Background of the Invention
[0001] This invention relates generally to tire packaging, and more specifically to the
packaging of large tires having beads that are susceptible to damage by lifting hooks
or fork trucks during shipment.
[0002] It is widely recognized in the tire and shipping industries that tires for heavy
equipment having, for example, nominal bead diameters of 508 millimeters (20 inches)
and larger are very susceptible to damage when they are handled by fork trucks or
lifting hooks during shipment. The use of such handling equipment is necessitated
by the heavy weights of these tires which can typically range from about 225 kilograms
(500 pounds) to about 6,800 kilograms (15;000 pounds). Damage frequently occurs to
the bead portions of the tire because the fork truck forks, or lifting hook, pick
up the tire by the bead portions.
[0003] Tire manufacturers have made various attempts at packaging tires for heavy equipment
to prevent or minimize damage to the bead portions of tires during shipment, but each
of the prior art tire packages has its own drawbacks. One packaging approach has been
the use of wooden disks having diameters larger than the beads of a tire located on
each side of the tire and fastened to one another by straps. While the disk approach
does protect the inside of the tire as long as the disks remain intact, there is no
hole in the disk for fork lift handling and the packaging is expensive. Furthermore
fork lift operators have often punctured or removed the disks to facilitate handling
and damage results to the tire. Another approach has been to place extruded rubber
tubes slit to form U-shaped channels around the bead portions of a tire, place axially
oriented wood spacers between the beads, and staple straps extending radially around
and through the tire to the wooden spacers. This packaging is difficult to install,
expensive because it is very labor intensive, and can result in tire damage if the
wooden spacers split during shipment. Yet another approach has been the use of a metal
rim base/flange with foam rubber or styrofoam padding between the metal rim base/flange
and the tire bead; one metal rim base/flange is used for each tire bead, and they
are connected to one another by tension members. This last approach is not only expensive,
but can result in damage to the tire if the metal rim base/flange is kinked or distorted
resulting in a rough edge during handling because the metal is not flexible or elastic
enough to distort with the tire beads during handling and then return to its original
shape when the tire bead does.
[0004] The expense of the packaging approaches described above is an important consideration
because tires for heavy equipment are frequently shipped to distant countries making
the return of the packaging materials to the tire manufacturer for re-use impractical.
Of course, even if the tires are shipped a shorter distance the re-use of the packaging
material is minimized by the frequent occurrence of damage to the packaging as has
already been described.
[0005] A plastic bead protector and a tire package according to the present invention overcome
the problems of high cost, difficult installation, and inadequate protection of the
tire bead portions of prior art packaging. The reduced weight of a plastic bead protector
and tire package according to the present invention, in respect to the prior art packaging,
also contributes to reduced shipping costs.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0006] Various advantages and features of the invention will be apparent in the following
description and claims, considered together with the drawings forming an integral
part of the specification and in which:
Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a bead protector according to the invention;
Fig. 2 is a radial cross-sectional view of a tire package according to one aspect
of the invention; and
Fig. 3 is a perspective view of a tire package in accordance with another aspect of
the invention.
Detailed Description of the Invention
[0007] Referring first to Fig. 1, there is shown a perspective view of a bead protector
10 for use in packaging a tire. The bead protector 10 of Fig. 1 is intended to be
used for protecting the bead portions of a tire having a conventional horseshoe shaped
radial cross-section such as that illustrated in radial cross-section in Fig. 2.
[0008] The tire 20 illustrated in Fig. 2 has a pair of annular bead portions 21. Each annular
bead portion 21 of the tire has a radially inner surface 22 of a predetermined axial
width that is oriented at a predetermined angle with respect to the axis of rotation
of the tire. Each bead portion 21 also has an axially outer surface 23 that extends
in a generally radial direction. The radially inner and axially outer surfaces of
each bead portion are connected to one another by a curved surface 24. Projections
of the radially inner and axially outer surfaces of the bead portions of the tire
intersect one another at the predetermined sharp diameter of the bead portions. The
sharp diameter of the bead portion of a tire, rounded to the nearest one-half inch,
is often referred to in the tire art as the nominal bead diameter of a tire. The dimensions
and orientation of the surfaces of the bead portion of a tire are selected by a tire
engineer in accordance with well known engineering practices so that the bead portions
will mate properly with a rim that the tire is designed to be mounted upon. While
it is believed that the present invention may be most advantageously practiced in
cooperation with tires for heavy equipment, such as earthmovers, having, for example,
nominal bead diameters in the range of from about 508 millimeters (20 inches) to about
1,450 millimeters (57 inches), it is understood that any tire fitting the above general
description may be protectively packaged according to the invention regardless of
its size.
[0009] As used herein and in the appendend claims "axis" refers to the axis of rotation
about which a tire, tire package or bead protector may normally rotate, and "axial"
and "axially" refer to directions parallel to said axis. "Radial" and "radially" refer
to directions that are perpendicular to said axis.
[0010] A bead protector 10 according to the invention can best be described by referring
to Fig. 1 in conjunction with Fig. 2, which is a radial cross-sectional view of a
tire package according to one aspect of the invention. The bead protector 10 is an
annular plastic structure comprising a bead seat 11 extending in a generally axial
direction with a generally radially extending flange 12 located at one axial end of
the bead seat. The bead seat 11 of the bead protector 10 has a radially outer surface
13 with an axial width that is preferably at least as great as the axial width of
the radially inner surfaces 22 of the bead portions of a tire that the bead protector
is intended to protect. The radially outer surface 13 of the bead seat 11 of the bead
protector is oriented at substantially the same angle with respect to the axis of
the bead protector as the radially inner surfaces 22 of the bead portions of the tire
are oriented with respect to the axis of rotation of the tire. It is understood that
in a tire package according to the invention the tire and the bead protectors are
coaxial. These surfaces are normally oriented at angles of between about 5° and about
15° with respect to their respective axes, so that the bead seat 11 has one axial
end that is located radially outwardly of the other axial end of the bead seat. The
flange 12 of the bead protector is located at the radially outermost axial end of
the bead seat.
[0011] The radially outer surface 13 of the bead seat 11 and the axially inner surface 14
of the flange 12 are connected by a curved surface 15, and projections of each of
these surfaces intersect one another at a sharp diameter that is equal to or less
than the sharp diameter of the bead portions of the tire. Preferably the difference
between the sharp diameter of the bead portions of the tire and the sharp diameter
of the bead protector is no greater than 3.175 millimeters (1/8 inch). Put another
way, the difference between the two sharp diameters should be in the range of 0.0
to 3.175 millimeters (1/8 inch) so that the bead protector can be slideably inserted
inside the bead portion of the tire and still have relatively little movement in a
radial direction that could eventually result in the distortion of the protector when
the tire is handled during shipping.
[0012] The radial height of the flange 12 of the bead protector should preferably be about
the same as that of the radially oriented portion of the side protecting flange of
a rim that the tire is designed to be mounted upon, but in any event it must be long
enough to extend radially outwardly of the curved surface 24 at the heel of the bead
portion of the tire when the bead protector is inserted into the bead portion of a
tire.
[0013] Preferably a plastic bead protector according to the invention is comprised of polyethylene.
Bead protectors according to the invention have been satisfactorily manufactured by
rotational molding of Medium-Density Polyethylene Rotational Molding Resin DNDA-7148
Natural, which is distributed by the Union Carbide Corporation. Bead protectors manufactured
using this particular resin performed satisfactorily when they were manufactured to
be between about 6.35 millimeters (1/4 inch) and about 9.52 millimeters (3/8 inch)
thick. Plastic bead protectors of this construction had both sufficient strength and
flexibility to protect and distort with the tire without breaking or becoming displaced
when handled by fork trucks or lifting hooks during shipping. Furthermore these bead
protectors, and the tire package, are much less expensive than the prior art tire
packages described herein. However, it is understood that a bead protector according
to the invention may be made of any flexible plastic material and by any manufacturing
method without deviating from the scope of the invention.
[0014] A tire package according to the invention comprises a tire of the type that has already
been described with reference to Fig. 2, a pair of annular plastic bead protectors
as had already been disclosed with reference to Figs. 1 and 2, and a plurality of
elastic tension members exerting an axially inwardly directed force on each of the
bead protectors to hold them in position with respect to the bead portions of the
tire. Referring now to Fig. 2, a tire package 30 according to the invention is manufactured
by providing a tire 20 of the type already described; slideably inserting a plastic
bead protector 10 inside of each bead portion 21 of the tire such that the radially
outer surface 13 of the bead seat 11 of the bead protector is adjacent to the radially
inner surface 22 of a bead portion of the tire and the axially inner surface 14 of
the flange 12 of the bead protector is adjacent to the axially outer surface 23 of
the bead portion of the tire. Preferably the radially outer surface of the bead seat
of each bead protector has an axial width that is greater than the axial width of
the radially inner surfaces of the bead portions of the tire, as shown in Fig. 2,
and the bead seats have a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart holes 16 therethrough.
The holes 16 are disposed at an axial distance from the axially inner surface of the
flange that is greater than the axial width of the radially inner surfaces of the
bead portions of the tire. An elastic tension member 17, such as a strip of inner
tube or a spring, is then secured to each of the bead protectors by a means for fastening
18, such as an S hook, that extends through one of said holes. If the means for fastening
are S hooks it is preferable that they be crimped shut, as shown in Fig. 2.
[0015] A tire package according to another aspect of the invention may also be manufactured
as illustrated in Fig. 3, even if the radially outer surfaces of the bead seats of
the bead protectors are not as wide as, or wider than, the radially inner surfaces
of the bead portions of the tire. The elastic tension members 41 may be straps that
extend completely around and through the tire 42 and bead protectors 43 in a plane
that is substantially perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the tire package 40.
1. A tire package having an axis of rotation and comprising:
(a) a tire having a pair of annular bead portions, each said bead portion having a
radially .inner surface of a predetermined axial width that is oriented at a predetermined
angle with respect to said axis, each said bead portion further comprising an axially
outer surface extending in a generally radial direction, projections of the radially
inner and axially outer surfaces of said bead portions intersecting one another at
the sharp diameter of the bead portions;
(b) a pair of annular plastic bead protectors characterized by each of said bead protectors
being located adjacent to a bead portion of said tire, each said bead protector comprising
an annular bead seat with a generally radially extending flange located at the axially
outermost end of the bead seat with respect to said tire package, the bead seat of
each bead protector having a radially outer surface that is adjacent to the radially
inner surface of a bead portion of said tire with the flange having an axially inner
surface that is adjacent to the axially outer surface of the bead portion.of the tire,
the radially outer surface of the bead seat of each bead protector being oriented
at substantially the same angle with respect to said axis as the radially inner surfaces
of the bead portions of said tire, projections of the radially outer surfaces of said
bead seats and axially inner surfaces of said flanges intersecting one another at
a sharp diameter that is less than the sharp diameter of the bead portions of said
tire; and
(c) a plurality of elastic tension members exerting an axially inwardly directed force
on each of said bead protectors.
2. A tire package as.described in Claim 1 further characterized in that said tension
members extend completely around and through said tire and bead protectors in a plane
that is perpendicular to -said axis. -
3. A tire package as described in Claim 1 further characterized in that the radially
outer surface of the bead seat of each bead protector has an axial width that is greater
than the axial width of the radial inner surfaces of the bead portions of said tire,
the bead seat of each bead protector having a plurality of circumferentially spaced
apart holes extending therethrough located axially inwardly of the radially inner
surface of the respective bead portion of said tire, and said elastic tension members
being secured to each of said bead protectors by a means for fastening that extends
through one of said holes.
4. A tire package as described in Claim 2 further characterized in that said bead
protectors are comprised of polyethylene.
5. A tire package as described in Claim 3 further characterized in that said bead
protectors are comprised of polyethylene.
6. A tire package as described in any one of Claims 1 through 5 further characterized
in that the difference between the sharp diameter of the bead portions of the tire
and the sharp diameter of said bead protectors is no greater than 3.175 millimeters
(1/8 inch).
7. A tire package as described in any one of Claims 1 through 5 further characterized
in that the sharp diameter of the bead portions of said tire is at least 508 millimeters
(20 inches).