This invention generally relates to firefighting equipment and more particularly pertains to devices power and data port interfaces used for housing optics and battery-powered electronics at the leading edge of a fire suppression operation.
Today's fire fighters are asked to fill many roles and operate on diverse emergency scenes. These scenes include structural firefighting, wild land firefighting, vehicular accidents, technical rescues, hazardous material exposures, and emergency medical incidents. All of these incident scenes present unique and different challenges.
Temperatures at the nozzle end of a hand line (i.e., the “tip of the spear”) can exceed 1,000° F. Such extreme temperatures make operating battery powered electronic devices such as high intensity lighting, infrared cameras, video cameras challenging because the battery power needed is prone to failure and even explosion at such extreme temperatures. Having a device that can protect electronics, particularly batteries and electronic data, at the leading edge of a fire suppression operation would allow firefighters access to critical electronic components where it is needed most. Likewise, monitoring current conditions and providing warning systems to alert fire fighters of hazardous conditions can be critical to avoiding injury and locating lost or incapacitated fire fighters.
Excessive temperature extremes, moisture, contaminated/flammable atmospheres, and other difficult and unknown hazards force fire fighters to use a minimum amount of tools that contain batteries and other electronic components subject to failure. Hand held radios, flashlights, and power tools are often undependable because of the harsh conditions. A related danger is the fact that these first responders often enter structures filled with natural gas and other hazardous materials sensitive to explosions related to static discharge or random, uncontrolled electrical impulses.
These fire fighters, operating in forward positions (tip of the spear), have the best vantage point to quickly and efficiently neutralize the threat, but are severely limited because of the nature of the tools with which they are currently equipped. Current prior art tools and techniques are not sufficient for the demands of the job.
While there have been attempts to equip fire fighters, paramedics, emergency medical technicians, and other first responders with helmet-mounted or body mounted video cameras. These cameras cannot presently be used at the leading edge of a fire suppression operation because of the extreme heat. In addition, these cameras are basically useless in low light/no light environments. They record what they see and in limited visibility situations they are unable to see much, if anything. The dynamic nature of these scenes would benefit from increased visibility and live video streaming to enhance communication and protect the privacy of all people on and in the vicinity of the emergency scene.
Therefore, it would be desirable to provide a device and method that overcomes the above problems. The device and method would provide a hands-free tool to assist fire crews involved in search, rescue, and fire suppression efforts. The device and method would provide enhanced lighting, video monitoring, and other sensory informational capability to be used in firefighting operations inside or outside a structure.
The present invention is incorporated in a power and data port interface illustrated in the accompanying schematics, presented in this specification, provides an original solution to enhance electronic device operability and life safety in extreme environments.
The power/data interface 100 is preferably located on the outside face of a device to be used at the leading edge (i.e., the “tip of the spear”) of a fire suppression operation. An example of such a device is shown in
Power/data interface 100 serves as an operational link between housing device 10 and an accessory 308. An “accessory” as used herein is a detachable electronic device for use in a fire zone. Example accessories 308 include thermal imaging cameras (or “tic cameras”) 310, sensory devices 312, or video cameras 313. The power/data interface 100 not only provides power to accessory 308 by connecting it to a power source (such as power source 70) located inside the housing device 10, but the power/data interface 100 can exchange data between the accessory 308 and the housing device 10. Such exchange of data enables the housing device 10 to record and protect data captured by accessory 308 on a flash drive or other recordable media located inside housing device 10.
In addition to providing power and exchanging data with an accessory 308, the power/data interface 100 can also accept battery pack 314 that can be used to recharge a battery or other power source located inside the housing device 10, such as power source 70.
In the alternative, the data/power interface 100 can also be located on a hand-grip unit 330. The hand-grip unit 330 can also house batteries and recording media to power accessory 308 and record data captured by accessory 308.
Those in the art will recognize other electronic devices that could be useful in these circumstances. Likewise, while this power and data port interface is demonstrated to be useful in firefighting applications, it can be used in any application where individuals work or recreate in environments detrimental to electronic component operability.
It is an object of this invention to support the transmittal of real-time video streaming from the “tip of the spear.”
It is another object of this invention to support thermal imaging cameras connected to the device: short wave infrared, ultraviolet, and all cameras across the visible/non-visible light spectrum.
It is an another object of this invention to house electronics for supporting a video camera capable of capturing video images and transmitting those images via wireless technology to a mobile device or monitor at a remote location.
It is another object of this invention to provide incident commanders and alarm room staff with live, streaming video from the scene that enables them to make more timely and prudent decisions to assist on scene personnel.
It is another object of this invention to enable firefighters and emergency medical personnel to send live, streaming video to hospital emergency rooms to allow doctors, nurses, and staff to make better triage decisions and promote better patient outcomes. In essence, all those involved in emergency scene management will be able to visually monitor and evaluate scene operations while respecting the privacy and dignity of those involved in those operations.
The features, functions, and advantages may be achieved independently in various embodiments of the disclosure or may be combined in yet other embodiments.
Embodiments of the disclosure will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Firefighting personnel will most typically use the present invention during a structure fire to advance into and through the structure. In operation, a firefighter would use the device at the nozzle end of a hand line to illuminate the firefighter's path and search the structure and apply a burst of water and/or other extinguishing agent or propellant from the attached hose. Under these operating conditions, the housing device 10 will see a temperature of at least 500° F. for 15 minutes, which is two and a half times the specified maximum temperature for typical batteries known in the art. Degraded battery performance not only subjects most electronics devices to failure but also exposes firefighting personnel to unacceptable risks of injury or death.
Standard thermal management strategies for devices under these extreme conditions involve components, assemblies, and constructions to manage heat generated by the power dissipation of electrical components. Standard thermal management generally includes contact of electrical components or the component packaging with at least one heat sink component or structure that conducts heat away from the electrical components to be dissipated through either conduction or radiation. This standard strategy is effective because the ambient air temperature is lower than that of the electrical components. Standard thermal management strategies are however unacceptable for fire-fighting environments, which demand a different strategy.
Contrary to the normal operating conditions that enable standard thermal management strategies to work, the ambient air temperatures during a structure fire are extreme and render standard thermal management strategies inappropriate. For example, flashover (i.e. the immediate combustion of flammable materials due to extreme heat), is reached when the average upper gas temperature in the room exceeds about 600° F. Prior to flashover, there may be flame temperatures of over 900° F. in certain areas although wide spatial variations are possible. Peak fire temperature in a room or structure fire is estimated to be around 1200° F., although a typical post-flashover room fire will more commonly be 900˜1000° F. The temperatures present in a fire can damage electronics and particularly affect the performance of batteries. Temperatures above 90° C. (or 194° F.) adversely affect battery performance.
In addition, other environmental aspects can be hazardous to electronics. Both water and dirt can damage electronics. And most of the time, a firefighter's visibility is severely limited by smoke and darkness. So joining two items, like a battery pack to a thermal imaging camera can prove difficult and time consuming.
The present invention provides a significant improvement over the prior art in the field of fire-fighting tools and technology because not only does it protect electronic components from extreme temperatures, water, and dirt, but it allows two items, namely a power supply and a detachable electronic device to be joined together primarily by feel.
As shown in
The power/data interface 100 is located on an exterior surface 110 of the housing 100 enclosing a battery. This allows accessories 308 to be connected and disconnected to the housing 10 quickly. To assist in the quick connect/disconnect, it is preferred to have magnetic connectors located on the exterior face 110. For the purpose of this specification, magnetic connector 110 is a magnet or something capable of coupling (or mating) to a magnet, like metal.
A electronic port 130 is also located on the exterior surface 110 of the housing device 10. The preferred electronic port 130 is a mateable electrical connection. The preferred embodiment of the mateable electrical connection is shown in
The preferred electronic port 130 includes connections for both power and data transfer between the housing device 10 and an accessory 308. As shown in
The electronic port 130 preferably has two (2) power conductors 322, one (1) positive terminal, one (1) negative terminal. Likewise, there are preferably two (2) conductors 324 that permit data to flow between the housing device 10 and the detachable electronic device 308. This data can be video data, thermal imaging data, communication data or any other data that might be desired by a user.
The preferred power/data interface 100 is triangular in shape, but other shapes may be suitable. The important aspect of the shape is that the interface 100 be configured so that there is only one way for the housing device 10 and accessory 308 can mate. That way, in the chaos present at the leading edge of a fire suppression operation, the user knows that the housing device 10 is connected correctly by fit and feel rather than having to read labels. As shown in
Referring now to
The power/data interface 100 can serve multiple purposes. First, it can provide power to accessory 308 by connecting it to a power source (such as power source 70) located inside the housing device 10. Second, the power/data interface 100 can exchange data between the accessory 308 and the housing device 10. Such exchange of data enables the housing device 10 to record and protect data captured by accessory 308 on a flash drive or other recordable media located inside housing device 10. In addition, the exchange of data permits the power/data interface 100 to identify when different accessories 308 are attached and to recognize various states of those accessories 308 (e.g., on/off, recording, standby, etc.)
In addition to providing power and exchanging data with accessory 308, the power/data interface 100 can also accept battery pack 314 that can be used to recharge a battery or other power sources located inside the housing device 10, such as internal power source 70.
In operation, when a user attaches an accessory 308 to a housing device 10 (or hand-grip unit 330), micro-controller 340 will sense voltages from accessory 308 via power conductors 322 and data conductors 324 to detect the presence of an accessory 308. The micro-processor 340 communicates with accessory 308 to determine what it is (e.g., a tic camera, video device, communication device, battery, etc.). Depending on what accessory 308 is attached, microprocessor 340 will start communicating with accessory 308 thru data conductors 324 to transfer information, pass control to accessory. Information passed to the housing device 10 can include data (such as thermal imaging data) to store within the housing device 10 on a flash drive or other storage media. The housing device 10 can offer protection from the extreme conditions for the data storage device.
Power conductors 322 can be used to power the accessory 308 from a power source or battery inside the housing device 10, such as power source 70 by way of example. Conversely, power conductors 322 can be used to charge a power source inside housing device 10, such as power supply 70 by way of example.
In the alternative, as shown in
While embodiments of the disclosure have been described in terms of various specific embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that the embodiments of the disclosure may be practiced with modifications within the spirit and scope of the claims.
This application claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/145,224 filed Apr. 9, 2015.
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