The present invention relates to a traction winch for a cable or the like, said winch comprising a winch frame, at least two sheave assemblies each having at least a first sheave and a second sheave, each sheave having a single circumferential friction surface for the cable, at least two rotatable driveshafts, journalled in the winch frame in a side-by-side arrangement, each drive shaft being associated with a sheave assembly and at least one motor for driving the driveshafts.
Known winches of this kind are used for the retrieval of elongated bodies such as cables. In particularly, the invention relates to winches intended to haul very heavy loads by means of a cable, a not inconsiderable part of the load being often constituted by the weight of the cable, generally a cable of large diameter and of very great length. The invention also concerns the application of such a winch to off-shore technologies, e.g. for abandonment and recovery applications, oceanography and dredging at great depths. A problem of known traction winches is that cables wear rapidly. Under load fibre rope stretches which causes the cable to slip and the sheave to spin. This causes heat development which results in wear. This may be in particularly disadvantageous for high-tech cables.
In U.S. Pat. No. 6,182,915 a solution is presented according to which all sheaves are driven separately. In U.S. Pat. No. 7,175,163 an alternative solution is presented according to which the sheaves slip relatively with respect to a centrally provided drum.
It is an object of the present invention to provide yet an alternative traction winch which prevents slippage and wear of the cables over the sheaves upon elongation of the cable.
The winch of the invention includes a differential assembly being provided between each driveshaft and sheave assembly so as to allow for different rotational speeds of the sheaves during operation of the traction winch due to cable elongation.
Preferably, a differential gear assembly is provided. It is noted that other known differential assemblies are less preferred, but may also be applied.
The traction winch according to the invention is beneficial since it enables handling any type of rope, e.g. lightweight rope, fibre rope and cables in a very careful manner, without causing damage. The use of fibre rope is particularly beneficial when large ends are required, e.g. for use in deep water, because of its properties being as strong as steel wire but only a fraction of the weight. This means that lightweight fibre rope can handle a substantially better payload in deep water, and, due to its low weight, winches an handling equipment may be applied with much smaller power requirements and dimensions than for steel wire. As a result, energy and space consumption of traction winches on offshore equipment is reduced. Because of the differential assembly, slipping between rope and sheave is prevented which slipping develops heat and causes wear. Hence, it is possible to use lightweight rope in deep water, e.g. for lowering equipment and placing equipment on the bottom of the sea. The traction winch according to the invention enables an increase in lifting capacity, and hence lifting in increased water depths. The traction winch according to the invention may alternatively be applied for mooring purposes.
Preferred embodiments of the invention as well as the advantages and essential details thereof are disclosed in the drawing and the description and the claims which follow.
The invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the drawing, in which:
a and 1b show schematic details of a first embodiment of a traction winch according to the invention;
a and 2b show schematic details of a second embodiment of a traction winch according to the invention;
c shows a schematic detail of a third embodiment of a traction winch according to the invention;
a-3c show schematic details of a fourth embodiment of a traction winch according to the invention;
In
In
A rotatable driveshaft 3 is associated with sheave assembly 10. In analogy, a rotatable driveshaft (not shown) is associated with sheave assembly 11. Both driveshafts are journalled in the winch frame in a side-by-side arrangement. At least one motor is provided for driving each of the driveshafts.
Between driveshaft 3 and sheave assembly 10 according to the invention a differential gear assembly is provided so as to allow for different rotational speeds of the sheaves during operation of the traction winch due to cable elongation.
In the preferred embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown in
Bearings 15 are provided between sheave 5 and stationary shaft 1, bearings 16 are provided between sheave 4 and carrier 2 and bearings 18 are provided between driveshaft 3 and shaft 1. Bearings 17 next to carrier 2 are provided to fix the carrier 2.
The operation of a planetary gear in a differential gear assembly is elucidated in
In the embodiment shown in
In
Driving planetary gear 32 causes ring gear 31 and central gear 33 to rotate. A second sheave (not shown) may be coupled to, or formed integral with second ring gear 31. The shown differential gear assembly allows for different rotational speeds of the ring gears 21, 31, and hence of the connected or integral sheaves (not shown).
A third axle 44 is shown in bearing 37, connected to central gear 33. These features are redundant in case only two sheaves are provided in the sheave assembly. A third sheave may be connected to the shown axle 44 of the second central gear 33, operating similar to sheave 5 shown in
In
Yet an alternative differential gear assembly is shown in
In the embodiment shown in
An alternative embodiment is shown in
The principle of yet an alternative a differential gear assembly is shown in
In
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NL2007/000207 | 8/24/2007 | WO | 00 | 3/11/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/028927 | 3/5/2009 | WO | A |
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1 465 703 | Mar 1967 | FR |
2 377 962 | Aug 1978 | FR |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110147684 A1 | Jun 2011 | US |