This application is a national stage application of PCT/IB2010/000299, filed on Feb. 17, 2010, which claims the benefit of and priority to Italian Patent Application No. M12009A 000215, filed on Feb. 18, 2009, the entire contents of each are incorporated by reference herein.
Certain known snow groomers normally also comprise a tiller for grooming the snow surface of ski slopes; and a shovel for moving masses of snow along ski slopes. When operating the snow groomer on particularly steep ski slopes, the free end of the winch assembly cable is fixed to an uphill anchorage to maneuver the snow groomer with the aid of the winch assembly, to ensure greater safety and prevent the snow groomer from slipping in the event of loss of traction.
Certain known snow groomers, however, fail to provide for adequate cable control. For example, Canadian Patent No. 2,441,650, describes a snow groomer comprising a winch assembly, which in turn comprises a cable guide device comprising movable arms operated by the cable. The movable arms operate an actuator to move the cable guide device in front of the drum, to wind/unwind the cable correctly with respect to the drum.
However, the snow groomer in Canadian Patent No. 2,441,650 fails to eliminate certain drawbacks caused by occasional deviations of the cable, and may result in malfunctioning of the winch assembly and the snow groomer as a whole. Moreover, the arms may jam and produce undue movement of the cable guide device.
The snow groomer in Canadian Patent No. 2,441,650 also fails to perform functions other than positioning the cable with respect to the drum, with all the drawbacks referred to above.
The present disclosure relates to a snow groomer comprising a winch assembly to aid handling of the snow groomer on steep slopes.
More specifically, in one embodiment, the snow groomer comprises a frame; a control unit; and the winch assembly, which comprises a support structure fixed or connected to the frame, a drum that rotates with respect to the support structure about an axis, a cable wound about the drum, and an actuator assembly for rotating the drum about the axis.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present disclosure to provide a snow groomer designed to eliminate certain of the drawbacks of certain of the known art.
Another object of the present disclosure is to provide a snow groomer designed to improve cable control.
According to one embodiment of the present disclosure, there is provided a snow groomer comprising a winch assembly to aid handling of the snow groomer on steep slopes, the snow groomer comprises a frame; a control unit; and the winch assembly which comprises a support structure fixed or connected to the frame, a drum that rotates with respect to the support structure about an axis, a cable wound about the drum, an actuator assembly for rotating the drum about the axis, and a sensor for determining the position of the drum about the axis; the control unit being configured to control the cable as a function of the position of the drum and the geometry of the drum.
It is thus possible to control the actual amount of cable wound/unwound on/off the drum, and determine the area of the drum the cable is wound/unwound on/off, and therefore the position the cable should assume with respect to the drum, especially when winding the cable.
In one embodiment of the present disclosure, the winch assembly comprises a cable guide device movable with respect to the drum to position the cable in a given or designated position with respect to the drum; and an actuator for moving the cable guide device with respect to the drum; the control unit being configured to calculate a position of the cable guide device as a function of the position of the drum and the geometry of the drum, and to control the actuator as a function of the calculated position.
The cable is thus wound and unwound correctly in a spiral about the drum.
In another embodiment of the present disclosure, the winch assembly comprises at least one idle pulley, which is positioned contacting the cable and rotated by the cable; and a sensor for determining the position of the idle pulley; the control unit being configured to acquire the rotation speed of the drum and the rotation speed of the idle pulley, and to control the actuator assembly as a function of the rotation speed of the drum, the rotation speed of the idle pulley, the position of the drum, and the geometry of the idle pulley and the drum.
It is thus possible to determine correct tensioning of the cable. If the cable is not tensioned properly, it loses grip on the idle pulley, which therefore does not rotate about its axis. If the cable is not kept taut, it may rewind incorrectly or even unwind automatically off the drum due to its own elasticity.
Another object of the present disclosure is to provide a method of operating a snow groomer winch assembly.
According to one embodiment of the present disclosure, there is provided a method of operating a winch assembly to aid handling of a snow groomer on steep slopes, the winch assembly comprising a support structure; a drum that rotates with respect to the support structure about an axis; and a cable wound about the drum; the method comprising the steps of determining the position of the drum about the axis; and controlling the cable as a function of the determined position of the drum and the geometry of the drum.
Additional features and advantages are described in, and will be apparent from, the following Detailed Description and the figures.
A non-limiting embodiment of the present disclosure will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring now to the example embodiments of the present disclosure illustrated in
Snow groomer 1 comprises a frame 2; two crawlers 3 (only one shown in
Snow groomer 1 comprises a control unit 13 connected to user interface 7 and for controlling snow groomer 1 and winch assembly 10.
With reference to
Support structure 14 includes a lattice structure, and comprises a bottom portion 23 fixed or connected to frame 2 (
With reference to
In the
In an alternative embodiment (not shown in the drawings), the guide mechanism comprises an arm, such as the type described in Canadian Patent No. 2,441,650, that supports the cable guide device and rotates about an axis crosswise to the drum axis.
Drum 15 comprises two flanges 37 perpendicular to axis A1; and, as shown in
Groove 39 winds approximately in a spiral along cylindrical wall 38, and is characterized by semicircular portions connected to one another, and by offset portions that produce a shift, in the direction parallel to axis A1, equal to half the pitch of groove 39. A groove 39 of the above type is generally referred to as a Lebus.
Cable 16 is wound in a spiral about drum 15. That is, a first layer of cable 16 is wound partly inside groove 39, and further layers of cable 16 are wound, with the same pitch as groove 39, over the first layer.
As shown in
Control unit 13 is configured to control cable 16, in particular the position of cable 16 with respect to drum 15, and the tension of cable 16, and comprises a memory 42, in which the geometry of drum 15 and the geometry of idle pulley 18 are stored. Control unit 13 is configured to control cable 16 as a function of the position of drum 15 and the geometry of drum 15, which includes the type of groove 39, the dimensions of drum 15 and groove 39, and the number or quantity of winding layers of cable 16. Control unit 13 is connected to user interface 7 to enter data into memory 42.
The position of drum 15 is intended as the absolute position with respect to a zero reference point, in which drum 15 is in a predetermined winding condition, such as with cable 16 fully wound.
On the basis of this information, control unit 13 is configured to control the position of cable guide device 17 as a function of a calculated position, and accordingly comprises a computing block 43 to calculate the position of cable guide device 17 with respect to drum 15.
On the basis of the signal emitted by sensor 28, and of the geometry of drum 15, the winding state of drum 15 can be displayed on a display 44 in cab 6 (
Once the position of cable guide device 17 is calculated, control unit 13 operates control device 32 to command actuator 31 to set cable guide device 17 to the calculated position.
Control unit 13 also comprises a comparing block 45 to compare the actual position of cable guide device 17 with the calculated position. The actual position is determined by sensor 30. When the difference between the actual position and the calculated position exceeds a given or designated acceptance range, control unit 13 is configured to correct the actual position of cable guide device 17.
Control unit 13 comprises two differentiating blocks 46, 47 to acquire the rotation speed of drum 15 and the rotation speed of idle pulley 18 as a function of the respective positions determined by sensors 28 and 41; a computing block 48 to convert the rotation speeds of drum 15 and idle pulley 18 to respective tangential speeds as a function of the geometry of drum 15, the geometry of idle pulley 18, and the absolute position of drum 15; and a comparing block 49 to determine whether the difference between the tangential speeds exceeds a given or designated threshold value. In which case, control unit 13 is configured to stop drum 15, if drum 15 is unwinding cable 16.
In the absence of slippage between cable 16 and idle pulley 18, the speeds tangential to idle pulley 18 and drum 15 are equal, according to the equation:
ω18*R18=ω15*R15
where:
Put briefly, the comparison may be of the type: ω18<K(ω15*R15)/R18, where K is an acceptance factor.
Cable tension control is actually also a function of the absolute position of drum 15.
The present disclosure thus provides for a snow groomer capable of precise and also highly versatile winch assembly cable control. The snow groomer, in fact, is capable of controlling the position of the cable along the drum when winding and unwinding the cable; controlling cable tension; and providing the user with a cable winding/unwinding status display.
It should be understood that various changes and modifications to the presently preferred embodiments described herein will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Such changes and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present subject matter and without diminishing its intended advantages. It is therefore intended that such changes and modifications be covered by the appended claims
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MI2009A0215 | Feb 2009 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2010/000299 | 2/17/2010 | WO | 00 | 10/24/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/095016 | 8/26/2010 | WO | A |
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