This application claims priority to. European Patent Application No. 11179639.7, filed Aug. 31, 2011, which is incorporated herein by reference.
The disclosure relates to an elevator.
In elevators with large conveying heights a device for providing compensation for the weight of a suspension means is usually provided. The suspension means is guided over a drive pulley which in turn is drivable by means of an elevator drive. An elevator cage is arranged at one end of the suspension means and a counterweight is arranged at the other end of the suspension means. The elevator cage and the counterweight are movable by way of the suspension means in opposite directions in an elevator shaft, wherein the elevator cage serves stories.
If the elevator cage is disposed at the top in the elevator shaft, the suspension means length and the weight of the suspension means on the counterweight side is large. If the elevator cage is disposed at the bottom of the elevator shaft, the suspension means length and the weight of the suspension means on the cage side is large. Provided as compensation for the weight displacement from the counterweight side to the cage side and conversely is a compensating means which is arranged at one end underneath at the elevator cage and at the other end underneath at the counterweight. If, for example, the suspension means length is large on the counterweight side the compensating means length is small on the counterweight side and large on the cage side. Balancing of or compensation for the weight displacement on the part of the suspension means is provided by the compensating means acting in opposite directions. Drive torque, braking moment and traction at the drive pulley can be optimized by the weight compensation.
However, the compensating means hanging at the elevator cage and at the counterweight is susceptible to oscillation, including in the case of elevator installations with large conveying heights, or through other influences such as, for example, air in the elevator shaft, earthquakes or building fluctuations. In the case of movement of the elevator cage and the counterweight the compensating means, for example an encased chain, can be excited into oscillation, wherein the deflection of the compensating means in the case of further travel of the elevator cage and the counterweight can be amplified. The deflection can be of such a magnitude that the compensating means whips against the shaft walls. In that case there is the risk that the compensating means can tangle with shaft fittings, for example fastening brackets for guide rails. If the compensating means is tangled on the counterweight side and the elevator cage moves upwardly and the counterweight downwardly then the compensating means can be additionally tensioned from the damage point to the elevator cage and can be loose from the damage point to the counterweight. Such damage can be dangerous for safe operation of the elevator installation. In the extreme case the compensating means can break and cause consequential damage.
In at least some embodiments, at least one compensating means is arranged between an elevator cage and a counterweight and serves for compensation for the weight of a suspension means, wherein the compensating means is guided by means of a guide device and forms a linear part, a loop part and a curved part and wherein the loop part and the curved part together have a form similar to a parabola. At least some embodiments create a monitoring which can be tolerant relative to deflections of a compensating means, but which can help guarantee safety of the elevator installation.
At least some embodiments allow that the compensating means can be simply and reliably monitored. For example, loop movements triggered by oscillations in the compensating means switch off the elevator installation only when the loop movements adopt, for the compensating means and for the shaft fittings, a potential with destructive force. After switching-off of the elevator installation the elevator cage and counterweight can run on due to inertia. The proposed device takes into consideration this running-on without damage being caused directly after the switching off.
Under normal conditions, for example in the case of building fluctuations or in the case of draft air in the elevator shaft or in the case of inspection travel or in the case of emergency stopping situations or in the case of mere contact of the shaft walls or of the shaft floor, switching off need not take place. The proposed device can be settable in this respect to the respective elevator installation.
The proposed device can be suitable for a compensating means with a linear part, possibly on the counterweight side, and a curved part, possibly on the cage side. A guide device arranged, for example, below the travel path of the counterweight and centrally with respect to the counterweight guide rails guides and damps the compensating means, possibly on the counterweight side. Between the guide device and the elevator cage the compensating means adopts a form similar to a parabola with a loop part and a slightly curved part. If the compensating means tangles on, for example, the counterweight side while the elevator cage travels upwardly the loop part progressively reduces and moves ever closer to the guide device. A comparable state can also occur in the case of strong oscillations in the compensating means. Without switching-off of the elevator installation in good time at least the guide device would be damaged.
The proposed device is explained in more detail on the basis of embodiments by way of the accompanying figures, in which:
In the embodiment a 1:1 suspension means guidance is shown. Other forms of suspension means guidance are also possible. The elevator cage 2 stands at an uppermost story 9, whilst the counterweight 3 stands above a shaft pit 10. In this position of the elevator cage 2 and the counterweight 3 the suspension means 5 is short on the cage side and long on the counterweight side. Serving as weight compensation for the different suspension means lengths is a compensating means, which is denoted by 11, between elevator cage 2 and counterweight 1. In the illustrated embodiment the compensating means 11 provides compensation for the absent weight of the suspension means 5 on the cage side. The compensating means 11 can be for example a rope a belt or a chain.
A guide device 12, which guides the compensating means 11 particularly on the counterweight side and damps it in terms of oscillation, is provided below the travel path of the counterweight 3 and centrally between the counterweight guide rails. The compensating means 11 forms itself linearly or has a linear part 11.1 between the counterweight 3 and the guide device 12. Between the guide device 12 and the elevator cage 2 the compensating means 11 adopts a form, which is similar to a parabola, with a loop part 11.2 and a slightly curved part 11.3.
Instead of the line 13.1 it is also possible to provide a yoke or a barrier which is actuable by means of the loop part 11.2. The yoke or the barrier is flexibly mounted so that the loop part 11.2 cannot cause damage in the case of a running on.
Instead of the line 13.1 and the switch 13.4 it is also possible to provide, for example, an optoelectronic monitoring device 13 which consists of a transmitter, a reflector and a receiver. The transmitter arranged at the first bracket 16 transmits a light beam, for example in the infrared region, to a reflector, which is arranged at the second bracket 17 and which reflects the light beam to the receiver arranged at the first bracket 16. If the compensating means 11 enters the detection region 13.8 of the monitoring device 13 the loop part 11.2 interrupts the light beam and the receiver generates a signal for switching off the elevator drive 6.1 and for activation of the brake. Transmitter, reflector and receiver are so arranged that the light beam is interrupted in good time and generally no damage of shaft fittings and/or compensating means can occur even in the case of running-on of the elevator cage and the counterweight. The sensor can also consist only of a transmitter and a receiver, in which case the transmitter is arranged at, for example, the first bracket 16 and the receiver at the second bracket 17.
The guide device 12 and the monitoring device 13 can, as an alternative, also be arranged on the cage side.
Having illustrated and described the principles of the disclosed technologies, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the disclosed embodiments can be modified in arrangement and detail without departing from such principles. In view of the many possible embodiments to which the principles of the disclosed technologies can be applied, it should be recognized that the illustrated embodiments are only examples of the technologies and should not be taken as limiting the scope of the invention. Rather, the scope of the invention is defined by the following claims and their equivalents. We therefore claim as our invention all that comes within the scope and spirit of these claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11179639.7 | Aug 2011 | EP | regional |