The object of the present invention is a lawn-mower and, in particular, a self-propelled lawn-mower for maintaining a defined cut area. Presently, self-propelled lawn-mowers are known which operate within a cut area defined by the perimetric wire which interacts electro-magnetically with a suitable circuit provided on the lawn-mower for determining an internal/external position thereof with respect to the cut area.
Systems are also known which make it possible for the lawn-mower to return autonomously to a recharge base to carry out the electric recharge.
The re-entry into the base is determined by a control unit which executes an electronic program to operate the displacements of the lawn-mower.
The systems of known type exhibit the drawbacks of a relative complexity both for the presence of a perimetric wire and the need for processing an electromagnetic signal.
The object of the present invention is to overcome the said drawbacks by providing a self-propelled lawn-mower of simple construction and able to operate within a predetermined cut area.
A further object is to provide an apparatus and a lawn-mower allowing the latter to re-enter into a recharge base in a simple and reliable manner.
These and other object, which will appear more clearly by a reading of the detailed description that follows, are achieved, according to the present invention, by means of a lawn-mower and an apparatus as disclosed in the attached main claims. Further embodiments of the same invention being set forth in the corresponding dependent claims.
The invention is illustrated herebelow in greater detail with reference to the accompanying drawings which represent an exemplary and non-limiting embodiment thereof. In the drawings:
Described herebelow with reference to
The motor units 2, 7, the mechanic components for operating the blade 3, and the mechanic components for moving the lawn-mower's wheels 6, do not make part of the invention and will not therefore be described herein in detail.
Within the scope of the present invention, it is specified, by way of example, that providing the lawn-mower's direction of displacement, could be formed by the wheels' steering mechanism, or, in case of non-steering wheels, by a differentiated control for the wheels' rotation speed provided at the sides of the lawn-mower.
Shown in
On the basis of the signal received from the sensor, the control unit is able to determine a condition of proximity of the sensor to the line L.
In particular, according to the invention, at least two sensors 4 are provided (six, in the example being shown) allowing to define a condition of alignment of the lawn-mower with the line L.
In practice, the occurrence at the same time of a condition of proximity of two sensors 4 to the line L, makes it possible to establish an alignment of the lawn-mower.
Advantageously, once the alignment condition of the two sensors 4a, 4b in the longitudinal direction “d” of the lawn-mower (
This solution makes it possible, for example, to operate the return of the lawn-mower into a recharge base 10, the latter being preferably provided with a bottom 17 and with at least a partial cover 18 to be connected along the line L (either outside or inside the area A) to at least one aperture 11 located in the direction of the lawn-mower motion so as to allow the automatic entry thereof into the base (
Preferably, the base 10 and the lawn-mower 1 are provided with respective connections in order to automatically establish an electric contact upon the entry of the lawn-mower into the base 10. For example, the recharge can occur by means of an inductive coupling via a low-voltage line, or in another suitable manner.
By way of example
In the example of
By way of example, the direction of displacement of the lawn-mower can be determined by the control unit by discriminating the upstream and downstream position of sensors 4a, 4b with respect to the lawn-mower.
In a possible operation mode, when the lawn-mower moves close to the line L, a sensor 4, for example 4a, will be the first to be in proximity condition.
At this point, the control unit can start the motor unit associated with the wheels to make the latter move the lawn-mower until a proximity condition of sensor 4b takes place as well and the alignment of the lawn-mower with the line L is obtained.
Similarly, the occurrence of the proximity condition of further pairs of sensors can be used for establishing the position and orientation of the lawn-mower with respect to the line L.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the line L is defined by the presence of regions of grass surface E having height lower or greater than a preset value T, and the sensors 4 are presence sensors able to detect the presence, if any, of a grass surface within the distance H.
By way of example, a sensor 4 suited to the purpose is an electronic proximity sensor able to sense the perturbation induced in a surrounding volume by an object and to translate this perturbation into an electric signal.
In the case herein considered, the mass is that of a grass surface above the height T.
Such a sensor includes, in particular, a detecting terminal component, for example a wire or metal sheet connected to an electric circuit or to an electronic device able to transfer, and possibly amplifying, a signal fed to the terminal, thereby having the function of aerial for the presence sensor 4.
The detecting terminal is then connected to MOS junction components (metal-oxide-semiconductor) of parasitic effect by which it is possible to cause an interaction with the electric behaviour of the same components by exclusively perturbating the volume of air in proximity of sensor 4.
Advantageously, the sensor 4 may comprise an oscillator with a gate of an inverting Schmitt circuit, or any device comprising at least one component made by the metal-oxide-semiconductor junction technology and capable of giving, in response to variations of an input signal, an output electric oscillation.
A description of this preferred embodiment is disclosed in the Patent Application No. FI2005A000250.
It is understood, however, that the sensors 4 can be of mechanical contact type, of optical, chromatic, radio, capacitive, inductive, ultrasound type or other, provided that it is able to recognize the existence of a border line L and to signal to the control unit a condition of proximity to the same line.
By way of example, the line L can be defined, fully or partly, by an orientation wire located on the ground and, in this case, as the robot moves onto the wire, the sensor 4—which may be the same or other than the one above described for the recognition of the grass surface—allows the control unit to track the same wire as far as to meet the recharge base.
In this case, provision could be made also of systems for the detection of a perimetric electric wire, of a type known per se, which exploit the electromagnetic effects generated by a current applied along the perimetric wire, for example by detecting the intensity of the magnetic field generated by the current.
A system particularly suitable for the purpose is disclosed in the Patent Application FI2004A000151 which provides for feeding a wire with an electric control signal of sinusoid type in order to generate a magnetic field, and measuring the phase difference between a detected electric signal, which depends on the magnetic field, and a reference electric signal.
A second embodiment of a lawn-mower 1, according to the present invention, comprises a motor unit 2 for the directional displacement of same lawn-mower 1, a cutting device 3, means 4 for detecting a perimeter L of a cut area A, and means for detecting a condition of proximity of the lawn-mower 1 with respect to the perimeter L.
The lawn-mower 1 further comprise a control unit 20 operatively associated with the proximity-condition detecting means for receiving a signal therefrom representative of the condition of proximity to the perimeter L.
The control unit is operatively connected to the motor unit 2 to cause a displacement of the lawn-mower 1 over a predetermined trajectory, with respect to the same perimeter L, in response to a received proximity signal.
In particular, the predetermined trajectory to be followed by the lawn-mower 1 in response to the detection of perimeter L, can advantageously formed by arcs of a circle.
In particular, when the sensors 4 detect a proximity to the line L, instead of determining the alignment of the lawn-mower 1 with said line, drive the lawn-mower into motion so as to reverse its direction of advancement with respect to the line L.
More specifically, in this embodiment, the lawn-mower 1 does not follow the line L, but every time it detects the line, bounces over it until it finds the recharge base 10.
A further embodiment of the present invention provides for a guide device disposed in proximity of the base 10, for example an electric wire, which simulates a signal read by the lawn-mower as the presence of grass and, therefore, directs univocally the lawn-mower 1 into the recharge base 10.
By way of example, the guide device may comprise an electric wire disposed so as to exit from the recharge base and extending a few meters away therefrom.
In this way, as soon as the lawn-mower detects the presence of said wire, it is automatically guided into the base.
This embodiment is particularly advantageous when the recharge base 10 is located on an area in which the grass is hardly dense, or when the base is disposed outside the cut area T.
The advantages achieved by the invention lie essentially in the possibility of driving a self-propelled lawn-mower along a border line of the cut area, and this even when the border line is a spontaneous perimeter (such as the end of a grass surface of a garden) and when a border is artificially defined by laying down a perimetric wire.
Moreover, the invention allows positioning a lawn-mower's recovery and/or recharge base with respect to the line L and causing the same lawn-mower to re-enter the base by following the line L.
The invention thus conceived is evidently suited for industrial application; the same invention can also be subjected to several modifications and changes falling within the scope of the inventive idea; moreover, all the parts may be replaced by other elements technically equivalent.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
BO2008A0040 | Jan 2008 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3425197 | Kita | Feb 1969 | A |
3550714 | Bellinger | Dec 1970 | A |
3563327 | Mier | Feb 1971 | A |
3570227 | Bellinger | Mar 1971 | A |
3733597 | Healey et al. | May 1973 | A |
3965442 | Eaton, Jr. | Jun 1976 | A |
4138649 | Schaffer | Feb 1979 | A |
4777785 | Rafaels | Oct 1988 | A |
4964265 | Young | Oct 1990 | A |
5007234 | Shurman et al. | Apr 1991 | A |
5163273 | Wojtkowski et al. | Nov 1992 | A |
5323593 | Cline et al. | Jun 1994 | A |
5444965 | Colens | Aug 1995 | A |
5507137 | Norris | Apr 1996 | A |
5528888 | Miyamoto et al. | Jun 1996 | A |
5572856 | Ku | Nov 1996 | A |
5911670 | Angott et al. | Jun 1999 | A |
5974347 | Nelson | Oct 1999 | A |
6443509 | Levin et al. | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6598692 | Angott | Jul 2003 | B2 |
6604348 | Hunt | Aug 2003 | B2 |
6611738 | Ruffner | Aug 2003 | B2 |
6984952 | Peless et al. | Jan 2006 | B2 |
7185478 | Willis, II | Mar 2007 | B1 |
20020049522 | Ruffner | Apr 2002 | A1 |
20020104300 | Hunt | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20030023356 | Keable | Jan 2003 | A1 |
20050007057 | Peless et al. | Jan 2005 | A1 |
20050034437 | McMurtry et al. | Feb 2005 | A1 |
20050046373 | Aldred | Mar 2005 | A1 |
20060059880 | Angott | Mar 2006 | A1 |
20060161318 | Aldred et al. | Jul 2006 | A1 |
20070142964 | Abramson | Jun 2007 | A1 |
20080007193 | Jones et al. | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20080039974 | Sandin et al. | Feb 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
200 20 641 | May 2002 | DE |
10 2007 023 157 | Nov 2008 | DE |
1612631 | Jan 2006 | EP |
1745686 | Jan 2007 | EP |
2645700 | Oct 1990 | FR |
2 142 447 | Jan 1985 | GB |
FI2004A000151 | Jan 2006 | IT |
0074465 | Dec 2000 | WO |
WO 02062194 | Aug 2002 | WO |
WO 2007066195 | Jun 2007 | WO |
2008138967 | Nov 2008 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090183478 A1 | Jul 2009 | US |