The disclosure relates to marine fuel systems.
Marine fuel systems are known for a marine internal combustion engine for a vessel in a body of water and subject to movement, including due to waves, rough water, people moving on the vessel, etc. The system includes a fuel tank containing fuel subject to sloshing action due to the vessel movement, and including a fuel filler inlet for adding fuel to the fuel tank, and a fuel level sensor in the fuel tank and outputting a fuel level signal to a fuel gauge, e.g. at the helm. Marine fuel tanks are typically directly vented to atmosphere using a vent tube that typically runs through the hull of the vessel. When an operator, including a dock attendant, fills the fuel tank, it can overfill before the fuel pump shut-off shuts off the flow. This overfilling causes raw liquid fuel to spew out of the fuel tank vent.
Typically, the fuel level is determined by the user looking at the fuel gauge. However, the fuel gauge is typically at the helm of the vessel and not near the fuel filler inlet. This in turn requires two people to fill the vessel fuel tank to a given fuel level, one to watch the gauge, and the other for operating the fuel pump on the dock or filling station.
To avoid overfilling, where a second person may not be readily available, some boaters prefer to not fill their fuel tank completely or to a given preferred level, but rather only fill the tank to a lower predetermined level, to allow them to carry enough fuel for a day's usage, and any emergencies if possible. In another alternative, the fuel tank is provided with a fuel gauge and/or shut-off at the filler inlet, but this may be objectionable as to cost because such integrated gauges/shut-offs can be expensive.
The present disclosure arose during continuing development efforts in the above technology. In one aspect, the disclosure uses existing hardware, without expensive add-ons, to allow a single user to fill his marine fuel tank without overfilling.
A discrimination control circuit 40, including a central processing unit, CPU, 42, ROM 44, RAM 46, and input/output, (I/O), interface 48, receives the fuel level signal and discriminates between condition A comprising an increase in the true amount of fuel in the fuel tank above a given level, and condition B comprising a transient increase in the level of fuel in the fuel tank above the given level due to vessel movement, and outputs an alert signal at 50 in response to condition A and not to condition B. The discrimination control circuit reads condition A as a true-fill to the noted given level, and reads condition B as a false-fill and avoids false triggering of the alert signal. An alarm 52 is actuated by the alert signal and alerts the operator thereto regardless of the operator's observation or non-observation of fuel gauge 32. In one embodiment alarm 52 emits an audible alert in response to alert signal 50, though other types of alerting alarms may be used, e.g. visual, as flashing lights, haptic, vibratory, and so on.
In one embodiment,
In another embodiment,
The above methodology may be suitable where the maximum flow rate of the fuel dispenser is used, and the fuel tank size and shape is known. In other embodiments, where the flow rate of the fuel dispenser may vary and/or where the fuel tank size may not be known and/or where the fuel tank may not be symmetrical and/or the shape of the fuel tank may not be known and/or the fuel tank shape or other characteristic may cause the fuel level to increase at different rates depending on the current level of the fuel in the fuel tank, a different methodology may be desired, including as now described in
The present system provides a method for avoiding overfilling a marine fuel tank in a marine fuel system for a marine internal combustion engine for a vessel in a body of water and subject to movement, including due to waves, the fuel tank containing fuel subject to sloshing action due to the vessel movement, the fuel tank having a fuel filler inlet for adding fuel to the fuel tank, and a fuel level sensor in the fuel tank and outputting a fuel level signal. The method includes receiving the fuel level signal and discriminating between condition A comprising an increase in the true amount of fuel in the tank above a given level, and condition B comprising a transient increase in the level of fuel in the tank at the sensor above the give level due to the vessel movement, and outputting an alert signal in response to condition A and not to condition B. The method includes reading condition A as a true-fill to the given level, and reading condition B as a false-fill and avoiding false triggering of the alert signal. The method includes supplying the fuel level signal from the sensor to a fuel gauge in the vessel at a location not readily observable by an operator adding fuel to the tank at the fuel filler inlet, and actuating an alarm in response to the alert signal and alerting the operator thereto regardless of the operator's observation or non-observation of the fuel gauge. In one embodiment, the method includes emitting an audible alert from the alarm in response to the alert signal. In one embodiment, the method includes determining if the engine is running and if fuel level in the tank is increasing at a rate than can only be done during fueling without sloshing due to the vessel movement, and comparing current fuel level in the tank to the desired given fuel level, and outputting the alert signal when the given fuel level is met. In another embodiment, the method includes determining current fuel level in the tank, determining if the current fuel level minus a previous fuel level is less than a threshold, and if yes, determining if the engine is running, and if no, determining if the current fuel level is greater than the noted desired given fuel level, and if yes, outputting the alert signal. In another embodiment, the method includes filtering the fuel level signal from the sensor to prevent false triggering of the alert signal by the noted transient increase. In another embodiment, the method includes ignoring condition B by integrating the fuel level signal.
The present system further provides a method comprising entering a loop,
The control circuit 40 including at CPU 42, ROM 44, RAM 46, includes a computer-readable medium having computer-executable instructions for performing the above noted method, including the steps set forth above.
In the foregoing description, certain terms have been used for brevity, clearness, and understanding. No unnecessary limitations are to be inferred therefrom beyond the requirement of the prior art because such terms are used for descriptive purposes and are intended to be broadly construed. The different configurations, systems, and method steps described herein may be used alone or in combination with other configurations, systems and method steps. It is to be expected that various equivalents, alternatives and modifications are possible within the scope of the appended claims. Each limitation in the appended claims is intended to invoke interpretation under 35 U.S.C. §112, sixth paragraph, only if the terms “means for” or “step for” are explicitly recited in the respective limitation.
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