WO2004085190A1 - Method of controlling a continuously variable transmission - Google Patents

Method of controlling a continuously variable transmission Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2004085190A1
WO2004085190A1 PCT/EP2004/003293 EP2004003293W WO2004085190A1 WO 2004085190 A1 WO2004085190 A1 WO 2004085190A1 EP 2004003293 W EP2004003293 W EP 2004003293W WO 2004085190 A1 WO2004085190 A1 WO 2004085190A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
engine
torque
variator
transmission
engine speed
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/EP2004/003293
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2004085190A8 (en
Inventor
Matthew Piers Burke
Matthew Gibson Field
Stephen William Murray
Original Assignee
Torotrak (Development) Limited
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
Priority claimed from GB0307038A external-priority patent/GB0307038D0/en
Priority claimed from GB0326206A external-priority patent/GB0326206D0/en
Priority to JP2006504896A priority Critical patent/JP4461219B2/en
Priority to DE602004002765T priority patent/DE602004002765T2/en
Priority to CA002520539A priority patent/CA2520539A1/en
Priority to MXPA05010360A priority patent/MXPA05010360A/en
Application filed by Torotrak (Development) Limited filed Critical Torotrak (Development) Limited
Priority to BRPI0408795-0A priority patent/BRPI0408795A/en
Priority to EP04723989A priority patent/EP1606135B1/en
Priority to CN200480014751.3A priority patent/CN1860315B/en
Priority to KR1020057018259A priority patent/KR101179284B1/en
Priority to US10/550,905 priority patent/US8108108B2/en
Publication of WO2004085190A1 publication Critical patent/WO2004085190A1/en
Publication of WO2004085190A8 publication Critical patent/WO2004085190A8/en
Priority to US13/348,509 priority patent/US8892315B2/en

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60WCONJOINT CONTROL OF VEHICLE SUB-UNITS OF DIFFERENT TYPE OR DIFFERENT FUNCTION; CONTROL SYSTEMS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR HYBRID VEHICLES; ROAD VEHICLE DRIVE CONTROL SYSTEMS FOR PURPOSES NOT RELATED TO THE CONTROL OF A PARTICULAR SUB-UNIT
    • B60W10/00Conjoint control of vehicle sub-units of different type or different function
    • B60W10/04Conjoint control of vehicle sub-units of different type or different function including control of propulsion units
    • B60W10/06Conjoint control of vehicle sub-units of different type or different function including control of propulsion units including control of combustion engines
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60WCONJOINT CONTROL OF VEHICLE SUB-UNITS OF DIFFERENT TYPE OR DIFFERENT FUNCTION; CONTROL SYSTEMS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR HYBRID VEHICLES; ROAD VEHICLE DRIVE CONTROL SYSTEMS FOR PURPOSES NOT RELATED TO THE CONTROL OF A PARTICULAR SUB-UNIT
    • B60W10/00Conjoint control of vehicle sub-units of different type or different function
    • B60W10/04Conjoint control of vehicle sub-units of different type or different function including control of propulsion units
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60WCONJOINT CONTROL OF VEHICLE SUB-UNITS OF DIFFERENT TYPE OR DIFFERENT FUNCTION; CONTROL SYSTEMS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR HYBRID VEHICLES; ROAD VEHICLE DRIVE CONTROL SYSTEMS FOR PURPOSES NOT RELATED TO THE CONTROL OF A PARTICULAR SUB-UNIT
    • B60W10/00Conjoint control of vehicle sub-units of different type or different function
    • B60W10/10Conjoint control of vehicle sub-units of different type or different function including control of change-speed gearings
    • B60W10/101Infinitely variable gearings
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60WCONJOINT CONTROL OF VEHICLE SUB-UNITS OF DIFFERENT TYPE OR DIFFERENT FUNCTION; CONTROL SYSTEMS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR HYBRID VEHICLES; ROAD VEHICLE DRIVE CONTROL SYSTEMS FOR PURPOSES NOT RELATED TO THE CONTROL OF A PARTICULAR SUB-UNIT
    • B60W10/00Conjoint control of vehicle sub-units of different type or different function
    • B60W10/10Conjoint control of vehicle sub-units of different type or different function including control of change-speed gearings
    • B60W10/101Infinitely variable gearings
    • B60W10/108Friction gearings
    • B60W10/109Friction gearings of the toroïd type
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60WCONJOINT CONTROL OF VEHICLE SUB-UNITS OF DIFFERENT TYPE OR DIFFERENT FUNCTION; CONTROL SYSTEMS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR HYBRID VEHICLES; ROAD VEHICLE DRIVE CONTROL SYSTEMS FOR PURPOSES NOT RELATED TO THE CONTROL OF A PARTICULAR SUB-UNIT
    • B60W30/00Purposes of road vehicle drive control systems not related to the control of a particular sub-unit, e.g. of systems using conjoint control of vehicle sub-units, or advanced driver assistance systems for ensuring comfort, stability and safety or drive control systems for propelling or retarding the vehicle
    • B60W30/18Propelling the vehicle
    • B60W30/1819Propulsion control with control means using analogue circuits, relays or mechanical links
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60WCONJOINT CONTROL OF VEHICLE SUB-UNITS OF DIFFERENT TYPE OR DIFFERENT FUNCTION; CONTROL SYSTEMS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR HYBRID VEHICLES; ROAD VEHICLE DRIVE CONTROL SYSTEMS FOR PURPOSES NOT RELATED TO THE CONTROL OF A PARTICULAR SUB-UNIT
    • B60W30/00Purposes of road vehicle drive control systems not related to the control of a particular sub-unit, e.g. of systems using conjoint control of vehicle sub-units, or advanced driver assistance systems for ensuring comfort, stability and safety or drive control systems for propelling or retarding the vehicle
    • B60W30/18Propelling the vehicle
    • B60W30/188Controlling power parameters of the driveline, e.g. determining the required power
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16HGEARING
    • F16H61/00Control functions within control units of change-speed- or reversing-gearings for conveying rotary motion ; Control of exclusively fluid gearing, friction gearing, gearings with endless flexible members or other particular types of gearing
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16HGEARING
    • F16H61/00Control functions within control units of change-speed- or reversing-gearings for conveying rotary motion ; Control of exclusively fluid gearing, friction gearing, gearings with endless flexible members or other particular types of gearing
    • F16H61/66Control functions within control units of change-speed- or reversing-gearings for conveying rotary motion ; Control of exclusively fluid gearing, friction gearing, gearings with endless flexible members or other particular types of gearing specially adapted for continuously variable gearings

Definitions

  • the present invention is concerned with the control of a transmission of continuously
  • variable ratio type and of an associated engine.
  • the present invention has been developed in connection with
  • variable which provides a continuously variable drive ratio.
  • the variator couples
  • a r ⁇ tr ⁇ -controlled variator receives a control signal representing a required variator
  • the variator responds by adjusting its drive ratio to the required value.
  • the adjustment typically involves detecting the position of a ratio-determining
  • ratio corresponds
  • variator is constructed and arranged such as to exert upon its input and output
  • the variator drive ratio is permitted to change correspondingly.
  • Torque control has to date principally been applied to toroidal-race, rolling-traction
  • the variator rollers exert respective torques T in and T out upon the input and output discs. Correspondingly the rollers experience
  • reaction torque T in +T 0Ut about the disc axis. This reaction torque is opposed by
  • the geometry is such that movement of the rollers about the disc axis is accompanied
  • + T out is uniquely determined by the control signal, the magnitude of the ratio T in / T out .
  • both T in and T out are uniquely determined by the control signal.
  • reaction torque and control signal The direct correspondence between reaction torque and control signal is not provided
  • sheave is mounted upon its drive shaft in such a way that motion of the sheave
  • a feature common to both arrangements is that the variator comprises a component -
  • the engine speed to the target value using a closed loop based on engine speed.
  • Stubbs' simple approach proves inadequate, for a production motor vehicle, in a number of ways relating to stability of the transmission ratio and to driveability of
  • Engine speed control is a relatively straightforward matter since, by maintaining a set drive ratio, the transmission
  • Wheel torque is controlled by the variator rather than by engine torque.
  • Engine speed is not constrained to follow vehicle speed. Instead the
  • control signal applied to the variator determines a loading torque applied by the
  • Dynamic matching of engine torque to loading torque is thus fundamental to management of the drive line as a whole and of engine speed in
  • the profile of changes in engine speed is important to the "driveability" of the vehicle.
  • An object of the present invention is to make possible effective control of a drive line utilizing a torque-controlled transmission.
  • a method of controlling a continuously variable ratio transmission of the type comprising a continuously variable ratio unit ("variator") which has rotary input and output members through which the variator is coupled between an engine and a driven component, the variator receiving a primary control signal and being constructed and arranged such as to exert upon its input and output members torques which, for a given variator drive ratio, correspond directly to the control signal, the method comprising: determining a target engine acceleration,
  • a continuously variable ratio transmission of the type comprising a continuously variable ratio unit ("variator") which has rotary input and output members through which the variator is coupled between an engine and a driven component, the variator receiving a primary control signal and being constructed and arranged such as to exert upon its input and output members torques which, for a given variator drive ratio, correspond directly to the control signal, the method comprising:
  • control effort which is a correction to the net torque required to reduce the engine
  • Figure 1 is a simplified illustration of a toroidal-race, rolling-traction variator, of a
  • Figure 2 is a highly schematic representation of a powertrain of torque-controlled
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic representation of the hardware used in powertrain control
  • Figures 4a and 4b are graphs representing the interpretation of a driver's control input in a control system embodying the present invention
  • Figure 5 is an example of a map of engine torque against engine speed for an internal
  • Figure 6 is a flow diagram representing a "feed forward" part of a powertrain control
  • Figure 7 is a highly schematic representation of a transmission operable in accordance with the present invention.
  • Figure 8 is a graph of engine speed variation and related variables over time in the
  • Figure 9 is a flow diagram providing an overview of a "feedback" part of the powertrain control strategy embodying the present invention.
  • FIGS 10-13 are flow diagrams showing in greater detail respective parts of Figure
  • the present invention has been developed in connection with a vehicle transmission
  • FIG. 1 illustrates some of the major components of the variator 10 and Figure 2
  • the variator is seen to comprise co-axially mounted input and
  • the roller runs on respective faces of the input and output discs in order to
  • the roller is mounted in a manner permitting
  • roller is also able to "precess". That is, the roller's axis is able to rotate, changing the
  • roller is
  • a first actuator 32 mounted in a carriage 26 coupled by a stem 28 to a piston 30 of an actuator 32.
  • roller angle As the roller moves back and forth it follows
  • the actuator 32 receives opposed hydraulic fluid pressures through lines 34, 36 and
  • the roller exerts a
  • Figure 2 is intended to illustrate certain principles relating to control of the
  • An engine is represented by box 16 and is coupled to the input disc 12
  • Masses represented by a box 18 and acting upon the variator output disc 14 provide
  • the variator's control signal determines, at the current variator drive ratio, the torque
  • control signal determines the variator output
  • the illustrated variator 10 is of course greatly simplified for the sake of clarity.
  • a practical variator typically has two pairs of input/output discs defining two
  • reaction torque is the sum of the torques applied to all of the variator rollers.
  • the dynamic balance can be adjusted
  • reaction torque adjustments are used to control engine speed then the driver may not be used
  • a co-ordinated strategy for controlling reaction torque and engine torque is required.
  • the illustrated architecture serves as an example
  • PCU electronic Powertrain Control Unit
  • driver's control 309 (formed e.g. by the accelerator pedal of a conventional motor vehicle).
  • the PCU provides outputs controlling the behaviour of both
  • Engine control is carried out through an electronic engine
  • Transmission control is effected in this exemplary embodiment by
  • driver's input which is of course typically communicated through the position of an
  • accelerator control such as a pedal. What the current control system does is to map
  • Figure 4a is a graph showing the engine speed requested
  • driver's requested engine speed enables the driver's requested engine power to be
  • the driver's requested engine torque and engine speed may be used.
  • driver's requested engine power may be used in conj unction with an engine map, or set of engine maps, to determine the optimal
  • Figure 5 is an engine map with engine speeds along the horizontal axis
  • Line 500 shows how the driver's requested
  • Line 502 represents
  • the process of interpretation of driver demand results in a base target engine torque, TrqEngBaseReq and a base target engine speed SpdEngBaseReq.
  • the task of the system under consideration is to control the engine and transmission
  • the calculation is also based on the moment of inertia J e of the engine and transmission referred to the engine.
  • Steps 1 to 6 can be referred to as a "feed forward” strategy.
  • Step 7 is a "feedback"
  • closed loop feedback engine speed correction is used only to adjust the engine speed
  • TrqEngBaseReq is added, at 200, to a torque TrqAcc calculated to provide a target
  • TrqAcc the torque available from the engine is finite and a limiter 202 ensures that if
  • the input to the limiter is a torque greater, or indeed more negative, than the engine can supply then it is modified to fall within the available torque range.
  • the output from the limiter 202 goes to a shunt strategy 203 which slightly modifies the profile
  • the shunt strategy takes the form of an integrator (with respect to time) which is normally
  • TrqEngReq the required torque value
  • the engine is set to provide an engine torque corresponding to the sum of
  • TrqEngBaseReq the base target engine torque necessary to accelerate the engine toward the target engine speed (subject to an adjustment based
  • reaction torque (and correspondingly in the loading torque applied by the transmission to the engine) can lead to a dramatic deviation of engine speed, as
  • control system incorporates an engine model 204 which, based on the torque requirement input to the engine
  • reaction torque required of the variator is then obtained.
  • reaction torque is modified by means of a latching strategy 208 in order to prevent unwanted
  • the latching strategy serves to limit deviation of wheel torque from the level demanded by the driver.
  • TrqReacVarReq an output variable TrqReacVarReq, to logic controlling the fluid pressures applied
  • control system as so far described provides values for use in controlling both the
  • control signal to the variator is provided in the form
  • T in (referred to in the discussion of Figure 2 as T in , and which could equivalently be referred to as the torque input to the transmission) and the instantaneous engine
  • the integrator also receives the base target engine speed SpdEngBaseReq, which
  • the base target engine speed SpdEngBaseReq is supplied, via a limiter 219, to
  • subtraction block 220 which takes the predicted engine speed SpdEngReq away from
  • the target engine acceleration is chosen to be proportional to the difference
  • a further limiter 224 ensures that the desired engine acceleration does not exceed
  • TrqAcc the excess torque required to achieve the engine acceleration AccEng.
  • TrqAcc is equal to AccEng multiplied by the driveline inertia J e referred to the
  • engine acceleration can be calculated.
  • the epicyclic comprises, in the usual manner, a planet carrier CAR, a sun gear SUN
  • the planet carrier CAR is driven from the engine
  • the sun gear is driven via R l5 R 2 and the variator 702 itself.
  • the instantaneous variator ratio will be referred to as R v .
  • a low regime clutch LC is engaged, coupling the annular gear ANN to the output 704 via gearing with a ratio R ⁇ In low regime power
  • J l5 Inertias of the engine and transmission are represented by J l5 which includes the inertia of the engine; J 2 , an inertia coupled to the sun gear SUN; and J 3 an inertia
  • TrqAcc The relationship between TrqAcc and engine acceleration (d ⁇ Jdt) is obtained using conservation of energy.
  • An input power ⁇ x TrqAcc goes to change kinetic energy
  • inertia J 3 is coupled to the vehicle wheels and is subject to the transmission output torque, which has of course been treated
  • TrqAcc x + J 2 (R t R 2 R v ) 2 ) ⁇ d ⁇ dt
  • TrqEngReq and TrqReacVarReq the torque demand to be used in controlling the
  • Line 800 represents the base target engine
  • base target engine speed increases instantaneously from below 100 to over 250
  • Line 802 represents the predicted engine speed SpdEngReq from the feed forward
  • the engine torque is
  • the feedback strategy is able to react rapidly to deviations of
  • TrqEngReq required engine torque TrqEngReq, such as to minimize deviations of the engine
  • PID proportional integral differential controller
  • Reset logic 1004 receives both the current transmission
  • the driver selects forward, reverse, neutral etc.) and, where appropriate, sets a flag
  • controller is reset when the driver selects "park” or "neutral".
  • PID is also reset as the transmission moves from one regime to the other. This is because regime
  • the PID controlled may thus be "wound up"
  • the response of the PID controller 1002 to the engine speed error is dependent upon
  • the coefficients Kp and Ki are determined by a gain schedule 1006 which receives
  • FlagTrqReacVarLim which, as will become more clear below, indicates one
  • control effort can be any of two possible conditions.
  • the control effort can be any of two possible conditions.
  • the control effort can be any of two possible conditions.
  • PID controller is used to determine the value of this engine torque adjustment.
  • the gain required of the PID controller 1002 is different in the two conditions due to the
  • the values of the coefficients may be found as mathematical functions of the inputs
  • the PID controller determines the control effort TrqEngCtrl. This
  • the first step is to establish whether the control effort can be implemented solely by
  • TrqWhlDriverReq set on the basis of driver demand) which is acceptable
  • the first of these steps is represented in dotted loop 902 of Figure 9, and in more detail in Figure 11.
  • the level DeltaTrqWhl of deviation of wheel torque from the desired value TrqWhlReq which can be accepted can be calculated in several
  • DeltaTrqWhl may be chosen to be constant. This has been demonstrated to provide
  • DeltaTrqWhl may be calculated as a function of
  • accelerator control position and/or vehicle speed and/or target wheel torque may be more closely constrained to follow driver
  • the output DeltaTrqWhl of the block 1104 is led to a limiter 1106 which ensures that
  • TrqWhlReq since the sign of TrqWhlReq is negative in reverse and positive in forward
  • This aspect is taken care of by a switch 1112 which, based upon a flag
  • TrqWhlMax and TrqWhlMin representing the acceptable wheel torque range. Because wheel torque and engine loading torque are related, the acceptable wheel
  • torque range corresponds to a certain range of engine loading torque.
  • system uses a mathematical model of the transmission to determine the engine
  • the current engine speed SpdEng and vehicle speed SpdVeh are input to block 904
  • TrqWhlReq respectively to maximum, minimum and required engine loading torques
  • TrqLoad@TrqWhlMax TrqLoad@TrqWhlMin and TrqLoad@TrqWhlReq.
  • maximum and minimum values represent the range of loading torques which can be
  • the limiter determines whether the control effort falls between
  • TrqEng4TrqReacVarClip is set to be equal to the inverted value of the control effort TrqEngCtrl. If the control effort falls outside the range then the transmission
  • An adder 1308 and an engine torque limiter 1310 together determine the torque
  • the adder receives the required
  • TrqEngReq established by the feed forward strategy and adds this to (a) the control effort TrqEngCtrl and (b) the output TrqEng4TrqReacVarClip from the limiter 1304. Recall that while the transmission adjustment is not saturated (i.e
  • TrqEngCtrl and TrqEng4TrqReacVarClip is non zero and is added to the required engine torque TrqEngReq. The effect is that whatever part of the control effort
  • TrqEngCtrl cannot be implemented by adjustment of the transmission is instead
  • TrqEngDesShunt if it falls outside the available range TrqEngMin
  • TrqEngMaxAvail the result is the final engine torque demand TrqEngDes
  • FlagTrqEngLim indicates whether
  • the limiter is active
  • a physical model 1312 of the transmission is used in establishing the final control
  • This model converts engine loading torque into the variator reaction torque demand.
  • TrqReacVarDes is used by software controlling the transmission to set the demands for pressures applied to the variator pistons 30 ( Figure 1).
  • PID controller 1002 could be expected to increase (or "wind up") over time due to the integral term in an undesirable manner. To prevent this an AND junction 1316
  • junction's output forms a flag FlagAntiWindup which is input to the PID controller
  • control theory such as a state space or "H infmity" or sliding mode controller could

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Transportation (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Automation & Control Theory (AREA)
  • Control Of Transmission Device (AREA)
  • Control Of Vehicle Engines Or Engines For Specific Uses (AREA)
  • Friction Gearing (AREA)

Abstract

There is described a method of controlling a continuously variable ratio transmission of the type comprising a continuously variable ratio unit ('variator') which has rotary input and output members though which the variator is coupled between an engine and a driven component, the variator receiving a primary control signal and being constructed and arranged such as to exert upon its input and output members torques which, for a given variator drive ratio, correspond directly to the control signal, the method comprising: determining a target engine acceleration, determining settings of the variator's primary control signal and of an engine torque control for providing the required engine acceleration and adjusting the control signal and/or the engine torque control based on these settings, predicting a consequent engine speed change, allowing for engine and/or transmission characteristics, and correcting the settings of the control signal and engine torque based on a comparison of actual and predicted engine speeds.

Description

DESCRTPTION
METHOD OF CONTROLLING A CONTINUOUSLY
VARIABLE TRANSMISSION
The present invention is concerned with the control of a transmission of continuously
variable ratio type and of an associated engine.
The term "engine" as used herein should be understood to encompass any suitable
device for providing rotational drive including internal combustion engines and
electric motors. The present invention has been developed in connection with
transmissions for motor vehicles and is particularly well suited to this application. Nonetheless it is considered potentially applicable to transmissions for use in other
contexts.
In any continuously variable transmission there is a device, referred to herein as a
"variator", which provides a continuously variable drive ratio. The variator couples
to other parts of the transmission - typically gearing leading on one side of the
variator to the engine and on the other side to driven components such as the driven
wheels of a motor vehicle - through rotary input and output members. The speed of
the output member divided by the speed of the input member is the "variator drive
ratio".
The concept of "torque control" is known in this art but will now be explained. It
is useful to distinguish from the alternative of "ratio control" . A rαtrø-controlled variator receives a control signal representing a required variator
drive ratio. The variator responds by adjusting its drive ratio to the required value.
The adjustment typically involves detecting the position of a ratio-determining
element of the variator (e.g. the separation of the sheaves in a belt-and-sheave
variator, or the position of the rollers in a toroidal-race type variator) and adjusting
the actual position of this element to a desired position (determined by the control
signal) using a feedback loop. Thus in a ratio controlled variator, ratio corresponds
directly to the control signal.
This is not the case in a torque-contx llcd variator. Instead a torque-controlled
variator is constructed and arranged such as to exert upon its input and output
members torques which, for a given variator drive ratio, correspond directly to the
variator' s primary control signal. It is torque which is the control variable rather than
drive ratio. Changes in speed of the variator input and output, and hence changes in
variator drive ratio, result from the application of these torques, added to externally
applied torques (e.g. from engine and wheels), to the inertias coupled to the variator
input and output. The variator drive ratio is permitted to change correspondingly.
Torque control has to date principally been applied to toroidal-race, rolling-traction
type variators. In an arrangement described for example in Torotrak (Development)
Ltd's European patent EP444086, variator rollers serve to transmit drive between co-
axially mounted input and output discs. The variator rollers exert respective torques Tin and Tout upon the input and output discs. Correspondingly the rollers experience
a "reaction torque" Tin +T0Ut about the disc axis. This reaction torque is opposed by
an equal and opposite torque applied to the rollers about the axis by a set of actuators.
The geometry is such that movement of the rollers about the disc axis is accompanied
by "precession" of the rollers - a change in the angles of the roller axes to the disc
axis, effecting a corresponding change in variator drive ratio. By controlling the
actuator torque, the reaction torque Tin + Tout is directly controlled. The control signal
in this type of variator corresponds directly to the reaction torque.
The actual torques exerted by the variator upon its input and output depend not only
on the control signal but also upon the current drive ratio, since although the sum Tin
+ Tout is uniquely determined by the control signal, the magnitude of the ratio Tin / Tout .
is equal to the reciprocal of the variator drive ratio, and so subject to change with the
variator drive ratio. Nonetheless it can be appreciated that, for a given drive ratio,
both Tin and Tout are uniquely determined by the control signal.
The direct correspondence between reaction torque and control signal is not provided
by all torque-controlled variators. An example of a torque-controlled variator of a
quite different type, using belt-and-sheave construction, is provided in the applicant's
own prior European patent 736153 and its US counterpart 5766105, wherein one
sheave is mounted upon its drive shaft in such a way that motion of the sheave
relative to the shaft along a helical path is permitted. Hence when torque is applied to the sheave, a corresponding force along the axis of the shaft is created. This axial
force is opposed by a force applied to the sheave by an actuator. Again, an
equilibrium is created between the two forces. It can again be said of this example
that the torque Tin exerted by the sheaves upon the shaft is, for a given variator drive
ratio, uniquely determined by the control signal, which corresponds to the force
applied by the actuator.
A feature common to both arrangements is that the variator comprises a component -
the movable sheave or variator roller - whose position corresponds to the current
variator drive ratio and that this component is subject to a biasing torque (or force)
which is determined by the control signal and is balanced by the torques created at the variator input/output.
Effective utilization of torque-controlled transmissions depends on' electronics to
regulate the engine and transmission in unison. Early papers on the electronic control
of such a powertrain are by Stubbs - "The Development of a Perbury Traction
Transmission for Motor Car Applications", ASME (The American Society of Mechanical Engineers) paper no. 80-GT-22, March 1980 and also by Ironside and
Stubbs - "Microcomputer Control of an Automotive Perbury Transmission", IMechE
paper no. C200/81 , 1981. Both papers describe a project concerned with electronic
control of a transmission based on a toroidal-race rolling-traction type variator
operating in torque controlled mode. Both papers point out an important advantage associated with continuously variable
transmissions: that fuel economy can be greatly enhanced when using such
transmissions by operating the engine at or close to the levels of engine speed and
engine torque at which it is most fuel efficient. For any given level of engine power demanded by the driver there is a particular combination of engine speed and engine
torque which provides best fuel efficiency. Stubbs plotted the locus of such "optimal
efficiency" points on a graph forming a line representing the optimal engine
efficiency. The control strategies proposed by Ironside and Stubbs were based on
operating the engine on this line where possible.
In the control schemes described in these papers the driver's demand was interpreted
as a requirement for wheel torque, which was then converted into a requirement for
engine power by multiplication by the rotational speed of the vehicle wheels. From
this power a unique point on the optimal efficiency line was selected, providing target values for the engine torque and engine speed. The engine was set to produce the
target torque and the loading applied to the engine by the variator adjusted to bring
the engine speed to the target value, using a closed loop based on engine speed.
Stubbs' simple approach proves inadequate, for a production motor vehicle, in a number of ways relating to stability of the transmission ratio and to driveability of
the vehicle. The challenges involved in controlling a torque-controlled transmission are very
different from those involved in controlling a ratio-controlled transmission. In the
latter, since the variator maintains a chosen drive ratio, torque at the driven wheels
is related directly to engine torque. Engine speed control is a relatively straightforward matter since, by maintaining a set drive ratio, the transmission
provides a direct relationship between engine speed and vehicle speed. In a torque-
controlled transmission, in which drive ratio is not the control variable and is
permitted to vary, the engine and wheels can be thought of as being effectively de¬
coupled from one another. Wheel torque is controlled by the variator rather than by engine torque. Engine speed is not constrained to follow vehicle speed. Instead the
control signal applied to the variator determines a loading torque applied by the
variator to the engine. Combustion within the engine creates an engine torque. The
sum of the loading torque and the engine torque acts upon the inertia referred to the
engine (contributed by masses in both engine and the transmission) and so determines
engine acceleration. While the loading torque and the engine torque are equal and opposite, engine speed is constant. Changes in engine speed result from an inequality
between these torques. Dynamic matching of engine torque to loading torque is thus fundamental to management of the drive line as a whole and of engine speed in
particular. Failure to manage the balance would allow unwanted changes in engine
speed.
Some issues relating to engine speed management are addressed in US 649 7636 (Schleicher et al) which, so far as the present applicant has been able to understand
the language of this document, concerns itself with transmission and engine
adjustments needed to bring the engine to the desired operating point (engine speed
and engine torque).
The profile of changes in engine speed is important to the "driveability" of the vehicle. The fact that in a CVT power train the engine is typically run at low speed and high torque (to provide high fuel economy) makes the management of engine speed especially important. When the driver calls for an increase in power the engine, already operating close to its maximum torque, must typically be accelerated in a controlled manner in order to be capable of providing the required power.
An object of the present invention is to make possible effective control of a drive line utilizing a torque-controlled transmission.
In accordance with a first aspect of the present invention there is a method of controlling a continuously variable ratio transmission of the type comprising a continuously variable ratio unit ("variator") which has rotary input and output members through which the variator is coupled between an engine and a driven component, the variator receiving a primary control signal and being constructed and arranged such as to exert upon its input and output members torques which, for a given variator drive ratio, correspond directly to the control signal, the method comprising: determining a target engine acceleration,
determining settings of the variator's primary control signal and of an engine torque control for providing the required engine acceleration and adjusting the control signal and/or the engine torque control based on these settings,
predicting a consequent engine speed change, and
correcting the settings of the control signal and engine torque based on a comparison of actual and predicted engine speeds.
In accordance with a second aspect of the present invention there is a method of controlling a continuously variable ratio transmission of the type comprising a continuously variable ratio unit ("variator") which has rotary input and output members through which the variator is coupled between an engine and a driven component, the variator receiving a primary control signal and being constructed and arranged such as to exert upon its input and output members torques which, for a given variator drive ratio, correspond directly to the control signal, the method comprising:
determining a target engine acceleration,
determining an excess torque TrqAcc required to accelerate power train inertia to achieve the target engine acceleration, and
adjusting the control signal to the variator and/or adjusting a torque controller of the engine such that engine torque is equal to loading torque applied by the transmission to the engine plus the excess torque TrqAcc.
In accordance with a third aspect of the present invention, there is a method of
controlling engine speed error in a motor vehicle powertrain comprising an engine
which drives at least one vehicle wheel through a transmission which provides a
continuously variable ratio, the transmission being constructed and arranged to exert
upon the engine a chosen loading torque and to permit the transmission ratio to vary in accordance with changes in engine speed, so that engine acceleration results from
applications of a net torque, which is the sum of the loading torque and engine torque created by the engine, to the inertias referred to the engine, the method comprising,
in a feedback loop, the steps of
determining the engine speed error,
supplying the engine speed error to a closed loop controller which establishes a
control effort, which is a correction to the net torque required to reduce the engine
speed error, establishing, taking account of the control effort, an allocation of the control effort
between (i) adjustment of the engine torque and (ii) adjustment of the loading torque,
and effecting the adjustment.
Specific embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of
example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: -
Figure 1 is a simplified illustration of a toroidal-race, rolling-traction variator, of a
type known in itself, suitable for use in implementing the present invention;
Figure 2 is a highly schematic representation of a powertrain of torque-controlled
type suitable for implementing the present invention;
Figure 3 is a schematic representation of the hardware used in powertrain control;
Figures 4a and 4b are graphs representing the interpretation of a driver's control input in a control system embodying the present invention;
Figure 5 is an example of a map of engine torque against engine speed for an internal
combustion engine; Figure 6 is a flow diagram representing a "feed forward" part of a powertrain control
strategy embodying the present invention;
Figure 7 is a highly schematic representation of a transmission operable in accordance with the present invention;
Figure 8 is a graph of engine speed variation and related variables over time in the
operation of a transmission according to the present invention;
Figure 9 is a flow diagram providing an overview of a "feedback" part of the powertrain control strategy embodying the present invention;
Figures 10-13 are flow diagrams showing in greater detail respective parts of Figure
9.
The present invention has been developed in connection with a vehicle transmission
using a torque-controlled variator of toroidal-race, rolling-traction type. The
invention is considered potentially applicable to other types of torque- controlled transmission. Nonetheless the toroidal-race variator in question will now be very
briefly described, in order to illustrate certain relevant principles. More detail on
both the construction and function of this type of variator is to be found in various
patents and published applications held by Torotrak (Development) Ltd. including European patent EP444086.
Figure 1 illustrates some of the major components of the variator 10 and Figure 2
illustrates, in highly schematic format, major parts of a drive line incorporating the
variator. In Figure 1 the variator is seen to comprise co-axially mounted input and
output discs 12, 14 together defining a toroidal cavity 22 containing a variator roller
20. The roller runs on respective faces of the input and output discs in order to
transmit drive from one to the other. The roller is mounted in a manner permitting
it to move along a circumferential direction about the axis 24 of the discs 12, 14. The
roller is also able to "precess". That is, the roller's axis is able to rotate, changing the
inclination of the roller to the disc axis. In the illustrated example the roller is
mounted in a carriage 26 coupled by a stem 28 to a piston 30 of an actuator 32. A
line from the center of the piston 30 to the center of the roller 20 constitutes a
"precession axis" about which the whole assembly can rotate. Changes in the
inclination of the roller result in changes in the radii of the paths traced on the input
and output discs 12, 14 by the roller. Consequently a change in roller inclination is
accompanied by a change in variator drive ratio.
Note that the precession axis does not lie precisely in a plane perpendicular to the
disc axis, but is instead angled to this plane. This angle, labeled CA in Figure 1, is
referred to herein as the "castor angle". As the roller moves back and forth it follows
a circular path centered on the disc axis. Furthermore, the action of the discs 12, 14 upon the rollers tends to maintain the rollers at such an inclination that the roller axis
intersects the disc axis. This intersection of the axes can be maintained, despite
movement of the roller along its circular path, by virtue of the castor angle. The
result is that translational movement of the roller about the disc axis is accompanied
by precession of the roller and so by a change in variator drive ratio. If one neglects
slip between the roller and the discs, the position of the variator roller corresponds
to the variator drive ratio and so to the speed ratio between the engine and the driven
wheels.
The actuator 32 receives opposed hydraulic fluid pressures through lines 34, 36 and
force applied to the roller by the actuator corresponds to the difference in pressures
in the lines. This pressure difference is the primary control signal applied to the
variator, in this example. The effect of this force is to urge the roller to move along
its circular path about the disc axis. Equivalently one can say that the actuator exerts a torque about the disc axis upon the roller. The actuator torque is balanced by
torque created by the interaction of the roller with the discs. The roller exerts a
torque Tin upon the input disc 12 and a torque T out upon the output disc 14.
Correspondingly the discs together exert a torque Tin + Tout upon the roller, about the
disc axis. The quantity Tin + Tout (the reaction torque) is equal to the actuator torque
and so directly proportional to the control signal formed by the aforementioned
pressure difference. Hence this control signal determines the reaction torque created
by the variator. Figure 2 is intended to illustrate certain principles relating to control of the
powertrain. An engine is represented by box 16 and is coupled to the input disc 12
of the variator. A direct coupling is shown in this highly simplified drawing. In
practice there is of course intervening gearing. Masses coupled to the variator's
input disc, including the mass of the engine itself, provide an engine-side inertia Je
Masses represented by a box 18 and acting upon the variator output disc 14 provide
a vehicle-side inertia Jv. While traction is maintained between the vehicle's driven
wheels and the road, the mass of the vehicle itself contributes to the effective output
inertia Jv.
The variator's control signal determines, at the current variator drive ratio, the torque
Tin applied to the variator input disc 12 by the roller. The simplified arrangement
illustrated in Figure 2 with the variator input disc 12 directly coupled to the engine
would result in the loading torque applied to the engine being equal to the torque Tin
applied to the variator input disc 12 and for the sake of simplicity the two will be
taken to be equal in the present discussion. Due to the gearing interposed between
the input disc 12 and the engine 16 in a practical transmission, the loading torque
experienced by the engine is equal to the variator input torque Tin divided by the ratio
of the intervening gearing (neglecting frictional losses).
While the engine is driving the vehicle, the loading torque Tin is opposed by the
engine torque Te which is the torque created by combustion in the engine. Note that this is not necessarily the same as the torque available at the engine's drive shaft
since some of the engine torque Te goes to overcoming the engine-side inertia Je,
while engine speed is changing. The sum of the engine torque Te and the loading
torque Tin acts upon the engine-side inertia Je (which includes the engine inertia) so
that an inequality between loading torque Tin and engine torque Te causes a change
in engine speed ωe. The variator automatically accommodates the resultant change
in transmission ratio. Likewise the control signal determines the variator output
torque Tout. This is divided by the ratio of gears interposed between the variator and
the vehicle wheels, and added to externally applied torques Tv (e.g. from the vehicle wheels) in determining the net torque available to accelerate the output-side inertia Jv. Again, factional losses in gearing are neglected in this discussion for the sake of
simplicity. In this way changes in transmission output speed ωv are produced and again resultant ratio change is automatically accommodated by the variator.
The illustrated variator 10 is of course greatly simplified for the sake of clarity. For
instance a practical variator typically has two pairs of input/output discs defining two
toroidal cavities each of which contains a set of rollers. In such an arrangement the
reaction torque is the sum of the torques applied to all of the variator rollers. The
principles of operation set out above are however essentially unchanged in a practical
transmission.
It should be clear from the aforegoing that in order to control engine speed it is necessary to control the dynamic balance between the torque created within the
engine (the "engine torque") and the loading torque applied to the engine by the
transmission (the "loading torque"). This must be done while at the same time
providing the driver with torque at the driven wheels of the vehicle ("wheel torque")
which, to within some acceptable tolerance, matches the driver's demand as
communicated through the accelerator control. The dynamic balance can be adjusted
by the powertrain' s control system through adjustments to:-
i. The engine torque (via the engine controls-fuel supply etc.) As a means of
controlling engine speed this has the advantage that changes in engine torque do not
(in a torque controlled transmission) directly produce a change in wheel torque.
However adjustments carried out with the engine's throttle are relatively slow. That
is, there is an appreciable lag between an adjustment to the throttle and the
corresponding change in the torque actually provided by the engine. This is due to
factors including the dynamics of the engine's intake manifold. Adjustments to
engine torque also compromise fuel economy.
ii. The variator reaction torque, which determines the loading torque applied to
the engine. This has the advantage of being relatively fast. However changes in
reaction torque lead to changes in wheel torque, with the attendant problem that if
reaction torque adjustments are used to control engine speed then the driver may not
experience the wheel torque requested through the accelerator control. The problem
is highly significant at low ratio when a large change in wheel torque is needed to effect a small change in engine loading torque.
A co-ordinated strategy for controlling reaction torque and engine torque is required.
A broad overview of the main components of a control system embodying the present
invention is provided in Figure 3 wherein the engine is seen at 300 and drives a
continuously variable, torque-controlled type transmission 302. The diagram
schematically indicates both the variator 304 and epicyclic gearing 306 through
which the variator is coupled between transmission input and output in either of a low
regime, in which the range of ratios available from the variator maps onto a low range of overall transmission ratios, and a high regime, in which the range of variator
ratios maps onto a higher range of overall transmission ratios. The transmission
output is coupled to a load - typically the driven wheels of a motor vehicle - which
is represented by block 308 in the drawing.
The control of both engine and transmission is performed electronically, subject to
direction from the driver. Conventional digital microprocessors are programmed for
this task in current embodiments. The illustrated architecture serves as an example
only and may be further simplified in production versions, but comprises an
electronic Powertrain Control Unit ("PCU") which receives data from instrumentation associated with the engine, the transmission and also from the
driver's control 309 (formed e.g. by the accelerator pedal of a conventional motor vehicle). In response the PCU provides outputs controlling the behaviour of both
engine and transmission. Engine control is carried out through an electronic engine
controller 310. Transmission control is effected in this exemplary embodiment by
control of hydraulic pressures applied to the variator 304 and, in order to control
transmission regime, to clutches of its associated gearing 306.
In controlling a motor vehicle power train it is necessary firstly to interpret the
driver's input, which is of course typically communicated through the position of an
accelerator control such as a pedal. What the current control system does is to map
pedal position onto a driver demand for wheel torque and engine speed, taking
account of vehicle speed. Figure 4a is a graph showing the engine speed requested
by the driver (SpdEngDr) against the vehicle speed (SpdVeh) and the pedal positions
(PosPedal). Figure 4b shows the driver's requested wheel torque (TrqWheelDr) once
more against vehicle speed and pedal position. The two graphs are recorded in the
form of look up tables in the control system.
Based on the driver's requested wheel torque - TrqWheelDr - a mathematical model
of the transmission (taking account of factors including transmission efficiency) is
used to obtain the driver's requested engine torque which, in conjunction with the
driver's requested engine speed, enables the driver's requested engine power to be
determined. The driver's requested engine torque and engine speed may be used
unmodified or alternatively the driver's requested engine power may be used in conj unction with an engine map, or set of engine maps, to determine the optimal
engine speed and engine torque for providing the requested engine power. Purely by
way of example, to illustrate how optimization with regard to engine efficiency can
be achieved, Figure 5 is an engine map with engine speeds along the horizontal axis
and engine torque on the vertical axis. Line 500 shows how the driver's requested
engine speed and torque vary as the pedal position is changed. Line 502 represents
the relationship between engine speed and engine torque which provides optimal
engine efficiency. Asterisks on the two lines correspond to the same level of engine
power, and the system can choose between the two operating points.
The process of interpretation of driver demand results in a base target engine torque, TrqEngBaseReq and a base target engine speed SpdEngBaseReq.
The task of the system under consideration is to control the engine and transmission
in such a manner as to achieve, or in a dynamic situation at least to adjust toward,
these values while providing torque at the driven vehicle wheels which reflects the
driver's demand. The control process will be described in detail below but can be
summarised as comprising the following steps, which are repeated in a loop.
1. Determine the difference between actual and base target engine speeds.
2. Calculate from this difference a target engine acceleration - i.e. the rate at which the engine should be accelerated toward the base target engine speed (a controlled
engine speed profile is desired) and then calculate the torque which will be taken up
in overcoming inertia in order to provide the target engine acceleration (based on the
moment of inertia Je referred to the engine.
3. Set the engine torque controller appropriately to provide the engine torque required
both to (1) create an appropriate wheel torque and (2) accelerate the engine,
overcoming the inertia Je. Where possible the wheel torque corresponds to the driver
request. However, the available engine torque being finite, it is necessary in some
situations to accept a lower wheel torque in order to provide the torque required to
accelerate the engine.
4. Calculate what instantaneous torque the engine will actually provide given this
engine torque controller setting, since the engine's reaction to its controller is not
instantaneous. Factors including the engine's intake manifold dynamics create a lag
between adjustment and resultant changes in engine torque. Techniques for modeling
the instantaneous output torque are known in the art and are applied here.
5. Adjust the control signal applied to the variator to load the engine with a torque
equal to the calculated instantaneous engine torque, derived from the aforesaid
model, minus the torque required to accelerate the engine, calculated at step 2. The
signal may also be adjusted by a latching strategy, to be explained below. 6. Calculate what engine acceleration is actually expected. This expected value does
not precisely match the target acceleration, since the calculation of the expected value
takes account of (a) the instantaneous engine torque calculated above and (b) a
further model representing the transmission's response to the control applied at step
5 above, the transmission too having a time lag in its response to the control input.
The calculation is also based on the moment of inertia Je of the engine and transmission referred to the engine.
7. Integrate the engine acceleration obtained at step 6 to obtain a predicted engine
speed, and then apply a closed loop correction of the actual engine speed, correcting
it toward the predicted value.
Steps 1 to 6 can be referred to as a "feed forward" strategy. Step 7 is a "feedback"
strategy used to correct for deviations from the predicted engine speed. Because the
closed loop feedback engine speed correction is used only to adjust the engine speed
toward an expected value based on models of the engine and transmission dynamics, the amount of such correction is minimized. The process allows the engine
acceleration to be controlled and "profiled" (the rate of engine acceleration being a controlled function of the discrepancy between actual and target engine speeds) in a
highly effective manner.
The feed forward part of the control process will now be described in more detail with reference to Fig. 6, wherein the target engine torque is represented by the input
variable TrqEngBaseReq and the target engine speed by the input variable
SpdEngBaseReq.
Looking firstly at the top left of the diagram, the base target engine torque
TrqEngBaseReq is added, at 200, to a torque TrqAcc calculated to provide a target
engine acceleration. The determination of TrqAcc will be considered below. Of course the torque available from the engine is finite and a limiter 202 ensures that if
the input to the limiter is a torque greater, or indeed more negative, than the engine can supply then it is modified to fall within the available torque range. The output from the limiter 202 goes to a shunt strategy 203 which slightly modifies the profile
of changes to the engine torque, preventing very abrupt engine torque changes (as
might occur e.g. when the accelerator control is rapidly depressed by the driver)
which could otherwise produce undesirable shocks in the powertrain. The shunt strategy takes the form of an integrator (with respect to time) which is normally
saturated so that its output follows its input. In the event of abrupt input changes,
however, the integrator's output takes a finite time to "catch up" to the input so that
the output of the strategy changes more slowly than its input. The resulting required torque value, TrqEngReq, is used in controlling the engine torque demand applied
to the engine, as will be explained below with reference to Figure 13. Hence, where
possible, the engine is set to provide an engine torque corresponding to the sum of
the base target engine torque, TrqEngBaseReq, and the torque TrqAcc necessary to accelerate the engine toward the target engine speed (subject to an adjustment based
upon feedback of engine speed, as will be explained below).
As noted above, the engine's response to the engine torque controller is not instantaneous. Even neglecting the effects of engine inertia, the torque generated by
the engine lags somewhat behind throttle adjustments, as is well known to the skilled
person. Such a time lag is potentially problematic in a torque-controlled
transmission, where even a brief mismatch between engine torque and variator
reaction torque (and correspondingly in the loading torque applied by the transmission to the engine) can lead to a dramatic deviation of engine speed, as
explained above. To avoid such problems the illustrated control system incorporates an engine model 204 which, based on the torque requirement input to the engine
controller and on a model of the engine behavior, outputs an estimate TrqEngEst of
the instantaneous torque created by the engine, allowing for the time lag in the engine's response to its torque controller.
At 206 the torque TrqAcc necessary to accelerate the inertia Je referred to the engine
and transmission is subtracted from the instantaneous engine torque TrqEngEst to
give the loading torque to be applied to the engine by the transmission, from which
the reaction torque required of the variator is then obtained. However the reaction torque is modified by means of a latching strategy 208 in order to prevent unwanted
variations in wheel torque under certain conditions. The latching strategy serves to limit deviation of wheel torque from the level demanded by the driver. The output
from the latching strategy represents the engine loading torque to be provided by
virtue of the variator and this is converted at 210 to a pressure difference for
application to the variator (the variator's primary control signal) which is passed, as
an output variable TrqReacVarReq, to logic controlling the fluid pressures applied
to the variator itself, to be described below with reference to Figure 13.
The control system as so far described provides values for use in controlling both the
engine torque and the transmission hydraulics. Based on these two values the
consequent changes in engine speed are estimated. In doing so it is necessary to take
account not only of the time lag in the engine's response, (modeled at 204 as
mentioned above) but also of time lags in the response of the variator to its control
input. As already explained the control signal to the variator is provided in the form
of two oil pressures controlled by valves in the hydraulics associated with the
variator. Changes in the valve settings take a finite time to produce an effect, this
delay being allowed for at 212. Compliance in the hydraulics produces a contribution
to the lag, also modeled at 212 to produce an output which is an estimate of the
instantaneous transmission reaction torque.
The torque available to overcome powertrain inertia and so accelerate the engine is
the difference between the instantaneous loading torque applied to the engine
(referred to in the discussion of Figure 2 as Tin, and which could equivalently be referred to as the torque input to the transmission) and the instantaneous engine
torque (referred to above as Te). In Figure 6 a comparator 216 takes away the
estimated instantaneous engine torque, output from the engine model 204, from the
estimated instantaneous loading torque. Dividing the result by the inertia Je referred
to the engine at 218 gives an estimate of engine acceleration and integrating at 221
provides a prediction of the engine speed. In practice, since the inertia Je is not
constant, this calculation is somewhat more complicated, as will be explained below.
The integrator also receives the base target engine speed SpdEngBaseReq, which
serves to saturate the integrator, thus preventing the predicted engine speed from overshooting the target engine speed.
It has yet to be explained how the target engine acceleration is determined. Note that
the base target engine speed SpdEngBaseReq is supplied, via a limiter 219, to
subtraction block 220 which takes the predicted engine speed SpdEngReq away from
the limited target engine speed SpdEngBaseReqLimit, giving a prediction of the
difference between the actual engine speed and the target engine speed. The system
controls the engine acceleration as a function of this difference. In the illustrated example, the target engine acceleration is chosen to be proportional to the difference
SpdEngBaseReqLimit minus SpdEngReq, a constant of proportionality GainAccEng being introduced at 222. This process provides a suitable profile to the engine
acceleration, which is large when the engine's speed is a long way from the target value and falls as the engine speed approaches the target value. Clearly, however, a different function could be chosen for setting the target engine acceleration AccEng.
A further limiter 224 ensures that the desired engine acceleration does not exceed
acceptable limits. It is then necessary to calculate TrqAcc, the excess torque required to achieve the engine acceleration AccEng. In principle, and neglecting energy
losses, TrqAcc is equal to AccEng multiplied by the driveline inertia Je referred to the
engine. However Je is in a practical transmission not constant as noted above. An
explanation will now be provided of how the relationship between TrqAcc and
engine acceleration can be calculated.
This relationship arises from the particular form of the gearing used to couple the
variator to the engine and wheels and Figure 7 provides a schematic illustration of a
suitable arrangement. This is of the dual regime, power recirculatory type already
known in the art e.g. from Torotrak (Development) Limited' s earlier patents including EP933284. In Figure 7 the engine is indicated at 700, the variator at 702 and an output of the transmission to driven vehicle wheels at 704. An epicyclic
"shunt" gearing arrangement is indicated at 706 and boxes 1- 4 represent gear ratios
at various points in the transmission.
The epicyclic comprises, in the usual manner, a planet carrier CAR, a sun gear SUN
and an annular outer gear ANN. The planet carrier CAR is driven from the engine
via gearing Rl5 R3. The sun gear is driven via Rl5 R2 and the variator 702 itself. The instantaneous variator ratio will be referred to as Rv.
To engage low regime (in which the available range of variator drive ratio maps onto
a low range of transmission ratios) a low regime clutch LC is engaged, coupling the annular gear ANN to the output 704 via gearing with a ratio R^ In low regime power
is recirculated through the variator in a manner familiar to the skilled person.
To engage high regime (in which the available range of Variator drive ratio maps
onto a higher range of transmission ratios) a high regime clutch HC is engaged,
forming a drive path from the variator output through clutch HC to gearing R4 and
so to the transmission output.
Inertias of the engine and transmission are represented by Jl5 which includes the inertia of the engine; J2, an inertia coupled to the sun gear SUN; and J 3 an inertia
coupled to the annular gear ANN. Rotational speeds of the three inertias are referred
to respectively as ω ω2 and ω3. ω, is therefore engine speed in this diagram.
The relationship between TrqAcc and engine acceleration (dωJdt) is obtained using conservation of energy. An input power ω x TrqAcc goes to change kinetic energy
of the transmission and changes in speed result.
Looking firstly at the low regime case, inertia J3 is coupled to the vehicle wheels and is subject to the transmission output torque, which has of course been treated
separately from TrqAcc. Hence it is necessary only to consider kinetic energies Qj
and Q2 of Jj and J2.
Q, = Vi Ji < and Q2 = V2 J2 ω2 2
and total kinetic energy
Figure imgf000030_0001
and since the control system monitors variator ratio Ry, ω2 can be stated in terms of
ω,.
Figure imgf000030_0002
Substituting equation 1 into equation 2:
Qτoτ ~ (Ji + J2 (R-i R-2 Rv) )ωι2 and the rate of change of this ldnetic energy is equal to the input power so:-
dQT0T/dt = TrqAcc x = + J2 (Rt R2 Rv)2)ω d ω dt
Figure imgf000030_0003
Hence it is possible to determine the excess torque TrqAcc required to accelerate the
engine, this value being added to the target engine Torque TrqEngBaseReq at 200,
as already explained above.
The process described with reference to Figure 6 may be described as a "feed
forward" strategy. It provides values for two important control variables -
TrqEngReq and TrqReacVarReq, the torque demand to be used in controlling the
engine and the reaction torque demand to be used in controlling the transmission.
These are obtained upon the basis of predictions of the system's responses (hence the
term "feed forward"). However these values are not supplied directly to the devices
controlling the engine and transmission. Instead they are modified based on feedback
relating to engine speed (step 7 in the summary given above). The feedback strategy
utilizes the predicted engine speed SpdEngReq, which is a third important output
from the feed forward strategy.
To appreciate how the feed forward and feedback strategies cooperate, refer to Figure
8 which is a graph of engine speed (in radians per second, on the vertical axis) against
time (in seconds, on the horizontal axis). Line 800 represents the base target engine
speed SpdEngBaseReq derived from interpretation of the driver's demand. Between
12.5 and 13 seconds the driver's accelerator control is abruptly depressed and the
base target engine speed increases instantaneously from below 100 to over 250
radians per second, in line with the increased requirement for engine power. Line 802 represents the predicted engine speed SpdEngReq from the feed forward
strategy. Of course this lags behind the base target engine speed since engine
acceleration is physically limited. It also shows a controlled profile. Line 804
represents actual engine speed and is seen to deviate somewhat from the prediction.
What the feedback strategy does is to adjust the demands applied to the engine and
transmission such as to reduce the deviation of actual engine speed 804 from the
prediction 802 provided by the feed forward strategy.
In the feed forward part of the control strategy it is the engine torque that is
preferentially adjusted to create the excess torque needed to accelerate the engine (or
of course the torque deficit needed to decelerate the engine). Adjustments to the
transmission (which result in deviation of wheel torque from the value required by
the driver) are made only if the engine is unable to provide the necessary torque. In
the feedback part of the strategy, however, adjustments are preferentially made to the
transmission, to vary the loading torque applied to the engine. The engine torque is
adjusted by the feedback strategy only when the "control effort" required by this part
of the strategy would, if implemented by adjustment only to the transmission, result
in an unacceptable deviation of the wheel torque from that requested by the driver.
Because adjustments to the loading torque applied by the transmission can be made
relatively quickly, the feedback strategy is able to react rapidly to deviations of
engine speed from the desired value. Figure 9 provides an overview of the feedback strategy which serves to modify the
required variator reaction torque TrqReacVarReq, and where necessary also the
required engine torque TrqEngReq, such as to minimize deviations of the engine
speed SpdEng from the predicted value SpdEngReq. Most variable labels etc. are
omitted from Figure 9 due to space constraints and instead the four main parts of this
drawing are shown enlarged in Figures 10, 11, 12 and 13.
Elements of the feedback strategy shown in dotted loop 900 of Figure 9 and in more
detail in Figure 10 serve to generate a "control effort" TrqEngCtrl which represents
the shift in the dynamic torque balance between engine torque and loading torque
required by the feedback strategy to correct deviation of the engine speed SpdEng
from the predicted value SpdEngReq. This part of the strategy receives both
SpdEngReq and also data representing the current transmission operating point - the
current engine speed SpdEng and the current transmission regime CurrRegime. The
control effort is established on the basis of the engine speed error SpdEngErrTRV
which is established at 1000 by subtracting SpdEng from SpdEngReq.
SpdEngErrTRV is applied to a proportional integral differential controller (PID) 1002
of a conventional type. Reset logic 1004 receives both the current transmission
regime CurrRegime and the status StatusDriveFB of the "drive control" (by which
the driver selects forward, reverse, neutral etc.) and, where appropriate, sets a flag
FlagPLSpdEngDr to reset the PID controller 1002. Thus for example the PID
controller is reset when the driver selects "park" or "neutral". The PID is also reset as the transmission moves from one regime to the other. This is because regime
change involves a finite period in which both low and high regimes are engaged,
which effectively locks the variator at the synchronous ratio. In this condition the
variator is not able to respond to pressure input and engine speed error cannot be
corrected by the transmission since, at fixed synchronous ratio, engine speed is
simply proportional to vehicle speed. The PID controlled may thus be "wound up"
in this condition, hence the need to reset it.
The response of the PID controller 1002 to the engine speed error is dependent upon
two values Kp and Ki (proportional and integral coefficients) in known manner.
Note that in this embodiment there is no differential coefficient input and in fact the
differential of the engine speed error is not used by the PID controller. Using a
differential term proves unnecessary and is potentially problematic because of noise.
The coefficients Kp and Ki are determined by a gain schedule 1006 which receives
a flag FlagTrqReacVarLim which, as will become more clear below, indicates one
of two possible conditions. In the first condition the control effort can be
implemented by adjustment to the transmission alone and the PID controller 1002
controls this adjustment. In the second condition the transmission adjustment is
saturated - that is, the maximum acceptable adjustment to the transmission is made
and is insufficient to implement the control effort required to correct engine speed
error. In this condition adjustment is additionally made to the engine torque and the
PID controller is used to determine the value of this engine torque adjustment. The gain required of the PID controller 1002 is different in the two conditions due to the
different characteristics of the engine and transmission, and the actuators used to
control them, and is determined by the gain schedule 1006 which sets the coefficients
Kp and Ki on the basis of :
i. the flag FlagTrqReacVarLim;
ii. a time constant TcMan of the inlet manifold, which is relevant in
determining the time lag affecting changes to engine torque;
iii. the engine speed error SpdEngErrTRV itself; and
iv. the rest flag FlagPLSpdEngD.
The values of the coefficients may be found as mathematical functions of the inputs
to the gain schedule or, as in the present embodiment, from look up tables.
Based upon the engine speed error and in the manner determined by the coefficients
Kp and Ki, the PID controller determines the control effort TrqEngCtrl. This
quantity is a torque and represents the shift in the dynamic torque balance between
engine torque and loading torque required by the feedback strategy to correct for
engine speed error.
It will now be explained how the control effort is implemented - i.e. how the
feedback strategy determines what modification of the transmission and engine
torque settings to use to provide the required shift in the dynamic torque balance. The first step is to establish whether the control effort can be implemented solely by
adjustment of the transmission, without adjustment of the engine torque. Recall that
by adjusting the reaction torque created by the variator, the loading torque applied to
the engine is adjusted, but that this creates a corresponding deviation in the wheel
torque, which may be perceptible - and unwelcome - to the driver. Also as the
transmission drive ratio approaches geared neutral, the ratio of wheel torque to
loading torque increases so that a given adjustment to loading torque creates an increased wheel torque deviation. Hence at low ratios it is not appropriate to rely
upon the transmission alone to control engine speed deviation, since to do so may
result in inappropriate wheel torque being created. The approach to this problem is
in three steps :- i. determine a range of wheel torque (above and below the desired wheel torque
TrqWhlDriverReq set on the basis of driver demand) which is acceptable;
ii. determine the range of engine loading torque which corresponds to the wheel torque range; and
iii. then establish whether the required shift in the dynamic balance at the engine
can be provided by adjustment of the transmission alone, without departing
from the engine loading torque range (and hence from the wheel torque
range).
The first of these steps is represented in dotted loop 902 of Figure 9, and in more detail in Figure 11. The level DeltaTrqWhl of deviation of wheel torque from the desired value TrqWhlReq which can be accepted can be calculated in several
different ways. Which is most desirable is partly a matter of driver perception. In
Figure 11 the calculation of this value is carried out at 1104. Most simply,
DeltaTrqWhl may be chosen to be constant. This has been demonstrated to provide
a working system. Alternatively DeltaTrqWhl may be calculated as a function of
accelerator control position and/or vehicle speed and/or target wheel torque. Thus for example the wheel torque may be more closely constrained to follow driver
demand when the wheel torque demand indicated by the driver is low, or the vehicle
speed is low, or the target wheel torque is low. When the driver calls for large wheel torque, a larger divergence between demanded and actual values is tolerable.
The output DeltaTrqWhl of the block 1104 is led to a limiter 1106 which ensures that
the wheel torque value does not exceed limits DELTATRQWHLMAX and
Figure imgf000037_0001
. Then at adder 1108 and subtracter 1110 it is respectively added to and taken away from the desired wheel torque TrqWhlReq to provide
maximum and minimum acceptable values of total wheel torque. The proper order
of these values is dependent upon whether the vehicle controls are set for forward or
reverse since the sign of TrqWhlReq is negative in reverse and positive in forward
operation. This aspect is taken care of by a switch 1112 which, based upon a flag
DriveSelected, selects either direct outputs from the adder and subtracter 1108, 1110 or outputs routed through a reverser 1114 and in its turn outputs variables
TrqWhlMax and TrqWhlMin representing the acceptable wheel torque range. Because wheel torque and engine loading torque are related, the acceptable wheel
torque range corresponds to a certain range of engine loading torque. The present
system uses a mathematical model of the transmission to determine the engine
loading torque range corresponding to the acceptable wheel torque range TrqWhlMin
to TrqWhlMax (step (ii) from the summary above). The relevant functional block is
indicated at 904 and more detail is provided in Figure 12.
The current engine speed SpdEng and vehicle speed SpdVeh are input to block 904
and together allow current transmission ratio to be determined. If the transmission
were 100% efficient then simply dividing the transmission ratio by wheel torque
would give the engine loading torque. In a real transmission however energy losses
take place and the wheel torque/loading torque relationship is more complex. Using
the above inputs and also the current transmission regime Curr Regime, which has
an influence on transmission efficiency, physical model 1200 is used to convert the
maximum, minimum and target wheel torques TrqWhlMax, TrqWhlMin and
TrqWhlReq respectively to maximum, minimum and required engine loading torques
TrqLoad@TrqWhlMax, TrqLoad@TrqWhlMin and TrqLoad@TrqWhlReq. The
maximum and minimum values represent the range of loading torques which can be
applied by the transmission to the engine without causing an unacceptable deviation
of wheel torque from the driver's demand.
The maximum, minimum and required engine loading torques, along with the control ef ort TrqEngCtrl, are passed to the part of the strategy contained in dotted loop 906
at Figure 9 and represented to a larger scale in Figure 13, which serves to determine
the adjustments to engine and transmission settings required to implement the control
effort. At 1300 and 1302 the required engine loading torque TrqLoad@TrqWhlReq
(corresponding to the required wheel torque) is taken away from the maximum
acceptable engine loading torque TrqLoad@TrqWhlMax and the minimum acceptable engine loading torque TrqLoad@TrqWhlMin to yield respectively the
maximum and minimum adjustments to the dynamic balance between engine torque
and loading torque which can be created by transmission adjustment without departing from the acceptable wheel torque range. These are given the respective
variable names DeltaTrqEng4TrqReacVarMax and DeltaTrqEng4TrqReacVarMin in the diagram and are input to a limiter 1304 which also receives a value of the
control effort TrqEngCtrl which has been inverted (i.e. multiplied by minus one) at
1306. The limiter determines whether the control effort falls between
DeltaTrqEng4ReacVarMax and DeltaTrqEng4TrqReacVarMin - i.e whether the
required control effort can be implemented by transmission adjustment alone without
departing from the acceptable wheel torque range. If it can - that is, if the control
effort TrqEngCtrl falls within the relevant range - then the limiter' s output
TrqEng4TrqReacVarClip is set to be equal to the inverted value of the control effort TrqEngCtrl. If the control effort falls outside the range then the transmission
adjustment is saturated and the limiter' s output TrqEng4TrqReacVarClip is clipped
to be equal to either the maximum or minimum acceptable adjustment to the loading torque - i.e. either to DeltaTrqEng4TrqReacVarMax or to
DeltaTrqEng4TrqReacVarMin. A flag FlagTrqEng4TrqReacVarLim is also output
by the limiter to indicate whether the transmission adjustment is saturated. Its
function will be explained below.
An adder 1308 and an engine torque limiter 1310 together determine the torque
request TrqEngDes to be applied to the engine. The adder receives the required
engine torque TrqEngReq established by the feed forward strategy and adds this to (a) the control effort TrqEngCtrl and (b) the output TrqEng4TrqReacVarClip from the limiter 1304. Recall that while the transmission adjustment is not saturated (i.e
the control effort can be implemented by transmission adjustment alone) TrqEngCtrl
is equal to TrqEng4TrqReacVarClip multiplied by minus one. Hence under this
circumstance TrqEngCtrl and TrqEng4TrqReacVarClip cancel each other out and the output TrqEngDesShunt from the adder 1308 is equal to the required engine torque
TrqEngReq. That is, the feedback strategy does not modify the required engine
torque. However if the transmission adjustment is saturated then the sum of
TrqEngCtrl and TrqEng4TrqReacVarClip is non zero and is added to the required engine torque TrqEngReq. The effect is that whatever part of the control effort
TrqEngCtrl cannot be implemented by adjustment of the transmission is instead
added to the torque to be demanded of the engine.
Of course there are physical limitations upon the maximum and minimum torque which the engine can provide. To take account of these the engine torque demand
limiter 1310 clips TrqEngDesShunt if it falls outside the available range TrqEngMin
to TrqEngMaxAvail and the result is the final engine torque demand TrqEngDes,
which is passed to the engine torque controller. FlagTrqEngLim indicates whether
the limiter is active
A physical model 1312 of the transmission is used in establishing the final control
value TrqReacVarDes to be used in controlling the transmission. Refer once more
to Figure 6 and recall that the feed forward strategy provides a value TrqLoad (the
output from latching strategy 208) for the engine loading torque to be applied by the variator. This is added at 1314 to the clipped control effort TrqEng4TrqReacVarClip, the resulting value TrqLoad4TrqReacVarDes being input to the physical model 1312.
This model converts engine loading torque into the variator reaction torque demand.
It does so on the basis of current transmission regime and variator ratio. The model's
output TrqReacVarDes is used by software controlling the transmission to set the demands for pressures applied to the variator pistons 30 (Figure 1).
There are circumstances under which the feedback adjustments to both engine and
transmission are saturated, when the desired correction to engine speed cannot physically be provided without an excessive deviation in wheel torque from the value
required by the driver. Under these conditions the magnitude of the output from the
PID controller 1002 could be expected to increase (or "wind up") over time due to the integral term in an undesirable manner. To prevent this an AND junction 1316
receives both FlagTrqEng4TrqReacVarLim and FlagTrqEngLim, the flags indicating
whether the transmission and engine adjustments are at their limits. The AND
junction's output forms a flag FlagAntiWindup which is input to the PID controller
1002 to inhibit wind up.
The aforegoing embodiment serves as an example only and of course the practical
implementation of the claimed invention may take other forms. For example, in
place of the P.I.D. controller some other closed loop controller based on advanced
control theory such as a state space or "H infmity" or sliding mode controller could
be used.

Claims

1. A method of controlling a continuously variable ratio transmission of the type
comprising a continuously variable ratio unit ("variator") which has rotary input and
output members through which the variator is coupled between an engine and a
driven component, the variator receiving a primary control signal and being
constructed and arranged such as to exert upon its input and output members torques
which, for a given variator drive ratio, correspond directly to the control signal, the
method comprising:
determining a target engine acceleration,
determining settings of the variator's primary control signal and of an engine torque control for providing the required engine acceleration and adjusting the control signal
and or the engine torque control based orl these settings,
predicting a consequent engine speed change,
correcting the settings of the control signal and engine torque based on a comparison
of actual and predicted engine speeds.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1 wherein allowance is made for engine
characteristics in predicting engine speed change.
3. A method as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2 comprising calculating the
instantaneous torque expected to be created by the engine and using the calculated
torque value in predicting the engine speed change.
4. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein allowance is made for
transmission characteristics in predicting the engine speed change.
5. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the construction and
arrangement of the variator is such that torques exerted by the variator upon its input and output members are proportional to magnitude of the primary control signal, for
a given variator drive ratio.
6. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the construction and
arrangement of the variator is such that the sum of the torques exerted by the variator upon its rotary input and output members is always proportional to magnitude of the
primary control signal.
7. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the control signal takes the
form of a difference between two hydraulic pressures.
8. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the target engine
acceleration is calculated based on a difference between current and target engine
speeds.
9. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein target engine speed is set in
dependence upon a user input.
10. A method as claimed in claim 9 wherein the user input is interpreted as a demand
for a transmission output torque and engine speed.
11. A method as claimed in claim 10 wherein the driver's demands for transmission
output torque and engine speed are modified based on engine efficiency
considerations.
12. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the demanded transmission output torque is converted to a target engine torque using a model of the transmission
characteristics.
13. A method as claimed in any of claims 1 to 9 wherein, subject to limitations of the
engine, a torque request to the engine torque controller is set to the sum of the target engine torque and the excess torque TrqAcc required to accelerate power train inertia.
14. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the engine's response to the
torque controller is modelled to provide an estimate of instantaneous engine torque.
15. A method as claimed in claim 14 wherein the excess torque TrqAcc required to
accelerate the engine is subtracted from the estimated instantaneous engine torque to obtain a required loading torque to be applied by the transmission to the engine, the
variator control signal being adjusted to provide the required loading torque.
16. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein instantaneous values of
engine torque and of loading torque applied to the engine by the transmission are
estimated and used to calculate engine acceleration, the engine acceleration being
integrated with respect to time to provide a prediction of engine speed, and closed loop control being applied to engine speed to correct it toward the predicted value.
17. A method of controlling a continuously variable ratio transmission of the type
comprising a continuously variable ratio unit ("variator") which has rotary input and
output members through which the variator is coupled between an engine and a driven component, the variator receiving a primary control signal and being constructed and arranged such as to exert upon its input and output members torques
which, for a given variator drive ratio, correspond directly to the control signal, the
method comprising:
determining a target engine acceleration,
determining an excess torque TrqAcc required to accelerate power train inertia to
achieve the target engine acceleration, and adjusting the control signal to the variator and/or adjusting a torque controller of the
engine such that engine torque is equal to loading torque applied by the transmission
to the engine plus the excess torque TrqAcc.
18. A method as claimed in claim 17 wherein the construction and arrangement of
the variator is such that torques exerted by the variator upon its input and output
members is always proportional to magnitude of the primary control signal, for a
given variator drive ratio.
19. A method as claimed in claim 17 wherein the construction and arrangement of
the variator is such that the sum of the torques exerted by the variator upon its rotary input and output members is always proportional to magnitude of the primary signal control.
20. A method as claimed in any of claims 17 to 19 wherein the control signal takes the form of a difference between two hydraulic pressures.
21. A method as claimed in any of claims 17 to 20 wherein the target engine
acceleration is calculated based on a difference between current and target engine
speeds.
22. A method as claimed in any of claims 17 to 21 wherein target engine speed is set
in dependence upon a user input.
23. A method as claimed in claim 22 wherein the user input is interpreted as a
demand for a transmission output torque and for an engine speed.
24. A method as claimed in claim 23 wherein the driver's demands for transmission
output torque and engine speed are modified based on engine efficiency
considerations.
25. A method as claimed in any of claims 17 to 24 wherein the demanded
transmission output torque is converted to a target engine torque using a model of the
transmission characteristics.
26. A method as claimed in any of claims 17 to 25 wherein the engine's response to the torque controller is modelled to provide an estimate of instantaneous engine torque.
27. A method as claimed in claim 26 wherein the excess torque TrqAcc required to
accelerate the engine is subtracted from the estimated instantaneous engine torque to
obtain a required loading torque to be applied by the transmission to the engine, the
variator control signal being adjusted to correspond to the required loading torque.
28. A method as claimed in any of claims 17 to 27 wherein instantaneous values of
engine torque and of loading torque applied to the engine by the transmission are
estimated using engine and transmission models and used to calculate engine acceleration, the engine acceleration being integrated with respect to time to provide
a prediction of engine speed and closed loop control being applied to the engine
speed to correct it toward the predicted value.
29. A method of controlling engine speed error in a motor vehicle powertrain
comprising an engine which drives at least one vehicle wheel through a transmission
which provides a continuously variable ratio, the transmission being constructed and
arranged to exert upon the engine a controlled loading torque and to permit the
transmission ratio to vary in accordance with resultant changes in engine speed, so
that engine acceleration results from application of a net torque, which is the sum of
the loading torque and an engine torque created by the engine, to the inertias referred
to the engine, the method comprising, in a feedback loop, the steps of
determining the engine speed error,
supplying the engine speed error to a closed loop controller which establishes a
control effort, which is a correction to the net torque required to reduce the engine
speed error,
establishing, talcing account of the control effort, an allocation of the control effort
between (i) adjustment of the engine torque and (ii) adjustment of the loading torque,
and effecting the adjustment(s).
30. A method as claimed in claim 29 wherein the control effort is preferentially
allocated to the loading torque adjustment.
31. A method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the implementation of the control effort
involves adjustment of the engine torque only when the control effort exceeds a
threshold, the control effort being otherwise implemented by adjustment to the
loading torque alone.
32. A method as claimed in any of claims 29 to 31 further comprising limiting the
adjustment to the loading torque on the basis of the deviation in torque at the driven
wheel ("wheel torque") which it creates.
33. A method as claimed in claim 32 wherein a maximum acceptable deviation of
wheel torque is set as a function of any one or more of: driver's accelerator control
position, vehicle speed and target wheel torque.
34. A method as claimed in claim 32 or claim 33 comprising the further step of
calculating a maximun loading torque adjustment from a maximum acceptable wheel
torque deviation.
35. A method as claimed in any of claims 29 to 34, wherein the adjustment of the
engine torque is established by subtracting the loading torque adjustment from the
control effort.
36. A method as claimed in any of claims 29 to 35, wherein the engine speed error
is determined using a predicted engine speed.
37. A method as claimed in any of claims 29 to 36, wherein engine speed error is
established by comparison of current engine speed with a predicted engine speed
established by calculating engine acceleration on the basis of engine and transmission
settings and integrating engine acceleration over time.
38. A method of controlling engine speed comprising establishing base
requirements for engine and transmission settings taking account of driver input,
predicting engine speed based upon actual engine and transmission settings, and
modifying the base requirements for the engine and transmission settings by a
method as claimed in any of claims 29 to 37, wherein the engine speed error is
obtained by comparison of current and predicted engine speed values.
39. A method of engine speed control wherein base requirements for engine and
transmission settings are established by a feed forward method and are adjusted by
a feedback method as claimed in any of claims 29 to 38.
40. A method as claimed in claim 39 wherein the feed forward method preferentially
controls engine speed using the engine and the feedback method preferentially
controls engine speed error using the transmission.
41. A method as claimed in claim 39 or claim 40 wherein the feed forward method
preferentially selects base transmission settings to provide a wheel torque demanded
by the driver and selects base engine settings to achieve a desired engine speed.
42. A device adapted to implement the method claimed in any of claims 29 to 41.
43. A method as claimed in claim 13 wherein the feedback method involves
preferentially adjusting the transmission settings to control engine speed error.
PCT/EP2004/003293 2003-03-27 2004-03-29 Method of controlling a continuously variable transmission WO2004085190A1 (en)

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US10/550,905 US8108108B2 (en) 2003-03-27 2004-03-29 Method of controlling a continuously variable transmission
KR1020057018259A KR101179284B1 (en) 2003-03-27 2004-03-29 Method of controlling a continuously variable transmission
DE602004002765T DE602004002765T2 (en) 2003-03-27 2004-03-29 METHOD FOR CONTROLLING A STEADY GEARBOX
CA002520539A CA2520539A1 (en) 2003-03-27 2004-03-29 Method of controlling a continuously variable transmission
MXPA05010360A MXPA05010360A (en) 2003-03-27 2004-03-29 Method of controlling a continuously variable transmission.
JP2006504896A JP4461219B2 (en) 2003-03-27 2004-03-29 Method for controlling a continuously variable transmission
BRPI0408795-0A BRPI0408795A (en) 2003-03-27 2004-03-29 method for controlling a continuously variable transmission
EP04723989A EP1606135B1 (en) 2003-03-27 2004-03-29 Method of controlling a continuously variable transmission
CN200480014751.3A CN1860315B (en) 2003-03-27 2004-03-29 Method of controlling a continuously variable transmission
US13/348,509 US8892315B2 (en) 2003-03-27 2012-01-11 Method of controlling a continuously variable transmission

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US20120220425A1 (en) 2012-08-30
WO2004085190A8 (en) 2005-06-16

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