The object of the invention is an elevator arrangement.
Although the arrangement according to the invention is primarily intended for handling transportation traffic, such as the transportation of passenger traffic, between two floors of a building, said floors being one above the other, e.g. to replace escalators or travelators, transportation traffic between more than two floors can also be handled with the arrangement according to the invention.
Transportation traffic between two floors of a building that are one above another, e.g. the transportation of passengers, is often arranged by means of escalators or travelators, one good aspect of which is good transport capacity. One problem is, however, that escalators, and especially travelators arranged into a ramp, require a very large amount of space in the horizontal direction. In addition, on those floors on which escalators or travelators are used the placement of these devices causes various constraints on the placement of other spaces in the same area or on the arrangement for passageways. Long escalators or travelators, in particular, cause problems in the design of other spaces of the floors, because they prevent internal connections between floors and also the oblique direction of the passenger flow between floors caused by them sometimes compels the starting points for design of the spaces of nearby areas and of the conveying of people to be other than optimal from the viewpoint of the use of the spaces or the conveying of people. Yet another problem with the use of escalators and travelators is that generally at least one elevator is in any case needed in addition to them for physically handicapped people and e.g. for transporting goods, such as children's prams or children's pushchairs and shopping trolleys, between floors.
One common problem in the use of elevator solutions according to prior art, and in solutions using the type of escalators or travelators in which the ends of escalators or travelators that are side-by-side and traveling in different directions are very close, is that passenger flows in different directions meet each other in the passenger embarking and disembarking area. This causes awkward mixing of traffic flows, especially during peak hours.
The aim in the United States patent publications nos. U.S. Pat. No. 6,481,535(B1), U.S. Pat. No. 6,520,295(B1) and U.S. Pat. No. 7,296,662(B1) is to resolve the aforementioned space problems of escalators and travelators, and the problems of passenger flows of different directions colliding, with elevator arrangements in which there is a group of elevator cars traveling between two floors that are one above the other and in which some of the elevators are through-type elevator cars, the doors of one side of which elevator cars are intended for embarking passengers and the doors of the side opposite the aforementioned side are intended for disembarking passengers. In this way it is possible to avoid the meeting in the same elevator of passenger flows in different directions. A problem in these solutions is, however, that when driving two elevator cars with the same machine and with the same suspension ropes, the differences in loading of the elevator cars and the elongations of the suspension ropes resulting from loading affect the sill height of the elevator cars at the floor levels. When an elevator car is loaded its suspension ropes elongate and the elevator car settles e.g. below the sill level of the floor level, which causes a hazard to people and hampers e.g. the loading of wheelchairs and children's pushchairs. Correspondingly, when coming to a floor level, even if e.g. the lighter car were to be driven to be sufficiently flush with the floor level, the sill of the heavier elevator car can remain below the sill level of its own floor level. Likewise, if the heavier car is driven precisely to the floor level, the sill level of the lighter elevator car can remain above the sill level of its own floor level. Too large a height difference between the sills of elevator car and of the floor makes moving difficult and is a safety issue owing to the tripping hazard. When driving a conventional elevator with counterweight, which comprises one elevator car and a counterweight balancing it, there is not normally this type of problem because the elevator car can, by means of its moving machine, drive accurately to the floor and also stay at the floor when the load changes.
The aim of the present invention is to eliminate the aforementioned drawbacks and to achieve an inexpensive and easy-to-implement elevator arrangement, which can replace the use of escalators and travelators, and in which space usage is more advantageous than in the use of escalators and travelators, and correspondingly the transport capacity and control of passenger traffic is better than in normal elevator use. Yet another aim is to achieve an elevator arrangement in which the elevator cars remain sufficiently accurately at their floor levels when they are being loaded and likewise the sill levels of the elevator cars coming both to the upper floor and to the lower floor can be brought accurately to be flush with the sill levels of their own floors regardless of the loading differences of the elevator cars. The elevator arrangement according to the invention is characterized by what is disclosed in the claims.
A preferred way to implement the invention is to connect with suspension ropes or corresponding, e.g. with toothed belts or another type of belts, two elevator cars to each other to move simultaneously with each other and reciprocally in an elevator hoistway. A hoisting machine provided with at least one traction sheave or corresponding moves the elevator cars, said traction sheave preferably being common to the elevator cars. For positioning the elevator cars sufficiently accurately at the floor levels regardless of the loading of the elevator cars and/or for keeping the elevator cars sufficiently well at the floor levels when the load increases or decreases, the solution comprises compensation means, with which positioning inaccuracies are compensated.
In the invention are preferably two elevator cars that are connected to each other with suspension ropes or corresponding and are configured to move simultaneously with each other and reciprocally in an elevator hoistway, and a hoisting machine provided with at least one traction sheave or corresponding, and at least one compensation means for compensating positioning inaccuracies caused by loading of the elevator cars or by loading differences or by loading changes.
A preferred solution for applying the invention is to apply it in an elevator arrangement, in which there is a part of the elevator roping above the elevator cars, e.g. suspension ropes common to two elevator cars, which suspension ropes suspend the elevator cars from above the elevator cars, and in which the elevator cars are moved by means of a part of the elevator roping, e.g. toothed belts or some other traction means, that is below the elevator cars and common to them.
A preferred way to implement the compensation means is a tensioning system that acts on the tension of the elevator roping, in other words on the tension of the parts of the roping suspending the elevator car and of the parts of the roping moving the elevator, e.g. the traction belt or traction belts.
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 expressions 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 can also be applied in other embodiments. In addition it can be stated that at least some of the subordinate claims can in at least some situations be deemed to be inventive in their own right.
One advantage, among others, of the solution according to the invention is that by means of it better transport capacity than by means of normal elevator use is achieved and at the same time a space advantage is achieved with respect to conventional escalator use and travelator use. Another advantage is that when loading the elevator cars elongations of the suspension ropes can be compensated in such a way that the sill levels of the elevator cars can easily be kept in the proximity of the sill level of the floor. Likewise, one advantage is that accuracy problems of a run to a sill level resulting from a different loading of the elevator cars can be eliminated and the elevator cars can be brought accurately to the floor levels regardless of their different loading to each other.
One preferred way of implementing the compensation means of the invention is to arrange the part of the elevator roping leaving upwards from the elevator cars to suspend or to support the elevator cars and the second part of the elevator roping, which leaves downwards from the elevator car, to move the elevator cars, and to arrange continuous rope tension in the elevator roping formed from this part of the elevator roping leaving upwards and from this part of the elevator roping leaving downwards, in other words rope tension greater than zero is present all the time everywhere in the elevator roping. In practice a simple way to achieve continuous rope tension is a pretensioning means acting on the elevator roping or a number of pretensioning means acting on the elevator roping.
Thus in a preferred embodiment of the invention the elevator roping is pretensioned, in which case a stiff suspension of the elevator cars is achieved as an advantage. Owing to this type of stiff suspension the movement of the elevator car, e.g. when people move into the elevator car or out of the elevator car, is smaller than if the roping were not pretensioned. Preferably pretensioning brings about tension in the part of the roping downwards from each elevator car, the effect of which in terms of its magnitude as a force pulling the car downwards is at least half the permitted weight of the nominal load of the elevator car. Even more preferably pretensioning brings about tension in the part of the roping downwards from the elevator car, the effect of which in terms of its magnitude as a force pulling the car downwards is the weight of the nominal load permitted for the elevator car or a weight greater than that. A larger force effect can reasonably be 125%-250% of the weight of the nominal load of the elevator car. Dimensioning to be very much larger than this is not sensible, because from the viewpoint of adequate operation of the elevator it is not sensible to overdimension the roping or structures.
In some inventive solutions in which there are parts of the elevator roping upwards and downwards from the elevator car and the elevator roping is pretensioned, the means of the pretensioning system are preferably configured to shorten the elevator roping when the rope tension in the part leaving downwards from the elevator car decreases to below a set magnitude or disappears completely.
In some inventive solutions in which there are parts of the elevator roping upwards and downwards from the elevator car and the elevator roping is pretensioned, the means of the pretensioning system are preferably configured to lengthen the elevator roping when the rope tension in the part leaving downwards from the elevator car increases to above a set magnitude.
Preferably the compensation means for compensating positioning inaccuracies is arranged to act with a controllable or self-operating actuator acting on the position of at least one end of the suspension ropes of the elevator and/or of the ropes moving the elevator or acting on the pretensioning. A self-operated actuator is preferably based on spring force. A suitable actuator for pretensioning, particularly in an arrangement in which the suspension ropes and the moving ropes form a closed loop, or in which there is suspension roping above the elevator cars and roping below the elevator cars that is for moving the elevator cars by means of drive machinery and that is separate from the suspension roping, is such that it produces a constant force. Instead of an actuator producing a constant force, a solution wherein an actuator is at one end or at both ends of the lower roping is also suitable, which actuator maintains the tension of the end of the roping at any given time and tightens the lower roping if the rope tension of the lower roping decreases and possibly also reduces the rope tension if the rope tension grows to be too large, i.e. larger than a pre-set value. Preferably changes in the tension of this type of actuator occur when the elevator car is at a floor for people to leave or to step into the car and during a run of the elevator car the actuator is locked so that the tensioning does not change. Belts, e.g. toothed belts or other corresponding means, can be used instead of suspension ropes and/or instead of moving ropes. An advantageous actuator can also be an actuator moving the floor of an elevator car or an actuator moving the elevator car in the car sling. A hydraulic cylinder, a screw and a spindle motor are, for example, suited for use as active actuators. Preferably a positioning inaccuracy is compensated by means of an actuator or actuator means of the drive machinery moving the elevator cars, said actuator or actuator means being separate from the drive machinery, particularly suitably using as an aid the control of the drive of the drive machinery moving the elevator cars.
The movement of passengers into the elevator cars and out of the elevator cars can easily be controlled by the placement of the doors and by the timing of their opening and closing.
In the following, the invention will be described in more detail by the aid of some examples of its embodiment with reference to the simplified and diagrammatic drawings attached, wherein
In the solutions according to the invention presented hereinafter the elevator arrangement comprises at least two elevator cars 1 and 2 that move simultaneously with each other and are stationary simultaneously with each other, which elevator cars are arranged to function as counterweights for each other, and which are connected to each other with the suspension ropes 3 of the elevator, of which ropes there can be only one rope or many parallel ropes. The length of the suspension ropes 3 is dimensioned in such a way that when the first elevator car 1 is at the floor 7 that is one floor higher than the lower floor 8, the second elevator car 2 is correspondingly at the level 8 that is one floor lower than the floor 7, and vice versa. In the solutions according to the embodiment the elevator cars 1 and 2 thus travel between only two floors 7 and 8 that are one above the other, but they can also travel between more than two floors one above the other. The elevator cars can serve e.g. a restaurant in the top part of a building, e.g. on the topmost floor, in which case when the first of the two elevator cars 1 connected to each is e.g. at the lower lobby of the building, the second elevator car 2 is at the entrance floor of the restaurant in the top part of the building, and vice versa.
In the elevator arrangement according to the invention there can be a number of side-by-side pairs of elevator cars 1, 2, with one of each pair connected to the other, which pairs can operate on different cycles to each other e.g. in such a way that when some elevator car pair is in position at its own floors 7 and 8, some other elevator car pair is moving between the floor levels 7 and 8. When there are a number of elevator car pairs side-by-side, passengers will quickly, without long waiting times, find an elevator with which to get from one floor to the other.
The elevator arrangement according to the invention presented in
The loading of the elevator cars 1 and 2 and loads of different magnitudes produce elongations of different magnitudes in the suspension ropes 3, which elongations remain for as long as there are loads in the elevator cars. In this case it might happen such that e.g. even if the lighter first elevator car 1 were to be driven sufficiently precisely to be flush with the upper floor level 7, the sill of the heavier second elevator car 2 can remain above the sill level of its own floor level 8. Correspondingly, if the heavier elevator car 8 is driven precisely to the floor level 8, the sill of the lighter elevator car 1 can remain above the sill level of its own floor level 7. Likewise when loading the elevator cars 1, 2 the suspension ropes elongate and the sill levels of the elevator cars 1, 2 settle below the sill level of their own floor at that time. For eliminating these problems the elevator arrangement according to the invention comprises compensation means 6 for compensating the aforementioned positioning inaccuracies that arise when loading the elevator cars 1 and 2 and when driving to a floor.
The compensation means 6 can be disposed on only one elevator car 1 or 2, e.g. on the second elevator car 2 at the end 3 of the suspension ropes 3 to be fixed to the car, as is presented in
The compensation means 6 can also be inside an elevator car 1 or 2 and act e.g. on the inside floor of the elevator car in such a way that when the sill level of the elevator car remains at a different height with respect to the sill level of the floor level, the compensation means are arranged to displace the inside floor of the elevator car to be flush with the sill level of the floor level.
In the elevator arrangement according to the invention, the compensation of positioning inaccuracies affecting a run to a floor and staying at the floor when loading functions e.g. as follows: Considering now the situation according to
So that the sill level of the second elevator car 2 would not settle as a consequence of the aforementioned corrective action to below the sill level of its own floor level 8, the compensation means 6 are arranged to absorb the movement of the suspension ropes 3 caused by the corrective action made with the elevator machine 4, in which case the second elevator car 2 remains in its position. As a result of the compensation both elevator cars 1 and 2 remain precisely at their own floor levels 7 and 8 during loading. If there were separate compensation means 6 in connection with each elevator car 1, 2, the compensation of the elongation of the suspension ropes 3 resulting from loading could be wholly implemented with the separate compensation means 6 and the elevator machine would not be needed as an aid.
In the solution according to
In the elevator arrangement according to
The solution according to
In the elevator arrangement according to
In the elevator arrangement presented in
All the compensation means 6 presented above, regardless of their technical solutions and disposal location, are connected to the control system of the elevator for controlling the control system and the compensation means 6 receive information about the position of an elevator car 1, 2 from the control system of the elevator.
The pretensioning means 18 comprises at least the aforementioned frame part 18i, a roll 18c mounted on bearings onto an axle 18f so as to rotate freely, an adjustment means 18d rotating along with the roll 18c, and also a tensioning means 18g, the free end of which is tensioned by the aid of a spring 18j into its position in the second end of the frame part 18i. The frame part 18i is e.g. a metal plate bent into a U-shape, as viewed from above, comprising a base part 18n and two side flanges 18m that are in an orthogonal attitude in relation to it, in at least one of which side flanges are fixing holes 18q for fixing the pretensioning means to its mounting base. Correspondingly, the base part 18n at the second end of the frame part 18i has a hole 18p for the rod 18h at the free end of the tensioning means 18g, through which hole 18p the rod 18h can be threaded. In addition, there is a hole in the first end, i.e. the free end, of the side flanges 18m for the axle 18f of the roll 18c.
Both ends of the traction means 16, such as of a toothed belt, of the elevator are fixed to the outer rim of the roll 18c in such a way that the end of the traction means 16 fixed to the roll 18c of the traction means 16 can be coiled for some distance onto the roll 18c when the roll 18c rotates around its axle 18f as the traction means 16 loosen e.g. in connection with loading.
An adjustment means 18d rotating along with the roll 18c, and having an essentially e.g. spiral outer surface 18e that is eccentric with respect to the axis of rotation 18f, is fixed to the side of the roll in connection with the roll 18c, the length of which eccentric outer surface 18e, e.g. in the arrangement according to the embodiment, comprises less than one revolution, i.e. the length of the spiral outer surface 18e is smaller than 360°. A tensioning means 18g, such as a steel rope or plastic rope or corresponding, is fitted for rotating the eccentric outer surface 18e of the adjustment means 18d, which tensioning means is fixed at its first end to move along with the roll 18c and the adjustment means 18d, and at its second end to a tensioning arrangement provided with a rod 18h through the base part 18n of the frame part 18i, with a flange 18k and also with a compression spring 18j, in which tensioning arrangement the compression spring 18j is arranged to press against the outer surface of the base part 18n of the frame part 18i in such a way that the tensioning arrangement pulls the tensioning means 18g by the aid of the spring force of the spring 18j and keeps the tensioning means 18g always as taut as possible by the aid of its spring force.
What is essential to pretensioning means 18 is that the eccentricity, i.e. the spiral pitch, of the outer rim 18e of the adjustment means 18d is selected in such a way that it corresponds to the spring constant of the spring 18j, in which case in all the rotational positions of the adjustment means 18d the tensioning of the traction means 16 remains essentially the same and corresponding to the spring constant. When the traction means 16 stretches or otherwise loosens, the spring 18j pulls the tensioning means 18g and via it rotates the roll 18c and the adjustment means 18d in such a way that the distance of the outer rim 18e of the adjustment means 18d from the axle 18f at the point of detachment 18r of the tensioning means 18g increases according to the eccentricity of the outer rim 18e. The eccentricity, i.e. the spiral pitch, of the outer rim 18e of the adjustment means 18d can also be selected in such a way that the adjustment means 18d can compensate in the aforementioned manner a spring other than a compression spring 18j, e.g. a gas spring, a draw-spring or some other means providing a spring force.
It is obvious to the person skilled in the art that the invention is not limited solely to the examples described above, but that it may be varied within the scope of the claims presented below. Thus, for example, the compensation means can also be different and in different locations to what is presented above. In this case e.g. the pretensioning means presented in
Additionally, it is obvious to the person skilled in the art that the suspension arrangements of the elevator cars can be different to what is presented above.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20126138 | Oct 2012 | FI | national |
This application is a continuation of PCT International Application No. PCT/FI2013/051033 which has an International filing date of Oct. 31, 2013, and which claims priority to Finnish patent application number 20126138 filed Oct. 31, 2012, the entire contents of both of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20150197410 A1 | Jul 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/FI2013/051033 | Oct 2013 | US |
Child | 14669947 | US |