Lifting apparatus
10173704 ยท 2019-01-08
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B62B1/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B62B1/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B62B2203/70
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B62B1/264
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B62B1/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B62B1/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A lifting apparatus, such as may be used with gas cylinders such as welding gas cylinders, comprising a frame (1) and a carriage (3), the carriage being mounted on the frame through a mounting (9), the mounting (9) allowing the carriage (3) to rotate relative to the frame (1) and to slide linearly relative to the frame (1) constrained to a path, the carriage (3) being provided with a loading surface (2, 12, 24) for a load (101). The mounting may comprise a bar (19) typically on the carriage (3) held captive in a track (25) typically on the frame (1).
Claims
1. A lifting apparatus, comprising a frame and a carriage, the carriage being mounted on the frame through a mounting, the carriage being provided with a loading surface for a load having a bottom, the mounting comprising a bar on one of the frame and the carriage and a track on the other of the frame and the carriage, the bar being captive within the track allowing the carriage to rotate relative to the frame about the bar and to slide linearly relative to the frame constrained to a path defined by the track, such that the load can be pivoted about its bottom.
2. The lifting apparatus of claim 1, in which the path comprises a straight line.
3. The lifting apparatus of claim 1, in which the path has two ends, the carriage not being able to move past the ends of the path relative to the frame.
4. The lifting apparatus of claim 1, wherein the bar is on the frame and the track is on the carriage.
5. The lifting apparatus of claim 4, in which the track comprises a slot in which the bar is captive, the bar and the slot both being elongate and having a length, the lengths of the bar and the slot being generally perpendicular to each other.
6. The lifting apparatus of claim 5, in which the bar comprises a pair of wider portions between which there is a narrower portion, wherein the narrower portion fits between a pair of parallel walls of the slot, whereas the pair of wider portions do not fit between the pair of parallel walls.
7. The lifting apparatus of claim 5, in which at least one end of the length of the slot provides a bearing surface for the bar.
8. The lifting apparatus of claim 1, in which the loading surface is arranged so as to support a side of a load and not the bottom of the load.
9. The lifting apparatus of claim 8, in which the loading surface corresponds to a surface of the load.
10. The lifting apparatus of claim 9, in which the load is generally cylindrical and the loading surface defines part of a cylinder.
11. The lifting apparatus of claim 1, in which the loading surface is provided by a plurality of loading members, each providing a surface.
12. The lifting apparatus of claim 1, provided with locking means to selectively prevent movement of the carriage relative to the frame.
13. The lifting apparatus of claim 1, in which the frame is provided with locomotion means which allow the frame to be moved over a surface on which it is placed.
14. The combination of a load and a lifting apparatus comprising a frame and a carriage, the carriage being mounted on the frame through a mounting, the carriage being provided with a loading surface for the load having a bottom, the mounting comprising a bar on one of the frame and the carriage and a track on the other of the frame and the carriage, the bar being captive within the track allowing the carriage to rotate relative to the frame about the bar and to slide linearly relative to the frame constrained to a path defined by the track, such that the load, which is loaded onto the loading surface, can be pivoted about its bottom.
15. The combination of claim 14, in which the load is a gas cylinder.
16. A method of moving an object having a bottom resting on a first surface to a second surface, the method comprising: providing a lifting apparatus comprising a frame and a carriage, the carriage being mounted on the frame through a mounting, the mounting allowing the carriage to rotate relative to the frame and to slide linearly relative to the frame constrained to a path, the carriage being provided with a loading surface for a load; positioning the lifting apparatus such that the loading surface is adjacent to the object on the first surface; securing the object to the loading surface; pivoting the carriage of the lifting apparatus relative to the frame so as to lift the bottom of the object off the first surface; moving the lifting apparatus so that the bottom of the object is over the second surface; and sliding the carriage relative to the frame so that the object pivots about its bottom.
17. The method of claim 16, in which the second surface is higher than the first surface and the step of pivoting the carriage relative to the frame includes pivoting the carriage until the bottom of the object is resting on the second surface, with the step of sliding the carriage relative to the frame occurring after the step of moving the lifting apparatus.
18. The method of claim 16, in which the second surface is lower than the first surface.
19. The method of claim 16, in which the step of pivoting the carriage will occur when the carriage is at an end of the path relative to the frame.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) There now follows, by way of example only, description of embodiments of the invention, described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) A lifting apparatus in accordance with an embodiment of the invention is shown in
(7) The carriage 3 is mounted on the frame 1 through a mounting 9, which comprises a bar 19 on the frame 1 held captive within a slot 4 in a track 25 on the carriage 3. The slot 4 is generally cuboid, with a width, a length and a depth, the depth being slightly larger than the thickness of the bar 19. The bar 19 is positioned in the slot parallel to the width and perpendicular to the length of the slot 4. The bar 19 has widened ends 16 relative to the remainder of the bar, set slightly larger than the width of the track 25.
(8) As such, the bar 19 is free to pivot about its length in the slot 4, and so the carriage 3 can pivot about that axis relative to the frame 1. However, as far as linear movement is concerned, the bar 19 is constrained so that it can only move along the length of the slot, the walls of the track 25 which define the slot 4 not permitting movement of the bar 19 out of the depth of the slot and the widened ends 16 not allowing movement of the bar 19 along its own length. Thus, the carriage 3 can only move linearly relative to the frame 1 along a path defined by the length of the slot 4. Furthermore, the end walls of the slot at each end of the length of the slot (particularly that at the top of the slot 4) can each provide a bearing surface for the bar 19, so that the bar 19 can pivot in the slot 4 with the track 25 being supported through the bearing surface on the bar 19.
(9) The carriage is provided with three loading members 2, 12, 24, which together define a loading surface, in that each of the loading members 2, 12, 24 have a load-bearing surface which lie on the common loading surface. In the present case, where the loading apparatus is to be used with a gas cylinder, the loading surface is part of the curved surface of a cylinder, and so each of the load-bearing surfaces lie on the same part-cylindrical surface.
(10) The carriage is also provided with straps 23, which can be used to retain the load onto the carriage.
(11) The frame 1 is furthermore provided with an automatic lock 18, which acts to prevent any rotation of the carriage 3 relative to the frame 1 past the point when a lock member 6 passes the lock 18. Once this occurs, the lock 18 will grasp 6 and prevent any further rotation of the carriage 3 relative to the frame 1 in any direction until the lock is released. This acts as a safety mechanism, and prevents the load from rotating too far backwards.
(12) Thus, the lifting apparatus described above can be used to move, in this embodiment, a cylindrical gas cylinder, although the skilled man will appreciate that it could be modified, in particular by appropriate adaptation of the shape of the loading surface.
(13) The use of this lifting apparatus to move a welding gas cylinder onto and off of a welding apparatus can be seen with respect to
(14) The scenario starts with the gas cylinder 101 on a first surface 104 distant from the welding apparatus 103. The lifting apparatus 100 is brought adjacent to the cylinder 101, so that the cylinder 101 is laying on the loading members 2, 12, 24 making up the loading surface. The straps 23 are connected around the cylinder 101, so as to strap it to the carriage 3. A bolt 26 is used to lock the carriage 3 against rotation relative to the frame 1. The equipment is now in the position shown in
(15) The handle 14 of the carriage 3 can now be used to tilt the lifting apparatus 100 and the cylinder 101 backwards, as shown in
(16) As shown in
(17) This movement is continued until the cylinder 101 is upright on the platform 102 as shown in
(18) In order to lift the cylinder 101 off of the platform, a similar technique is applied in reverse. The lifting apparatus 100, with the carriage 3 raised as shown in
(19) Because of the weight of the cylinder 101, a user will need to exert caution at this stage. However, the lock 18 will assist the user, as shown in
(20) However, to prevent the carriage 3 and cylinder 101 from tipping too far (possibly leading to accidents should the cylinder overbalance backwards), the lock 18 will limit the amount of rotational travel. As shown in
(21) With the lock 18 engaged, the user can then move the lifting apparatus on its wheels 22 slightly, until the cylinder is no longer over the platform 102. The lock 18 can be released, and the carriage 3 pivoted relative to the frame 1 until the cylinder is vertical (
(22) It can therefore be seen that the lifting apparatus of this embodiment of the invention reduces the level of manual handling and particular the amount of manual lifting of the cylinder that is required; much of the weight of the cylinder can be supported by the lifting apparatus where previously it would need to have previously been supported by the user. Because the lifting of the cylinder is achieved generally by pivoting, be it about the bar 19 or the bottom 105 of the cylinder, the user can make use of considerable mechanical advantage. We believe this lifting apparatus provides a much safer, convenient and ergonomic solution to the problem of lifting gas cylinders in particular than the manual lifting that was previously required.
(23) In an alternative embodiment, shown in