[0001] The present invention relates to an elevator machinery as defined in the preamble
of claim 1.
[0002] Depending on the placement of an elevator machinery, its physical dimensions have
an influence on the size of the elevator shaft and/or building. When the elevator
machinery is placed in the elevator shaft, beside the shaft or in a machine room,
the properties and dimensions of the machinery have a significance in respect of the
space required.
[0003] A conventional elevator machinery has a motor, a gear system and a traction sheave
as separate parts. A conventional elevator machinery is well suited for installation
in a machine room, because there is a sufficient space reserved for it in the machine
room. Solutions are also known in which such a machinery is placed in the counterweight
or beside the shaft.
[0004] An elevator machinery can also have a gearless construction, based e.g. on a disc-type
motor as presented e.g. in Fig. 8 of patent specification US 5,018,603. The motors
presented in the specification are clearly more compact and also flatter in the axial
direction of the motor shaft than conventional geared elevator machineries. However,
the machineries described in the specification are clearly designed for installation
in an elevator machine room.
[0005] When a geared or gearless elevator machinery of known construction is placed in the
elevator shaft, their space requirement becomes obvious as they always need an extra
space.
[0006] The object of the present invention is to achieve a new solution for the placement
of an elevator machinery based on a disc-type motor in which the space required by
the machinery when installed in the elevator shaft is as small as possible.
[0007] The elevator machinery of the invention is characterized by what is presented in
the characterization part of claim 1, and other embodiments of the invention are characterized
by the features presented in the other claims.
[0008] The invention provides the advantage that the elevator machinery can be installed
in the elevator shaft without substantially requiring any extra space in the shaft.
The elevator machinery is mounted on an elevator or counterweight guide rail which
is needed in the shaft anyway, and the forces caused by the elevator ropes are transmitted
directly to the guide rail. Since the guide rail is designed to receive the large
vertical forces generated by the action of the safety gears of the elevator, the guide
rails need not be dimensioned separately to permit the installation of the machinery.
[0009] An embodiment of the invention has the advantage that the elevator guide rail is
used as a structural part of the elevator machinery to increase its strength. In this
case, the elevator machinery itself can have a lighter construction and is therefore
cheaper to manufacture.
[0010] In another embodiment, the vertical forces generated by the elevator ropes are passed
via the rolling center of one of the bearings of the machinery to the guide rail.
This provides the advantage that no reinforcement is required in that part of the
guide rail to which the elevator machinery is attached to increase the rigidity of
the rail, because the machinery permits some bending of the guide rail.
[0011] In yet another embodiment, the machinery is provided with means for damping vibrations,
placed between the elevator machinery and the guide rail. The damping system in this
embodiment ensures that bearing noise and the noise and vibrations generated by the
elevator ropes in the rope grooves cannot be transmitted to the guide rail and further
to the building.
[0012] The invention is described by the aid of an embodiment, in which
- Fig. 1
- presents an elevator machinery as defined by the invention, seen from the direction
of the motor shaft,
- Fig. 2
- presents a cross-section of the elevator machinery,
- Fig. 3
- presents another cross-section fo the elevator machinery,
- Fig. 4
- presents a diagram of a lay-out of the elevator machinery in the elevator shaft,
- Fig. 5
- presents a diagram of another lay-out of the elevator machinery,
- Fig. 6
- illustrates the vibration damping system of the elevator machinery, and
- Fig. 7
- presents the vibration damping elements in a cross-section of the elevator machinery.
[0013] Fig. 1 shows a gearless elevator machinery 1 as provided by the invention, mounted
on a guide rail 6. The guide rail may be an elevator guide rail or a counterweight
guide rail and the point of attachment of the elevator machinery to the guide rail
may be e.g. in the upper or lower part of the shaft. The elevator machinery 1 comprises
a disc-type elevator motor 2, a brake 3 and a traction sheave 4. The elevator ropes
5 are passed around the traction sheave 4. The elevator machinery is fixed by the
edge of the stator 8 to the elevator guide rail 6 by means of clawlike clamps 46 on
opposite sides of the machinery. Moreover, the elevator machinery is fixed by its
central part to the guide rail by means of fixing elements 35 and a supporting element
34. The vertical forces of the elevator machinery are passed to the supporting element
34 and further via shear bolts 31 to the guide rail 6. The clawlike clamps keep the
machinery in place on the guide rail and prevent it from turning. The fixing element
35 supports the elevator machinery by means of the shear bolts and, together with
the clamps 34, prevents the machinery from turning and moving sideways in relation
to the guide rail. Furthermore, there is a protecting device 33 attached to the guide
rail 6 by means of fixing elements 32 to prevent the elevator ropes 5 from coming
off the rope groove 19 of the traction sheave 4.
[0014] Fig. 2 presents the elevator machinery 1 of Fig. 1 as sectioned along line A-A. The
elevator machinery 1 comprises an elevator motor 2, a traction sheave 4 driving the
elevator ropes 5 and a brake 3. The elevator motor consists of a stator 9, a motor
shaft 7 and a rotor 8 and a bearing 10 between the rotor 8 and stator 9. The stator
9 consists of a stator disc 11 formed by an annular stator core packet 12 with a stator
winding 13. The stator core packet together with its winding is attached by means
of fixing elements 53 to the stator disc 11. The fixing elements are preferably screws.
The rotor 8 consists of a rotor disc 14 provided with rotor excitation elements 15
placed opposite to the stator core packet 12. The rotor excitation elements 15 are
formed by attaching a number of permanent magnets to the rotor disc 8 in succession
so as to form a ringlike circle. The magnetic flux of the rotor flows inside the rotor
disc. The portion of the rotor disc lying under the permanent magnets forms part of
the magnetic circuit and also contributes to the material strength of the rotor. The
permanent magnets may be different in shape and they can be divided into smaller magnets
placed side by side or in succession.
[0015] Between the permanent magnets 23 and the stator core packet 12 there is an air gap
in which forms a plane 16 essentially perpendicular to the shaft 7. The air gap ag
may also have a slightly conical shape (not shown in the figure). In this case, the
mid-line of the cone coincides with the mid-line 71 of the shaft 7. The traction sheave
4 and the stator 9 are placed on different sides of the rotor disc 14 in the direction
of the shaft 7 of the elevator motor 2.
[0016] The elevator motor 2 may be e.g. a synchronous motor or a commutating d.c. motor.
[0017] The traction sheave 4 forms an integrated structure with the rotor disc 14, and the
shaft 7 is integrated with the stator disc 11, but both could just as well be implemented
as separate parts. However, an integrated structure is preferable with regard to manufacturing
technology. The elevator machinery is mounted on the guide rail 6 by means of a supporting
element 34 fixed to the rail with screws 35. The screws carry the axial (vertical)
loads of the elevator machinery. Between the supporting element and the guide rail
there are also shear bolts 36 (2 pcs) which receive the vertical loads. The shaft
7 is hollow and the end of the supporting element is inside the hollow shaft. The
supporting element is provided with a relatively narrow annular boss 37 of about 10
mm, placed in alignment with the focus of the rope load of the elevator and at the
same time with one of the bearings 10. Thus, between supporting elements 38, the elevator
machinery is attached to the guide rail by means of clamps 46 holding the machinery
horizontally by the stator and by means of supporting element 34 and shear bolts 36
supporting it vertically by its central part, allowing some bending of the guide rail
in the region of the narrow boss 37. This arrangement provides the advantage that
the guide rail need not be so fixed that it is completely rigid in the region of the
machinery, but it suffices for the retainment of the guide rail to fix it to the elevator
shaft by means of supporting elements 38 placed on opposite sides of the machinery
(Fig.1) and the guide rail still functions as a structural part reinforcing the elevator
machinery. Therefore, the stator of the machinery can be of a light construction,
providing an economic advantage.
[0018] The stator disc 11 is provided with a cuplike or ring-shaped troughlike cavity 20
formed by a first wall 21 and a second wall 22 joined together, leaving the cavity
open on one side. The first wall 21 is attached to the shaft 7. The stator core packet
12 with the stator winding 13 is attached to the first wall by means of fixing elements
53. The second wall 22 is directed towards the rotor disc 14.
[0019] The elevator machinery of the invention can also be implemented as an embodiment
having a stator disc 11 provided with a cuplike or ring-shaped annular cavity 20 open
on one side and formed by a first wall 21 and a second wall 22 joined together, both
walls being directed towards the rotor disc 14. The first wall 21 is attached to the
shaft 7 by means of bracing ribs and the stator core packet 12 with the stator winding
13 is attached either to the first or the second wall. This second embodiment is suited
for elevator motors having a very large diameter. The structure is not shown in the
figures because the above description is sufficient for a person skilled in the art.
[0020] Mounted between the rotor disc 8 and the second wall 22 directed towards the rotor
disc 8 is a sealing 24, which may be a felt gasket, a lap seal or some other type
of sealing, e.g. a labyrinth seal. The labyrinth seal may be implemented e.g. by providing
the rotor disc 14 with a ridge in the sealing zone 24 and the stator disc with collet-shaped
ridges placed in a corresponding location on either side of the first ridge. The sealing
prevents detrimental particles from getting into the cavity 20.
[0021] The rotor disc is provided with a brake disc 38 for a disc brake, forming an extension
of the outer circle of the rotor disc. The brake 3 may also be a shoe brake, in which
case the braking surface is the outermost part 39 of the annular brake disc. Thus,
the brake disc is substantially an immediate extension of the rotor disc, yet with
a narrow annular area for a sealing betweeen the rotor bars and the brake disc.
[0022] Moreover, the elevator machinery is provided with an outermost wall 40 which extends
over the brake disc and forms a baffle plate shielding the brake plate e.g. from being
touched.
[0023] Placed between the elevator machinery 1 and the guide rail 6 is a damping means for
damping vibrations. The figures do not show the damping means, but it is implemented
by placing an element made of a damping material such as rubber between the clamps
46 and the guide rail 6. A corresponding vibration damping element, preferably a tubular
one, is also provided between the supporting element 34 and the shaft 7 of the elevator
machinery.
[0024] Fig. 3 presents section B-B of Fig. 1. The machinery has two brakes 3 float-mounted
by means of fixtures 42 and 43 between mounting brackets 47 forming an extension of
the stator disc 11 and a bar 41 attached to the stator disc. The braking surfaces
44 of the brake are placed on either side of the brake disc. The figure also shows
the projectures 45 placed on opposite sides of the stator disc in the direction of
the guide rail and directed towards the guide rail, by which the elevator machinery
is fastened to the guide rail by means of fixing elements 46.
[0025] Figures 4 and 5 present diagrams giving two examples of the placement of the elevator
machinery 1 of the invention on a guide rail 6 in an elevator shaft 51.
[0026] In Fig. 4, the elevator machinery is fixed to the top end of the guide rail 6 in
the manner illustrated by Fig. 1. The guide rail 6 may be either an elevator guide
rail or a counterweight guide rail. One end of the elevator rope 5 is attached to
the top 52 of the elevator shaft 51 at point 53, from where the elevator rope is passed
via diverting pulleys 56 below the elevator car 54 and up to the traction sheave 4
of the elevator machinery 1, from where it is further passed down to the diverting
pulley of the counterweight 55 and then back up to point 58 at the top of the shaft,
to which the other end of the elevator rope is fixed.
[0027] Fig. 5 illustrates another solution, in which the elevator machinery 1 is fixed to
the lower end of the guide rail 6 in the elevator shaft 51. One end of the elevator
rope 5 is attached to the top 52 of the elevator shaft 51 at point 53, from where
the rope is passed down via diverting pulleys 56 below the elevator car 54 and then
over a diverting pulley 59 in the top part of the shaft 51 and back down to the traction
sheave 4 of the elevator machinery 1 fixed to the lower end of the guide rail. From
here, the rope is passed back up to another diverting pulley 60, then downwards to
the diverting pulley 57 of the counterweight 55 and back up to point 58 at the top
of the elevator shaft, to which the other end of the elevator rope is fixed.
[0028] Figures 6 and 7 present an application of the vibration damping system in an elevator
machinery 1 as defined by the invention, the machinery being mounted on the rail 6
by means of an auxiliary frame 64.
[0029] The auxiliary frame 64 consists of a base plate 66, two side plates 65, a top end
plate 67 and a bottom end plate 68, said plates being joined together. The side plates
are reinforcing plates extending through about one half of the rail height past the
T-back towards the guide surface. This solution enables a small total thickness of
the machinery to be achieved. The vibration damping elements 61, 62 and 63 between
the elevator machinery 1 and the guide rail 6 are attached to the stator 9 and the
guide rail 6 via the auxiliary frame 64 in such manner that the auxiliary frame 64
is fixed to the stator 9 and the damping elements 61, 62 and 63 are between the guide
rail 6 and the auxiliary frame 64. In principle, it would be possible to use only
one damping element, but technically and economically it is advantageous to divide
damping element into smaller parts, preferably three parts, a first 61, a second 62
and a third damper 63. Two dampers 62 and 63 prevent the elevator machinery 1 from
substantially turning about the longitudinal axis of the guide rail 6, and similarly
two dampers, the first 61 and second 62 and/or the first 61 and third 63 dampers,
prevent the elevator machinery 1 from substantially deviating vertically from the
direction of the guide rail 6. The first damper 61 at the top edge of the machinery
is held between the top end plate 69 and a top cover 69, said top cover being attached
to the guide rail 6 by means of a fixing element 73. Correspondingly, the second and
third dampers 62 and 63 placed side by side below the machinery are held between the
auxiliary frame 64 and a lower supporter 70. The lower supporter is attached to the
guide rail 6 by means of fixing elements 74. The top cover 69 and the lower supporter
70 are provided with a fillet to prevent sideways movement of the dampers. The shear
forces resisting the rotation and rolling over of the machinery are transmitted by
guide pins 72 fixed to the auxiliary frame 64 and passing through the dampers. The
auxiliary frame 64 also acts as a structural part increasing the rigidity of the stator
9, the auxiliary frame being attached to the stator 9 at a point in its central part
in the region of the shaft 7 by means of the supporting element 34 and fixing screws
35 and at two points on the edge of the stator by means of fixing elements 77. One
of the hoisting lugs 76 of the machinery is attached to the guide pin 72 going through
the first damper 61. The guide pins 72 are passed through holes 75 in the top and
bottom end plates. The guide pins act as safety devices after the occurrence of a
possible damper breakage, because in that case the guide pin will remain leaning against
the top or bottom end plate.
[0030] An alternative way of mounting the dampers is to place each damper between two cuplike
structures. The upper cup would have a diameter slightly larger than that of the lower
cup and would partly surround the lower cup. In the event of a damper breakage, the
cup edges would come into contact with each other, thus preventing the elevator machinery
from coming off the auxiliary frame.
[0031] It is obvious to a person skilled in the art that different embodiments of the invention
are not restricted to the examples described above, but that they may instead be varied
within the scope of the claims presented below.
1. Elevator machinery (1) for an elevator (54) moving along guide rails (6), said machinery
comprising at least an elevator motor (2) and a traction sheave (4) driving the elevator
ropes (5), said elevator motor (2) comprising a discoid stator (9), a discoid rotor
(8) and a motor shaft (7) and at least one bearing (10) between the rotor (8) and
the stator (9), characterized in that the elevator machinery (1) is mounted on one of the guide rails (6) of the
elevator (54) or counterweight (55).
2. Elevator machinery (1) as defined in claim 1, characterized in that the guide rail (6) is used as a structural part of the elevator machinery
(1).
3. Elevator machinery (1) as defined in claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the vertical forces of the elevator ropes (5) on the traction sheave (6)
are passed via the rolling centre of a bearing (10) to the guide rail (6).
4. Elevator machinery (1) as defined in any one of claims 1 - 3, characterized in that it has a supporting element (34) between the elevator machinery (1) and the
guide rail (6), said element (34) supporting the elevator machinery (1).
5. Elevator machinery (1) as defined in claim 4, characterized in that the supporting center (37) of the element (34) supporting the elevator machinery
(1) is vertically aligned with the rolling center of the bearing (10).
6. Elevator machinery (1) as defined in any one of claims 1 - 5, characterized in that there is at least one vibration damping element (61, 62, 63) between the
elevator machinery (1) and the guide rail (6).
7. Elevator machinery (1) as defined in claim 6, characterized in that the damping element (61, 62, 63) is placed between the stator (9) of the
elevator motor (2) and the guide rail (6).
8. Elevator machinery (1) as defined in claim 1, characterized in that it has at least one vibration damping element (61, 62, 63) between the elevator
machinery (1) and the guide rail (6) and that the damping element (61, 62, 63) is
attached to the stator (9) and guide rail (6) via an auxiliary frame (64) in such
manner that the auxiliary frame (64) is attached to the stator 9 and the damping element
(61, 62, 63) is placed between the auxiliary frame (64) and the guide rail (6).
9. Elevator machinery (1) as defined in claim 8, characterized in that the damping element is divided into parts, preferably three parts, a first
(61), a second (62) and a third damper (63), of which at least two dampers (62, 63)
prevent the elevator machinery (1) from substantially turning about the longitudinal
axis of the guide rail (6), and similarly at least two dampers, the first (61) and
second (62) and/or the first (61) and third (63) dampers, prevent the elevator machinery
(1) from substantially deviating vertically from the direction of the guide rail (6).
10. Elevator machinery (1) as defined in claim 8 or 9, characterized in that the auxiliary frame (64) acts as a structure increasing the rigidity of the
stator, the auxiliary frame being attached to the stator (9) at a point in its central
part in the region of the shaft (7) and at two points on the edge of the stator by
means of fixing elements (77).