This application claims priority to European Patent Application No. 15169081.5 filed on May 25, 2015, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to an arrangement and a method for installing or uninstalling elevator ropes.
An elevator comprises an elevator car, lifting machinery, ropes, and a counter weight. The elevator car is supported on a transport frame being formed by a sling or a car frame. The transport frame surrounds the elevator car. The lifting machinery comprises a sheave, a machinery brake and an electric motor for rotating the sheave. The lifting machinery moves the car upwards and downwards in a vertically extending elevator shaft. The transport frame and thereby also the elevator car are carried by the ropes, which connect the elevator car to the counter weight. The transport frame of the elevator car is further supported with gliding means at guide rails extending in the vertical direction in the elevator shaft. The gliding means can comprise rolls rolling on the guide rails or gliding shoes gliding on the guide rails when the elevator car is mowing upwards and downwards in the elevator shaft. The guide rails are supported with support means on the side wall structures of the elevator shaft. The gliding means engaging with the guide rails keep the elevator car in position in the horizontal plane when the elevator car moves upwards and downwards in the elevator shaft. The counter weight is supported in a corresponding way on guide rails supported with support means on the wall structure of the elevator shaft. The elevator car transports people and/or goods between the landings in the building. The elevator shaft can be formed so that the wall structure is formed of solid walls or so that the wall structure is formed of an open steel structure.
When an elevator installation in a high rise building is performed, the roping process requires a lot of manual work. The ropes are in a new elevator installation positioned on rope reels and are then reeled from the rope reels to the shaft. The old ropes are in a replacement of ropes reeled on empty reels. The rope reels are driven manually i.e. a fitter rotates and controls the rope reels.
When installing new ropes, one to ten ropes can be lifted simultaneously depending on the weight of the ropes. One fitter can control the rolling of maximum four rope reels. The fitter controls and keeps the reel rolling speeds in each rope reel on such a level that the ropes are kept on a desired tightness on their way to the elevator shaft. The idea is to avoid unnecessary slack in the ropes when they pass to the elevator shaft.
When uninstalling old ropes, one to ten ropes can be removed simultaneously depending on the weight of the ropes. The fitter is rolling the reel manually and one fitter can roll one to two reels. The fitter rolls the reels so that the old ropes are removed from the shaft and reeled on the empty reel that he is rolling. The number of fitters that are available limits the number of ropes that can be changed on one run. It is possible to roll several ropes on one reel, but the ropes have to be cut when the reel gets full and then one has to continue on the next reel.
An object of the present invention is to save manual work during the installation and/or replacement of ropes in an elevator.
The arrangement for installing or uninstalling elevator ropes is defined in claim 1.
The arrangement for installing or uninstalling elevator ropes comprising at least one rope reel and a rope reel unit comprising a frame and at least one rotating rope feed member. The at least one rotating rope feed member is driven by an electric drive unit comprising an electric motor and a gear, the electric motor being driven by a frequency converter by which the torque of the electric motor is adjustable continuously, whereby the feeding of at least one rope from the at least one rope reel is controlled directly or indirectly by the at least one rope feed member.
The method for installing or uninstalling elevator ropes is defined in claim 10.
The method for installing or uninstalling elevator ropes comprises the steps of:
feeding at least one rope from at least one rope reel over a traction sheave to an elevator shaft or feeding the at least one rope in the opposite direction,
controlling the feeding of the at least one rope directly or indirectly with a rope reel unit comprising a frame and at least one rotating rope feed member, whereby the at least one rotating rope feed member is driven by an electric drive unit comprising an electric motor and a gear, the electric motor being driven by a frequency converter by which the torque of the electric motor is adjustable continuously.
The invention makes it possible to control the rope feeding effectively in an elevator rope reeling process.
The invention makes it also possible to control the rope reeling from several rope reels with one rope reeling unit.
The invention will in the following be described in greater detail by means of preferred embodiments with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
The elevator comprises a car 10, an elevator shaft 20, a machine room 30, lifting machinery 40, ropes 41, and a counter weight 42. The car 10 is supported on a sling 11 or transport frame surrounding the car 10. The lifting machinery 40 comprises a traction sheave 43, an electric motor 44 for rotating the traction sheave 43 via a shaft 45, and a machinery brake 46 for braking the rotation of the traction sheave 45. The lifting machinery 40 moves the car 10 in a first direction S1 upwards and downwards in a vertically extending elevator shaft 20. The sling 11 and thereby also the elevator car 10 are carried by the ropes 41, which connect the elevator car 10 to the counter weight 42. The sling 11 and thereby also the elevator car 10 is further supported with gliding means 70 at guide rails 50 extending in the vertical direction in the elevator shaft 20. There are two guide rails 51, 52 for the elevator car 10. The elevator car guide rails 51, 52 are positioned on opposite side walls 21C, 21D of the shaft 20. The gliding means 70 can comprise rolls rolling on the guide rails 50 or gliding shoes gliding on the guide rails 50 when the elevator car 10 is mowing upwards and downwards in the elevator shaft 20. There are further two guide rails 53, 54 for the counter weight 42 positioned on the back wall 21B of the shaft 20. The counter weight 42 is supported with corresponding gliding means 70 on the counter weight guide rails 53, 54.
The guide rails 50 are fastened with support means 60 at the walls 21B, 21C, 21D of the shaft 20. The figure shows only two support means 60, but there are several support means 60 along the height of each guide rail 50. The cross section of the guide rails 50 may have the form of a letter T. The vertical branch of the guide rail element 50 forms three gliding surfaces for the gliding means 70 comprising rolls or gliding shoes. There are thus two opposite side gliding surfaces and one front gliding surface in the guide rail 50. The cross-section of the gliding means 70 has the form of a letter U so that the inner surface of the gliding means 70 sets against the three gliding surfaces of the guide rail 50. The gliding means 70 are attached to the sling 11 and/or to the counter weight 42.
The elevator shaft 20 can be formed so that the walls 21A, 21B, 21C, 21D are formed of solid walls or so that the walls 21A, 21B, 21C, 21D are formed of an open steel structure.
The figures show a first direction S1, which is a vertical direction in the elevator shaft 20, a second direction S2, which is the direction between the guide rails (DBG) and a third direction S3, which is the direction from the back wall 21B to the front wall 21A in the shaft 20 (BTF). The second direction S2 is perpendicular to the third direction S3.
Several adjacent rope reels 200 can be situated on the support frame 510. The ropes R of all the rope reels 200 can be fed simultaneously through the rope reeling unit 100. Only one rope reeling unit 100 is thus needed to control the reeling of several ropes R.
The arrangement shown in
The rope reeling process corresponds as such to the rope reeling process described in
The arrangement shown in
Guide rollers could be used in guiding the rope R after the traction sheave 43 through the opening in the floor of the machine room 30 if needed. These guide rollers would not be driven.
The rope reeling process corresponds as such to the rope reeling process described in
The rope reeling unit shown in
The arrangement and the method according to the invention can be used when new ropes are to be installed into the elevator shaft and when old ropes are to be replaced by new ropes in the elevator shaft. When uninstalling i.e. reeling old ropes onto the rope reel 200 the electric drive unit 300 rotates the rope reel 200 and keeps the torque acting on the rope reel 200 constant. The rotation speed of the rope reel 200 is not a good target for the frequency converter 400 in this case. This is due to the fact that the radius of the rope layer on the rope reel 200 changes when the amount of rope changes on the rope reel 200.
The arrangement and the method can be used in a 2:1 elevator roping system or in a higher order elevator roping system.
The elevator could have a hoisting height of over 30 meters, preferably 30-80 meters, most preferably 40-80 meters.
The elevator could on the other hand have a hoisting height of over 75 meters, preferably over 100 meters, more preferably over 150 meters, most preferably over 250 meters. In elevators with a great hoisting height long ropes have to be used, whereby the weight of the ropes becomes considerable. This makes the use of the invention even more advantageous as the reeling of the ropes can easily be controlled in reliable manner by only one or maybe two fitters.
The use of the invention is naturally not limited to the type of elevator disclosed in the figures. The invention can be used in any type of elevator e.g. also in elevators lacking a machine room and/or a counterweight. The counter weight could be positioned on the back wall or on at either side wall of the elevator shaft or on both side walls of the elevator shaft. The lifting machinery could be positioned at the top of the elevator shaft or at the bottom of the elevator shaft or within the elevator shaft at either side wall of the elevator shaft.
It will be obvious to a person skilled in the art that, as the technology advances, the inventive concept can be implemented in various ways. The invention and its embodiments are not limited to the examples described above but may vary within the scope of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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15169081.5 | May 2015 | EP | regional |