This application claims priority from European Application Serial No. 07008485.0 filed Apr. 26, 2007.
The invention relates to an apparatus for monitoring individual parking positions in accordance with the pre-characterizing portion of patent claim 1.
The monitoring of individual parking positions in in-door car parks or public traffic spaces presently uses cable-linked sensors for vehicle detection, the common practice being the use of ultrasonic, infrared or geomagnetic field sensors. Optical indication is effected by cable-linked lights or light emitting diodes as well. The cable links are needed because of the high energy consumption of the sensors and the optical indicator elements. Likewise, cables are used for transmitting occupied/free data relating to each parking position to a network connected to the parking facility control center. The cabling of the prior individual parking position monitoring devices necessitates considerable capital outlays especially if retrofitted. The cost of laying the cables may far exceed that of the sensors and the optical indicators themselves.
An object of the invention is to provide an individual parking position monitoring system which is inexpensive to install.
In accordance with the invention, each vehicle detection sensor has a transmit aerial for communicating the occupancy status of the respective parking position by radio to the central control system of a facility such as an in-door car park. This obviates a data transmission cable link from the sensor.
Also, in accordance with the invention, the optical indicator means comprises a bistable indicating element, whereby the display is controlled only in response to change in status. This results in considerable energy savings, whereby the sensor and the optical indicator may be operated on a (dry-cell or chargeable) battery for several years. Apart from a dry-cell battery, it would be possible to use a photovoltaic module including a chargeable battery or a storage capacitor, said module receiving daylight and/or being lit by the headlights of the motor vehicles in the car park or other parking facility.
In accordance with the invention, this obviates the high cost of laying cables. Rather, the sensor and the optical indicator—both preferably in a casing—may be mounted in a simple manner e.g. by bolting or bonding onto the pavement surface of the parking lot or overhead onto a ceiling there above.
The sensor and the optical indicator may each be provided with a casing of its own. Preferably, the sensor and the optical indicator are disposed in the same casing, which will further reduce the cost of installation.
The bistable indicator element preferably comprises a so-called “flip dot”, i.e. an electro mechanical component including tilt or rotation means and controlled to show one of two optically differing sides of an indicator platelet. To this end, the platelet may be mounted for rotation on the casing. The two sides of the platelet may differ in color, such as one red and the other green. The platelet may have a permanent magnet mounted to the rear surface thereof, with a solenoid disposed there behind to exert a polarity-dependent force on the platelet so as to swing it over. Snap-type locking means is provided to prevent the indicator platelet from pivoting back when the solenoid is disabled. As a result, the indicator platelet has two stable conditions, whereby energy is needed only for rotating it. No such energy needs to be expended as long as the indication remains constant.
The indicator platelet may be fluorescing or reflecting—such as a retro reflector, i.e. comprising prism-shaped surface elements of glass on at least one side thereof. If struck by light from vehicle headlights, the prisms will refract the impinging light and retro reflect it with a brightness sufficient to create the impression of being an independent light source.
Additional energy savings are obtainable by the sensor being configured for intermittent activation for vehicle detection and/or radio transmission.
In addition to the transmit aerial, the sensor has a receive aerial.
Differences between the signal received by the receive aerial and the signal transmitted by the transmit aerial may be evaluated to detect vehicle movements to so perform vehicle detection. Such differences may be amplitude, phase and/or frequency differences—such as frequency shifts due to the Doppler effect. As a result, the sensor may essentially comprise the receive and transmit aerials, a mixer, a transceiver, and a micro controller so that it may be very simple in structure and be assembled on a single printed wiring board. However, the sensor may be configured for vehicle detection by evaluating reflected signals.
The transmit aerial may be used also for transmitting the occupied/free status of a single parking position by radio to the car park control center.
To this end, radio transmission from a sensor's transmit aerial to the receive aerial of a neighboring sensor or of a base station may take place in an in-door car park e.g. on the story thereof which is linked to the parking facility control center via a local network (LAN).
Instead, radio transmission may take place from the transmit aerials of plural sensors to a base station and from there to the next base station and further on to a master base station connected to the parking facility control center by means such as a LAN. The base station or stations or the master base station may be mounted to the ceiling or to a wall of the in-door car park or of the respective story and be powered by electric lighting mounted on that ceiling or wall.
In case the transmit and/or the receive aerial of the sensor are directional, radio transmission may be by a non-directional aerial, with the sensor feeding, or being fed from, the directional and the non-directional aerials alternatingly.
The sensor used for vehicle detection may be a geomagnetic field sensor, an ultrasonic sensor or an infrared sensor as well.
An exemplary embodiment of the inventive apparatus is illustrated below under reference to the attached drawing.
As shown in
The shallow domed casing 1 is circular in plan and has at the side facing the access area 3 to the individual parking position 4 (
According to
As shown in
To this end, a receive aerial 13a is used in addition to transmit aerial 10, with the frequency of transmit aerial 10 being combined with that of receive aerial 13a in a mixer 14. The signal from mixer 14 is AC coupled at 15 and via a low-pass filter 16 to A/D transducer 17 included in transceiver 18 and then to micro controller 19, which feed transmit aerial 10 at the same time. If transmit aerial 10 is directional, an additional non-directional aerial 21 may be provided, with directional and non-directional aerials 10, 21 fed alternatingly through a switch 22. If receive aerial 13a is directional, an additional non-directional or directional aerial 13b may be provided as a receive aerial, with aerials 13a, 13b being connected to the unit alternatingly by means of a switch 28.
As shown in
In the embodiment shown in
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07008485 | Apr 2007 | EP | regional |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080266138 A1 | Oct 2008 | US |