METHODS OF MONITORING THE CONDITION OF ELEVATOR BELTS
20210339984 · 2021-11-04
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A method may be used to monitor the health of a belt in an elevator system. The belt may include first and second terminal ends, a plurality of conductive load carrier strands that extend between the first and second terminal ends, and a polymer material surrounding the strands. A measuring connection point may be located between a pair of adjacent carrier strands at each terminal end of the belt. The method may involve electrically connecting a measuring apparatus between the pair of strands at the measuring connection point at each terminal end and measuring an electrical characteristic at each connection point between at least one pair of strands. The electrical characteristic measured over the complete width of the belt gives a complete overview of the health of the belt, as a change in the measured electrical characteristic over time will be indicative of damage within one or more strands.
Claims
1. A method for monitoring a condition of an elevator belt, the method comprising: connecting a first measuring apparatus to a first pair of adjacent load carrier strands at a first terminal end of the elevator belt; measuring an electrical characteristic between the first pair of adjacent load carrier strands at the first terminal end of the elevator belt to obtain a first measurement; connecting the first measuring apparatus or a second measuring apparatus to the first pair of adjacent load carrier strands at a second terminal end of the elevator belt; and measuring the electrical characteristic between the first pair of adjacent load carrier strands at the second terminal end of the elevator belt to obtain a second measurement.
2. The method of claim 1, comprising comparing the first and second measurements respectively to previously-obtained measurements of the electrical characteristic for the first pair of adjacent load carrier strands from the first and second terminal ends of the elevator belt.
3. The method of claim 1, comprising measuring the electrical characteristic between all pairs of adjacent load carrier strands at the first and second terminal ends of the elevator belt to obtain a plurality of measurements.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the plurality of measurements comprise the first and second measurements, the method comprising comparing the plurality of measurements respectively to previously-obtained measurements of the electrical characteristic for all pairs of adjacent load carrier strands at the first and second terminal ends of the elevator belt.
5. The method of claim 1, comprising comparing the first measurement to the second measurement.
6. The method of claim 1, comprising: measuring the electrical characteristic between a second pair of adjacent load carrier strands at the first terminal end of the elevator belt to obtain a third measurement; measuring the electrical characteristic between the second pair of adjacent load carrier strands at the second terminal end of the elevator belt to obtain a fourth measurement; comparing the first measurement to the third measurement; and comparing the second measurement to the fourth measurement.
7. A method for monitoring a condition of an elevator belt, the method comprising: measuring an electrical characteristic between a first pair of adjacent load carrier strands at a first terminal end of the elevator belt to obtain a first measurement; and measuring the electrical characteristic between the first pair of adjacent load carrier strands at a second terminal end of the elevator belt to obtain a second measurement.
8. The method of claim 7, comprising comparing the first and second measurements respectively to previously-obtained measurements of the electrical characteristic for the first pair of adjacent load carrier strands from the first and second terminal ends of the elevator belt.
9. The method of claim 7, comprising measuring the electrical characteristic between all pairs of adjacent load carrier strands at the first and second terminal ends of the elevator belt to obtain a plurality of measurements.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the plurality of measurements comprise the first and second measurements, the method comprising comparing the plurality of measurements respectively to previously-obtained measurements of the electrical characteristic for all pairs of adjacent load carrier strands at the first and second terminal ends of the elevator belt.
11. The method of claim 7, comprising approximating where between the first and second terminal ends of the elevator belt a defect exists based on the first and second measurements.
12. The method of claim 7, wherein the electrical characteristic is capacitance.
13. A method for monitoring a condition of an elevator belt in an elevator system, wherein the elevator belt comprises a first terminal end, a second terminal end, load carrier strands extending between the first and second terminal ends, with each strand comprising a conductive wire, and a polymer material surrounding the load carrier strands, wherein a measuring connection point is located between each strand at each terminal end, wherein two adjacent load carrier strands form a pair, the method comprising: electrically connecting a measuring apparatus between a pair of the load carrier strands at a measuring connection point at each terminal end; and measuring at each measuring connection point an electrical characteristic between at least one pair of load carrier strands such that a change in the electrical characteristic is indicative of damage within one or more load carrier strand.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein the electrical characteristic is capacitance.
15. The method of claim 13, wherein the damage includes a physical abnormality within one or more load carrier strand, a broken load carrier strand, and/or a faulty connection within at least one conductive wire within one or more strand.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0020]
[0021] When one or more load carrier strands 1-14 is damaged, the capacitance C is reduced (shown by reference number 22 in
[0022] In
[0023] The damaged load carrier strand 7′ forms a pair P6 with strand 6 and forms a pair P7 with strand 8. Therefore, two pairs of load carrier strands are affected. Since the capacitance measured between the pairs P6, P7 is dependent on their respective strand lengths, the defect 30′ causes the capacitance C′ of each pair P6, P7 to decrease. The extent of the decrease, however, is dependent on the location and severity of the damage/defect 30′ within the belt 100′. For example, the farther the defect 30′ is from the measurement point M at the terminal end t1 of the belt 100′, the lesser the change in capacitance C′. In this particular example, the defect 30′ is located at a distance from the measurement point M that's equivalent to three quarters of the total length L. Therefore, the effective length L1′ of the damaged load carrier strand 7′ is:
L1′=0.75 L.
[0024] Therefore, the capacitance C′ for pairs P6 and P7 can be represented by either of the following two equations, wherein the characters in the square brackets identify the particular load carrier strand 6, 7′, 8 and are not part of the equations.
C′=(L1′[7′]+L[6])+(L1′[7′]+L[8]) i.
C′=(0.75L[7′]+L[6])+(0.75L[7′]+L[8]) ii.
[0025] The capacitance C′ measured for the pairs P6 and P7 could also be represented as:
C′=0.75C (wherein C is the capacitance measured for any one of the remaining pairs P1-P5, P8-P13). iii.
[0026] The reduction in capacitance C′ of pairs P6 and P7 causes the overall capacitance Co′ for the belt 100′ to reduce significantly, thereby alerting the technician that a fault is present and a maintenance operation should be conducted. The defect 30′ may originate from various causes such as, for example, general wear of the load carrier strand 7′ or a random physical abnormality.
[0027] In
[0028] In this particular example, the defect 30″ is located at a distance from the measurement point M that's equivalent to 97% of the total length L. In other words, the defect 30″ is at the opposite side of the load carrier strand 7″ when measured from the perspective of the measurement point M, which is one of the most difficult points in the entire load carrier strand 7″ to measure from the measurement point M. Nevertheless, the effective length L1″ of the damaged load carrier strand 7″ is:
L1″=0.97 L.
[0029] Since the extent of the decrease in capacitance C″ is dependent on the location and severity of the damage/defect 30″ within the belt 100″, and this particular defect is located at the opposite end of the belt 100″, the change in capacitance C″ will be much harder to detect and thus highly accurate measuring equipment is required. Also, the farther the damage/defect 30″ from the point of measurement M, the smaller the change in capacitance. Therefore, the defect 30″ may ultimately go undetected and/or a capacitance reading for this particular belt 100″ is likely to be inaccurate, either of which can compromise passenger safety and the integrity of the elevator system as a whole.
[0030] The solution of the present disclosure is explained via reference to
[0031]
[0032] The example load carrier strand 7″′ in
[0033] As explained above, the damaged load carrier strand 7″′ forms a pair P6 with the strand 6 and a pair P7 with the strand 8, and both pairs P6, P7 of load carrier strands are affected. Since the capacitance measured between the pairs P6, P7 is dependent on their respective strand lengths, the defect 30″′ causes the capacitance C″′ of each pair P6, P7 to decrease. The extent of the decrease, though, depends on the location and severity of the damage/defect 30″′ within the belt 100″′. Since measurements are made at each end of the load carrier strand 7′″, the most difficult point to evaluate along the strand 7″′ now becomes the center of the strand 7′″. Notwithstanding, changes in capacitance will be comparatively higher than would be detected with prior art methods. Thus detecting damage/defects becomes easier and more reliable.
[0034] In this particular example, the defect 30″′ is located at the same distance as the defect shown in
L1″′=0.97L.
[0035] The change in capacitance now becomes much easier to detect since the defect 30″′ is very close to the measurement point M2. There will be a significant change in capacitance measured at M2, whilst the change measured at M1 will be negligible in comparison.
[0036] With respect to measurement at the point M2, the capacitance C″′ for pairs P6 and P7 when measured at point M2 can be represented by either of the following two equations. The characters in square brackets represent the particular load carrier strands 6, 7″′, 8 and are not part of the equations.
C′″=(L2′″[7′″]+L[6])+(L2′″[7′″]+L[8]) i.
C″′=(0.03L[7′″]+L[6])+(0.03L[7″′]+L[8]) ii.
[0037] And the capacitance C″′ when measured at the measurement point M2 for the pairs P6 and P7 could also be represented as:
C″′=0.03C iii.
(wherein C is the capacitance measured for any one of the remaining pairs P1-P5, P8-P13).
[0038] With respect to measurement at the point M1, the capacitance C″′ for pairs P6 and P7 when measured at point M1 can be represented by either of the following two equations. The characters in square brackets represent the particular load carrier strands 6, 7″′, 8 and are not part of the equations.
C′″=(L1′″[7′″]+L[6])+(L1′″[7′″]+L[8]) i.
C″′=(0.97L[7′″]+L[6])+(0.97L[7″′]+L[8]) ii.
[0039] And the capacitance C″′ when measured at the measurement point M1 for the pairs P6 and P7 could also be represented as:
C″′=0.97C iii.
(wherein C is the capacitance measured for any one of the remaining pairs P1-P5, P8-P13).
[0040] In
L1″″=L2″″=0.5L.
[0041] Since the defect 30″″ is equidistant from measurement points M1 and M2, the capacitance C″″ for the pairs P6 and P7 when measured at either M1 or M2 can be represented by any of the following two equations. The characters in square brackets represent the particular load carrier strands 6, 7″″, 8 and are not part of the equations.
C″″=(L1″″[7″″]+L[6])+(L1″″[7″″]+L[8]) i.
wherein L1″″=L2″″
C″″=(0.5L[7″″]+L[6])+(0.5L[7″″]+L[8]) ii.
[0042] The capacitance C″″ when measured at either measurement point M1 or M2 for the pairs P6 and P7 could also be represented as:
C″″=0.5C iii.
(wherein C is the capacitance measured for any one of the remaining pairs P1-P5, P8-P13).
[0043] By measuring at both measurement points M1, M2, each respective capacitance reading should show a decrease of similar or equivalent degree. A break in the middle of a load carrier strand 7″″ is effectively a worst-case scenario from a measurement perspective. If the break is farther from the measurement point M1, it becomes closer to the measurement point M2, and the measurement point M2 will have a greater change in its capacitance measurement and vice versa. Damage at the midpoint causes the smallest possible change in measurement for both measurement points M1 and M2. Yet it is still a 50% change in capacitance measurement from nominal. For partial damage and incomplete breaks, this same logic holds but the capacitance measurement change will depend on the level of damage.
[0044] Using the methods of the present disclosure and measuring capacitance at both ends of belts, any changes can be more easily and reliably detected. This in turn enables earlier and improved detection of a possible deterioration/defect within any one or more load carrier strands. Likewise, measuring from both ends allows one to better approximate a location between terminal ends of the belt where a defect exists. Damage or defects can also be detected if the measured capacitances of two pairs of load carrier strands deviate disproportionately from an average or median value of the measured capacitances of the other pairs of load carrier strands. Consequently, both passenger safety and the condition monitoring process are improved.
[0045] Whilst this present disclosure relates to measuring capacitance, the method of measuring at both terminal ends of a belt can be applied to any electrical characteristic in order to provide condition monitoring. Further, it should be understood that the appended figures are not necessarily to scale and present a simplified representation of various features illustrative of the basic principles of the invention. The specific design features of the present disclosure such as dimensions, orientations, locations, and shapes, for example, will be determined by the particular intended application and use environment. Accordingly, the foregoing description is intended to be illustrative rather than restrictive. The assembly of the present disclosure described hereinabove is defined by the claims, and all changes that fall within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.
REFERENCE CHARACTERS
[0046] C strand pair capacitance
[0047] Co overall belt capacitance
[0048] L length of complete load carrier strand
[0049] L1, L2 length of damaged load carrier strand
[0050] M measurement connection
[0051] M1, M2 measurement connection
[0052] M1n, M2n measurement connection
[0053] P1-P13 pair of load carrier strands
[0054] t1, t2 belt terminal end
[0055] 100 belt
[0056] 101 polymer material
[0057] 102 terminal ends of load carrier strands
[0058] 1-14 load carrier strand
[0059] 30 damage/defect
[0060] 20 C of strand pair
[0061] 21 C of strand pair with general wear
[0062] 22 C of strand pair with defect