By | Jul 09, 2011
Special solution built with SHE 200 worm-gear screw jacks features closed-circuit oil cooling for galvanizing plants
Lifting heavy loads under the harshest of conditions has always been one of the specialties for the jacking systems from Pfaff-silberblau Hebezeuge GmbH, with headquarters in the Southern German town of Kissing. With a clever special jacking system based on its versatile SHE worm-gear screw jacks, the company is now reducing downtimes for the steel industry’s galvanizing lines. The crucial feature: A special sensor monitors the temperature of the gearbox oil, and an active cooling circuit keeps it at the ideal level. Simultaneously, a contactless sensor constantly monitors the temperature at the screw and does not turn off the system unless there is a risk of overheating. In this way, system operators can ensure that their systems remain functional, but also help to minimize operational interruptions.
Industrial manufacturing of galvanized steel sheet – a material that is employed in the packaging and automobile industries, for example – is accomplished with continuous galvanizing lines (CGLs). Here, a steel strip is pulled continuously through a galvanizing bath and then rolled up. At the heart of these plants are zinc pot furnaces, in which the metal is melted and kept in a liquid state. Most CGLs have two such pots available, each of which contains a different zinc alloy. These pots are then employed according to the specific needs. To make this possible, the required pot is moved on a rail system (which is located one story beneath the production line) from its parked position to the jacking system. From there, this system lifts the pot into the production line. Lifting these pots, which weigh about 500 t, by a height of two meters requires a lifting system that is powerful and, above all, robust. Moreover, the steel industry is increasingly calling for shorter down times. This is because the shorter the screw jack’s cycles are, the greater the production line’s speed and flexibility can be.
With a special system, Pfaff-silberblau is now meeting the stringent demands facing an international steelmaker. At the heart of the jacking system are four size “SHE 200” worm-gear screw jacks von Pfaff-silberblau, which are driven by a central motor via bevel gearboxes and connecting shafts. The outstanding feature offered by these Southern German specialists for drive technology is the constant monitoring of the temperatures for both the oil used to lubricate the gearbox and for the spindles themselves. To make this possible, a special sensor continuously acquires temperature data for the lubricant. If a preset limit is reached, an active cooling circuit goes into action to ensure that the system remains at the plant-specific temperature level. The temperature of the worm-gear screw, which absorbs a large portion of the heat that arises, is constantly monitored via a contactless temperature sensor. If this sensor measures an impermissibly high value, the system automatically turns off to prevent overheating.
For users, this means that the jacking system can be used right up until the point that a certain temperature limit is reached, at which time the system automatically powers down. Conventional systems, on the other hand, require a cool-down period of up to eight hours after each work cycle – which results in expensive downtimes that can be avoided by employing the special Pfaff-silberblau solution.
The cooling circuit for the new Pfaff-silberblau jacking system consists of a pump unit, supply and return lines, as well as an oil/air cooler fitted with a cooling fan. Furthermore, a level sensor checks the oil level in the screw jack and the control unit only authorizes use of the jacking system if the level is high enough.
In order to reduce the amount of manual maintenance required and simultaneously optimize spindle lubrication, the jacking system is equipped with a central lubricant pump. This pump adds lubricant at the relevant areas of the spindle and nut system while taking the current direction of travel into consideration during the lifting and lowering of loads.
Pfaff-silberblau is providing information on the versatility of its SHE worm-gear screw jacks and the other products from its corporate portfolio at Motek 2010 in Stuttgart, Germany (booth 5428, hall 5). The company’s subsidiary ALLTEC Antriebstechnik GmbH with headquarters in Heilbronn, Germany, is also represented at the booth with its latest flagship products, the TELESTO and PHOENIX lifting columns and the TARVOS linear actuators.
Further information about Pfaff-silberblau is available at www.pfaff-silberblau.com
For 150 years we have been a technological leader in motion and lifting technology.
Whether turnkey lifting systems for trains and buses, spindle lifting elements, electromechanical components of linear drive technology or hoists
for steel and heavy industry, logistics, stage technology, offshore installations and ATEX areas.
Customers worldwide benefit from our products, services and complete solutions from project planning to maintenance.
Learn everything you need to know about the screw jacks available from Columbus McKinnon including the two types of screw jack systems, the main types of screw jacks (machine and ball) and, available features (stainless steel, anti-backlash, ,heavy-duty and more).
Hardly any other workplace has such harsh environmental conditions as a steel mill. In the face of scorching heat and the greatest dirt, the heavy work is mainly carried out by machines – and for this they must also be designed to be particularly robust. Pfaff-silberblau Hebezeugfabrik GmbH, Kissing, has developed a special push tube construction based on the SHE 150 for the adjustment of casting trolleys for the continuous foundry of a large German steel manufacturer. This encapsulated system solution from the Kissinger drive technology specialist has passed its "acid test" in the foundry and is now also suitable for other applications in heavy industry in which high loads have to be moved under unfavorable environmental conditions.
In the South African Karoo semi-desert, astronomers working on the MeerKAT project are using 64 radio telescopes from the German manufacturer Vertex Antennentechnik to explore space. The elevation movement of the antennas is effected using the innovative technology from Columbus McKinnon Engineered Products.
Last year saw the start of a major construction project in Kazakhstan designed to establish the ferry terminal in Kuryk on the shores of the Caspian Sea as the hub for the transhipment-free transportation of goods to Europe. Columbus McKinnon Engineered Products, working closely with the local company in St. Petersburg/Russia, is now fitting this construction site out with two giant loading bridges each with 24 Pfaff-silberblau special screw jacks SHE 150.1 in addition to 48 special gear motors and, in doing so, is creating the technical basis that will allow entire freight trains to quickly drive in and out of the ferries before the end of the year.
PHOENIX telescopic lifting columns from Columbus McKinnon Engineered Products can be used in a variety of applications, as illustrated by the current example of a special test bench application at the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin. Here, the Pfaff-silberblau lifting column PHOENIX takes over the manual height adjustment when guiding a photon beam to experimental stations (beamlines) – as sensitively as possible and backlash-free in order to guide the photon beam precisely through narrow apertures. The telescopic lifting column should therefore be as stiff as possible and the telescopic guide free of side play. Due to its technical design, Pfaff-silberblau's PHOENIX telescopic lifting column was able to meet the high demands of scientists in the standard version so well that no additional design effort was required for the height adjustment.
In the summer of 2015, the region's first storm surge barrier will be inaugurated in Greifswald on the German Baltic Sea coast. Columbus McKinnon Engineered Products, Kissing, uses its PFAFF-silberblau SHE screw jacks to position the sliding gates of the harbour promenade to protect against flooding.
The “Iron Gate”, on the Danube River in the southern Carpathian Mountains on the border from Romania to Serbia, is regarded as one of the most impressive gorges in Europe. Two river power stations built in 1972 – “Iron Gate” 1 and 2 – with a lockage had tamed what had been up until then the most dangerous section of the Danube River for navigation. For the maintenance of this lockage, Columbus McKinnon Engineered Products GmbH, Kissing/Germany, has now designed and installed a special lifting device. The linear lifting solution consists of four high-precision and proven heavy-duty screw jack elements SHE 100.1 made by Pfaff-silberblau. These lift and lower the heavy lock gate weighing some 200 t by 700 mm – with a deviation of less than 0.1 mm.
For natural gas filter towers in the Saudi-Arabian desert, Columbus McKinnon Engineered Products GmbH, Kissing/Germany, has developed and installed a special lifting and traversing system for exchanging filter elements. This involves the use of 19 specially designed trolleys in three different sizes and eight gantry cranes made from ATEX-compliant lifting elements and electric wire rope winches from Pfaff-silberblau. This extremely heavy-duty special solution is capable of withstanding temperatures of up to 50 degrees Celsius, sand and dust and even the explosive environment.
Thanks to their robust design, the successful SHE screw jack elements from Pfaff-silberblau are perfectly equipped for use in difficult environmental conditions. Designed specifically for use in the extremely aggressive conditions of the paper industry, the company Columbus McKinnon Engineered Products GmbH (Kissing/Germany) has now extended its versatile SHE range with the option “stainless”. The newly developed SSP series from Pfaff-silberblau with integrally cast swivel brackets is easy to clean and satisfies with ease the exacting requirements with regard to corrosion protection in the paper making and processing industry.
Reliable and safe performance is essential also in lifting applications for outdoor use as well as in aggressive and hygienically critical environmental conditions. Columbus McKinnon Engineered Products GmbH, Kissing (Germany), has extended its versatile SHE series of the Pfaff-silberblau brand with a “stainless” option.
With its innovative new design and featuring fully rust-proof components, the SHE-S series meets exacting of requirements in terms of corrosion protection and cleanability with its corrosion-resistant design. Also thanks to its cost-effective construction, the SHE-S “stainless” series by Pfaff-silberblau is attracting more and more customers, particularly from the food processing industry, pharmaceutical industry, paper industry, petrol industry as well as from steel hydraulics construction.
AGV - ifting units for automotive industry
Columbus McKinnon Engineered Products is now supplying Pfaff-silberblau HEK10.1 lifting units as standard equipment to KUKA for integration into the KMP 1500 Mobile Platform. The lifting unit is a special development according to DIN EN 1494:2009-05 and EN 1570-1:2011+A1:2014 "Safety requirements for lifting tables" specifically for this automated guided vehicle, which moves around autonomously. With a lifting capacity of 10 kN per lifting unit, large loads can be moved around very flexibly on the small, manoeuvrable platform and moved vertically at speeds of 50 mm/s over a lifting path of 200 mm. Thanks to its two lifting units, the KMP 1500 transports loads weighing up to 1.5 tonnes safely through production and warehouses.