The present invention relates to an aftermarket controller for a garage door opener that allows the garage door to operated and monitored remotely from a cell phone or other personal communication device connected to a wireless network.
Referring to the drawings which are appended hereto and which form a portion of this disclosure, it may be seen that:
Referring to the drawings for a clearer understanding of the invention, it may be seen that the present device is an add on for existing garage door openers that will economically provide owners of existing garage door openers with the benefit of having “smart” garage door opener. As is well known, garage door openers are typically activated from a wall unit or a remote control radio link that the owner uses while in a car leaving or approaching an associated drive way. Garage door openers include limit switches and well known controls for stopping the movement of the associated garage door at it fully up and fully down position. Additionally, light beam devices mounted near the floor adjacent the garage door are connected to the garage door opener to reverse the movement of the door or stop the movement of the door when an object is blocking the light beam. The present device uses these features as the base upon which a smart garage door opener is built.
Most garage door openers come with a standard 110 volt plug for plugging into a conveniently located outlet on the ceiling superjacent the garage door. Our device utilizes a Y cable 13 shown in
Referring to
The garage door controller 11 uses microprocessor 101 to control the garage door opener in accordance with control communications from a user's cell phone or other wireless device through a home automation hub. Exemplary control components for controller 11 would be Silicon Labs' EM357 system-on-chip that integrates a 2.4 GHz, IEEE 802.15.4-2003-compliant transceiver, 32-bit ARM® Cortex™-M3 microprocessor, flash and RAM memory, and peripherals of ZigBee-based systems, such as home automation wireless networks. The integrated transceiver module, such as a ZICM35xSP2 available from California Eastern Laboratories, provides communication with a home automation unit using ZigBee HA 1.2 integration or similar radio frequency home integration capabilities. With onboard ZigBee HA 1.2 integration, the system can trigger other devices in the connected home such as lighting scenes, text notifications, and events as directed from a cellular telephone.
Referring to
To enable the smart performance of the garage door opener, door movement information is needed beyond the basic open and closed information provided by the standard garage door opener. To this end, a garage door sensor 120 is employed to report to the microprocessor 101. The garage door sensor reports when the door is opened or closed and level of the door, if open. The sensor 120 includes an accelerometer 121, a microcontroller 122, and a transmitter 123. In an exemplary embodiment, we use a Microchip PIC16LF1618 microcontroller that receives acceleration data from an LIS331DLH high performance, ultra-low-power three-axis linear accelerometer to detect garage door movement. This acceleration data is converted to angular rotational data, and passed from the PIC16LF1618 microcontroller to the Silicon Labs Si4010 RF transmitter for transmission to the garage door controller to use for indicating garage door position. When the accelerometer 121 detects motion, it sends a “wake up” signal to the microcontroller 122 which enters a data sampling mode, and receives update signals from the accelerometer 121. This rotational data is used to determine whether the garage door is moving up or down, as well as angular degrees, and is passed to the transmitter for broadcast to the garage door controller 11.
Specifically, referring to
Although we have described an accelerometer based system, it should be understood that we can also use a rotational counter mounted to the torsion bar to achieve the same control in a well-known manner. Such rotational counters may be based on a detectable physical anomaly such as one or more gaps in a disc, a magnetic anomaly, a reflective surface or any other like anomaly that may be detected as the torsion bar rotates. Mounted proximal the torsion bar in a cooperative position at a fixed point for sensing the anomaly 17 is a detector or sensor which will generate an electrical signal indicative of the position of the anomaly as it passes the fixed or reference point. The rotation of the torsion bar can be easily mathematically converted to the distance the door travels in either direction for calibration and control purposes. For directional control, two distinct anomalies sensed by different sensors may be employed with the direction determined by the order of detection of the anomaly.
In another embodiment, sensor 120 is mounted to the lower panel of the door. In this embodiment, torsion bar mount 125 is not used and sensor housing 126 is affixed to the door in the bottom panel of the door. The accelerometer 121 will indicate the start of any movement by the door and the garage door controller can be calibrated based on the time it takes the door to move from a stationary position to a stop at the fully raised and open position. In any described embodiment the controller 11 can stop the motor at any preset or selected position of the door between fully open and fully closed.
The garage door sensor 120 reports movement of the door, indicating whether the door is opened or closed and what level the door is at if open. By combining the output of sensor 120 and the status of the motor, an alarm may be triggered if the door has been moved without use of the motor. Further, if the door is open, the controller 11 can tell whether a person or thing has entered the garage by monitoring the safety beam sensor 32. Users will be able to send and receive text notifications or event alerts depending on the service platform they decide to use. Two of the most common use case scenarios include home break-in alerts when the garage door is opened manually without activating the motor, and automating safer and easier package deliveries where users remotely command the garage door to open to a few feet around time of delivery, then utilize a separate motion detector having a field of view within the garage adjacent the door to trigger the garage door to close after delivery.
Use of the garage door controller is straightforward. Setup and operation generally follow the flow chart of
While in the foregoing specification this device has been described in relation to certain embodiments thereof, and many details have been put forth for the purpose of illustration, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the invention is susceptible to additional embodiments and that certain of the details described herein can be varied considerably without departing from the basic principles of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62138817 | Mar 2015 | US |