Claims
- 1. A safety system for a load-carrying hoist comprising:
- a primary drive train including an input motor means, said primary drive train having a first high-speed load-carrying element, a drum operatively connected to an output end of said primary drive train, a last low-speed load-carrying element operatively associated with said drum, an operating brake operatively associated with the motor to hold the load when the motor is de-energized, and an emergency brake operatively coupled to the drum;
- a mechanical out-of-sync detector;
- brake-applying means responsive to an output from the out-of-sync detector for applying said brake;
- said detector including a mechanical differential assembly having a first input element drivingly coupled to the first high-speed load-supporting element, a second input element drivingly coupled to the last low-speed load-supporting element of the hoist, an out-of-sync detection output element, differential means coupled to said first and second input elements and operable upon relative angular velocity differences between said input elements to rotate said output element due to an out-of-sync condition, including means for restricting movement of said input elements when attempted to be driven by said differential means, whereby neither input element is back-driven by said differential means and thus the output element is caused to rotate during differential angular velocities between said input elements; and
- means operatively coupling the detector output element to said brake-applying means for applying the brake in said out-of-sync condition.
- 2. The system of claim 1, said brake-applying means including force-applying means for tightening the brake, and the rotational output of said output element caused by said differential angular velocities of said input elements providing the force for moving said force-applying means for tightening the brake.
- 3. The safety system of claim 1 wherein said differential means includes a differential gear drivingly coupled to the input and output elements for rotating the output element when the input elements have a relative change in velocity.
- 4. The safety system of claim 1, said means for restricting movement of said input elements including said first and second input elements having shafts each having external and internal shaft sections each joined by a unidirectional drive clutch which transmits rotation into the differential means but does not transmit rotation if driven from the differential means, said internal shaft sections being coupled to said differential means and each said unidirectional drive clutch being operative to transfer rotational drive inputs from said external shaft sections but preventing rotation of said internal shaft sections when internal shaft sections attempt to drive said external shaft sections.
- 5. The system of claim 1, said gear reduction unit including torque-limiting transfer means operable to allow slippage to limit torque applied between the motor and the drum for dissipating kinetic energy of the motor and primary drive train in case of a hazard condition of the type precluding upward movement of the load, and wherein said slippage causes a normal minor relative angular velocity difference between said first and second input elements to rotate said differential means output element.
- 6. The system of claim 5, said first and second input elements having said normal minor and hazard abnormal major relative angular velocity differences and including nulling means for maintaining the output element in an in-sync condition to compensate for said minor relative angular velocity differences between said input elements.
- 7. The system of claim 6, said output element including a shaft having inner and outer ends, said nulling means including a disconnect clutch on said output element operable to disconnect the output shaft outer end from said output shaft inner end, means for centering said outer end of said output shaft when disconnected from said inner end, and means responsive to rotation of said drum for periodically disconnecting said clutch.
- 8. The system of claim 1, further including an overspeed detection clutch for disconnecting one of said input elements during an excessive threshold overspeed condition to initiate said relative angular velocity difference between said first and second input elements.
- 9. The safety system of claim 8, further including load magnitude responsive means to correlate load magnitude to motor speed for varying the threshold excessive overspeed condition dependent upon load magnitude.
- 10. The safety system of claim 9, said load magnitude correlation means including an adjustable speed governor on said overspeed detection clutch, and load magnitude-sensing means coupled to said load and said adjustable speed governor for adjusting the governor movement with load magnitude.
- 11. The system of claim 1, further including an electrically activated driving clutch operable when electrically de-energized to disconnect an input element from its respective motor or drum to initiate said relative angular velocity differential between said first and second input elements.
- 12. The system of claim 1, said brake-applying means including a high-force, brake-setting spring and a low-force anchor releasibly holding said spring in a cocked condition, means responsive to a hazard condition for moving said low-force anchor to release said high-force spring for setting said emergency brake, and means for restoring said spring and low-force anchor to their initial cocked condition and releasing said emergency brake.
- 13. A safety system in a hoist having a reversible electric input motor, a primary drive train including a gear reduction unit drivingly connected to the input motor, a drum drivingly connected to the gear reduction unit, and an emergency brake operatively coupled to the drum, comprising:
- a mechanical out-of-sync detector having an output member and first and second input members, means coupling the first input member to the primary drive train, and means coupling the second input member to the drum, said reversible input motor causing each of said input members to rotate multidirectionally and simultaneously in all normal raising and lowering operating modes of said hoist, said output member moving upon an out-of-sync condition between said input members; and
- a spring-set brake including spring means for setting the brake, mechanical trigger means for holding the brake against the brake-setting force of the spring means and releasing the spring means for setting the brake responsive to said motion of the output member, and mechanical link means coupled to the output member so that upon said movement of the output member of the detector, the motion is transmitted via the mechanical link means to release the trigger means and allow the spring to set the brake.
- 14. The safety system of claim 13 wherein the detector is a differential assembly that includes first input shaft means coupled through a drag clutch to the motor of the hoist system and second input shaft means coupled through a drag clutch to the drum shaft of the hoist device, and wherein there is a differential gear set coupled to both of said input shaft means between the drag clutches thereon and having an output shaft coupled to the differential gear set wherein a difference between the relative velocities or directions of the respected input shaft means will produce movement of the output shaft, and means coupling the output shaft to the brake actuator for converting this movement to a force for applying the brake.
- 15. The safety system of claim 14 wherein said drag clutches each include a one-way clutch, with the first and second shaft means into the differential assembly each having respective external and internal sections, the one-way clutches allowing driving rotation between the external and internal sections when the external sections are driving but preventing rotation of the internal sections when one of the internal sections tries to drive an external section, thereby causing a relative angular velocity change in the input shaft means and a resultant movement of the output shaft.
- 16. A safety system in a hoist having a primary drive train comprising an input motor on the high-speed end of the primary drive train and a gear reduction unit drivingly connected to the motor, a drum drivingly connected to the gear reduction unit, a normal operating brake, and an emergency brake operatively coupled to the drum, comprising:
- a mechanical out-of-sync detector;
- said normal operating brake being located on the high-speed end of the primary drive train, said detector including a mechanical differential assembly having a first input element operatively coupled to said motor, a second input element drivingly coupled to said drum, an overspeed release clutch, which disconnects when rotated above a predetermined rotational speed, drivingly connected between one of said input elements and its respective motor or drum, an output element, differential means coupled to said first and second input elements and operable upon relative angular velocity changes between said input elements, including a relative velocity change caused by disconnection of the overspeed release clutch, to rotate said output element in an out-of-sync condition; and
- brake-applying means responsive to said detector for applying only said emergency brake.
- 17. The safety system of claim 16, in which each of the input elements includes an input shaft which has an external and an internal section coupled by a one-way clutch, said one-way clutches each being positioned such that the external input shaft section can drive the internal section but an internal section cannot drive an external section, whereby a rotational input from one of the first or second input shafts while the other is stopped will immediately result in said differential means producing rotation of the output element to set the brake.
- 18. The safety system of claim 16, in which the detecting means and brake-applying means are coupled to the output element such that the detecting means provides the force for directly setting the brake.
- 19. A safety system in a hoist having an input motor, a primary drive train unit drivingly connected to the motor, a drum drivingly connected to the primary drive train unit, a normal operating brake and an emergency brake on an operating element drivingly coupled to the drum, comprising:
- a mechanical out-of-sync detector;
- brake-applying means responsive to an output from the out-of-sync detector for applying said emergency brake;
- said detector including a mechanical differential assembly having a first input element drivingly coupled to said motor, a second input element drivingly coupled to said drum, an output shaft, differential means coupled to said first and second input elements and operable upon relative angular velocity differences in either rotational direction between said input elements to rotate said output element in an out-of-sync condition;
- said primary drive train including torque-limiting transfer means operable to allow major slippage to limit torque applied between the motor and the drum for dissipating kinetic energy of the motor and primary drive train in case of a hazard condition of the type precluding upward movement of the load but causing minor slippage during normal operation, and wherein said major and minor slippage causes a relative major and minor change in angular velocity of said first and second input elements to rotate said differential output element;
- including nulling means for maintaining the output element in an in-sync condition to compensate for such minor relative angular velocity differences between said input elements; and
- said brake-applying means being responsive to such output element rotation for applying the brake in said out-of-sync condition, said brake-applying means including a high-force spring held in a cocked condition and, when released, capable of applying a high braking force, a trigger mechanism holding said spring in said cocked condition, a low-force trigger release mechanism for holding said trigger in said cocking condition, and means for releasing said low-force trigger release mechanism to release said trigger mechanism to thereby release said spring to set the brake, and reset means for resetting the low-force trigger release mechanism and triggering mechanism to recock said spring and thus reset said brake.
- 20. The system of claim 19, said trigger release mechanism including a solenoid, a carrier for holding the trigger mechanism against the spring and a high-force motiontransmitting device for linearly translating said triggering mechanism to cock said spring.
- 21. A safety system for a hoist of the type having an input motor, a primary drive train, a drum, and a brake coupled to the drum or to an element drivingly coupled to the drum, comprising:
- said primary drive train including an input motor means, said primary drive train having a first high-speed load-carrying element, a drum operatively connected to an output end of said primary drive train, a last low-speed load-carrying element operatively associated with said drum, an operating brake operatively associated with the motor to hold the load when the motor is de-energized, and an emergency brake operatively coupled to the drum;
- means for detecting a hazard condition, such as an operating brake failure, including first and second input elements drivingly coupled to the first high-speed and last low-speed load-carrying elements of the hoist, an output element that moves when a differential rotation occurs between said input elements, an electric clutch which, when electrically energized, drivingly couples one of said input elements with its respective load-carrying element and being inoperative upon being electrically de-energized to decouple the input element from its respective load-carrying element; and
- brake-applying means for applying the brake responsive to motion of said output element of said detecting means when said electric clutch is de-energized and said operating brake fails.
- 22. The system of claim 21, emergency brake-applying means including a large force spring, which, when released, will set the emergency brake, low-force triggering means for holding the large-force spring in cocked condition, and low-force trigger release means for releasibly holding the trigger means, whereby a low force can cause release of the high-force spring to set the emergency brake, said low-force trigger release means including a trigger reset mechanism operable to engage the trigger means for holding the spring and recocking the large-force spring.
- 23. The system of claim 21, said low-force trigger release means including a solenoid release wherein actuation of the solenoid moves the trigger release to release the trigger means and releases the large-force spring.
- 24. The system of claim 23, said low-force trigger release means including a trigger reset mechanism operable to engage the trigger means for holding the large-force spring and recocking the large-force spring.
- 25. The system of claim 21, said primary drive train including torque-limiting transfer means automatically operable to allow major slippage in the event of excessive torque between the motor and the drum for dissipating the kinetic energy of the motor and primary drive train in case of a hazard condition of the type precluding upward movement of the load, said torque-limiting transfer means causing minor slippage during normal operating conditions, and wherein either slippage causes a relative differential angular velocity of said first and second input elements to rotate said differential output element, and including nulling means for maintaining the output element in an in-sync condition by compensating for said minor relative angular velocity differences between said input elements but allowing the output element to respond to said major slippage.
- 26. The safety system of claim 13 wherein the emergency brake is a band brake having fixed and movable ends and said mechanical link means is coupled directly to the movable end of the band brake for setting the brake.
- 27. The safety system of claim 13 wherein the emergency brake is spring applied and held unset by a trigger mechanism and wherein said mechanical link means is coupled to said trigger mechanism for releasing the trigger to apply the brake.
- 28. The safety system of claim 16, said overspeed release clutch being located between the first input element and the motor.
- 29. A safety system in a load-carrying hoist in which there is defined a last upstream load-carrying component and a last downstream load-carrying component and in input motor with a motor shaft, a power transmission main drive operatively coupled to the motor, an operating brake operatively associated with the motor to hold the load when the motor is de-energized, a drum and an emergency safety brake drivingly coupled to an operating element closely associated with this drum but independent of the main drive so as to provide emergency holding of the load in the event of a main drive failure, a safety brake actuator responsive to an output from an out-of-sync detector for applying said safety brake,
- a mechanical out-of-sync detector, said detector including a monitoring secondary drive train having a first input shaft drivingly coupled to the last upstream load-carrying component, a second input shaft drivingly coupled to the last downstream load-carrying component, means for detecting a predetermined variation in relative speed or direction between said two input shafts and producing an emergency brake-setting rotation output to set said emergency safety brake,
- said power transmission main drive having minor slippage producing an accumulative error between the relative rotations of the last upstream and last downstream load-carrying components, and error compensating means for compensating for such relative rotation accumulative error so that an emergency brake-setting rotation output does not occur from said accumulative error.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 205,009, filed Nov. 7, 1980, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (7)
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
205009 |
Nov 1980 |
|