This invention relates to a hoist mechanism intended primarily, but not only, for use when a disabled person's manual or motor driven wheelchair or scooter is to be loaded into, or unloaded from, the load carrying space of an estate type vehicle or people carrier for example.
Motor driven wheelchairs and scooters are much too heavy to be lifted manually, and frequently need to be loaded into, or unloaded from, the vehicle in which they are transported. Manually operated wheelchairs are of much lesser weight but may be more than an elderly or unfit person can lift with ease into, or from, a motor vehicle. It is, therefore, vitally important that such a hoist mechanism is completely reliable and easy to use. It is also advantageous if any necessary adjustments to such a hoist mechanism, when transferring it for use to another suitable vehicle, are able to be made relatively easily.
The kind of hoist with which the invention is concerned includes an upstanding pivot post which is to be secured within and to one side of the load carrying space of a vehicle, and a lifting arm pivotally connected at a lower end of said pivot post, an actuator member being, at one end, pivotally connected at or near the upper end of said pivot post and at its other end pivotally connected to an intermediate point along the length of the lifting arm, the arrangement being such that, in use, as the working length of the actuator is reduced the lifting arm is raised, and as the working length of the actuator is increased the lifting arm is lowered.
According to the invention, there is provided a hoist mechanism of the kind referred to in which, when the lifting arm is in a fully raised position, a projecting upper end section of a major length of said arm extends substantially horizontally, and the effective length of said projecting upper end section is made variable by the provision of an extension element adjustably fixed to it, and in which also the lifting arm is variable in upstanding height by the provision of lower end section slidably connected to said major part, both length variations being made by stepless adjustments. The major part of the lifting arm may be formed with longitudinally extending undercut slots along its side edges, these providing the means whereby a bracket pivotally connecting the actuator to the lifting arm can be steplessly adjusted in position along the length of the major part, the undercut grooves housing clamping plates with tapped holes which can be engaged by clamping bolts extending through clearance holes in side walls of the bracket. The side walls of said bracket will preferably be formed with key elements on their inside surfaces, these engaging the longitudinally extending slots in the side walls of the major part of the lifting arm.
At least the major part of the lifting arm may be formed by a length of material having a bore of oval cross section and an external shape which at one end of the oval closely conforms to the shape of the hollow bore within it but at the other end of the oval widens and within the widened wall thickness there is formed the undercut slots previously referred to. The projecting end section of the lifting arm will preferably also be made from a length of the same material, in which case the extent by which the extension element can be caused to project beyond the outer end of the end section of the lifting arm may involve the forming of a slot on the top side of said end section near its outer end, and the fitting of a clamp within said slot to bear down on said extension element. The clamp may be formed from a short length of the material and bolts may extend through clearance holes in said clamp to be received in screw-threaded holes opening from the undersides of the undercut slots previously referred to.
According to a further aspect of the invention, a cross beam extender assembly for a hoist mechanism of the kind referred to includes a lifting bar which, at its opposite ends, is fitted with respective extension elements which are slidably adjustable within its end sections, the outermost ends of said extension elements being provided with respective clamp elements for securely fixing in place flexible lifting straps from which a wheelchair or scooter can be suspended, said outermost ends having a longitudinally extending screw-threaded holes formed in the sidewall thickness of the hollow section from which the extension element has been formed, and the lowermost edge of the cavity opening into the element, into which an end portion of a lifting strap is to be fed, being rounded, and each clamp having a body part shaped in part to match the outer cross sectional shape of the extension element, having clearance holes for bolts which are to engage the screw-threaded holes in the sidewall thickness of the extension element, and having a projecting tongue portion which is to extend into the space remaining above the lifting strap when the end portion of the latter has been entered into it, said tongue portion having a serrated underside, the serrations extending transversely of the length of said tongue portion. The serrations on the underside of the tongue portion will preferably continue in a part-circular arc so that, in use, as clamping is effected, they are spaced from the rounded edge of the lowermost part of the extension element at a distance somewhat less than the thickness of the compressed lifting strap.
The visual appearance of the assembly, and also its safe handling, will preferably be improved by forming the clamp elements with stepped portions in which the bolt heads will be at least partly located, also by rounding those portions which, in use, form the outermost ends of the crossbeam extender assembly.
The invention may be best understood by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing figures in which:
Referring now to
The pivot post is pivotally connected near its upper and lower ends to an upstanding portion of the A-frame so that, in use of the hoist, it is able to be moved pivotally about a substantially vertical axis.
A lifting arm, generally indicated 14, is shown to be pivotally connected at 16 to a bracket 18 at the lower end of the pivot post 10. The inclination of said lifting arm is controlled by an actuator 20 (in this case a double acting, electric motor operated actuator) which is, at one end 22, pivotally connected to a bracket 24 located near the upper end of the pivot post, and pivotally connected at its other end 26 to a bracket 28 located near the upper end of what is a major length 15 of the lifting arm. It will be seen that, by means of four equally spaced holes 30 in the pivot post 10, for a pair of bolts 31 by means of which it can be clamped in position, the bracket 24 can be located in any one of three positions near the upper end of said post. As will presently be explained, the other end 26 of the actuator is, in effect, pivotally connected at a selected point along the major length 15 of the lifting arm by virtue of the fact that the bracket 28 can be steplessly adjusted in position along it. In
As shown in
The major length 15 of the lifting arm and the projecting end section 32, within which the extension element 34 is located have the cross sectional shape illustrated in
The construction and form of the major length of the lifting arm lends itself ideally towards the making of two further steplessly variable adjustments to the mechanism, these being the means whereby the extent by which the extension element 34 can be caused to project beyond the outer end of the end section 32 of the lifting arm, and the manner in which adjustments of the overall height of the lifting arm can be effected, both of these adjustments being made independently of the other. In
The third stepless adjustment which can be made is an adjustment by means of which the overall length of the lifting arm 14 can be varied, this being effected by adjusting the extent by which a lowermost section 13 of the lifting arm extends downwards from the major length 15. Said lowermost section has been made from the same cross section material as the extension element 34 referred to above to be a sliding fit in said major length. The lower end of the length of material used has been formed as shown, by cutting away material on opposite sides of the oval cross section to form two side walls through which the pivotal connection indicated 16 is made. The same type of clamp arrangement illustrated in
A so-called cross beam extender assembly, generally indicated 50 in
The outermost ends of the width extension elements 54, 54 are provided with respective clamp elements, generally indicated 60,60 for securely fixing in place flexible lifting straps or webbing 62,62 from which a wheelchair or scooter can be suspended. As shown in
Each clamp element 60 is formed as shown in
As seen in
As shown most clearly in
Referring now to
The upper end of the swivel pin 78 is connected, as shown, by a cross pin 84 to a hanger 85 which is itself pinned in position, by a locating pin 86, between projecting side wall portions 88 of the lifting bar 52 (these having been formed by the removal of a lower portion at the extreme end of the bar as indicated in chain-dotted lines in
Thus there is provided a hoist construction which, by virtue of the several steplessly variable adjustments provided, can be installed in a vehicle relatively easily. Also, by the use of those adjustments, it is possible to provide the maximum amount of headroom when loading or unloading an article of relatively awkward height in a vehicle of modest size, for example when transporting a powered wheelchair or scooter in an estate type vehicle or people carrier.
The very smallest amount of headroom gained in this way may be important when fitting the mechanism into a vehicle or when re-fitting it in a slightly different vehicle. However, various modifications could be made. For example, the actuator need not necessarily be electric motor operated. If used in a commercial vehicle the actuator could well be a double acting hydraulic cylinder.
The foregoing has described a hoist mechanism. While specific embodiments of the present invention have been described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications thereto can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the foregoing description of the preferred embodiment of the invention and the best mode for practicing the invention are provided for the purpose of illustration only and not for the purpose of limitation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1117251.7 | Oct 2011 | GB | national |