The present disclosure generally relates worksite machine payload tipoff and, more particularly, to a method and system for automated payload target tipoff.
At worksites, such as excavation, surface mines, construction, and agricultural sites, worksite loading machines such as wheeled loaders, track-type loaders, backhoe loaders, and the like are relied upon to load loose payload material into haul vehicles such as over the road haul trucks. It is essential that the haul truck is sufficiently loaded to maximum capacity avoiding underloading or overloading situations which can be undesirable from a productivity and efficiency standpoint.
Typically, loaders have a payload control system which can accurately measure the payload in the bucket. Once activated, the payload control system can sum successive bucket payloads to determine an estimated amount of payload already deposited into the haul truck. During the final pass, the operator adjusts the final amount of payload in the implement to be dumped at the pile or dumps only a partial amount from the bucket directly into the haul truck. The process is referred to as tip-off or tipping-off. The former situation is known as pile tip-off where in-vehicle sensors determine the load in the bucket and operator tips-off excess payload onto the pile. The latter situation is known as truck tip-off where the operator racks the bucket and partially empties the bucket into the haul truck until the target payload capacity is reached.
While one strategy exists in co-owned U.S. Pat. No. 6,211,471 in which a Dump-to-Angle scheme is described. In practice, the operator must know the type of material as well as set the tip-off type manually. While the scheme appears to have promise, the weight signal from the in-vehicle sensors is a noisy signal due to linkage bounce and material settling. This requires extra time and attention from the operator which can detract from the ability to accomplish the tasks on a reliable and repeatable basis.
The disclosed method and system for automated payload target tip-off for loading a haul vehicle is directed to overcoming one or more of the problems set forth above.
In accordance with one aspect of the disclosure, a method for automated payload tip-off for a worksite loading machine is presented. The method includes receiving a signal of a remaining payload target; loading material into an implement in excess of the remaining payload target; and receiving a signal of a material weight within the implement and a signal of an angle of the implement. A tip-off threshold is determined based on the material weight and the remaining payload target, wherein a difference between the material weight and the remaining payload target greater than the tip-off threshold triggers a bulk dump sequence, and the difference below the tip-off threshold triggers a slow dump sequence. The bulk dump sequence including a single implement actuation to induce material spill until the tip-off threshold is met and the material is staged. The slow dump sequence including a plurality of dump then rack actuations to induce and then prevent material spill until the remaining payload target is met, each dump actuation having an associated dump angle and each successive dump angle is progressively smaller.
In accordance with another aspect of the disclosure, a payload detection system for automated payload tip-off of a loading operation is presented. The system includes a tip-off controller configured to receive a signal of a remaining payload target and receive a signal of a material weight within an implement and a signal of an angle of the implement. A tip-off threshold is determined based on the material weight and the remaining payload target. A difference between the material weight and the remaining payload target greater than the tip-off threshold triggers a bulk dump sequence, and the difference below the tip-off threshold triggers a slow dump sequence. The bulk dump sequence includes a single implement actuation to induce material spill until the tip-off threshold is met and the material is staged. The slow dump sequence includes a plurality of dump then rack actuations to induce and then prevent material spill until the remaining payload target is met, each dump actuation having an associated dump angle and each successive dump angle is progressively smaller.
In accordance with a further aspect of the disclosure, a haul machine is presented. The haul machine includes an implement configured to hold a payload therein, a payload detection unit having at least one sensor for generating a signal of a material weight within the implement and at least one sensor for generating a signal of an angle of the implement, a a display unit for displaying a user interface including at least one of operator-selectable graphical element configured to initiate an automated tip-off operation, and a tip-off controller. The tip-off controller is configured to receive a signal of a remaining payload target, receive a signal of a material weight within the implement and a signal of an angle of the implement, and determine a tip-off threshold based on the material weight and the remaining payload target; wherein a difference between the material weight and the remaining payload target greater than the tip-off threshold triggers a bulk dump sequence, and the difference below the tip-off threshold triggers a slow dump sequence. The bulk dump sequence includes a single implement actuation to induce material spill until the tip-off threshold is met and the material is staged. The slow dump sequence including a plurality of dump then rack actuations to induce and then prevent material spill until the remaining payload target is met, each dump actuation having an associated dump angle and each successive dump angle is progressively smaller.
Aspects of the disclosure will now be described in detail with reference to the drawings, wherein like reference numbers refer to like elements throughout, unless specified otherwise.
Referring to
The work machine 102 may perform various operations at the worksite. In one example, the work machine 102 may perform a payload dump operation. More particularly, the work machine 102 may dump a payload into a haul machine or truck 104. The haul truck 104 may include machines, such as, a dump truck, a mining truck, or any other machine that is capable of holding and transporting the payload from one location to another on the worksite 100. Alternatively, the work machine 102 may dump the payload in a pile, a hopper, or other payload receiver at the worksite 100.
The work machine 102 may include a frame and/or chassis 106. The work machine 102 includes a powertrain or a drivetrain 108 for the production and transmission of motive power. The powertrain 108 may include an engine such as an internal combustion engine, a gas turbine, a hybrid engine, or the like. The powertrain 108 may include a motor connected to a power source like batteries, fuel cell, generator, or any other power source known in the art to power a motor. The powertrain 108 may further include a torque converter, geared transmission, electric motors, drive shafts, differentials, or other known drive links for transmission of motive power from the engine to ground engaging members 110. The ground engaging members 110, such as wheels or tracks, are mounted to the chassis 106 by a suspension system (not shown) which may include suspension springs, beams, hydraulic cylinders, axles, and the like for the purpose of mobility of the work machine 102 relative to the worksite terrain.
The work machine 102 includes a linkage assembly 112 attached to the frame 106. The linkage assembly 112 includes a linkage member 114 and a support arm 116. An implement 118, such as a bucket, may be pivotally coupled to the linkage member 114. The implement 118 of the linkage assembly 112 may be configured to collect, hold and convey any material and/or object at the worksite 100. It should be appreciated that the linkage assembly 112 and the implement 118 of the work machine 102 may vary based on the type of machine or the type of operation or task required to be carried out by the work machine 102.
An operator cabin 120 may be provided on the work machine 102 which houses the various operator input devices and controls of such as, but not limited to, joysticks, knobs, keyboards, a steering wheel, pedals, levers, buttons, switches, display devices, touchscreens, etc. that are adapted to operate the work machine 102. In an exemplary embodiment, the operator cabin 120 includes at least one touchscreen display device 122 configured to display a graphical user interface which can receive an operator touch input associated with displayed operator-selectable graphical elements.
During operation of the machine 102, the linkage member 114 and the implement 118 may be moved to different positions in order to perform dump operations. A hydraulic system or a pneumatic system (not shown) may be used to effectuate a movement of the linkage member 114, the support arm 116, and/or the implement 118 of the linkage assembly 112. For example, a lift cylinder 124 and a tilt cylinder 126 may effectuate and control the movement of the implement 118. The cylinders 124, 126 may embody any one of a hydraulic cylinder and a pneumatic cylinder. Based on the movement of the linkage member 114 and the implement 118, the work machine 102 may perform different operations such as loading, dumping, excavating, and the like.
The dump operation of the payload may require tipping of a desired amount of payload from the implement 118 into a haul truck, known as truck tip-off, or may require tipping off excess material from a payload onto a pile, known as pile tip-off. Tipping refers to the process of dumping a partial amount of material of the payload from the implement 118 based on operation requirements. For example, an operator of a wheeled loader with an 18 ton bucket capacity may be required to load a 45 ton capacity haul truck to maximum capacity. The goal of the loader operator is to load as much tonnage into the haul truck in the shortest amount of time while consuming the least amount of fuel of the loader in order to achieve peak efficiency and reduce operation costs. The operator must also load the haul truck within a payload tolerance without overloading the haul truck. It takes a considerable amount of skill for an operator to load haul trucks within the desired payload tolerances. To achieve the 45 ton capacity, the operator can dump two passes at the maximum capacity of the loader bucket to achieve 36 tons. In a final pass, the operator must only dump 9 tons to achieve the desired payload. Depending on the skill of the operator, the final pass can take anywhere from 3 to 5 times as long as the first two passes.
To reduce the duration of the final pass and reduce the overall time to achieve a target payload in a haul truck 104, the work machine 102 includes a payload detection system (PDS) 130. The PDS 130 includes a tip-off controller 132 and at least one sensor for generating an electronic signal associated with the material weight within in the implement 118 and an electronic signal associated with the angle of the implement 118. In one embodiment, the PDS 130 includes a lift pressure sensor 134 associated with the lift cylinder 124 and a tilt pressure sensor 136 associated with the tilt cylinder 126 to enable the detection of hydraulic fluid pressure within the respective cylinders 124, 126. The fluid pressure signals associated with the respective cylinders 124, 126 may be used, alone or in combination, to determine the weight of the material within the implement 118. The PDS 130 may include a lift displacement sensor 138 associated with the lift cylinder 124 and a tilt displacement sensor 140 associated with the tilt cylinder 126. The displacement signals associated with the respective cylinders 124, 126 can be used to determine the weight of the material within the implement 118. The PDS 130 may also include an inertial motion unit (IMU) 142 which can generate a signal indicative of a position, velocity, motion, and orientation of the linkage assembly 112 and/or the implement 118 which can be used to determine the weight of the material within the implement 118. It should be appreciated that the PDS 130 may include any of a number of measurement devices and sensors in accordance with the particular requirements of the particular worksite application not specifically described herein
The tip-off controller 132 may include, or be coupled with as part of the PDS 130, at least one processing unit 150 which is configured to perform the functions of the tip-off controller 132. The processing unit 150 may embody a single microprocessor or multiple microprocessors that include components for receiving and monitoring the sensor signals of the PDS 130 of the work machine 102. For example, the processing unit 150 is configured to receive the fluid pressure signals from the lift and tilt pressure sensors 134, 136; the displacement signal from the lift and tilt displacement sensors 138, 140; and the position, velocity, motion, and orientation signals from the IMU 142. It should be appreciated that the processing unit 150 could readily be embodied in a general machine microprocessor capable of controlling numerous machine functions.
The tip-off controller 132 may further include, or be coupled with as part of the PDS 130, memory module 152 such as one or more data storage devices or another other component that may be used to run computer executable instructions that are stored to the memory module 152. It should be appreciated that various computer executable instructions, applications, computer program products, or other aspects that are generally described as stored to memory can also be stored on or read from various computer readable media such as, but not limited to, as computer chips and secondary storage devices, including hard disks, floppy disks, optical media, CD-ROM, or other forms of RAM or ROM.
The processing unit 150 may be configured with arithmetic units to algorithmically determine the weight of the material in the implement 118 based on any one of the sensor signals, alone or in combination, according to predetermined mathematical relationships which are stored in the memory module 152. The memory module 152 may store payload weight history data in order to determine, for example, a summed total weight of material loaded into the haul truck 104 during a loading procedure. The processing unit 150 also includes arithmetic units to algorithmically determine the angle of the implement 118 based on any one of the sensor signals, alone or in combination, according to predetermined mathematical relationships which are stored in the memory module 152.
As previously described, a loading procedure includes a final pass in which an operator performs a tip-off sequence to achieve a target payload weight. In one embodiment, the PDS 130 is configured to identify a final pass and automatically initiate a tip-off sequence as well as inform the operator via the user interface of the display device 122 that the tip-off sequence has been initiated. To identify a final pass of a loading sequence, the PDS 130 determines the material weight of each bucket load and calculates an accumulated payload weight by summing the weight of each individual bucket load and storing that data in the memory module 152. The accumulated payload weight is compared to a target payload weight to determine a remaining payload target. When the remaining payload target is less than the maximum capacity of the implement 118, the PDS 130 identifies that the next bucket load of material is a final pass payload and initiates an automated payload tip-off sequence. The PDS 130 informs the operator, via the user interface 122, that a tip-off sequence is initiated, of the remaining payload target, and instructs the operator to load material into the implement 118 in excess of the remaining target payload. Preferably, the operator will load at least 10% more material, by weight, than the remaining payload target. In another embodiment, the final pass is manually identified by the operator by selecting a corresponding graphical element displayed on the touchscreen display 122 to initiate the tip-off sequence.
In general, the PDS 130 and corresponding automated tipping sequence of the present disclosure can find applicability in in various industrial applications such as but not limited to work machines 102 such as those used throughout many industries, including but not limited to, earth moving, excavation, mining, agricultural, marine, construction, power generation, and other such industries. The PDS 130 achieves greater speed and accuracy during tip-off by staging the material to the angle of repose quickly and then exploiting the state of the staged material on the verge of spilling with incremental and controlled dumping and measuring to achieve the desired payload target.
Referring to
At step 202, the operator initiates the PDS 130 by depressing a graphical element displayed to the operator via the touchscreen user interface 122. In step 204, the system 130 receives a signal associated with a desired target payload, e.g. the maximum capacity of the haul truck 104, either automatically from the haul truck 104 or manually from the operator. After the payload target weight is received, the operator is instructed to commence with a normal loading operation, step 206. As shown in
Once the material 502 is secured and settled, the tip-off controller 132 will determine the material weight within the implement 118 based on a generated material weight signal received by the tip-off controller 132, step 212. The operator then positions the implement 118 over a receptacle of the haul truck 104 and positions the implement 118 in a dump position 600, with dump angle γ as shown in
Continuing with
The slow dump sequence includes a series of small dump then rack actuations to slowly dump a controlled amount of material until the payload target is met or the remaining payload is less than the target. The slow dump sequence includes a plurality of high accuracy dump iterations of small dump then rack motions of the implement 118. This motion limits the amount of material that can be spilled in a single iteration and secures the payload before measuring the payload. It should be appreciated that the pitch angle after each iteration, whether it be part of the bulk dump sequence or the slow dump sequence, is progressively lower. In other words, after each dump then rack actuation, the implement 118 is tilted lower. This ensures that material will spill each iteration and that the material is properly staged at the tip edge.
Continuing with
Next, the tip-off controller 132 determines a tip-off threshold based on the material weight in the implement 118 and the remaining payload target signal, step 226. The tip-off threshold can also be determined based on the type of material to account for spill characteristics of the material. As stated above, the tip-off threshold is the condition to determine whether to switch from a bulk dump sequence to a slow dump sequence. Depending on the type of tip-off selected, e.g. truck or pile, the tip-threshold is determined based on the amount of material remaining within the implement or the accumulated payload weight, respectively. The tip-off controller 132 can determine the tip-off threshold dynamically or it can be based on a table of predetermined tip-off thresholds correlated with material type.
With reference to
At step 234, the tip-off controller 132 initiates the slow dump sequence. The slow dump sequence includes a plurality of dump then rack iterations, where each iteration includes a partial dump actuation, followed by a partial rack actuation, and a quiescent interval during with the tip-off controller 132 measures the material weight remaining in the implement 118. Since there is noise in the weight signal from linkage bounce 114, 116 and material settling in the implement 118, the quiescent interval allows the signal to approach steady state to achieve a more accurate reading. At step 236, before the slow dump sequence begins, the tip-off controller 132 determines whether the material weight in the implement 118 meets the payload target after a quiescent period qi. At step 238, if the material weight meets the payload target, the slow dump sequence can be avoided and the automated tipping sequence 220 is terminated, step 240. If the material weight does not meet the payload target, then the slow dump sequence 234 is initiated. At step 242, the tip-off controller 132 controls the implement 118 to a dump angle ζi to initiate a partial dump; followed by a partial rack actuation with rack angle ηi, step 244; and then followed by a quiescent interval qi, step 246. After the quiescent interval qi; a material weight signal is generated from which the current the material weight in the implement 118 can be determined. It should be noted that after each successive iteration, i=1, 2, 3 . . . , n, the overall pitch angle (i.e. dump or rack angle) of the implement 118 becomes successively lower and more towards the fully dumped direction. For example, the pitch angle of the various actuations during slow dump sequence is as follows when the dump direction is considered to be in the negative direction from horizontal:
ζ1>ζ2>ζ3> . . . >ζn
η1>η2>η3> . . . >ηn
such that each successive actuation, whether it is a dump or rack actuation, has an overall pitch angle that will be successively lower.
In one embodiment, as the material in the implement becomes closer to the desired amount, the difference between successive angles may become smaller to reduce the material dumped in each iteration for accuracy reasons, as shown below:
(ζ1−ζ2)>(ζ2−ζ3)>(ζ3−ζ4)> . . . >(ζn-1−ζn)
This is because as the amount of material decreases in the implement 118, the corresponding dump and rack angles ζi,ηi become progressively smaller. The amount of material in the implement 118 also effects generated weight signal. As the material weight in the implement decreases, the material weight signal may become more susceptible to noise from, for example, linkage bounce, material settling, and the like. To mitigate the increase in noise in the generated material weight signal; the tip-off controller 132 may increase the length of each successive quiescent interval, such that, q1<q2< . . . <qn. In order to determine the length of each quiescent interval qi, the tip-off controller 132 may calculate a confidence metric based on an analysis of the noise in the material weight signal as well as previous material weight signals, previous quiescent intervals qi-1, qi-2, . . . q1, or historical data related previous automated tipping sequences stored in memory module 152. It should be appreciated that the duration of the quiescent interval can be minimized based on the confidence metric such that subsequent quiescent interval may stay the same or may even be shorter in duration.
In the embodiment where the operator chooses a truck tip-off, the operator is then informed to deposit the remaining material in the implement 118 back to the pile 402. In the embodiment where the operator chooses a pile tip-off, the operator is then instructed to deposit the remaining material in the implement 118 into the receptacle of the haul truck 104.
It will be appreciated that the foregoing description provides examples of the disclosed system and technique. However, it is contemplated that other implementations of the disclosure may differ in detail from the foregoing examples. All references to the disclosure or examples thereof are intended to reference the particular example being discussed at that point and are not intended to imply any limitation as to the scope of the disclosure more generally. All language of distinction and disparagement with respect to certain features is intended to indicate a lack of preference for those features, but not to exclude such from the scope of the disclosure entirely unless otherwise indicated.
Recitation of ranges of values herein is merely intended to serve as a shorthand method of referring individually to each separate value falling within the range, unless otherwise indicated herein, and each separate value is incorporated into the specification as if it were individually recited herein. All methods described herein can be performed in any suitable order unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context.
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