The present application is a U.S. National Stage of International Patent Application No. PCT/AT2007/000349 filed Jul. 16, 2007, and claims priority of Austrian Patent Application No. A 1206/2006 filed Jul. 14, 2006 and of Austrian Patent Application No. A 1649/2006 filed Oct. 3, 2006.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a device for slidable devices such as sliding gates or sliding doors.
The invention furthermore relates to a displaceable element, in particular a sliding gate or a sliding door, with a device for moving the element.
2. Discussion of Background Information
In the outdoor area, for example, in garden areas or private car parks, sliding gates or sliding doors are increasingly replacing hinged gates or doors of a conventional type. Sliding gates or sliding doors have essential advantages compared to conventional gates or doors: on the one hand sliding gates or sliding doors can be opened to the side so that the space can also be used that would otherwise have to have been kept free as the swiveling range of a gate or of a door. On the other hand, sliding gates or sliding doors can usually be moved on rolling or sliding elements, which is why the actuation thereof is generally possible with comparatively low force, even in the case of heavy gates.
Several requirements are made of sliding gates or sliding doors, in particular those that are used in the outdoor area. A first criterion is that the slidable gates or doors should be embodied as far as possible to be self-supporting, that is without support rollers. Support rollers namely require a smooth and clean substrate. At the same time, the device necessary to move the gate should require the smallest possible space, so that the appearance of the gate per se is disturbed as little as possible. A second criterion is an ease of movement of the gate or of the door during opening, since the lowest possible expenditure of force should be necessary for an opening. In addition, a third criterion is that the gate or the door should be as stable as possible during opening/closing as well as in the extended (or closed) and in the retracted (or opened) state.
Sliding gates or sliding doors for the outdoor area often comprise mainly metal and are therefore heavy. In order nevertheless to be able to construct self-supporting sliding gates or sliding doors, the teaching of WO 2005/093199 A1 can be consulted. According to this document, a device for sliding gates became known, which has a central carrier with fixed rollers and with a runner rail with an S-shaped profile. A gate equipped with track rollers can be moved in the upper part of the runner rail at a speed v by means of a motor. In addition, the runner rail can be moved by means of the same motor at half speed v/2 via the fixed rollers of the carrier. This means that the sliding gate, independent of its position, is always supported in part by the runner rail supported in a displaceable manner, which permits a self-supporting embodiment.
With the variant presented above according to the prior art, however, it is a disadvantage that the rollers attached to the gate and the rollers of the carrier are respectively positioned above one another in one half of the S-shaped runner rail, thus a relatively high substructure is necessary. This means not only that the high esthetic requirements are not met, but also that the gate has an unsatisfactory stability during movement and in the opened or closed state.
The invention starts from this point and has the object of disclosing a device of the type mentioned at the outset, which renders possible a more compact construction and on which a gate can be freely carried with high stability.
Another object of the invention is to disclose a displaceable element of the type mentioned at the outset, with which disadvantages of the prior art are eliminated.
This object is attained through a device according to claim 1. Advantageous variants of a device according to the invention are the subject matter of claims 2 through 16.
The further object of the invention is attained through a displaceable element according to claim 17.
The advantages achieved with the invention are to be seen in particular in that a compact and at the same time highly stable substructure for a freely supported gate or a freely supported door is provided. Due to the compact construction method, at the same time esthetic requirements can also be met, since the carrier device requires little space. A compact substructure is achieved in that rolling elements and/or sliding elements are provided on the shorter runner rail. These can be attached at a height of the shorter runner rail, which is dimensioned such that the longer runner rail is easily moveable over the shorter runner rail. The height of a substructure is thus considerably reduced compared to the prior art and the gate also has a lower tendency to tilt. At the same time, due to the movability of the shorter runner rail, it is also ensured that a heavy gate or a heavy door even in the self-supporting state and fully extended is well supported or the gravitational force of the gate (the door) is counteracted. The supporting or retaining element provided, which, for example, can be fixed on the floor side, can be embodied in a solid manner, e.g., of steel and ensures a good dissipation of the weight force of the gate to the ground, which additionally contributes to high stability.
For reasons of stability it is preferred within the scope of the invention that the rolling element and/or sliding elements provided on the shorter runner rail are attached at opposite ends of the runner rail, in order to distribute the load moment generated by the gate or the door over an entire length of the short runner rail.
In a particularly simple and therefore also preferred embodiment variant, the shorter runner rail during movement of the longer runner rail can be moved automatically into a maximum extended or retracted position.
It is also preferred if a profile of the shorter runner rail is embodied essentially closed in cross section. In particular when the device for the gate or the door is attached on the ground side, this prevents the rolling and/or sliding elements from being soiled with dirt, which can impair an ease of movement during displacement. For analogous reasons it is also preferred if a profile of the longer runner rail is likewise embodied to be essentially closed in cross section. A particularly preferred embodiment variant results in this connection when a profile of the longer runner rail at least partially encloses that of the shorter runner rail in cross section, preferably encloses it entirely. In this case, the longer runner rail, which can preferably be present essentially closed, provides the shorter runner rail, regardless of a position, protection from soiling and/or frost. The gate is therefore easily moveable even after longer use or in winter.
A device according to the invention of the type described above can be used to support and move sliding gates or doors and in addition to a compact, space-saving construction, is characterized in that the gates/doors can be attached in an esthetically pleasing and self-supporting manner and at the same time a highly stable substructure is provided for a gate to be supported or a door to be supported, wherein the weight of the gate or of the door loading the longer runner rail is taken over at least in part by the shorter runner rail. The shorter runner rail thereby bears against rolling elements and/or sliding elements of the supporting or retaining element during movement at all times.
When the longer runner rail is fully extended or retracted, a large load can act on the rolling and/or sliding elements due to a long lever, which elements are arranged on the relatively short supporting or retaining element. Above all with heavy door structures with a weight, for example, of more than 300 kilograms, the rolling and/or sliding elements are therefore exposed to an enormous stress. This problem can be eliminated if the rolling elements and/or sliding elements provided on the supporting and/or retaining element are supported in a vertically flexible manner and/or comprise an elastic material and the shorter runner rail can be placed at the supporting or retaining element overcoming a spring force.
It is advantageously achieved thereby that the rolling elements and/or sliding elements that are attached to the supporting or retaining element are vertically displaced when the load is too high, as soon as a spring force is overcome due to an acting dead weight of the structure or of the gate (e.g., in particular in the extended state). The shorter runner rail can then bear against the supporting element and the rolling elements or sliding elements are largely unloaded. This increases a service life of the rolling elements and/or sliding elements and thus ensures an error-free functioning of the device over a long period of time in particular also with heavy gates/doors. It is further advantageous thereby, so that the shorter runner rail can bear against the supporting or retaining element secured against tilting, if supports for the shorter runner rail are provided on the supporting or retaining element. For reasons of stability these are preferably embodied in front-face view approximately with a width of the shorter runner rail. In order to have a most stable possible base or installation for the shorter runner rail, it is favorable thereby for the supports to be arranged approximately in the area of the ends of the supporting or retaining element.
Fundamentally, as soon as it is moveable, the shorter runner rail could be displaced by hand. However, in order to be able to pull out or push in a sliding gate with a hand manipulation, it can be provided that catches are arranged on the longer runner rail, which catches interact with hooks arranged on the shorter runner rail such that the shorter runner rail can be displaced with the longer runner rail as soon as this does not rest on or bear against the supporting or retaining element. In a particularly simple embodiment, the hooks can be hinge-mounted against a spring force and have a stop, through which on contact with the supporting or retaining element an uncoupling from the catch can be triggered.
Further advantages and effects of the invention result from the following exemplary embodiments. It is self-evident to one skilled in the art that individual features of the following exemplary embodiments—even when they are cited in combination with other features—can be combined with the general concept of the invention explained above.
They show:
Fixed pairs of rollers 5 are supported on the head side of the support 2. This is expediently carried out in that the roller pairs 5 have a maximum horizontal distance from one another, which in turn has an effect on a good force dissipation into the ground and consequently a high stability of the device 1 as a whole. A runner rail 3 runs on the pairs of rollers 5, which runner rail in turn is equipped on the end side respectively at positions E1, E2 with two pairs of rollers 6. These pairs of rollers 6 are provided for a further runner rail 4, the length of which exceeds that of the runner rail 3 and which supports a gate 7. As can be seen from the schematic diagram, a vertical spacing between the longer runner rail 4 and the shorter runner rail 3 is small and essentially depends only on the height at which the pairs of rollers 6 are attached. Ideally the pairs of rollers 6 are positioned at a height that just renders possible an easy sliding of the runner rail 4 or of the gate 7 on the shorter runner rail 3. A substructure is thus given that is compact or reduced in height and highly stable.
As can also be seen based on the schematic diagram in
As shown based on
As likewise discernible based on
If, as shown in
This can be avoided when a device 1 according to the invention is used with a supporting or retaining element 2, as shown in
The mode of operation of a device 1 according to the invention is as follows: in the fully retracted state (see
A shorter runner rail 3, which interacts with a supporting or retaining element 2, is shown in more detail in
In addition with the support 2 shown in
It is expedient that a mechanism is provided that ensures an automatic movement of the shorter runner rail 3 as soon as the longer runner rail 4 is displaced and the shorter runner rail 3 does not bear against the bases 9. Various mechanisms can be used for this purpose, wherein a particularly simple one is explained based on
As shown in
As can likewise be seen from
Considerably heavier gates can be supported with a device according to the invention than before. For example, it is possible to move gates with up to several hundred kilograms with the aid of a device according to the invention. The provided springs 14 are thereby preferably designed such that with a high load of, for example, more than 400 kilograms, the shorter runner rail 3 comes to rest on the support 2. A load on the rolling elements 5 is thus low even with the enormous masses given. At the same time, however, the shorter runner rail 3 is used to support the longer runner rail 4 and thus takes over a major part of the load even in the fully extended or fully retracted state of the gate. This load is finally transferred to the supporting or retaining element 2, which is expediently made of a steel in a solid manner and therefore can absorb and dissipate the high loads despite the short construction.
Although not shown, the shorter runner rail 3 does not necessarily have to be embodied in a straight manner, but can also be embodied preferably at least in part in a curved manner. A curvature of the runner rail 3 caused by the load of the gate can thus be compensated, which for example in the area of the supporting or retaining element 2 is only 2 mm, but in the extended state of the gate can lead to a sinking of several centimeters. An embodiment of this type can also be expedient when due to the environment the gate should be horizontal in the retracted state but should be tilted in the extended state.
Alternatively to a curved embodiment of the shorter runner rail 3, it is also possible with a straight embodiment of the shorter runner rail 3 to provide an adjusting means 16, for example, on the support 2 (see
Although a use of a device 1 according to the invention has been described above by way of example for sliding gates, a device 1 of this type can also be used with shelf systems and store systems, porches, covers, mobile bridges, working platforms and formwork platforms, propulsion machines (tunnel construction and mining), extraction and extension devices in mechanical engineering and instrument manufacture, with room dividers and furniture as well as quite generally with devices with which large loads have to be displaced on a short support element with respect to the extension length of the device. In particular an embodiment of the supporting or retaining element 2 according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
A 1206/2006 | Jul 2006 | AT | national |
A 1649/2006 | Oct 2006 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/AT2007/000349 | 7/16/2007 | WO | 00 | 5/8/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2008/006129 | 1/17/2008 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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Japanese Office action conducted in counterpart Japanese Appln. No. 354390 (May 29, 2012). |
Chinese Office action conducted in counterpart Chinese Appln. No. 200780026774.X (Feb. 29, 2012) (with English language translation). |
German Office Action conducted in counterpart German Appln. No. 07 763 746.0/1607 (Aug. 22, 2014) (w/ machine translation). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090307981 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |