The present invention concerns a fixing device for wire cable trays.
In the manner known in the art, wire cable trays take the form of a channel consisting of wire mesh. This mesh includes longitudinal wires, usually called warp wires, and transverse wires called weft wires. The warp wires are rectilinear, or substantially rectilinear, and are welded to the weft wires. The latter generally have an overall U-shape and are disposed with a regular pitch along the warp wires. Thus, overall, a cable tray includes three panels, namely a bottom panel and two lateral panels.
Such cable trays are commonly used to accommodate, support and protect flexible conduits of diverse kinds: electrical cables (low-voltage or high-voltage), data transmission cables (telephone, optical fiber, etc.), fluid pipes, etc.
It is sometimes required to group cables together in a cable tray to form a bundle of cables in the cable tray and to fix this bundle into the cable tray. A cable tie is then used, for example, which surrounds the cables concerned and a warp wire of the cable tray.
It can also be required to fix an accessory in the cable tray. The classic solution is then to bolt it into the bottom of the cable tray or to a lateral flange.
The present invention has the object of providing a device for fixing elements—cable bundle, accessory, sundry objects, etc.—into a cable tray. This device can preferably on the one hand be fitted to numerous types of cable tray and on the other hand be mounted quickly, without ancillary parts (bolts, etc.) and without tools. This device can advantageously also be fitted on site as required.
To this end, the invention proposes a fixing device for wire cable trays including on the one hand longitudinal warp wires and on the other hand transverse weft wires, having a base with a mounting face by which it is mounted on the cable tray and fixing means.
According to the invention, this fixing device includes:
This device can easily be fitted, without tools, to a cable tray. A first wire of the cable tray (warp wire or weft wire) bears on the bottom of the trough-shaped housing while a second wire of the cable tray (weft wire or warp wire) bears on the bearing surface, thereby retaining the device with a clamping force depending on the distance between the bottom of the trough and the bearing surface. Here mounting is effected by bearing on two faces (edges) of wires of the cable tray that are welded together. Thus the diameter of the wires used is of no consequence.
In a first embodiment, a fixing device of the invention has a plurality of similar longitudinal housings disposed parallel to each other at a regular pitch.
In a second embodiment, a fixing device of the invention includes a plurality of similar transverse cut-outs disposed parallel to each other at a regular pitch.
By adapting to the shapes in which cable trays are produced, these two embodiments offer improved retention to enable the fixing of an accessory on which a greater or lesser load is exerted.
When there are both a number of longitudinal housings and a number of transverse cut-outs, the pitch between the longitudinal housings is preferably the same as that between the transverse cut-outs. The fixing device can then be mounted in two different mutually perpendicular orientations on the cable tray.
For improved retention on the cable tray on which the device of the invention is mounted, a boss can be produced on the bearing surface. Fitting is then effected by clipping.
In one embodiment of the device of the invention the base is produced in a molded synthetic material. In this case, this fixing device is associated for example with a cable retaining device. One such cable retaining device is described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,107,653, for example.
In another embodiment the base of the device of the invention is produced in sheet metal cut and bent to shape. The fixing means of this device then take the form of circular bores and/or oblong holes produced in the sheet.
The present invention also concerns an embodiment of a fixing device including a single trough-shaped longitudinal housing, a single transverse cut-out and two bearing surfaces disposed on opposite sides of the longitudinal housing. This particularly advantageous embodiment places the device at the intersection of a warp wire and a weft wire.
Finally, the present invention also concerns an assembly including on the one hand a section of cable tray having longitudinal warp wires and U-shaped transverse weft wires and on the other hand a fixing device as described above, this assembly being characterized in that the base of the fixing device is inside the section of cable tray, that is to say between the branches of the U-shape of the weft wires, and in that each longitudinal housing receives a warp wire. In this advantageous embodiment, the fixing device is mounted by positioning said device in the cable tray and sliding it along a warp wire. This is advantageous because if cables have already been placed in the section of cable tray, the movement to fix the fixing device is parallel to the cables already in place and can therefore be performed easily. Movements when fixing a cable tray to a support or the like generally entail sliding along a weft wire and thus in a direction perpendicular to any cables in the cable tray.
Details and advantages of the present invention will emerge more clearly from the following description, given with reference to the appended diagrammatic drawings, in which:
The base 2 is intended to enable fixing of the fixing device of the invention to a section of wire cable tray 6. In the conventional way, and as represented in the drawings, this cable tray is gutter-shaped and includes longitudinal wires 8 called warp wires and transverse wires 10 called weft wires. The warp wires 8 are rectilinear (except for the edge wires in the embodiment represented, which are nevertheless substantially rectilinear). The weft wires 10 are U-shaped. The section of cable tray 6 therefore has a bottom panel 12 and two lateral panels 14. It is assumed here that the bottom panel 12 is at the bottom of the lateral panels. This bottom panel 12 is disposed in a substantially horizontal plane whereas the lateral panels 14 extend substantially vertically. Such an orientation is usual for a section of cable tray. Other orientations can nevertheless be envisaged, for example with the bottom panel 12 disposed vertically or inclined.
The base 2 has a mounting face 16 which, in a preferred embodiment, is a substantially plane face. A trough-shaped housing 18 is produced in the mounting face 16. This housing 18 forms a groove extending the entire length of the mounting face 16 intended to receive a wire of the section of cable tray, a warp wire 8 in the orientation chosen for
The base 2 also has a bearing surface 20 set back relative to the mounting face 16. This bearing surface 20 extends perpendicularly to the housing 18. It is parallel to the back line 22 of the housing 18. In the embodiment shown here, which is a preferred embodiment, it is also parallel to the mounting face 16.
The bearing surface 20 is between the mounting face 16 and the back line 22 of the housing 18. The distance between the bearing surface 20 and the back line 22 (which is parallel to it) is a few tenths of a millimeter.
A transverse cut-out 24 provides access from the mounting face 16 to the bearing surface 20. This cut-out is seen in
As
Arrows in
The base 2 is then moved vertically downward (in the chosen orientation, see above) indicated by the first arrow 26 in
The fixing device of the invention, once mounted, is retained on the one hand by the back of the housing 18 bearing on the warp wire 8 and on the other hand by the weft wire 10 bearing on the bearing surfaces 20. There can be a slight clamping effect here to retain the device of the invention on the section of cable tray 6 by adapting the distance between the back line 22 of the housing 18 and the bearing surfaces 20. This device is then retained thanks to this clamping effect without having to use any tools. Moreover, if cables (not shown) are present in the section of cable tray 6, mounting can be effected anyway because, during mounting, fixing is effected by a longitudinal movement, which is parallel to the cables. Because of this, the cables do not greatly impede the fixing of the device.
In the embodiment of
The cable retaining device 4 is shown diagrammatically in
On the device of
The two transverse cut-outs 24 extend in each case from a longitudinal housing 18 to an edge of the mounting face 16. They are aligned and thus correspond to the same weft wire 10 (or warp wire 8). Each transverse cut-out 24 here defines a tongue 32 one face of which, that opposite the mounting face 16, is part of the bearing surface 20.
To enable the fixing of any accessory, the fixing device includes fixing means which, in the embodiment shown (see
To mount this fixing device on the section of cable tray 6 as shown in
In this sheet metal embodiment, having only one longitudinal housing 18 and only one transverse cut-out 24 can be envisaged. There are then two bearing surfaces 20 disposed on opposite sides of the longitudinal housing 18. Thus the device can be mounted at the crossover of a warp wire and a weft wire of the section of cable tray.
The fixing device represented here is also produced in sheet metal. It includes a base 2 having a mounting face 16 and a fixing plate 36. This fixing device is also produced by pressing and bending sheet metal. The fixing plate 36 is provided with bores 38 of circular shape and oblong holes 38′.
The mounting face 16 of this fixing device includes a longitudinal housing 18 and six transverse cut-outs 24. The transverse cut-outs 24 are regularly spaced with a regular pitch, for example a pitch of 50 mm. This pitch corresponds to the pitch between two adjacent warp wires. The pitch between two weft wires is twice that between the warp wires, i.e. 100 mm. These numerical values are given by way of nonlimiting example, but correspond to values currently found on some cable trays. The fact of having warp wires and weft wires with separation pitches of which one is a multiple of the other enables mounting of the fixing device in the two positions shown in
This mounting in two different directions is illustrated by the embodiment represented in
Of course, embodiments with a plurality of longitudinal housings 18 and/or a plurality of transverse cut-outs 24 can be produced for bases of synthetic material fixing devices of the type shown in
The fixing devices described above can be considered as universal fixing devices because each can be used on cable trays produced with wires of different diameters: they can be used on a cable tray using wires of different diameters, but they can also be used on two different cable trays produced with wires of different diameters. Furthermore, fixing devices whose mounting face includes a longitudinal housing and a transverse cut-out can adapt to any intersection of two wires of a cable tray and can be mounted at will essentially inside the cable tray or outside it. A device of the invention thus enables fixing of an accessory intended to be located inside a cable tray or outside it.
Note further that the mounting of these devices is easy and can be effected without tools. These sections can be mounted on demand on site when fitting a cable tray with no auxiliary parts, such as bolts or the like.
Even if a device of the invention can be produced in bent and cut sheet metal, it is a device offering good accuracy and high stiffness. A molded synthetic material embodiment also provides good accuracy. It has the advantage of not being aggressive to cables intended to be placed in the cable tray.
The devices described are essentially intended to be mounted in a section of cable tray but mounting versions with a plurality of longitudinal housings and/or a plurality of transverse cut-outs between two sections of cable tray can also be envisaged.
The present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above by way of nonlimiting example and to the variants referred to. It concerns equally all variants evident to the person skilled in the art within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07 52993 | Jan 2007 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2008/000114 | 1/31/2008 | WO | 00 | 7/30/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/110687 | 9/18/2008 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5531410 | Simon | Jul 1996 | A |
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6239364 | Nickel | May 2001 | B1 |
6590154 | Badey et al. | Jul 2003 | B1 |
7468491 | Deciry et al. | Dec 2008 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1 406 362 | Apr 2004 | EP |
2 796 121 | Jan 2001 | FR |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100059250 A1 | Mar 2010 | US |