GB2169189A - Curtain driving means - Google Patents

Curtain driving means Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2169189A
GB2169189A GB08530322A GB8530322A GB2169189A GB 2169189 A GB2169189 A GB 2169189A GB 08530322 A GB08530322 A GB 08530322A GB 8530322 A GB8530322 A GB 8530322A GB 2169189 A GB2169189 A GB 2169189A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
curtain
driving
driving means
belt material
loop
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
GB08530322A
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GB8530322D0 (en
Inventor
Paul Christopher Berend
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to PCT/GB1986/000005 priority Critical patent/WO1986003955A1/en
Priority to EP19860900610 priority patent/EP0235158A1/en
Publication of GB8530322D0 publication Critical patent/GB8530322D0/en
Publication of GB2169189A publication Critical patent/GB2169189A/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47HFURNISHINGS FOR WINDOWS OR DOORS
    • A47H5/00Devices for drawing draperies, curtains, or the like
    • A47H5/02Devices for opening and closing curtains
    • A47H5/032Devices with guiding means and draw cords
    • A47H5/0325Devices with guiding means and draw cords using electrical or electronical drive, detecting or controlling means

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  • Curtains And Furnishings For Windows Or Doors (AREA)

Abstract

A curtain driving means for drawing curtains to and fro relative to a window opening comprises, when assembled in position adjacent such an opening, a continuous, curtain-driving loop (52) stretched tautly between cooperating driving and return pulleys (40, 50) and having means (74) for removably coupling respective positions on that loop with respective edge portions of the respective curtains. The loop is drivable to and fro, whereby to open and close the curtains, by rotation of said driving pulley (40). The two pulleys are carried on respective supports (30, 42) adjacent the window opening, for rotation about vertical, parallel axes. The driving loop (52) comprises a broad, thin-strip, belt material which has one of its two broad surfaces in contact with the pulleys, so that the belt material is suspended and driven between said pulleys with its broad surfaces vertical. The driving pulley and the belt material preferably have inter-engaging teeth (62) for positively driving the curtain driving loop (52). The driving pulley (40) is coupled through a dependent, elongate shaft (36) and a speed-reduction gear unit (32) with a reversible, high-speed, low-voltage motor (34). <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Curtain driving means Technical Field This invention relates to curtain driving means, that is to say, to driving means arranged, when suitably mounted in position, for drawing to and fro across an opening or space to be covered, curtains or other vertical sheet or strip materials (for example, as in vertical blinds) acting as curtains, which curtains are suspended from suspension devices carried on and movable along a suspension track or rail system secured over and across said opening or space.
A curtain suspension track or rail system may comprise a single, full-length track or rail extending over the full span of the curtains, or it may comprise, for example, two half-length tracks or rails, which together extend across that span and have at the centre of the span overlapping portions. For simplicity's sake, in what follows the term 'curtain suspension track' or more simply 'curtain track' will be used to cover, where appropriate, both kinds of track or rail system as referred to above.
The present invention relates more particularly to curtain driving means for use with curtains of the sizes commonly encountered in domestic households and commercial offices, though the application of the present invention is not limited in this respect.
Background Art It is known to provide, as such a driving means, a system of cords for drawing curtains by their respective leading edge portions to and fro across the opening; and to accommodate such cords in supporting channels provided in the curtain track system, so as to prevent them sagging in an unsightly manner across the said opening. It is also known to operate such a cord system manually, or by means of an electrically powered drive unit.
One such drive unit comprised an electric driving motor provided with a cord driving pulley, which pulley drivingly engaged a tightly stretched continuous loop of curtain drawing cord which extended downwardlytheretofrom said curtain track cord channels. However, the bulkiness of that particular form of drive unit prevented it in most cases from being mounted closely adjacent the curtain track, there being an insufficient distance between the wall adjacent the track and the curtains suspended from the track. Hence, the use of such an electric drive unit required the motor to be mounted somewhat remotely from the track, and the consequent use of long lengths of curtain drawing cord gave rise to problems caused by the stretching of such long cord lengths.Moreover, that form of drive unit could be applied to an existing curtain installation only when the curtain track incorporated, or could incorporate, a suitable curtain driving cord system for drawing the curtains along the track.
In one alternative form of prior art electric curtain driving means, the electric drive unit was formed as an integral part of the curtain suspension track system, so that it had to be made to measure and could not be applied separately to an existing track system. Moreover, such an integral system had a relatively high selling price, so that the adoption of such an integral system involved the scrapping of any existing curtain track system, and a high outlay for the replacement integral system.
The present invention seeks to provide an alternative form of curtain driving means which does not have the disadvantages of the prior art mentioned above, and which in particular can be fitted to most existing curtain suspension track systems, both readily and at a relatively low cost; and which can be readily adapted to suit curtain suspension tracks of various spans.
Disclosure of the Invention According to the present invention, there is provided a curtain driving means for use in association with a curtain suspension system which comprises a track or rail system and a plurality of curtain suspension members carried thereon, which driving means comprises:: (a) a drive unit arranged for mounting in a predetermined operating position at one side of an opening or space to be covered by a curtain or curtains when drawn to, said unit incorporating a rotatable belt-driving pulley, and said pulley being aligned, when said drive unit is mounted in its said operating position, for rotation about a vertical axis; (b) a return unit arranged for mounting in a predetermined operating position on the said wall at the opposite side of said opening or space, and incorporating a rotatable belt-return pulley, which pulley, when said return unit is mounted in its said operating position, is aligned for rotation about a vertical axis;; (c) a driving belt in the form of a continuous closed loop of a belt material having a thin, broad cross section, which belt loop is arranged to be stretched tightly over and to engage at its respective end portions the said rotatable drive and return pulleys respectively (when mounted in their respective positions), the belt when in position on said pulleys having its greater transverse dimension extending in the vertical direction and being so tensioned asto preventthe belt from sagging under its own weight to any substantial extent; and (d) for each curtain to be drawn along said track or rail system a link member secured on said belt loop (when stretched over said pulleys) at an appropriate driving position, which link member is arranged for coupling with said curtain or a curtain suspension member supporting said curtain.
According to one important preferred feature of the present invention, said belt material comprises a substantially inextensible strip material in which are formed on one face thereof uniformly spaced teeth which extend transversely of the length of the strip material, and said belt driving pulley comprises a toothed pulley arranged to be engaged by and to cooperate in a driving manner with the teeth of said belt material. Said belt return pulley may comprise as desired a similarly toothed pulley, or a plain cylindrical pulley.
Said loop of belt material may comprise two similar pieces of said toothed belt material joined in overlapping relationship at their respective end portions, one such piece having its teeth facing inwardly of the loop for engaging said toothed driving pulley, and the other piece having its teeth facing outwardly of the loop, and each pair of said overlapping end portions of the respective belt pieces being held together with their respective sets of teeth in inter-engagement.
Each said pair of said overlapping portions may be secured, with the respective sets of teeth of said portions inter-engaged, by a clamp. Such a clamp may comprise a U-shaped clip of a deformable sheet metal, which clip has been compressed and plastically deformed on to a said pair of overlapping end portions. Alternatively, such a clip may be made of a resilient metal, and be opened to place it in position, whereafter it returns to its closed position in which it then clasps the opposed overlapping end portions and secures them together.
According to another important feature of the present invention, said driving pulley is drivingly carried on the end of an elongate driving shaft which is supported from a base member, and which is drivingly coupled at its opposite end to a driving means, which driving means is carried on the said base member at a predetermined substantial distance from the said driving pulley such that that pulley may be positioned substantially at the height of the said curtain suspension members and between them and the adjacent wall, whilst said driving means is disposed between said wall and the adjacent curtain at a position substantially below the level of a row of curtain hooks on and by means of which said curtain is suspended from said curtain suspension members.With such a drive unit, the drive to the curtains is applied directly to the curtain suspension members (or even to the curtain hooks carried thereby), whilst the said driving means is capable of being concealed lower down behind the adjacent curtain.
The belt driving means advantageously comprises a high speed electric motor having its output shaft coupled to a high ratio speed reduction gear unit, the output shaft of which constitutes said elongate drive shaft carrying said belt driving pulley; and said motor is preferably a low voltage motor supplied via a step down transformer from the normal domestic electricity supply circuit.
Other features of the present invention will appear from the description that follows hereafter, and from the claims appended at the end of that description.
One curtain drawing means according to the present invention, and various modified forms thereof, as used in relation to different forms of curtain suspension track, will now be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying diagrammatic drawings.
Brief Description of the Drawings Figure 1 shows in front elevation a window opening in a wall, which opening is to be covered by a pair of curtains, and the relative dispositions of the various items constituting the curtain driving means; Figure 2 shows in plan view the disposition of some of those items, disclosed in relation to one form of curtain suspension track; Figure 3 shows to a different scale and in a pictorial manner the curtain driving means applied to a different form of curtain suspension track, with the drive unit shown, for simplicity's sake, in side elevation; Figure 4 shows an enlargement of a belt clamp which is shown encircled in the Figure 3; and Figure 5 shows pictorially a modified form of the clip shown in the Figure 4.
Description of the Embodiments of the Invention Referring now to the drawings, Figure 1 shows a window opening 10 in a wall 12 that is to be provided with a pair of curtains, which are represented in chain-dotted form at references 14 and 16. A curtain suspension track is likewise shown in chain-dotted form at reference 18, being secured to the wall over and spanning the opening 10. The track is provided with a plurality of suspension runners (Figure 2, 20; Figure 3,22) for receiving curtain hooks (Figure 3,24) which are engaged in the upper parts of the curtains. As will be seen from the Figures 2 and 3, the track comprises a single, full-length rail or rod carrying all the suspension members for both curtains.The curtain driving means that is aboutto be described in relation thereto would be equally useful in relationship to an alternative suspension track that comprises two half-length rails or rods which overlap one another at the centre of the span, or a plurality of such sets of half-length rails or rods.
The curtain driving means includes on the left hand side of the window opening 10 a drive unit 26 disposed in a position, largely below the curtain track 18, where it is concealed at all times by the left hand curtain, and on the right hand side of the opening 10 a belt return unit 28 which is mounted behind the right hand end of the curtain track 18 and which is concealed by the right hand curtain 16, likewise at all times.
The drive unit 26 comprises a base 30 on which are carried a high ratio, speed reducing gear unit 32, and a reversible, high speed, electric driving motor 34 which is coupled to an input shaft (not shown) of the gear unit. An elongate output shaft 36 of the gear unit isjournalled in a bearing extension 38 of the base 30 and carries at its free end and drives a toothed and flanged driving pulley 40.
The belt return unit 28 comprises a bracket 42 secured by screws 44to the wall 12, a vertical stub shaft 46 carried on that bracket and being slidably adjustable thereon in a transverse direction along a slot 48, and a flanged, cylindrical beit-return pulley 50 mounted for rotation on that stub shaft.
Stretched tautly over the toothed driving pulley 40 and untoothed return pulley 50 is a continuous belt 52 in the form of a closed loop of a thin, broad, toothed, substantially inextensible belt material.
That loop comprises two similar half-portions 54,56 joined together with overlapping end portions 58, 60, the teeth 62 on one half-portion 54 (the driving portion) projecting inwardly and engaging the toothed driving pulley 40, and the teeth 62 on the other half-portion 56 projecting outwardly, so that the non-toothed side ofthat half-portion engages the cylindrical surface ofthe return pulley 50.
Each pair of overlapping end portions 58,60 of the belt half portions is clamped, with the respective sets ofteeth of those portions inter-engaged, by means of a clamp 64 in theform of a thin shell 66 of square section, in which a pressure plate 68 is urged against the said end portions bya clamping screw 70 which is screwed through the shell wall. That clamping screw carries a ring-shaped head 72 through the eye of which is looped a flexible draw loop or link 74four engaging at its free end around the lower part of a said curtain suspension member 22, in the manner indicated in chain-dotted form at reference 76 in Figure 3.By means of such draw links,the beltis coupled to selected curtain suspension members 22 (or even to the curtain hooks carried thereby), so that on rotation ofthe belt driving pulley 40, the curtains are driven in appropriate directions. It will be appreciated that since the two draw links 74 shown are coupled to the respective clamps 64 that are associated respectively with the front and rear belt runs,thetwo sets of clamps and associated links move in opposite directions when the belt is driven bythe belt driving pulley.
Otherforms of clamp may be used instead ofthose shown in the Figures 3 and 4. For example, in Figure 5 the clamp 78 comprises a deformable metal clip 80, generally of U shape, which has been slid over and then plastically compressed on to the opposed end portions of the belt half portions, whereby to secure them together. The draw link 74 is looped through apertures 82 formed in the lower free ends of the clip.
Instead of using plastically deformable clips as described above, each such clip may be made instead of a metal or a plastics material that is resiliently opens bile from a closed, clamping position, so as to enable itto be slipped overthe opposed end portions, whereafter it is allowed to snap back to its closed condition, and so hold those end portions secured together.
Alternatively, a U-shaped clip (of metal our a plastics material) may be provided with catch parts on the respective free ends of the clip, which catch parts may be caused to inter-engage after closing the clip on to the opposed end portions, and so hold the clip closed thereon.
Toothed, fibre-reinforced belt materials with very low extension rates are commercially available, and such belt materials can be adequately tensioned so that with the broad dimension of the belt material extending vertically very little downward deflection of the belt loop can be observed. Thus, the curtain driving belt loop appears substantially linear in front view, and does not droop acrossthewindow opening in an unsightly manner.
Thus with a curtain track of the kind illustrated in the Figure 3, the belt driving loop can be hidden from view behind the curtain track, in the manner shown.
Though toothed belt material cooperating with a toothed driving pulley (as shown in the Figure 3) is greatly advantageous, belt material not having such teeth may be used instead, in which case the belt driving pulley may have a cylindrical belt-contacting surface.
The elongate drive pulley shaft 36 and the upward extension of the base 30 of the drive unit 26 enable (a) the belt loop 52 to be positioned as high as possible and even behind the curtain track in appropriate cases, so asto be obscured from view; and (b)the motor and its associated gear unit to be positioned lower down away from the curtain track, where there is more space to accommodate them.
Moreover, the adoption of a driving mechanism involving a high speed motor (for example, one having a no-load speed of 8000 RPM) and a high reduction ratio gear unit results in a drive unit 26 of suitable size and proportions, so that it may be satisfactorily accommodated behind the curtain in the desired location near the curtain track 18.
The reduction in size of the driving motor is facilitated by the use of a low voltage motor supplied through its own voltage-reducing transformer.
Moreover, the use of a low voltage motor also reduces the risk of electric shock to the person fitting or adjusting the curtain driving system a curtain installation.
In the Figure 2, the curtain track is ofthe kind in which a large diameter cylindrical pole 84 is carried by two end brackets 86 secured to the wall 12, and the suspension runners 20 comprise large diameter rings carried on the pole and having, lowermost, small suspension eyes for receiving curtain hooks such as those indicated in Figure 3 at reference 24.
In Figure 3, the curtain track comprises a thin strip 88 standing on edge and supported at intervals by mounting brackets 90 secured to the wall. The suspension runners 22 engage around the upper and lower edges ofthe strip 88 in the manner shown, and have, lowermost, eyes for receiving the curtain hooks 24.
The curtain drawing system described above can be supplied at relatively low cost to the purchaser (compared to the costs ofthe prior art systems).
Moreover, it can be fitted to any set of curtains, whether existing or new, since there is no special adaptation required to suit ittotheparticular circumstances ofthe curtain suspension installation, beyond the selection of appropriate lengths of belt material so asto suit the particular span ofthe curtains.
It will be appreciated that the installation ofthe curtain drawing system described above is relatively simple to accomplish, and requires no special expertise. Furthermore, it will be appreciated thatthe positions of the drive and return units 26 and 28 may be readily interchanged to suit the particular circumstances of a given curtain installation,for example, where the power supply is situated on the opposite side of the window opening 10.
Though in the above description the driving motor has comprised an electric motor, other forms of reversible motor may be used instead.
Other forms of positive-drive belt and belt-driving pulley may be used instead ofthetoothed belt and pulley described above. For example, a belt having uniformly spaced apertures may be arranged to cooperate with a driving pulley having spikes or projections spaced uniformly around its circumference.
In a modification of the system described above with reference to the Figures 3 and 4, the clamps 64 are omitted, and as shown in the Figure 6, one end of each of the belt half-portions 54,56 is provided with a buckle 100 for receiving and securing in a non-slip manner the other end of the other belt halfportion. That buckle comprises a closed buckle loop 102 secured permanently to the looped end of one belt half-portion 54, and a movable cross bar 104 which is slidably mounted on the side portions of the loop 102 and around which the free end of the other belt half-portion 56 is looped in the re-entrant manner shown, so as to trap itself securely between the transverse free end portion of the buckle loop 102 and the cross bar 104.
With such a modified belt system, the length of the belt can be readily adjusted by means of the buckles 100, so that the return pulley 50 can be mounted on a vertical shaft 46 that is non-adjustably fixed on the bracket 42.
Avertical pin or projection may be provided on that bracket 42 for temporarily holding one end of one such belt half-portion 54, 56 whilst that belt halfportion is stretched across to the drive unit pulley 40 so as to determine the required length of that belt half-portion. For that purpose, the said buckle 100 may be temporarily impaled on said pin or projection so as to hold the associated end of the belt half-portion whilst that belt half-portion is stretched across to the driving pulley 40.
In a further modification, each said flexible draw loop or link 74 is formed as a simple piece of cord on one end of which is permanently secured a smaller version of the buckle 100. By adjustment of the position of the free end of the cord in the buckle, the length of the draw link can be readily adjusted to suit the particular arrangement of curtains and track.
Each such buckled draw link 74 may be connected with the belt 52 by looping it through the closed buckle loop 102 of the relevant buckle 100 in the manner shown.
In the above described embodiments the curtain driving loop 52 has comprised two similar pieces of belt material joined in various ways as described.
However, where a suitable belt material is commercially available in a length sufficient to provide such a continuous loop in one single piece only, to suit a desired window span, such a onepiece loop is preferred, and may be formed by permanently securing a buckle, such as that referenced 100 in the Figure 5, to one end of the belt material, for example, in the manner indicated in that Figure, and then threading the other end of that piece of belt material through the free end of the buckle and adjustably securing it there, for example, in the manner shown in that Figure. After forming that single-piece continuous loop in the manner described above, and engaging it loosely around the driving and return pulleys 40 and 50, the belt is tightened by drawing the free end of the belt material further through the buckle.When a toothed belt material (as used in the other embodiments) is used to form such a continuous one-piece loop, the teeth all face inwardly of the loop, and in that case preferably both the driving and the return.pulleys are toothed pulleys.
In the past, toothed, fibre-reinforced belt materials with low extension rates have been available only in the form of continuous belts, such as have been used as for timing purposes in various forms of engine or other machine. Hence, the maximum available length of such toothed belt material has so far been determined by the maximum available size of such a continuous belt. That limitation on the maximum length of belt material has so far dictated, for all but the smallest window spans, the use of a two-piece curtain driving loop. However, by the use of recently devised, special production methods, it is now possible to produce such toothed belt material in much greater lengths than hitherto.
Hence, it will be more convenient and cheaper to produce one-piece, toothed, curtain driving loops.
Where one-piece curtain driving loops are used, the leading ends ofthe respective curtains may be coupled to the curtain driving loop 52 by means of flexible draw links such as those illustrated at reference 74 in the Figures 3 and 4. Such draw links may be looped around the toothed belt material 52 itself at desired positions, or otherwise looped around suitable clips which are removably positioned on the belt material at those desired positions.
Whereas in the above described embodiments the curtain driving means have been illustrated and described as driving but a single pair of curtains across a single window opening, such curtain driving means may alternatively be arranged to span a plurality of similar window openings that are spaced apart along a single wall, and to simultaneously operate in that case the various pairs of curtains that are associated with the respective window openings. That may be achieved by similarly coupling each left hand curtain in like mannerto, for example, the front run of the curtain driving loop 52, and each right hand curtain in like manner to, for example, the rear run of that driving loop. Such an arrangement is shown diagrammatically and by way of example in the Figure 7.
Though in the arrangement of Figure 1 the electric driving motor is supplied via a plug 104 which incorporates a transformer and the associated reversing switches, other embodiments may use a remote switch-control device having for example either a trailing cabie linked to the plug or an infrared transmitter.
In contrast to the bulky prior art arrangements referred to in the introduction to this description, the driving and return pulleys 40 and 50 need have a diameter of only 12 mm, as compared with the much larger pulleys of some 35 mm diameter used in those bulky prior art arrangements.

Claims (14)

1. Curtain driving means for drawing at least one curtain to and fro relative to a window or other opening, which driving means comprises, when assembled in position adjacent such an opening, a continuous, curtain-driving loop stretched tautly between cooperating driving and return pulleys and having means for removably coupling to that loop an edge portion of at least one curtain, the loop being drivable to and fro by rotation of said driving pulley, and the two pulleys being carried on respective supports disposed adjacent said opening for rotation about respective axes that are both vertical and parallel; and wherein said driving loop comprises a broad, thin-strip, belt material, which material has one of its two broad surfaces in contact with said pulleys whereby said belt material is suspended and driven between said pulleys with its broad surfaces vertical.
2. Curtain driving means according to claim 1, wherein at least the driving pulley and the belt material have cooperating positive driving means whereby the belt material is driven positively by the driving pulley without relative slip.
3. Curtain driving means according to claim 2, wherein the said positive driving means comprises inter-engaging teeth formed respectively on the driving surface of the driving pulley and on the driven surface of the belt material.
4. Curtain driving means according to claim 3, wherein the return pulley also has teeth formed thereon which interengage with the teeth of the belt material:
5. Curtain driving means according to claim 3 or4, wherein the teeth of said belt material are disposed transverse to the length of the belt material.
6. Curtain driving mean according to any preceding claim, wherein said belt material comprises a fibre-reinforced elastomeric belt material.
7. Curtain driving means according to any preceding claim, wherein said continuous driving loop comprises a single piece of said belt material having its respective free ends joined by an adjustable fastening means.
8. Curtain driving means according to claim 7, wherein said fastening means comprises a buckle secured to one free end of said belt material, and having a securing means through which the other free end of the belt material may be drawn under tension and secured in any desired position.
9. Curtain driving means according to any preceding claim, wherein said driving pulley is drivingly carried on the end of an elongate shaft which is supported adjacent that end from a base member, and which is drivingly coupled at its opposite end to a driving means, which driving means is carried on the base member at a predetermined substantial distance from the said driving pulley such that whilst that pulley may be positioned substantially at the height of curtain suspension members on which a curtain is suspended from a curtain rail and between those suspension members and an adjacent wall, the said driving means may be disposed between that wall and the adjacent curtain at a position substantially below the level of a row of curtain hooks by means of which said curtain is suspended from said suspension members.
10. Curtain driving means according to claim 9, wherein said driving means comprises a high speed electric motor having its output shaft coupled to a high-ratio, speed-reduction gear unit, the output shaft of which constitutes said elongated shaft carrying said driving pulley.
11. Curtain driving means according to claim 10, wherein said motor comprises a low voltage motor connected for supply to a voltage step-down transformer.
12. A kit of parts for assembling into a curtain driving means according to any preceding claim.
13. Curtain driving means according to any preceding claim, substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to and as illustrated by the accompanying diagrammatic drawings.
14. Any and every aspect and/or operative combination offeatures, not otherwise specifically claimed, of the curtain driving means hereinbefore described with reference to and as illustrated by the accompanying diagrammatic drawings.
GB08530322A 1985-01-03 1985-12-09 Curtain driving means Withdrawn GB2169189A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/GB1986/000005 WO1986003955A1 (en) 1985-01-03 1986-01-03 Curtain driving means
EP19860900610 EP0235158A1 (en) 1985-01-03 1986-01-03 Curtain driving means

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB858500060A GB8500060D0 (en) 1985-01-03 1985-01-03 Curtain driving means

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GB8530322D0 GB8530322D0 (en) 1986-01-22
GB2169189A true GB2169189A (en) 1986-07-09

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GB858500060A Pending GB8500060D0 (en) 1985-01-03 1985-01-03 Curtain driving means
GB08530322A Withdrawn GB2169189A (en) 1985-01-03 1985-12-09 Curtain driving means

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GB858500060A Pending GB8500060D0 (en) 1985-01-03 1985-01-03 Curtain driving means

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2329575A (en) * 1997-09-25 1999-03-31 Silent Gliss Int Ag Motorised curtain drive with clutch
EP1316281A1 (en) * 2001-12-03 2003-06-04 Goelst, Rolf Edward Device for automatically moving a curtain along a curtain rail
GB2382764A (en) * 2001-10-10 2003-06-11 Scotronic Ltd Drive device for a blind cord
US6886218B2 (en) * 2002-03-28 2005-05-03 Rolf Edward Goelst Apparatus for moving a curtain along a curtain rail

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB563499A (en) * 1943-02-12 1944-08-17 Herbert Charles Wiltshire Improvements in means for operating curtains
GB991543A (en) * 1961-02-18 1965-05-12 French & Sons Thomas Improvements in or relating to curtain suspension systems
GB1045250A (en) * 1964-09-28 1966-10-12 Malcolm Hubert John Over Arrangements for drawing curtains

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB563499A (en) * 1943-02-12 1944-08-17 Herbert Charles Wiltshire Improvements in means for operating curtains
GB991543A (en) * 1961-02-18 1965-05-12 French & Sons Thomas Improvements in or relating to curtain suspension systems
GB1045250A (en) * 1964-09-28 1966-10-12 Malcolm Hubert John Over Arrangements for drawing curtains

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2329575A (en) * 1997-09-25 1999-03-31 Silent Gliss Int Ag Motorised curtain drive with clutch
US6076592A (en) * 1997-09-25 2000-06-20 Silent Gliss International Ag Curtain operating assembly
GB2329575B (en) * 1997-09-25 2001-08-08 Silent Gliss Int Ag Curtain operating drive unit
GB2382764A (en) * 2001-10-10 2003-06-11 Scotronic Ltd Drive device for a blind cord
EP1316281A1 (en) * 2001-12-03 2003-06-04 Goelst, Rolf Edward Device for automatically moving a curtain along a curtain rail
NL1019467C2 (en) * 2001-12-03 2003-06-04 Rolf Edward Goelst Device for automatically moving a curtain along a curtain rail.
US7703501B2 (en) 2001-12-03 2010-04-27 Rolf Edward Goelst Device for automatically moving a curtain along a curtain rail
US6886218B2 (en) * 2002-03-28 2005-05-03 Rolf Edward Goelst Apparatus for moving a curtain along a curtain rail

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB8500060D0 (en) 1985-02-13
GB8530322D0 (en) 1986-01-22

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