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The disclosed invention relates to the cycling transportation and sporting industry, specifically to modern bicycle designs typically making use of front and rear powered drive chain derailleurs serving to alternate drive chain position between different ratio front and rear drive sprockets through wiring to a set of rider control switches, thereby permitting the rider to achieve an optimal drivetrain ratio through selection of an adequate combination of front and rear drive sprockets, thereby facilitating a comfortable pedaling rate and effort thereof depending on desired road speed, rider conditioning, road inclination and other circumstantial conditions.
Bicycles have existed for many years serving throughout as transportation and sporting means. Over the great time span since their inception, the technology has evolved with numerous designs and advancements predominantly geared toward addressing rider comfort. With the initial designs from many years ago comprising a single speed power transmission mechanism often requiring the rider to either exert undue effort on the pedals or have to alternate the pedals at an uncomfortably high rate to achieve desired riding speed, a need was recognized for multiple powertrain ratios to facilitate acceptable operator pedaling rates and efforts. A variety of designs consequently emerged where additional power transmission sprockets of various number of teeth but equal pitch were added in the axial directions of the pedals mechanism as well as power transmission rear wheel to facilitate a combination of front and rear power transmission ratios resulting in optimal settings based on desired bicycle speeds, road conditions, operator biometrics and preference. This innovation was facilitated by the de-facto standard four bar linkage mechanism based derailleur assembly used to this very day to alternate drive sprockets through properly positioning the drive chain thereto as well as compensate for resultant varying chain lengths through an integral spring loaded chain tensioning mechanism. The capability was facilitated by two cable tensioning apparatuses, one for rear sprockets and another for the fronts. With one end of each cable apparatus connected to the derailleur chain positioning mechanism and the other end to an operator actuation mechanism typically comprising a lever assembly, this apparatus granted the operator the ability to adjust the chain position in the axial direction for proper alignment and thereby engagement of selected rear and front drive sprockets in order to achieve optimal power transmission ratio settings. Advancements in the actuation mechanism included indexing capability of the operator lever assembly so that the actuation of the gearing mechanism takes place in an indexing fashion consistently properly aligning the chain with desired sprocket thereof rather than one continuous motion requiring the operator to guess the proper chain position often leading to positioning errors.
Most recent developments stemming from desire to eliminate shifting cables altogether and additionally relieve operator actuation efforts through replacement of the shifter mechanisms with switching devices, resulted in a number of powered derailleur designs making use of small DC motors acting through typically a worm and spur gearset to drive the derailleur mechanisms through actuation of one of the joints of their four bar linkages, equally applicable to both rear as well as front derailleurs.
As most of these recent designs need to achieve a substantial gearing reduction ratio to amplify the output torque of their fairly small motors to an operational level, they almost exclusively rely on multiple stage proprietary gearing reduction sets making use of at least one worm gearset stage directly realizing the needed substantial reduction but at the cost of diminished efficiency to around 70% for the wormset stage due to the sliding motion between the worm and the worm gear. With their second, third and often fourth stage relying on pure spur gearing strictly based on rolling motions, these later reduction stages achieve substantially higher power transmission efficiencies, typically in the neighborhood of 95% plus per stage.
Consequentially, the typical efficiency range of electrical derailleur reduction gearsets is in the 60th percentile neighborhood, simply derived by the product of efficiencies of all stages, leading to oversized motors and higher drain on powering circuits and batteries typically leading to premature componentry wear for most of these commercially available derailleurs.
The following is a brief summary of prior art deemed pertinent to the bicycle front derailleur electrical actuator of the present invention.
U.S. Pat. No. 11,458,450 B2 discloses an electronic front derailleur making use of a proprietary geared reduction unit for actuation thereof making use of a first stage worm gearing notwithstanding lower efficiency due to sliding motion between the worm and worm gear leading to higher battery drain, increased motor load and heat generation and thereby shorter componentry life.
U.S. Pat. No. 9,950,769 B2 discloses an assortment of designs for an electronic front derailleur making use of proprietary geared reduction units for actuation thereof, at least one of which making use of a first stage worm gearing set notwithstanding the lower overall efficiency, being the product of efficiencies of all reduction stages, stemming from the worm gearing stage, thereby leading to higher battery drain, increased motor load and heat generation and thereby shorter componentry life.
U.S. Pat. No. 9,573,653 B2 discloses an electronic front derailleur integrating gearing and linkage components. Although this design does offer some potential advantages it does so at the cost of additional weight and costly non-standard and difficult to fabricate components
Notwithstanding the extensive endeavor in the art, a standard high efficiency front derailleur actuator apparatus entailing additional highly desirable characteristics such as built-in overload protection, minimal weight and a fast response time remains elusive.
Equally applicable to both front and rear bicycle electrical derailleurs, inventor discloses an actuating gearbox apparatus comprising a widely available high efficiency standard reduction transmission package typically used in wireless remote control (RC) servo units thoroughbred for great space and weight savings, exclusively relying on spur gearing and with on-board electronics serving to directly interpret a pulse width modulated signal to power a directly coupled small cored or coreless DC motor acting through a triple or quadruple spur gearing reduction set with output shaft thereof coupled to a magnetic 12-bit quadrature encoder for high positioning accuracy. In the foregoing front derailleur implementation, target standard remote control (RC) servo mechanism is directly coupled to actuation shaft of the preferred embodiment front derailleur.
A further iteration of the disclosed invention comprises a digitally commutated brushless AC motor, also available as standard off the shelf wireless remote control (RC) servo componentry, in lieu of the brushed DC motor, with integral on board electronics resulting in greatly improved response time, greater endurance due to elimination of motor brushes and higher efficiency thereof for substantially improved power conservation and minimal heat losses.
In a first control scheme, a rider makes use of a touchscreen based device such as a cellphone to wirelessly monitor using Bluetooth low energy (BLE) status of front and rear derailleur actuation switches, bicycle speed sensor and wind load sensor, and additionally monitor through a Bluetooth wireless connection road inclination, vertical and forward bicycle acceleration as relayed by a shifter control unit directly wired to front derailleur, rear derailleur, chain movement sensor and a newly disclosed seat force sensor, compiles all received inputs through an application program (App) running on the touchscreen based device, and finally commands Bluetooth wireless shifter control unit to conduct resultant shifting actions based on manual and pre-programmed operator invoked semi-automatic and fully automatic control modes.
In a second and third control schemes, a rider makes use of a touchscreen based device such as a cellphone to wirelessly monitor using Bluetooth low energy (BLE) status of front and rear derailleur actuation switches, bicycle speed sensor, wind load sensor, road inclination sensor, vertical and forward bicycle acceleration sensors, and a seat force sensor, compiles all received inputs through an application program (App) running on the touchscreen based device, and finally commands through a Bluetooth wireless connection for the second scheme and a remote control (RC) servo wireless communication for the third scheme, wireless front and rear derailleurs to conduct resultant shifting actions based on manual and pre-programmed operator invoked semi-automatic and fully automatic control modes.
Preferred Embodiment Construction—
With reference to
Preferred Embodiment Controls—
With reference to
Operator command panel 18 comprising battery 35, touchscreen display 36, video driver 37, controls subsection 38 comprising processor 39, random access memory (RAM) 40, electrically erasable programmable read only memory (EEPROM) 41, oscillator/counters/timers subsection 42, acting as an integral system executing application program (APP) 43 serving to evaluate readings of chain motion sensor 24, seat force sensor 23, forward motion accelerometer 29, vertical motion accelerometer 28, GPS/GNSS altimeter 27, received through Bluetooth transceiver 44, and commands from rear derailleur switches 20, front derailleur switches 21, speed readings from speed sensor 22 and wind load readings from hot wire anemometer 19 received through Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) transceiver 45, and in turn issue controls command to control system 17 for programmed energization of front derailleur motor controller 33 and rear derailleur motor controller 34 through Bluetooth transceiver 44.
Rear derailleur motor controls subsection 46 comprises input terminals 47 serving to receive power and control signal 48 from rear derailleur motor controller 34 of control system 17, comparator/resolver 49 serving to compare rear derailleur encoder signal 50 to received control signal 48 and accordingly bias motor driver 51 serving to power motor of rear derailleur 10.
Front derailleur motor controls subsection 52 comprises input terminals 53 serving to receive power and control signal 54 from front derailleur motor controller 33 of control system 17, comparator/resolver 55 serving to compare front derailleur encoder signal 56 to received control signal 54 and accordingly bias motor driver 57 serving to power motor of front derailleur 14.
Operating as individually powered standard Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) spectrum protocol discrete transmission units, speed sensor 22, front derailleur switches 21, rear derailleur switches 20 and hot wire anemometer 19, each comprising own battery 58 for power and own Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) transceiver 59, serve to respectively transmit bicycle speed, operator commands, and wind speed with data thereof intercepted by BLE transceiver 45 for data processing through APP 43 of operator command panel 18.
First Alternate Embodiment Construction—
With reference to
First Alternate Embodiment Controls—
With reference to
Operating as individually powered standard Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) spectrum protocol discrete transmission units, chain movement sensor 124, seat force sensor 123, speed sensor 22, front derailleur switches 21, rear derailleur switches 20, hot wire anemometer 19, and forward and vertical motion accelerometers 71, each comprising own battery 73 for power and own Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) transceiver 74, serve to transmit chain movement, seat force, bicycle speed, front and rear derailleur operator commands, wind speed, and forward and vertical accelerations respectively to operator command panel 118 intercepted through BLE transceiver 70 for data processing thereof through APP 62.
Relying on wireless Bluetooth transceiver 75 serving to relay derailleur position and receive derailleur position commands from control panel 118, front derailleur 114 additionally comprises, battery 76 serving to provide power and digital magnetic rotary encoder 77 serving to relay actual derailleur position to comparator/resolver 78 used to compare actual derailleur position thereof to desired derailleur position received from control panel 118 and accordingly bias motor driver 80 serving to power electrical motor of front derailleur 114.
Relying on wireless Bluetooth transceiver 81 serving to relay derailleur position and receive derailleur position commands from control panel 118, rear derailleur 110 additionally comprises, battery 82 serving to provide power and digital magnetic encoder 83 serving to relay actual derailleur position to comparator/resolver 84 used to compare actual derailleur position thereof to desired derailleur position received from control panel 118 and accordingly bias motor driver 86 serving to power electrical motor of rear derailleur 110.
Second Alternate Embodiment Construction—
With reference to
Second Alternate Embodiment Controls—
With reference to
Operating as individually powered standard Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) spectrum protocol discrete transmission units, chain movement sensor 124, seat force sensor 123, speed sensor 22, front derailleur switches 21, rear derailleur switches 20, hot wire anemometer 19, and forward and vertical motion accelerometers 71, each comprising own battery 73 for power and own Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) transceiver 74, serve to transmit chain movement, seat force, bicycle speed, front and rear derailleur operator commands, wind speed, and forward and vertical accelerations respectively to operator command panel 218 intercepted through BLE transceiver 97 for data processing thereof through APP 89.
Relying on standard wireless remote control (RC) servo receiver 130 serving to receive derailleur position commands from control panel 218, front derailleur 214 additionally comprises, battery 131 serving to provide power and digital magnetic encoder 132 serving to relay actual derailleur position to comparator/resolver 133 used to compare actual derailleur position thereof to desired derailleur position received from control panel 218 and accordingly bias motor driver 134 serving to power electrical motor 135 of front derailleur 214.
Relying on standard wireless remote control (RC) servo receiver 136 serving to receive derailleur position commands from control panel 218, rear derailleur 210 additionally comprises, battery 137 serving to provide power and digital magnetic encoder 138 serving to relay actual derailleur position to comparator/resolver 139 used to compare actual derailleur position thereof to desired derailleur position received from control panel 218 and accordingly bias motor driver 140 serving to power electrical motor 141 of rear derailleur 210.
Front Derailleur Construction—
With reference to frontal, rearward, exploded and isometric views depicted in
Front Derailleur Actuator Construction—
With reference to
Front Derailleur Drive Assembly Construction—
With reference to
Front Derailleur Position Feedback—
With reference to
Front Derailleur Position Feedback—
With reference to
With reference to
With the sole connection to servo electronics board 262 being three wires with power being supplied by negative wire 322 and positive wire 323, and with the third wire 324 delivering front derailleur control signal 54 with voltage 325 thereof charted in
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