Claims
- 1. An elevator comprising:
- a car;
- a hydraulic actuator having a piston that is extended and retracted to raise and lower the car;
- a position sensor for providing a position signal that manifests the velocity and position of the car;
- a hydraulic fluid tank;
- a hydraulic fluid pump;
- a hydraulic valve for regulating the flow of fluid between the pump and the actuator to raise the car and between the actuator and the tank to lower the car;
- processing means for controlling the operation of the hydraulic valve and the pump in response to hall and car calls and the position signal;
- the elevator being characterized in that:
- the valve comprises a single flow control valve that is movable in a first direction to increase flow from the pump to the actuator and simultaneously equally decrease a flow bypassed from the pump to the tank to control the ascent velocity of the car when the pump is on and that is movable in an opposite second direction when the pump is off, to decrease the flow from the actuator to the tank to control the descent velocity of the car, and means for providing a control signal that manifests that the pump out pressure applied to the car has exceeded the pressure required to hold the car in place;
- an electrical actuator that is connected to the single control valve and that responds to a speed signal by moving the valve in the first direction when the speed signal is one polarity and in a second direction opposite the first direction when the speed signal is of the opposite polarity;
- the processing means comprises means for providing the speed signal at a first magnitude after the pump is activated and then in a succession of different magnitudes that define, over time, the car velocity profile in response to the control signal.
- 2. An elevator according to claim 1, characterized in that:
- the electrical actuator comprises a stepper motor;
- the processing means comprises means for providing the speed signal at said first polarity according to a first sequence in which it has first frequency, then a first succession of higher frequencies, each for a fixed time interval initiated in response to the check valve signal until a preselected maximum frequency is reached for then maintaining the speed signal at that maximum frequency for a predetermined number of steps for then providing the speed signal at successive frequencies in a second sequence in which the frequencies are the same as the first sequence and decrease from the maximum to the first frequency, the duration of the speed signal at each frequency in the second sequence being said predetermined time interval.
- 3. An elevator according to claim 2, characterized in that:
- the means for providing the control signal comprises a check valve in line with the actuator and a switch that is operated by the check valve when the check valve opens for flow to the actuator, the switch providing a check valve signal when the check valve operates.
- 4. An elevator according to claim 2, characterized in that:
- the processing means comprises means for providing, while the pump is on, the speed signal at said second polarity at a plurality of successively higher frequencies after the motor has been turned off following car deceleration, the speed signal at said second polarity being provided at the highest of those frequencies until the car is at floor level.
- 5. An elevator according to any one of claims 1-4, characterized in that:
- the processing means comprises means for providing the speed signal in a sequence that defines the car velocity when the car is lowered by providing the speed signal at a first rate of change for a fixed sampling interval of time and thereafter providing the speed signal at different rates, each for the same time intervals, those rates being the product of a preset rate and an adjustment signal, and for providing said adjustment signal by comparing the car velocity manifested by the position signal with a velocity reference signal during the sampling interval, said adjustment signal representing the ratio between the car velocity and the reference velocity.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 799,666, filed Nov. 18, 1985 now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
3977497 |
McMurray |
Oct 1976 |
|
4249641 |
Takenoshita et al. |
Feb 1981 |
|
4311212 |
Simpson |
Jan 1982 |
|
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
799666 |
Nov 1985 |
|