Claims
- 1. An electrically self-powered miniature toy vehicle capable of climbing over rough terrain and obstacles as well as up steep inclines, said vehicle having major weight components positioned to provide weight in a generally balanced and relatively low arrangement while also providing adequate ground clearance in the area between the front and rear wheels, said vehicle comprising:
- a frame;
- at least three wheel means mounted to the frame for rolling rotation about respective mutually parallel but spaced-apart axes, such axes being in front of each other and there being at least one front axis spaced from at least one rear axis;
- an electric motor mounted to one side of the frame between said at least one front axis and said at least one rear axis and having a driveshaft which is perpendicular to the axes and extends both fore and aft from the motor;
- means for supporting a pair of AA batteries disposed end-to-end along the other side of the frame and for electrically connecting the batteries to the motor; the batteries and motor being at generally the level of said wheel axes; and the frame, the motor and the batteries not extending appreciably below the level of the axes in the space between said at least one front axis and said at least one rear axis;
- three worms mounted parallel to the driveshaft and driven respectively from the fore and aft extensions of the driveshaft; and
- three worm gears rotatably mounted to the vehicle, with their axes of rotation parallel to the axes of wheel rotation; each worm gear driving a respective one of the said at least three wheel means, and being meshed with and directly driven from a respective one of the three worms.
- 2. The vehicle of claim 1, also comprising:
- a pair of pinions, each mounted directly to a respective one of the two fore and aft extensions of the drive shaft for rotation therewith; and
- a pair of spur gears, each mounted and secured for rotation with a respective one of the worms and meshed with a respective one of the pinions.
- 3. The vehicle of claim 2 wherein each of the worm gears is mounted conaxially with a respective one of the wheel means and secured thereto for rotation therewith.
- 4. The vehicle of claim 3 wherein each of said wheel means are mounted on an axle and each of the worm gears is mounted to the axle of the said respective one wheel means, and both the worm gear and the wheel means are secured against rotation with respect to the corresponding axle.
- 5. The vehicle of claim 4 wherein each worm rides on a common shaft with its corresponding spur gear, each said common shaft being journalled at both ends in the frame.
- 6. The vehicle of claim 1 also comprising tires mounted to the wheel means, the tires having a high friction peripheral surface and an extremely exaggerated tread pattern.
- 7. The vehicle of claim 1 also comprising:
- tires mounted to the wheel means; and
- a toy vehicle body mounted to the frame, said body:
- concealing the motor, worms, worm gears and dry-cell mounting means; and
- being a scale model derived from at least one real vehicle body;
- said axes of wheel rotation being spaced apart to generally match the axle spacing of such a real vehicle at the scale used; and
- the tires being at least one-and-a-half times overscale.
- 8. The vehicle of claim 7 wherein the scale used is in the range from 45:1 to 60:1.
- 9. The vehicle of claim 7 wherein the tires are roughly two times overscale.
- 10. The vehicle of claim 9 wherein the scale used is in the range from 45:1 to 60:1.
- 11. The vehicle of claim 1, also comprising tires, mounted to the wheel means and made of foam whose cell structure at the periphery of the tires is open to the ambient.
- 12. The vehicle of claim 1 wherein the mechanical advantage between the motor shafts and their corresponding worm-gear shafts is between about 100:1 and 50:1.
- 13. The vehicle of claim 12, also comprising tires which are mounted to the wheel means and made of foam whose cell structure at the periphery of the tires is open to the ambient.
- 14. The vehicle of claim 13, also comprising:
- a toy vehicle body mounted to the frame, said body:
- concealing the motor, worms, worm gears and dry-cell mounting means; and
- being a scale model derived from at least one real vehicle body;
- said axes of wheel rotation being spaced apart to match the axle spacing of such a real vehicle at the scale used; and
- said tires being at least one-and-a-half times overscale.
- 15. The vehicle of claim 14 wherein the tires are roughly two times overscale.
- 16. The vehicle of claim 15 wherein the torque-to-weight ratio of the vehicle is such as to permit climbing a grade of roughly 40.degree..
- 17. The vehicle of claim 15, wherein:
- the tires define an extremely exaggerated tread pattern; and
- the torque-to-weight ratio in combination with the exaggerated tread is such as to permit climbing a vertical step substantially exceeding the front-tire radius.
- 18. The vehicle of claim 1 in combination with means defining an irregular climbing surface which comprises effective grades exceeding 30.degree..
- 19. The vehicle of claim 18 wherein the surface-defining means comprise relatively sharp ridges along two sides of the climbing surface, for restraining the vehicle from leaving the climbing surface.
- 20. The vehicle of claim 1 wherein:
- each of the worms is mounted directly to a respective one of the two fore and aft extensions of the shaft for rotation therewith; and
- each of the worm gears is mounted conaxially with a respective one of the wheel means and secured thereto for rotation therewith.
- 21. A miniature electrically self powered toy vehicle capable of climbing over rough terrain and obstacles as well as up steep inclines, said vehicle having its major weight components positioned to provide weight in a generally balanced and relatively low arrangement while also providing adequate ground clearance in the area between the front and rear wheels, said vehicle comprising:
- a chassis having an extended rectangular bottom surface and raised walls at both sides, and at front and rear;
- six wheels mounted to and secured for rotation with three axles, two wheels to each axle, the axles in turn being mounted in mutual parallelism for rotation generally at said rectangular bottom surface, in such orientation as to permit the toy to roll on the wheels in a direction parallel to the long dimension of the rectangular bottom surface of the chassis; at least one of such axles being near one end of the rectangular bottom surface of the chassis and at least another of the axles being near the other end of the said surface, and furthest apart of said axles being spaced apart by roughly the length of two penlight dry cells each not appreciably over two inches in length;
- six tires, one mounted to each wheel, respectively;
- an electric motor mounted upon the chassis along one of the side walls and having a driveshaft which is perpendicular to the axles and extends both fore and aft from the motor;
- a pair of pinions, each mounted directly to a respective one of the two fore and aft extensions of the shaft for rotation therewith;
- a pair of spur gears, each fixed to a respective shaft parallel with but below the motor shaft, and journalled at one end in a respective end wall of the chassis, each of said spur gears meshing with and being directly driven by a respective one of the pinions;
- three worms, each fixed to a respective one of the spur gear shafts and secured to the corresponding spur gear for rotation therewith;
- three worm gears, each rotatably mounted to a respective one of the said three axles and secured for rotation therewith; each of said worm gears meshing with and being directly driven by a corresponding one of the worms; and
- means for mounting two small cylindrical dry-cells each not appreciably over two inches long or shorter longitudinally end-to-end upon and within the chassis between the motor and the other one of the side walls, alongside the motor, pinions, spur gears, and worms at generally the same height as the wheels, and wherein said frame, said motor and said dry-cells do not extend any appreciable distance below the level of the front and rear axles in the area between the front wheels and the rear wheels; and means for electrically interconnecting such dry-cells, when mounted to the mounting means, to power the motor.
- 22. The toy vehicle of claim 21, also comprising:
- a toy vehicle body mounted upon the chassis to conceal the motor, worms, worm gears and dry-cell mounting means;
- said body being a scale model derived from at least on real vehicle body, at a scale between 45:1 and 60:1;
- the aforesaid axles being spaced apart to generally match the axle spacing of such a real vehicle at roughly said scale; and
- said tires being roughly two times overscale in diameter, made of foam whose cell structure is open to ambient about the tire periphery, and defining extremely exaggerated tread patterns.
- 23. The miniature toy vehicle of claim 22, wherein:
- the mechanical advantage between the motor shafts and their corresponding worm-gear shafts is between about 100:1 and 50:1; and
- the torque-to-weight ratio in combination with the said tread patterns and tire materials is such as to permit climbing a grade of up to 40.degree., except on unusually slippery surfaces.
- 24. The miniature toy vehicle of claim 22, wherein:
- the mechanical advantage between the motor shafts and their corresponding worm-gear shafts is between about 100:1 and 50:1; and
- the torque-to-weight ratio in combination with the said tread patterns and tire materials is such as to permit climbing any grade on which the vehicle does not tip over backwards, except where traction fails.
- 25. A miniature electrically self-powered toy vehicle capable of climbing over rough terrain and obstacles as well as up steep inclines, said vehicle having major weight components positioned to provide weight in a generally balanced and relatively low arrangement, while also providing adequate ground clearance in the area between the front and rear wheels, said vehicle comprising:
- a frame;
- front wheel means and rear wheel means fixed to axles mounted to the frame for rolling rotation about respective mutually parallel but spaced-apart front and rear axes, there being at least three axes in total, at least one rear axis and at least one front axis, there being a wheel axle at each axis, the distance between the furthest apart of the front and rear axes being generally about four inches, each of said wheel means having high friction peripheral surfaces with inside edges located respectively adjacent to opposite sides of said frame;
- an electric motor mounted to one side of the frame between the front and rear wheel means and located adjacent to said inside wheel edges on said one side of the frame, and having a driveshaft which is perpendicular to the two axes and extends both fore and aft from the motor;
- means mounted to the frame to releasably support electrical battery means in the form of a pair of standard cylindrical AA dry-cells at the other side of the frame in a position extending substantially the full distance between said furthest apart front and rear axes and located adjacent to said inside wheel edges on said other side of the frame, with the axes of the battery means substantially parallel to the driveshaft and the battery means being laterally adjacent to the electric motor and at approximately the same height as said front and rear wheel means, and wherein said frame, said motor and said battery means do not protrude any appreciable distance below the level of said front and rear axes in the area between said front and rear wheel means;
- means for electrically connecting such battery means, when supported in the supporting means, to the motor, so that the battery means powers the motor;
- three worms rotatably mounted parallel to the driveshaft and driven respectively from the fore and aft extensions of the driveshaft; and
- three worm gears rotatably mounted to the vehicle, with their axes of rotation parallel to the axes of wheel rotation; each worm gear driving a respective one of the said wheel axles, and being meshed with and directly driven from a respective one of the three worms.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 121,645 filed Feb. 14, 1980 now U.S. Pat. No. 4,306,375.
US Referenced Citations (5)
Foreign Referenced Citations (7)
Number |
Date |
Country |
816816 |
Aug 1951 |
DEX |
521348 |
May 1940 |
GBX |
841659 |
Jul 1960 |
GBX |
893768 |
Apr 1962 |
GBX |
1049164 |
Nov 1966 |
GBX |
1459119 |
Dec 1976 |
GBX |
2024633 |
Jan 1980 |
GBX |
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
121645 |
Feb 1980 |
|