These gear-less traction machines remind me of the installation with an elevator system DMR I think it was New Zealand. Except, they were much larger massive driven sheave, double wrapped. The floor relays and selector were very precision engineering. These elevators were still powered by MG sets, which were mounted vertically. The building was a low rise just 15 floors.
@liftguy30wellington455 күн бұрын
PISS building had four of those, as did Rutherford house, Freyberg Building and the Breeze Plaza, they are all modernised now
@satoshiaaron15 күн бұрын
I wasnt even aware that Express operated in New Zealand
@the_alex_ellis_channel692315 күн бұрын
Express was MASSIVE in New Zealand. For most of the 20th century, the two main players were Express and OTIS. Following the demise of Express, most of their lifts in New Zealand ended up being maintained by Schindler, who often stuck their own name plates in them over the top of the Express one. Many Express lifts also received Schindler modernizations. This is one of the contributing factors as to why Schindler remains the most popular lift brand in New Zealand to this day,
@liftguy30wellington455 күн бұрын
ECC was the agent from them in NZ, Schindler purchased ECC in 1990, GEC than ran express in NZ until 1996 when Otis purchased the parent company
@BritishEngineer19 күн бұрын
ULP (Ultra Low Price)
@liftguy30wellington4518 күн бұрын
Universal lift processor, made with a Sinclair ZX81 processor and would run anything from a hydro to a VFD
@satoshiaaron15 күн бұрын
Reminds me of the DCP controllers that Express made, everyone called them "Dirty Cheap Processor" 😂. I'm assuming it would have actually stood for Digital Control Processor.