US461411A - Device for operating doors to elevator-wells - Google Patents
Device for operating doors to elevator-wells Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US461411A US461411A US461411DA US461411A US 461411 A US461411 A US 461411A US 461411D A US461411D A US 461411DA US 461411 A US461411 A US 461411A
- Authority
- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- elevator
- door
- doors
- wells
- lever
- 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.)
- Expired - Lifetime
Links
- XEEYBQQBJWHFJM-UHFFFAOYSA-N iron Chemical compound [Fe] XEEYBQQBJWHFJM-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 4
- 229910000831 Steel Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- 229910000754 Wrought iron Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- CWYNVVGOOAEACU-UHFFFAOYSA-N fe2+ Chemical compound [Fe+2] CWYNVVGOOAEACU-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- 229910052742 iron Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 description 2
- 239000000203 mixture Substances 0.000 description 2
- 239000002965 rope Substances 0.000 description 2
- 239000010959 steel Substances 0.000 description 2
- 239000002023 wood Substances 0.000 description 2
Images
Classifications
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B66—HOISTING; LIFTING; HAULING
- B66B—ELEVATORS; ESCALATORS OR MOVING WALKWAYS
- B66B13/00—Doors, gates, or other apparatus controlling access to, or exit from, cages or lift well landings
- B66B13/02—Door or gate operation
- B66B13/12—Arrangements for effecting simultaneous opening or closing of cage and landing doors
Definitions
- Our invention relates to devices for automatically opening and closing the exit and entrance doors or gates of elevators used for carrying passengers or freight, and at the same time open or close the hatchways or trap-doors of an elevator-shaft provided on the floor-lines of a building containing an elevator, wherein such doors and hatchways are actuatedby sliding them in opening or closing; and the object of our invention is to aiford means wherein, by the upward and downward movements of the elevator in its well or shaft, the sliding doors leading to it from the floors, as well as the sliding hatchcovers provided for safety against accident or fire, maybe alternately opened and closed,
- Figure I is a View, partly in section and partly in elevation, of aportion of an elevatorshaft containing an elevator and showing our device applied for the purpose of opening and closing the hatch-covers or trap-doors of a hatehway in the floor of a building.
- Fig. II is a top view showing the hatchway-cover closed.
- Fig. III is a sectional view showing a roller on which the hatchway-cover moves, with its truck and support.
- FIG. IV is an elevation of an elevator-car, showing by dotted lines-our opening and closing device applied, with the door open.
- Fig. V is a similar view showing the same closed.
- Fig. VI is a perspective view of our device applied to the floor-guards of an elevator, showing portions of the latter broken off.-
- B the elevator shaft or well
- B an upright extending on one side the length of the well
- B the floor and ceiling,'with the space between, of a story to a building within which the hatch-covers operate, and these together constitute the frame-work for our invention.
- D represents a block attached to the upright B.
- O 0 represents angle-bent lever-bars, made of wrought iron or steel, having a V-shaped or forked end to each, as shown by C G, with an eye 0 in the other end thereof, to which is pivoted the link 0.
- C G the angle-bent lever-bars
- the hatch-covers are represented by E. They are made square, in two parts, of light material in wood or iron, and are twice the length of the opening they are designed to cover when the hatch is closed. These hatchcovers are placed on two or more axles, (represented by 6 Fig. 111,) which move on wheels 6, having grooves e between the upper and lower guides or tracks e 6 and are placed on two sides of the hatch-opening between the floor and ceiling, as shown in Fig. I.
- the angle-bent arms are fastened to the bracket D at the points old by the pivot-pin c, on
Landscapes
- Elevator Door Apparatuses (AREA)
Description
'(No Model.)
2 Sheets Sheet 1. J. B. CRAIG 8v T. W. PURGELL. DEVICE FOR OPERATING DOORS T0 ELEVATOR WELLS.
No. 461,411. Patented Oct. 13,1891.
Jail? .3, 6 d 220010.977?! m: xonms PCTERS 00., PNOTO-LITNIL, WASNINGYQN, n. c.
(No Model.) 2 Sheets-Sheet 2.
J. B. CRAIG & T. W. PUROELL. DEVICE FOR OPERATING DOORS T0 ELEVATOR WELLS.
No. 461,411.. I Patented Oct. 18,1891.
Jbhn, 13. ra s IZmmcwWfParc 0ZZ,
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
JOHN B. CRAIG AND THOMAS W. PUROELL, oF'sT. LOUIS, MISSOURI.
DEVICE FOR OPERATING DOORS TO ELEVATOR-WELLS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 461,411, dated October 13, 1891. Application filed May 20, 1891- Serial No. 393,431. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern.-
Be it known that we, JOHN B. CRAIG and .THoMAs W. PURCELL, both citizens of the United States, and residing at the city of St. Louis, in the State of Missouri, have jointlyinvented a new and useful Improvement in Devices forAutomatically Opening and Closing the Hatchways and Doors of Elevators, of which the following is a specification.
Our invention relates to devices for automatically opening and closing the exit and entrance doors or gates of elevators used for carrying passengers or freight, and at the same time open or close the hatchways or trap-doors of an elevator-shaft provided on the floor-lines of a building containing an elevator, wherein such doors and hatchways are actuatedby sliding them in opening or closing; and the object of our invention is to aiford means wherein, by the upward and downward movements of the elevator in its well or shaft, the sliding doors leading to it from the floors, as well as the sliding hatchcovers provided for safety against accident or fire, maybe alternately opened and closed,
so that the elevator-shaft may be at all times guarded either by closed doors and hatchways or the presence of the elevator-ear, ready to receive or discharge passengers or freight at the fioor desired. We attain these-objects by the devices and mechanism shown by the accompanying drawings, in which Figure I is a View, partly in section and partly in elevation, of aportion of an elevatorshaft containing an elevator and showing our device applied for the purpose of opening and closing the hatch-covers or trap-doors of a hatehway in the floor of a building. Fig. II is a top view showing the hatchway-cover closed. Fig. III is a sectional view showing a roller on which the hatchway-cover moves, with its truck and support. Fig. IV is an elevation of an elevator-car, showing by dotted lines-our opening and closing device applied, with the door open. Fig. V is a similar view showing the same closed. Fig. VI is a perspective view of our device applied to the floor-guards of an elevator, showing portions of the latter broken off.-
B, the elevator shaft or well; B, an upright extending on one side the length of the well, and B the floor and ceiling,'with the space between, of a story to a building within which the hatch-covers operate, and these together constitute the frame-work for our invention.
D represents a block attached to the upright B.
O 0 represents angle-bent lever-bars, made of wrought iron or steel, having a V-shaped or forked end to each, as shown by C G, with an eye 0 in the other end thereof, to which is pivoted the link 0. For our device for operating the sliding hatch-cover E four of the Within angle-bent lever-bars are used, two being placed above the floor and inverted, two below the ceiling of the floor below, the downwardly-descending arms above the floor and the upwardly-extending arms below the ceiling being approximately of the length of the opening of the hatchway designed to be covered.
The hatch-covers are represented by E. They are made square, in two parts, of light material in wood or iron, and are twice the length of the opening they are designed to cover when the hatch is closed. These hatchcovers are placed on two or more axles, (represented by 6 Fig. 111,) which move on wheels 6, having grooves e between the upper and lower guides or tracks e 6 and are placed on two sides of the hatch-opening between the floor and ceiling, as shown in Fig. I. The angle-bent arms are fastened to the bracket D at the points old by the pivot-pin c, on
which they move. The short angle-arms of the levers which terminate in the V-shaped or forked cam-ears are placed opposite one In the door opening and closing appliance of our invention, as shown in'Figs. IV, V,
and VI, we use two of the forked end and an gle-bent lever-bars, which are pivotally connected with each other and with the door in the guard-cage at the floor-landing, (see figures last referred to,) the forked end of one being raised slightly higher than that of the other, so as to allow of their passing one another, as shown at 0 Having provided a suitable bracket or support on which to hang the lever-operating bars for the door, we connect it pivotally to the door at the point f by the pivot-pin 0, making a center for the backward-and-forward motion of the door F on the lever-bearing pivot connection 0' on the guard above the door, as shown fully in Fig. VI, with the mouth or forked ends of the levers facing toward each other, the one above the other, with a slight angle-sufficient to freely allow a to pass. 'The latter is a pin projection fast ened to the side of the elevator-car next the door approximating the point a Fig. IV, which point should be on a line permitting the pin projection to pass one cam-ear of the lever represented by c and impinge upon the other, thus actuating the lever-arms to open or close the door as the elevator ascends or descends, as the case may be.
It will be readily understood from the drawings how our device operates, viz: as the elevator-car descends on the rope a down the elevator-shaft the projections 11 0. Fig. I, enter the V-shaped ends of the angle-bent lever-bars C C, and. passing by the first lug or car thereof, strike the second, and thus actuate the lever connection with the hatch- Way-covers E E, throwing them back and opening the hatchway at orabout the same time the projeotingpin a on the opposite side of the elevator-car intercepts the lower ear of the upper lever-bar, (see a Fig. V,) and the'door is thrown open by the levers, as shown by Fig. IV, just When the elevatorplatform is on a level with the floor. car thence descending, the pin or roller projections 0, (1 Fig. I, impinge on the lower ear of the upwardly-projecting bent levers C 0 below the ceiling, (see Fig. 1,) which in turn actuate the lever-connection with the hatchcovers and closes them. About the same time the pin projection a on the opposite side of the elevator-car impinges on the lower ear of the under lever-arm and operates it to close the door.
Having thus described our invention, what We claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
The combination of the slidable door, the L-shaped levers pivoted at their angles to the elevator-shaft and having their shorter arms arranged in substantially horizontal planes, with their ends forked and in the same vertical plane, the elevator-car having a single lateral projection adapted to successively engage the forked ends of the levers, and links connecting the ends of the longer arms of the levers to the door.
' JOHN B. CRAIG.
THOS. W. PURCELL.
\Vitnesses:
E. J. OBRIEN,
FRANK LALLY.
The
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
US461411A true US461411A (en) | 1891-10-13 |
Family
ID=2530283
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US461411D Expired - Lifetime US461411A (en) | Device for operating doors to elevator-wells |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US461411A (en) |
-
0
- US US461411D patent/US461411A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
US461411A (en) | Device for operating doors to elevator-wells | |
US1095370A (en) | Elevator-shaft and doors therefor. | |
US286136A (en) | David humphbeys | |
US339035A (en) | westberg | |
US475524A (en) | Elevator | |
US305000A (en) | Automatic elevator-guard | |
US404618A (en) | Self-closing hatchway | |
US613468A (en) | Mechanism for actuating doors or gates of elevators | |
US370308A (en) | Alexandee j | |
US320083A (en) | Automatic hatchway-guard | |
US153121A (en) | Improvement in self-closing hatchways | |
US153135A (en) | Improvement in hatchway-guards | |
US483407A (en) | Apparatus for operating elevator-doors | |
US373554A (en) | Hatchway for elevators | |
US1201316A (en) | Safety device for sidewalk-elevators. | |
US456063A (en) | rogers | |
US715464A (en) | Safety-door for lifts. | |
US463632A (en) | Elevator | |
US134334A (en) | Improvement in hatchways for elevators | |
US795449A (en) | Automatic safety fire-door. | |
US120844A (en) | Improvement in vertical hoists | |
US306126A (en) | lauffeb | |
US272552A (en) | Safety-gate for elevators | |
US147853A (en) | Improvement in self-closing hatchways | |
US207572A (en) | Improvement in hatchways |