This invention relates to a ground pressure detonation device.
Pressure sensitive explosive devices buried in or on the ground, such as land mines, ground surface Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) detonators, and the like, may be cleared by vehicles equipped with a mine flail. A typical mine flail includes a rotating drum adorned with metal chains. The chains impact the ground with substantial force as the drum spins, causing land mines to detonate. Mine flails may have many sizes, e.g., from large tank-mounted devices to smaller devices attached to robots. However, conventional small, robot-mounted devices may have difficulty generating enough force to guarantee mine detonation.
Another conventional approach to clearing and/or detonating the pressure sensitive explosive devices described above may be to use heavy ground rollers. As the name implies, these devices typically include of one or more rolling mass(es) which impart a ground pressure as they are moved across terrain of interest for clearing. The ground pressures from the rollers are designed to be sufficiently high so as to detonate the mines, IEDs, detonators and similar devices in the path. However, achieving sufficient pressures may be difficult and may often require extremely massive roller systems.
In one aspect, a ground pressure detonation device is featured. The device includes a housing, a foot coupled to the housing, and an oscillation subsystem associated with the housing configured to oscillate the housing such that foot impacts the ground with sufficient oscillatory force sufficient to ensure detonation of one or more pressure sensitive explosive devices in and/or on the ground.
In one embodiment, oscillation subsystem may be configured to oscillate the housing such that the housing and the foot bounce up and down off the ground and the foot impacts the ground with the sufficient oscillatory force. The oscillation subsystem may include at least one moveable mass and a drive subsystem configured to oscillate the housing. The subsystem may include two wheels and the at least one moveable mass includes a mass attached to each of the two wheels. The drive system may include a motor coupled to the two wheels configured to rotate the two wheels in a counter-rotating direction with respect to each other such that the masses on each of the two rotating wheels oscillate the housing. The device may include a spring between the foot and the housing configured to store energy to the oscillation subsystem when the housing contacts the foot and the foot contacts the ground and configured to return energy to the oscillation subsystem as the foot and the housing bounce away from the ground. The spring and/or the drive subsystem may be configured to tune the amount of the oscillating force and/or the amount of the bounce. The spring and/or the drive subsystem may be configured to create a resonant condition that transfers energy into the oscillating force. The frame may be configured as a cylinder and the at least one moveable mass is in the cylinder. The drive subsystem may include a detonation subsystem configured to create repeated explosions in the cylinder to drive the mass in a downward vertical direction. The device may include a spring in the cylinder configured to drive the mass in an upward vertical direction. The downward vertical direction and the upward vertical direction of the mass may create the oscillating force. At least one moveable mass may be in the housing and the drive system may be configured to move the mass in a downward vertical direction and an upward vertical direction to create the oscillating force. The drive system may include a voice coil actuator subsystem configured to move the mass in a downward vertical direction and a spring configured to move the mass in an upward vertical direction to create the oscillating force. The drive subsystem may include a crank and a connecting rod coupled to the at least one mass configured to move the mass in a downward vertical direction and an upward vertical direction to create the oscillating force. The oscillation subsystem may include a plurality of arms extending from the housing each having masses coupled thereto and a drive system for moving the arms and masses to create the oscillating force. The drive system may include a motor coupled to the a ns. The oscillation subsystem may include torsional springs coupled to the arms configured to control the motion of the arms. The device may include a spring between the foot and the housing configured to store energy to the oscillation subsystem when the housing contacts the foot and the foot contacts the ground and configured to return energy to the oscillation subsystem as the foot and the housing bounce away from the ground. The spring and/or the drive subsystem may be configured to tune the amount of the oscillating force and/or the amount of the bounce. The spring and/or the drive subsystem may be configured to create a resonant condition that transfers energy into the oscillating force. The drive system may include a flexure extending through the housing configured to form said arms and a motor configured to drive a cam in contact with the flexure to deflect the flexure and drive the arms to create the oscillating force. The housing may include an upward port and a downward port and the drive system includes a jet engine and a spinning plate in the housing configured to alternately direct thrust to the upward port and the downward port to oscillate the housing to create the oscillating. The device may include a spring between the foot and the housing configured to store energy to the oscillation subsystem when the housing contacts the foot and the foot contacts the ground and configured to return energy to the oscillation subsystem as the foot and the housing bounce away from the ground. The spring and/or the drive subsystem may be configured to tune the amount of the oscillating force and/or the amount of the bounce. The spring and/or the drive subsystem may be configured to create a resonant condition that transfers energy into the oscillating force. The housing may be tilted in a predetermined direction such that the ground pressure device bounces in a desired direction. The housing may be titled in a predetermined direction such that the ground pressure device bounces over one or more obstacles.
In another aspect, a ground pressure detonation device is featured. The device includes at least one mass, a foot coupled to the mass, a spring coupled between the foot and the mass, and a drive subsystem configured to repeatedly move the mass in a downward vertical direction. The spring is configured to drive the mass in an upward vertical direction. The downward vertical direction and the upward vertical direction of the mass causes the mass to oscillate such that the foot impacts the ground with sufficient oscillating force to ensure detonation of one or more pressure sensitive explosive devices in and/or on the ground.
In one embodiment, the mass and the spring may be configured to oscillate the mass such that the mass and the foot bounce up and down off the ground and the foot impacts the ground with the sufficient oscillatory force. The spring and the mass may be configured to tune the amount of the oscillating force and/or the amount of the bounce. The spring and the mass may be configured to create a resonant condition that transfers energy into the oscillating force. The mass may be tilted in a predetermined direction such that the ground pressure device bounces in a desired direction. The mass may be titled in a predetermined direction such that the ground pressure device bounces over one or more obstacles.
In yet another aspect, a ground pressure detonation device is featured. The device includes at least one mass and a drive system configured to repeatedly drive the mass in a downward vertical direction such that the mass impacts the ground with sufficient oscillating force to ensure detonation of at least one pressure sensitive explosive device in and/or on the ground.
In one embodiment, the mass may be tilted in a predetermined direction such that the ground pressure device bounces in a desired direction. The mass may be titled in a predetermined direction such that the ground pressure device bounces over one or more obstacles.
Other objects, features and advantages will occur to those skilled in the art from the following description of a preferred embodiment and the accompanying drawings, in which:
Aside from the preferred embodiment or embodiments disclosed below, this invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or being carried out in various ways. Thus, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangements of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. If only one embodiment is described herein, the claims hereof are not to be limited to that embodiment. Moreover, the claims hereof are not to be read restrictively unless there is clear and convincing evidence manifesting a certain exclusion, restriction, or disclaimer.
As discussed in the Background section above, pressure sensitive explosive devices buried in the ground are typically cleared by vehicles equipped with a mine flail or a mine roller. A mine flail typically includes a rotating drum adorned with metal chains. The chains impact the ground with substantial force as the drum spins, causing land mines to detonate. Mine flails come in many sizes, from large tank-mounted devices to small devices attached to robots.
Another approach to detonating pressure sensitive explosives buried in or on the ground is conventional rollers. Like flails, rollers can be mounted in front of tanks, trucks, or similar armored vehicles. Smaller rollers can be used with Bobcats, small tractors, robots, and the like, to attempt to detonate the pressure sensitive explosives.
Rollers may have the same shortcomings of flails discussed above. Similarly, small rollers may have problems generating sufficient force to trigger some pressure sensitive explosives.
The ground pressure detonation device of one or more embodiments of this invention overcomes the problems associated with conventional flails and rollers discussed above by providing a small, man-portable device that provides sufficient force needed to detonate pressure sensitive explosive devices in or on the ground.
Ground pressure detonation device 30,
In the example shown, oscillation subsystem 36 includes two counter-rotating wheels 50, 52 with masses 54, 56, attached thereto. Motor 70 may be used with belt 64 linking motor 70 to drive one of wheels 50, 52, e.g., wheel 50 to rotate wheels 50, 52 in a counter rotating manner with respect to each other, e.g., as shown by arrows 66, 68. Motor 70 may be a brushed DC motor, an air motor, a brushless DC motor, an induction motor, an internal combustion motor, or similar type motor. The rotation of wheels 50, 52 with masses 56, 58 is preferably slaved together using gears 60, 62, a timing belt, and linkages or controls (not shown). As wheels 50, 52 counter-rotate, the lateral portion of the centrifugal force balances out, creating net oscillating vertical motion 46 of housing 32 that causes foot 34 to impact ground 42 with sufficient oscillatory force 43 to ensure detonation of one or more pressure sensitive explosive devices 44 in and/or on the ground 42.
The result is ground pressure detonation device 30 effectively and efficiently detonates pressure sensitive devices in and/or on the ground. Device 30 is a small, man-portable device and overcomes the problems associated with conventional flails and rollers discussed above.
In one design, device 30 may include spring 72 attached to bottom 74 of housing 32 and foot 34. Spring 72 stores energy to oscillation subsystem 36 when housing 32 contacts foot 34 which impacts ground 42 and returns energy to oscillation subsystem 36 as device 30 bounces away from ground 42 saving drive power. The oscillatory force of foot 34 on ground 42 and the amount of bounce of foot 34 and housing 32 on and off ground 42 can be tailored by selection of the stiffness of spring 72 and/or the rotation rate of wheels 50, 52. Additionally, spring 72 and/or the amount of rotation of wheels 50, 52 may be used to create a resonant condition of housing 32 and/or foot 34 which efficiently transfers the input energy into oscillatory force 43 that impacts ground 42.
In one exemplary operation, the ground pressure detonation device 30,
A photograph of one example of a proof-of-concept prototype ground pressure detonation device 30 is shown in
Ground pressure detonation device 30a,
Ground pressure detonation device 30b,
Ground pressure detonation device 30c,
Device 30c also preferably includes torsional springs 140 and 142 coupled to arms 120 and 124, respectively, which may limit the motion of arms 120, 122. Motor 128 preferably drives arms 120, 122 by moving through small displacements instead of a full rotation. Preferably, motor 128 is driven with an oscillating voltage/torque to bring device 30c into resonance.
Device 30c may include spring 72 that functions similar as discussed above. The oscillatory force of foot 34 on ground 34 and the amount of bounce of foot 34 and housing 34 on and off ground 42 as can be tailored by selection of the stiffness of spring 72 and/or springs 140, 142 and/or the rate of motor 128. Additionally, spring 72 and/or springs 140, 142 and/or arms 120, 122 may be used to create a resonant condition of housing 32 and foot 34 which efficiently transfers the input energy into oscillatory force 43 that impacts ground 42.
Ground pressure detonation device 30d,
Ground pressure detonation device 30e,
Device 30e may include spring 72 that functions similar as discussed above. The oscillatory force of foot 34 on ground 42 and mass 162 and foot 34 as they bounce up and down off ground 42 can be tailored by selection of the stiffness of spring 72 and/or the amount of force provided by pulses 162. Additionally, spring 72 and/or the amount of force provided by pulses 162 may be used to create a resonant condition of device 30e which efficiently transfers the input energy into oscillatory force 43 that impacts ground 42.
Ground pressure detonation device 30f,
Device 30f may include spring 72 that functions similar as discussed above. The oscillatory force of foot 34,
Ground pressure detonation device 30g,
Ground pressure detonation device 30h,
Device 30e may also include spring 72 coupled to foot 34 as discussed above. The oscillatory force of foot 214 on ground 42 and housing 32 and foot 34 as they bounce on and off ground 42 can be tailored by selection of the stiffness of spring 212 and/or the amount of thrust 206 and/or the selection of ports 200 and 202. Additionally, spring 72 and the thrust from ports 200 and 202 may be used to create a resonant condition of device 30h which efficiently transfers the input energy into oscillatory force 43 that impacts ground 42.
The result is ground pressure detonation device 30 of one or more embodiments of this invention discussed above with reference to one or more of
In addition to applications for narrow trails and areas where man portability of the device is desired, ground pressure detonation device 30 of one or more embodiments of this invention can be scaled to greater sizes and/or used in multiple numbers to replace the flails, rollers, and other devices that might be used on roadways and areas wider than small paths. In these applications, ground pressure detonation device 30 of one or more embodiments of this invention may offer very high ground forces and pressures while weighing far less than conventional flails or rollers that might be used in similar applications. The lower weight of the ground pressure detonation device may provide for easier transport and lower loads and stresses on the vehicles used for guiding and propelling the device.
Although specific features of the invention are shown in some drawings and not in others, this is for convenience only as each feature may be combined with any or all of the other features in accordance with the invention. The words “including”, “comprising”, “having”, and “with” as used herein are to be interpreted broadly and comprehensively and are not limited to any physical interconnection. Moreover, any embodiments disclosed in the subject application are not to be taken as the only possible embodiments. Other embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art.
In addition, any amendment presented during the prosecution of the patent application for this patent is not a disclaimer of any claim element presented in the application as filed: those skilled in the art cannot reasonably be expected to draft a claim that would literally encompass all possible equivalents, many equivalents will be unforeseeable at the time of the amendment and are beyond a fair interpretation of what is to be surrendered (if anything), the rationale underlying the amendment may bear no more than a tangential relation to many equivalents, and/or there are many other reasons the applicant cannot be expected to describe certain insubstantial substitutes for any claim element amended.
Other embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art and are within the following claims.
This application claims benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/628,258, filed Oct. 27, 2011, and U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/629,657, filed Nov. 22, 2011 under 35 U.S.C. §§119, 120, 363, 365, and 37 C.F.R. §1.55 and §1.78 and both are incorporated herein by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61628258 | Oct 2011 | US | |
61629657 | Nov 2011 | US |