[0001] THIS INVENTION relates to a drilling and/or lifting machine, in particular a track-mounted
drilling and lifting rig, for use in soil investigation, well drilling and like fields
and especially for drilling at angles of from 0° to 90
0 to the vertical.
[0002] Currently available mini drilling machines are suitable for drilling the small diameter
holes required for use in soil investigation, and the like but cannot be used for
drilling the larger diameter bore holes required for, for example, forming wells.
Furthermore, such drilling means cannot drill horizontal or angled bore holes and
cannot therefore be used in the construction of galleries or foundations. However,
if a drilling machine which is capable of drilling larger, angled or horizontal bore
holes is used, such a drilling machine cannot drill small bore holes, particularly
in limited spaces. Furthermore, current machines cannot be used at sites where the
ground is uneven.
[0003] Currently available soil investigation drilling machines are usually small in size
and most have no suitable rotary head. Rather these machines use a winch together
with a steel wire and a crown block to hoist elongate drill strings or casings. During
hoisting, the machine must stop any drilling operation and open the rotary head to
enable a further drill rod or casing to be added to the drill string to enable the
bore to be lengthened or to enable a drill rod or casing to be removed from the bore.
Thus the efficiency of these machines is low.
[0004] In some advanced soil investigation drilling machines it is not necessary to open
the rotary head, however the whole machine must be slid backwards so as to be far
from the centre of the bore during hoisting so that lift and the drilling operations
also can not be performed simultaneously with these machines.
[0005] In the field of water well drilling or oil well drilling, more than one hundred elongate
well elements such as tubings, pipes and sucker rods are required to be hoisted successively.
The centre of the rig hoists used to lower the drill string into the well or to remove
the string from the well usually coincide with the centre of the bore. Some of the
machines have another hoist at the front of the mast and may have two winch systems
(bottom turnable rig) This kind of machine also cannot provide drilling and lifting
functions simultaneously. When performing work such as placing a string at the hoisting
position to connect or disconnect a member from the string and to run the string into
the well or remove it from the well, several operators are required to work manually
to fulfill the task, thus causing low efficiciency.
[0006] A self-contained automatically operable well servicing and drilling rig is disclosed
in UK Patent Application No. 2047306A which is capable of picking up an elongate well
element from a horizontal storage position to a vertical position. This machine can
keep the manual work to a minimum and reduce the number of workers required but cannot
drill angled holes or bores such as holes at an angle of 45 to the ground and work
with drill strings grout pipes and anchor bars in different sizes. Also this machine
can not provide drilling and lifting functions simultaneously.
[0007] A well drilling rig described in UK Patent Specification No. 1393389 may provide
a means of selecting a drill-casing segment (consisting of a drill pipe segment surrounded
by a casing segment) from a storage rack (e.g. on a truck) and transferring the combined
segments to a vertical drilling position directly over the well. But this kind of
machine is big in size and its useful apDaratus is very complicated. Also such machines
can only drill in a vertical direction and cannot drill slanting holes such as holes
or bores at an angle of 45 to the horizontal, that is at an angle of 45° to the surface
in which the machine is working. Furthermore this kind of machine needs a large amount
of space and area to operate in whereas the work site often has limited space and
area and comprises muddy, soft and watery ground.
[0008] It is an object of the present invention to provide a drilling and/or lifting machine
which overcomes or at least mitigates the above mentioned problems.
[0009] According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a lifting
and/or drilling machine comprising the features of claim 1.
[0010] According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a machine
comprising the features of claim 3. In this case, the second lifting and/or tool carrying
means preferably may be arranged to lift items for supplying to the first lifting
and/or tool carrying means.
[0011] A drilling and/or lifting machine embodying the invention is particularly suited
for use in soil investigation and mine prospecting, mining, harbour construction,
gallery, water well digging and the like. Moreover, it may be capable of drilling
large dimensioned holes, for example holes of 35 cm (14") in diameter and 10m in depth
as well as holes of small dimensions, for example 6,3 cm to 15,2 cm (2 1/2 to 6")
in diameter and 30m in depth. Furthermore, the machine can drill horizontal holes
at both high and low levels and also holes which extend at an angle in either direction
to the horizon.
[0012] A machine according to the invention is capable of providing lifting and drilling
functions simultaneously and cooperatively.
[0013] For a better understanding of the present invention, and to show how the same may
be put into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying
drawings, in which:
FIGURE 1 is a side elevational view of a track-mounted drilling and lifting machine
in accordance with the present invention with a drilling mast system thereof at a
45° downward angle to the vertical carrying out ground anchoring work;
FIGURE 2 is a side elevational view of the machine of Fiqure I with the drilling mast
system in a vertical position;
FIGURE 3 is a front elevational view of the machine shown in Figure I taken along
the direction of the arrow II in Figure 2 but showing a lifting mast system of the
machine rotated through 90 about a vertical axis:
FIGURE 4 is a side elevational view of the machine of Figure I with the drilling and
lifting mast systems in position for transport:
FIGURE 5 is a front view of the machine as shown in Figure 4 tcken along the direction
of the arrow IV in Figure 4;
FIGURE 6 is a front view of the machine of Figure I showing the drilling mast system
in a horizontal position;
FIGURE 7 is a schematic view of the lifting mast system illustrating graphically lifting
distances and elevations;
FIGURE 8 is an enlarged view of the drilling mast as shown in Figure 3 illustrating
the drilling mast being moved from a verticcl to a horizontal position by extension
of the piston of a hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement;
FIGURE 9 is a side elevational view of the track-mounted machine of Figure I showing
the drilling mast in a position for enabling upward drilling at an angle of 45°to
the horizontal to be carried out:
FIGURE 10 is a chart illustrating the sequence of operations of the lifting and drilling
mast systems during insertion of casings into a bore:
FIGURE I I is a chart illustrating the sequence of operations of the lifting and drilling
mast systems during removal of casings from a bore;
FIGURES 12 and 13 show a clamping unit and a twisting unit, respectively,for use with
the machine of Fig. 1.
[0014] Referring now to Fiqures I to 9 of the drawings, there is shown a multi-directional
drilling and lifting machine which, as shown in Figure I, comprises a universally
movable carriage having o chassis 35, a drilling mast system A and a lifting mast
system B. The lifting system B can be operated either with or independently of the
drilling system A which is capable of drilling in various different directions.
[0015] The movable carriage A has driving chain wheels 36 mounted on either side thereof
toward the rear of the carriage and driven chain wheels 36a aligned with the driving
chain wheels 36 but mounted toward the front of the carriage. A respective track 37
is trained round each driving chain wheel 36 and the aligned driven chain wheel 36a.
In the preferred arrangement, the position of the driven chain wheels 36a is adjustable
so that the tension in the track 37 can be altered whereas the driving chain wheels
36, which preferably have 24 teeth, are rotatable but fixed in position.
[0016] The lifting system B comprises a supporting part 19 mounted on the chassis 35 of
the movable carriage by means of eight screws. A turntable support 20 is mounted on
the supporting part 19 by means of a bearing so as to be rotatable thereon. An extendable
and/or retractable mast system is pivotally connected by means of hinge KK' to the
turntable support 20. The turntable support 20, and therefore the lifting mast system,
is rotatable through a maximum of 200 by means of a hydraulically operated gearing
arrangement comprising a hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement 32 and a set of
right angle gear wheels, that is a bevel gear arrangement.
[0017] The extendable and/or retractable mast system comprises telescopically arranged square
- cross-section tubes 21, 22 and 23, the tube 23 being of the smallest cross-section.
A telescopic jack or piston and cylinder arrangement 24 is provided inside the largest
cross-section tube 21. One end of the jack 24 is mounted to the hinge KK' and the
other end is mounted to the tube 22 by a hinge RR' so that extension or retraction
of the jack 24 causes corresponding extension or retraction of the tube 22. The smallest
cross-section tube 23 can only be extended or retracted manually, the desired extension
of the tube 23 from the intermediate cross-section tube 22 being determined by a manually
positionable pin LL'.
[0018] The cylinder of a piston and cylinder arrangement 31 is connected by means of a hinge
MM' to a side surface of the turntable support 20 while the piston of the piston and
cylinder arrangement 31 is connected by means of a hinge NN' to the end of the intermediate
cross-section tube 22 closest to the tube 21 so that extension and retraction of the
piston of the piston and cylinder arrangement 31 causes the lifting mast system to
rotate about the hinge KK'.
[0019] A winch 25 operable by means of a hydraulic motor (not shown) is rotatably mounted
to the side of the turntable support 20. A cable 26 wound onto the winch posses over
a double pulley 27 rotatably mounted to a free end of the mast unit and a free end
of the cable 26 is secured to a movable single pulley 28 provided with a hook 29 for
engaging an object, in this case a pipe casing,30 to be lifted by the lifting mast
unit.
[0020] Assuming a winch load capacity of 0.5 tonnes, then the maximum load which could be
lifted by the lifting mast unit is: 0.5 x 3 = 1.5 tonnes. If a safety factor of 1.5
is assumed, then the safe load capacity of the lifting mast is I tonne.
[0021] As shown most clearly in Figure 2, two hydraulic jack or piston and cylinders arrangements
33 are provided to support the machine and to ensure that the machine is balanced
during lifting.
[0022] Figure 7 illustrates graphically various different extensions in metres of the lifting
mast and various different angles of elevation therefor.
[0023] The drilling mast system A is mounted to the carriage by a support means comprising
a raising means for moving the drilling system from a horizontal to a vertical position
and vice versa, in particular for rotating the drilling mast system about a horizontal
axis so that the drilling mast system rotates in a vertical plane which extends longitudinally
of the carriage. The support means comprises a boom 2 having one end connected via
a hinge BB' to a bearing pipe I. The other end of the boom 2 is connected by means
of a hinge CC' to a bearing plate 3 so that the bearing plate cannot rotate with respect
to the boom 2. The bearing plate 3 is rotatably received in a circular bearing 3a
secured to a mast sliding bed 7. A cylinder of a piston and cylinder arrangement 5
is connected to the boom 2 by means of a hinge FF' while the piston of the piston
and cylinder arrangement 5 is connected by meons of a hinge GG' to the bearing plate
3. Thus, when the piston and cylinder arrangement 5 is actuated, the bearing plate
3, and therefore the mast sliding bed, can be turned through up to 90° about the hinge
CC' from the vertical to the horizontal or vice versa. One end of a hydraulic piston
and cylinder arrangement 4 is connected to the bearing pipe I by means of a hinge
DD' and the other end thereof is connected to the boom 2 by means of a hinge EE'.
Thus, when the hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement 4 is actuated, the boom 2
can be moved upwardly through a maximum of 45 and downwardly through a maximum of
20° to enable the drilling system to be turned in the longitudinal vertical plane
about the hinge BB'.
[0024] As shown in Figure I and as shown schematically in Figure 3, one end of a hydraulic
piston and cylinder arrangement 6 is mounted to a hinge HH' positioned either to the
left HH'L (Figure 8) or right HH'R (Figure 8) side of the sliding bed 7 while the
other end of the hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement 6 is connected via a hinge
PP' to the bearing plate 3. Thus, when the hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement
6 is actuated, the sliding bed 7 turns to the left or right about the central line
of the bearing plate 3. Figure 8 illustrates schematically the movement of the mast
sliding bed when the hinge is positioned to the left HH'L. Thus, if the hinge HH'
is positioned to the right of the sliding bed 7, the sliding bed 7 turns to the right
and if the hinge HH' is positioned to the left of the sliding bed, the sliding bed
7 turns toward the left. The hinge HH' is positioned sufficiently low on the sliding
bed 7 that it is easy to change between the two positions. Thus, the drilling system
carried by the mast sliding bed 7 can be rotated about a horizontal axis lying in
the plane of the paper in Figure 1.
[0025] One end of a hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement 34 is mounted to the chassis
35 by means of a hinge TT' while the other end is mounted to the boom 2 by means of
a hinge SS' (Figures 3 and 5). Thus, by virtue of the bearing pipe I, the support
means including the boom 2 and the hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangment 4, and
therefore the drilling system A, can be swung about a vertical axis in a horizontal
plane to a maximum of 25° to the left or to the right about a longitudinal axis of
the bearing pipe I.
[0026] The drilling mast system A comprises a steel mast 36 which is slidably mounted within
the mast sliding bed 7 by means of a hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement 8.
One end of the piston and cylinder arrangement 8 is mounted to the top of the drilling
most system A by means of a hinge JJ' and the other end is mounted to the sliding
bed by means of a hinge II' so that the mast 36 can be slid longitudinally of the
sliding bed 7.
Figures I to 6 and 9 illustrate various different drilling positions for the drilling
mast.
Figure I illustrates the drilling mast system at a 45° inclination during the performing
of ground anchoring work.
[0027] As shown in Figure 2, the mast 36 is in a position to enable a drill bit of a drill
string carried thereby to drill vertically downwardly. Figure 3 is a front view of
the machine as shown in Figure 2 but with the lifting mast system B rotated through
90° by actuation of the piston and cylinder arrangement 32. In order to drill vertically
upwardly, the most 36 is rotated through 180° about the bearing plate 3 so that the
piston and cylinder arrangement 6 is disposed at the top of the mast 36.
[0028] Figures 4 and 5 illustrate schematically the drilling mast system and the lifting
mast system in a position for transport to enable the machine to be moved to another
site, the pistons of the piston and cylinders 33 having been retracted as shown. Figure
6 is similar to Figure 5 but illustrates the drilling mast system rotated through
90° by the piston and cylinder arrangement 34 and the lifting mast system extended
by actuation of the piston and cylinder arrangement 31.
[0029] Figure 9 shows the lifting most system extended and the drilling mast system rotated
through 180
0 from the position shown in Figure 1 to enable upward drilling at an angle of 45
0 to the horizontal to be carried out.
[0030] As shown in Figure 1 α rotary drill head 14 for supporting and rotating a drill and
a casing therefor are mounted on a cradle 13. The rotary drill head 14 is provided
with a flushing inlet or aperture 16 for encbling flushing fluid to be supplied to
a drill rod connected to the rotary head. The inlet 16 of the flushing unit is at
a right angle to the bottom of the rotary head and is arranged so that it does not
pass through the centre thereof and therefore does not interfere with the action of
the rotary head.
[0031] The rotcry head has an adapter 15 having two screw-threaded adapter sections for
engaging a drill rod and a casing therefor. The rotary head may also carry a hydraulic
chuck for connecting a drilling tool to the rotary head. A motor is provided to rotate
the head 14.
[0032] The cradle 13 is mounted on rails of the drilling mast unit A so as to be slidable
therealong by means of a hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement 9 mounted within
the drilling mast 36. An upper end of the hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement
9 is fixed to the mast 36 by means of a hinge QQ' while a front end of the piston
thereof is fixed to a movable three-part pulley system 10. A cable or wire carrying
the cradle 13 is trained over the movable three - part pulley system 10 and a further
pulley system I I is provided at an upper part of the drilling mast so that when the
piston and cylinder arrangement 9 is actuated, the cradle 13 is moved up and down
the mast by means of. the pulley system 10 and 11. A wire adjusting point and a wire
adjusting unit are provided to enable the tension in the wire or cable of the pulley
system to be adjusted.
[0033] As can be seen from the Figures, in particular Figures I and 2, the hydraulic piston
and cylinder arrangement 9 is mounted so that the cylinder is at the top of the drilling
mast and the piston is at the bottom thereof so that when the piston is extended,
the push force is greater than when the piston is retracted because the area at the
cylinder side is bigger than the area at the piston side. The advantage of installing
the hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement 9 in this manner is that a relatively
greater pull load can be expected when extracting a casing from a drilled hole while
a relatively smaller load would be expected during drilling. If the hydraulic piston
and cylinder arrangement 9 were installed so that the cylinder were at the bottom
and the piston were at the top, the push force developed would be greater than the
weight of the machine causing the machine to lift up during drillng and and the pull
force developed would not be sufficient to extract the casing when a drill hole had
been completed.
[0034] A hydraulic drill rod or casing clamping unit 17 and a hydraulic drill rod or casing
twisting or turninq and clamping unit 18 are mounted at the end of the most remote
from the rotary head 14, that is adjacent a nose of the mast.
[0035] The clamping unit 17 is illustrated schematically in Figure 12 while the twisting
unit 18 is illustrated schematically in Figure 13. The clamping unit 17 is in the
form of a hydraulic clamp comprising a pair of hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangements
17a mounted to a frame 17b which is fixed to the mast. The rod clamping unit is used
to clamp a drill rod or the like so as to assist in the removal thereof from a drill
bore when the mast hydraulic piston and cylinder arrangement 9 is actuated to pull
a drill rod or the like connected thereto out of a drilled bore.
[0036] As shown in Figure 13, the twisting or turning unit 18 which is mounted between the
clamping unit 17 and the rotary drill head 14 comprises four hydraulic cylinders 18a,
18b, 18c and 18d and a U-shaped frame 18e. Two of the cylinders 18a and 18b are mounted
on the frame 18e to clamp a drill rod or a similar tool while the other two cylinders
18c and 18d are mounted to a frame 18f which is fixed to the mast. The U-shaped frame
is rotatably supported by a bearing olate and can be rotated using the hydraulic cylinders
18a, 18b, 18c and 18d through an angle of preferably 40° to turn or twist a drill
rod or like tool mounted to the drill mast so as to assist in the removal thereof
after the drilling operation or like. particularly if the drill rod or the like is
jammed or stuck inside the drill bore.
[0037] The operating procedure of the machine will be described with reference to the example
of angled hole drilling shown in Figure I to explain how the machine provides lifting
and drilling functions simultaneously.
[0038] As shown in Figure I, the machine is drilling a hole or bore downwardly at an angle
of approximately 45° to the vertical. The machine is located such that the two foot
piston and cylinder arrangements 33 are six feet six inches (1.96m) away from the
sheet-pile and the centre of the bore or hole C approximately five feet (1.5m) above
the around.
[0039] Figure 10 is timing diagram or chart illustrating the operation of and cooperation
between the lifting and drilling systems during the attachment of a pipe or casing
to the string while Fiqure 11 illustrates the operation and cooperation between the
lifting and drilling systems during detachment or removal of a pipe casing or rod
from the string. It should be appreciated that the 1st and 2nd casings referred to
in Figures 10 and I are not necessarily the same casings.
[0040] After the machine has been located, the lifting mast picks up a drill casing set
(including a casing bit and a casing) and lays the set down into the drill guide formed
by the pipe clamping units 17 and 18. The clamping units are hydraulically controlled
to adjust the two jaws thereof to provide an internal diameter which is bigger than
the casing's outside diameter. Then the lifting mast is adjusted to position the drill
tool ready to connect to the flange adapter. After the top of the flange has been
connected to the flange adapter 15, the casing is drilled into the hole with or without
the supply of flushing fluid through the flushing aperture 16. Drilling is stopped
when the drill casing has sunk into the ground. Then the casing is clamped by the
pipe clamping unit 17 and the rotation of the rotary head is reversed to unscrew the
flange adapter 15 from the casing. The rotary head 14 is then hoisted back to the
top of the most by the control hoist piston and cylinder arrangement 9 and the steel
wire. As the rotary head 14 inserts one casing 30' the lifting mast system B lifs
up a second casing 30 and keeps the second casing 30 in a waiting position over the
drill mast (as shown in Figure I). Now the second casing can be put into the right
position between the first casing and the flange adapter 15 and linked to them. The
next drilling cycle can then be started to add further casings to the string. From
the above description it is clearly shown that the time for lifting conincides with
that for drilling and thus efficiency is increased.
[0041] In order to remove a casing from a string, as illustrated in Figure I I, drilling
is first stopped and the first or uppermost casing is pulled out of the bore by moving
the rotary head 15 up the mast. The clamping unit 17 then clamps the next or second
casing and rotation of the rotary head is reversed to disconnect the first and second
casings. If necessary, the twisting unit 18 should be used to disconnect the casings.
The twisting unit 18 then clamps the first casing and the rotary head is reversed
to disconnect the first casing from the flange adapter 15. The lifting mast system
then picks up the first casing and transfersthe casing to a storoqe position. The
rotary head is at that time moved down the most and rotated to connect the flange
adapter 15 to the next or 2nd casing. The clamping unit 17 then clamps the third casing
and the rotary head 15 is reversed to disconnect the second and third casings. The
cycle or procedure is repeated until all the desired casings have been removed from
the bore.
Summary of the Invention
[0042]
I. A machine comprising a movable carriage, a first lifting and/or tool carrying means,
support means mountinq the first lifting and/or tool carrying means on the carriage
to enable the first lifting and/or tool carrying means to be positioned in a selected
one of a plurality of different positions and a second lifting and/or tool carrying
means mounted on the carriage so as to be movable either with or independently of
the first lifting and/or tool carrying means.
2. A machine according to No. I, wherein the first lifting and/or tool carrying means
is rotatable relative to the support means and connecting means connect the support
means to the first lifting and/or tool carrying means, the connecting means being
movable to rotate the first lifting and/or tool carrying means relative to the support
means.
3. A machine which comprises a first lifting and/or tool carrying means, a carriage,
a support means mounting the first lifting and/or tool carrying means to the carriage
so that the first lifting and/or tool carrying means is rotatable about a first axis
relative to the support means, and means connecting the support means to the first
lifting and/or tool carrying means, the connecting means being movable to rotate the
first lifting and/or toot carrying means relative to the support means.
4. A machine according to No. 2 or 3, wherein the connecting means comprises a crank
member having a first arm and a second arm, the first arm being extendable to rotate
the first lifting and/or tool carrying means relative to the support means.
5. A machine according to No. 4, wherein the first arm comprises a piston and cylinder
arrangement.
6. A machine according to any one of Nos. 2 to 5, wherein the support means is arranged
to rotate the first lifting and/or tool carrying means about a second axis not parallel
to the first axis.
7. A machine according to any one of Nos. 2 to 5, wherein the support means carries
a bearing means which is rotatably mounted to the first lifting and/or tool carrying
means to enable the first lifting and/or tool carrying means to rotate relative to
the support means.
8. A machine according to No. 7, wherein the support means comprises a boom member
pivotally connected between the bearing means and a part of the carriage.
9. A machine according to No. 8, wherein an extendable member is pivotally connected
between the bearing means and the boom member for rotating the first lifting and/or
tool carrying meons about a second axis not parallel to the first axis.
10. A machine according to No. 9, wherein the extendable member comprises a piston
and cylinder arrangement.
11. A machine according to No.9 or 10, wherein a further extendable member is connected
between the said part of the carriage and the boom member for raising and lowering
the first lifting and/or tool carrying means relative to the carriage.
12. A machine according to No, 11, wherein the further extendable member comprises
a piston and cylinder arrangement.
13. A machine according to No. 9, 10, 11 or 12, wherein the first and second axes
are perpendicular.
14. A machine according to any preceding claim, wherein the first lifting and/or tool
carrying means are slidably mounted to the support means.
15. A machine according to any one of Nas. 7 to 13, wherein the support means comprises
guide means to which the bearing means is rotatably mounted, the first lifting and/or
tool carrying means being slidably mounted in the guide means.
16. A machine according to No. 14 or No. 15, wherein the first lifting and/or tool
carrying means is slidable bv means of a piston and cylinder orrongement.
17. A machine according to any precedinq Nrs., wherein the first lifting and/or tool carrying means comprises a mast.
18. A machine according to No. 17, wherein clamping means are mounted to the mast.
19. A machine according to No. 18, wherein the clamping means comprises a hydraulic
piston and cylinder arrangement.
20. A machine according to No. 17, 18 or 19, which further comprises gripping and
turning means mounted to the mast.
21. A machine according to No. 20, wherein the gripping and turning means comprises
gripping means rotatably mounted on the mast and two piston and cylinder arrangements
mounted on a frame of the gripping means and turning means comprising two further
piston and cylinder arrangements for effecting rotation of the frame relative to the
mast.
22. A machine according to any one of No. 17 to 21, wherein the mast is a drilling
mast having means for supporting and driving a drilling tool.
23. A machine according to No. 22, wherein the supporting and driving means comprises
a rotary drill head.
24. A machine according to any preceding No. further comprising a carriage which is
powered to move the machine over a surface.
25. A machine according to any one of Nps. 4 to 24 when dependent on Claim 3, further
comprising a second lifting and/or tool carrying means mounted on the carriage so
as to be movable either with or independently of the first lifting and/or tool carrying
means.
26. A machine according to No. I, 2 or 25 wherein the second lifting and/or tool carrying
means is arranged to lift items for supplying to the first lifting and/or tool carrying
means.
27. A machine according to No. I, 2, 25 or 26, wherein the second liftinq and/or tool
carrying means comprises a telescopic arm member having one end mounted to the carriage
and the other end carrying means for engaging a tool or load.
28. A machine according to No. 27, wherein the telescopic arm member comprises a plurality
of telescopable tubes.
29. A machine according to No. 28, wherein a first tube is extendable from and retractable
into a second tube of the plurality of telescopable tubes by means of a piston and
cylinder arrangement.
30. A machine according to No. 1 or 2 or any one of Nrs. 25 to 28, wherein the machine provides lifting and drilling functions
simultaneously and cooperatively.
31. A machine substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to, and as shown
in, any accompanying drawings.
32. Any novel feature or combination of features described herein.
1. A drilling and/or lifting machine comprising a movable carriage, characterized
by a first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A), e.g. a mast, support means (1-5)
mounting the first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A) on the carriage (35) to
enable the first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A) to be positioned in a selected
one of a plurality of different positions and a second lifting and/or tool carrying
means (B) mounted on the carriage (35) so as to be movable either with or independently
of the first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A).
2. A machine according to claim 1, characterized in that the first lifting and/or
tool carrying means (A) is rotable relative to the support means (1-5) and connecting
means (6) connect the support means to the first lifting and/or tool carrying means
(A), the connecting means being movable to rotate the first lifting and/or tool carrying
means (A) relative to the support means (1-5).
3. A drilling and/or lifting machine comprising a movable carriage (35), characterized
by a first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A), a support means (1-5) mounting
the first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A) to the carriage (35) so that the
first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A) is rotable about a first axis relative
to the support means (1-5), and means (6) connecting the support means (1) to the
first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A), the connecting means (6) being movable
to rotate the first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A) relative to the support
means (1-5).
4. A machine according to claim 2 or 3,
characterized in that the connecting means (6) comprises a crank member having a first
arm and a second arm, the first arm being extendable, particularly by means of a piston
and cylinder arrangement, to rotate the first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A)
relative to the support means (1-5), preferably about a second axis not parallel to
the first axis.
5. A machine according to any one of 2 to 4,
characterized in that the support means (1-5) carries a bearing menas (3) which is
rotably mounted to the first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A) to enable the
first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A) to rotate relative to the support means.
6. A machine according to Claim 5, characterized in that the support means comprises
a boom member (2) pivotally connected between the bearing means (3) and a part of
the carriage (35) and an extendable member (5), particularly a piston and cylinder
arrangement pivotally connected between the bearing means (3) and the boom member
(2) for rotating the first lifting and/or tool carrying means about a second axis
(CC') not parallel to the first axis (AA').
7. A machine according to claim 6, characterized in that a further extendable member
(4), particularly a piston and cylinder arrangement, is connected between the said
part of the carriage (35) and the boom member (2) for raising and lowering the first
lifting and/or tool carrying means (A) relative to the carriage.
8. A machine according to one of claims 4 to 7,
characterized in that the first and second axes are perpendicular.
9. A machine according to any preceding claim,
characterized in that the first lifting and/or tool carrying means (A) are slidably
mounted to the support means (1-5).
10. A machine according to any one of claims 5 to 9, characterized in that the first
lifting and/or tool carrying means (A) are slidably mounted in guide means (7), to
which the bearing means (3) is rotably mounted and slidable by means of a piston and
cylinder arrangement (8).
11. A machine according to any preceding claim,
characterized in that a clamping means (17), e.g. comprising a hydraulic piston and
cylinder arrangement (17a) is mounted to the first lifting and/or tool carrying means,
in particular the mast.
12. A machine according to claim 11, characterized in that gripping and turning means
(18) are mounted to the mast, said gripping and turning means preferably comprising
gripping means rotatably mounted on the mast and two piston and cylinder arrangements
(18a,18b) mounted on a frame (18e) of the gripping means and turning means comprising
two further piston and cylinder arrangements (18c, 18d) for effecting rotation of
the frame relative to the mast.
13. A machine according to claim 11 or 12,
characterized in that the first lifting and/or tool carrying means is a drilling mast
(A) having means for supporting and driving a drilling tool, in particular a rotary
drill head (14).
14. A machine according to any one of claims 4 to 13 when dependent on claim 3, characterized
by a second lifting and/or tool carrying means (B) mounted on the carriage (35) so
as to be movable either with or independently of the first lifting and/or tool carrying
means (A).
15. A machine according to claim 1, 2 or 14,
characterized in that the second lifting and/or tool carrying means (B) has a telescopic
arm member comprising a plurality of telescopable tubes (21,22,23) having one end
mounted to the carriage (35) and the other end carrying means (29) for engaging a
tool or load.
16. A machine according to claim 15, characterized in that a first tube (22) is extendable
from and retractable into a second tube (21) of the plurality of telescopable tubes
by means of a piston and cylinder arrangement (24).