This application relates generally to providing temporary and emergency lighting in an elevator cab.
It is known, in the elevator design and installation business, to provide both temporary and/or emergency lighting in elevator cab shells before finished wall panels, drop ceilings, translucent light diffusing drop ceiling panels, and other interior furnishings and appointments are installed. The temporary lighting provides code-compliant elevator cab illumination sufficient to allow for elevator use during building construction, building renovation, interior space build-out, and/or move-in of furniture; while avoiding damage to elevator cab interior furnishings that might otherwise occur as such operations are carried-out. The emergency lighting provides code-compliant elevator cab illumination in the event a main building electrical power supply should fail during such operations.
It is also known, once building construction, renovation, interior build-out, and/or move-in operations have been completed, to remove the temporary and/or emergency lighting, and replace it with a permanent elevator cab lighting system during or after installation of elevator interior furnishings and appointments such as wall panels and a drop-ceiling. Where the drop-ceiling includes opaque ceiling panels, permanent elevator interior lighting is known to include down lighting fixtures installed in holes formed in the ceiling panels. Where the drop- ceiling includes translucent light-diffusing panels, a light source is supported above the panels and is positioned to direct light downward through the panels and into the elevator cab below. Because translucent light diffuser panels are known to block a significant amount of light, light sources positioned above such panels must emit sufficient light to allow for such blockage and still pass enough light through the panels to provide code-compliant illumination within the elevator cab.
A temporary and emergency elevator interior lighting assembly for illuminating an elevator interior and providing emergency lighting during building construction and build-out of interior spaces or during building renovation, is shown at 12 in the attached figures. As shown in
The assembly 12 may also include a temporary LED power supply 22, best shown in
The assembly 12 may further include an emergency LED power supply module 32, that may be connectable to one or more emergency LEDs 34. The emergency LED power supply module 32 may be configured to provide sufficient power to the one or more emergency LEDs 34 to provide code-compliant emergency lighting in the elevator 18, i.e., a light level high enough to satisfy code requirements for elevator cabs during a main building electrical power supply failure, in response to loss of power from a primary electrical power source 36 such as a main building or grid electrical power source.
The emergency LED power supply module 32 may be detachably carried by the temporary LED power supply 22. This is so that, following completion of building construction or renovation, the emergency LED power supply module 32 can be electrically disconnected from the primary source of electrical power 36 and the one or more emergency LEDs 32, and mechanically disconnected and removed from a housing 38 of the temporary LED power supply 22. The emergency LED power supply module 32 may then be installed in, on, or in the general vicinity of an elevator main lighting system power supply 40, re-connected to the primary electrical power source 36, e.g., via the elevator main lighting system power supply 40, connected to one or more LEDs 20 of one or more elevator interior permanent lighting fixtures 42, and configured to power the one or more LEDs 20 of the one or more permanent elevator interior lighting fixtures 42 in response to loss of building power. This unique feature allows the emergency LED power supply module 32 to be re-used on the elevator 18 after the final installation of opaque 44 or diffuser/translucent 46 ceilings as shown in
As best Shown in
The emergency LEDs 34 may be carried by the temporary LED light fixture 14, as shown in
In practice, the provision of code-compliant temporary illumination of an elevator interior during building construction, interior space build-out, or renovation; and the provision of emergency lighting capability both during and after building construction, interior space build-out, or renovation, can be accomplished by first installing on an interior surface, on or adjacent a canopy 16 of an elevator 18, a temporary LED light fixture 14 capable of providing sufficient illumination to provide code-compliant lighting in the elevator 18 absent any intervening translucent or opaque panels. A temporary LED power supply 22 may then be installed on the canopy 16 of the elevator 18 by connecting an LED driver 23 of the temporary LED power supply 22 to one or more LEDs of the temporary LED light fixture 14 and connecting an emergency LED power supply module 32 mounted in the temporary LED power supply 22 to one or more emergency LEDs 34.
The temporary LED power supply 22 installed by this method may be configured to provide sufficient power to the LEDs of the temporary LED light fixture 14 to provide code-compliant temporary lighting in the cab. The emergency LED power supply module 32 installed according to this method may also be configured to provide sufficient power to the one or more emergency LEDs 34 to provide code-compliant emergency lighting in the cab in response to loss of building power. The one or more emergency LEDs 34 to which the emergency LED power supply module 32 is connected may mounted in the temporary LED light fixture 14, or may, alternatively or additionally, be mounted in one or more emergency light fixtures 48 separate from the temporary LED light fixture 14. The temporary LED power supply 22 may use an oversized transformer/LED driver 23 to accommodate this future expansion.
Where the method includes installing an opaque drop-ceiling 44 in the elevator 18, as shown in
Where the method includes installing a translucent and/or diffuser drop-ceiling 46 in the elevator 18, the drop-ceiling installation may include installing one or more translucent light diffuser panels 47 to allow light to be transmitted into the cab from above, as shown in
Sufficient code-compliant emergency, temporary, and general lighting may be determined according to the standards set by ASME 17.5 (or its effective successors and equivalents). For example, to meet current ASME standards, emergency fixtures 34 may be added until at least 0.2 Foot Candles (FC), measured 1 foot out and 4 feet off the floor, are provided by the emergency lighting. And additional LED fixtures may be added for general lighting until at least 5 Foot Candles (FC) are provided at the elevator's threshold with the doors closed. Specific quantities and types of lights added may vary to meet variations in code across time and jurisdiction.
The emergency LED power supply module 32, when mounted on the temporary power supply 22, may be connected to one or more emergency LEDs 34 of an emergency light fixture 48 that may be supported in a position to illuminate the elevator 18 cab without passing through the translucent light diffuser panels 47 or opaque drop ceiling 44. For example, the emergency light fixture 48 may be mounted to a wall 50 of the elevator 18 adjacent a gap between the elevator wall 50 and the translucent light diffuser panels 47, as shown in
This description, rather than describing limitations of an invention, only illustrates embodiments of the invention recited in the claims. The language of this description is therefore exclusively descriptive and is non-limiting. Obviously, it's possible to modify this invention from what the description teaches. Within the scope of the claims, one may practice the invention other than as described above.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Non-Provisional Application No. 62/882,763 filed Aug. 5, 2019, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62882764 | Aug 2019 | US |