Lightweight Crane-Set Forming Panel
A forming panel is provided which is particularly useful as a large, crane-set forming panel for forming concrete walls. The forming panel includes a face plate and a frame, the frame including channels having a slot extending longitudinally therealong. The slot is adapted to receive a filler insert having a bushing which includes a flexible barrier having a brush-like element with a plurality of filaments extending into a passage configured to receive either a tie bar or a tie rod. The forming panel preferably includes a shiftably mounted bracket for supporting a waler, scaffold or strongback thereon, wherein the bracket includes an arm which may be pivoted to a position substantially parallel to the frame and its mounting plate for transport and/or storage. The face plate may be provided as a multilayered composite panel and the frame may include rails having grooves on the side opposite the face plate which receive flexible barriers for inhibiting the passage of fine particles of concrete therepast.
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This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/885,587, filed Jan. 18, 2007.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION1. Field of the Invention
The present invention concerns a lightweight metal forming panel used in the construction of concrete or other cementations walls. More particularly, the present invention concerns a forming panel which is constructed with dimensions typical of a crane-set forming panel but lighter in weight, may include a composite face plate and a frame including a resilient barrier, and may feature a reinforcing spine adapted to receive a shiftable bracket which permits sealing against internally placed form connecting elements such as ties bars or tie rods of different configurations and includes a retractable support bracket.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Forming panels are well known in the construction industry as providing a system for retaining flowable cementatious material such as concrete in a desired shape during pouring and curing. Forming panels of metal represent a significant advance over panels of wood because of their durability which permits their removal and reuse on successive construction projects. One typical use of such forming panels is the formation of upright walls including foundation walls, above-grade walls, parapet walls and the like.
Such metal forms are typically modular in character such that a number of panels are coupled together to providing a forming system. Such forming systems are generally shown and described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,708,315, 4,744,541, 4,958,800, 4,976,401, 4,978,099, 5,058,855, 5,080,321, 5,174,909, 5,184,439, 5,288,051, 5,965,053, 6,935,607 and 7,144,530, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. Prior forming systems and their panels included openings or channels which permitted attachment of accessories, such as shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,965,053, 6,935,607 and 7,144,530. However, the channels of the U.S. Pat. No. 5,965,053 patent required the use of complementary nuts and bolts, clamps or pins with retainers to enable attachment of hardware and accessories such as connecting elements, e.g. tie bars and tie rods, braces, stiffbacks, scaffold boards, supports and other forming accessories. Such loose parts are problematic at a construction site, being broken, misplaced or lost as the forming walls are disassembled or moved. Moreover, the location for receipt of these attachment members were limited and by necessity often were between reinforced areas of the forming panels and thus placed stress on portions of the panels in locations least configured to accept such stresses and strains. The forming panel shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,935,607 and 7,144,530 represents a significant advancement. However, the use of the “O” ring as a sealing member requires relatively frequent replacement and provides limited tolerances to differences in the diameters of the tie rod against which it seals. Furthermore, the use of the “O” ring as a sealing member presents inherent limitations as to the dimensions or configuration of the tie rod, and typically not configured for sealing around conventional tie bars to inhibit the passage of concrete therepast. While improvements in inhibiting leakage around a form and to an extent through openings in the form are shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,655,650, the improvements in such sealing have been limited to use on the forming panel itself, and limited in the ability to provide a barrier to concrete intrusion when an opening is later made through the face plate of the forming panel inboard of the side rail or other parts of the frame.
Particularly in connection with large forming panels which are set by cranes, there has developed a need for a panel which is easier for the workmen to handle during setting both in regard to weight and depth of the forming panel. There is also a need for a forming panel which minimizes the use of separate attachments. There is a further need for a forming panel which is of sufficient height and width to replace two or more conventional hand-set forming panels which are typically about 3 feet or 4 feet wide, 8 feet or 10 feet high, and have a depth of about 4 inches, but which is configured to readily align with these hand-set panels so as to be more readily compatible therewith.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThese and other objects have largely been addressed by the lightweight crane-set forming panel of the present invention. That is to say, the forming panel of the present invention presents significant improvements over prior art in regard to providing a lightweight panel of a size typical of crane-set forming panels, but presents improved capabilities for inhibiting the passage of fine particles of concrete around the frame or through openings in a face plate of the forming panel, and facilitates its use with other conventional panels by the provision of a folding bracket for holding a waler or other structural support. Moreover, while it is common to mount tie bars to the side rails of a forming panel, the present invention provides a forming panel capable of reuse and which permits the insertion of a tie rod or tie bar through an opening such as a hole or slot positioned internally of the side rails of the frame.
The forming panel of the present invention broadly includes a face plate and a generally rearwardly extending frame which includes rails extending along the edge of the face plate. One or a plurality of strengthening members, such as channels and commonly known in the trade as “hats”, extend along the rear side of the face plate to provide support and rigidity. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the face plate may be provided as a composite sheet of several layers of material received in a groove in the frame, the frame including a flexible barrier on the outside edge of the frame to inhibit the passage of fine particles of concrete therepast. In one aspect of the present invention hereof, a filler insert is configured for receipt into a slot defined by the channel and includes a bushing. The bushing is preferably provided with a flexible, brush type barrier which may be of either a round or O-shaped configuration, or present a rectangular, slot-type opening configuration. Most preferably, alternative configurations of the bushing in the filler insert permit replacement of the filler insert and substitution of a bushing of a different configuration. The filler insert may be selectively placed along the slot of the channel where a hole or slot is located in the face plate of the forming panel. In especially preferred embodiments, a progressive sealing element is provided in the bushing of the filler insert, such that depending on the size of the rod or bar to be sealed, one or more seals of the progressive seal are engaged by the bar or rod. In some preferred embodiments, threaded slots are provided in the frame, and the filler insert may be mounted by bolts to the threaded slots, and/or a threaded ring may be placed around the bushing and used for holding the filler insert in position.
Another aspect of the invention includes a support bracket which is shiftably mounted to frame. The shiftable support bracket is preferably pivotally mounted to the frame, whereby it may be pivoted to a position which extends rearwardly from the face plate and frame to receive a structural or alignment member such as a scaffold, waler or strongback, and then pivoted to a position extending in a plane substantially parallel to the face plate for storage and transport. The shiftable support bracket is advantageously slidably mounted along one or a plurality of slots through the use of bolts or studs received in the slot. Moreover, the shiftable support bracket is removably mounted whereby it may be removed and repositioned to provide for holding either a vertical or horizontally positioned support member. Two or more sets of such brackets of different capacities may be provided, such as to enable contemporaneous, overlapping use of a scaffold, a waler (horizontal orientation of the bracing member) and a strongback (vertical orientation of the bracing member) on the rear side of the forming panel.
The channel, preferably though not necessarily unitary in construction and extending either fully or partially between the rails of the frame, and a central slot extending therealong is preferably threaded. As used herein in connection with the slot in the channel, the term “threaded” refers to the presence of opposed ridges or flights on the opposing, inward-facing sides of the wall surfaces of the channel forming the slot to permit a threaded member such as a bolt, stud, tie-rod or other externally threaded member to advance into and be withdrawn from the slot when rotated. Because the slot is open at the ends, an encircling opening with internal threads as typically understood by the term “threaded” is not provided, but the ridges on the channel nonetheless permit threadable attachment of such threaded members. Preferably, the channel includes at least a pair of wall surfaces each having a plurality of ribs which cooperatively define a threaded surface in the slot. The channel is preferably formed by extrusion whereby the threaded slot extends longitudinally along the channel permitting the positioning of a complementary threaded member, such as a bolt, receiver or plug, to be capable of infinite adjustment along the threaded portion of the channel. The threaded slot further preferably extends substantially the entire length of the channel. Multiple channels may be included in the frame in parallel or transverse orientations. For example, a first set of one or a plurality of channels may be oriented in an upright position when the panel is positioned for use, and another set of channels may be positioned in horizontal relationship. The channels not only serve to provide a grid for multiple attachment locations for accessories to the panel, but also help to reinforce the face panel against deflection. Both the face panel and the frame may be provided of aluminum alloy or other suitable metal which is durable and capable of outdoor use. The face plate may also be provided as a composite panel of layers of material such as synthetic resin and metal sheets. The channel may also have external serrations to facilitate gripping of the channel by clamps or other accessories. Beneficially, the preferred embodiment of the invention further includes slot rails accessible from the rear of the form which may be positioned laterally from but extend parallel to the channel. The slot rails may advantageously sized so as to capture and hold a nut or bolt head against turning, thereby greatly facilitating attachment and then tightening to the rear side of the form of form hardware such as the shiftable support bracket described above.
The threaded slot provided by the channel may be used to anchor various types of accessories to the panel. For example, the face plate may be provided with a hole thereon to permit a threaded tie rod to pass through a hole in the face plate and into the slot. A receiver may then be threaded into the threaded slot for engaging and supporting the tie rod and inhibiting the passage of water or concrete through the hole and past the tie rod which may result in a rough and uneven concrete finish around the tie rod. The channel may also permit a large attachment nut to bear against the back side of the channel and thread onto the threaded end of the tie rod. Bolts or similar threaded fasteners may be readily threaded directly into the channel to attach braces, stiffbacks, or the like. In addition, a bolt may be threaded into the threaded slot and extend past the channel and through an opening in the face plate for anchoring into the concrete either before or after curing. Such a usage may be desirable for providing an anchor in the cured concrete whereby a plurality of sequential concrete pours may be employed to construct a multistory wall of sequentially poured wall sections by removing a panel from a completed wall and reinstalling the panel atop a cap or the like for providing a second, third or further walls after the poured concrete or other cementations material of the lower wall has cured to hardness. The bolt and cap may then be withdrawn and reused for each successive wall section to be poured, and the hole in the forming panel filled by a stopper, caulk, or other sealing means.
The forming panel hereof is useful as part of a forming system wherein a plurality of such panels may be connected by fasteners to provide a forming wall which faces another, opposite one of the forming walls to receive poured cementations material such as concrete therebetween. The threaded slots in the channels and the non-threaded slot rails of the channels greatly facilitate the attachment and securement of tie rods at multiple locations internal to the surrounding edges of the form and the mounting of hardware and accessories such as an expandable wall brace, a horizontal waler, a scaffold bracket, a lifting bracket with a clevis, and a gang leveler without the need for small nuts which must be positioned in narrow channel slots. Rather, the bolts for coupling such members to the panel may be secured directly to the panel and threaded into the channels while retaining the capability of infinite adjustment along the threaded portion of the panel. Moreover, the forming panel of the present invention may be provided of a reduced rearward depth from the face plate as compared to other crane set forms. This permits the forming panel of the present invention to favorably align along the rear side of the frame, so that the forming panel is complemental in depth and location of holes in the rails to smaller, typically man-set forms. Thus, while retaining the strength required of large, crane-set forms, the forming panel of the present invention can be placed side-by-side with smaller man-set forms and readily coupled thereto using pins and wedges or other fastening members such as the PINLOCK fastener of Western Forms as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,058,855, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference. In addition, a waler or scaffold placed in spanning relationship across the crane-set form of the present invention may not only provide alignment of the forming panel hereof, but also smaller man-set forms.
These and other advantages will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art with reference to the drawings and description which follow.
Referring now to the drawings, a forming panel 10 in accordance with the present invention broadly includes a face plate 12 and a frame 14 and includes at least one channel 16 having an elongated, internally threaded slot 18. The forming panel 10 is preferably of aluminum or an aluminum alloy. The frame 14 preferably includes upper rail 20, lower rail 22 and side rails 24 and 26. The face plate 12 is a generally planar sheet of aluminum or aluminum alloy welded to the frame 14. Alternatively, as shown in
In greater detail, the face plate 12 of the forming panel 10 shown herein is preferably of a relatively thin extruded sheet of aluminum which may be cut or pierced to provide a hole 32 therein for the passage of members such as tie rods or tie bars which extend into the poured concrete 34 between opposing forming panels. The face plate 12 includes a front face 36 and a rear face 38, the front face being smooth or textured, as desired, to provide a surface against which the poured concrete cures in the desired configuration. The rails 18, 20, 22 and 24 extend rearwardly from the face plate 12 and are preferably welded together at their junctions forming corners of the forming panel 10 and a plurality of openings 40 are preferably provided in each in order to receive connectors such as pins 194 held by wedges and other couplers such as the locking assembly shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,058,855 known to those skilled in the art for coupling the forming panel 10 to adjacent panels or other forming hardware. Hangers 46 for tie rods and the like and attachment pins 48 useful for lifting and moving the forming panels 10 may be located at suitable locations on the rear side of forming panel 10 as shown in
As shown in
The threaded slot 18 is adapted to threadably receive different threaded members 60 and thereby couple with a variety of different forming accessories such as, for example, tie rods 62. In particularly preferred embodiments, the horizontal channels 30 and secondary perimeter channels 31 permit attachment of other components by having exterior slots 64 adapted to receive bolt heads for coupling strongbacks, beams or other members through the use of conventional bolts and nuts as illustrated in the embodiment shown in
The channels 16 may be extruded in various configurations and reinforced.
In the combination shown in
The horizontal channel 30 of
The bolt slot 118 is particularly useful for supporting a shiftable waler bracket 126, shown in greater detail in
The filler insert 66 may be provided as a modified filler insert 66A as shown in
The bracket 212 is shown in greater detail in
The filler insert 66B is shown in greater detail in
The filler insert 66C is in similarly constructed to filler insert 66B, except that the U-shaped backing 70C includes gaps 260 which are located adjacent to bushing 68. A retaining ring 262 may then be inserted into the channel 28 and turned a ¼ turn whereby the threads 264 on the outside of the ring engage the ribs of the threaded slot 18. To facilitate insertion and engagement, the retaining ring 262 has circumferentially spaced, opposite external unthreaded or flat surfaces 266 and 268, and semicircular recesses 270 to facilitate insertion of a tool for dislodgement of the retaining ring 262 from the channel 28 when desired. The retaining ring 262 may also have an internal, circumscribing groove to receive an O-ring therein for sealing around the bushing 68. In use, the retaining ring 262 is inserted into the channel 28, turned a ¼ turn, then the filler insert 66C is positioned with the bushing 68 inserted into the retaining ring 262. The tapered tie rod is then passed through the bushing 68 as described above and secured with a nut 270 or plate 98 as described above. The filler insert 66C is also provided with 4 holes 252 in the mounting plate 272 and may be held in place using nuts 134 and bolts 132 as described above. The provision of the mounting plate 272 provides a broad surface so that a tie rod nut 270 may be used instead of a threaded plate 98, the same being true with respect to the mounting plate 250 of filler insert 66B.
As seen in greater detail in
As shown in
In use, the forming panel 10 or 10A hereof is a large form typically about 9 feet or more in width and 8 feet or more height, and thus is typically set in position by a crane. Typically, crane-set aluminum forming panels weigh about 7 lbs. or more per square foot measured by the area of the concrete-receiving face. However, the construction of the forming panel 10 or 10A hereof dramatically reduces the weight, such that the weight of the forming panel 10 or 10A hereof is desirably less than about 6.5 pounds per square foot. Thus, the forming panel may be more easily manipulated by the contractor to position the form alongside other forms both similarly sized and of smaller sizes for coupling together as opposed forming walls as is well known to those in the art.
Once positioned and attached by pins or other fasteners to adjacent forming panels, it may be desirable to provide support for maintaining alignment of the forming panels 10 or 10A set side by side. In this regard, the shiftable waler bracket 126 is particularly useful. Once its bolts are received in the slot rail 118, the waler bracket may be shifted along the horizontal channels 30 until selectively positioned, and then the bolts or nuts are tightened to hold the waler bracket 126 in place. The bracket arm 144 may then be pivoted from the position shown in
To maintain the desired spacing between opposing forming panels 10, typically tie bars 180 are positioned between adjacent forming panels and extend across the concrete-receiving space 202 between opposed forming panel walls. The tie bars are then held in place by clamps, pins or other similar fasteners. However, in using large crane-set forms of the type shown in the preferred embodiment, it may also be desired to provide a hole which penetrates through the face plate 12 inboard of the side rails and top and bottom rails, as shown in
In the present invention, the use of the progressive seal provided by the O rings 42 and 44 and flexible barrier 78 helps to inhibit the leakage of fine concrete particles carried by water in the poured concrete past the tie rod. After the hole is created in the face plates 12 of the opposing forming panels, the tie rod is inserted through the slot in the channel and the passages of the bushings in the filler insert 66. Internally threaded cap 204 and nut 296 may then be threaded onto the threaded ends of the tie rod to hold it in position to resist outward displacement of the forming panel 10 or the portion of the face plate 12 thereof. The retaining ring 82 is then tightened against the ribs of the channel 16 in order to help hold the filler insert 66 from movement along the channel.
In some circumstance, the workman may desire to use a tie bar 180 instead of a tie rod in such applications. The tie bar 180 may be positioned between adjacent forming panels and held by a pin 194 and wedge 306 as shown in
Concrete may then be poured between the forming walls made up of the forming panels 10 positioned side by side and coupled together. After the concrete has cured to sufficient hardness, the pins, nuts, retaining rings, caps, walers, scaffolds and strongbacks, together with other forming hardware and accessories, are removed. While the tie bars remain embedded in the concrete, the tapered tie rods may typically be removed from the cured concrete prior to stripping the forming panels from the concrete wall. After the forming panels 10 are stripped, the bracket arms 144 and 144A conveniently pivot back to the storage position as shown in
Although preferred forms of the invention have been described above, it is to be recognized that such disclosure is by way of illustration only, and should not be utilized in a limiting sense in interpreting the scope of the present invention. Obvious modifications to the exemplary embodiments, as hereinabove set forth, could 10 be readily made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the present invention.
The inventors hereby states their intent to rely on the Doctrine of Equivalents to determine and assess the reasonably fair scope of their invention as pertains to any apparatus not materially departing from but outside the literal scope of the invention as set out in the following claims.
Claims
1. A forming panel for receiving thereagainst flowable cementatious material comprising:
- a face plate presenting a rear side and a concrete-receiving side;
- a frame including a plurality of rails extending rearwardly from the rear side of the face plate and at least one channel extending along the rear side of the face plate and positioned between said plurality of rails, said channel having a longitudinally extending slot therealong, said face plate including at least one opening therethrough adapted for receiving a connecting element; and
- a filler insert removably mounted to said frame and configured for receipt in said slot, said filler insert including a bushing having a passage therethrough for positioning in alignment with the opening and a flexible barrier of brush-like filaments extending into the passage.
2. A forming panel as set forth in claim 1, wherein said channels include opposed longitudinally extending first and second walls having longitudinally extending ribs thereon with said longitudinally extending slot being located intermediate said walls.
3. A forming panel as set forth in claim 2, further including a retaining ring configured for mounting over said bushing and having an outer surface including a thread configured for threadably engaging said ribs.
4. A forming panel as set forth in claim 3, said retaining ring further including an interior surface mounting a resilient member thereon adapted for engaging the bushing when mounted thereon.
5. A forming panel as set forth in claim 4, said retaining ring further including a rearward edge presenting a relief therein.
6. A forming panel as set forth in claim 1, said passage in said bushing having an arcuate configuration.
7. A forming panel as set forth in claim 1, said bushing having a pair of opposed guides each presenting a substantially flat central surface defining said passage.
8. A filler insert for selective mounting to a forming panel for receiving thereagainst flowable cementatious material, said filler insert comprising:
- a backing member;
- a bushing mounted to the backing member and having a passage through the bushing; and
- a flexible barrier of brush-like filaments mounted on the bushing and extending into the passage.
9. A bracket for selective positioning along a frame of a forming panel for concrete having a face plate presenting a concrete-receiving surface, said bracket comprising:
- a mounting plate adapted for mounting to the frame;
- a bracket arm; and
- pivot structure for pivotally mounting the bracket arm to the mounting plate for shifting the bracket arm about a pivot axis from a position substantially parallel to the mounting plate to a position substantially perpendicular to the mounting plate.
10. A bracket as set forth in claim 9, further including a clamping member shiftably mounted to said bracket arm.
11. A bracket as set forth in claim 10, said clamping member being in a generally upright plane including a slot which is inclined relative to the mounting plate whereby shifting of clamping member relative to the arm causes the clamping member to move toward or away from the mounting plate.
12. A bracket as set forth in claim 9, wherein said bracket arm includes a pair of spaced-apart flanges and said bracket further includes a support arm pivotally mounted to said bracket arm and sized for receipt between said flanges.
13. A forming panel for receiving thereagainst flowable cementatious material, said forming panel comprising:
- a frame including an upper rail, a lower rail and spaced-apart side rails, each of said rails including an inner surface, an outer surface, and a front edge, wherein the inner surface includes a first groove located proximate the front edge, the outer surface includes a second groove proximate the front edge, and the front edge includes a flange extending forwardly of the groove;
- a face plate mounted to the frame and received in the first groove of said rails, wherein said face plate includes a panel having a synthetic resin core received between metal sheets; and
- a flexible barrier mounted in said second groove and extending generally away from said face plate.
14. A forming panel as set forth in claim 13, wherein said flexible barrier includes a brush having a multiplicity of filaments.
15. A method of forming a wall of concrete or other cementations material comprising the steps of:
- providing a pair of opposed forming panels each having a face plate and a frame including spaced apart upper and lower rails and a pair of spaced apart side rails positioned along perimeter edges of the face plate;
- coupling the forming panels in opposition to define a concrete-receiving space therebetween;
- pouring concrete into the space between the opposed forming panels;
- allowing the concrete to at least partially cure to a self-sustaining condition; and
- removing the forming panels from the concrete,
- wherein said coupling step includes providing a hole through the face plate of each of the forming panels inboard of the upper and lower rails and the side rails, and providing a brush-like flexible barrier adjacent the face plate, and providing a tie member extending between the opposed forming panels extending through their respective holes, positioning the brush-like flexible barrier adjacent the face plate and in engagement with the tie member, and operatively coupling the tie member to the frames of the respective forming panels to inhibiting displacement of the opposed forming panels away from each other.
16. A method of forming a wall of concrete or other cementations material comprising the steps of:
- providing a pair of opposed forming panels each having a face plate and a frame including spaced apart upper and lower rails and a pair of spaced apart side rails positioned along perimeter edges of the face plate;
- coupling the forming panels in opposition to define a concrete-receiving space therebetween;
- pouring concrete into the space between the opposed forming panels;
- allowing the concrete to at least partially cure to a self-sustaining condition; and
- removing the forming panels from the concrete,
- further including the steps of providing a plurality of brackets each including a mounting plate and an arm pivotally mounted thereto, and a support member for receipt on the arm and positioning adjacent to the frame of at least one forming panel, and mounting the brackets to the frame, positioning the brackets at a desired location along the frame, supporting the support member on the arm, removing the support member, and pivoting the arm to a position substantially parallel to the mounting plate.
17. A method as set forth in claim 16, wherein said pivoting step includes pivoting the arm about a substantially vertical axis.
18. A method as set forth in claim 16, wherein said pivoting step includes pivoting the arm about a substantially horizontal axis.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 18, 2008
Publication Date: Jul 24, 2008
Applicant: WESTERN FORMS, INC. (Kansas City, MO)
Inventors: Roman Brewka (St. Joseph, MO), Ronald A. Ward (Leawood, KS)
Application Number: 12/016,802
International Classification: E04G 9/00 (20060101); E04G 17/00 (20060101);