MOTORIZED BRACKET FOR VIDEO PROJECTOR
20230108928 · 2023-04-06
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16M13/027
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16M2200/068
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16M11/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02K11/0094
ELECTRICITY
F16M11/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16M11/2035
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16M11/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16M11/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16M11/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16M13/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02K11/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A motorized bracket is intended to receive, in a support, a video projector and having a base, a first arm and a second arm. The first arm is connected to the base at a first motorized rotation axis. The second arm is connected to the first arm at a second motorized rotation axis and the second arm is connected to the support at a third motorized rotation axis. The motorized rotation axes each consist of a motor coupled to a geared motor assembly in direct engagement with the arm or the support that is to be controlled.
Claims
1-10. (canceled)
11. A motorized bracket intended to receive, in a support, a video projector and having a base, a first arm and a second arm, wherein the first arm is connected to the base at a first motorized rotation axis, the second arm being connected to the first arm at a second motorized rotation axis and the second arm is connected to the support at a third motorized rotation axis, the motorized rotation axes each consisting of a motor coupled to a geared motor assembly in direct engagement with the arm or the support that is to be controlled.
12. The motorized bracket according to claim 11, wherein the motors are stepper motors or brushless DC motors and the geared motor assemblies in direct engagement are elliptical reduction gears with very low hysteresis, less than 0.5 Arcmin.
13. The motorized bracket according to claim 11, wherein the first and second arms have an “L” shape or a “U” shape.
14. The motorized bracket according to claim 13 and in which the first and second arms have a “U” shape, wherein the first and second arms are connected via a single free rotation axis that is coaxial with the second motorized rotation axis.
15. The motorized bracket according to claim 11, wherein the support comprises an electrical connector intended to be connected to the video projector in order to ensure the supply of power and the control of motors of the video projector from the control unit according to a daisy chain.
16. The motorized bracket according to claim 15, wherein the base comprises an AC/DC converter, a battery and a control unit delivering, on a power line, the energy necessary for the power supply of the various motors of the bracket and of the video projector and, on a common data line, position data required in order to control the rotation of the various motors of the bracket and of the video projector.
17. The motorized bracket according to claim 16, wherein each of these motors comprises its own control card equipped with a microprocessor or microcontroller locally managing the rotation position data of the associated motor received on the common data line, according to its own preprogrammed servo-control law, each control card having a code wheel allowing a specific motor to be identified.
18. The motorized bracket according to claim 17, wherein each of the control cards is configured to maintain from the battery and in all circumstances, a minimum supply voltage necessary for saving the position of each of the motors of the bracket, in standby mode and when switched off.
19. The motorized bracket according to claim 17, wherein the microprocessor or microcontroller has a static RAM memory, flash memory or electrically programmable ROM memory.
20. An assembly comprising a video projector and a motorized bracket according to claim 11.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0014] Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the description given below, with reference to the appended drawings which illustrate an exemplary embodiment that is in no way limiting and wherein:
[0015]
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DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0025]
[0026] According to the invention and in a first embodiment, this motorized bracket intended to receive, in a support frame 102, the video projector 12 comprises two arms 104, 106 in an “L” shape each having a first and a second end, the first end 104A of the first arm 104 being connected to the base 100 at a first vertical axis of rotation 108 and the second end 104B of the first arm 104 being connected to the first end 106A of the second arm 106 at a second horizontal axis of rotation 110 perpendicular to the first vertical axis of rotation 108, the second end 106B of the second arm 106 being connected to the support frame 100 at a third vertical axis of rotation 112 perpendicular to the second horizontal axis of rotation 110 and coaxial (in its rest position) with the first vertical axis of rotation 108. Each rotation axis 108, 110, 112 is motorized by a motor-gear assembly 114, 116; 118, 120; 122, 124 in direct engagement with this rotation axis (also referred to as direct axis motorisation), in other words without significant pulley or belt vibration generators (jerks during accelerations or decelerations) and hysteresis (or backlash). The motors are typically stepper motors, or, for example, brushless DC motors and the reduction gears are very high precision, elliptical reduction gear, geared motor assemblies from Harmonic DriveⓇ for example, for which the hysteresis is less than 0.5 Arcmin (i.e. 0.0083 °). In addition, it is also possible to manage, by means of the motorized bracket motors (and their associated geared motor assemblies), the tilt 126, zoom 128 and focus 130 of the video projector (each illustrated in
[0027]
[0028] The above support structure, whether it is single arm (
[0029] The incorporation of at least one additional axis, compared to conventional motorized brackets with two axes, enables the management of an additional adjustment parameter which does not exist in the solutions of the prior art. Indeed, the image of a video projector has a 16/9 or even 4/3 ratio and it is therefore useful to be able to position the image in “portrait” mode as well as in “landscape” mode, which is made possible by the presence of the third motorized rotation axis 112.
[0030]
[0031] The electric circuit providing the motorisation of the bracket is illustrated in
[0032] The control unit 1004 delivers, on a power line 100C, the energy necessary to supply the various motors of the bracket and the projector and, on a common data line 100D, according to known communication protocols such as RS485, DMX512 or Art-Net, the position data required for controlling the rotation of the various motors of the bracket and the projector. In contrast to the brackets of the prior art where a single control card is connected in star configuration to the set of controlled motors, each of the motors of the invention has its own control card 1140, 1180, 1220, 1260, 1280, 1300 equipped with a microprocessor (typically a microcontroller of the AVR® family from Microchip Technology) locally managing the position in rotation of the associated motor according to a pre-programmed servo-control law with a predefined movement speed, movement amplitude, acceleration/deceleration curve and torque specific to each controlled motor. The connection between the bracket and the projector is made at a connector 140 enabling power and commands of its individual motors to be relayed to the projector and maintaining, between all of the motors controlled by the control unit 1004, a daisy chain in which each autonomous control card receives from the “upstream” card to which it is connected, the power and data lines, that it retransmits to the “downstream” card to which it is also connected, each control card of the motors having a code wheel for identifying a specific motor.
[0033] The control cards are configured to maintain, in all circumstances, a minimum supply voltage necessary for saving the position of each of the motors of the bracket in standby mode and when switched off, with a high permanent holding torque facilitated by the presence of the electromagnetic brake on each of the outgoing rear axes of the motors 114, 118, 122. Typically, this information is saved in the microsecond which follows the switching off of the bracket (including in the case of micro-outages) in the internal memory of the microprocessors of these cards (typically a static RAM memory, a flash memory or an electrically programmable ROM memory). This information can also be saved in the memory of the control unit 1004, when it possesses one.
[0034] The operation of the motorized bracket is now explained with regard to
[0035]
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[0037]
[0038] The invention provides a high-performance bracket, both technically in terms of the quality of movements during movements of view, as well as economically to ensure, if necessary, the only positioning of inaccessible projectors.
[0039] Of course, although, in the illustrated example, reference has essentially been made to a video projector, it is obvious that such a motorized bracket can be used with a fixed or moving image projector.