This application claims priority International Application No. PCT/U.S. 2014/053285, filed Aug. 28, 2014, which claims priority in U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/870,925, filed Aug. 28, 2013, both of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to the field of product support and service, and specifically to a method of allowing an operator or service personnel in a remote location, such as a field, to view and access information about service parts and to order them from the remote location.
2. Description of the Related Art
Every time a piece of equipment, such as a tractor or a field-working implement, breaks down in the field, it can cost the farmer or operator valuable time to find the failed component, identify it, locate and visit or contact a dealership, order the part, wait for it to be shipped, pick it up, and have it installed. For example, down time for a tractor or implement can cost a farmer thousands of dollars or more, especially if a crop is at a critical stage and the down time prevents some necessary operation from being performed in a timely manner. For example, the sugar content in a sugar beet plant can change in a very short time, and harvesting a crop of sugar beets too late may mean that the chemical makeup of the crop has changed, reducing the sugar content and dramatically affecting the value of the crop.
The same can be said for construction equipment being used to complete a large project. Down time can cause a tightly scheduled project to slip, and the contractor can be penalized financially for a schedule slip. Both construction and farming are also weather-dependent, and there are only so many days in a season when work can be done. Down time can affect many other industries, as well. When a piece of machinery is down, money is often lost. Manufacturing lines, printing operations, commercial shipping, and many other industries are affected by the down time of machinery.
Today when a machine fails, the operator or service person must try to find the part that failed, go to the shop and thumb through a user manual or find an electronic copy of the same manual online, try to locate the failed component on a black-and-white, two-dimensional line drawing from the manual, order the part, wait for it to be shipped, pick it up from the dealer, and install the part. The entire process is subject to human error, such as misidentifying the component, writing the part number down wrong, having the dealership order the wrong part, etc.
What is needed in the art is a portable service tool that can be used in the field at the point of failure, which can display a three-dimensional rendering of the entire system which can be manipulated in virtual space, allow the user to view individual subsystems and components of the system, also in three dimensions, and to order the part directly from the mobile service tool, without leaving the site or having to contact a service provider.
According to one aspect of the present invention, a method for presenting and ordering service parts, comprising the steps of creating a three-dimensional model of a system, the system model comprising a plurality of three-dimensional models of components integral to the system, creating a database of service information, the service information comprising data related to one or more service providers capable of supplying parts corresponding to the three-dimensional models of components, uploading the three-dimensional model and database of service information to a centralized server, providing a mobile device capable of communicating with the centralized server, transferring the three-dimensional model and subsets of information from the database of service information to the mobile device, displaying the three-dimensional model and the component models as selected by a user on the mobile device, allowing the user to select one or more of the service providers, and allowing the user to order a part directly from the mobile device by interacting with the three-dimensional model and service information.
According to another aspect of the invention, a system for presenting and ordering service parts, comprising an information management function, a service management function, a centralized server, a mobile device, and an application running on the mobile device, wherein a user can display a three-dimensional model of a complex system on the application, select one or more subcomponents from the three-dimensional model, select one or more service providers capable of providing the subcomponents, and ordering the subcomponents from the service provider directly from the application.
These and other aspects of the invention will become obvious in the following discussion and corresponding figures.
As required, detailed aspects of the disclosed subject matter are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed aspects are merely exemplary of the invention, which may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art how to variously employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed structure.
Certain terminology will be used in the following description for convenience in reference only and will not be limiting. For example, up, down, front, back, right and left refer to the invention as orientated in the view being referred to. The words, “inwardly” and “outwardly” refer to directions toward and away from, respectively, the geometric center of the aspect being described and designated parts thereof. Additional examples include computing devices such as a mobile smart device including a display device for viewing a typical web browser or user interface will be commonly referred to throughout the following description. The type of device, computer, display, or user interface may vary when practicing an embodiment of the present invention. A computing device could be represented by a desktop personal computer, a laptop computer, “smart” mobile phones, PDAs, tablets, or other handheld computing devices. Healthcare providers may include any person or entity within the healthcare field, from insurance providers, to pharmacists, to hospitals, to doctors, and more. Said terminology will include the words specifically mentioned, derivatives thereof and words of similar meaning.
Referring to the drawings in more detail,
These four components work together to create a “service tool platform,” or simply a “service tool.” The IMT 8 is a component that is used to create images and three-dimensional models of equipment, such as tractors, implements, and other vehicles, and import them up into the “cloud” for storage and later retrieval. Turning now to
The first step 16 in the IMT 8 workflow is to use the IMT to create a three-dimensional model of the system, where the system may include the major components of a tractor, implement, or any other appropriate complex system. These models are created and imported from a standard CAD program, such as AutoCAD, Pro-Engineer, or any other appropriate computer-aided drafting tool. At the “Create Model” step, relationships between parts (system to subsystem, subsystem to component, etc.) may be created. For example, at the top level, a “system” may be a model of an implement, such as a planter. This “system” model may be comprised of smaller “subsystems”, such as a “brake module”, “transmission”, or “blower motor”, and, in turn, each subsystem may be further broken down into “components”. For example, a “transmission” subsystem may have “components” such as a “gasket”, a “bushing”, or a “cluster gear”.
The next step 18 in the IMT Workflow of
The next two steps in the IMT Workflow of
Next in the IMT Workflow are the steps of “Part Number Assignment” step 24 and “Link Documents” step 26, whereby associations can be made between a component or subsystem on a model with underlying documentation, such as unit pricing, a page from an owner's manual, or a specification.
Finally, the models move to the “Test and Publish” step 28, where the models can be verified in a “staging” location, and then transferred to the cloud for storage and dissemination to other system components. The process ends at 30.
In the “Define Service Area” step 44 of
In the “Specify Contact Information” step 46 of
In the “Configure Ordering Process” step 48, the process used to order a component using the service tool can be defined, and template forms used in the process can be provided and incorporated into the tool. This ordering process is typically customized to the service provider.
In the “Link to Products” step 50 of
In looking at the overall process and work flow of the system detailed in
Finally, a service tool application (or “app”), executing on a mobile device, such as an iPad, smart phone, mobile or tablet computer, or a laptop, can access the IMT and SMT information stored in the cloud to provide a rich end user experience. A user operating a vehicle in a field or at a construction site, for example, experiencing a problem with their vehicle can leave the vehicle bringing the mobile device executing the app with them. It should be noted that the mobile device used for this application may also be used for other purposes, including a vehicle display, virtual terminal, or other display function, within the vehicle. For example, in one embodiment, an operator may use an iPad or similar mobile device to control and display information regarding an implement the vehicle is towing. If the vehicle or towed implement suffers a service issue, the operator can stop the vehicle, grab the mobile device, put the device into “service tool” mode, and walk back to the problem area on the vehicle or implement. Then, using the mobile device in service tool mode (with the service tool application executing), the user can access a three-dimensional model of the vehicle or implement (downloaded from the cloud and originally created by the IMT), rotate and spin the model on the screen, dive down into the subsystem layers of the model, or into the component layers, until they have identified the part that is in need of service. The operator can then access service information about the part (by calling up the service provider information downloaded from the cloud and originally created by the SMT), and can check pricing and availability and even order the part, all without leaving the field.
The service tool app could also allow other functions, including but not limited to the following:
The service tool of the present invention can also be used to collect information from a fleet of deployed vehicles and/or implements, information which can be collected and analyzed and used to predict when service parts might be needed. For example, if a fleet of similar implements are monitored within a certain service area corresponding to a dealership, and if the analyzed data from the fleet show that a certain part (such as a bushing on a transmission shaft) tends to fail after 500 hours of implement operation, the service tool platform can monitor the fleet within its area and predict when each implement will approach 500 hours of operation, and recommend to the dealer than a corresponding number of replacement parts be stocked and on hand before the failure occurs. The service tool app can then send a recommendation to the implement operator that the part (the bushing in this example) may be approaching its end of life, and that it might be wise to replace it as soon as convenient. Ideally, the notification and recommendation for part replacement comes well before an actual failure, allowing the operator of the implement to schedule service for the part at a time that is convenient for the operator, as opposed to waiting for the part to fail, which may happen at an unpredictable time, when the implement is most needed, such as during a harvesting operation.
The remaining figures (
Some of the icons and interactive links to other features of the preferred embodiment of the present invention include a Parts Viewer icon 56 and associated description 58 of that feature; a shopping cart icon 60 and associated description 62 of that feature; an order status icon 64 and associated description of that feature 66; an instructions icon 68 and associated description of that feature 70; and a contact/settings icon 72 and associated description of that feature 74. Other preferred interactive buttons or links include a dashboard button 76 which takes the user to a home dashboard of the user device, a settings button 78 which allows the user to adjust certain settings associated with the user application 10 and/or the device 4, and a help button 80 which provides information to assist the user in interacting with the application 10 or device 4. A title bar 90 describes the user application 10 or the page on which the application is presently on.
Features of a preferred view of such a display include a rotatable three-dimensional representation of a piece of equipment 82, such as a vehicle. A link to the home page 92, which is shown in
Features of a preferred view of such a display include a list of part names 100 and check boxes 102 associated with each part. The user may select one or more check boxes 102 and the associated parts will then be displayed in the user interface 32, as shown in
For example,
Finally,
Having described the preferred embodiment, it will become apparent that various modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in this document. For example, it may be appropriate to combine the IMT and SMT components into a single application, or to break the functions contained within each component into a larger number of smaller, more specific components. The service tool application could be displayed on a hardwired, dedicated display in a vehicle or on a system, instead of on a mobile device. This might be appropriate for a non-mobile industrial application, such as a mounting a display directly on a printing press to allow the service tool to be used when the press has a service problem. This and other applications and uses of the service tool described herein may be created without deviating from the inventive concept of the present invention.
It is to be understood that while certain aspects of the disclosed subject matter have been shown and described, the disclosed subject matter is not limited thereto and encompasses various other embodiments and aspects.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US14/53285 | 8/28/2014 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61870925 | Aug 2013 | US |