The present invention relates to impact attenuators for vehicles that have left the roadway, and in particular to such attenuators that are well adapted to bring an axially impacting vehicle to a safe stop and to redirect a laterally impacting vehicle that strikes the side of the attenuator.
Carney U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,645,375 and 5,011,326 disclose two stationary impact attenuation systems. Both rely on an array of vertically oriented metal cylinders. In the '375 patent, compression elements 54 are arranged in selected cylinders transverse to the longitudinal axis of the array. In the '326 patent, the cylinders are guided in longitudinal movement by cables extending alongside the cylinders on both outer faces of the array. The individual cylinders are guided along the cables by eye-bolts or U-bolts.
A need presently exists for an improved impact attenuator that provides improved redirection for vehicles impacting the side of the barrier, and that is more easily restored to working condition after an impact.
By way of introduction, the impact attenuators described below include a central, elongated structure that is designed to resist lateral deflection. Tubes are mounted on either side of this elongated structure to slide along the structure in an axial impact and to react against the structure and redirect the vehicle in a lateral impact. The tubes are formed of a resilient, self-restoring material such as an elastomer or a high-density, high-molecular-weight polyethylene. Compression elements are mounted in the cylinders, and these compression elements are oriented at an angle of about 60° to the longitudinal axis of the array to improve the redirection capabilities of the system.
The foregoing paragraph has been provided by way of general introduction, and it should not be used to narrow the scope of the following claims.
The attenuator 10 includes an array 14 of tubes 16. In this embodiment, all of the tubes 16 are cylindrical in shape, and they are oriented with their cylinder axes positioned vertically. The tubes 16 are preferably formed of a resilient, polymeric material, such as high density polyethylene (HDPE), such that the tubes 16 are self-restoring after an impact. As used herein, the term “self-restoring” signifies that the tubes return substantially (though not in all cases completely) to their original condition after at least some impacts. Thus, the tube does not have to return to exactly its original condition to be considered self-restoring.
The array 14 defines a longitudinal axis 18 extending forwardly from the backup 12, and the array 14 includes a front end 20 positioned farther from the backup than the back end 22.
As described in greater detail below, the tubes 16 are secured together and to the backup 12, and at least the majority of the array 14 includes rows of the tubes 16, each row having at least two tubes. In this example, each of the rows includes two adjacent tubes, each disposed on a respective side of the longitudinal axis 18. Each of these tubes includes a compression element 24 that is designed to resist compression of the respective tube 16 along a respective compression axis 26, while allowing elongation of the tube 16 along the same axis 26 and collapse of the tube along the longitudinal axis of the array.
In this embodiment, an elongated structure 28 takes the form of a rail 30 that is secured in place in alignment with the longitudinal axis 18, for example, by bolting the rail 30 to the support surface. This rail may take the form of the rail described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,733,062, assigned to the assignee of the present invention and hereby incorporated by reference. The attenuator 10 also includes a plurality of guides 32. In this embodiment, each of the guides 32 includes a transverse element 34 that is secured to adjacent ones of the tubes 16 and is configured to slide along the length of the rail 30, in an axial impact.
In an axial impact, the transverse elements 34 slide along the rail 30, and the tubes 16 are flattened along the longitudinal direction. Deformation of the tubes 16 absorbs kinetic energy and decelerates the impacting vehicle.
In a lateral impact, the compression elements 24 transfer compressive loads to the transverse elements 34, which in turn transfer these compressive loads to the rail 30. This provides substantial lateral stiffness to the attenuator 10 such that the attenuator 10 redirects an impacting vehicle that strikes the attenuator 10 laterally. Because the guides 32 and the elongated structure 28 are positioned centrally, a vehicle traveling down the side of the attenuator 10 encounters few snagging surfaces that might adversely affect the stability or trajectory of the impacting vehicle.
This approach can be used in vehicle impact attenuators of other types, e.g., the attenuator of U.S. Pat. No. 5,733,062, and a wide variety of energy absorbing elements can be used between the transverse elements, including sheet metal elements, foam elements, and composite elements of various types. See, e.g. the energy absorbing elements of U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,733,062, 5,875,875, 4,452,431, 4,635,981, 4,674,911, 4,711,481 and 4,352,484.
As shown in
Though
In the event of an axial impact, the impacting vehicle first strikes the front end 20. The momentum of the impacting vehicle causes the transverse elements 34 to slide along the rail 30, thereby compressing the tubes 16 such that they become elongated transverse to the longitudinal axis and flattened along the longitudinal axis. In order to prevent any undesired binding, it is preferred that the tubes 16 within any given row be spaced from one another in an initial condition, e.g., by about one-half the diameter of tubes 16. After the impact, the system can be restored to its original configuration by pulling the forward transverse element 34 away from the backup 12. In many cases, nothing more is required by way of refurbishment.
In the event of a lateral impact at a glancing angle, e.g. 20°, the impacting vehicle will strike the side of the array 14. The compression elements 24 transfer compressive loading to the transverse elements 34, which transfer this compressive loading to the rail 30. In this way, the attenuator 10 provides substantial lateral stiffness and effective redirection of an impacting vehicle.
In the preferred embodiment described above, the orientation of the compression elements at approximately 60° with respect to the longitudinal axis of the array has been found to provide advantages in terms of improved vehicle redirection. In this configuration, the outboard end of each compression element is positioned forwardly of the inboard end of each compression element, at the illustrated angle with the longitudinal axis. Of course, other angles can be used.
In the embodiment of
Of course, many alternatives are possible to the preferred embodiment described above.
The embodiment of
Of course, many changes and modifications can be made to the preferred embodiments described above. For example, when the elongated structure is implemented as a rail, two or more rails can be used rather than the single rail described above. The tubes 16 can be formed of a wide variety of materials, and may be non-circular in cross section (e.g. rectangular, oval, or triangular). The compression elements can be shaped either as frames or struts, as described above, or alternately as panels or other shapes designed to resist compression effectively. In some cases, a single compression element can be placed within each tube. In other cases, multiple compression elements may be placed within each tube, for example at varying heights.
Similarly, the guides described above can take many forms, including guides adapted to slide along a cable as well as guides adapted to slide along one or more rails. The guides may or may not include transverse elements, and if so the transverse elements may be shaped differently than those described above. For example, rigid panels may be substituted for the disclosed frames.
As another alternative, a separate guide may be provided for each tube rather than having a single transverse element to which multiple tubes are mounted. Also, there may be a smaller ratio of guides to tubes such that some of the tubes are coupled only indirectly to one or more guides (e.g. via intermediate tubes). In this alternative, two or more tubes that are spaced along the longitudinal axis of the array may have no guide therebetween.
The angle of the compression axes, the number of transverse elements 34 per system, the number of tubes per system, the location of the compression elements within the tubes, and the number of compression elements per tube may all be varied as appropriate for the particular application. Also, it is not essential that every tube include a compression element or that every tube be directly connected to a guide, and selective use of compression elements and/or guides with only some of the tubes is contemplated.
As used herein, the term “tube” is intended broadly to encompass tubes of any desired cross-section. Thus, a tube does not have to be circular in cross-section as in the illustrated embodiment.
The term “set” is used in its conventional way to indicate one or more.
The term “compression element” is intended to encompass a wide variety of structures that effectively resist compressive loads along a compression axis while allowing substantial compression transverse to the compression axis.
The foregoing detailed description has discussed only a few of the many forms that this invention can take. For this reason, this detailed description is intended by way of illustration, and not limitation. It is only the following claims, including all equivalents, that are intended to define the scope of this invention.
This application is a divisionalreissue of Ser. No. 10/232,140, filed Aug. 29, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,623,204 B1, issued Sep. 23, 2003, which is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/753,476, filed Jan. 3, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,461,076, the entire disclosuredisclosures of both of which isare hereby incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09753476 | Jan 2001 | US |
Child | 10232140 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10232140 | Aug 2002 | US |
Child | 10931242 | US |