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| United States Patent | 4147322 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4147322.html |
| Inventor(s) | Dahlstrom; Claes-Inge S. (Patron Lars vag 18, S-121 40 Huddinge, SE) |
| Abstract | A mold element for casting concrete walls, which comprises a mold wall
strengthened by an assembly of elongate structural steels which extend
substantially parallel to one another and to one edge of the mold wall,
and having at least two mold beams extending transverse to the said
structural steels and across the mold wall from said one edge thereof to
the opposite edge, each of the mold beams being upright when the mold
element is in a vertical orientation, with said one edge uppermost, to
form a mold, and each mold beam having one and only one coupling point at
which a stay member can be positioned to extend between the mold element
and a corresponding opposed mold element to link them together to form a
mold cavity between them, said coupling point of each beam being located
at a position between 35% and 40% of the length of the beam from the other
end thereof. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4147322 |
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Mold element for concrete-casting |
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| Publication Date |
April 3, 1979 |
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| Filing Date |
September 19, 1977 |
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| Priority Data |
Sep 24, 1976[SE]7610641 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to concrete-casting and more specifically to a mold
element for casting concrete.
In recent years prefabricated mold elements are widely used in the
construction industry. For instance, a mold element of the type used
comprises a mold panel of sheet metal having a height of 2 to 3 meters and
any desired length such as 1 to 4 meters. Horizontal stiffening members
are welded at equal distances one above another at the surface of the mold
panel facing away from the mold cavity such as, for instance, U-beams
secured with one flange to the panel whereas the other flange is free. At
right angles to these U-beams, i.e. vertically when the element is mounted
in position for casting, a number of mold beams are fastened to the other
flange of the U-beams with equal spaces, for instance 90 mm, the bending
resistance of said mold beams being calculated so that the beams will
resist the lateral forces resulting from the casting and vibration of the
concrete mass. The top ends of the mold beams are linked together with a
distance member, and the bottom ends are fastened to a sill or block of
concrete or wood which, in turn, is fastened to the floor. A plurality of
stay members, such as three or four ones, are distributed along the length
of the mold beams and positioned to extend between the opposed mold
element to prevent bulging of the mold walls under the lateral pressure of
the fluid concrete mass.
A serious disadvantage of a mold element of this known type is the need of
a large number of stay bolts with nuts, and the accompanying laborious
mounting and dismounting work. Another disadvantage will be seen in the
cumbrious complementary work required to fill up and smooth the holes and
irregularities remaining in the finished concrete wall after dismantling
the mold.
An approach to solve the above problems is represented by a mold element
described in the inventor's Great Britain Pat. No. 1,381,346, according to
which each mold beam has two and only two coupling points at each of which
a stay bolt can be positioned to extend between the two opposed mold
elements to form a mold cavity between them, wherein one coupling point of
each beam is located at the upper end thereof at or adjacent the upper
edge of the mold wall, and the other coupling point is located at a
position between 1/4 and 1/3 of the height of the beam from the bottom end
thereof.
Thus, the mold element described in the above-mentioned Great Britain
Patent presupposes the use of an upper stay bolt to take up the outward
pressure of the newly cast concrete mass above the lower stay bolt. In the
course of pouring the concrete mass into the mold, the initial amounts of
the poured mass will only exert a quite neglectible lateral pressure on
the lower free ends of the mold beams via the mold walls, and when the
mold has been completely filled and the lower ends of the mold beams are
subjected to the maximum lateral force which could cause the lower end of
the mold beam to be bent outwards, this bending outwards will be
counteracted by the pressure exerted by the poured concrete mass on the
mold beam between the points of action of the two stay bolts. In this
manner a self-compensating system of forces is obtained which ensures a
substantial stress-relief of the mold beam as compared with a beam clamped
between the extreme ends.
The mold element according to the above-mentioned British Patent has
subsequently been developed to the extent that the upper stay bolt has
been given the shape of a flat bar steel member acting simultaneously as a
distance member of a fixed length and having an opening at each end, said
flat bar steel member being with one end pivotally mounted at a mold beam
of an opposed mold element already erected and adapted to be swung across
the mold cavity and secured with its other end by means of a lock bolt to
an upstanding lug at the mold beam of the opposed mold element. It has
been found, however, that the assembling operation is associated with
serious difficulties. In the course of erecting a mold element in parallel
relationship and at a fixed distance from a previously erected mold
element, it is lifted by means of a building crane and lowered until it
reaches the cast concrete blocks or other distance members secured to the
floor to define the thickness of the wall to be cast. However, the mold
element suspended in the wires of the building crane will tend to swing in
the long lift wires so that it will be difficult to get the holes in the
lug of the opposed mold beam and the distance member in register to allow
insertion of the lock bolt. In the course of dismounting the concrete mold
after completed casting operation, when the lock bolts are pulled or
knocked out of their engagement, they are frequently lost.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention overcomes the prior problems of the above-mentioned
mold element by providing a mold element each mold beam of which has one
and only one coupling point at which a stay member can be positioned to
extend between the mold element and a corresponding opposed mold element
to link them together to form a mold cavity between them, the coupling
point of each beam being located at a distance from the end of the mold
beam adapted to rest on a support, which corresponds to at least 1/3,
preferably 35 to 40%, of the total effective height of the beams as
measured from the support, i.e., the height corresponding to the level of
the concrete mass cast in the mold cavity, a distance member being mounted
at the other end of the mold beam to engage the upper end of the
corresponding mold beam of the opposed mold element to prevent bending of
the beams inward towards one another in the course of casting.
Therefore, it is an object of this invention to provide a concrete-casting
mold element of a simplified construction which provides for saving of
materials and mounting work.
A further object of the invention is to provide a concrete-casting mold
element giving a concrete wall which requires a minimum of mending and
finishing work.
Other objects of the invention will become readily apparent from the
following description and accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 shows an isometric sketch of a mold element according to the
invention assembled with a similar, opposed mold element to form a mold
cavity between them.
FIG. 2 is a graph showing the inward moment of force exerted by the upper
leg of the mold beam as a function of the height of the stay member
coupling point above the beam support, under the load of a flowable
concrete mass occupying the entire mold cavity.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The mold element of the present invention, shown in FIG. 1, comprises a
mold wall 1 strengthened in the longitudinal direction by a reinforcing
structure of elongate U-irons 2, and at least two vertical mold beams 3,
4.
Each mold beam 3, 4 is provided with only one stay bolt 5 to connect the
mold element with an opposed mold element 1'. The coupling point 6 of the
stay bolt comprising a coupling hole is located at a distance from the
lower end of the mold beam which corresponds to 35-40% of the total height
of the effective height of the beam, i.e., the height to which the
concrete mass is to be poured in the mold.
To prevent the opposed mold beams 3, 3' from bending inwards in the course
of casting, according to the invention a distance member 7 is preferably
positioned to extend across the mold cavity between the upper ends of the
pair of mold beams. For example, this distance member could be a loose
piece of a U-iron supported by brackets welded to the respective mold
beams.
A prerequisite for casting a flat wall with the mold element according to
the invention is that the vertical mold beams possess a sufficient bending
strength to resist lateral pressures without appreciable bulging outwards.
Whereas any standard beam material may be used such as I-irons, according
to the invention a beam including two U-irons is preferably used, said
beams being welded together with their webs in parallel spaced
relationship at right angles to the surface of the mold wall, the width
between the webs being sufficient to permit insertion of the stay member
through the slot between the webs. The mold beam comprising two U-irons is
strengthened, in the zone surrounding the stay member, with a steel washer
8 approximately 5 mm thick, which is welded on the outer flanges of the
U-irons and has a central opening for insertion of a stay member. Such a
beam provides for a good bending resistance with less height and weight
than an I-iron of corresponding bending resistance.
Any suitable device may be used as the distance member between the upper
ends of the mold beams, such as a wooden block. According to an embodiment
of the invention, a relatively thin U-iron is welded or bolted to one of
the mold beams or mold walls of a pair, at right angles to the surface of
the mold wall, to rest against the opposed beam or wall to keep the
correct distance between the beams when in the course of casting they tend
to be bent inwards. It is also possible to weld shoulders to the upper
opposed ends of the beams, on which a piece of an U-iron used as a
distance member is hanged up.
It will be appreciated from the foregoing description that the essential
feature of the invention resides in the positioning of the coupling point
of the stay member. The practicable range of its positioning is relatively
narrow. The lateral pressure of the newly cast concrete mass decreases
with the height. In the initial stage of casting the concrete mass tends
to bend the legs of the pair of opposed mold beams below the distance bolt
outwards. However, they are prevented from this bending outwards through
the upper distance member and through the stay member. The amount of this
bending is about one or a few millimeters but will result in a tendency of
the upper legs of the opposed mold beams to be bent inwards but are
prevented from doing this by the upper distance member and the stay member
by means of which the predetermined distance between the mold walls is
maintained. When in the course of casting the level of concrete mass is
rising and passes the stay member, the concrete mass will exert on the
upstanding legs of the mold beams above the stay member an outward
pressure which counteracts the inward pressure of the beam legs above the
stay member caused by the outward lateral pressure of the concrete mass
below the stay member.
Calculations of the moments of force exerted on the mold beams by a newly
cast concrete mass have shown that the moment of force exerted by the
concrete mass against the lower leg of the beam is of substantially the
same magnitude as the moment of force exerted by the concrete mass against
the upper leg, when the coupling point of the stay member is located at a
height above the support or floor corresponding to approximately 32% of
the total height of the beam. Accordingly, this means that the moments of
force are in equilibrium and that on termination of the casting operation
the upper legs of the pair of opposed beams would theoretically maintain
their mutual distance without using distance members between the upper
ends. However, it frequently occurs that the cast concrete mass will have
time to set in the lower zones of the mold before casting is terminated.
For that reason the lower portion of the concrete mass would no longer
exert a hydraulic pressure on the lower legs, in consequence of which the
upper beam legs would tend to be bent outwards in the finishing stage of
casting. Therefore, the coupling point of the stay member is preferably
located at a higher level of the beam than that indicated above (32% of
the height), whereby the concrete mass initially cast and lying below the
stay member exerts on the mold walls a lateral pressure causing the lower
legs of the mold beams to be bent outwards so that the upper legs are bent
inwards and forced against the distance member under a prestress which is
subsequently more or less released in the course of termination of the
casting when the mold is being filled with concrete mass. Therefore,
according to the invention, the coupling point for the stay member is
preferably located at a distance above the lower end of the mold beam
which corresponds to 32-40% of the total effective height of the beam. If
the coupling point would be located at a higher level than that
corresponding to 40% of the total height of the beam, the inward pressure
exerted on the upper beam leg would be unreasonably high.
The graph in FIG. 2 schematically shows the magnitude of the inward moment
of force exerted by the upper end of the mold beam when the mold cavity is
completely filled with a fluid concrete mass, as a function of the height
of the stay member above the beam support. The basic calculations were
made under the assumption of the existence of a true hydraulic medium. It
was found, however, that the calculations corresponded also to the
behaviour of a flowable concrete mass. It appears from the graph that the
moment of force equals zero when the height of the coupling point of the
stay member is about 32.5% of the total height of the beam. Accordingly,
this is the lowest allowable height of the coupling point since otherwise
the moment of force would be directed outwards (the negative values in the
graph). Preferably, the coupling point is positioned at so high a level on
the beam that the upper leg of the beam is pressed against the distance
member under a certain amount of prestress. Since the inward moment of
force increases largely with increasing height, the coupling point
preferably is located at a height which corresponds to 35-40% of the total
effective height of the beam.
While particular embodiments and examples have been illustrated and
described, modifications and changes will become apparent to those skilled
in the art, and it is intended to cover in the appended claims all such
modifications and changes that come within the spirit and scope of the
invention.
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Description  |
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