The present invention refers to a reflector for a vehicle headlight of the complex type, i.e. formed of a plurality of sectors oriented so as to permit the illumination of the surrounding space according to a predetermined light distribution.
Stylistic and performance requirements have always pushed the motor vehicle industry towards the use of headlights of reduced dimensions, with a smooth transparent element and complex reflecting surfaces. The principal problems in the designing of a reflector of this type are the limitation of dazzle in the dipped light beam, and the control of the light beam for the formation of the distribution of illumination according to the regulations. As may be seen from
The angle of spread (or divergence) of the light beam reflected by each point of the reflector depends on the dimension of the virtual source at that point and on the distance between the source and the point on the reflector. In particular, it is important to consider the vertical angle of spread θ, or the angle of spread in the direction perpendicular to the plane of the road.
In order to obtain a predetermined light distribution, for example of the type described above, the conventional reflectors have a surface sub-divided into a plurality of facets for directing the light beam from a light source into predetermined zones of the distribution. A reflector for headlights of this type is known for example from U.S. Pat. No. 6,007,224. That patent describes a method for producing the reflector which provides for the arrangement of a plurality of facets of the reflector, the shape of which is established beforehand, to form a desired image of the source. The said patent further provides for the facets furthest from the light source to be intended to provide light to a region with greater light intensity of the light distribution generated, and for the facets closest to the light source to be intended to provide light to the regions of lesser light intensity of the light distribution.
The aim of the present invention is to produce a reflector for a vehicle headlight that is relatively simple to manufacture, in which the shape and the dimension of the sectors are optimised, thus minimising the number thereof and reducing the overall dimensions to a minimum.
The predetermined light distribution is obtained according to the invention by a reflector for a vehicle headlight having the characteristics defined in the claims.
In a reflector thus produced, the shape and the dimension of the sectors are not determined beforehand, as in U.S. Pat. No. 6,007,224, but optimised for each sector on the basis of the shape of the light source and the relative position of the latter with respect to the zone of the reflector that is in question. The number of sectors may thus be minimised, significantly simplifying the manufacture of the reflector dies, and the overall dimensions are reduced.
A further object of the invention is a method for the manufacture of such a reflector.
A description will now be given of a preferred but non-limiting embodiment of the invention, referring to the appended drawings, in which:
With reference to
Here and hereinafter, the surface of the reflector 10 is to be understood to be disposed with respect to a Cartesian system of reference so that the axis z of that reference corresponds to the optical axis of the headlight, the axis x is parallel to the plane of the road and the axis y is perpendicular to the plane of the road.
The surface of the reflector 10 is sub-divided into a plurality of sectors 11 faceted so as to obtain the light distribution illustrated in
In one position of the reflector 10, in the present example substantially central, a light source 20 is disposed. The source may be any known type of source, for example a discharge or incandescent source, of the type used in motor vehicle headlights.
The reflector 10 described above is obtained according to the invention by means of the method described hereinafter.
First of all, the overall shape that the reflector 10 is to have is arranged according to the overall dimensions required within the vehicle and to aesthetic requirements. The shape may for example be that obtained starting from a paraboloid surface described in the preceding example.
A light source is then arranged, having a predetermined shape and geometric arrangement with respect to the reflector 10. As in the example described above, the source may be of the halogen type, with the filament of the source positioned in a known manner with the axis parallel to the optical axis z of the headlight (see
On the surface of the reflector 10, boundary lines 12′ are then determined, at the points of which the value of the angle of spread θ (or divergence) of the light beam reflected in the vertical direction of the axis y is constant.
In the case where the lamp of the source 20 is of type H7, it is possible to approximate the shape of the source 20 to a cylinder, and therefore calculate analytically the projection of the cylinder on the substantially paraboloid reflector 10.
It is therefore possible to obtain a mapping of the lines 12′ with θ constant on the reflector 10. In the present example, such curves 12′ are substantially segments of circumference having common tangent points on the optical axis of the reflector 10, and having centres positioned along the vertical axis y (see
As can be seen in
In the case where the surface of the reflector 10 is different from that of a paraboloid, the lines 12′ generated obviously have a different shape, for example substantially elliptical or also non-conical.
In the case where the shape of the source cannot be approximated to a cylinder, the analytical calculation described above becomes laborious or even impossible, so that recourse is had to conventional computing techniques, for example of the type based on non-sequential ray tracing codes.
Once the lines 12′ with constant θ are defined, it is then possible to determine the sectors 11 in which to sub-divide the surface of the reflector 10, selecting them from among the regions 11′ delimited by the boundary lines 12′ and, naturally, by the edges of the reflector 10. At least some of the sectors 11 then correspond to respective regions 11′, while the edges 12 of the sectors 11 coincide at least in part with the lines 12′ with constant θ.
After having determined the arrangement and the shape of the sectors 11 of the reflector 10, the corresponding surfaces are optimised in such a manner that the sectors having an angle of angular spread θ along the axis y with a lesser value contribute to the part of the light distribution of
The mapping of the surface of the reflector 10 further makes it possible to select the zone of the reflector 10 and to obtain the relative sectors to create the region of light distribution below the inclined section of the cut-off line, so that there is a minimal vertical divergence.
The reflector described above is suitable for being used both in headlights having a smooth transparent element and in headlights with an at least partially prismatic transparent element.
With the principle of the invention remaining unchanged, the details of production and the embodiments may of course be widely varied with respect to what has been described and illustrated, without thereby departing from the scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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TO2003A0612 | Aug 2003 | IT | national |
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0 735 309 | Oct 1996 | EP |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050057940 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |