The present invention relates to an automatic system for the control of the propulsive units for the turn of a boat.
More particularly, the invention relates to an automatic control system which is able to automatically modulate the operation of the two engines in order to increase the manoeuvrability of a boat, as defined in claim 1.
Turn operations are conventionally performed by acting uniquely upon the rudder.
A difficulty encountered by the unskilled operator which is related to the performing of manoeuvre operations is when the boat has to be manoeuvred at a low speed, for example while being in the port. In such a case, since the boat rudders are poorly efficient at low speeds, conventional systems provide for the operator to separately use and actuate the two engines being the two different propulsive lines of the boat in order to perform manoeuvres in narrow spaces.
Some systems facilitate this kind of manoeuvre thanks to a movable joystick which allows the user to intuitively drive the boat.
An object of the present invention is to propose a control system for the turn of a boat which is able to improve performance in terms of manoeuvrability of the boat, both at high speed and low speed.
It is desired to provide a system which, at high speed, allows the user to perform curves with narrower radiuses, the speed kept equal, than with conventional systems.
It is further desired that, at low speed, the system allows the user to use the rudder wheel in order to perform manoeuvre operations of the boat.
These and other objects are achieved by an automatic system for controlling the propulsive units for the turn of a boat, the main features of which are defined in claim 1.
Particular embodiments are the object of the dependent claims.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will appear from the detailed description below, which is merely given by way of a non-limiting example, with reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
In
In a variant embodiment not illustrated in the figures, the boat propulsion system is a hydro jet drive type. In this case, the two propulsive lines are composed by an engine, a hydro jet pump and a reversal baffle. The selection of forward gear, reverse gear or neutral is therefore carried out by controlling the reversal baffle located downstream the nozzle of the hydro jet pump which is able to reverse the direction of part of the flow, by adjusting forward or rearward thrust direction. The turn operation, instead, is typically carried out either via a direction baffle which deviates the water flow rightwards or leftwards, or through directionable nozzles.
The propulsion system such as represented in
Each of the two left 1 and right 2 throttle levers is arranged to send a forward gear request signal 8, a reverse gear request signal 9 and a boat acceleration request signal 10 to the control unit 3.
The control unit 3 is arranged to generate, according to modalities which will be described below, two forward gear reverser signals 11a and 11b and two reverse gear reverser signals 12a and 12b, said signals 11a, 11b, 12a, 12b being associated in pairs to the left 6 and right 7 reversers, respectively. Furthermore, the control unit 3 is adapted to generate two engine acceleration-deceleration signals 13a and 13b, which are associated to the left 4 and right 5 engines, respectively.
In the case of a hydro-jet system, the forward gear reverser 11a and 11b and reverse reverser 12a and 12b signals are used in order to control the reversal baffle instead of the reverser.
The control unit 3 is further arranged to receive, by a transducer 14 of the rudder angle (γ), a turn request signal 15 representative of the turn angle as desired by the user.
The control system of the assisted turn is thus interposed between the control of the left 1 and right 2 throttle levers and the propulsive apparatus, and it provides that, depending on the required turn angle, the two left 4 and right 5 engines (and the associated left 6 and right 7 reversers) are controlled in a differentiated manner, so as to facilitate the manoeuvre. Therefore, the control system allows managing the two engines 4 and 5 also as a function of the required turn angle.
The management logic of the system according to the invention provides that both left 4 and right 5 engines can be modulated using only one throttle lever, either the left throttle lever 1 or the right throttle lever 2 according to the design selections. Said throttle lever, which is indicated as the reference throttle lever herein below, is arranged to provide all the information and signals relating to the overall thrust which is desired for the boat. The differentiated control to the two propulsive lines is established by the control unit 3.
However, the non-reference throttle lever is monitored by the control unit 3 in order to implement safety logics. For example, it is possible to bypass the control unit of the assisted turn system in order to manoeuvre the boat in the conventional manner, by means of the control by the two throttle levers.
Said virtual speed signals 17 and 18 represent the thrust that the propellers 6a and 7a have to generate in order to properly distribute the overall thrust of the boat between the two propulsive lines. The virtual speed signals 17 and 18 are therefore linked to the engine operational speed and desired turn angle 15.
The engine operational interval can range between a minimum value and a maximum value, while the virtual speed signals 17 and 18 can range between a negative value −MIN (corresponding to the engaged reverse gear with minimum running engine) and a positive value +MIN (corresponding to the engaged forward gear with minimum running engine), to a maximum positive value +MAX in the case of forward gear engagement and operation of the accelerator. The null value of the virtual speed signals 17 or 18 corresponds to the neutral, i.e. a minimum running engine and reverser in the neutral.
Thereby, after the virtual speed signal 17 or 18 has been established to be assigned to each group composed by the engine 4 or 5 and the associated reverser 6 or 7, said groups are individually controlled.
In order to generate the two virtual speed signals 17 and 18, the fuzzy speed control unit 16 turns the boat acceleration request signal 10 and the turn request signal 15 to the signals which are representative of the control to be provided to the two engines 4 and 5 for the generation of the torques of said engines 4 and 5. This transformation process will be described in greater detail below.
At this stage, the two virtual speed signals 17 and 18 are sent to an accelerator control unit 19, associated with the left 4 and right 5 engines, which outputs, according to modalities to be described herein below, the engine acceleration-deceleration signals 13a and 13b, which represent the absolute value for the acceleration and/or the deceleration to be provided to each of the engines 4 and 5.
The two virtual speed signals 17 and 18 are further sent to a reverser gear control unit 22 associated to the left 4 and right 5 engines, which outputs, according to modalities to be described herein below, the forward gear reverser 11a and 11b and reverse gear reverser 12a and 12b signals for each of the reversers 6 and 7. Said forward gear reverser 11a and 11b and reverse gear reverser 12a and 12b signals are sent to a reverser enable unit 25 which, on the basis of an enable signal 26, sends them to the reversers 6 and 7. The enable signal 26 is sent by the reference throttle lever, and is activated when the forward gear is engaged; the forward gear reverser 11a and 11b and reverse gear reverser 12a and 12b signals are thus enabled only when the reference throttle lever sends the forward gear request signal 8 to the control unit 3. It should be noted that the actual gear engagement is performed by the control unit 3 by means of the forward gear reverser 11a and 11b and reverse gear reverser 12a and 12b signals, while the throttle lever only provides for the enabling.
The enable signal 26 is used in order to distinguish the minimum running engaged gear condition from the condition in which the neutral is engaged, since, in both cases, the engine is in a minimum speed operational condition.
Three engine operational speeds are defined on the basis of the boat acceleration request signal 10, in particular the Low, Medium and High speeds, which are implemented as fuzzy sets. The fuzzy sets are sets which are implemented according to a known logic such that a variable's condition of membership to a given set can be true, false, or can have intermediate truth degrees. The truth degree of such condition is called “degree of membership” of the fuzzy set.
A function of the turn request 15 and boat acceleration request 10 signals is associated to each operational speed. The fuzzy speed control unit 16 performs a combination weighed on the degree of membership to the fuzzy set of the three functions for each of the two left 4 and right 5 engines, thus obtaining the virtual speed signals 17 and 18 through a methodology (inference method of the Takagi-Sugeno type), known per se.
The functions are such that the values of the virtual speed signal 17 or 18 are less than or equal to the values of the boat acceleration request signal 10 for the inner engine as compared with the turn trajectory (starboard engine for the starboard turn, port side engine for the port side turn) and the values of the virtual speed signal 17 or 18 are greater than or equal to the values of the boat acceleration request signal 10 for the outer engine (starboard engine for the port side turn, port side engine for the starboard turn).
As the turn request signal 15 increases, in either turn trajectory, the difference between the virtual speed signals 17 and 18 will also increase. The dependence of said functions from the turn angle request signal 15 can be varied in order to increase or decrease the system sensibility to rudder angle (γ) variations.
In the case where a rudder angle (γ) is equal to zero, the virtual speed signals 17 and 18 are equal to each other, and are equal to the boat acceleration request signal 10.
In
In the Ahead region 28, the forward gear is engaged, and it is only acted upon the accelerator; the engine operation ranges from its minimum value to its maximum value. In the Neutral region, the neutral is engaged, and it is not acted upon the accelerator; the engine operational speed is equal to its minimum value. In the Astern region 30 the reverse gear is engaged and it is acted upon the accelerator. In this case, since the virtual speed signal 17 or 18 is inferiorly limited to −MIN, the engine operation is equal to its minimum value, but it could virtually extend to its maximum value.
In
The control unit of the reversers 22 acts independently on the two right and left propulsion lines by associating a state of the reversers 6 or 7 to the virtual speed signal 17 or 18. The reversing gear control unit 22 performs, for each of the two propulsion lines, respectively left and right, a finite state machine, representing the engines 4 and 5 operation, the states of which, corresponding to the above-mentioned Ahead, Neutral and Astern regions, are shown in
The transitions between the states are implemented by means of algorithms based on “budget”, so as to carry out a modulation of the reverser when the virtual speed signal 17 or 18 takes values belonging to the intermediate regions 31 and 32 of
The “budget”-based algorithm is such that a state is entered when particular conditions occur on the virtual speed signal 17 or 18. When a state is “entered”, an initial value is assigned to an inner variable, called the “budget”.
The transition to the Ahead state takes place in the case where a virtual speed signal 17 or 18 is recorded which is greater than the pre-established threshold S2. In ideal conditions, i.e. in the case of reversers with null response time, such threshold would match with point 0. On the other hand, the transition to the Astern state takes place in the case where a virtual speed signal 17 or 18 is recorded which is lower than the threshold Si. Within the Ahead and Astern states, the “budget” variable is modified at each control cycle. In the Ahead state (forward gear), the “budget” variable is reduced in the case where the virtual speed signal 17 or 18 is less than the +MIN value, according to a pre-established formula which adjusts the decreasing rate Δbudget/Δt on the basis of the virtual speed signal 17 or 18.
In the Astern state (reverse gear), the “budget” variable is reduced in the case where the virtual speed signal 17 or 18 is higher than the −MIN value, according to a pre-established formula as described above. When the value of the “budget” variable turns to zero, the gear is disengaged, and the system switches to the Neutral state.
From the Neutral state, one switches again to the Ahead and Astern states, on the basis of the value taken by the virtual speed signal 17 or 18, in order to carry out the gear engagement, respectively the forward gear or reverse gear.
The “budget” variable is therefore modified as a function of the virtual speed signal 17 or 18 value, which changes with time according to the variations of the input signals, respectively the turn request signal 15 and the boat acceleration request signal 10, which are continuously monitored.
Since the reversers 6 and 7 have response times which are different from the accelerator (both due to mechanical reasons and to safety-related reasons), the virtual speed signals 17 and 18 variations cannot be immediately followed; the budget-based algorithm performs a low-pass filtration of such signals. Thereby, even though the virtual speed signal 17 or 18 undergoes sudden variations, the control of the reversers while respecting the timing thereof is nevertheless possible, as per specification.
In the transitions from a state to another, variable delays are further introduced, depending on the specifications of the reversers 6 and 7, calculated on the basis of the engine operational speed recorded in the last time interval. This allows increasing the actuation delay of the reversers 6 and 7 in the case when the engine is running at high speeds, therefore the boat is moving at a high speed.
In particular, when disengaging the gear, i.e. the “budget” variable turns to zero, one switches to the Neutral state with a greater delay than in the case where the engine is running at its minimum speed. This is done in order to allow the boat to slow down due to the friction against water, before performing the reversing of the gear.
Thereby, the reversers and the engine are protected against damage problems due to excessive mechanical stress.
Therefore, the use of a “budget”-based algorithm allows computing the propulsive energy which is required and supplied in the last reference time interval.
In
The equation correlating duty cycle to virtual speed signal 17 or 18 is as follows:
where RV is the instantaneous value of the virtual speed signal 17 or 18, and MIN is its minimum value.
Finally, the accelerator control unit 19 turns the virtual speed signals 17 and 18 to the engine acceleration-deceleration signals 13a and 13b, shown as R in the following equation:
where RV is the virtual speed signal 17 or 18, and min is a value corresponding to the minimum operational speed of the engine, which, for example, can match with the +MIN value of the virtual speed signal 17 or 18. Such functionality is provided as independent for the left engine 4 and for the right engine 5.
In a variant embodiment of the invention, the reversers 6 and 7 are equipped with an adjustment valve, respectively a valve V1 and a valve V2 (see
where A respectively indicates the adjustment signal A1 or A2, RV represents the virtual speed signal 17 or 18, and MIN is its minimum value.
In this case, the use of the “budget”-based algorithm is not needed in order to change the engagement and disengagement of forward and reverse gears in the intermediate zones 31 and 32 of
Of course, the principle of the invention remaining the same, the embodiments and implementation details may be widely changed as compared with what has been described and illustrated above by way of non-limiting example only, without however departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the annexed claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
T02007A000304 | May 2007 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB07/54485 | 11/6/2007 | WO | 00 | 11/3/2009 |