The invention relates to a vertical reciprocating conveyor.
The invention provides a vertical reciprocating conveyor that includes a frame and a carrier movable up and down with respect to the frame to elevate and lower articles supported by the carrier. The conveyor also includes a prime mover and at least one sprocket rotating in response to operation of the prime mover. At least one flexible support member extends across the carrier from one side to an opposite side, and engages the at least one sprocket such that the at least one flexible support member is collected and let out in response to the direction of rotation of the sprocket to raise and lower the carrier with respect to the frame. The conveyor also includes brakes on the opposite sides of the carrier. The brakes are biased to engage the frame to prevent the carrier from free falling. The brakes are held out of engagement with the frame by the at least one flexible support member, and are permitted to substantially simultaneously engage the frame on opposite sides of the carrier in response to slack forming in the flexible support member.
Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limited. The use of “including,” “comprising” or “having” and variations thereof herein is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items. The terms “mounted,” “connected” and “coupled” are used broadly and encompass both direct and indirect mounting, connecting and coupling. Further, “connected” and “coupled” are not restricted to physical or mechanical connections or couplings, and can include electrical connections or couplings, whether direct or indirect.
With particular reference to
Turning now to
A spindle 75 is supported by a pair of bearings 80, and is coupled to the gear box 70 for rotation in response to operation of the prime mover assembly 25. The spindle 75 has mounted thereto a pair of sprockets 85 that are fixed for rotation with the spindle 75 with splines, keys, fasteners, or another suitable method. As used herein, the term “sprockets” includes the illustrated sprockets commonly used with chains, sheaves commonly used to drive belts, drums, pulleys, and any other apparatus that can be rotated to take up or let out a flexible support member. The flexible support members 30 extend across the sprockets such that, depending on the direction of rotation of the spindle 75, the sprockets 85 take up or let out the flexible support member 30 to raise or lower, respectively, the carriage 20.
In the illustrated embodiment of the invention, each flexible support member 30 forms a loop 87 that hangs down from the sprockets 85. The loop 87 increases in size when the carriage 20 is raised and decreases in size when the carriage is lowered. In alternative embodiments the flexible support member 30 may be wrapped around a drum or other device, in which case there would be no loop 87 hanging down.
With reference to
The prime mover assembly 25 and the spindle 75 should be positioned so that the top of the carriage 20 is about even with the top of the frame 15 when the sprockets 90 are even with or slightly below the sprockets 85. Thus, in the illustrated embodiment, the prime mover assembly 25 and spindle 75 are lower than the top of the frame 15 by a distance that is slightly less than the height of the carriage 20. In alternative embodiments, the frame 15 may be constructed with an open top such that the top of the carriage 20 may actually extend above the top of the frame 15. In such constructions, the prime mover assembly 25 and spindle 75 may be positioned even higher when an underslung flexible support member 30 arrangement (as in the illustrated embodiment) is used. If the flexible support members 30 extend across the top of the carriage 20, as may be the case in other embodiments, the prime mover assembly 25 and spindle 75 should be positioned very near the top of the frame 15 to maximize the vertical travel of the carriage 20 in the frame 15.
Because there are two flexible support members 30 in the illustrated embodiment, each flexible support member 30 carries half of the weight of the carriage 20 and its cargo. Because each flexible support member 30 extends vertically along both sides of the carriage 20, each vertical portion of each flexible support member 30 carries half of the weight born by that flexible support member 30. In other words, each vertical portion of the flexible support members 30 carries a quarter of the weight of the carriage and its cargo. This load-sharing arrangement permits the use of lower rated flexible support members 30 and smaller sprockets 85, 90. The arrangement also creates a mechanical advantage for the prime mover assembly 25 because the ratio of flexible support member 30 gathered or let out by the sprockets 85 to carriage 20 vertical displacement is 2:1. The overall result of the arrangement permits the use of a smaller prime mover 65 (compared to an arrangement in which one or two flexible support members 30 raised and lowered the carriage in a 1:1 ratio), and permits smaller gears to be employed in the gearbox 70. The reduction in size of the flexible support members 30, sprockets 85, 90, prime mover 65, and gear box 70 may reduce the cost of the VRC.
Turning now to
The tension in the flexible support members 30 applies equal and offsetting moment forces to the load yoke 95 and keeps the load yoke 95 substantially level. If there is slack in one of the flexible support members 30 the moment force applied through the other flexible support member 30 causes the load yoke 95 to tip. If slack develops in both flexible support members 30, the yoke 95 will tip of its own accord under the influence of gravity alone. A tip sensor 110 is mounted to the frame 15 adjacent the load yoke 95, senses when the load yoke 95 tips, and sounds an alarm that indicates slack in one or both of the flexible support members 30.
A support link 155 is pivotally mounted to the shaft 140 and is affixed to the supporting bar 145 to provide additional support to the brake plate 150. A torsion spring 160 is wrapped around the shaft 140 and is anchored at one end to the base 115 and at the other end to the supporting bar 145. A spacer 165 may be employed between the upright portions of the base 115 to reduce or prevent sliding of the cam 125 and torsion spring 160 on the shaft 140.
The brake assemblies 60 are mounted to the carriage 20 to position the brake plates 150 over the carriage sprockets 90 with the flexible support members 30 extending across the face of the brake plates 150. During ordinary operation of the VRC 10 (as illustrated in
The substantially simultaneous engagement of the brakes 60 on opposite sides of the carriage 20 helps to keep the carriage 20 level, even when one or both of the flexible support members 30 breaks. Since the brakes 60 on opposite sides engage substantially simultaneously, they share the load of the carriage 20 and its cargo. It is therefore believed that the illustrated arrangement of brake assemblies 60 reduces damage to the frame 15 and carriage 20 when slack develops in one or both of the flexible support members 30. Also, because two brake assemblies 60 engage substantially simultaneously and share the load, smaller brake assemblies 60 may be used when compared to a constructions relying on a single, larger brake assembly.
It should be noted that, although the illustrated embodiment discloses cam style brake assemblies 60, other types of brake assemblies may be used in the present invention as well. For example, the carriage 20 may include an angled surface, together with the flange 45, defines a wedge-shaped space opening downwardly. A roller or gear may be positioned in a relatively wide portion of the wedge-shaped space during normal operation of the VRC 10 such that the roller does not engage the flange 45 and carriage 20 simultaneously. The brake assembly may further include a mechanism for moving the roller into a relatively narrow portion of the wedge-shaped space where it is pinched between the flange 45 and a portion of the carriage 20 so that the carriage 20 cannot move downwardly with respect to the frame 15. The mechanism for moving the roller into the narrow portion of the wedge-shaped space may include, for example, a spring biasing the roller toward the narrow portion and a wheel or other low-friction member engaging the flexible support member 30 and resisting the biasing force of the spring while there is tension in the flexible support member 30.