This application is the U.S. national phase of International Application No. PCT/SE2006/001130 filed 5 Oct. 2006 which designated the U.S. and claims priority to Swedish Patent Application No. 0502347-8 filed 21 Oct. 2005, the entire contents of each of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention concerns an arrangement for securing a lift car that is part of a lift at a predetermined level and for preventing unintentional motion of the car secured in such a manner as described by the introduction to patent claim 1.
In order to allow service or maintenance work to be carried out on, under or above a lift car, it must be possible to lock the lift car in a safe manner at a predetermined level, such that what are known as “safety spaces” can be created both above and below the lift car. In other words, the lift car must be secured in such a manner that it can in no circumstances whatsoever be displaced unintentionally upwards or downwards or risk crushing a person who is located above or below the lift car. Furthermore, the lift car must be secured in such a manner that it will not be possible for an extraneous person to activate and drive the lift car while it is secured and while maintenance is being carried out.
Previously known arrangements for securing lift cars and creating a safety space located below the lift car normally comprise some form of mechanical support against which the lift car, arranged as a cage or platform, rests while the maintenance is being carried out. See, for example, the arrangements described in WO 99/47447 and in U.S. Pat. No. 5,806,633.
An arrangement is known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,773,771 that has a parallel pair of members that limit transport in the form of rods that can be displaced inwards and outwards in directions that are transverse to the direction of vertical transport of the lift car in the shaft. In other words, they can be caused to move from a withdrawn position outwards from two of the sides of the lift car that face each other. When the transport-limiting members are in their extended positions, the lift car is lowered downwards such that the two rods come into contact with complementary supports arranged in the shaft, against which supports the lift car is caused to rest. A defined safety space under the lift car is created in this manner. The arrangement of an electrical control circuit for the said transport-limiting members is also known from the said document, where the circuit allows the lift car to be transported a limited extent upwards in a direction towards an upper safety space when the support members are located in their extended positions.
A common disadvantage for the prior art technology is that service and maintenance work can take place only at predetermined locations along the vertical pathway of the lift car. In other words, such work can take place only at those locations at which supports or similar support arrangements for the support of the lift car have been arranged. A consequence of this is that the possibilities of being able to carry out such service and maintenance work at a freely chosen location along the pathway of the lift are limited. Neither does the prior art technology make it possible to arrange safety spaces of the type referred to here above and below the lift car.
The aim of the present invention thus is to achieve an arrangement that increases the flexibility and makes it possible to stop the lift car immediately from the platform or cage of the lift car at a freely chosen location along the vertical pathway of the lift car, and that essentially prevents unintentional driving of the lift car when it is securely located at a certain level and in this way creates the safety spaces described above.
This aim is achieved according to the present by means of an arrangement that demonstrates the characteristics that are specified in claim 1. Further advantages and characteristics are made clear by the non-independent claims.
The invention will be described in more detail below with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
As
The lift car 1 shown in
This can be described as previously known technology that in itself does not constitute any part of the invention.
As
The present invention is shown in more detail in
As the figures make clear, the restraint 13 of the restraining arrangement is supported by the lift car 1 while the interaction element 7 that is, similarly, part of the restraining arrangement is arranged to be stationary and to extend along the pathway of travel of the lift car. This interaction element 7 is constituted in this embodiment by the cogged rack of the particular lift that runs along the mast 2, which cogged rack is used in this type of lift in a known manner for driving the lift car.
As is made most clear by
With reference to
Furthermore, the push and pull element 16 is provided at its free end with a limited and relatively short cogged section, generally, denoted by the reference number 24, with a toothed profile 14, 15 that corresponds to the cogged teeth of the interaction element 7. As
It is possible to vary the length of the screw 20 in the frame 17 with the aid of a common spanner or similar hand tool (not shown in the drawings), and thus also the relative distance from the limited cogged section 24 to the cogged side of the extended interaction element 7 that faces the cogged section can be varied as is shown by the arrow in
As is made clear by
When placed in interaction with the interaction element 7, the lift car 1 is essentially locked for motion relative to the interaction element 7 and thus also locked for vertical motion upwards and downwards along the pathway of the lift car 1.
Through the push and pull element 16 being mounted between the two parallel sections of frame 18, 18′, the adjustment means 19 is not subject to any load in itself when the push and pull element 16 is located adjusted in retaining interaction with the longitudinal interaction element 7 of the restraining arrangement. It should also be realised that as a consequence of this all forces that arise during the locking of the lift car to the interaction element 7 that lies along the mast are essentially absorbed by the parallel sections of frame 18, 18′ and thus also by the sturdy frame 17.
With renewed reference to
In the embodiment of the invention shown and described here, the access-limiting means 27 comprises a door 28 that can be opened arranged in a section of the wall 11, which door when in its closed position covers or blocks a hole or an opening in the section of wall. The door 28 is mounted, such that it can be removed, in the said section of wall 11 by means of a number of attachment means 29 in the form of a set of knobs provided with screws, which knobs can be loosened by hand and be screwed into threaded holes 30 in the wall 11. Both the restraint 13 that is part of the restraining arrangement and the extended interaction element 7 are thus located behind and can be accessed through the opening arranged in the wall 11. Thus, when the door 28 is in its open position or totally removed from the section of wall 11, it is easy to change the setting of the restraining arrangement 13, 7, while when the door 28 is mounted in its place by means of the attachment means 29 only limited access is available to the restraining arrangement 13, 7 from the cage of the lift car 1. The term “limited” is here used to denote the situation in which the restraining arrangement 13, 7 is not immediately accessible from the lift cage, but is only available for disposition after certain operations or actions have been carried out.
In the case that it should be necessary for reasons of safety, the access-limiting means 27 would be assigned some form of lock (not shown in the drawings) that can be opened with a key or code, which would significantly reduce the risk of unauthorised access to the devices 13, 7 that are parts of the restraining arrangement.
Not only does the restraining arrangement 13, 7 make possible solely mechanical securing of the lift car 1 at a certain level: the present arrangement also offers supplementary safety arrangements with respect to unintentional driving of a lift car that has been secured at a certain level, and in this way the creation of what are known as “safety spaces” A and B.
To be more precise, the present arrangement comprises two principally supplementary arrangements that contribute significantly to the provision of the said supplementary safety.
As a first supplementary arrangement that offers safety, the arrangement comprises a power-interruption device 31. The said power-interruption device 31 can be placed into and removed from a power-interruption; position, and it has the task of interrupting the power to the electrical motor units 8 of the lift car 1 if the access-limiting arrangement 27 is removed from its customary access-limiting position over the restraining arrangement 13, 7. The power-interruption device 31 comprises for this purpose a; contact, divided into two, that consists of a contact of what is known as a “pin” or “blade” type that can be inserted into a holder. As is made most clear by
As a second arrangement that offers security, the device comprises a stop means 34 that prevents the access-limiting device 27 from being arranged in its access-limiting position as long as the limited cogged section 24 of the push and pull element 16 is located set into locking interaction with the cogged teeth 14, 15 of the interaction element 7 that extends along the vertical pathway of the lift car 1. Through the access-limiting device 27 being prevented from being remounted in its access-limiting position, it should be realised that the two contact parts 32, 33 of the power-interruption device 31 will remain separated from each other and thus that the driving motors 8 will remain without power as long as the restraining arrangement 13, 7 is located set in an interacting position. This is the case, in other words, while the cogged section 22 of the push and pull element 16 of the restraint 13 is positioned in active restraining interaction with the interaction element 7.
The supplementary arrangements offering safety specified above will be described in more detail with reference to
In contrast, when the push and pull element 16 is located in its protruded actively locking position, as is shown in
When the access-limiting device 27 is located in its normal access-limiting position above the restraining arrangement 13, 7, the profiled sheet element 36 of the stop means 34 is taken up into the space 35 between the withdrawn push and pull element 16 of the restraint 13 and the interaction element 7. Close study of
The present invention functions in the following manner.
During service or maintenance on or around the lift car 1 at a given vertical level, the screws 29 are initially removed, followed by the access-limiting device 27 that is arranged as a door 28 in the wall section 11. One consequence of this is that the two contacts 32, 33 of the power-interruption device 31 are separated from each other such that power to the two electrical driving motors 8 is interrupted. When the access-limiting device 27 has been removed, that is, when the door 28 has been removed from its position over the opening in the section of wall 11, the stop means 34 in the form of a profiled sheet element 36 is also removed from its inserted position in the space 35 between the cogged section 24 of the withdrawn push and pull element 16 and the interaction element 7 such that the push and pull element 16 of the restraint 13 is freed and can be displaced in a direction forwards towards the said cogged profile of the interaction element of alternating teeth 15 and gaps 15.
With the aid of a spanner (not shown in the drawings), the screw 20 is manually moved such that the push and pull element 16 of the restraint 13 moves forwards and its free cogged end section 24 comes into contact with a certain force with the cogged profile 14, 15 of the interaction element 7. In the case in which the cogged teeth 24 of the push and pull element 16 are not aligned with the corresponding gaps 15 of the interaction element 7, the push and pull element 16 is adjusted in the height or vertical direction before it is placed in contact with the interaction element 7.
The lift car 1 is now located in locked interaction with the interaction element 7 and is thus secure from motion relative to the mast 2, and thus in a vertical direction, in such a manner that the safety spaces A and B specified above are created above and below the lift car 1.
The present invention is not limited to that which has been described above and what has been illustrated in the drawings. It can be changed and modified in a number of different ways for the innovative concept specified in the attached patent claims. Thus it is conceivable within the said framework to use a number of different types of interacting locks that offer a locking action between the lift car and the extended interaction element. It would thus lie within the scope of this to use means that offer a locking effect between the lift car and the extended interaction element through-wedging, action and interaction in side regions of some part of the lift car and the extended element. It should also be understood that the extended stationary interaction element does not need to be continuous: it can consist of a series of elements arranged in a row after, each other that together form an extended unified element.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0502347 | Oct 2005 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/SE2006/001130 | 10/5/2006 | WO | 00 | 4/15/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/046742 | 4/26/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
230006 | Hall | Jul 1880 | A |
281016 | Canfield | Jul 1883 | A |
595786 | Rogers | Dec 1897 | A |
1252737 | Tanner | Jan 1918 | A |
1874044 | James | Aug 1932 | A |
2496714 | Haines | Feb 1950 | A |
3415343 | Svensson | Dec 1968 | A |
3924710 | Shohet | Dec 1975 | A |
4516663 | D'Alessio et al. | May 1985 | A |
5511633 | Aker | Apr 1996 | A |
5613576 | Lamb | Mar 1997 | A |
5721403 | Hoppie et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
5773771 | Chatham | Jun 1998 | A |
5806633 | Macuga | Sep 1998 | A |
5971109 | Aulanko et al. | Oct 1999 | A |
6032763 | Richter et al. | Mar 2000 | A |
6302240 | Shih | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6494296 | Lindegger et al. | Dec 2002 | B2 |
6736242 | Nygren | May 2004 | B2 |
6739431 | Wang | May 2004 | B1 |
6739432 | Elsener | May 2004 | B2 |
6892862 | Helmle | May 2005 | B2 |
7556126 | Wang | Jul 2009 | B2 |
20030010576 | Malone, Jr. | Jan 2003 | A1 |
20030015378 | Elsener | Jan 2003 | A1 |
20050092555 | Lauch | May 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
870722 | Oct 1998 | EP |
1050505 | Nov 2000 | EP |
1174381 | Jan 2002 | EP |
1 213 249 | Jun 2002 | EP |
1 213 249 | Jun 2002 | EP |
1319626 | Jun 2003 | EP |
1 437 320 | Jul 2004 | EP |
1 437 320 | Jul 2004 | EP |
1533265 | May 2005 | EP |
7-206301 | Aug 1995 | JP |
2000-203774 | Jul 2000 | JP |
WO 9947447 | Sep 1999 | WO |
02096791 | Dec 2002 | WO |
WO 02096791 | Dec 2002 | WO |
WO 2005032992 | Apr 2005 | WO |
Entry |
---|
EPO Machine Translation, Description EP1213249, p. 1-8. |
EPO Machine Translation, Description EP1213249, Jun. 2013, p. 1-8. |
International Search Report for PCT/SE2006/001130 mailed Feb. 26, 2007. |
International Preliminary Report on Patentability for PCT/SE2006/001130 mailed Jan. 21, 2008. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090159372 A1 | Jun 2009 | US |