This invention relates generally to overhead doors and, more particularly, to a door with two separate track systems which allow for an effective transition from a breakaway mode when in the down position to the stored mode when in the raised position.
Overhead doors are used to occlude openings in structures such as warehouses, factories, and other commercial establishments. Typically such a door is comprised of a series of panels hinged together and moveable between a doorway blocking position to an overhead storing position. In the stored position, the door may be disposed in a vertical, horizontal, or oblique angle position. For either of the horizontal or oblique angle dispositions there is generally provided a curved track to transition from the vertical closed position to the non-vertical stored disposition.
Overhead doors used at loading docks are often subject to impacts from forklifts, other loading devices, and freight. Such impacts often cause damage to an overhead door and sometimes to the building structure supporting the door. Accordingly, various types of “breakaway” devices have been designed to allow for the door to be temporarily disengaged from its vertical track when impacted by a substantial force. One such assembly, described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,988,528, having common inventorship with the present invention, provides for the use of brushes on the side edges of the door, with the brushes being slideably disposed in a track and disengageable therefrom upon impact. Another apparatus, shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,927,368, assigned to HPD International, Inc., provides a plurality of plungers extending outwardly from the door's edges to engage a groove of a track, with the spring biased plungers being disengaged from the track when the door's impacted. Another, U.S. Pat. No. 6,321,822, assigned to Rite-Elite Holding Corporation, includes a roller and track combination that is moveable relative to each other upon application of a breakaway force to the door.
In each of the above systems, a problem arises when the door is raised and the breakaway apparatus is caused to move along a curved portion of the track to move the door to the stored position. That is, because the mounting structure is designed to provide the breakaway feature, it is not so flexible as to be easily made to move through the curved portion of the track without complications such as frictional loading or leaving the track.
Briefly, in accordance with one aspect of the invention, a secondary track is provided above the doorway opening to accommodate a secondary tracking mechanism mounted on the door, such that when the door is in the down position, only the primary, disengageable, tracking mechanism is engaged in its primary track, but as the door is raised, the secondary tracking mechanism is fed into the secondary track, while at the same time the primary tracking mechanism is exiting its track. In this way, a smooth transition is made between the primary and secondary tracking mechanisms as the door is moved from the closed to the open position.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the secondary tracking mechanism comprises a plurality of rollers that are mounted on the outer side of the door and in a location which is inboard from the outer edge of the primary tracking member such that they do not interfere with the movement of the door during a disengagement process as caused by an impact.
In the drawings as hereinafter described, a preferred embodiment is depicted; however, various other modifications and alternate constructions can be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
a-4c are illustrative of various types of door mounting arrangements for which the present invention is applicable.
Referring now to
Mounted to the wall 13, on either side of the door 11 are vertical support members 21 and 22. The door 11 is supportably mounted within the vertical support members 21 and 22 in a manner which permits the door 11 to be temporarily disengaged from its mounting position when impacted by a substantial force as shown and described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,988,528, having common inventorship herewith, and incorporated herein by reference.
As shown in
Considering now the manner and structure for moving the door 11 to an open position, a lift bracket 27 is attached to the door side edge 19 at a point near the bottom of the door 11, and a cable 28 is secured to the lift bracket 27. The cable 28 passes upwardly to be wound around a pulley 29 mounted on a shaft 31 (see
It should be recognized that other mechanisms for opening and closing the door 11 can be used while remaining within the scope of the invention. For example, rather than the pulley 29 and spring 32, the cable 28 may be secured to a counterweight to provide the biasing effect.
Having discussed the position of the door in the closed position, it is necessary to consider its position when moved to an open condition. As shown in
The applicants have found that when a door with side brushes mounted in vertical track openings is caused to move along an arcuate path, such as the arcuate track members 36 and 37, the brushes are likely to come out of the track such that the door is no longer properly supported. The same problem is seen as occurring with other, non-brush, mounted arrangements such as those discussed hereinabove with respect to the prior art. Accordingly, the need was seen for a disengageable type of overhead door which, when moved to the open/stored position, will ensure that the door remains in a properly supported condition. The present invention accomplishes this in a simple and effective manner with the structure which will now be described.
As will be seen in
Attached to the door outer side 41 is a plurality of secondary tracking mechanisms 42 (that shown being one mounted near the top of the door) which include a mounting bracket 43, a shaft 44 and a roller or a wheel 46. Preferably, such a secondary tracking mechanism 42 is attached to each side of each of the panels 14. As will be seen in
It should be recognized that, in order for the disengageable feature of the door (i.e. the tracking mechanism that is effective during periods in which the door is fully closed or in the partially closed position), to properly function, it is necessary that the secondary tracking mechanism be so placed so as to not interfere with the disengaging function. This is accomplished with the present invention by locating the secondary tracking mechanism 42 on the outer side of the door and in a position where its wheel is disposed transversely inwardly (i.e. toward the center of the door) from the outer edge of the brush 26, as shown in
Referring now to
The
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US06/39321 | 10/6/2006 | WO | 00 | 12/14/2009 |