This application claims priority from United Kingdom Patent Application No. 09 10 998.4, filed Jun. 24, 2009, and also from United Kingdom Patent Application No. 10 04 867.6, filed Mar. 24, 2010, the whole contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
This invention concerns a descender regulated to control descent from a height.
A descender is a facility for recreational, educational, training or safety purposes. It comprises an elevated platform (which may form part of or be set upon a tower, a bridge, a crane cradle, a building or a tree etc) from which a user jumps, his fall being controlled by a brake operating on a line connected to the jumper by means of a harness. Typically the line is wound on a spool connected to a fan so that as the jumper descends the fan is rotated and the windage of the fan controls the rate of descent. We describe such an arrangement in our copending patent application EP 1996296, the contents whereof are hereby incorporated into the present application by reference.
If in such an arrangement the line rotates the fan at a constant speed, the windage air drag on the fan is similarly constant, and the jumper descends at a steady rate. However, particularly for a sporting or training facility, it is desirable to minimize the drag initially (to approximate to free fall) and increase it as the jumper nears the ground (to ensure a safe landing). In EP 1996296 we describe how this may be done by providing a spool tapered along its length, with the line being initially drawn off from a large diameter part so that initially the spool rotates very slowly, and so does the fan, whereby the braking force immediately after the user jumps is very slow. As the line unwinds it progresses to a lower diameter part of the spool, the spool speeds up and accordingly the braking force increases and the user's descent is slowed.
The arrangement of EP 1996296 has proved very successful and we have installed and operated many fan descenders of that kind. We have found, however, that for large descents (say ˜100 m) the size of spool needed to accommodate the line is such that its inertia becomes a significant factor. Thus, even when the apparatus is arranged so that there is very little windage braking immediately after jumping, the spool is relatively slow to accelerate owing to its inertia, and thus the jump does not achieve the desired impression of free fall.
It is an object of the present invention to overcome this inertial drag.
Thus according to a first aspect of the invention there is provided a descender including an elevated platform from which a user jumps, attached to a line, and regulating apparatus for regulating the user's descent from the platform, which regulating apparatus comprises a spool upon which the line is wound before the descent and from which the line is drawn off during the descent, thereby rotating the spool forwards, and a brake operative upon the spool to limit its speed of forward rotation and hence the rate of descent, wherein said descender includes drive means operative when enabled to accelerate the spool forwards during an initial part of the descent.
The descender preferably includes a platform monitor operatively connected to the drive means so that the drive means is not enabled unless the user is properly positioned on the platform. Preferably the platform monitor includes a gate and the drive means is not enabled unless the gate is closed behind the user. Preferably, too, the platform monitor includes a light curtain extending across the platform and the drive means is not enabled unless the light curtain detects the user.
The descender may include an abort control for disabling the drive means if a user fails to jump.
The regulating apparatus of the descender preferably comprises a spool, a line wound upon the spool to be drawn off during a descent of a load attached to the line thereby rotating the spool forwards and a brake operative upon the spool to limit its speed of forward rotation and hence the rate at which the load descends, wherein the apparatus includes drive means operative when enabled to accelerate the spool forwards during an initial part of the descent.
The drive means preferably comprises an electric motor connected to the spool and operative under the control of a servomechanism to accelerate the spool forwards for a first predetermined time period t1.
The servomechanism is preferably so configured and arranged that the acceleration of the spool during the initial part of the descent is marginally less than g/πD rev/s2, where D is the diameter of the spool from which the line unwinds during the initial part of the descent. Having the initial acceleration of the spool close to g/πD rev/s2 provides a close approximation to a free-fall descent; and as long as the initial acceleration is less than g/πD rev/s2 the line will remain taut, which is desirable for safety reasons. The acceleration of the spool during the initial part of the descent is therefore preferably less than g/πD rev/s2 but not less than 0.9 g/πD rev/s2.
The servomechanism may also be so configured and arranged that the first predetermined time period t1 during which the spool is initially accelerated is substantially less than √(2 h/g) s, where h is the height of the descent. This is to ensure that the brake has adequate time to slow the descent after the drive means ceases to operate. The first time period t1 may for instance be less than √(h/g) s. Preferably the servomechanism is also so configured and arranged that the operation of the drive means is progressively reduced to zero over a time period t2 after t1. The time period t2 may be approximately equal to the time period t1.
Preferably the brake operates with a force related to the speed of rotation of the spool and the spool is formed with a fore section (from which the line unwinds first) of diameter D, a rear section (from which the line unwinds last) of relatively small diameter d and a tapered section between said fore section and said rear section. By this means, as the load descends its turning force on the spool decreases whereas the braking force remains high, and thus the spool (and the rate of descent of the load) is slowed. The line may be wound helically approximately N times on the fore section of the spool, where N=gt12/2πrd, with the effect that the line begins to unwind down the tapered section of the spool as the operation of the drive means begins to be reduced.
Preferably the drive means is automatically disabled during a descent if (a) the spool exceeds a predetermined rate of rotation or (b) the drive means attempts to drive the spool backwards or (c) the drive means is operative for longer than a predetermined time.
The brake may conveniently comprise a fan rotatable forwards with said spool, generally of the form described in EP 1996296.
The descender may include an elevated platform from which a user jumps and makes a controlled descent under the operation of the regulating apparatus.
The line of the regulating apparatus may have a tethered end connected to the spool and be wound helically on the spool from the tethered end towards a free end of the cable, said free end being connected to a harness for the user. In this arrangement the tethered end of the line preferably has a one-way locking connection with the spool such that at the bottom of the descent the spool may rotate free of the line, by which means overrun of the spool at the end of the descent does not cause the line to be wound back up upon the spool.
The descender preferably includes various safety features as follows. First, the descender preferably includes a main switch manually operable to switch the descender on. The descender preferably also includes a gate for controlling access to the platform wherein the drive means is operatively connected to said gate so as to be enabled only if the descender is on and the gate is closed. Further, the descender preferably includes a sensor for detecting a said user on the platform wherein the drive means is operatively connected to said sensor so as to be enabled only if the descender is on, the gate is closed and the sensor detects a user on the platform. Preferably, too, the drive means when enabled operates automatically as soon as said sensor detects that the user has left the platform. It is also preferred that the descender include an abort switch manually operable to cancel enablement of the drive means, and also an emergency switch manually operable to disable the drive means.
To prevent the descent from going astray, for instance because of winds, the harness of the descender may be slidingfy connected to a guide rig extending downward from said platform to the bottom of the descent.
The drive means may be selectively operable to drive the spool backwards after a descent to return the harness to said platform.
Those skilled in the science will appreciate that the one-way connection between tether and spool mentioned above is not limited to any particular form of descender. Thus the invention extends to any facility for recreational, educational, training or safety purposes including an elevated platform from which a person descends on a line unwinding from a spool rotating forwardly about an axis, the line being of length equal to the height of the descent so that at the end of the descent the line is fully unwound from the spool and the descent being regulated by a brake acting on the spool, wherein the fine is secured to a tether rotatable about said axis and having a one-way locking connection with the spool such that the spool can rotate without rotating the tether whilst the tether cannot rotate without rotating the spool.
The tether may be rotatable backwards to rotate the spool backwards and thereby rewind the line upon the spool. With this arrangement the tether preferably locks to the spoof in only one relative orientation, and also the spool and the tether may each be formed with a helical channel for the wound line and the respective channels be mutually aligned in said one relative orientation.
Other features of the invention will be apparent from the following description, which is made by way of example only with reference to the accompanying schematic drawing in which—
Referring first to
Secured to one end (the left hand end as seen in
When a load is applied to its free end 24a and allowed to fall downwards in the direction of arrow L, the line 24 is progressively drawn off the spool 10, causing the spool 10 to rotate (in what is herein termed a forward direction) about the spindle 12. The drive belts 32 then drive the fan 16 rotatably about the spindle 18 in the same direction of rotation as the spool 10—that is, in the forward direction.
The fan 16 has a generally cylindrical periphery about the axis 20 with a plurality of vanes spaced around this periphery, a representative vane of such plurality being identified in the drawing by reference numeral 34. As the fan 16 is driven to rotate forwards it acts as a radial flow air impeller, giving rise to considerable windage. Thus the fan 16 acts as a brake upon the spool 10, retarding the forward rotation of the spool 10 and so regulating the movement of the load on the line 24.
It will be understood that the windage and hence the braking force on the line 24 depends upon the speed of rotation of the fan 16, and this is adjusted in use by forming the spool 10 with a relatively large diameter part and a relatively small diameter part and a taper from one part to the other (ie of reducing diameter towards the right as seen in
It follows from the above that, when the load on the line 24 begins to fall, it initially accelerates quickly, because the braking force is small; and as the braking force increases, the rate of descent of the load is reduced. This fall profile means that a person harnessed to the line 24 in place of the load will initially experience something like free-fall followed by progressive deceleration to a safe landing speed. In short, a descender including the regulating apparatus of
The spool 10 needs to accommodate a length of line at least equal to the height of the jump, and in broad terms this will depend upon the length of the spool and its average effective diameter. The regulating apparatus of
I∝M×r2
The mass of a spool such as the spool 10 depends upon its length I and the square of its average radius r. That is—
M∝I×r2
Accordingly—
I∝I×r4
It follows that going up from a 30 m spool to a 90 m spool by doubling the average diameter and increasing the length 1.5 times may increase the moment of inertia as much as 24 times, since 1.5×24=24. A 90 m spool of the same length as the 30 m spool but 3 times the average diameter may have a moment of inertia 81 times greater, since 1×34=81. In practice the increase in moment of inertia will not be as precise as these figures suggest, being dependent upon the configuration of the spool; but increasing the dimensions of the spool, will necessarily bring a great increase in the moment of inertia. In practice there is almost always a limit to the increase in length which can be permitted, because the plane of deployment of the line moves along the spool as the line is drawn off, so the average diameter must be increased; and this has an extra effect because of the fourth power in the formula for moment of inertia.
The much greater inertia of the 90 m spool means that it gains speed much less quickly than a 30 m spool when acted on by a load such as the weight of a person and so detracts from the initial free-fall experience. The present invention counteracts this, as will now be described first with reference to
The spool 40 of
The electric motor 42 is arranged (as will be described in more detail hereinafter) to start as soon as a user jumps, to accelerate the spool 40 at a rate such that the user initially drops as indicated by arrow K at very nearly free-fall rate and then progressively to reduce its driving force as the fan 44 begins to brake the spool 40 connected to it by toothed belts 46.
The user's descent profile is illustrated by
As can be seen from
The points P, Q, R and S are marked on
It will be understood that the moment of inertia of the spool 40 will cause it to continue to rotate, at least for a short time, after the user has landed, and it is necessary to prevent this from rewinding the line back up on to the spool 40, which could cause discomfort and possibly harm to the user and would at a minimum have to be freed before the apparatus could be used again. In the present invention such inadvertent rewinding is avoided as shown in
As the line 48 is drawn off in the direction of arrow K it causes the spool 40 to rotate forwards as indicated by arrow Y. The line 48 is laid on the spool 40 in a helical channel which as seen in
The known regulating apparatus of
The control line 70 descends from the spool 68 to a harness 90 worn by the user 62. When the user 62 jumps from the edge of the platform 60 the line 70 is paid out by the regulating apparatus 64 to control the descent. Stay wires 76 extend sideways from the user's harness to shuttles 78 mounted for sliding movement on generally vertical stabiliser cables 80 so that the user is not blown off course during the descent.
It will be appreciated from the foregoing description of the regulating apparatus that the motor 72 must begin to accelerate the spool 68 as soon as the user 62 jumps. This is controlled by means of a gate 82 and a sensor in the form of a light curtain extending transversely across the forward part of the platform 60 at about thigh height as indicated in broken lines at 84, both the gate 82 and the sensor 84 being operatively connected to the regulating apparatus 64 in a safely organized manner as will now be described.
First, the regulating apparatus 64 has to be switched on by an authorized operator 86 using a keypad 88 or the like. Second, the gate 82 which controls access is arranged so that the electric motor 72 is enabled only if the main switch is on the gate 82 is properly closed. Third, the electric motor 72 is enabled only if in addition the light curtain 84 detects that a user 62 is in the jumping position at the edge of the platform 60. Only when all these preliminaries have been properly completed can the electric motor 72 be energized to accelerate the spool 68, and this happens as soon as the light curtain 84 detects that the user 62 has jumped off the edge of the platform 60.
It should be pointed out that the gate 82, when closed, prevents the user 62 from moving backwards out of the light curtain to trigger a false actuation of the motor 72. And if the gate 82 is opened, the regulating apparatus is automatically disabled.
Additional safety features include (a) an abort switch manually operable by the operator 86 to cancel enablement of the drive means, for instance if a user has become too nervous to jump, and (b) an emergency switch manually operable to disable regulating apparatus altogether in the event of some unforeseen problem.
The invention will now be further described with reference to
First, a system operative powers up the system at 100 by means of a master switch.
The operative then checks the system at 102 for illumination of a System-OK light. The procedure can continue only if the System-OK light is ON, as indicated by Y on the flow chart. If it is OFF, indicated by N on the flow chart, the operative must examine the system and take appropriate remedial action as indicated at 104.
Assuming the System-OK light is illuminated, the operative then physically checks that the jump platform is closed off by the gate provided, as indicated at 106. The operative also checks that the Gate-Closed light is illuminated as indicated at 108. The procedure can continue only if the Gate-Closed light is ON, as indicated by Y on the flow chart. If it is OFF, indicated by N on the flow chart, the operative must examine the system and take appropriate remedial action as indicated at 104.
Assuming the Gate-Closed light is ON, the operative now switches the means drive to REWIND, as indicated at 110, after which the system can be homed by means of a wireless controller, as indicated at 112.
The homing operation 112 puts all elements of the system in the correct positions and status for a descent. An operative at the platform can now connect a user to the descent line, by means of a harness on the line, as indicated at 114. After this the drive means is switched to RUN at 116, the platform gate is opened at 118, and at 120 the platform operative guides the user into the correct position on the platform for him to make his descent.
The platform operative then closes the platform gate at 122, and at 124 checks that both the Gate-Closed fight and a Light-Curtain light are illuminated. (A light curtain extends transversely across the forward part of the platform. This light curtain is interrupted, causing illumination of the Light-Curtain light, only when the user is correctly positioned for his descent, at the edge of the platform). The user can make his descent only if both the Gate-Closed light and the Light-Curtain light are ON, indicated on the flow chart by Y against the check at 124. If either the Gate-Closed light or the Light-Curtain light is OFF, indicated by N on the flow chart, the operative must examine the system and take appropriate remedial action as indicated at 104.
Assuming both the Gate-Closed light and the Light-Curtain light are ON, the operative now presses a Start button as indicated at 126 to enable the drive means. The enabled status of the drive means is signaled by a Ready light, as indicated at 128. The system procedure can continue only if the Ready light is ON, as indicated by Y on the flow chart. If it is OFF, indicated by N on the flow chart, the operative must examine the system and take appropriate remedial action as indicated at 104.
Assuming the Ready light is ON, the user can now jump as indicated at 130, the drive means is automatically activated at 132 to drive the spool of the regulator forwards for a predetermined time and under servo control and the user descends. At the end of his descent a ground operative releases the user from the harness at 134 and then switches the drive means back to REWIND at 136. The homing operation 112 then causes the descent line to be rewound upon its spool and otherwise repositions the system for another descent.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that users will occasionally decide not to make a descent even when they have been harnessed and reached the jump position at the edge of the platform. As will now be described, the system is arranged to allow for this possibility. If, for whatever reason, a user fails as indicated at 138 to jump when expected, an operative presses an Abort button as indicated at 140, to disable the drive means. The operative then opens the gate as indicated at 142. The user is then brought off the platform and the gate closed again, as indicated at 144. The system being already homed, another user can now be harnessed for a descent, as indicated at 114.
A descender according to the invention may include an electronic counter recording the number of descents so that charges to users can be related to the amount of use and maintenance schedules be conveniently maintained.
The electric motor used in the regulating apparatus is a servomotor controlled by vector pulse width modulation (VPWM). A suitable motor is one of the 190U2 range available world-wide from Control Techniques and in the present application is arranged to drive through a 3:1 step-down gearbox also available from Control Techniques under item number SP+180S. However it should be understood that some other drive means (not necessarily an electric motor) may be used in the invention.
Various modifications of the arrangements described may be made without departing from the scope of the invention, and in particular it should be noted that the one-way locking connection hereinbefore described is not necessarily limited to the particular form of regulating apparatus shown herein.
Also, those skilled in the science will appreciate that the invention may be applied to a range of descenders for recreational, educational, training or safety purposes including zip wires or other facilities. Further, whilst the invention has been particularly described as being used by a person who jumps from an elevated platform, is also to be understood that the invention may be adapted to provide safety apparatus for a climber, who can be clipped into the described harness on the ground and then make an ascent (of a tower or climbing wall, say) knowing that he will be lowered safely to the ground if he should fall.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
09 10 998.4 | Jun 2009 | GB | national |
10 04 867.6 | Mar 2010 | GB | national |