1. Field
The present invention relates to an elevator and an elevator brake.
2. Description of Related Art
According to the regulations elevators must contain an emergency brake, which is switched on in exceptional situations, such as during an electricity power cut. The normal holding brake of the elevator, for example, is used as an emergency brake, which keeps the elevator car in its position in normal situations when the car is at a landing. Deceleration of the car in normal situations is usually effected as motor braking. Connection of the emergency brake when moving upwards in elevators without counterweight, combined with the earth's gravity, can cause such large deceleration of the elevator car that the safety of the passengers can be endangered. Thus when traveling upwards the emergency brake should not decelerate the elevator car of an elevator without counterweight too effectively or not necessarily at all.
The elevator and/or elevator brake may eliminate the aforementioned drawback and may be simple and operationally reliable. The elevator and/or elevator brake may avoid unnecessary discomfort or dangerous situations for the passengers. The elevator according to the invention is discussed below. The elevator brake according to the invention is also discussed below. Some embodiments of the invention are characterized by what is disclosed in the claims.
Some inventive embodiments are also discussed in the descriptive section of the present application. The inventive content of the application can also be defined differently than in the claims presented below. The inventive content may also consist of several separate inventions, especially if the invention is considered in the light of explicit or implicit sub-tasks or from the point of view of advantages or categories of advantages achieved. In this case, some of the attributes contained in the claims below may be superfluous from the point of view of separate inventive concepts. Likewise, the different details presented in connection with each embodiment of the invention can also be applied in other embodiments. Problems solved separately can be for example adjustment of the air gap of the brake or the guiding of supporting forces to support in braking occurring in the upward or downward direction.
In the invention the braking exerted on the traction sheave of the brake is reduced in a situation where emergency braking occurs, in which the elevator car is moving upwards, by allowing the brake shoe to follow the movement of the traction sheave for at least some distance. Preferably the normal force exerted on the brake wheel of the brake shoe at the same time is simultaneously allowed to be lighter.
The advantage of the elevator according to the invention and its braking solution is that the upward movement of the elevator car in elevators without counterweight does not slow down too quickly in an emergency braking situation, in which case no danger is caused to the passengers in the car by sudden stopping of the elevator car. A further advantage is the dependable and operationally reliable construction. Another advantage is that the solution according to the invention is suitable for use also in elevators with counterweight, in which case slipping between the hoisting rope and the traction wheel and between the hoisting rope and the diverting pulleys caused by sudden deceleration can be prevented. This saves at least both the rope and the traction wheel and diverting pulleys.
In the following, the invention will be described in more detail by the aid of some example of its embodiment with reference to the attached drawings, wherein
The hoisting machine 5 comprises at least a fixed stator and a rotating rotor, along with which a brake wheel 11 provided with a braking surface 11a rotates. Additionally a traction sheave 6 is fixed to the rotor so that it rotates with the rotor. The brake 10 comprises at least a brake frame 13 fixed to the hoisting machine 5, containing at least one electromagnet 20 equipped with windings. A brake plate 15 fitted to move in relation to the frame is located on the brake frame 13, between the brake wheel 11 and the frame 13, and a brake shoe 12 provided with a wedge piece 16 is further located between the brake plate 15 and the brake wheel 11 such that the wedge piece 16 is between the brake plate 15 and the brake shoe 12. The wedge surface of the wedge piece 16 on the side of the brake plate 15 and correspondingly the surface of the brake plate 15 on the side of the wedge piece together form a substantially straight first sliding surface 16a, which is inclined to an angle, which opens the brake wheel 11 in that direction of rotation in which the elevator car 1 moves upwards. The aforementioned direction of rotation is marked in the figure with the arrow A. In addition the second sliding surface 25 between the wedge piece 16 and the brake shoe 12 as viewed from the side is curved such that the wedge piece 16 slides on the sliding surface 25 in relation to the brake shoe 12, but the wedge piece 16 does not come out from between the brake plate 15 and the brake shoe 12. Preferably the wedge angle between the brake plate 15 and the wedge piece 16 is appreciably greater than the friction angle between them, and even better: in addition to or alongside a sufficient wedge angle the ease of a change in the inter-positioning of the brake plate 15, the wedge piece 16 and the brake shoe 12 is achieved with a selection of materials suitable for these pieces in which case the friction between the brake plate 15, the wedge piece 16 and the brake shoe 12 at their mutual sliding surfaces is slight.
The brake frame 13 contains a center hole in the center of the frame and extending through the frame, in which is a bore 24 extending through the frame on the side of the brake plate 15 and at least a second bore 22 with the same center, which is open to the opposite side of the brake plate 15 of the frame 13. The bore 22 does not extend through the frame 13 and the diameter of the bore 22 is greater than the diameter of the bore 24 such that at the meeting point of the bores inside the frame is a ring-like collar 21. In addition a presser pin 18 is fitted to pass through the bores 22, 24, of which the diameter of the part mainly situated in the bore 24 is greater than the diameter of the part mainly in the bore 22, such that there is a ring-like collar 19 on the presser pin 18 at the meeting point of the different diameters. The length of the part of the presser pin 18 of greater diameter is selected to be such that it is essentially greater than the length of the smaller diameter bore 24 of the center hole. A disc spring pack 14 locked at its first end with a locking element 23 is located around the presser pin 18 in the larger diameter bore 22, which is fitted to press the presser pin 18 at its second end via the collars 19 towards the brake shoe 12. The brake plate 15 contains a stop surface, against which the presser pin 18 presses and causes movement of the brake plate towards the brake shoe 12 in the braking phase.
In a braking situation current is disconnected from the electromagnets 20, whereupon the disc spring pack 14 presses the presser pin on the collar 19 towards the brake wheel 11. The presser pin 18 for its part presses the brake plate 15, and the brake shoe 12 via both the brake plate and the wedge piece 16, towards the brake wheel 11. The collars 21 in the smaller diameter bore 24 of the frame prevent the disc spring pack 14 from pressing the presser pin 18 too long a distance towards the brake wheel 11. When the brake is not activated, the electromagnets 20 keep the brake shoe 12 detached from the braking surface 11a of the brake wheel 11.
When the elevator car 1 is moving upwards the brake wheel 11 rotates in the situation of the figure counterclockwise in the direction of the arrow A. When the brake 10 is switched on while driving upwards, the mutual shaping of the wedge piece 16 on the brake shoe 12, the brake plate 15 and the brake shoe 12 enable the brake shoe 12 to move along with the brake wheel 11 in the direction of rotation of the braking surface 11a owing to the friction between the shoe and the braking surface 11a, in other words in the direction of the arrow A. The wedge piece 16 then moves in relation to the sliding surfaces 16a and 25 and at the same time the brake shoe 12 moves away from the braking surface 11a. The brake shoe 12 does not however manage to move too long a distance, because the spring-action stop and return element 17 supported against the frame prevents movement of the brake shoe 12 after a pre-determined distance. When the brake shoe 12 has moved far enough to the side below the brake plate 15, the lowest springs of the disc spring pack 14 engage the collar 21 in the center hole of the frame 13, whereupon the presser pin 18 no longer presses the brake plate 15 closer to the brake wheel 11. In this case the aforementioned compression towards the brake wheel 11 is no longer exerted on the brake shoe 12 and the brake shoe 12 is able to move a little away from the braking surface 11a, whereupon there is no longer any substantial braking force and the elevator car stops softly under the influence of the earth's gravity.
When the movement of the elevator car 1 upwards has stopped due to the earth's gravity, the elevator car simultaneously tries to move immediately downwards. In this case the brake shoe 12 wedges back into its normal position due to the spring force of the stop and return element 17 and also due to the friction between the brake shoe 12 and the braking surface 11a, if the elevator car 1 has continued its downward movement after stopping. The brake 10 then stops the elevator car in its position and the brake thereafter operates as a normal holding brake. By adjusting the spring force of the stop and return element it is also possible to set the force of braking occurring in the upward direction to at least some extent.
The arrester element 26, which is presented in the figure as an adjuster screw, determines together with the spring of the return element 17 the resting position of the brake shoe 12. The arrester element 26 also prevents, at least for its part, the brake shoe from following the movement of the brake wheel when braking occurs in the downward direction. The arrester element 26 receives support for bearing braking in the downward direction from the brake plate 15 or possibly from another part of the brake. The adjuster screw functioning as the arrester element also determines within the scope of its adjustment tolerance the height of the entity jointly formed by the brake shoe 12, the brake plate 15 and the wedge piece 16 in the direction of the brake stroke, in which case the air gap between the brake shoe 12 and the braking surface 11a is easily adjustable.
It is obvious to the person skilled in the art that the invention is not limited solely to the example described above, but that it may be varied within the scope of the claims presented below. Thus, for example, the lightening of the braking force in an emergency braking situation can also be implemented with separate device structures than that presented above. Instead of mechanical lightening of the braking force, the braking force can be lightened electrically with electromagnets or also hydraulically.
It is also obvious to the person skilled in the art that the suspension ratio of the elevator can be greater than a 1:1 ratio. For example 2:1, 4:1, 8:1 ratios, and also other ratios, including uneven ratios, are easy to implement from the standpoint of the invention.
It is further obvious to the person skilled in the art that the invention is suitable for use also, apart from in elevators without counterweight, in e.g. those types of elevators with counterweight, in which the counterweight is at most the weight of the empty elevator car. In this case slipping between the hoisting rope and the traction wheel and between the hoisting rope and the diverting pulleys caused by sudden deceleration can be prevented.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FI2007/000008 | Jan 2006 | FI | national |
This application is a continuation of PCT/FI2007/000008 filed on Jan. 10, 2007, which is an international application claiming priority from FI 20060034 filed Jan. 16, 2006, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/FI2007/000008 | Jan 2007 | US |
Child | 12155289 | US |