Elevator rope maintenance method
11465879 · 2022-10-11
Assignee
Inventors
- Mitsuru Kato (Inzai, JP)
- Hirotomo Tanaka (Chiba, JP)
- Takashi Takeuchi (Tokyo, JP)
- Ryuji Onoda (Chiba, JP)
- Yusuke WATABE (Tokyo, JP)
- Yoshiki Nota (Tokyo, JP)
- Kazuaki Chida (Tokyo, JP)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
During a maintenance inspection, an optical rope diameter measuring device is provided at a predetermined position along a path of a wire rope, rope diameter is measured at multiple measuring points while the elevator is driven in test mode, and diameter reduction at each measuring point is determined and stored as a first diameter reduction (S2_S6). During a subsequent maintenance inspection, rope diameter is similarly measured at each measuring point to determine diameter reduction constituting a second diameter reduction (S7_S11). Based on these two diameter reductions, the time at which diameter reduction will reach a predetermined threshold value is predicted for each measuring point, and the earliest time is displayed as a rope replacement time (S12_S14).
Claims
1. A rope maintenance method for an elevator comprising a plurality of wire ropes looped around a drive sheave; characterized in that: a non-contact rope diameter measuring device is provided at a predetermined position in an elevator shaft along a path of the wire ropes; at a first inspection time, each rope diameter is measured at multiple measuring points set along each wire rope as a car is raised and lowered; a diameter reduction for rope diameter against a reference diameter constituted by the diameter of the wire rope at a location that does not contact the drive sheave or by the nominal diameter of the wire rope at each measuring point is stored as a first diameter reduction; at a second inspection time at a certain period after the first inspection time, rope diameter is again measured at each of the measuring points of each of the wire ropes as the car is raised and lowered; a diameter reduction for rope diameter against a reference diameter constituted by the diameter of the wire rope at a location that does not contact the drive sheave or by the nominal diameter of the wire rope at each measuring point is stored as a second diameter reduction; the time at which the diameter reduction at each of the measuring points of each of the wire ropes will reach a predetermined threshold value is determined on the basis of the first diameter reduction, the second diameter reduction, and the period; and the earliest time out of the times for each of the measuring points of each of the wire ropes is displayed as rope replacement time.
2. The elevator rope maintenance method according to claim 1, wherein a portable non-contact rope diameter measuring device is used as the non-contact rope diameter measuring device, and temporarily mounted at a predetermined position near a drive machine at the inspection times.
3. The elevator rope maintenance method according to claim 1, wherein rope diameter at each measuring point is measured by the non-contact rope diameter measuring device while the elevator is continuously moving, using output from a rotary encoder provided on the drive machine.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(6) An example of the present invention will now be described in detail with reference to the drawings.
(7)
(8) The elevator is provided with a control panel 9 for controlling the operation of the drive machine 6, the operation of car doors and landing doors not shown in the drawings, etc. The control panel 9 is disposed in the machine room 2 housing the drive machine 6. The drive machine 6 has, for example, a direct-action configuration in which the drive sheave 7 is mounted on a rotary shaft of a high-torque permanent magnet motor, and is provided with a rotary encoder 10 that detects the amount of rotation of the drive sheave 7, and, by extension, the amount of movement of the wire ropes 5. The control panel 9 precisely controls the position of the car 3 using a signal from the rotary encoder 10.
(9) As part of the rope maintenance apparatus, an optical rope diameter measuring device 11 is disposed in the machine room 2 as a non-contact rope diameter measuring device. The rope diameter measuring device 11 has a configuration analogous to that of a digital camera, and measures the diameters of the wire ropes 5 by photographing the wire ropes 5 and performing image processing upon the acquired image data. The rope diameter measuring device 11 is disposed at a predetermined position along the path of the wire ropes 5 so as to be capable of simultaneously photographing multiple (for example, four) wire ropes 5. Specifically, the device is disposed facing straight portions of the wire ropes 5 extending from the drive sheave 7 toward the car 3, as shown in
(10)
(11) In the present example, the diameters at locations on the wire ropes 5 that do not contact the drive sheave 7 are used as reference diameters for the wire ropes 5, and diameter reduction is determined via comparison with these reference diameters. Therefore, the rope diameter measuring device 11 does not need to measure the absolute diameters of the wire ropes 5 in terms, for example, of millimeters. In other words, a value such as pixel count can be treated as-is as the diameters of the wire ropes 5.
(12) The rope diameter measuring device 11 may optionally have a transmissive configuration provided with a light-projecting unit and a light-receiving unit disposed facing each other across the wire ropes 5. Additionally, the device may be configured so as to individually photograph each of the plurality of wire ropes 5.
(13) An elevator diagnostic device 15 for performing various types of inspection/diagnosis upon the elevator is used as part of the rope maintenance apparatus. The elevator diagnostic device 15 is constituted by a notebook or laptop computer capable of being carried by a maintenance worker, and is connected to the control panel 9 for use during elevator maintenance inspections. The elevator diagnostic device 15 is provided with a storage medium such as a hard disk, a display device constituted by an LCD or the like, an input device such as a keyboard or a mouse, a communication device for exchanging signals with the control panel 9, and so forth, and software for performing a rope replacement time prediction process is stored in the storage medium.
(14)
(15) In an initial diagnosis, the process proceeds to step 2, and the control panel 9 is used to start the elevator running in test mode. Specifically, the car 3 is raised (or lowered) at low speed by the drive machine 6 from a position at the lowest floor to the highest floor (or, conversely, from the highest floor to the lowest floor). In step 3, rope diameter is measured at each measuring point of the wire ropes 5 by the rope diameter measuring device 11. In one example, substantially the entire length of the wire ropes 5 capable of passing in front of the rope diameter measuring device 11 is divided into 1024 equal sections to set 1024 measuring points, and image data is acquired and subjected to image processing when the measuring points pass in front of the rope diameter measuring device 11 according to the output of the rotary encoder 10, thereby measuring rope diameter at each measuring point. In other words, by reading the values outputted by the non-contact rope diameter measuring device 11 in sync with the rope positions outputted by the rotary encoder 10 while the car 3 is continuously moving, rope diameter is measured at each measuring point while the car 3 is continuously moving. Once measurement at each of the 1024 measuring points is finished, test mode operation of the elevator is ended in step 4.
(16) Next, in step 5, rope diameter reduction at each measuring point is calculated. Specifically, rope diameter at a specific measuring point, out of the 1024 measuring points at which rope diameter was measured in step 4, at a location on the wire ropes 5 that does not contract the drive sheave 7 (in the example shown in
(17) This completes the work performed during the initial maintenance inspection. The maintenance worker can remove and leave with the rope diameter measuring device 11 until the next maintenance inspection time.
(18) Next, after a specific period (for example, three months) has passed and maintenance inspection time has arrived, similar work is performed; this time, because previous value data in the form of “first diameter reduction” is present in the storage medium of the elevator diagnostic device 15, the process proceeds from step 1 to step 7 and onward. The process performed in steps 7_10 is similar to the process performed in steps 2_5, with test mode operation being started in step 7, rope diameter being measured at, for example, 1024 set measuring points in step 8, each diameter reduction being determined in step 9, and elevator operation being ended in step 10. The reference diameter used at this time may be a rope diameter newly measured at a location on the wire ropes 5 that does not contact the drive sheave 7, or the initial reference diameter used to calculate first diameter reduction. Next, in step 11, the diameter reduction at each of these 1024 measuring points is stored as a “second diameter reduction” for each measuring point.
(19) Next, in step 12, the first diameter reduction and second diameter reduction at each measuring point are used to determine the time at which diameter reduction at the measuring point in question is expected to reach a predetermined threshold value. The maximum diameter reduction permitted by elevator code, for example, is set as the threshold value. In other words,
(20) In step 12, time tx is calculated for all 1024 measuring points. More specifically, time tx is determined for the 1024 measuring points on all of the plurality of wire ropes 5. Thus, if, for example, there are four wire ropes 5, a time tx is obtained for 1024×4 locations.
(21) Next, in step 13, the multiple times tx thus determined are compared to extract the earliest time tx. Then, in step 14, the earliest time tx is displayed on the display of the elevator diagnostic device 15 as the wire rope 5 replacement time, and stored in the storage medium. This allows the maintenance worker to determine, easily and in advance, when to replace the wire ropes 5.
(22) In step 15, the current diameter reduction calculated as “second diameter reduction” in steps 10 and 11 is stored as “first diameter reduction” for each measuring point. In other words, the previous value for “first diameter reduction” is updated to the current value for second diameter reduction, and saved as a new “first diameter reduction”.
(23) Thus, after a specific period (for example, three months) has elapsed and the next maintenance inspection time is reached, the newly acquired “second diameter reduction” is use to predict the time to replace the wire ropes 5. When replacement time is repeatedly predicted in this way every three months, for example, the predicted replacement time will eventually be relatively soon (for example, sooner than the next scheduled maintenance inspection); thus, the actual wire rope 5 replacement schedule, arrangements for procuring replacement wire ropes 5, etc., can be performed according to this predicted replacement time.
(24) When calculating diameter reduction, the nominal diameter of the wire ropes 5 provided, for example, by the manufacturer of the wire ropes 5 may be used as the “reference diameter” instead of the actual rope diameter at a location on the wire ropes 5 that does not contact the drive sheave 7.
(25) Thus, in accordance with the rope maintenance method according to the present invention, it is possible to predict in advance when the wire ropes 5 should be replaced, and replace the wire ropes 5 at a suitable time, before rope diameter actually decreases below tolerance. In particular, in accordance with the examples described above, a portable rope diameter measuring device 11 is used, and the positions of the measuring points on the wire ropes 5 are identified using the output of a rotary encoder 10 on the drive machine 6, thereby enabling easy application of the rope maintenance method according to the present invention to existing elevators.
(26) Naturally, the rope diameter measuring device 11 may also be permanently disposed at a suitable position along the elevator shaft 1 in the present invention. A rope replacement time prediction function according to the present invention may be incorporated into the control panel 9 as a diagnostic function.
(27) The elevator configuration depicted in
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
(28) 1: Elevator shaft 2: Machine room 3: Car 4: Counterweight 5: Wire rope 6: Drive machine 7: Drive sheave 9: Control panel 10: Rotary encoder 11: Rope diameter measuring device 15: Elevator diagnostic device