The present invention relates to a method for controlling a crane, the method comprising controlling a rope part connected to a hook of the crane with a friction-operated driving wheel, extra rope being coiled into a plurality of layers onto a storage reel, whereby two machineries are used, of which the first is intended for the driving wheel and the other for the storage reel.
In lifting devices, the hoisting rope is generally coiled onto a drum in one layer when the lifting hook is in an upper position. However, solutions are also known, wherein extra rope is coiled onto a storage reel. In these solutions, sufficient friction is accomplished by means of the driving wheel and a sheave, whereby only a slight force, generated by means of a spiral spring, for example, is required for tightening the rope on the storage wheel. One solution is to coil the rope directly into a plurality of layers onto the driving drum.
However, particularly at extreme lifting heights, the rope drum becomes long if the rope is in one layer. This being so, a large space is required for the drum, and strong structures are required strength-theoretically. The length of the drum also makes the rope wander depending on the height of the hook. In drum solutions, the rope angle becomes large, shortening the operating life of the rope. A rope angle refers to the angle of departure from the driving wheel or the drum. Using a storage reel in the above described manner results in a large torque in the driving wheel machinery. However, managing the storage reel requires some kind of device for adjusting the tightness of the rope. A spiral spring causes difficulties if the lifting height is large. A lifting device coiling directly onto the drum into a plurality of layers also requires a large torque. Furthermore, the operating life of the rope is poor, since the rope is wound onto the reel with a high force.
An object of the present invention is to eliminate the above-described drawbacks. This object is achieved by the method of the invention, characterized by controlling one of the machineries with a speed instruction and the other machinery with a torque instruction.
The invention is based on the use of two machineries. The machinery comprises an electric motor and generally a gear. A gearless solution is also feasible. One of the machineries drives a friction-operated driving wheel and the second machinery drives a storage reel that coils into a plurality of layers. The machinery controlling the driving wheel is preferably adjusted with the speed instruction and the machinery of the storage reel is controlled with the torque instruction. The speed instruction is supplied by the user of the lifting device or the computer controlling the operation. The speed instruction controls the speed of the lifting hook.
The method of the present invention provides the storage reel with an efficient mechanism for adjusting the tightness of the rope and, at the same time, a smaller torque of the friction-operated driving wheel is accomplished than in the prior art. A compact and strength-theoretically preferable structure is also accomplished. The rope angle is avoided, and thus the operating life of the rope improves. The position of the rope does not either wander in the device of the invention as a function of the lifting height. In the invention, the operating life of the rope is lengthened by the smaller tension force of the rope on the storage reel than in a lifting device winding directly onto the reel.
In a preferred embodiment of the method of the invention, the torque instruction of the storage reel is changed when transferring from one layer of the rope to another such that the force in the rope portion between the storage reel and the friction driving wheel remains constant. Furthermore, the force of the rope between the friction driving wheel and the storage reel is kept at half the value of that in the rope portion going from the friction driving wheel to the hook. However, a different kind of relationship can also be used. The torque changes when the rope changes layers on the storage reel. If a shift to an additional layer is made, then the torque has to increase, and if the layer decreases, then the torque decreases. In order to manage the change point of the rope layer, a table including the change point of the layer as a function of location has to be stored in a memory of the computer controlling the machineries. This information is easiest to obtain by a teaching run. The teaching run is carried out in connection with the implementation of the apparatus.
In another alternative embodiment of the method of the invention, the storage reel is controlled with the speed instruction and the driving wheel with the torque instruction. This being so, the controlling computer includes a table for changing the speed of rotation of the storage reel as a function of the length of the rope such that the speed of the hook stays in the magnitude of the speed instruction given.
Preferred embodiments of the device of the invention are disclosed in the accompanying claims 2 to 9.
In the following, the invention will be described in more detail in connection with a crane preferably used in the method of the invention with reference to the accompanying figures, in which
The operating strategy is made such that the force in the rope portion 12 between the friction driving wheel 3 and the storage reel 4 is in a determined relationship to the force of the rope 13 between the friction driving wheel 3 and the hook. This relationship is one half, for example, but some other relationship may also be used. This is adjusted by suitably adjusting the force of the rope part 12. When it is desirable to generate a constant force in the rope going to the reel 4 that coils into a plurality of layers, then a different torque is required on the shaft of the reel 4, depending on the amount of rope on the reel 4 and, further, on the rope layer being used. This is because the radius between the shaft of the reel 4 and the rope changes as the amount of rope changes. The radius always increases when a new layer starts to be built on the reel 4. This is why a change in the torque instruction is required in the controlling computer. In order for this to succeed, the computer controlling the device has to know when the turn of the rope being coiled onto the reel 4 changes. To get this information, a teaching program is used in the computer. The teaching run is carried out at a constant speed of the machinery 2. In this case, the machinery 1 drives with a small torque instruction. This being so, the crane drives at a constant speed, controlled by the computer 11, from one end of a lifting movement to the other. In this case, the speed of the machinery 1 always changes when the rope starts to be coiled onto a new layer. The computer 11 monitors the location and the speed by means of the sensors 14 and 15 on the shafts of the machineries. The detection point of the change is stored in the memory of the computer. This results in a table by means of which the torque changes required by the storage reel 4 can be managed in normal operation. In normal drive, this layer information is used to change the torque of the machinery 2 in a manner keeping the rope force constant. The rope part 13 connected to the hook of the crane is controlled with a friction-operated driving wheel, and extra rope is coiled into a plurality of layers onto the storage reel 4.
In
It is to be understood that the foregoing description and the thereto-related figures are only intended to illustrate the present invention. Different variations and modifications of the invention will be evident to a person skilled in the art without deviating from the scope of protection and the spirit of the invention disclosed in the enclosed claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20075584 | Aug 2007 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI08/50471 | 8/21/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/23/2010 |