The present application relates to a system of lowering objects and is especially concerned with lowering people and objects safely from a height.
The present application finds application in many fields, including for example:
Mechanisms are known for lowering objects from a height and these include ropes and a simple block and tackle; friction arrangements are also known for engaging a rope to slow the descent of an object or a person. However, rope itself is quite heavy and bulky and the additional devices to control the descent of an object or person merely add to the bulk and the weight.
Another form of escape that can be used to descend from a height is a rope ladder, which can be deployed to descend from a window in the event of fire; despite their ability to be rolled up, rope ladders are bulky and heavy. They are also hazardous since it is easy to fall from a rope ladder.
Rope-based solutions for lowering people from heights including rope ladders, all suffer from the requirement that the person concerned must either be relatively agile himself/herself or have someone else to help them who is fit. Also, it is often required that the user needs a certain degree of knowledge of the operation of such rope-based solutions and the necessary skill to operate them. Furthermore, ropes have a finite life and must be replaced periodically and the replacement date must be logged to ensure that an old rope is replaced at the appropriate time.
There is a need for a safety device that can be made light and compact and that can be used easily.
EP 0 496 028 describes a fall arresting device having two ends, one of which is secured to an anchoring point and the other to a person. The two ends are connected by a chain that is doubled back on itself to form a U-shape. The two limbs of the U-shaped chain are joined together by short lengths of stainless steel cable. If a person should fall, tension is applied between the two ends of the chain, which causes lengths of cable to snap in succession until their fall is arrested. The device is heavy, bulky and cumbersome.
EP-1 308 398 discloses a packaging device for holding bottles that is in the form of a plastic sheet having a row of openings for receiving the bottles and a handle for carrying the package.
According to the present invention, there is provided a device for lowering a weight from a structure, the device comprising:
The device may also be used for removing kinetic energy from a moving person or object, e.g. to bring it to a halt, and as such the device can be used not only to control downward movement but also to control movement in other directions, e.g. for braking a horizontally-moving object.
The device itself will generally be elongated in shape and the anchoring end for securing the first elongate member to the structure will be provided at the same end of the device as the weight support end of the second elongate member since only then will the links connecting the first and second elongate members together be subject to the gravitational forces of the weight being lowered. The gravitational force is absorbed, according to the present invention, by the stretching and failing of the successive links joining the first and second elongate members together. This allows the weight to be lowered slowly and in a controlled manner.
It is preferred that the first and second elongate members and the links are integral with each other. Preferably, the elongate members and the links are formed from a single sheet of polymer material.
It is preferred that the links are spaced apart by a distance such that one link begins to take the load of the weight as the preceding link fails. In this way, the weight is supported between a pair of the first and second members by only one link, or at most two links, at a time and this provides for a smooth descent. The arrangement in which one link fails before the succeeding link starts to bear the weight is preferably avoided since that will lead to a jerky descent and the weight will be in free fall, albeit only for a very short period of time, before the next succeeding link takes up the weight. The absorption of the momentum gained during free fall could place unacceptable stresses on the device. In addition, such an arrangement is inefficient in its absorption of energy and leads to a faster descent speed.
The polymer materials from which the links can be formed are all ductile and preferably have an elongation at break of at least 100%, more preferably 200 to 500%.
The actual dimensions of the links, and in particular the cross sectional area of the links, will dictate the weight that can be lowered using the device of the present application. The length of the links will depend on the spacing between the links so that the above successive stretching and failing mechanism can be provided.
In order to provide optimum plastic elongation of the links, the polymer material is preferably a semi-crystalline thermoplastic that is branch-free. Possible materials include ETFE (a copolymer of ethylene and tetrafluoroethylene) and LDPE (low density polyethylene). Typical tensile strengths of these materials (MPa) under standard conditions are as follows:
The preferred material when the device is used as a fire escape is a fluoropolymer, such as ETFE, which has high temperature stability, self-extinguishing fire properties, high resistance to ultraviolet radiation degradation and chemical attack as well as good surface properties, low friction and are non-adherent so that, if folded away in a pack, the device can readily be taken out without the folds of the device adhering to each other. However, where fire-resistant properties are not needed, and protection from sources of ultraviolet radiation can be provided, other polymers, e.g. LDPE, are preferred on the ground of cost.
The polymer is preferably chosen such that it is not subjected to substantial strain hardening, which is an increase in the tensile properties of the polymer when subject to strain, since strain hardening can prevent the fracture of the links, thereby halting the descent of the weight. Some strain hardening is to be expected in the polymer materials but is usually balanced by a reduction in the cross-sectional area of the link as it is stretched (so-called “necking”) and so the effects cancel each other out, and so a certain amount of strain hardening is acceptable. In material mechanics terms the ideal is for the polymer to exhibit “purely plastic” behaviour.
ETFE is the preferred material because of its low strain-hardening properties, high elongation and strength, as well as the properties mentioned above possessed by fluoropolymers. However, other materials, for example LDPE, are also acceptable, although it does not have the advantageous properties of fluoropolymers discussed above and has a lower tensile strength than ETFE. On the other hand, LDPE is substantially cheaper than ETFE and has a lesser environmental impact, so is likely to be selected for most commercial applications.
By way of example only, there will now be described a device in accordance with the present invention, with reference to the following drawings in which:
Referring initially to
The fixing 16 for connecting the first elongate member 10 to the structure may be a clamp, although the fixing 16 and the connection 18 on the first and second elongate members 10,12 are preferably identical to each other except when an integral harness is provided.
Typical dimensions for a descent device made of LDPE are as follows:
Since ETFE has a higher tensile strength than LDPE, it can support larger weights and/or have smaller dimensions to those set out above.
It has been found that a ratio of the distance between adjacent links to the length of the links of approximately 2:1 gives good results.
A number of descent devices as set out in
In addition, the velocity at which the weight descended was measured and is also shown in
As can be seen from
It was noted that, when high stresses were imposed on the descent device, the polymer appeared “crazed” showing alternate areas of relatively high stretching and relatively low stretching, accompanied by severe necking in several places. This multiple necking and stretching means that the material absorbed more energy than would be the case if it had stretched and necked at one location only.
Turning now to
A series of tests have shown that the descent device can be used to lower weights under a stress range of 17 to 45 MPa using a tape of LDPE, which corresponds to a stress range of 34 to 90 MPa in ETFE. The weight that can be supported will depend on the geometry of the device and in particular the width and thickness of the links 14.
If it is desired to provide a broader range of weights that can be lowered, it is possible to combine two or more descent devices 66, 68 as shown in
The weight is supported by the yoke 34 at position 40, as indicated by the arrow 42. The yoke 34 can select whether one set of links 14 is used to control the descent or whether both sets of links 14 are used. The operation of the yoke 34 is described below in connection with
Referring to
The yoke is designed to have two points at which it can fail, indicated by line “A” and line “B” in
As indicated above, the mass 42 is insufficient to cause failure along line “B”. However, it can propagate the crack nucleated by notch 58 and this proceeds (see
As indicated above, the force 42 is greater than that required to bring about a fracture along line “B” which occurs relatively quickly as compared to the propagation of the crack along line “A”. Accordingly, the yoke fails along line “B” before the crack manages to nucleate along line “A”.
Tapes 50 and 52 are connected directly to, or are integral with, the inner elongate members 32 of the two descent devices 66, 68 and so both descent devices are engaged to control the decent of the weight. Because both descent devices 66, 68 are used, a greater weight can be supported and controlled in its descent as compared to the use of a single descent device 66 consisting of only one pair of elongate members.
The control system provided by the yoke 34 can only operate correctly when there is a load being carried through it. If the weight were applied simultaneously to the yoke and the descent devices 66, 68, then the links 14 of the descent devices would begin to fail before the control system of the yoke could operate to select the correct number of descent devices to use to lower the weight applied. To accommodate this, a release mechanism 80 may be used (see
Referring to
b to 16d show the sequence of events when the yoke 34 deploys both devices 66,68 and; although only bar parts 82,84 are shown, the sequence of events is the same for bar parts 86,88.
The use of the mechanism 80 offers advantages to users as they can position themselves on a window sill without it being possible to descend until they are ready to initiate descent by removing the pins 90. It therefore allows the user to become fully supported by the harness, to avoid sudden movements.
Many alternative arrangements for holding the devices 66,68 while the yoke 34 selects the number of devices that are to be deployed are of course possible.
Using the control arrangement in the yoke 34 depicted in connection with
35 to 92 kg: only one of the two descent devices 66, 68 is engaged;
57 to 149 kg: both descent devices 66, 68 are engaged.
Two systems shown in
The two yokes 34, 34′ in the arrangement of
Light weight, e.g. 13-35 kg. The weight is insufficient to fracture either yoke 34, 34′ along the line “B” but they both break along the line “A”. Thus only one of the descent devices (descent device 66) of each yoke is engaged in lowering the weight (i.e. two descent devices 66 are used in total).
Medium weight, e.g. 35-92 kg. The weight is sufficient to fracture one of the yokes 34 along the line “B” but not the second yoke 34′, which then breaks along the line “A”. Thus, both descent devices 66, 68 connected to the first yoke 34 are engaged in lowering the weight. However, only one descent device 66 connected to the second yoke 34′ is engaged in lowering the weight (i.e. three descent devices 66, 68 are used in total).
Heavy weight, e.g. 57-149 kg. The weight is sufficient to fracture both yokes 34, 34′ along the line “B”. Thus both descent devices 66, 68 of each of the two yokes 34, 34′ are engaged in lowering the weight (i.e. four sets of descent devices are used in total).
In summary, the present invention provides a device that is able to lower weights in a broad range from a structure in a controlled manner and the device itself can be made light, compact and easy to operate.
As is clear from the above description, the present invention is not limited to lowering people or objects to the ground and finds application as a safety device for people operating at heights for example window cleaners, tree surgeons, builders and overhead line maintenance engineers and also climbers and mountaineers. Thus the device of the present invention can act as a safety device to arrest a fall; in the course of the arrest of a fall, the weight will be lowered but generally not to the ground. If it is desired to arrest the fall in a relatively short distance, some (but not necessarily all) of the links will fail. In this case, the shorter the distance that the person should be allowed to fall, the higher the tensile strength of the links should be. The fall arrester device may, for example be configured to break the fall of an 80 kg person over a distance not exceeding 2 metres when the device supports the weight of the person after they have fallen 2 metres.
In the fall arresting device, the tensile strength of the links is such that, for a person of a given weight, the links should be able to support that weight without tearing when the weight is static. The device may be such that successive links have an increasingly high tensile strength.
The fall arresting device of the present invention will be attached between the person operating at a height, e.g. via a harness, and a structure, e.g. a building or scaffolding. To allow the person free movement, a line may be attached either between the person and the fall arresting device or between the fall arresting device and the structure. However, to prevent the person falling too far before the fall arresting device is deployed, the line may be wound onto a spring-loaded spool that winds up any slack line and the spool could include a centrifugal clutch that locks when the line is withdrawn from the spool too quickly, i.e. when the person falls.
The fall arresting device could also be fed onto the spool if the device is wound up or bunched up tightly. Such an arrangement is shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05253888.1 | Jun 2005 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2006/002266 | 6/22/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/16/2008 |