US632369A - Means for operating elevator-doors. - Google Patents

Means for operating elevator-doors. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US632369A
US632369A US63175397A US1897631753A US632369A US 632369 A US632369 A US 632369A US 63175397 A US63175397 A US 63175397A US 1897631753 A US1897631753 A US 1897631753A US 632369 A US632369 A US 632369A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
door
car
weight
bar
elevator
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
Application number
US63175397A
Inventor
Elliott S Robison
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
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US63175397A priority Critical patent/US632369A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US632369A publication Critical patent/US632369A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B66HOISTING; LIFTING; HAULING
    • B66BELEVATORS; ESCALATORS OR MOVING WALKWAYS
    • B66B13/00Doors, gates, or other apparatus controlling access to, or exit from, cages or lift well landings
    • B66B13/02Door or gate operation
    • B66B13/06Door or gate operation of sliding doors
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B66HOISTING; LIFTING; HAULING
    • B66BELEVATORS; ESCALATORS OR MOVING WALKWAYS
    • B66B13/00Doors, gates, or other apparatus controlling access to, or exit from, cages or lift well landings
    • B66B13/02Door or gate operation
    • B66B13/06Door or gate operation of sliding doors
    • B66B13/10Door or gate operation of sliding doors by car or cage movement
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B66HOISTING; LIFTING; HAULING
    • B66BELEVATORS; ESCALATORS OR MOVING WALKWAYS
    • B66B13/00Doors, gates, or other apparatus controlling access to, or exit from, cages or lift well landings
    • B66B13/02Door or gate operation
    • B66B13/14Control systems or devices
    • B66B13/16Door or gate locking devices controlled or primarily controlled by condition of cage, e.g. movement or position

Definitions

  • My invention relates to means for operating elevator doors, and more particularly to means for closing the door by the motion of the car after it has been opened by other means; and it has for its object to provide an improved and simple mechanism whereby the movement of the car in either direction may close and lock the door.
  • Figure 1 is a vertical section of an elevator car and shaft equipped with my improvements, looking from the side.
  • Fig. 2 is a front View, partly broken away, of an elevator provided with my improvements.
  • Fig. 3 is an enlarged plan sectional view taken on the line 3 3, Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 4 is an enlarged detail section, partly broken away, taken on the line 4 4, Figs. 1 and 3.
  • Fig. 5 is a front elevation of the lower portion of the' gate or door and the car, showing certain portions broken away and others in section on different vertical planes, as will hereinafter appear; and
  • Fig. 6 is a detail plan section taken on the line 6 6, Fig. 5.
  • My invention is shown as applied to a freight-elevator, this being an example of the form for which my improvements are more especially designed.
  • a vertical weight-box 9 in which is'ar- .ranged a weight 10, and at the upper end 0E which boX is located a pulley 11.
  • a cable or cord 12 Secured to the door 3 at one end is a cable or cord 12,which passes upwardly over a pulley 13, secured to the upper side of the door-frame, and then passes over the pulley 1l and has its other end attached to the weight 10.
  • This weight 10 is, also connected to one end of a cable 14, which passes upwardly over another pulley 15, arranged near the upper end of the weight-box 9, and thence passes over a pulley 16, secured to the under side of the beam 17.
  • cord or cable 14 passes downwardly around and is attached to a drum 18, journaled in a box or bearing 19, mounted upon a suitable support or beam 20.
  • a pinion 21 On the inner side of the drum 1S is secured a pinion 21, which meshes with a horizontallysliding rack-bar 22, the latter being supported by brackets 23 24, secured to the stanchion 5 of the elevator-shaft.
  • the rack-bar 22 passes through a suitable passage formed in the stanchion 5 and restsV against the inner side of the guide-strip 6, which serves to hold the bar 22 in place.
  • One end of the bar 22 is provided with a hook 25, under which engages a latch 26, having a pivotal support 27 and stop 28 on the bar or beam29, one end of the latch ⁇ 26 being arranged in such a position 1 that it may be engaged by a cranked arm 30, ⁇ formed on a shaft 31, mounted in suitable g bearings 32 on the door 3 and having an operating-handle 33thus enabling the conductor on the car to release the latch 26 from its en- Vhen the hook 25 is so released, it will be seen that the weight gagement with the hook 25.
  • cams 35 are arranged in a vertical position and secured by brackets 36 to one of the standards 2 of the car, and they are so formed that the rack-bar 22 may recede to the full extremity of its movement away from the door before the lng 34 strikes either of the cams when the car is substantially level with the landing. To this end the cams 35 project toward the door from their meeting ends, and hence if the lug 34 should be in the path of the cams when the car moves in either direction it will be forced toward the door until the hook 25 engages over the latch 26, and thnslocks the door from being opened by the weight 10.
  • the upper end of one and the lower end of the other is provided with an inwardly-inclining portion 35, which would strike under or over the lu g 34, according to the direction in which the car might be moving, and force the lug outwardly until the hook 25 engaged over the latch 2G. The door might then be opened after the car reached the landing.
  • a lock which prevents the rack-bar 22 from being pulled inwardly or away from the door.
  • This is best shown in Fig. 4 of the drawings, and it consists simply of a sliding bolt 37, mounted in a bracket or box 3S under the bar 22, and has a tooth 39, adapted to engage in a recess 40, formed in the under side of the bar 22, the bolt 37 being forced normally ontward with the tooth 39 in engagement with the recess 40 by a spring 41, located in the box 38.
  • This lock is automatically released and the bar 22 permitted to slide by a shoe 42, secured to the side of one of the standards 2 of the car, so that by the time the car vreaches the level of the fioor or landing the bolt 37 will have been engaged and forced back by the shoe 42, permitting the weight lO to open the door as soon as the latch 2G is released by the conductor.
  • Another form of this lock mechanism, ⁇ vl1ich accomplishes substantially the same end, is shown in Figs. 5 and G, and
  • a sliding bolt 43 located in the lower end of the weight-box 9 and passing through such box and engaging in a recess 44, formed in the side of the gate or door 3, the recess 44 being vertically elongated, so that it may not be necessary to place the door in an exact position before it will lock.
  • This bolt 43 is provided with a laterally outwardly projecting arm 45, which is swiveled or pivoted ⁇ in the upper end of a lever 46, the latter being pivoted at 47 to the side of the elevatorshaft and carrying a lng 4S, with which a shoe49 on the side of the elevator-car engages wh en the car reaches the landing, thus crowding the lever 46 to one side and pulling the bolt 43 out of engagement with the recess 44.
  • the bolt 43 is automatically returned to its engaging position when the car moves away by a spring 50.
  • Thelower corner of the door 3 may beveled oif, as shown at 5l, whereby the door in descending will automatically force the bolt 43 back until the recess 44 comes opposite it.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Automation & Control Theory (AREA)
  • Elevator Door Apparatuses (AREA)

Description

Patented Sept. 5, i899.
E. s. Ramsau.
MEANS FOR OPERATING ELEVATOB DUDES;
(Application led Apr. 12, 1897.)
2 Sheots-Shat l.
cua Madam TH: mams PETERS co. mom-mwa. wksumaora. nv c.
N0. 632,369. Y Patented Sepif5, |899.
E. S.-ROB|SON.
MEANS FUR UPEBATING ELEVATOB DOORS.
(Application flled Apr. 12, 1897.) '(Nu Model.) 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 m: mams PETER: ca, momurna. wummou. n. c.
Nrrnn STATESV A'rnN'r rrrcfE.
ELLIOTT S. ROBISON, OF CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
MEANS FOR OPERATING.ELEVATOR-DOORS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent N o. 632,369, dated September 5, 1899.
Application filed April 1,2, 1897.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it vknown that I, ELLIOTT S. RoBIsoN, a citizen of the United States, residing at Chicago, in the county of Cook and State of Illinois, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Means for Operating Elevator-Doors, of which the following is a full, clear, and exact specification.
My invention relates to means for operating elevator doors, and more particularly to means for closing the door by the motion of the car after it has been opened by other means; and it has for its object to provide an improved and simple mechanism whereby the movement of the car in either direction may close and lock the door.
It also has for its object to prevent the opening of the door excepting when the car is at the proper elevation and to then open it automatically.
With these ends in view my invention consists in certain features of novelty in the construction, combination, and arrangement of parts by which the said objects and certain other objects hereinafter appearing are attained, all as fully described with reference to the accompanying drawings, and more particularly pointed out in the claims.
In the said drawings, Figure 1 is a vertical section of an elevator car and shaft equipped with my improvements, looking from the side. Fig. 2 is a front View, partly broken away, of an elevator provided with my improvements. Fig. 3 is an enlarged plan sectional view taken on the line 3 3, Fig. 1. Fig. 4 is an enlarged detail section, partly broken away, taken on the line 4 4, Figs. 1 and 3. Fig. 5 is a front elevation of the lower portion of the' gate or door and the car, showing certain portions broken away and others in section on different vertical planes, as will hereinafter appear; and Fig. 6 is a detail plan section taken on the line 6 6, Fig. 5.
My invention is shown as applied to a freight-elevator, this being an example of the form for which my improvements are more especially designed.
1 represents the oor of the car; 2,thestand ards; 3, the gate or door; 4, one of the floors of the building; 5, one of the side standards of the shaft, and 6 the guide-strips secured thereto and with which the guides on the standards 2 engage. In the example of elevator shown in the drawings the door 3 is Serial No. 631.753. (No model.)
arranged to slide vertically between guides or ways 7 S and is adapted to close by its own gravity, so as to be self-closing when permitted by other mechanism by which it isl controlled. y
In one corner of the elevator-shaft is arranged a vertical weight-box 9, in which is'ar- .ranged a weight 10, and at the upper end 0E which boX is located a pulley 11. Secured to the door 3 at one end is a cable or cord 12,which passes upwardly over a pulley 13, secured to the upper side of the door-frame, and then passes over the pulley 1l and has its other end attached to the weight 10. By this means it willv be seen that the weight will automatically elevate the door 3 as soon as it is released. This weight 10 is, also connected to one end of a cable 14, which passes upwardly over another pulley 15, arranged near the upper end of the weight-box 9, and thence passes over a pulley 16, secured to the under side of the beam 17. From here the cord or cable 14 passes downwardly around and is attached to a drum 18, journaled in a box or bearing 19, mounted upon a suitable support or beam 20. On the inner side of the drum 1S is secured a pinion 21, which meshes with a horizontallysliding rack-bar 22, the latter being supported by brackets 23 24, secured to the stanchion 5 of the elevator-shaft. The rack-bar 22 passes through a suitable passage formed in the stanchion 5 and restsV against the inner side of the guide-strip 6, which serves to hold the bar 22 in place. One end of the bar 22 is provided with a hook 25, under which engages a latch 26, having a pivotal support 27 and stop 28 on the bar or beam29, one end of the latch `26 being arranged in such a position 1 that it may be engaged by a cranked arm 30, `formed on a shaft 31, mounted in suitable g bearings 32 on the door 3 and having an operating-handle 33thus enabling the conductor on the car to release the latch 26 from its en- Vhen the hook 25 is so released, it will be seen that the weight gagement with the hook 25.
10 will elevate the door and in so doingvunwind the cable 14 from the drum 28vand cause the rack-bar 22 to recede from the door, and the door will remain open until such rackbar has been again forced forward, causing the cable 14 to wind upon the drum and elevate the weight 10. In order now that this forward movement of the rack-bar 22 maybe effected bythe movement of the carin either IOO direction and the door thus automatically closed and latched, I provide the side of the rack-bar with a lug, which may bein the 'form of a pivoted roller 34 and which is arranged to be strncl; by either of twin cams 35, carried by the car. These cams 35 are arranged in a vertical position and secured by brackets 36 to one of the standards 2 of the car, and they are so formed that the rack-bar 22 may recede to the full extremity of its movement away from the door before the lng 34 strikes either of the cams when the car is substantially level with the landing. To this end the cams 35 project toward the door from their meeting ends, and hence if the lug 34 should be in the path of the cams when the car moves in either direction it will be forced toward the door until the hook 25 engages over the latch 26, and thnslocks the door from being opened by the weight 10. In order that the lng 34 may not engage behind the cams 35 in the event the door should be opened bei fore the car reaches the landing, the upper end of one and the lower end of the other is provided with an inwardly-inclining portion 35, which would strike under or over the lu g 34, according to the direction in which the car might be moving, and force the lug outwardly until the hook 25 engaged over the latch 2G. The door might then be opened after the car reached the landing. By thus permitting the door to close by gravity and Vto be opened by the gravity ofthe weight lO it will be seen that the force ofthe movement of the door in one direction will be limited by the force of gravity exerted upon it and in the other direction by the force of gravity exerted on the Weight l0 regardless of the speed of the elevator-car, and hence all danger of injury to persons being caught in the door, which exists where the door is opened and closed by positive means,`is absolutely avoided.
As a safeguard against mischievous persons operating the door-opening mechanism before the car reaches the landing, I provide a lock which prevents the rack-bar 22 from being pulled inwardly or away from the door. This is best shown in Fig. 4 of the drawings, and it consists simply of a sliding bolt 37, mounted in a bracket or box 3S under the bar 22, and has a tooth 39, adapted to engage in a recess 40, formed in the under side of the bar 22, the bolt 37 being forced normally ontward with the tooth 39 in engagement with the recess 40 by a spring 41, located in the box 38. This lock is automatically released and the bar 22 permitted to slide by a shoe 42, secured to the side of one of the standards 2 of the car, so that by the time the car vreaches the level of the fioor or landing the bolt 37 will have been engaged and forced back by the shoe 42, permitting the weight lO to open the door as soon as the latch 2G is released by the conductor. Another form of this lock mechanism,\vl1ich accomplishes substantially the same end, is shown in Figs. 5 and G, and
consists of a sliding bolt 43, located in the lower end of the weight-box 9 and passing through such box and engaging in a recess 44, formed in the side of the gate or door 3, the recess 44 being vertically elongated, so that it may not be necessary to place the door in an exact position before it will lock. This bolt 43 is provided with a laterally outwardly projecting arm 45, which is swiveled or pivoted `in the upper end of a lever 46, the latter being pivoted at 47 to the side of the elevatorshaft and carrying a lng 4S, with which a shoe49 on the side of the elevator-car engages wh en the car reaches the landing, thus crowding the lever 46 to one side and pulling the bolt 43 out of engagement with the recess 44. The bolt 43 is automatically returned to its engaging position when the car moves away by a spring 50. Thelower corner of the door 3 may be beveled oif, as shown at 5l, whereby the door in descending will automatically force the bolt 43 back until the recess 44 comes opposite it.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
l. The combination with the car and a selfclosing door, of a weight or its equivalent for opening said door, a Winding mechanism, a liexible connection lbetween said winding mechanism and weight, means for actuating said winding mechanism and elevating said weight having a portion carried by the car, and means for holding said weight elevated, substantially as set forth.
2. The combination with the car anda selfclosing door, of a Weight or its eqnivalentconnected with said door for opening it, a windin g-drum having flexible connection with said weight, a sliding bar having a stud, geared to said drum, a device carried bythe car for moving said bar lengthwise and elevating said weight and means for holding said weight elevated, substantially as set forth.
3. The combination with the car and a selfclosing door, of a weight or its equivalent for opening said door, a winding-drum having a iiexible connection with said weight Afor elevating it, a sliding rack-bar geared to said drum and having a stud and a catch at one end,a latch for engaging said catch and means carried by the car for engaging said stud and forcing said bar lengthwise, substantially as set forth.
4. The combination with the car and the door, of means for opening the said door, means for causing the door to close, an actuating device for said latter means carried by the car,a lock forholding said means inactive and preventing the door-opening means from being operated and a device carried by the car for disengaging said lock, substantially as set forth.
E. S. ROBISON. Vitnesses:
E'DNA B. JoHNsoN, F. A. lIorKrNs.
IOO
IIO
US63175397A 1897-04-12 1897-04-12 Means for operating elevator-doors. Expired - Lifetime US632369A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US63175397A US632369A (en) 1897-04-12 1897-04-12 Means for operating elevator-doors.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US63175397A US632369A (en) 1897-04-12 1897-04-12 Means for operating elevator-doors.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US632369A true US632369A (en) 1899-09-05

Family

ID=2700963

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US63175397A Expired - Lifetime US632369A (en) 1897-04-12 1897-04-12 Means for operating elevator-doors.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US632369A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US632369A (en) Means for operating elevator-doors.
US575935A (en) Operating mechanism for elevator-shaft doors and safety devices
US1211412A (en) Mine-shaft gate.
US1197164A (en) Grain-door opener.
US567095A (en) Island
US1201006A (en) Grain-door opener and process of opening it.
US560306A (en) Webster p
US1092633A (en) Automatic door opening and closing device for elevators.
US1574217A (en) Elevator-door-operating device
US257182A (en) Elevator
US281632A (en) Automatic door for elevator-hatchways
US1065956A (en) Elevator.
US279612A (en) Elevator-hatch
US1241724A (en) Elevator construction.
US570253A (en) Island
US840754A (en) Elevator-door-opening device.
US651562A (en) Elevator.
US475524A (en) Elevator
US1221543A (en) Elevator protective apparatus.
US319292A (en) Automatic elevator-gate
US693936A (en) Safety device for elevators.
US371207A (en) Elevator
US1381263A (en) Locking mechanism for automatic elevator-doors
US256981A (en) Automatic gate for elevators
US300677A (en) Elevator-gate attachment