The invention relates generally to road markers. In particular, the invention relates to a road marker having a increased reflective or retroreflective characteristics due to reflective sheeting behind a lens mounted on the road marker.
It is known to make lenses for use in items such as reflective or retroreflective road markers which have flat surfaces on one side of the lens and a plurality of shapes such as cube corners on the opposite side. Cube corners are typically plated with vacuum depositions of aluminum or another material having high reflective properties in order to perform specular reflection to provide good reflectivity. It is also known to use a glass sheet in the front of the front surface of the lens to protect an acrylic lens from abrasion when tires pass over the surface of the lens. However, such lenses are expensive to produce. The plating process is time consuming, and it is difficult to control the quality of the plating process.
A road marker assembly mounted to a road enabling a driver to better see road divisions, the road marker assembly comprising a lens having a rear surface, a shell having an outer surface, the lens mounted on the outer surface of the shell, and a reflective or retroreflective sheeting layer disposed between the rear surface of the lens and the outer surface of the shell thereby allowing light entering the lens from vehicle headlights to reflect efficiently near back to the originating light emitted from the vehicle headlights. The outer surface of the shell includes a recess adapted to accept the lens, wherein the lens sits within the recess of the outer surface of the shell. The reflective layer lines the recess and is disposed between the lens and the recess of the outer surface of the shell.
A novel lens arrangement for reflective articles such as road markers is disclosed. The lens 12 has a planar outer surface 22 and one or more inner surfaces (24, 26) which are covered with a retroreflective or simply reflective sheeting material 30 The lens 12 has a planar outer surface 22 and one or more inner surfaces (24, 26) which are covered with the sheeting material 30. The outer surface 22 and rear surfaces 24, 26 are angled with respect to each other to form a prism and provide a desired angle of incidence on the sheeting 30. Let it be understood that the sheeting 30 may have either reflective or retroreflective characteristics, this description should not serve to limit claim coverage to either reflective or retroreflective characteristics. This description should clearly serve to cover both use of a reflective or retroflective sheeting 30.
The road marker 10 has lenses 12 with inner surfaces covered with the sheeting 30 and a shell 16 having a longitudinal trapezoidal cross section. The shell 16 has a top 18 surface between a pair of stepped angled surfaces 28 formed to the lenses. The lenses 12 are secured to the shell 16 with an acceptable adhesive. Furthermore, the lenses 12 are secured to the reflective retroreflective sheeting 30 by an adhesive, and the sheeting 30 attaches to the shell 16 by means of an adhesive. The adhesives used should be suitable so as to not disrupt or compromise the specific refractive index of the lens 12. It should be further understood that certain sheetings 30 have built in pressure sensitive adhesive enabling the requirement of having a suitable refractive index adhesive to assure continuity of light ray thru interfaces.
The lenses 12 are formed of glass or suitable plastic such as acrylic. Each lens has a planar outer surface 22 and planar rear surfaces 24, 26. A first rear surface 26 is angled at an angle θR with respect to the outer surface 22 of the lens 12. The rear surfaces 24, 26 are covered by the sheeting 30 such as Diamond Grade Translucent Reflective Sheeting produced by 3M Corporation. The shell 16 further includes an inner surface defining a cavity 40 wherein the cavity 40 is filled with a potting material to improve overall strength of the road marker.
An alternative embodiment of the lens 112 has a plurality of stepped portions as shown in
As shown in
The sheeting 30 has the ability to redirect light rays 50 incident upon a surface of the sheeting 30 towards its originating source, such as a vehicle. There are many types of reflective or retroreflective sheeting 30 including crystal beads, cube corners, tetrahedral cube corners, pyramid cube corners, canted cube corners, etc. The sheeting 30 generally incorporates a structured surface including at least one array of reflective elements to enhance the visibility of an object. By orientating the optics of a cube corner, the sheeting 30 may be designed to exhibit optimal performance at a specific orientation. This may be accomplished by forming cube corner elements of the sheeting 30 such that their optical axes are canted relative to an axis perpendicular to the base plane and the sheeting. Additionally, gripping members 32 are provided on the shell 16 to ease install of the road marker 10.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,588,258 discloses sheeting 30 which employs optics having canted cube corner elements which form opposing matched pairs. The sheeting 30 exhibits a primary plane of improved retroreflective performance at high entrance angles identified as the X plane and a second plane of improved retroreflective performance identified as the Y plane. The axes can be canted in either a backward negative direction or a forward positive direction. Thus when reflective sheeting is applied to a lens such as the lens of a road marker, it is desirable to direct the light through the lens to the surface of the sheeting 30 at a desired angle which will result in the light being reflected back from the sheeting 30 to maximize reflectivity.
The amount of light reflected depends on the entrance angle θ3 or angle of incidence. Thus for a −4 degree entrance angle θ3, the amount of light reflected is greater than for a +30 degree entrance angle. The amount of light reflected varies with the divergence angle or observation angle. Thus it is desirable to orientate the surface of the reflective material with respect to the reflective property of the material. As shown in
An alternative embodiment of the road marker 210 is depicted in
Thus is disclosed a novel lens for an article such as a road marker which provides excellent retroreflectivity and may be produced inexpensively. The invention is not restricted to the illustrative examples and embodiments described above. The embodiments are not intended as limitations on the scope of the invention. Methods, apparatus, compositions, and the like described herein are exemplary and not intended as limitations on the scope of the invention. Changes therein and other uses will occur to those skilled in the art. The scope of the invention is defined by the scope of the claims.
This application claims priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/288,687 filed Dec. 21, 2009, which is incorporated herein by reference
Number | Date | Country | |
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61288687 | Dec 2009 | US |