This invention relates to load lifting operations with cranes. Particularly, it relates to the transfer of loads in or out of roofed spaces. ‘Roofed space’ in this disclosure refers to a situation with overhead restrictions that block direct vertical lifting or landing of the load.
Practitioners rely on various methods to transfer loads to and from roofed spaces. The safest method is using a cantilevered beam mounted on the ceiling above the roofed space, the beam extending beyond the edge. A chain block coupled to a trolley travels along the beam length and lifts the load to a sufficient before it is pulled into the roofed space. Such hoisting beams are useful for equipment transfers in and out of the specific floor and many completed buildings maintain a permanent one to assist equipment repair or replacement after commissioning. However, weight support being offset from the plumbline of the lift, load capacity is severely limited making this method expensive and time consuming for installation for use in a multitude of roofed spaces in an ongoing project.
Many options are not suitable for extremely heavy items such as building chillers, generators, and large transformers. These are usually hoisted into position on high floors before the roof is constructed. Then, if necessary, site owners engage professional crew with mobile lifting pods for repair and replacement of these items at higher floors of completed buildings. However, there are logistical and safety issues in using mobile pods.
OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) safe lifting regulations require that the load is lashed and held solidly on the platform during lifting. Typically, the crew boards the suspended pod docked at target floor to insert or remove skates for lateral shifting, and, to lash or unlash the load. Mounting the suspended pod makes the crew vulnerable to injury from falling objects, a hazard from which they have no realistic escape in an emergency. Consideration for crew access and egress also places limitations on the load size. The above factors combine to make the use of hoisting pods time a consuming process, causing heavy loads to be suspended at the target floor much longer than necessary.
In a first aspect, the invention provides a lifting rig comprising: a cradle and a load transfer device; the load transfer device is arranged to draw in a payload to the cradle or deliver a payload from the cradle; said lifting rig is arranged to be lifted to an elevated space and the load transfer device arranged to draw in or deliver the payload within the elevated space.
In a second aspect, the invention provides A method for lifting a payload to an elevated space, the method comprising the steps of: drawing in a payload to a cradle by a load transfer device mounted therein; lifting the cradle from a first level to the elevated space; delivering the payload to the elevated space by the load transfer device.
Thus, by providing a lifting rig having a cradle and a load transfer device, that is arranged to move relative to the cradle, this allows for load handling at a first level, for instance at street level, and at an elevated location. The load transfer device acts to draw in the payload to the cradle or deliver a payload from the cradle.
That elevated location may be a roofed space, with the lifting rig arranged to load or discharge a payload to the roofed space without crew mounting the rig at any time during the operation.
It will be convenient to further describe the present invention with respect to the accompanying drawings that illustrate possible arrangements of the invention. Other arrangements of the invention are possible and consequently, the particularity of the accompanying drawings is not to be understood as superseding the generality of the preceding description of the invention.
The cradle may further include mounting fixtures arranged to couple to the elevated space, and so secure and/or stead the lifting rig while suspended. The mounting fixtures may be a simple dowel arrangement for sliding into apertures at the docking zone of an elevated space. Alternatively, the mounting fixtures may include beams arranged to project into the elevated space, such that the beams are designed to resist the weight of the lifting rig. In this embodiment, the beams can then support the lifting rig momentarily should the crane inadvertently lower the lifting rig. Thus, the mounting fixtures may also act as a safety feature
It will be appreciated that in some embodiments, having two ends may allow for the payload to enter on one side (perhaps at street level) and exit on the other (at the elevated location). In an alternative arrangement, the lifting rig may have only one open end, with the payload arranged to enter and exit from the same end.
It will be appreciated that, where only one open end is present, the other end includes blocks, plates or cross beams arranged to prevent the unintended exit of the payload. It will further be appreciated that the one or both open ends include selectively removable barriers, such as block, plates or crossbeams, to secure the load during transport.
The bearings arranged to facilitate the relative movement of the platform may be in the for of slides fixed between the platform and cradle. Alternatively, the platform may be free to move without fixtures, and so constrained by the sides of the cradle. The bearings may also be in the form of a two-dimensional array of ball bearings, either mounted to the platform or to the cradle. This may allow for both forward and lateral movement of the platform, relative to the cradle. This may therefore allow for incremental positioning of the payload as it exits the lifting rig, so as to facilitate alignment. The bearing array may also allow for incremental rotation, to solve rotational alignment issues.
Besides the platform, other moving parts of this embodiment include the mounting fixtures previously described. The mounting fixtures may further include docking legs 103 and stoppers 104. The docking legs and the stoppers may be pushed up when the cradle is put down on flat ground for loading or unloading the platform. The platform may be pulled out of the cradle for loading or unloading without encumbrance. A payload is placed on the platform by either using a crane or dollies, before being lashed 105 to the platform for hoisting by crane 106 in adherence to OSHA standard practice regulations. When the cradle is hoisted the stoppers drop to act as a block to prevent the platform from moving out of position during the lifting procedure. The docking legs also drop as the cradle is hoisted. The lifting crew guides the crane to position the cradle using the docking legs to abut the wall outside the roofed space 109 while hovering the tongue 107 of the cradle above the floor. Positioning the cradle raises the block on the platform allowing the crew to pull out the load by hand or using a winch. Lashing removal is safely done on the stable ground of the roofed space rather than on the suspended or cantilevered platform as before. A chain block mounted on the ceiling above the load can be used to lift the load before the platform is pushed back into the cradle. Alternatively, the load can be dollied off the platform.
In a still further embodiment, the platform may include an articulated conveyor arranged to first project the payload into the roofed space, and then progressively deliver the payload from the platform into the space.
The inclusion of the housing insulates the platform from deformation caused to the cradle by the upward force of the crane, repeatedly acting over prolonged usage, on the cradle as the load transfers away from it and onto the roofed space. In conventional platforms, when the load transfers to the building, the pressure at the back is released causing the back part of the platform to lift up with the open side weighed down by the load—this may cause a prior art platform to bend.
For the present embodiment, the housing is pivot jointed to the cradle, and so the cradle resists the applied load without the application of a flexural load, which may otherwise bend and deform the cradle. This allows the back to lift up without damaging the cradle.
An electric motor 209 equipped with a brake is fitted to the platform and coupled to a rack and pinion based on the housing floor to drive the platform in and out of the housing. The motor brake prevents movement of the platform during hoisting. The platform has wheels 210 that support the load as the platform moves over the roofed floor. Electric power for the motor is supplied from the ground 211 from a multi directional extension attachment, such as the commercially available Deck Arrangement Tower for operations upon roofed spaces at lower reaches such as the first few floors of a building in construction or the deck of a vessel in harbour.
In the first embodiment (
In the second embodiment (
In the third embodiment (
Electrical power may come from within the building using a quick coupling and uncoupling socket. Power sockets with an extension wire 303 are provided within safe reach at both ends to couple with power source at loading and discharge points. Alternatively, power may be provided from the crane via the lifting cables. In cases where the lifting rig is large enough, the lifting rig may further include a generator so as to be power autonomous.
A telescopic boom 502 with grabs 503, such as mechanical or magnetic grabs, may be used in conjunction with a counterweight 504 to transfer the material back and forth between the cradle and the roofed floor space. Said telescopic boom may rely upon the counterweight for balancing the telescopic boom, and cradle, as the payload is moving between the elevated space and the cradle.
All embodiments of the invention can be equipped with useful technological attachments such collision sensors and measurement devices like inclinometers.
Monitoring, guidance, and communication aids can also be packaged into a crew coordination system which allows the crane operator to have audio-visual contact with the crew at the loading and discharge points, and the benefit of seeing the operations live.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10202006581R | Jul 2020 | SG | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/SG2021/050401 | 7/8/2021 | WO |