The present application relates generally to movable barrier operators and, more particularly, to movable barrier operators that utilize flexible driven members to move associated movable barriers.
Movable barrier operators may be used to control access to areas by moving movable barriers between different positions. Various types of movable barriers can be moved in such a fashion, including vertically moving barriers such as single piece and segmented barriers as well as horizontally moving barriers such as sliding and swinging gates.
A movable barrier operator may have a motive source, such as a motor system, to produce movement of a movable barrier. More particularly, the motor system may have a wheel, pulley, or sprocket that engages a flexible driven member connected to the movable barrier and moves the driven member to adjust the position of the movable barrier. In one approach, the driven member is a long chain and the motor system has a drive gear that engages the chain. The chain is connected to the movable barrier such that rotating the drive gear moves the chain and the attached movable barrier. The movable barrier operator controls the rotation of the drive gear to move the movable barrier between a full-open position and a full-closed position. In a second approach the driven member is a belt and the motor system has a drive pulley that engages the belt. The belt is connected to the movable barrier such that rotating the drive pulley moves the belt and the attached movable barrier. As with the first approach, the movable barrier operator controls the rotation of the drive pulley to move the movable barrier between a full-open position and a full-closed position.
One shortcoming to using a flexible driven member is that when the movable barrier is at either the full-open or the full-closed position, there will be a long segment of the flexible driven member that sags downwardly due to the effect of gravity on the driven member. The appearance of the long sagging segment of the flexible driven member may be visually unappealing for certain applications. Also, the appearance of the flexible driven member sagging may be considered a sign of an improper installation. In this instance, an installer may be tempted to over-tighten the flexible driven member in order to reduce sag, which may cause undo wear on the system.
Further, the flexible drive member may gradually stretch over time such that an acceptable amount of sag at installation may increase and eventually become unacceptable to the owner of the movable barrier operator. If the flexible drive member is a chain, the chain may have hinge points that loosen over time and gradually increase in length. Similarly, belts have a tendency to increase in length over their lifetime due to stretching.
Another shortcoming of prior movable barrier operators is that the sagging segment of chain allows the motor to speed up prior to having to pull the barrier. When the drive gear begins to rotate, the sagging segment will first be tensioned to remove the sag before the barrier is moved. This is due to the low amount of force needed to remove the tension. Once the sag is removed the operator will have to overcome the inertia of the barrier requiring a much higher force. This creates an impact force on the movable barrier operator which may damage the movable barrier operator, the flexible drive member, and the movable barrier.
In accordance with one aspect, a method of operating a movable barrier operator is provided that includes engaging a revolving drive of the movable barrier operator between leading and trailing portions of a flexible driven member connected to a movable barrier. The revolving drive is configured to rotate about an axis with the leading portion of the driven member being initially paid out from the axis and the trailing portion of the driven member being pulled toward the axis as the revolving drive rotates about the axis.
The movable barrier is moved by moving the leading portion of the driven member away from the revolving drive while moving the trailing portion of the driven member toward the revolving drive. The method includes suspending movement of the movable barrier in response to the movable barrier arriving at a stopping point. The stopping point may be, for example, a full-closed position of the movable barrier wherein the leading portion of the driven member sags downwardly a greater amount than the trailing portion of the driven member. After suspending movement of the movable barrier, the method further calls for moving the leading portion of the driven member toward the revolving drive while moving the trailing portion of the driven member away from the revolving drive without moving the movable barrier. In this manner, moving the leading portion of the driven member back toward the revolving drive may reduce the slack in the leading portion of the driven member and improve the overall appearance of the driven member when the movable barrier is positioned at the stopping point.
In another aspect, a movable barrier apparatus is provided including a movable barrier configured to move between a first limit position and a second limit position. The apparatus further includes a flexible driven member having a pair of end portions configured to connect to the movable barrier and a movable barrier operator disposed between the end portions of the driven member. The movable barrier operator is configured to selectively move the driven member in a forward direction to move the movable barrier toward the first limit position as well as move the driven member in an opposite, reverse direction to move the movable barrier toward the second limit position. A movable barrier controller is operatively coupled to the movable barrier operator, the movable barrier controller being configured to cause the movable barrier operator to move the driven member in the reverse direction without moving the movable barrier. More particularly, the movable barrier controller causes the movable barrier operator to shift the driven member in the reverse direction a given distance after stopping movement of the movable barrier toward the first limit position. By reversing the driven member a given distance after stopping movement of the movable barrier, the movable barrier controller may remove slack from the driven member and compensate for changes to the length of the driven member over time.
There are a number of different approaches to determine when to move the driven member the given distance, including using a limit position sensor to sense when the movable barrier reaches the first limit position. In this approach, the movable barrier operator is configured to shift the driven member in the reverse direction in response to the limit position sensor detecting that the movable barrier reaches the first limit position. In another approach, the movable barrier apparatus includes a revolving drive that engages the driven member, a position sensor for detecting the position of the revolving drive, and a movable barrier controller that is operatively coupled to the revolving drive and the position sensor. The movable barrier controller is configured to calculate the position of the movable barrier in response to information from the position sensor. In this manner, the movable barrier controller may cause the movable barrier operator to move the driven member in the reverse direction the given distance in response to the movable barrier controller determining that the revolving drive has moved the movable barrier to the first limit position.
In accordance with another aspect, a method of operating a movable barrier operator is provided that includes engaging a revolving drive of the movable barrier operator with a flexible driven member. The driven member is moved in a first direction to move a movable barrier connected to the driven member. The method calls for monitoring a position of the movable barrier and suspending movement of the driven member in response to the movable barrier reaching a given position. The method further calls for moving the driven member in a second direction without moving the movable barrier. Moving the driven member in the second direction pretensions the driven member between the revolving drive of the movable barrier operator and a connection between the driven member and the movable barrier. Pretensioning the driven member permits a consistent engagement between the driven member and the revolving drive, which reduces start-up impact on the movable barrier operator and the driven member. Pretensioning the driven member will also reduce the appearance of chain sag in a given approach.
Skilled artisans will appreciate that elements in the figures are illustrated for simplicity and clarity and have not necessarily been drawn to scale. For example, the dimensions and/or relative positioning of some of the elements in the figures may be exaggerated relative to other elements to help to improve understanding of various embodiments. Also, common but well-understood elements that are useful or necessary in a commercially feasible embodiment are often not depicted to facilitate a less obstructed view of these various embodiments. It will further be appreciated that certain actions and/or steps may be described or depicted in a particular order of occurrence while those skilled in the art will understand that such specificity with respect to sequence is not actually required. It will also be understood that the terms and expressions used herein have the ordinary technical meaning as is accorded to such terms and expressions by persons skilled in the technical field as set forth above except where different specific meanings have otherwise been set forth herein.
In
To shift the movable barrier 20 from the open limit position to the closed limit position in direction 32, the movable barrier operator 24 advances a leading portion 34 of the flexible driven member 26 in direction 32 while a trailing portion 36 of the driven member 26 is advanced toward the movable barrier operator 24. In one approach, the movable barrier system 10 includes a position sensor 38 that detects whether the movable barrier 20 has reached an open or closed limit position using electrical contacts 40, 42. Once the movable barrier 20 has reached the closed limit position (shown in
One approach to reducing the amount of sag in the leading portion 34 of driven member 26 is illustrated by the flow diagram of
With the movable barrier 20 in the second limit position, the movable barrier operator 24 transfers slack in the driven member 26 at step 58 by reversing the direction of the drive system of the movable barrier operator 24 and advancing the leading portion 34 of the driven member 26 in direction 60 (see
In an alternative garage door opener system example (not shown), the driven member may have both ends thereof attached to a trolley of the garage door opener. A rotatable drive of the garage door operator may engage the driven member between the ends thereof. The garage door opener system may encounter similar slack issues delineated with respect to the embodiments shown in FIGS. 1 and 3A-3D such that it may be desirable to remove slack from one length of the driven member and transfer it to another length of the driven member. To this end, the rotatable drive of the garage door opener may be operated in a manner similar to the method illustrated in
Returning to
With the movable barrier 100 returned to the second limit position 106, the leading portion 122 of the driven member 114 sags downwardly a distance 140 due to the effect of gravity on the leading portion 122. The trailing portion 128 also sags downwardly a distance 132. The representation in
Turning to
Returning to
The movable barrier operator applies the pretensioning force FP until a time T1, wherein the movable barrier operator receives a signal to shift the movable barrier 100 to the first limit position 104. At time T1, the rotatable drive 108 applies an increasing amount of force to the driven member 114 until reaching the threshold force FT at time T2. The movable barrier operator may include an upper limit on the amount of force the rotatable drive 108 may apply to the driven member 114, and the threshold force FT may be at or below the upper limit of that force. The rotatable drive 108 applies a decreasing amount of force after time T2 until the time T3, which reflects the lower amount of force needed to continue movement of the movable barrier 100 after the movable barrier 100 has initially shifted away from the second limit position 106. Specifically, the rotatable drive 108 applies a barrier movement force FM at T3 to continue movement of the movable barrier 100 after the threshold force of FT has initiated movement of the movable barrier 100. For a given arrangement, the barrier movement force FM may be the same as the threshold force FT. The force applied to the driven member 114 rapidly decreases to zero at a time T4 after the movable barrier 100 has reached the first limit position 104. Alternatively, the force applied to the driven member 114 could decrease to a non-zero amount.
An alternative method for repositioning slack includes a delay period between the time T0 and a time T1, as shown in
Turning to
There may also be a delay between the movable barrier 100 arriving at the second limit position 106 and the subsequent repositioning of slack within the driven member 114, as shown in
As with the approaches of
In
The movable barrier operator 200 may also include a position sensor 220 that monitors the position of the rotating drive 202 so that the position of the movable barrier can be determined. One such position sensor 220 is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,400,112 to Fitzgibbon et al., which issued on Jun. 4, 2002, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety. Specifically, the position sensor 220 may include a pass-point system driven by a motor shaft of the movable barrier operator 200. The pass-point system employs a plurality of spur gears disposed on a common shaft, with each gear having an aperture and a different number of teeth. The spur gears are driven by a common pinion at slightly different speeds such that the apertures of the gears align only once during movement of the associated movable barrier between limit positions. The pass-point system may utilize an optical emitter and an optical detector to determine when the apertures of the spur gears are aligned. A pass-point occurs when all the apertures align, and the pass-point system may use the pass-point as a reference point to measure barrier travel beyond the pass-point and toward the limit positions.
The movable barrier operator 200 of
Referring to
Those skilled in the art will recognize that a wide variety of modifications, alterations, and combinations can be made with respect to the above described embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention, and that such modifications, alterations, and combinations are to be viewed as being within the ambit of the inventive concept.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120066976 A1 | Mar 2012 | US |