This patent generally pertains to roll-up doors and more specifically to rolling windbars for roll-up doors.
Typical roll-up doors comprise a flexible curtain that when the door is open the curtain is wound about a roller above the doorway. To close the door, the curtain unwinds as two vertical tracks guide the curtain down across the doorway. Roll-up doors are typically either powered open and closed or are powered open and descend controllably by gravity to close.
Some roll-up doors are powered by a drive unit that can rotate the curtain's roller in either direction to open or close the door. Other roll-up doors are powered by a drive unit that drivingly engages the curtain itself while the roller takes up any curtain slack as the door opens.
Many roll-up doors in use today, especially larger ones, employ windbars to assist in reducing the negative effects of wind loading. Large doors present a substantial cross-sectional area for the wind to react with. Negative effects include pulling the door curtain edges out of the guide tracks, excessive bowing of the curtain, and increasing the frictional forces between the tracks and the curtain edge to a point where the door will not open and/or close. Some windbars are integral to the door curtain itself. Other windbars are separate and travel relative to the curtain as the door opens and closes.
Example curtain roll-up doors include a rolling windbar that provides back support to reduce billowing of the curtain when the door is closed are disclosed herein. As the door opens and closes, the windbar freely rotates to reduce relative sliding action, friction and wear between the windbar and an adjacent surface of the curtain. Some example windbars are supported by rolling carriages that travel along channels in a track system. In some examples, the carriages are suspended from an overhead windbar roller. In other examples, the carriages are suspended from the curtain itself. Some example roll-up doors include multiple rolling windbars on opposite sides of the door.
The door 10 also includes a rolling windbar 24 for providing back and/or front support that reduces curtain billowing and helps prevent wind or an air pressure differential on opposite sides of the curtain 20 from blowing a closed curtain 20 through the doorway 12. The term, “curtain” refers to any assembly, panel or sheet of material that is sufficiently flexible to be rolled up upon itself or upon a roller and subsequently unrolled and generally straightened without significant permanent deformation. Example curtain materials include nylon, polyurethane, polyester, fabric, and various combinations thereof.
In the illustrated example, the door 10 also includes a track system 26 for laterally retaining and guiding lateral edges 28 of the curtain 20 as the door 10 opens and closes. There are countless known means for retaining and guiding a curtain within a track. In some examples, the track system 26 has a lip 30 (
Any suitable means can be used for moving the curtain 20 between its open and closed positions. In the illustrated example, the door 10 includes a curtain drive unit 36 and a windbar drive unit 38. The drive units 36, 38 are schematically illustrated to represent any powered or unpowered mechanisms for urging or facilitating the rotation of a shaft or roller or for urging or facilitating a curtain to coil about itself. In some examples, the windbar drive unit 38 is motor driven to rotate a windbar roller 40, which in turn rotates an attached drive gear 42 that meshes with the protrusions 32 on the curtain 20. Depending on the drive gear's direction of rotation, the drive gear 42 forces the curtain 20 up or down to respectively open or the close door 10. As the door 10 opens, the curtain 20 wraps about itself or, in some examples, wraps about a curtain roller 44 coupled to the curtain drive unit 36. In some examples, the windbar roller 40 has an outer diameter 46 that is positioned to guide and redirect the curtain 20 between the track system 26 and the curtain roller 44 that is offset relative to the track system 26, as shown in
In some examples, the curtain drive unit 36 is motor driven. In some examples, a transmission couples the curtain drive unit 36 to the windbar drive unit 38 such that one drive unit powers the rotation of the other. The term, “transmission” refers to any mechanism for coupling the rotation of one rotating element to another. In some examples where the windbar drive unit 38 is motor driven, the curtain drive unit 36 is a spring-loaded counterbalance that urges the curtain roller 44 to rotate in a direction that takes up the curtain 20 as the door 10 opens. In some examples where the windbar drive unit 38 is motor driven, the curtain drive unit 36 comprises a counterweight suspended from a pulley or a shaft that is attached to the curtain roller 44. The hanging counterweight applies torque to the curtain roller 44 so as to urge curtain roller 44 to rotate in a direction that takes up the curtain 20 as the door 10 opens. In some examples, when the drive gear 42 is driven in a direction that lowers the curtain 20, the curtain drive unit 36 yields to the drive gear's driving force so that the curtain roller 44 pays out the curtain 20 as the door 10 closes.
To lower the windbar 24 to a desired intermediate elevation across the doorway 12 when the door 10 closes, and to raise the windbar 24 at or above the lintel 14 when the door 10 opens, some examples of the door 10 include one or more suspenders 48 that suspend the windbar 24 from the windbar roller 40. The term, “suspender” refers to any flexible elongate member from which something hangs, wherein the elongate member is sufficiently flexible to repeatedly wrap and unwrap around a drum, shaft, rod, or other type of roller. Examples of a suspender include a strap, a belt, a chain, a rope, a cable, a wire, and a ribbon. Some example suspenders are of a fixed length, and other example suspenders are elastic.
In some examples, an upper end of the suspender 48 wraps around and connects to the windbar roller 40 so that as the drive gear 42 rotates to raise or lower the curtain 20, the windbar roller 40 respectively raises or lowers the windbar 24, but with the windbar 24 traveling slower than the curtain's leading edge 22. In some examples, the outer diameters of the drive gear 42 and the windbar roller 40 are sized such that the windbar roller 40 moves the windbar 24 at about half the speed that the drive gear 42 moves the leading edge 22. That is, in the time it takes for the leading edge 22 of the curtain 20 to travel from the floor 16 (the fully closed position) to the lintel 14 (the fully open position), the windbar roller 40 will travel from approximately the midpoint between the floor 16 and lintel 14 up to the lintel 14. This particular reference to the windbar roller's outer diameter refers to the diameter around which suspender 48 wraps. In other words, a first tangential speed 50 of curtain roller 44, which corresponds to the tangential speed of the drive gear 42, is greater than (e.g., about twice as great) a second tangential speed 52 of windbar roller 40 (see
To reduce friction and wear between the windbar 24 and the curtain 20, some examples of the windbar 24 are free to rotate. In some examples, the rotation of the windbar 24 is unrestricted by the rotation or lack of rotation of a track roller 54 that helps guide the windbar 24 along the track system 26. In some examples, the rotation of the windbar 24 is unrestricted by the suspenders 48.
To achieve such unrestricted freedom of rotation, some examples of the windbar 24 are rotatably coupled to the carriages 56 that guide the windbar 24 along the track system 26. Also, in some examples, suspender 48 carries or supports the weight of the windbar 24, yet the suspender 48 remains spaced apart from the windbar 24 rather than gripping it in a sling. In the example illustrated in
In some examples that include both front and back the windbars 24, a transmission (e.g., a transmission 76 or 78) couples corresponding front and back windbar rollers 40, as shown in
As the door 86 opens to the intermediate position shown in
An example door 86′, shown in
The take-up coil 96 is schematically illustrated to represent any spring-loaded device suitable for coiling and storing the suspender 48″. Examples of the take-up coil 96 include a mechanism similar to those commonly used for vehicle seat belts (but without a locking element), a mechanism similar to those commonly used for retractable dog leashes (but without a locking element), and a mechanism similar to a conventional spring-loaded window shade (but without a locking element).
Although certain example methods, apparatus and articles of manufacture have been described herein, the scope of the coverage of this patent is not limited thereto. On the contrary, this patent covers all methods, apparatus and articles of manufacture fairly falling within the scope of the appended claims either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents.
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