The first time kids encounter an
escalator, it can seem like a magical contraption. You have to step
onto a moving floor that suddenly becomes a moving staircase. At the top
of the escalator, you step off and it disappears below your feet.
How does this work? Is it magic?
Nope, it's just a marvel of science and technology. Let's take a
closer look at exactly how escalators work.
Although escalators can be quite
large and expensive to install and operate, they're
fairly simple technologically. Basically, escalators are a variation of
the simple conveyor belt.
Inside an escalator, a pair of
chains wraps around two pairs of gears that are driven by an electric
motor. The motor and chains sit within a metal structure known as the
truss, which extends between the floors served by the escalator.
Unlike a conveyor belt, which
moves a flat surface, the chains in an escalator move a series of steps. Each
step has two sets of wheels that roll on separate tracks.
The upper wheels are connected to
the moving chain that pulls them along. The bottom wheels roll along in a
separate track that's spaced precisely to ensure that the steps always
remain level.
The steps are also designed in
such a way that they collapse on each other to create a flat platform at the
top and bottom of the escalator. This makes it easier for escalator riders to
get on and off the escalator safely.
To make the ride more stable,
escalators also feature a handrail that moves at the same speed as the steps.
The handrail consists of a rubber conveyor belt that loops around a series of
wheels powered by the escalator's electric motor.
Although escalators can't move
dozens of people many stories, they can move much larger groups of people
shorter distances. Experts estimate that an escalator moving 145 feet per minute
can carry about 10,000 people per hour.
So while they're not technologically complicated,
escalators do seem to work like magic and make getting from one level to
another in shopping malls and airports much easier. They haven't always been
called escalators, though. Some early nicknames included "magic
stairway," "traveling staircase," and "inclined elevator."
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