A novel sailboat anemometer design that reduces weight by moving the battery from the tail to use as a counter-weight in the nose cone. Ultrasonic welding is used to seal a lightweight shell on the tail, instead of molded encapsulation of the tail electronics.
A wireless sailboat wind sensor has been previously defined in PCT/CA2014/000416 and US Patent Publication No. 20160370399, which are incorporated herein by reference, in which the solar panels form the tail of the wind direction arrow, and a digital compass is built into the wind direction arrow. That creates a number of advantages, but after about 5 years of customer use and feedback some limitations to the design have been identified.
In order to move in light winds, a wind direction arrow needs to have minimal weight. But this design includes a circuit board, solar panels and battery in the tail of the wind direction arrow. Although that makes the unit self-contained and wireless, a counter-weight is needed in the nose to allow the arrow to balance, which is made of heavy brass (which further adds to the weight).
A second problem with the existing design is that the battery is sealed in the tail to make the electronics waterproof. If the user flattens and damages the battery, there is no way to remove the battery, and the entire product must be replaced.
The battery also has a steel shell, and steel is a ferrous metal meaning it can be magnetized. If the battery shell is magnetized when close to a magnet, laptop, tablet or other object with an electro-magnetic field, the compass no longer responds to the earth's magnetic field, and is stuck in one direction (pointing to the battery). It is not good to have a battery with a steel shell near a highly sensitive digital compass.
Finally, in order to seal the electronics in the tail, the electronics are “potted” or placed in a mold with liquid resin, which hardens into clear plastic around the electronics and solar panel. This process is difficult, time-consuming and expensive for manufacturing in large quantities. The resin is also heavy, but if the molding makes it very thin, there are spots where it does not cover and leaks may occur.
It is also challenging to find suitable resins from suppliers, since most urethane, epoxy and polyester resin tends to eventually amber or deteriorate from UV rays. Also molding the resin with a smooth, clear glossy surface is an ongoing challenge.
The original anemometer design disclosed in in PCT/CA2014/000416 was a dramatic departure from traditional anemometers. After five years of use in the field, it is desirable to add some additional novel improvements to the structure. These structural improvements were not obvious originally and are not used in any other anemometers (because there have been very few wireless anemometers).
The original design was novel, in part, because all of the electronics were put in the tail so that it was compact and sealed, with no wires to gradually chafe and no electronics or sensors or gaskets that could get wet or leak. These new structures further improve on the novel design. The disclosed changes are specific to this particular design. Other anemometer designs would generally not need these new features.
In particular, the battery in the electronics in the tail is about the same size as the brass nose cone in the original design. The battery only weighs about one-third as much as the brass nose cone, but once it is removed from the tail, a smaller counterweight can be used. The invention disclosed here with the battery inside the nose cone could only have been discovered after using the original design and gradually seeing its shortcomings. It took years of testing, refinement and new designing to find a better structure.
The reason a counterweight is used on anemometers is to balance the wind direction arrow, so that it can rotate without friction. This is particularly important on sailboat anemometers, since sailboats often move along heeled over at an angle from wind power. If the tail is heavier than the nose (or vice versa), gravity then pulls on the tail, causing it to point up instead of into the wind. But when the nose and tail are balanced, gravity has no effect and the arrow responds only to the wind direction.
Along with being balanced, when a wind direction arrow is not very heavy, it can turn more easily in light winds. So the design could be improved by taking the battery out of the tail, and using the battery as the nose-cone. This allows removing the weight of the brass nose cone. It is a huge improvement to use the battery itself as the counterweight (with appropriate wiring from the battery to the electronics), rather than intentionally adding extra weight to a wind direction arrow that is meant to float in the wind.
This design also has a major advantage by adding a removable battery. That way if customers flatten their battery, they can just buy a replacement. The usual problem with replaceable batteries is that the compartment may leak and damage the electronics. But in this case, the electronics are all still encapsulated in the tail.
Placing the battery in the nose cone to act as the counterweight also creates a distance between the highly sensitive compass and the battery. So if the steel shell on the battery happens to become magnetized, its magnetic field will not affect the compass. That is a valuable side-effect of this design.
Ordinarily a compartment for a removable battery places the electronics at risk. But with this design, the electronics are still completely sealed and waterproof in the tail, with the battery in the nose cone on the end of the pointer arm.
A lightweight shell is placed over the tail electronics, to form the surface of the tail. The solar panels can be underneath the shell if it is clear. But in the preferred embodiment, the solar panels are attached with double-sided tape to the outside of the shell, so that there is no surface obstructing the clarity of the solar panels and reducing sunlight hitting them.
Ultrasonic welding is used to join the two halves of the shell, with several pieces extending out of the shell from the circuit board. Two of these pieces are C-shaped retaining clips for the axle and wind cups. There is also a reinforcement bar to carry some of the circuit board weight to the axle. And the pointer arm connects the circuit board to the nose cone through the axle. It is hollow for the battery wires. Ultrasonic welding creates a hermetic seal around the edges of the case, so that the electronics are sealed inside. Compared to molding resin to encapsulate the tail, ultrasonic welding of a thin shell is faster and easier for volume manufacturing, has less expensive materials, and is much more lightweight.
The circuit board in the tail is sealed inside a plastic shell 7 with ultrasonic welding to make the seal waterproof Solar panels 8 are a thicker area of the tail, attached with double-sided tape on the outside of the plastic shell so that there is nothing obstructing the sun's rays for maximum solar charging. Although the shell over most of the tail is close to the electronics, there is an open air gap 11 over the Bluetooth antenna, to allow the radio waves to propagate for maximum transmission distance.
The cap of the nose cone is somewhat pointed or pointy, like an arrow or bullet going into the wind. This cap threads on to the main battery container, with an O-ring 12 on the threads to provide a watertight seal when tightened. There is a hollow area inside the cap that provides space for a tiny battery connector plug. The battery is shrink-wrapped with wires from the positive and negative ends extending out a few centimeters with a plug on the end. The wire in the pointer arm comes out in the nose cone and has the other side of the battery plug. There is a space in the nose cone beside the battery for the wire so that the battery does not rub and chafe on the wire. The plug and excess wire are stored in the cap when the cap is turned on.
The battery wire runs inside the pointer arm. To further decrease the weight of the wind direction arrow, a hollow tube can be used to run the wire. Carbon fiber is preferred because it is lightweight but very strong, although other materials such as aluminum could be used. When carbon fiber is used for the tube, it must be glued to a clevis to attach to the circuit board, and glued to the nose cone. Carbon fiber is not suitable to use with traditional metal threads or nuts and bolts.
Inside the battery container, three ridges are shown that support the battery. One ridge 6 is not as tall as the other two, making the battery off-center, to leave space for the wire to come up the side of the battery without chafing.
At the end of the pointer arm with the circuit board, a special fastener is needed since the carbon fiber tube cannot be bolted directly to the circuit board. As shown in
The scale of the clevis and the carbon fiber tube and nose cone can vary without affecting the spirit and scope of the invention, although in a preferred embodiment, the size of the hollow pointer arm may be 5 mm outer diameter and 3 mm inner diameter. In this embodiment the clevis should have an inner diameter around 5.1 mm, to snugly fit over the tube, and an outer diameter of around 6.5 mm.
Although adhesive could be used to join and seal the two sides of the shell over the circuit board, in the preferred embodiment ultrasonic welding is used to join and seal the two sides of the shell. The two halves are molded to a shape that fits around the circuit board. One side is set on a supportive base, the electronics are sandwiched in the middle, and the other side of the case is set on top. Then a metal fixture is brought down into contact with the edges of the upper part, pressing down on the edges. The upper part vibrates at frequencies in the range of 20,000-40,000 times per second, creating frictional heat between the two plastic sides, melting the plastic. The vibration stops and the plastic cools. The clamping down is maintained until the plastic cools and solidifies. The two plastic sides are now joined as one, providing a hermetic seal of the electronics inside. This is a fast, strong, clean and repeatable manufacturing process with no solvents, molded resin or adhesives involved.
It should be understood that the above-described embodiments of the present invention, particularly, any “preferred” embodiments, are only examples of implementations, merely set forth for a clear understanding of the principles of the invention. Many variations and modifications may be made to the above-described embodiment(s) of the invention as will be evident to those skilled in the art. That is, persons skilled in the art will appreciate and understand that such modifications and variations are, or will be, possible to utilize and carry out the teachings of the invention described herein.
The scope of the claims that follow is not limited by the embodiments set forth in the description. The claims should be given the broadest purposive construction consistent with the description and figures as a whole.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CA2019/000040 | 3/28/2019 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62653833 | Apr 2018 | US |