The invention relates to a conveyor with the features of the introductory part of claim 1. Such conveyors are necessary for carrying people over medium distances, for example in larger building complexes such as shopping centers, train stations, and airports, or else in pedestrian underpasses, passages and corridors. They make it easy for people to cover on foot distances of several hundred meters at an accelerated pace.
The known conveyors are either moving walkways or moving sidewalks or small trams and buses. Moving walkways or moving sidewalks are escalators—similar to continuously-running conveyor belts—that can run horizontally or else up/down. They have the advantage that they are continuously available. The running speed is limited to at most twice the speed of walking (about 8 km/hour), however, to ensure safe entry and exit. In particular during exiting from moving sidewalks, dangerous situations can arise if several individuals have formed groups while traveling on the moving sidewalk, since they slow down when exiting and therefore narrowly miss one another. Moving sidewalks are used exclusively indoors or at least in areas that are covered and protected from the effects of weather.
Depending on the design, trams or buses can clearly run more quickly, but are not continuously available, so that waiting times have to be tolerated. They are therefore usually used only over distances of at least 500 m and primarily outdoors. In general, they also require a significantly broader track or a more expensive rail infrastructure than a moving sidewalk.
Several attempts to find solutions for conveyors for medium distances for the above-mentioned areas of use are known from the literature. For example, WO 2005/051829 A proposes designing conveyor belts using an expensive mechanism for variable running speeds. Other publications (e.g., EP 0 015 581 A, U.S. Pat. No. 4,391,200, and JP-A-2000229775) deal with the possibility of replacing the continuous conveyor belt by movable cars or platforms. However, to date, no simple and accepted solution for the configuration of entry/exit points and for turn-around points could even be found for this approach.
The object of the invention is to indicate a conveyor, in particular for medium distances, which is continuously available, can be entered safely and in turn exited from safely, whose running speed is not restricted by the entry and exit, and that overcomes the above-mentioned drawbacks of the known prior art.
The object according to the invention is achieved with a conveyor with the features of claim 1.
Preferred and advantageous configurations of the invention are subjects of the subclaims.
The conveyor according to the invention has movable cars that are designed as mobile units or as platforms, which can move along a track enclosed therein, preferably formed by a rail section.
The cars that are used as mobile units in the system according to the invention can be open “platforms.”
The cars can be equipped with a single drive.
The cars are preferably equipped along their periphery with support walls or a railing and optionally with at least one (movable or pivotable) door.
The track that is designed as a rail section preferably has at least two turn-around points that are simultaneously entry/exit points. The turn-around points are connected to one another by one lane for each travel direction.
The track can be also be made with a more complex design (more than two turn-around points and entry/exit points).
The geometry (outline, footprint) of the cars of the conveyor according to the invention is preferably configured so that the cars can rest against one another snugly between the cars at the turn-around points in which the track is designed as a semi-circular track. This is achieved by having the footprint of the car essentially correspond to a sector of a circle or ring segment. An opening angle of the sector of 90° is preferred, since this simplifies the track guiding and the movements at the turn-around point. Other opening angles can also be present, however.
During operation of the conveyor according to the invention, in each case several—for example two or three—cars are (slowly) guided through the turn-around points or the entry/exit points with their lateral surfaces resting against one another. Thus, a safe entry and exit in the cars moving continuously and arranged in an arc is possible. The cars can be mechanically connected (coupled) to one another at turn-around points or entry/exit points or can be controlled by, e.g., maintaining a sensor-controlled contact pressure of the rear car on the front car. As a result, at the entry/exit point, a continuous sequence of cars is formed without gaps or intermediate spaces developing.
After leaving the entry/exit point, the cars are accelerated by a drive, such as, e.g., a linear motor, arranged in the car or its chassis or along the track. The cars can therefore negotiate the track at a speed that is independent of the speed of the cars in the area of entry/exit points and turn-around points and higher than this speed. Before reaching the next entry/exit point, the cars are again slowed down and guided onto cars traveling in front of them in such a way that they gently approach the latter until the cars abut snugly against the front cars.
All movements of the cars relative to the track, but also with respect to maintaining the necessary safety intervals between the cars and in particular approaching a front car at an entry/exit point, are preferably monitored by sensors or devices for the measuring of position, distance and speed and are controlled electronically. In addition, rubber stops for cushioning the movement of the cars can be applied to the cars.
Within the scope of the invention, it is also considered to move the cars at entry/exit points by means of drives that are applied in a stationary manner to the entry/exit points. This facilitates, for example, the stopping or slowing of the passage of the cars to enable the entry and exit of disabled individuals or children.
The cars of the conveyor according to the invention can be designed with, for example, driven and/or slowed-down rollers, which run on rails.
Also, however, contact-free processes for supporting and guiding cars, such as magnetic forces or air cushions, or a combination of these processes, can be used.
The support and guide rollers, magnetic bearings and other devices for transferring the weight of the car to the rails and for guiding the cars, hereinafter the “chassis,” are preferably attached at the corners of the car to ensure stable and reliable driving behavior. In a possible embodiment, this means that in each case, a front and a rear chassis are guided along a main rail and an inner chassis is run on an auxiliary rail. When entering a turn-around point, the translational movement of the car is deflected into a pivoting movement and in turn when leaving the turn-around point, there is a shift from the pivoting movement into a translational movement.
Here, it is to be noted that the front and rear chassis in the areas of the movement transition (translation-pivoting) run on various tracks so that in this embodiment, separate rail branches are advantageous.
In addition, in this embodiment, a mechanism is advantageously provided to select the correct rail branch (shunting mechanism), which preferably is applied either to the chassis or to the rails of the platforms.
This mechanism, optionally provided in the cars, for selecting the rail branch at turn-around points and entry/exit points can also be used to expand the conveyor to several tracks and to provide branch points between the tracks.
Also, it is possible to provide additional entry/exit points along the track in one or in both travel directions, whereby the latter are not necessarily designed as turn-around points but rather can be connected to the track by curved segments.
In another configuration of the invention, it is possible to run several tracks essentially in the shape of a star to an entry/exit position in each case, so that a conveyor with more than two turn-around points, which are connected to one another by a single track enclosed therein, exists.
The main rail of the conveyor according to the invention consists in a possible embodiment at the turn-around point that consists of straight branches for moving the cars in and out as well as arcs, along which the cars are rotated. The angle of the point of intersection between two rail branches is determined by the arrangement of the chassis and is therefore always smaller than the opening angle of the footprint of the car.
The travel direction of the cars (mobile units) as well as the direction of rotation of the cars at the entry/exit positions can be selected freely.
The conveyor according to the invention offers the possibility for safe entry and exit into/from slowly moving cars, which accelerate individually after leaving the entry/exit points and are slowed down again before reaching the next entry/exit point, so that they are gently brought in to the cars moving at the entry/exit point, whereby the cars slowly pass through the entry/exit point in a continuous assembly of cars.
The configuration of the track as well as the platforms and their chassis and drive of the conveyor according to the invention is possible in a variety of ways and is indicated only by way of example for possible embodiments of the invention.
Further details, advantages and features of the invention are produced from the description below of preferred embodiments based on the drawings. Here:
In
The outline of the car (its footprint) is designed according to the type of a sector of a circle or a ring segment, whereby the radius of the outside circle of the footprint is identical to the outside radius of the track or the radius of the inside edge, adjacent to the track, of an outer boundary (platform) of the track at an entry/exit point 1 (turn-around point). Thus, it is achieved that the side of the car that lies outside of the entry/exit point 1 runs concentrically to the outside of the track, so that the cars can then be guided close to the entry/exit platform. By coordinating the radii of cars and tracks (at a turn-around point), the advantage is created that the front/rear sides of the cars remain essentially free of gaps or intermediate spaces when the cars move through an entry/exit point 1.
By way of example,
An inside chassis 14 of the car is arranged in the center of the car and is therefore run or guided along the inside rail 3.
The angle δ, via which the outside rail 2 is divided into the partial loads 2a and 2b, is determined at the cars by the suspension points of the chassis 12 and 13. The shapes of the rails and the configuration of the branches are selected to match the respectively selected driving and guiding methods.
In addition, the chassis 12, 13 and 14 are provided at the corners of the car below the floor.
To protect the passengers, the cars are equipped with doors 11 that are closed during travel.
On the lateral surfaces of the cars, in particular on the front and the rear corners, rubber stops 15 can be attached to ensure a soft “accumulation” of cars at the entry/exit points 1.
In summary, one embodiment of the invention can be described as follows:
A conveyor for medium distances has a track with at least two entry/exit points 1, through which movable cars 4-8 are continuously driven or moved and which rest snugly against one another as a footprint that is designed as a sector of a circle or a ring segment. The entry/exit points 1 are connected in the two travel directions with a track that is usually composed of rails 2, 3 and along which the cars 4-8 can be controlled individually by a drive. The running speed along the track is independent of that when moving through entry/exit points 1. The conveyor therefore combines the advantages of continuously running conveyor belts with any rapid transport tracks.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A795/2007 | May 2007 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/AT08/00160 | 5/8/2008 | WO | 00 | 11/23/2009 |