APPARATUS FOR MAKING THIN FLOOR PLATE AND A THIN FLOOR PLATE
20190388963 ยท 2019-12-26
Inventors
Cpc classification
B21B1/46
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22D11/0622
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04F15/06
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
B22D11/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04F15/02
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B21B1/46
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method of making floor plate includes assembling a pair of casting rolls laterally disposed to form a nip, assembling a hot rolling mill downstream of the nip having work rolls with a surface pattern forming the negative of a raised slip-resistant pattern desired in a floor plate, introducing molten metal through at least one metal delivery nozzle to form a casting pool supported on the casting rolls above the nip; counter rotating the casting rolls to form shells on the casting surfaces of the casting rolls to cast metal strip of less than 2.2 mm thickness downwardly from the nip, and delivering the cast metal strip to and through the hot rolling mill to form by the negative of the slip-resistant pattern on the work rolls a raised slip-resistant pattern of between 0.3 and 0.7 mm in height in a floor plate of less than 1.7 mm thickness.
Claims
1-7. (canceled)
8. A hot rolling mill comprising: a single pair of work rolls, one work roll of the pair of work rolls including a surface pattern forming a negative of a raised slip resistant pattern desired in a floor plate between 0.3 and 0.7 mm in height and wherein the single pair of work rolls delivers a floor plate having a thickness of less than 1.7 mm.
9. The hot rolling mill of claim 8, where the delivered floor plate is greater than 0.7 mm in thickness.
10. The hot rolling mill of claim 8, where the delivered floor plate is greater than 1.0 mm in thickness.
11. The hot rolling mill of claim 8, where the delivered floor plate has a slip resistant pattern formed as specified in ASTM A786M-2004, pattern 4.
12. The hot rolling mill of claim 9, where the delivered floor plate has a slip resistant pattern formed as specified in ASTM A786M-2004, pattern 4.
13. The hot rolling mill of claim 10, where the delivered floor plate has a slip resistant pattern formed as specified in ASTM A786M-2004, pattern 4.
14. A hot rolling mill comprising: a pair of work rolls, one work roll of the pair of work rolls including a surface pattern forming a negative of a raised slip resistant pattern desired in a floor plate between 0.3 and 0.7 mm in height and wherein the single pair of work rolls delivers a floor plate having a thickness of less than 1.7 mm; wherein the pair of work rolls are arranged between only two additional pairs of pinch rolls forming a first and second pair of pinch rolls such that a cast metal strip is directed from a nip directly to the first pair of pinch rolls, directly thereafter to the pair of work rolls, and directly thereafter to the second pair of pinch rolls.
15. A thin cast metal strip comprising: a thickness of less than 1.7 mm and a raised slip resistant pattern desired in a floor plate between 0.3 and 0.7 mm in height formed by a single hot rolling mill having a single pair of work rolls where one work roll of the pair of work rolls includes a surface pattern that is a negative of the raised slip-resistant pattern.
16. The thin cast metal strip of claim 15 wherein the thickness is greater than 0.7 mm.
17. The thin cast metal strip of claim 15 wherein the thickness is greater than 1.0 mm.
18. The thin cast metal strip of claim 15 wherein the raised slip resistant pattern is formed as specified in ASTM A786M-2004, pattern 4.
19. The thin cast metal strip of claim 16 wherein the raised slip resistant pattern is formed as specified in ASTM A786M-2004, pattern 4.
20. The thin cast metal strip of claim 17 wherein the raised slip resistant pattern is formed as specified in ASTM A786M-2004, pattern 4.
21. The thin cast metal strip of claim 15 that is coiled.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0006] The accompanying drawings illustrate the invention in which:
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015] Referring to
[0016] Molten metal is supplied from a ladle 13 through a metal delivery system, with a movable tundish 14 and a transition piece or distributor 16. From the distributor 16, the molten metal is delivered to at least one metal delivery nozzle 17, or core nozzle, positioned between the casting rolls 12 above the nip 18. Molten metal discharged from the delivery nozzle 17 forms casting pool 19 of molten metal above the nip 18 supported on the casting surfaces 12A of the casting rolls 12. The casting pool 19 is confined on the casting rolls by side closures or side dams 20 (shown in dotted line in
[0017] The ladle 13 typically is of a conventional construction supported on a rotating turret 40. For metal delivery, the ladle 13 is positioned above a movable tundish 14 positioned adjacent the casting area to fill the tundish with molten metal. The movable tundish 14 may be positioned on a tundish car 66 capable of transferring the tundish from a heating station (not shown), where the tundish is heated to near a casting temperature, to the casting position. A tundish guide, such as rails, may be positioned beneath the tundish car 66 to enable moving the movable tundish 14 from the heating station to the casting position.
[0018] The movable tundish 14 may be fitted with a slide gate 25, actuable by a servo mechanism, to allow molten metal to flow from the tundish 14 through the slide gate 25, and then through a refractory outlet shroud 15 to a transition piece or distributor 16 in the casting position. From the distributor 16, the molten metal flows to the delivery nozzle 17 positioned between the casting rolls 12 above the nip 18.
[0019] The casting rolls 12 are internally water cooled and the casting rolls 12 are counter-rotated to solidify metal shells on the casting surfaces 12A as the casting surfaces 12A move into and through the casting pool 19 with each revolution of the casting rolls 12. The shells formed on the casting surfaces 12A are brought together at the nip 18 between the casting rolls 12 to form a solidified thin cast strip product 21 delivered downwardly from the nip 18.
[0020]
[0021] At the start of the casting campaign, a short length of imperfect strip is typically produced as casting conditions stabilize. After continuous casting is established, the casting rolls are moved apart slightly and then brought together again to cause the leading end of the cast strip to break away forming a clean head end of the cast strip to follow. The imperfect material drops into a scrap receptacle 26, which is movable on a scrap receptacle guide. The scrap receptacle 26 is located in a scrap receiving position beneath the caster and forms part of a sealed enclosure 27 as described below. The enclosure 27 is typically water cooled. During casting, water-cooled apron 28 normally hangs downwardly from a pivot 29 to one side in the enclosure 27 and is swung into position to guide the clean end of the cast strip 21 onto the guide table 30 and feed the strip to the pinch roll stand 31. The apron 28 is then retracted back to its hanging position to cause the cast strip 21 to hang in a loop beneath the casting rolls in enclosure 27 before it passes onto the guide table 30 where it engages a succession of guide rollers.
[0022] An overflow container 38 may be provided beneath the movable tundish 14 to receive molten material that may spill from the tundish. As shown in
[0023] The sealed enclosure 27 is formed by a number of separate wall sections that assembled together with sealed connections to form a continuous enclosure wall that permits control of the atmosphere within the enclosure during casting. Additionally, the scrap receptacle 26 may be capable of attaching to the enclosure 27 so that the enclosure to provide a protective atmosphere immediately beneath the casting rolls 12 in the casting position. The enclosure 27 includes an opening in the lower portion of the enclosure, lower enclosure portion 44, providing an outlet for scrap to pass from the enclosure 27 into the scrap receptacle 26 in the scrap receiving position. The lower enclosure portion 44 may extend downwardly as a part of the enclosure 27, the opening being positioned above the scrap receptacle 26 in the scrap receiving position. As used in the specification and claims herein, seal, sealed, sealing, and sealingly in reference to the scrap receptacle 26, enclosure 27, and related features may not be a complete seal so as to prevent leakage, but rather is usually provides less than perfect seal to allow control and support of the atmosphere within the enclosure as desired with some tolerable leakage.
[0024] A rim portion 45 may surround the opening of the lower enclosure portion 44 and may be movably positioned above the scrap receptacle, capable of sealingly engaging and/or attaching to the scrap receptacle 26 in the scrap receiving position. The rim portion 45 may be movable between a sealing position in which the rim portion engages the scrap receptacle, and a clearance position in which the rim portion 45 is disengaged from the scrap receptacle. Additionally, the caster or the scrap receptacle may include a lifting mechanism to raise the scrap receptacle into sealing engagement with the rim portion 45 of the enclosure, and then lower the scrap receptacle into the clearance position. When sealed, the enclosure 27 and scrap receptacle 26 are filled with a desired gas, such as nitrogen, to reduce the amount of oxygen in the enclosure to generally less than 5% and provide a protective atmosphere during casting of strip.
[0025] The enclosure 27 may include an upper collar portion supporting a protective atmosphere immediately beneath the casting rolls in the casting position. When the casting rolls 12 are in the casting position, the upper collar portion 27A is moved to the extended position closing the space between a housing portion adjacent the casting rolls 12, as shown in
[0026] A method for making floor plate may comprise the following steps: (a) assembling a pair of casting rolls laterally disposed to form a nip between with side dams at the ends of the casting rolls to maintain a molten metal pool supported above the nip by the casting rolls; (b) assembling a hot rolling mill downstream of the nip having work rolls with a pattern thereon forming the negative of a raised slip-resistant pattern desired in a floor plate between 0.3 and 0.7 mm in height; (c) introducing molten metal from a metal delivery system through an elongated metal delivery nozzle to form a casting pool supported on the casting rolls above the nip; (d) counter rotating the casting rolls so as to form shells on the casting surfaces of the casting rolls brought together at the nip to cast metal strip of preferably less than 2.2 mm thickness downwardly from the nip; and (e) delivering the cast metal strip to and through the hot rolling mill to form by the negative on the work rolls of the slip-resistant pattern desired in the floor plate between 0.3 and 0.7 mm of less than 1.7 mm thickness. Further, the delivered cast metal strip may be such as to provide floor plate greater than 0.7 or greater the 1.0 mm in thickness. The delivered cast metal strip may be silicon killed such as to provide a floor plate with less than 0.008 aluminum. Further the floor plate of the current disclosure may contain a total oxygen content of greater than 50 ppm.
[0027] The slip resistant pattern form in the floor plate may be ASTM A786M-2004, pattern 4. ASTM A786M covers carbon high-strength, low-alloyed and alloyed steel plate intended for flooring, stairs, transport equipment and other purposes. Steel plate under ASTM A786M shall be manufactured lenticular-riffled. ASTM A786 Steel Floor Plate has a raised diamond lug pattern that provides excellent skid resistance for a wide range of applications commonly used in stairs, walkways, ramps and entrances where rough or high-wear surfaces are preferred. A786 floor plate is available as 4-Way patterned plates, which provide maximum skid resistance with an easy to clean surface. A786 4-Way floor plates may be used for safety flooring on docks, ramps, mezzanines, stair treads catwalks, trench covers, walkways, ornamental projects and other surfaces that require skid resistance with an easy to clean surface.
[0028] The floor plate may have a density between 2.0 and 2.2 lbs./ft..sup.2. In other embodiments, the floor plate may have a density of between 2.5 and 2.7 lbs./ft..sup.2.
[0029] There is shown in
[0030] Tensile testing was done on a series of floor plates for a range of differing base thicknesses ranging from 0.042 to 0.066 inches. The resulting tensile properties are represented in the table below:
TABLE-US-00001 Hardness % Heat Direction Thickness Top Bottom Tensile Elongation Yield 429582-1 trans 0.0661 62 67 59.618 21.057 40.471 429582-2 trans 0.0623 61 66 59.491 20.767 40.496 429582-3 trans 0.0612 62 65 59.306 17.944 41.068 429582-7 trans 0.0423 59 48 57.208 15.754 39.285 429586-2 trans 0.0461 56 37 50.037 16.085 34.564 429586-3 trans 0.0434 60 58 61.474 15.108 43.988 429586-5 trans 0.0544 61 70 58.31 20.091 42.013 429586-6 trans 0.0561 53 55 57.449 20.14 39.525 429586-6 long 0.0604 62 55 54.333 20.467 36.276 429586-8 trans 0.0508 56 56 58.024 15.968 41.032 429586-8 long 0.0491 60 55 57.851 14.882 40.168
[0031] There is shown in
[0032] There is shown in
[0033] There is shown in
[0034] There is shown in
[0035]
[0036] While the invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the foregoing drawings and description, the same is to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive in character, it being understood that only illustrative embodiments thereof have been shown and described, and that all changes and modifications that come within the spirit of the invention described by the following claims are desired to be protected. Additional features of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon consideration of the description. Modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.