Title of Invention

AN ELEVATOR

Abstract Elevator, preferably an elevator without machine room. In the elevator, a hoisting machine (6) engages a set of hoisting ropes (3) by means of a traction sheave (7). The set of hoisting ropes comprises hoisting ropes of substantially circular cross-section. The hoisting ropes support a counterweight (2) and an elevator car (1) moving on their respective tracks (10, 11). The hoisting rope has a thickness below 8mm and / or the diameter of the traction sheave (7) is smaller than 320 mm. The contact angle between the hoisting rope or hoisting ropes and the traction sheave is larger than 180°.
Full Text AN ELEVATOR
The present invention relates to an elevator, preferably a machineroomless elevator.
One of the objectives in elevator development work is to achieve an efficient and economical
utilization of building space. In recent years, this development work has produced various elevator
solutions without machine room, among other things. Good examples of elevators without machine
room are disclosed in specifications EP 0 631 967 (A1) and EP 0 631 968. The elevators described in
these specifications are fairly efficient in respect of space utilization as they have made it possible to
eliminate the space required by the elevator machine room in the building without a need to enlarge
the elevator shaft. In the elevators disclosed in these specifications, the machine is compact at least in
one direction, but in other directions it may have much larger dimensions than a conventional
elevator machine.
In these basically good elevator solutions, the space required by the hoisting machine
limits the freedom of choice in elevator lay-out solutions. Some space is needed to provide for
the passage of the hoisting ropes. It is difficult to reduce the space required by the elevator car
itself on its track and likewise the space required by the counterweight, at least at a reasonable
cost and without impairing elevator performance and operational quality. In a traction sheave
elevator without machine room, mounting the hoisting machine in the elevator shaft is difficult,
especially in a solution with machine above, because the hoisting machine is a sizeable body of
considerable weight. Especially in the case of larger loads, speeds and/or hoisting heights, the
size and weight of the machine are a problem regarding installation, even so much so
that the required machine size and weight have in
practice limited the sphere of application of the con-
cept of elevator without machine room or at least re-
tarded the introduction of said concept in larger ele-
vators. If the size of the machine and the traction
sheave of the elevator is reduced, then a further
problem is often the question of how to ensure a suf-
ficient grip between the hoisting ropes and the trac-
tion sheave.
Specification WO 99/43589 discloses an elevator sus-
pended using flat belts in which relatively small di-
version diameters on the traction sheave and diverting
pulleys are achieved. However, the problem with this
solution is the limitations regarding lay-out solu-
tions, the disposition of components in the elevator
shaft and the alignment of diverting pulleys. Also,
the alignment of polyurethane-coated belts having a
load-bearing steel component inside is problematic
e.g. in a situation where the car is tilted. To avoid
undesirable vibrations, an elevator so implemented
needs to be rather robustly constructed at least as
regards the machine and/or the structures supporting
it. The massive construction of other parts of the
elevator needed to maintain alignment between the
traction sheave and diverting pulleys also increases
the weight and cost of the elevator. In addition, in-
stalling and adjusting such a system is a difficult
task requiring great precision. In this case, too,
there is the problem of how to ensure sufficient grip
between the traction sheave and the hoisting ropes.
On the other hand, to achieve a small rope diversion
diameter, rope structures have been used in which the
load-bearing part is made of artificial fiber. Such a
solution is exotic and the ropes thus achieved are
lighter than steel wire ropes, but at least in the
case of elevators designed for the commonest hoisting heights, artificial-fiber ropes do not provide
any substantial advantage, particularly because they are remarkably expensive as compared with steel
wire ropes.
The object of the invention is to achieve at least one of the following objectives. On the one
hand, it is an aim of the invention to develop the elevator without machine room further so as to
allow more effective space utilization in the building and elevator shaft than before. This means that
the elevator must be so constructed that it can be installed in a fairly narrow elevator shaft if
necessary. On the other hand, it is an aim of the invention to reduce the size and / or weight of the
elevator or at least those of its machine. A third objective is to achieve an elevator with a thin
hoisting rope and / or small traction sheave in which the hoisting rope has a good grip / contact on
the traction sheave.
The object of the invention should be achieved without impairing the possibility of varying
the basic elevator layout.
Accordingly, the present invention provides an elevator comprising a hoisting machine
engaging a set of hoisting ropes by means of a traction sheave, said set of hoisting ropes comprising
hoisting ropes of substantially circular cross-section, and in which elevator the set of hoisting ropes
supports a counterweight and an elevator car moving on their respective tracks, wherein the said
substantially round hoisting rope has a thickness below 8 mm and / or the diameter of the traction
sheave is smaller than 320 mm and the overall contact between the traction sheave and a hoisting
rope exceed a contact angle of 180°, and the weight of the hoisting machine of the elevator is at most
1/5 of the weight of the nominal load of the elevator and / or the weight of the hoisting machine of
the elevator is at most 100 kg.
Some inventive embodiments are also discussed in the description section of the present
application. The inventive content may also consist of several separate inventions, especially if
the invention is considered in the light of explicitly expressed or implicit sub-tasks or from the
point of view of advantages or categories of advantages achieved. In this case, some of
the definitions contained in the specification may be superfluous from the point of view of separate
inventive concepts.
By applying the invention, one or more of the following advantages, among others, can be
achieved:
- Due to a small traction sheave, a compact elevator and elevator machine are achieved
- By using a small coated traction sheave, the weight of the machine can easily be
reduced even to about half of the weight of the machines now generally used in
elevators without machine room. For example, in the case of elevators designed for a
nominal load below 1000 kg, this means machines weighing 100-150 kg or even less.
Via appropriate motor solutions and choices of materials, it is even possible to achieve
machines weighing less than 100 kg.
- A good traction traction sheave grip and light components allow the weight of the
elevator car to be considerably reduced, and correspondingly the counterweight can
also be made lighter than in current elevator solutions.
- A compact machine size and thin, substantially round ropes permit the elevator
machine to be relatively freely placed in the shaft. Thus, the elevator solution can be
implemented in a fairly wide variety of ways in the case of both elevators with
machine above and elevators with machine below.
- The elevator machine can be advantageously placed between the car and a shaft wall.
- All or at least part of the weight of the elevator car and counterweight can be carried
by the elevator guide rails.
- In elevators applying the invention, an arrangement of centric suspension of the
elevator car and counterweight can readily be achieved, thereby reducing
the lateral supporting forces applied to the guide
rails.
- Applying the invention allows effective utilization
of the cross-sectional area of the shaft.
- The invention reduces the installation time and to-
tal installation costs of the elevator.
- The elevator is economical to manufacture and in-
stall because many of its components are smaller and
lighter than those used before.
- The speed governor rope and the hoisting rope are
usually different in respect of their properties and
they can be easily distinguished from each other
during installation if the speed governor rope is
thicker than the hoisting ropes; on the other hand,
the speed governor rope and the hoisting ropes may
also be of identical structure, which will reduce
ambiguities regarding these matters in elevator de-
livery logistics and installation.
- The light, thin ropes are easy to handle, allowing
considerably faster installation.
- E.g. in elevators for a nominal load below 1000 kg
and a speed below 2 m/s, the thin and strong steel
wire ropes of the invention have a diameter of the
order of only 3-5 mm.
- With rope diameters of about 6 mm or 8 mm, fairly
large and fast elevators according to the invention
can be achieved.
- The traction sheave and the rope pulleys are small
and light as compared with those used in conven-
tional elevators.
- The small traction sheave allows the use of smaller
operating brakes.
- The small traction sheave reduces the torque re-
quirement, thus allowing the use of a smaller motor
with smaller operating brakes.
- Because of the smaller traction sheave, a higher ro-
tational speed is needed to achieve a given car
speed, which means that the same motor output power
can be reached by a smaller motor.
- Either coated or uncoated ropes can be used.
- It is possible to implement the traction sheave and
the rope pulleys in such a way that, after the coat-
ing on the pulley has been worn out, the rope will
bite firmly on the pulley and thus a sufficient grip
between rope and pulley in this emergency is main-
tained.
- The use of a small traction sheave makes it possible
to use a smaller elevator drive motor, which means a
reduction in drive motor acquisition/manufacturing
costs.
- The invention can be applied in gearless and geared
elevator motor solutions.
- Although the invention is primarily intended for use
in elevators without machine room, it can also be
applied in elevators with machine room.
- In the invention a better grip and a better contact
between the hoisting ropes and the traction sheave
are achieved by increasing the contact angle between
them.
- Due to the improved grip, the size and weight of the
car and counterweight can be reduced.
- The space saving potential of the elevator of the
invention is increased.
- The weight of elevator car in relation to the weight
of the counterweight can be reduced.
- The acceleration power required by the elevator is
reduced and the torque required is also reduced.
- The elevator of the invention can be implemented us-
ing a lighter and smaller machine and/or motor.
- As a result of using a lighter and smaller elevator
system, energy savings and at the same time cost
savings are achieved.
- It is possible to place the machine in the free
space above the counterweight, thus increasing the
space saving potential of the elevator.
- By mounting at least the elevator hoisting machine,
the traction sheave and a diverting pulley in a com-
plete unit, which is fitted as a part of the eleva-
tor of the invention, considerable savings in in-
stallation time and costs will be achieved.
The primary area of application of the invention is
elevators designed for transporting people and/or
freight. In addition, the invention is primarily in-
tended for use in elevators whose speed range, in the
case of passenger elevators, is normally about or
above 1.0 m/s but may also be e.g. only about 0.5 m/s.
In the case of freight elevators, too, the speed is
preferably at least about 0.5 m/s, although slower
speeds can also be used with large loads.
In both passenger and freight elevators, many of the
advantages achieved through the invention are pro-
nouncedly brought out even in elevators for only 3-4
people, and distinctly already in elevators for 6-8
people (500 - 630 kg).
The elevator of the invention can be provided with
elevator hoisting ropes twisted e.g. from round and
strong wires. From round wires, the rope can be
twisted in many ways using wires of different or equal
thickness. In ropes applicable with the invention, the
wire thickness is below 0.4 mm on an average. Well ap-
plicable ropes made from strong wires are those in
which the average wire thickness is below 0.3 mm or
even below 0.2 mm. For instance, thin-wired and strong
4 mm ropes can be twisted relatively economically from
wires such that the mean wire thickness in the fin-
ished rope is in the range of 0.15 ... 0.25 mm, while
the thinnest wires may have a thickness as small as only about 0.1mm. Thin rope wires can easily be
made very strong. The invention employs rope wires having a strength of over 2000 N/mm2. A
suitable range of rope wire strength is 2300-2700 N/mm2. In principle, it is possible to use rope wires
as strong as about 3000 N/mm2 or even more.
By increasing the contact angle using a diverting pulley, the grip between the traction sheave
and the hoisting ropes can be improved. Therefore, it is possible to reduce the weight of the car and
counterweight and their size can be reduced as well, thus increasing the space saving potential of the
elevator. Alternatively or at the same time, it is possible to reduce the weight of the elevator car in
relation to the weight of the counterweight. A contact angle of over 180° between the traction sheave
and the hoisting rope is achieved by using one or more auxiliary diverting pulleys.
A preferred embodiment of the elevator of the invention is an elevator with machine above
without machine room, the drive machine of which comprises a coated traction sheave and which
uses thin hoisting ropes of substantially round cross-section. The contact angle between the hoisting
ropes of the elevator and the traction sheave is larger than 180°. The elevator comprises a unit
comprising a drive machine, a traction sheave and a diverting pulley fitted at a correct angle relative
to the traction sheave, all this equipment being fitted on a mounting base. The unit is secured to the
elevator guide rails.
In the following, the invention will be described in detail by aid of a few examples
of its embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein
Fig. 1 presents a diagram representing a traction
sheave elevator according to the invention,
Fig. 2 presents a diagram representing another
traction sheave elevator according to the
invention,
Fig. 3 presents a rope sheave applying the inven-
tion,
Fig. 4 presents a coating solution according to
the invention,
Fig. 5a presents a steel wire rope used in the in-
vention,
Fig. 5b presents another steel wire rope used in
the invention,
Fig. 5c presents a third steel wire rope used in
the invention, and
Fig. 6 presents a diagram of a rope pulley place-
ment in an elevator car according to the
invention,
Fig. 7 presents a diagrammatic view of a traction
sheave elevator according to the invention,
Fig. 8 presents a diagrammatic view of a traction
sheave elevator according to the invention,
Fig. 9 presents a diagrammatic view of a traction
sheave elevator according to the invention,
Figures 10 present traction sheave roping solutions
according to the invention, and
Fig. 11 presents an embodiment according to the in-
vention .
Fig. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of the struc-
ture of an elevator. The elevator is preferably an
elevator without machine room, with a drive machine 6
placed in the elevator shaft. The elevator shown in
the figure is a traction sheave elevator with machine
above. The passage of the hoisting ropes 3 of the ele-
vator is as follows: One end of the ropes is immovably
fixed to an anchorage 13 located in the upper part of
the shaft above the path of a counterweight 2 moving
along counterweight guide rails 11. From the anchor-
age, the ropes run downward and are passed around di-
verting pulleys 9 suspending the counterweight, which
diverting pulleys 9 are rotatably mounted on the coun-
terweight 2 and from which the ropes 3 run further up-
ward via the rope grooves of diverting pulley 15 to
the traction sheave 7 of the drive machine 6, passing
around the traction sheave along rope grooves on the
sheave. From the traction sheave 7, the ropes 3 run
further downward back to diverting pulley 15, passing
around it along the rope grooves and returning then
back up to the traction sheave 7, over which the ropes
run in the traction sheave rope grooves. From the
traction sheave 7, the ropes 3 go further downwards
via the rope grooves of diverting pulley 15 to the
elevator car 1 moving along the car guide rails 10 of
the elevator, passing under the car via diverting pul-
leys 4 used to suspend the elevator car on the ropes,
and going then upward again from the elevator car to
an anchorage 14 in the upper part of the elevator
shaft, to which anchorage the second end of the ropes
3 is immovably fixed. Anchorage 13 in the upper part
of the shaft, the traction sheave 7 and the diverting
pulley 9 suspending the counterweight on the ropes are
preferably so disposed in relation to each other that
both the rope portion going from the anchorage 13 to
the counterweight 2 and the rope portion going from
the counterweight 2 to the traction sheave 7 are sub-
stantially parallel to the path of the counterweight
2. Similarly, a solution is preferred in which anchor-
age 14 in the upper part of the shaft, the traction
sheave 7, diverting pulley 15 and the diverting pul-
leys 4 suspending the elevator car on the ropes are so
disposed in relation to each other that the rope por-
tion going from the anchorage 14 to the elevator car 1
and the rope portion going from the elevator car 1 via
diverting pulley 15 to the traction sheave 7 are sub-
stantially parallel to the path of the elevator car 1.
With this arrangement, no additional diverting pulleys
are needed to define the passage of the ropes in the
shaft. The roping arrangement between the traction
sheave 7 and the diverting pulley 15 is referred to as
Double Wrap roping, wherein the hoisting ropes are
wrapped around the traction sheave two and/or more
times. In this way, the contact angle can be increased
in two and/or more stages. For example, in the embodi-
ment presented in Fig. 1, a contact angle of 180° +
180°, i.e. 360 ° between the traction sheave 7 and the
hoisting ropes 3 is achieved. Double Wrap roping can
be arranged in other ways, too, e.g. by placing the
diverting pulley on the side of the traction sheave,
in which case, as the hoisting ropes are passed twice
around the traction sheave, a contact angle of 180° +
90° = 270° is obtained, or by placing the diverting
pulley at some other appropriate position. The rope
suspension acts in a substantially centric manner on
the elevator car 1, provided that the rope pulleys 4
supporting the elevator car are mounted substantially
symmetrically relative to the vertical center line
passing via the center of gravity of the elevator car
1. A preferable solution is to dispose the traction
sheave 7 and the diverting pulley 15 in such a way
that the diverting pulley 15 will also function as a
guide of the hoisting ropes 3 and as a damping pulley.
The drive machine 6 placed in the elevator shaft is
preferably of a flat construction, in other words, the
machine has a small thickness dimension as compared
with its width and/or height, or at least the machine
is slim enough to be accommodated between the elevator
car and a wall of the elevator shaft. The machine may
also be placed differently, e.g. by disposing the slim
machine partly or completely between an imaginary ex-
tension of the elevator car and a shaft wall. The ele-
vator shaft is advantageously provided with equipment
required for the supply of power to the motor driving
the traction sheave 7 as well as equipment for eleva-
tor control, both of which can be placed in a common
instrument panel 8 or mounted separately from each
other or integrated partly or wholly with the drive
machine 6. The drive machine may be of a geared or
gearless type. A preferable solution is a gearless ma-
chine comprising a permanent magnet motor. Another ad-
vantageous solution is to build a complete unit com-
prising both an elevator drive machine with a traction
sheave and one or more diverting pulleys with bearings
in a correct operating angle relative to the traction
sheave. The operating angle is determined by the rop-
ing used between the traction sheave an the diverting
pulley/pulleys, which defines the way in which the mu-
tual positions and angle between the traction sheave
and diverting pulley/diverting pulleys relative to
each other axe fitted in the unit. This unit can be
mounted in place as a unitary aggregate in the same
way as a drive machine. The drive machine may be fixed
to a wall of the elevator shaft, to the ceiling, to a
guide rail or guide rails or to some other structure,
such as a beam or frame. In the case of an elevator
with machine below, a further possibility is to mount
the machine on the bottom of the elevator shaft. Fig.
1 illustrates the economical 2:1 suspension, but the
ivention can also be implemented in an elevator using
a 1:1 suspension ratio, in other words, in an elevator
in which the hoisting ropes are connected directly to
the counterweight and elevator car without diverting
pulleys. Other suspension arrangements are also possi-
ble in an implementation of the invention. For exam-
ple, an elevator according to the invention can be im-
plemented using a suspension ratio of 3:1, 4:1 or even
higher suspension ratios. The counterweight and the
elevator car may also be suspended in such manner that
the counterweight is suspended using a suspension ra-
tio of n:1 while the elevator car is suspended with a
suspension ratio of m:l, where m is an integer at
least equal to 1 and n is an integer greater than m.
The elevator presented in the figure has automatic
telescoping doors, but other types of automatic doors
or turning doors may also be used within the framework
of the invention.
Fig. 2 presents a diagram representing another trac-
tion sheave elevator according to the invention. In
this elevator, the ropes go upward from the machine.
This type of elevator is generally a traction sheave
elevator with machine below. The elevator car 101 and
the counterweight 102 are suspended on the hoisting
ropes 103 of the elevator. The elevator drive machine
unit 106 is mounted in the elevator shaft, preferably
in the lower part of the shaft, a diverting pulley 115
is mounted near the drive machine unit 106, said di-
verting pulley allowing a sufficiently large contact
angle to be achieved between the traction sheave 107
and the hoisting ropes 103. The hoisting ropes are
passed via diverting pulleys 104,105 provided in the
upper part of the elevator shaft to the car 101 and to
the counterweight 102. Diverting pulleys 104,105 are
placed in the upper part of the shaft and preferably
separately mounted with bearings on the same axle so
that they can rotate independently of each other. By
way of example, in the elevator in Fig. 2, Double Wrap
roping is also applied in an elevator with machine be-
low.
The elevator car 101 and the counterweight 102 move in
the elevator shaft along elevator and counterweight
guide rails 110,111 guiding them.
In Fig. 2, the hoisting ropes run as follows: One end
of the ropes is fixed to an anchorage 112 in the upper
part of the shaft, from where it goes downward to the
counterweight 102. The counterweight is suspended on
the ropes 103 via a diverting pulley 109. From the
counterweight, the ropes go further upward to a first
diverting pulley 105 mounted on an elevator guide rail
110, and from the diverting pulley 105 further via the
rope grooves of diverting pulley 115 to the traction
sheave 107 driven by the drive machine 106. From the
traction sheave, the ropes go again upwards to divert-
ing pulley 115, and having wrapped around it they go
back to the traction sheave 107. From the traction
sheave 107, the ropes go again upwards via the rope
grooves of diverting pulley 115 to diverting pulley
104, and having wrapped around this pulley they pass
via diverting pulleys 108 mounted on the top of the
elevator car and then go further to an anchorage 113
in the upper part of the elevator shaft, where the
other end of the hoisting ropes is fixed. The elevator
car is suspended on the hoisting ropes 103 by means of
diverting pulleys 108. In the hoisting ropes 103, one
or more of the rope portions between the diverting
pulleys or between the diverting pulleys and the trac-
tion sheave or between the diverting pulleys and the
anchorages may deviate from an exact vertical direc-
tion, a circumstance that makes it easy to provide a
sufficient distance between different rope portions or
a sufficient distance between the hoisting ropes and
the other elevator components. The traction sheave 107
and the hoisting machine 106 are preferably disposed
somewhat aside from the path of the elevator car 101
as well as that of the counterweight 102, so they can
be easily placed almost at any height in the elevator
shaft below the diverting pulleys 104 and 105. If the
machine is not placed directly above or below the
counterweight or elevator car, this will allow a sav-
ing in shaft height. In this case, the minimum height
of the elevator shaft is exclusively determined on the
basis of the length of the paths of the counterweight
and elevator car and the safety clearances needed
above and below these. In addition, a smaller space at
the top or bottom of the shaft will be sufficient due
to the reduced rope pulley diameters as compared with
earlier solutions, depending on how the rope pulleys
are mounted on the elevator car and/or on the frame of
the elevator car.
Fig. 3 presents a partially sectioned view of a rope
pulley 200 applying the invention. The rim 206 of the
rope pulley is provided with rope grooves 201, which
are covered by a coating 202. Provided in the hub of
the rope pulley is a space 203 for a bearing used to
mount the rope pulley. The rope pulley is also pro-
vided with holes 205 for bolts, allowing the rope pul-
ley to be fastened by its side to an anchorage in the
hoisting machine 6, e.g. to a rotating flange, to form
a traction sheave 7, so that no bearing separate from
the hoisting machine is needed. The coating material
used on the traction sheave and the rope pulleys may
consist of rubber, polyurethane or a corresponding
elastic material that increases friction. The material
of the traction sheave and/or rope pulleys may also be
so chosen that, together with the hoisting rope used,
it forms a material pair such that the hoisting rope
will bite into the pulley after the coating on the
pulley has been worn out. This ensures a sufficient
grip between the rope pulley 200 and the hoisting rope
3 in an emergency where the coating 202 has been worn
out from the rope pulley 200. This feature allows the
elevator to maintain its functionality and operational
reliability in the situation referred to. The traction
sheave and/or the rope pulleys can also be manufac-
tured in such manner that only the rim 206 of the rope
pulley 200 is made of a material forming a grip in-
creasing material pair with the hoisting rope 3. The
use of strong hoisting ropes that are considerably
thinner than normally allows the traction sheave and
the rope pulleys to be designed to considerably
smaller dimensions and sizes than when normal-sized
ropes are used. This also makes it possible to use a
motor of a smaller size with a lower torque as the
drive motor of the elevator, which leads to a reduc-
tion in the acquisition costs of the motor. For exam-
ple, in an elevator according to the invention de-
signed for a nominal load below 1000 kg, the traction
sheave diameter is preferably 120-200 mm, but it may
even be less than this. The traction sheave diameter
depends on the thickness of the hoisting ropes used.
In the elevator of the invention, the use of a small
traction sheave, e.g. in the case of elevators for a
nominal load below 1000 kg, makes it possible to
achieve a machine weight even as low as about one half
of the weight of currently used machines, which means
producing elevator machines weighing 100-150 kg or
even less. In the invention, the machine is understood
as comprising at least the traction sheave, the motor,
the machine housing structures and the brakes.
The weight of the elevator machine and its supporting
elements used to hold the machine in place in the ele-
vator shaft is at most about 1/5 of the nominal load.
If the machine is exclusively or almost exclusively
supported by one or more elevator and/or counterweight
guide rails, then the total weight of the machine and
its supporting elements may be less than about 1/6 or
even less than 1/8 of the nominal load. Nominal load
of an elevator means a load defined for elevators of a
given size. The supporting elements of the elevator
machine may include e.g. a beam, carriage or suspen-
sion bracket used to support or suspend the machine
on/from a wall structure or ceiling of the elevator
shaft or on the elevator or counterweight guide rails,
or clamps used to hold the machine fastened to the
sides of the elevator guide rails. It will be easy to
achieve an elevator in which the machine deadweight
without supporting elements is below 1/7 of the nomi-
nal load or even about 1/10 of the nominal load or
still less. Basically, the ratio of machine weight to
nominal load is given for a conventional elevator in
which the counterweight has a weight substantially
equal to the weight of an empty car plus half the
nominal load. As an example of machine weight in the
case of an elevator of a given nominal weight when the
fairly common 2:1 suspension ratio is used with a
nominal load of 630 kg, the combined weight of the ma-
chine and its supporting elements may be only 75 kg
when the traction sheave diameter is 160 mm and hoist-
ing ropes having a diameter of 4 mm are used, in other
words, the total weight of the machine and its sup-
porting elements is about 1/8 of the nominal load of
the elevator. As another example, using the same 2:1
suspension ratio, the same 160 mm traction sheave di-
ameter and the same 4 mm hoisting rope diameter, in
the case of an elevator for a nominal load of about
1000 kg, the total weight of the machine and its sup-
porting elements is about 150 kg, so in this case the
machine and its supporting elements have a total
weight equaling about 1/6 of the nominal load. As a
third example, let us consider an elevator designed
for a nominal load of 1600 kg. In this case, when the
suspension ratio is 2:1, the traction sheave diameter
240 mm and the hoisting rope diameter 6 mm, the total
weight of the machine and its supporting elements will
be about 300 kg, i.e. about 1/7 of the nominal load.
By varying the hoisting rope suspension arrangements,
it is possible to reach a still lower total weight of
the machine and its supporting elements. For example,
when a 4:1 suspension ratio, a 160 mm traction sheave
diameter and a 4 mm hoisting rope diameter are used in
an elevator designed for a nominal load of 500 kg, a
total weight of hoisting machine and its supporting
elements of about 50 kg will be achieved. In this
case, the total weight of the machine and its support-
ing elements is as small as only about 1/10 of the
nominal load.
Fig. 4 presents a solution in which the rope groove
301 is in a coating 302, which is thinner at the sides
of the rope groove than at the bottom. In such a solu-
tion, the coating is placed in a basic groove 320 pro-
vided in the rope pulley 300 so that deformations pro-
duced in the coating by the pressure imposed on it by
the rope will be small and mainly limited to the rope
surface texture sinking into the coating. Such a solu-
tion often means in practice that the rope pulley
coating consists of rope groove-specific sub-coatings
separate from each other, but considering manufactur-
ing or other aspects it may be appropriate to design
the rope pulley coating so that it extends continu-
ously over a number of grooves.
By making the coating thinner at the sides of the
groove than at its bottom, the strain imposed by the
rope on the bottom of the rope groove while sinking
into the groove is avoided or at least reduced. As the
pressure cannot be discharged laterally but is di-
rected by the combined effect of the shape of the ba-
sic groove 320 and the thickness variation of the
coating 302 to support the rope in the rope groove
301, lower maximum surface pressures acting on the
rope and the coating are also achieved. One method of
making a grooved coating 302 like this is to fill the
round-bottomed basic groove 320 with coating material
and then form a half-round rope groove 301 in this
coating material in the basic groove. The shape of the
rope grooves is well supported and the load-bearing
surface layer under the rope provides a better resis-
tance against lateral propagation of the compression
stress produced by the ropes. The lateral spreading or
rather adjustment of the coating caused by the pres-
sure is promoted by thickness and elasticity of the
coating and reduced by hardness and eventual rein-
forcements of the coating. The coating thickness on
the bottom of the rope groove can be made large, even
as large as half the rope thickness, in which case a
hard and inelastic coating is needed. On the other
hand, if a coating thickness corresponding to only
about one tenth of the rope thickness is used, then
the coating material may be clearly softer. An eleva-
tor for eight persons could be implemented using a
coating thickness at the bottom of the groove equal to
about one fifth of the rope thickness if the ropes and
the rope load are chosen appropriately. The coating
thickness should equal at least 2-3 times the depth of
the rope surface texture formed by the surface wires
of the rope. Such a very thin coating, having a thick-
ness even less than the thickness of the surface wire
of the rope, will not necessarily endure the strain
imposed on it. In practice, the coating must have a
thickness larger than this minimum thickness because
the coating will also have to receive rope surface
variations rougher than the surface texture. Such a
rougher area is formed e.g. where the level differ-
ences between rope strands are larger than those be-
tween wires. In practice, a suitable minimum coating
thickness is about 1-3 times the surface wire thick-
ness. In the case of the ropes normally used in eleva-
tors, which have been designed for a contact with a
metallic rope groove and which have a thickness of 8-
10 mm, this thickness definition leads to a coating at
least about 1 mm thick. Since a coating on the trac-
tion sheave, which causes more rope wear than the
other rope pulleys of the elevator, will reduce rope
wear and therefore also the need to provide the rope
with thick surface wires, the rope can be made
smoother. Rope smoothness can naturally be improved by
coating the rope with a material suited for this pur-
pose, such as e.g. polyurethane or equivalent. The use
of thin wires allows the rope itself to be made thin-
ner, because thin steel wires can be manufactured from
a stronger material than thicker wires. For instance,
using 0.2 mm wires, a 4 mm thick elevator hoisting
rope of a fairly good construction can be produced.
Depending on the thickness of the hoisting rope used
and/or on other reasons, the wires in the steel wire
rope may preferably have a thickness between 0.15 mm
and 0.5 mm, in which range there are readily available
steel wires with good strength properties in which
even an individual wire has a sufficient wear resis-
tance and a sufficiently low susceptibility to damage.
In the above, ropes made of round steel wires have
been discussed. Applying the same principles, the
ropes can be wholly or partly twisted from non-round
profiled wires. In this case, the cross-sectional ar-
eas of the wires are preferably substantially the same
as for round wires, i.e. in the range of 0.015 mm2 -
0.2 mm2. Using wires in this thickness range, it will
be easy to produce steel wire ropes having a wire
strength above about 2000 N/mm2 and a wire cross-
section of 0.015 mm2 - 6.2 mm2 and comprising a large
cross-sectional area of steel material in relation to
the cross-sectional area of the rope, as is achieved
e.g. by using the Warrington construction. For the im-
plementation of the invention, particularly well
suited are ropes having a wire strength in the range
of 2300 N/m2 - 2700 N/mmz, because such ropes have a
very large bearing capacity in relation to rope thick-
ness while the high hardness of the strong wires in-
volves no substantial difficulties in the use of the
rope in elevators. A traction sheave coating well
suited for such a rope is already clearly below 1 mm
thick. However, the coating should be thick enough to
ensure that it will not be very easily scratched away
or pierced e.g. by an occasional sand grain or similar
particle that may have got between the rope groove and
the hoisting rope. Thus, a desirable minimum coating
thickness, even when thin-wire hoisting ropes are
used, would be about 0.5...1 mm. For hoisting ropes hav-
ing small surface wires and an otherwise relatively
smooth surface, a coating having a thickness of the
form A+Bcosa is well suited. However, such a coating
is also applicable to ropes whose surface strands meet
the rope groove at a distance from each other, because
if the coating material is sufficiently hard, each
strand meeting the rope groove is in a way separately
supported and the supporting force is the same and/or
as desired. In the formula A+Bcosa, A and B are con-
stants so that A+B is the coating thickness at the
bottom of the rope groove 301 and the angle a is the
angular distance from the bottom of the rope groove as
measured from the center of curvature of the rope
groove cross-section. Constant A is larger than or
equal to zero, and constant B is always larger than
zero. The thickness of the coating growing thinner to-
wards the edges can also be defined in other ways be-
sides using the formula A+Bcosa so that the elasticity
decreases towards the edges of the rope groove. The
elasticity in the central part of the rope groove can
also be increased by making an undercut rope groove
and/or by adding to the coating on the bottom of the
rope groove a portion of different material of special
elasticity, where the elasticity has been increased,
in addition to increasing the material thickness, by
the use of a material that is softer than the rest of
the coating.
Fig. 5a, 5b and 5c present longitudinal cross-sections
of steel wire ropes used in the invention. The ropes
in these figures contain thin steel wires 403, a coat-
ing 402 on the steel wires and/or partly between the
steel wires, and in Fig. 5a a coating 401 over the
steel wires. The rope presented in Fig. 5b is an un-
coated steel wire rope with a rubber-like filler added
to its interior structure, and Fig. 5a presents a
steel wire rope provided with a coating in addition to
a filler added to the internal structure. The rope
presented in Fig. 5c has a non-metallic core 404,
which may be a solid or fibrous structure made of
plastic, natural fiber or some other material suited
for the purpose. A fibrous structure will be good if
the rope is lubricated, in which case lubricant will
accumulate in the fibrous core. The core thus acts as
a kind of lubricant storage. The steel wire ropes of
substantially round cross-section used in the elevator
of the invention may be coated, uncoated and/or pro-
vided with a rubber-like filler, such as e.g. polyure-
thane or some other suitable filler, added to the in-
€erior structure of the rope and acting as a kind of
lubricant lubricating the rope and also balancing the
pressure between wires and strands. The use of a
filler makes it possible to achieve a rope that needs
no lubrication, so its surface can be dry. The coating
used in the steel wire ropes may be made of the same
or nearly the same material as the filler or of a ma-
terial that is better suited for use as a coating and
has properties, such as friction and wear resistance
properties, that are better suited to the purpose than
a filler. The coating of the steel wire rope may also
be so implemented that the coating material penetrates
partially into the rope or through the entire thick-
ness of the rope, giving the rope the same properties
as the filler mentioned above. The use of thin and
strong steel wire ropes according to the invention is
possible because the steel wires used are wires of
special strength, allowing the ropes to be made sub-
stantially thin as compared with steel wire ropes used
before. The ropes presented in Fig. 5a and 5b are
steel wire ropes having a diameter of about 4 mm. For
example, when a 2:1 suspension ratio is used, the thin
and strong steel wire ropes of the invention prefera-
bly have a diameter of about 2.5 - 5 mm in elevators
for a nominal load below 1000 kg, and preferably about
5-8 mm in elevators for a nominal load above 1000
kg. In principle, it is possible to use ropes thinner
than this, but in this case a large number of ropes
will be needed. Still, by increasing the suspension
ratio, ropes thinner than those mentioned above can be
used for corresponding loads, and at the same time a
smaller and lighter elevator machine can be achieved.
Fig. 6 illustrates the manner in which a rope pulley
502 connected to a horizontal beam 504 comprised in
the structure supporting the elevator car 501 is
placed in relation to the beam 504, said rope pulley
being used to support the elevator car and associated
structures. The rope pulley 502 presented in the fig-
ure may have a diameter equal to or less than the
height of the beam 504 comprised in the structure. The
beam 504 supporting the elevator car 501 may be lo-
cated either below or above the elevator car. The rope
pulley 502 may be placed completely or partially in-
side the beam 504, as shown in the figure. The hoist-
ing ropes 503 of the elevator in the figure run as
follows: The hoisting ropes 503 come to the coated
rope pulley 502 connected to the beam 504 comprised in
the structure supporting the elevator car 501, from
which pulley the hoisting rope runs further, protected
by the beam, e.g. in a hollow 506 inside the beam, un-
der the elevator car and goes then further via a sec-
ond rope pulley placed on the other side of the eleva-
tor car. The elevator car 501 rests on the beam 504
comprised in the structure, on vibration absorbers 505
placed between them. The beam 504 also acts as a rope
guard for the hoisting rope 503. The beam 504 may be a
C-, U-, I-, Z-section beam or a hollow beam or equiva-
lent.
Fig. 7 presents a diagrammatic illustration of the
structure of an elevator according to the invention.
The elevator is preferably an elevator without machine
room, with a drive machine 706 placed in the elevator
shaft. The elevator shown in the figure is a traction
sheave elevator with machine above. The passage of the
hoisting ropes 703 of the elevator is as follows: One
end of the ropes is immovably fixed to an anchorage
713 located in the upper part of the shaft above the
path of a counterweight 702 moving along counterweight
guide rails 711. From the anchorage, the ropes run
downwards to diverting pulleys 709 suspending the
counterweight, which are rotatably mounted on the
counterweight 702 and from which the ropes 703 run
further upward via the rope grooves of diverting pul-
ley 715 to the traction sheave 707 of the drive ma-
chine 706, passing around the traction sheave along
the rope grooves on the sheave. From the traction
sheave 707, the ropes 703 run further downwards back
to diverting pulley 715, wrapping around it along the
rope grooves of the diverting pulley and returning
then back up to the traction sheave 707, over which
the ropes run in the traction sheave rope grooves.
From the traction sheave 707, the ropes 703 go further
downwards via the rope grooves of the diverting pulley
to the elevator car 701 moving along the car guide
rails 710 of the elevator, passing under the car via
diverging pulleys 704 used to suspend the elevator car
on the ropes, and going then upwards again from the
elevator car to an anchorage 714 in the upper part of
the elevator shaft, to which anchorage the second end
of the ropes 703 is immovably fixed. Anchorage 713 in
the upper part of the shaft, the traction sheave 707,
diverting pulley 715 and the diverting pulley 709 sus-
pending the counterweight on the ropes are preferably
so disposed in relation to each other that both the
rope portion going from the anchorage 713 to the coun-
terweight 702 and the rope portion going from the
counterweight 702 via diverting pulley 715 to the
traction sheave 707 are substantially parallel to the
path of the counterweight 702. Similarly, a solution
is preferred in which the anchorage 714 in the upper
part of the shaft, the traction sheave 707, diverting
pulleys 715,712 and the diverting pulleys 7 04 suspend-
ing the elevator car on the ropes are so disposed in
relation to each other that the rope portion going
from the anchorage 714 to the elevator car 701 and the
rope portion going from the elevator car 701 via di-
verting pulley 715 to the traction sheave 707 are sub-
stantially parallel to the path of the elevator car
701. With this arrangement, no additional diverting
pulleys are needed to define the passage of the ropes
in the shaft. The roping arrangement between the trac-
tion sheave 707 and the diverting pulley 715 is re-
ferred to as Double Wrap roping, wherein the hoisting
ropes are wrapped around the traction sheave two
and/or more times. In this way, the contact angle can
be increased in two and/or more stages. For example,
in the embodiment presented in Fig. 7, a contact angle
of 180° + 180°, i.e. 360 ° between the traction sheave
707 and the hoisting ropes 703 is achieved. The rope
suspension acts in a substantially centric manner on
the elevator car 701, provided that the rope pulleys
704 suspending the elevator car are mounted substan-
tially symmetrically relative to the vertical center
line passing via the center of gravity of the elevator
car 701. A preferable solution is to dispose the trac-
tion sheave 707 and the diverting pulley 715 in such a
way that the diverting pulley 715 will also function
as a guide of the hoisting ropes 703 and as a damping
pulley.
The drive machine 706 placed in the elevator shaft is
preferably of flat construction, in other words, the
machine has a small thickness dimension as compared
with its width and/or height, or at least the machine
is slim enough to be accommodated between the elevator
car and a wall of the elevator shaft. The machine may
also be placed differently, e.g. by disposing the slim
machine partly or completely between an imaginary ex-
tension of the elevator car and a shaft wall. The ele-
vator shaft is advantageously provided with equipment
required for the supply of power to the motor driving
the traction sheave 707 as well as equipment needed
for elevator control, both of which can be placed in a
common instrument panel 708 or mounted separately from
each other or integrated partly or wholly with the
drive machine 706. The drive machine may be of geared
or gearless type. A prefereble solution is a gearless
machine comprising a permanent magnet motor. Another
advantageous solution is to build a complete unit com-
prising both the elevator drive machine 706 and the
diverting pulley 715 and its bearings, which is used
to increase the contact angle, in a correct operating
angle relative to the traction sheave 707, which unit
can be mounted in place as a unitary aggregate in the
same way as a drive machine. The drive machine may be
fixed to a wall of the elevator shaft, to the ceiling,
to a guide rail or guide rails or to some other struc-
ture, such as a beam or frame. The diverting pul-
ley/diverting pulleys to be placed near the drive ma-
chine to increase the operating angle can be mounted
in the same way. In the case of an elevator with ma-
chine below, a further possibility is to mount the
above-mentioned components on the bottom of the eleva-
tor shaft. In Double Wrap roping, when diverting pul-
ley 715 is of substantially equal size with the trac-
tion sheave 707, diverting pulley 715 can also func-
tion as a damping wheel. In this case, the ropes going
from the traction sheave 707 to the counterweight 702
and to the elevator car 701 are passed via the rope
grooves of the diverting pulley 715 and the rope de-
flection caused by the diverting pulley is very small.
It could be said that the ropes coming from the trac-
tion sheave only touch the diverting pulley tangen-
tially. Such tangential contact serves as a solution
damping the vibrations of outgoing ropes and it can
applied in other roping solutions as well. An example
of these other roping solutions is Single Wrap (SW)
roping, where the diverting pulley is of substantially
equal size with the traction sheave of the drive ma-
chine and where a diverting pulley used for tangential
rope contact as described above. In SW roping accord-
ing to the example, the ropes wrap around the traction
sheave only once, with a contact angle of about 180°
between the rope and the traction sheave, the divert-
ing pulley is only used as a means of producing a tan-
gential contact as described above and the diverting
pulley functions as a rope guide and as a damping
wheel for the damping of vibrations. The suspension
ratio of the elevator is of no importance with respect
to the application of SW roping described in the exam-
ple; instead, it can be used in connection with any
suspension ratio. The embodiment using SW roping as
described in the example may have an inventive value
in itself, at least in regard of damping. The divert-
ing pulley 715 may also be of substantially different
size than the traction sheave, in which case it func-
tions as a diverting pulley increasing the contact an-
gle and not as a damping wheel. Fig. 7 presents an
elevator according to the invention that uses a sus-
pension ratio of 4:1. The invention can also be imple-
mented using other suspension arrangements. For exam-
ple, an elevator according to the invention can be im-
plemented using a suspension ratio of 1:1, 2:1, 3:1 or
even suspension ratios higher than 4:1. The elevator
presented in the figure has automatic telescoping
doors, but other types of automatic doors or turning
doors may also be used within the framework of the in-
vention.
Fig. 8 presents a diagrammatic illustration of the
structure of an elevator according to the invention.
The elevator is preferably an elevator without machine
room, with a drive machine 806 placed in the elevator
shaft. The elevator shown in the figure is a traction
sheave elevator with machine above. The passage of the
hoisting ropes 803 of the elevator is as follows: One
end of the ropes is immovably fixed to an anchorage
813 located in the upper part of the shaft above the
path of a counterweight 802 moving along counterweight
guide rails 811. From the anchorage, the ropes run
downwards to diverting pulleys 809 suspending the
counterweight, which are rotatably mounted on the
counterweight 802 and from which the ropes 803 run
further upward via the rope grooves of diverting pul-
ley 815 to the traction sheave 807 of the drive ma-
chine 806, wrapping around the traction sheave along
the rope grooves on the sheave. From the traction
sheave 807, the ropes 803 run further downwards, going
crosswise relative to the upwards going ropes, and
further via the rope grooves of the diverting pulley
to the elevator car 801 moving along the car guide
rails 810 of the elevator, passing under the car via
diverting pulleys 804 used to suspend the elevator car
on the ropes, and going then upwards again from the
elevator car to an anchorage 814 in the upper part of
the elevator shaft, to which anchorage the second end
of the ropes 803 is immovably fixed. Anchorage 813 in
the upper part of the shaft, the traction sheave 807,
diverting pulley 815 and the diverting pulley 809 sus-
pending the counterweight on the ropes are preferably
so disposed in relation to each other that both the
rope portion going from the anchorage 813 to the coun-
terweight 802 and the rope portion going from the
counterweight 802 via diverting pulley 815 to the
traction sheave 807 are substantially parallel to the
path of the counterweight 802. Similarly, a solution
is preferred in which the anchorage 814 in the upper
part of the shaft, the traction sheave 807, diverting
pulley 815 and the diverting pulleys 804 suspending
the elevator car on the ropes are so disposed in rela-
tion to each other that the rope portion going from
the anchorage 814 to the elevator car 801 and the rope
portion going from the elevator car 801 via diverting
pulley 815 to the traction sheave 807 are substan-
tially parallel to the path of the elevator car 801.
With this arrangement, no additional diverting pulleys
are needed to define the passage of the ropes in the
shaft. This roping arrangement between the traction
sheave 807 and the diverting pulley 815 can be re-
ferred to as X Wrap (XW) roping, while Double Wrap
(DW) roping, Single Wrap (SW) roping and Extended Wrap
(ESW) roping are previously known concepts. In X Wrap
roping, the ropes are caused to wrap around the trac-
tion sheave with a large contact angle. For example,
in the case illustrated in Fig. 8, a contact angle of
well over 180°, i.e. about 270° between the traction
sheave 807 and the hoisting ropes 803 is achieved. X
Wrap roping presented in the figure can also be ar-
ranged in another way, e.g. by providing two diverting
pulleys at appropriate positions near the drive ma-
chine. Diverting pulley 815 has been fitted in a posi-
tion designed to form an angle relative to the trac-
tion sheave 807 such that the ropes will run crosswise
in a manner known in itself so that the ropes are not
damaged. The rope suspension acts in a substantially
centric manner on the elevator car 801, provided that
the rope pulleys 804 suspending the elevator car are
mounted substantially symmetrically relative to the
vertical center line passing via the center of gravity
of the elevator car 801.
The drive machine 806 placed in the elevator shaft is
preferably of flat construction, in other words, the
machine has a small thickness dimension as compared
with its width and/or height, or at least the machine
is slim enough to be accommodated between the elevator
car and a wall of the elevator shaft. The machine may
also be placed differently, e.g. by disposing the slim
machine partly or completely between an imaginary ex-
tension of the elevator car and a shaft wall. The ele-
vator shaft is advantageously provided with equipment
required for the supply of power to the motor driving
the traction sheave 807 as well as equipment needed
for elevator control, both of which can be placed in a
common instrument panel 808 or mounted separately from
each other or integrated partly or wholly with the
drive machine 806. The drive machine may be of geared
or gearless type. A preferable solution is a gearless
machine comprising a permanent magnet motor. Another
advantageous solution is to build a complete unit com-
prising both the elevator drive machine 806 and the
diverting pulley 815 and its bearings, which is used
to increase the contact angle, in a correct operating
angle relative to the traction sheave 807, which unit
can be mounted in place as a unitary aggregate in the
same way as a drive machine. Using a complete unit
means less need for rigging during installation. X
Wrap roping can also be implemented by mounting a di-
verting pulley directly on the drive machine. The
drive machine may be fixed to a wall of the elevator
shaft, to the ceiling, to a guide rail or guide rails
or to some other structure, such as a beam or frame.
The diverting pulley to be placed near the drive ma-
chine to increase the. operating angle can be mounted
in the same way. In the case of an elevator with ma-
chine below, a further possibility is to mount the
above-mentioned components on the bottom of the eleva-
tor shaft. Fig. 8 illustrates the economical 2:1 sus-
pension, but the invention can also be implemented in
an elevator with 1:1 suspension ratio, in other words,
in an elevator with the hoisting ropes connected di-
rectly to the counterweight and elevator car without a
diverting pulley. The invention can also be imple-
mented using other suspension arrangements. For exam-
ple, an elevator according to the invention can be im-
plemented using a suspension ratio of 3:1, 4:1 or even
higher suspension ratios. The elevator presented in
the figure has automatic telescoping doors, but other
types of automatic doors or turning doors may also be
used within the framework of the invention.
Fig. 9 presents a diagrammatic illustration of the
structure of an elevator according to the invention.
The elevator is preferably an elevator without machine
room, with a drive machine 906 placed in the elevator
shaft. The elevator shown in the figure is a traction
sheave elevator with machine above. The passage of the
hoisting ropes 903 of the elevator is as follows: One
end of the ropes is immovably fixed to an anchorage
913 located in the upper part of the shaft above the
path of a counterweight 902 moving along counterweight
guide rails 911. From the anchorage, the ropes run
downwards to diverting pulleys 909 suspending the
counterweight, which are rotatably mounted on the
counterweight 902 and from which diverting pulleys 909
the ropes 903 run further upward to the traction
sheave 907 of the drive machine 906, wrapping around
the traction sheave along the rope grooves on the
sheave. From the traction sheave 907, the ropes 903
run further downwards, going crosswise relative to the
upwards going ropes, and further to diverting pulley
915, wrapping around it along the rope grooves of the
diverting pulley 915. From the diverting pulley 915,
the ropes go further downwards to the elevator car 901
moving along the car guide rails 910 of the elevator,
passing under the car via diverting pulleys 904 used
to suspend the elevator car on the ropes, and going
then upwards again from the elevator car to an anchor-
age 914 in the upper part of the elevator shaft, to
which anchorage the second end of the ropes 903 is im-
movably fixed. Anchorage 913 in the upper part of the
shaft, the traction sheave 907 and the diverting pul-
ley 909 suspending the counterweight on the ropes are
preferably so disposed in relation to each other that
both the rope portion going from the anchorage 913 to
the counterweight 902 and the rope portion going from
the counterweight 902 to the traction sheave 907 are
substantially parallel to the path of the counter-
weight 902. Similarly, a solution is preferred in
which the anchorage 914 in the upper part of the
shaft, the traction sheave 907, diverting pulley 915
and the diverting pulleys 904 suspending the elevator
car on the ropes are so disposed in relation to each
other that the rope portion going from the anchorage
914 to the elevator car 901 and the rope portion going
from the elevator car 901 via diverting pulley 915 to
the traction sheave 907 are substantially parallel to
the path of the elevator car 901. With this arrange-
ment, no additional diverting pulleys are needed to
define the passage of the ropes in the shaft. This
roping arrangement between the traction sheave 907 and
the diverting pulley 915 can be referred to as Ex-
tended Single Wrap roping. In Extended Single Wrap
roping, by using a diverting pulley, the hoisting
ropes are caused to wrap around the traction sheave
with a larger contact angle. For example, in the case
illustrated in Fig. 9, a contact angle of well over
180°, i.e. about 270° between the traction sheave 907
and the hoisting ropes 903 is achieved. Extended Sin-
gle Wrap roping presented in the figure can also be
arranged in another way, e.g. by disposing the drive
machine and the diverting pulley in another way in re-
lation to each other, e.g. the other way round rela-
tive to each other than in the case presented in Fig.
9. Diverting pulley 915 has been fitted in a position
designed to form an angle relative to the traction
sheave 907 such that the ropes will run crosswise in a
manner known in itself so that the ropes are not dam-
aged. The rope suspension acts in a substantially cen-
tric manner on the elevator car 901, provided that the
rope pulleys 904 suspending the elevator car are
mounted substantially symmetrically relative to the
vertical center line passing via the center of gravity
of the elevator car 901. In the solution represented
by Fig. 9, the drive machine 906 can preferably be
placed e.g. in the free space above the counterweight,
thereby increasing the space saving potential of the
elevator.
The drive machine 906 placed in the elevator shaft is
preferably of flat construction, in other words, the
machine has a small thickness dimension as compared
with its width and/or height, or at least the machine
is slim enough to be accommodated between the elevator
car and a wall of the elevator shaft. The machine may
also be placed differently, e.g. by disposing the slim
machine partly or completely between an imaginary ex-
tension of the elevator car and a shaft wall. The ele-
vator shaft is advantageously provided with equipment
required for the supply of power to the motor driving
the traction sheave 907 as well as equipment needed
for elevator control, both of which can be placed in a
common instrument panel 908 or mounted separately from
each other or integrated partly or wholly with the
drive machine 906. The drive machine may be of geared
or gearless type. A preferable solution is a gearless
machine comprising a permanent magnet motor. Another
advantageous solution is to build a complete unit com-
prising both the elevator drive machine 906 and/or the
diverting pulley/diverting pulleys 915 with their
bearings, mounted in a correct operating angle rela-
tive to the traction sheave 907 to increase the con-
tact angle, all this equipment being ready fitted on a
mounting base, which unit can be mounted in place as a
unitary aggregate in the same way as a drive machine.
Using a unitary aggregate solution reduces the need
for rigging at installation time. The drive machine
may be fixed to a wall of the elevator shaft, to the
ceiling, to a guide rail or guide rails or to some
other structure, such as a beam or frame. The divert-
ing pulley to be placed near the drive machine to in-
crease the operating angle can be mounted in the same
way. In the case of an elevator with machine below, a
further possibility is to mount the above-mentioned
components on the bottom of the elevator shaft. Fig. 9
illustrates the economical 2:1 suspension, but the in-
vention can also be implemented in an elevator with
1:1 suspension ratio, in other words, in an elevator
with the hoisting ropes connected directly to the
counterweight and elevator car without a diverting
pulley. The invention can also be implemented using
other suspension arrangements. For example, an eleva-
tor according to the invention can be implemented us-
ing a suspension ratio of 3:1, 4:1 or even higher sus-
pension ratios. The elevator presented in the figure
has automatic telescoping doors, but other types of
automatic doors or turning doors may also be used
within the framework of the invention.
Figures 10a, 10b, 10c, 10d, 10e, 10f and 10g present
some variations of the roping arrangements according
to the invention that can be used between the traction
sheave 1007 and the diverting pulley 1015 to increase
the contact angle between the ropes 1003 and the trac-
tion sheave 1007, in which arrangements the ropes 1003
go downwards from the drive machine 1006 towards the
elevator car and counterweight. These roping arrange-
ments make it possible to increase the contact angle
between the hoisting rope 1003 and the traction sheave
1007. In the invention, contact angle a refers to the
length of the arc of contact between the traction
sheave and the hoisting rope. The magnitude of the
contact angle a may be expressed e.g. in degrees, as
is done in the invention, but it is also possible to
express the magnitude of the contact angle in other
terms, e.g. in radians or equivalent. The contact an-
gle a is presented in greater detail in Fig. 10a. In
the other figures, the contact angle a is not ex-
pressly indicated, but it can be seen from the other
figures as well without specific description.
The roping arrangements presented in Fig. 10a, 10b,
10c represent some variations of the X Wrap roping de-
scribed above. In the arrangement presented in Fig.
10a, the ropes 1003 come via diverting pulley 1015,
wrapping around it along rope grooves, to the traction
sheave 1007, over which the ropes pass along its rope
grooves and then go further back to the diverting pul-
ley 1015, passing crosswise with respect to the rope
portion coming from the diverting pulley, and continu-
ing their passage further. Crosswise passage of the
ropes 1003 between the diverting pulley 1015 and the
traction sheave 1007 can be implemented e.g. by having
the diverting pulley fitted at such an angle with re-
spect to the traction sheave that the ropes will cross
each other in a manner known in itself so that the
ropes 1003 are not damaged. In Fig. 10a, the contact
angle a between the ropes 1003 and the traction sheave
1007 is represented by the shaded area. The magnitude
of the contact angle a in this figure is about 310°.
The size of the diameter of the diverting pulley can
be used as a means of determining the distance of sus-
pension that is to be provided between the diverting
pulley 1015 and the traction sheave 1007. The magni-
tude of the contact angle can be varied by varying the
distance between the diverting pulley 1015 and the
traction sheave 1007. The magnitude of the angle a can
also be varied by varying the diameter of the divert-
ing pulley and/or by varying the diameter of the trac-
tion sheave and also by varying the relation between
the diameters of the diverting pulley and the traction
sheave. Fig. 10b and 10c present an example of imple-
menting a corresponding XW roping arrangement using
two diverting pulleys.
The roping arrangements presented in Fig. 10d and 10e
are different variations of the above-mentioned Double
Wrap roping. In the roping arrangement in Fig. 10d,
the ropes run via the rope grooves of diverting pulley
1015 to the traction sheave traction sheave 1007 of
the drive machine 1006, passing over it along the rope
grooves of the traction sheave. From the traction
sheave 1007, the ropes 1003 go further downwards back
to diverting pulley 1015, wrapping around it along the
rope grooves of the diverting pulley and returning
then back to the traction sheave 1007, over which the
ropes run in the rope grooves of the traction sheave.
From the traction sheave 1007, the ropes 1003 run fur-
ther downwards via the rope grooves of the diverting
pulley. In the roping arrangement presented in the
figure, the hoisting ropes are caused to wrap around
the traction sheave twice and/or more times. By these
means, the contact angle can be increased in two
and/or more stages. For example, in the case presented
in Fig. 10d, a contact angle of 180° + 180° between the
traction sheave 1007 and the ropes 1003 is achieved.
In Double Wrap roping, when the diverting pulley 1015
is substantially of equal size with the traction
sheave 1007, the diverting pulley 1015 also functions
as a damping wheel. In this case, the ropes going from
the traction sheave 1007 to the counterweight and ele-
vator car pass via the rope grooves of the diverting
pulley 1015 and the rope deflection produced by the
diverting pulley is very small. It could be said that
the ropes coming from the traction sheave only touch
the diverting pulley tangentially. Such tangential
contact serves as a solution damping the vibrations of
outgoing ropes and it can applied in other roping ar-
rangements as well. In this case, the diverting pulley
1015 also functions as a rope guide. The ratio of the
diameters of the diverting pulley and traction sheave
can be varied by varying the diameters of the divert-
ing pulley and/or traction sheave. This can be used as
a means of defining the magnitude of the contact angle
and fitting it to a desired magnitude. By using DW
roping, forward bending of the rope 1003 is achieved,
which means that the rope 1003 is in DW roping is bent
in the same direction on the diverting pulley 1015 and
on the traction sheave 1007. DW roping can also be im-
plemented in other ways, such as e.g. the way illus-
trated in Fig. 10e, where the diverting pulley 1015 is
disposed on the side of the traction sheave 1007. In
this roping arrangement, the ropes 1003 are passed in
a manner corresponding to Fig. 10d, but in this case a
contact angle of 180° + 90°, i.e. 270° is obtained. If
the diverting pulley 1015 is placed on the side of the
traction sheave in the case of DW roping, greater de-
mands are imposed on the bearings and mounting of the
diverting pulley because it is exposed to greater
stress and load forces than in the embodiment pre-
sented in Fig. 10d.
Fig. 10f presents an embodiment of the invention ap-
plying Extended Single Wrap roping as mentioned above.
In the roping arrangement presented in the figure, the
ropes 1003 run to the traction sheave 1007 of the
drive machine 1006, wrapping around it along the rope
grooves of the traction sheave. From the traction
sheave 1007, the ropes 1003 go further downwards, run-
ning crosswise relative to the upwards going ropes and
further to diverting pulley 1015, passing over it
along the rope grooves of the diverting pulley 1015.
From the diverting pulley 1015, the ropes 1003 run
further on. In Extended Single Wrap roping, by using a
diverting pulley, the hoisting ropes are caused to
wrap around the traction sheave with a larger contact
angle than in ordinary Single Wrap roping. For exam-
ple, in the case illustrated in Fig. lOf, a contact
angle of about 270° between the ropes 1003 and the
traction sheave 1007 is obtained. The diverting pulley
1015 is fitted in position at an angle such that the
ropes run crosswise in a manner known in itself, so
that the ropes are not damaged. By virtue of the con-
tact angle achieved using Extended Single Wrap roping,
elevators implemented according to the invention can
use a very light elevator car and the elevator drive
machine can be placed e.g. in the free space above the
counterweight, thus allowing freer disposition of
other elevator components because there is more space
available. One possibility of increasing the contact
angle is illustrated in Fig. 10g, where the hoisting
ropes do not run crosswise relative to each other af-
ter wrapping around the traction sheave and/or divert-
ing pulley. By using a roping arrangement like this,
it is also possible increase the contact angle between
the hoisting ropes 1003 and the traction sheave 1007
of the drive machine 1006 to a magnitude substantially-
over 180°.
Figures 10a,b,c,d,f and g present different variations
of roping arrangements between the traction sheave and
the diverting pulley/diverting pulleys, in which the
ropes go downwards from the drive machine towards the
counterweight and the elevator car. In the case of an
elevator embodiment according to the invention with
machine below, these roping arrangements can be in-
verted and implemented in a corresponding manner so
that the ropes go upwards from the elevator drive ma-
chine towards the counterweight and the elevator car.
Fig. 11 presents yet another embodiment of the inven-
tion, wnerein the elevator drive machine 1106 is fit-
ted together with a diverting pulley 1115 on the same
mounting base 1121 in a ready-made unit 1120, which
can be fitted as such to form a part of an elevator
according to the invention. The unit contains the ele-
vator drive machine 1106, the traction sheave 1107 and
diverting pulley 1115 ready-fitted on the mounting
base 1121, the traction sheave and diverting pulley
being ready fitted at a correct operating angle rela-
tive to each other, depending on the roping arrange-
ment used between the traction sheave 1107 and the di-
verting pulley 1115. The unit 1120 may comprise more
than only one diverting pulley 1115, or it may only
comprise the drive machine 1106 fitted on the mounting
base 1121. The unit can be mounted in an elevator ac-
cording to the invention like a drive machine, the
mounting arrangement being described in greater detail
in connection with the previous figures. If necessary,
the unit can be used together with any of the roping
arrangements described above, such as e.g. embodiments
using ESW, DW, SW or XW roping. By fitting the above-
described unit as part of an elevator according to the
invention, considerable savings can be made in instal-
lation costs and in the time required for installa-
tion.
It is obvious to the person skilled in the art that
different embodiments of the invention are not limited
to the examples described above, but that they may be
varied within the scope of the following claims. For
instance, the number of times the hoisting ropes are
passed between the upper part of the elevator shaft
and the counterweight or elevator car is not a very
decisive question as regards the basic advantages of
the invention, although it is possible to achieve some
additional advantages by using multiple rope passages.
In general, embodiments should be so implemented that
the ropes go to the elevator car at most as many times
as to the counterweight. It is also obvious that the
hoisting ropes need not necessarily be passed under
the car; instead, they may also be passed over or
sideways past the elevator car. In accordance with the
examples described above, the skilled person can vary
the embodiment of the invention, while the traction
sheaves and rope pulleys, instead of being coated
metal pulleys, may also be uncoated metal pulleys or
uncoated pulleys made of some other material suited to
the purpose.
It is further obvious to the person skilled in the art
that the metallic traction sheaves and rope pulleys
used in the invention, which are coated with a non-
metallic material at least in the area of their
grooves, may be implemented using a coating material
consisting of e.g. rubber, polyurethane or some other
material suited to the purpose.
It is also obvious to the person skilled in the art
that the elevator car, the counterweight and the ma-
chine unit may be laid out in the cross-section of the
elevator shaft in a manner differing from the lay-out
described in the examples. Such a different lay-out
might be e.g. one in which the machine and the coun-
terweight are located behind the car as seen from the
shaft door and the ropes are passed under the car di-
agonally relative to the bottom of the car. Passing
the ropes under, the car in a diagonal or otherwise
oblique direction relative to the form of the bottom
provides an advantage when the suspension of the car
on the ropes is to be made symmetrical relative to the
center of mass of the elevator in other types of sus-
pension lay-out as well.
It is further obvious to the person skilled in the art
that the equipment required for the supply of power to
the motor and the equipment needed for elevator con-
trol can be placed elsewhere than in connection with
the machine unit, e.g. in a separate instrument panel.
It is also possible to fit pieces of equipment needed
for control into separate units which can then be dis-
posed in different places in the elevator shaft and/or
in other parts of the building. It is likewise obvious
to the skilled person that an elevator applying the
invention may be equipped differently from the exam-
ples described above. It is further obvious to the
skilled person that the suspension solutions according
to the invention can also be implemented using some
other type of flexible hoisting means as hoisting
ropes than the means described here, to achieve small
deflection diameters of the hoisting means, for exam-
ple by using flexible rope of one or more strands, flat
belt, cogged belt, trapezoidal belt or some other type
of belt applicable to the purpose, or even using dif-
ferent types of chains.
It is also obvious to the skilled person that, instead
of using ropes with a filler as illustrated in Fig. 5a
and 5b, the invention may be implemented using ropes
without filler, which are either lubricated or unlu-
bricated. In addition, it is also obvious to the per-
son skilled in the art that the ropes may be twisted
in many different ways. It is also obvious to the
skilled person that the average of the wire thick-
nesses may be understood as referring to a statisti-
cal, geometrical or arithmetical mean value. To deter-
mine a statistical average, the standard deviation or
Gauss distribution can be used. It is further obvious
that the wire thicknesses in the rope may vary, e.g.
even by a factor of 3 or more.
It is also obvious to the person skilled in the art
that the elevator of the invention can be implemented
using different roping arrangements for increasing the
contact angle a between the traction sheave and the
diverting pulley/diverting pulleys than those de-
scribed as examples. For example, it is possible to
dispose the diverting pulley/diverting pulleys, the
traction sheave and the hoisting ropes in other ways
than in the roping arrangements described in the exam-
ples.
WE CLAIM :
1. An elevator comprising a hoisting machine engaging a set of hoisting ropes by means of a
traction sheave, said set of hoisting ropes comprising hoisting ropes of substantially circular cross-
section, and in which elevator the set of hoisting ropes supports a counterweight and an elevator car
moving on their respective tracks, wherein the said substantially round hoisting rope has a thickness
below 8 mm and / or the diameter of the traction sheave is smaller than 320 mm and the overall
contact between the traction sheave and a hoisting rope exceed a contact angle of 180°, and the
weight of the hoisting machine of the elevator is at most 1/5 of the weight of the nominal load of the
elevator and / or the weight of the hoisting machine of the elevator is at most 100 kg.
2. Elevator as claimed in claim 1, wherein the said elevator is machineroomless.
3. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein between the traction sheave and the hoisting
ropes there is a continuous contact angle of at least 180°.
4. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the contact angle on the traction sheave consists
of 2 or more parts.
5. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the roping of the traction sheave is implemented
using ESW roping.
6. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the roping of the traction sheave is implemented
using DW roping,
7. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the roping of the traction sheave is implemented
using XW roping.
8. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the elevator car and / or the counterweight are
suspended with a suspension ratio of 2:1.
9. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the elevator car and / or the counterweight are
suspended with a suspension ratio of 1:1.
10. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the elevator car and / or the counterweight are
suspended with a suspension ratio of 3:1.
11. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the elevator car and / or the counterweight are
suspended with a suspension ratio of 4:1 or even with a higher suspension ratio.
12. Elevator as claimed in claim 1, wherein the counterweight is suspended n:1 and the car is
suspended m:1 and m is an integer at least 1 and n is an integer greater than m.
13. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the average of the wire thicknesses of the steel
wires of the hoisting ropes is 0.5mm, and that the strength of the steel wires is greater than 2000
N/mm2.
14. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the average of the wire thicknesses of the steel
wires of the hoisting ropes is greater than 0.1mm and less than 0.4mm.
15. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the average of the wire thicknesses of the steel
wires of the hoisting ropes is greater than 0.15 mm and less than 0.3mm.
16. Elevator as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein it is also implemented according to at least two
of the other preceding claims.
17. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the strength of the steel wires
of the hoisting ropes is greater than about 2300 N/mm2 and less than 2700 N/mm2.
18. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the outer diameter of the
traction sheave driven by the hoisting machine of the elevator is at most about 250 mm.
19. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the hoisting machine is of
gearless type.
20. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the hoisting machine is of
geared type.
21. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the rope of the overspeed
governor is thicker in diameter than the hoisting ropes.
22. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the overspeed governor rope
is of the same thicknesses in diameter as the hoisting ropes.
23. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the weight of the elevator
machine is at most 1/6 of the nominal load, preferably at most 1/8 of the nominal load, very
preferably less than 1/10 of the nominal load.
24. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the total weight of the
elevator machine and its supporting elements is at most 1/5 of the nominal load, preferably at most
1/8 of the nominal load.
25. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the diameter of the pulleys
(502) supporting the car is equal to or less than the height dimension of a horizontal beam (504)
comprised in the structure supporting the car.
26. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the pulleys (502) are placed
at least partially inside the beam (504).
27. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the track of the elevator car is
in an elevator shaft.
28. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein at least part of the spaces
between strands and / or wires in the hoisting ropes is filled with rubber, urethane or some other
medium of substantially non-fluid nature.
29. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the hoisting ropes have a
surface part made of rubber, urethane or some other non-metallic material.
30. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the hoisting ropes are
uncoated.
31. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the traction sheave and / or
rope pulleys are / is coated at least in their / its rope grooves with a non-metallic material.
32. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the traction sheave and / or
rope pulleys are / is made of a non-metallic material at least in the rim part comprising the rope
grooves.
33. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the traction sheave is
uncoated.
34. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the both the counter-weight
and the elevator car are suspended using a diverting pulley.
35. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the hoisting ropes are passed
under, over or sideways past the elevator car by means of diverting pulleys mounted on the elevator
car.
36. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein at least the traction sheave
and / or the rope pulleys form together with the hoisting ropes a material pair that allows the hoisting
rope to bite into the traction sheave and / or into the rope pulley after the coating on the traction
sheave has worn out.
37. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the elevator comprises a
mounting base on which the hoisting machine with the traction sheave and at least one diverting
pulley are mounted, and that the mounting base determines the relative positions of and distance
between the diverting pulley and the traction sheave.
39. Elevator as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein at least the elevator hoisting
machine, traction sheave, diverting pulley and mounting base have been fitted as a ready-made unit.
Elevator, preferably an elevator without machine room. In the elevator, a hoisting machine (6)
engages a set of hoisting ropes (3) by means of a traction sheave (7). The set of hoisting ropes
comprises hoisting ropes of substantially circular cross-section. The hoisting ropes support a
counterweight (2) and an elevator car (1) moving on their respective tracks (10, 11). The hoisting
rope has a thickness below 8mm and / or the diameter of the traction sheave (7) is smaller than 320
mm. The contact angle between the hoisting rope or hoisting ropes and the traction sheave is larger
than 180°.

Documents:

725-KOLNP-2004-CORRESPONDENCE 1.1.pdf

725-KOLNP-2004-CORRESPONDENCE 1.2.pdf

725-KOLNP-2004-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

725-KOLNP-2004-FORM 27.pdf

725-KOLNP-2004-FORM-27.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-abstract.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-assignment.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-claims.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-correspondence.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-description (complete).pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-drawings.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-examination report.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-form 1.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-form 18.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-form 3.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-form 5.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-gpa.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

725-kolnp-2004-granted-specification.pdf

725-KOLNP-2004-OTHERS 1.1.pdf

725-KOLNP-2004-PA 1.1.pdf

725-KOLNP-2004-PA.pdf


Patent Number 223073
Indian Patent Application Number 725/KOLNP/2004
PG Journal Number 36/2008
Publication Date 05-Sep-2008
Grant Date 03-Sep-2008
Date of Filing 31-May-2004
Name of Patentee KONE CORPORATION
Applicant Address KARTANONTIE 1, FIN-00330 HELSINKI
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 MUSTALAHTI JORMA RAIVAAJANTIE 13, FIN-05820 HYVINKAA
2 AULANKO ESKO KAENKATU 6 C 33 FIN-04230 KERAVA
PCT International Classification Number B66B 11/00
PCT International Application Number PCT/FI2003/000012
PCT International Filing date 2003-01-09
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 20020043 2002-01-09 Finland