WO1984001012A1 - Vehicle lighting system - Google Patents

Vehicle lighting system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1984001012A1
WO1984001012A1 PCT/AU1983/000118 AU8300118W WO8401012A1 WO 1984001012 A1 WO1984001012 A1 WO 1984001012A1 AU 8300118 W AU8300118 W AU 8300118W WO 8401012 A1 WO8401012 A1 WO 8401012A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
light
vehicle
polarizing
polarizing means
polarized
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/AU1983/000118
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Ronald Harry Brooks
Original Assignee
Brooks Ronald H
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Brooks Ronald H filed Critical Brooks Ronald H
Priority to AU18860/83A priority Critical patent/AU1886083A/en
Publication of WO1984001012A1 publication Critical patent/WO1984001012A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F21LIGHTING
    • F21SNON-PORTABLE LIGHTING DEVICES; SYSTEMS THEREOF; VEHICLE LIGHTING DEVICES SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR VEHICLE EXTERIORS
    • F21S41/00Illuminating devices specially adapted for vehicle exteriors, e.g. headlamps
    • F21S41/10Illuminating devices specially adapted for vehicle exteriors, e.g. headlamps characterised by the light source
    • F21S41/12Illuminating devices specially adapted for vehicle exteriors, e.g. headlamps characterised by the light source characterised by the type of emitted light
    • F21S41/135Polarised

Definitions

  • Difficulty is also often experienced by drivers dazzled by the lights of oncoming vehicles in adverse weathe conditions, even though the lights may be correctly aimed and on low beam, due to the greater incidence of reflected and refracted light.
  • a beam of light 21 from the headlight 12 passes through the polarizing medium 14 and is polarized thereby in the plane represented by the line 16.
  • the beam 21, on being reflected from an object 22, such as a road surface passes back to the cooperating means 17, and because the reflected polarized light is in the same plane as the polarizing medium of the means 17 as represented by the line 18, the reflected beam of light 21 passes through the means 17 to be.seen by the driver of the first vehicle.
  • the driver is able to see reflections from his vehicle's lights and objects illuminated thereby.
  • the plane of polarization of a beam of light 25 from headlight 12 is substantially at right angles to the polarizing plane of the cooperating polarizing means 27 so that the polarized light beam 25 will be further polarized by the means 27 thus substantially blocking the transmission of the beam 25.
  • the cooperatin means 27 will polarize the light beam 25 at right angles to its original polarization thereby substantially eliminating light transmission.
  • the polarizing plane of each light source on each vehicle and of each associated cooperating polarizing means may be the same or may be different to each other.
  • the • -planes may also be at angles greater or less than 45 .
  • Selection of desired plane angles for each of the light sources and the cooperating polarizing means enables variations to be made to amounts of either or both reflected and directly incident light passing through the cooperating polarizing means. .
  • the polarizing plane angle for all lights and cooperating means is selected as 40°, all reflected light and a small amount of direct light will pass through the relevant cooperating means.
  • the invention may be used with polarizing mediums which do not fully polarize light in any one plane. In this case, some ' partially polarized light will pass through the cooperating means irrespective of the relative orientations of the polarizing planes.

Abstract

An anti-glare system for lighting, particularly for vehicles such as automobiles, using first light polarizing means (14, 24) to polarize in a desired plane (16, 26) the light emitted from vehicle or other lights (12, 23) and second polarizing means (17, 27) having a polarizing plane (18) aligned with that of the first polarizing means (14, 23). The polarizing planes are arranged so that reflected light (21) will pass through the second polarizing means (17), and is thus able to be seen, while polarized light (30) from an opposed light source (23) incident on the second polarizing means (17) is further polarized thus substantially reducing transmission of light therethrough.

Description

_
VEHICLE LIGHTING SYSTEM
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a lighting system for vehicles, particularly road vehicles, but the system according to the invention may be adapted for any other vehicle or device having its own lighting system and/or which is subjected to incident light from lighting systems of other vehicles or light from other sources. For convenience, the system of the invention will be described hereinafter with reference to automobiles.
At the present time, automobiles are provided with headlights which can be switched between "low" beam (some¬ times termed "dipped" beam) and "high" beam. On "low" beam, the headlights are intended to be aimed on the roadway some distance in front of the vehicle and various means are employed to direct or*mask the low beam light so that it does not shine directly into the eyes of a driver of an * oncoming vehicle. The means for maintaining the light in a "low" beam condition include multi-filament bulbs, shielding, relatively movable bulbs, reflectors or lights and, when dual lights are provided, specific aiming.
On "high" beam, the vehicle lights are aimed to direct light well in front of the vehicle such that lights on high beam will shine directly into the eyes of a driver . of an oncoming vehicle.
It has long been a problem that the driver of a vehicle can be dazzled or temporarily blinded by lights of an oncoming vehicle which either are switched to high beam or are badly or incorrectly adjusted low beam lights. Such badly adjusted low beam lights may simply be the result of uneven loading of the oncoming vehicle.
Difficulty is also often experienced by drivers dazzled by the lights of oncoming vehicles in adverse weathe conditions, even though the lights may be correctly aimed and on low beam, due to the greater incidence of reflected and refracted light.
It is highly desirable that a vehicle driver can clearly see his path or roadway from the illumination provided by his own headlights, and can clearly see objects illuminated by the headlights and yet is not dazzled or temporarily blinded by the lights of an oncoming vehicle either through those lights being incorrectly switched to high beam or being badly adjusted low beam lights, or due to any other cause such as adverse weather conditions.
It is also desirable to provide means for preventing or, at least, reducing normal headlight glare as seen by the driver of a vehicle. It is further desirable to provide means for reducin or eliminating headlight glare which means is relatively simple and economical to incorporate on vehicles .
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Means for polarizing light are well known. Such polarizing means are commonly used in scientific instruments and are also commonly used in some forms of glasses, particularly, sunglasses, to reduce glare.
The present invention utilizes in a novel manner - the properties of light polarized in a selected plane being able to pass through a polarizing medium aligned with the selected plane but being blocked, or partially blocked by a polarizing medium mis-aligned with the selected plane.
-' According to one aspect of the invention there is provided first polarizing means to polarize in a predetermin plane the light emitted from a light source on a vehicle, second polarizing means on the vehicle aligned or effectivel aligned with said predetermined plane whereby reflected polarized light will pass through said second polarizing mea said predetermined plane being selected such that transmissi of the polarized light from the light source through similarly aligned second polarizing means on an approaching vehicle is at least reduced.
In one arrangement, the first polarizing means to polarize the light emitted from the vehicle light source comprises a polarizing medium which forms part of or is attached to the headlight lenses or covers of the vehicle so that all the light emitted from the vehicle headlights is polarized in the predetermined plane.
The second polarizing means on the vehicle may com- prise a polarizing medium on or forming the vehicle windscre or may be a visor or the like in the vehicle and which the vehicle driver can move to a position whereat light from an approaching vehicle passes through the visor before reaching the eyes of the driver. Preferably, the planes of polarization of the first and second polarizing means are aligned and extend at an ang of between 30° and 60 , more preferably 45°, to the horizont
It will be seen that the invention, in its preferred aspect, provides polarizing means to polarize the light from a vehicle's headlights in .such a manner that the polarized light therefrom can.be reflected back through a polarized medium on or adjacent that vehicle's windscreen but the similarly polarized lights from a vehicle facing the opposit direction are effectively polarized in a different plane suc that the polarized light from the oncoming vehicle will not pass through the polarized windscreen of the first vehicle, or will pass through at a greatly diminished intensity dependant on the relative angles of the polarizing plane. According to another aspect of the invention there is provided an anti-glare system for vehicles comprising light polarizing means on or associated with the headlights of vehicles such that the light emitted by such headlights is polarized, cooperating light polarizing means through which light impinging on the vehicle windscree passes befor reaching the eyes of the vehicle driver, the said vehicle light polarizing means and the cooperating light polarizing means being arranged so that reflected polarized light from each vehicle will pass through the cooperating light polarizing means and can be seen by the driver of that vehicle but polarized light from a vehicle travelling in an opposite direction towards a first vehicle will be further polarized by said cooperating light polarizing means of the first vehicle to be thereby reduced in intensity as seen by the driver of the first vehicle.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Figure 1 is a diagrammatic illustration of the polarizing light system of the invention as applied to road vehicles.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to the drawing, a headlight 12 "of a first vehicle emits light which passes through a polarizing medium 14 which may be incorporated in the headlight lens, o may be a cover over the lens, or a polarizing coating on the bulb, lens, reflecrtor or any other means for polarizing the light emitted from the headlight 12. For the purposes o illustration it is considered that the light emitted from the headlight 12 is polarized in a plane extending at an ang of approximately 45 to the horizontal and represented by th lines 16 on the polarizing medium 14. Those lines 16 extend downwardly from right to left as viewed from the headlight side of the medium 14. A cooperating polarizing means of the first vehicle is represented by 17 which may comprise incorporation of a polarizing medium within the windscreen structure of the vehicle or by coating the windscreen with suitable polarizin material or by a polarizing attachment or accessory mounted adjacent the windscreen either inside or outside the vehicle such as a flip-down polarized screen similar to or incorporated with a sun visor. The polarizing plane of the cooperating polarizing means 17 is the same as that for the polarizing medium 14 of headlight 12 and is represented by the lines 18 extending downwardly from right to left as viewed by the vehicle driver.
A beam of light 21 from the headlight 12 passes through the polarizing medium 14 and is polarized thereby in the plane represented by the line 16. 'The beam 21, on being reflected from an object 22, such as a road surface passes back to the cooperating means 17, and because the reflected polarized light is in the same plane as the polarizing medium of the means 17 as represented by the line 18, the reflected beam of light 21 passes through the means 17 to be.seen by the driver of the first vehicle. Thus, the driver is able to see reflections from his vehicle's lights and objects illuminated thereby.
The headlight 23 of the second vehicle has its light polarized by a polarizing medium 24 in the same manner as that of the first vehicle. Again, the polarizing medium 24 polarizes the light from the headlight 23 in a plane corresponding to the lines 26 which extend downwardly from right to left in exactly the same manner as for the headligh 12. Thus, the headlights 12 and 23 and the respective polarizing mediums 14 and 24 are identical. Similarly, the cooperating polarizing means 27 of the second vehicle is polarized in the same manner as the means 17 of'the first vehicle so that a polarized beam of light 31 from the head- light 23, when reflected by the object 22, passes back throu the cooperating polarizing means 27 to be seen by the driver of the second vehicle.
However, when the first and second vehicles are approaching each other, the plane of polarization of a beam of light 25 from headlight 12 is substantially at right angles to the polarizing plane of the cooperating polarizing means 27 so that the polarized light beam 25 will be further polarized by the means 27 thus substantially blocking the transmission of the beam 25. In other words, the cooperatin means 27 will polarize the light beam 25 at right angles to its original polarization thereby substantially eliminating light transmission.* In a similar manner, a beam of light 30
OMPI sty , WIPO fro the headlight 23 and which is polarized by the polarizing medium 24 in a plane extending a '-substantially 45° to the horizontal as represented by the lines 26 will be further polarized by the cooperating polarizing means 17 of the approaching other vehicle at an angle substantially a right angles to the initial polarizing plane thereby reducin or substantially eliminating transmitted light through the cooperating polarizing means 17.
The present invention is thereby able, by suitable arrangement of various polarizing mediums, to facilitate at least substantial reduction of light which is able to pass from a vehicle headlight through a windscreen of an oncoming vehicle without reducing to any great extent the reflected light which the driver of the first vehicle would normally see. By appropriately orienting the planes of polarization of the vehicle headlights and the cooperating polarizing means on or adjacent the vehicle windscreen optimum reflected light transmission can be provided with a corresponding selected reduction in transmission of light fr the oncoming vehicle.' Because the polarizing plane selected would preferably be at an angle of about 45 to the horizont the effect of polarized sunglasses and the like would be minimal as such glasses generally have a polarizing plane which is substantially horizontal. The polarizing plane of each light source on each vehicle and of each associated cooperating polarizing means may be the same or may be different to each other. The • -planes may also be at angles greater or less than 45 . Selection of desired plane angles for each of the light sources and the cooperating polarizing means enables variations to be made to amounts of either or both reflected and directly incident light passing through the cooperating polarizing means. . Thus, if the polarizing plane angle for all lights and cooperating means is selected as 40°, all reflected light and a small amount of direct light will pass through the relevant cooperating means. Further, it will be appreciated that the invention may be used with polarizing mediums which do not fully polarize light in any one plane. In this case, some' partially polarized light will pass through the cooperating means irrespective of the relative orientations of the polarizing planes.
As. previously indicated, the output light from the vehicle headlights may be polarized by any suitable means such as polarized plastic material or glass in the lens, or a polarizing coating on the lens, or by using polarized hea light protectors which are fitted in front of the normal he light lens. Alternatively, the headlights may be designed emit polarized light having the desired characteristics. In a modification of the invention, instead of providing vehicles with windscreens which are either polarized or have a polarized coating or layer associated therewith, vehicle drivers may wear glasses having lens appropriately polarized to produce the effects of the prese invention. Many other modifications may be made in the design, construction, arrangement or performance of embodiments of the invention, the exact nature and scope of which is defin in the following claims.
OMPI °

Claims

Claims .
1. A lighting system comprising a light source, first light polarizing means to polarize in a predetermined plane light emitted from the light source, second polarizing means having a polarizing plane aligned or effectively aligned with said predetermined plane whereby reflected polarized light from the light source is able to pass through the said second polarizing means, said predetermined plane being selected so that transmission of said polarized light from the light source through an opposed further second polarizin means is at least substantially reduced.
2. A lighting system according to claim 1 wherein said predetermined plane is approximately 45 to the horizontal.
3. A lighting system according to claim 1 wherein said light source, said first light polarizing means and said sec light polarizing means are located on a vehicle.
4. A lighting system according to claim 3 wherein said further second polarizing means is located on a second vehicle.
5. A lighting system according to, any one of the preceding claims wherein said first polarizing means comprises a polarizing medium attached to or forming part of the light source.
6. An anti-glare system for vehicles comprising light polarizing means on or associated with the or each vehicle headlight such that the light emitted by such headlights is polarized, cooperating light polarizing means through which light impinging on the vehicle windscreen passes before reaching the eyes of the vehicle driver, the said vehicle light polarizing means and the cooperating light
OMPI polarizing means being arranged so that reflected polarized light from each vehicle will pass through the cooperating light polarizing means and can be seen by the driver of tha vehicle but polarized light from a vehicle travelling in an opposite direction towards a first vehicle will be further polarized by said cooperating light polarizing means of the first vehicle to be thereby at least reduced in intensity as seen by the driver of the first vehicle.
7. A system according to claim 6 wherein the light emitted by the vehicle headlights is polarized in a plane of between 30 and 60 to horizontal.
8. A system according to claim 6 or claim 7 wherein the light emitted by the vehicle headlights is polarized in a plane extending at about 45 to horizontal.
9. A system according to any one of claims 6 to 8 wherein said cooperating light polarizing means has a polarizing plane substantially aligned with the polarizing plane of the vehicle light polarizing means.
10. A system according to any of claims 6 to 9 wherein said cooperating light polarizing means comprises an adjustable visor in the respective vehicle adapted to be moved to a position between the light source of an opposed vehicle and the driver, said visor comprising or including a light polarizing medium.
11. A system according to any one of claims 6 to 9 wherein said cooperating light polarizing means comprises a polarizing medium formed into or secured to said vehicle windscreen.
12. A system according to any one of claims 6 to 11' wherein said vehicle light polarizing means comprises headli covers incorporating a polarizing medium and adapted to be attached to the vehicle headlight(s) .
13. A system according to any one of claims 6 to 11 wherein said vehicle light polarizing means comprises a polarizing medium incorporated into or secured to the head¬ light lens.
PCT/AU1983/000118 1982-08-27 1983-08-26 Vehicle lighting system WO1984001012A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU18860/83A AU1886083A (en) 1982-08-27 1983-08-26 Vehicle lighting system

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU560782 1982-08-27

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1984001012A1 true WO1984001012A1 (en) 1984-03-15

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ID=3696074

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/AU1983/000118 WO1984001012A1 (en) 1982-08-27 1983-08-26 Vehicle lighting system

Country Status (2)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0118477A1 (en)
WO (1) WO1984001012A1 (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2743862A1 (en) * 1996-01-23 1997-07-25 Bouillart Roland POLARIZATION METHODS AND DEVICES FOR IMPROVING VISIBILITY IN PARTICULAR IN MOBILE
GB2346955A (en) * 1999-02-09 2000-08-23 Roger Hobbs Polarising headlights
GB2362206A (en) * 2000-05-12 2001-11-14 Aldersey Williams John Polarising light from vehicle headlamps
WO2009104977A1 (en) * 2008-02-21 2009-08-27 Dumitru Ionescu Illumination interactive system and antiblinding protection

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2031045A (en) * 1932-12-06 1936-02-18 Sheet Polarizer Company Inc Means for avoiding glare from automobile headlights
AU4620759A (en) * 1959-02-24 1959-08-27 Dalessandro Ernesto Anti-dazzle headlight system
AU4372472A (en) * 1971-06-28 1974-01-03 Polaroid Corp. Headlamp polarizing attachment

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2031045A (en) * 1932-12-06 1936-02-18 Sheet Polarizer Company Inc Means for avoiding glare from automobile headlights
AU5724660A (en) * 1959-02-19 1960-08-11 Unitedstates Steel Corporations Method of determining the size of crystals formed on freezing the surface of tin orthe like
AU4620759A (en) * 1959-02-24 1959-08-27 Dalessandro Ernesto Anti-dazzle headlight system
AU4372472A (en) * 1971-06-28 1974-01-03 Polaroid Corp. Headlamp polarizing attachment

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2743862A1 (en) * 1996-01-23 1997-07-25 Bouillart Roland POLARIZATION METHODS AND DEVICES FOR IMPROVING VISIBILITY IN PARTICULAR IN MOBILE
WO1997027422A1 (en) * 1996-01-23 1997-07-31 Roland Bouillart Polarisation methods and devices for enhancing visibility, particularly in vehicles
GB2346955A (en) * 1999-02-09 2000-08-23 Roger Hobbs Polarising headlights
GB2362206A (en) * 2000-05-12 2001-11-14 Aldersey Williams John Polarising light from vehicle headlamps
WO2009104977A1 (en) * 2008-02-21 2009-08-27 Dumitru Ionescu Illumination interactive system and antiblinding protection

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0118477A1 (en) 1984-09-19

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