The present disclosure relates generally to the field of winches. More specifically, the present disclosure relates to an apparatus for a winch that swivels based on pressure data.
Winches are hauling or lifting devices, which pull in or let out a line. Winches function by winding or unwinding the line that is coiled around a rotating drum. A winch fairlead is commonly used to direct the line as it winds or unwinds along the drum. Typically, the line must be at a shallow angle to the fairlead in order to minimize friction between the line and the internal edges of the fairlead that surround the line. Thus, a problem arises if the line is connected to a load that is at a wide angle to the fairlead because friction between the line and the fairlead reduces the pulling capacity of the winch and shortens the life of the line (can cause the line to fray, for example).
This invention has been developed in response to the present state of the art and, in particular, in response to the problems and needs in the art that have not yet been fully solved by currently available systems and methods. Features and advantages of different embodiments of the invention will become more fully apparent from the following description and appended claims, or may be learned by practice of the invention as set forth hereinafter.
Consistent with the foregoing, a system and method for a swivel winch are disclosed.
A winch is described that includes a rotatable drum comprising a winch cable windably connected to the winch drum, and a removable vehicle winch frame with two end brackets. The winch comprises a winch motor, a gear assembly, and a swivel plate, a base plate, and a bearing.
A plurality of sensors are designed to detect pressure from the cable are placed on the fairlead, which guides the cable along the drum as it unwinds or winds on to or off of the drum. Because the cable passes through the orifice of the fairlead, placing a plurality of sensors on the portion of the fairlead that form the orifice allows for the cable to be in contact with the sensors.
The plurality of sensors may comprise two sensors, such that the sensors are placed on opposing sides of the orifice, in a first plane that is parallel with the drum axis, and wherein the swivel plate swivels in a second plane that is parallel with the drum axis.
The plurality of sensors may comprise two sensors, such that the two sensors are located on opposing sides of the orifice, in a third plane that is perpendicular with the drum axis, and wherein the swivel plate swivels in a fourth plane that is perpendicular with the drum axis. In this embodiment, the sensors might be placed at the upper and lower portions of the portion of the fairlead that forms an orifice, thus allowing the winch to tilt upwards or downwards in response to detected pressure from the sensors.
In another embodiment, the swivel winch comprises four sensors. Two of the four sensors are located on opposing sides of the orifice, in a first plane that is parallel with the drum axis and two of the four sensors are located on opposing sides of the orifice, in a third plane that is perpendicular with the drum axis.
The swivel winch is designed such that the swivel plate, bearing, and base plate permit the swivel winch to rotate about the plane parallel with the drum axis.
The controller of the winch receives data from the sensors as they detect pressure from the cables. The controller, upon receiving the data, will determine whether or not to generate a command for the actuator based on whether or not the data from the sensors indicates that a pressure threshold is passed. If the pressure threshold is passed, the controller generates a command and the actuator actuates the command, causing the swivel winch to swivel. The controller generates a command for a swivel position that minimizes the pressure data received from each of the plurality of sensors, and by determining an actuator position that will achieve the swivel position.
The controller may also generate the command by determining the command that will actuate the actuator to achieve the actuator position.
The actuator may be a motor, or another device that actuates.
The swivel winch allows for a user to override the controllers commands, in the event that a user prefers to determine the angle of the winch to the load.
The sensors and the portion of the fairlead that form the orifice are smooth such that friction is reduced when the cable is sliding through the orifice while winding or unwinding on or off of the drum.
The bearing may be plain bearing, rolling-element bearing, fluid bearing or magnetic bearing, and the sensors may be an absolute pressure sensor, a sealed pressure sensor, a differential pressure sensor.
In another embodiment, the swivel winch is attachable to vehicles, and thus may be used while attached to a vehicle or while unattached to a vehicle.
In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are provided for a thorough understanding of the various embodiments disclosed herein. The embodiments disclosed herein can be manufactured without one or more of the specific details, or with other methods, components, materials, etc. In addition, in some cases, well-known structures, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more alternative embodiments.
Winches in their most basic form have been used for many years to help hoist or move objects. Winches can be used in a variety of settings. They are used on boats, on cars, in a building, in a theatre, on a construction site, indoors or outdoors. They are extremely useful because they help users to maneuver often large or heavy equipment or materials in such a way that would be extremely difficult to do manually.
Winches are used to pull in or let out tension on a rope. There exists a wide variety of winches comprised of different materials. One of the challenges associated with winches is that pulling capacity may be diminished when a load is not perpendicular to the drum. Typically, this challenge is addressed by using a fairlead that includes rollers to reduce the friction associated with off-angle loads (loads that result in the winch cable not being perpendicular with the winch drum, for example). However, even with a fairlead that includes rollers, the winch capacity for off-angle loads is reduced, and the pressure and friction of the fairlead may result in increased wear on the winch cable and/or the winch components.
Embodiments and methods disclosed herein may improve winch performance when the load is at a wide angle to the fairlead. The present devices, systems, and methods describe a winch that includes a swivel mechanism (e.g., swivel winch). As described herein, the swivel winch may swivel to orient itself in a way that minimizes or eliminates off-angle loads. In other words, the swivel winch may rotate towards a load that the swivel winch is pulling, such that there is less friction on the cable when being wound onto the drum. This allows for increased efficiency and increases the capacity of the winch to pull heavier items or loads.
Depending on the environment and scenario in which a winch is used, one of the common use cases for winches, for example, is for a winch to be placed on a vehicle (e.g., all-terrain vehicle (ATV), truck, utility vehicle, and the like). Typically, the winch is placed at the front (or back) of the vehicle. This placement may be ideal for some use cases. A vehicle, however, may or may not be able to be situated directly in the front or the back of the load to be pulled. Furthermore, the vehicle may or may not be able to be situated on the same level as the load to be pulled. When using the winch, it is most efficient when directly facing the load it is pulling because friction is reduced and efficiency is increased. Thus, it is beneficial for a winch to have the ability to tilt, rotate, and/or twist in order to face the load being pulled so that it is directly facing the load to be pulled.
It is appreciated, that pulling off-angle reduces the efficiency and ability of all winches. Pulling off-angle, however, may be particularly problematic for winches that include a winch-line-guide that directs the line to wind along the length of the rotatable drum to avoid bunching or catching the line on the rotatable drum. In one embodiment, a motor powers the drum to rotate about an axis within a frame. A fairlead of the winch-line-guide may be connected to and may simultaneously move along the length of one or more elongated rods, which extend longitudinally within the frame in substantially parallel relation to the drum axis. As the fairlead moves along the rods, the line passes through the fairlead such that the fairlead directs the line to wind uniformly around the drum. When pulling off-angle, however, the fairlead may, at times, be unable to move along the drum length due to the force of the load working against the movement direction of the fairlead. A winch-mount that changes the direction of the drum and fairlead may resolve this problem and allow the fairlead to smoothly move along the length of the drum.
In one embodiment the swivel winch may include sensors in proximity to the orifice on the fairlead which sense/detect pressure. When pressure exceeds a predetermined threshold, the swivel winch is instructed to swivel, tilt, and/or rotate in the direction that will most relieve the sensed pressure. Thus, sensors may be used to allow the fairlead to operate without decreasing efficiency.
In some embodiments, the mounting-plate (to which the winch is mounted, for example) may oscillate, rotate, balance, pivot, turn, tilt, teeter, vacillate, hover, hang, sway, and/or dither. The mounting-plate may be connected to the winch frame in some embodiments. The winch may include one or more spacers, insertions, and/or attachments between the rotatable drum and the mounting-plate. Some embodiments of the mounting-plate may include one or more protrusions, attachments, flanges, extensions, shelves, depressions, grooves and/or other surface discontinuities that interact with springs. In one embodiment, the mounting-plate may include one or more folds, bends, creases, and/or curvatures such that the degree to which the rotatable drum tilts is as much as 180° from rest. The mounting-plate may also rotate as much as 360° around the center pivot, according to one embodiment.
The following detailed description refers to the accompanying drawings. The same reference numbers may be used in different drawings to identify the same or similar elements. In the following description, for purposes of explanation and not limitation, specific details are set forth such as particular structures, architectures, interfaces, techniques, etc. in order to provide a thorough understanding of the various aspects of various embodiments. However, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art having the benefit of the present disclosure that the various aspects of the various embodiments may be practiced in other examples that depart from these specific details. In certain instances, descriptions of well-known devices, circuits, and methods are omitted so as not to obscure the description of the various embodiments with unnecessary detail.
The swivel winch 100 in this embodiment is on an ATV 114. The swivel winch 100 can be mounted upon many different vehicles because it is detachable. A swivel winch 100 can fit an automobile, a tractor, a truck, a boat, a tank, an armored fighting vehicle, a military engineering vehicle, an ambulance, a train, a draisine, or a reconnaissance vehicle. This is extremely useful because a swivel winch 100 is designed to pull a large variety of things in a large variety of situations, and because the swivel winch 100 can attach to different vehicles, it becomes useful in many more situations. For example, a swivel winch 100 could attach to a truck and be used to pull a tree trunk out of the ground. It could be attached to an ATV 114 to pull an object stuck in mud out of the mud. A swivel winch 100 might also be attached to an automobile and then used to pull another automobile. A swivel winch 100 might also be attached to an automobile, ATV 114, truck, or tractor to fell a tree, or to pull a boat out of water. The swivel winch 100 is removably attached to a vehicle so that it can be attached to any one vehicle, used, then removed, and attached to another vehicle for a different purpose. Additionally, the swivel winch 100 may be attached to a non-vehicle.
At 902 the sensors 105 detect a pressure.
At 904, the pressure is compared to a threshold.
At 906, if the pressure does not exceed the threshold, it is compared to the threshold again. If the pressure does exceed the threshold, at 908, the actuator is instructed to swivel the winch.
The operations method 900 may be performed by a winch, programmable application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), field programmable gate array (FPGA), or the like.
For example, a portion of the cable 104 may pass through the orifice 111 and may apply a pressure to one of the sensors 105. The one of the sensors 105 may send pressure data to the controller 1004. The controller 1004 may subsequently send a signal to the actuator 1001 to disengage the mechanical lock 1003. The mechanical lock 1003 may disengage. Subsequently, the cable 104 may release the aforementioned pressure from the one of the sensors 105. The one of the sensors 105 may send pressure data to the controller 1004. The controller 1004 may subsequently send a signal to the actuator 1001 to engage the mechanical lock 1003. The mechanical lock 1003 may engage.
The mechanical lock 1003 may prevent the swivel plate 107 from moving with respect to the base plate 106, by any of a variety of means, including by applying a force which may generate a frictional force or moving a pin which interferes with motion of base the base plate 106 relative to the swivel plate 107.
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