FIELD OF INVENTION
This invention relates generally to auxiliary vehicle systems and, more specifically, to a comprehensive electrical system for insertion onto a personal vehicle.
Golf carts have been constructed for transportation around grass-covered golf courses. All-terrain vehicles have been constructed for driving along muddy and rough paths instead of on streets. Bicycles and electric bicycles are increasingly moving from a sidewalk sport to a viable form of transportation as people utilize bikes to commute to work and run errands. These are all different examples of personal vehicles, and now many personal vehicles, though created for off-road purposes, are increasingly driven on streets alongside cars and trucks.
Personal vehicles include vehicles such as bicycles, electric bicycles, golf carts, Amish buggies, carriages, all-terrain vehicles (ATVs), utility vehicles, mules, four-wheelers, remote access vehicles, and many others. Each of these vehicles is an example of a transport carrier that a driver may use on private land, but may wish to use on a public street as well. However, many drivers are constrained from taking these vehicles to the streets, either by laws or by safety concerns. By adding a comprehensive system of turn signals, headlights, brake lights, license lights, hazard lights, brake lights, and a horn, a personal vehicle may meet legal and safety requirements for driving on common streets.
The standards behind many of the laws governing the use of personal vehicles 10 on common roads is often based on and related to the safety of the personal vehicle driver. Laws may differ by location, but common safety steps may be implemented in many locations, regardless of the laws governing the personal vehicle 10. Laws and safety focus on proper lighting elements 30 that can be displayed to keep other vehicles on the street better informed of the personal vehicle driver location and intentions. These lighting elements 30 may include brake lights, turn signals, headlights, hazard lights, license-illuminating lights, and possibly running lights (aka parking lights). Additional elements 30 that may be desired could include a horn, a windshield wiper, accessory outlet (allowing an owner to provide power to an accessory of his/her choice), etc.
For personal vehicles 10 that are not street-legal as new laws take effect, it will be difficult and expensive to update them for common-road-driving by separately adding each of the required elements. An owner would have to hire a mechanic to make the installations since the system would be difficult. Other difficulties with such a random method of updating include haphazard placement of controls in a variety of locations, failure of the added parts would be high due to the large number of pieces involved and locations for wires to be loosened. Also, in the case of an electrical failure, it could be difficult to locate a bad wire/connection due to the unorganized placement of the wires.
The present invention relates to a wholly-inclusive system 22. This system allows for mounting of a single, controlling system unit 20 with clearly marked functions, a limited and manageable number of quasi-protected or weather-resilient wires that are coded in a way that allows a non-electrician owner to make his/her own installations, and a power-pull architecture 60 for the system that does not significantly damage the power-storage units 61 during use.
Many electrical systems 30 will include an innovative turn signal system 32, 33. The turn signals 32, 33 can incorporate a timing mechanism 72 instead of or in addition to a turn-sensing mechanism 74. This would allow the driver or a system manufacturer to include a predetermined time (i.e. 2 seconds, 4 seconds, 6 seconds, 8 seconds, 10 seconds, 20 seconds, 30 seconds, etc.) that the turn signal 32, 33 would be in an “on” position. Alternatively, the driver would have the option of adjusting the timing to suit his or her preferences. Upon expiration of that time, the turn signal 32, 33 would turn off without regard to whether or not the vehicle driver turned. This could eliminate the need for a turn-sensing mechanism. Such a development would also create an environment where the driver would not need to turn off a signal after actions that do not register on a turn-sensing mechanism (i.e. switching lanes, making only a shallow turn).
Each of the electrical elements 30 are coordinated by a controlling system unit 20. Such a controlling unit may be flexibly mounted in a location preferred by a driver. Depending on driver preferences, a controlling unit 20 may be formed in different shapes, sizes, and designs. For example, a personal vehicle controlling unit may be mounted within a box that sits next to the driver, on a keypad that sits on the steering wheel of the vehicle, on a skin formed to fit the dashboard or handlebars of the vehicle, etc.). The controlling unit 20 is the location of multiple switches that turn the electrical elements off and on. Switches may be of the toggle variety, push-button variety, conductance variety, radio-signal variety, magnetic variety, etc. A distinct feature of the controlling unit 20 should be water/weather resistance.
It is worth noting that certain challenges are unique to installing a comprehensive system on smaller personal vehicles 10, such as bicycles, where the entire system of lighting elements 30 has an increased exposure to rain, wind, and other natural and corrosive elements during outdoor use. Extra steps can be taken to ensure longevity of the electrical elements 30 through strategically weatherizing (i.e. threading any connectors through the frame of the personal vehicle, encasing connectors in a protecting sheath, employing multiple-conductor cables, etc.).
Although the system has been shown and described in a particular manner, equivalent modifications and alterations will occur to those skilled in the art after reading and studying this specification. Such alterations are obvious and incorporated within the current disclosure as all features described hereinabove may be combined in a multiplicity of ways that may or may not have been explicitly described in the present application.
This patent application claims priority to provisional patent No. U.S. 61/333,070 filed on May 10, 2010, and this provisional patent application is herein wholly incorporated within the present application.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US11/35786 | 5/9/2011 | WO | 00 | 11/8/2012 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61333070 | May 2010 | US |