1. Technical Field
The invention relates to assemblies for a mine detonation apparatus.
2. Background Art
Systems for mine detonation include mechanical mine-clearing systems. The mechanical mine clearing system include both manned and remote control systems, and may be mechanical, and include rollers. Mine rollers may be attached to a vehicle such as a battle tank, armored vehicle or personnel carrier, vehicle, or the like. The vehicle may push or pull the rollers over the terrain, and the pressure from the roller contacting the ground detonates the mine or improvised explosive device (IED) placed in the terrain.
In one embodiment, a mine roller assembly has a bracket, an arm, a spring and damper system, and a wheel assembly. The bracket is adapted for attachment to a mine roller system frame and has a first end region and a second end region. The arm has a first end region and a second end region where the first end region of the arm pivotally connects to the first end region of the bracket. The spring and damper system extends between the second end region of the bracket and the arm. The wheel assembly rotatably connects to the second end region of the arm, and is configured to interact with the underlying surface.
In another embodiment, a mine roller assembly has a bracket, an arm, a wheel assembly, and a spring and damper system. The bracket is adapted for attachment to a mine roller frame. The arm pivotally connects to the bracket. The wheel assembly rotatably connects to the arm. The spring and damper system extends between the bracket and the arm and has a damper system with a rebound damping rate and a compression damping rate. The rebound damping rate is higher than the compression damping rate to increase a ground following time of the wheel assembly with an underlying surface.
In a further embodiment, a system of mine roller assemblies has a first mine roller assembly with a first wheel assembly and a first axis of rotation and a second mine roller assembly with a second wheel assembly and a second axis of rotation. The first and second mine roller assemblies are adapted for attachment to the mine roller. The first and second rotational axes are offset from one another such that the first and second wheel assemblies are offset from one another.
In another embodiment, a method detonates a mine in or on an underlying surface using a mine roller assembly connected to a mine roller frame, the frame attached to a vehicle. The method propels the mine roller assembly across the underlying surface. The mine roller assembly has a wheel assembly rotatably connected to an arm pivotally connected to a bracket for attachment to the mine roller frame, and a spring and damper system extending between the bracket and the arm. The method applies a pressure from a pneumatic tire of the wheel assembly to the underlying surface, and maintains substantial contact between the pneumatic tire and the underlying surface due to the spring and damper system having a rebound damping rate which is higher than a compression damping rate to increase a ground following time of the tire. The mine detonates adjacent to the mine roller assembly and at a distance from the vehicle, thereby preserving the vehicle.
As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale; some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for the claims and/or as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention.
The mine roller assemblies 108 contact the underlying surface 102, and exert a force on the ground 102. This force is sufficient to detonate a mine or IED that may be placed on top of the ground 102, or buried within the ground 102. The mine roller assemblies 108 act to detonate or discharge the mine before the vehicle 100 reaches the mine. The mine is thereby discharged by the assemblies 108 at a distance from the vehicle 100 and may maintain the vehicle 100 usability and personnel safety.
Two banks 206 of mine roller assemblies 208 are shown in
An individual mine roller assembly 308 is shown in
The arm 332, as shown in
The wheel assembly 334 as shown in
A shield 364 is shown in
The bracket 330, arm 332, shield 364, and wheel 356 may be made of various materials including metals such as steel or aluminum alloys, composites, or the like.
The adaptor plates 470 may be used to mount the assemblies 408 onto the mine roller 404. The adaptor plates 470 bolt or fasten onto the lateral frame member 416. The adaptor plates 470 also may have a bolt pattern 472 corresponding to the bracket 430 bolt pattern 438, and the bracket 430 is thereby mounted to the adaptor plate 470. The adaptor plates 470 may be used if retrofitting an existing mine roller 404, for example. The adaptor plates 470 additionally may be used to create offsets between the mine roller assemblies 408 and between the corresponding wheel assemblies 434, and may reduce gaps between the mine roller assemblies.
An embodiment of a bank 406 of assemblies 408 is shown in
A third mine roller assembly 492 is connected to the mine roller 410 using adaptor plate 494. Plate 494 may be a single plate, and additionally may have a bracket 496 to mount the plate 494 to the mine roller 410. Adaptor plate 494 may allow for the third assembly 492 to be offset from the first and second assemblies 474, 476 as shown. The wheel assembly 434 of the third assembly 492 has an axis of rotation 498, and may have an offset distance 500 from the second axis of rotation 486. Offset distance 500 may be the same as offset 486, or may be different.
A fourth and fifth mine roller assembly 502, 504 are attached to the mine roller 404 and may mirror the first and second mine roller assemblies 474, 476, thereby forming a chevron pattern based on the positioning of the assemblies 474, 476, 492, 502, 504. Alternatively, the mine roller assemblies 408 in the bank 406 may be arranged such that they form a linear pattern with a slope, with offsets between the wheel assemblies 434 being the same, or varying between them. Alternatively, the wheel assemblies 434 may be arranged non-linearly, such as along an exponential or other curve. Alternatively, one or both outside mine rollers 474, 502 may be extended rearwards by modifying the attachment point for the arm or wheel assembly 434, or by adding an additional extension piece, which can aid in the stability of the bank of mine rollers 406. The mine rollers 474, 502 are adjusted using a series of apertures and pin system.
Two or more adjacent wheel assemblies 434 may mount to a single adaptor plate 470 with a stepped surface to provide the offset. Alternatively, each wheel assembly 434 may have an individual adaptor plate 470, with a specified thickness to provide the offset. Of course, any combination of adaptor plates 470 is contemplated.
Referring back to
A rebound damping rate that is higher than the compression damping rate may be used in some embodiments in order to increase a ground following time of the wheel assembly with an underlying surface. The ground following time is the time in which the tire is in contact with the underlying surface or ground 302.
The weight of the mine roller assembly 308, tuning the characteristics of the spring and damper system 336, including spring rate, compression damping rate, and rebound damping rate, the use of a pneumatic tire 358, and using multiple wheel assemblies 308 are some ways in which ground following times may be increased.
A dynamic model was created of the mine roller assembly 308, the model incorporates vehicle effects and the effect of the hydraulic ram 318 used for applying downforce. The single-arm model was used to determine ground-following performance, based on running the model at various speeds over a simulated 1-inch RMS course. Roller arm spring rate, shock compression damping, and shock rebound damping for the spring and damper system 336 were used as input variables. The shock and spring settings used in modeling are shown in Table 1.
Table 2 lists some dynamic model results for the total time off ground and percent of time off ground, averaged across five assemblies 408 in a bank 406 for each spring and damper 336 configuration in Table 1. The results shown are for modeled 20 mile-per-hour runs across the RMS course, 500 feet in length.
Experimental testing was conducted on a single mine roller assembly 308. The tests were conducted on a gravel road with a surface-laid SIM (simulated instrumented mine) to minimize the variability of the soil overburden to provide a direct comparison between the different suspension configurations. Half-round impact testing (as in
While embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, it is not intended that these embodiments illustrate and describe all possible forms of the invention. Rather, the words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation, and it is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, features of various implementing embodiments may be combined to form further embodiments of the invention.
The invention was made in part with Government support. The Government may have certain rights to the invention.