

Haul Rope replacement frequency.
#3
Posted 12 March 2009 - 12:44 PM
#5
Posted 12 March 2009 - 02:41 PM
#7
Posted 13 March 2009 - 09:01 AM
aug, on Mar 12 2009, 10:41 PM, said:
Interesting. By this I am guessing you mean that the rope stretches over time. The temperature required for steel to creep is greater than 300 degrees C, so what is happening ? Does the weave of the rope flatten/stretch ?
#8
Posted 13 March 2009 - 09:44 AM
pete_dl, on Mar 13 2009, 10:01 AM, said:
The core is wearing out making the diameter smaller and the length longer. Steel expands and contracts with tempreture . I expect the tension carriage to be in different postions vs. a hot day and cold day. I believe this is due to the thermal expansion/ contraction of the steel. ( Please correct me if I am wrong). As for the Lay length and Diameter of the rope, as the rope ages under tension and use, the core "breaks in " lengthening the rope . This is why in the past (before solid core ropes) that a resplice was usually needed in the first years of the lift with a new haul rope. As the core wears the strands of the rope come into contact with each other. The result of this is called "nicking". The wire in the strands( inside the rope) will show were wire to wire contact is being made. (Splicer should post a link to a wire rope page.)Hope this helps
This post has been edited by aug: 13 March 2009 - 09:47 AM
#10
Posted 13 March 2009 - 07:07 PM
In general, and ignoring the very lift-specific detail parameters, revolving "average" haulage ropes on "average" ski lifts serve some 20 years on fixed grip lifts, that a running at 400 fpm.
Rope life is based more on rope cycles, bending cycles around the bull wheels and cycles over the sheave assemblies rather than number of years on the rope.
With a range of 90,000---120,000 expectable rope cycles, the speed, the length of the lift, and the number of service hours are decisive for a rope life expectancy:
Example: "average" lift length 4000 ft.
rope length 8000 ft.
"average" lift speed 400 fpm 1000 fpm
rope cycles per hour 3 7.5
rope cycles per ski season (1200 hrs) 3600 9000
min. expectable rope life 25 seasons 10 seasons
max. expectable rope life 33 seasons 13.3 seasons
This does not consider outside influencing factors such as routine maintenance (how often the rope was lubed), quality of the rope, quality and condition of the splice, if the rope was initially installed correctly, as well as the drive and line machinery quality (proper alignment), all of which contribute to the life expectancy of the rope.
Calculating Cycles Per Hour
Rope Length = 8000 ft.
Lift Speed = 1000 fpm
1000 fpm/ = 1 ft./min./ = 1 cycle / X 60 min. / = 7.5 cycles/
8000 ft. 8ft. 8 min. 1 hour hour
divide by
1000 to
simplify
Rope Length 8000 ft.
Lift Speed 400 fpm
400 fpm/ 60 min /
8000 ft. 1 hour
Divide rope speed by lift length then multiply by 60 = cycles per hour.
I couldn't figure out the underline for divided by so the "/" will have to do. ex. 1000fpm/8000ft. in the example above.
In my experience in inspecting wire rope, lay length and diameter generally never are the cause for rope retirement, the most common cause for rope retirement is the splice where work hardening makes it no longer possible to splice the rope. Hope this helps in this discussion.
Attached File(s)
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Rope_Life.pdf (27.85K)
Number of downloads: 61
#14
Posted 20 March 2009 - 06:49 AM
Kicking Horse, on Mar 19 2009, 06:55 PM, said:
Length and speed. Twice as long and twice as fast would have the life, not including other factors as mentioned above.
Similar with insert clips. Inspection & relocation intervals should be determined more by cycles around the bullwheel than just straight operating hours.
#16
Posted 25 March 2009 - 07:37 PM
#18
Posted 26 March 2009 - 06:34 AM
moura39, on Mar 25 2009, 09:31 AM, said:
Although I'm not certain about the question you are asking, I think I might understand it a little. One cycle is the cable going uphill and coming back downhill. So it goes around both bullwheels to be a complete cycle. Hope that helps.
#19
Posted 26 March 2009 - 07:43 AM
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