NZ736632B2 - Apparatus and method for increased realism of training on exercise machines - Google Patents
Apparatus and method for increased realism of training on exercise machines Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- NZ736632B2 NZ736632B2 NZ736632A NZ73663216A NZ736632B2 NZ 736632 B2 NZ736632 B2 NZ 736632B2 NZ 736632 A NZ736632 A NZ 736632A NZ 73663216 A NZ73663216 A NZ 73663216A NZ 736632 B2 NZ736632 B2 NZ 736632B2
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- New Zealand
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- machine
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- electrical
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- rowing
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- A63B71/00—Games or sports accessories not covered in groups A63B1/00 - A63B69/00
- A63B71/06—Indicating or scoring devices for games or players, or for other sports activities
- A63B71/0619—Displays, user interfaces and indicating devices, specially adapted for sport equipment, e.g. display mounted on treadmills
- A63B71/0622—Visual, audio or audio-visual systems for entertaining, instructing or motivating the user
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G16—INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR SPECIFIC APPLICATION FIELDS
- G16H—HEALTHCARE INFORMATICS, i.e. INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR THE HANDLING OR PROCESSING OF MEDICAL OR HEALTHCARE DATA
- G16H20/00—ICT specially adapted for therapies or health-improving plans, e.g. for handling prescriptions, for steering therapy or for monitoring patient compliance
- G16H20/30—ICT specially adapted for therapies or health-improving plans, e.g. for handling prescriptions, for steering therapy or for monitoring patient compliance relating to physical therapies or activities, e.g. physiotherapy, acupressure or exercising
Abstract
exercise machine includes a cyclical actuator and a mechanical energy storage device. Connective structure operatively connects the cyclical actuator to the mechanical energy storage device. Motion of the cyclical actuator urges physical motion of and energy storage in the mechanical energy storage device. The exercise machine further includes an electric machine. A communication pathway enables exchange of data between multiple associated exercise machines such that multiple associated operators on multiple associated exercise machines have a common experience. This exercise machine enables rowers to train together while being located in different cities from each other. The machine simulates as if they were rowing in the same boat for training purposes, and as such solves the problem of how to train for a team sport while not being together while training. ge device. The exercise machine further includes an electric machine. A communication pathway enables exchange of data between multiple associated exercise machines such that multiple associated operators on multiple associated exercise machines have a common experience. This exercise machine enables rowers to train together while being located in different cities from each other. The machine simulates as if they were rowing in the same boat for training purposes, and as such solves the problem of how to train for a team sport while not being together while training.
Description
(12) Granted patent specificaon (19) NZ (11) 736632 (13) B2
(47) Publicaon date: 2021.12.24
(54) APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR INCREASED REALISM OF NG ON EXERCISE MACHINES
(51) Internaonal Patent Classificaon(s):
A63B 21/005 A63B 21/22 A63B 22/06 A63B 24/00 A63B 69/06 A63B 69/16 A63B 71/06
(22) Filing date: (73) Owner(s):
4.19 SCHAEFER, Michael V.
BALINT, John A.
(23) Complete specificaon filing date:
2016.04.19 (74) Contact:
Wynnes Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys
(30) Internaonal Priority Data:
US 62/149,869 2015.04.20 (72) Inventor(s):
SCHAEFER, l V.
(86) Internaonal Applicaon No.: BALINT, John A.
(87) Internaonal Publicaon number:
WO/2016/172103
(57) ct:
An exercise machine includes a cyclical actuator and a mechanical energy storage device.
Connecve structure operavely connects the cyclical actuator to the mechanical energy storage
device. Moon of the cyclical actuator urges physical moon of and energy storage in the
mechanical energy storage device. The exercise machine further es an electric machine.
A communicaon y enables exchange of data between mulple ated exercise
machines such that mulple associated operators on mulple associated exercise machines have a
common experience. This exercise machine s rowers to train er while being located in
different cies from each other. The machine simulates as if they were rowing in the same boat for
training purposes, and as such solves the problem of how to train for a team sport while not being
together while training.
NZ 736632 B2
WO 72103
APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR INCREASED REALISM OF TRAINING
ON EXERCISE MACHINES
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims the benefit of US. Provisional Application No.
62/149,869, filed April 20, 2015, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated
herein by reference.
TECHNICAL FIELD
In various ments, the t disclosure relates generally to
exercise machines, and more specifically to exercise machines that dissipate energy
through mechanisms that allow customizable load s, and to exercise machines
having an interconnection capability that enables synchronization of exercise
activities.
OUND ART
Many athletic activities entail the coordination of s by members of
team. Herein, we term such activities “coordinated ” To be competitive in
coordinated sport, team members must build skill, strength, and nce and learn
to coordinate their efforts. An example of coordinated effort is, in team rowing, the
performance of oarstrokes of y similar timing, duration, and power. Another
example is, in tandem bicycle riding, the coordination of pedal strokes. Herein,
frequent reference will be made to the sport of rowing and to exercise machines
pertinent to rowing, but such references are illustrative, not restrictive: other sports,
non-sport activities, and types of exercise machines are contemplated and within the
scope of the disclosure.
Teams may be d by field se, e.g., actually rowing a boat on
water, however, due to seasonal, weather, and other limitations on field exercise, in
practice athletes prepare for and supplement field exercise by working out extensively
on trainers, i.e., stationary machines whose mechanics simulate one or more aspects
of the sport in question. A typical r comprises one or more mechanisms upon
which the user’s body rests and/or acts (e,g., pedals, oars, seats) and one or more
dissipative mechanisms (e.g., air fins, friction pads), typically adjustable, which place
energetic loads on the user. A typical trainer also comprises an inertial mechanism
(e.g., flywheel) that simulates the a of one or more athletes in motion along with
the inertia of a watercraft, bicycle, or other gear.
Trainers are most often built to accommodate a single athlete. Single-user
trainers do not support training of team members in the coordinative aspects of a
given sport, and when only single-user trainers are available, training in the
coordinative aspects of the sport can only occur in field ses. To overcome this
problem, the prior art has developed team trainers, relatively large machines that
accommodate two or more athletes at one time. For example, the rowing simulator
sed in US. Pat. No. 8,622,876 describes mechanical ganging of single—oar
rowing machines for simultaneous training of up to 8 rowers. However, in this
example, dissipative loads (e.g., ergometers) are driven by each athlete: thus, the
performance of one e does not cally affect the loads addressed by other
athletes on the user trainer. In another e, the simulated rowing machine
disclosed in US. Pat. No. 8,235,874 describes ganging of single-oar rowing machines
so as to include mechanical coupling of each s resistance and recovery
mechanism to every other’s, enabling the crew to align its power application in a
realistic fashion.
tions of the prior art for coordinative (i.e., team) training include but
are not d to the following: (1) Athletes g out on ed machines (e. g.,
in a single space but not mechanically connected, or in different geographical
locations) cannot receive training on the coordination aspects of their sport. (2) All
athletes to be trained by a team trainer must assemble at a common place and time to
use the team trainer. This s travel to the common location by all athletes and
burdensome coordination of schedules. If one or more team members are not able to
attend at the common place and time, training for full-team coordination cannot occur.
(3) A training space must accommodate the bulk of the team trainer, whose maximum
dimension, for an N—person trainer, will be on the order ofN times that of a single-
person trainer. (4) Realistic team trainers are significantly more costly on a per-
athlete basis than individual trainers.
Techniques are ore desired by means of which exercise machines can
enable one or more athletes to receive realistic training on the coordinative aspects of
their sport without requiring multiple athletes to assemble at a single location.
Moreover, there is need for such exercise systems to be affordable and compact.
BRIEF SUlVllVIARY
Technical Problem
Exercise machines ucted according to the prior art are generally
ed with energy dissipation (i.e., load) devices that employ friction, gaseous,
and/or liquid damping effects and whose rate of energy dissipation is approximately
fixed after an initial adjustment, e.g., throughout a given exercise session. Also, such
exercise machines generally include d damping variability. Also, such exercise
es (herein also termed “trainers”) are either inherently single-user (i.e., lack
means of communication with other exercise machines that can be used to provide a
common or “team” experience for operators), or, in order to provide a common
experience for operators, require that multiple machines be mechanically ganged into
a relatively large multi-user assembly and that operators assemble at a single facility
for the use of such a multi-user assembly. Moreover, ted real-time competition
between such assemblies would require the co-location of multiple assemblies,
typically an expensive and impractical proposition. For these and other reasons,
ements to exercise machines are desired.
on to Problem
Various embodiments of the disclosed tus and systems transcend the
limitations of the prior art by enabling athletes on separate exercise machines, which
may be far distant from each other, to exercise jointly in a manner that imates
the experience of exercising jointly on a real physical apparatus (e. g., rowing shell).
Moreover, various embodiments of the disclosure enable athletes to train with or
against simulated athletes. Some other advantages offered by embodiments of the
disclosure shall be made clear hereinbelow both descriptively and with reference to
the Figures.
Various embodiments replace the ative mechanism of the prior art
with an electrical e (generator) whose power output is dissipated largely by a
resistive electrical load. s embodiments se additional computational,
icative, and other aspects. In various embodiments, one or more
WO 72103
computational aspects collect measurement ation telemetrically from portions
of the se machine; issue commands to controllable aspects of the exercise
machine (e.g., ical machine, resistive load); and communicate inforrnatically
(e.g., through a network) with s devices that can include, but are not necessarily
limited to, one or more of (1) other exercise es, (2) a server that can gather and
store data pertaining to multiple exercise machines and their ors and nate
the behaviors of multiple exercise machines, (3) other computing devices, including
devices operated by one or more coaches and/or by team participants with distinctive
roles (e.g., coxswains), and (4) sources of metric information such as wearable
athletic monitors or activity trackers. The computational aspects of various
embodiments include software capabilities for (l) calculating and recording the
performance of teams and individual operators, (2) rating and otherwise analyzing
operator and team performance, (3) algorithmically modeling combinations of one or
more operators, who may be at disparate physical locations, into one or more “virtual
teams” whose members’ efforts affect the loads experienced by the one or more
operators in a manner that simulates joint effort applied to a c apparatus (e.g., a
rowing a four-person scull), (4) numerically simulating the efforts (e. g., oarstroke
timing, power, and duration) of one or more “simulated operators” and the effects of
these efforts on the loads experienced by real operators and by other simulated
operators, and (5) calculating the performance of combinations of real and simulated
ors so that individual operators may train as part of a complete team, or a partial
team may train as part of a te team, or one virtual team (entirely real or partly
or entirely simulated) may compete t one or more other teams (entirely real or
partly or entirely simulated). The performance characteristics of a simulated operator
tute a set of tunable parameters that may be based on the measured
characteristics of a real operator, ed from a library, custom-specified, randomly
generated, or otherwise specified.
Also, various embodiments comprise devices that offer audiovisual
feedback to operators that can supplement the feedback supplied by the mechanical
load of the exercise machine: for example, a rowing-machine operator may face a
device that gives visual and/or aural cues such as an audiovisual representation of a
lead rower, the sound of a coxswain’s voice (real or simulated), scenery to providing a
visual indication of motion, performance metrics (e.g., stroke rate, operator power
2016/028282
output), and the like. It may be beneficial for the audiovisual feedbacks offered to
multiple operators ng as a team to be coordinated by a computational device so
that operators are offered consistent cues. Audiovisual ck is in some
embodiments provided to the operator by a l reality device (e.g., Oculus Rift) to
endow the training experience with a high degree of psychophysical realism. In one
example, rowers on a virtual crew team -- every one of whom is hundreds of
kilometers away from every other —- share a virtual reality in which each operator
occupies a definite point of view in a virtual watercraft, and movement of the virtual
watercraft (and potentially of competing virtual watercraft) in the virtual reality is
determined algorithmically from the physical efforts of the operators.
In various embodiments, the disclosed apparatus ses an electrical
e (e.g., a linear or rotary electrical generator) that is motivated by one or more
operators and supplies power to a load (e. g., a bank of resistors). Regarding the
provision of load for the operator, the electrical machine and its load bank correspond
imately to the dissipative load mechanism of an exercise machine built
according to the prior art. Such prior-art dissipative mechanisms include (1) piston
mechanisms, whereby load is presented by hydraulic cylinders attached to s,
and (2) braked flywheel mechanisms, wherein load presented by a flywheel braked
using friction pads, electromagnets, air fins, water paddles, or other dissipative
contrivances. In various embodiments of the disclosure, a linear electrical machine is
employed in a manner ous to a resistive hydraulic cylinder, or a load-feeding
rotary electrical machine is employed in a manner analogous to a flywheel load.
In s embodiments, the load that dissipates power generated by the
electrical machine can se one or more resistors that dissipate energy as heat.
The one or more resistors of the electrical load are herein collectively termed “the
electrical load bank.” In one example, the net resistance of the electrical load bank is
fixed and the current through the load bank is varied in proportion to the required
load. Alternatively, the net resistance of the electrical load bank is adjustable by
means of signals transmitted from the system controller: e. g., relays may connect or
nect resistors in the electrical load bank, thus increasing or decreasing the
ical load presented to the operator. Additionally or alternatively, the electrical
load bank may comprise continuously le resistive ts (e.g.,
iometers). Non-electrical loads such as friction brakes and fluid-stirring
mechanisms may be comprised by various embodiments, additionally or alternatively
to resistive and other electrical loads.
In various embodiments that comprise a flywheel and a separately excited
alternator as the rotary electrical e, the flywheel is coupled by a transmission
mechanism (e.g., gearbox, common axis, or sprocket and roller chain) to the rotary
electrical machine, which the flywheel drives. The torque Telec of the alternator is
determined by the mutual inductance Laf n the alternator’ s armature and field
circuit, by the alternator’s armature t Iann, and by the altemator’s field circuit
current Ifld. An electrical load bank (resistance R) is in series with the alternator’s
armature circuit. Thus, Telec, which butes to the load tered by the
exercise-machine operator, may in such embodiments be adjusted by ng at least
one of R, 1am and Ifld.
Additionally or alternatively in various embodiments, components of a
rotary electrical machine may be weighted so as increase the electrical machine’s
moment of inertia, enabling the electrical machine to act as an additional flywheel or
as the system’s sole l. Moreover, additionally or alternatively, the flywheel
and/or rotary electrical machine may have a controllable moment of a (e.g., may
incorporate devices that move mass toward or away from the axis of on).
Herein, the terms “user,” “operator,” and “athlete” are used
interchangeably.
Advantageous Effects
Various embodiments of the disclosure combine load control with
networked communications and model-based control of loads to transcend
shortcomings of the prior art. The y of various embodiments to combine
operators at a single location or multiple locations into one or more Virtual teams,
each of whom ences a varying load that realistically approximates the
experience that would be had in a shared physical setting (e.g., in a boat on the water,
or in a multi-user trainer with load linkage), overcomes the prior art’s requirement
that team members assemble at a common location to practice the coordinative
aspects of their sport. Since individual machines are linked informatically, not
mechanically, if all team s do assemble at a common time and place there is
no need to find room for a large multi-unit assembly, as in the prior art, in order to
exercise in a linked manner: in an example, rowing machines scattered about a room
can operate as a multi-unit trainer.
As shall be made clearer with reference to the Figures, certain ons
offered by some ments of the disclosure are entirely novel as compared to the
prior art. In an example, in various embodiments a single operator may practice as a
member of a team whose other members are all simulated. In further examples,
multiple operators may, regardless of their physical locations, (1) ce together as
a complete team with realistic performance/load linkage, (2) practice with a
combination of real operators and simulated operators (e. g., if there are not enough
real operators to form a complete team, the team complement may be filled out by
simulated operators), (3) be combined variously by a user (e. g., coach) into ative
team lineups, without any need for the operators to change locations or even get off
their machines, and (4) compete with real or simulated teams regardless of the
on of any operators. er, the physics of different phases of team effort
can be simulated by appropriate manipulation of exercise machine loads (e.g, higher
loads during acceleration; in rowing or biking, higher values for water and/or air
resistance loads at higher ties; in rowing or biking, higher loads when going
against a current or biking uphill, respectively). In a further example, ments of
the disclosure can both enhance training for traditional team rowing and expand the
established sport of competitive indoor rowing in ways that will be clear to persons
familiar with these .
These and other objects, along with ages and es of the
disclosure, will become more apparent through reference to the ing description,
the accompanying drawings, and the claims. Furthermore, it is to be understood that
the features of the various embodiments described herein are not mutually exclusive
and can exist in various combinations and permutations. Furthermore, the particular
features, structures, routines, steps, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable
manner in one or more examples of the technology. Also, gh single-user
trainers are frequently referenced herein, multi-user trainers may be similarly
incorporated in embodiments of the disclosure. All such ions are contemplated
and within the scope of the disclosure.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
The foregoing and other aspects of the present sure will become
apparent to those skilled in the art to which the present disclosure relates upon g
the following description with reference to the following figures:
is a schematic representation of a single—user exercise system
according to one form of the prior art;
is a tic representation of an illustrative exercise system
according to at least one aspect of the present disclosure;
is a schematic representation of at least one embodiment of the
present disclosure showing the addition of a retrofit kit to the exercise system of for conversion to the exercise system of
is a schematic representation of an exemplary decentralized
network comprising a number of exercise systems, each similar to the exercise system
of
is a schematic representation of an example four-member team in
the network of ;
is schematic representation of an exemplary centralized k
comprising a number of exercise systems, each similar to the exercise system of FIG.
is a side view of an example exercise system of and
is a tic representation of the exercise system of
including onal ents.
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODHVIENTS
In the Figures and discussion thereof, systems and s are disclosed
that enable the construction of an exercise machine which improves aspects of
individual and team training. These systems and s can provide networked
communication between multiple exercise machines to provide machine users with a
common exercise experience that simulates s ofjoint operation of a single
athletic apparatus or of operation in a common environment of separate athletic
apparatuses. The types of exercise machine to which these systems and s
apply include, but are not limited to, rowing machines, nary bicycles, elliptical
machines, and cross-country skiing machines. This disclosure primarily describes
illustrative cases in which the exercise machine is a rowing machine, but no
restriction is intended by this usage. In the Figures, for the sake of clarity, certain
features are omitted whose necessity or utility would be clear to persons familiar with
the design and ion of exercise machines and other nt devices; for
example, detailed provisions for wiring an alternator or for plugging into mains power
are not depicted, and force transmission mechanisms standard to various exercise
machines are not depicted. The emphasis of the Figures is on features that clarify
embodiments of the disclosure.
schematically depicts portions of an illustrative single-user exercise
system 100 according to one form of the prior art. A user or athlete 102 operates an
exercise machine 104. The exercise machine 104 comprises a force ism 106,
an inertial mechanism 108, and a damping ism or load 110. The force
mechanism 106 transmits forces between the body of the athlete 102 and other
portions of the exercise e 104: in an example, in a stationary bicycle the force
mechanism 106 comprises seat, handlebars, pedals, et, chain, and other
ents. In another example, in a rowing machine the force mechanism 106
comprises seat, foot stretcher, handle, and other components. The inertial mechanism
108 typically comprises a flywheel, and smooths operation of the exercise machine by
simulating the inertia of an athlete moving with a mobile athletic apparatus (e. g.,
cyclist on bicycle, rower on watercraft). The load 110, which is typically adjustable,
simulates dissipative and possibly other loads enced by an e moving an
athletic apparatus (e. g., resistance of air and/or water, friction, uphill travel). The
schematization or breakdown of a typical exercise system 100 shown in is
offered to clarify subsequent Figures and sion, but is to some degree arbitrary,
and other schematizations are possible.
schematically depicts portions of an illustrative exercise system 200
according to an embodiment of the present disclosure. An athlete 202 operates an
exercise machine 204. The se machine 204 comprises a force mechanism 206,
an al mechanism 208, an electrical machine 210 (e. g., linear or rotary generator),
a damping ism or load 212, a computer device 214, and a user interface device
216. In s embodiments, the electrical machine 210 can be any suitable device
including, but not d to, a separately excited electric machine, alternating t
induction motor, permanent-magnet alternating current motor, or brushed or brushless
direct current motor. The force mechanism 206 transmits forces between the body of
the athlete 202 and other portions of the exercise machine 204. The inertial
mechanism 208 can comprise a flywheel. The electrical machine 210 is coupled to
the inertial mechanism 208 by a ission mechanism (not shown) and constitutes
a mechanical load on the al mechanism 208. In various embodiments, the
al mechanism 208 and electrical machine 210 are integrated into a single device
(e.g., a rotary ical machine with an appropriately high moment of inertia).
The load 212 comprises an electrical load which serves to ate or
absorb electrical energy produced by the electrical e 210. In one example, the
electrical load is able in magnitude. In various embodiments, the load 212
comprises resistors, a battery, an AC/DC converter and/or a DC/DC converter, and
various electrically powered components of the exercise machine 204 or of other
devices.
The user interface 216 comprises one or more of audio, visual, and tactile
means of conveying information to the athlete 202, where such information can
comprise metrics of e performance (e.g., stroke rate, power output), athlete
biometrics (e. g., heart rate), audiovisual representations or simulations (e. g., virtual
reality), audio (e. g., voice, rhythm cues), and others. The user interface 216 also
comprises one or more means of information input from the athlete 202 (e. g., voice
input, keyboard input, touchscreen input, eye-movement based ction, etc).
The computer 214 comprises a data-gathering capability, computational
capability, control capability, communications capability, and memory capability.
The data-gathering lity of the computer 214 receives signals from sensors (not
shown) communicating with various portions of the exercise machine 204. In
dashed arrows denote informatic transmission paths (as distinguished from
mechanical and electrical energetic transmission paths, denoted by solid arrows).
Thus, the er 214 receives sensed information from and transmits (via its
control capability) controlling commands to the force mechanism 206, inertial
mechanism 208, electrical machine 210, load 212, and interface 216. The control
capability of the computer 214 enables it to d changes in the states of s
components of the exercise machine 204. For example, the computer 214 may
transmit signals that cause the excitation current in a winding of the electrical
machine 210 to increase or decrease, thus altering the torque placed by the electrical
WO 72103
machine 210 on the inertial mechanism 208 and ultimately altering the mechanical
load felt by the e 202. In another example, the computer 214 transmits signals
that cause a resistive component of the load 212 to increase or decrease, altering the
load on the ical machine 210 and tely altering the mechanical load felt by
the athlete 202.
The ications capability of the computer 214 enables it to exchange
information with a network 230. The communications capability is capable of
information exchange h one or more wired ls and protocols, one or more
wireless channels and protocols, or both. In an example, the network 230 comprises a
number of exercise machines that are similar to exercise e 204 and are
interconnected by cabled or wireless channels, where machine 204 and the machines
with which it is in communication act as communicative nodes in a network topology.
In another example, the network 230 is the internet. Through the network 230, the
computer 214 can be in informatic communication with machines similar to se
machine 204, general computing devices, and other devices capable of informatic
exchange h the network 23 0. In an example, the exercise machine 204
communicates through the network 230 with a wearable sensor device worn by the
athlete, ing biometric information (e.g., heart rate) and utilizing such
information in the computation and memory capabilities of the computer 214.
The exercise machine 204 can be in communication via the network 230
withM— 1 other, similar exercise machines (best represented in FIG 4A), which are
typically also in communication with each other. Together, the exercise machine 204
and theM— 1 exercise es with which it is in networked communication
constitute a networked group ofM exercise machines. The quantity of members of a
networked group may vary from occasion to occasion.
As shall be made clear with reference to illustrative ments
hereinbelow, the computational capability of the computer 214 implements a
computational algorithm, herein termed the “team algorithm.” The team algorithm
accepts as numerical inputs measured electrical and mechanical quantities from
portions of the machine 204 (e. g., rotational velocity of a flywheel, acceleration of a
flywheel, voltage across a resistive load, current in a generator winding). These
measured quantities are such as enable estimation of the real—time effort exerted by
the athlete 202 and, potentially, of other quantities. The team thm also accepts
as inputs a number of numerical parameters stored in the memory capability of the
computer 214. These parameters can express physical properties of a hypothetical
apparatus (e.g., a particular type of watercraft), al characteristics of a given
exercise machine (e. g., the moment of inertia of a flywheel), physical characteristics
of athletes (e.g., mass), and other variables. The team algorithm can also accept as
input real-time data enting the activities ofN athletes, N Z 1, one of whom may
be the operator 202 of the exercise machine 204. The N athletes whose activity data
are inputted to the team algorithm are herein said to constitute a “virtual team.”
Activity data may be derived from the activities of real human athletes, or numerically
ted, or both: that is, some or all of the N networked athletes on a virtual team
may be real athletes and some or all may be simulated athletes. Simulation of an
athlete is performed by code computed by the computer 214 or by some computer
device with which computer 214 is in communication via the k 230.
Simulation can be based on parameters derived by measurement from real es or
otherwise derived, and may include a random aspect (e. g., the efforts of a ted
rower may vary slightly in a realistically nondeterministic fashion from stroke to
stroke). IfM real athletes onM real machines are participating in an N-member
virtual team, then N—M team members are simulated.
Data received by the computer 214 via the network 230 during
computation of the team thm typically include real-time data on the activities of
theM - 1 real athletes other than the real local athlete 202 on the virtual team. Real-
time data on the activities of the real local athlete 202 are gathered ly by the
computer 214 from machine 204. Also, the computer 214 typically transmits activity
data on the local athlete 202 via the network 230 to theM - 1 machines from which
the machine 204 is receiving athlete activity data. Data on the activity of simulated
athletes on a virtual team may be produced locally by the computer devices of
exercise es (e. g., computer 214), or communicated to or among exercise
machines or computers via the network 230, or both.
The team algorithm ed by computer 214 produces commands that
are icated to various llable mechanisms of the machine 204 (e.g.,
aspects of the ical machine 210 and load 212), ultimately altering the
mechanical load experienced by the athlete 202. TheM— 1 other networked
machines similarly compute the team algorithm to calculate commands for their own
mechanisms, thus affecting the experiences of their own operators in a manner
coordinated with that of machine 204. That is, theM machines of theM real athletes
on an N—member virtual team all possess or e activity information for N athletes
and compute load adjustments for the N athletes. For theM machines of the virtual
team operated by real athletes, physical load adjustments are actually made; for the N
—M simulated athletes, adjustments can be made to the simulation calculations,
appropriately altering the effort data corresponding to each simulated athlete. The
method of measurement, calculation, and apparatus ment herein described
constitutes a form of closed-loop l.
The team algonthm, operating on real activity data from M real es
and simulated activity data from N—M ted es, and consequently
ing the loads specified for both real and simulated athletes on an N—member
team, is designed to imate the performance of an actual athletic apparatus (e.g.,
rowboat) operated jointly by the N team members. By ng the parameters of the
team algorithm, the physical responses of various apparatuses may be simulated (e.g.,
4-rower craft of a first type, 4-rower craft of a second type, 8-rower craft). Real
athletes participating in a virtual team experience time-varying resistance from their
se machines that reflects the efforts of other team members, real and simulated,
in a manner imating joint team operation of a real physical tus, even
though other real team members are operating physically separate machines that may
be geographically distant. In an example, the exercise machine 204 is a rowing
machine and the athlete 202 is a rower participating in a virtual team rowing a virtual
four-person soul]. The resistance presented by the handle or oar to athlete 202 will
vary throughout each stroke and from stroke to stroke in a manner that depends via
the team algorithm on the timing, power, and other features of the strokes of athlete
202, on the strokes of the other three athletes on the team, and on the teristics of
the watercraft model chosen as the viItual apparatus (e.g, four-person scull).
er, the outputs of the operator interface 216 are typically d in
coordination with team performance as determined by the team algorithm. In an
example, the interface 216 comprises a virtual-reality headset, the virtual apparatus
simulated is a four-rower watercraft, a participating athlete 202 experiences a visual
field with coordinated audio g them in a specific position in the virtual
watercraft in a given water environment, and the watercraft is seen by the athlete 202
to move through its environment in a manner dependent on the team’s joint efforts.
One or more competing virtual watercraft may be represented in the ved
environment, either simulated or partly or wholly rowed by real athletes, and real
competing athletes may be ed with complementary points of view in the virtual
y. Quantitative data on individual performance, team performance, competitor
performance, and other variables can be made selectively available (e. g., visually) to
individual athletes, coaches, teams, and others. Audio, video, and other data gathered
from athletes and other parties (e.g., coaches, onlookers) may be integrated variously
with the outputs of the operator interface 216 to produce virtual gs of varying
character, interactivity, and realism, ng the training of athletes in the
psychosocial as well as physical aspects of a sport. Sport ers may be linked to
the system through virtual—reality headsets, enabling audiences to be virtually present
at virtual races rowed by real and/or simulated athletes, where all onlookers and real
participants may be separated geographically to any degree. Other forms of interface
coordination, e. g., coach audio shared aneously to all athletes on a virtual team,
are also contemplated and within the scope of the disclosure. All such applications,
r elaborate, depend on the lity of various embodiments of the disclosure
to mechanically produce for each individual exercise-machine user an exercise
experience that reflects both that e user’s efforts and the simultaneous s
of other users, real and/or simulated.
It is possible to apply the described apparatus and methods to other types
of se machines. In an example, the exercise machine 204 of is a
stationary bicycle that can te real-world load conditions of various
topographies, drafting effects from different locations in a riding pack, tandem riding,
etc, whether for a single rider or simultaneously for members of a team using a
networked group of similar exercise machines. In another example, the exercise
machine 204 is a cross-country ski machine that can simulate various topographies,
wind conditions, snow types, etc. In general, any suitable type of exercise e
can employ the described apparatus and methods to enhance group workouts and to
enable the use of customized, possibly time—varying load profiles for individual
workouts.
The ages of embodiments of the disclosure may, in some instances,
be realized by modifying or retrofitting an existing exercise machine built according
to the prior art. depicts the retrofitting of an exercise machine 302 built
according to the prior art with an illustrative “retrofit kit” 304. The machine 302 is,
before retrofit, similar to the machine 104 of The load mechanism of the
prior-art machine 302, corresponding to the load mechanism 110 of machine 104 of
is removed and replaced by the retrofit kit 304, which comprises an electrical
machine 306, load 308, er 310 capable of communicating with a network 230,
and an operator interface 314. The properties of the electrical machine 306, load 308,
computer 310, and interface 314 are as described above with reference to
corresponding components in For t to occur, an appropriate
transmission mechanism (not shown) must in general exist or be provided (e.g., as
part of the kit) for linking the inertial ism 316 of the machine 302 to the
electrical machine 306 of the kit 304. In an e, the inertial mechanism of a
rowing machine comprises a flywheel, the electrical machine 306 of the retrofit kit
304 comprises a rotary electrical generator, and with appropriate attachment
hardware, a sprocket-and-chain transmission can be employed to link the flywheel to
the generator.
Reference is now made to , which schematically s an
illustrative network 400 comprising a number of se machines (e. g., trainer 402),
each similar to the exercise machine 204 of For simplicity, the k 400
comprises L physical locations (e.g., gymnasia), each with K rs (total N = L X K
trainers), each trainer potentially odating a single athlete. Ellipses indicate
trainers not explicitly depicted. In the topology of , ication pathways
(e.g., pathway 404) enable each trainer to icate with at least one additional
trainer. It is to be understood that shows a limited number of exercise
machine communication pathways for the sake of clarity, but that in general each
r in the network can be connected to every other, further, it is a well-known
mathematical result that the total number of possible communication pathways (one
node direct to another) in such an arrangement is N(N —1)/2. In the illustrative
network topology of , software running on the ational capabilities of
the individual trainers enables the trainers to communicate with each other and thus
for the operators of various trainers to associate with each other in one or more teams.
For example, in , the operators (e.g, athletes or rowers) of trainers 402, 406,
408, and 410 (highlighted by r outlines) have associated into a four-member
team All four team members can now work out simultaneously on a common l
apparatus (e.g., four-person scull), the load experienced by each team member will be
adjusted in real time, as a function of the efforts of all team members and the chosen
load profile of the virtual apparatus, to approximate the sensation of engaging with a
jointly ed physical apparatus. The network 400 may also be referred to as a
simulation system or a crew training tion system.
depicts another example of a four-member team 414 in the
k 400 (best seen in ), for clarity showing only the trainers of team
s and the communications pathways connecting them. Team 414 consists of
the operators of trainers 402, 406, 410, and the virtual operator of a simulated
operator trainer 416. The activity data of simulated trainer 416 can be calculated
locally (i.e., redundantly) by the computational capabilities of all three trainers 402,
406, 410 or can be calculated by any one of the trainers 402, 406, 410 and
communicated to the other two.
Another illustrative embodiment of a k with additional details and
having a topology that differs from that of FIGS. 4A and 4B, is schematically
depicted in The illustrative topology of FIGS. 4A and 4B is decentralized,
whereas the illustrative topology of is centralized: additional architectures will
be readily envisaged by persons familiar with the art of device networking and
control, and all such architectures are contemplated and within the scope of the
disclosure. The embodiment of comprises a crew training tion system
500. The system 500 comprises some number N of trainers with associated real
operators, e.g., trainers 502, 504, 506. Ellipses indicate trainers not explicitly
depicted. Trainer 502 is typical of the trainers comprised by the system 500. The
computer device 508 of trainer 502 runs a program (application, app) 510 termed the
Crew App. The program 510 implements the team algorithm (not shown), a user
interface 512 that s interactions with the or of the trainer 502, a
communications and media interface 514 that s interactions with the network
516 (which corresponds to the network 230 of , and other functions. In the
illustrative system 500 of the network 516 is the internet and the computer
device 508 communicates with the network 516 via a standard wireless technology
(e.g., WiFi, Bluetooth). The s trainers (e. g., trainers 504, 506) communicate
ndently and simultaneously with the k 516, the numberN of trainers
ted to the network 516 typically increases and decreases over time as trainers
are logged in and out of the system 500. In one e, only trainers occupied by
operators will be logged in, i.e., in active communication with the network 516. The
trainers may communicate directly with each other through the network 516, or may
communicate with each other solely or primarily through the agency of a server 518,
which is also in ication with the network 516. The server 518 can be a
computing device (e.g., laptop, desktop, tablet) capable of overseeing coordination of
trainers, communications between trainers and operators, simulation of team
operation of l apparatuses, other simulation tasks (e.g., virtual reality
generation), and storage, retrieval, and tion of data pertaining to the operation
of the system 500 (e.g., data pertaining the conduct of simulated training runs and
competitions). In various embodiments, the server 518 is not a y computing
device (e.g., laptop er), that is, its computational and data-storage capabilities
may be realized by multiple devices, either redundantly or in a distributed (e.g.,
cloud-computing) manner, where such multiple devices may include the computer
s comprised by the trainers. Thus, no restriction is intended by the
representation of the server 518 as a unitary device in The server 518
comprises a database layer 520 that implements access to one or more databases, e. g,
an operators database 522 (recording information pertaining to individual operators,
both real and simulated), a coaches database 524 (recording information pertaining to
coaches or other coordinative system users), an tus database 526 ining
information pertaining to virtual apparatuses), and potentially other databases 528,
indicated in by ellipses, which may contain any data deemed pertinent to the
conduct of the system 500 (e.g., measured mechanical characteristics of dual
trainers, es and statistics pertaining to simulated .
The server 518 comprises software programs that implement various
functional aspects of the system 500. These programs can include a database app 530,
which maintains the contents of the database layer 520 and retrieves information for
serving to trainers and other devices as needed; a tion app 532, which
calculates the team algorithm, ates the activities of simulated operators, and
ms other calculative tasks; an administrative app 534, which enables a master
user to act at an operations management level; a developer app 536, which enables
access to the application programming interfaces of the system for application
2016/028282
development; and a root app 538, which enables master control over other user
categories and access to everything contained in the database layer 520. In various
embodiments, the functions realized in the illustrative system 500 by the database
layer 520 and the apps 530, 532, 534, 536, and 538 are realized by a differently
organized set of applications or software modules. Moreover, the system 500 can
comprise one or more additional computing devices, e.g., a coach device 540
supplying authorized access to a “coach,” i.e., user having coordinative,
strative, or oversight powers. The coach device 540 may in various
ments or modes of operation of system 500 be the computer device of one of
the trainers (e.g., r 502), a laptop or desktop, or a mobile computing device. The
network 516 may also communicate with other networks and with devices ted
thereto.
In an illustrative mode of operation of system 500, a coach device 540,
communicating with the server 518, is authorized to work with some subset of the N
rs logged on to the system 500. For example, the coach device 540 may be one
of a d number of coach devices at a university authorized to access the system
500 as part of a paid subscription e. The user of coach device 540, employing a
software capability running on their computer device, chooses the operators ofP
trainers, a subset of the N trainers, to be members of a virtual team. The user of the
coach device 540 also specifies a specific virtual apparatus and, potentially, other
conditions that will influence the load profile of the run (e. g., race topology, wind
conditions, race on). The server 518 sets up a computational model (e.g., team
thm) with parameters set and/or updated during simulation to reflect the s
transmitted by the coach device 540 and other pertinent variables (e.g., trainer-
specific mechanical characteristics) and employing also as inputs ty data from
the P team members. The run begins on a signal from the coach device 540 or at a set
time, whereupon activity data from the P trainers begins to be transmitted to the
server 518 through the network 516. The server 518 computationally models the
behavior of the Virtual apparatus based on its various parameters and the activity data
received and transmits instructions for each of the P trainers accordingly to modify
the loads experienced by the trainer operators (e.g., by increasing or decreasing the
current to a generator winding). The run terminates at r signal or time. The
server 518 records in its database layer 520 all data received or generated by the
server 518 during the course of the run, which may include activity data from the
trainers, operators’ metric data that may have been transmitted through the
network 516 from activity monitors, race outcomes, and the like.
The gy of requires on the order ofN communicative
ls, as opposed to the N(N — 1)/2 channels of the topology of
The number of distinct Virtual teams that can be assembled using either the
topology of or of grows rapidly with N. By the binomial theorem, the
number of possible teams of size P that can be specified from N operators without
regard to order (i.e., the number of combinations of size P) is given by the binomial
ient, N! /(P!(N — P)!). However, in many sports team—member ordering does
matter (e. g., it matters where crew members are seated in a boat); in such sports, the
number of teams of size P that can be specified from N operators with regard to order
(i.e., number of permutations of size P) is NP. Thus, embodiments of the disclosure
enable athletes, including both athletes at a single facility and athletes at widely
separated facilities, to be rapidly and easily combined and recombined in a potentially
very large number of Virtual teams of various sizes, exercising on Virtual apparatuses
and in Virtual environments of practically unlimited number. This capability is not
offered in practicable form by the prior art (which es athletes to le at a
common location to practice as a team, and to jointly e large user training
apparatuses, or actual athletic apparatuses in the field, to train as a team). The
combinatoric team—forming capability of embodiments of the disclosure offers many
advantages: e. g., a coach can easily try out a number of team permutations to see
which is the most competitive under specified environmental conditions, using
specified athletic apparatuses, and so on.
In another illustrative mode of ion of system 500, more than one
Virtual team may be assembled at a time, by one or more s, from among the N
available trainers (assuming ently large N) and set to compete against each
other in a Virtual race. The simulation of each team’s run may occur independently of
the simulation of each other team’s run, or the simulation app 532 may comprise
provisions for modeling interactions of teams in a Virtual nment.
In yet another illustrative mode of operation of system 500, one or more
team members of one or more Virtual teams may be simulated by the server 518. At
one extreme, all participating athletes are real and no ted athletes are employed;
in various mixed cases, one or more real athletes and one or more simulated athletes
are employed; and at another extreme, all athletes are simulated. The latter mode of
operation of system 500 may be used for training of coaches, for investigation of
s styles of team formation and competition tactics, and other purposes.
schematically s in side View portions of an illustrative
embodiment of the sure sing a rowing machine 600. The rowing
machine 600 is operated by a rower 602 and comprises a sliding seat 604, a foot
stretcher (brace) 606, a handle 608, a connective structure 610 (only partly depicted),
a user interface device 612, and a protective housing 614. The rowing machine 600
also comprises, inside the protective g 614, a flywheel 616, a generator 618, a
first sprocket 620 attached to the l 616, a loop chain 622, a second sprocket
624 attached to the generator 618, an ical load bank 626, wiring 628 conveying
electrical power from the generator 618 to the ical load bank 626, a fan 630 that
cools the electrical load bank 626, and a computer device (controller) 632. The
controller 632 is equipped with a wireless ication capability 634 (e.g., WiFi
or Bluetooth) that enables the ller 632 to communicate, through a network (best
seen in with other s (best seen in , e. g., rowing es similar
to machine 600 or various computing devices connected to the network, such as a
server. The handle 608 and connective structure 610 (a pullable cord or chain)
communicate via a standard force-transferring mechanism (not shown) with the
flywheel 616, enabling a force ted by the rower 602 to urge the motion of the
flywheel 616 (i.e., during performance of an oarstroke). That is, the rower 602, by
pulling on the handle 608, applies a torque Tathlete to the flywheel 616. The resistance
of the flywheel 616 to acceleration is determined by its moment of inertia and by any
retarding torque applied to the flywheel 616, e.g., torque applied Via the sprocket 620.
Thus, for example, the electrical generator 618 communicates a torque load to the
flywheel via sprocket 624, chain 622, and sprocket 620, increasing the resistance to
acceleration of the flywheel 616. Increased resistance to acceleration of the flywheel
616 is felt by the rower 602 as increased pulling resistance.
The rowing machine 600 is illustrative: other configurations, which will be
known to persons having skill in the art, are possible. In the illustrative embodiment
of , the generator 618 is an alternator. Various s, wires, and other
components of the machine 600 are not depicted in for the sake of clarity.
ing again to , one particular example of the exercise
machine 600 can be a rowing machine as described above. The exercise machine 600
includes a cyclical or 608, which can be a handle. In one e, the handle
can be configured to ate a handle of an oar used on a typical watercraft, such as
a multi-rower shell. The cyclical actuator 608 is movably mounted to the exercise
e 600.
Referring again to , an illustrative example of an exercise machine
according to this disclosure can be a rowing machine 600 as described above.
Components corresponding to some parts of the illustrative machine 600 can be
comprised by exercise machines according to various other embodiments of the
disclosure as follows. The handle 608 of can be generally understood as a
cyclical actuator, which can take various forms in various embodiments. In one
example, a cyclic actuator is configured to replicate a handle of an oar used on a
typical watercraft, such as a multi-rower shell. In general, the al actuator is
movably coupled via a connective structure to the exercise machine (e. g., rowing
machine 600).
Various exercise machines according to the disclosure e mechanical
energy storage devices, e.g., flywheel 616 of machine 600. (Mechanical energy is
stored in all moving components of an exercise system, including the athlete, but
herein the phrase “mechanical energy storage device” refers to a device whose
primary function is to store mechanical energy.) In the example of , the
mechanical energy storage device is the flywheel 616 mounted to the exercise
machine 600: the connective structure 610 (cord) operatively connects the cyclical
actuator 608 (handle) to the mechanical energy storage device 616 (flywheel).
It is to be understood that the mechanical energy storage device can
e structures other than the flywheel 616. For example, a motor that has
sufficient inertia may act as both the flywheel 616 and the electrical generator 618.
Other mechanical energy storage devices are also contemplated.
In s ments, this relationship of parts (cyclic or,
connective ure, mechanical energy storage device) can be realized by various
mechanisms. In an e, any suitable connective ure can be used (e.g.,
strap, cord, chain, lever, friction wheel, pedal crank arm) that provides a physical
connection between the cyclical actuator (e.g., handle, pedal, ski) and the mechanical
energy storage device (e.g., flywheel, spring, moveable weight, moving fluid). In one
example, a connective ure can be configured to be actuated like an oar on a
watercraft. In another example, a connective structure can be placed directly in front
of the operator and pulled rearward as shown in . Other examples of
connective structures include multiple components and combinations of components
such as gears, shafts, axles, jointed rods, etc. Regardless of the physical make-up of
the tive structure, the tive structure transfers and/or transforms a force
generated by an operator of the exercise machine in such a manner that motion of the
cyclical actuator urges motion of the mechanical energy e device (e. g., rotation
of a flywheel).
In an illustrative class of rowing machines according to some
embodiments of the invention, the connective structure includes an upper axle. The
upper axle can be operably connected to the cyclic actuator (i.e., handle) ly or
via portions of a connective structure such that the rowing action of an operator urges
the upper axle to rotate. The upper axle is mounted to the l such that rotation
of the upper axle urges the flywheel to rotate. A transmission mechanism connects
the l to a lower axle ted to an electrical generator. The dual
components of the handle, the connective structure, the flywheel, the two axles, and
the transmission ism coupling the two axles can be collectively thought of as a
drivetrain to transmit motion from the operator to an electrical generator. In this
example and in various other embodiments, the ical generator 618 can be any
le device including, but not limited to, a separately excited electric machine
(SEPEX), alternating current (AC) induction, permanent-magnet alternating current
(PMAC), brushless direct current motor (BLDC), etc. Additionally, the described
components are but one example of a drivetrain, and any suitable means of
transferring motion can be employed by exercise machines according to various
embodiments of the disclosure.
Continuing discussion of the foregoing example, an exercise machine
(e.g., e 600 of ) in the illustrative class of machines exercise machine
comprises an electrical generator 618 having a rotatable shaft that is ted to the
lower axle. The rotatable shaft of the electrical generator 618 is the lower axle. The
ical generator is operatively connected to the flywheel 616 through the
drivetrain such that rotation of the upper axle and/or the l 616 urges rotation
of the rotatable shaft in the electrical generator 618. Rotation of the motor on the
generator shaft creates an ical signal. In some s of the illustrative class
of machines, the electrical generator 618 is an alternator which creates an electrical
signal that is AC, which can be converted to a direct current (DC). It is to be noted
that any le electrical generator can be used in various embodiments comprising
an electrical machine. Also, exercise machines in the illustrative class of machines
according to various embodiments can include a converter (e.g., a rectifier) in
electrical communication with the electrical generator 618 and a resistive load bank
626. In one example, the converter converts the AC electrical signal delivered from
the alternator to DC electrical signal that is passed to the electrical load bank. In other
s of the illustrative class, the converter can be integral to the alternator such
that the alternator rs a DC ical signal output.
In an exemplary member of the illustrative class, the resistive load bank
626 is configured to supplement the load resistance of the flywheel 616. The resistive
load bank 626 is in electrical communication with the electrical generator 618. The
resistive load bank 626 can be ered part of the “armature circuit.” In another
exemplary member of the illustrative class of machines, a wire s delivers the
electrical signal from the electrical generator 618 to the electrical load bank 626 and
the electrical signal is dissipated at the electrical load bank 626, typically by
generating heat. In one example, heat generated in the electrical load bank 626 can be
dissipated using at least one fan 630. The rate of fan speed can be proportional to the
average electrical load through the electrical load bank 626.
Additionally, the electrical load bank 626 can comprise various different
structures to achieve the goal of dissipating the electrical energy created by physical
work by the rower 602 input into the electrical generator 618. In one example, the
electrical load bank 626 can comprise a series of ors that dissipate at least a
portion of the electrical signal d by the electrical tor 618. In another
example, the electrical load bank 626 can comprise a combination of ance
elements and capacitance elements. In yet another example, the electrical load bank
626 can comprise thermo-electric generators. The thermo-electric generators can
ially decrease the overall size of the electrical load bank 626 and provide
electrical cooling to the electrical load bank 626.
The operative organization of rowing machine 600, which is typical of a
number of rowing machines according to various embodiments of the disclosure, is
schematically clarified in , with the omission for clarity of control pathways
from the controller 632 to the alternator 618, load bank 626, and other components,
and with the addition of several ents comprised by various embodiments but
not depicted in . In particular, as shown in the power output of the
alternator 618 may be passed through an electrical converter 636. The electrical
ter 636 can include an AC/DC converter and/or a DC/DC converter, and the
resulting DC power may be ated in the load bank 626 and/or used to charge a
battery 638 (e.g, a twelve—volt, sealed-lead—acid battery or a fifteen—volt lithium-ion
battery), here understood to comprise an appropriate ng mechanism, which may
in turn supply power to the controller 632, the user interface or display device 612,
one or more windings of the alternator 618, and possibly other devices. By means of
the electrical ter 636 and battery 63 8, the rowing machine 600 may be made
self-powering as regards its electrical devices. In various ments, the electrical
converter 636 can be integral to the alternator 618 such that the alternator 618 rs
a DC electrical output . For simplicity, the illustrative exercise machine 600
shown in does not comprise a ter 636 or battery 63 8.
Referring again to the rative machine 600 of , provisions are
made (but, for clarity, not depicted in ) for acquiring measurement data of a
number of operative variables of the exercise machine 600, to be more particularly
described below. These data are conveyed (e. g., by ) to the controller 632,
which can use these data in cooperation with various tunable parameters and a team
algorithm stored in a memory lity to compute the team algorithm. The outputs
of the team algorithm are used by the controller 632 to alter the load experienced by
the rower 602, as shall be described. For example, as the rower 602 pulls the handle
608, this action moves the flywheel 616, which in turn rotates the alternator 618 to
create an electrical signal that is dissipated by the load bank 626. The algorithm
calculated by the controller 632 can be used to simulate real-world ions of
various rowing apparatuses including, but not limited to, a one-person scull, two-
person scull, four-person scull, two-person sweep, four-person sweep, and eight-
person sweep.
Discussion hereinbelow will first focus on the provision of a specific load
profile to a user of isolated e 600, that is, on a state of ion not
incorporating activity data from other trainers or from simulated operators. Although
this discussion refers for the sake of specificity and clarity to machine 600 of , it will be clear to persons familiar with the science of engineering that the
principles thus clarified will, with riate adjustments, apply equally to various
other embodiments.
First, it is to be noted that the effort produced by the rower 602 at any
moment can be characterized by the instantaneous torque Tathlete exerted by the rower
602 on the flywheel 616 via the connective ure 610, The torque Tathlete may be
considered under two aspects, i.e., actual or measured Tathlete and targeted or desired
Tread. Actual Tamas is produced by the rower 602; targeted Tread is a numerically
calculated quantity which the exercise machine 600 will, in typical ion, proceed
to produce in response to a changing state of the exercise machine 600. In l,
the goal of a rower is to row at a certain rate (which, in a team context, is ideally
synchronous with the rowing of team-mates): e. g., to produce a certain rate of
acceleration, as during startup, or to maintain a certain speed, as during a cruising
phase. Also, in the exercise machine 600, the rotational velocity 0) of the flywheel
616 is analogous to watercraft speed: i.e., the angular momentum of the l 616
turning at a given 03 is analogous to the linear momentum of a crew-bearing watercraft
moving at a given velocity. Similarly, the effort (Tathlete) required to increase or
maintain the rotational velocity 03 of the l 616 is determined by the moment of
inertia J of the l 616 and by any torque loads on the flywheel 616, and this
effort is analogous to that required to increase or in the velocity of a watercraft,
which is determined by the inertia of the watercraft and crew and by any fluid drag on
the watercraft. The function of the controller 632 can, in this context, be stated as
follows: To require of the rower 602, as the rower 602 seeks to maintain a certain
power output, an actual Tread that matches a calculated, target Tload reflecting
hypothetical physical conditions. These hypothetical physical ions are
determined by a hypothetical apparatus (e,g., boat type) moving in a etical
physical environment. Herein, we refer to a numerical characterization of the
apparatus and environment as a “load profile.” Thus, targeted ngad is in general a
on both of a load profile and the state of operation of the exercise machine 600,
2016/028282
ing actual te, 0;), and all settable and/or intrinsic loads that contribute to the
load experienced by the rower 602. The numerical values used to set settable loads in
the exercise machine 600 may be influenced by the measured activities of both the
rower 602 and other rowers on other machines, real or simulated, hence the ability of
various embodiments of the disclosure to produce a joint training experience for
rowers on physically separate exercise machines. These general considerations, with
other considerations discussed with nce to the rative exercise machine 600
shown as a rowing machine, will be understood to apply also, with appropriate
modifications, to other forms of exercise machines and ic apparatus. This
disclosure now turns to portions of the closed-loop control method employed by the
illustrative exercise machine 600.
As will be clear to persons familiar with electrical machines, the excitation
of an alternator, e.g., alternator 618, can be controlled by pulse-width modulation of
the excitation current of the field g, that is, by switching the field-winding
voltage on and off at a fixed frequency but with a variable duty cycle. The exercise
machine 600 can thus adjust, by altering the duty cycle of a pulse-width-modulated
voltage source, the average excitation current of the alternator 618, which in turn
affects the torque load placed on the flywheel 616 by the alternator 618 and thus the
load experienced by the rower 602. To accomplish this, the controller 632 calculates
an estimate of a torque value, Tathlete, that is applied by the rower 602 to the flywheel
616. The calculation of Tathlete is based on several measured variables of machine
operation along with a set of pre-recorded variables enting physical
characteristics of the exercise machine 600. Calculations can be performed, in
s embodiments, using various algorithmic models. In one example, sensors
monitor armature voltage Vann of the alternator 618, a field current Ifld in the field
t of the alternator, and a onal velocity 0) of the flywheel 616. The
rotational acceleration 0t of the flywheel 616 can be estimated from ed
measurements of the flywheel rotational velocity 03. Additionally, an armature t
[arm of the alternator 618 can be calculated based upon the sensed value of the
armature e Varm. In an example, the power output of the alternator 618 can be
between zero (0) and one (1) kilowatt.
The programmed physical characteristics of the exercise machine 600 can
include ance of the electrical load bank, Rload (which may in, various
embodiments, be a controllable quantity); inductance of the field circuit, Lfld;
resistance of the field Rfld; resistance of the armature, Ram, inductance of the
armature, Lam; mutual inductance between the armature and the field circuit 38, Laf;
moment of inertia of the flywheel 616, J ; and a number of drivetrain g
coefficients, e. g., b0, b1, and b2, so called because they appear in torque terms
proportional to powers of 03. The values for Laf, J, Ram, Rfld, Rload, b0, b1, and b2 are
system characteristics initially identified during design of the exercise machine 600
and can be refined for each individual exercise machine 600 during a calibration
process at or near the end of the manufacturing process, or at a later time.
In an example, the controller 632 can use the described values to calculate
an estimate of the applied torque value Tathlete, which can be a sum of a mechanical
, Tmech, and an electrical torque, Telse, using the following equations:
EQUATION 1: Tathlete = Tmech + Telse
where Tmech is the sum of an inertial term and several drag terms, i.e.,
ON 2: Tmech = (J >< 0t) + be + (b1 X 0)) + ([92 X 032)
and where
EQUATION 3: Telec = Laf >< Ind >< [am
Note that Teiec is proportional to Ifld, where Ifld is a readily controllable
quantity, as explained above. Also, [arm may be varied by ng the net resistance
of the electrical load bank.
It is to be understood that EQUATIONS 1—3 are illustrative only, and that
additional or other variables and equations can be employed to te Tathlete, and
that other or additional variables can be sensed to accomplishing the same purpose
without departing from the spirit of this disclosure. For example, the current of the
armature, Iarm, can be sensed or measured and used directly in the above Telec equation
without sensing or measuring Vann first and then calculating [am using Ohm’s law.
Sensing or measuring any number of variables is anticipated by the present disclosure.
Persons having skill in the art of electrical engineering will readily understand the
above calculations, and also that it is possible to measure a y of variables to use
in various ations to accomplish the same purpose.
The calculated value for Tathlete (e. g., rowing ty; torque actually
d by the athlete) is applied to a dynamic model of a desired load profile (e. g.,
WO 72103
numerical model of a ular apparatus) to arrive at the appropriate load that the
operator should ence. A dynamic model of the exercise machine 600 itself is
then referenced for converting the desired load to an appropriate actuation d.
For the purposes of this disclosure, an appropriate actuation command can be any
number of actions taken by the controller 632 to selectively modify the load
experienced by the operator of the exercise machine 600.
In one example, the controller 632 can change at least one value used in
one or both of the expressions for Tmech and Telec shown above. Changing at least one
of the values in these equations changes the load experienced by the operator. For
example, the controller 632 can alter the value of one or more of the values J, b0, b1,
or b2 of the Tmech equation so that the exercise machine 600 feels like an actual
watercraft; or, as noted above, Ind and/or [am may be altered. By comparison, rowing
devices according to the prior art can change the torque load on the rower only if a
damper is physically (usually manually) moved to increase or decrease an d
area used for air passage so that a flywheel loaded by a fan shifts its operating point
on a continuum n acting as a predominantly inertial load (damper 100%
closed) and acting predominantly as a pump (damper 100% open). The closed-loop
methods of load control employed in various embodiments of the disclosure allow
tion of operator load at onic speeds and thus, advantageously, the
simulation of y shifting, slowly shifting, and constant real-world loads.
Moreover, the apparatus and methods of various embodiments enable the
controller 632 to alter the torque load experienced by the operator to match a ed
simulated—apparatus profile. In an example, the calculated Tmech has to make up any
difference between Teiec and the desired torque load Tathiete based on the selected
profile and state of trainer operation. As shown in EQUATION 2, the value of Tmech
is a function of velocity and acceleration of the flywheel 616. One method of
providing a different load for the exercise machine operator (e. g., rower 602) is to
change at least one of the damping coefficients for a given velocity of the flywheel
616 and then change at least one of [fld and [arm to alter Telse so that the actual value of
te is equal to or is substantially equal to the desired value of Tioad.
Moreover, the controller 632 can be programmed to replicate the load felt
by an operator on any number of actual watercraft or exercise es. In one
example, the described exercise machine 600 can mimic the feel of known rowing
machines. In other examples, the described exercise machine 600 can mimic the feel
of any number of actual watercraft such as the previously mentioned one-person scull,
two-person scull, four-person scull, two—person sweep, four-person sweep, or eight—
person sweep. The exercise machine 600 can mimic any number of other watercraft,
exercise devices, etc. with each mimicked device represented by a different profile
that can be stored in the memory of the controller. Each profile can include changes
to any number of the J, b0, b1, and [)2 values.
In one example, the process for mimicking a particular device can be
described as follows. The dynamic model is in the thm as represented in the
Tmech equation shown above. This model can be similar to some existing rowing
es that provide relatively close approximations of rowing while off the water.
The controller 632 then conducts calculations to match the load felt by the operator to
what the operator would feel as if they were rowing on the water in a particular
watercraft. The controller 632 then applies the resultant load (e.g., Tathlete) to the
dynamic model of the Tmech equation. The controller 632 can include memory
allocations for the inertia J and g ients b0, b1, and [)2 for the separately
excited electric machine 618.
For e, the flywheel 616 can be specified, designed, and/or
constructed to have particular inertia value J. In some examples, the b0, b1, and b2
damping coefficients are almost ible. Additionally, in some examples, there
can be additional damping coefficients; however, these terms are often not significant
enough to ntially affect the calculation result. The controller 632 will then
calculate a value for Tathlete (the load felt by the operator) using the constants for Laf, J,
b0, b1, and [92.
The controller 632 then accesses a desired torque value for the particular
desired profile (e. g., a four-person scull) selected by the operator. Because Telse is
lled, the controller 632 will conduct ations to augment the Telec value with
a new Tmech value such that the Tathlete is equal to or is substantially close to the d
torque value for the desired profile. In one example, the same Tmech and Telse
equations are used by the controller 632, except that new values for the a and
damping coefficients e the previous ones, for example the equation can use J ’,
bo’, b1’, [)2 ’rather than J, b0, b1, and b2 to calculate a value for Tmech. The controller
632 will then add the Telse and the new Tmech torque values to ascertain whether actual
Tathlete is equal to or is substantially close to the desired Tamas. If not, the ller
632 can re—calculate Tmech using yet another set of inertia and damping coefficients.
This process can continue within the controller until an appropriate Tathlete value is
The controller 632 then applies the known inertia and damping coefficients
to the Tmech equation to make the exercise machine 600 “feel like” the selected
apparatus (e.g., a four-person scull). Each actual apparatus moves very differently on
the water; e. g., it is to be iated that a one-person apparatus can exhibit
relatively fast acceleration values and have a relatively low top speed on the water.
Another tus, such as an person tus, can exhibit relatively slow
acceleration and have a relatively high top speed. The Tmech on shown above
can mimic each of the apparatus and their various characteristics with the proper
values forJ, b0, b1, and b2.
It is to be appreciated from the above equations that the torque load the
operator ences (Tathlete) is a function of the current at the re (law), which
can be calculated after measuring or sensing Varm, and of the current h the field
circuit (Ifld), which is a closed loop control variable. The controller 632 constantly
measures and adjusts the [ad modulator to produce the desired Tathlete. In one example,
if Ifld is higher than the value required to replicate the selected , the controller
632 can decrease the duty cycle of [fld to reduce the average (effective) Ifld. Similarly,
the controller 632 can increase the duty cycle if the value of Ifld is too low. The
controller 632 can monitor and adjust Ifld at relatively short intervals such that Ifld is
adjusted as needed. In this way, [ml is controlled such that the exercise machine 600
can approximate real-world conditions of various rowing apparatus as described
above.
Referring again to , in one e, wherein the exercise e
is in at least some modes of operation self-powering, the battery 638 can provide the
controller 632 with electrical power. Additionally, the battery 638 can provide power
to the field circuit of the alternator 618 for a relatively short time as the rower 602
begins to operate the exercise machine. Once the operator 602 begins moving the
connective structure 610 (e. g., by rowing), the electrical converter 636 will replenish
electrical charge removed from the battery 638 while the operator 602 completes one
or more strokes during an exercise period. In an example, electrical energy can be
diverted from the electrical circuit of the electric machine 618 before the electrical
signal reaches the electrical load bank 626, and the diverted electrical energy can be
supplied to the battery 638. In another example, the y 638 can draw power from
the electrical load bank 626 to maintain a charge. As an alternative, a rd wall
power supply (e.g, 110-volt , not depicted) can be used to provide power to the
battery 638. In yet another example, a battery charger can accept electrical supply
from a combination of the standard wall power supply and the ical energy
created by operating the exercise machine 600.
The exercise e 600 can communicate with at least one additional
associated exercise machine (e.g., via the direct-interconnect topology of , the
centralized topology of or some other topology). Communication between
exercise machines can provide the benefit of having multiple operators working out
on multiple machines against an effectively shared load. For example, an operator in
one on can operate an exercise machine set to a desired load profile to replicate
a four-person scull, while three additional operators can operate three additional
exercise machines with the same desired load profile, each operator working against
the same load. In an example, the exercise machine 600 exchanges activity data with
each of the three ated exercise machines, and this data can be incorporated in
controller and/or server calculations to achieve desired closed-loop control
characteristics.
Various le algorithms can incorporate various data items, including
activity data from multiple machines, to achieve desired closed-loop l
characteristics with the apparatus and methods of the present disclosure. In an
example where e 600 is one ofP comparable exercise es (e.g., with
similar flywheels) combined virtually in a group-training fashion, using the inertia J
of the flywheel 616 and the d acceleration Otdes of the flywheel 616, one can
calculate a net torque, Tnet, acting on the flywheel 616 using
Tnet = J X owes
Solving for desired onal acceleration owes, one obtains:
owes = Tnet / J
If the desired rotational velocity of the flywheels of the P es is codes,
then, integrating with respect to time,
OJdes : fades
This can be combined with all known applied torque(s) from each of the
associated exercise machines to determine a desired rotational velocity, (Bags, for the
flywheels using desired damping coefficients bOdes, bides, and bzdes:
EQUATION 4: (Ddes : ,/'((Tcrew — {bOdes + (bldes X 03) + (bZdes X 032)» /Jdes)
In ON 4, Jdes is the desired flywheel inertia, 03 is the actual
rotational ty of the flywheel, and
TCrew = Z Tammoyp, z' : 1, . . . P
where TatmeteU) is the torque applied by the 1th of the P athletes.
Tnet in the above description is the desired Tioad, and, the Tcrew term can be
calculated for an arbitrary number of athletes as appropriate.
EQUATION 4 can be used to directly perform closed loop speed control.
Any number of closed loop control methodologies can be applied to achieve desired
closed loop control characteristics. Examples of closed-loop control methodologies
can include, but are not limited to: tional-integral-derivative control, lag-
compensation, h-infinity, state-space, etc.
Many activities are enabled by the ing and various other
embodiments of the disclosure that were not enabled at all, or were d less
conveniently or more expensively, by the prior art. A non-exhaustive list of
rative use cases is hereby presented to illustrate the highly flexible potential of
embodiments of the disclosure:
- An athlete may exercise on an isolated exercise machine at a fixed load level
t engaging a load profile (virtual apparatus): that is, the athlete may
engage in normal stand-alone machine se, as on a typical prior—art
machine.
- An athlete may exercise on an isolated exercise machine which simulates the
load profile of a specific athletic tus.
- An athlete may exercise on a networked exercise machine as part of a virtual
team of other real athletes on other exercise machines y operating a
specific virtual apparatus, where the athletes involved may be at various
phical distances from each other.
- An athlete may exercise as part of a virtual team of whose other members one
or more are simulated.
- Athletes may be combined and recombined by manipulation of appropriate
software into various teams of various sizes operating various virtual
apparatuses, and/or moved between virtual positions in a given virtual
apparatus,
- A virtual team of real athletes may compete against one or more virtual teams,
whose members may be partly or entirely real or partly or entirely simulated.
Having described the foregoing embodiments of the disclosure, it will be
apparent to those of ry skill in the art that other ments incorporating the
ts disclosed herein may be used without departing from the spirit and scope of
the disclosure. The descnbed embodiments are to be ered in all respects as
only rative and not restrictive.
Claims (17)
1. A rowing machine for group exercise, comprising: a mechanical energy storage device; a handle coupled to the mechanical energy storage device via a connective structure wherein relative movement of the handle with respect to the mechanical energy storage device urges motion of the mechanical energy storage device; an apparatus configured to dynamically supplement the resistance of the mechanical energy storage device with an added resistance; and a ller configured to adjust the added resistance to alter a load experienced by an associated rower participating in the group exercise as a member of a team of rowers by applying force to the handle as a function of the s of all members of the team and the chosen load profile of a virtual watercraft being rowed by the team of rowers so that the load of the virtual watercraft is shared between the team members; and wherein the controller ses communications capability that enables the controller to communicate with at least one additional associated rowing machine operated by r member of the team.
2. The rowing machine of claim 1, wherein the another member of the team is a real rower.
3. The rowing machine of claim 1 or claim 2, wherein the controller is configured to ively modify the load experienced by the associated rower to simulate rapidly shifting, slowly shifting, and constant real world loads of the virtual watercraft as nced by the individual s of each of the rowers rowing the virtual watercraft.
4. The rowing machine of claim 3, wherein the controller is configured to adjust and then apply one or more drive train damping coefficients to the load experienced by the ated rower in response to the sum of the individual efforts of the each of the rowers rowing the virtual watercraft.
5. The rowing machine of any one of the preceding claims, n the apparatus comprises an electrical generator coupled to the ical energy storage device via a transmission wherein the motion of the mechanical energy storage device produces an electrical signal with the electrical generator.
6. The rowing machine of claim 5, wherein the tus comprises an electrical load bank in electrical communication with the ical generator whereby a portion of the electrical signal is dissipated within the electrical load bank.
7. The rowing machine of claim 5 or claim 6, wherein the controller further comprises computer readable instructions for adapting the responsiveness of the electrical generator based on the virtual watercraft selected for the group exercise.
8. The rowing e of any one of the preceding claims, wherein the ications capability enables the controller to exchange information with a network.
9. The rowing machine of any one of the preceding claims, further comprising an apparatus configured to provide visual tion of an action taking place on the at least one additional associated rowing machine.
10. The rowing machine of any one of the preceding claims, further comprising a user interactive apparatus configured to provide aural tion of an action taking place on the at least one additional associated rowing machine.
11. The rowing machine of any one of claims 1 to 10, wherein the handle is ured to replicate a handle of an oar used when the virtual watercraft is one of a two person scull or a four person scull.
12. The rowing machine of any one of claims 1 to 10, wherein the handle is configured to replicate a handle of an oar used when the virtual watercraft is one of a two person sweep, a four person sweep, or an eight person sweep.
13. The rowing machine of any one of the ing claims, wherein the mechanical energy storage device is a flywheel.
14. A method of operating an exercise machine comprising: providing a rowing e as defined in claim 1; ining a desired load; and adjusting the added resistance to create the desired load experienced by the associated rower.
15. The method according to claim 14, wherein the apparatus comprises: an electrical generator coupled to the mechanical energy storage device via a transmission wherein the motion of the mechanical energy storage device produces an ical signal with the electrical generator; and an electrical load bank in electrical communication with the electrical generator whereby a portion of the electrical signal is dissipated within the electrical load bank; wherein the method comprises adjusting a current value through the electrical load bank to create the desired load experienced by the associated rower; and dissipating the electrical signal at the electrical load bank.
16. A kit for modifying an existing rowing machine, comprising: an electric machine; a mechanical energy storage device; a transmission for coupling the electric e to the mechanical energy e device; an electrical load bank to be coupled to the electric machine; and a controller to be placed in communication with the electric machine and the electric load bank and configured to selectively adapt the operation of the electric machine or the ic load bank to provide a dynamic selective alteration of a load experienced by an associated rower participating in a group exercise as a member of a team of rowers by ng force to a handle of the existing rowing machine as a on of the efforts of all members of the team and the chosen load profile of a virtual watercraft being rowed by the team of rowers so that the load of the virtual watercraft is shared between the team members; wherein the controller comprises communications capability that enables the controller to icate with at least one onal associated rowing machine operated by another member of the team.
17. A method of employing a kit for modifying an existing rowing machine comprising: providing an existing rowing machine; removing a flywheel, a damper, and a mechanical louver from the ng rowing machine; providing the kit for modifying the ng rowing machine, the kit including a flywheel, an ical machine, an electrical load bank, a transmission and a controller; attaching the flywheel to the existing rowing machine; attaching the electrical machine to the existing rowing e; attaching the electrical load bank to the existing rowing machine, wherein the electrical load bank is coupled to the electric machine; attaching the transmission n the ical machine and the flywheel; and g the controller in communication with the electrical machine and the electrical load bank, the controller being configured to selectively adapt the operation of the electrical machine or the electrical load bank to provide a c selective alteration of a load experienced by an associated rower participating in a group exercise as a member of a team of rowers by applying force to a handle of the existing rowing machine as a function of the efforts of all members of the team and the chosen load profile of a virtual watercraft being rowed by the team of rowers so that the load of the virtual watercraft is shared between the team members, wherein the ller comprises communications capability that enables the controller to communicate with at least one additional associated rowing machine operated by another member of the team.
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US201562149869P | 2015-04-20 | 2015-04-20 | |
US62/149,869 | 2015-04-20 | ||
PCT/US2016/028282 WO2016172103A1 (en) | 2015-04-20 | 2016-04-19 | Apparatus and method for increased realism of training on exercise machines |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
NZ736632A NZ736632A (en) | 2021-08-27 |
NZ736632B2 true NZ736632B2 (en) | 2021-11-30 |
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