[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/

EP0039716A1 - Method and apparatus for producing and laying a ballasted mat for ground stabilization - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for producing and laying a ballasted mat for ground stabilization

Info

Publication number
EP0039716A1
EP0039716A1 EP19800902231 EP80902231A EP0039716A1 EP 0039716 A1 EP0039716 A1 EP 0039716A1 EP 19800902231 EP19800902231 EP 19800902231 EP 80902231 A EP80902231 A EP 80902231A EP 0039716 A1 EP0039716 A1 EP 0039716A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
mat
sheet material
continuously
ballast
sheets
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
EP19800902231
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Inventor
Ole Fjord Larsen
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Publication of EP0039716A1 publication Critical patent/EP0039716A1/en
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E01CONSTRUCTION OF ROADS, RAILWAYS, OR BRIDGES
    • E01CCONSTRUCTION OF, OR SURFACES FOR, ROADS, SPORTS GROUNDS, OR THE LIKE; MACHINES OR AUXILIARY TOOLS FOR CONSTRUCTION OR REPAIR
    • E01C19/00Machines, tools or auxiliary devices for preparing or distributing paving materials, for working the placed materials, or for forming, consolidating, or finishing the paving
    • E01C19/46Machines, tools or auxiliary devices for preparing or distributing paving materials, for working the placed materials, or for forming, consolidating, or finishing the paving for preparing and placing the materials, e.g. slurry seals
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E02HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING; FOUNDATIONS; SOIL SHIFTING
    • E02BHYDRAULIC ENGINEERING
    • E02B3/00Engineering works in connection with control or use of streams, rivers, coasts, or other marine sites; Sealings or joints for engineering works in general
    • E02B3/04Structures or apparatus for, or methods of, protecting banks, coasts, or harbours
    • E02B3/12Revetment of banks, dams, watercourses, or the like, e.g. the sea-floor
    • E02B3/121Devices for applying linings on banks or the water bottom
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E02HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING; FOUNDATIONS; SOIL SHIFTING
    • E02DFOUNDATIONS; EXCAVATIONS; EMBANKMENTS; UNDERGROUND OR UNDERWATER STRUCTURES
    • E02D3/00Improving or preserving soil or rock, e.g. preserving permafrost soil

Definitions

  • the invention relates to the forming and installing of a ballasted mat for stabilization of the ground.
  • Typical applications of the invention are: Prevention or control of scour along submarine pipelines and also ballasting of these, shore and river bank protection, prevention of shoaling up of navigational channels, stabilization of the ground tinder roads, prevention of land slides, and the like.
  • the mat-producing machine is mounted either on a vehicle, e g supplied with caterpillars fit for moving on land, or on a surface vessel or on a platform supplied with movable legs by means of which the platform can "walk", or on a underwater vehicle, e g supported on and driven forward by longitjxlinally extending rotating tubes supplied with screw threads on their outer surfaces.
  • the sheet material used for forming the mat preferably is provided in two opposite rolls, each having the proper width, or alternatively, in more, shorter rolls.
  • the material from either roll is fed through a system of parallel, adjacent rollers which spread out the sheets and by means of brakes control the speed of laying the mat.
  • a continuous mat containing vertical parallel compartments like those of a ribbed eider down is formed.
  • Particulate-matter forming ballast is simultaneously fed through pipes or hoses between the seaming devices into the compartments of the mat.
  • the lower ends of the hoses or pipes are below the seaming devices, but above the ground, so that the weight of the ballast continuously pulls the mat down to the ground, as the mat-forming machine is continuously advanced.
  • the compartments of the mat are closed by seaming crosswise the end of the section in a horizontal line below the lower ends of the hoses or pipes.
  • a parallel seam a little distance above this first seam is produced to close the foremost end of the next section of mat to be produced, and finally the mat is cut between the two seams.
  • Fig. 1 is a plan view of the mat-forming system of the present invention and shows the system mounted on a surface vessel and continuously forming and laying the mat over the pipeline,
  • Fig. 2 is a cross-section taken along the line I-I in Fig. 1 and shows the pipeline covered by the mat.
  • Fig. 3 is an enlarged cross-section taken along the line II-II in Fig. 1 and shows a schematic cross-section of the mat-forming and -laying system
  • Fig. 4 is an enlarged cross-section taken along the line III-III in Fig. 3
  • Fig. 5 is a cross-section taken along the line IV-IV in Fig. 3 of the com ⁇ pleted mat
  • Fig. 6 is a cross-section of an alternative shape of the mat
  • Fig. 7 is a schematic cross-section of a submarine barrier involving use of the present "type of mat.
  • FIG. 1-6 of the drawings there is depicted an apparatus 16 of the present invention for forming and installing a ballasted mat 15 over a pipeline 1.
  • 16 is mounted on a sea going vessel which may be in the form of a barge out over the side of which 16 is overhanging, or in the form of a barge supplied with a moonpool through which 15 can pass on its way to the seabed, or in the form of two barges 17 coupled together by means of beams 18 an the over- and/or underside of 17.
  • the vessel 17 may be moved forwards by means of winches 21 pulling the vessel along the warps 19 which are anchored to warp anchors 20.
  • the vessel 17 may include compartments for storing a particulate ballast material 3 and sheet material 2 utilized in forming the mat 15. Both kinds of material may transported from shore to the vessel by supply boats 24 and unloaded by a crane 23.
  • the ballast material 3 may comprise any suitable weighty particulate material such as stones, pebbles, sand, pieces of concrete and the like.
  • the grain size must be larger than the size of any perforation of the sheet material 2, but smaller than about 1/3 of the diameter of the hoses or pipes 8. Otherwise the ballast material may get stuck in the hoses or pipes.
  • the sheet material 2 may be a continuous, woven or extruded sheet consisting for instance of plastic or natural fibres resistant to the eroding and deteriorating factors of the environment. Alternatively, it nay be a net, in which the mesh width is smaller than the grain size of the ballast material 3.
  • the net may be made of plastic, natural fibres, aluminium or steel which may be galvanized and/or coated with plastic.
  • the two layers of sheet 2 forming the mat 15 may be made of the same material or two different kinds of material, they may have different mesh widths and other differences.
  • the straight sheet 30 may be a coated steel wire mesh or a strong plastic net, e g reinforced with aromatic polyamide, and the buckled sheet 31 may be a thinner or weaker net made for instance of plastic.
  • the rolls 10 supported on bearing rollers 13 feed the sheet material 2 to the seaming devices 4 via a suitable number of rollers, for instance three: 5, 6 and 7.
  • the functions of the rollers are to stretch out the sheet in its transverse direction and to control the speed of laying of the mat. If for instance the sheet material is a plastic net and therefore is very elastic, its width has a tendency to contract because of the longitudinal drag force due to the weight of the ballast 3.
  • one of the rollers, e g 7, on its surface may be supplied with two screw threads 25. Either thread occupies half of the length of the roller 7, and the two threads have opposite directions of pitch.
  • the surface of the roller 7 turns in the direction 32 against the direction 33 of movement of the sheet 2, and when 7 rotates, either screw thread tends to stretch out the sheet 2 in direction away from the middle of the roller 7 toward the outer end of the thread.
  • the surfaces of the rollers 6 and 5 turn in the same directions as the direction of movement of the sheet 2.
  • the surface of at least the roller 5, which carries the weight of the suspended length of the mat 15, has a high frictional resistance, obtained for instance by means of the raised edges of longitudinally extending slits cut in a steel plate cylinder making up the surface of 5.
  • the roller 6 may be supported in slide bearings and by means of spring or rubber means continuously pressed against 5.
  • the weight of 15 thereby is carried by the rollers 5; and by brake means acting on the periphery or the axle of 5, the speed of descending the mat can be controlled.
  • guiding merrbers 11 make the two sheets meet, so that the sheets can be seamed together in each line between the upper and lower parts of each guiding member 11.
  • the members 11 may be vertical plates, as shown in the drawing, and should have thickness corresponding to the width of the seaming devices 4.
  • the guiding edges of the me ⁇ bers 11 are placed in line with the centerlines of the hoses of pipes 8, cf. Fig. 6, or asymmetrically as shewn in Fig. 3. In the latter case the seams of the mat, Fig. 5, become less strained by the ballast during and after laying of the mat.
  • the guiding members 11 are mounted slidably on horizontal beams 35, so that their mutual spacing can be regulated in accordance with the desired thickness of the mat.
  • the seams may be continuous, so that completely separated tube-like compartments between the two sheets 2 are formed. Aternatively, the seaming process may be stopped at intervals, while the sheets continue on their way downwrards, whereby the resulting connections between the ccnpartments are left open. The intervals may be staggered between neighbouring seams.
  • seaming together of the two sheets 2 is effected by means of well-known seaming devices 4.
  • These devices may be in the form of heating means, if plastic sheet material is being utilized.
  • seaming means may be in the form of any suitable apparatus for sewing, stapling or gluing the sheets together, so that sufficiently strong joints are produced with lasting qualities for the environment within which the mat will be placed.
  • the well-known seaming devices 4 schematically shewn in Fig. 3 may be appropriate.
  • Each device includes an electrically heated melt of polyester which is pumped . through a nozzle so that a squirt 34 is formed.
  • the lower row or parts of the guiding members 11 are placed so far below the seaming devices 4 that the melted polyester gets time enough to harden before it readies the lower row or parts of the guiding members.
  • the crosswise seaming of the end of each section of mat appropriately may be done by means of stapling means.
  • hoses or pipes 8 lead the ballast material 3 into the continuous compartments formed between the two sheets 2.
  • ballast material 3 may be obtained by means of a well-known distribution plant 9, 12, 13 and 14.
  • 9 is a horizontal tank to the perforated bottom of which the hoses or pipes 8 are attached.
  • a conveyer belt 12 on bearing rollers 13 transports the ballast material 3 from a filling station at the end of the belt, and a car 14 on tracks,driven by the belt 12, moves to and fro and distributes the ballast material over the entire length of the tank 9.
  • an uneven distribution is desirable.
  • the net openings allowing for flow through the centre portion of the mat may be kept open.
  • Such uneven distribution may be obtained by regulating the supply of ballast material frcm the filling station and/or from the car 14, and/or by closing more or less the centre hoses or pipes 8.
  • the speed of laying the mat 15 must be correlated with the speed of the sur face vessel 17 and with the speed of supply of the ballast material 3. This correlation may be obtained by manual regulation. Alternatively, the said three speeds may be correlated by means of mechanical couplings 22 between the winches 21 and the rollers 5 and the conveyer belt 12, or between two of these three components, only. 6. Industrial Applicability
  • the mat 15 normally is placed directly on the ground above or under water. Besides this way of applying the mat, it may be used for construction of a barrier on land or in a body of water. Exa ⁇ ples are: Road or railway construction, sea or river dikes, submarine barriers for coastal protection or prevention of siltation in water ways, and the like.
  • the core of the barrier may be solid and consist of fill material such as sand, gravel or other granular material. Or it may consist of a shell-formed structure 37 forming at least part of the desired cross-section of the barrier,cf. Fig. 7.
  • the surface of the barrier is made up of a the ballasted mat 15. In submarine barriers the mat protects the core against undermining and adds weight to prevent removal of the barrier due to waves and currents.
  • the structure 37 may consist of concrete, plastic, wood or metal.
  • the sy ⁇ rnetrical side portions of 37 may be hinged or rigidly interconrnected, and their lower edges may be interconnected by horizontal ties 38.
  • the structure 37 may be a continuous plate, which may be provided with apertures allowing for vertical flew of water.
  • the structure may be made up of separate or interconnected transversely extending supporting ⁇ s ⁇ bers perpendicular or oblique to the longitudinal direction of the barrier.
  • the structure 37 may be attached to the mat 15, before the mat is laid

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Agronomy & Crop Science (AREA)
  • Soil Sciences (AREA)
  • General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Mining & Mineral Resources (AREA)
  • Paleontology (AREA)
  • Architecture (AREA)
  • Ocean & Marine Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Revetment (AREA)

Abstract

Procede et appareil de production et de pose d'un tapis leste (15) pour la stabilisation sur le sol. Les domaines d'application comprennent la prevention de l'affouillement le long de pipelines sous-marins (1), la protection de rivages, la prevention de l'envasement dans les cours d'eau, la construction de barrieres sous-marines, la construction de routes. Le tapis (15) comprend deux couvertures (2, 30 ou 31) et est forme par couture de maniere continue des deux couvertures en lignes paralleles. Simultanement, les compartiments en forme de tube ainsi formes entre les deux couvertures sont remplis de maniere continue avec un materiau de lest particulaire (3). Le remplissage complet des compartiments et le deroulement continu du materiau de couverture (2) se font par gravite de pair avec la progression continue de la machine de formation du tapis (16) sur le sol a recouvrir avec le tapis (15).Method and apparatus for producing and laying a weight carpet (15) for stabilization on the ground. Areas of application include the prevention of scour along undersea pipelines (1), the protection of shorelines, the prevention of siltation in watercourses, the construction of underwater barriers, the road construction. The carpet (15) comprises two covers (2, 30 or 31) and is formed by continuously sewing the two covers in parallel lines. At the same time, the tube-shaped compartments thus formed between the two covers are continuously filled with a special ballast material (3). The complete filling of the compartments and the continuous unrolling of the covering material (2) are done by gravity together with the continuous progression of the carpet forming machine (16) on the ground to be covered with the carpet (15).

Description

METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR PRODUCING AND LAYING A BALLASTED MAT FOR GROUND STABILIZATION
1. Technical Field
The invention relates to the forming and installing of a ballasted mat for stabilization of the ground. Typical applications of the invention are: Prevention or control of scour along submarine pipelines and also ballasting of these, shore and river bank protection, prevention of shoaling up of navigational channels, stabilization of the ground tinder roads, prevention of land slides, and the like.
2. Background Art
Several means have been devised for fixing the soil or for covering it. However, these present solutions often are of relatively high cost and are somewhat complex in construction while not always giving the desired protective results.
For anchoring of underwater pipelines a continuous dumb ell tube system is disclosed by the Murphy US Patent No. 3,779,027. However, this tube system extends only a short distance away from the pipeline and thereby has too narrow width to prevent undermining of the pipeline. Furthermore, the filling of the tubular envelope with ballast material takes place a fte r the tubular envelope has 'been installed over the pipeline. This method of filling which does not utilize gravity cannot and is not supposed to totally fill out the cross-section of the tube.
Similar disadvantages has the Keith US Patent No. 3,793,845. Another existing, so called Gabion system is used for shore protection, harbour construction, road construction, and the like. The area to be stabilized is covered with separate, side-by-side boxes of wire mesh which are filled manually with stones. Eecause of the large required volume of stones and the extensive use of labour work involved, this system is very expensive. 3. Disclosure of Invention
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus for producing and laying a ballasted mat for ground stabilization which will overcome the inherent limitations and disadvantages of the known prior systems.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a ballasted mat having an economical cost per unit area factor.
Depending on the purpose of the mat, the mat-producing machine is mounted either on a vehicle, e g supplied with caterpillars fit for moving on land, or on a surface vessel or on a platform supplied with movable legs by means of which the platform can "walk", or on a underwater vehicle, e g supported on and driven forward by longitjxlinally extending rotating tubes supplied with screw threads on their outer surfaces.
The sheet material used for forming the mat preferably is provided in two opposite rolls, each having the proper width, or alternatively, in more, shorter rolls. The material from either roll is fed through a system of parallel, adjacent rollers which spread out the sheets and by means of brakes control the speed of laying the mat.
A certain distance below the last roller which either sheet passes over, the sheet is seamed together with the other sheet by means of a row of horizontally spaced seaming devices. Hereby a continuous mat containing vertical parallel compartments like those of a ribbed eider down is formed. Particulate-matter forming ballast is simultaneously fed through pipes or hoses between the seaming devices into the compartments of the mat. The lower ends of the hoses or pipes are below the seaming devices, but above the ground, so that the weight of the ballast continuously pulls the mat down to the ground, as the mat-forming machine is continuously advanced. At the completion of the section of mat, the compartments of the mat are closed by seaming crosswise the end of the section in a horizontal line below the lower ends of the hoses or pipes. A parallel seam a little distance above this first seam is produced to close the foremost end of the next section of mat to be produced, and finally the mat is cut between the two seams. 4. Brief Description of Drawings
While the fields of application of the present invention cover uses above as well as under water, a full and complete understanding of the invention may be had by reference to the description of preferred embodiments relating to one example: protection of submarine pipelines as set forth hereinafter and as may be seen in the accompanying drawings in which:
Fig. 1 is a plan view of the mat-forming system of the present invention and shows the system mounted on a surface vessel and continuously forming and laying the mat over the pipeline,
Fig. 2 is a cross-section taken along the line I-I in Fig. 1 and shows the pipeline covered by the mat.
Fig. 3 is an enlarged cross-section taken along the line II-II in Fig. 1 and shows a schematic cross-section of the mat-forming and -laying system, Fig. 4 is an enlarged cross-section taken along the line III-III in Fig. 3, Fig. 5 is a cross-section taken along the line IV-IV in Fig. 3 of the com¬pleted mat,
Fig. 6 is a cross-section of an alternative shape of the mat, and Fig. 7 is a schematic cross-section of a submarine barrier involving use of the present "type of mat.
5. Best Mode of Carrying Out the Invention
Referring to Figs. 1-6 of the drawings, there is depicted an apparatus 16 of the present invention for forming and installing a ballasted mat 15 over a pipeline 1. 16 is mounted on a sea going vessel which may be in the form of a barge out over the side of which 16 is overhanging, or in the form of a barge supplied with a moonpool through which 15 can pass on its way to the seabed, or in the form of two barges 17 coupled together by means of beams 18 an the over- and/or underside of 17.
The vessel 17 may be moved forwards by means of winches 21 pulling the vessel along the warps 19 which are anchored to warp anchors 20.
The vessel 17 may include compartments for storing a particulate ballast material 3 and sheet material 2 utilized in forming the mat 15. Both kinds of material may transported from shore to the vessel by supply boats 24 and unloaded by a crane 23.
The ballast material 3 may comprise any suitable weighty particulate material such as stones, pebbles, sand, pieces of concrete and the like. The grain size must be larger than the size of any perforation of the sheet material 2, but smaller than about 1/3 of the diameter of the hoses or pipes 8. Otherwise the ballast material may get stuck in the hoses or pipes.
The sheet material 2 may be a continuous, woven or extruded sheet consisting for instance of plastic or natural fibres resistant to the eroding and deteriorating factors of the environment. Alternatively, it nay be a net, in which the mesh width is smaller than the grain size of the ballast material 3. The net may be made of plastic, natural fibres, aluminium or steel which may be galvanized and/or coated with plastic.
The two layers of sheet 2 forming the mat 15 may be made of the same material or two different kinds of material, they may have different mesh widths and other differences. For example, in the cross-section of the mat shown in Fig. 5 the straight sheet 30 may be a coated steel wire mesh or a strong plastic net, e g reinforced with aromatic polyamide, and the buckled sheet 31 may be a thinner or weaker net made for instance of plastic.
The rolls 10 supported on bearing rollers 13 feed the sheet material 2 to the seaming devices 4 via a suitable number of rollers, for instance three: 5, 6 and 7. The functions of the rollers are to stretch out the sheet in its transverse direction and to control the speed of laying of the mat. If for instance the sheet material is a plastic net and therefore is very elastic, its width has a tendency to contract because of the longitudinal drag force due to the weight of the ballast 3. To counteract such tendency of a sheet 30 which is supposed to be straightened out when it leaves the roller 5, one of the rollers, e g 7, on its surface may be supplied with two screw threads 25. Either thread occupies half of the length of the roller 7, and the two threads have opposite directions of pitch. The surface of the roller 7 turns in the direction 32 against the direction 33 of movement of the sheet 2, and when 7 rotates, either screw thread tends to stretch out the sheet 2 in direction away from the middle of the roller 7 toward the outer end of the thread. The surfaces of the rollers 6 and 5 turn in the same directions as the direction of movement of the sheet 2. The surface of at least the roller 5, which carries the weight of the suspended length of the mat 15, has a high frictional resistance, obtained for instance by means of the raised edges of longitudinally extending slits cut in a steel plate cylinder making up the surface of 5.
The roller 6 may be supported in slide bearings and by means of spring or rubber means continuously pressed against 5. The weight of 15 thereby is carried by the rollers 5; and by brake means acting on the periphery or the axle of 5, the speed of descending the mat can be controlled.
At a suitable level below 5, guiding merrbers 11 make the two sheets meet, so that the sheets can be seamed together in each line between the upper and lower parts of each guiding member 11. The members 11 may be vertical plates, as shown in the drawing, and should have thickness corresponding to the width of the seaming devices 4. Depending on the desired contour of the cross-sec tion of the mat, the guiding edges of the meπbers 11 are placed in line with the centerlines of the hoses of pipes 8, cf. Fig. 6, or asymmetrically as shewn in Fig. 3. In the latter case the seams of the mat, Fig. 5, become less strained by the ballast during and after laying of the mat.
Preferably the guiding members 11 are mounted slidably on horizontal beams 35, so that their mutual spacing can be regulated in accordance with the desired thickness of the mat.
The seams may be continuous, so that completely separated tube-like compartments between the two sheets 2 are formed. Aternatively, the seaming process may be stopped at intervals, while the sheets continue on their way downwrards, whereby the resulting connections between the ccnpartments are left open. The intervals may be staggered between neighbouring seams.
The seaming together of the two sheets 2 is effected by means of well-known seaming devices 4. These devices may be in the form of heating means, if plastic sheet material is being utilized. Alternatively, seaming means may be in the form of any suitable apparatus for sewing, stapling or gluing the sheets together, so that sufficiently strong joints are produced with lasting qualities for the environment within which the mat will be placed. If the sheets 2 are nets with suffiently large mesh widths, the well-known seaming devices 4 schematically shewn in Fig. 3 may be appropriate. Each device includes an electrically heated melt of polyester which is pumped . through a nozzle so that a squirt 34 is formed. If in each line to be seamed two opposite devices 4 pump squirts 34 against eachother, preferably under an angle, the two squirts will fuse in the openings between the threads of the nets 2 and embrace the threads on their outward sides, so that a continuous, strong seam is formed.
The lower row or parts of the guiding members 11 are placed so far below the seaming devices 4 that the melted polyester gets time enough to harden before it readies the lower row or parts of the guiding members. The crosswise seaming of the end of each section of mat appropriately may be done by means of stapling means.
Between the guiding members 11, hoses or pipes 8 lead the ballast material 3 into the continuous compartments formed between the two sheets 2. The lower ends of 8.are below the lower guiding members 11, but above the ground, so that gravity can be utilized.
An even distribution of the ballast material 3 over all of the width of the mat 15 may be obtained by means of a well-known distribution plant 9, 12, 13 and 14. 9 is a horizontal tank to the perforated bottom of which the hoses or pipes 8 are attached. A conveyer belt 12 on bearing rollers 13 transports the ballast material 3 from a filling station at the end of the belt, and a car 14 on tracks,driven by the belt 12, moves to and fro and distributes the ballast material over the entire length of the tank 9.
In some cases an uneven distribution is desirable. For example, in a mat consisting of two layers of net for covering a submarine pipeline, the net openings allowing for flow through the centre portion of the mat may be kept open. Such uneven distribution may be obtained by regulating the supply of ballast material frcm the filling station and/or from the car 14, and/or by closing more or less the centre hoses or pipes 8.
The speed of laying the mat 15 must be correlated with the speed of the sur face vessel 17 and with the speed of supply of the ballast material 3. This correlation may be obtained by manual regulation. Alternatively, the said three speeds may be correlated by means of mechanical couplings 22 between the winches 21 and the rollers 5 and the conveyer belt 12, or between two of these three components, only. 6. Industrial Applicability
In the above-mentioned fields of application of the invention the mat 15 normally is placed directly on the ground above or under water. Besides this way of applying the mat, it may be used for construction of a barrier on land or in a body of water. Exaπples are: Road or railway construction, sea or river dikes, submarine barriers for coastal protection or prevention of siltation in water ways, and the like.
The core of the barrier may be solid and consist of fill material such as sand, gravel or other granular material. Or it may consist of a shell-formed structure 37 forming at least part of the desired cross-section of the barrier,cf. Fig. 7. The surface of the barrier is made up of a the ballasted mat 15. In submarine barriers the mat protects the core against undermining and adds weight to prevent removal of the barrier due to waves and currents. The structure 37, for example, may consist of concrete, plastic, wood or metal. The syπrnetrical side portions of 37 may be hinged or rigidly interconrnected, and their lower edges may be interconnected by horizontal ties 38. The structure 37 may be a continuous plate, which may be provided with apertures allowing for vertical flew of water. Alternatively, the structure may be made up of separate or interconnected transversely extending supporting πsπbers perpendicular or oblique to the longitudinal direction of the barrier. The structure 37 may be attached to the mat 15, before the mat is laid.

Claims

CLAIMS :
1. A method of continuously forming and installing a ballasted mat for ground stabilization comprising in succession: utilizing the weight of the completed mat hanging downwardly from a matforming apparatus to the groundfor continuously drawing sheet material from two sheet material supply means through brake means; by means of guiding member s continuously leading the two sheets to meet at a row of horizontally spaced seaming devices; continuously or interruptively seaming the two sheets together in parallel lines, so that a mat enclosing parallel continuous or interrupted hollow compartments between the two sheets is formed; by means of downwardly, between the two sheets,hanging hoses or pipes, continuously filling said compartments with particulate ballast material, the lower ends of said hoses or pipes being below the lower ends of said guiding members but above the ground, so that gravity can be utilized; continuously advancing the mat-forming apparatus over the ground to be stabilized, the forwardly advancing speed being in pace with the mat-forming process, and seaming crosswise the end of each completed section of mat and the adjacent end of the next section of mat below the lower ends of said hoses or pipes.
2.- A method of producing a barrier by means of the method according to Claim 1, wherein a ridgeformed solid core of fill material or a hollow core formed by a suitable kind of structure is placed on the sea bottom, whereafter said ballasted mat is placed on top of such core.
3. An apparatus for continuously forming and installing a ballasted mat according to the method claimed in Claim 1 or 2 comprising in combination : a storage means for containing a supply of ballast material; two sheet material supply means; two sheet material conveying means for leading sheet material from said two sheet material supply means to a row of horizontally spaced seaming devices; sheet material brake means for controlling the rate of feeding said sheet material from said sheet material supply means to said seaming devices; guiding members above and below said seaming devices for keeping the two sheets close together at least at the level of the seaming devices; ballast distribution means for distributing ballast material from said ballast supply means over the width of said sheets; a row of hoses or pipes for conducting ballast material from said ballast distribution means into the parallel compartument formed in the mat by said seaming devices, the lower ends of said hoses or pipes being below the lower ends of said guiding meπfoers, but above the ground; a vehicle or seagoing surface vessel for transporting the mat-forming apparatus at a speed correlated to the rate of the mat-forming process.
4. An apparatus according to Claim 3, wherein either of said sheet material conveying means includes a suitable number of rollers, at least one roller having a surface with such high frictional resistance that the sheet is prevented frcm sliding on its surface, and the rate of feeding the sheet material frcm said sheet material supply means can be controlled by brake means acting on the periphery or the axle of said roller.
5. An apparatus according to Claim 3 or 4, wherein said correlation of the speed of said vehicle or surface vessel with the rate of the mat-forming process is obtained by means of mechanical coupling means.
EP19800902231 1979-11-13 1980-11-12 Method and apparatus for producing and laying a ballasted mat for ground stabilization Ceased EP0039716A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7939278 1979-11-13
GB7939278 1979-11-13
GB8001270 1980-01-15
GB8001270 1980-01-15
GB8014348 1980-05-01
GB8014348 1980-05-01

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0039716A1 true EP0039716A1 (en) 1981-11-18

Family

ID=27260799

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP19800902231 Ceased EP0039716A1 (en) 1979-11-13 1980-11-12 Method and apparatus for producing and laying a ballasted mat for ground stabilization

Country Status (3)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0039716A1 (en)
JP (1) JPS56501888A (en)
WO (1) WO1981001432A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4541751A (en) * 1980-05-10 1985-09-17 Larsen Ole Fjord Method of producing and laying a barrier structure
AU1154299A (en) * 1997-10-20 1999-05-10 Markus Hoh Device for producing an embankment
NL1011043C2 (en) * 1999-01-15 2000-07-21 Gemeentewerken Rotterdam Namen System for creating and filling very long geotubes for construction of dams, breakwaters and other underwater or partially underwater structures
DE102008033459B3 (en) * 2008-07-11 2009-08-27 Sächsisches Textilforschungsinstitut e.V. Bulk material i.e. mineral substance, filling method for use during production of textile hose, involves directly filling filler into hose-manufacturing textile machine and adjusting filling level of funnel

Family Cites Families (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1359575A (en) * 1915-06-11 1920-11-23 Chenoweth Alexander Crawford Apparatus for making and laying protective coverings
US2918768A (en) * 1954-11-16 1959-12-29 Pickering Dorothy Frances Method and means for the production of liquid or paste filled containers
US3334466A (en) * 1964-01-14 1967-08-08 Scholle Container Corp Process and apparatus for continuously forming and filling flexible containers
US3358419A (en) * 1964-04-15 1967-12-19 Bartelt Engineering Co Inc Packaging machine
DE1931537C3 (en) * 1969-06-21 1979-04-19 Fa. Pilsa, Luxemburg Method for producing embankment and / or soil protection
FR2104066A5 (en) * 1970-08-07 1972-04-14 Uren John
DE2559115A1 (en) * 1971-01-11 1976-08-19 O J Fjord Larsen Watercourse bed sediment protection system - has plate with side sections whose upper surfaces diverge towards bed
DE2162559A1 (en) * 1971-01-11 1972-07-27 Larsen, Öle Jeppe Fjord, Hjerting (Dänemark) Method and device for the production and attachment of deposits of sediment material on the bottom of water
NO134124L (en) * 1972-09-15
NO141346C (en) * 1977-08-19 1980-02-20 Selmer As Ing F DEVICE FOR THE PROTECTION OF MARINE CONSTRUCTIONS
FR2429872A1 (en) * 1978-06-26 1980-01-25 Trefilunion Soil coverings incorporating nonwoven polyester matting - to prevent soil erosion or leaching out of muds, clays etc.

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
See references of WO8101432A1 *

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JPS56501888A (en) 1981-12-24
WO1981001432A1 (en) 1981-05-28

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4407606A (en) Method and apparatus for producing and laying a ballasted mat for ground stabilization
US3373568A (en) System for reclamation of land
US3779027A (en) Method and apparatus for a continuous dumbbell tube anchoring system for submarine pipelines
NO810010L (en) SAFETY MAT FOR USE IN THE PROTECTION OF WATER-RINED AREAS AGAINST EROSION AND / OR UNDERGROUND
US3898940A (en) Ground drainage systems, and method and apparatus therefor
US3922865A (en) Mattress, method of sinking a mattress and vessel suitable for use in said method
EP0277670A1 (en) Ground barrier
US4480943A (en) Method and apparatus for laying underwater coverings
US4541751A (en) Method of producing and laying a barrier structure
EP0039716A1 (en) Method and apparatus for producing and laying a ballasted mat for ground stabilization
DE2729201A1 (en) DEVICE FOR DEPOSITING AND PROTECTING SEDIMENT MATERIAL ON THE BOTTOM OF WATERS
US3563037A (en) Minimizing scouring action in water flow channels
EP0001161A1 (en) A system for protection of an installation on the floor of a body of water and a method of using it
CA1163815A (en) Method and apparatus for producing and laying a ballasted mat for ground stabilization
CA3071167C (en) Flexible mat forming system and method
US1409140A (en) Method and means for current and channel control in moving bodies of water
US3625014A (en) Method and apparatus for underwater deposition of settable materials
DE102017004302B3 (en) Cable laying machine
US11345065B2 (en) Flexible mat forming system and method
US4028894A (en) Apparatus for preventing erosion of the seabed in front of hydraulic structures
US2476682A (en) Method for producing and laying out revetments
US3343470A (en) Concrete joint form inserter
DE2224095A1 (en) Method and apparatus for containing and recovering spilled oil
DE60018985T2 (en) PROCESS FOR CONSTRUCTING A SYSTEM FOR PROTECTION AGAINST FLOODING
SU1416597A1 (en) Method and apparatus for underwater placement of earth slope reinforcing webs

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PUAI Public reference made under article 153(3) epc to a published international application that has entered the european phase

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009012

AK Designated contracting states

Designated state(s): DE FR GB NL SE

17P Request for examination filed

Effective date: 19811124

STAA Information on the status of an ep patent application or granted ep patent

Free format text: STATUS: THE APPLICATION HAS BEEN REFUSED

18R Application refused

Effective date: 19840119