The present invention relates to a lifting hook provided with a line guiding means. The lifting hook is carryable and is adapted to be attached to a support member manually by an operator using a guideline.
In some industries, especially such industries that handles heavy items, the items may have to be lifted or moved. Often, an overhead crane or a bridge crane arranged in the building can be used. Sometimes, a portable crane may be used, but in confined spaces, a portable crane may not be possible to use. In these cases, an overhead support structure in the form of a rod or a lifting hook may be mounted to e.g. the ceiling of the location, by which the heavy item can be lifted by the use of a lifting aid, e.g. a block and tackle, a rope and pulley system or a hoist.
However, to be able to handle a heavy weight, the lifting aid itself must be relatively strong and thus heavy. With the support member mounted overhead, often several meters above ground, it may be difficult to attach the upper end of the lifting aid to the support member. The lifting aid may e.g. comprise a hook that has to be hung on the support member or through a lifting eye. The hook and a corresponding chain or wire may be too heavy to lift into place by an operator, especially if the operator have to climb a ladder to reach the support member.
JP 4865927 B1 discloses a removable coupling device that is attached to a lifting hook when the lifting hook is to be attached to a metal fitting of some kind. When the hook is attached, the removable coupling device is detached from the lifting hook by pulling a second wire. The shown solution works well for attaching the lifting hook, but can not be used if the lifting hook is to be removed again. There is further a risk that the coupling device may detach during the attachment of the lifting hook, which may cause injuries.
JP 2016013073 A discloses a tow hook for e.g. fallen trees, where a guide rope is arranged around the tree and where the tow hook is threaded through a ring of the guide rope. A guideline is loosely attached to a fixed support hook on the tow hook. This solution may work for smaller tow hooks, but there is a risk that the guideline will come loose during the operation.
There is therefore a need for a lifting hook that can manually be attached to an overhead support member by an operator in a secure way.
An object of the invention is therefore to provide a lifting hook that is adapted to be attached manually to an overhead support member by the use of a guideline. A further object is to provide a lifting hook arrangement comprising a guideline. A further object is to provide a method for manually attaching a lifting hook to an overhead support member.
The solution to the problem according to the invention is defined by the lifting hook according to claim 1, by the lifting hook arrangement according to claim 12, which contains the lifting hook according to claim 1, and by the method according to claim 13. The other claims contain advantageous embodiments and further developments of the lifting hook and the method.
In a lifting hook adapted to be attached to a support member remotely and manually by an operator, where the lifting hook comprises a hook eye and a hook, where the hook comprises a body and a tip having a tip end, the object of the invention is achieved in that the lifting hook comprises a line guiding means permanently and pivotable attached to the tip, where the line guiding means is arranged to support or hold a guideline.
By this first embodiment of the lifting hook according to the invention, a lifting hook that is easy and safe to attach to a remote support member is provided. The lifting hook can be used when a lifting hook has to be attached to e.g. a support eye mounted out of reach of an operator. The support member may be a lifting eye, a rod mounted to a structure, a part of a lattice, a part of a framed structure or the like. The lifting hook is carryable such that it can be handled by a single operator. The term “carryable” means that the lifting hook can be carried and handled by one person. One definition of the term “carryable” may be a weight below 32 kg, which according to international regulation is the greatest weight of aircraft luggage that may be handled by the aircraft staff. The weight of the lifting hook is thus advantageously less than 32 kg, more advantageously less than 25 kg and most advantageously less than 20 kg.
The lifting hook is provided with a line guiding means permanently and pivotable attached to the tip of the lifting hook. The line guiding means is attached to the tip such that it extends outside of the contact surface of the tip end. In this way, the line guiding means will constitute a bearing surface for the tip end when the hook is attached to a support member. During the attachment of the hook to the support member, the line guiding means will glide on the surface of the support member, and since the line guiding means extends outside of the contact surface of the tip end, the tip end will not catch or snag the support member during the attachment. A guideline is either attached to the line guiding means or is support by the line guiding means, such that the lifting hook can be pulled towards and over the support member by the guideline.
The invention will be described in greater detail in the following, with reference to the embodiments that are shown in the attached drawings, in which
The embodiments of the invention with further developments described in the following are to be regarded only as examples and are in no way to limit the scope of the protection provided by the patent claims.
A lifting hook 1 according to the invention is provided with a line guiding means 10 arranged at the tip 5 of the lifting hook. The line guiding means is adapted to hold a guide line that is to be used when attaching a lifting hook to an overhead support member, e.g. a rod or a lifting eye arranged e.g. at the ceiling of a building. The guideline is threaded over or through the support member. The guideline is a thin flexible member and can be a wire, a string, a rope, a chain or the like. By pulling the guideline, the lifting hook is moved to the support member. By attaching the line guiding means at the tip of the lifting hook such that the line guiding means extends outside of the contact surface of the tip end of the lifting hook, the tip end of the hook can be pulled over the support member such that the hook is attached to the support member. This simplifies the hanging of a lifting hook considerably. Further, the safety of the operator is enhanced, since the operator can attach the lifting hook from below, standing on the floor of the building. In this way, no heavy lifting is necessary. The lifting hook may also be attached to a structure below the user, e.g. to an underwater structure or a structure arranged at a floor below the user.
The tip end 6 of the lifting hook is in this example provided with a central slit 17 such that two tip end arms are created. The slit 17 is parallel with the centre plane 22 of the lifting hook. A hole 16 is provided through the two tip end arms, perpendicular to the slit 17. A pin 18 is inserted through the hole 16. A line guiding means 10 in the form of a carbine hook 19 or safety hook is arranged in the slit and is suspended by the pin. In this way, the carbine hook is permanently and pivotable attached to the tip. The line guiding means extends outside of the contact surface 23 of the tip end 6. The contact surface plane 24 of the contact surface 23 is perpendicular to the centre plane 22 of the lifting hook. In this example, the carbine hook is provided with a locking member 25 such that a guideline can be securely attached to the line guiding means. A guideline 103 can be attached to the carbine hook or can be routed through the carbine hook.
The line guiding means is used when the lifting hook is to be attached to a support member of some sort, e.g. arranged overhead of the operator. In order to allow the tip end of the hook to pass over the support member without catching or getting stuck on the support member, it is important that the line guiding means extends outside of the contact surface of the tip end, such that the line guiding means will glide against the support member during the attachment of the lifting hook on the support member. The tip end will at the same moment not contact the support member. When a carbine hook is used as a line guiding means, the carbine hook will act as an extension of the guideline and will further act as a small lever that helps the tip end of the hook over the support member.
In
The purpose of attaching a lifting hook to a support member is to be able to lift an item by the lifting hook. A chain or wire of some type (not shown) is thus attached to the hook eye 2 of the lifting hook before the lifting hook is attached to the support member. In one example, the lifting hook is used to attach a lifting hook that is used to assemble the wires for an elevator to the upper elevator support. In this case, a wire pulley with an additional guideline is attached to the hook eye of the lifting hook. With the lifting hook in place, the guideline of the wire pulley is used to pull the elevator wires to the upper elevator support. The upper elevator support may be positioned e.g. 4-6 meters above the upper landing platform for the elevator, and with an angle to the landing platform. By threading a guideline through the upper elevator support and attaching a lifting hook to the upper support, the installation of an elevator is simplified considerably. The installation can thus be made both quicker and safer.
The guideline may be threaded over the support member or through a lifting eye with some kind of threading tool, or an operator may thread the guideline through the lifting eye standing on a ladder. In one example, the guideline is threaded through or over the support member with a boat hook from Hook&Moor. In this way, the guideline can be threaded through a lifting eye by an operator standing on the floor.
When the guideline is threaded through the lifting eye, the operator pulls the guideline such that the lifting hook comes closer to the lifting eye, as shown in
The lifting hook may also be used to attach a lifting hook on other support members, such as to insert a lifting hook in a submarine foundation eye. In this case, the lifting hook may be used to anchor a vessel or the like. The foundation eye may e.g. be positioned a few meters below the waterline, and a normal manner to attach the lifting hook to the foundation eye would be to use a diver to attach the lifting hook. With the inventive lifting hook, a guideline can be threaded through the foundation eye and the lifting hook can be attached to the foundation eye by pulling the guideline. This simplifies the attachment of lifting hooks to support members positioned below the operator.
The invention is not to be regarded as being limited to the embodiments described above, a number of additional variants and modifications being possible within the scope of the subsequent patent claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2150455-0 | Apr 2021 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/SE2022/050330 | 4/1/2022 | WO |