Solution
Today, these requirements are met by the maintenance-free
polymer energy chains and
chainflex cables from igus. They are installed in the lifting gear on the mast of the storage and retrieval units and supply the systems with energy and data like an umbilical cord. Especially the fast lifting movements and vibrations at large unit heights or at high travel speeds place an extremely high load on the cables. Conventional cables can often form corkscrews, which can lead to core breakage.
This is why igus began developing special cables under the brand name
chainflex for dynamic use in energy chains back in 1989. A special feature is their specific structure consisting of cores wound in bundles. Here, the cores are not wound in layers around the centre of the cable, but are wound together in three, four or five cores, which are then wound together again to form a complete stranding of the bundles. Additionally, gusset-filling extruded inner jackets fill the spaces between the cores. The effect: The stranding cannot unravel and each core is moved equally in the inner and outer radius when moving in the energy chain. One-sided stretching and compression, which often lead to core ruptures or corkscrews, are a thing of the past.
But temperature-resistant cables are also important to viastore for use in deep-freeze warehouses. They have to cope with small bend radii and millions of strokes at very low temperatures. Not only the design principle but also the used materials qualify the cables for continuous use in this application. For example, in particularly cold ambient conditions, cables with specially developed highly cold-flexible TPE outer jacket materials are used.
But the variety of cable types in the igus range was also important to the customer. viastore can flexibly offer 1,244 chainflex cables – from control and servo cables up to motor and robot cables as well as bus, encoder and fibre-optic cables .