The present disclosure relates generally to toy vehicles with on-board electronics, and more specifically to toy vehicles incorporating electronics to record and display data related to the performance of the toy vehicle.
Examples of known toy vehicles are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,800,389, 2,896,708, 3,546,668, 3,618,397, 3,652,937, 3,944,114, 4,237,648, 4,247,107, 4,265,047, 4,280,300, 4,292,758, 4,330,127, 4,409,196, 4,424,566, 4,479,650, 4,451,911, 4,946,416, 4,964,837, 5,306,197, 5,637,996, 5,692,956, 5,855,483, 5,928,058, 6,155,928, 6,200,219, 6,293,798, 6,354,844, 6,461,240, 6,688,985, D446,215, D492,685 and published patent applications US2001/0045978, US2002/0144701, US2002/0187725, US2003/0188594, US2004/0038395, US2004/0077285, US2004/0224742, US2005/0064942, WO199615837, WO2002078810, WO2004233847. The disclosures of all of these patents and publications are incorporated herein by reference.
A toy vehicle of the present disclosure may be rolled by children on flat surfaces, down inclines or along flexible tracks and may not use motors or other power sources for motion. A toy vehicle may include electronic sensors such as rotary optical encoders or accelerometers that monitor motion of the vehicle or monitor motion of a wheel of the vehicle. The toy vehicle may be used to simulate racing and the displayed data may be used to compare vehicle speed with other similar toy vehicles or with other runs of the same vehicle.
The data recorded by the sensors may be used to perform calculations relating to the motion or speed of the vehicle. The recorded data and/or results of the calculations may be made available to the user The data may be displayed on a Liquid Crystal Display (“LCD”) as part of the toy, a remote LCD screen, through Light Emitting Diodes (“LEDs”), through an audio output such as a speaker, or even through a conventional computer output device by plugging the vehicle into the computer or by plugging removable memory from the vehicle into the computer.
Values calculated and displayed may include speed, distance traveled, length of time of travel and acceleration (“G Force”). Some embodiments of the toy vehicle may include keys or control inputs that allow the user to change what information is displayed.
The advantages of the present invention will be understood more readily after a consideration of the drawings and the Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiment.
Referring to
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A user playing with toy vehicle 10 may push the vehicle across the floor as fast as possible to achieve the highest possible speed. In some applications, multiple users may race their toys by giving them an initial velocity and releasing them side by side. Toy vehicle 10 may travel down an incline to gain speed. Users may try to attain the highest speed or acceleration possible with the data displayed on toy vehicle 10.
Wheel 22 rotates as toy vehicle 10 moves. Wheel rotations may be detected and counted by rotary encoder 32. Rotary encoder 32 may incorporate a light source 34, a detector 36 and encoder pattern 20.
Encoder pattern 20 may be printed on wheel 22. Encoder pattern 20 may comprise contrasting patterns of a black section 38 and a white section 40. Encoder pattern 20 may rotate in front of light source 34 and detector 36. Light from light source 34 may be reflected from the surface of encoder 20. Black section 38 and white section 40 of encoder pattern 20 may reflect different amounts of light. Detector 36 may differentiate the amount of light reaching it from light source 34.
Where encoder pattern 20 is on the surface of wheel 22, encoder pattern 20 rotates with wheel 22. When white section 40 is proximate to encoder 32, it reflects more light from source 34 which may cause detector 36 to emit an ‘ON’ signal. Black section 38 may reflect less light than white section 40 and may result in detector 36 emitting an ‘OFF’ signal.
Where encoder pattern 20 comprises only one white section 40 and one black section 38, each rotation will result in detector 36 emitting an ‘ON’ signal once. Each ‘ON’ signal will indicate one rotation at microprocessor 24. Light source 34 and detector 36 may comprise a single unit. Light source 34 may be an LED.
In
Where encoder pattern 20 comprises one clear section and one opaque section of disk 38, each rotation will result in detector 36 emitting an ‘ON’ signal once. Each ‘ON’ signal will indicate one rotation. Disk 38 may have multiple clear sections separated by opaque sections.
These encoder pattern configurations are examples and should not be construed as limitations. Any encoder pattern configured to operate with rotary encoder 32 may be used and still fall within the scope of this disclosure.
Microprocessor 24 may count the number of distinct ‘ON’ values transmitted by encoder 32 over a set period of time. The wheel circumference may be programmed into microprocessor 24 and the distance traveled may be calculated using the wheel circumference. If the wheel circumference is 2 centimeters (cm) and there are 50 rotations in a second, the distance traveled by toy vehicle 10 is 100 cm and the toy vehicle velocity is 100 cm per second. A velocity of 100 cm per second is equivalent to 3.6 kilometers per hour.
Microprocessor 24 may be further programmed to multiply this value by the scale of vehicle 10. For example, if toy vehicle 10 is a scale model 1/32nd the size of a real car, the speed displayed may be 115 kilometers per hour. Microprocessor 24 may further convert this value to other units such as miles per hour and display a speed of 71 miles per hour. The reported speed value may be saved into memory 28. The speed value may be shown on display 14.
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In an alternate configuration, motion sensor 18 may be an accelerometer 30. A single axis accelerometer may determine acceleration in one direction, such as by measuring the deflection of a cantilever beam on an integrated circuit chip. The chip may include means for measuring the deflection of the beam and transmitting that data from the chip as an electronic signal. Other methods of determining acceleration may also be used.
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In this example, accelerometer 30 may be supported by housing 12 and configured to measure the acceleration resulting from moving the car forwards and backwards. Data sent from accelerometer 30 may be received by microprocessor 24. Microprocessor 24 may determine a speed value at any point in time from the measured acceleration and send the speed value to display 14.
Microprocessor 24 may convert the acceleration data from accelerator 30 to the required units and format to be sent to display 14. Control inputs 16 may be used to configure the functions of microprocessor 24.
Microprocessor 24 may use the information from rotary encoder 32 or accelerometer 30 to determine other toy vehicle performance measures. Microprocessor 24 may determine elapsed time to reach a certain speed. Microprocessor 24 may also determine if the current speed value is higher than a highest or maximum speed value stored in memory and may replace a current speed value in memory.
Control input 16 may comprise keys. The keys may be used to change a mode of play for the toy vehicle or the keys may be used to reset values stored in memory 28 or on microprocessor 24. Keys may include a mode key 38, a reset key 40 and a unit key 42.
Toy vehicle 10 may have several functional configurations for recording and reporting toy vehicle performance. Mode key 38 may be used to select from a plurality of modes such as Try Me mode, Speed Test mode, Highest Speed mode, and Time-trial mode. Reset key 40 may be used to clear and reset the display contents. Unit key 42 may be used to change a display unit of measure. In some embodiments, the selectable units of display may include M/h (miles per hour), km/h (kilometers per hour), or Rev/s (revolution per second).
In Try Me mode, the current speed of the car may be displayed. In this mode, the internal electronics of vehicle 10 may use the information obtained by the rotary encoder 32 or accelerometer 30 to calculate the current speed of the vehicle. If the current speed calculated is higher than the highest speed record, then the current speed may be stored in the highest speed record. Reset key 40 may have no function in this mode.
The user may select Speed Test Mode using Mode key 38. The Speed Test mode may display the highest speed of the current run. The speed displayed may be different than the speed stored in memory as the highest speed. If the speed displayed in Speed Test Mode is higher than the value stored in memory 28 as the highest speed, the new higher speed value may be replaced with the lower speed value in memory.
In Highest Speed Mode, display 14 may show the maximum speed attained. The user may press Reset key 40 in this mode to clear the maximum speed record to zero. When vehicle 10 is in Highest Speed Mode toy vehicle 10 may only display memory contents and motion sensor 18 may be turned off.
The speed value unit of measure may be selected by pressing Unit key 42. For example, pressing the Unit key may change the display from units of Miles per Hour to Kilometers per Hour.
Time-Trial Mode measures the time it takes for vehicle 10 to reach a predetermined speed, for example the time duration in ms (milliseconds) it takes for vehicle 10 to travel from 0 mph to 100 mph. The time may be displayed in increments of 250 ms per step until the speed of 100 mph is reached. When vehicle 10 is in Time Trial Mode, electronic motion sensor 18 may be turned on. The time displayed may increment in tenths of a second.
The decimal point on display 14 may be represented by an underscore. Pressing Reset key 40 may ready the on-board electronics for another time trial by clearing the LCD screen to zero. Unit key 42 may have no function in Time Trial mode.
Some embodiments of vehicle 10 may also include an auto shut down function. The internal electronics of toy vehicle 10 may automatically shut down to save power when not in use for a predetermined length of time, such as one minute. Display 14 and microprocessor 24 may be turned off on system shut down. Additionally, display 14 may dim when a battery requires replacement or an icon may appear.
In some embodiments of vehicle 10, there may be default game play settings and default display settings when the toy is first turned on. For example, the default mode of play may be Current Speed Mode, the default display may be 0000, and the default maximum speed recorded may be 0000.
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The mode selected may be displayed in an upper segment of display 14 above the four digit number When in Try Me mode, Speed Test mode, Highest Speed mode or Time Trial mode, display 14 may display “TRY”, “TEST”, “MAX”, and “0-100” respectively. The display unit selected may be displayed in a side segment to the right of the four digit number. When in miles per hour, kilometers per hour, or revolutions per minute, display 14 may show “MPH”, “KPH”, and “REV” respectively.
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In an alternate embodiment, vehicle 10 may include a speaker. Vehicle 10 may download audio files from computer 200 and play the audio files during acceleration or at other times during play.
In an alternate embodiment, vehicle 10 may record multiple measurements of vehicle performance and save the measurements to memory 28. For example, vehicle 10 may record speed of vehicle 10 every second for 20 seconds as vehicle 10 travels along a track. The results may be downloaded from memory 28 to computer 200. Computer 200 may create a graphical chart displaying the collected speed values.
These configurations are presented as examples and should not be construed as limitations. Connector 44 may be a different kind of connector or comprise a cable. Connector 44 could be a wireless link such as a link using infrared or radio communication. Command inputs may comprise more or fewer buttons. Similarly, display configurations, play modes and encoders described here are examples only and should not be considered limitations. Other configurations than those presented which perform similar functions are within the scope of this disclosure.
It is believed that the disclosure set forth above encompasses multiple distinct inventions with independent utility. While each of these inventions has been disclosed in its preferred form, the specific embodiments thereof as disclosed and illustrated herein are not to be considered in a limiting sense as numerous variations are possible. The subject matter of the inventions includes all novel and non-obvious combinations and subcombinations of the various elements, features, functions and/or properties disclosed herein. Similarly, where any claim recites “a” or “a first” element or the equivalent thereof, such claim should be understood to include incorporation of one or more such elements, neither requiring nor excluding two or more such elements.
Inventions embodied in various combinations and subcombinations of features, functions, elements, and/or properties may be claimed through presentation of new claims in this or a related application. Such new claims, whether they are directed to a different invention or directed to the same invention, whether different, broader, narrower or equal in scope to the original claims, are also regarded as included within the subject matter of the inventions of the present disclosure.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/687,375, filed Jun. 3, 2005, and entitled “Toy Vehicle with On-Board Electronics,” incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60687375 | Jun 2005 | US |