Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6715235
-
Patent Number
6,715,235
-
Date Filed
Tuesday, May 22, 200124 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, April 6, 200421 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 049 320
- 049 4891
- 049 4751
- 049 4841
- 049 4951
- 049 321
- 049 306
- 049 4981
- 049 394
- 049 209
- 049 410
- 105 37711
- 105 37708
- 105 37707
- 105 37705
- 105 37706
- 292 144
- 292 41
- 292 33
- 292 2565
- 114 116
- 114 117
- 114 120
- 114 201 R
- 114 202
- 114 203
-
International Classifications
- E06B728
- B63B1912
- E05B6500
-
Abstract
A seal for a pivotally mounted door, which is arranged to close off a load area on board a ship and is provided with sealing elements around the periphery of the door and exhibits battening jacks that are caused to move to batten down the door to the deck and bulkhead or parts thereof. A sealing element pivotally supported along the top and/or bottom edge of the door is capable of actuation by a number of the battening jacks causing it to be moved into a sealing (SP) position along the top and/or bottom edge of the door against a contact surface.
Description
The present invention relates to an arrangement for a pivotally mounted door, which is so arranged as to close off a load area on board a ship and is provided with sealing elements around the periphery of the door and exhibits battening jacks that are caused to move to batten down the door to the deck and bulkhead.
Previously disclosed are various solutions for seals for ship doors for the purpose of making these as watertight as possible. Sealing elements are often arranged along the whole of the opening in the interior of the ship along which the door is wished to provide a seal, although this means that it is necessary to fit the seals on board the ship, which takes a lot of time and costs a lot of money. If it is wished to replace the seals, for example, this means that it is necessary to enter the ship in order to work, with a resulting significant delay in its availability for use. If elements which incorporate several functions can be prefabricated, it is possible to save up to four times as much time as is required for the subsequent installation of corresponding functions in the ship.
A seal for a door is also previously disclosed through patent application Ser. No. 8201332-7, in conjunction with which the seal is supported by the door itself on the bottom edge of the door and extends along the aforementioned bottom edge of the door. Actuation of the seal takes place entirely separately from actuation of the door with the help of a number of actuating hydraulic cylinders supported by the door. Separate driving means are thus required for the aforementioned seal.
The principal object of the present invention is thus, in the first instance, to solve the aforementioned problems by simple and effectively functioning means and, in conjunction therewith, to cause existing battens to be used to actuate the seal.
The aforementioned object is achieved by means of an arrangement in accordance with the present invention, which is characterized essentially in that a sealing element pivotally supported along the top and/or bottom edge of the door is capable of actuation by a number of the aforementioned battening jacks causing it to be moved into a sealing position along the top and/or bottom edge of the door against a contact surface.
The invention is described below as a number of preferred illustrative embodiments, in conjunction with which reference is made to the accompanying drawings, in which
FIG. 1
shows a side view of a door with a sealing arrangement at the top in accordance with the invention;
FIG. 2
shows a part of the pivot bearing of the door viewed along line II—II in
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 3
shows a sectioned view of the door along line III—III in
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 4
shows a hinged articulation arrangement for the moving sealing part;
FIG. 5
shows a sectioned view of the door with the seals in an active sealing position;
FIG. 6
shows the seals and their actuating jack;
FIG. 7
shows the inner part of the door with the associated pivot bearing and a sealing arrangement;
FIG. 8
shows a further side view of the door and a sealing arrangement along the peripheral edges of the door;
FIG. 9
shows the extent of the sealing arrangements in a door;
FIG. 10
shows a sectioned view along line X—X in
FIG. 9
;
FIG. 11
shows a section along a first illustrative example of a seal in contact with the deck and the door;
FIG. 12
shows a section along a second illustrative example of a seal in contact with the deck and the door;
FIG. 13
shows a top view of the different pivot positions of a door;
FIG. 14
shows a sectioned view of the door and its locking and sealing elements in non-active positions;
FIG. 15
also shows a sectioned view of the door with its locking and sealing elements in active locking and sealing positions;
FIG. 16
shows a cross-section of an illustrative example with sealing elements situated at the bottom of a door;
FIG. 17
shows a cross-section of a further illustrative example with sealing elements situated both at the bottom and at the top of a door along the horizontal edges of the door.
An arrangement
1
for a pivotally mounted door
2
, of the kind which is pivotally mounted preferably at 180° but at least at 90° between the open position OP and the closing position CP, is so arranged as to be capable of closing off a load area
3
on board a ship
4
.
The aforementioned door
2
is provided with appropriate sealing elements
5
-
13
, for example made of rubber or plastic, which extend along the periphery of the door. The door arrangement also exhibits battening jacks
14
-
16
which are arranged for battening the door to the deck
17
,
18
and bulkhead
19
of the ship or fixed locking components, e.g. rails, rigidly attached thereto.
In accordance with the present invention, a pivotally mounted sealing element
10
-
13
is present along the top edge
20
of the door. The aforementioned sealing element
10
-
13
is supported essentially by a horizontal rigid rail
21
, which is supported in a pivotally mounted fashion via a pivoting articulation
22
on the top edge
20
of the door. The aforementioned upper moving sealing elements
10
-
13
are so arranged as to be actuated by a number of the aforementioned battening jacks
16
and to be caused to move into a sealing position SP along the aforementioned top edge
20
of the door into contact respectively with an upper and lower contact surface
23
,
24
functioning as a sealing face.
The aforementioned sealing supporting rail
21
supports an upper sealing element
10
of the intended kind sealing against the upper deck
18
of the ship or parts thereof extending along the upper pivoting end part
25
of the sealing supporting rail
21
. The aforementioned sealing supporting rail
21
also supports a lower sealing element
11
, which is capable of being brought into contact so as to effect a seal against a sealing face
24
on the upper part of the door
2
and supported by the door
2
, which sealing element is so arranged as to seal the space
26
formed between the sealing supporting rail
21
and the top edge
20
of the door.
An alternative embodiment of the arrangement of the sealing elements
10
1
,
11
1
is shown in FIG.
12
and is so arranged in this case, instead of making contact at the top with a vertical contact surface
23
in a recess or a projection
27
in the upper deck
18
of the ship, as to make contact with a contact surface
23
1
in the smooth horizontal upper deck
18
.
The sealing element
11
1
is so arranged at the bottom next to the aforementioned sealing supporting rail
21
1
as to make contact with a vertical upper flange
24
1
in the door
2
. With the aforementioned arrangement, the need to arrange weakened recesses or other projections in the deck
18
is avoided.
In this way the contact surface, with which the moving upper seal
10
comes into contact, is formed from an essentially horizontal part
23
1
of an upper deck
18
, as shown in
FIG. 12
, for example, or from a vertical part
23
of a recess or a projection
27
in the upper deck
18
.
The moving sealing element
11
1
,
11
, which is so arranged as to seal between the upper edge
20
of the door
2
and the aforementioned sealing rail
21
, is so arranged as to seal against a stop
24
1
,
24
, which is so arranged as to extend essentially vertically or essentially horizontally supported by the door
2
; see FIG.
12
and
FIG. 11
respectively.
One side
28
of an aforementioned battening jack
16
, which is preferably executed with square cross-section, is so arranged by making contact with one side
29
of the sealing supporting rail
21
, as to interact with the same in order to cause the aforementioned sealing supporting rail
21
to pivot in an upward direction
30
. However, the front part
31
of the aforementioned battening jack
16
is so arranged as initially to lift up the sealing supporting rail
21
at the time of initiating its upward-pivoting phase.
The aforementioned battening jack
16
appropriately consists of a number of preferably hydraulically powered piston cylinders distributed along the longitudinal extent of the door, which are accommodated in matching spaces
32
in the inside of the door. In the extended position I, each piston rod
33
is so arranged as to be accommodated in, for example, a matching recess
27
provided for this purpose in the upper deck
18
in the hull of the ship.
In order to enable the moving, pivoting sealing arrangement
10
-
13
to be brought down from the sealing I upward-pivoted position SP to a downward-pivoted II non-sealing opening position OP, in which position the sealing supporting rail
21
is in contact with an upper inclined part
34
of the door
2
, a drawing device
35
is so arranged as to connect the sealing supporting rail
21
with an aforementioned battening jack piston rod
33
.
The aforementioned drawing device preferably consists of a chain
35
, a cable, a rope or some other flexible device.
The function of the invention should have emerged from the above description and the illustrations in the drawings, although the function is clearly illustrated in the drawings in
FIGS. 14 and 15
. When the door
2
has been swung outwards from its open position OP closely along a bulkhead
19
, for example in the central part of the ship, about the pivoting articulations
36
of the door, and has rolled on the deck
17
with the help of telescopically moving support wheels
37
, a piston cylinder
38
on the bottom part of the door is activated so that the door
2
is lowered in the direction of the arrow
39
. The seal
5
, which is situated on the bottom part of the door and extends along the lower edge
40
of the door, then comes into sealing contact with the deck
17
; see FIG.
15
. The preferably hydraulically powered piston cylinders
14
,
15
,
16
are then actuated so that they are each accommodated in their own recess
41
,
27
in the deck or in a bulkhead. When the upper jacks
16
are extended in a direction upwards
42
, the sealing supporting rail
21
is caused to pivot upwards at the same time in the direction of the arrow
30
so that the moving seals
10
,
11
each come into sealing contact with their own sealing contact surface
23
,
24
;
23
1
,
24
1
. In conjunction with this, the aforementioned seals can make contact with an evenly adjustable sealing surface, for example welded-on strips
43
of metal.
The seals in this case seal effectively around the periphery of the entire door, so that a watertight door
2
is able to close off the opening
50
capable of being closed off by the door
2
between the bulkhead
19
,
51
in the space
3
inside the ship that it is wished to seal, for example a space accessible by vehicles in a ferry that it is wished to make secure if water were to find its way into the ship. When the battening jacks
16
are subsequently caused to retract and thus to withdraw from their accommodating openings or projections
27
in the ship, the sealing supporting rail
21
falls down in the direction of the arrow
44
or
44
1
, and in conjunction with this the moving seals leave their sealing positions. The door
2
can then be raised and caused to pivot to its open position.
The illustrative embodiment of a sealing arrangement
101
shown in
FIG. 16
exhibits a fixed upper seal
176
, which comes into contact with the upper deck
18
when the wheel
37
and the wheel jack
38
of the door are activated and have forced the door upwards. The existing door battening jacks
176
,
114
are then actuated, of which the lower ones cause the lower seals
175
,
177
to be made to pivot about a common pivoting articulation
178
and into engagement with the intended contact surface
179
,
180
. The aforementioned lower seals are also supported by a pivotally mounted rigid transverse rail
181
.
The seal at the bottom is thus effectively released, and at the top a fixed seal
182
seals against the upper deck
18
, etc. Upward pivoting of the lower sealing rail
181
can preferably take place by means of drawing devices (not shown here), which are connected to the sealing supporting rail
181
and a number of the lower jacks
114
, in conjunction with which the upward movement of the jacks is transferred to the aforementioned sealing supporting rail
181
.
Finally, illustrated in
FIG. 17
is an example of how moving seals
210
,
211
,
275
,
276
capable of actuation can be arranged connected in pairs each to their own rigid sealing supporting rail
221
both at the top and at the bottom of the door
2
. In this case, too, the battening jacks
222
,
223
take care of causing the sealing supporting rails
221
to pivot to a sealing position, so that the seals supported by them come into contact with a matching contact surface
224
-
227
after activation of the aforementioned battening jacks
222
,
223
. No support wheel is required in this embodiment with movable seals both at the top and at the bottom of the door, but the door
2
can be mounted only pivotally at a certain specified distance from the lower deck.
The invention is naturally not restricted to the embodiments described above and illustrated in the drawings. Modifications are possible, especially with regard to he nature of the different parts, or through the use of equivalent technology, without departing from the area of protection afforded to the invention as defined in the Patent Claims.
Claims
- 1. Seal for a pivotally mounted door the door arranged to close off a load area on board a ship and is provided with sealing elements around the periphery of the door and exhibits battening jacks that are caused to move to batten down the door to a deck and a bulkhead of the ship, characterized in that the sealing elements are pivotally supported along at least one of a top edge or a bottom edge of the door, the sealing elements are capable of actuation by a number of the battening jacks causing the sealing elements to be moved into a sealing position along the at least one of a top edge or a bottom edge of the door against a contact surfacewherein the sealing elements are supported by a horizontal sealing support rail, and a drawing device is so arranged as to connect the sealing support rail with a battening jack piston rod.
- 2. The seal according to claim 1, characterized in that the sealing elements located on the top edge of the door are supported by the door.
- 3. The seal according to claim 1, characterized in that the sealing support rail supports an upper sealing element sealing against the deck of the ship extending along an upper pivoting end part of the sealing support rail and a lower sealing element which seals against a sealing face on the upper part of the door, which is so arranged as to seal between the sealing support rail and the top edge of the door.
- 4. The seal according to claim 3, wherein the sealing element between the upper edge of the door and the sealing support rail is so arranged as to seal against a stop, which is arranged vertically or horizontally and supported by the door.
- 5. The seal according to claim 3, wherein one side of the at least one of the battening jacks is so arranged, by making contact with the sealing support rail as to interact with the sealing support rail in order to cause the sealing support rail to pivot upwards.
- 6. The seal according to claim 3, wherein the contact surface is in contact with a moving upper seal and is formed from an essentially horizontal part of the deck or from a vertical part of a recess in the deck.
- 7. The seal according to claim 6, wherein the sealing element between the upper edge of the door and the sealing rail, is so arranged as to seal against a stop, which is arranged vertically or horizontally and is supported by the door.
- 8. The seal according claim 3, characterized in that the sealing elements located on the top edge of the door are supported by the door.
- 9. The seal according to claim 8, wherein one side of at least one of the battening jacks is so arranged, by making contact with the sealing support rail, as to interact with the sealing support rail in order to cause the sealing support rail to pivot upwards.
- 10. The seal according to claim 9, characterized in that the drawing device consists of a chain, a cable, or a rope.
- 11. The seal according to claim 10, where in the contact surface is in contact with a moving upper seal and is formed from n essentially horizontal part of the deck or from a vertical part of a recess in the deck; andwherein the sealing element between the upper edge of the door and the sealing support rail, is so arranged as to seal against a stop, which is arranged vertically or horizontally and is supported by the door.
- 12. The seal according to claim 9, wherein at least one of the battening jacks consists of piston cylinders, each having an extendable piston rod so arranged as to be accommodated in a recess or in a projection provided in the hull of the ship.
- 13. The seal according to claim 12, wherein the contact surface is in contact with a moving upper seal and is formed from an essentially horizontal part of the deck or a vertical part of a recess in the deck.
- 14. The seal according to claim 12, characterized in that the drawing device consists of a chain, a cable, or a rope.
- 15. The seal according to claim 1, characterized in that the drawing device consists of a chain, a cable, or a rope.
- 16. The seal according to claim 15, wherein one side of at least one of the battening jacks is so arranged, by making contact with the sealing support rail as to interact with the sealing support rail in order to cause the sealing support rail to pivot upwards.
- 17. The seal according to claim 1, wherein one side of at least one of the battening jacks is so arranged, by making contact with the sealing support rail, as to interact with the sealing support rail in order to cause sealing support rail to pivot upwards.
- 18. The seal according to claim 1, wherein at least one of the battening jacks consists of piston cylinders, each having an extendable piston rod so arranged as to be accommodated in a recess or in a projection in the hull of the ship.
- 19. The seal according to claim 1, wherein the contact surface is in contact with a moving upper seal and, is formed from an essentially horizontal part of the deck or from a vertical part of a recess in a the deck.
- 20. The seal according to claim 19, wherein the sealing element between the upper edge of the door and the sealing support rail is so arranged as to seal against a stop which is arranged vertically or horizontally and is supported by the door.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
0001904 |
May 2000 |
SE |
|
US Referenced Citations (10)
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
4141631 |
Jun 1993 |
DE |
2220220 |
Jan 1990 |
GB |