Controller for Tarp System
20200354188 ยท 2020-11-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60J7/068
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60J7/085
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60J11/025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65H75/4402
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60Y2200/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
The electrical system between the battery and the tarp motor uses a significant amount of heavy cabling to deliver the power required. Disclosed are electrical systems to reduce the amount of wire necessary by employing the vehicle body for the electrical ground; momentarily configuring the battery bank to raise the voltage; and a control system to simplify the user interface.
Claims
1. An electrical motor control system for a vehicle tarping system, said motor control system comprising: (a) a power supply comprising at least two vehicle batteries, a control signal, a first switching device, an insulated conductor, and a grounded conductor, wherein upon activation of the power supply control signal, the switching device reconfigures the vehicle's batteries from a parallel battery configuration to a series battery configuration, and wherein the insulated conductor is connected to the positive voltage from the series battery configuration, and the ground conductor is attached to the negative voltage from the series battery configuration; (b) a motor directional driver configured to receive the insulated conductor and the grounded conductor and a directional control signal, and further comprising two motor output conductors consisting of motor output A and motor output B, and a secondary switching device configured to selectively pass or invert the voltage potential provided by insulated and grounded conductor onto motor output A and motor output B; and (c) an electrical motor in communication with a winding spool of the vehicle tarping system configured to receive motor output A and motor output B.
2. The electrical motor control system of claim 1 wherein the insulated conductor has a wire diameter less than 4 mm.
3. The electrical motor control system of claim 1 wherein the secondary switching device is a double-pole, double-throw relay.
4. The electrical motor control system of claim 1 wherein the power supply comprises exactly two batteries.
5. The electrical motor control system of claim 1 wherein the power supply comprises exactly three batteries.
6. The electrical motor control system of claim 1 wherein grounded conductor is the vehicle chassis.
7. An electrical motor control system for a vehicle tarping system, said motor control system comprising: a power supply, a control module, a current detection device, and a tarp motor, wherein (a) the power supply comprises a vehicle battery connected and providing power to the control module, (b) the control module includes a first and second output configured to provide a differential output voltage with selectable polarity, (c) the tarp motor is connected to and receives electrical power from the first and second output of the control module, (d) the current detection device provides information corresponding to the electrical current drawn by the tarp motor and it utilized by the control module, (e) the control module is configured to receive a command signal from a user to effect movement of the tarp motor, and (f) the tarp motor is mechanically connected to a spool of the vehicle tarping system.
8. The electrical motor control system of claim 7 wherein the differential output voltage has at least three states including positive polarity, wherein the first output has a voltage potential higher than the second output, negative polarity, wherein the first output has a voltage potential lower than the second output, and neutral polarity, wherein voltage difference between the first output and second output is essentially zero.
9. The electrical motor control system of claim 8 wherein the control module includes an embedded controller having firmware, wherein said firmware receives information from the current detection device and the command signal, and directs the differential output voltage.
10. The electrical motor control system of claim 9 wherein the firmware is configured to transition the differential output from a non-neutral state to a neutral state in response to a predetermined current threshold.
11. The electrical motor control system of claim 9 wherein the firmware is configured to transition the differential output from a non-neutral state to a neutral state in response to a positive step function like current measurement as the tarping system transitions from fully extended to retracting.
12. A battery management system for driving a tarping system motor of a vehicle at a higher voltage than the standard vehicle voltage, said battery management system comprising: (a) a power supply comprising a first battery and at least one secondary battery, wherein the batteries each have a positive and a negative terminal, and are configured to selectively transition from a parallel battery configuration to series battery configuration by utilizing a control circuit, said control circuit comprising a switching device activated by a control signal; (b) wherein a differential voltage exists between the negative terminal of the first battery and the positive terminal of the secondary battery; (c) wherein the activation of the control signal causes the switching device to arrange the batteries into a series configuration, and the differential voltage provides power through a conductor to the tarping system motor; and (d) wherein the deactivation of the control signal causes the batteries to connect in parallel.
13. The battery management system of claim 12 wherein the power supply comprises exactly one secondary battery.
14. The battery management system of claim 13 wherein activation of a relay connects the negative terminal of the secondary battery to the positive terminal of the first battery.
15. The battery management system of claim 12 wherein the vehicle has a cab and the control signal is provided by a momentary contact switch located in the cab of the vehicle.
16. The battery management system of claim 12 wherein the vehicle has a chassis, and said chassis provides a portion of an electrical path between the negative terminal of the first battery and a terminal of the motor of the tarping system.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0021] In response to federal and state regulations, automatic tarping systems have been employed by vehicles configured to haul materials in a hopper or bed 16, such as dump trucks, to eliminate the debris 18 from escaping the bed 16.
[0022]
Dual Voltage Motor Driver
[0023] It is common for the tarp motor 10 to operate off the vehicles system voltage, which is generally 12-volts in the U.S. Due to the high-torque which the motor must overcome and subsequent high electrical currents, heavy cabling is used between the vehicle power supply 24 and the tarp motor 10.
[0024] The mechanical power required by the motor 10 would be identical regardless of being a 12-volt system or a 24-volt system, and the corresponding 12-volt and 24-volt motors often have similar efficiencies in converting the incoming electrical power to mechanical power. Thus, if the electrical power requirement remains nearly identical and the voltage doubles, the required current for operation is halved. By reducing the electrical current, a lower gauge conductor may be used for the application. The following section outlines an electrical system which utilizes the existing 12-volt vehicle batteries to create a high-voltage system and thus reduce the required motor current.
[0025] The battery system 24 of most heavy-duty vehicles may comprise of two or more 12-volt batteries connected in parallel. The power block of
[0026] In the direction block shown in
[0027] The control block shown in
[0028] While the schematic shows the blocks in close communication, they may be located at different locations throughout the vehicle. In one embodiment, the switching device of the direction block may be located near the tarp motor 10, while in another embodiment, both Relay1 and Relay2 may be located in close proximity of the battery bank 24, or even within a single controller 26. In either case, the positive signal or open-circuit is carried by a high-voltage conductor between the power block and the direction block. The negative or ground signal from the power block may be carried by a wire conductor to the direction block or may be carried by a combination of conductors including the vehicle chassis, ground straps, and metallic bed 16. An illustration of the direction block located in close proximity of the motor 10 is shown in
[0029] As stated earlier, to retract the tarp 12 from the covered position, the electric motor 10 must transform the electrical energy into the mechanical energy necessary to wind the tarp in. The automatic tarping system illustrated in
[0030] To illustrate the benefit of increasing the voltage, the following is offered as a non-limiting example. Table 1 provides the electrical current and mechanical torque for a 12-volt motor suited for this application and includes the electrical power required, mechanical power delivered, and motor efficiency.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Electrical Motor Performance Electric Mechanical Volt Current Power Torque Rotation Power Efficiency (V) (A) In (W) (N m) (t/min) Out (W) (%) No- 12.121 14.62 178.1 .68 52 3.70 20.79 Load Max 11.994 61.62 740.0 38.2 39.8 159.47 21.55 Torque
[0031] If the application were designed for maximum torque of 38.2 N.m. from this motor, the electrical power required is given as 740 Watts (P1) to produce mechanical power of 159 Watts (P2). On a 12-volt system, the electrical current into the motor at this torque is 61.6 Amps. If the application were designed to account for a potential increase of 50% more current for motor starting/stall conditions, various temperatures, and other factors, the resulting 93-amp circuit design would require 6-gauge (4.115 mm) copper wiring for the power cabling per the American Wire Gauge standards for chassis wiring.
[0032] Given the same mechanical torque requirements and similar motor efficiencies, a motor requiring 740 Watts (P1) on a 24-volt system would require 30.8 Amps. Following the previous guidelines in designing for 50% increase in current, the requirements for the resulting 46-amp circuit design is satisfied using 11-gauge (2.305 mm) wiring per the American Wire Gauge standards.
[0033] Given the significant length of wiring used for these applications, there is a major cost benefit achieved in reducing the required copper by 68.6% as demonstrated in this example.
[0034] As vehicles may be equipped with multiple batteries, the same general circuit can be employed to further increase the voltage.
Chassis Ground Configuration
[0035] The battery 24 bank is often located near the cab of the truck and the electrical drive motor 10 is positioned at a point opposite the tailgate, as such, the electrical cabling must extend from the cab, to the point where the bed 16 is hinged to the frame at the rear of the vehicle, and then traverse back the length of the bed 16 to the motor 10. For a large vehicle application, such as a 40 end-dump truck, this application would currently require nearly 100 feet of two-conductor, 6-gauge copper cabling. One of the conductors would carry the positive voltage, while the other conductor would provide the ground return path.
[0036] It is common for the chassis of the vehicle to provide an electrical grounding point for vehicle motors and accessories. Higher current items, such as the starter motor, often have a braded cable or a ground strap attached to the chassis to provide the return path. Although steel is not as efficient a conductor relative to copper, the sectional area of the vehicle allows it to overcome potential voltage drops.
[0037] In
[0038] For systems which do not utilize the dual-voltage system presented, the positive terminal of the battery 24 may be connected to a positive single-conductor cable 46 that traverses across the vehicle to the direction block controller 26 located near the tarp motor 10. For systems which to utilize the multiple batteries in series as presented, the switched high-voltage may be carried by the positive single conductor cable 46. In either scenario, there may be fuses or circuit breakers in-line with the positive single conductor cable 46.
Sensors and Algorithms
[0039] As stated earlier, it is envisioned that more complex circuitry would be utilized for the control block of
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[0044] During the covering process, the motor 10 releases the tarp 12 at a controlled speed as the tarp 12 is being pulled by the bail arms 20. The current during the covering process is continually declining as tarp reaches the fully deployed position. Once fully deployed, if the motor continues to spin in the same direction, the spool will begin to reverse wind and the current will sharply rise as the motor once again begins pulling the tarp back and up (Stage 4). The sudden increase in current to detect the fully covered position is shown as I.sub.T2.
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