The present invention relates to trunk or hatch opening and closing devices and systems for vehicles and control devices for vehicle remote control systems.
Automated and propelled vehicle trunk lid, hatch and/or rear door openers are known and commercially available on vehicles. It is also known to have vehicle key fobs with several remote control keys or buttons for locking and unlocking the vehicle and for unlocking or opening the vehicle hatch. Also known are panic buttons as remote control keys for actuating audible vehicle alarms.
The present invention provides a vehicle hatch control system that comprises a hatch opening control disposed at a vehicle and operable to open and close a hatch of the vehicle responsive to a triggering signal. The hatch comprises one of a liftgate of the equipped vehicle, a deck lid of the equipped vehicle, a rear window of the equipped vehicle and a rear door of the equipped vehicle. A remote transmitter is operable to transmit the triggering signal responsive to a user input. The remote transmitter has at least two buttons. The user input comprises one of (i) actuation of at least two of the buttons of the remote transmitter at the same time, (ii) repetitive actuation of one of the buttons at least three times with time gaps in between the actuations not exceeding a threshold time period, and (iii) actuation of at least two of the buttons in a predetermined sequence or actuation pattern.
Optionally, a remote transmitter may also be operable to transmit a panic signal to actuate an alarm or lights or horn of the vehicle. The vehicle is operable to transmit a confirmation signal back to the remote device or transmitter. The remote transmitter has human machine interface (HMI) means for bringing the confirmation signal to the human user's attention, such as via a visual alert or display or a haptic alert or audible alert or the like.
Therefore, the system of the present invention requires multiple actuations or inputs at the remote transmitter or key fob to open the vehicle hatch. Such multiple actuations are made in a predetermined manner or sequence or pattern, such that random or accidental actuation of one or more buttons at the remote transmitter will not open or unlock the vehicle hatch. The present invention thus provides enhanced control of the unlocking and opening of a vehicle hatch to limit or preclude accidental opening of the hatch by a person carrying the remote transmitter or key fob.
These and other objects, advantages, purposes and features of the present invention will become apparent upon review of the following specification in conjunction with the drawings.
Referring now to the drawings and the illustrative embodiments depicted therein, a vehicle 10 (
Openers for automated and propelled vehicle trunk lids, hatches, liftgates, rear windows and rear doors (hereinafter referred to as a ‘hatch’) typically comprise vehicle key fobs with several remote control keys for unlocking the vehicle or for starting or stopping the opening or closing of the vehicle hatch. More modern key fobs have displays, such as, for example, for indicating the vehicle locking status. So called Keyless Entry-Go systems allow the user to enter and start the vehicle without handling the key since the presence of the key in the driver's or passenger's pocket near the car is sufficient to unlock the vehicle. The presence of the key inside (starting enabled) and outside (door access enabled) the vehicle typically gets detected by a LF (wake up) and HF (code data exchange) radio transmission.
Remote key fobs, such as the key fob 30 shown in
Some customers complain that they find their vehicle with their electrically propelled hatch wide open even in situations when they have left it in closed condition. Excluding faulty openings caused by electronics malfunction of the trunk lid motor control unit (which existed in past), these unintended openings are originated by unintended triggering of the remote key fob, such as when the driver puts the key fob into his or her pocket and/or sat on it and pushed the button 33 by that, while the vehicle was still in range of the remote control signal of the key fob.
The present invention provides a solution to these occurrences. As a first solution in accordance with the present invention, the present invention provides a system that requires more than one key or input to trigger the opening hatch remote signal. For example, it may be required to press three or two buttons at a time, such as, for example, the door unlock button 31 and the hatch opening button 33 on the key fob 30 together.
As a second solution in accordance with the present invention, it may be required that one (same) button gets triggered consecutively. For example, the hatch opening remote signal may be transmitted responsive to the door opening button 33 being repetitively actuated or triggered three times in a row, with time gaps in between the actuations not exceeding a threshold time period, such as, for example, about three seconds.
As a third solution in accordance with the present invention, it may be required to enter a sequence of button entries for generating the hatch opening remote signal. For example, it may be required to enter a sequence of three consecutive button entries, such as, for example, pressing the hatch opening button 33 first, then pressing the door unlock button 31 second and finally pressing the hatch opening button 33 again.
As an option to the second and third solutions, the key entry sequence may be editable by the customer. For example, a custom key sequence may be entered and stored by absolving a prior learning sequence procedure which stays valid until it gets relearned. In a driver initiated learning phase, the driver may enter the desired key sequence in a timely fashion as desired. He or she may set a tolerance band in which the run time key time can be entered for successful triggering of the hatch opening.
A very similar problem to be solved by the present invention is that a remote transmitter or key fob user may accidentally press the “panic” button on their transmitter, causing the vehicle alarm to be actuated and remain actuated until it gets noticed by the user and turned off by pressing the button again or until the vehicle battery dies. Currently, the most common problem is that, if the button got pressed by mistake, the user may not notice turning the panic alarm off and the vehicle battery may drain. This problem may be especially concerning in apartments where drivers park their cars within the range of key fob and possibly may not be able to physically see the vehicle. The user may be surprised the next day when he or she tries to start the vehicle and the vehicle won't start because the battery is drained due to the panic alarm operating overnight.
To avoid this problem, a small LED flash light or indicator on the remote transmitting device may glow when the button gets pressed and/or a speaker of the remote transmitting device may produce an audible sound or beeping sound may be actuated or a device inside the fob vibrates when the panic alarm is engaged. This way even when the vehicle cannot be seen physically, but may be parked within the key fob range, especially in apartments, the vehicle driver or owner may be able to recognize his/her mistake and turn off the vehicle's panic button. Instead of having an omnidirectional transmission such as shown in
Optionally, instead of a small LED indicator, the transmitter may comprise a display for displaying the panic alarm status. For example, the BMW i8 has a key (
The system may utilize aspects of the systems described in U.S. Pat. No. 9,068,390 and/or U.S. Publication No. US 2011-0043633, published Feb. 24, 2011, which are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
Changes and modifications to the specifically described embodiments may be carried out without departing from the principles of the present invention, which is intended to be limited only by the scope of the appended claims as interpreted according to the principles of patent law.
The present application is related to U.S. provisional applications, Ser. No. 62/466,448, filed Mar. 3, 2017, and Ser. No. 62/431,084, filed Dec. 7, 2016, which are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62466448 | Mar 2017 | US | |
62431084 | Dec 2016 | US |