Claims
- 1. A self-propelled amphibious toy vehicle for operation along the surface of a pool of water and on a steep, irregular nonwater surface; said vehicle having wheel means that contribute to propulsion along both such surfaces and that contribute to flotation during operation along the surface of such pool of water, and said vehicle also having a steerable water jet that contributes to propulsion of the vehicle along such water surface and that steers the vehicle; said vehicle being for use with electrical battery means, and comprising:
- a frame;
- hollow wheel means comprising substantially overscale hollow front wheel means and substantially overscale hollow rear wheel means mounted to the frame for rolling rotation about respective mutually parallel but spaced-apart front and rear axes, and extending below the frame to effect propulsion of the vehicle along such a water surface and along such a steep, irregular nonwater surface, the volume-to-weight ratio of each of said wheel means being sufficiently high to contribute significantly to flotation of the vehicle in water;
- cleated tires mounted to the wheel means, the cleats being adapted and sufficiently pronounced to propel the vehicle along such a water surface when generally each wheel means is partly submerged in such water;
- an electric motor mounted to the frame and operatively connected to drive at least one of the wheel means;
- means mounted to the frame to releasably support such electrical battery means and to electrically connect such battery means to power the motor;
- an impeller rotatably mounted to the frame and disposed for immersion in such water when the vehicle is in operation along such a water surface, the impeller having an intake side and an exhaust side;
- an impeller housing mounted to the frame and disposed to guide such water:
- from such pool to the intake side of the impeller, and
- from the exhaust side of the impeller as a water jet back into such pool, to aid in propelling the vehicle;
- at least part of the impeller housing being manually rotatable relative to the frame, to point the exhaust jet in a desired direction so as to control the vehicle's trajectory; and
- means, rotatably mounted to the frame and powered from the motor, for driving the impeller;
- an output driveshaft that forms a part of the motor;
- a pinion gear mounted to and driven by the driveshaft;
- a worm rotatably mounted to the frame and powered from the pinion;
- a worm gear rotatably mounted to the frame, and meshed with and directly driven from the worm, and driving at least one of the wheel means; and
- the impeller driving means also being powered from the pinion.
- 2. The toy vehicle of claim 1, wherein the impeller-driving means comprise:
- an impeller gear mounted to the impeller for rotation therewith; and
- an extension of the pinion gear, mounted to engage and drive the impeller gear;
- whereby the water jet and said at least one of the wheel means are driven from the pinion in common through a small number of moving parts, but at different speeds to accommodate the differing drive-speed requirements of a water jet and a wheel means.
- 3. The toy vehicle of claim 2, wherein:
- the impeller gear is a crown gear coaxial with the impeller.
- 4. The vehicle of claim 2, wherein:
- said at least one driven wheel means are mounted to the frame by means of a corresponding axle that rotates with the driven wheel means;
- the worm gear is mounted to the axle for rotation with the axle and for sliding motion along the axle; and
- the worm gear is manually slidable along the axle into and out of engagement with the worm.
- 5. The toy vehicle of claim 4, wherein:
- the impeller comprises a plurality of vanes disposed in a substantially circular array about a generally open center, the vanes being oriented to take in such water from the center and exhaust such water toward the periphery of the array, when the impeller is rotated in a particular sense; and
- the impeller housing defines:
- a central aperture that is disposed adjacent to the center intake of the array of vanes, and
- a peripheral enclosure surrounding the periphery of the array, except for an exhaust aperture in the enclosure;
- the exhaust aperture being manually rotatable with respect to the frame, to point the exhaust jet in a desired direction so as to control the vehicle's trajectory.
- 6. The vehicle of claim 5, for use with electrical battery means that comprise a dry-cell battery; said vehicle having, when such battery means are in use therewith, major weight components positioned to provide a generally symmetrical and balanced arrangement; wherein:
- the frame defines a chassis having upright walls defining an interior compartment;
- the electric motor is mounted in the interior compartment; and
- at least major portions of the pinion gear, worm gear, and impeller-driving means, the motor, and such battery means, when such battery means are supported in the supporting means, being at approximately the same height as the front and rear wheel means;
- whereby the vehicle is stable in operation even when driven along such water surface and even when driven along such steep, irregular nonwater surface.
- 7. The toy vehicle of claim 6, wherein:
- the motor driveshaft is oriented parallel with the direction of propulsion of the vehicle on such nonwater surface, and extends out of the motor at two opposite ends of the motor, both forwardly and rearwardly with respect to the direction of propulsion of the vehicle;
- a duplicate pinion, worm, and worm gear are provided at each end of the vehicle, driven by the respective ends of the driveshaft.
- 8. A self-propelled amphibious toy vehicle for operation along the surface of a pool of water and on a steep, irregular nonwater surface; said vehicle having major weight components positioned to provide weight in a generally symmetrical and balanced arrangement so that said vehicle is stable in operation even when driven along such water surface and even when driven along such steep, irregular nonwater surface; said vehicle being for use with electrical battery means that comprise a dry-cell battery; said vehicle having, when such battery means are in use therewith, major weight components positioned to provide a generally symmetrical and balanced arrangement; and comprising:
- a frame in the form of a chassis having upright walls defining an interior compartment;
- hollow wheel means comprising hollow front wheel means and hollow rear wheel means mounted to the frame for rolling rotation about respective mutually parallel but spaced-apart front and rear axes, and extending below the frame to effect propulsion of the vehicle along such a water surface and along such a steep, irregular nonwater surface, the volume-to-weight ratio of each of said wheel means being sufficiently high to contribute significantly to flotation of the vehicle in water;
- cleated tires mounted to the wheel means, the cleats being adapted and sufficiently pronounced to propel the vehicle along such a water surface when generally the bottom half of each wheel means is submerged in such water and generally the top half of each wheel means is above such water; and
- wherein the overall flotation characteristics of the vehicle are such that when the vehicle is placed in a sufficiently deep pool of water the vehicle floats with generally the bottom half of each wheel means submerged in such water and generally the top half of each wheel means above such water;
- an electric motor that is mounted to the frame, within the interior compartment, and that has a driveshaft which extends from the motor and which is operatively connected to drive at least one of the wheel means, said at least one of the wheel means being mounted to the frame by means of a corresponding axle which is positioned at the corresponding axis of that wheel means and which rotates with that wheel means;
- means mounted to the frame to releasably support such electrical battery means;
- said frame, said motor and said battery means when supported in the support means not protruding any appreciable distance below the level of said front and rear axes in the area between said front and rear wheel means;
- means for electrically connecting such battery means, when supported in the supporting means, to the motor, so that the battery means power the motor;
- a pinion gear mounted to and driven by the driveshaft;
- a worm rotatably mounted to the frame and powered from the pinion;
- at least major portions of the motor, the pinion gear, the worm, and such battery means, when such battery means are supported in the supporting means, being at approximately the same height as the front and rear wheel means; and
- a worm gear that is rotatably mounted to the axle for rotation with the axle and for sliding motion along the axle, and that is meshed with and directly driven from the worm, and that drives said at least one of the wheel means, and that is slidable along the axle into and out of engagement with the worm;
- whereby the vehicle is stable in operation even when driven along such water surface and even when driven along such steep, irregular nonwater surface.
- 9. The toy vehicle of claim 8, wherein:
- the motor driveshaft is oriented parallel with the direction of propulsion of the vehicle on such nonwater surface, and extends out of the motor at two opposite ends of the motor, both forwardly and rearwardly with respect to the direction of propulsion of the vehicle;
- duplicate sets of the pinion, the worm, and the worm gear are provided at each end of the vehicle, and are driven by the respective ends of the driveshaft.
RELATED APPLICATIONS AND PATENT
This application is a continuation-in-part of pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 463,999, filed Feb. 4, 1983, and issued on Oct. 15, 1985 as U.S. Pat. No. 4,547,166. That application was a continuation-in-part of then-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 417,554, filed Sept. 13, 1982, and issued Jan. 8, 1985 as U.S. Pat. No. 4,492,058, which itself was a continuation-in-part of then-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 233,495, filed Feb. 11, 1981, and now abandoned. The latter application was in turn a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 121,645, filed Feb. 14, 1980, and issued Dec. 22, 1981, as U.S. Pat. No. 4,306,375.
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Continuation in Parts (4)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
463999 |
Feb 1983 |
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Parent |
417554 |
Sep 1982 |
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Parent |
233495 |
Feb 1981 |
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Parent |
121645 |
Feb 1980 |
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