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Major Nikon

(36,818 posts)
9. I'm somewhat familiar with elevators going back to the 50's and up
Thu Jan 12, 2012, 09:46 PM
Jan 2012

The older ones I've seen haven't been any more or less reliable than newer ones, but they do tend to get renovated every other decade or so. The things that tend to wear out are the sensors that tell when the doors are activated or the location of the floor. The wiring that goes to the car tends to have problems because it moves all the time. Wires get old and crack and connections start to fail. In typical installations you have one small room on top of the elevator shaft one floor above the highest floor the elevator services. This houses the electrical service, the motor, the gearbox, and the control circuitry. We call this the elevator penthouse or machine room.

The earliest electric elevators didn't have control circuitry that told the elevator what floor it was on or exactly where the floor was. So they required an elevator operator who had a big rheostat (I think) type control that fed an AC motor(again I'm guessing) in the penthouse. I think an elevator from the 20's would be of this design. More modern controls were added as the elevators were renovated.

A typical renovation replaces all the sensors, wiring, and control circuits. This often requires a new panel inside the car. Often the motor, gearbox, and brake are replaced or overhauled along with the steel cables. The car itself is rarely replaced on an elevator, along with the rails inside the shaft. Pulleys and/or bearings are replaced or overhauled.

Most people who have their elevator renovated get an elevator company to do it. Most states require periodic inspections of public use elevators by certified elevator repair people. I don't know if these certifications are required to work on or renovate an elevator. If our elevators require anything more than a reset, we call the elevator folks with whom we have a contract.

try Otis elevators maybe Angry Dragon Jan 2012 #1
Thanks. wryter2000 Jan 2012 #2
dunno if you can find it, but there was a dirty jobs about this. mopinko Jan 2012 #3
Thanks wryter2000 Jan 2012 #6
Well, if your story were in Boston, the elevators would run on DC current Warpy Jan 2012 #10
The operator caught me watching him as he man-handled the control levers Kolesar Jan 2012 #4
LOL wryter2000 Jan 2012 #7
What exactly would you want to know? Stinky The Clown Jan 2012 #5
I only want it to get stuck between floors for a while wryter2000 Jan 2012 #8
I'm somewhat familiar with elevators going back to the 50's and up Major Nikon Jan 2012 #9
Thank you wryter2000 Jan 2012 #12
This message was self-deleted by its author Tesha Jan 2012 #14
can't it just be a power outage?? n/t NMDemDist2 Jan 2012 #11
Thanks. That could be an option wryter2000 Jan 2012 #13
There's some good elevator stuff in Arthur Hailey's "Hotel"... n/t TygrBright Sep 2013 #17
Than you! wryter2000 Sep 2013 #18
This message was self-deleted by its author Tesha Jan 2012 #15
Thank you! wryter2000 Jan 2012 #16
Send me a mail Tetrachloride Feb 2019 #19
Hi, I posted this a long time ago wryter2000 Feb 2019 #20
Post removed Post removed Nov 2019 #21
The opening post is asking about elevators left-of-center2012 Nov 2019 #22
Sorry I missed it wryter2000 Nov 2019 #23
Anything to boost our post count, right? left-of-center2012 Nov 2019 #24
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