This invention relates to stacking mechanisms for stacking a plurality of elements. In particular, the invention relates to elements which are linearly or sequentially arranged.
A common type of stacking mechanism is used for closing the shutter of a door opening and comprises a plurality of shutter members such as parallel plates or blades extending across the opening and movably mounted to opposite sides thereof. In a closed position of the shutter, the blades lie generally in the plane of the opening, with touching or overlapping edges, thereby closing the opening. In an open position of the shutter, the blades are removed from the opening and may be stacked one over the other or collapsed face-to-face or rolled in a roll or just drawn away along the ceiling or a wall, etc. as the design may be. The transition from closed to open position and back is performed by a motion device that may employ pulleys and ropes or chains, scissors lever mechanism, motion screw, etc. and a motor or manual drive. Another common type of shutter has a number of parallel bars connected with transverse elements such as diagonal cross-bars moveable like scissors, or flexible chains, bands, etc. so that these elements obstruct the passage when the parallel bars are in the most spaced position.
For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,163,494 discloses a sectional door installation comprising a series of horizontal blades mounted with their opposite ends to scissors linkages. The lowermost linkage is raised or lowered by an endless chain whereby all linkages contract or extend simultaneously. The blades are mounted to one of the two levers in a scissors pair and turn together with the lever, so that in the most raised position, the blades are nearly horizontal and are stacked in a tight stack under the upper beam of the doorframe.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,469,905 describes a security and hurricane shutter using blades which are longitudinally pivoted to each other. Every other pivoting axis is supported in a vertical guide at the two opposing sides of the door. The shutter can use either pulleys or motion screw that raises the lowermost blade. Thereby, the whole blade assembly collapses like accordion towards the upper beam of the door.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,846,244 discloses a window shutter comprising a plurality of horizontal blades, a tilting device for simultaneously tilting all the blades about their horizontal axes, and a raising device. The blades are mounted on shafts received within channels at opposite sides of the window. The devices for tilting and raising of the blades employ ropes and pulleys like in Venetian blinds.
The usage of motion screws in shutter mechanisms generally allows more accurate motion than the usage of ropes or chains. However, the stacking of the blades in known shutter mechanisms requires that only one blade is engaged with the screw thread thus overloading this blade while the other blades lose the accuracy of motion.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a stacking mechanism comprising:
The traveling nuts are arranged at intervals W1i, i=1, 2, . . . , N−1, preferably uniform, within the length L1 in a first position of the mechanism. By means of continuous rotation of the screw in one direction, they can slide along the screw within the length L1 at rate P1 per 1 turn of the screw under the action of the arrester and the thread with pitch P1. The nuts can transit smoothly and reversibly from L1 to L2, and can slide with rotation along the screw within the length L2 at a rate P2 per 1 turn of the traveling nut under the action of the thread with pitch P1 and the thread with pitch P2. The nuts can achieve reversibly a second position of the mechanism where they are arranged at intervals W2i, i=1, 2, . . . , N−1 within the length L2, where W2i<W1i and L2<L1.
Preferably, the arrester is an elongated member, i.e., an L- or C-profile, parallel to the screw, and the traveling nuts have a notch engaging the elongated member while the traveling nuts are within the length L1.
Each traveling nut has a connection element mounted for free rotation about the nut axis and carrying a non-rotating shutter member. The connection element is preferably a ring with an inward rim and a radial pin while the nut has an external annular channel adapted to engage the inward rim.
The threaded member has a cutout parallel to the thread axis so that the connection elements can travel together with the traveling nuts within the length L2. The threaded member may be a toothed rack parallel to the screw, the teeth of the rack constituting thread with pitch P2.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a stacking assembly comprising two stacking mechanisms as described above. The two stacking mechanisms may be disposed substantially opposite one another, so that each element to be stacked spans therebetween, and is attached to corresponding nuts on each stacking mechanism.
In order to understand the invention and to see how it may be carried out in practice, preferred embodiments will now be described, by way of non-limiting example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to
The stacking mechanism and the construction of the shutter in general are described in greater detail in the following figures. With reference to
The screw 22 has length L and its thread 24 is multi-start thread with pitch P1 (one turn thereof is shown under number 24′).
With reference also to
The arrester 28 is an elongated member with C-like cross-section (i.e., a C-section), of length L1 disposed parallel to the screw. The sides 56 of the C-section engage the notches 40 and 41 of the nut 26, as shown in
The threaded member 30 is formed as a tooth rack and is disposed parallel to the screw 22, the teeth constituting the internal thread 32 with pitch P2, matching the thread 38 on the nut 26. The member 32 has length L2 and is disposed adjacent the arrester 28.
The stacking mechanism 20 operates as follows. With initial position of the traveling nut 26′ within the length L1 of the screw, the screw 22 starts uniform rotation in one direction. Within the length L1, the traveling nut 26 is engaged with the arrester 28 by means of the tooth 44 and notches 40 and 41 which prevents the rotation of the nut. Therefore, the nut slides along the screw 22 at rate li=P1 per 1 turn of the screw. When the traveling nut 26 reaches the end of the arrester 28 at the boundary between lengths L1 and L2, the tooth 44 disengages from the arrester 28. At the same time, the tooth 44 abuts the start of the thread in the threaded member 30 which stops the sliding of the nut along the screw 22. But now the nut 26 is able to rotate together with the screw 22, the tooth 44 and the whole thread 38 following the internal thread 32. Therefore, when within the length L2, the nut performs a complex motion including rotation with the screw 22 but with angular sliding, and linear translation at rate P2 per 1 turn of the nut. The linear travel l2 of the nut per one turn of the screw is:
l2=(P1×P2)/(P1+P2)
Upon reverse rotation of the screw, the nut travels back from the length L2 to the length L1 with smooth transition. It will be readily appreciated that if two nuts 26 are positioned initially at a distance W1 on the length L1 of the screw 22, after both nuts pass over to the length L2, they will be positioned at a distance W2:
W2=(W1×P2)/(P1+P2)
With reference also to
The stacking mechanism may be used, for example, in the shutter 10 shown externally in
The shutter 10 further comprises a plurality of N flat rectangular blades 12 with long edges 14, short edges 16 of width W1, and has a thickness T<W2. The short and long edges of the blades are disposed approximately in one common plane (the plane of the aperture) in the first position of the stacking mechanisms, as shown by blades 12B and 12C, whereby the access aperture is closed. The blades are stacked under the upper beam 59, turned perpendicularly to the common plane, in the second position of the stacking mechanisms, as shown by blade 12′, whereby the access aperture is opened.
With reference also to
With reference also to
a) N pivoting levers 72, each one firmly mounted to one short edge 16 of each blade, generally in a plane perpendicular to the blade axis. Each lever 72 has a roller 74 at its free end 76;
b) A guiding member 78 extending parallel to the screw 22. The guiding member 78 has a channel profile (C-shaped cross-section) which engages the roller of each pivoting lever while the blade is traveling along the screw;
c) A movable suspension (not shown) of the guiding member allowing the guiding member to be displaced from its initial position transversely to the screw, while preserving the parallel orientation and the engagement with the roller;
d) A latch 82 preventing the displacement of the guiding member 78 and disposed at the lower end of the guiding member;
e) an actuator 84 engaged with the screw 22 and adapted to unlock and lock the latch 82. The actuator 84 is actually a traveling nut 26T that carries a finger 85 adapted to engage the latch 82 when moving past the latch; and
f) A plurality of N traps 88 (recesses) disposed on the guiding member 78 at intervals W1. The traps 88 are adapted to catch for a while the free end of the lever of each blade when its roller falls into the trap.
The shutter 10 operates in the following way. In the first position of the stacking mechanism (
During the upward motion, the rollers 74 successively fall into next traps 88 but the actuator 84 cannot engage the latch anymore. Therefore, the rollers 74 are pulled out without turning the levers 72.
It should be appreciated that in the reverse (downward) motion, the operation of the stacking mechanism 20 proceeds exactly in the reverse order.
The pivoting mechanism may be adapted to swivel each blade away from the common plane just before its traveling nuts start their transition from the length L1 to the length L2. A second embodiment of the pivoting mechanism shown in
Another application of the stacking mechanism is shown in
In the first position (
It would be appreciated that elements which extend between the bars 112 may be of various nature, such as flexible chains, ropes, mesh, textile, elastic sheets, etc.
Although a description of specific embodiments has been presented, it is contemplated that various changes could be made without deviating from the spirit and the scope of the present invention. Likewise, those skilled in the art to which this invention pertains will readily appreciate that numerous changes, variations and modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention mutatis mutandis. For example, the stacking mechanism and/or the pivoting mechanism could be modified and used with any type of mechanism to stack linearly arranged elements, for example, window slats, truck and/or cargo doors, shelves, parallel bars, lights, machine elements, and any other use which requires elements which are aligned linearly to be stacked and/or un-stacked in an orderly fashion. The mechanisms may be mounted with vertical screws, with horizontal screws and in any orientation of the access aperture plane.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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154223 | Jan 2003 | IL | national |
This is a Continuation-In-Part of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/543,407 filed on Jul. 26, 2005 and issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,370,684 on May 13, 2008, which is a US National Phase of PCT/IL2004/000039 filed Jan. 15, 2004, and claims priority from Israeli Patent Application IL154223, filed Jan. 30, 2003, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080210388 A1 | Sep 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10543407 | US | |
Child | 12149958 | US |