Overhead doors can be used for a variety of applications. For example, overhead doors can be used as garage doors in residential locations or doors for bays and entrances to warehouses in commercial locations.
Some overhead doors can be pulled open through a counterbalance system that includes a motor, a torsion spring, a rotating shaft connected to the motor and torsion spring, and a cable/strap system that connects to the bottom section of a door to the rotating shaft. Through the movement of the counterbalance system, the door moves along a track. Typically the moving doors can be moved along a track as the sections of the door are connected by hinges to lay horizontally with the floor along the track. If a door has door sections that are connected by hinges to assist in moving the sections along the track, then the design of the counterbalance system and the track alone provide the mechanism to open and close the door section.
Examples described herein provide examples of a vertical stability roller for panels of a vertically stacking panel door that is without hinged connections between each panel. As discussed above, currently available overhead doors are moved along a track by a counterbalance system. The door lies horizontally or parallel with the floor in a single piece.
However, since the vertically stacking panel door is formed by individual panels, there may be potential for some panels to fail to move through a panel interface zone as the door is opened. For example, the vertically stacking panel door may have individual disconnected panels that can move along a vertical track portion, then along a panel interface zone that transitions movement from a vertical movement to a horizontal movement, and then along a horizontal track portion where the individual panels can be stacked and stored when the door is fully opened.
The panel interface zone may have a small area where a top most track wheel of the panel may be free from interaction with any of the tracks in the panel interface zone. As a result, the panel may tilt at an angle and cause the top most track wheel to move into the lower horizontal track instead of into the upper horizontal track. This may cause the panel to get jammed and may prevent the door from opening properly.
The present disclosure provides a vertical stability roller to prevent the top most track wheel from entering the lower horizontal track and getting jammed. For example, the tracks of the panel interface zone may be modified to include an additional outer track on the lower track portion of the panel interface zone. The vertical stability roller may interact with the additional outer track to ensure that the panel remains vertical during a time where the top most wheel loses contact with either track in the panel interface zone as the panel is moving vertically upwards. As a result, the vertical stability roller may ensure that the top most track wheel enters the upper horizontal track and the lower most track wheel enters the lower horizontal track to prevent the panel from getting stuck and jamming the door while the door is opening.
In one embodiment, the track may include opposing vertical track guides 104, a horizontal track guide 106, and a panel interface zone 114. The horizontal track guide 106 includes a first horizontal track portion 110 (also referred to herein as an upper horizontal track 110) and a second horizontal track portion 112 (also referred to herein as a lower horizontal track 112). The opposing vertical track guides 104 may include a first vertical track 104 on a first side of a door jamb 164 and a second vertical track 104 on a second side of a door jamb 166.
The panel interface zone 114 defines a transitional area between the vertical door guide 104 and a horizontal door guide 106. The panel interface zone 114 proves the means for lifting and separating the plurality of panels 108 when the door 102 is opening and to align and place the plurality of panels 108 in tangential connection when the door 102 is closing. As the panels 108 are separated, the panels 108 can be stacked along the horizontal track guide 106. As the panels 108 are aligned and tangentially connected, the panels 108 can be stacked in a vertical orientation along the opposing vertical track guides 104.
In one embodiment, the door 102 may be closed by moving the panels 108 towards the vertical door guide 104 one-by-one. The panels 108 may be stacked on top of one another as the door 102 is closed.
In one embodiment, the vertically stacking panel door system 100 may include a counterbalance system 150. The counterbalance system 150 may include a drum 152 which may be connected to a strap (not shown) that is coupled to the bottom most panel 108 (e.g., panel 1081 in
In one embodiment, the top most panel 108n may include end caps 202 on opposite ends of the panel 108n. In other words, a first end cap 202 may be coupled to a first end or outer end of the panel 108n and a second end cap 202 may be coupled to a second end or outer end of the panel 108n. The first end and the second end of the panel 108n may be on opposite sides of the panel 108n.
In one embodiment, the end cap 202 may include a body 204 that can be mechanically coupled to the top most panel 108n. For example, a screw, a nut and bolt, or any other type of mechanical fastener may be used to couple the body 204 of the end cap 202 to the top most panel 108n.
In one embodiment, a first track wheel 206, a second track wheel 208, and the vertical stability roller 210 may be coupled to the body 204. In one embodiment, the vertical stability roller 210 may be fabricated from a rubber or plastic material. The first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208 may be fabricated from a plastic, rubber, or metal material.
In one embodiment, the first track wheel 206 may be positioned above the vertical stability roller 210 and the second track wheel 208. The vertical stability roller 210 may be located between the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208. The first track wheel 206 may travel from the vertical track guide 104, through the panel interface zone 114, and into the upper horizontal track 110. The second track wheel 208 may travel from the vertical track guide 104, through the panel interface zone 114, and into the lower horizontal track 112.
In one embodiment, the end cap 202 may also include a lower insert roller 214. The lower insert roller 214 may be added to the end cap 202 for every panel 108 except the bottom most panel 1081. The lower insert roller may follow a lower transition radius within the panel interface zone 114 to help guide lower panels 108 into the horizontal track guide 106. Since the bottom most panel 1081 does not have a panel below it, the lower insert roller 214 is not needed on the bottom most panel 1081. The lower insert roller 214 may be fabricated from a plastic or a rubber.
In one embodiment, the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208 may protrude away from the body 204 in a direction shown by an arrow 216. A length that the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208 protrude away from the body 204 may be equal. In other words, the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208 may protrude away from the body 204 by an equal amount. The length at which the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208 protrude may correlate to a dimension (such as depth) of the vertical track guide 104, the guides within the panel interface zone 114 (illustrated in
In one embodiment, the vertical stability roller 210 may also protrude away from the body 204. A length at which the vertical stability roller 210 protrudes away from the body 204 may be less than an amount at which the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208 protrude away from the body 204. In one embodiment, a length at which the vertical stability roller 210 protrudes away from the body 204 may correlate to a dimension (such as a depth) of an additional outer track portion of the panel interface zone 114, illustrated in
In one embodiment, a diameter (as measured along a dimension shown by an arrow 218) of the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208 may be equal. In one embodiment, the first track wheel 206, the second track wheel 208, and the vertical stability roller 210 may have the same diameter. In one embodiment, the vertical stability roller 210 may have a different diameter from the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208.
In one embodiment, the first track wheel 206, the second track wheel 208, and the vertical stability roller 210 may be vertically aligned. For example, the first track wheel 206, the second track wheel 208, and the vertical stability roller 210 may lie along a vertical line 250. In one embodiment, the first track wheel 206, the second track wheel 208, and the vertical stability roller 210 may also be centered along the vertical alignment on the vertical line 250. For example, a center of the first track wheel 206, the second track wheel 208, and the vertical stability roller 210 may lie on the vertical line 250.
The lower insert roller 214 may be offset from the first track wheel 206, the second track wheel 208, and the vertical stability roller 210. In other words, the lower insert roller 214 may not lie on the vertical line 250 with the first track wheel 206, the second track wheel 208, and the vertical stability roller 210.
In one embodiment, the first track wheel 206 and the vertical stability roller 210 may be spaced apart by a distance 220. The distance may be measured from a bottom point of the first track wheel 206 to a top point of the vertical stability roller 210. Dashed lines that are tangential to the bottom point of the first track wheel 206 and tangential to a top point of the vertical stability roller 210 are shown to illustrate the distance 220.
The distance 220 may correlate to a distance between an upper track portion and a lower track portion within the panel interface zone 114. Details of the panel interface zone 114 are illustrated in
As can be seen in
A distance 410 between where lower track portion 404 begins to where the upper track portion 402 begins may define the gap 408. The lower track portion 404 may begin where the vertical track portion of the panel interface zone 114 goes from 90 degrees to less than 90 degrees. In other words, the lower track portion 404 may begin where the vertical track portion of the panel interface zone 114 begins to be angled towards the lower horizontal track 112.
The beginning of the upper track portion 402 can be defined by the point where the opening of the upper track portion 402 is formed. Parallel lines are drawn in
As discussed above, without the vertical stability roller 210, the top most panel 108n may tilt, causing the first track wheel 206 to fall into the lower track portion 404 instead of travelling further upward into the upper track portion 402. This may cause the door 102 or the top most panel 108n to jam or to get stuck when the door 102 is being opened.
Referring back to
In one embodiment, the distance 410 may be approximately equal to the distance 220 between the first track wheel 206 and the vertical stability roller 210, as illustrated in
The additional lower track portion 404 may be a curved surface that extends a lower surface of the lower track portion 404. The additional lower track portion 404 may have a same amount of curvature and follow the same path as the lower surface of the lower track portion 404.
The amount by which the vertical stability roller 210 protrudes from the body 202 may be defined by an amount by which the additional outer track portion 406 protrudes away from the panel interface zone 114. Similarly, the amount by which the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208 protrude away from the body 202 may be defined by an amount by which the upper track portion 402 and the lower track portion 404 protrude away from the panel interface zone 114. Said another way, the length of the first track wheel 206, the second track wheel 208, and the vertical stability roller 210 may be set to allow the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208 to move within the upper track portion 402 and the lower track portion 404 while the vertical stability roller 210 contacts the additional outer track portion 406.
Thus, as the first track wheel 206 and the second track wheel 208 enter the upper horizontal track 112 and the lower horizontal track 114, respectively, the vertical stability roller 210 may not contact the upper horizontal track 112 or the lower horizontal track 114. Said another way, once the top most panel 108n enters the horizontal track guide 106, the vertical stability roller 210 does not contact any track surfaces or guides.
Thus, the vertical stability roller 210 in combination with the additional outer track portion 406 provides vertical stability for the top most panel 108n when opening the door 102. The vertical stability roller 210 ensures that the top most panel 108n remains vertical until the first track wheel 206 enters the upper track portion 402 of the panel interface zone 114. The vertical stability roller 210 and the additional outer track portion 406 prevents the door 102 from jamming or failing to open properly when opening the door 102.
It will be appreciated that variants of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be combined into many other different systems or applications. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.