

    7. The assembly of claim 6, wherein the integral components include one or more retaining rings formed as part of a cavity wall of the companion plug.

    8. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the retention apparatus comprises non-integral components and integral components.

    9. The assembly of claim 8, wherein the non-integral components include one or more retaining rings, and wherein the integral components include one or more retaining rings formed as part of a cavity wall of the companion plug.

    10. The assembly of claim 2, wherein the retention apparatus comprises one or more self-locking push rings installed within one or more grooves or upon one or more shelves in the plug cavity of the companion plug.

    11. The assembly of claim 10, wherein one or more spiral rings, spring rings, and/or springs are installed within the one or more grooves or upon the one or more shelves in the plug cavity of the companion plug for assisting in implementing the retention apparatus.

    12. The assembly of claim 1, wherein one or more internal and/or external o-rings are provided for sealing and protecting the retention apparatus from raw water to prevent corrosion.

    13. The assembly of claim 1, wherein one or more internal and/or external o-rings are provided for serving as a cushioning and stabilizing bearing surface that prevents the sacrificial anode rod from chattering against a plug wall of the companion plug and prevents fatigue at contact points in the retention apparatus.

    14. The assembly of claim 1, wherein one or more internal and/or external o-rings are provided for serving as a barrier between a shoulder of the sacrificial anode rod and an opening, shoulder-facing surface of the companion plug to prevent fusing together as a result of corrosion.

    15. The assembly of claim 1, wherein one or more air gaps are provided for serving as a barrier between a shoulder of the sacrificial anode rod and an opening, shoulder-facing surface of the companion plug to prevent fusing together as a result of corrosion.

    16. The assembly of claim 2, wherein a release mechanism is provided to disengage the retention apparatus and permit removal of the sacrificial anode rod from the plug cavity.

    17. The assembly of claim 16, wherein the release mechanism includes a tapered sleeve.

    18. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the plug cavity has exactly one opening.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    (1) FIGS. 1A-1D illustrate an overview of the basic features of zinc rod-plug assemblies currently known in the art;

    (2) FIGS. 2A-2F illustrate aspects of the zinc rod-plug assembly according to one embodiment of the present invention;

    (3) FIGS. 3A-3B illustrate relevant forces and utility of a zinc rod-plug assembly of the present invention in mitigating problems associated with those zinc rod-plug assemblies currently known in the art; and

    (4) FIGS. 4A-4C illustrate a rod release mechanism associated with a zinc rod-plug assembly of the present invention.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

    (5) The invention is comprised of a plug and a sacrificial rod, generically referred to as “zinc” but not limited to any particular material. In the embodiment of FIG. 2, the plug cavity has a shelf 200 which supports a self-locking push ring 205. Self-locking push rings are characterized by an ability to allow a shaft to be pushed through in one direction for installation while preventing the shaft from being pulled back out, and an ability to allow the retained shaft to rotate relative to the ring. Immediately above the shelf, a groove 210 houses a spiral retaining ring 215 which retains the self-locking ring in its position on the shelf, i.e., prevents it from being pulled out of the plug cavity. The spiral ring both allows for insertion through the smaller diameter cavity 220 to the larger diameter groove 210 and serves as an ad-hoc spring helping both to maintain electrical contact and decrease play of the rod in the cavity. The self-locking push ring, groove, and spiral retaining ring combination will be referred to as the retention apparatus 265 and the location of the retention apparatus will be referred to as the retention point 260. An additional groove 225 in the plug cavity, near the plug opening, houses an o-ring 230. This o-ring serves several purposes, including stabilizing and cushioning the zinc rod, which is subject to extreme vibration and chatter due to the running engine on which it resides, and sealing the retention apparatus from seawater.

    (6) With the present embodiment using only one retention apparatus 265 located at a single retention point 260, the second point of contact provided by the o-ring prevents the rod from pivoting back and forth about the retention point, resulting from play/tolerance in the fit, and chattering against the cavity wall as the engine vibrates. To further improve fit, the plug cavity has a tapered structure 235. The spring action from the spiral retaining ring pushing against the upper wall of the retention groove 210, i.e., the face closest to the plug opening, pushes the self-locking ring holding the rod, and subsequently the rod itself, towards the bottom of the plug. This force effectively seats the rod taper against the plug taper, eliminating play and increasing metal-to-metal contact for electrical continuity. Continuity is further ensured by electrical contact at the retention point. Electrical continuity between the rod, the plug, and the component in which the assembly resides is essential to the working of sacrificial anodes. Zinc rod 240 is correspondingly tapered to match the taper of the plug cavity 235 and has a smooth shank, which is contrary to the threaded shank of pencil zincs known in the art, that is inserted into the plug cavity and pressed through the self-locking ring 205 at the retention point 260 to form the assembly 245. A gap is left between the shoulder of the zinc rod and the opening of the plug cavity to accommodate an additional o-ring 250, which improves fit, further seals the cavity, and prevents corrosion at this interface from fusing the rod and plug together. This gap is further illustrated in FIG. 4, reference character 405.

    (7) The benefit of the present invention, which is a departure from the current art of threaded connections in plug cavities, is the achievement of a retention apparatus that securely retains the sacrificial pencil rod, maintains electrical continuity between the plug and the rod, and provides for reliable removal of the plug and remnant portion of the rod from the cooler for replacement. Reliable removal refers to attributes of the present invention in which the rod is prevented from being left behind in the engine cooler due to either unthreading of the plug-rod connection when removing the plug from the cooler or breaking due to torsional strain. The present embodiment achieves this improved behavior by inventing and employing a retention apparatus that allows the rod to rotate freely while being securely held in the plug. This degree of rotational freedom results in a purely linear pull being applied along the length of the rod by the act of unscrewing the outer threads of the plug from the engine cooler. The purely tensile linear force allows stuck plugs to reliably be extracted from the engine component and eliminates torsional forces that can break the vulnerable shoulder areas of the sacrificial rods. In this way, the plug serves as both a holder and a puller for stuck rods that have become adhered to the cooler walls or that have become scaled and are now unable to fit cleanly through the cooler opening.

    (8) Concerning FIG. 3, unscrewing the plug 255 relative to the cooler walls 305 by application of torque 300 on the head, such as by means of a wrench, results in the plug moving longitudinally up relative to the cooler by a screw action along external threads 310 on the plug. This upward force is propagated to the zinc rod via the retention apparatus 265. A key characteristic of the retention apparatus, as previously described, is that it allows the plug to rotate freely about a stuck zinc rod 240 while still holding it in place along its length. The result is that a purely tensile force 315 is translated to the rod 240, which serves to pull the plug out of the cooler along its strongest direction. No torsional force, which can cause breaking of the rod in the weaker shoulder area, is applied to the rod. This is achieved both by the self-locking ring, shown at reference character 205 in FIG. 2, allowing rotation of the rod relative to itself and the ability of the ring itself to rotate relative to its supporting shelf, shown at reference character 200 in FIG. 2.

    (9) Furthermore, the present embodiment of the invention includes an optional sleeve to release the self-locking ring in order to facilitate removing the remnants of the spent rod from the plug and reusing the plug with a replacement rod. Referring to FIG. 4, the thin sleeve 400 wraps around the taper of the rod and rests on the inner, locking edge of the self-locking ring 205. The upper end of the sleeve terminates in the gap between the plug opening and the shoulder of the rod 405, serving as a substitute for the o-ring, shown at reference character 250 in FIG. 2. Pushing the sleeve down causes the retention mechanism to release the rod. In the case of the present embodiment, the inner, locking edge of the self-locking retaining ring 205 is forced to disengage from the rod effecting its release from the plug cavity.

    (10) In the present embodiment, the plug itself is secured to the cooler in the traditional way of using external, self-sealing (NPT) threads. The inventive aspects of the present embodiment concern the internal cavity retention apparatus and retention points. Any housing/outer plug design that employs the anode retention apparatus described herein is also within the scope of the present invention.

    (11) Although the aforementioned embodiments of the present invention are described relative to marine engines and coolers, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that marine engine and coolers are an exemplary application and that the present invention applies to other marine or non-marine components that require the use of sacrificial pencil-type anodes and/or the insertion of any rod-like component into a device cavity, including but not limited to the purpose of combating galvanic and electrolytic corrosion, e.g., water makers, desalinization equipment, pipelines, water heaters, pumps, generators, etc.

    (12) It should be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents substituted without departing the spirit and scope of the invention described herein and by the appended claims. In addition, modifications may be made to adapt to a particular situation, material, composition of matter, method, process, series of steps to achieve the objective of the present invention while staying within the spirit and scope of the invention, and such modifications are intended to be within the spirit and scope of the appended claims. In particular, while the methods disclosed have been described with reference to particular usage cases and particular mechanical embodiments, it will be understood that these usage cases, applications, and particular embodiments may be combined, subdivided, expanded upon, and reordered without departing the teachings of the present invention. Accordingly, the order, grouping of steps, usage cases, and particular embodiments are not a limitation of the present invention. Such variants include, but are not limited to, the number of retention points, the location of retention points, alternate embodiments of retention apparatus including, but not limited to, different types of retention rings, self-locking rings, rings, or retention apparatus machined directly into the plug body or integral to the plug body in any way or alternate mechanisms for retaining the rod within the cavity to ensure reliable extraction of rods from coolers as described herein, shapes of rods, materials of plugs and rods, and insertion into components/items other than anodes, such as sensors including, but not limited to, temperature sensors, pressure sensors, and water sensors.