The present invention relates to the field of doors and other closures supported on rollers and guided in tracks. More particularly, the invention pertains to such doors formed of hinged panels, each panel alternately connected to and separated from the other panels.
Doors for opening and closing openings in garages, sheds and other storage spaces are usually formed of panels that extend laterally between tracks located at opposite sides of the opening. The panels, arranged in a series, each carry rollers at each lateral side. The rollers are supported on the tracks, which guide movement of the door panels as the door is opened and closed. Each track includes a horizontal length located above the opening, a vertical length parallel to the sides of the opening, and an arcuate transition section connecting the horizontal and vertical lengths.
The panels carry hinges, which interconnect the panels so that the door panels move as a unit along the tracks and articulate about the axis of the hinge pin when the door passes along the transition section.
Doors of this kind are either fully opened or fully closed. When the door is open, the door panels are in the horizontal track length; when closed, the lower panel is supported on the ground and all the panels are in a vertical plane filling the opening.
There is a need for a door of this kind to be partially open and partially closed so that it allows ventilation, provides a line of sight through the opening, and prevents the entrance of animals, wind-blown debris, and other unwanted objects.
A door, according the present invention, can be fully open and fully closed manually or with use of remotely controlled automatic opening and closing equipment.
The door can also be partially opened such that some of the upper door panels are raised along supporting tracks into a horizontal plane over the opening, and lower door panels rest on the ground in a vertical plane providing an opening between the upper, open panels and the and lower, closed panels. Split hinges are manipulated to disconnect adjacent door panels, thereby determining the location the opening. The size of the opening is controlled by adjusting the location of the raised panels.
To disconnect adjacent door panels, a release pin is removed from the hinges at each side of the door; to reconnect the door panels, the release pin reengages the hinges. A quick connect/release pin provides a continuous elastic biasing force to assist the operator in performing these operations.
To prevent roller interference at the transition radius, each roller can be supported on the respective hinge with a resilient suspension that continually urges the roller toward the supporting track, thereby ensuring continuous support of the door on the tracks and automatically increasing the space between adjacent rollers at the transition.
The release pins are readily engaged and disengaged manually by an operator, and the hinge plates are formed so they are guided into their correct position before being engaged.
A door assembly, according to the present invention, includes multiple door panels arranged in series along laterally spaced tracks, extending laterally between the tracks, and supported for movement on the tracks. A first pair of hinge plates is secured to a first door panel, each member of the first pair being located at an opposite lateral side of the first panel. A second pair of hinge plates is secured to a second door panel, each member of the second pair being located at an opposite lateral side of the second panel. A first release pin alternately disconnects and connects the first and second hinge plates at the first lateral side of the door panels. A second release pin alternately disconnects and connects the first and second hinge plates at the second lateral side of the door panels.
The above, as well as other advantages of the present invention, will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment when considered in the light of the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to the drawings,
The door 10 is formed in consecutive sections or panels 14, 16, 18, 20, which extend laterally between tracks 22, 24 located, respectively, at the left-hand side and right-hand side of an opening that is closed and opened by the door. The door 10 carries rollers at each lateral edge, each roller being fitted into one of the tracks 22, 24, which support the door and guide its travel along a vertical and horizontal path defined by the tracks. Each door panel 14, 16, 18, 20 extends longitudinally along axis 12 when the door is fully closed. Adjacent panels are mutually interconnected and hinged to permit the door to follow the curvature of the tracks 22, 24 as the door is raised and lowered.
When the door 10 is fully open, it lays in a substantially horizontal plane supported on the tracks 22, 24 over the opening. When the door 10 is fully closed, it occupies a vertical plane in the opening and its lower edge 25 rests on the ground. As
Preferably each door panel 14, 16, 18, 20 is reinforced with an upper horizontal stiffener 26 and a lower horizontal stiffener 28, a vertical stiffener 30 located at the left-hand door edge, a vertical stiffener 31 located at the center, and a vertical stiffener 32 located at the right-hand door edge.
A pair of centrally located split hinges 34 alternately connects and disconnects adjacent panels at the center axis 12 of the door 10. A pair of split hinges 36 alternately connects and disconnects adjacent panels at the left-hand door edge. A pair of split hinges 38 alternately connects and disconnects adjacent panels at the right-hand door edge.
The split hinges 36 at the left lateral door edge are illustrated in
Roller 44 is rotatably supported on the end of a shaft 48, which extends laterally rightward from roller 44 through a sleeve 50 and mutually aligned holes formed in the legs 52, 54 of upper hinge plate 40. Similarly, roller 46 is rotatably supported on a shaft 56, which extends laterally rightward from roller 46 through a sleeve 58 and mutually aligned holes formed in the legs 60, 62 of lower hinge plate 42. Channel legs 52, 54 of the upper hinge plate 40 extend downward toward the lower hinge plate 42, whose legs 60, 62 extend upward toward the upper hinge plate 40. Leg 52 passes within leg 60, leg 54 passes within leg 62, and mutually aligned holes 64 are formed in the legs 52, 54, 60, 62 in the area of the overlap. The upper ends of the legs 60, 62 of the lower hinge plate 42 are flared outward laterally to guide movement of the legs 52, 54 of the upper hinge plate 40 into their proper position when the door closes the opening between panels 18 and 20.
When the door panels 16, 18 are connected by hinge 36, a cylindrical release pin 66 is fitted through the holes 64, thereby connecting the upper and lower hinge plates 40, 42 and permitting the adjacent door panels 18, 20 to articulate about the axis of the pin as the door travels on the track 22. When the release pin 66 is installed in the split hinge plates 40, 42, it is disposed parallel to the horizontal edges of the adjacent door panels and it is aligned with those door edges.
The split hinges 38 at the right-hand door edge (shown in
When the release pin 66 is removed from the split hinge pairs 36, 38 at the lateral edges of the door and a release pin is removed from the split hinge pair 34 at the center of the door, panel 18 is disconnected from panel 20. The upper panels 18, 16, 14 can then be raised as a unit while mutually connected, and the lower panel 20 can be supported on the floor, thereby partially opening the door 10.
A quick-release pin 90, which may be substituted for release pin 66 in the split hinges 36, 38, is illustrated in
The latch pins 94, 100 are secured mutually by inserting a threaded set screw or pin 106 and 106′, respectively, in aligned radial holes formed in the bored length portion of latch pin 94 and in the reduced diameter portion 104 of latch pin 100.
The end of latch pin 100 is formed with radial handle 108, which facilitates manually rotating the pin 90 when it is installed in its split hinge. A compression spring 110 bears against the outboard latch 92 and against the inboard channel leg 54 when the quick-release pin 90 is installed. The force produced by spring 110 continually urges the outboard latch 92 into engagement with the holes 64 in the overlapping outboard legs of the split hinge plates 40, 42.
A split hinge 120 for use with release pin 90 is illustrated in more detail in
Roller 126 is rotatably supported on the end of a shaft 130, which extends laterally leftward from roller 126 through a sleeve 132 and mutually aligned holes formed in the legs 134, 136 of the upper channel plate 122. Similarly, roller 128 is rotatably supported on a shaft 138, which extends laterally leftward from roller 128 through a sleeve 140 and mutually aligned holes formed in the legs 142, 144 of the lower channel plate 124. Channel legs 134, 136 of the upper channel plate 122 extend downward toward the lower channel plate 124, and whose legs 142, 144 extend upward toward the upper channel plate 122. Leg 134 overlaps leg 142, leg 136 overlaps leg 144. Similar to holes 82 and 83 shown in the split hinge 34 which is illustrated in
Release pin 90 is supported on legs 134, 136 by inserting it into aligned holes 152 located between roller sleeve 132 and holes 150, 151. The holes 152, on which pin 90 is supported, are spaced from holes 150, 151 such that latch 92 can engage holes 150 and latch 98 can engage holes 151.
Release pin 90 is installed by the following preferred steps: (1) inserting latch pin 94 into hole 152 in channel leg 134, (2) inserting spring 110 between leg 136 and latch 92, (3) inserting latch pin 100 through hole 152 in the channel leg 136, (4) inserting the reduced diameter portion 104 into bore 95, and (5) securing the latch pins together using the pin 106′ or set screw 106 such that latch 98 engages holes 151 when latch 92 is engaged with holes 150.
The release pin is reengaged by pulling the handle 108 leftward from the position shown in
Finally, it is important that the split hinge assembly avoids interference between the rollers that may occur where the track radius provides a transition between the horizontal length above the aperture and the vertical length beside the aperture, particularly where the track radius is relatively small, the panel height is large and/or the panels are heavy. Therefore, it may be necessary that the longitudinal spacing between the rollers 44, 46 carried on each pair of the split hinge plates 40, 42 be increased, and the rollers be elastically biased toward the respective track 22 as illustrated in the embodiment shown in
More specifically, viewing
Hinge plate 42′ includes a similar arrangement to that illustrated in
The arrangement of
In accordance with the provisions of the patent statutes, the present invention has been described in what is considered to represent its preferred embodiments with the various modifications if and as necessary. However, it should be noted that the invention can be practiced otherwise than as specifically illustrated and described without departing from its spirit or scope.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/218,393, filed Aug. 31, 2005 now abandoned, the full disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11218393 | Aug 2005 | US |
Child | 12424673 | US |