Not applicable.
Not applicable.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to devices and methods used to automatically and evenly spool cable, wire, line or lead rope, and more particularly to such devices and methods used to pull conductors in the electrical utility field.
2. Description of Related Art
Automatic spooling of cable on a drum for conductor pullers is usually done with a self-reversing leadscrew. This is a mechanical means to traverse a spooling head linearly back and forth similar to the manner in which fishing line is spooled on a bait casting reel. The linear speed of the spooling head is proportional to the rotational speed of the drum, where the drum and leadscrew are mechanically linked by a chain. Properly sizing the chain reduction, leadscrew pitch, and leadscrew groove length will spool the cable onto the drum somewhat evenly. However, since the prior art methods are a mechanical solution to proper spooling, all components must be designed, machined and assembled perfectly for it to work correctly. If the cable is not spooled properly, then cable life is decreased due to increased frictional wear and the machine will not work properly. Leadscrews require many parts that are quickly wearable and require frequent maintenance. Furthermore, the leadscrew is typically designed for one specific cable diameter. Therefore, if one cable is exchanged for another, or if the cable shrinks due to stretching, the leadscrew will not work properly, and a new leadscrew system needs to be installed. Also, because of the chain linking the leadscrew to the drum, the leadscrew may not be moved independently of the drum.
Accordingly, what is needed is an improved method and device for automatically spooling cable, wire, line or lead rope on a drum which accomplishes at least the following objectives: (1) automatic cable spooling on the drum with a powered levelwind arm; (2) use of a controller to gauge drum speed and conversion to the appropriate levelwind movement based on the drum flange width and cable diameter; (3) use of a slew bearing and worm gear to support movement of the levelwind arm; (4) use of an encoder in the drum driveline to assist in establishing the proper cable position; and (5) use of an encoder on the worm gear for establishing the actual cable position.
An automatic spooling system is provided in a preferred embodiment, comprising a frame adapted to rotatably hold a spooling drum, wherein the spooling drum includes a rotational axis, and a spooling width bounded by a first flange and a second flange; a drum motor operatively connected to the drum; a levelwind arm positioned adjacent to the drum, wherein the levelwind arm is moved in a plane aligned with the rotational axis of the drum; an arm motor operatively connected to the levelwind arm; an arm encoder in communication with the arm motor; a microcontroller in communication with the arm motor; an arm encoder adapted to sense a position of the arm motor and in communication with the microcontroller; a drum encoder adapted to sense a position of the drum motor and in communication with the microcontroller; and wherein the position of the levelwind arm is controlled by the microcontroller based on the position of the drum, the spooling width, and a predetermined cable diameter.
In a further embodiment, the levelwind arm includes a plurality of sheaves adapted to guide a cable from a cable source into the drum.
In another embodiment, the levelwind arm may be mounted to a slew bearing adapted to allow pivoting motion of the levelwind arm within the plane.
The slew bearing includes a central opening for passage of a cable, and the arm motor is operatively connected to the slew bearing through a worm and worm gear system.
The drum encoder is adapted to identify a required cable position, and the arm encoder is adapted to identify an actual cable position.
In a further embodiment, the spooling system also includes a display in communication with the microcontroller adapted to receive input from an operator of parameters required to achieve an optimum wind of a cable around the drum.
A method of spooling a cable is also provided, comprising the steps of providing a spooling system as explained above; setting a plurality of parameters in the microcontroller based on a position of the drum, the spooling width, and a predetermined cable diameter; and operating the spooling system to spool the cable.
The above and other objects and features of the present invention will become apparent from the drawings, the description given herein, and the appended claims.
For a further understanding of the nature, objects, and advantages of the present invention, reference should be had to the following detailed description, read in conjunction with the following drawings, wherein like reference numerals denote like elements.
Before the subject invention is further described, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the particular embodiments of the invention described below, as variations of the particular embodiments may be made and still fall within the scope of the appended claims. It is also to be understood that the terminology employed is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments, and is not intended to be limiting. Instead, the scope of the present invention will be established by the appended claims.
In this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural reference unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood to one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs.
As will be further described below with respect to the preferred embodiment, the present invention automatically and evenly spools cable onto a drum regardless of variations in cable size or other external factors. The system uses electronics to replace mechanical means of automatic spooling. Generally, a cable enters through the pivoting axis of a slew bearing and is directed through a plurality of sheaves onto a drum. A levelwind arm is driven back and forth based on a closed loop feedback system that relates the proper cable position to its actual position. The proper position of the cable is a function of variable drum rotation, drum width, and cable diameter. The drum and cable parameters may be modified at any time to accommodate the specifics of the spooling environment.
In the preferred embodiment shown in
The slew bearing 6 includes worm gear and worm system 8 operatively attached to the slew bearing 6 for causing the levelwind arm 1 to pivot back and forth as will be further described. A slew motor 9 is operatively connected to the worm drive 8, along with a slew encoder 7 and a microcontroller 17 (such as a programmable logic controller, or PLC, having data storage and memory functionality), as further depicted in
The drum 11 includes side flanges 20 which are rotatably positioned within a drum frame 14. A drum motor 12, and typically a drum gear box 13 to increase drum motor torque, are operatively connected to the drum frame 14 and the drum 11 to rotate the drum 11 and spool the cable 10. The drum motor 12 includes a drum encoder 16, as further depicted in the schematic diagram of
The microcontroller 17 is initialized by the operator with the beginning position of the cable 10 on the drum 11. As the drum 11 turns, the microcontroller 17 relates the drum encoder 16 pulses to the proper position of the cable 10 based on the particular characteristics of the cable 10 and drum 11 that are input into the microcontroller 17 via the display 30 on the cable spooler. The microcontroller 17 also receives positional data from the slew encoder 7 and calculates the actual position of the cable 10. The microcontroller 17 then outputs signals to the slew motor 9 to move the levelwind arm 1 until the actual cable position equals the proper cable position, thus completing a closed loop feedback system. Inputs to the microcontroller 17, such as drum width, cable diameter, and calibrated position function, may be modified at any time using the display 30.
With reference to
In operation, to achieve the levelwind output position during spooling, an operator uses the display 30 to input the drum 11 width between the drum flanges 20. Generally, this is accomplished by defining six positions of the levelwind arm 1 between one drum flange 20 to the other drum flange 20. First, the operator is prompted by the display 30 to manually move the levelwind arm 1 until the center of the second sheave 2B is directly over the first flange (left or right). With the second sheave 2B and the level wind arm 1 in this initial position, the operator presses a button on the display 30 which records the corresponding slew encoder 7 position in the microcontroller 17. The operator is then prompted to manually move the levelwind arm 1 until the center of the second sheave 2B is one-fifth of the way between the two drum flanges 20. With the levelwind arm 1 the second position, the operator presses a button on the display 30 which records the corresponding slew encoder 7 position in the microcontroller 17. This sequential process of moving the level wind arm 1 and recording the position via the display 30 is repeated for each position at successive one-fifth distances from the initial drum flange 20 until the sixth and final position of the levelwind arm 1 is recorded at the second drum flange 20.
At this point, the microcontroller 17 has six points to plot a position profile. Between each point, the profile curve is linearized for simplification, because the error is small enough to neglect. The foregoing steps have now correlated the slew encoder 7 output to the levelwind arm 1 output position. To define the cable 10 position, the operator uses the display 30 to input the desired number of wraps on the drum 11 per layer into the microcontroller 17. The operator also inputs the pulses per revolution of an incremental drum encoder 16. The microcontroller 17 then calculates the total number of pulses per cable layer as well as the number of pulses per wrap. As the cable 10 enters and is aligned with the initial drum flange 20 and is tangent to the drum 11 from the levelwind arm 1 output sheave 2B, the operator uses the display 30 to input this position as the starting point of the cable 10. At this position, the microcontroller 17 resets its counts to zero. As the drum 11 turns, the drum encoder 16 outputs pulses to the microcontroller 17. One full revolution of the drum 11 means the cable 10 should move exactly one wrap (or cable diameter) over, causing movement of the levelwind arm 1 to achieve this outcome. The spooling of the cable 10 continues until the total number of pulses per layer have been achieved, which is indicative that the cable 10 has completed a full layer and reached the opposite drum flange 20, and now needs to travel back toward the initial drum flange 20 in half-wrap increments.
At this point in the spooling process, each pulse from the drum encoder 16 is subtracted from the cumulative pulse count tracked by the microcontroller 17. This continues until the pulse count reaches zero, indicating that the cable 10 has returned to the initial drum flange 20 and needs to change directions. Now that both the proper cable 10 position (cable position) and the actual cable 10 position (levelwind output position) are known by the microcontroller 17, a closed loop feedback system can be used. For example, a proportional-integral-derivative (PID) feedback loop can be employed, where two variables (actual position and proper position) are present, and the controller calculates the error, or simply the difference, between the two variables. The controller also accepts constants such as proportional gain factor, integral gain factor, differential gain factor and min/max output values. The controller calculates the proportional, integral and differential of the error and multiplies each respective gain. The output of the controller is the sum of each of these except when they exceed the minimum or maximum values. When this system is in action, the levelwind arm 1 will always place the cable 10 in the proper position to wrap each layer on the drum 11. Reversing the rotating direction of the drum 11 is easily accommodated by changing the pulse count direction. If a smaller or larger cable 10 is desired, the new number of wraps is entered via the display 30 into the microcontroller 17.
To achieve parallel wraps, the levelwind arm 1 must be positioned directly in line and create a zero degree fleet angle between the sheave 2B and correct cable wrap position on the drum 11. The levelwind arm 1 will remain in this position until the drum 11 has rotated 180 degrees. At this point the microcontroller 17 establishes that the levelwind arm 1 must be moved until the “actual” levelwind arm 1 position equals the “proper” levelwind arm 1 position. As explained above, this result is achieved by a PID feedback loop where the error is calculated as the difference between the actual position and the proper position. The slew motor 9 speed and direction are determined by the output of PID loop. Once the error between the actual position and the proper position equals zero, the drum motor 12 will remain in that position until the next half-wrap position is requested.
The above described spooling system may be used in a wide range of spooling applications. However, in a preferred embodiment, the spooling system can be incorporated into a larger machine designed for pulling conductor for electrical services. As shown in
In operation, and as shown in
All references cited in this specification are herein incorporated by reference as though each reference was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference. The citation of any reference is for its disclosure prior to the filing date and should not be construed as an admission that the present invention is not entitled to antedate such reference by virtue of prior invention.
It will be understood that each of the elements described above, or two or more together may also find a useful application in other types of methods differing from the type described above. Without further analysis, the foregoing will so fully reveal the gist of the present invention that others can, by applying current knowledge, readily adapt it for various applications without omitting features that, from the standpoint of prior art, fairly constitute essential characteristics of the generic or specific aspects of this invention set forth in the appended claims. The foregoing embodiments are presented by way of example only; the scope of the present invention is to be limited only by the following claims.
This nonprovisional application claims priority to U.S. Ser. No. 62/233,367, filed on Sep. 27, 2015.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62233367 | Sep 2015 | US |