Protective environmentally friendly accessory for marine piling
An add-on protective covering for a support piling on an existing marine structure. The add-on protective covering has two pieces. First is a generally U-shaped piece which fits around an existing piling. One end of the U-shaped piece, a sliding piece, will slide into place on connectors with the U-shaped piece and on the sliding piece. The connectors serve the dual purpose of holding the sliding piece in place and restricting water flow to the space inside the protective covering. Restricting water flow prevents the growth of marine organisms on the existing marine piling this is an add on protective covering for installed pilings in a salt water marine environment where marine borers attach pilings.
The current invention relates generally to an after market accessory to be installed on an existing marine piling to protect the marine piling from damage by marine organisms to extend the life of the piling and to avoid environmental contamination.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONWood posts or pilings are used in a wide variety of environments and to fulfill a wide variety of purposes. The posts can be sunk into the ground as support for a building or fence. Pilings or posts can be sunk into ground beneath water to extend above the water to support structures above the water. These kinds of structures are usually called “piling” as opposed to “posts” although, the terms are largely interchangeable. Where a post is used for fencing, it has both functional purposes of providing support for the fencing but also decorative purposes linked to the fence. Consequently, a wide variety of expedients have been proposed to improve the functionality or appearance of a post or piling. For example, Papworth, U.S. Pat. No. 4,068,483, discloses a longitudinally split, flexible and resilient plastic casing to go around a piling. It is to provide a mold or casing for concrete to be poured into the casing to fit around an eroded section of a piling to provide both structural support and protection for that portion of the piling. The Papworth casing is to provide a means of repair for pilings sunk in water. Williams et. al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,516,236, discloses a sheet of flexible plastic wrapped around a substantially circular or column-like piling. Williams' sheath wraps around the piling in a circumferential configuration. The flexible sheath is secured on a piling and held into place. The purpose of the William's sheath is to provide protection against damage from marine organisms and specifically marine borers.
In a different context, fence post protecting apparatus are commonly seen. One example is Ricci, U.S. Pat. No. 7,104,525. This is an apparatus for shielding a fence post from foreign elements. It has a collar section with three side walls and one detachable side wall and a base extending around the perimeter of the collar section. The detachable-side wall is attached to the remainder of the apparatus by tongue-and-groove arrangement which allows a slidable engagement. It is appreciated that the apparatus can be assembled and disassembled by removing or attaching the side wall along a substantial vertical plane. Ricci's cladding device is decorative and reduces the need to paint a post.
In the context of pilings sunk in water subject to attack by marine borers, there are polymer coatings for wood. These polymer coatings usually cover the entire outside of a wood piling so as to fully encapsulate the wood. One brand name for this kind of encapsulated wood piling is called “Timber Guard.” This is marketed on the basis of the environmental benefits. Ordinarily, pilings may be treated with chemical treatments that will protect the piling from damage from marine animals. The chemical treatments are designed to discourage or defeat attack by marine borers. However, these treatments are necessarily harmful to marine organisms or they would not be effective against marine borers. Over time the chemical treatments leach from the wood into the water and surrounding mud. This leaching has two negative effects. First, the wood is then less protected against attacks from marine borers. Secondly, the leaching of the chemicals into the water and mud pollutes the marine environment. Consequently, there are regulations imposed on what kinds of chemicals and amounts of chemicals that can be used for this purpose. These regulations vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Over time the regulations have tended to become more stringent and, consequently, less effective amounts of chemical treatments are used than was the case in the past, thus protecting the environment but at the expense of making the pilings more subject to attack by marine borers.
Despite this earlier work, there is a substantial unmet need in the marine industry to protect pilings from marine borers. Pilings are ordinarily sunk by use of a pile driver. The pile driver can destroy or substantially harm a protective sheath or device that is applied to the piling before it is sunk into the grounds. Moreover, an installed piling may be of an uncertain length because it is unclear just how far they will be driven into the ground, how much will be exposed above the ground, and how much of that exposure will also be subject to water exposure in a marine environment. Consequently, sheathing an entire length of an unsunk piling in a protective sheeting of one kind or another can be prohibitively expensive. The sheathing can be stripped or destroyed during shipping and the pile driving process. If the primary purpose of the sheathing is to protect a piling from attack of marine organisms, parts of the piling that are unexposed to water do not need this sheath protection. Sometimes wood pilings that are sunk in the water are chemically treated to discourage growth of marine organisms. As explained above, chemical treatments are temporary and over time the protection leaches from the wood by the exposure to water. Even a treated piling rarely has an effective life span of more than a few years. Flexible cloth-like or woven sheets may be employed around a piling to protect it from attack by marine organisms, including marine borers. However, these can be difficult to apply to a piling that is already sunk into the water. First, to be effective, the sheathing should extend somewhat below the water line into the ground or mud in which the piling is sunk. If even a small portion remains exposed to marine organisms, then they will find and attack that exposed portion. A piling is like a chain in that any part of it is attacked by marine borers then the entire piling is weakened. Consequently, to be effective, any kind of protective sheathing should extend below the ground and cover the piling to above where the water will rise at normally expected high water. Installing such protection on an installed piling is complicated by the fact that virtually all pilings have structures affixed to them be it a dock, a pier, or a walkway. What this means is that at the top of the piling, boards or other structures are affixed to it which makes it impossible to slide a sheathing that extends all the way around the piling, down the piling to provide protection. You cannot install a sheathing from the top of the piling because of the structures. For these reasons, there is no currently offered product for existing installed pilings that provides a way of installing a durable sheathing that will extend into the mud or ground where the piling is exposed to a marine environment, that will extend above the point where the piling is no longer exposed to water, and can be easily and readily installed on the existing piling which does not allow access to the top of the piling. Once installed the sheathing must be durable enough to withstand tidal action and wave action that is common in salt water marine environments and specifically those near or around the ocean or the Intracoastal Waterway. In addition to the action of the tides, there are waves like bow waves, ocean waves, or wind driven waves. These factors create unique stresses on a protective sheathing.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe current invention consists of two pieces. First, a three-sided, generally U-shaped piece made of a durable, resistant material, such as a molded plastic material sized to fit around the commonly found 6×6 inch square marine piling used for docks or piers in or near the ocean or the Intracoastal Waterway. The three-sided U-shaped piece of plastic will be of appropriate dimension where it will fit around and on an existing 6×6 inch piling. It need not be an exact fit since there is some variation in the size of wood pilings created by the manufacture and milling process but it must be a reasonably close fit. The fit should reduce the amount of space for water to leak into and between the three-sided U-shaped piece of plastic and the piling. Marine borers require nutrients and oxygen. These nutrients and oxygen are provided by circulating water. Consequently, the three-sided U-shaped piece of plastic and a side wall piece must restrict the circulation of water enough to produce an environment hostile to survival and growth of marine borers. The U-shaped piece may be cut to size to fit on an existing piling. Because the U-shaped piece is open on one side, it may be horizontally mounted on a piling through the open side of the U-shape without requiring access to the top of the piling. Once the three-sided piece is mounted around the piling, it must then be sealed off from water by a side wall piece. The sliding side wall piece slides in and is secured into place against the three-sided piece already placed around the piling. Ordinarily, the side wall piece must bend sufficiently that a sufficient length can be mounted into the three-sided piece. The way the side wall is mounted on the U-shaped three-sided piece must secure it in place against the action of waves and tides. Because the side wall piece necessarily has some flexibility to allow it to be bent to slide into place, the connection between the two pieces must have an interlocking feature which will hold it into place against the stresses created by tides and waves. Consequently, the appropriate connection of the sliding side wall piece to the U-shaped piece is of importance in making the device work. Once the sliding side wall piece is in place against the U-shaped three-sided piece, the unit may be then sunk into the mud at the bottom of the piling. Fitted together, the two pieces form the accessory piling protector. The accessory piling protector will extend for several inches into the mud and at least to the mean high water mark at the top of the piling. Once in place the accessory piling protector will restrict water flow around the piling. This creates an oxygen deprived environment between the piling and the accessory piling protector. No marine borer can survive in this environment created by the accessory piling protector.
Claims
1. An add-on plastic protective covering for a wooden support piling in an existing marine structure comprising: whereby said flexible plastic sliding piece and U-shaped plastic piece are secured around a wooden support piling in a marine environment to restrict growth of marine organisms on said wooden support piling.
- (a) a generally U-shaped plastic piece of predetermined dimensions sized to be placed around three sides of said wooden support piling;
- (b) a flexible plastic sliding piece of predetermined dimensions to attach to said U-shaped piece and to enclose said wooden support piling on four sides;
- (c) means for securing said flexible sliding piece to said U-shaped plastic piece against wave and tidal forces;
- (d) means for restricting water flow through said U-shaped piece and said flexible plastic sliding piece around said wooden support piling;
2. An add-on plastic protective covering for a wooden support piling in an existing marine structure of claim 1 wherein said means for securing further comprises on said U-shaped plastic piece at each end of said U-shaped piece, a first hook shaped connector; and on said flexible plastic sliding piece at each end of said sliding piece, a matching second hook shaped connector, whereby said second hook shaped connector on said flexible plastic sliding piece interlocks with said first hook shaped connector on said U-shaped plastic piece securely connecting said flexible plastic sliding piece to said U-shaped plastic piece.
3. An add-on plastic protective covering for a wooden support piling in an existing marine structure of claim 2 wherein for said U-shaped plastic piece for each of said first hook shaped connector further comprises a first connector arm at a right angle to an arm of said U-shaped plastic piece, a second connector arm at a right angle to said first connector arm; and for each of said second hook shaped connectors on said flexible plastic sliding piece further comprises a first connector arm at a right angle to said flexible plastic sliding piece, a second connector arm at a right angle to said first connector arm, and a third connector arm parallel to said first connector arm; whereby said first and second hook shaped connectors are sized for interlocking connection to each other.
4. An add-on plastic protective covering for a wooden support piling in an existing marine structure of claim 3 wherein said means for restricting water flow comprises on said first hook shaped connector or said U-shaped plastic piece and said second hook shaped connector on said flexible plastic sliding piece further comprises a gasket means for restricting water flow.
5. An add-on plastic protective covering for a wooden support piling in an existing marine structure of claim 3 wherein said means for restricting water flow further comprises for said predetermined dimension for said flexible plastic sliding piece and for said predetermined dimension for said U-shape plastic piece when fitted around a wooden piling, provide no more than one-quarter inch space between said add-on plastic protective covering and wooden piling on all four sides of said wooden piling.
6. An add-on plastic protective covering for a wooden support piling in an existing marine structure of claim 5 wherein said means for restricting water flow further comprises gasket means on said first hook shaped connector for said U-shaped plastic piece and for said second hook shaped connector on said flexible plastic sliding piece.
Type: Application
Filed: May 11, 2010
Publication Date: Nov 17, 2011
Inventor: Sammy Varnam (Supply, NC)
Application Number: 12/800,198