The invention relates to a motorized shutter, blind or sun-protection device comprising at least one roll-up element, one end of which is kinematically linked to a roll-up element drive roller and the other end of which is attached to pulling strands kinematically linked to a strand drive roller, at least one strand return roller, and an elastic means keeping the roll-up element and the strands tensioned.
In devices of this type, the variation in diameter of the roll-up element, in this case the rolled-up fabric, causes a variation in the torque exerted by the elastic means on the fabric drive roller. Assuming the system to be balanced in the rolled-up position, the decrease in resistive torque during unrolling gives rise to a resultant torque which tends to cause the fabric to roll up again. If the pulling strands consist of straps that roll up on themselves as the fabric unrolls, the increase in torque on the strap drive roller is added to the decrease in resistive torque on the fabric drive roller, thus further increasing the resultant torque that tends to cause the fabric to roll up again. An increasing level of force is therefore necessary to unroll the fabric. There is a high consumption of current that reduces the service life of batteries. Furthermore, a brake is needed to keep the fabric unrolled. This brake generally consists of an electromagnetic brake or a permanent friction brake and this also consumes power when the fabric is moving. Hence, it is virtually impossible to power such devices by means of an independent source, such as a battery, of reasonable size.
U.S. Pat. No. 262,398, granted on Aug. 8, 1882, discloses a manually-driven awning whose fabric unrolls from a drum to which the fabric is fastened via one end, the other end being linked to a pulling strand passing around a return pulley and rolled up on a frustoconical drum with a helical groove, a spring keeping the return pulley tensioned. With the pulling strands being helically rolled up around the frustoconical drum, this balances the system in all positions of the fabric. The aim of this arrangement is to ensure that the fabric stays in the position in which it is placed whether it is totally or partially unrolled.
Although this document has been known for 120 years, until now nobody appears to have appreciated the advantage such a device could have in terms of energy savings.
The aim of the present invention is to produce a shutter, blind or sun-protection device as defined above whose electric motor is powered by an independent current source. For such a device to be practically advantageous it must have a low current consumption.
The device of the invention is characterized in that it constitutes a balanced system.
Because the system is balanced, the torque resulting from the action of the roll-up element, on the one hand, and the pulling strands on the other, and, if present, the auxiliary means, is always zero. The tension force is therefore always the same, ensuring better distribution of the useful power, which is constant throughout the time the roll-up element is in motion. By avoiding high consumption levels, the overall consumption is reduced, and if batteries are used as power source, the service life of these batteries is lengthened. Furthermore, there is no need to use a brake to keep the roll-up element in position. It is therefore possible to replace the brake motors generally used by more simple, less expensive and more compact motors. Current consumption is also lowered. The situation is the same in the case of a permanent-friction brake.
In some embodiments, the linear weight of the roll-up element, in particular of the fabric, and the linear weight of the pulling strands, taken together, are equal.
For the sake of simplification, the term “fabric” will be used below but it is understood that this term could also be replaced by “roll-up element”.
In the embodiments with a fabric, the fabric drive roller and the strand drive roller are advantageously coaxial and rotate as one. They may consist of a single roller.
If the fabric has an end bar, the pulling strands have at least one counterweight compensating for the weight of the bar.
According to one embodiment, the fabric drive rollers and strand drive rollers have the same diameter, one of the ends of the fabric and of the strands is free, the device comprises a press roller bearing against the drive rollers and the fabric and the strands pass in opposite directions between the drive rollers and the press roller so that they are driven in opposite directions and the device comprises at least one store in which the fabric accumulates when the device is opened and the strands accumulate when the device is closed.
According to another embodiment, in which one of the ends of the fabric and of the strands is attached to the drive rollers so that the pulling strands, consisting of tapes, roll up in a spiral when the fabric unrolls, the device comprises conical pulleys with a helical groove that rotate as one with the fabric drive roller, on which pulleys cords with counterweights are rolled up and unroll, in opposite directions, the torques generated by these counterweights compensating for the variations in torque generated by the variations in the roll-up diameters of the fabric and of the pulling strands.
According to another embodiment, in which the end of the fabric linked kinematically to the drive roller is attached to the drive roller such that the fabric rolls up around the roller, the pulling strand drive roller has two frustoconical parts with helical grooves in which the pulling strands roll up.
According to a variant of the above embodiment, the end of the fabric to which the pulling strands are linked has a hollow bar housing a spring working in tension, to whose ends the pulling strands are attached.
In some embodiments, the device comprises two fabrics and two fabric drive rollers each associated with a pulling strand drive roller and constituting two pairs of rollers, each of these pairs of rollers serving as return rollers for the rollers of the other pair.
The attached drawing shows, by way of example, a few embodiments of the invention.
The device shown in
While the axis of the shaft of the roller 1 is fixed, the shaft of the roller 6 can move transversely and this shaft is tensioned by an elastic tensioning means 7, for example a pair of springs attached to the ends of the shaft so as to maintain a degree of tension on the pulling strands and the fabric.
The particular feature of this embodiment is that one of the ends of the fabric 2 and of the strands 3 and 4 is free and that the fabric and the pulling strands are driven by adhesion by the drive roller 1. For this purpose, the device is equipped with a press roller 8 held against the roller 1 by an elastic pulling means, for example a pair of springs 9. The fabric 2 and the strands 3 and 4 pass between the drive roller 1 and the press roller 8. Beyond the rollers 1 and 8, the fabric 2 and the strands 3 and 4 pass into respective stores, the accumulation of the fabric and the strands in the stores being depicted diagrammatically by the folded parts 10 and 11 in
The device is driven by a motor acting either on the roller 1 or on the press roller 8.
In this embodiment, the roll-up radii of the fabric and the strands on the roller 1 are identical and are constant whatever the position of the fabric 2 since there is no superposition of several turns of fabric and pulling strands. The torque resulting from the fabric and pulling strands pulling on the main roller 1 is therefore zero whatever the position of the fabric, such that the force exerted by the elastic tensioning means does not change. Furthermore, the linear speed of the fabric and the strands is identical at all times.
When the fabric 2 is used vertically or obliquely, the system is balanced whatever the position of the fabric because the weight of the unrolled fabric is always equal to the weight of the pulling strands and the weight of the bar 5 is balanced by the counterweights 31 and 32.
The pulling strands could consist of cables or cords. In this case, at least the roller 1 will have grooves for receiving these cables or cords. The depth of these grooves will be such that the pressure of the press roller 8 exerts sufficient pressure on the cables or cords to drive them. The fabric and the strands could be driven by pegs.
The embodiment shown in
The strands 3 and 4 of the first system are thus driven by the roller 1′ of the second system and vice versa. It could therefore also be said that there are no return rollers, only pulling rollers. As in the first embodiment, the free strands of each system are driven by the rollers 1 and 8, or 1′ and 8′, of the other system.
When used vertically, the system is always balanced because the weights of the unrolled fabric parts, the weights of the pulling strands and the weights of the bars 5 and 5′ compensate for one another.
This device may also be driven by a single motor acting on one of the rollers 1, 8, 1′ or 8′. The advantage of this embodiment is that the time needed to close and open the device is halved, since each fabric only travels over half the area to be shaded, while the masses moved are barely greater than in the first embodiment. This embodiment therefore provides an additional energy saving. Such is the case also for the embodiments according to
The embodiment shown in
One end of the fabric 20 is attached to the drive roller 1 while its other end, again having a bar 5, is attached by this bar to one of the ends of the pulling strands 15 and 16, the other ends of which are attached to drive rollers 17 and 18 that are coaxial and rotate as one with the fabric drive roller 1 and have a diameter equal to the diameter of the roller 1. The straps 15 and 16 constituting the pulling strands are rolled up in grooves. The straps 15 and 16 pass around returns 19 and 21, which are also grooved.
The roll-up diameter of the fabric and of the pulling strands varying in opposite directions, the torques exerted also vary in opposite directions and therefore tend to give rise to a nonzero resultant torque. In order to restore the torque balance in all positions, two counterweights 10 and 11 are provided, suspended from two cords 12 and 13, respectively, that roll up around two frustoconical helically-grooved pulleys 14 and 14′, respectively. The cord 13 rolls up when the fabric 20 is unrolled, and the rolled-up diameter of the cord 13 decreases with that of the fabric. As a result, the torque generated by the weight 11 decreases together with that generated by the fabric. The weight 11 and the conicity of the pulley 14′ are chosen such that the decrease in torque generated by the weight 11 compensates for the decrease in torque generated by the fabric, and vice versa. The same happens with the counterweight 10 and the straps 15 and 16. The system is therefore balanced in all positions of the fabric.
As in the preceding cases, it is possible to mount two assemblies head-to-tail, as shown in
The embodiment shown in
In the variant shown in
As in the preceding embodiments, the variant shown in
In the embodiment shown in
In the variant shown in
It would of course be possible to provide a second spring like the spring 29 in the bar 26′. Since the tension on the spring 29 is practically constant, the pulleys 27 and 28 hardly turn at all. Obviously, the same happens with the pulleys 27′ and 28′. All these pulleys may therefore be replaced by a single curved groove.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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01/16730 | Dec 2001 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB02/05530 | 12/18/2002 | WO |