Patents by Inventor Robin Wingate-Hill

Robin Wingate-Hill has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 5127453
    Abstract: When conventional mechanical equipment for removing branches or limbs from a tree trunk is used, stumps of the branches removed remain on the tree trunk. The present invention avoids the creation of such stumps when a trunk (or a length of a trunk) is being transported through a mill or compression debarking equipment and is simultaneously rotated. The invention uses an elongate helical milling head, mounted at the end of a support arm and rotated by a motor to remove the branches. The milling head axis is positioned parallel to the axis of the trunk with the cutting surface of the milling head close to the bark of the trunk. Normally a brace member is included to stiffen the mounting of the milling head. Preferably the milling head is formed as a plurality of short milling heads mounted colinearly and with their helical cutters aligned.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 8, 1991
    Date of Patent: July 7, 1992
    Assignee: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
    Inventors: Robin Wingate-Hill, Ian J. MacArthur, William C. L. Gabriel
  • Patent number: 5111860
    Abstract: Apparatus for debarking a log using the compression debarking technique includes rollers which apply radial pressure to the log to separate the bark from the wood of the log. Three double-cone rollers, each having its double cones tapered to the middle of the roller, are arranged with their axes of rotation at substantially 60.degree. to each other and perpendicular to the direction of travel of the log through an aperture defined by the three rollers. Pressure is applied to the bark of the log by the double-cone rollers. The apparatus may include cutting means, such as a knife blade on the outer surface of all three of the double-cone rollers, which slices the bark which has been separated from the wood of the log by the pressure applied by the rollers, so that strips of bark fall from the log. The invention is especially suitable for removing thick stringy, fibrous bark from logs.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 27, 1991
    Date of Patent: May 12, 1992
    Assignee: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
    Inventors: Robin Wingate-Hill, Ian J. MacArthur
  • Patent number: 5022446
    Abstract: Apparatus for debarking a log using the compression debarking technique includes rollers which apply radial pressure to the log to separate the bark from the wood of the log. Pairs of rollers mounted in a bogie-like arrangement on the end of respective arms bear against the log. At each roller contact location, the log is also contacted by either a fixed roller or another pair of bogie-mounted rollers. At least two of the rollers of each set are driven by a reversible motor, to rotate the log while pressure is applied to it. The (preferably variable) angle which the planes of rotation of the rollers make with the longitudinal axis of the log ensures that the log is transported through the set of rollers as pressure is applied to the log. Cutting means, such as a knife blade on the outer surface of at least one roller, slices the bark which has been separated from the wood of the log, so that strips of bark fall from the log.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 27, 1989
    Date of Patent: June 11, 1991
    Assignee: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
    Inventors: Robin Wingate-Hill, Ian J. MacArthur
  • Patent number: 4875511
    Abstract: Apparatus for removing bark from logs, particularly from logs of stringy-bark eucalyts and other rough-barked tree species, and for crushing logs, consists of a plurality of pairs of concave rollers which are mounted in spaced-apart relationship along the linear passage of the log through the apparatus. Each pair of concave rollers applies pressure to regions of the log to loosen the bark from the body of the log. Knives may be included on the concave surfaces of some or all of the rollers to cut the loosened bark.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 10, 1987
    Date of Patent: October 24, 1989
    Assignee: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
    Inventors: Robin Wingate-Hill, Bernard M. Hadaway