1. Field of Invention
This invention relates to the door operating mechanisms for bins, boxes, shelters, vending kiosks, truck and trailer bodies, utility buildings, and the like where one or both sides are raised for access. In particular, operating mechanisms for raising gull-wing type doors hinged along a ridge pole in the center of the roof, and the like.
2. Description of Prior Art
British Patent #GB 2,152,448 shows a truck body with a single gull-wing type side/roof panel door. GB 2,152,448 illustrates a hydraulic cylinder pin connected directly between the door and a fixed structure for opening a gull-wing lid/door. A pin connected hydraulic means is very common for lifting roof (lid) panels and side panels. The rotation at the attachment pins provides hinging for accommodating the changes of angle between the hydraulic cylinder and the structure as a door or lid is moved between closed and open positions. No additional mechanism to provide mechanical advantage and employed. The mechanism is simple, but requires the addition of a source of hydraulic pressure, which is seldom available in the applications for the present invention.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,268,084 uses a cable and pulley assembly with a spring as counterbalance for opening a folding gull wing lid/door plus a drop-side portion forming a ramp. The roof/door assembly is operated manually (Column 5, line 4) aided by the counter balancing forces from the spring and weight of the drop-side (ramp) which may be stepped on to complete the operation. '084 is not a true gull-wing, because the lid and side panel are hingedly connected. A counter arm guides the side panel motion. The whole assembly operates as a pin-connected trapezoid (FIG. 4). The roof/door mechanism described in '084 do not provide any sheltering to the workers or the truck contents from weather as does the present invention.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,890,020 shows a single roof with attached side closing means, in this case a canvas drop panel. '020 also shows the ubiquitous pin attached hydraulic cylinder as the opening mechanism. The lid/side assembly is not a gull-wing, but does open the side when the lid is raised. The similarity to the present invention ends there.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,896,316 and 6,902,226, both by William S. Taylor, show a single solid gull-wing door/lid structure hinged at the far side of the truck. It too uses the ubiquitous pin attached hydraulic cylinder as the opening mechanism (FIGS. 2 & 3b). The lid/side doors of '316 and '226 would be too heavy to be practical for using manual or low voltage electric motor lifting.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,682,811 is a multi-mode hinging for side and top doors of a box bin. One of the modes is a gull-wing lid/side door hinged at or near the center of the lid area (FIGS. 2 and 3a). '811, like others, is operated by pin attached hydraulic cylinders. '811 has no sealing means along the hinge lines to prevent ingress of rain or wash water.
Hydraulic lifting means, besides requiring a hydraulic power source, have several other disadvantages. When pinned between fixed and moving structures as illustrated in the above references, the angles of force during some of the range of motion are far from optimum. Indeed, the cylinder has to provide several times as much force in some positions as is required in other positions of the range of motion. Thus the cylinder has to be sized much larger and have more pressure to provide lift from this awkward configuration than is necessary for working over most of the range of motion. When hydraulic cylinders are used in tandem such as one on each end of the lid assembly as is also illustrated in the references, all the cylinders generally receive the same pressure from the power source, causing them to operate with coordinated (equal) force. If one portion of the moving structure requires more force to move, such as may be the case with snow load, damaged or rusty hinges, bending, dents, etc, the moving structure will be lifted unevenly, perhaps doing even more damage to the structure.
The present invention does not require an often absent source of hydraulic power, and the several lifting jacks are operated with coordinated movement, not coordinated force. Thus the gull-wing roof lifts evenly along its whole length.
1. It is an object of the invention to provide a box with large horizontally hinged side opening doors and the machinery to raise the doors.
2. It is a further object of the invention to use power assist to open the doors
3. It is a further object of the invention to use manual operation to open the doors.
4. It is a further object of the invention to permit a plurality of independently operated doors.
5. It is a further object of the invention to mount the box on a truck or trailer.
6. It is a further object of the invention to provide a shelter roof over openings exposed by the open door.
These and other advantages will be fulfilled by a box or building described by the following specification.
In the preferred embodiment, two rows of parallel hinges are mounted near the center of the top of a basically rectangular box. The box may deviate from a rectangular parallelopiped shape by having a portion of the top surface sloping, ie, a barn style hip roof. Two edge connected panels are attached to each hinge row. These panels each form a top and one side of a closed box, and when rotated about their respective hinges, are gull-wing type doors and open the box sides for access with high clearance plus weather protecting eves over the users and the contents of the box.
Stiffener bars extending between the lid portion near the hinge and approximately the distal edge of the side portion also serve as the member where lift forces from a jack are applied. In most cases, the stiffeners are located at the ends of the door panels. Additional stiffeners may be inserted between the end stiffeners whenever needed to support the door panels at mid-spans.
The jack may be a screw mechanism, cable, hydraulic or pneumatic piston, rack and pinion, pawl and ratchet, cam, or similar used singularly or in combination. For larger doors, jacks may be placed at both ends and/or mid span to avoid bending and to provide even lift. A coordinating means is incorporated to ensure that all jacks on any one door operate co-operatively. The preferred coordinating means is a shaft driving two or more jack screws from the shaft by bevel or worm gears, or similarly, sprocket gears on the jack screws which are driven by a link chain similar to a bicycle chain or a rubber cog belt similar to an automobile timing belt. Other drive methods are applicable as well, all driven together by a common crank or motor. The doors may also be divided into independent segments each having independent cranks or motors.
The lid portion, or roof, may be flat, rounded, or hipped for additional interior height and/or strength.
A flexible waterproof membrane is attached to the left and right lid portions and cover the hinges to protect the hinges from weather and prevent leakage into the interior of the box in both open and closed configurations.
The drawings do not show various structural elements such as the detail design of the frame, foundation, truck or trailer, etc, associated with the building or box design.
The term jack, and similar is intended to include the various machinery and ways for producing forceful linear motion, including tackle and differential chainhoists. The term cable is generic and includes chains, links, or any device operating in tension that may be substituted for an ordinary cable.
Referring to
Referring to
Truck 6 consists of at least two wheels 8 and is pivotally mounted 10 to lifting arm 9. Alternatively, a single wheel as illustrated in
Not shown, is a means to keep the truck on the track surface of brace 5. This may be either by providing sufficient stiffness that the truck tracks along the axis of the brace, or better, for more security, a holding means is employed. Typically, such a holding means would be a guiding channel on the track or guide fingers on the truck which extend over the sides of the track to guide the truck along on the brace track.
Lifting arm 9 is fixedly attached to nut 11, which in turn co-operates with jack screw 12 to move the lift arms and trucks which in turn lift the brace 5 and the door assembly.
Lifting arm(s) 9, nut 11, and jack screw 12 together comprise a complete jack machine to forcefully lift the door(s). For the purposes of this invention, cable or chain lifts which in other contexts would be described as hoists or cranes (
Panel 13 shown is an end wall of the box. It is not part of the innovation, but may serve structural purposes for partly supporting the jack screw, other jack parts, winches, pulleys, motors, etc.
A motor or crank assembly (not shown in
A flexible weather proof panel 16 is sealed to the doors and covers the hinges to protect the hinge assembly and box in general from rain and dirt. Suitable gaskets on the door edges would seal the doors against weather.
While a the description is of a screw jack, any means to lift the “nut” 11 would suffice, although with diminished capability For safety, a screw of other non-self releasing supporting jack is preferred. Secondary safety catches are recommended as well.
One embodiment in particular as a substitute for a screw jack is shown in
The winch 28 may be operated by a manual crank, or electric, air, vacuum, steam, or hydraulic motors. A crank or electric motor is preferred because muscle power is always available, and an electric motor may be run off of an automobile or truck electrical system, which will usually be available. A winch is only one of several well known means to pull a cable. Hydraulic and pneumatic piston cylinders are known to be equivalent in some applications. Such may also use cable rigging similar to a reverse operated block and tackle to increase the effective throw of the piston. A differential chain hoist will also be usable to lift the slider up.
A means to disconnect one of the trucks to disable the lift on one door is provided so that only one door is raised. Referring to
The side walls of slot 30 should each be at least ½ the thickness of the tang portion 32 of arm 9a, and obviously, both the tang portion and the slot walls have to be of sufficient size and strength to support the expected applied load during operation.
Obviously, each door may be fitted with its own individual opening machinery. If so fitted, it is recommended that the individual drives be located on an axis approximately at the place shown for the trucks 6 in
The roof portion may be shaped in any convenient manner to fit the application. The descriptions of the embodiments illustrated show the panels hinged near the center of the building or box, most likely on a strong back or ridge pole. The ridge pole fine structure not illustrated, but may be any structurally sound assembly such as a truss, structural box, angle, channel, I beam, etc, or any attached stiffening elements. Also included in the ridge pole design options is to have the proximal edges (hinged) of the roof stiffened with a bent down edge, or stiffening ribs of any design. With this option, the two roof panels are hinged together, with the hinge line strengthened by a stiffening means integral with the roof panels.
Additional panels and/or curtains may be added to the lower edge of the side panels to serve as awnings, sun-shades, outer walls. Obviously, such a shade panel could be formed by hinging a portion of the side panel itself.
The figures illustrate track brace 5 as a straight element. It is reasonable to curve brace 5, or more precisely, its track function, as a separate track to keep the truck 6 wheels 8 approximately horizontal to reduce the development of useless horizontal components of force which must be resisted by the hinges, jack, and the rest of the structure. This can be done by developing a mathematical function, but easily by graphical means more likely to be understandable by the ordinarily skilled mechanic.
The following illustrates one method of developing such a curve.
Referring to
1. Draft a scale drawing of the track brace 5 and hinge point 2.
2. Draw a short vertical line 12′ representing the locus of movement of truck 6.
3. Draw a horizontal line 19a at the crossing of the vertical locus and the track.
Note this first horizontal line at the closed position of 5 is the only one in this process that is in its proper physical position.
4. Rotate brace 5 and the previously drawn horizontal line(s) incrementally through its range to 5′.
5. At each increment, draw another horizontal line 19b, c, &d, at the intersection of the vertical locus 12′ and brace 5.
6. Repeat 4-5 to the final position at 5′.
7. Return the brace to the closed position at 5
8. Pull each of the horizontal lines 19a, b, c, &d down to positions 19e, f, &g to form a curve with the each other line and the first line.
9. Draw a smoothed curve through the connected lines.
10. It is noticed that, for at least in the example shown, the resulting curve of lifting points is on a circle 20 which has its center 21 on the vertical locus 12′ midway between the first horizontal line and the elevation of the brace 5 if rotated to a horizontal position 22. (Whether the brace is or is not expected to actually be rotated to horizontal.)
The resulting curved track will present an approximately horizontal face to the truck at all positions of lift, thereby not producing any horizontal forces tending to bend the jack. Reduction of horizontal and torsional forces is most important when a jack is used to lift only one door. These forces are balanced in the two-door configuration so their elimination is not required.
Referring to
A variation of the hoisting jack shown in
The truck track for both embodiments illustrated in
Referring to
The figures show structural elements as solid bars or similar. Various bracing, trussing, and lattice work structures are the structural equivalent of the elements as shown, and are considered to be covered by the attached claims.
The described box with gull-wing lift doors may be mounted on a foundation such as skids, feet, casters, a foundation stand, fork lift pallets, a truck, trailer, railroad car, or any suitable support providing an adequate base to support the box without it being warped. Similarly, the interior is furnished with the equipment, furniture, and fixtures required for the purpose of use.
When it is desired to open the doors of the box or building, any latches or locks are released, the jacks operated as described, and the doors lifted. Safety catches are set, and the building is open and ready for use.
The sequence is reversed to close up the building.
The foregoing is considered as illustrative only of the principles of the invention. Further, since numerous modifications and changes will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact construction and operation shown and described, and accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to falling within the scope of the invention as defined by the claims which follow.
The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property right or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
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284846 | Herron | Sep 1883 | A |
893193 | Waldmire | Jul 1908 | A |
1740350 | Ingraham | Dec 1929 | A |
2920920 | Couse et al. | Jan 1960 | A |
3299589 | Hay | Jan 1967 | A |
4268084 | Peters | May 1981 | A |
4682811 | Ooguro | Jul 1987 | A |
5239776 | Lhotak | Aug 1993 | A |
6890020 | Bush | May 2005 | B2 |
6896316 | Taylor | May 2005 | B1 |
6902226 | Taylor | Jun 2005 | B1 |
6969130 | Newton et al. | Nov 2005 | B2 |
20030115808 | Morrow | Jun 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2152448 | Aug 1985 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080104890 A1 | May 2008 | US |