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BS 5655-2:1988

Superseded

Superseded

A superseded Standard is one, which is fully replaced by another Standard, which is a new edition of the same Standard.

View Superseded by
superseded

A superseded Standard is one, which is fully replaced by another Standard, which is a new edition of the same Standard.

Lifts and service lifts Safety rules for the construction and installation of hydraulic lifts

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF

Superseded date

15-11-1998

Language(s)

English

Published date

30-06-1988

National foreword
Cooperating organizations
0 Introduction
1 Scope and field of application
2 References
3 Definitions
4 Symbols and abbreviations
5 Lift well
6 Machine and pulley rooms
7 Landing doors
8 Car and counterweight
9 Suspension, precautions against free fall, descent
     with excessive speed and creeping of the car
10 Guides, buffers and final limit switches
11 Clearances between the car and the lift well wall,
     and between car and counterweight
12 Machine, jack and other hydraulic equipment
13 Electric installations and appliances
14 Protection against electric faults; controls;
     priorities
15 Notices and operating instructions
16 Examinations; tests; register; servicing
Appendices
A Conditions for use of electric safety devices
B Unlocking triangle
C Technical dossier
D Examination and tests before going into service
E Periodical examinations and tests. Examinations and
     tests after an important modification or after an
     accident
F Test procedures for type examination
F.0 Introduction
F.1 Landing door locking devices
F.2 Landing doors
F.3 Safety gear
F.4 Overspeed governors
F.5 Energy accumulation type buffers with buffered
     return movement and energy dissipation buffers
G Recommendations for fire protection
National appendices
V National variations
W Corresponding British Standards for International
     Standards and for CENELEC Harmonization Documents
     referred to
X National alphabetical index
Y National Committees responsible for this British
     Standard

Requirements for passenger and goods lifts to safeguard passengers and maintenance personnel against injury. Covers mechanical and electrical construction, relevant structural features of the building in which it is installed and subsequent examination and testing.

ⓃThis standard deals with permanently installed new lifts serving defined landing levels, having a car designed for the transportation of persons and/or goods, suspended by rope(s) or chain(s) or supported by one or more rams and moving at least partially between vertical guides or guides slightly inclined to the vertical. [For appliances where the inclination of the guides to the vertical exceeds 15°, this standard may usefully be taken as a basis (N.a, b).] ⓃIt does not cover the lifts which come under the following headings: paternosters, rack and pinion elevators, screw-driven elevators, mine lifts, theatrical lifts, appliances with automatic caging, skips, lifts and hoists for building and public works sites, ships’ hoists, platforms for exploration or drilling at sea, construction and maintenance appliances. However, this standard may usefully be taken as a basis. This standard need not be applied (N.a) in the following cases: a lift installed in a private residence or as a means of access to a private residence in a building, such that the lift is inaccessible to the other occupants of the building and to the general public, and if there are specific national rules concerning this type of lift; Ⓝthe installation of lifts serving only two levels, specialized for transporting the handicapped and where the travel does not exceed 4m, the speed does not exceed 0.1m/s, and the movement of the car requires continuous pressure on a button. Certain clauses need not be applied (N.b) to the extent that space does not permit, in the following cases: lifts installed in buildings in existence at the time this standard is brought into application; important modifications (AppendixE) to a lift installed before this standard is brought into application. This standard is divided into four Parts. Part1: deals with electric lifts; Part2: deals with hydraulic lifts; Part3: deals with electric service lifts (in preparation); Part4: deals with hydraulic service lifts (in preparation).

Committee
MHE/4
DevelopmentNote
Superseded by BS EN 81-2 but remains current. Inactive for the new design. (04/2005) Supersedes 83/74338 DC and BS 5655-2(1983) (08/2005)
DocumentType
Standard
Pages
98
PublisherName
British Standards Institution
Status
Superseded
SupersededBy
Supersedes

BS 5900:1980 Specification for powered homelifts
HD 384.4.41 S2:1996/A1:2002 ELECTRICAL INSTALLATIONS OF BUILDINGS - PART 4: PROTECTION FOR SAFETY - CHAPTER 41: PROTECTION AGAINST ELECTRIC SHOCK
BS 5655-10:1986 Lifts and service lifts Specification for the testing and inspection of electric and hydraulic lifts
BS 5901:1980 Method of test for determining the comparative and the proof tracking indices of solid insulating materials under moist conditions
BS 6004:1984 Specification for PVC-insulated cables (non-armoured) for electric power and lighting
BS 5655-6:1985 Lifts and service lifts Code of practice for selection and installation
ISO 834:1975 Fire-resistance tests — Elements of building construction
BS 5588-5:1986 Fire precautions in the design and construction of buildings. Code of practice for firefighting stairways and lifts
IEC 60364-3:1993 Electrical installations of buildings - Part 3: Assessment of general characteristics
ISO 2532:1974 Steel wire ropes Vocabulary
BS 5655-12:1989 Lifts and service lifts Recommendations for the installations of new, and the modernization of, hydraulic lifts in existing buildings
BS 5424-1:1977 Specification for controlgear for voltages up to and including 1000 V a.c. and 1200 V d.c. Contactors

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