Applicant claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of German Application No. 10 2004 057 039.6 filed Nov. 25, 2004, German Application No. 10 2004 062 515.8 filed Dec. 24, 2004, and German Application No. 10 2005 027 337.8 filed Jun. 13, 2005. Applicant also claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §365 of PCT/DE2005/002134 filed Nov. 25, 2005. The international application under PCT article 21(2) was not published in English.
The invention refers to the system arrangement of structural components and groups in lifting devices of container cranes and a procedure for the operation of the system arrangement.
Typical lifting devices consist of the following components: motor, motor shaft, clutch, if necessary with incorporated brake disk or brake drum, brake, transmission input shaft, transmission, transmission output shaft, clutch, wire rope drum with wire rope and incorporated brake disk or brake drum with safety brake. This arrangement can be effected in a unilateral or multilateral transmission or in a combination of several transmissions.
Lifting devices of this type are, according to the present state of the art, not sufficiently secured against overloading. In particular, when the load to be lifted is jammed, a considerable overloading may occur. In this connection, it may even happen that the load lifted by the drive performance is temporarily exceeded, if in the event of jamming the motor or motors with high revolution have saved a lot of rotation energy through their own momentum.
The current state of the art are systems which induce a reduction of the drive performance of the motor by means of measuring the power and the tension of the torsion. However, it is also in this case the period of time, which is required from the registration of the fact until the actual reduction of the performance that creates an enormous excess load.
In exceptional cases, specific systems are carried out to achieve the avoidance of critical operational conditions, whose cause is an overloading. This avoidance is achieved by means of hydraulic and/or pneumatic yielding systems with the application of deflection rollers in the wire ropes. Furthermore, measuring processes can be carried out on an electronic basis (e.g. torque, rotational speed, etc.) at various power transmission shafts and evaluated via a corresponding control arrangement.
These systems lead in a critical load case to the initiation of braking procedures and the cutting off of the motor.
The major disadvantages are caused, on one hand, by the excessive expenses involved, which result from the extensive hydraulic systems or extensive electronic controls required, on the other hand will the non-decoupling of the motor and transmission or their flyweights respectively lead to the fact that in the course of the braking-down process considerably larger load peaks will result than the maximum permissible ones will admit.
It is the task of the invention under discussion that an arrangement of the type mentioned above is developed in such a way that the safety of a movement is additionally increased. Furthermore, a procedure for the operation of the arrangement is to be created.
This task is solved by the invention according to the claims 1 and 10 and their pertaining sub-claims and is represented in the drawing at an example in the form of a two-sided transmission.
The invention allows several forms of execution. For the further illustration, two of them have been presented in the drawing, and they are described in the following.
In
In
A lifting device illustrated in the
Furthermore, the lifting device is equipped with two control units 15, 15′ for the steering of the brakes 11, 11′, 14, 14′. For the recognition of the switching of the device 13, 13′ the following two variations are preferably employed:
A first variation is displayed in
The control units 15, 15′ are connected on both sides of the motion sensors 16, 16′, of the devices 13, 13′ arranged as clutches. The devices 13, 13′ show coupling disks 17, 17′ in an arrangement opposed to each other, with teeth 18, 18′ on their circumference. The motion sensors 16, 16′ count the passing of the teeth 18, 18′ of the coupling disks 17, 17′. The control units 15, 15′ compare the number of the passing teeth 18, 18′ in the course of a defined period of time and determine from the result the movements of the coupling disks 17, 17′. In the case of an involuntary difference between the movements of the coupling disks 17, 17′, the control unit controls a part of or all brakes 11, 11′, 14, 14′, as a consequence of which these stop the rope drums 9, 9′. The movement sensors 16, 16′ are preferably designed as approximation switches.
A variation of the device 13 illustrated in
The control units of both variations are, furthermore, connected with speed sensors 19, 19′, 20, 20′ of the motors 1, 1′ and the rope drums 9, 9′. It is possible, in this way, to test the brakes 11, 11′, 14, 14′ one after the other, prior to the operation of the lifting device, by having the control units 15, 15′ control initially the brakes 11, 1′, 14, 14′, on account of which the movement of the corresponding brake disks 4, 4′, 10, 10′ will be blocked. Subsequently, the motor 1, 1′ will be started and the speed of the brake drums 9, 9′ and, if required, the speed of the motors 1, 1′ are determined. When, for instance, the speed sensors 20, 20′ determine a movement of the rope drum 9, 9′ beyond the normal speed—in spite of tightened brakes 11, 11′, 14, 14′—the braking performance for a safe operation of the lifting device will not be sufficient. In such a case, the display unit 21, 21′ will be activated for the operator of the lifting device, and a new start of the lifting device will be prevented or, exclusively, an emergency operation of the lifting device will be made possible.
The arrangement of the system arrangement according to claim 3 offers the advantage that the movement sensors have been arranged in such a manner that they will detect an actuation of the device (13) and pass on a signal to the control unit (15).
Of great advantage is the execution according to claim 2, in which case the separation is not again automatically created. In this way it is made impossible that the operator of the installation will again take up the operation of the units to be protected without visual inspection and examination.
Claim 7 designs the unit as a slip friction clutch, which in this arrangement ideally meets the requirements of a partial cancelling of the connection between motor and rope drum, since it passes on a part of the power in the slip friction operation. Through the operation of a downstream load-side brake according to claim 6, the excess load case can here be taken back again, the slip friction clutch can again come into the adhesion friction condition, and the lifting device can immediately continue to be operated.
On account of the complete separation of motor and rope drum, it is possible to exclude any excess load by one hundred percent.
Of great advantage is the execution according to claim 10, in which case the operation brakes 14, 14′ and the safety brakes 11, 11′ belonging to the state of the art take up the load-side power, released from the unit 13. In this connection, the execution according to claim 12 is also of great advantage, since the excess motor performance is also reduced in the overload case.
A mechanical separation between motor and rope drum in the unit 13 has the advantage to work without any third-party energy on its own. Hydraulic solutions can, in contrast, achieve high performance densities, by means of small unit volume and sizes, and as a consequence the flywheel effect of the unit 13 can be held small. For the electronic processing of the unit 13 having started operation, also an electrical execution is of advantage, because it will accept a signal for separation in a direct way.
The integration of the monitoring system for the recognition of overload cases within the unit 13 is in particular of great advantage for the retrofitting of existing lifting devices. This execution will then not require any additional retrofitting processes of further systems at the existing lifting devices and can, as a consequence, act independently.
In many lifting devices, a control system according to the state of the art is incorporated for the monitoring of anomalies of speed of the individual ingoing and outgoing driving units (all units from motor 1, 1′ until brake disk (10, 10′), in order to ensure the activation of the safety brakes 11, 11′ in the case of a failure of one of the units. Such a failure may, for instance, be a break in the driving shafts 2, 2′, 5, 5′, 7, 7′, of the clutches 3, 3′, 8, 8′ or in the gear 6. In the claim 10 the advantage of the unit 13 is made use of in a way that, in the case of a separation, the relation of the speeds of motor 1, 1′ and driving shaft 2, 2′ to the speeds of all units following the unit 13 will be changed. This change is automatically detected by the control system for the monitoring of speed anomalies and can, accordingly, be used for the introduction of braking processes according to claim 10.
The reduction of the driving performance of the motor during the occurrence of an overload is of great advantage because it represents, with the integration of the usual braking system 4, 14, 4′, 14′ between motor and rope drum, a compact and economic arrangement. It is the state of the art that such units are executed also direct with an integrated clutch.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 057 039 | Nov 2004 | DE | national |
10 2004 062 515 | Dec 2004 | DE | national |
10 2005 027 337 | Jun 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE2005/002134 | 11/25/2005 | WO | 00 | 5/24/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/056193 | 6/1/2006 | WO | A |
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