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US3706289A - Vehicle body-shell processing plant - Google Patents

Vehicle body-shell processing plant Download PDF

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US3706289A
US3706289A US156831A US3706289DA US3706289A US 3706289 A US3706289 A US 3706289A US 156831 A US156831 A US 156831A US 3706289D A US3706289D A US 3706289DA US 3706289 A US3706289 A US 3706289A
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quencher
furnace
conveyor means
disposed
quenching
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US156831A
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John C Brewer
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Garbalizer Corp of America
GARBALIZER CORP
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23GCREMATION FURNACES; CONSUMING WASTE PRODUCTS BY COMBUSTION
    • F23G7/00Incinerators or other apparatus for consuming industrial waste, e.g. chemicals
    • F23G7/003Incinerators or other apparatus for consuming industrial waste, e.g. chemicals for used articles
    • F23G7/005Incinerators or other apparatus for consuming industrial waste, e.g. chemicals for used articles cars, vehicles

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  • Quenching is done in the system such that steam, entrained particulate matter, and residual exhaust gases are conveyed to a gas scrubbing system for cleansing purposes.
  • Independent conveyors are utilized at feed-in, furnace, and quencher points.
  • the quencher conveyor is designed to have a sloping construction such that there can be an automatic and continuous process to shell bodies for each intermittent group processed.
  • the present invention relates to vehicle body-shell processing plants, and, more particularly, to a new and improved processing plant wherein burning, quenching, venting and baling of processed body-shells can be accomplished without measurably contributing to air pollution, and'in an economical and semicontinuous manner.
  • wrecking yards either fire or transport to a firing facility the body-shells, to remove by combustion upholstery and other products.
  • Conventional operations have become very objectionable to municipalities in that there is a marked contribution to air pollution. It is very important, particularly at the present time in view of current, already severe industrial waste and air pollution problems, for body-shells to be fired and processed in such a way such that air pollution contributing factors are minimized.
  • the air pollution factor is essentially completely eliminated, or at least controlled to the point of a bare minimum of contribution to the problem. This .is occasioned by the incorporation in the system of the routing of combustion products, steam and gaseous entrainment flow such that these are directed to a cleansing or scrubbing system.
  • a semi-continuous run of body-shells is made possible through the intermitten run through furnace and quencher, of groups of bodyshells. This is accomplished, preferably, by separate conveyers independently powered and belonging to feed-in, furnace, and quencher stages.
  • the introduction of an initial group of car bodies into the furnace of the system is accompanied by closure of the furnace doors such that the interior of the furnace area can be tired so as to remove as by combustion the upholstery and other products of the body-shells.
  • Exhaust fumes are routed directly to air scrubbing or air cleansing unit.
  • the car bodies After firing the car bodies are next introduced into an enclosed quencher, itself provided with its own conveyer, such that the now heated body-shells are water quenched, that is cooled, with steam and entrained particulate matter and objectionable gases being routed again to a cleaning system.
  • the body-shells After quenching takes place, the body-shells are deposited in a suitable, processed body storage area preparatory for introduction into a baler.
  • the latter incorporates the usual hydraulic press for compacting the bodies for the steel industry.
  • a principal object of the present invention is to provide a new and improved system for processing vehicle body-shells.
  • An additional object is to provide a vehicl ebodyshell processing plant which reduces the air pollution factor.
  • An additional object is to provide a semi-continuous body-shell processing plant wherein, by appropriate endless conveyer means, successive groups of bodyshells can be processed, that is fired and quenched in a manner preparatory for baling, with such operations being accomplished with a minimum air pollution factor being produced.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide an apparatus for collecting non-ferrous products from the furnace stage, from upper and lower courses of the conveyer, so that these may be directly routed to a reprocessing furnace for non-ferrous or other recovery.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a system incorporating the features of the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a longitudinal section taken along the lines 2-2 in FIG. 1.
  • FIG. 3 is a transverse vertical section taken along the line 3-3 in FIG. 1.
  • FIG. 4 is a transverse vertical section takenalong the line 4-4 in FIG. 1.
  • FIG. 5 is a fragmentary, enlarged detail of a representative conveyer such as the input conveyer of FIG. 1.
  • FIG. 6 is a transverse vertical section taken along the line 6-6 in FIG. 5.
  • FIG. 7 is a fragmentary plan, shown partially in section, of a representative conveyer drive accommodating the respective conveyers used in the system.
  • FIG. 8 is a fragmentary detail indicating cooperation of the endless conveyer structure with remainder of the structure for each conveyer.
  • FIG. 9 is a sectional view taken along the line 99 in FIG. 8.
  • FIG. 10 is a diagramatic view, illustrating structure useful in collecting droppings from upper and lower portions of a representative conveyer in the system and for conveying the same away for further processing, as desired.
  • input conveyer unit 10 may comprise a frame structure, see FIG. 2 which includes an endless conveyer II.
  • endless conveyer 11 is illustrated in the left-hand portion of FIG. 5, and all conveyer assemblies utilized in the invention may be similar.
  • Conveyer 11 is shown to include a pair of mutually spaced endless Chains I.
  • Each of the Chains I comprise respective sets of links 12 which are pivoted together and the chains joined by shafts 14.
  • Each of the links 12 support and is affixed to a respective end of a support bar 13.
  • the support bars are designed to support vehicle body-shells, and themselves are supported by their respective links through the latter being mounted to the roller-supported shafts l4.
  • Rollers 15 are journaled to the shafts M and are designed for travel over mutuallyspaced conveyer tracks 16.
  • a crane 24 is supplied and is provided with tong work equipment 25 suitablefor picking up automobile or truck bodies 26 at a wrecked storage area 27 and depositing these on the conveyer 'unit 10, in the manner shown in FIG. 1, such that plural car bodies are deposited on the conveyer, prior to actuation thereof, so as to introduce such bodies into the furnace 23.
  • FIG. 2 it is seen that the furnace 23 is supplied with a conveyer 28.
  • the latter can be constructed similarly to conveyer l0'relative to the input to the system.
  • Between upper and lower runs 29 and 30 of conveyer 28 will be disposed a sloping pan 31 for receiving and directing outwardly, non-ferrous metal droppings from this state.
  • Such materials are combined and dropped onto an auxiliary endless conveyor 33, which direct the material to a reprocessing furnace 34 for non-ferrous metals.
  • the upper portion of furnace 23 is formed as an exhaust hood 35 for receiving gases and directing the same up conduit 36 into the gas cleaning portion of the system.
  • an exhaust fan 37 having an associated motor drive, not shown, for directing such gases upwardly at 36 in the direction shown by the arrow in FIG. 2.
  • the gas cleaning or gas scrubbing system will be described hereinafter.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 of the furnace structure is provided with front and rear doors 38 and 39. These may comprise the rollable-type segmented doors that are common in industrial use and which are suitably insulated.
  • Doors 38 and 39 may be actuated remotely by suitable electrical means, not shown in detail.
  • suitable electrical means not shown in detail.
  • furnace 23 is closed on its sides, with access being provided the furnace conveyor drive 41, for driving conveyor 28 in FIG. 2.
  • Quencher unit 43 The next unit in the system is quencher unit 43, see FIGS. 1 and 2.
  • Quencher unit 43 likewise includes a powered conveyor unit, this time termed conveyor 44, but which now is slanted or sloping upwardly. This is for the purpose of preventing automobiles in the process to drop down into a storage position prior to transport to the baler 45.
  • the quencher unit 43 includes an exhaust fume or gas collecting hood 46, the latter being supplied with exhaust gases conduit 47 leading to junction 48 in FIG. 1.
  • An exhaust fan 49 may be provided and have its own power unit, not shown, for assisting the exhaust of gases within quencher 43 to the gas cleaning system.
  • Baler may beconventional in design; the processed automobile bodies, as received from quencher 43, can be easily picked up and transported by crane 50 to the baler 45 in the manner indicated.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates a cross-section of the furnace 23 and, in addition, shows the structure of the gas cleaning unit 51 which can be employed to clean gases received from furnace 23 as well as from quencher 43.
  • the furnace itself, the same will include'a plurality of jets 52 which are connected by pipes 53 to acommon source of fuel, not shown in detail.
  • the quencher 43 the same is provided with water spray nozzles 53' which lead by a respective conduit 54 to a common source of water maintained under pressure.
  • the same may take any one of several conventional forms.
  • the same may include a housing 55' provided with mutually spaced baffles 56 and 57 which are apertured at 58 and 59 to provide a tortuous path for ascending vapors.
  • Spray pipes 60 feed into the housing 55. and spray independent streams of water in a fine spray or a' mist form into the housing 55. Such spray tends to spray out of the gases flow particulate matter. This particulate matter may be conveyed out of the gas scrubbing system in the usual manner to provide waste sludge.
  • a filter 60 may be included within housing 54 as a final cleaning agent for the gases which ascend at 61 through exhaust stack 62.
  • Such actuation produces a forward motion as shown by the arrow A in FIG. 1 so that the body-shells are introduced onto the running furnace conveyorNo. 28 into the furnace area.
  • the door 38 is closed while the door 39 remains closed, via appropriate retention of the condition of door control 39A, of standard design.
  • a standard control turns on the fuel supply to conduit 53 so as to produce flame jets within the furnace 23.
  • Suitable pilots may be supplied one or more of the flame jets suchthat the supply of fuel to the burning units of the furnace will produce automatically a series of flames in the furnace area.
  • These flames will be highpressure flames such that there is a rapid burning of upholstery and other flammable material of the bodyshells at the furnace point. It is noted that combustion products of a gaseous nature are automatically routed upwardly via exhaust fan 37'so that such gases are routed for cleansing at housings 54' and 55'.
  • the bodyshells are immediately routed to the next conveyor i.e., conveyor 44 in the quenching unit 43.
  • Quencher 43 receiving the body-shells, subject the same to multiple streams of water as at 53' so that these body-shells are suitably cooled. It is important to note that such quenching not only accomplishes a cooling of the bodyshells at this point but also provides a means whereby particulate matter and also noxious gases can be conveyed upwardly, through action of exhaust fan 49, so that such materials can be brought-into the scrubber area and housings 54' and 55'.
  • the body-shells Once the body-shells have been thus quenched, then they can be deposited through appropriate travel of the conveyor 44 so as to be deposited preparatory to baling at 45.
  • a vehicle body shell processing plant including, in combination, first, second, and third endless conveyor means mutually spaced apart and disposed end-to-end and constructed such that when adjacent ones of said conveyor means are operating the contents of the rearmost conveyor means will be transported to a subsequent conveyor means, a furnace structure housing said second conveyor means and having closed, selectively openable door means disposed at its exit and entrance points and vertically oriented between adjacent ones of said conveyor means, and quencher structure housing said third conveyor means, said quencher structure being provided with water spray means for cooling contents disposed in said quencher structure,
  • a vehicle body-shell processing plant including, in combination, furnace structure for firing vehicle body shells, quenching structure proximate said furnace structure for water-cooling vehicle car bodies when introduced therein, transversely movable door means disposed between said furnace structure and said quenching structure, and venting means for venting ascending firing and quenching products from both of said structures.

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Abstract

A vehicle body-shell processing plant is provided wherein vehicle shells are fired and quenched prior to baling in a manner such as to avoid air pollution difficulties. Exhaust gases from the furnace and quencher stages of the system are routed through an air cleaning system such that only clean gases are exhausted from the system. Quenching is done in the system such that steam, entrained particulate matter, and residual exhaust gases are conveyed to a gas scrubbing system for cleansing purposes. Independent conveyors are utilized at feed-in, furnace, and quencher points. The quencher conveyor is designed to have a sloping construction such that there can be an automatic and continuous process to shell bodies for each intermittent group processed.

Description

United States Patent Brewer 1 1 Dec, 19, 1972 [54] VEHICLE BODY-SHELL PROCESSING PLANT [72] Inventor: John C. Brewer, Salt Lake City,
wUtah,
[73] Assignee: Garbalizer Corporation of America,
Salt Lake City, Utah 221' Filed: June 25, 197.1
[21] Appl. No.: 156,831
Related US. Application Data [63] Continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 35,035, May 6,
1970, Pat. No. 3,613,562.
[52] U.S.- C1. ..1 10/18 R, 263/2 [51] Int. Cl ..F23g 7/00 [58] Field of Search ..110/18; 263/2, 6; 266/6 S [56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATIENTS- Babcock ..1 10/18 Keough .....266/6 S Primary Examiner-Kenneth W. Sprague it Attorney-M. Ralph Shaffer [57] ABSTRACT A vehicle body-shell processing plant is provided wherein vehicle shells are fired and-quenched prior to baling in a manner such as to avoid air pollution difficulties. Exhaust gases from the furnace and quencher stages of the system are routed through an air cleaning system such that only clean gases are exhausted from the system. Quenching is done in the system such that steam, entrained particulate matter, and residual exhaust gases are conveyed to a gas scrubbing system for cleansing purposes. Independent conveyors are utilized at feed-in, furnace, and quencher points. The quencher conveyor is designed to have a sloping construction such that there can be an automatic and continuous process to shell bodies for each intermittent group processed.
- 4 Claims, 10 Drawing Figures PATENTEB 19 I912 3,706, 289
SHEET 1 or 3 HIS ATTORNEY PATETED HEB 19 I972 SHEET 2 0F 3 GIN nw TE 8 8 mm mw VF- ow 1 C. J N H 0 T E J 8.x. n61 h -w M Q N. 6
All mm N 01 HI 5 ATTORNEY PATENTEDIIEB 19 m2 SHEET 3 BF 3 INVENTOR.
JOHN C. BREWER WU g VEHICLE BODY-SHELL PROCESSING PLANT This is a continuation-in-part of the inventors copending patent application entitled PROCESSING OF AUTOMOBILE BODIES INTO SCRAP, Ser. No. 35, 035, filed May 6, 1970, now US. Pat. No. 3,613,562.
The present invention relates to vehicle body-shell processing plants, and, more particularly, to a new and improved processing plant wherein burning, quenching, venting and baling of processed body-shells can be accomplished without measurably contributing to air pollution, and'in an economical and semicontinuous manner.
In the past automobile wrecking establishments strip cars of items such as transmissions, axles, radiators, and other directly usable parts in order to provide body-shells for baling. It frequently is undesirable to bale the body-shell without previously burning the same since, in the absence of burning, body-shells even though crushed required too much space or bulk for handling. Furthermore, baled body-shells which have not been fired retain undesirable materials objectionable to the steel industry-Such materials include upholstering, plastic items, and so forth. 1
Conventionally, wrecking yards either fire or transport to a firing facility the body-shells, to remove by combustion upholstery and other products. Conventional operations have become very objectionable to municipalities in that there is a marked contribution to air pollution. It is very important, particularly at the present time in view of current, already severe industrial waste and air pollution problems, for body-shells to be fired and processed in such a way such that air pollution contributing factors are minimized.
In the present invention the air pollution factor is essentially completely eliminated, or at least controlled to the point of a bare minimum of contribution to the problem. This .is occasioned by the incorporation in the system of the routing of combustion products, steam and gaseous entrainment flow such that these are directed to a cleansing or scrubbing system.
In the present invention a semi-continuous run of body-shells is made possible through the intermitten run through furnace and quencher, of groups of bodyshells. This is accomplished, preferably, by separate conveyers independently powered and belonging to feed-in, furnace, and quencher stages. The introduction of an initial group of car bodies into the furnace of the system is accompanied by closure of the furnace doors such that the interior of the furnace area can be tired so as to remove as by combustion the upholstery and other products of the body-shells. Exhaust fumes are routed directly to air scrubbing or air cleansing unit. After firing the car bodies are next introduced into an enclosed quencher, itself provided with its own conveyer, such that the now heated body-shells are water quenched, that is cooled, with steam and entrained particulate matter and objectionable gases being routed again to a cleaning system. After quenching takes place, the body-shells are deposited in a suitable, processed body storage area preparatory for introduction into a baler. The latter incorporates the usual hydraulic press for compacting the bodies for the steel industry.
Accordingly, a principal object of the present invention is to provide a new and improved system for processing vehicle body-shells.
An additional object is to provide a vehicl ebodyshell processing plant which reduces the air pollution factor.
An additional object is to provide a semi-continuous body-shell processing plant wherein, by appropriate endless conveyer means, successive groups of bodyshells can be processed, that is fired and quenched in a manner preparatory for baling, with such operations being accomplished with a minimum air pollution factor being produced.
A further object of the invention is to provide an apparatus for collecting non-ferrous products from the furnace stage, from upper and lower courses of the conveyer, so that these may be directly routed to a reprocessing furnace for non-ferrous or other recovery.
The features of the present invention which are believed'to be novel are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The present invention, both as to its organization and manner of operation, together with further objects and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a system incorporating the features of the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a longitudinal section taken along the lines 2-2 in FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a transverse vertical section taken along the line 3-3 in FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a transverse vertical section takenalong the line 4-4 in FIG. 1.
FIG. 5 is a fragmentary, enlarged detail of a representative conveyer such as the input conveyer of FIG. 1.
FIG. 6 is a transverse vertical section taken along the line 6-6 in FIG. 5.
FIG. 7 is a fragmentary plan, shown partially in section, of a representative conveyer drive accommodating the respective conveyers used in the system.
FIG. 8 is a fragmentary detail indicating cooperation of the endless conveyer structure with remainder of the structure for each conveyer.
FIG. 9 is a sectional view taken along the line 99 in FIG. 8.
FIG. 10 is a diagramatic view, illustrating structure useful in collecting droppings from upper and lower portions of a representative conveyer in the system and for conveying the same away for further processing, as desired.
In FIG. 1 input conveyer unit 10 may comprise a frame structure, see FIG. 2 which includes an endless conveyer II. The left-hand side of endless conveyer 11 is illustrated in the left-hand portion of FIG. 5, and all conveyer assemblies utilized in the invention may be similar.
Conveyer 11 is shown to include a pair of mutually spaced endless Chains I. Each of the Chains I comprise respective sets of links 12 which are pivoted together and the chains joined by shafts 14. Each of the links 12 support and is affixed to a respective end of a support bar 13. The support bars are designed to support vehicle body-shells, and themselves are supported by their respective links through the latter being mounted to the roller-supported shafts l4. Rollers 15 are journaled to the shafts M and are designed for travel over mutuallyspaced conveyer tracks 16.
Accordingly, it is seen that the supplying of power by unit 22 to the conveyer unit will operate to advance automobile bodies and place them into the furnace unit 23. This will be explained hereinafter.
At this point, it is seen that a crane 24 is supplied and is provided with tong work equipment 25 suitablefor picking up automobile or truck bodies 26 at a wrecked storage area 27 and depositing these on the conveyer 'unit 10, in the manner shown in FIG. 1, such that plural car bodies are deposited on the conveyer, prior to actuation thereof, so as to introduce such bodies into the furnace 23. t
In FIG. 2 it is seen that the furnace 23 is supplied with a conveyer 28. The latter can be constructed similarly to conveyer l0'relative to the input to the system. Between upper and lower runs 29 and 30 of conveyer 28 will be disposed a sloping pan 31 for receiving and directing outwardly, non-ferrous metal droppings from this state. Correspondingly, there may be an additional pan 32 disposed underneath the lowermost course 30 of the conveyer for receiving metals that might tend to cling even tothe bottom course of the conveyer. Such materials are combined and dropped onto an auxiliary endless conveyor 33, which direct the material to a reprocessing furnace 34 for non-ferrous metals. I
The upper portion of furnace 23 is formed as an exhaust hood 35 for receiving gases and directing the same up conduit 36 into the gas cleaning portion of the system. There is preferably supplied an exhaust fan 37, having an associated motor drive, not shown, for directing such gases upwardly at 36 in the direction shown by the arrow in FIG. 2. The gas cleaning or gas scrubbing system will be described hereinafter.
In FIGS. 1 and 2 of the furnace structure is provided with front and rear doors 38 and 39. These may comprise the rollable-type segmented doors that are common in industrial use and which are suitably insulated.
Doors 38 and 39 may be actuated remotely by suitable electrical means, not shown in detail. The manner of raising and lowering the doors and the design of the doors themselves form no part of the present invention taken independently.
It is important to note that the furnace 23 is closed on its sides, with access being provided the furnace conveyor drive 41, for driving conveyor 28 in FIG. 2.
The next unit in the system is quencher unit 43, see FIGS. 1 and 2. Quencher unit 43 likewise includes a powered conveyor unit, this time termed conveyor 44, but which now is slanted or sloping upwardly. This is for the purpose of preventing automobiles in the process to drop down into a storage position prior to transport to the baler 45. The quencher unit 43 includes an exhaust fume or gas collecting hood 46, the latter being supplied with exhaust gases conduit 47 leading to junction 48 in FIG. 1. An exhaust fan 49 may be provided and have its own power unit, not shown, for assisting the exhaust of gases within quencher 43 to the gas cleaning system. Baler may beconventional in design; the processed automobile bodies, as received from quencher 43, can be easily picked up and transported by crane 50 to the baler 45 in the manner indicated.
FIG. 3 illustrates a cross-section of the furnace 23 and, in addition, shows the structure of the gas cleaning unit 51 which can be employed to clean gases received from furnace 23 as well as from quencher 43. As to the furnace itself, the same will include'a plurality of jets 52 which are connected by pipes 53 to acommon source of fuel, not shown in detail. As to the quencher 43, the same is provided with water spray nozzles 53' which lead by a respective conduit 54 to a common source of water maintained under pressure.
As to the design of the gasscrubbing system or gas cleaning system as at 51 and in FIG. 3, the same may take any one of several conventional forms. Thus, the same may include a housing 55' provided with mutually spaced baffles 56 and 57 which are apertured at 58 and 59 to provide a tortuous path for ascending vapors. Spray pipes 60 feed into the housing 55. and spray independent streams of water in a fine spray or a' mist form into the housing 55. Such spray tends to spray out of the gases flow particulate matter. This particulate matter may be conveyed out of the gas scrubbing system in the usual manner to provide waste sludge. A filter 60 may be included within housing 54 as a final cleaning agent for the gases which ascend at 61 through exhaust stack 62.
The system shown and described operates as follows. Preliminarily, there will be supplied, as before mentioned, a wreck storage area 27 at which point the automobile bodieswill be deposited. It will be understood that prior to processingof these bodies in the manner shown, these bodies will be stripped of components such as radiators, engines, axles, and soforth, so that just the body-shell remains. These shells are thentransported as by crane 24 onto conveyor unit 10 such that the body-shells are conveyed three at a time into. furnace 23. When fumace23 is empty, as for example after a previous firing of a forward group of bodyshells, then door 38 is opened by door control 38A, of standard design, and the conveyor unit 10 is actuated. Such actuation produces a forward motion as shown by the arrow A in FIG. 1 so that the body-shells are introduced onto the running furnace conveyorNo. 28 into the furnace area. At this point the door 38 is closed while the door 39 remains closed, via appropriate retention of the condition of door control 39A, of standard design. At this point a standard control, not shown, turns on the fuel supply to conduit 53 so as to produce flame jets within the furnace 23. Suitable pilots, not shown, may be supplied one or more of the flame jets suchthat the supply of fuel to the burning units of the furnace will produce automatically a series of flames in the furnace area. These flames will be highpressure flames such that there is a rapid burning of upholstery and other flammable material of the bodyshells at the furnace point. It is noted that combustion products of a gaseous nature are automatically routed upwardly via exhaust fan 37'so that such gases are routed for cleansing at housings 54' and 55'.
After the burning has taken place, then the bodyshells are immediately routed to the next conveyor i.e., conveyor 44 in the quenching unit 43. Quencher 43, receiving the body-shells, subject the same to multiple streams of water as at 53' so that these body-shells are suitably cooled. It is important to note that such quenching not only accomplishes a cooling of the bodyshells at this point but also provides a means whereby particulate matter and also noxious gases can be conveyed upwardly, through action of exhaust fan 49, so that such materials can be brought-into the scrubber area and housings 54' and 55'. Consequently, not only are the body-shells cooled at the quencher point, but also any particulate matter and noxious gases associated with the rising steam at the quenching unit is conveyed to the aircleansing system. It is to be noted that not only will door 39 be closed during. the quenching operation, but the outlet door 54" will likewise be closed as by conventional door closure means 55, shown merely-in block diagram form.
Once the body-shells have been thus quenched, then they can be deposited through appropriate travel of the conveyor 44 so as to be deposited preparatory to baling at 45.
What is provided, hence, is an integrated bodyshell processing system wherein car bodies and truck bodies can be processed suitably prior to baling such that baling may be accomplished with a minimum of space requirements per bale produced. Furthermore, it is noted that the upholstery and other flammable materials are conveniently disposed of in the present process without air pollution that accompanies conventional body-shell processing plants. The exhaust in FIG. 1 is clean air coming from stack 62. This renders the system completely unobjectionable to municipalities and adjacent areas. Furthermore, the plant is highly advantageous from an economics as well as a waste disposal point of view, in that the automobile bodies can be conveniently, rapidly and easily processed to provide compact metal bales of scrap, and this without objectionable air pollution problems which have heretofore existed in connection with said wrecking yard facilities.
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from this invention in its broader aspects, and, therefore, the aim in the appended claims is to cover all such changes and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of this invention.
lclaim:
1. A vehicle body shell processing plant including, in combination, first, second, and third endless conveyor means mutually spaced apart and disposed end-to-end and constructed such that when adjacent ones of said conveyor means are operating the contents of the rearmost conveyor means will be transported to a subsequent conveyor means, a furnace structure housing said second conveyor means and having closed, selectively openable door means disposed at its exit and entrance points and vertically oriented between adjacent ones of said conveyor means, and quencher structure housing said third conveyor means, said quencher structure being provided with water spray means for cooling contents disposed in said quencher structure,
2. S ructure according to claim 1 wherein said third conveyor means as disposed within said quencher structure slopes upwardly towards its terminal extremity, whereby to permit contents, disposed upon and traveling along said conveyor means in said quenching structure, to drop downwardly to a storage area.
3. A vehicle body-shell processing plant including, in combination, furnace structure for firing vehicle body shells, quenching structure proximate said furnace structure for water-cooling vehicle car bodies when introduced therein, transversely movable door means disposed between said furnace structure and said quenching structure, and venting means for venting ascending firing and quenching products from both of said structures.
4. Structure according to claim 3 wherein said processing plant includes an air cleaning system, said venting structure being routed to said air cleaning system.

Claims (4)

1. A vehicle body shell processing plant including, in combination, first, second, and third endless conveyor means mutually spaced apart and disposed end-to-end and constructed such that when adjacent ones of said conveyor means are operating the contents of the rear-most conveyor means will be transported to a subsequent conveyor means, a furnace structure housing said second conveyor means and having closed, selectively openable door means disposed at its exit and entrance points and vertically oriented between adjacent ones of said conveyor means, and quencher structure housing said third conveyor means, said quencher structure being provided with water spray means for cooling contents disposed in said quencher structure.
2. Structure according to claim 1 wherein said third conveyor means as disposed within said quencher structure slopes upwardly towards its terminal extremity, whereby to permit contents, disposed upon and traveling along said conveyor means in said quenching structure, to drop downwardly to a storage area.
3. A vehicle body-shell processing plant including, in combination, furnace structure for firing vehicle body shells, quenching structure proximate said furnace structure for water-cooling vehicle car bodies when introduced therein, transversely movable door means disposed between said furnace structure and said quenching structure, and venting means for venting ascending firing and quenching products from both of said structures.
4. Structure according to claim 3 wherein said processing plant includes an air cleaning system, said venting structure being routed to said air cleaning system.
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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4181081A (en) * 1976-09-27 1980-01-01 Roy Weber Pollution reduction smokeless auto incinerator
DE2904479A1 (en) * 1979-02-07 1980-08-14 Gutschmidt Peter M Dipl Ing SCRAP BURNING PLANT
US4466359A (en) * 1979-08-13 1984-08-21 Roy Weber Disc stabilized flame afterburner
US4557203A (en) * 1984-08-13 1985-12-10 Pollution Control Products Co. Method of controlling a reclamation furnace
FR2586287A1 (en) * 1985-08-14 1987-02-20 Meyer Francois Calcining installation for recovering ferrous metals and aluminium from scrapped motor vehicles
US6089860A (en) * 1997-12-22 2000-07-18 Corning Incorporated Method for firing ceramic honeycomb bodies and a tunnel kiln used therefor
US6325963B1 (en) * 1997-12-22 2001-12-04 Corning Incorporated Method for firing ceramic honeycomb bodies

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
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US2091172A (en) * 1935-07-31 1937-08-24 Wilson Lee Apparatus for heating
US2873101A (en) * 1957-04-08 1959-02-10 Babcock Samuel Incinerators
US3412985A (en) * 1966-05-23 1968-11-26 Robert E Perry Method and apparatus for burning automobile bodies and other waste materials
US3442274A (en) * 1963-10-11 1969-05-06 William R Keough Heat treating apparatus
US3518078A (en) * 1966-11-14 1970-06-30 Julius L Chazen Portable auto preparator
US3595546A (en) * 1969-10-30 1971-07-27 Edward A Uzdavines Apparatus for converting scrap automobile bodies to high grade pigs

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2091172A (en) * 1935-07-31 1937-08-24 Wilson Lee Apparatus for heating
US2873101A (en) * 1957-04-08 1959-02-10 Babcock Samuel Incinerators
US3442274A (en) * 1963-10-11 1969-05-06 William R Keough Heat treating apparatus
US3412985A (en) * 1966-05-23 1968-11-26 Robert E Perry Method and apparatus for burning automobile bodies and other waste materials
US3518078A (en) * 1966-11-14 1970-06-30 Julius L Chazen Portable auto preparator
US3595546A (en) * 1969-10-30 1971-07-27 Edward A Uzdavines Apparatus for converting scrap automobile bodies to high grade pigs

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4181081A (en) * 1976-09-27 1980-01-01 Roy Weber Pollution reduction smokeless auto incinerator
DE2904479A1 (en) * 1979-02-07 1980-08-14 Gutschmidt Peter M Dipl Ing SCRAP BURNING PLANT
US4345530A (en) * 1979-02-07 1982-08-24 Orgatechna Treuhand Ag Installation for burning-out scrap metal
US4466359A (en) * 1979-08-13 1984-08-21 Roy Weber Disc stabilized flame afterburner
US4557203A (en) * 1984-08-13 1985-12-10 Pollution Control Products Co. Method of controlling a reclamation furnace
FR2586287A1 (en) * 1985-08-14 1987-02-20 Meyer Francois Calcining installation for recovering ferrous metals and aluminium from scrapped motor vehicles
US6089860A (en) * 1997-12-22 2000-07-18 Corning Incorporated Method for firing ceramic honeycomb bodies and a tunnel kiln used therefor
US6325963B1 (en) * 1997-12-22 2001-12-04 Corning Incorporated Method for firing ceramic honeycomb bodies

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