Embodiments relates to elevator door interlocks. Embodiments also relate to simplifying the manufacture, repair, and configuration of elevator door interlocks.
Elevators are complex machines. Interlocks help insure proper elevator operation. One of the interlocks ensures that the elevator door is opened only when the elevator is present or during maintenance operations. At a minimum, an elevator door interlock includes a sensor, that senses whether the door is open or closed, and a locking mechanism, that locks the door in the closed position.
Elevator door interlocks should have a housing that protects the parts from outside interference. Current housings are made from stamped pieces of sheet metal. The components of the interlock must be mounted to the housing. The current solutions are to attach mountings to the housing via welding, soldering, screws, bolts, or similar devices or means. It takes considerable time and skill to assemble a housing in this manner. Furthermore, the assembly is prone to breakage because of the large number of parts that are used.
Elevator door interlock housings are typically sheet metal formed into 5 sides of a box type enclosure and a cover, making up the sixth side, completes the enclosure. The covers currently used are simple squares or rectangles of sheet metal. Components of the interlock can be attached to the cover as they are to the housing, bringing along similar problems. The inconvenience of attaching parts to the sheet metal cover usually leads to the cover being merely a cover and otherwise not a part of the elevator door interlock structure.
The sheet metal solutions used for housings and covers also require that any text that should be on the housing or cover to be added as part of a separate operation. That separate operation is usually painting, printing, or affixing an adhesive backed label. These are poor solutions because, over the life of the unit, they wear off.
Elevator doors typically open to the left or to the right. The elevator door interlocks currently used are designed only for left opening or right opening doors. As such, elevator maintenance organizations must stock both the left and right opening varieties. Furthermore, repairmen must go into the field with the correct unit and have the risk of arriving at the job site with the wrong one.
Elevator door interlocks must have a mechanism for locking the door closed and releasing the door when it is proper to do so. The solution is usually to mount a locking fixture to the door that mates with a locking fixture in the elevator door interlock. The elevator door interlock is then mounted to the doorframe. When the door is shut, the two locking fixtures engage. Another part in the interlock housing controls merely engaging the locking fixtures or locking them together. In modern elevators, the controlling part is usually a solenoid. A solenoid, a mechanism wherein an actuator remains in a default position until electrical current is applied causing the actuator to move to an energized position, is well known in the art of electromechanical devices and particularly in the art of elevator door interlocks. Solenoids require a specified electrical current or voltage for proper operation. For example, a 24-volt DC solenoid requires a steady voltage of approximately 24 volts. Alternating current or too low a voltage would not work. Too high a voltage could destroy the solenoid. Furthermore, keeping a solenoid energized for long periods of time can cause the device to overheat and fail. Once again, repairmen must arrive at the job site with elevator door interlocks that match the electrical power used at that job site.
Elevator door interlocks often keep the solenoid energized when the door is unlocked. This shortens solenoid life.
It is therefore one aspect of the embodiments to provide a cast housing for an elevator interlock housing.
It is another aspect of the embodiments to provide for the use of a cast cover instead of a stamped sheet metal cover to close the housing.
It is a further aspect of the embodiments to form text or pictograms into the cast housing or into the cast cover for conveying information.
It is also another aspect of the embodiments to use an electrical circuit that utilizes either AC or DC electricity as a power source.
It is an additional aspect of the embodiments to use symmetrical parts to reduce manufacturing costs and enable easy reconfiguration of the elevator door interlock.
It is yet a further aspect of the embodiments to utilize a snap over center arrangement of a locking cam to hold and release the door.
The aforementioned aspects and other objectives and advantages can now be achieved as described herein. As indicated above, one aspect of the embodiments is the use of a cast housing for an elevator interlock housing. Casting is a process by which a mold is used to produce a shaped part as a single piece. The shape of the housing can include the mountings and fasteners for the parts that must go into the housing. For example, solenoids are often fastened with a bolt and a nut. A cast housing allows other mounting methods to be used. One fastening method that can be used is to form a thickened threaded portion of the housing to mate with a bolt instead of using a nut to mate with the bolt. A mounting method that can be used is forming a mounting, as part of the housing, into which the solenoid snaps or slips into place. This example illustrates the reduction in parts count that is possible for the solenoid. There are many more components that must be similarly mounted in the housing. The mountings for many of those components can be formed into the cast housing.
Another aspect of the embodiments is to use a cast cover instead of a stamped sheet metal cover to close the housing. The mounting for a component can be formed in two parts. One part of the mounting is formed as part of the housing and the other part is formed as part of the cover. When the cover is attached to the housing, the two parts of the mounting are also joined to form a complete mounting that holds a component securely.
Another aspect of the embodiments is to form text or pictograms into the cast housing or into the cast cover for conveying information. Cast in text or pictograms are unlikely to wear off during the useful life of the housing or cover.
Another aspect of the embodiments is use an electrical circuit that uses either AC or DC electricity as a power source. Elevator door interlocks are usually part of an elevator control circuit. Different circuits are constructed with different electrical power supplies. Some installations use direct current, or DC. Others use alternating current, or AC. Elevator door interlocks that operate with either AC or DC electricity allow the same interlock to be used in more installations. This results in stocking fewer parts and a lower likelihood that repairmen reach the job site with the wrong part.
Another aspect of the embodiments is the use of symmetrical parts to reduce manufacturing costs and enable easy reconfiguration of the elevator door interlock. Doors can open to the left or to the right. The correct elevator door interlock must be used for each installation. Designing the unit with symmetrical components allows the exact same components to be used in either left or right opening units. If a repairman needs to install a left opening unit, but only has a right opening one, it is a simple operation to open up the unit, move the components, and thereby convert the left opening unit into a right opening one. The result is that fewer components are required for the manufacture of left and right opening units because both types use the same components. Another advantage is that a repairman at the job site with the wrong unit can easily convert it instead of returning for the correct unit.
Another aspect of the embodiments is using a snap over center arrangement of a locking cam to hold and release the door. In certain elevator door interlocks, a cam is a part of the locking fixture that resides in the housing. Snap over center is a type of action where a mechanism has two resting positions and, when not at rest, exerts force in an attempt to reach one of the resting positions. The cam rests in either the locked or the unlocked position. Snap over center action can be obtained by pressing a ball bearing against the side of the cam if the cam profile is properly designed.
One advantage of the snap over center action is that, unless there is outside force applied, the cam is always in a rest position. This enables more accurate alignment between the locking fixtures. It also enables use of cam position sensors that detect when the cam is in a rest position. When the locking cam is in the locked position, a solenoid can be used to lock the cam in place, thereby locking the door. A cam position sensor can be used to sense that the cam is in the locked position and turn off electrical power to the solenoid, which will keep the door locked without causing the solenoid to heat up. A similar sensor can cut solenoid power when the cam is in the unlocked position. As such, the solenoid is only energized when it needs to be, increasing the lifespan of the solenoid.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment,
Bolts are used to fasten things together. Single bolt holes and bolt hole patterns are examples of mount points. In general, a mount point is a place where two or more components of an assembly are joined together. The cast housing 101 can also have a locking fixture window 104 that is an opening where a locking fixture, such as the cam actuator illustrated later, can enter. The cast housing 101 can have a cam axle mount 105, which is a thickened area with a hole meant to hold an axle on which a cam rotates. The cast housing 101 can have a door sensor window 106, which is a place to mount a sensor that detects the presence of the elevator door.
The cast housing 101 can have a portion of a mounting, such as a solenoid mount portion 107. The portion that is part of the cast housing 101 can be designed such that a solenoid drops into it and then another portion of the mount is added to form a complete mount that holds the solenoid completely. The cast housing 101 also has a wire window 108. The elevator door interlock has some electrical parts and they must be electrically connected to elevator control circuitry. The wires from the control circuitry enter the cast housing 101 via the wire window 108. Usually the outside wires from the control circuitry connect to the circuitry inside the cast housing 101 via multi element electrical connectors.
When an electric current, either AC or DC is applied to the full wave bridge rectifier input 605, rectified current flows out of the rectifier positive output 607 into the coil 603, and then into the rectifier negative output 608. A flyback diode 606 is connected in parallel with the coil 603 to protect against flyback, a condition that occurs when the coil 603 is de-energized. Rectifiers, solenoids, flyback diodes, and full wave bridge rectifiers as individual components or subassemblies are known to those skilled in the art of electric circuitry.
Inside the cast housing 101, the lock bar 801 engages the lock bar notch 701 and causes the cam 700 to rotate. When the elevator door reaches its closed position, the cam 700 reaches the lock position at which time the solenoid actuator 602 can enter into the solenoid notch 702 thereby locking the cam 700, cam actuator 800, and elevator door in place. To unlock the elevator door, the solenoid actuator 602 must be retracted from the solenoid notch 702. This is accomplished by applying electrical power to the solenoid 601 or by physically pushing the solenoid actuator 602.
The protrusion sensors 1005 can be used to cut electrical power to the solenoid 601 when the cam 700 is in either the lock or unlock position. When the elevator door is fully closed, the cam 700 is in the lock position. When someone tries to open the elevator door, the cam actuator 800 pulls the cam 700 slightly out of the locked position thereby allowing the solenoid 601 to be energized. This is possible because the solenoid notch 702 is wide enough to allow it. If it is proper to open the elevator door the solenoid 601 can be energized which withdraws the solenoid actuator 602 from the solenoid notch 702, and allows the door to be fully opened. If the door can't be properly opened, the solenoid 601 is not energized and the door remains locked shut. Whoever is attempting to open the door then lets go and the snap over center action rotates the cam 700 to the locked position. In this manner, the solenoid 601 is not continuously energized whenever it is proper to open the door, only when it is proper and someone is attempting to open the door. Similarly, if the door is open and the cam 700 is resting in the unlock position then the solenoid 601 should not be energized. When the solenoid 601 is not energized, the solenoid actuator 602 pushes against the side of the cam 700, but does not enter a notch because none is present. As the door closes, the cam actuator 800 engages the cam 700 and rotates it to the locked position whereupon the solenoid actuator 602 snaps into the solenoid notch 702.
The protrusion sensors 1005 are presented as examples of a way to sense cam 700 position. One skilled in the art of elevator door interlocks should appreciate many different and equivalent ways to sense cam 700 position after reading this disclosure. In accordance with this aspect, any sensor that can sense cam position can be used to sense when the cam 700 is in any particular position such as the lock position or the unlock position.
Another aspect of the embodiment that is shown in all the figures is symmetry. The only figures in which symmetry is not apparent is
Another aspect of the embodiment is an electrical door sensor. The door sensor senses when the elevator door is in the shut or nearly shut position.
It will be appreciated that variations of the above-disclosed and other features, aspects and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Also that various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.