This invention concerns a safety balustrade mounted on the roof of a car of a machine room-less elevator.
In modern elevator installations, the tendency is to reduce as much as possible the ground surface and the height occupied by the installation. One of the solutions found to reach this aim is to eliminate the machine room which, till now, was located either at the top or at the bottom of the hoistway or else in a lateral local of the hoistway, and to secure the control equipment, for instance the controller, on a wall of the hoistway. Nowadays, it is well known to manufacture machines and controllers having a small thickness, which can then be secured in the space comprised between the hoistway and the car.
In the elevators of this kind, a balustrade is generally provided on the roof of the car, in a position somewhat offset from the edge of the roof to prevent any risk of falling into the hoistway when the roof is not at the level of the controller.
When a technician had to intervene on the controller or on the machine to effect maintenance or reparation operations, he has to climb onto the roof, to control the motion of the car and to stop it when the controller is within easy reach. Since the controller protrudes with respect to the wall of the hoistway, it arrives sufficiently near to the car to eliminate any risk of falling in the hoistway.
However, the technician had to work through the bars of the balustrade, or over the balustrade, i.e. at distance from the controller. In this position, certain working operations become rapidly uncomfortable and tiring. Furthermore, since the balustrade must be made of steel to guarantee sufficient resistance, its interposition between the technician and the controller increases the risk of electrical shock during operations made on electrical components.
The object of this invention is to solve these problems. To this end, the invention provides a safety top balustrade for a car of a machine room-less elevator which moves in a hoistway, on a wall of which the controller of the elevator is secured, said balustrade comprising:
The mobile structure is maintained in its closed position whenever the roof is not at the level of the controller and is brought to its open position only when the car stops at this level. In this position, there is no danger of falling because the controller is in close proximity to the edge of the car roof. However, in order to increase the security of the technician, and to allow him to approach closer to the controller, the roof of the car can be equipped with a bridge, comprised of a simple plate slidingly mounted on the car roof between a retracted position and an extended position in which a part of its length protrudes from the car roof over the space comprised between the car and the wall of the hoistway.
In its extended position, the end of the bridge can lie on a support bracket secured to the controller or to the wall of the hoistway.
The bars of the mobile structure can be independent and then they must be moved independently from their open position to their closed position and vice versa. In a more advantageous embodiment, the bars are connected at their outer ends by a vertical cross bar so that they can be integrally moved. The cross bar also acts as an abutting element which limits the movement of the mobile structure in its open position.
The mobile structure can be secured in either its retracted and open positions by means of locking elements, such as pins or bolts, which pass through holes drilled in the guard rails and in the bars. The mobile structure is then prevented to slide accidentally.
An embodiment of the invention will be now described with reference to the enclosed drawing in which:
The elevator installation 10 shown in the drawings is of the type machine room-less. The controller 14 of the elevator is fixed to a wall 12 of the hoistway in which the car 18 moves.
The interventions on the controller are made from the roof 16 of the car 18. The roof is equipped with a balustrade 20 which surrounds the roof, except along the edge of the roof which is adjacent to the front wall of the car, not shown, in which the car door 22 is located. The balustrade is not necessary on this side because the interval between said front wall of the hoistway is very little, and therefore there is no danger of falling.
The balustrade 20 comprises a fixed structure 21 comprising a plurality of vertical uprights 24 fixed near the periphery of the roof, and at least two horizontal tubular guard rails 26, 30 fixed at the top and at half-height of the vertical uprights respectively.
Each guard rail is U-shaped and comprises three tubes made of steel and having substantially the same lengths as the edges of the roof respectively. The tubes of each guard rail are fixed to each other by welding, screwing or the like. Said tubes have preferably a square cross section.
In the drawings, there are uprights 24 along the left and right edges of the roof, but not along the rear edge, and the tubes of the guard rails extending along said rear edge are connected therebetween by a strut 32. Of course, uprights can also be mounted on the rear edge of the roof.
Preferably, the upper guard rail 26 is fixed on the uprights at waist height.
According to the invention, the fixed structure 21 is interrupted on its right side in
According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention, a foot-bridge 42 is slidingly mounted on the roof of the car, along guides 44 extending in a direction transversal to the passage 33.
Increased stability can be provided for the portion of the bridge which protrudes from the roof if its end lies on a support bracket, not illustrated, fixed to the hoistway or on the controller.
The mobile structure 34 can be secured in its retracted position or in its extended position, by means of pins or bolts 46 inserted through holes drilled in the guard rails 26, 30 and in the bars 36, 38.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB02/02292 | 6/20/2002 | WO | 00 | 12/10/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO04/000713 | 12/31/2003 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050252726 A1 | Nov 2005 | US |