The present invention relates to the field of garage doors and in particular, to garage door rollers. These rollers allow the garage door to open and close along a guide track. Rollers are located on either side of the garage door and are positioned within a respective track located on opposite sides of a garage door. The rollers roll along a track as the garage door is raised or lowered. Each roller is respectively affixed to a collar by which the respective roller is retained. Each respective roller is affixed to a receiving member of a respective garage door hinge plate which in turn is affixed to a garage door plate, which in turn is affixed to a garage door. The present invention relates to improvements in the roller to reduce the noise created by the steel roller shaft hitting the respective garage door plate as the garage door is raised and lowered.
In the prior art which is known to the present inventor, most garage door rollers have a plated steel shaft that slides into a tube just slightly larger than the diameter of the shaft. This tube is part of a hinge that the roller is retained in to help move the sectional garage door up and down. The hinge is attached to multiple sections of the garage door. The shaft of the roller and tube of the hinge are made of steel. The gap between the roller shaft and the hinge tube allow it to move freely and side to side without binding or sticking. The problem is that the gap/clearance and both the roller shaft and hinge tube barrel being made of steel causes noise and rattling by the metal-to-metal contact as the garage door is raised and lowered. Putting lubricant between the shaft of the roller and the tube into which it is inserted provides some lubricant benefit but still does not significantly reduce the noise and rattling of the assembly.
The problem is not the roller wheel itself because that is not where the noise comes from. The noise comes from the steel shaft of the roller wheel that slides into a hinge bracket in the hinge affixed to garage door sections. The steel garage door hinges and fixtures have a tube or round bracket that retains the roller's shaft. This allows the roller to be retained and allows the shaft to move freely side to side. As the garage door rolls up and down, the rollers move freely and the space in between the tube and roller shaft causes a rattle because of the metal-to-metal contact. This is why the door sounds shaky and noisy when it is in motion. Greasing or lubricating the rollers will not fix the problem of the rattling sound. Even installing the quietest belt drive garage door opener with the quietest hinges and best precision ball rollers will not guarantee that the door will be rattle-free in operation.
In the prior art, the rollers are affixed to a metal shaft which is in turn affixed to a plate, which in turn is affixed to the rear of a garage door so that as the garage door is raised, the rollers which are positioned on opposite sides of the garage door and also positioned within a track, roll or rotate within the track to enable the garage door to be raised or lowered. The rollers are affixed to the shaft and the shafts that are usually made of metal make a clanging and unpleasant noise as the garage door is raised up and down. The problem with the prior art is that the shaft of the rollers is metal and the shaft comes into metal-to-metal contact with the plate to which the shaft is inserted so that there is a constant clanging noise as the garage door is raised and lowered. One other solution that has been attempted in prior art is to create a plastic hinge barrel but strength is sacrificed and the customer usually perceives the plastic hinge barrel to be weak and inferior. Further, the gap remaining between the plastic hinge barrel and the door still creates a rattling noise while traveling up and down. The gap between the shaft of the roller and the tube into which the shaft is inserted still remains and still creates a lot of noise when the garage door is raised and lowered. There is a significant need for a quieter roller shaft assembly so that there is less noise when the garage door is raised and lowered.
The prior art does not significantly reduce the noise created by the shaft of a roller inserted into a tube or hinge bracket as the roller moves up and down to enable the garage door to be raised and lowered. In the garage door, there are tracks on either side of the garage door and a roller is inserted into each track in order to enable the garage door to be raised and lowered. There may be multiple rollers along various lengths of the garage door and in particular, affixed to respective horizontal panels of the garage door. The roller in turn is attached to a shaft which in turn is inserted into a tube that is affixed to a hinge attachment plate which is affixed to the garage door. Therefore, as the garage door is raised and lowered, the metal of the shaft from the roller and the metal of the tube into which the shaft is inserted, have a metal-to-metal contact creating a lot of noise as the garage door is raised and lowered.
There is a significant need in the garage door industry for a quieter garage door roller. Over the years, rollers have been made of steel and plastic, with and without bearings and a plastic cover put over the roller wheel itself as improvements to make them quieter, which has not significantly reduced the noise. It has been discovered that a reduction in the noise of the rollers placed within the track will significantly reduce the noise created when the garage door is raised and lowered. Therefore, there is a significant need to improve the roller itself which is inserted into the track where there is a pair of oppositely disposed rollers in each track affixed to the back of the garage door through the above-referenced attachment plate. While the parent invention significantly helps in reducing the noise, there is still a significant need to further reduce the noise created by rollers which are inserted into the oppositely disposed tracks wherein the garage door is raised and lowered through the rollers rolling on the oppositely disposed tracks.
The present invention is an apparatus to reduce noise created by the shaft of a respective roller being inserted into a respective metal retaining member of a respective hinge plate where a multiplicity of hinge plates are affixed to adjacent panels of a garage door while a pair of oppositely disposed rollers respectively travel along a pair of oppositely disposed tracks adjacent opposite ends of a garage door panel as the garage door is raised and lowered.
The present invention is also an improvement in the roller which is inserted into the garage door track to significantly reduce the noise created by prior art rollers as the rollers roll in the garage door track.
Through experiments performed by the present inventor, it has been discovered that if the roller shaft is coated with or covered with a hard thermoplastic injection molding, then the metal-to-metal noise of the roller shaft retained in the metal barrel of a hinge plate is significantly reduced when the garage door is raised or lowered.
According to the present inventor, it has been discovered that an improved roller assembly is created with ball bearings and a hard plastic tire such as a Delrin plastic tire and a thermoplastic injection molded covered roller shaft. The difference would be a thermoplastic injection molded roller shaft cover. The thermoplastic injection molded shaft cover would be thin enough to still provide side-to-side non-binding movement. It would also provide a cushion/sound absorption effect and eliminate metal-to-metal contact. Thermoplastic injection molded material is tough enough to resist the chemicals that the door hinge is subject to when lubricated. It should be noted that other types of plastic and urethane covering the roller shaft are also within the spirit and scope of the present invention to achieve the same result.
It has been further discovered that utilizing thermoplastic injection molded material is the most cost effective way to achieve the quiet rattle-free operation of the roller plus chemical resistance. The thermoplastic injection molded will remain on the roller shaft with or without the use of glues or adhesive. Not having to use glues or adhesives makes it very cost effective. Therefore, the thermoplastic injection molded covered roller shaft could be offered on most garage door rollers at very little cost to the homeowner for a much greater rattle-free garage door. In addition, the thermoplastic injection molded covered roller shafts fit most standard garage door hinges.
It has further been discovered according to the present inventor that reducing the diameter of the steel on the roller shaft and adding the injection molded plastic on the top will not achieve a lasting result. Injection molded plastic on a smooth steel shaft will result in failure. The weight of the garage door transfers through the hinge and onto the shaft. The weight plus the side-to-side friction and force of motion on the roller shaft will push the plastic cover off like a tube.
It has been discovered that a significant improvement is to have threads or grooves or a valley on the roller shaft to facilitate an extra grip for the injection molded plastic to grab onto. A gripping joint to allow injection molded plastic to penetrate and wrap around the roller shaft will significantly reduce the noise of the garage door as it moves up and down. With the plastic embedded in and around the steel shaft of the roller, there is very reduced possibility for it to become loose or dislodged from the roller shaft. This provides a permanent lock and bond to the roller shaft. It also results in a long lasting achievable noise reducing assembly to enable the rollers to roll up and down within their tracks and reduce the noise by eliminating a metal-to-metal contact between the shaft of the roller and the tube of the hinge which attaches the assembly to the garage door.
Subsequent to the filing of the parent application, the present inventor also discovered that when the roller (also called roller wheel) is covered with a 50 to 90 durometer soft urethane plastic, the noise of the roller as it rolls on the garage door track is significantly reduced from the noise created by prior art rollers. Prior art rollers are made from a hard plastic wheel or can also be made from a steel wheel. They can also be made with a thin hard plastic cover.
Defined in detail, the present invention is a roller wheel connected to a roller shaft covered with a plastic tube being a portion of a hinge affixed to a garage door, the roller wheel adapted to roll within a track of a garage door, the roller wheel comprising: (a) seven ball bearings and a collar retained in a circumferential cylindrical middle cover seal and the circumferential cylindrical middle cover seal covered with a steel cover, the steel cover covered with 50-90 durometer soft urethane plastic, and (b) said collar retaining said roller shaft covered with a plastic tube; (c) whereby, said 50-90 durometer soft urethane plastic serves to reduce noise created when the roller wheel rolls within said track of said garage door.
Defined more broadly, the present invention is a roller wheel connected to a roller shaft being a portion of a hinge affixed to a garage door, the roller wheel adapted to roll within a track of a garage door, the roller wheel comprising: (a) at least one ball bearing and a collar retained in a circumferential cylindrical middle cover seal and the circumferential cylindrical middle cover seal covered with a steel cover, the steel cover covered with 50-90 durometer soft urethane plastic, and (b) said collar retaining said roller shaft.
Defined most broadly, the present invention is a roller wheel adapted to roll within a track of a garage door, the roller wheel comprising: a ball bearings retaining collar retained in a circumferential cylindrical middle cover seal and the circumferential cylindrical middle cover seal covered with a steel cover, the steel cover covered with 50-90 durometer soft urethane plastic.
Further novel features and other objects of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, discussion and the appended claims, taken in conjunction with the drawings.
Referring particularly to the drawings for the purpose of illustration only and not limitation, there is illustrated:
Although specific embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the drawings, it should be understood that such embodiments are by way of example only and merely illustrative of but a small number of the many possible specific embodiments which can represent applications of the principles of the present invention. Various changes and modifications obvious to one skilled in the art to which the present invention pertains are deemed to be within the spirit, scope and contemplation of the present invention as further defined in the appended claims.
The present invention addresses the following problem with noise created when a garage door is moving up or down. The problem is not the roller wheel itself because that is not where the noise comes from (this analysis has been revised in this CIP application). The noise comes from the steel shaft of the roller that slides into the hinge and fixtures (top and bottom door brackets) of the garage door. The steel garage door hinges and fixtures have a tube or round bracket that retains the roller's shaft. This allows the roller to be retained and allows the shaft to move freely side to side. As the garage door rolls up and down, the rollers move freely and the space in between the tube and roller shaft causes a rattle because of the metal-to-metal contact. This is why the door sounds shaky and noisy when it is in motion. Greasing or lubricating the rollers will not fix the problem of the rattling sound. Even installing the quietest belt drive garage door opener with the quietest hinges and best precision 13-ball rollers will not guarantee that the door will be rattle-free in operation.
The present invention is a roller with a Delrin plastic injection to coat the steel shaft wherein the plastic coated shaft eliminates the metal-to-metal contact that creates the noise. The new and improved Delrin plastic coated shaft will be 1 mm larger than industry standard shafts because 10-11 mm industry standard shafts are too loose in the hinge barrels which allows the rattling. This improved roller shaft is 12 mm at finished thickness to reduce the extra space. Closing the gap between the roller shaft and hinge barrel will eliminate the metal-to-metal contact resulting in a very quiet, rolling garage door. By keeping the finished thickness at 12 mm on the new shaft, the roller will still work on new and old garage door hinges and fixtures. This makes the new and improved roller shaft a truly universal product that will work on 90% of garage doors.
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The plastic tube 40 covering the roller shaft 30 eliminates metal to metal contact between the roller shaft 30 and the metal brackets 330 and 370 and metal hinge plates 340 and 380 to thereby significantly reduce the noise between the roller shaft 30 and the metal portions of the hinge brackets and hinge plates of the hinge as the garage door is moved upward and downwards.
The roller shaft can be covered with a plastic tube such as 40 or 40A and retained on the roller shaft 30 by retaining members such as treads, threads, screw threads, detents or other locking members. The roller shaft can also be coated with plastic and also the plastic can be heat formed or molded onto the roller shaft 30. The plastic covering also creates a tight press fit with the openings 310, 320, 350 and 360 with the hinge brackets 340 and 380 to further reduce noise and assure that the plastic shaft will not roll or fall out of the hinge brackets 340 and 380. The plastic coating on the roller shaft causing the plastic to abut against the openings 310, 320, 350 and 360 and therefore, the rattling noise of metal-to-metal contact known in the prior art is eliminated so that there is a much quieter action of the garage door roller as it rolls up and down the garage door track.
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Other components of the present invention roller wheel 100BB include a collar 20 along with ball bearings retained in the ball bearing circumferential middle cover seal. The collar retains a metal roller shaft 30 covered by a plastic tube, tube 40 incorporated as part of a garage door hinge as discussed above and illustrated in
The roller wheel 10BBB includes seven (7) ball bearings 12BBB, 14BBB, 16BBB, 18BBBB, 20BBBB, 22BBB, and 24BBB in a ball bearing circumferential cylindrical middle cover seal 30BBB also retaining collar 20. A steel cover 50BBB encircles the ball bearing circumferential cylindrical middle cover seal 30BBB. The present invention 50-90 durometer soft urethane plastic 70BBB covers the steel cover 50BBB and provides the significant noise reduction from the noise created by the roller wheel rolling inside the garage door track. The seven ball bearings also improve the rolling movement of the roller wheel 10BBB inside the garage door track. It is also within the spirit and scope of the present invention for there to be any number of ball bearings which is at least one or any multiplicity of ball bearings from 2 to 20 retained inn the ball bearing circumferential middle cover seal. bearings. The improved roller wheel 10BBB and the other invention components operate the same way as discussed in
It will be appreciated that the hinge 100 includes a collar 20 retaining a respective end of the roller shaft 30 (the roller shaft covered by the plastic tube 40). Each collar is retained by a roller wheel, either 10 or 10BBB as previously described.
Of course the present invention is not intended to be restricted to any particular form or arrangement, or any specific embodiment, or any specific use, disclosed herein, since the same may be modified in various particulars or relations without departing from the spirit or scope of the claimed invention hereinabove shown and described of which the apparatus or method shown is intended only for illustration and disclosure of an operative embodiment and not to show all of the various forms or modifications in which this invention might be embodied or operated.
This patent application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 14/827,259 filed on Aug. 14, 2015, now pending.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180002962 A1 | Jan 2018 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14827259 | Aug 2015 | US |
Child | 15338410 | US |