The present disclosure generally pertains to doors with a retractable panel and more specifically to a drive and/or a guide system for such a door.
Many vertically operating doors have a pliable panel or curtain that opens by moving from a vertical set of tracks installed along the lateral edges of a doorway to an overhead storage system. The storage system can vary depending on the available space above the doorway and other considerations. An overhead storage system, for instance, can be in the form of a take-up roller that draws in the curtain to open the door; or the storage system can be a set of horizontal, vertical, or inclined tracks that lead into the set of vertical tracks that line the doorway.
While the take-up roller can be power-driven to raise and lower the curtain, doors having other types of overhead storage may require some other means for operating the door. Thus, door manufactures often need to offer a selection of doors of dramatically different designs to meet the requirements of various door installation sites.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,028,741, however, discloses a door with a drive system that can force-feed a curtain into various overhead configurations. Moreover, the door includes a breakaway feature that enables the curtain to safely break away from its guide track if a forklift or something else crashes into the door.
Although the force-feed system and breakaway feature provide significant benefits, the patented door includes a complicated collection of numerous parts. In some cases (FIG. 3 of the '741 patent), the curtain is coupled to a track via a drive strip that carries a long series of individual clips that enable the curtain to breakaway from the drive strip. In the event of an impact, the curtain can break away from those clips, while the drive strip remains with the track. It appears that a complicated mechanism (FIG. 19 of the '741 patent) is subsequently used for reattaching the curtain to the clips.
In other cases (FIG. 5 of the '741 patent), the numerous clips are replaced by a drive strip that is blanked and formed to include integral clips. But even then the drive strip remains with the track after a breakaway collision, thus the door has a curtain that can move relative to a drive strip, which in turn can move relative to a track. Moreover, it appears that the drive strip with the integral clips is made of sheet metal. Such a material, particularly if it has sharp edges, might cause significant wear on the gear that moves the drive strip.
Consequently, a need exists for a vertically operating door that is simple and robust, wherein the door includes a drive unit that can push the door's curtain to various overhead storage configurations including vertical, horizontal, inclined and coiled.
In some embodiments, a door with a vertically translating panel includes a drive mechanism that allows the panel to retract onto storage tracks of various shapes or configurations including, but not limited to, storage tracks that are vertical, horizontal, inclined, coiled and various unlimited combinations thereof.
In some embodiments, the door panel is provided with a continuous drive strip that has sufficient flexibility to travel along tracks of various shapes yet is sufficiently rigid to allow the drive strip, under the impetus of a drive gear, to push the door to an elevated stored position.
In some embodiments, the continuous drive strip includes a plurality of spaced projections for engaging the drive gear.
In some embodiments, the door panel breaks away from its track without creating loose pieces in the track or on the panel.
In some embodiments that allow the panel to break away, the door includes an auto-refeed device that has no moving parts.
In some embodiments that allow the panel to break away, the panel can progressively break away in a zipper-like manner.
In some embodiments, a drive strip for the door panel includes spherical projections that smoothen a breakaway function and smoothen the engagement with a drive gear.
In some embodiments, a continuous drive strip with projections is flexible due to thinner sections of the strip that extend between the projections.
In some embodiments, the drive strip's flexibility allows it to flex one way as it travels past a drive gear and bend an opposite way as the door panel moves onto a storage track.
In some embodiments, a track defines a chamber for housing a sensor within the track.
In some embodiments, a resilient seal member is installed inside a channel of the track such that the seal member presses against an edge of the drive strip.
In some embodiments, a storage track can hold a flexible door panel in a coiled configuration with a central region that is wide open.
In some embodiments, the flexible door panel can be opened to a coiled configuration without the need for a take-up roll tube.
In some embodiments, the flexible door panel can be opened to a loosely coiled configuration to permit ventilation through the coiled panel and/or to help prevent a plastic window on the panel from scratched by other sections of the panel.
In some embodiments, a stiffener is attached to an upper edge of the door's panel to help prevent the upper edge from whipping centrifugally outward as the panel is wrapped into a coiled configuration.
In some embodiments, the door includes a horizontal drum that creates a bend in the door's panel to help prevent the panel from sagging.
a is similar to
a is similar to
A door system 10, shown in
The panel shown in
Whatever overall configuration of panel is used, to raise or lower panel 12, a motor 18 rotates at least one drive gear 20 (
The material forming the drive strip 24 itself, in some embodiments, requires a balance of various characteristics. Since the application of a drive force to the edge of the panel only directly occurs when a projection or projections 22 are in contact with drive gear 20, drive strip 24 needs adequate rigidity to be capable of transmitting that drive force along at least a portion of its length. At the same time, depending on the storage configuration of the door, the panel 12 including drive strips 24 may need to turn corners and/or assume a coiled or other configuration, as in
Preferably, drive strip 24 is co-extensive in length with the remainder of the door panel of which it forms a part. In some applications, however, it may be desirable for the strip 24 to extend somewhat less than this full length. Even so, a given drive strip 24 is preferably continuous or unbroken along its length. In some embodiments, it might be preferable to have multiple continuous drive strips forming an edge of the panel. As depicted herein, drive strip 24 is formed as a separate member, and is then permanently affixed to the remainder of panel 12 by any of a variety of attachment processes (sewing, gluing, heat-sealing, etc.) When the remainder of panel 12 is formed of a flexible material, the overall panel is thus flexible. In other embodiments (such as the flexible drive strip mounted to a rigid panel) this may not be the case.
The drive gear 20 is seen in cross-section in several of the figures. In general, it has a cylindrical shape with depressions for receiving projections 22 to thus drive the panel 12. Toward this end, some form of motor (appropriately geared) is provided to drive the gear 20 in rotation. In this case, the depressions in the gear 20 are in the form of laterally-extending grooves 21, seen in cross-section in
Door system 10 includes many unique features that make it superior to other doors. System 10, for instance, can be made impact resistant by allowing its panel 12 to safely breakaway from its guide track 26 in the event of an impact. In such breakaway embodiments, door system 10 can be selectively configured to achieve different levels of breakaway force. In a currently preferred design, panel 12 remains completely intact even after breaking away from an entirely stationary guide track, such as track 26.
Other unique features of door system 10 include: track 26 including a chamber 28 (
To help guide the movement of panel 12, two drive strips 24 forming the lateral edges of panel 12 extend into track 26 on either side of doorway 14. Referring to
Still referring to
After a portion of panel 12 is dislodged, projections 22 of drive strip 24 are readily fed back into channel 46 by simply driving the door to its open position. As a partially dislodged panel 12 rises to the open position, an auto-refeed device 52 (
Referring back to
Although various means could be used for attaching retention strip 40 to track 26, in a currently preferred embodiment, a proximal edge 66 of each strip 40 is held within a retaining structure illustratively in the form of groove 68 defined by track 26. Retention strip 40 can be made of various materials including, but not limited to, an extruded piece of LEXAN, which is a registered trademark of General Electric of Pittsfield, Mass. Strip 40 can be extruded to form proximal edge 66 as an enlarged bead that helps hold strip 40 within groove 68. A small flange 70 on track 26 helps hold retention strip 40 across the opening of channel 44. While this arrangement is currently preferred for holding the retention strip, other arrangement, such as using mechanical or other fasteners to attach retention strip 40 to track 26 could also be used. In addition, an alternative for of the retention strip 40 is shown in
Referring to
In an alternate embodiment, shown in
With projections 82, 86 or 94 on just one side of the drive strip, broad sealing contact could exist between a non-projection side of the drive strip and a facing surface 98 of track 84, thereby perhaps eliminating the need for seal 38 of
When a more compact storage configuration is preferred, panel 12 can be stored in the coiled arrangement of
A modification to further address the issue of friction in operation of a door as depicted in the drawings is shown in
The employment of such free-wheeling rollers to reduce friction may also be desirable in other areas of the door. The embodiments shown herein, for example, depict a bearing guide 135 adjacent drive gear 20 (
In some instances, it may not be possible or practical to reduce the frictional load on the system. In such instances, other techniques can be employed to address the issue. For example, a panel 12 stored in the spiral configuration of FIGS. 4/5 may generate significant friction as it coils up. Portions of the panel (particularly near the bottom thereof) are not as coiled, or remain generally flat even when the panel is coiled (such as the section of the panel just past drive gear 20 in
Panel 12 being stored in a loosely coiled arrangement, as shown in
To prevent centrifugal force from creating a whipping action at an upper edge 134 of panel 12 as panel 12 rapidly wraps into scroll track 32, a stiffener 136 can be attached to edge 134. Stiffener 136 is any member that is more rigid than panel 12. Examples of stiffener 136 include, but are not limited to, a metal or plastic channel member, angle member, bar, etc.
To help prevent panel 12 from sagging near the top of the doorway, a rotatable drum 138 (
Although the invention is described with respect to a preferred embodiment, modifications thereto will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. The scope of the invention, therefore, is to be determined by reference to the following claims.
This patent arises from a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/446,679 filed Jun. 5, 2006, which is hereby incorporated herein in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110067307 A1 | Mar 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11446679 | Jun 2006 | US |
Child | 12842706 | US |