This specification relates to modular tracks that can be used for autonomous vehicles, such as battery-powered toys.
Tracks for toy vehicles typically include multiple track components that include a rolling surface and sidewalls. Toy cars that are self-propelled or that are accelerated by an external force can traverse such tracks and be maintained on the track by the sidewalls and/or acceleration forces (e.g., generated by tight loops when the vehicle has sufficient speed). Electrically-powered toy cars that are powered through contact with positive and negative rails can also be maintained on a track through the use of a slot in the track and a corresponding pin on the car.
This specification describes technologies relating to tracks for autonomous devices.
In general, one innovative aspect of the subject matter described in this specification can be embodied in apparatus that include a plurality of modular track sections adapted to be assembled into a track for autonomous vehicles, wherein the track is configured such that the vehicles tend to stay on the track and that allows the autonomous vehicles to enter and exit the track from at least one side of the track. Other embodiments of this aspect include corresponding systems and methods of using the apparatus.
These and other embodiments can each optionally include one or more of the following features. The track forms an arena area bounded by the track that allows the vehicles to alternately move around in the arena and enter the track. A surface of the track adjacent to the arena area includes a surface having a different material than a material used for other surfaces of the track section. The track sections include a lateral slope and include ridges adapted to tend to maintain the vehicle on the track by counteracting gravitational forces due to the lateral slope. The track sections include a high outer bank. The track sections include a first ridge along a top surface of the track section adapted to engage an inner surface of one or more wheels of a vehicle to tend to keep the vehicle on the track. The track sections include a second ridge along a top surface of the track adapted to engage an outer surface of one or more wheels of the vehicle to tend to keep the vehicle from moving up a lateral slope of the track section. The track sections include a cross section adapted to prevent selected wheels of the vehicle at different lateral spacings from contacting an upper surface of the track when the vehicle is in a particular lateral position on the track section. The track sections include a cross section adapted to contact an underbelly of the vehicle. The cross section adapted to contact an underbelly of the vehicle tends to prevent the vehicle from exiting the track. The track sections include a cross section adapted to provide a predetermined statistical balance between a vehicle remaining on the track and leaving the track. The track sections are adapted for use with a vehicle having a plurality of wheels, with at least one pair of the plurality of wheels have a different lateral spacing than another pair of the plurality of wheels. The track sections are adapted for use with a vehicle having a plurality of wheels, with at least one pair of the plurality of wheels have a different diameter than another pair of the plurality of wheels. The track sections are adapted for use with a vehicle having a plurality of non-round wheels adapted to cause the vehicle to bounce as the wheels turn and propel the vehicle across a surface.
The details of one or more embodiments of the subject matter described in this specification are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, aspects, and advantages of the subject matter will become apparent from the description, the drawings, and the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
The inner edge 104 defines an arena area 110 on the surface 108. In some implementations, during operation of one or more vehicles 102, the vehicles 102 can move within an area 112 that includes the arena area 110 and the track surface between the edges 104 and 106. The vehicles 102 can enter and exit the track 100 from the arena area 110. Although the arena area 110 is depicted as an oval, other configurations are possible depending on the shape of the modular track sections and how the track sections are assembled. The track 100 can be designed to facilitate entry onto the track (at least if the vehicle 102 approaches the track within a particular range of angle) and to make the vehicles generally (but not necessarily exclusively) tend to stay on the track.
For example, two vehicles 102 may generally circle the track 100 and occasionally come into contact with each other. As a result of such contact (and/or as a result of random motion of the vehicles—e.g., resulting from bouncing of the vehicle on non-round “wheels”), one or more of the vehicles 102 may drop into the arena area 110 where they may further contact each other. Interactions in the arena area 110 among the one or more vehicles 102 (or simply the movement of a vehicle 102 toward the track) may cause one or more of the vehicles 102 to return to the track 100 and begin circling again. The slope and shape of the track 100 can prevent the vehicles 100 from moving beyond the outer edge 106.
The modular track 100 comprises several individual track sections that can be fastened together (e.g., using tongue-and-groove fittings) to form the track 100 in various configurations. Individual track sections can be straight sections of different lengths and curved sections of various arc lengths. The example track 100 has an oval shape, but other shapes and configurations of the track 100 can exist. For example, a vehicle 102 can operate on a non-oval track that has S-turns (e.g., a left turn and right turn in sequence), or a variety of turns.
Various materials can be used to manufacture sections of the track 100, including different types of plastics or other materials. For example, plastic track sections can be injection-molded or manufactured in other ways. Portions of the track surface can include other materials (e.g., rubber) or plastics that have different coefficients of friction. For example, an inner edge 104 that has a different coefficient of friction relative to the rest of the track 100 can help keep the vehicle 102 on the track 100 by causing the vehicle 102 wheels to grip and tend to turn the vehicle 102 toward the outer edge 106. In some implementations, the material that is selected for the inner edge 104 can help a vehicle 102 enter the track 100 from the arena area 110 regardless of the type of surface material (e.g., high friction or low friction) in the arena 110.
The purpose of the banked track surrounding an arena is to create multiple environments for the vehicles to interact, or battle. As described below, the cross section shape of the track can be designed to ensure that vehicles can proceed from the arena area to the track area. This arena-to-track movement can be made more or less difficult in order to create a balanced play that involves a desired time in the arena and time on the track (i.e., as desired by the designer of the track). The vehicles are preferably autonomous (not remote controlled) and are preferably designed to drive in a random and life-like manner. This autonomous life like movement, combined with the vehicles randomly moving from one area to the other, adds to the life-like appearance of the vehicles, and therefore, the realistic appearance of the vehicle battle. Tuning the characteristics of the track cross section can be done to create a desired statistical balance of the time the vehicle spends on the track and on the arena, as well as the statistical likelihood that the vehicle successfully transitions from one region to the other.
The connection between any two adjacent sections 202a-202f forms a seam (e.g., seams 204a-204f). For example, the track sections 202d and 202e form the seam 204a, the track sections 202e and 202a form the seam 204b, and the track sections 202a and 202b form the seam 204c, and so on.
Each of the track sections 202a-202f include two or more supports 206 that support the sloped shape of the track sections 202a-202f, and further allow the track sections 202a-202f to rest on a generally flat surface 208. As will be described below, some of the supports 206 are formed at seams (e.g., seams 204a-204f) between two adjacent track sections.
The supports at the ends of the straight sections 202e and 202f occur at seams between adjacent track sections. For example, the support 206a exists at (and consists of) the seam 204e between track sections 202f and 202c. The connecting end of the straight track section 202f includes a support element 212a having a tongue 214a that fits into a grooved element 216a that is part of the curved track section 202c. Similarly, the connecting end of the curved track section 202b includes a support element 212b having a tongue 214b that fits into a grooved element 216b that is part of the straight track section 202f.
In some implementations, other support mechanisms can be used that may or may not involve tongue-and-groove fasteners or supports that are formed by adjacent track sections. In some implementations, fewer or more supports can be used for different track sections. In some implementations, other types of fasteners can be used.
The track cross-section can be designed to create a track that is open to vehicles moving from the arena to the track. The design can account or allow for vehicles also occasionally leaving the track, as a result of the autonomous random movement of the vehicles. The cross section has several features that affect vehicle interaction with the track, including the overall angle of the track, the friction of the track or portions of the track, the ridges on the track, the general curve the vehicle encounters when on the track and in climbing the track, and the diameter of the wheels touching the track as the vehicle travels in the intended location. The intended locations are shown for various cross sections in
Wheels 508-514 can tend to keep the vehicle 505 on the track (e.g., and not sliding down and off the track) because of the cross-sectional shape of the track. For example, a high-banked outer area 518 can prevent the vehicle 505 from leaving the track on the highest outer edge of the track (e.g., by forcing the vehicle 505 to turn and stay on the track rather than going over the outer edge). A ridge 520 along the top surface of the track can engage one or more wheels of the vehicle 505 (e.g., wheel 510, which is touching the ridge 520), providing a rut-like area for the wheel to operate, which can tend to keep the vehicle 505 on the track. The upper surface of the track includes a ridge 521a, which in this example is almost touching the bottom side of the vehicle's body 506.
Depending on the position of the vehicle 505 on the track, some of the wheels 508-514 may not touch the surface of the track. For example, wheels 510 and 514 touch the surface, but wheels 508 and 512 do not touch the surface, as indicated by gaps 522a and 522b. Different wheels 508-514 can be touching the track at any one time, depending on fluctuations of the vehicle's lateral position relative to the slope of the track. Furthermore, shape variations (e.g., ridges such as the ridge 520) can help to steer the vehicle 505 to a more stable position along the track. The features of the track (e.g., ridge 520 and the track shape that causes gaps 522a and 522b) can be designed to keep particular wheels (e.g., smaller, slightly farther internal wheel 510 on the side of the vehicle toward the upper edge of the track and larger, outside wheel 514 on the side of the vehicle toward the arena) in contact with the track and other specific wheels from contacting the track (e.g., larger, external wheel 508 on the side of the vehicle toward the upper edge of the track and smaller, inside wheel 512 on the side of the vehicle toward the arena) when the vehicle 505 is in a stable position on the track. The varying wheel sizes, locations, and degrees of contact can facilitate maintaining the vehicle in position on the track (e.g., by causing the lower contacting wheel 514 to tend to drive the vehicle to turn toward the track and preventing the upper non-contacting wheel 508 from tending to drive the vehicle to turn away from the track). In the position shown, the vehicle is riding in a stable, intended position with three wheels contacting the track, e.g., the lower center wheel 512 and the two upper front and rear wheels 510. (In the cross section 502a (and in other cross sections 502b-502g), assume that another wheel 510 is behind the visible wheel 510.) In this position, the forward velocity created by the lower larger diameter wheel 512 is higher than the forward velocity caused by the upper smaller diameter wheels 510, resulting in a general tendency to climb the track and stay in the intended position and not slide down the track.
The cross section 502b of
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The track configuration 806 includes two adjacent curved track sections 808 and 810. The track sections 808 and 810 provide consecutive left and right turns, or right and left turns, depending on the direction of travel of a vehicle on the track. As a result, the track sections 808 and 810 provide an S-turn for the vehicle. In some implementations, the track section 808 can have a different type of lower edge 813 than other “inside-turn” curved sections of track, such as track section 810. For example, the lower edge 813 can have a different shape or use different materials in order to help keep a vehicle on the sloped track even when the turn away from the slope tends to push the vehicle off the track.
The track configuration 806 includes three adjacent straight track sections 814 and two adjacent straight track sections 816. Having multiple consecutive straight track sections can, for example, allow a vehicle on the track to increase its speed after forces in curved sections of track tend to slow the vehicle.
The track configurations 802-806 form arena areas 818-822, respectively. The irregular shape of the arena area 822 can provide a more entertaining interaction between multiple vehicles that use the track.
The vehicle is designed to create life-like movement that can be produced by creating chaotic driving conditions. The factors that create this include: low traction wheels that may slip occasionally, resulting in erratic movement direction; non-round wheels that cause the vehicle to continually bounce, resulting in more erratic traction and resulting direction; and larger center wheels that cause the vehicle to bounce front to rear resulting in more erratic traction and resulting direction.
Entry areas 1006 each provide an entry area for launching vehicles 1008 into the track, such as into a circular arena area 1010. In this example, the walls of the arena area 1010 may be sufficiently banked so that vehicles already in the arena area 1010 tend to remain there (e.g., tending not to return to any of the entry areas 1006).
The example track and arena configuration 1002 is just an example. Other configurations can include fewer or more entry areas 1006, or the arena area 1010 that is formed in the center may have different shapes, and so on.
The track and arena configuration 1004 shows a portion of the arena area 1010 in which vehicles 1008 are interacting. In this example, the vehicles 1008 have just crashed into each other, and break-away pieces of at least one of the vehicles are being scattered about.
The view 1104 is a perspective view of the vehicle 1008. In this view, a pincher head 1112, a torso 1114, and an outer wheel 1110a are attached to the vehicle 1008. However, in the view 1106, the pincher head 1112, the torso 1114, and the outer wheel 1110a are shown exploding away from the vehicle 1008, e.g., as a result of the vehicle 1008 crashing into another vehicle 1008 or an obstacle of some kind In particular, the vehicle 1008 can include a trigger that causes pieces, including the wheels, to detach from the vehicle 1008, which may immediately or eventually (e.g., after several contacts with the trigger cause more pieces to detach) render the vehicle inoperable (e.g., until it is reassembled). The wheels lack a completely round shape and the middle wheel on each side is larger than an farther out than the front and back wheels on each side, all of which contributes to some instability and a tendency to increase random motion as the wheels spin rapidly and the vehicle 1008 bounces along a surface. The wheels can also be constructed of a low friction material that encourages slippage.
Thus, particular embodiments of the subject matter have been described. Other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of U.S. Patent Application No. 61/390,005, entitled “Modular Track for Autonomous Vehicles,” filed Oct. 5, 2010, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61390005 | Oct 2010 | US |