1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to a control system for estimating the tongue length of a trailer being towed by a vehicle and, more particularly, to a control system for estimating the tongue length of a trailer being towed by a vehicle where the trailer includes a yaw rate sensor, and where the vehicle includes driver operated front-wheel steering with or without computer controlled rear-wheel steering.
2. Discussion of the Related Art
Automotive vehicles that employ coordinated front-wheel steering and rear-wheel steering systems are known in the art. Typically in such coordinated vehicle wheel steering systems, the driver controls the steering of the vehicles front wheels and a computer-based on-board steering controller controls the steering of the vehicles rear wheels in response thereto. In one example, the computer controlled rear-wheel steering system employs an electric motor-driven rack and pinion rear-wheel steering actuator.
Backing up a vehicle-trailer is typically a complex task, and requires a significant level of skill. It is heretofore been known in the art to employ a coordinated front and rear-wheel steering system to assist a driver operating a vehicle pulling a trailer. Particularly, U.S. Pat. No. 6,292,094, issued Sep. 18, 2001 to Deng et al., assigned to the assignee of this application and herein incorporated by reference, discloses a vehicle/trailer backing up control system in connection with a computer controlled rear-wheel steering system. The '094 patent employs an algorithm that uses front-wheel angle, vehicle speed, vehicle yaw rate and hitch angle to control the rear-wheel steering angle to assist the operator in backing up the vehicle-trailer.
The vehicle-trailer back-up control system disclosed in the '094 patent has been shown to be effective in assisting the vehicle operator when backing up a trailer. However, because trailers come in a variety of different lengths, the performance of the back-up control system can be improved by providing an input to the system that gives an estimation of the tongue length of the trailer. The algorithm in the '094 patent uses the same average tongue length for trailers of all lengths.
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/336,120, filed Jan. 3, 2003, titled “Trailer Tongue Length Estimation Using a Hitch Angle Sensor,” assigned to the assignee of this application, and herein incorporated by reference, discloses a system that estimates the tongue length of a trailer being towed by using a hitch angle sensor that provides a measurement of the hitch angle between the vehicle and the trailer to determine the tongue length. That system has also been shown to be effective in estimating the tongue length of the trailer to improve the ability of the control system to assist the driver in backing-up the trailer. However, further improvements can be made to make the system more practical and more cost effective. For example, because trailer hitches come in a variety of styles, sizes, etc., providing a hitch angle sensor that accurately measures the hitch angle for all of the various types of hitches may be impractical and costly.
In accordance with the teachings of the present invention, a control system is disclosed for estimating the tongue length of a trailer being towed by a vehicle in connection with a coordinated front and rear-wheel steering system. The control system employs an algorithm that calculates an estimate of the yaw rate of the trailer based on a corrected trailer tongue length, a steering wheel angle, a rear-wheel angle, vehicle speed and vehicle yaw rate applied to a vehicle-trailer kinematics model. The estimated trailer yaw rate is compared to the actual trailer yaw rate measured by a trailer yaw rate sensor to generate a yaw rate error signal. The yaw rate error signal is converted to a tongue length error signal by a PID controller. The tongue length error signal is subtracted from an estimated tongue length to give the corrected trailer tongue length for the next computation period. After a few seconds of processing, the yaw rate error signal will be nearly zero and the tongue length error signal will be nearly zero, and thus, the corrected tongue length will be the actual tongue length of the trailer.
Additional advantages and features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description and appended claims, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The following discussion of the embodiments of the invention directed to a control system for estimating the tongue length of a trailer being towed by a vehicle employing a coordinated front and rear-wheel steering system is merely exemplary in nature, and is in no way intended to limit the invention or its applications or uses.
The trailer 12 includes a trailer hitch post 20, a trailer bed 22 and trailer wheels 30 rotatably mounted to a trailer axle 32. In other embodiments, the trailer 12 may include more than one axle each including trailer wheels. The center of the turning radius for those trailers may be between the axles. The vehicle 14 includes a vehicle hitch post 24 having a hitch 26 that couples the hitch post 24 to the hitch post 20 in any known manner that allows the trailer 12 to be towed by the vehicle 14. As defined herein, the tongue length of the trailer 12 is the distance from the pivot location at the hitch 26 to the rotating center or turning radius of the trailer 12. When the vehicle 14 and the trailer 12 are backing up at a low speed and there is no side slip at the wheels 30, the tongue length of the trailer 12 is the distance from the hitch 26 to the center of the trailer axle 32.
The vehicle 14 includes a steering wheel 40 mounted to a steering column 42 that allows a vehicle operator to steer front wheels 44 of the vehicle 14 through a steering linkage and a front wheel axle 46. A steering wheel angle sensor 48 is mounted to the steering column 42 to provide a front wheel angle signal δf(t) indicative of the steering direction of the wheels 44. The maximum angular movement for a particular vehicle's front wheels is generally fixed, and may be, for example, about +33° to the left or −33° to the right. The signal from the steering wheel angle sensor 48 is provided to the controller 18.
The vehicle 14 also includes rear wheels 52 mounted to a rear wheel axle 54. The rear wheels 52 are turned by an electric motor 56 in connection with a rack and pinion steering mechanism 58 mounted to the axle 54. A rear wheel angle sensor 62 is mounted in combination with the rack and pinion steering mechanism 58, and provides a rear wheel angle signal δr(t) to the controller 18 indicative of the angle of the rear wheels 52.
The vehicle 14 also includes a vehicle speed sensor 64 that measures the speed of the vehicle 14 and provides a vehicle speed signal Vx(t) to the controller 18. The vehicle 14 further includes a vehicle yaw rate sensor 66 that measures the yaw rate of the vehicle 14 and provides a vehicle yaw rate signal rv(t) to the controller 18. The speed sensor 64 and the yaw rate sensor 66 can be any sensor suitable for the purposes described herein. Further, the trailer 12 includes a trailer yaw rate sensor 28 that measure the yaw rate of the trailer 12 and provides a trailer yaw rate signal rt(t) to the controller 18.
The controller 18 provides driver signals and commands to a driver advisor 68, including a suitable display, indicative of the operation of the system 10. For example, the vehicle 14 needs to be turning for some period of time to provide the necessary signals to calculate the estimated tongue length of the trailer 12. The driver advisor 68 can be used to instruct the driver to make the necessary turns when the trailer 12 is first connected to the vehicle 14, and tell the driver that the estimated tongue length of the trailer 12 has been calculated thereafter. In one embodiment, the driver advisor 68 is part of an ultrasound rear parking aid (URPA) alarm system.
According to the invention, the vehicle speed signal Vx(t), the front wheel angle signal δf (t), the rear wheel angle signal δr(t), the trailer yaw rate signal rt(t) and the vehicle yaw rate signal rv(t) are used to calculate an estimated trailer tongue length. The process of determining the tongue length is discussed below with reference to a kinematics model of a vehicle-trailer system 72, shown in
When the tongue length estimation process is first initiated, the tongue length error signal ΔTL(t) is zero, and thus the initial tongue length estimation signal {circumflex over (T)}L(t−Δt) outputted from the summer 82 is the corrected tongue length estimation signal {circumflex over (T)}L(t). For subsequent calculation periods, the corrected tongue length estimation signal {circumflex over (T)}L(t) will be closer to the actual trailer tongue length than the initial tongue length estimation signal.
The corrected tongue length estimation signal {circumflex over (T)}L(t) is applied to a vehicle-trailer kinematics model controller 84 that calculates variables for determining an estimated trailer yaw rate based on the kinematics model shown in
The controller 84 calculates the lateral velocity component at the hitch 26 for the vehicle side as:
A is the distance from the center of the front axle 46 to the center of the gravity point of the vehicle 14, B is the distance from the center of gravity point to the center of the rear axle 54, and H is the distance from the center of the rear axle 54 to the hitch 26.
The longitudinal velocity of the trailer 12 at the hitch 26 is:
Vxh(t)=Vx(t) (2)
The magnitude of the hitch velocity is:
Vh(t)={square root}{square root over (Vxh2(t)+Vyh2(t))} (3)
Using the corrected tongue length signal, the lateral hitch velocity for the trailer 12 can be written as:
Uyh(t)={circumflex over (T)}L(t)*rt(t) (4)
From the relationship between the vehicle side hitch velocities and the trailer side hitch velocities:
Uyh(t)=−Vxh(t)* sin(θest(t))+Vyh(t)* cos(θest(t)) (5)
A hitch angle estimation θest(t) can then be calculated as:
θest(t)=−sin−1(Uyh(t)/Vh(t))+sin(Vyh(t)/Vh(t)) (6)
The hitch angle rate can be estimated by differentiating the hitch angle estimation θest(t) from equation (6) by:
The estimated hitch angle rate {dot over (θ)}est(t) is then applied to a controller 86 that estimates the trailer yaw rate. The estimated trailer yaw rate rt
rt
The estimated trailer yaw rate rt
Δrt(t)=rt(t)−rt
The yaw rate error signal Δrt(t) is applied to a PID controller 90 to generate a tongue length estimation value as:
TL(t)=TL(t−Δt)+ΔTL(t) (11)
Kp is a proportional gain constant, Ki is an integral gain constant and Kd is a derivative gain constant. The PID control gains (Kp,Ki,Kd) are assigned using the following PID gain assignment rule. If |Δrt(t)|>0.1 degree/sec, then the PID gains are:
Kp=0.1, Ki=0.03, Kd=0.00005 (12)
otherwise,
Kp=0.1, Ki=0.2, Kd=0.000001 (13)
The PID controller 90 provides the tongue length error signal ΔTL(t) in this embodiment. However, other controllers may output a different type of signal that needs to be modified to get the tongue length error signal ΔTL(t). In those embodiments, a tongue length modification system 92 can be employed to convert the output of the PID controller 90 to the tongue length error signal ΔTL(t).
In order to start the estimation process, some of the input parameters need to be greater than a certain value because the present invention may not work if the vehicle-trailer is moving in a straight path. In other words, the vehicle-trailer needs to move in a circular path to produce a vehicle-trailer yaw rate. For example, the conditions to start the estimation process can be:
|Vx(t)|>0.05 (kph), |rv(t)|>0.005 (deg/sec), and |rt(t)|>0.005 (deg/sec). (14)
Although it has been observed that the best maneuver to produce an accurate tongue length estimation is a step steer forward or backward, other turning or sinusoidal steering maneuvers can be used for the estimation process. There is also a stop condition for the estimation process. When the trailer yaw rate estimation error is within a reasonable range for a certain period, the estimated tongue length is accepted as a true value. The stop conditions are dependent upon the noise characteristics of the input data as:
|Δrt(t)|<0.005 (deg/sec) for tduration>100Δt (15)
The foregoing discussion discloses and describes merely exemplary embodiments of the present invention. One skilled in the art will readily recognize from such discussion and from the accompanying drawings and claims, that various changes, modifications and variations can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.