This application claims priority from Great Britain Application Serial Nos. 0423463.9, 0423470.4, 0423474.6, 0423483.7 and 0423517.2, all filed Oct. 22, 2004.
The present invention relates to an amphibious vehicle and in particular, to a sit-astride amphibious vehicle having all-terrain vehicle (ATV) capability on land.
Amphibious vehicles are now well known in the art. However, the present applicant has identified a need for an amphibious vehicle having ATV capability on land and which performs as a high speed personal watercraft on water. A number of prior art proposals have proceeded to prototype. However, such vehicles have opted to either optimise operation in the marine mode or, alternatively, operation in the land mode. The result is an amphibious vehicle having poor performance in one mode of operation or the other.
Sit astride amphibious vehicles have previously been described such as in U.S. Pat. No. 5,690,046 to Grzech. Grzech teaches an amphibious tricycle. The problem identified by the inventor in this document, was to provide his personal watercraft (PWC) with limited on land capability in order that it was at least partially mobile when going ashore. GRZECH is limited in that it is only suitable for travel on well made up roads when operating in a land mode. This is because the vehicle has only three wheels and these are connected to the remainder of the vehicle by a suspension arrangement which is adapted to cope only with smooth road surfaces and does not have the suspension travel suitable for off-road use of the vehicle. Also, GRZECH needs a large heat exchanger which protrudes through the keel of the vehicle to provide the very necessary cooling required to cool the highly overpowered marine combustion engine. This dictates against off-road land use since the heat exchanger could easily be damaged in such a use. GRZECH has opted for a single steerable front wheel since this is easiest to provide in an adaptation of a personal watercraft.
Accordingly, there exists the need for an all terrain high speed amphibian vehicle, more particularly, having at least four retractable wheel assemblies.
In a first aspect, the present invention provides an amphibious vehicle comprising:
GRZECH only seeks to provide a PWC with a limited on-land function; he has taken an existing PWC and adapted it with few changes. GRZECH teaches that the engine can be connected to the driven wheels through a transmission with one fixed gear ratio.
In a second aspect the present invention provides an amphibious vehicle comprising:
GRZECH in adapting a PWC has sought to keep the overall dimensions of the vehicle within those of an existing PWC; thus he has chosen rear wheels on a trailing arm suspension with a track width less than the hull beam and also a single retractable front wheel.
In a third aspect the present invention provides an amphibious vehicle comprising:
In a fourth aspect the present invention provides an amphibious vehicle comprising:
In a fifth aspect the present invention provides an amphibious vehicle comprising:
In a sixth aspect the present invention provides an amphibious vehicle comprising:
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments which, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, illustrate by way of example the principles of the invention.
Referring now to
The vehicle 10 has four road wheels 50,51,52,53 which are connected to the remainder of the vehicle by a wheel suspension system which includes a wheel retraction mechanism for moving the wheels 50,51,52,53 between a lowered state for road use and a raised state for marine use. The front wheels 50 and 53 are steerable and handlebars 54 enable steering of these wheels. The rear wheels 51,52 are driven to propel the vehicle on land. A jet drive unit 55 (see
The structure of the amphibious vehicle 10 comprises an upper deck section 30 and a lower hull section 40. The upper deck structure 30 is sealed to the lower hull section 40 around a peripheral planar edge which is above the water line when the amphibious vehicle 10 is displaced in water—(as can best be seen in
Air inlet openings 31 provide an entry for cooling air (e.g. fan-assisted) for use by the cooling systems of the amphibious vehicle 10. Air entrained via inlets 31 is eventually exhausted via outlets 32. Between air inlet 31 and air outlet 32, a dorade system is installed to prevent the ingress of water. The dorade system facilitates righting of the vehicle on water by use of a labyrinthine air inlet passage system to prevent the ingress of water should the amphibious vehicle 10 be inverted in use in the marine mode. Sit-astride seats 33 and 34 are provided for a driver and a passenger of the amphibious vehicle 10. A footwell area 35 is provided either side of the sit-astride seats 33, 34, each shrouded by bodywork positioned laterally outside of the footwell area 35 to provide protection. These footwell areas 35 may be provided with means to bail automatically any water shipped in use of the amphibious vehicle 10.
Front and rear wheel arches 36, 37 are provided on either side of the amphibious vehicle 10 so as to contain a retractable wheel assembly which is retracted when the amphibious vehicle 10 is operating in the marine mode. An instrument panel 38 is provided ahead of the steering controls to convey relevant parameters of the amphibious vehicle 10 to the driver. Additionally, rear view mirrors (not shown) may be provided as a visual aid to the driver. Furthermore, navigation lights may also be provided within or on the upper deck structure 30 in accordance with the local legislative requirements.
The upper deck structure 30 forms an integral part of the entire structure of the vehicle. It is a structural component and not merely cladding. Typically it will take the form of a composite structure (e.g. glass fibres or carbon fibres set in resin) although any suitable manufacturing method may be employed. Where localised areas of strength are required in the upper deck structure 30, extra layers or mats of fibres may be laid down during manufacture. The deck 30 will be formed with localised reinforced areas in order to provide a complete force transmitting path extending around the vehicle in a complete circle in a plane orthogonal to a longitudinal axis of the vehicle, in order to provide resistance to torsional loads on the vehicle.
Referring now to
Cutouts are provided in the hull on either side of the centre line of the vehicle in the region of the front and rear wheel arches 42, 43 to provide slots through which the retractable wheel assemblies can be protracted and retracted. Suitably profiled covers 44, 45 are provided as part of the wheel assemblies so as to reconstruct the lines of the hull when the wheel assemblies are retracted for use in marine mode.
A lower V section 46 depends from the mid section 41 and is provided with a keel section running from the bow 12 of the amphibious vehicle to approximately halfway along the length of the vehicle. At this point, the keel splits to incorporate a water intake area 49 for a jet drive marine propulsion unit of the amphibious vehicle 10. The design of the hull 40 is critical in determining the performance achieved when the amphibious vehicle 10 is operated in the marine mode.
The present applicants have spent considerable time and effort in the design of the hull 40 which has resulted in a rather surprising shape in that usually expected for a planing water craft. The dead rise angle of the hull is substantially 20.7 degrees along substantially its entire length. This compares with traditional planing hulls which start at the bow section with a very steep dead rise angle and these dead rise angles become more shallow along the length of the hull towards the stern, typically ending at 5 degrees or less of dead rise angle.
Since the seating of the vehicle is arranged longitudinally along the vehicle, the vehicle is narrower than a passenger car. Aligning the engine longitudinally along the vehicle gives a body shape which is narrow in beam and deep. Rather than adopting the flat planing hull common in the prior art, the applicant has adopted a greater dead rise angle for the agile marine handling this provides, accepting that this gives a need for a suspension with a lot of travel to give adequate ground clearance on land. Large wheels also enable off-road usage, although they give problems of packaging. Whereas before vehicles such as that of GRZECH strove to keep the track width of the wheels within the beam of the vehicle, the applicant has realised that better land mode operation can be achieved if the track width of the vehicle is greater than the beam of the hull. The approach adopted by the applicant does mean that wheels must be retracted through a large angle in order to be clear of the vehicle waterline in marine use, but the strategy does provide for a vehicle capable both on land and on water.
The hull 40 is additionally provided with hydrodynamic aids in the form of strakes 47, 48 and the profiled suspension arm covers 44, 45 previously referred to. Even with the small footprint of the hull of the amphibious vehicle 10, the hull design 40 is capable of propelling the amphibious vehicle 10 up onto the plane with little difficulty in fast time periods. Furthermore, on-water performance of the amphibious vehicle 10 is not compromised and adequate ground clearance is available in operating the amphibious vehicle 10 in land mode as an all terrain vehicle.
In
In
The seating in the vehicle is provided substantially above the vehicle powertrain, with the handlebars located roughly halfway along the length of the vehicle, this comparing with traditional PWC designs which locate the handlebars roughly two thirds along the length of the vehicle (measured from the back). This gives a good weight distribution for both marine and land use.
The powertrain components illustrated in
The radiator 70 can also be seen in
The transmission 61 comprises an output shaft 71 leading drive from the engine to a gearbox 72 which has two output shafts; a horizontally extending shaft 73 taking drive to the jet drive unit 55 and a vertically extending shaft 74 leading to a continuously variable transmission arrangement, the pulleys 75,76 of which can be seen in
Each suspension 103 and 105 comprises an upright member 107 (see
Extending from each of the upright members 107 is a steering arm 117 (see especially
An actuator 141 having piston rod 143 acts on one arm of swing arm 137 to pivot the arm, the outer ends of which are connected to piston rods 144 of suspension dampers 145 (see
Whilst above a single internal combustion engine is used to both drive the wheels is land mode operations and also to power the jet drive, separate engines could be provided, one for the road wheels and another for the jet drive. Also the jet drive could be replaced by a propeller.
While a particular form of the present invention has been illustrated and described, it will also be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Accordingly, it is not intended that the invention be limited except by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13288823 | Nov 2011 | US |
Child | 16740288 | US | |
Parent | 12038653 | Feb 2008 | US |
Child | 13288823 | US | |
Parent | 11255779 | Oct 2005 | US |
Child | 12038653 | US |