Not Applicable
Not Applicable.
Material handling trucks include a carriage moveable up and down a mast and hydraulic cylinders to move the carriage. A hydraulic pump pumps hydraulic fluid into the hydraulic cylinders to force movement of pistons within the hydraulic cylinders and lift the carriage along the mast. When the carriage is lowered, hydraulic fluid is allowed to exit the cylinders. Hydraulic cylinders include a flow limiting valve that only permits flows of hydraulic fluid into and out of the hydraulic cylinders up to a flow limit value. The flow limiting valve ensures the carriage descent speed is limited in the event of an unsolicited descent of the carriage. Unfortunately, the flow limiting valve also limits the carriage descent speeds when the operator requests that the carriage lift or lower. In warehouse storage environments, the productivity of material handling vehicles is partly based on how many pallets can be raised or lowered per hour from shelving. Limiting the carriage speed of solicited descents thus limits the productivity of the material handling vehicle.
Therefore, a need exists for a system that only limits carriage descent speeds in the event of an unsolicited carriage descent.
The present invention provides a vehicle including a vehicle frame, a vertical mast coupled to the vehicle frame, and a carriage movably mounted to the mast for ascending and descending along the mast. The vehicle also includes one or more hydraulic cylinders moving the carriage along the mast, a hydraulic pump pumping hydraulic fluid into the hydraulic cylinder, and a flow valve controlling the flow of hydraulic fluid between the hydraulic pump and the hydraulic cylinder. The vehicle further includes a sensor sensing an actual descent speed of the carriage and a controller controlling the flow valve to allow descent of the carriage at a requested descent speed. The controller controls the flow valve to limit descent of the carriage to an unsolicited descent speed limit if a difference between the actual descent speed and the requested descent speed exceeds a threshold value.
A general objective of the present invention is to control the descent speed of a carriage along a mast mounted to a frame of a vehicle. This objective is accomplished by determining a requested descent speed of the carriage, sensing an actual descent speed of the carriage, and comparing the requested descent speed and the actual descent speed to determine a difference value. This objective is further accomplished by comparing the difference value with a threshold value, and limiting the actual descent speed to an unsolicited descent speed limit if the difference value is greater than the threshold value.
The foregoing and other objects and advantages of the invention will appear from the following detailed description. In the description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings which illustrate a preferred embodiment of the invention.
Conventional material handling vehicles limit the maximum descent speed of a carriage vertically movable along a mast to approximately 118 feet per minute. Advantageously, the vehicle described herein incorporating the present invention can achieve descent speeds greater than the standard maximum descent speed, while limiting descent speeds to an unsolicited descent speed limit during unsolicited carriage descents. In one embodiment, a vehicle controller controlling the carriage distinguishes a solicited carriage descent from an unsolicited carriage descent by comparing the actual speed of the carriage, as sensed by a sensor, with the descent speed requested by an operator, as further described below.
Referring to
The hydraulic system 18 of the vehicle 10 includes one or more hydraulic cylinders 30, as shown in
The pump motor controller 34 can operate the hydraulic pump 32 at different speeds to control the amount of fluid flow to the hydraulic cylinders 30, which in turn controls the ascent or descent speed of the carriage 16. For example, given that the diameter of each hydraulic cylinder 30 is fixed, and the hydraulic pump 32 has a fixed fluid displacement per revolution, the movement speed of the carriage 16 is always a function of the pump rotational speed (e.g., measured in revolutions per minute, or RPM, of a motor of the pump 32) and the turning direction of the pump 32. Thus, under proper operating conditions, the following relationship holds true for converting carriage speed to pump rotation speed: Carriage Speed=K×RPM, where RPM<0 for descent, RPM>0 for ascent, and K is a constant.
In addition to the pump motor controller 34, the flow valves 36 also control the amount of fluid flow to the hydraulic cylinders 30, and therefore also control the ascent or descent speed of the carriage 16. Each flow valve 36 is located in a fluid path between the hydraulic pump 32 and the hydraulic cylinders 30 to selectively permit or limit flow between the hydraulic pump 32 and the hydraulic cylinders 30. Each flow valve 36 is in communication with the vehicle controller 20 so that the operating state of the flow valve 36 is dependent upon input from the vehicle controller 20. For example, if power is received from the vehicle controller 20, the flow valve 36 remains in a completely open state (i.e., a bypass state) to permit unlimited fluid flow between the hydraulic pump 32 and the hydraulic cylinders 30. If no power is received from the vehicle controller 20, the flow valve 36 is partially closed to act as a conventional flow limiting valve (i.e., in a throttled, or flow-limiting, state) and prevent fluid flows above a maximum flow value to prevent descent speeds above the unsolicited descent speed limit (e.g., about 118 feet per minute).
Accordingly, in the throttled state, the flow valve 36 limits fluid flow and power must be received by the vehicle controller 20 in order to change the operating state of the flow valve 36 to the bypass state. In order to accomplish this, each flow valve 36 includes a solenoid 38, as shown in
During normal vehicle operation in which an operator solicits carriage descents and lifts, the flow valves 36 are in the bypass state and the vehicle controller 20 provides power to the solenoid 38 in order to allow unlimited flow to and from the hydraulic cylinders 30. In the event of an unsolicited descent, the vehicle controller 20 cuts power to the solenoid 38 in order to limit flow. In order to determine an unsolicited descent, the actual carriage speed is detected by the sensor 22 shown in
In some embodiments, other speed sensing devices can be used in place of the MEM accelerometer 26. In one example, magnetic sensors can be used to detect the passage of holes or bumps along the mast 14 over time to obtain the descent speed. In another example, optical, microwave, or ultrasonic sensors can measure the distance from the floor to the carriage 16, and the distance measurements can be differentiated to obtain the descent speed.
As described above, the vehicle controller 20, as shown in
The vehicle controller 20 is also in communication with the sensor 22, which measures the actual movement speed (“CSPEED”) of the carriage 16. The vehicle controller 20 receives a CSPEED signal from the sensor 22 and compares it to the requested descent speed described above. The vehicle controller 20 uses the requested descent speed received by the operator input controls 24 or the calculated descent speed as the requested descent speed for this comparison. The vehicle controller 20 then calculates a difference value, “DELTA”, for example in feet per minute, between the actual descent speed and the requested descent speed (e.g., DELTA=CSPEED−Requested Descent Speed). A negative DELTA value indicates the carriage 16 is descending slower than the pump rotational speed would indicate. Likewise, a positive DELTA value indicates the carriage descent speed is higher than the pump rotational speed indicates. Since the requested carriage speed is based on operator input, any difference between the requested carriage speed and the actual carriage speed can indicate unsolicited carriage motion.
As described above, the flow valve 36 throttles fluid flow unless the vehicle controller 20 sends power to the solenoid 38 (i.e., energizes the solenoid 38) to hold the flow valve 36 open. When the absolute value of DELTA exceeds a threshold, the vehicle controller 20 determines that carriage motion is unsolicited and cuts power to the solenoid 38 (i.e. de-energizes the solenoid 38), placing the control valve in the throttled state to limit descent speed of the carriage 16 to the unsolicited descent speed limit.
If the absolute value of DELTA remains below the threshold, the vehicle controller 20 determines that carriage movement is solicited and continues providing power to the solenoid 38 and, as a result, permits descent speeds above the unsolicited descent speed limit. This permits carriage descent speeds above the unsolicited descent speed limit only when carriage motion is solicited by the operator. Advantageously, if the vehicle controller 20 itself experiences a failure, the sensor 22 experiences a failure, or if communication between the solenoid 38 and the vehicle controller 20 or the sensor 22 and the vehicle controller 20 is impeded for any reason, the solenoid 38 will stop receiving power and will not be able to hold the flow valve 36 in the bypass state, therefore limiting the carriage descent speed to the unsolicited descent speed limit.
In addition to communicating the CSPEED signal, as described above, the sensor 22 and the vehicle controller 20 also communicate to perform one or more calibration procedures to maintain the accuracy of the sensor 22 over time and in varying operating conditions. For example,
As shown in
With further reference to the sensor microcontroller 28 functions of
Once the zero acceleration signal is calibrated at least once, following KEY ON in the embodiment illustrated in
In some embodiments, the processes of the vehicle controller 20 (i.e., process blocks 54-64) and the sensor microcontroller 28 (i.e., process blocks 42-50) are repeated fifty or more times per second. In addition, in one embodiment, the sensor microcontroller process illustrated in
As described above, communications between the sensor microcontroller 28 and the vehicle controller 20 are transmitted in both directions. This two-way communication is implemented over a single communication line through Power Line Communication (PLC) or other similar methods. In one embodiment, over the electrical connection between the vehicle controller 20 and the sensor microcontroller 38, the vehicle controller 20 provides a fixed 5-volt power supply through a 100-ohm resistance or 500-ohm resistance. For example, the vehicle controller 20 normally applies 5 volts across the 100-ohm resistance and the sensor microcontroller 28 in turn sinks a current from about 4 milliamperes (mA) to about 20 mA to indicate the CSPEED value, as well as signal to the vehicle controller 20 that the sensor 22 is still connected and operating. Also, the vehicle controller 20 shifts from the 100-ohm resistance to the 500-ohm resistance to indicate that the pump 32 is not rotating (i.e., to communicate the ZRPM signal).
The purpose of the present invention is to retain all the desirable features of an unsolicited descent speed limit when unsolicited operation occurs, and permit lowering speeds beyond the unsolicited descent speed limit during solicited operation. Achieving faster descent speeds can increase productivity and, as a result, save labor costs. In addition, the faster descent speeds can further assist with energy regeneration of the vehicle 10 when using the hydraulic pump 32 as a generator. By constantly determining whether the carriage 16 is in solicited or unsolicited descent, the present invention provides a reliable method of reverting to the industry standard descent speed limit for unsolicited carriage descents. Such unsolicited carriage descents can be accurately and timely detected through constant calibration between the sensor 22 and the vehicle controller 20.
In addition, the system and methods of the present invention can be applied to different vehicle designs. For example, vehicles 10 without regenerative lowering may not include hydraulic pumps 32 that spin backwards during carriage descent. Such vehicles 10 alternately include an additional pressure sensor and/or flow measurement device (not shown) to determine the requested carriage speed value for comparison with the sensor measurements. In addition, such vehicles 10 use vacuum or pressure assistance between the hydraulic pump 32 and the double acting hydraulic cylinders 30 for controlling carriage descent. Other design changes in accordance with the present invention include large diameter tubing between the hydraulic pump 32 and the hydraulic cylinders 30 to permit higher flow rates back through the hydraulic pump 32.
While there has been shown and described what are at present considered the preferred embodiments of the invention, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention defined by the appended claims.