Flywheel for a wood chipper and process for making thereof
12226781 ยท 2025-02-18
Inventors
Cpc classification
B27L11/002
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C18/083
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C18/143
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C2018/166
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B27L11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A wood chipper, a flywheel therefor, and a process of making the flywheel. A plurality of plates are laser cut to each have a thickness up to about inch, including laser cutting a plurality of apertures in each of the plates and laser cutting a central opening in each of the plates for receiving a shaft for effecting rotation of the flywheel. The plurality of plates are laminated together by inserting fasteners in corresponding ones of the apertures in the plates. At least one knife is attached to the laminated plates for cutting wood material to form chips of the wood material as the flywheel is rotated.
Claims
1. A flywheel for a wood chipper, the flywheel having a thickness and comprising a plurality of plates each having a plurality of apertures, wherein said plurality of plates are laminated together with fasteners received in respective ones of said apertures in said plurality of plates respectively, a central opening in each of said plates for receiving a shaft in said central openings of said plates for effecting rotation of the flywheel, at least one knife attached to the laminated plates for cutting wood material to form chips of the wood material as the flywheel is rotated, and a cylindrical member configured to interact with the at least one knife such that a leading piece of the wood material and a trailing piece of the wood material remain attached to each other to cause the leading piece of the wood material to pull the trailing piece of the wood material into the flywheel during cutting of the wood material, wherein said plates, including said apertures and said central openings, are each formed by laser cutting, wherein a combined thickness of said plurality of plates laminated together is equal to said thickness of the flywheel, and wherein each of said plates is of a type having a thickness of up to about inch and composed of steel.
2. The flywheel according to claim 1 wherein each of said plates is composed of carbon steel.
3. The flywheel according to claim 1 wherein each of said plates has the thickness of about inch.
4. The flywheel according to claim 1, wherein each of said apertures and each of said central openings has a diameter which is equal to at least the thickness of said respective plate.
5. A wood chipper comprising a flywheel having a thickness and including a plurality of plates each having a plurality of apertures, wherein said plurality of plates are laminated together with fasteners received in respective ones of said apertures in said plurality of plates respectively, a central opening in each of said plates for receiving a shaft in said central openings of said plates for effecting rotation of said flywheel, at least one knife attached to the laminated plates for cutting wood material to form chips of the wood material as said flywheel is rotated, and a cylindrical member configured to interact with the at least one knife such that a leading piece of the wood material and a trailing piece of the wood material remain attached to each other to cause the leading piece of the wood material to pull the trailing piece of the wood material into the flywheel during cutting of the wood material, wherein said plates, including said apertures and said central openings, are each formed by laser cutting, wherein a combined thickness of said plurality of plates laminated together is equal to said thickness of said flywheel, and wherein each of said plates is of a type having a thickness of up to about inch and composed of steel.
6. The wood chipper according to claim 5 wherein each of said plates is composed of carbon steel.
7. The wood chipper according to claim 5 wherein each of said plates has the thickness of about inch.
8. The wood chipper according to claim 5, wherein each of said apertures and each of said central openings has a diameter which is equal to at least the thickness of said respective plate.
9. A process for making a flywheel for a wood chipper comprising the steps of: laser cutting a plurality of plates, including laser cutting a plurality of apertures in each of the plates and laser cutting a central opening in each of the plates for receiving a shaft for effecting rotation of the flywheel; laminating the plurality of plates together by inserting fasteners in corresponding ones of the apertures in the plates; attaching at least one knife to the laminated plates for cutting wood material to form chips of the wood material as the flywheel is rotated whereby the flywheel is made, wherein each of said plates is of a type having a thickness of up to about inch and composed of steel; and associating a cylindrical member with the at least one knife, wherein the cylindrical member is configured to interact with the at least one knife such that a leading piece of the wood material and a trailing piece of the wood material remain attached to each other to cause the leading piece of the wood material to pull the trailing piece of the wood material into the flywheel during cutting of the wood material.
10. The process according to claim 9 wherein each of the plates is composed of carbon steel.
11. The process according to claim 9 wherein each of the plates is laser cut to have the thickness of about inch.
12. The process according to claim 9 wherein the step of laser cutting a plurality of apertures comprises laser cutting the plurality of apertures to each have a diameter equal to at least the thickness of said respective plate, and wherein the step of laser cutting a central opening comprises laser cutting the central opening to have a diameter equal to at least the thickness of said respective plate.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT(S)
(13) Referring to
(14) The in-feed roller 16, which rotates counterclockwise as illustrated at 22 and which is driven as shown and discussed in my aforesaid U.S. Pat. No. 10,507,469, may alternatively be paired with a second driven or non-driven in-feed roller for passage of wood between the pair of in-feed rollers, as also shown and discussed in my aforesaid U.S. Pat. No. 10,507,469, which is incorporated herein by reference.
(15) In the chipping chamber 36, a flywheel, illustrated schematically at 40 in
(16) Referring to
(17) The conventionally used method of flywheel machining of such thick steel pieces by laser cutting undesirably generates heat and warpage, which thereafter requires expensive flattening, with the undesirable result being that the machining process for such a thick flywheel is an expensive and time-consuming process. Moreover, it is difficult to make the desired small clean holes in such a thick steel piece to receive bolts. It is very difficult to laser cut holes having diameters which are less than the plate thickness. I have found that steel plates having a thickness less than or about inch may be laser cut so as to desirably not generate such heat and warpage as to require flattening and to desirably obtain small clean holes. As long as a hole diameter is greater than the plate thickness, such a small clean hole is obtainable by laser cutting. Accordingly, in order to provide a wood chipper steel flywheel such as flywheel 40 having an overall thickness greater than about inch which can be made by a less expensive and quicker process not requiring such flattening, in accordance with the present invention, a plurality of plates 52, at least one of which and preferably all of which have a thickness of about inch or less (which is considered to be about the largest thickness which will still laser cut well) are formed by laser cutting and laminated together with fasteners, as discussed hereinafter. As used herein and in the claims, the term laminate is defined as attaching a plurality of side-by-side thin plates together to provide a thicker member, and when such a member is so formed, it is referred to as being laminated. Thus, the laminated flywheel 40 as seen in
(18) It should of course be understood that a larger number of thinner plates such as, for example, inch or inch, may be used to form the laminated flywheel of the desired thickness. However, there may be no manufacturing benefit to doing so since a laser can, as a practical matter, only cut a hole in a plate which has a diameter which is about equal to or greater than the plate thickness, and there would not normally be a need for a hole diameter smaller than inch in the flywheel. For example, a inch thick plate allows for a inch (or larger) hole to be laser cut which may normally be an adequate for the flywheel, and a inch plate allows for a inch (or larger) hole to be laser cut, etc., but the flywheel would not normally need such a small hole. Therefore, there would not normally be a need to cut a greater number of thinner plates of steel to provide the needed flywheel thickness, rather there would undesirably be additional labor and laser cutting costs. If there is a need for smaller diameter holes in the plates, then the plates should be made thinner to match the smaller hole size. Accordingly, unless a hole is needed in a plate which has a smaller diameter which cannot be practically laser cut in a inch thick plate, it is preferred that the plate thickness be about inch.
(19) The individual plates 52 are formed to have various apertures and slots as hereinafter discussed which define corresponding composite apertures and slots in the laminated flywheel 40. For purposes of clarity, a group of three aligned apertures or slots in the three plates 52 respectively and the composite aperture or slot defined thereby in the laminated flywheel will have the same reference numeral, and also for purposes of clarity, only representative bolts and nuts for the apertures are shown, and it should be understood that similarly positioned apertures will similarly have similar bolts and nuts. It should be understood that the plates 52 are formed substantially similarly, i.e., formed to have the same apertures and slots similarly situated, but that would not prevent, for example, a plate having an aperture that the other plates do not have or, for another example, a plate having a different diameter which would not interfere with the lamination of the plates together. It should also be understood that any dimensions, aperture diameters, sizes or types of bolts or the like specified herein are for exemplary purposes only and not for purposes of limitation, unless otherwise specified. In accordance with the above-discussed preferred embodiment, for example, each of the plates has a diameter of 24 inches, and each of the apertures in the plates has a diameter of inch or larger.
(20) A suitable plurality of, for example, four circumferentially spaced slots 66 are provided in the flywheel 40 to extend through the entire thickness of the flywheel 40 for the passage of chips formed by knives 68 next to the slots respectively on the proximate side 42 of the flywheel, as hereinafter discussed. For more effective chipping, these slots 66 (and accordingly the knives 68) are preferably staggered radially. Thus, two of these slots 66, which are diametrically opposed, are seen to extend radially inwardly from the outer edge of the flywheel 40, while the other two of these slots 66 are seen to be radially closer to the center 54 thereby providing a radially staggered relationship to the four slots 66.
(21) An elongate radially extending knife 68 is attached to the proximate side 42 (which faces the wood inlet 24) of the flywheel adjacent each of the slots 66 thereby lying alongside the respective slot and has a cutting blade 70 on it's leading edge (the flywheel 40 rotates in the direction illustrated at 71) to chip or cut the pieces of wood fed into the chipping chamber 36 into fine chips. The blades 70 are positioned in accordance with principles commonly known to those of ordinary skill in the art to which the present invention pertains so that the chips as they are formed are suitably led through the slots 66 respectively.
(22) Each knife 68 has a plurality of, for example, three longitudinally spaced apertures 78, and the flywheel 40 has corresponding apertures 80. Suitable screws or bolts 82 (for example, inch flat head screws) are received in the apertures 78 and the corresponding apertures 80 respectively with the plates 52 pressed together and suitable nuts 86 tightly applied thereto to form the rigid laminated flywheel 40 with the knives 68 tightly and rigidly attached to the proximate side 42 thereof.
(23) An elongate radial fan blade or fin or paddle or chip deflector 72 is attached to the distal side 44 of the flywheel suitably adjacent each of the slots 66 thereby lying alongside the respective slot. The paddle 72 has an attachment portion 74 to lie flat against the flywheel 40 for attachment thereto and a deflector portion 76 to act to deflect the chips passing through the respective slot to exit the wood chipper 10 through the exit chute 46, as illustrated at 48. The paddles 72 are shaped and positioned in accordance with principles commonly known to those of ordinary skill in the art to which the present invention pertains to suitably direct the chips to the exit chute 46.
(24) Each paddle 72 has an inner aperture 88 in its attachment portion adjacent the radially inner end thereof. Each paddle 72 has a plurality of, for example, three longitudinally spaced apertures in its attachment portion 74 with one of these apertures being inner aperture 88 and with the other two of these apertures being identified with reference numeral 90. The flywheel apertures 62 correspond to the paddle inner apertures 88 respectively, and flywheel apertures 94 correspond to the other paddle apertures 90 respectively. Suitable screws or bolts 96 (for example, inch carriage bolts) are received in the other paddle apertures 90 and the corresponding flywheel apertures 94 respectively and suitable nuts 98 tightly applied thereto to rigidly attach the paddles 72 tightly and rigidly to the distal side 44 of the flywheel 40.
(25) A hole 51 (extending entirely through the thickness of the flywheel 40) is desirably provided in each quadrant of the flywheel 40. A pin is insertable in a suitable one of the holes 51 and in a hole in the chipper frame to restrain movement of the flywheel for safely conducting repairs and maintenance.
(26) The flywheel 40 has a central aperture 54 in which a suitably powered rotatable shaft or rotor 56 is received for supplying rotating power to the flywheel 40. The shaft or rotor 56 has a mounting flange 58, integral therewith or otherwise suitably rigidly attached thereto, which has four circumferentially spaced apertures 60. The flywheel 40 has four corresponding apertures 62, and screws or bolts 64 (for example, inch flat head screws) are received in apertures 60 and apertures 62 respectively and in the paddle radially inner apertures 88 respectively and nuts 89 tightly applied for rigidly attaching the flange 58 to the flywheel 40 so that rotation of the shaft 56 will suitably rotate the flywheel 40.
(27) It should be understood that the plates 52 and the knifes 68 and paddles 72 may be assembled in other ways, for example, by welding the knifes 68 and/or the paddles 72 to the flywheel 40, or, for another example, as illustrated in claims 4, 5, 11, and 12. Such other ways are meant to come within the bounds of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
(28) The shaft 56 has an end portion 100 suitably adapted with splines 102 for attachment to the power take-off of a tractor or the like, or the shaft may be suitably alternatively adapted for attachment to an engine incorporated with the wood chipper or for otherwise provision of suitable power to the shaft 56. The other end of the shaft 56 is suitably connected to a pulley 104 for driving a hydrostatic pump for the in-feed roller 16 or for otherwise suitably driving the in-feed roller 16. Suitable conventional bearings 106 are suitably provided for bearing the shaft 56. There may be alternative suitable arrangements for driving the flywheel 40 and in-feed roller 16.
(29) Skewed Knives
(30) Referring to
(31) Referring to
(32) The radially spaced fasteners 96 and 64 in each quadrant of the flywheel 200 are received in suitable apertures in the plates 208 and 210 to attach the paddles (not shown) to the flywheel 200, similarly as the paddles 72 are attached to flywheel 40 in
(33) It can be seen in
(34) Referring to
(35) Referring to
(36) Referring to
(37) Cylindrical Anvil
(38) It is considered desirable for the flywheel to be able to continuously pull the wood material into the flywheel chamber during the act of chipping, to enhance the quality of the chipping process, particularly for those wood chippers without in-feed rollers wherein the wood material is gravity fed. Referring to
(39) The cylindrical anvil 300, which may be rotatable and thus be referred to herein as a rotary anvil since it preferably is rotatable, as discussed hereinafter, is positioned to provide a circumferential anvil-like surface 302 which bridges the distance to the flywheel 200 from the end or outlet at 304 of the in-feed bin 17 along which the wood product moves under the force of gravity. The previously discussed small gap 248 separates the roller 300 from the flywheel blades 226, but is close enough to the blades 226 to allow the desired cutting, like a pair of scissors, of the wood material. The size of the small gap 248 is the same as for the embodiment of
(40) Instead of shearing the wood material clean off, which releases it (as the prior art bed knife anvil 232 of
(41) If the cylindrical anvil 300 were not rotatable, added friction would be created by having to drag the wood material over the stationery anvil 300. In order to instead have the anvil 300 rotate and thus reduce the friction of movement of the wood material over the anvil 300, the cylindrical anvil 300 is preferably rotatable, as illustrated at 306, to thereby more efficiently aid in the gravity movement of the wood product after it leaves the bin 17, at 304, in a direction toward the flywheel 200.
(42) Referring to
(43) The cylindrical anvil 300 is also provided to advantageously make the wood material pitch downward thereby decreasing the in-feed angle, illustrated at 330, to a steeper degree, to provide even more effective chipping. This is considered to be more particularly effective with smaller wood material on the order of one inch diameter or less.
(44) The cylindrical anvil 300 is thus provided to achieve much improved feeding of wood material, advantageously without the need of in-feed rollers.
(45) Water Mist
(46) Referring to
(47) Water for the water spray is contained in water tank 404 having a filling cap 405. A 12-volt water pump 406 (or other suitable water pump) receives water through line or hose 408 and discharges the water through line or hose 410 to the spray nozzle 402. The pump 406 is powered by a suitable 12-volt power source 412 such as from a tractor to which the wood chipper is connected (or other suitable power source). Upon the closing of a suitable switch 414, operation of the water pump 406 is initiated via line 416 to provide the water mist from the spray nozzle 402, and upon opening of the switch 414, the pump 406 is turned off to cease the spray of the water mist.
(48) A rigid baffle 418, made of vinyl or other suitable material, is suitably hingedly attached at 420 to a downwardly-extending upper wall 422 of the in-feed bin 17 and hangs therefrom to extend downwardly to terminate short of the downwardly-extending bottom wall 424 of the in-feed bin along which the wood product is gravity fed. When wood product is fed down the in-feed bin, it impinges and thereby effects pivoting movement of the baffle 418 about a hinge, schematically illustrated as or at hinge point 420, in the direction as illustrated at 426, as the wood product pushes against and passes under and by the resultingly raised bottom of the baffle 418. A suitable plate 428 (switch actuator plate) is connected to the baffle 418 and positioned in a manner to turn the switch 414 on as the baffle 418 is moved in direction 426 so as to thereby effect pumping of water through line 410 to provide the spray mist to the wood product being fed down the in-feed bin 17 and to turn the switch off thereby stopping the pumping of water when the baffle 418 is returned to its position shown in
(49) It should be understood that, while the present invention has been described in detail herein, the invention can be embodied otherwise without departing from the principles thereof, and such other embodiments are meant to come within the scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.