Instrumented firefighter's nozzle and method

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6607038
  • Patent Number
    6,607,038
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, April 5, 2001
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, August 19, 2003
    20 years ago
Abstract
Method and apparatus are presented for instrumentation of a firefighter's vari-nozzle for motion tracking and measurement of pattern selector and bail handle positions. In the embodiment presented here, brackets and associated hardware attach (1) a position tracking device to the nozzle to measure its 6-DOF (Degrees of Freedom) position and orientation, and (2) potentiometers to measure the angular positions of the two main, moving components (the bail handle and the pattern selector) of the nozzle. The mounts are attached to the brass nozzle with holes drilled into the main body of the nozzle.One application of this instrumentation is control of an augmented reality or virtual reality water stream, or other extinguishing agent. The electronic signals from potentiometers in the instrumentation permit a computer to calculate and display graphical representations of water flow from the nozzle for virtual reality and augmented reality applications. This virtual flow is responsive to the motions of the user with the nozzle, including operation of the bail handle (on/off of water flow) and the nozzle pattern selector (straight stream, narrow angle fog, and wide angle fog). The position tracking information is used to align a computer graphical representation of a water stream with the real nozzle.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to real-time data acquisition for purposes of measuring the operation of a fire hose nozzle. Mechanical and electronic components have been designed and attached to a nozzle for purposes of instrumentation. The field in which the invention is currently used is that of virtual reality and augmented reality. The invention is used as an input device to control a computer-generated water stream and align that stream with the actual nozzle in a manner consistent with its operation.




COPYRIGHT INFORMATION




A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material that is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office records but otherwise reserves all copyright works whatsoever.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Information establishing the real-time position and orientation of a nozzle (e.g., a firefighter's nozzle) is useful, as is information establishing the settings of the nozzle bail handle and pattern selector. With this information, a computer will know how the nozzle is being operated, and the data may then be collected or applied to a real-time simulation. One application is the need to accurately display a graphical representation of a water stream, or other extinguishing agent, that is responsive to the actions of a user operating the nozzle, such as for augmented reality or virtual reality.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The purpose of the invention is to enable control of a computer-generated graphical spray with a real vari-nozzle for firefighter training. Key aspects of the invention include (1) an instrumented bail handle, which controls the flow of water or extinguishing agent through a nozzle, and (2) an instrumented pattern selector, which controls the angle of the fog spray from a nozzle. Another aspect (3) of the invention is a mount that allows a motion tracker to have line of sight with the ceiling and be unobtrusive to a user of the instrumented nozzle.




The invention provides sufficient accuracy on a real-time basis so that a computer can generate realistic and responsive graphics depicting water flow through the nozzle. This flow can be a wide fog pattern, a straight stream pattern or anything in between, typical of streams used by firefighters. Additionally, the bail handle measurements provided by the instrumentation permit a computer to operate continuously from the off position to steady flow. The graphics generated by a computer can be displayed to a user of the instrumented nozzle by means of virtual reality, augmented reality, or other displays.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a sketch of a design for the vertical mount that holds an INTERSENSE IS-900™ “Stylus” tracking station.





FIG. 2

is an assembly drawing of the preferred vertical bracket of an IS-900™ vertical mount.





FIG. 3

is an assembly drawing and for a mount that holds an INTERSENSE IS-600™ tracking station.





FIG. 4

is a drawing of the nozzle body, with bail handle, and its dimensional relationship to the main horizontal bracket.





FIG. 5

is a mechanical drawing of the part of the nozzle spray instrumentation components that holds the potentiometer for the nozzle spray instrumentation.





FIG. 6

is a mechanical drawing of the part of the nozzle spray instrumentation components that rigidly clamps to the nozzle body with the part in FIG.


11


.





FIG. 7

is a mechanical drawing of a key that attaches to a potentiometer.





FIG. 8

is a mechanical drawing of the part of the nozzle spray instrumentation components that is attached to the nozzle pattern selector and drives the key attached to a potentiometer.





FIG. 9

is an assembly drawing of the components that attach internally to the nozzle to mount a potentiometer inside the body of the nozzle, and the sensing portion of the potentiometer to the moving pattern selector.





FIG. 10

is an exploded assembly drawing of all bail handle instrumentation components.





FIG. 11

is an assembly drawing of the bail handle instrumentation components.





FIG. 12

is a wiring diagram from the analog-to-digital converter, wire/signal pairings through the twisted pair ethernet-type cable, and the anticipated connections to the two potentiometers connected to the RJ-45 connector.





FIG. 13

is a drawing of an alternative method to very simply mount the RJ-45 connector.





FIG. 14

is a drawing of an alternative method to connect a potentiometer to a bail handle.





FIG. 15

includes drawings made of alternative designs for connecting the potentiometer to the bail handle.




FIG.


16


and

FIG. 17

are drawings of a design to use the linear potentiometer to sense the position of the nozzle pattern selector. In this design, the linear potentiometer is concealed inside a machined recess in the nozzle.




FIG.


18


and

FIG. 19

are drawings of an alternative idea to use the linear potentiometer to sense the position of the nozzle pattern selector. In this design, the linear potentiometer does not puncture the nozzle.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION




Most of the components that were designed and machined for this invention were made from black Delrin™ (a hard plastic made by DUPONT) (du Pont de Nemours and Company, 1007 Market Street, Wilmington, Del. 19898, U.S.A) or black Nylon 66™. The specific invention is designed to attach to a standard ELKHART (Elkhart Brass Mfg. Co. Inc., P.O. Box 1127, 1302 W. Beardsley Ave., Elkhart, Ill. 46515, U.S.A) 1.5-inch brass nozzle (Model SFL-GN-95) used for fire fighting.




Mount for the InterSense Tracking Equipment




One component of the invention is a mount for a piece of motion tracking equipment required to determine the position and orientation of the nozzle as a whole in real time. The motion tracking products used in the preferred embodiment of this invention require line of sight to ceiling-mounted grids, so the mount had to hold the motion tracking equipment to the side of and above the nozzle for best line of sight.





FIG. 1

is an exploded assembly drawing showing how a side clamp


3


designed to hold an INTERSENSE (InterSense, Inc., 73 Second Avenue, Burlington, Mass. 01803, U.S.A) IS-900™ stylus


1


from the side and a top clamp


4


designed to hold the stylus


1


from the top fit together with the vertical portion of the mount


2


.

FIG. 2

shows a sketch of the vertical portion of the mount


2


designed to hold the stylus


1


with an alternative method of attaching the stylus to the bracket via the side clamp


3




a


and the identical top clamp


4


. The mounts we created to hold the INTERSENSE IS-900™ stylus on the side and from the top allow the stylus to be held in place firmly without having to require undue amounts of tolerance in the dimensions of the bracket components. When assembled, there are gaps between the side and top clamps which allow the screws to provide a clamping force onto the IS-900™ stylus.




In

FIG. 3

, the curved cutout in the main horizontal bracket


5


matches the external radius of the nozzle. Drilling a hole (not shown) along the length of horizontal bracket


5


can produce an easy-to-wire conduit which allows wires to be contained completely within the bracket and nozzle barrel and hidden from external view. The nozzle may be drilled and tapped to match holes made in the bracket.





FIG. 3

also shows the INTERSENSE IS-600™ mount


2




a


that holds the standard IS-600™ tracking station an appropriate distance away from the nozzle so that proper tracking (no line of sight interference) and no interference with the user occurs. If interference occurs (e.g., the user is left-handed), the bracket design is reversible to allow the tracking station to be on the opposite side of the nozzle. The top cap


4




a


produces a clamping force on the IS-600™ tracking station to keep it in place.

FIG. 3

shows an isometric view of how the components


5


,


2




a


, and


4




a


fit together and attach to the nozzle


7


.

FIG. 4

shows a front view of the nozzle


7


and bracket


5


assembly.




Mount for Potentiometer to Measure the Pattern Selector Position




The nozzle pattern selector rotates approximately 180 degrees counter-clockwise relative to the nozzle sleeve, and it is used to set the angle of the nozzle spray pattern. The nozzle sleeve clicks solidly into place relative to the nozzle body, but it can be undone for a “flush” setting, and can rotate about 150 degrees clockwise relative to the nozzle body. Together, this adds up to about 330 degrees of total motion. However, only 180 degrees of it needs to be supported for normal operations (straight stream, narrow angle fog, and wide angle fog). The “flush” setting is not anticipated to be an important training factor, and the nozzle sleeve is required to remain locked for the potentiometer to properly read the pattern selector's position. Requiring the sleeve to be locked allows the design to be simpler.





FIG. 5

shows a plate


8


that mates to cylinder


9


in FIG.


6


.

FIG. 7

shows a key


10


that attaches to a potentiometer shaft, and

FIG. 8

shows a part


11


with a slot that fits over the key


10


and rotates the potentiometer shaft.

FIG. 9

shows an assembly drawing of these parts, illustrating how they rotate the shaft of the potentiometer


12


in concert with the pattern selector


23


to measure the rotation of the pattern selector


23


. Pieces


8


and


9


fit inside the nozzle barrel


21


and remain fixed in place by clamping down on a shelf inside nozzle barrel. There is a gap between the two pieces to allow the screws to generate a clamping force. Potentiometer


12


screws into plate


8


, and the rotating portion of the potentiometer protrudes into the cylinder


9


. Part


11


screws into the rubber portion of the pattern selector


23


, fits over key


10


, and rotates the shaft of potentiometer


12


when the pattern selector is turned.




The potentiometer


12


has a range of rotation of only 295 degrees. Therefore, even though


10


has a place for a setscrew, it was not used in the preferred embodiment because it would damage the part if the user ever turned the nozzle sleeve. It was noticed that the key held very tightly to the shaft of the potentiometer, and the friction between the shaft and key was sufficient in measuring the motion of the pattern selector


23


without slipping.




Mount for Potentiometer to Measure the Bail Handle Position




The nozzle bail handle (


25


in

FIG. 10

) rotates approximately 100 degrees, and the shaft of the potentiometer (the same model as chosen for the nozzle pattern selector) is designed to rotate about the same axis as the bail handle. Part


13


and part


14


in

FIG. 10

form a case that holds a potentiometer


24


and RJ-45 connector


17


and attaches to the main horizontal bracket


5


. Potentiometer


24


rigidly attaches to key


15


, which fits into keyway


16


. Keyway


16


is attached to bail handle


25


with a bolt into a tapped hole in


25


. Washers or nuts may be used for spacing the keyway


16


away from the bail handle


25


.

FIG. 11

shows front and top views of the assembly from FIG.


10


.




Even though the potentiometer is designed to be centered, a key


15


and keyway


16


in

FIG. 10

were designed to allow for a great deal of misalignment of the parts, thereby reducing the risk of damaging the sensitive potentiometer. The key


15


fits in the keyway


16


with a tight, yet sliding fit, allowing movement in all 6 degrees of freedom to compensate for a lack of perfect machining and part placement, and to allow for some slop in the axis of rotation of the nozzle bail handle. A gap between the body of the key


15


and the keyway


16


was introduced so that axial motion (along the potentiometer shaft) in either direction won't damage the potentiometer. The net effect is that the potentiometer is rigidly mounted, but the coupling effectively connects the motion of the bail handle to the shaft of the potentiometer with essentially no play and without putting any significant stress on the bearings of the potentiometer.




An 8-pin RJ-45 connector


17


in

FIG. 10

is held on five sides by parts


13


and


14


. The INTERSENSE bracket vertical mount


2


or


2




a


and the main horizontal mount


5


combine to hold the RJ-45 connector on the remaining side. The bottom surface of the connector was ground flat to make it sit better. The RJ-45 connector and an associated 8-pin category


5


network cable were used because they could easily be obtained in black.




Electrical and Analog-to-Digital Aspects of the Invention




Because only four signals are needed, LLGND (low level ground), +10 V (for power), AI0 (Analog In 0), and AI1 (Analog In 1), a four-pin telephone (RJ-11 cable) system could have been used instead of an RJ-45 cable. The components for such a system are known to exist, but since 8-pin components were readily available, those were used. A similar design using four-pin telephone connections is considered for use in future revisions of the invention.




In making the connection from the analog-to-digital converter, there were four signals to deal with (ground, +10 volts, and the two readings from the potentiometers, signal 0 and signal 1), and 8 wires to accomplish the task. To make the best use of the wires, using the fact that a twisted-pair cable has pairs of wires twisted together to reduce electromagnetic noise and interference, a wiring pattern was chosen (

FIG. 12

) which made logical pairings between the signal connections and power/ground wires.




There are two main types of wiring layouts of RJ-45 connectors. Both were used in the invention. One RJ-45 connector is attached to a box made to connect to an analog-to-digital converter, and one is attached to the nozzle bracket.




Potentiometers


12


and


24


(Model #93F9870, Spectrol Electronics Corp., 4051 Greystone Drive, Ontario, Calif. 91761, U.S.A) were chosen based on a few factors: (1) small size, (2) square shape to allow easy mounting, (3) range of motion, and (4) resistance value. The resistance value of ten kilo-ohms was chosen because the ten volt power supply on the analog-to-digital converter can supply two milliamps. The closer the load is set to the maximum current load, the better, since lower resistances produce less noise. With the two potentiometers, the load is two milliamps.




The analog-to-digital converter we chose for our implementation, the COMPUTERBOARDS PPIO-8™, (Measurement Computing Corp., formerly ComputerBoards, 16 Commerce Boulevard, Middleboro, Mass. 02346, U.S.A) is an inexpensive parallel port-based unit. It takes power from the PC, and sends its information to the PC via the parallel port. A software development kit is available which allows input from the unit to be used in applications written in a number of programming languages.




Alternate Embodiments of the Invention




Several methods were considered before arriving at the preferred embodiment, and those methods are presented in the remaining Figures.

FIG. 13

shows an alternate method of mounting the RJ-45 connector


12


with a single mounting plate. This design is simpler to make and install than the preferred embodiment, but is less durable, so it was not chosen for this implementation.

FIG. 14

shows an alternative part


16




a


that could be used for a nondestructive or destructive coupling of potentiometer


24


to bail handle


25


. Whether the design in

FIG. 14

is nondestructive or destructive depends on whether the screws penetrate the bail handle or simply clamp onto it.

FIG. 15

shows an alternate embodiment of a keyway


16




b


with a closed bottom. Additionally,

FIG. 15

shows three methods of attaching keyway


16


or


16




b


to the bail handle


25


, including bolt and nuts


19


(the preferred embodiment), press-fit bearing and shaft


19




a


, and pivot


19




b


.

FIG. 15

also shows an alternate potentiometer-to-keyway connector


15




a.






A spring-loaded linear potentiometer


20


in

FIG. 16

has also been considered to measure pattern selector angle instead of rotational potentiometer


12


.

FIG. 16

illustrates that a cap head or flat head linear potentiometer can fit into a hole drilled in the nozzle body


21


and


22


. The potentiometer


20


can be compressed as the pattern selector


23


is turned.

FIG. 17

presents another view of this alternative. FIG.


18


and

FIG. 19

illustrate an alternate mounting location for potentiometer


20


that does not require a hole to be drilled in


21


and


22


.




Although specific features of the invention are shown in the drawing and not 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.




Other embodiments that will occur to those skilled in the art are within the following claims:



Claims
  • 1. An instrumented firefighter's nozzle that reads and sends information to a computer, used in virtual or augmented reality firefighter training, for displaying to the user a computer-generated graphical representation of a stream of extinguishing agent aligned with the actual nozzle in a manner consistent with its operation, comprising:a hand-held firefighter's nozzle with one or more flow regulating devices that control the application rate of extinguishing agent; one or more sensors for measuring the setting of the flow regulating devices; and position and orientation tracking equipment, attached to the nozzle, for accomplishing real time six degree-of-freedom tracking of the position and orientation of the nozzle.
  • 2. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 1 in which one or more of the sensors are potentiometers.
  • 3. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 2 further including a key and keyway for attaching the potentiometer to the flow regulating device.
  • 4. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 1 further including wiring connected to the sensors and the position and orientation tracking equipment, and a protective enclosure for the sensors and wiring to increase ruggedness.
  • 5. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 1 further including a standard 8-wire cable and an analog-to-digital converter, wherein some of the wires in the cable are used to transmit the electrical signals from the sensors to the analog-to-digital converter, and the remainder of the wires in the cable are connected to the tracking equipment.
  • 6. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 1 further including an analog-to-digital converter and a standard 4-wire cable, wherein the wire is used to transmit the electrical signals from the sensors to the analog-to-digital converter.
  • 7. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 1 in which the equipment that can perform real time tracking is an InterSense IS-600™ device.
  • 8. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 1 in which the equipment that can perform real time tracking is an InterSense IS-900™ device.
  • 9. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 1 in which the sensors are positioned in such a way at to be largely non-intrusive to the user and resistant to damage by the user.
  • 10. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 1 further including wires connecting the sensors to an analog-to-digital converter and wires connecting tracking equipment to the devices that interface with the tracking equipment and a standard firefighter nozzle hose, wherein all of the wires enter inside the end of the hose attached to the nozzle and run through the length of the hose and exit the other end of the hose to then connect the wires to the corresponding equipment.
  • 11. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 1 further comprising a nozzle pattern selector that controls the angular width of the extinguishing agent as it exits the nozzle.
  • 12. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 11 further comprising one or more sensors for measurement of the setting of the nozzle pattern selector.
  • 13. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 12 in which a sensor comprises a linear potentiometer that is used to measure the position of the nozzle pattern selector.
  • 14. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 12 in which the attached tracking equipment does not reduce the functionality of the sensors that measure the positions of the pattern selector and flow regulating device.
  • 15. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 12 in which measurements of the setting of the nozzle pattern selector are sent from the sensors to a computer.
  • 16. The firefighter's nozzle of claim 1 in which measurements of the setting of the flow regulating device are sent from the sensors to a computer.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims priority of Provisional patent application 60/195,503 filed Apr. 6, 2000, and is a Continuation in Part of “Augmented Reality-Based Firefighter Training System and Method” Ser. No. 09/525,983 filed Mar. 15, 2000.

GOVERNMENT RIGHTS

This invention was made with Government support under Contract Number N61339-98-C-0036 awarded by the Department of the Navy. The Government has certain rights in the invention.

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3776313 DePalma Dec 1973 A
3974879 Nelson, Jr. et al. Aug 1976 A
4830116 Walden et al. May 1989 A
4909329 Yoshida et al. Mar 1990 A
4949794 Petit et al. Aug 1990 A
4983124 Ernst et al. Jan 1991 A
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5374191 Herman et al. Dec 1994 A
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6279664 Yanovsky et al. Aug 2001 B1
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60/195503 Apr 2000 US
Continuation in Parts (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 09/525983 Mar 2000 US
Child 09/826993 US