The invention relates to an elevator installation which has an elevator car and a counterweight which are suspended and driven by flat-belt-type suspension means arranged in parallel. Present on the counterweight and/or on the elevator car are suspension-sheave systems which, together with a traction sheave and the suspension means, form a suspension system. This suspension system has a reeving factor of at least 2:1, and the suspension means, or more specifically their center lines, are arranged in parallel vertical planes which run diagonally to the main horizontal axes of the counterweight and/or of the elevator car.
From published International application WO 99/43593 an elevator system is known which has a drive motor arranged above, and in which the elevator car and the counterweight are suspended and driven by several flat belts arranged in parallel. FIG. 5 in WO 99/43593 shows an exemplary embodiment in which the flat belts which form the suspension means support the elevator car in the form of an undersling, the suspension means being arranged in parallel vertical planes which run diagonally to the main horizontal axes of the elevator car and of the counterweight, i.e. also diagonally to the walls of the elevator hoistway. The axles of the traction sheave, of the suspension sheaves mounted underneath the elevator car, and of the suspension sheaves on the counterweight, are aligned at right angels to the aforementioned planes of the suspension means and therefore also diagonally to the aforementioned main axes of the elevator car and of the counterweight.
An elevator car as disclosed in FIG. 5 of WO 99/43593 has a disadvantage as described below.
Passed around the suspension sheave present on the counterweight are several flat belts arranged in parallel, which can have the consequence that the suspension sheave must have a width which is substantially greater than the width of the counterweight. Because of the diagonal alignment of the suspension sheave axle relative to the main horizontal axes of the counterweight, which is necessary for the illustrated flat-belt suspension, the suspension sheave of the counterweight can require a building space which exceeds the width (thickness) of the counterweight. This prevents optimal utilization of the available hoistway cross section to accommodate a largest possible floor surface of the car, or requires for a given floor surface of the car a larger hoistway cross section.
A purpose of the present invention is to eliminate the aforementioned disadvantages of elevator installations which contain suspension sheaves on the counterweight and on the elevator car as well as several flat-belt-type suspension means arranged in parallel and in which the suspension means—more exactly their center lines—are arranged in several mutually parallel vertical planes which run diagonally to the horizontal main axes of the counterweight and/or of the elevator car.
The present invention is based on the idea of replacing the monolithic or single-axle suspension sheaves on the counterweight (and in certain cases also on the elevator car) which require too much building space by several suspension-sheave units which are arranged adjacent to each other and each of which has one suspension sheave, the suspension-sheave units being fastened to the counterweight and/or elevator car in such manner that the axles of the suspension sheaves are essentially horizontal and can each be aligned by swiveling about an associated vertical axis. By this means the problem can be avoided that a multi-suspension sheave consisting of one piece, or of several suspension sheaves arranged on the same axle, projects beyond the building space of the counterweight or cannot be built onto an elevator car in an available building space.
According to the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the suspension-sheave units are aligned in such manner that the suspension-sheave axles are at right angles to the parallel planes which run diagonally to the main axes of the counterweight and/or of the elevator car and in which the suspension means are arranged. Aligned in this manner, the axles of the suspension sheaves are mutually offset in the horizontal direction, with the result that the required building space for the suspension sheaves on the counterweight and/or for those on the elevator car can be minimized.
Particularly expedient is an embodiment of the present invention in which the suspension sheave of each suspension-sheave unit is mounted in bearings in a suspension-sheave housing which has an essentially rectangular horizontal cross section whose length is approximately the same as the diameter of the suspension sheave and whose width is not more than 150% of the width of the flat-belt-type suspension means. With such an embodiment it is guaranteed that the distance between the individual flat-belt-type suspension means can be kept as small as possible.
According to an expedient embodiment of the present invention, the vertical axes around which the suspension-sheave units can be swiveled are arranged on the counterweight and/or on the elevator car along a straight line and with distances between them which are so much greater than the width of the horizontal cross section of the suspension sheaves that the suspension-sheave housings can each be swiveled about their vertical axes through an angle of not more than 40° from their respective central positions before they prevent each other from moving further.
This makes it possible for the position of the suspension-sheave units to be adapted to elevator installations according to the present invention in which the angle between the parallel vertical planes containing the suspension means and the horizontal straight lines running at right angles to the horizontal straight lines and along which the vertical axes of the suspension means on the counterweight and/or on the elevator car are arranged are not greater than 40°.
An expedient further development of the present invention is that the vertical axes about which the suspension-sheave units can be swiveled have distances between them which are so much greater than the width of the horizontal cross section of the suspension-sheave housings that the suspension-sheave housings can each only be swiveled about their vertical axes through an angle of not more than 30° from their respective central positions before they prevent each other from moving further. Thanks to this limitation of the maximum possible swiveling angle of the suspension-sheave housings—and therefore of the suspension-sheave units—the distance between them—and therefore the distance between the flat-belt-type suspension means arranged in parallel—can be minimized, provided that the angles between the parallel vertical planes containing the suspension means and the horizontal straight lines which run at right angles to the horizontal straight lines along which the vertical axes of the suspension means on the counterweight and/or on the elevator car are arranged are not greater than 30°.
In a further embodiment of the present invention, the horizontal straight line along which the vertical axes of the suspension-sheave housings on the counterweight are arranged runs diagonally to the horizontal longitudinal axis of the counterweight. At a given distance between the flat-belt-type suspension means and the maximum swivel of the suspension-sheave housing which depends on that distance, an increase in the diagonality of the suspension-sheave units relative to the main horizontal axes of the counterweight and/or of the elevator car can be made possible, but a slightly larger building space is then required.
Advantageously, the suspension-sheave units are each fastened onto the elevator car and/or onto the counterweight by means of a tie-rod arranged approximately vertically, the tie-rod also forming the aforesaid vertical axis about which the suspension-sheave unit can be swiveled.
An expedient further development of the present invention consists of the tie-rod having at least one section with an external thread, it being possible for the external thread in conjunction with a screw part containing an internal thread to serve for adjustment of the tension in the associated suspension means. Tensioning means at the fastening points of the suspension means, which are usually arranged in a manner less well accessible for re-tensioning by maintenance personnel, can thereby be dispensed with.
In an especially advantageous embodiment of the present invention, the flat-belt-type suspension means are executed as V-ribbed belts. V-ribbed belts can be passed without problem over the traction sheave and over the suspension sheave and diverter sheave provided that these have on their periphery a V-ribbed profile complementary to the profile of the belt. Furthermore, the tractive force which can be transferred from the traction sheave to a belt is higher for V-ribbed belts than for a flat belt.
Depending on, for example, the hoistway space available in the hoistway headroom or in the hoistway pit, elevator installations according to the present invention can be executed with suspension sheaves mounted above the elevator car or executed with suspension sheaves underneath the elevator car—i.e. with so-called underslung suspension means as cited in the aforementioned state of the art.
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:
From the plan view (
As shown in
The construction of these suspension-sheave units 8.2, 8.1, their arrangement, and their advantageous effects are described in more detail below.
Connected to the suspension-means housing 17 in its lower area is a tie-rod 20 which serves to fasten the suspension-sheave housing 17 and with it the suspension-sheave unit 8.2, 8.1 to the counterweight 2 and/or to the elevator car 1 and at the same time forms the aforementioned vertical axis 16 about which the suspension-sheave unit can be swiveled.
The connection between the suspension-sheave housing 17 and the tie-rod 20 is advantageously effected via a round pin 21 inserted in the suspension-sheave housing, as a result of which a certain articulation of the aforesaid connection is achieved. For at least part of its length, the tie-rod 20 is provided with an external thread which in conjunction with screw parts 26 not only allows screw connection with components of the counterweight 2 and/or the elevator car 1 but also serves to cause equal tensile forces in the parallel suspension means 6.
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The aforesaid distances are chosen in such manner that the suspension-sheave units 8.2, 8.1 in both directions of swivel can be swiveled by a maximum of 40° out of their central position, i.e. that these can be swiveled by a maximum of 80° in total.
If the angle between the parallel vertical planes 6.1, in which the suspension means are arranged, and the horizontal straight lines which run at right angles to the horizontal straight lines along which the vertical axes of the suspension means on the counterweight and/or on the elevator car are arranged are correspondingly small, the distances between the vertical axes (swiveling axes) 16 of the suspension-sheave unit 8.2, 8.1 can be so reduced that the suspension-sheave units can only be swiveled by a maximum of 30° out of their central position, i.e. they can be swiveled by a maximum of 60° in total. As a result, smaller distances between the suspension devices or means 6 can be achieved.
It can also be seen from
In accordance with the provisions of the patent statutes, the present invention has been described in what is considered to represent its preferred embodiment. 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.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04016913 | Jul 2004 | EP | regional |
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Number | Date | Country |
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05294584 | Nov 1993 | JP |
WO 9943593 | Sep 1999 | WO |
WO 9943591 | Sep 1999 | WO |