Title of Invention

DEVICE FOR MILLING ROCK AND OTHER MATERIALS AND METHOD FOR MILLING ROCK OR THE LIKE USING SAID DEVICE

Abstract The invention relates to a device for milling rock or other materials. Said device comprises a spindle drum (13) which is rotatably mounted on a drum support (11) and in which a plurality of tool spindles (22) are received to be rotatable about spindle axes in a manner off-center of the drum axis (43). The tool spindles, at their ends projecting from the spindle drum, carry machining tools (41). The invention is characterized in that at least two of the tool spindles can be driven by a common gear drive which comprises output gears (24), permanently disposed on the tool spindles, and a common drive element (25) interacting with the output gears. The drive element and the spindle drum (13) can be rotated in relation to each other.
Full Text The invention relates to a device for milling treatment, in particular, rock or other materials, with a
spindle drum which is rotatably mounted on a drum support about a drum axis, in which a plurality of
tool spindles are supported eccentrically to the drum axis to be rotatably drivable about spindle axes and
carry machining tools at their ends projecting from the spindle drum. The invention further relates to a
method for milling rock or the like using such a device.
For the milling of rock or other hard materials as for example of extraction products in underground or
open-work mining, of tarmac or concrete components in road or structural engineering, a plurality of
milling systems are known, which are mainly rotary driven drums or discs, at the circumference of which
are mounted milling tools, for example round shaft bits, in an evenly distributed manner. If rock or coal
is extracted in underground mining with such a drum provided with milling tools at its circumference, for
example with the help of a drum shearer loader, and the cutting disk or drum cuts or mills the material to
be extracted with a full face cut, approximately half of all machining tools arranged at the circumference
of the drum are engaged simultaneously. Each machining tool is engaged with the material to be
machined during the full face cut via half a rotation, that is 180°, which results in that the hard metal tips
of the tools are heated to very high temperatures and wear quickly, especially in harder materials.
A further disadvantage with the known machines consists in that the entire contact pressure, with which
the drum abuts against the rock, is distributed onto a large number of individual tools, so that for every
individual chisel in use, only a comparatively small pressure force is available. If the entire pressure of
the drum against the rock is for example about 2000 N, and about 20 individual tools are always used
during a full cut, on the average every individual tool has only a contact pressure of 100 N . Furthermore,
it is also difficult to axially drive into the material to be machined with the known devices, in which the
tools are drivingly connected at the circumference of a roller or a drum, which problem can be attributed
to the fact that the optimum cutting speed is at the outer diameter of the drums, and that the cutting speed
is consistently reduced in the direction towards the axis of rotation of the drum or the roller, and becomes
so small in the proximity of the axis of rotation, that cutting is practically impossible there. Even when
the drum is provided with tools at its face side, these cannot break out the rock abutting their face during
the axial driving-in of the drum in a reasonable manner.
From DE 34 45 492 C2, a boring head for boring in rock is known , which comprises a tool support with
boring tools, which is mounted on a central shaft, which is coupled to bore rods extending between the
bore hole and the boring head. The boring tools at the tool support can be rotatably driven via a planetary
gear transmission.
It is the object of the invention to create a device for the milling treatment of rock or other materials of
the above-mentioned type, which is able to also treat very hard materials with a high milling
performance, whereas, compared to conventionally driven tools, the pressing forces exerted by the
spindle drum are reduced and the edge lives of the tools are extended. Particularly, the device according
to invention shall have a high operational security, be compact and offer the possibility to receive

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machining tools of different types as for example milling rollers, saw blades, undercutting tools or the
like with arbitrary weights and sizes.
This object is being solved with the invention with the features as defined in the independent claims. As
at least two of the tool spindles can be driven by a common transmission gear drive, which comprises
driven gear wheels drivingly connected to the tool spindles and a common drive element, in particular a
drive gear wheel or also a drive chain, a drive transmission belt or the like, which drive element
cooperates with the driven gear wheels, while the drive element and the spindle drum can be rotated
relatively to one another, a particularly compact arrangement of a device is created, in which the at least
two tool spindles with the tools thereon are driven synchronously outside the centre axis of the spindle
drum. The machining tools arranged at the tool spindles can thereby be adjusted easily so that even
during a full cut with an abutment of 180° respectively only one machining tool or only a few tools are
used simultaneously, so that the entire available pressing force of the spindle drum can respectively only
be used by one or a few tools, that is, the individual tool presently in engagement with the rock has a
very high loosening force.
It is possible that the spindle drum comprises a rotary drive, which is decoupled from the transmission
gear drive. In this embodiment, the spindle drum is thus rotated by a rotary drive and the tool spindles
experience their drive independently of the rotary speed of the spindle drum. With this embodiment, it is
even feasible to stop the spindle drum in any case briefly during the axial drive-in of the device into the
rock and to bore a short distance into the rock only by rotation of the tool spindles, and only then to start
the drive for the spindle drum.
It has proved to be particularly advantageous if the spindle drum and at least some of the tool spindles
have a common rotary drive, so that, with a rotation of the spindle drum, the tool spindles which are also
acted upon by the common rotary drive are also automatically rotated.
In this context, it is constructional ly advantageous if the drive element formed from a drive gear wheel is
arranged irrotationally with respect to the drum support, in particular firmly connected to the drum
support. The driven gear wheels drivingly connected to the tool spindles then mesh with the drive gear
wheel arranged irrotationally with respect to the drum support, whereby the tool spindles are rotated
when the spindle drum in which the tool spindles are received is driven by the rotary drive. Very high
forces and torques can be transferred with such a planetary gear drive with a particularly compact design.
The tool spindles are preferably received in bearing bushes by means of bearings in a rotary manner and
are conveniently sealed by shaft seals. It is particularly advantageous with such an arrangement, if the
bearing bushes with the tool spindles mounted therein in a rotary manner are inserted and locked in an
exchangeable manner like cartridges in drum chambers provided at the spindle drum. The tool spindles
can then be replaced with their bearings and possibly seals by simple exchange of the bearing bushes in
the structural unit, for example when they are worn or when tool spindles for other machining tools are to

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be used. The tool spindles in the bearing bushes are pre-mounted, so that removal and fitting of this
structural unit only takes a very short time.
Preferably, all tool spindles can be drivable via the common drive gear wheel of the transmission gear
drive. However, it is also easily possible that a first group of tool spindles is drivable via a first common
drive gear wheel and a second group of tool spindles is drivable via a second common drive gear wheel,
for example in a case in which a first group of tool spindles is arranged at the spindle drum on a pitch
circle having a larger diameter and a second group of tool spindles is arranged on a pitch circle having a
smaller diameter. The gear transmission ratios between the tool spindles of the first group and the first
drive gear wheel and the tool spindles of the second group and the second drive gear wheel and/or the
directions of rotation of the tool spindles of the first and second group can then be different. As already
suggested above, the tool spindles of the first group and those of the second group can be arranged with a
different radial distance from the drum axis in the spindle drum, that is, on two different pitch circles.
The tool spindles are preferably arranged uniformly distributed over the circumference in the spindle
drum.
In a particularly advantageous embodiment of the device according to invention it is possible that the
machining tool(s) of one tool spindle is/are arranged in an offset manner relative to the arrangement of
the machining tool(s) of the tool spindle being arranged in front or behind that one tool spindle in the
drum circumference direction . In other words, the machining tools of tool spindles following each other
in the circumferential direction of the spindle drum can be arranged with regard to one another in a
phase-shift manner . This arrangement makes it possible to ensure in a particularly advantageous manner
during the execution of the method according to the invention for milling of rock, that an individual tool
arranged at a tool spindle reaches engagement with the rock to be machined at another point than an
individual tool of a tool spindle lying in front of it in the direction of rotation. It is thus ensured by the
phase-shifted arrangement of the tools that the impact points of the individual tools or cutters of the
different tool spindles do not overlap, but that a following tool machines the rock at a point which the
tools of a tool spindle moved previously through the rock have left. Thereby a particularly effective
treatment of the rock or the like is achieved. In order to achieve the desired phase shift or the offset angle
as exactly as possible, the machining tools are preferably arranged in an adjustable manner at the tool
spindles, that is, they can be adjusted in their angular position relative to the tool spindles.
The machining tools can comprise one or several machining bits or individual tools at every tool spindle.
In a particularly advantageous embodiment of the invention, at least some of the individual tools can
consist of straight shank bits, while in some cases, flat chisel tools or roller bits have proved themselves,
in particular roller bits which are formed conically on one side. For many machining uses it has proved to
be advantageous if the machining tools project at the most with 50% of their machining surfaces radially
over the outer circumference, that is, that at the most half of the individual machining tools of a tool
spindle are in simultaneous engagement with the rock or the like.

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The spindle drum can be provided with a preferably centrically arranged dust extraction opening, through
which the fine dust which results during the milling treatment of the rock or the like can be extracted. It
is also advantageous, if the device is provided with at least one sprinkling device for the machining tools,
with which on the one hand the resulting dust can be bound by water sprayed on the machining point,
and on the other hand, a cooling of the machining tools can be provided. The sprinkling device is
preferably arranged at the spindle drum and/or at the drum support.
With the device according to invention, machining tools of different types can be used. It is thus
possible, when the machining tools of one or several of the tool spindles essentially consist of a chisel
support and several round bits, flat bits and/or roller chisels arranged thereon, whereas the arrangement is
in such a manner that the chisel/bit tools arranged at the chisel support machine the rock or other
respectively machined material in an undercutting manner in one or more layers. The arrangement is
preferably made in such a manner that a tool operating in several layers tapers in the direction of the rock
to be machined, preferably in the form of steps. The machining tools can essentially also consist of
milling rollers, which are arranged on one or several tool spindles. These milling rollers can be formed
cylindrically or can taper conically or expand towards the rock to be machined.
If the drive element consists of a drive gear wheel geared on the outside, which is connected to the drum
support, the direction of rotation of the tool spindles is the same as the one of the spindle drum. If the
drive element consists of a drive gear wheel geared on the inside, the tool spindles driven from such a
drive gear ring rotate in the opposite direction of the spindle drum.
In order to provide the rotary drive for the spindle drum independent from the transmission gear drive
for the tool spindles, a constructional embodiment has proven to be advantageous, in which the spindle
drum comprises a reception bore for a drive shaft running coaxially to the drum axis, which drive shaft is
rotatably supported in the reception bore and is coupled to the drive element for the tool spindle. The
drive shaft is thus mounted rotatably concentrically in the spindle drum, which is not only particularly
compact, but which also ensures a high stability of the construction. The spindle drum can comprise a
closed housing with an approximately cup-shaped drum base and a housing lid, so that the drive element,
that is, in particular the drive gear wheel, is received in the inside of the drum base and is connected to
the drive shaft and is covered by the housing lid.
The transmission drive for the tool spindles is preferably arranged in an encapsulated manner in the
spindle drum. The machining tools with their respective tool spindles can be in an overhung position at
the spindle and can project from the spindle drum at the face and/or at the circumference.
So as to favour the axial driving-in of the device into the rock, it has been proved to be advantageous if
the spindle drum is, additionally to the tool spindles which are arranged distributed over its
circumference, provided with milling tools with a core milling cutter arranged in the inside of the pitch
circle described by the tool spindles, which core milling cutter is preferably arranged with a small

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eccentricity to the drum axis. With the help of the core milling cutter which is formed in a driveable
manner, it can be ensured that the entire rock present in front of the face of the spindle drum will be
milled during the axial feed motion of the device therein.
In order to ensure a particularly stable reception of the tool spindles, the machining tools with their
respective tool spindles are preferably mounted at the spindle drum by means of a two-point bearing. A
fixed floating bearing can be provided for this, alternatively, an engaged bearing, in particular in the X-
arrangement can be used, for example by means of taper roller bearings or the like.
Especially in cases where machining tools with a comparatively large axial length are to be used, for
example tools with long milling shanks, it is particularly advantageous if the spindle drum comprises an
approximately plate-like bearing flange in the proximity of the drum support for the reception of the first
bearings of the tool spindles and a support journal projecting concentrically to the drum axis, at which at
least one support element for the reception of the second bearings of the tool spindles is arranged. The
regions of the machining tools which machine the rock are then between the two bearings, so that a
particularly sturdy support is achieved. With this embodiment of the invention it can further be
convenient, that the support element or the support journal comprises a bearing journal arranged
concentrically to the spindle drum axis for the additional support of the spindle drum. Thereby it is then
possible to also mount the spindle drum itself by means of a two-point bearing, that is to additionally
support it at the end which is turned away from the drum support, and therewith to avoid bending which
can occur with long tools and an overhung bearing.
The support element can consist of a lid flange arranged at the face of the support journal, which flange
is provided with bearing receptions for the second bearing. The machining tools are then covered by the
lid flange at their face and machine the rock only with individual tools which are arranged at their
circumference and which project radially between the plate-like bearing flange and the lid flange of the
spindle drum therefrom. It is also possible that at least two support elements are provided, which are
arranged at different distances from the bearing flange and which respectively receive the second
bearings of different tool spindles. With this arrangement, the second bearings of the tool spindles then
have a distance from the face (free) end of the machining tools, which can then also be in engagement
with the rock with their faces.
So as to avoid damages of the device by overloading, it has proved to be convenient that the drive
element is connected to the drum support via an overload clutch, which can for example be a spring-
loaded friction clutch. The spring load acting on the clutch is preferably adjustable, so that the activation
value at which the clutch is released and the drive element slips through at the drum support can be
adjusted.
The spindle drum can, at its rear side, which is turned away from the machining tools, be provided with a
demountable covering cap sealed with regard to the drum support by means of a shaft seal, which cap

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enables access to the transmission gear drive and other parts lying below, which have to be serviced or
inspected occasionally.
Generally, the tool spindle axes in the spindle drum will be aligned parallel to the drum axis. It is
however also possible to arrange the tool spindle axes in an inclined manner relative to the drum axis,
whereby the milling result can be improved further with some rocks or materials to be machined. In a
further embodiment of the invention, every machining tool preferably comprises several individual tools
arranged evenly over the circumference of the machining tool, and is mounted to the associated tool
spindle using a detent coupling, whereby the number of possible lock positions of the detent coupling is
adapted to the number at the machining tool so that these are in the same relative position to the tool
spindle in every locked position. The detent coupling responds when the machining tool is blocked by
the rock which it engages, so that the associated tool spindle which carries this tool can rotate further to
the next lock position, into which the machining tool then locks again and rotates further. The machining
tool thereby locks again in such a position where its relative position to the machining tools of adjacent
tool spindles remains the same, that is, the originally adjusted phase shift or the offset of the machining
tools of successive tool spindles remains after the response of the detent coupling and locking of the tool.
The device according to invention and the method that can be effected thereby are particularly suitable
for the removal of mineral extraction products as for example coal, ore rock or the like. The device can
be used for this purpose as replacement for a well-known cutting head of a drum shearing machine or as
cutting head of a selective cut or full cu heading machine. The device and the method can
advantageously also be used for the machining of concreted or tarmacked surfaces or buildings, for
example when milling tarmacked or concreted road surfaces, during demolition of concrete buildings or
the like. It is often advantageous for the different applications if the device according to the invention is
mounted to an adjustable arm and is engaged with this against the rock or the like to be machined. Use of
the device according to the invention is also conceivable with small appliances, for example with hand-
held plaster milling devices.
Further characteristics or advantages of the invention result from the following description and the
drawings, where preferential embodiments of the invention are explained further with examples It shows:
Fig. 1 a first embodiment of a device according to the invention in cross section (fig. la) and plan view
on the spindle drum;
Fig. 2 a second embodiment of the device according to the invention in a representation corresponding to
% 1;
Fig. 3 a third embodiment of the device according to the invention in a representation corresponding to
fig. 1 and 2;

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Fig. 4 a fourth embodiment of the device according to the invention in a representation corresponding to
fig. 1 to 3;
Fig. 5 a device according to invention during the implementation of the method according to the
invention in contact with the rock in a view on the spindle drum and partially in cross section;
Fig. 6 a fifth embodiment of the device according to the invention in cross section;
Fig. 7 a sixth embodiment of the device according to the invention, also in cross section;
Fig. 8 a seventh embodiment of the device according to the invention;
Fig. 9 an eighth embodiment of the device according to the invention;
Fig. 10 a ninth embodiment of the device according to the invention in a representation corresponding to
fig. 1 to 4;
Fig. 11 a tenth embodiment of the device according to the invention in cross section:
Fig. 12 an eleventh embodiment of the device according to the invention in a representation
corresponding to fig. 1 to 4;
Fig. 13 a twelfth embodiment of the device according to the invention in a representation corresponding
to fig. 1 to 4; and
Fig. 14 a thirteenth embodiment of the invention;
The various embodiments of the device according to the invention shown in the drawings, which device
is designated as 10 in its entirety, serve for the milling of rock, for example mineral extraction products
such as coal or ore, or also for the processing of concrete, tarmac or other building materials, for example
during the milling of road surfaces or the like. As far as the different embodiments of the device
according to the invention conform in their constructional details, a repeated description of these
recurring details with different embodiments shall be forgone. Rather, after the detailed description of the
fundamental construction on the basis of fig. 1, essentially only the differences of the different
embodiments will be explained.
Referring to fig. 1, it can be seen that the device 10 according to the invention comprises a drum support
11 for the mounting to a machine body (not shown) suitable therefore, for example an extension arm of a
winning machine or a road milling machine. The drum support 11 comprises a central bearing reception
12, in which a spindle drum 13 is pivoted by means of two taper roller bearings 15 adjusted in a back-to-
back arrangement. The bearing journal 14 projects with its rear end 16 from the bearing reception 12 of
the drum support 11 rearwardly and supports a drive wheel 17 there which is coupled to a rotary drive for
the rotation of the spindle drum, not shown in detail.

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The bearing journal 14 changes into a circular plate-like bearing flange 18 of the spindle drum at its other
end opposite the drive wheel 17, which journal comprises several, in the example of the embodiment six,
evenly distributed drum chambers 20 on a pitch circle 19 near its outer circumference. The drum
chambers 20 each receive a bearing bush 21 with a tool spindle 22 mounted rotatably therein, whereby
the bearing bushes with the tool spindles mounted therein like a cartridge are inserted into their
respective drum chamber 20 in an exchangeable manner and are locked in the inserted state by means of
fixing screws 23. At their rear end, with which the tool spindles project rearwardly from the bearing
flange 18 of the spindle drum, they are provided with driven gear wheels 24 which mesh with a driving
gear wheel 25, which is secured firmly to the drum support 11 with screws 27 at a gear wheel reception
26 provided for this. One can see in the first embodiment shown in fig. 1, that the gearings of the driven
gear wheels 24 of the tool spindles 22 roll off at the drive gear wheel 25 firmly mounted to the drum
support 11, when the spindle drum 13 is rotated by the rotary drive effective at the drive wheel 17, so
that the tool spindles are also rotated hereby. With this design, there exists a fixed gear transmission ratio
between the rotatably driven spindle drum 13 and the tool spindles synchronously driven by the gear
drive 24, 25 pivoted therein. . With a gear transmission ratio of for example 10:1, the tool spindles rotate
with 500 rpm when the spindle drum is driven with 50 rpm. The gear transmission ratio can be changed
by a change of the diameters of the drive gear wheels and of the driven gear wheel or a change of the
number of teeth. To this end, the drive gear wheel 25 can be disassembled and can be replaced by for
example by a smaller gear wheel, while also other tool spindles with correspondingly larger drive gear
wheels are inserted at the same time.
For the attachment of the entire device 10 to a machine frame (not shown) provided for this, as for
example an arm of a drum shearing machine or a road milling machine, mounting holes 28 for fixing
screws are provided at the drum support 11, which screws are threaded through access holes 29 provided
in the bearing flange 18 of the spindle drum and can be screwed into threaded bores at the machine frame
aligned with the mounting holes 28 by means of a suitable tool as for example an alien key. The entire
device can be quickly installed at the machine frame without disassembly of any parts of the device.
In fig. IA it can easily be seen that the bearing flange 18 of the spindle drum 13 is provided with a
housing lid 30 at its rear side, which is screwed to the bearing flange 18 and together with this forms a
closed housing 31 for the transmission gear drive 24, 25 of the tool spindles. In order to prevent an
ingress of humidity or dirt into the housing 31, the housing lid 30 is provided with a seal 32 at its radial
inner edge, with which the sealing with regard to the drum support is effected.
The front ends of the tool spindles projecting from the free side of the spindle drum form cone seat
receptions 33 for machining tools, different designs of which being shown in fig. 2 to 14. All these
different designs of the machining tools can also be used with the embodiment of the design according to
the invention according to fig. 1, as will be described in detail in the following.

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With the embodiment of the invention shown in fig. 2, it is possible to adjust the number of revolutions
and the direction of rotation of the individual tool spindles independently of the number of revolutions
and the direction of rotation of the spindle drum. For this, the spindle drum 13 comprises a rotary drive,
which is decoupled from the transmission gear drive of the tool spindles. This is solved constructional ly
in that the spindle drum 13 comprises a reception bore 35 for a drive shaft 36 running coaxially to the
drum axis 34, which shaft is mounted in the reception bore in a rotary manner with two cylinder roller
bearings 37. The front bearing flange 18 of the spindle drum forms a closed housing 31 with an
approximately cup-shaped drum base 38 and a housing lid 30, and the drive gear wheel 25 of the
transmission gear drive for the tool spindles is irrotationally mounted on the drive shaft 36 and is
received in the housing 31 between the drum base 38 and the housing lid 30. There it meshes with the
driven gear wheels 24 of the tool spindles 22.
The drive shaft is provided with a front gear wheel 39 at its rear end, which can be coupled to a spindle
drive motor (not shown), so as to rotate the drive shaft 36 and thus the drive gear wheel 25 mounted
thereon on the inside of the spindle drum and to hereby effect the rotary drive of the tool spindles, so that
the number of revolutions of the tool spindles can be adjusted independently of the number of
revolutions of the spindle drum.
In the embodiment according to fig. 2, the tool spindles are not received in bearing bushes and inserted
cartridge-like in drum chambers at the spindle drum, but the individual shafts are mounted directly in the
spindle drum, whereas the rear of respectively two cone roller bearings is arranged in the drum base and
the front bearing pointing to the machining side in the housing lid 30. The sealing of the spindle drum in
relation to the drum support 11 is effected by means of a shaft seal ring 40 in this example of the
embodiment, which is arranged in the transition region of the bearing flange 18 to the bearing journal 14.
With the example of an embodiment according to fig. 2, chisel rings 42 with respectively six individual
tools 43 in the form of impact chisels mounted thereon are used as machining tools 41, whereas the
arrangement is such that the sphere of activity 45 defined by the impact tips 44 of the individual tools 43
projects with a relatively small segment over the outer circumference 46 of the spindle drum, so that,
with the example of an embodiment shown, no more than two individual tools 43 project radially over
the outer circumference 46 of the spindle drum at the same time. The circle line 4 describing the
individual spheres of activity 45 of the six machining tools 41 defines the milling diameter of the device
in the rock, that is, the range within which the machining tools machine the rock with their individual
tools. It can be seen that no more than 1/3 of all individual tools are engaged at the milling line 47 in the
rock at a respective time, that is, every tool only breaks out rock on 1/3 of the path covered by a rotation
of the tool spindle and is subjected to the loads created thereby.
Fig. 3 shows the device according to fig. 2, as provided with machining tools 41 in the form of conical,
two-stage chisel milling cutters 48, which respectively comprise six individual tools 43 at axially
successively arranged mounting circles. The chisel milling cutters mill through the rock 49 in two stages

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during the operation of the device, so that the radially external machining tools impact the rock 49 in a
first sphere of activity 46a closer to the device, and the radially inner tools in a second sphere of activity
46b which establishes deeper in the rock. It can easily be seen that, by the overlapping of the rotation of
the spindle drum 13 and the rotation of the tool spindle, the individual tools 43 are actually engaged with
the rock only for a short time, whereby the wear of the tools is considerably reduced in a particularly
advantageous manner compared to known cutting drums or the like. Instead of an arrangement in two
stages, an arrangement in three or more stages can of course also be selected for the individual tools, in
order to remove the rock or another material to be milled in one operation by a direction-free, lateral
method of the device in an undercutting manner. An axial driving-in of the device into the rock is
generally possible without any problem.
With embodiment shown in fig. 4, the machining tools are end milling cutters 50, which comprise a
support shaft 51 connected rigidly to the respective tool spindle 22, at the circumference of which are
arranged individual tools 43, which can for example consist of straight shank chisels received in suitable
tool holders. The individual tools are preferably arranged in a spiral form over the length of the support
shaft 51 in this embodiment, while the arrangement can also take place in several spirals. With this
arrangement, it is easily possible to drive axially into the material to be cut, and subsequently to remove
the material in the entire driven depth or length of the shaft milling cutters by a direction-free, lateral
method of the device. So as to ease the cutting, that is, the driving-in in the axial direction, it is possible
to taper the diameter of the tools at least at their front region towards the face in the direction of the rock.
In fig. 5, the preferred mode of operation which can be achieved with the device according to the
invention can be seen in a particularly illustrative manner. While the spindle drum rotates with a first
rotation speed in the direction of arrow A, for example with 50 rpm, the individual tool spindles rotate
synchronously with a rotation speed corresponding to the chosen gear reduction, that is, with the
embodiments of the device according to fig. 1, 3 and 4, in the same direction of rotation as the spindle
drum. With an assumed gear transmission ratio of 1: 10, the rotation speed of the tool spindles is thus
500 rpm. It can be seen that the first machining tool 41A, which impacts the rock 49 to be milled,
impacts recesses 52 into the rock 49 with its four individual tools 43 with a certain rhythm or distance.
The following machining tool 41B drives rock out between the recesses 52, whereby a wave profile 54 is
formed in the rock at the approximately semicircular milling edge 53. The machining tools 41C and 41D
following now successively remove the raised tips 55 in the wave profile, shown in a hatched
representation, whereby the milling edge is smoothed as far as possible, and with the further feed of the
spindle drum in the direction of the arrow 56, the described procedure with the machining tools 41E to
41H can repeat itself. Alternatively, the tools 41E-H can also even be used for a further smoothing of the
milling edge 53 in the rock. On the other hand, it is also possible, depending on the chosen gear
reduction ratio and number of the individual tools 43 at the machining tools, that a first machining tool,
for example tool 41 A, pre-cuts, and that the regions remaining between the recesses 52 are knocked off
with the following tool, and that the tool following in the circumferential direction of the drum then

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again drives out new recesses 52 as the first tool and that the following tool mills the regions remaining
therebetween. The representation according to fig. 5 is selected as if the tools 41A-D drive approximately
simultaneously into the rock 49 to be cut, which is normally not the case in practice. It has proven to be
particularly advantageous in experiments, if the tools - in the shown case the machining tools 4IA-H - are
constructed in such a manner, that, with the shown engagement of 180° (full cut) only one individual tool
of all (five) effective machining tools is in engagement with the rock on the 180° region of the milling
edge 53, as then the entire pressing force or feeding force exerted on the spindle drum by the device can
be used by only one individual tool, and not, as was usual up to now, is distributed simultaneously on
several bits. The machining tools are positioned and adjusted in the preferred form so that the tools
following in each case do not drive exactly into the outline produced by the preceding tools at the rock,
but in an offset manner.
A further embodiment of the device according to the invention is shown in fig. 6. This embodiment is
based on the device according to fig. 1 and differs from this by the mounting of the drive gear wheel 25,
at which the driven gear wheels 24 of the tool spindles roll off. In the embodiment according to fig. 6, the
drive gear wheel 25 is connected to the drum support 11 via an overload clutch 57, which effects a
friction-locked connection between the drum support 11 and the drive gear wheel 25 via clutch linings
58. The activation moment where the overload clutch operates and the drive gear wheel begins to slip
through with regard to the drum support can be adjusted. For this, an adjustment ring 59 can be engaged
against the clutch package formed by the clutch linings and the intermediate part of the drive gear wheel
25 via a thread 60, in order to preload a plate spring 61 which then acts thereon with a constant spring
load over the circumference of the clutch. With this arrangement, it is ensured that the device is not
damaged when a tool driving into the rock blocks, as in such a case, the overload clutch responds and
separates all machining tools from the common drive of the spindle drum and the tools until the blocking
of the concerned individual tool ceases. The synchronisation of the individual machining tools with one
another still remains , as these all stay in engagement with the driven gear wheel during the activation of
the clutch.
The embodiment of the device according to the invention shown in fig. 7 also uses the overload clutch,
which is designed exactly as with the embodiment according to fig. 7. In the embodiment shown in fig.
7, however, there is selected a separate drive from the spindle drum drive for the tool spindles. For this, a
drive ring 62 is mounted in a rotary manner at the drum support 11 at a front section 11 a, which ring
supports the drive gear wheel mounted via the overload clutch 57 at its outer circumference. The drive
ring is provided with an internal gearing 63 at it axial rear region, into which gearing engages a drive
pinion (not shown) of a common tool drive, so as to effect the rotation of the drive ring on the drum body
11, and to drive the tool spindles hereby.
Fig. 8 again shows the device according to fig. 1, this time with machining tools in the form of cutting
plates 64, which essentially consist of an approximately plate-shaped support 65 and respectively four
cutting discs 66 arranged evenly over the circumference of the support 65, which discs are rotatably

12
mounted in the support 65. The arrangement is such that the axes of rotation of the discs 66 do not run
parallel to the axis of rotation of the support 65 mounted irrotationally on the associated tool spindle, but
are inclined inwardly towards the rock, so that during the cut of the cutting discs into the rock 49 the
faces of the cutting discs do not come into contact with the rock, but that it is ensured that the cutting
discs 66 actually only machine the rock with their rotating cutting edge 67. By the rotary mounting of the
cutting discs in the support of the cutting plates it is ensured that the cutting discs can roll off in the rock
along their cutting edge at the generated milling edge 53. In a preferred further development of this
embodiment, not shown, the individual cutting discs can be coupled to one another via a suitable
coupling tool as for example a belt transmission or a gear wheel transmission present in the inside of the
support, whereby it is ensured that, during the rotation of the tool spindle, an individual tool (cutting
disc) coming into engagement with the rock already comprises the same circumferential speed, as a
preceding individual tool leaving the engagement, so that a possible damage does not occur here by the
sudden acceleration of the cutting disc during contact with the surrounding rock. The machining tools
which are used in the embodiment according to fig. 8 are particularly suitably for somewhat softer rocks
to be machined, for example during the production of coal.
With the embodiment shown in fig. 9, the spindle axes 68 of the tool spindles 22 are not aligned parallel
to the drum axis 34 of the spindle drum 13, but are inclined inwardly in the direction of the rock. For
this, the bearing bushes 21 are bored diagonally for the reception of the tool spindles mounted therein
and the drive gear wheel 25 is a formed as a bevel gear, at which the driven gear wheels 24 of the
diagonal tool spindles formed at the tool spindles roll off.
With the embodiment of the device according to the invention according to fig. 10, the tool spindles 22
are arranged on two different pitch circles 19a, 19b, as can easily be seen in fig. 10. The drive of the first
group 69 of tool spindles on the first, outer pitch circle 19a and of the second group of 70 of tool spindles
on the inner pitch circle 19b takes place through a common drive element in the form of a stepped drive
gear wheel 25, which comprises a first gear ring of larger diameter 25a for the tool spindles of the first
group lying outside and a second gear ring 25b with smaller diameter, which drives the tool spindles of
the second group 70 which lie radially somewhat further inside. In all other respects, the structure of the
embodiment according to fig. 10 corresponds to the one used with fig. 1.
With the embodiments of the device according to the invention described up to now with a common
drive for the spindle drum and the tool spindles mounted rotatably therein, the direction of rotation of the
spindle drum and the tool spindles was the same. Fig. 11 now shows an embodiment where the tool
spindles rotate against the direction of rotation of the spindle drum 13. For this, the drive element for the
tool spindles consists of a drive gear ring 71 geared on the inside, which is centrally fastened to the drum
support 11 and in which engage the tool spindles with their driven gear wheels 24, as can be seen in the
drawing.

13
With the embodiments shown in fig. 12 and 13, shaft milling cutters with a comparatively long support
shaft 51 are used as machining tools 41, which cannot, due to the large axial length of the tools, be
overhung alone like the embodiments shown so far. Accordingly, with the embodiments according to fig.
12 and fig. 13, the machining tools are mounted at the spindle drum with their respective tool spindles by
means of a two-point mounting. The spindle drum comprises a plate-like bearing flange 18 in the
proximity of the drum support 11 for the reception of the first bearings of the tool spindle for this, which
form the fixed bearing for the two-point bearing with the shown embodiment and which is executed in
the form of a mounted bearing in a back-to-back arrangement with cone roller bearings. The spindle
drum further comprises a projecting support journal 72 arranged concentrically to the drum axis 34
which supports a support element 73 for the reception of the second bearings 74 of the machining tools
arranged on the tool spindles near its free end. With embodiments according to fig. 12 and fig. 13, the
second bearings at the support element form the floating bearing for the fixed floating bearing of the
machining tools. They consist of cylinder roller bearings, which are particularly suitable for the reception
of large radial forces. With the embodiment according to fig. 12, the support element consists of a lid
flange 75 arranged at the face of the support journal 72, which flange is provided with bearing receptions
76 for the cylinder roller bearings 74. This embodiment of the two-point bearing for the machining tools
is particularly stable, but it is not suitable for an axial driving of the tools into the rock to be machined, as
the machining tools are not effective at the face, by being covered by the lid flange 75. This disadvantage
is avoided with the embodiment according to fig. 13, where two support elements 73a. 73b are provided,
which support respectively every second machining tool at the circumference of the spindle drum in a
star-shaped manner. The two support elements 73a, 73b are arranged with different distances s, S from
the bearing flange 18 for this, and support the respective second bearings of different tool spindles in
star-shaped projecting arms 77. So that the spindle drum in the embodiment according to fig. 12 or fig.
13 cannot sag due to the forces acting on the machining tools, the lid flange 75 or the support journal 72
can be provided with a bearing journal 86 arranged concentrically to the spindle drum axis 34, shown
with dash-dot lines in the drawings for the additional support of the spindle drum by means of a bearing
(not shown), which is for example present in the same machine frame as the drum support at this
opposite side.
Finally, with the embodiment shown in fig. 14, the spindle drum 13 is, additionally to the tool spindles
22, which are distributed evenly over its circumference with milling tools 41 arranged thereon, provided
with a core milling device 78 arranged on the inside of the pitch circle 19 described by the tool spindles,
which milling device is arranged with a small eccentricity e to the drum axis 34, and which is driven
opposite to the direction of rotation of the tool spindles. The core milling device thereby consists of a
reception cartridge 79, on the inside of which is mounted a milling shaft 80 in a rotary manner, which
carries a milling head 81 at its front end pointing towards the rock. At its rear end, which projects from
the reception cartridge 79, the milling shaft is provided with a front gear wheel 82 which is flanged
thereon. The reception cartridge 79 with the shaft mounted therein is inserted in a milling cutter reception
provided at the bearing flange 18 of the spindle drum 13 and is irrotationally fixed. In the mounted

14
condition, the front wheel 82 meshes with an internally geared milling cutter drive gear ring 83, which is
firmly mounted to the drum support 11 and which engages in a circumferential groove 84 provided at the
rear side of the bearing flange of the spindle drum. The core milling cutter is thereby driven in the
opposite rotary direction to the direction of rotation of the spindle drum and favours in particular during
the axial driving-in of the tool into the rock the excavation of the material possibly remaining in the
central area 85 described by the tool spindles.
The invention is not limited to the shown and described examples of embodiments, but different changes
and additions are feasible, without leaving the scope of the invention. It is for example possible to let the
tool spindles of a first group of tools and the tool spindles of a second group of tools rotate in opposite
directions, in particular when the tools of the first group are provided on a different pitch circle to those
of the second group. The details shown and described on the basis of the individual embodiments can be
combined with one another in most diverse ways, which can be noted by the expert without special
difficulties. With the selection of suitable machining tools it is easily possible, to use the device
according to the invention also for the machining of other materials than rock or coal, for example for the
machining of metal, wood or plastics.

15
Claims
1. Device for milling and/or boring treatment particularly of rock and other materials, with a spindle
drum (13) rotatably mounted on a drum support (11) about a drum axis (34), in which spindle drum
several tool spindles (22) are pivotally-mounted about spindle axes (68) which are eccentric from the
drum axis, said tool spindles carrying machining tools (41) at their ends projecting from the spindle
drum (13), characterised in that at least two of the tool spindles (22) can be driven via a common
transmission gear drive (24, 25) which comprises driven gear wheels (24) drivingly connected to the tool
spindles (22) and a common drive element (25) which cooperates with the driven gear wheels (24), the
drive element (25) and the spindle drum (13) being arranged to rotate relative to one another.
2. Device according to claim 1, characterised in that the spindle drum (13) comprises a rotary drive,
which is decoupled from the transmission gear drive (24, 25).
3. Device according to claim 1 or 2, characterised in that the spindle drum (13) and at least one part of
the tool spindles (22) have a common rotary drive.
4. Device according to one of claims 1 to 3, characterised in that the drive element (25) consists of a
drive gear wheel.
5. Device according to one of claims 1 to 3, characterised in that the drive element (25) essentially
consists of a drive chain, a drive gear belt or the like.
6. Device according to one of claims 1 to 5, characterised in that the drive gear wheel (25) is arranged
irrotationally with respect to the drum support (11).
7. Device according to claim 6, characterised in that the drive gear wheel (25) is drivingly connected to
the drum support (11).
8. Device according to one of claims 1 to 7, characterised in that the tool spindles (22) are rotatably
received in bearing bushes (21) by means of bearings and in a sealing manner by means of shaft sealings.
9. Device according to claim 8, characterised in that the bearing bushes (21) with the tool spindles (22)
mounted therein in a rotary manner are inserted and retained in drum chambers (20) provided at the
spindle drum (13) in an exchangeable manner as a cartridge.

10. Device according to one of claims 1 to 9, characterised in that all tool spindles (22) can be driven
via the common drive gear wheel (25) of the transmission gear drive.
11. Device according to one of claims 1 to 9, characterised in that a first group (69) of tool spindles
(22) can be driven via a first common drive gear wheel (25a) and a second group (70) of tool spindles
(22) via a second common drive gear wheel (25b).

16
12. Device according to claim 11, characterised in that the gear transmission ratios between the tool
spindles (22) of the first group (69) and the first drive gear wheel (25a) and the tool spindles of the
second group (70) and the second drive gear wheel (25b) and/or the directions of rotation of the tool
spindles of the first and second group are different.
13. Device according to claim 11 or 12, characterised in that the tool spindles (22) of the first group
(69) and of the second group (70) are arranged with a different radial distance from the drum axis (34) in
the spindle drum (13).
14. Device according to one of claims 1 to 13, characterised in that the tool spindles (22) are arranged
over the circumference in the spindle drum (13) in an evenly distributed manner.
15. Device according to one of claims 1 to 14, characterised in that the machining tool(s) (41A)
arranged at a tool spindle (22) is/are arranged offset with an angular amount relative to the arrangement
of the machining tool(s) (41) of a tool spindle (41H, 4 IB) lying in front or behind thereof in the
circumference direction of the drum.
16. Device according to one of claims 1 to 14, characterised in that the relative position of the
machining tools (41) to their respective tool spindles (22) is the same.
17. Device according to one of claims 1 to 16, characterised in that the machining tools (41) are
arranged at the tool spindles (22) in an adjustable manner.
18. Device according to one of claims 1 to 17, characterised in that the machining tools (41) comprise
one or several individual tools (43) at each tool spindle (22).
19. Device according to claim 18, characterised in that the individual tools (43) essentially consist of
round bits, flat bits and/or in particular roller bits which are conically chamfered on one side.
20. Device according to one of claims 1 to 19, characterised in that the machining tools (41) project
radially over the circumference (46) of the spindle drum (13) at the most with 50% of their
circumferential machining surfaces (44).
21. Device according to claim 19 or 20, characterised in that at the most half of all machining chisels
(41) of a tool spindle (22) project simultaneously radially over the outer circumference (46) of the
spindle drum (13).
22. Device according to one of claims 1 to 21, characterised in that the tool spindles (22) are arranged
on several concentric pitch circles (19a, b) in the spindle drum (22).
23. Device according to one of claims 1 to 22, characterised in that the spindle drum (22) is provided
with a preferably centrically arranged dust extractor opening.

17
24. Device according to one of claims 1 to 23, characterised by at least a spraying device for the
machining tools.
25. Device according to claim 24, characterised in that the spraying device is arranged at the spindle
drum (13) and/or at the drum support (11).
26. Device according to one of claims 1 to 25, characterised in that the machining tools (41) of one or
several of the tool spindles (22) essentially consist of a chisel/bit support (42; 65) and several round bits,
flat bits and/or roller bits arranged thereon, whereas the arrangement is preferably implemented in such a
manner that the chisel tools (43) arranged on the chisel support machine the rock or another respectively
machined material in an undercut manner in one or several layers.
27. Device according to claim 26, characterised in that several roller bits or rotary cutters (66) are
mounted in a rotary manner on a common support (65) which is flanged to the associated tool spindle
(22), and that the roller bits or rotary cutters (66) mounted at a common support are coupled in a rotary
manner according to the operation.
28. Device according to one of claims 1 to 27, characterised in that the machining tools (41) of one or
several of the tool spindles (22) essentially consist of milling rollers.
29. Device according to claim 28, characterised in that the milling rollers are cylindrical or taper
conically or expand towards the rock (49) or the like to be machined.
30. Device according to one of claims 1 to 29, characterised in that the drive element (25) consists of a
drive gear wheel which is geared on the outside.
31. Device according to one of claims 1 to 29, characterised in that the drive element consists of a drive
gear ring (62), which is geared on the inside.
32. Device according to one of claims 1 to 31, characterised in that the machining tools (41) of tool
spindles (22) following each other in the circumferential direction of the spindle drum (13) are arranged
in a phase-shift manner with regard to one another.
33. Device according to one of claims 1 to 32, characterised in that the spindle drum (13) comprises a
reception bore (35) running coaxially to the drum axis (34) for a drive shaft (36) which is mounted in a
rotary manner in the reception bore and which is coupled to the drive element (25) for the tool spindles
(22).
34. Device according to claim 33, characterised in that the spindle drum (13) comprises a closed
housing (31) with an approximately cup-shaped drum base (38) and a housing lid (30). whereas the drive
element (25), in particular the drive gear wheel, is received on the inside of the drum base (38) and is
connected to the drive shaft (36) and is covered by the housing lid (30)

18
35. Device according to one of claims 1 to 34, characterised in that the gear drive (24, 25) for the tool
spindles (22) is arranged in the spindle drum (13) in a sealed manner.
36. Device according to one of claims 1 to 35, characterised in that the machining tools (41) are
mounted at the spindle drum (13) in an overhung position with their respective tool spindles (22).
37. Device according one of claims 1 to 36, characterised in that the spindle drum (13) is provided with
a core milling device (78) arranged in the inside of the pitch circle (19) described by the tool spindles
(22) additionally to the tool spindles (22) arranged in a distributed manner over the circumference with
machining tools (41), which milling device is preferably arranged with low eccentricity (e) with regard to
the drum axis (34).

38. Device according to claim 37, characterised in that the core milling device can be driven or is
driven.
39. Device according to one of claims 1 to 38, characterised in that the machining tools (41) are
mounted at the spindle drum (13) with their respective tool spindles (22) via two spaced bearings.
40. Device according to claim 39, characterised in that the two spaced bearing comprise one fixed
bearing and one floating bearing .
41. Device according to claim 39, characterised in that the two spaced bearings are adjusted bearings in
particular in a back-to-back arrangement.
42. Device according to one of claims 39 to 41, characterised in that the spindle drum (13) comprises
an approximately plate-like bearing flange (18) in the proximity of the drum support (11) for the
reception of the first bearings of the tool spindles (22) and a support journal (72) projecting
concentrically from the drum axis (34), where is arranged at least one support element (73) for the
reception of the second bearings (74) of the machining tools.
43. Device according to claim 42, characterised in that the support element (73) or the support journal
(72) comprises a bearing journal (86) arranged concentrically to the spindle drum axis (34) for the
additional support of the spindle drum (13).
44. Device according to claim 42 or 43, characterised in that the support element (73) consists of a lid
flange (75) arranged at the face of the support journal (72), which flange is provided with bearing
receptions (76) for the second bearings (74).
45. Device according to claim 42 or 43, characterised in that at least two support elements (73a,b) are
provided which are arranged with different distances (S,s) from the bearing flange and which
respectively receive the second bearings (74) from different tool spindles (22).

19
46. Device according to one of the claims 1 to 45, characterised in that the drive element (25) is
connected to the drum support (11) via an overload clutch (57).
47. Device according to claim 46, characterised in that the overload clutch (57) is spring-loaded and
that the spring load can be adjusted with regard to the clutch.

48. Device according to one of claims 1 to 47, characterised in that the spindle drum (13) is provided
with a demountable sealing cap (30) sealed by means of a shaft seal (32) with regard to the drum support
(11) on its rear side facing away from the machining tools (41).
49. Device according to one of claims 1 to 48, characterised in that the tool spindle axes (68) are
arranged in an inclined manner relative to the drum axis (34).
50. Device according to one of the claims 1 to 49, characterised in that every machining tool (41)
comprises several individual tools (43) distributed evenly over the circumference of the machining tool
and is mounted using a detent coupling at the associated tool spindles, whereby the number of possible
lock positions of the detent coupling is adapted to the number of the individual tools arranged at the
machining tool in such a manner that these are in the same relative position to the tool spindle in every
locked position.
51. Method for milling rock or the like with use of a device according to one of claims 1 to 50, where the
rotary speed of the tool spindles (22) and the rotary speed of the spindle drum (13) and/or the angular
position of the individual tools (43) arranged at the individual tool spindles (22) are adjusted relative to
the angular position of the individual tools (43) of the tool spindles lying in front or behind thereof in the
circumferential direction so that an individual tool (43) of a following tool spindle (22) does not impact
the rock or the like at the same point of impact as an individual tool (43) of a preceding workpiece
spindle.
52. Method according to claim 51, characterised in that an individual tool (43) of a following spindle
impacts the rock or the like between the points of impact (52) of the individual tools (43) of a preceding
spindle.
53. Method according to claim 51 or 52, characterised in that as few as possible individual tools (43)
are simultaneously in a milling engagement with the rock or the like to be milled.
54. Use of a device according to one of claims 1 to 50 and/or the method according to one of claims 51 to
53 for the mining of mineral extraction products such as coal, ore rock or the like and/or for the
machining of concreted or tarmacked surfaces or buildings.

The invention relates to a device for milling rock or other materials. Said device
comprises a spindle drum (13) which is rotatably mounted on a drum support (11) and
in which a plurality of tool spindles (22) are received to be rotatable about spindle axes
in a manner off-center of the drum axis (43). The tool spindles, at their ends projecting
from the spindle drum, carry machining tools (41). The invention is characterized in that
at least two of the tool spindles can be driven by a common gear drive which
comprises output gears (24), permanently disposed on the tool spindles, and a common
drive element (25) interacting with the output gears. The drive element and the spindle
drum (13) can be rotated in relation to each other.

Documents:

02367-kolnp-2007-abstract.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-claims.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-correspondence others 1.1.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-correspondence others 1.2.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-correspondence others 1.3.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-correspondence others.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-description complete.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-drawings.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-form 1.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-form 2.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-form 3.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-form 5.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-gpa.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-international publication.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-international search report.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-pct request form.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-priority document 1.1.pdf

02367-kolnp-2007-priority document.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(09-04-2014)-ASSIGNMENT.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(09-04-2014)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-ABSTRACT.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-CLAIMS.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE).pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-DRAWINGS.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-FORM-1.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-FORM-2.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-FORM-3.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-FORM-5.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-OTHERS.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-PA.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(13-06-2013)-PETITION UNDER RULE 137.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(24-02-2014)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(24-06-2013)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(24-06-2013)-FORM-3.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(25-02-2013)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(25-02-2013)-FORM-13-1.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(25-02-2013)-FORM-13.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(25-02-2013)-OTHERS.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(25-02-2013)-PA.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-ABSTRACT.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-CLAIMS.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE).pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-DRAWINGS.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-FORM-1.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-FORM-13.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-FORM-2.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-FORM-3.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-OTHERS.pdf

2367-KOLNP-2007-(29-04-2014)-PETITION UNDER RULE 137.pdf

2367-kolnp-2007-form 18.pdf

abstract-02367-kolnp-2007.jpg

Abstract.pdf

Amended claims.pdf

Form 2.pdf

Form 3.pdf

Response as filed.pdf


Patent Number 262745
Indian Patent Application Number 2367/KOLNP/2007
PG Journal Number 37/2014
Publication Date 12-Sep-2014
Grant Date 10-Sep-2014
Date of Filing 27-Jun-2007
Name of Patentee CATERPILLAR GLOBAL MINING EUROPE GMBH
Applicant Address INDUSTRIESTRASSE 1 D-44534 LUNEN
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 BECHEM, ULRICH ROMBROCKER STR. 24, D-58640 ISERLOHN
2 RASCHKA, JAOACHIM ZUR WALDSCHMIEDE 23, D-44805 BOCHUM GERMANY
3 STEINBERG, JENS SCHEFFELPFAD 3, D-45640 HATTINGEN GERMANY
PCT International Classification Number E21C 25/10
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP2006/000683
PCT International Filing date 2006-01-26
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 10 2005 003 840.9 2005-01-27 Germany