Technology Category
- Functional Applications - Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES)
- Sensors - Autonomous Driving Sensors
Applicable Industries
- Buildings
- Cement
Applicable Functions
- Logistics & Transportation
- Product Research & Development
Use Cases
- Building Automation & Control
- Onsite Human Safety Management
Services
- System Integration
About The Customer
Champion Elevators Inc. is a Texas-based company that specializes in the design and installation of rack-and-pinion driven elevators. The company is a leader in its field and its elevators are used in a variety of settings including high-rise construction sites, offshore oil and gas rigs, refineries and power plants, port facilities and shipyards, and on ships. The company's basic design includes a tower assembled from standard segments, rigid ties to connect it to the exterior of the structure, electrically powered rack-and-pinion drives, sheet metal elevator cars, automatic braking, and spring-like buffers at the bottoms of the towers. The company prides itself on its ability to custom engineer unique products and each product is made to rigid specifications, as determined by the client and its own engineers. The company employs 150 people.
The Challenge
Champion Elevators Inc., a Texas-based leader in the design and installation of rack-and-pinion driven elevators, faced the challenge of redesigning cost-effective, yet safe elevators that conform to the stringent building and electrical codes of the high-rise construction industry. The company had to ensure that their elevators met two different sets of standards - regulatory building and electrical codes, and safety standards that are essentially physical properties. After almost three decades in the business, Champion Elevators knew that conformance to building codes was a must. Given the obvious risks, engineers at Champion ran every job through analysis. Assuring safety and conformance to the codes and regulations fell into two very different types of engineering analyses. Safety assurances of the elevator — essentially measuring maximum stresses and ensuring adequate safety margins — was handled with ANSYS DesignSpace® software for finite element modeling and finite element analysis (FEM/FEA) from ANSYS Inc.
The Solution
Champion Elevators used ANSYS DesignSpace to cut weight and cost on elevator cars while conforming to safety regulations. The company began re-engineering its products in 2000 to reduce weight and cost and simplify manufacturing. The major re-engineering effort went into the structure of the elevator car to reduce its weight, simplify its manufacturing processes and cut costs. The car redesign replaced the four springs with two urethane shock absorber systems. They weigh less, cost less, and simplified manufacturing since only two buffer attachment points were needed rather than four spring pods. A new landing gate door was designed not by engineers armed with computers and finite element software but by a long-time employee who did his calculations by hand. The redesign made them smaller and stronger. In fact, they got a much better safety factor so lighter steel could be used. They used DesignSpace to make sure the margins of safety were protected.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
Case Study missing?
Start adding your own!
Register with your work email and create a new case study profile for your business.
Related Case Studies.
Case Study
Energy Saving & Power Monitoring System
Recently a university in Taiwan was experiencing dramatic power usage increases due to its growing number of campus buildings and students. Aiming to analyze their power consumption and increase their power efficiency across 52 buildings, the university wanted to build a power management system utilizing web-based hardware and software. With these goals in mind, they contacted Advantech to help them develop their system and provide them with the means to save energy in the years to come.
Case Study
System 800xA at Indian Cement Plants
Chettinad Cement recognized that further efficiencies could be achieved in its cement manufacturing process. It looked to investing in comprehensive operational and control technologies to manage and derive productivity and energy efficiency gains from the assets on Line 2, their second plant in India.
Case Study
Intelligent Building Automation System and Energy Saving Solution
One of the most difficult problems facing the world is conserving energy in buildings. However, it is not easy to have a cost-effective solution to reduce energy usage in a building. One solution for saving energy is to implement an intelligent building automation system (BAS) which can be controlled according to its schedule. In Indonesia a large university with a five floor building and 22 classrooms wanted to save the amount of energy being used.
Case Study
Powering Smart Home Automation solutions with IoT for Energy conservation
Many industry leaders that offer Smart Energy Management products & solutions face challenges including:How to build a scalable platform that can automatically scale-up to on-board ‘n’ number of Smart home devicesData security, solution availability, and reliability are the other critical factors to deal withHow to create a robust common IoT platform that handles any kind of smart devicesHow to enable data management capabilities that would help in intelligent decision-making
Case Study
Commercial Building Automation Boosts Energy Efficiency
One of the challenges to building automation is the multitude of non-interoperable communications protocols that have evolved over the years. Buildings have several islands of automation. Bridging the islands of different automation without losing the considerable investment in each specialized control network is the main focus in this solution.