1. Field of Invention
The present invention relates to a treadmill and, more particularly, to a treadmill capable of detecting the status of a runner.
2. Related Prior Art
A conventional treadmill includes a supporting unit located on a base. An upper controller is located in a control panel located on the supporting unit. Two rollers are located on the base. A platform is located between the rollers. A belt is in the form of a loop wound around the rollers. A motor is used to drive one of the rollers. A lower controller is electrically connected to the motor and the upper controller. The actuation, pausing and stopping of the motor is under the control of the upper controller via the lower controller. A runner can run on the belt. The runner gets tired, slows down, and needs a break after running on the belt for some time. The control panel gets out of the reach of the runner as the runner slows down. Thus, the runner cannot stop the motor by operating the control panel. The runner could lose balance, tumble over, and get hurt, and this is a problem.
A treadmill is equipped with a sensor as disclosed in Taiwanese Patent Publication No. 552956. The sensor is electrically connected to the upper controller, and includes an emitter and a receiver. The emitter emits light. If the light hits a runner, some of the light is reflected. The receiver receives the reflected light, and the upper controller accordingly determines that there is a runner running on the belt and therefore keeps the motor running. If the runner slows down, he or she gets further from the control panel. The light misses the runner and is not reflected. The receiver does not receive any reflected light, and the upper controller accordingly determines that the runner is slowing down and therefore stops the motor. The receiver could however fail to receive any of the reflected light as the reflected light scatters. This could cause the upper control to wrongly determine that the runner is slowing down and stop the motor.
A treadmill is equipped with a sensor as disclosed in Taiwanese Patent M241070. The sensor is electrically connected to the upper controller, and includes an emitter and a receiver. The emitter emits infrared light. If the infrared light hits a runner, some of the infrared light is reflected. The receiver receives the reflected infrared light, and the upper controller determines the distance of the runner from the sensor. If the distance gets shorter, the upper controller instructs the motor to speed up. If the distance gets longer, the upper controller makes the motor slow down. Thus, the runner stays in a predetermined zone on the belt no matter how fast or slowly he or she runs. The runner tends to rush toward the control panel to operate the control panel to stop the motor when he or she feels tired and would like to stop. Such movement however reduces the distance of the runner from the sensor and causes the upper controller to increase the speed of the motor to carry the runner back to the predetermined zone, and this is against the will of the runner to reach the control panel.
A treadmill is equipped with a portable controller as disclosed in Taiwanese Patent M278420. The portable controller includes a circuit board and at least one battery for energizing the circuit board. The circuit board includes several buttons formed thereon. The portable controller communicates with the upper controller in a wireless manner. The portable controller is operable to measure the pulse of a runner, change the speed of the motor and the angle of the belt. The portable controller however interferes with the movement of the runner's hand. Moreover, the portable controller might slip from the runner's hand and hurt someone nearby.
The present invention is therefore intended to obviate or at least alleviate the problems encountered in prior art.
It is an objective of the present invention to provide a safe and economic treadmill.
To achieve the foregoing objective, the treadmill includes a base, a supporting unit provided on the base, an upper controller located on the supporting unit, a lower controller located on the base and electrically connected to the upper controller, two rollers located on the base, a platform located between the rollers, a magnet attached to the platform, a belt made in the form of a loop wound around the rollers, a motor for driving one of the rollers; and a sensor attached to the base and electrically to both of the upper and lower controllers and for sensing movement of the magnet.
Other objectives, advantages and features of the present invention will be apparent from the following description referring to the attached drawings.
The present invention will be described via detailed illustration of two embodiments referring to the drawings wherein:
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The magnet 74 defines a magnetic field for the Hall IC 93, with a voltage. The platform 70 vibrates as a runner runs thereon. The magnet 74 reciprocates as the platform 70 vibrates. Thus, a voltage difference occurs in the Hall IC 93, and this is called the “Hall effect.”
In use, at 1, the treadmill is turned on. The motor 82, the upper and lower controllers 40 and 50, and the sensor assembly 90 are turned on.
At 2, a value of voltage measured by the sensor assembly 90 is set to be the zero point
At 3, the Hall IC 93 is used to determine whether a user is running on the platform 70 by sensing movement of the magnet 74 due to vibration of the platform 70.
At 4, the motor 82 continues to operate as it is determined that a runner is running on the platform 70.
At 5, on determining that no runner is running on the platform 70 but the motor 82 is turned on, the upper controller 40 sends warning such as words and an alarm and begins to count. There are two situations that can be considered “no runner is running on the platform 70.” The first situation is that there is not runner on the platform 70. The second situation is that there is person standing still on the platform 70.
At 6, before a first predetermined period of time elapses, the lower controller 50 turns off the motor 82 as the upper controller 40 receives an off signal from a person around the treadmill.
At 7, after the first predetermined period of time elapses, the lower controller 50 turns off the motor 82, and the upper controller 40 begins to count again.
At 8, after a second predetermined period of time elapses, the upper controller 40 turns to a standby status.
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The present invention has been described via the detailed illustration of the embodiments. Those skilled in the art can derive variations from the embodiments without departing from the scope of the present invention. Therefore, the embodiments shall not limit the scope of the present invention defined in the claims.