REMOTE CONTROL GENERATOR
20240380344 ยท 2024-11-14
Inventors
- Graham Harry Fountain (Sydney, AU)
- Emmanuel Kavarnos (Sydney, AU)
- Dimitrios Psonis (Sydney, AU)
- Richard Terrence Tamba (Sydney, AU)
Cpc classification
H02J3/38
ELECTRICITY
H02P9/04
ELECTRICITY
F02B63/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B63/042
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B75/246
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
H02P9/04
ELECTRICITY
F02B63/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02J3/38
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A generator for providing electrical power, the generator being provided with a control unit for controlling the generator, wherein the generator includes a communication receiver such that the generator is able to be remotely controlled by instructions received by way of the communication receiver. A method of supplying electrical power including the steps of: providing a plurality of generators rated at a first capacity but restricted to a second capacity, the second capacity being lower than the first capacity; leasing the generators to customers at a lease rate commensurate with the second capacity; on approval from the customers, selectively remotely derestricting the generators to operate at the first capacity and at a lease rate commensurate with the first capacity.
Claims
1. A generator for providing electrical power, the generator being provided with a control unit for controlling the generator, wherein the generator includes a communication receiver such that the generator is able to be remotely controlled by instructions received by way of the communication receiver.
2. A generator as claimed in claim 1, wherein the control unit includes the communication receiver.
3. A generator as claimed in claim 1, the generator including an internal combustion engine, including a piston, a cylinder, and an output shaft, wherein the piston is arranged for reciprocating motion within the cylinder, driven by combustion, and the piston is coupled to the output shaft by a coupling such that said reciprocating motion of the piston drives rotation of the output shaft.
4. A generator as claimed in claim 3, wherein the coupling is arranged such that the piston has sinusoidal motion for constant rotational velocity of the output shaft when plotted against rotational angle of the output shaft.
5. A generator as claimed in claim 3, wherein the engine is in the form of an opposed cylinder engine.
6. A generator as claimed in claim 5, wherein the engine has at least one pair of opposed cylinders having pistons movable along a common axis and connected by a unitary connecting rod such that the pistons move simultaneously in the same direction.
7. A generator as claimed in claim 1, wherein the control unit is arranged to receive software updates via the communication receiver.
8. A generator as claimed in claim 1, wherein the generator includes a communication transmitter.
9. A generator as claimed in claim 8, wherein the control unit is able to transmit data from the generator via the communication transmitter to a remote device for analysis of the data.
10. A generator as claimed in claim 8, wherein the data relates to maintenance, power usage and/or whether the generator is a correct size/capacity for the power usage.
11. A generator having an internal combustion engine, including a plurality of pistons, a plurality of cylinders, and an output shaft, wherein the pistons are arranged for reciprocating motion within the cylinders, driven by combustion, and the pistons are coupled to the output shaft by a coupling such that said reciprocating motion of the piston drives rotation of the output shaft, wherein the engine includes a first cylinder bank and a second cylinder bank, wherein drive for a camshaft of the first cylinder bank from the output shaft is at one end of the output shaft, and wherein drive for a camshaft of the second cylinder bank from the output shaft is at an opposite end of the output shaft.
12. A generator as claimed in claim 11, wherein the engine is in the form of an opposed cylinder engine.
13. A generator having an internal combustion engine, the engine including a piston, a cylinder, and an output shaft, wherein the piston is arranged for reciprocating motion within the cylinder, driven by combustion, and the piston is coupled to the output shaft by a coupling such that said reciprocating motion of the piston drives rotation of the output shaft, wherein the engine includes an engine cylinder block formed as separable parts, being a crankcase and at least one cylinder block.
14. A generator having an internal combustion engine, the engine including a piston, a cylinder, and an output shaft, wherein the piston is arranged for reciprocating motion within the cylinder, driven by combustion, and the piston is coupled to the output shaft by a coupling such that said reciprocating motion of the piston drives rotation of the output shaft, wherein the engine includes a crankcase formed of a plurality of separable like parts, each of the like parts being cast as a common part.
15. An engine as claimed in claim 14, wherein each of the like parts is an identical part.
16. A method of supplying electrical power including the steps of: providing a plurality of generators rated at a first capacity but restricted to a second capacity, the second capacity being lower than the first capacity; leasing the generators to customers at a lease rate commensurate with the second capacity; selectively remotely derestricting the generators to operate at the first capacity and at a lease rate commensurate with the first capacity.
17. A method of supplying electrical power as claimed in claim 16, wherein the step of derestricting the generators is conducted in response to demand on the generator exceeding output of the generator.
18. A method of supplying electrical power as claimed in claim 16, wherein the step of derestricting the generators is conducted in response to customer request.
19. A method of supplying electrical power as claimed in claim 16, wherein a single generator is shared between multiple households.
20. A method of supplying electrical power as claimed in claim 16, further including providing a remote master controller for controlling multiple generators in response to a master command.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0023] The invention is further described by way of non-limiting example only with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0024]
[0025]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0026] As can be seen in
[0027] More specifically, as shown in
[0028] The control unit 12 may includes the communication receiver 14. The communication receiver 14 may make use of Wi-Fi and/or cellular communications. In one form, the communication receiver 14 may be provided with its own Sim card for communication with a cellular tower 16 and/or a Wi-Fi receiver for communication with a Wi-Fi router 18.
[0029] The generator 10 may be provided with an internal combustion engine 20, including a piston, a cylinder, and an output shaft. The piston may be arranged for reciprocating motion within the cylinder, driven by combustion, and the piston may be coupled to the output shaft by a coupling such that the reciprocating motion of the piston drives rotation of the output shaft which, in turn, drives generation of electrical power for supply from the generator 10.
[0030] The coupling may be arranged such that the piston has sinusoidal motion for constant rotational velocity of the output shaft when plotted against rotational angle of the output shaft. The engine may be in the form of an opposed cylinder engine. More specifically, the engine may have at least one pair of opposed cylinders having pistons movable along a common axis and connected by a unitary connecting rod, such that both pistons move simultaneously in the same direction. In one particular example, the engine may be in the form of a scotch yoke engine. The engine may include one or more of the features disclosed in the applicant's own published International patent application numbers referred to at the beginning of this patent specification.
[0031] The control unit 12 may be arranged to receive software updates via the communication receiver such that software of the generator 10 can be kept up-to-date remotely. A service vehicle 22 may be used for delivering the generator 10 for installation and for providing service to the generator 10.
[0032] The generator 10 may include a communication transmitter 24. The communication transmitter 24 may include a Wi-Fi transmitter for communication with the Wi-Fi router 18 and/or a cellular transmitter for communication with the cellular communications tower 16. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the generator 10 may include a communication transceiver which may be in the form of a Wi-Fi transceiver and/or a cellular transceiver. The control unit 12 may be able to transmit data from the generator 10 via the communication transmitter 24 to a remote device for analysis of the data. In one form, the data may relate to maintenance, power usage and/or whether the generator is a correct size/capacity for the power usage.
[0033] The internal combustion engine 20 may include a plurality of pistons, a plurality of cylinders, and an output shaft. In one form, the pistons are arranged for reciprocating motion within the cylinders, driven by combustion, and the pistons are coupled to the output shaft by a coupling such that the reciprocating motion of the piston drives rotation of the output shaft. In one example, the engine includes a first cylinder bank and a second cylinder bank, wherein drive for a camshaft of the first cylinder bank from the output shaft is at one end of the output shaft, and wherein drive for a camshaft of the second cylinder bank from the output shaft is at an opposite end of the output shaft. The engine may be in the form of an opposed cylinder engine.
[0034] Advantageously, the engine 20 may be in the form of an engine with at least one pair of opposed cylinders having pistons movable along a common axis and connected by a unitary connecting rod. Using an engine of this type for powering the generator 10 may be advantageous in providing a compact, low noise engine with low NVH operation. This type of engine may also provide advantages in relation to reducing emissions and reducing costs. The engine may run on a power source of petrol, LPG, methanol, ethanol, diesel, compressed natural gas, hydrogen or other suitable fuel. The fuel may be provided by way of a tank or piped. Furthermore, this type of engine may have a lubrication regime which allows the engine to run reliably at relatively higher speeds such as, for non-limiting example, 5,500 rpm. In addition, the applicant has identified that use of a linear bearing provides sinus oil motion to the pistons over both TDC (top dead centre) and BDC (bottom dead centre).
[0035] In another form, the internal combustion engine 20 includes a piston, a cylinder, and an output shaft, wherein the piston is arranged for reciprocating motion within the cylinder, driven by combustion. The piston is coupled to the output shaft by a coupling such that said reciprocating motion of the piston drives rotation of the output shaft. The engine 20 includes an engine cylinder block formed as separable parts, being a crankcase and at least one cylinder block.
[0036] In yet another form, the engine 20 includes a crankcase formed of a plurality of separable like parts, each of the like parts being cast as a common part. Each of the like parts may be in the form of an identical part.
[0037] In another aspect, there is provided an advantageous method of electrical power supply. In particular, there is provided a method of supplying electrical power including the steps of: [0038] providing a plurality of generators 10 rated at a first capacity but restricted to a second capacity, the second capacity being lower than the first capacity; [0039] leasing the generators 10 to customers at a lease rate commensurate with the second capacity; and [0040] selectively remotely derestricting the generators 10 to operate at the first capacity and at a lease rate commensurate with the first capacity.
[0041] The step of derestricting the generators may be conducted in response to demand on the generator 10 exceeding output of the generator 10. Alternatively or in addition, the step of derestricting the generators 10 may be conducted in response to customer request.
[0042] It is foreseen that a single generator 10 may be shared between multiple households.
[0043] The method may also include a step of providing a remote master controller for controlling multiple generators in response to a master command. For example, the master controller may be used for controlling the generators in a power outage event such as due to a bushfire or the like. The method of electrical power supply provided by the present invention may reduce costs for consumers insofar as avoiding the need to purchase a generator (which can be expensive) by instead leasing a generator for a regular leasing fee. Also, the ability of the generator to be remotely controlled may avoid tripping out of the generator (which may require resetting of a circuit breaker) as, with monitoring of the output and demand, the generator can be automatically adjusted to avoid tripping out. This may be achieved by way of changing the tuning of the internal combustion engine of the generator.
[0044] With reference to
[0045] Turning to
[0046] In the arrangement shown in
[0047] Examples of the present invention provide a method whereby the generator power can be regulated or controlled remotely. It also covers a means of communication between a monitoring station and the generator 10 itself whereby the engine power demand and output can be remotely monitored and configured to varying power output levels electronically rather than mechanically. Examples of the present invention may cover the following key areas: [0048] The use of an engine 20 in a generator 10 where the power output can be monitored remotely [0049] Where the existing household (or other) Wi-Fi system can be used as the communication media [0050] Where the existing Cellular network can be used as the communication media [0051] Where a dedicated radio link can be used as the communication media [0052] Where a powerline modem can be used as the communication media [0053] Where a radio link can be used as the communication media [0054] Where a visual display can be used as the communication media [0055] Where the engine 20 power output can be monitored by the communication media [0056] Where the downstream power demand can be monitored via the communication media [0057] Where the power output of the generator 10 can be increased or decreased via the communication media [0058] Where the billing for the power used and rate per kWhr can be applied based on the information received over the communication media [0059] Where the engine 20 servicing requirements can be communicated and monitored using the communication media
[0060] The result is: [0061] Less cost for the owner as he/she is billed at market rate only for what is used [0062] Less cost for the installer as the system can be monitored and configured remotely [0063] Less maintenance cost as only essential maintenance is required (no over-servicing) [0064] Ability to manage the power output based on system requirements [0065] Ability for a one-size-fits-all approach to generator output for the installer [0066] The ability to rerate the engine output based on demand history and then charge the owner accordingly [0067] The ability for the generator 10 to be reactive to the demand in peak periods [0068] The ability to bill a combination of rental plus real power usage rather than a rental based on generator size alone (that may be oversized for the application) [0069] Less backup power trip outs [0070] The ability to lease the generator 10 to a user rather than sell the generator 10 to them and then set charges based on rental plus usage [0071] The ability to integrate the generator 10 with other power supply devices (eg solar) and manage when the generator 10 does and does not start. ie it does not make sense for the generator 10 to start if the grid does down but the home solar system is keeping up with the demand [0072] Ability to reduce greenhouse gases generated by home generators starting up when not needed
[0073] While various embodiments of the present invention have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only, and not by way of limitation. It will be apparent to a person skilled in the relevant art that various changes in form and detail can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Thus, the present invention should not be limited by any of the above described exemplary embodiments.
[0074] The reference in this specification to any prior publication (or information derived from it), or to any matter which is known, is not, and should not be taken as an acknowledgment or admission or any form of suggestion that that prior publication (or information derived from it) or known matter forms part of the common general knowledge in the field of endeavour to which this specification relates.
LIST OF FEATURES
[0075] 10 Generator [0076] 12 Control unit [0077] 14 Communication receiver [0078] 16 Cellular communications tower [0079] 18 Wi-Fi router [0080] 20 Internal combustion engine [0081] 22 Service vehicle [0082] 24 Communication transmitter [0083] 26 Renewable energy source [0084] 28 Houses, shops and other buildings [0085] 30 Coal piles [0086] 32 Coal power station [0087] 34 Transformer [0088] 36 Transmission lines [0089] 38 Substation