Abstract:
A component made of sintered oxides of indium and tin and a method of manufacturing such a component. The mean size of the oxide particles is larger than 2 .mu.m. The empirical density of the component is more than 95% of theoretical. The component is characterized in that at least 97 weight % of the oxide particles are solid solution crystals with a crystalline matrix of indium oxide. The method comprises molding a green body of a powder of indium-oxide and tin-oxide solid solution and sintering the green body at a temperature less than 1100.degree. C. and preferably between 800.degree. and 1050.degree. C.
Abstract:
An arrangement for converting rotary motion into translational motion in which a motion-transmission device that is movable translationally, is divided into two strings that move longitudinally along their direction of motion. A driving motor provides rotational motion through a rotary drive. The strings are guided transversely and are positioned outside of a guide where they become separated. The strings, on the other hand, become united inside the guide, and this guide prevents the strings from being movable from each other laterally. The strings have teeth on sides facing each other in vicinity of the guide, and these strings have ends secured to an intermediate component in the guide, remote from the rotary drive. The intermediate component is common to both strings, and they become disengaged in vicinity of the intermediate component.
Abstract:
A latch assembly for use in combination with slidable doors is disclosed. A rotatable disk is connected to the door so that the plane of the disk is perpendicular to the door and parallel to the direction of door movement. A lock bolt which projects from the door jam is adapted to engage a slot in the disk as the door closes, causing the disk to rotate. As the disk rotates, it slides with respect to a spring loaded latch bolt until the bolt slides through a second slot in the disk, when the door is fully closed. Efforts to effectuate a forced entry of the door cause the resulting forces to be passed primarily between the disk and the lock bolt, while the latch bolt's primary function is to prevent rotation of the disk. Thus, an attempted forced entry will not cause excessive forces to be placed on the latch bolt. The latch bolt is slidably connected to a conventional manually operated garage door handle assembly including a lock.
Abstract:
The present invention relates to a door drive, in particular a garage door drive, with a door control and with a programming unit for programming the door control during operation and/or maintenance of the door drive. In accordance with the invention, the programming unit is configured as an external device, wherein for operation and/or maintenance of the door drive a data transmission connection can be established between the programming unit and the door control.
Abstract:
The present invention pertains to a door drive housing with an assembly holding device for mounting an electric door drive assembly with at least one electric terminal, particularly of a transformer, wherein the assembly holding device contains preferably separable mounting means for mounting the assembly. According to the invention, the door drive housing is characterized in that the mounting means contain a plug-type receptacle, into which the assembly can be inserted, as well as snap-in means that positively interlock with the assembly during the insertion into the plug-type receptacle.
Abstract:
A method for monitoring motion of a drive-operable door body between open d closed positions. To monitor movement as sensitively as possible, an actually occurring course of movement is compared with a previously fixed nominal course. A signal for interrupting movement is generated when the nominal course and the actual course, and/or one of the derivations of these, differ from one another by a previously fixed amount.
Abstract:
A control system for an electrical motor drive for moving a door between end positions. The two end positions are detected by the control system, and an increment detector associated with the motor drive reproduces the movement cycle of the door. A stop associated with the motor drive marks an end position of the door that corresponds to the open position thereof. This open position is treated as a reference point. A pulse storage device is set to a specific value at this reference point and initiates the beginning of a pulse sequence to reproduce movement of the object between the end positions. The pulse sequence is compared for coincidence with pulses produced by the increment detector upon movement of the door into the opposite end position that corresponds to its closed position.
Abstract:
Transmission that converts a rotary into a translational motion and is preferably attached to a motorized drive assembly, with a rotary drive mechanism and a translationally channeled motion-transmitting component that is attached to the drive mechanism in the vicinity of a track and driven by the drive mechanism. A controller wheel is attached to the motion-transmitting component by way of a cogged gear that converts the translational motion of the motion-transmitting component into a rotary motion on the part of the activating wheel. At least one activating component on the controller wheel engages at least one switch in accordance with the angle of rotation of the controller wheel.
Abstract:
Methods are known for producing a body from a material susceptible to thermal cracking, in particular from an alloy, by casting a melt of the material in a mold with thermally insulated side walls and a bottom of material with good thermal conducting properties and cooling the melt in the casting mold, where the solid-liquid interface forming as the border between the melt and the already solidified material essentially extends parallel to the bottom and, in the course of the solidification of the melt, moves from the bottom in the direction of the exposed surface of the melt. In order to provide a simple and cost-effective method, for producing plate-shaped bodies of material susceptible to thermal cracking, which permits the casting of crack-free and homogeneous bodies, the melt is poured into a casting mold, the temperature of which in degrees Celsius corresponds maximally to a third of the liquidus temperature of the material and is cast in the shape of a rectangular plate with a plate thickness in the range between 5 mm and 20 mm, where in the course of solidification of the melt, the solid-liquid interface moves essentially in the direction of one of the long sides of the plate.