None.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is for a brush wear adjustment system and method, and in particular relates to a brush wear adjustment system for use in a street sweeping vehicle.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Rotary brushes utilized in street sweepers generally are mounted to the chassis of a truck or other suitable vehicle or structure. Normal wear and tear of a rotary brush during the sweeping mode results in worn rotary brush bristles the lengths of which are continually reduced due to abrasive qualities of the roadway with normal usage. The axle of the rotary brush is often secured between opposing pivot arms which gravitationally and automatically adjust in vertical fashion about pivot points to suitably contact the roadway and to compensate for the reduction in bristle length. As the bristle length is reduced, efficiency and effectiveness of the sweeping operation is increasingly degraded. Effective sweeping is predicated partially on the speed of the bristle tip, and is also predicted partially by the pressure of the bristles exerted downwardly to meet the roadway. A new rotary brush has long bristles which produces the highest bristle tip speed, and a well worn rotary brush has short bristles which produces a significantly slower and less effective bristle tip speed for the same rotary brush rate of rotation, thereby resulting in poorer and less effective sweeping. As the bristles wear, the rotary brush exhibits less control by gravitational downward force, thereby causing a lighter impingement with the roadway. Truck sweeper operators have lacked displays indicating brush wear which can be conveniently read in the control cab of a street sweeper. What is needed is a system which compensates for the degraded sweeping effectiveness and efficiency caused by continually shortening of the bristles of a rotary brush and which also displays brush wear. Such a system to provide consistent sweeping performance by increasing RPM of the rotary broom and/or adjusting the down pressure of the rotary broom is provided for by the present invention and method.
The general purpose of the present invention is to provide a brush wear adjustment system and method.
As used herein, a road sweeper is any kind of surface sweeper, including, among others, streets, roads, factory floors, and the like.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a brush wear adjustment system and method, including a mounting surface, an optional protective enclosure, a retainer bracket, a position sensor secured to the mounting surface, a lever arm secured to and extending from the position sensor, a return spring mounted between the optional protective enclosure or other suitable location on the sweeper truck chassis and the lever arm, a linkage secured on one end to the outboard end of the lever arm and on the other end to an adjustable clevis, a linkage bracket connected to the lower end of the adjustable clevis, an electro-hydraulic controller, and a hydraulic metering valve. The hydraulic valve connects to a hydraulic rotary brush motor. Although hydraulic devices are shown and described, other devices utilizing other methods of propulsion for speed control such as, but not limited to, electric motors, rheostats, voltage controls, electronic control and the like can be utilized without departing from the apparent scope hereof.
The components of the invention are mounted to and about the chassis and other components of a sweeper truck or other such suitable vehicle or device. The position sensor and the connected lever arm are mounted to a mounting surface provided on a fixed portion of the sweeper chassis or optionally provided on an optional protective enclosure, and the linkage bracket secures to a pivoted support arm at a location between a pivot point and the corresponding rotary brush mount. The linkage attaches to and extends generally and substantially between the fixed portion of the sweeper chassis in communication with one of the pivoted support arms where displacement of the pivoted support arm is sensed by the position sensor via the interconnecting linkage. Information regarding the position of the pivoted support arm, and thus the length of the bristles, is sensed by the position sensor and sent by an interconnecting electrical cable to the electro-hydraulic controller which determines the proper and required rotary brush speed for efficient and effective sweeping by the ever shortening bristles. The position sensor also relays information to a readout display which can be located in the operating cab of the sweeper truck to indicate bristle wear. A hydraulic metering valve is actuated accordingly by the electro-hydraulic controller to increase the rotational speed of the hydraulic rotary brush motor to the required rotational speed. Aggressiveness of the sweep can be influenced by hydraulically operated cables attached to the pivoted support arms which support the rotary brush.
In another embodiment of the invention, a manual system, may be employed where sensor 16 is eliminated, and the speed controller for controlling the rotation rate of the rotary brush is provided with a manual input setting determined by a simple visual inspection of the remaining brush bristles, which may be color coded, or in the alternative a window may be provided with indicia relative to the remaining brush bristle length. In turn, this setting may be provide as an input to a controller for controlling brush rotation rate or brush position or both in accordance with a predetermined relationship to the visual inspection of the brush bristle length.
While the present invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the accompanying figures, it will be understood, however, that other modifications thereto are of course possible, all of which are intended to be within the true spirit and scope of the present invention. Various changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the true spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
More specifically, position sensor 16 is intended to provide an output signal indicative of remaining brush bristle length on the brush. Brush diameter or radius is, of course, related to brush bristle length. Likewise, brush weight is indicative of bristle length since as the bristles wear, the brush weight decreases. Thus, sensor 16 represents any type of sensor which may provide an output signal indicative of the quantity intended to be sensed, i.e., bristle length, for ultimately controlling either the rotation rate of the rotary brush and/or the pressure of the brush against the surface intended to be swept in order to achieve consistent sweeping performance of a road sweeper or the like. Accordingly, sensor 16 may be implemented by a wide array of sensors including proximity sensors, optical sensors, and weight sensors depending upon the selected control scheme in accordance with the principles of the present invention, all of which are intended to be within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Further, the most simplest form of the present invention is an open loop control system for setting the rotation rate of the rotary brush or brush position or both in response to the sensed value of the remaining bristles on the rotary brush. However, a closed loop control system may also be employed having more or less advantages. Further, the control system of the present invention may be complex employing an algorithmic relation of bristle length to the controlled parameter, i.e., brush rotation rate or position, or may simply be based on a selected or predetermined look up table relating the parameter intended to be controlled in response to the sensed value of the remaining bristles on the rotary brush, all of which are intended to be within the spirit and scope of the present invention. It should also be recognized that the brush wear system of the present invention may be implemented by a wide array of analog and digital techniques, including microprocessors, computers, software and firmware, and the like, and either being part of a sole system or part of a more complex controller having many more functions.
Although depicted in the drawings is a particular rotary brush positioning system employing linkages, cables, hydraulic pumps, electro-hydraulic controllers, and hydraulic motors, and the like, others are of course possible. For example, the rotary brush system may be implement by electrical linear actuators or linear hydraulic actuators as opposed to pivotal arrangements shown in the drawings, and the like, all of which are intended to be within the true spirit and scope of the present invention.
A significant aspect and feature of the present invention is a brush wear adjustment system which provides for consistent sweeping performance by adjustment of rotary brush speed and/or rotary brush down pressure.
A significant aspect and feature of the present invention is a brush wear adjustment system which accommodates the constant and increasing shortening of bristles.
Another significant aspect and feature of the present invention is a brush wear adjustment system which senses data relating to the rotating brush bristle length.
Another significant aspect and feature of the present invention is a brush wear adjustment system which increases the rotational rate of a rotating brush to maintain the tip speed of a bristle.
Yet another significant aspect and feature of the present invention is a brush wear adjustment system incorporating the use of a position sensor to determine vertical displacement of a rotary brush.
A further significant aspect and feature of the present invention is a brush wear adjustment system incorporating the use of an electro-hydraulic controller to determine required rotary brush speed.
A still further significant aspect and feature of the present invention is a brush wear adjustment system incorporating a metering valve controlled by an electro-hydraulic controller to vary the rotary brush speed.
Yet another significant aspect and feature of the present invention is the use of the invention as a brush wear indicator where the wear or the amount of bristle remaining can be viewed on a swivelable readout display in the operator cab of a sweeper truck.
Having thus described embodiments of the present invention and enumerated several significant aspects and features thereof, it is the principal object of the present invention to provide a brush wear adjustment system, and method for use in a road sweeper or other suitable device.
Other objects of the present invention and many of the attendant advantages of the present invention will be readily appreciated as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals designate like parts throughout the figures thereof and wherein:
Electrical positional information is sent via the electrical cable 28 to the electro-hydraulic controller 30 which contains suitable circuitry or computational devices such as, but not limited to, a micro-computer, as well as other required controlling devices. The output of the electro-hydraulic controller 30 controls a metering valve 32 or other such suitable apparatus which under commands can variably deliver hydraulic fluid from a hydraulic reservoir and hydraulic pump under the correct pressure and suitable flow to the hydraulic rotary brush motor of a sweeper. In the alternative and in lieu of the metering valve 32, the electro-hydraulic controller 30 could control a variable displacement hydraulic pump to power the hydraulic rotary brush motor; or, the electro-hydraulic controller 30 could directly control a variable speed rotary brush motor.
Electrical positional information as provided by the position sensor 16 is sent via an electrical cable 29 to a computer 31 which drives the readout display 33 to provide bristle length information to either the driver or driver's assistant in the truck sweeper cab. The readout display 33 can be swivel mounted for viewing by the driver or driver's assistant.
Various modifications can be made to the present invention without departing from the apparent scope hereof.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040045581 A1 | Mar 2004 | US |