This application claims priority to European Patent Application No. 10179457.6, filed Sep. 24, 2010, which is incorporated herein by reference.
The disclosure relates to conveying equipment for persons.
A support construction for an escalator or a moving walkway has become known from the specification EP 1 321 424 A1. The support construction comprises at least one framework element which is constructed integrally and as an areal, unprofiled, cut plate. The framework element can, for example, be made from sheet metal. The side walls constructed from the framework elements have substantially as much load-bearing material in the form of webs or girders as is necessary for exercise of the supporting function. Reinforcements in the form of angle profile members are provided in the upper region of the support walls. Moreover, the support walls are connected by means of transverse frames consisting of cross-connectors and ribs.
An escalator has become known from the specification EP 1 142 819 B1, in which the steps are supported in horizontal direction in the forward run at the balustrade base and in the return run at the travel track profile section. A respective lubricated rolling ball or a guide roller, for example, is provided for each step and in the forward run rolls on the base metal plate stiffened by means of profile rails and in the return run on the travel track profile section side wall.
An escalator, the supporting walls of which are made from sheet metal parts, has become known from the specification JP 2003 335486 A. Stiffeners in the form of angle profile members are provided in the upper and lower region of the supporting walls. In addition, the supporting walls are stiffened by means of ribs and connected by means of cross members.
A moving walkway has become known from the specification GB 2 121 748, in which side walls made from sheet metal parts support the travel tracks for the tread plate rollers. Balustrade supports support the balustrade and reinforce the side walls. A framework stiffens the support walls of the moving walkway.
In at least some embodiments of the disclosed technologies, the support construction can be constructed with relatively few parts, which are simple to produce, and thus the production costs can be kept low. Moreover, specific components at the same time can fulfill several functions such as, for example, stiffening, guiding, covering and protecting. The component for stiffening the side wall can at the same time form the base plate in the conveyor element region, and it can also provide horizontal guidance of the conveyor elements in the forward run. The travel tracks for the conveyor element rollers and chain rollers can serve at the same time for stiffening the side wall. The component for stiffening the side wall at the lower end can also serve for guidance in the horizontal direction of the conveyor elements in the return run.
With the multi-functional components and with the arrangement of the ribs at the outer side of the side wall, the conveying equipment for persons can be of significantly more slender construction than hitherto. In at least some embodiments, conveying equipment for persons, which is of slender construction in width, is capable of transport more efficiently, is more economic, can be assembled more simply, can be modified more easily, is simpler to install and demands less building space, less installation width and less floor area. In further embodiments, conveying equipment for persons, which is of slender construction, can also be installed, for example in the case of modernization, in existing support structures or frameworks.
The present disclosure is explained in more detail by way of the following detailed description and the accompanying figures, in which:
a shows an exemplary embodiment of a longitudinal section through the conveying equipment for persons of
An exemplifying embodiment of the conveying equipment for persons with conveyor elements, which are combined to form an endless belt, on the basis of an escalator with steps is explained in the following. The explanations also apply in the same sense to a moving walkway with tread plates. In the case of an escalator a conveyor element is a step and in the case of a moving walkway a conveyor element is a tread plate.
To stiffen a sheet metal part, at least one rib 5, which is connected with a center cross member 6, is provided to extend approximately over the height of the sheet metal part 4. The rib 5 forms, together with the associated rib of the opposite side wall and the centre cross member 6, an ‘H’, termed H-frame in the following, which primarily ensures the lateral stiffness of the escalator 1. With the ribs 5 arranged at the outer side 3.1 of the side wall 3, in at least some embodiments the escalator is constructed to be more slender and with less external width than an escalator with a conventional supporting construction.
For further stiffening, for example stiffening in bending, of the escalator 1 a box-like upper stiffener 7 with stiffening web 7.1 and a box-like lower stiffener 8 are provided for each side wall 3, which stiffeners together with the sheet metal part 4 form along the entire length of the escalator a cavity offering space for electrical lines, signal lines, lines for fire protection medium, etc. The upper stiffener 7 fulfils, apart from stiffening of the escalator 1, a further function; it forms at the same time a base of the balustrade (not illustrated) and guides the steps 2.1 in horizontal transverse direction. As illustrated in
The lower stiffener 8 of one side wall 3 is connected by means of at least one lower cross member 12 with the lower stiffener of the other side wall 3 and fulfills, apart from stiffening the escalator 1, a further function: it serves at the same time, together with a first travel track 9, as a second travel track 8.1 for the steps 2.1 in the return run and guides the steps 2.1 in horizontal transverse direction. The lower stiffener 8 is connected with the lower sheet metal part half 4.2 by means of welding or riveting or clamping or gluing.
A third travel track 10 and a fourth travel track 11, which are supported by the center cross member 6, are provided in the forward run for the steps 2.1. In some embodiments, the travel tracks 9, 10, 11 are correspondingly dimensioned so that they significantly contribute to stiffening of the escalator 1. The travel tracks 9, 10, 11 are connected with the lower sheet metal part half 4.2 and the upper sheet metal half 4.1 by means of welding or riveting or clamping or gluing.
In some embodiments, each side wall 3 can also be of double-wall construction, wherein the double wall consists, for example, of parallel sheet metal parts 4 stiffened by ribs 5.
Sheet metal parts 4, stiffeners 7, 8, H-frames and travel tracks 9, 10, 11, 12 together replace, in terms of statics, load-bearing capability and stiffness, the previously used conventional framework.
A lower truss 17, which extends parallel to the side walls 3 and below the side walls 3 and which comprises tension elements for acceptance of tension forces in the escalator or in the moving walkway, can also be provided at the escalator or moving walkway.
Having illustrated and described the principles of the disclosed technologies, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the disclosed embodiments can be modified in arrangement and detail without departing from such principles. In view of the many possible embodiments to which the principles of the disclosed technologies can be applied, it should be recognized that the illustrated embodiments are only examples of the technologies and should not be taken as limiting the scope of the invention. Rather, the scope of the invention is defined by the following claims and their equivalents. We therefore claim as our invention all that comes within the scope and spirit of these claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10179457 | Sep 2010 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3682289 | Kraft | Aug 1972 | A |
4484674 | Lunardi et al. | Nov 1984 | A |
7431139 | Streibig et al. | Oct 2008 | B2 |
7703594 | Stein | Apr 2010 | B2 |
20030000800 | Krampl | Jan 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1321424 | Jun 2003 | EP |
1142819 | Nov 2008 | EP |
2269468 | Nov 1975 | FR |
2121748 | Jan 1984 | GB |
53140789 | Dec 1978 | JP |
2003335486 | Nov 2003 | JP |
02092491 | Nov 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120073934 A1 | Mar 2012 | US |