ELEVATOR INSTALLATION
20220332546 · 2022-10-20
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
An elevator installation includes an elevator shaft provided with shaft doors and a car moveable up and down in the shaft. The car has a car skirt moveable between a horizontal rest position and a vertical blocking position. The car skirt is pivotally and displaceably mounted on the car by a guideway. When the car skirt is in the blocking position, it can be supported on an adjacent one of the shaft doors.
Claims
1-9. (canceled)
10. An elevator installation including a car moveable up and down in an elevator shaft, the elevator shaft having a plurality of shaft doors, the car comprising: a car skirt arranged on the car and being moveable between a horizontal rest position and a vertical blocking position; and wherein when the car skirt is in the blocking position and the car is adjacent to one of the shaft doors, the car skirt is adapted to be supported on the one shaft door.
11. The elevator installation according to claim 10 wherein the car skirt is movable relative to the car about a horizontal pivot axis, the car skirt having a blocking segment that adjoins the pivot axis and projects downward when the car skirt is in the blocking position thereby closing a gap between a floor at which the one shaft door is located and an underside of the car, and the car skirt having a support segment that adjoins the pivot axis and projects upward when the car skirt is in the blocking position to positionally secure the car skirt vertically.
12. The elevator installation according to claim 11 wherein the support segment has a length of at least 10 cm.
13. The elevator installation according to claim 10 wherein the car skirt is pivotally and displaceably mounted on the car by a guideway.
14. The elevator installation according to claim 13 wherein the guideway has a guide portion for displacing the car skirt to bridge a horizontal distance between the car and the one shaft door.
15. The elevator installation according to claim 14 wherein the guide portion is an oblique guide portion.
16. The elevator installation according to claim 14 wherein the guideway has a vertical end portion that adjoins the guide portion.
17. The elevator installation according to claim 16 wherein the end portion has a front end for setting the blocking position of the car skirt, the front end forming a lowest point of the guideway such that the pivot axis of the car skirt is temporarily fixed in place.
18. The elevator installation according to claim 11 wherein the car skirt has a central, preferably approximately rectangular, cutout formed in a region of the support segment.
19. The elevator installation according to claim 18 wherein the central cutout is rectangular is shape.
20. An elevator car skirt for use in an elevator installation a car moveable up and down in an elevator shaft, the elevator shaft having a plurality of shaft doors, the car skirt comprising: a guideway adapted to be attached to an underside of the car; a skirt element being moveable along the guideway and being rotatable about a horizontal pivot axis at the guideway for movement between a horizontal rest position and a vertical blocking position; and wherein when the car skirt is attached to the car and in the blocking position and the car is adjacent to one of the shaft doors, the skirt element is adapted to be supported on the one shaft door.
21. The elevator car skirt according to claim 20 wherein the skirt element has a blocking segment that adjoins the pivot axis and projects downward when the car skirt is in the blocking position thereby closing a gap between a floor at which the one shaft door is located and the underside of the car, and the skirt element has a support segment that adjoins the pivot axis and projects upward when the car skirt is in the blocking position to positionally secure the car skirt vertically.
22. The elevator car skirt according to claim 20 wherein the guideway has a guide portion for displacing the car skirt to bridge a horizontal distance between the car and the one shaft door, the guide portion extending one of horizontally and obliquely.
23. The elevator car skirt according to claim 22 wherein the guideway has a vertical end portion that adjoins the guide portion, the end portion having a front end for setting the blocking position of the car skirt, the front end forming a lowest point of the guideway such that the pivot axis of the car skirt is temporarily fixed in place.
Description
[0025] Further individual features and advantages of the invention can be derived from the following description of embodiments and from the drawings, in which
[0026]
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[0030]
[0031]
[0032] A shaft door 4 is associated with each floor. In addition to the cabin 3, the elevator installation generally has a counterweight, suspension means and a drive, which are not shown here for the sake of simplicity and for reasons of clarity. The drive (e.g., a traction sheave drive) drives the one or more suspension means (for example belts or steel cables) and thus moves the cabin 3 and the counterweight in opposite directions. To guide the cabin 3, guide rails (also not shown here) are arranged in the elevator shaft 2.
[0033] A special cabin skirt 5, which is described in detail below, is arranged below the cabin 3. In
[0034] The aforementioned securing means 15 can, for example, comprise one or at most a plurality of pawls, by means of which the cabin skirt 5 can be held in the rest position on the cabin 3 in the horizontal position on the underside 20 of the cabin 20. The securing means 15 can be controlled or can be operated manually to lift the rest position.
[0035] As can be seen from
[0036] The guideway 10 can be formed, for example, by a groove. The pivot axis for the pivoting movement is denoted by S. The guideway 10 comprises a linear guide portion 11 (see
[0037] Since the cabin skirt 5, when it is in the blocking position (5″), can be supported on the shaft doors 4 when horizontal forces are exerted from the outside, it is not necessary to provide additional or special locking means in order to secure the blocking position of the cabin skirt. The shaft doors 4 are usually designed as sliding doors. This ensures that the cabin skirt 5 can also be supported on the shaft door 4 when the shaft door 4 is open for evacuation.
[0038] So that the cabin skirt 5 can be brought back from the blocking position into the initial position, i.e., into the aforementioned rest position, the cabin skirt 5 must be raised. After the cabin skirt 5 has been moved slightly upward in the vertical direction, it can be pushed back again along the linear horizontal guide portion 11 of the guideway 10 into the horizontal intermediate position (5′) at the start of the guideway 10. Finally, the cabin skirt 5 only has to be folded back up. If the securing means 15 have corresponding pawls for a latching connection, for example, the cabin skirt 5 latches on the pawl, the cabin skirt 5 is securely held in the rest position again as a result.
[0039] For a reliable and safe support of the cabin skirt 5 when it is in the blocking position, the cabin skirt 5 has a part that protrudes upward in relation to the pivot axis S. This protruding part is formed by a segment of the cabin skirt 5 referred to as a support segment 8. The cabin skirt 5 substantially consists of a flat skirt element 6 which is made up of a blocking segment 7 and the aforementioned support segment 8. The blocking segment 7 has the task of closing the gap between the floor and the underside 20 of the cabin. The blocking segment 7 and the support segment 8, which are preferably flush with one another and are thus on the same plane, form a common flat element.
[0040] As an example, an extension for forming the pivot axis S is attached to the flat skirt element 6. The extension can be monolithically connected to the flat skirt element 6. The extension can be equipped with an articulated cam, for example. In this case, the cabin skirt 5 can preferably have a pair of articulated cams which engage in a pair of parallel guide grooves to form the guideway 10 on the cabin 3.
[0041] A preferred variant of a guideway 10 for the pivotable and displaceable mounting of the cabin skirt 5 is shown in
[0042] As already mentioned, the cabin skirt 5 has a blocking segment 7 which adjoins the pivot axis S and projects downward in the blocking position in order to close the gap between the floor and the underside 20 of the cabin and a support segment 8 which adjoins the pivot axis S and projects upward in the blocking position in order to positionally secure the vertical position of the cabin skirt. The support segment 8 preferably has a length L, measured from the pivot axis S as far as the free upper end 19, of at least 10 cm.
[0043] The end portion 13 has a front end for setting the blocking position, the front end corresponding to an end point of the guideway 10. The front end forms the lowest point of the guideway 10.
[0044] In
[0045] It can be seen from the front view of the cabin 3 according to