WO2018115484A1 - Spliced rope system - Google Patents
Spliced rope system Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO2018115484A1 WO2018115484A1 PCT/EP2017/084474 EP2017084474W WO2018115484A1 WO 2018115484 A1 WO2018115484 A1 WO 2018115484A1 EP 2017084474 W EP2017084474 W EP 2017084474W WO 2018115484 A1 WO2018115484 A1 WO 2018115484A1
- Authority
- WO
- WIPO (PCT)
- Prior art keywords
- rope
- conductive element
- section
- splice
- rope section
- Prior art date
Links
Classifications
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B1/00—Constructional features of ropes or cables
- D07B1/14—Ropes or cables with incorporated auxiliary elements, e.g. for marking, extending throughout the length of the rope or cable
- D07B1/145—Ropes or cables with incorporated auxiliary elements, e.g. for marking, extending throughout the length of the rope or cable comprising elements for indicating or detecting the rope or cable status
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B1/00—Constructional features of ropes or cables
- D07B1/18—Grommets
- D07B1/185—Grommets characterised by the eye construction
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B7/00—Details of, or auxiliary devices incorporated in, rope- or cable-making machines; Auxiliary apparatus associated with such machines
- D07B7/16—Auxiliary apparatus
- D07B7/169—Auxiliary apparatus for interconnecting two cable or rope ends, e.g. by splicing or sewing
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B7/00—Details of, or auxiliary devices incorporated in, rope- or cable-making machines; Auxiliary apparatus associated with such machines
- D07B7/16—Auxiliary apparatus
- D07B7/18—Auxiliary apparatus for spreading or untwisting ropes or cables into constituent parts for treatment or splicing purposes
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2201/00—Ropes or cables
- D07B2201/20—Rope or cable components
- D07B2201/2001—Wires or filaments
- D07B2201/2002—Wires or filaments characterised by their cross-sectional shape
- D07B2201/2003—Wires or filaments characterised by their cross-sectional shape flat
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2201/00—Ropes or cables
- D07B2201/20—Rope or cable components
- D07B2201/2095—Auxiliary components, e.g. electric conductors or light guides
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2201/00—Ropes or cables
- D07B2201/20—Rope or cable components
- D07B2201/2095—Auxiliary components, e.g. electric conductors or light guides
- D07B2201/2096—Light guides
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2205/00—Rope or cable materials
- D07B2205/20—Organic high polymers
- D07B2205/201—Polyolefins
- D07B2205/2014—High performance polyolefins, e.g. Dyneema or Spectra
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2205/00—Rope or cable materials
- D07B2205/20—Organic high polymers
- D07B2205/2039—Polyesters
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2205/00—Rope or cable materials
- D07B2205/20—Organic high polymers
- D07B2205/2046—Polyamides, e.g. nylons
- D07B2205/205—Aramides
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2205/00—Rope or cable materials
- D07B2205/20—Organic high polymers
- D07B2205/2096—Poly-p-phenylenebenzo-bisoxazole [PBO]
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2205/00—Rope or cable materials
- D07B2205/30—Inorganic materials
- D07B2205/3017—Silicon carbides
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2301/00—Controls
- D07B2301/55—Sensors
- D07B2301/5531—Sensors using electric means or elements
- D07B2301/5577—Sensors using electric means or elements using light guides
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2801/00—Linked indexing codes associated with indexing codes or classes of D07B
- D07B2801/10—Smallest filamentary entity of a rope or strand, i.e. wire, filament, fiber or yarn
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D07—ROPES; CABLES OTHER THAN ELECTRIC
- D07B—ROPES OR CABLES IN GENERAL
- D07B2801/00—Linked indexing codes associated with indexing codes or classes of D07B
- D07B2801/18—Coating
Definitions
- the present invention relates to rope systems, more specifically to a rope comprising a splice.
- Rope splicing refers to the formation of a joint between two ropes or two parts of the same rope by partly disassembling and reassembling strands of the rope or ropes by interweaving.
- the aim of the present invention is to provide a rope system comprising a splice structure not showing above disadvantages.
- a rope system comprising a splice structure that enables a save use without the need for frequent inspection.
- the present invention relates to a particular form of rope splicing herein referred to as a reliable splice.
- a reliable splice minimizes the number of inspections needed for a safe usage of the splice in static as well as dynamic rope applications.
- a rope system comprising a first rope section, a second rope section and a splice structure, wherein the first and the second rope section comprise each at least three rope strands, wherein said splice structure is between the first rope section and the second rope section and connects said first to said second rope section, wherein the rope system further comprises at least one conductive element extending from within the first rope section through the splice structure into the second rope section whereby at least a portion of the conductive element is immobilized in both, the first and second rope section.
- the present invention is of particular significance in the context of forming a splice as an end-to-end connection of two rope sections.
- the present invention also covers application of splices, other than end-to-end splices, like eye-splices or splices to form circular grommets or round slings.
- the present inventive rope structure may be especially relevant for applications where monitoring of the splice is difficult, for example in case of a covered splice, or critical, for example if desirable for safety reasons.
- first rope section and the second rope section are sections of a single rope whereby the rope system is an eye- splice or a round sling.
- first rope section and the second rope section are sections of distinct ropes whereby the rope system is a spliced rope.
- Figure 1 (a) is a schematic top plan view of a rope structure using an example eye splice system constructed in accordance with, and embodying, the principles of the present invention.
- Figure Kb is a schematic top plain view of a rope structure using on example rope end splice system constructed in accordance with, and embodying, the principle of the present invention.
- the rope system 10 comprises a splice structure 12 linking a first rope section 14 and a second rope section 16 and a conductive element 18.
- an example rope system 20 according to another embodiment of the present invention comprising a splice structure 22 connecting a first rope section 24 with a second rope section 26.
- the example splice structure further comprises a conductive element 28 extending form the first rope section through the splice into the second rope section.
- a rope system comprises at least a first rope.
- the rope system comprises one rope, said rope comprising a first rope section and a second rope section, whereby the first and second rope sections are joined together by the splice forming an eye in said rope.
- the first rope section is a section close to one end of the rope and the second rope section is more distant from said end, whereby said end of the rope is spliced to the second rope section.
- first and the second rope section may be close to the 2 ends of a single rope whereby the splice results in a loop or the first and the second rope section may be close to the ends of 2 distinct ropes whereby the splice results in a connection between said 2 ropes.
- the rope or ropes of the rope system of the invention may have various constructions amongst which a laid or braided rope construction.
- the various constructions, in particular the braided or laid ropes may comprise primary strands (herein also referred to as rope strands or strands) that in turn may comprise sub- strands of bundles of parallel or twisted yarns, typically multifilament yarns.
- the nature of rope will substantially depend on the properties and use of the rope. For heavy-duty applications braided ropes are preferred, providing a rope construction with increased robustness.
- Splice structures that may be employed for the present invention will be well known to the skilled person and are amongst others know from for example Chapter 7 of the Handbook of fibre rope technology (eds McKenna, Hearle and O'Hear, Woodhead Publishing Ltd, ISBN 1 85573 606 3) or W016059261 .
- the length of a splice may strongly depend upon the type of splice construction and end use of the rope system. By introducing a splice in a rope system the skilled person will attempt to strike a balance between the reliability of the splice and the length of the splice. For economical but also manufacturing reasons the splice should be as short as possible but long enough to avoid slippage of the splice.
- the present invention hence allows an additional safety factor in the splice, allowing to build as short as possible splices while safety is guaranteed by the slip detection according to the present invention.
- the length of the splice is at most 100 times the diameter of the rope or ropes, preferably at most 80, more preferably at most 50 times the diameter of the rope or ropes.
- the rope system comprises one or two laid ropes, preferably said laid rope or ropes comprises 3, 4, 6, or 6+1 primary strands wherein the splice structure is a tucked splices between the ends of the rope or ropes, the advantage being very little slip in the spliced connection.
- the rope system comprises one or two braided ropes, preferably said braided rope or ropes comprises 6, 8, or 12 primary strands.
- the splice structure comprises a tucked splice or an insert splice (also called buried splice) between the ends of the rope or ropes.
- the advantage of such braided rope splices is a robust and stable connection.
- each of the first and/or second rope section is braided and/or laid each from at least 4 rope strands, more preferably each from at least 6 rope strands and most preferably each from at least 8 rope strands.
- the strands of the rope or ropes of the rope system of the invention preferably comprise polymeric elongated elements with a tenacity of at least 1.0 N/Tex.
- This can be an elongated element, preferably a yarn, of any high performance fibre material, like polyester, polyamide, aromatic polyamide (aramid), poly(p-phenylene-2,6- benzobisoxazole), or polyethylene yarns.
- the elongated element is a high modulus polyethylene (HMPE) yarn, also referred to as UHMWPE yarns.
- HMPE yarn comprises highly-drawn fibres of high-molecular weight linear polyethylene.
- High molecular weight here means a weight average molecular weight of at least 400,000 g/mol.
- Linear polyethylene here means polyethylene having fewer than 1 side chain per 100 C atoms, preferably fewer than 1 side chain per 300 C atoms, a side chain or branch generally containing more than 10 C atoms.
- the polyethylene may also contain up to 5 mol % of one or more other alkenes which are copolymerisable therewith, such as propylene, 1 -butene, 1 -hexene, 4-methyl-1 -pentene or 1 -octene.
- the polymeric material of choice for the elongated element of the rope or ropes is ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE).
- UHMWPE in the context of the present invention has an intrinsic viscosity (IV) of preferably between 3 and 40 dl/g, more preferably between 8 and 30 dl/g.
- UHMWPE yarns are preferably manufactured according to a gel spinning process as described in numerous publications, including for example WO2005066401 and WO2012139934.
- This process essentially comprises the preparation of a solution of a polyethylene of high intrinsic viscosity, spinning the solution into solutions filaments at a temperature above the dissolving temperature, cooling the solution filaments to below the gelling temperature to form solvent-containing gel filaments and drawing the filaments before, during or after at least partial removal of the solvent.
- a rope structure comprising HMPE yarn
- Advantages of a rope structure include high abrasion resistance, good resistance against fatigue under flexural loads, a low elongation resulting in an easier positioning, an excellent chemical and UV resistance and a high cut resistance.
- the elongated element is preferably a fiber, a yarn, and especially a multifilament yarn.
- fiber is herein understood an elongate body, the length dimension of which is much greater than the transverse dimensions of width and thickness. Accordingly, the term fiber includes filament, ribbon, strip, band, tape, and the like having regular or irregular cross-sections.
- the fiber may have continuous length, known in the art as filament, or discontinuous length, known in the art as staple fiber. Staple fibers are commonly obtained by cutting or stretch-breaking filaments.
- a yarn for the purpose of the invention is an elongated element containing many fibers.
- a multifilament yarn for the purpose of the invention is an elongated element containing many filaments.
- the elongated elements, preferably the yarns, of the rope or ropes are of high strength, sometimes also referred to as high modulus.
- the elongated element has a tenacity of at least 1 .0 N/Tex, preferably of at least 1.2 N/Tex, more preferably at least 1 .5 N/Tex, even more preferably at least 2.0 N/Tex, yet more preferably at least 2.2 N/Tex and most preferably at least 2.5 N/tex.
- said UHMWPE yarn preferably has a tenacity of at least 1 .8 N/Tex, more preferably of at least 2.5 N/Tex, most preferably at least 3.5 N/Tex.
- the polymeric elongated element has a modulus of at least 30 N/Tex, more preferably of at least 50 N/Tex, most preferably of at least 60 N/Tex.
- the UHMWPE yarn have a tensile modulus of at least 50 N/Tex, more preferably of at least 80 N/Tex, most preferably of at least 100 N/Tex.
- a preferred embodiment of the invention is a rope system wherein the first and/or second rope section comprise elongated elements, preferably synthetic yarns, more preferably high modulus synthetic yarns, most preferably high modulus ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) yarns, most preferably UHMWPE yarns with a tenacity of at least 1 .8 N/Tex.
- first and/or second rope section comprise elongated elements, preferably synthetic yarns, more preferably high modulus synthetic yarns, most preferably high modulus ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) yarns, most preferably UHMWPE yarns with a tenacity of at least 1 .8 N/Tex.
- UHMWPE ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene
- the rope or ropes of the rope system according to the invention comprises polymeric elongated elements that are at least partially coated with a thermoset or thermoplastic polymer.
- a thermoset or thermoplastic polymer able to form a suitable composite with the elongated elements may be used, whereas silicone resins and plastomers are the preferred thermoset or thermoplastic polymers, respectively.
- a rope system according to this embodiment may form a splice deforming to a lesser extent when the splice is stretched. This is advantageous when objects, such as hooks for instance, are passed through the eye, especially when the rope system is under load.
- the coating also offers further protection against damage development during dynamic loading conditions for instance and limit the deterioration of properties during long term use.
- at least the first or the second rope section comprises a thermoset or thermoplastic coating, preferably the rope or ropes comprise a thermoset or thermoplastic coating.
- the rope system of the invention comprises at least one conductive element extending from the first rope section through the splice structure to the second rope section.
- a substantial length of the conductive element is present in the first rope section, the second rope section and in the splice structure.
- the rope system is built such that at least a portion of the conductive element is immobilized in both, the first and second rope section, such that upon application of a tension on the rope system at least said portions of the conductive element do not move along the axial direction of the rope structure.
- Such construction may be achieved by choosing the length of the conductive element to be sufficiently long for transferring the tension from the rope to the conductive element.
- friction modifying additives may be applied to the conductive element or fastening means may be employed.
- the first and the second rope section upon slippage of the splice structure, the first and the second rope section will be pulled apart from each other, increasing the distance between them.
- the conductive element being immobilized in each of the first and second rope section is consequently subjected to a tensile force.
- the conductive element will split. Splitting of the conductive element may for example occur by cleavage of the conductive element through breakage or a disconnection of two individual conductive sub-elements by separation.
- the conductive element comprised in the splice structure is arranged such that the conductive element splits when the length of the splice structure is reduced to less than 50% of the original length of the splice structure, preferably to less than 75% of the original length of the splice structure, most preferably to less than 90% of the original length of the splice structure.
- the length of the splice structure is the distance in longitudinal direction of the rope structure where both the first and the second rope section are present. Upon slippage the respective rope sections move apart from each other whereby the overlapping part, the splice, is reduced in length.
- conductive element is herein understood an elongated element having the capability to transfer electrons, ions, electro-magnetic waves, acoustic waves or combinations thereof along its longitudinal direction.
- the conductive element of the invention is an optical conductive element and/or an acoustic conductive element and/or an electrical conductive element.
- Conductive elements will be well-known to the person skilled in the art.
- An optical conductive element may for example comprise or be optical fibers, like glass fibers or fibers from any other material that has sufficient transparency for the chosen signal.
- An electrical conductive element may for example comprise or be a metal wire, carbon fibers or fibers coated with an electrical conductive material or assemblies thereof.
- the conductive element is an optical fiber, a metal wire or metal cable, a carbon yarn or carbon fiber, or a synthetic yarn or synthetic fiber coated with a conductive layer, preferably the synthetic yarn is a
- a conductive element to monitor strain in a rope is for example described in US2005/0226584, where a direct in situ measurement of large strains on the order of 0 to 15 percent in ropes is reported, allowing the identification of local strains using plastic optical fibers combined with light time-of-flight measurements.
- the conductive element In its operating mode, the conductive element is isolated from the rope structure at positions beyond the first and second rope section.
- the ends of the conductive element may directly or by means of further conductive elements be connected to instruments.
- at one end the conductive element is connected to a signal transmitter and at the other end the conductive element is connected to a signal receiver.
- the transmitter signal is measured by means of the signal receiver and the intactness of the conductive element is evaluated on the basis of the measured or absent signal.
- EP 0 731 209 shows an example of a conductive element monitoring by means of electric signals.
- a preferred embodiment of the invention is a rope system comprising devices suitable to emit and receive a signal through the conductive element.
- the length of the conductive element present in the rope structure of the invention may vary widely and will substantially depend upon the rope structure and the positioning of the measuring devices.
- the conductive element may be of substantially the same length as the total length of the rope structure, i.e. from several meters up to thousands of meters whereby the end of the conductive element will be isolated from the rope structure close to its ends.
- the conductive element may have a length close to the length of the splice structure.
- Such a construction would be chosen when an existing rope requires modification by a monitored splice structure and a disassembling of the rope is challenging. During the splicing operation a conductive element would be embedded into the inventive rope structure and guided out of the rope structure at convenient positions.
- the rope system comprises a conductive element, which is one unitary element.
- the conductive element is assembled from two or more conductive sub- elements connected with each other to form the conductive element.
- such a conductive element constructed from at least two sub-elements has the advantage that a rope comprising conductive elements can be repaired by a splice with as little as possible loss of rope length, thereby allowing a permanent monitoring of the condition of the splice.
- a conductive element is constructed from at least 2 conductive sub-elements
- said sub-elements are connected to each other in a manner allowing the transfer of the signal from one sub-element to the other.
- the two or more conductive elements are connected with each other by twisting, compression wrapping, splicing, knotting, clamping, stitching, gluing or combinations thereof.
- the rope system comprises at least one further conductive element.
- further conductive element there are multiple benefits to such further conductive element, amongst which a further increased safety factor by redundancy, but also the additional freedom to distinguish between different levels of splice lengthening.
- the later construction would provide 2 or more conductive elements through the splice structure with different levels of slag, such that signals would fail at different displacements of the 2 spliced rope sections.
- a very early warning could for example indicate a setting of the splice, e.g. at a splice length reduction of maximum 5% whereas a critical splice slippage signal failure would occur at e.g. 10 or 20% of splice length reduction.
- the conductive element of the rope structure may be positioned at any cross-sectional place of the rope structure.
- the conductive element may be at the rope periphery, in the axial center of the rope, along an individual rope strand or embedded inside one of the strands forming the ropes of the rope structure.
- the conductive element is comprised in an individual rope strand.
- the advantage of such a construction is that the conductive element is substantially shielded from deteriorating conditions and in contrast to a positioning in the axial center of the rope will have an elongation behavior similar to the rest of the rope.
- at least one further conductive element is present in the rope structure, it is preferred that the conductive elements are embedded in distinct rope strands.
- said 2 conductive elements are comprised in 2 distinct rope strands with opposite twist.
- the at least one conductive element forms a loop through the rope structure and passes from the first rope section, through the splice structure into the second rope section and back through the splice structure to the first rope section.
- the conductive element has the shape of a "U" whereby each end of the U comes from the first rope section, both legs of the U pass the spliced zone of the rope construction and the 2 legs are linked in the second rope section.
- Such construction has the advantage that a signal emitter and receiver can be located together on one side of the splice structure, preferably at one end of the rope structure.
- said U-shaped conductive element construction provides sufficient length of the conductive element in the second rope section to avoid the dislocation of the conductive element without breakage upon slippage of the splice structure.
- this can be achieved by a sufficiently long length of the conductive element in the second rope section or alternatively by fastening the conductive element to the second rope section by a connection mean, preferably the connection mean is a knot, a braid or a plug.
- IV Intrinsic Viscosity of UHMWPE is determined according to ASTM-D1601/2004 at 135°C in decalin, the dissolution time being 16 hours, with DBPC as anti-oxidant in an amount of 2 g/l solution, by extrapolating the viscosity as measured at different concentrations to zero concentration.
- Tensile properties, i.e. strength and modulus, of fibers were determined on multifilament yarns as specified in ASTM D885M, using a nominal gauge length of the yarn of 500 mm, a crosshead speed of 50%/min and Instron 2714 clamps, of type Fibre Grip D5618C.
- the tensile forces measured may be divided by the titre, as determined by weighing 10 meter of fibre; values in GPa for are calculated assuming the natural density of the polymer, e.g. for UHMWPE is 0.97 g/cm 3 .
Landscapes
- Ropes Or Cables (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (6)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
KR1020197017466A KR20190094179A (en) | 2016-12-22 | 2017-12-22 | Splice joint rope system |
CN201780079247.9A CN110088392A (en) | 2016-12-22 | 2017-12-22 | Splice tethered system |
JP2019531287A JP2020504246A (en) | 2016-12-22 | 2017-12-22 | Spliced rope system |
BR112019012505-1A BR112019012505A2 (en) | 2016-12-22 | 2017-12-22 | spliced rope system |
US16/470,671 US20200087856A1 (en) | 2016-12-22 | 2017-12-22 | Spliced rope system |
EP17822695.7A EP3559339A1 (en) | 2016-12-22 | 2017-12-22 | Spliced rope system |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
EP16206353 | 2016-12-22 | ||
EP16206353.1 | 2016-12-22 |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
WO2018115484A1 true WO2018115484A1 (en) | 2018-06-28 |
Family
ID=57755031
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2017/084474 WO2018115484A1 (en) | 2016-12-22 | 2017-12-22 | Spliced rope system |
Country Status (7)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US20200087856A1 (en) |
EP (1) | EP3559339A1 (en) |
JP (1) | JP2020504246A (en) |
KR (1) | KR20190094179A (en) |
CN (1) | CN110088392A (en) |
BR (1) | BR112019012505A2 (en) |
WO (1) | WO2018115484A1 (en) |
Families Citing this family (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
KR102528821B1 (en) * | 2022-07-29 | 2023-05-04 | 정삼영 | Rope for trawl nets with high-strength eye-splice |
Citations (8)
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EP0731209A1 (en) | 1995-03-06 | 1996-09-11 | Inventio Ag | Device for detecting the end of service life for synthetic fibre ropes |
WO2005066401A1 (en) | 2004-01-01 | 2005-07-21 | Dsm Ip Assets B.V. | Process for making high-performance polyethylene multifilament yarn |
US20050226584A1 (en) | 2002-05-03 | 2005-10-13 | Williams Jerry G | Measurement of large strains in ropes using plastic optical fibers |
WO2012139934A1 (en) | 2011-04-13 | 2012-10-18 | Dsm Ip Assets B.V. | Creep-optimized uhmwpe fiber |
FR2974305A1 (en) * | 2011-04-22 | 2012-10-26 | Zedel | Retaining device i.e. dynamic belay rope, for stopping falling person during e.g. activity, has status indicator including relative sliding segment with end partially decoupled under tension of cord by sliding of end relative to cord |
WO2013126325A1 (en) * | 2012-02-20 | 2013-08-29 | Actuant Corporation | Mooring cable for transmitting oceanographic data |
US20150152594A1 (en) * | 2012-10-29 | 2015-06-04 | Obama Rope Mfg., Co., Ltd. | Synthetic-fiber rope |
WO2016059261A2 (en) | 2015-03-02 | 2016-04-21 | Dsm Ip Assets B.V. | Low slip splice |
Family Cites Families (10)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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JP4371515B2 (en) * | 1999-01-22 | 2009-11-25 | インベンテイオ・アクテイエンゲゼルシヤフト | Detection of damage to a rope sheath of a synthetic fiber rope |
IL140043A (en) * | 1999-12-21 | 2006-07-05 | Inventio Ag | Contact-connecting safety-monitored synthetic fiber ropes |
CN2716316Y (en) * | 2004-04-13 | 2005-08-10 | 柳州欧维姆机械股份有限公司 | Anchor cable with sensing optical fibers |
BRPI0614846B1 (en) * | 2005-08-19 | 2018-09-25 | N.V Bekaert S.A | steel rope ends connection |
ES2428374T3 (en) * | 2006-12-04 | 2013-11-07 | Inventio Ag | Synthetic fiber cable |
CN101845763B (en) * | 2010-04-07 | 2011-09-14 | 金文成 | Distributed intelligent rope and manufacturing method thereof |
EP2855972B1 (en) * | 2012-05-24 | 2018-07-18 | Gregg Marine, Inc. | Braided termination for fiber subsea umbilical line |
CN204000417U (en) * | 2014-08-11 | 2014-12-10 | 江苏华飞不锈钢有限公司 | A kind of good steel wire rope |
CN105040492A (en) * | 2015-07-03 | 2015-11-11 | 天津鑫坤泰预应力专业技术有限公司 | Intelligent steel strand |
CN105256622A (en) * | 2015-11-03 | 2016-01-20 | 山东鲁普科技有限公司 | Splicing method of ultrahigh high molecular weight polyethylene fiber rope ring plate sling |
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2017
- 2017-12-22 BR BR112019012505-1A patent/BR112019012505A2/en not_active Application Discontinuation
- 2017-12-22 CN CN201780079247.9A patent/CN110088392A/en active Pending
- 2017-12-22 US US16/470,671 patent/US20200087856A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2017-12-22 WO PCT/EP2017/084474 patent/WO2018115484A1/en unknown
- 2017-12-22 KR KR1020197017466A patent/KR20190094179A/en unknown
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US20200087856A1 (en) | 2020-03-19 |
KR20190094179A (en) | 2019-08-12 |
BR112019012505A2 (en) | 2019-11-19 |
EP3559339A1 (en) | 2019-10-30 |
JP2020504246A (en) | 2020-02-06 |
CN110088392A (en) | 2019-08-02 |
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