WO2006053318A2 - Tire pressure maintenance device - Google Patents

Tire pressure maintenance device Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2006053318A2
WO2006053318A2 PCT/US2005/041305 US2005041305W WO2006053318A2 WO 2006053318 A2 WO2006053318 A2 WO 2006053318A2 US 2005041305 W US2005041305 W US 2005041305W WO 2006053318 A2 WO2006053318 A2 WO 2006053318A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
compressor
wheel
tire
output
air
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2005/041305
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2006053318A3 (en
Inventor
Richard Loewe
Original Assignee
Richard Loewe
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Richard Loewe filed Critical Richard Loewe
Priority to CN2005800451255A priority Critical patent/CN101111400B/en
Priority to JP2007541431A priority patent/JP2008519735A/en
Priority to CA2586319A priority patent/CA2586319C/en
Priority to AT05849171T priority patent/ATE520549T1/en
Priority to EP05849171A priority patent/EP1817180B1/en
Publication of WO2006053318A2 publication Critical patent/WO2006053318A2/en
Publication of WO2006053318A3 publication Critical patent/WO2006053318A3/en

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60CVEHICLE TYRES; TYRE INFLATION; TYRE CHANGING; CONNECTING VALVES TO INFLATABLE ELASTIC BODIES IN GENERAL; DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS RELATED TO TYRES
    • B60C23/00Devices for measuring, signalling, controlling, or distributing tyre pressure or temperature, specially adapted for mounting on vehicles; Arrangement of tyre inflating devices on vehicles, e.g. of pumps or of tanks; Tyre cooling arrangements
    • B60C23/02Signalling devices actuated by tyre pressure
    • B60C23/04Signalling devices actuated by tyre pressure mounted on the wheel or tyre
    • B60C23/0408Signalling devices actuated by tyre pressure mounted on the wheel or tyre transmitting the signals by non-mechanical means from the wheel or tyre to a vehicle body mounted receiver
    • B60C23/0422Signalling devices actuated by tyre pressure mounted on the wheel or tyre transmitting the signals by non-mechanical means from the wheel or tyre to a vehicle body mounted receiver characterised by the type of signal transmission means
    • B60C23/0427Near field transmission with inductive or capacitive coupling means
    • B60C23/043Near field transmission with inductive or capacitive coupling means using transformer type signal transducers, e.g. rotary transformers
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60CVEHICLE TYRES; TYRE INFLATION; TYRE CHANGING; CONNECTING VALVES TO INFLATABLE ELASTIC BODIES IN GENERAL; DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS RELATED TO TYRES
    • B60C23/00Devices for measuring, signalling, controlling, or distributing tyre pressure or temperature, specially adapted for mounting on vehicles; Arrangement of tyre inflating devices on vehicles, e.g. of pumps or of tanks; Tyre cooling arrangements
    • B60C23/001Devices for manually or automatically controlling or distributing tyre pressure whilst the vehicle is moving
    • B60C23/004Devices for manually or automatically controlling or distributing tyre pressure whilst the vehicle is moving the control being done on the wheel, e.g. using a wheel-mounted reservoir
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60CVEHICLE TYRES; TYRE INFLATION; TYRE CHANGING; CONNECTING VALVES TO INFLATABLE ELASTIC BODIES IN GENERAL; DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS RELATED TO TYRES
    • B60C23/00Devices for measuring, signalling, controlling, or distributing tyre pressure or temperature, specially adapted for mounting on vehicles; Arrangement of tyre inflating devices on vehicles, e.g. of pumps or of tanks; Tyre cooling arrangements
    • B60C23/02Signalling devices actuated by tyre pressure
    • B60C23/04Signalling devices actuated by tyre pressure mounted on the wheel or tyre
    • B60C23/0408Signalling devices actuated by tyre pressure mounted on the wheel or tyre transmitting the signals by non-mechanical means from the wheel or tyre to a vehicle body mounted receiver
    • B60C23/041Means for supplying power to the signal- transmitting means on the wheel
    • B60C23/0413Wireless charging of active radio frequency circuits
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60CVEHICLE TYRES; TYRE INFLATION; TYRE CHANGING; CONNECTING VALVES TO INFLATABLE ELASTIC BODIES IN GENERAL; DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS RELATED TO TYRES
    • B60C23/00Devices for measuring, signalling, controlling, or distributing tyre pressure or temperature, specially adapted for mounting on vehicles; Arrangement of tyre inflating devices on vehicles, e.g. of pumps or of tanks; Tyre cooling arrangements
    • B60C23/10Arrangement of tyre-inflating pumps mounted on vehicles
    • B60C23/12Arrangement of tyre-inflating pumps mounted on vehicles operated by a running wheel
    • B60C23/126Arrangement of tyre-inflating pumps mounted on vehicles operated by a running wheel the pumps being mounted on the wheel rims
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60CVEHICLE TYRES; TYRE INFLATION; TYRE CHANGING; CONNECTING VALVES TO INFLATABLE ELASTIC BODIES IN GENERAL; DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS RELATED TO TYRES
    • B60C23/00Devices for measuring, signalling, controlling, or distributing tyre pressure or temperature, specially adapted for mounting on vehicles; Arrangement of tyre inflating devices on vehicles, e.g. of pumps or of tanks; Tyre cooling arrangements
    • B60C23/10Arrangement of tyre-inflating pumps mounted on vehicles
    • B60C23/12Arrangement of tyre-inflating pumps mounted on vehicles operated by a running wheel
    • B60C23/129Arrangement of tyre-inflating pumps mounted on vehicles operated by a running wheel the pumps being mounted on wheel spokes
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60CVEHICLE TYRES; TYRE INFLATION; TYRE CHANGING; CONNECTING VALVES TO INFLATABLE ELASTIC BODIES IN GENERAL; DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS RELATED TO TYRES
    • B60C23/00Devices for measuring, signalling, controlling, or distributing tyre pressure or temperature, specially adapted for mounting on vehicles; Arrangement of tyre inflating devices on vehicles, e.g. of pumps or of tanks; Tyre cooling arrangements
    • B60C23/10Arrangement of tyre-inflating pumps mounted on vehicles
    • B60C23/12Arrangement of tyre-inflating pumps mounted on vehicles operated by a running wheel
    • B60C23/133Arrangement of tyre-inflating pumps mounted on vehicles operated by a running wheel activated by centrifugal force

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to vehicle tire pressure maintenance, and more specifically, to tire pressure maintenance devices contained on a wheel of a vehicle that automatically regulate and maintain a desired tire inflation pressure or amount of air in a tire.
  • Under-inflation of vehicle tires is dangerous, deadly, and common. Under- inflation is involved in hundreds of thousands of accidents, tens of thousands of injuries, and hundreds of fatalities annually in the U.S. During 2000, a large number of SUV rollovers and deaths were attributed to significantly under-inflated tires, bringing significant attention to the problem. In hope of reducing the unacceptably high rate of accidents, injuries, and deaths related to under-inflation, the United States
  • FIG. 1 shows how tire pressure varies with temperature according to the ideal gas law.
  • the four pressure-temperature (PT) lines illustrate the pressure-temperature behavior of a tire filled to 32 psi at air temperatures of 20, 40, 60, and 80 0 F, assuming a constant tire volume.
  • the four PT lines represent four different amounts of air in the tire.
  • Ambient temperature variations and tire heating from rolling make tire temperatures and pressures move up and down along the PT line denoting the amount of air in the tire. A tire will move to a higher PT line only when air is added and to a lower line only when air is released or leaks out of the tire.
  • the pressure in a tire increases and decreases about 1 psi with temperature increases and decreases of 1O 0 F.
  • the recommended manual tire inflation procedure is to fill tires monthly to the manufacturer's recommended cold pressure (MRCP or "placard” pressure) at ambient temperature.
  • HRP manufacturer's recommended cold pressure
  • tires are usually filled less often and while warm from driving.
  • Constant Pressure maintains the MRCP independent of temperature by adding air when the warm tire pressure is below its warm objective (about 3 psi above the MRCP);
  • Constant Amount of Air maintains the amount of air in the tire that produces the MRCP at a selected temperature by adding air any time the tire temperature and pressure fall below the appropriate PT line. Both approaches replace air that leaks from tires and assure less variation from the MRCP than manual inflation procedures, with or without a TPMS. The constant amount of air approach will minimize deviations from the PT line due to temperature changes and will minimize the amount of air pumped into a tire to maintain the desired inflation pressure.
  • a new device automatically maintains a desired inflation pressure of an interior of a tire mounted on a wheel of a vehicle.
  • a magnetic element is attached to a stationary part of a wheel assembly and a compressor, such as a microcompressor that is mounted on the rotating wheel, passes near the magnet, thereby magnetically activating the compressor.
  • the magnetic element which may be a stationary permanent magnet or electromagnet, may thus be used as the driving element, and several magnetically-driven compressor configurations are disclosed herein.
  • the compressor may perform at least one cycle per wheel revolution and may replace normal car tire leakage.
  • an electrical coil can be mounted on the wheel to pass near the magnetic element, thereby inducing voltage pulses in the coil to provide on-wheel electrical power to run an electrically-driven compressor that is mounted at another location on the wheel.
  • a stationary permanent magnet drives an on-wheel magnetically activated compressor.
  • a stationary electromagnet drives an on-wheel magnetically activated compressor.
  • a stationary electromagnet and an on-wheel coil form an intermittent split transformer that transfers electrical power to the wheel to drive an on-wheel electrically activated compressor and exchanges pulse coded data between the wheel and vehicle frame.
  • the magnetic element is mounted on the stationary member of the wheel assembly, such as a brake housing, at a radial distance from the axis of rotation.
  • the compressor or coil may be mounted on the wheel such that it passes near the magnet during each revolution of the wheel.
  • the magnetic element produces a magnetic field, which creates a magnetic force on the compressor.
  • a bias force which opposes the magnetic force, may be produced by a bias member or source within the compressor, by centrifugal force upon the compressor, or by another magnet or pole.
  • the magnetic force and the bias force cause a piston to reciprocate within a cylinder.
  • One of the simplest, smallest embodiments of the present invention uses a stationary permanent magnet and a magnetically activated compressor on the wheel.
  • a magnet in the compressor provides a continuous bias force that holds the compression chamber closed, except when it is overpowered by passing near the magnet (whose magnetic force is stronger than the bias force) off the wheel that briefly opens the compression chamber, thus creating the reciprocating motion of the compressor.
  • the bias force may vary the desired inflation pressure with temperature to match the ideal gas law, thereby regulating the amount of air in the tire to produce the desired inflation pressure at a selected temperature.
  • a compressor that will supply 0.001 to 0.002 cubic inch of free air to a tire each wheel revolution is capable of increasing a normal car tire pressure by 1 psi within 50 to 100 miles of driving, well above normal leakage rates.
  • Such a magnetically-driven compressor may occupy a fraction of a cubic inch and weigh a fraction of an ounce.
  • the device can be added to a Tire Pressure Maintenance System (TPMS) equipped vehicle, but a TPMS may add little value to a vehicle equipped with a device that maintains the desired tire pressure.
  • TPMS Tire Pressure Maintenance System
  • An alternative embodiment uses a stationary electromagnet and a rotating electrical coil on the wheel to form an intermittent split pulse transformer briefly during each revolution as the coil passes the stationary electromagnet.
  • the intermittent transformer transfers electrical power from the vehicle to the wheel and provides two-way pulse communication between the vehicle and wheels.
  • the electrical power on the wheel activates an electrically-driven compressor to maintain the desired tire inflation and provides power to on-wheel electronics.
  • An on-wheel electronic controller may manage compressor operation and control two-way communication with a central controller on the vehicle. It sends data on compressor utilization or output flow rate to the central controller from which too high a rate suggests a leak, and too low a rate suggests a device failure.
  • the central controller warns the driver of either such condition by a simple display. Addition of a small rechargeable battery whose charge is maintained by power from the transformer provides reserve power to run the compressor at high speed to mitigate rapid leaks, increasing time to reach safety before the tire goes flat.
  • Figure 1 is a graph showing the relationship of air pressure and temperature along pressure-temperature lines in a tire filled with four different amounts of air to the manufacturer's recommended cold pressure (MRCP) at different temperatures;
  • Figure 2 is a partial cross-section view of an exemplary automobile wheel assembly showing an example location of a magnetic element on a stationary disc brake caliper housing and a magnetically-driven compressor located on a wheel rim at a time when the wheel rotation places them adjacent in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention
  • Figure 3 is an oblique view illustrating the magnetic element and compressor arrangement of Figure 2 in greater detail
  • Figure 4 is a cross-section view of a compressor that includes a cylinder and a piston with a magnetic actuator and bias magnets, depicted at a position adjacent to the stationary permanent magnet;
  • Figure 5 is a partial cross-section view of another example arrangement on an automobile wheel assembly with a stationary electromagnet and a magnetically- driven compressor wherein the compressor output is connected to a tire valve stem by a pneumatic tube;
  • Figure 6A is a cross-sectional view of an intake position of a magnetic diaphragm compressor when passing the stationary electromagnet
  • Figure 6B is a cross-sectional view of an output position of the magnetic diaphragm compressor whose output is connected by pneumatic tube to the tire valve stem as shown in Figure 5;
  • Figure 7 is a cross-section view of a compressor when adjacent to the stationary electromagnet wherein a bias force on the piston is created by centrifugal force of the rotary motion of the compressor;
  • Figure 8 is an oblique view of a magnetically-driven compressor that is activated by passing each pole of an electromagnet
  • Figure 9 is a partial cross-section view of an exemplary automobile wheel assembly wherein the stationary permanent magnet is mounted on a drum brake backing plate of the wheel assembly where an electrical coil, mounted on a wheel rim, passes close to the magnetic element and is in electrical communication with an electrically-driven compressor located over a wheel hub and in fluid communication with the valve stem via the pneumatic tube;
  • Figure 10 is a schematic diagram of the arrangement in Figure 9 showing the optional addition of a power supply and rechargeable battery and illustrating use of a bias member, depicted as a compression spring;
  • Figure 1 1 is a cross-section view of a partial automobile wheel assembly with an electromagnet mounted on a disc brake caliper housing and an electrical coil mounted on a wheel spoke thereby forming an intermittent split transformer for transferring electrical power from the vehicle to the wheel and for communicating between the wheel and a central controller on the vehicle;
  • Figure 12 is a schematic diagram of the electromagnet and electrical coil forming an intermittent split pulse transformer that provides induced electrical pulses directly to the electrically-driven compressor;
  • Figure 13 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment using the intermittent split pulse transformer to transfer electrical power from the vehicle to operate the electrically-driven compressor and on-wheel electronics, and to transfer pulse coded data in both directions between the vehicle frame and the wheel to alert a driver to suspected leaks or failures; and
  • Figure 14 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment as in Figure 13 in which the magnetically-driven compressor and the electrical coil pass the electromagnet sequentially, the electrical coil supplying electrical power to only the on-wheel electronics and providing two-way pulse coded communication of alerts and control data between the vehicle and the wheel.
  • Figure 2 is a cross-section view of a partial automobile wheel assembly 10 and a device 12 for maintaining a desired inflation pressure of an interior of a tire 14 by using the rotation of the wheel 22 with respect to the wheel assembly 10.
  • Wheel assemblies are generally movably attached to a vehicle frame by a suspension and in some cases, by a steering mechanism.
  • the embodiments of the present invention will be discussed with reference to generic elements that are commonly present in most wheel assemblies 10.
  • implementations of the present invention may be retrofitted into a variety of existing wheel assemblies 10 or designed into new wheel assemblies 10 of differing configurations.
  • Wheel assemblies 10 may include many members that do not rotate with the wheel 22, some of which, such as a brake assembly, retain a very close relationship with the wheel. Such items are referred to hereafter as stationary members 16, meaning stationary with respect to a wheel assembly 10. Although they may move with respect to the vehicle frame, they do not rotate with the wheel.
  • the wheel assembly 10 includes a stationary member 16 such as a disc brake caliper housing 18, a drum brake backing plate 20, as well as any other of a variety of stationary members 16 of a wheel assembly 10.
  • a stationary member 16 such as a disc brake caliper housing 18, a drum brake backing plate 20, as well as any other of a variety of stationary members 16 of a wheel assembly 10.
  • Figures 2 and 3 also illustrate that the wheel assembly 10 includes a wheel 22 that defines an interior portion 24 and an axis of rotation 26. It is contemplated that the interior portion 24 of the wheel 22 may refer to numerous locations along the wheel 22, such as a wheel rim 28 or a wheel spoke 96.
  • the tire inflation device 12 comprises at least one magnetic element 30 on the stationary member 16 and a compressor 32 that rotates with the wheel 22.
  • the magnetic element 30 is mounted on the stationary member 16 at a radial distance 34 from the axis of rotation 26.
  • the magnetic element 30 is operative to produce a magnetic field 36 that the magnetically-driven compressor 32 transits once per wheel revolution.
  • the magnetic element 30 may be a stationary permanent magnet 37 or an electromagnet 38.
  • the electromagnet 38 may be powered by receiving a current from a power source 40, such as a vehicle battery 42.
  • the compressor 32 is mounted on the interior portion 24 of the wheel 22. Thus, as the wheel 22 rotates relative to the stationary member 16 of the wheel assembly 10 the compressor 32 transits the magnetic field 36 during each revolution of the wheel 22. In response to the presence of the magnetic field 36, the compressor 32 operates to maintain the desired inflation pressure within the tire 14 by intaking air from the atmosphere, compressing the air, and outputting the air into the tire 14. Thus, the compressor 32 is in fluid communication with the atmosphere and the tire
  • the compressor 32 may be a magnetic compressor.
  • the compressor 32 includes a compressor body 44.
  • Figures 2 and 3 illustrate the relationship of the compressor 32 with respect to the magnetic element 30 as the compressor 32 transits the magnetic field.
  • the magnetic element 30 and the compressor 32 are disposed at approximately the same radial distance 34 from the axis of rotation 26, and the compressor 32 is positioned to pass close to the magnetic element 30. It is contemplated that various modifications to the general configuration may be implemented so as to further enhance the magnetic communication of the magnetic element 30 and the compressor 32 and to facilitate mounting on various wheel assemblies 10.
  • the device 12 further includes means for regulating output pressure of the compressed air to the desired inflation pressure.
  • the regulation of the output pressure of the compressed air may be accomplished without off-wheel aid.
  • embodiments of the present invention may operate independent of controllers, regulators, or other devices and provide an independent, self-sufficient device that maintains the desired inflation pressure within the tire 14.
  • FIG 4 there is illustrated a cross-section view of the stationary permanent magnet 37 and the compressor 32 as the compressor 32 transits the magnetic field.
  • the compressor 32 may include an intake valve 46, an output valve 48, a centrifugal valve 78, an intake plenum 86, and an intake port 88.
  • the intake port 88 and the centrifugal valve 78 are operative to intake air into the compressor 32.
  • the intake valve 46 is operative to intake air into the compression chamber 33
  • the output valve 48 is operative to output air from the compression chamber 33 into the output port 66, which is in fluid communication with the tire 14.
  • the compressor 32 utilizes the intake and output valves 46, 48 to maintain the desired inflation pressure of the tire 14.
  • the compressor 32 includes a compression chamber 33 and an actuator 35.
  • the compression chamber 33 defines a chamber volume, which volume may be increased or decreased by the action of the actuator 35.
  • the compressor 32 may include a cylinder 50 and a piston 52. The portion of the cylinder 50, not occupied by the piston 52, in which air is compressed, is referred to as the compression chamber 33.
  • the piston 52 may include a piston base 53, as shown in Figure 4.
  • the actuator 35 is the piston base 53 of the piston 50.
  • the piston 52 is slidably positionable within the cylinder 50 to reciprocate between input and output positions 56, 58.
  • the output position 58 is shown in Figure 10.
  • the piston base 53 may be ferromagnetic to be responsive to magnetic forces.
  • the cylinder 50 is in fluid communication with the intake and output valves 46, 48. Further, the cylinder 50 may define a cylinder axis 54.
  • the compressor 32 may be mounted with the cylinder axis 54 being parallel to the axis of rotation 26 to allow the motion of the compressor's piston 52 to be orthogonal to the centrifugal force created by the rotation of the wheel 22.
  • the compressor 32 passes the magnet 30, it passes through the magnetic flux path which follows the path of the magnetic field 36 as shown by the arrows.
  • the magnetic flux path of the magnetic field 36 passes through the air gap and ferromagnetic piston base 53 and permanent magnet 30, 37.
  • the magnetic field 36 which is well-known in the art as being a three-dimensional phenomenon, is represented by the two dimensional magnetic flux path shown in the figures.
  • the magnetic element 30 may be wider than the compressor 32 in the direction of relative motion to lengthen the time that the full magnetic force is applied to the compressor 32 as it transits the magnetic field.
  • the air path through the compressor 32 begins at the centrifugal valve 78 at the intake port 88 which may be held closed by bias magnets 60 at vehicle speeds below a predetermined speed (e.g. 15 mph) at which the centrifugal force expels potential liquid or solid contaminants preventing their entry through the centrifugal valve 78. Above that predetermined speed, the centrifugal force on the centrifugal valve 78 overcomes the magnetic bias force holding the centrifugal valve 78 closed and opens the centrifugal valve 78 to allow clean air to enter the intake plenum 86.
  • the compressor body 44 around the centrifugal valve 78 may be shaped to modify the air flow to deflect airborne particles away and reduce pressure differences due to the Bernoulli Effect.
  • the intake plenum 86 may occupy spare space within the compressor 32 between the centrifugal valve 78 and the intake valve 46, and may include a membrane 79 that passes air, but resists passage of water. Air may also flow through an air filter 80 that may be in the piston 52 (as shown in Figure 4) or in the intake plenum 86 (as shown in Figure 6A) and then through the intake valve 46 into the compression chamber 33.
  • An intake stroke of the piston 52 may occur as the compressor 32 transits the magnetic field and the magnetic force on the piston base 53 draws the piston 52 outward of the cylinder 50.
  • the outward movement of the piston 52 increases the volume of the compression chamber 33 and creates a partial vacuum in the compression chamber 33 that opens the intake valve 46 and draws air in from the intake plenum 86 through a filter 80.
  • the intake stroke is performed as the piston 52 moves toward an intake position 56.
  • the intake position 56 is achieved when the piston 52 is positioned with the compression chamber 33 substantially having a maximum chamber volume.
  • the piston 52 is further operative to expel air from the cylinder 50 into the tire 14 via the output valve 48 as the piston 52 moves toward an output position 58 during an output stroke, in which the piston 52 is positioned with the compression chamber 33 substantially having a minimum chamber volume.
  • the output stroke is performed when the piston
  • the intake and output valves 46, 48 are preferably check valves. Thus, as the cylinder 50 intakes air, the output check valve 48 may insure that no air from the tire 14 enters the cylinder 50. Further, when the cylinder 50 is expelling air into the tire 14, the intake check valve 46 may insure that no air intended for the tire 14 exits through the intake valve 46.
  • two bias magnets 60 apply a bias force on the ferromagnetic piston base 53 (magnetic actuator) that holds the piston in the output position 58 minimizing the volume of the compression chamber 33.
  • the magnetic force applied by the magnet 30, 37 on the piston base 53 overpowers the bias force and pulls the piston 52 out on the intake stroke, maximizing the volume of the compression chamber 33.
  • this creates a partial vacuum in the compression chamber 33 and draws air into the compression chamber 33 from the intake plenum 86 through the intake check valve 46.
  • the magnetic flux follows the path 36 as shown by the arrows in Figure 4 through the air gaps, the ferromagnetic piston base 53, and magnetic element 30, 37.
  • the magnetic element 30 may be wider than the compressor 32 in the direction of relative motion to lengthen the time that the full magnetic force is applied to the piston base 53 as it transits the magnetic field.
  • the bias force on the piston base 53 returns the piston 52 to an output position on an output stroke.
  • the volume of the compression chamber 33 is reduced the air is compressed. If the maximum pressure provided by the bias force is less than the tire pressure that appears in the output port 66 the output valve 48 remains closed and no air is forced into the tire 14.
  • the output valve 48 opens and air flows into the output port 66.
  • selecting or adjusting the bias force to the desired inflation pressure fixes the maximum pressure to be applied to the tire 14 and is used to establish the desired tire inflation pressure. For example, if the bias force on the piston base is 1.7 pounds and the piston area is 0.05 square inches, the bias pressure is 34 psi, the maximum pressure produced.
  • the bias force for a device is selected or adjusted to the desired tire pressure, typically the MRCP (manufacturer's recommended cold pressure or "placard pressure”), at the average ambient temperature.
  • the compressed air enters the tire 14 from the output port 66 through fluid communication with a penetration 64 (hole) of the rim 28, as in Figures 2, 3, and 4, or alternatively by a pneumatic tube 70 to a valve stem 72.
  • the intake and output valves 46, 48 may provide two one-way check valves that prevent air from flowing backwards from the tire 14 through the compressor 32 in the event of a valve failure in the open position.
  • the compressor 32 may be mounted with the cylinder axis 54 being parallel to the axis of rotation 26 to allow the motion of the compressor's piston 52 to be orthogonal to the centrifugal force created by the rotation of the wheel 22.
  • Each revolution of the wheel 22 causes one cycle of the compressor 32, forcing a tiny amount of air into the tire 14 when the tire pressure is below the desired inflation pressure.
  • the compressor may be sized to overcome a nominal tire leakage rate of about 1 psi per month and a minimum number of miles a vehicle may travel monthly.
  • the magnetic element 30 may drive the input stroke and the bias member 60 drive the output stroke, it is contemplated that the magnetic element 30 may drive the output stroke and that the bias force may drive the input stroke of the piston 52.
  • the bias member 60 may be selected or adjusted to provide a fixed bias force at a selected temperature that determines the desired fixed pressure that the compressor 32 maintains in the tire 14 when warm (normally the MCRP plus 2 or 3 psi). Providing a calibrated adjustment to the bias force may permit manual change of the desired tire pressure to adapt to seasons, loads, or other conditions. If a tire is inadvertently filled with too much air the normal tire leak rate will gradually correct this without compressor operation.
  • Two alternative approaches to tire safety may be followed utilizing embodiments of the present invention.
  • the compressor 32 may be required to add air to the tire 14 to compensate for pressure losses due to leaks or drops in the ambient temperature.
  • the fixed pressure approach one may seek to maintain constant the amount of air in the tire 14.
  • the compressor 32 may vary the bias force with temperature to make the desired inflation pressure approximate a selected PT line 92 in Figure 1. This is achieved by maintaining a constant ratio of absolute pressure to absolute temperature in the tire.
  • the compressor 32 may be configured to follow the PT line 92 that intersects the horizontal MRCP 32 psi line at 6O 0 F. That line becomes the desired PT line 92 for the compressor 32.
  • the bias force is increased with temperature to increase the desired inflation pressure with temperature.
  • the bias member's 60 mounting may be configured to vary the bias magnets' 60 position with temperature thereby changing the bias force with temperature to approximate the selected PT line.
  • the compressor 32 adds air to the tire 14 when the pressure-temperature (PT point) of the air in the tire 14 is below the desired PT line 92.
  • the bias force of the compressor 32 may be selected or adjusted to follow a desired PT line 92 ("compressor's PT line") that intersects the MRCP at an average ambient temperature for the area of use.
  • the tire pressure normally stays on a PT line determined by the amount of air in the tire.
  • the compressor 32 maintains the amount of air in the tire 14 constant, and the pressure of the tire 14 may fluctuate with temperature.
  • This fixed-amount-of-air alternative to fixed pressure may be useful in many climates and may be safer than constantly filling the tire with more air in order to keep tire pressure constant.
  • the compressor 32 pumps a small amount of air into the tire 14 each wheel 22 revolution. If the tire's PT point is above the compressor's PT line 92, no air is pumped into the tire 14 and normal leaks bring the tire's PT point down to the compressor's PT line 92.
  • the compressor 32 replaces leakage air and maintains the amount of air in the tire 14 nearly constant, keeping it on the selected compressor PT line 92 and minimizing the amount of air that must be added to the tire 14.
  • the bias magnets 60 may be mounted at one end of temperature sensitive positioning rods 94 that establish the separation of the bias magnets 60 from the piston base 53 for three purposes: (1) to select the compressor's PT line 92; (2) to vary the desired inflation pressure with temperature to match the selected PT line 92; and (3) to offset the bias magnets' decreasing strength with increasing temperature.
  • the positioning rods 94 establish the separation of the bias member 60 from the piston base 53 at the end of the output stroke.
  • the positioning rod has a high thermal coefficient of expansion (TCE) and is mounted to provide good thermal communication with the air in the tire. By configuring the TCE materials, their exposure to the air in the tire, and the separation of the bias magnets from the piston base, the desired inflation pressure provided by the bias force may be established.
  • TCE thermal coefficient of expansion
  • Figures 5, 9, and 1 1 illustrate other example mounting arrangements and Figures 6A, 6B, 7, and 8 illustrate other example embodiments of magnetic elements 30 and magnetically-driven compressors 32.
  • These figures are generally schematic illustrations of concepts rather than realistic design illustrations.
  • centrifugal valves, filters, and means to vary the desired inflation pressure with temperature are not shown in all cases, although they are contemplated.
  • the compressor 32, 110 may be mounted to the wheel rim 28 as shown in Figures 2 and 3 or to a wheel spoke 96 as shown in Figures 9 and 1 1.
  • Its output may be by a direct penetration of the rim 28 by attaching the output port 66 through a hole 64 in the rim as shown in Figures 2 and 3 or by pneumatic tube 70 to the wheel's valve stem 72.
  • the magnetic element 30 may be attached to the brake housing 18 as shown in Figure 2 or any other stationary member 16 of the wheel assembly 10 where the compressor 32 can be mounted to pass close to it.
  • the shapes and sizes of magnetic members may assume many varied configurations.
  • Figures 7 and 10 illustrate different biasing means using centrifugal force or a spring for the biasing force.
  • Figure 5 shows an example mounting with an electromagnet 38 mounted on a drum brake backing plate 20 and the compressor 32 mounted on the wheel spoke 96 with a pneumatic tube 70 connecting the output port 66 of the compressor 32 to the valve stem 72.
  • the central controller 100 directs current from the vehicle battery 42 to an electromagnet winding 1 16 to produce the magnetic field 36 only while the compressor 32 transits the magnetic field 36. It may determine the location and speed of the compressor on the wheel using a Hall Effect sensor to sense the passing of a small signal magnet mounted on the wheel a known angle from the compressor. It then determines the speed and position of the compressor and the time of its next transit.
  • the electromagnet 38 and magnetically- driven diaphragm compressor 32 embodiment whose intake position 56 is illustrated in Figure 6A and output position 58 is illustrated in Figure 6B may be used in the mounting configuration in Figure 5.
  • the actuator 35 is a ferromagnetic diaphragm 59.
  • a short pneumatic tube attached to the port 66 conveys the output air to the tire 14 via its valve stem 72.
  • the magnetic element 30 is shown as an electromagnet 38, although it may just as well be a permanent magnet 30, 37.
  • the diaphragm 59 preferably comprises ferromagnetic particles embedded in a flexible diaphragm material.
  • Figure 6A shows the compressor 32 adjacent the magnetic element 30, 38 where the flexible magnetic actuator 59 is magnetically drawn to the intake position 56 by the electromagnet 38, drawing air into the compression chamber 33 from the intake plenum 86 through the filter 80 and the intake check valve 46.
  • Figure 6B shows the flexible magnetic diaphragm 59 held in the output position 58 by the bias magnet 60, forcing the compressed output air out of the compression chamber 33 through the output check valve 48.
  • the compressor body 44 is mostly non-magnetic, but includes two ferromagnetic pole extenders 61 that effectively shorten the air gap between the magnetic element 30 and the flexible magnetic actuator 58.
  • Figure 7 illustrates an embodiment using centrifugal force on the piston 52 and piston base 53 as the bias force to drive the piston's output stroke.
  • the compressor 32 is oriented such that the cylinder axis 54 is perpendicular to the axis of rotation 26 and parallel with the centrifugal force created by the rotation of the compressor 32 about the axis of rotation 26.
  • the centrifugal force acts as a continuous bias force on the piston base 53 and the piston 52 that drives the piston 52 toward the output position 58, compressing the volume of the compression chamber 33.
  • the compressed air exits through the output valve 48 and the output port 66 that penetrates the wheel rim 28.
  • the magnetic element 30 is shown as an electromagnet 38 but can alternatively be a permanent magnet. As the compressor 32 passes the electromagnet
  • the electromagnet 38 is pulsed by a central controller 100 creating the magnetic field 36 that draws the piston base 53 toward the intake position 56 on the intake stroke, overcoming the centrifugal bias force on the piston 52. Because the centrifugal bias force varies with vehicle speed, it is not usable to limit the pressure to the desired inflation pressure. Rather, a pressure limit valve 74 may be located in the piston 52 to release air from the compression chamber 33 to the intake plenum 86 when the pressure in the compression chamber 33 exceeds the desired tire inflation pressure, thereby limiting the output pressure to that at which the limit valve 74 opens.
  • the ball and spring pressure limit valve 74 shown is oriented perpendicular to the cylinder axis 54 as shown in Figure 7 to prevent centrifugal force from affecting limit valve 74 operation.
  • the pressure limit valve 74 may be placed at the output port 66 to release air to the atmosphere or to the intake plenum 86 when pressure in the output port 66 exceeds the desired tire inflation pressure.
  • another check valve is placed between the tire 14 and the pressure limit valve 74 to prevent a failure of the pressure limit valve 74 from releasing air from the tire 14 to the atmosphere or intake plenum 86.
  • the centrifugal valve 78 uses a disc spring 84 to continuously force the valve plug into the valve seat and uses centrifugal force to overcome the bias spring 84 force and open the centrifugal valve 78 at a predetermined vehicle speed.
  • FIG. 8 shows a magnetic configuration that may provide two compressor cycles on one transit of the magnet element 30, 38 by the compressor 32.
  • the compressor 32 transits two separated poles 87 of the magnetic element 30, 38. Transit of each pole 87 initiates one of an intake stroke and an output stroke in the compressor 32. While the compressor 32 is passing between the two poles 87, the magnetic field 36 from the magnetic element 30, 38 falls off and the bias force initiates the other one of the input and output stroke. If the space between poles 87, the speed of rotation of the wheel
  • the first two strokes will end before the compressor 32 reaches the second pole 87 and initiates another intake stroke.
  • more than one compressor cycle can be completed during one wheel revolution.
  • magnetic fields of opposite polarity have the same attracting effect on non-magnetized ferromagnetic material
  • magnetic fields of opposite polarity will attract or repel a permanent magnet, depending on the arrangement of the magnetic poles 87.
  • poles attract and like poles repel if the actuator 35 is magnetic, such as if the piston base 53 is a permanent magnet, the compressor 32 may undergo alternating intake and output strokes upon passing two opposite poles 87 of the stationary magnetic element 30 separated in the direction of relative motion.
  • Embodiments without a bias force may use a pressure limit valve 74 as described above to establish and regulate the desired tire inflation pressure.
  • AU of the embodiments described above use a magnetically-driven compressor.
  • the following embodiments use an electric coil 104 to transit the magnetic field 36 of the magnetic element 30 and relay the induced electrical energy received by the coil 104 to an electrically-driven compressor 110.
  • Figure 9 illustrates an example arrangement showing a coil 104 connected by wire 98 to an electrically- driven compressor 110 mounted over a wheel hub 99 and sending the output air through a pneumatic tube 70 to the valve stem 72.
  • a pulse of one polarity is induced as the coil 104 enters the magnetic field 36 and a pulse of opposite polarity is induced as the coil 104 leaves the magnetic field 36, if the field 36 is wider than the coil 104.
  • the pulses may each drive an intake stroke and produce two compressor cycles in one wheel revolution, which may also work in previously discussed embodiments if the compressor 32, and not the coil 104 transits the magnetic field 36.
  • Such electrical pulses may directly drive an electrically-driven compressor 1 10.
  • Almost any magnetically-driven compressor configuration may be converted to an electrically-driven compressor by attaching an electromagnet 38 that produces the type of magnetic field needed by the magnetically-driven compressor 32.
  • Figure 10 illustrates an embodiment that uses the arrangement in Figure 9.
  • the compressor 110 is shown using a compression spring 62 as the bias member 60 to provide the bias force that drives the output stroke.
  • An alternative to using the bias force is to establish the desired inflation pressure using a pressure activated switch 76.
  • the switch 76 may be activated by a sensor that senses the pressure in the output port 66 of the compressor 1 10 and open a circuit 1 1 1 from the coil 104 to the compressor 110 when the output pressure is higher than the desired tire inflation pressure, thereby causing the compressor 1 10 to stop operating.
  • the centrifugal valve 78 may be located sufficiently off the axis of rotation 26 for proper operation and be in fluid communication with the intake port 88 of the compressor 110 by another pneumatic tube 70.
  • the intake pneumatic tube 70 may be filled with a filter material as an added precaution.
  • An electronic power supply 1 12 may be provided to convert the electrical power received from the electrical coil 104 to a form best suited to drive any type of electrically-driven compressor 110.
  • any of the magnetically-driven compressor 32 embodiments described above may be converted to an electrically- driven compressor 1 10 by attaching an electromagnet 38, as shown in Figure 10.
  • Any type of electrically-driven compressor may be used, such as a diaphragm compressor, solenoid-driven compressor, stepping motor compressor, or a D.C. or A.C. motor- driven compressor.
  • Electrical energy may be stored by a capacitor or by a small rechargeable battery 1 14 that is kept charged by rectified pulses from the coil 104.
  • the electromagnet 38 may be configured to change the polarity of its poles 87 by reversing the direction of current through the electromagnet's winding 116, permitting more configurations.
  • An unmagnetized actuator 35 with a bias force and a magnetic element 30 with two wide poles 87 that are widely separated in the direction of relative motion may effect two compressor cycles during one complete transit of the magnetic element 30 by the compressor 32. If the output of the electrical coil 104 is sent to an electromagnet 38 driving a compressor 1 10, as shown in Figure 10, and if the piston base 53 is a permanent magnet, then the two pulses of alternating polarity would drive one compressor cycle from one transit of the coil 104 past the magnet 37, without a bias member 60. A direct electrical connection may be provided from the coil 104 to the compressor, as shown in Figure 10. With the magnetic element configuration in Figure 8, one transit produces the four induced pulses of opposite polarity that may effect two complete compressor cycles on one wheel revolution
  • any of the capabilities described above to augment the magnetically-driven compressors 32 may be added to electrically-driven compressors 110, including a centrifugal valve 78, pressure activated switch, and bias force pressure regulation. If the configuration in Figure 10 is used with a TPMS, a switch similar to switch 76 may be activated by the TPMS controller, enabling more sophisticated control of the pressure-temperature relationship.
  • FIGS 11 and 12 illustrate another embodiment using an electromagnet 38 for the magnetic element 30, an electrical coil 104 to transit the magnetic field, and an electrically-driven compressor 110.
  • the central controller 100 directs current pulses from the vehicle battery 42 to the electromagnets 38 on all wheels when the coil is passing the electromagnet 38.
  • the combination of electromagnet 38 and electric coil 104 form an intermittent split pulse transformer 102 with a two-piece core.
  • One core piece with the electromagnet winding 1 16 is stationary on the wheel assembly 10.
  • the other core piece is part of the electrical coil 104 and rotates with the wheel 22, passing close to the stationary core piece once per wheel revolution.
  • the split transformer 102 is operative during the time the coil 104 is passing the magnetic element 30.
  • the electromagnet winding 116 is the primary winding of the split pulse transformer 102 and the electrical coil 104 is the secondary winding 1 18. While the electrical coil 104 transits the magnetic field caused by a current pulse in the primary winding 116, the voltage pulses induced in the secondary 1 18 is fed by wire to the electrically-driven compressor 110 to initiate one compressor cycle.
  • a pressure activated switch 76, or pressure limit valve 74, or the bias force may limit the output pressure to the desired tire inflation pressure.
  • the electrically-driven compressor 1 10 may be located anywhere on the wheel 22, preferably over the wheel hub 99.
  • Figure 13 expands on the embodiment in Figure 12 by adding an on-wheel controller 120, an on-wheel power supply 112, a simple driver display 128, and a small rechargeable battery 1 14.
  • the power supply 112 permits use of any type of electrically-driven compressor and provides power for any on- wheel electronics.
  • the on-wheel controller 120 typically a microprocessor, may control compressor operation and the two-way data communication capability provided by the intermittent transformer 102.
  • the on-wheel controller may receive control instructions from the central controller 100. It sends data regarding at least one of the compressor 1 10 utilization and output flow rate. The flow rate derived from a sensor in the output port 66 is sent to the central controller 100.
  • the central controller 100 sends an alert to the driver display 128 suggesting a possible leak when the utilization or flow rate of any wheel exceeds a predetermined threshold for a predetermined period. Similarly, it sends an alert to the driver display 128 when the utilization or low rate has been zero for a predetermined period, suggesting possible failure of the device 12.
  • the alerts indicate the wheel involved and nature of the alert.
  • the small rechargeable battery 1 14, illustrated in Figures 13 and 14, is kept charged by a charging circuit in the power supply 1 12, and adds two valuable features. It provides power storage and smoothing for any on-wheel electronics and provides emergency power for brief periods of maximum speed compressor operation for a tire suspected of having a leak. In normal operation, the low duty cycle of power transfer through the intermittent transformer 102 limits compressor operation to that adequate for replacing normal leakage.
  • a TPMS may use the two-way communications between the wheel 22 and the vehicle and the rechargeable battery 1 14 to power the on-wheel electronics.
  • Addition of temperature and pressure sensors 90, 124 to tires in the Figure 13 embodiment allows adding the primary function of a TPMS, warning the driver when any tire 14 is significantly under-inflated.
  • any value of such TPMS-like warnings is greatly reduced since significant under-inflation is unlikely to occur in this embodiment unless there is a significant leak in a tire or a device failure, which may be sensed and trigger alerts to the driver without in-tire sensors.
  • Figure 14 illustrates an embodiment with the same features as in the embodiment in Figure 13.
  • the magnetically-driven compressor 32 and electrical coil 104 transit the magnetic field separately.
  • a magnetically-driven compressor 32 is used instead of an electrically-driven compressor 1 10.
  • the coil 104 and power supply 1 12 serves only the electronics and rechargeable battery 114 and not the compressor 32.
  • the aforementioned embodiments may be variously modified. For example, multiple pulses may be applied during one transit of a compressor 32 or a coil 104 past an electromagnetic 38; the magnetic element 30 may be mounted on any stationary member 16 (non- rotating part) of the wheel 22 assembly 10 from which it can be positioned close enough to the rotating compressor 32 or coil 104; the compressor 32 or electrical coil
  • any of the implementations described above can use multiple magnetic elements 30 and/or multiple compressors 32 or electrical coils 104 on one wheel assembly 10; the devices may be used on wheels of any type of vehicle with inflatable tires; different types and configurations of magnets 30, compressors 32, 1 10 and electrical coils 104 may be used; various combinations of magnets 30, compressors 32, 1 10 bias force means, pressure limit means, input and output means, check valves, element mounting means and configurations may be used.
  • the means of driving a compressor 32, 1 10 is one of the important features of the present invention, not necessarily the nature of the compressor 32, 1 10 (therefore, diaphragm, compressors, motor-driven compressors, solenoid compressors, and other types of compressors may also be substituted as viable compressors in embodiments of the present invention).

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Compressors, Vaccum Pumps And Other Relevant Systems (AREA)
  • Vehicle Cleaning, Maintenance, Repair, Refitting, And Outriggers (AREA)

Abstract

A device is provided for maintaining a desired inflation pressure within a tire mounted on a wheel of a vehicle. The device includes a microcompressor and a magnetic element. The compressor is mounted on the wheel and is in fluid communication with the atmosphere and the tire. The magnetic element is mounted on a stationary member of the wheel assembly and produces a magnetic field. The compressor is activated by transiting the magnetic field during each wheel revolution. Alternatively, an electric coil mounted on the wheel may transit the magnetic field to generate electrical power for an electrically-driven compressor. Thus, the compressor may pump air into the tire to maintain the desired inflation pressure. For leaks or device failure, a driver may be notified and a battery can operate the compressor at a high rate to maximize tire use until a safe place is reached.

Description

TIRE PRESSURE MAINTENANCE DEVICE
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
The present application claims priority to provisional application Serial No. 60/627,256 filed on November 12, 2004.
STATEMENT RE: FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH/DEVELOPMENT Not Applicable
BACKGROUND
The present invention relates generally to vehicle tire pressure maintenance, and more specifically, to tire pressure maintenance devices contained on a wheel of a vehicle that automatically regulate and maintain a desired tire inflation pressure or amount of air in a tire. Under-inflation of vehicle tires is dangerous, deadly, and common. Under- inflation is involved in hundreds of thousands of accidents, tens of thousands of injuries, and hundreds of fatalities annually in the U.S. During 2000, a large number of SUV rollovers and deaths were attributed to significantly under-inflated tires, bringing significant attention to the problem. In hope of reducing the unacceptably high rate of accidents, injuries, and deaths related to under-inflation, the United States
Congress passed the TREAD Act of 2000 that requires tire pressure monitoring systems (TPMSs) on all new light passenger vehicles in the U.S. Consequently, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) proposed a safety standard requiring that as of 2007, all new passenger cars, trucks, multipurpose passenger vehicles, or busses under 10,000 pounds must be equipped with a TPMS to warn a driver when any tire is under-inflated by 25% or more. The program is estimated to cost well over $1 billion annually.
However, even if the controversial TPMS program achieves its estimates it will reduce under-inflation related accidents by about 20%. Many industry experts doubt that it will help at all. A device that maintains proper tire inflation automatically has the potential of eliminating 80% to 90% of such accidents, injuries and deaths. In addition, an effective tire pressure maintenance device will improve fuel efficiency by about 2% and will reduce tire tread wear by about 5%, more than paying for the devices and saving many billions of dollars annually in the U.S. if in widespread use.
The temperature of air in a tire has a major effect on the pressure of air in the tire that must be considered in any approach to tire pressure maintenance. Figure 1 shows how tire pressure varies with temperature according to the ideal gas law. The four pressure-temperature (PT) lines illustrate the pressure-temperature behavior of a tire filled to 32 psi at air temperatures of 20, 40, 60, and 800F, assuming a constant tire volume. The four PT lines represent four different amounts of air in the tire. Ambient temperature variations and tire heating from rolling make tire temperatures and pressures move up and down along the PT line denoting the amount of air in the tire. A tire will move to a higher PT line only when air is added and to a lower line only when air is released or leaks out of the tire.
As shown in Figure 1 , the pressure in a tire increases and decreases about 1 psi with temperature increases and decreases of 1O0F. Normally, as a car is-driven the temperature in the tire increases about 3 psi above its "cold" pressure (at ambient temperature) due to the heat caused by flexing of the side-walls and friction from road contact. The recommended manual tire inflation procedure is to fill tires monthly to the manufacturer's recommended cold pressure (MRCP or "placard" pressure) at ambient temperature. In practice, tires are usually filled less often and while warm from driving. An ambient temperature drop of 500F, possible within a day and common within a month, reduces tire pressure by about 5 psi. Thus, tire pressures frequently fall 8 psi below the MRCP, typically 25%, without considering the normal leak rate of about 1 psi per month. Most under-inflation is due to inadequate manual tire pressure maintenance and it is killing and maiming people at an unacceptable rate. Two approaches to automatic tire pressure maintenance goals are:
1) Constant Pressure - maintains the MRCP independent of temperature by adding air when the warm tire pressure is below its warm objective (about 3 psi above the MRCP); and
2) Constant Amount of Air - maintains the amount of air in the tire that produces the MRCP at a selected temperature by adding air any time the tire temperature and pressure fall below the appropriate PT line. Both approaches replace air that leaks from tires and assure less variation from the MRCP than manual inflation procedures, with or without a TPMS. The constant amount of air approach will minimize deviations from the PT line due to temperature changes and will minimize the amount of air pumped into a tire to maintain the desired inflation pressure.
Many patents have been granted on approaches to automatically maintain the desired inflation pressure in pneumatic tires. None address temperature variation significantly. Of the related approaches, one involves a difficult generation of two continuous out of phase A.C. voltages that are rectified to provide a continuous D.C. power source for a D.C. motor-driven air compressor on the wheel. Another discloses a battery operated compressor contained on a wheel with no practical means for recharging the battery. Another requires a TPMS or an on-wheel pressure sensor to send low tire pressure data from the wheel to the vehicle body in order to activate an electromagnet that drives a compressor on the wheel. However, none have produced a practical device. Therefore, there are needs in the art for a tire pressure maintenance means that: • automatically maintains proper tire inflation without operator attention or maintenance;
• is small, simple, practical, inexpensive and that provides long term reliable operation; is self-contained on a wheel assembly and operated by wheel rotation; • is fail safe such that failures do not cause deflation or over-inflation of a tire; alerts drivers to excessive tire leaks or failures of the pressure maintenance means; and
• provides a higher emergency inflation rate to mitigate leak rates and increase the time for drivers to reach a safe place.
BRIEF SUMMARY
A new device automatically maintains a desired inflation pressure of an interior of a tire mounted on a wheel of a vehicle. A magnetic element is attached to a stationary part of a wheel assembly and a compressor, such as a microcompressor that is mounted on the rotating wheel, passes near the magnet, thereby magnetically activating the compressor. The magnetic element, which may be a stationary permanent magnet or electromagnet, may thus be used as the driving element, and several magnetically-driven compressor configurations are disclosed herein. The compressor may perform at least one cycle per wheel revolution and may replace normal car tire leakage. Alternatively, an electrical coil can be mounted on the wheel to pass near the magnetic element, thereby inducing voltage pulses in the coil to provide on-wheel electrical power to run an electrically-driven compressor that is mounted at another location on the wheel.
Various embodiments of the device using such a magnetic element include:
1) A stationary permanent magnet drives an on-wheel magnetically activated compressor. 2) A stationary electromagnet drives an on-wheel magnetically activated compressor.
3) A stationary permanent magnet and an on-wheel coil drive an on- wheel electrically activated compressor.
4) A stationary electromagnet and an on-wheel coil form an intermittent split transformer that transfers electrical power to the wheel to drive an on-wheel electrically activated compressor and exchanges pulse coded data between the wheel and vehicle frame.
As mentioned above, the magnetic element is mounted on the stationary member of the wheel assembly, such as a brake housing, at a radial distance from the axis of rotation. The compressor or coil may be mounted on the wheel such that it passes near the magnet during each revolution of the wheel. The magnetic element produces a magnetic field, which creates a magnetic force on the compressor.
Additionally, a bias force, which opposes the magnetic force, may be produced by a bias member or source within the compressor, by centrifugal force upon the compressor, or by another magnet or pole. In one embodiment, the magnetic force and the bias force cause a piston to reciprocate within a cylinder. When the pressure in the compression chamber exceeds the actual tire pressure and does not exceed the desired inflation pressure, the compressor's output valve opens and compressed air flows into the tire. Thus, the compressor maintains the desired inflation pressure of the tire in response to transiting the magnetic field.
One of the simplest, smallest embodiments of the present invention uses a stationary permanent magnet and a magnetically activated compressor on the wheel. A magnet in the compressor provides a continuous bias force that holds the compression chamber closed, except when it is overpowered by passing near the magnet (whose magnetic force is stronger than the bias force) off the wheel that briefly opens the compression chamber, thus creating the reciprocating motion of the compressor. The bias force may vary the desired inflation pressure with temperature to match the ideal gas law, thereby regulating the amount of air in the tire to produce the desired inflation pressure at a selected temperature. A compressor that will supply 0.001 to 0.002 cubic inch of free air to a tire each wheel revolution is capable of increasing a normal car tire pressure by 1 psi within 50 to 100 miles of driving, well above normal leakage rates. Such a magnetically-driven compressor may occupy a fraction of a cubic inch and weigh a fraction of an ounce. The device can be added to a Tire Pressure Maintenance System (TPMS) equipped vehicle, but a TPMS may add little value to a vehicle equipped with a device that maintains the desired tire pressure.
An alternative embodiment uses a stationary electromagnet and a rotating electrical coil on the wheel to form an intermittent split pulse transformer briefly during each revolution as the coil passes the stationary electromagnet. The intermittent transformer transfers electrical power from the vehicle to the wheel and provides two-way pulse communication between the vehicle and wheels. The electrical power on the wheel activates an electrically-driven compressor to maintain the desired tire inflation and provides power to on-wheel electronics. An on-wheel electronic controller may manage compressor operation and control two-way communication with a central controller on the vehicle. It sends data on compressor utilization or output flow rate to the central controller from which too high a rate suggests a leak, and too low a rate suggests a device failure. The central controller warns the driver of either such condition by a simple display. Addition of a small rechargeable battery whose charge is maintained by power from the transformer provides reserve power to run the compressor at high speed to mitigate rapid leaks, increasing time to reach safety before the tire goes flat.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS These and other features and advantages of the various embodiments disclosed herein will be better understood with respect to the following description and drawings, in which like numbers refer to like parts throughout, and in which: Figure 1 is a graph showing the relationship of air pressure and temperature along pressure-temperature lines in a tire filled with four different amounts of air to the manufacturer's recommended cold pressure (MRCP) at different temperatures;
Figure 2 is a partial cross-section view of an exemplary automobile wheel assembly showing an example location of a magnetic element on a stationary disc brake caliper housing and a magnetically-driven compressor located on a wheel rim at a time when the wheel rotation places them adjacent in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 3 is an oblique view illustrating the magnetic element and compressor arrangement of Figure 2 in greater detail;
Figure 4 is a cross-section view of a compressor that includes a cylinder and a piston with a magnetic actuator and bias magnets, depicted at a position adjacent to the stationary permanent magnet;
Figure 5 is a partial cross-section view of another example arrangement on an automobile wheel assembly with a stationary electromagnet and a magnetically- driven compressor wherein the compressor output is connected to a tire valve stem by a pneumatic tube;
Figure 6A is a cross-sectional view of an intake position of a magnetic diaphragm compressor when passing the stationary electromagnet; Figure 6B is a cross-sectional view of an output position of the magnetic diaphragm compressor whose output is connected by pneumatic tube to the tire valve stem as shown in Figure 5;
Figure 7 is a cross-section view of a compressor when adjacent to the stationary electromagnet wherein a bias force on the piston is created by centrifugal force of the rotary motion of the compressor;
Figure 8 is an oblique view of a magnetically-driven compressor that is activated by passing each pole of an electromagnet;
Figure 9 is a partial cross-section view of an exemplary automobile wheel assembly wherein the stationary permanent magnet is mounted on a drum brake backing plate of the wheel assembly where an electrical coil, mounted on a wheel rim, passes close to the magnetic element and is in electrical communication with an electrically-driven compressor located over a wheel hub and in fluid communication with the valve stem via the pneumatic tube; Figure 10 is a schematic diagram of the arrangement in Figure 9 showing the optional addition of a power supply and rechargeable battery and illustrating use of a bias member, depicted as a compression spring;
Figure 1 1 is a cross-section view of a partial automobile wheel assembly with an electromagnet mounted on a disc brake caliper housing and an electrical coil mounted on a wheel spoke thereby forming an intermittent split transformer for transferring electrical power from the vehicle to the wheel and for communicating between the wheel and a central controller on the vehicle;
Figure 12 is a schematic diagram of the electromagnet and electrical coil forming an intermittent split pulse transformer that provides induced electrical pulses directly to the electrically-driven compressor;
Figure 13 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment using the intermittent split pulse transformer to transfer electrical power from the vehicle to operate the electrically-driven compressor and on-wheel electronics, and to transfer pulse coded data in both directions between the vehicle frame and the wheel to alert a driver to suspected leaks or failures; and
Figure 14 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment as in Figure 13 in which the magnetically-driven compressor and the electrical coil pass the electromagnet sequentially, the electrical coil supplying electrical power to only the on-wheel electronics and providing two-way pulse coded communication of alerts and control data between the vehicle and the wheel.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION Referring now to the drawings wherein the showings are for purposes of illustrating the preferred embodiments of the present invention and not for purposes of limiting the same, Figure 2 is a cross-section view of a partial automobile wheel assembly 10 and a device 12 for maintaining a desired inflation pressure of an interior of a tire 14 by using the rotation of the wheel 22 with respect to the wheel assembly 10. As is known in the art, various configurations exist for vehicle wheel assemblies 10. Wheel assemblies are generally movably attached to a vehicle frame by a suspension and in some cases, by a steering mechanism. For simplicity, the embodiments of the present invention will be discussed with reference to generic elements that are commonly present in most wheel assemblies 10. However, as will be understood, implementations of the present invention may be retrofitted into a variety of existing wheel assemblies 10 or designed into new wheel assemblies 10 of differing configurations.
Wheel assemblies 10 may include many members that do not rotate with the wheel 22, some of which, such as a brake assembly, retain a very close relationship with the wheel. Such items are referred to hereafter as stationary members 16, meaning stationary with respect to a wheel assembly 10. Although they may move with respect to the vehicle frame, they do not rotate with the wheel.
As shown in Figure 2, the wheel assembly 10 includes a stationary member 16 such as a disc brake caliper housing 18, a drum brake backing plate 20, as well as any other of a variety of stationary members 16 of a wheel assembly 10. Further, Figures 2 and 3 also illustrate that the wheel assembly 10 includes a wheel 22 that defines an interior portion 24 and an axis of rotation 26. It is contemplated that the interior portion 24 of the wheel 22 may refer to numerous locations along the wheel 22, such as a wheel rim 28 or a wheel spoke 96. The tire inflation device 12 comprises at least one magnetic element 30 on the stationary member 16 and a compressor 32 that rotates with the wheel 22. The magnetic element 30 is mounted on the stationary member 16 at a radial distance 34 from the axis of rotation 26. According to an embodiment of the present invention, the magnetic element 30 is operative to produce a magnetic field 36 that the magnetically-driven compressor 32 transits once per wheel revolution. The magnetic element 30 may be a stationary permanent magnet 37 or an electromagnet 38. The electromagnet 38 may be powered by receiving a current from a power source 40, such as a vehicle battery 42.
The compressor 32 is mounted on the interior portion 24 of the wheel 22. Thus, as the wheel 22 rotates relative to the stationary member 16 of the wheel assembly 10 the compressor 32 transits the magnetic field 36 during each revolution of the wheel 22. In response to the presence of the magnetic field 36, the compressor 32 operates to maintain the desired inflation pressure within the tire 14 by intaking air from the atmosphere, compressing the air, and outputting the air into the tire 14. Thus, the compressor 32 is in fluid communication with the atmosphere and the tire
14. The compressor 32 may be a magnetic compressor. The compressor 32 includes a compressor body 44. Figures 2 and 3 illustrate the relationship of the compressor 32 with respect to the magnetic element 30 as the compressor 32 transits the magnetic field. As shown in these Figures, the magnetic element 30 and the compressor 32 are disposed at approximately the same radial distance 34 from the axis of rotation 26, and the compressor 32 is positioned to pass close to the magnetic element 30. It is contemplated that various modifications to the general configuration may be implemented so as to further enhance the magnetic communication of the magnetic element 30 and the compressor 32 and to facilitate mounting on various wheel assemblies 10.
In addition to the features already mentioned, the device 12 further includes means for regulating output pressure of the compressed air to the desired inflation pressure. As will be noted further below, the regulation of the output pressure of the compressed air may be accomplished without off-wheel aid. Thus, embodiments of the present invention may operate independent of controllers, regulators, or other devices and provide an independent, self-sufficient device that maintains the desired inflation pressure within the tire 14. Referring now to Figure 4, there is illustrated a cross-section view of the stationary permanent magnet 37 and the compressor 32 as the compressor 32 transits the magnetic field. The compressor 32 may include an intake valve 46, an output valve 48, a centrifugal valve 78, an intake plenum 86, and an intake port 88. The intake port 88 and the centrifugal valve 78 are operative to intake air into the compressor 32. The intake valve 46 is operative to intake air into the compression chamber 33, and the output valve 48 is operative to output air from the compression chamber 33 into the output port 66, which is in fluid communication with the tire 14. The compressor 32 utilizes the intake and output valves 46, 48 to maintain the desired inflation pressure of the tire 14. In the embodiment shown in Figure 4, the compressor 32 includes a compression chamber 33 and an actuator 35. The compression chamber 33 defines a chamber volume, which volume may be increased or decreased by the action of the actuator 35. The compressor 32 may include a cylinder 50 and a piston 52. The portion of the cylinder 50, not occupied by the piston 52, in which air is compressed, is referred to as the compression chamber 33. The piston 52 may include a piston base 53, as shown in Figure 4. In the embodiments shown in Figures 4 and 10, the actuator 35 is the piston base 53 of the piston 50. The piston 52 is slidably positionable within the cylinder 50 to reciprocate between input and output positions 56, 58. The output position 58 is shown in Figure 10. The piston base 53 may be ferromagnetic to be responsive to magnetic forces. The cylinder 50 is in fluid communication with the intake and output valves 46, 48. Further, the cylinder 50 may define a cylinder axis 54. As shown in Figures 2 and 3, the compressor 32 may be mounted with the cylinder axis 54 being parallel to the axis of rotation 26 to allow the motion of the compressor's piston 52 to be orthogonal to the centrifugal force created by the rotation of the wheel 22. As the compressor 32 passes the magnet 30, it passes through the magnetic flux path which follows the path of the magnetic field 36 as shown by the arrows. The magnetic flux path of the magnetic field 36 passes through the air gap and ferromagnetic piston base 53 and permanent magnet 30, 37. It should be noted that the magnetic field 36, which is well-known in the art as being a three-dimensional phenomenon, is represented by the two dimensional magnetic flux path shown in the figures. The magnetic element 30 may be wider than the compressor 32 in the direction of relative motion to lengthen the time that the full magnetic force is applied to the compressor 32 as it transits the magnetic field.
Referring still to Figure 4, the air path through the compressor 32 begins at the centrifugal valve 78 at the intake port 88 which may be held closed by bias magnets 60 at vehicle speeds below a predetermined speed (e.g. 15 mph) at which the centrifugal force expels potential liquid or solid contaminants preventing their entry through the centrifugal valve 78. Above that predetermined speed, the centrifugal force on the centrifugal valve 78 overcomes the magnetic bias force holding the centrifugal valve 78 closed and opens the centrifugal valve 78 to allow clean air to enter the intake plenum 86. The compressor body 44 around the centrifugal valve 78 may be shaped to modify the air flow to deflect airborne particles away and reduce pressure differences due to the Bernoulli Effect. The intake plenum 86 may occupy spare space within the compressor 32 between the centrifugal valve 78 and the intake valve 46, and may include a membrane 79 that passes air, but resists passage of water. Air may also flow through an air filter 80 that may be in the piston 52 (as shown in Figure 4) or in the intake plenum 86 (as shown in Figure 6A) and then through the intake valve 46 into the compression chamber 33.
An intake stroke of the piston 52 may occur as the compressor 32 transits the magnetic field and the magnetic force on the piston base 53 draws the piston 52 outward of the cylinder 50. The outward movement of the piston 52 increases the volume of the compression chamber 33 and creates a partial vacuum in the compression chamber 33 that opens the intake valve 46 and draws air in from the intake plenum 86 through a filter 80. The intake stroke, as may be visualized from Figure 4, is performed as the piston 52 moves toward an intake position 56. The intake position 56 is achieved when the piston 52 is positioned with the compression chamber 33 substantially having a maximum chamber volume. The piston 52 is further operative to expel air from the cylinder 50 into the tire 14 via the output valve 48 as the piston 52 moves toward an output position 58 during an output stroke, in which the piston 52 is positioned with the compression chamber 33 substantially having a minimum chamber volume. The output stroke is performed when the piston
52 moves away from the magnetic element 30 which reduces the volume of the compression chamber 33 and causes the air within the cylinder 50 to be evacuated therefrom and expelled into the tire 14. The intake and output valves 46, 48 are preferably check valves. Thus, as the cylinder 50 intakes air, the output check valve 48 may insure that no air from the tire 14 enters the cylinder 50. Further, when the cylinder 50 is expelling air into the tire 14, the intake check valve 46 may insure that no air intended for the tire 14 exits through the intake valve 46.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, as shown in Figure 4, two bias magnets 60 apply a bias force on the ferromagnetic piston base 53 (magnetic actuator) that holds the piston in the output position 58 minimizing the volume of the compression chamber 33. When the compressor rotates to the position adjacent the stationary magnet 30, 37, as shown in Figure 3 and 4, the magnetic force applied by the magnet 30, 37 on the piston base 53 overpowers the bias force and pulls the piston 52 out on the intake stroke, maximizing the volume of the compression chamber 33. As mentioned above, this creates a partial vacuum in the compression chamber 33 and draws air into the compression chamber 33 from the intake plenum 86 through the intake check valve 46. As the compressor 32 passes the magnet 30 the magnetic flux follows the path 36 as shown by the arrows in Figure 4 through the air gaps, the ferromagnetic piston base 53, and magnetic element 30, 37. The magnetic element 30 may be wider than the compressor 32 in the direction of relative motion to lengthen the time that the full magnetic force is applied to the piston base 53 as it transits the magnetic field. As the compressor transits the stationary magnet 30, 37 the bias force on the piston base 53 returns the piston 52 to an output position on an output stroke. As the volume of the compression chamber 33 is reduced the air is compressed. If the maximum pressure provided by the bias force is less than the tire pressure that appears in the output port 66 the output valve 48 remains closed and no air is forced into the tire 14. If the pressure created in the compression chamber 33 by the bias force exceeds the tire pressure, the output valve 48 opens and air flows into the output port 66. Thus, selecting or adjusting the bias force to the desired inflation pressure fixes the maximum pressure to be applied to the tire 14 and is used to establish the desired tire inflation pressure. For example, if the bias force on the piston base is 1.7 pounds and the piston area is 0.05 square inches, the bias pressure is 34 psi, the maximum pressure produced. The bias force for a device is selected or adjusted to the desired tire pressure, typically the MRCP (manufacturer's recommended cold pressure or "placard pressure"), at the average ambient temperature. The compressed air enters the tire 14 from the output port 66 through fluid communication with a penetration 64 (hole) of the rim 28, as in Figures 2, 3, and 4, or alternatively by a pneumatic tube 70 to a valve stem 72. As shown in Figure 4, the intake and output valves 46, 48 may provide two one-way check valves that prevent air from flowing backwards from the tire 14 through the compressor 32 in the event of a valve failure in the open position.
As shown by Figures 2 and 3, the compressor 32 may be mounted with the cylinder axis 54 being parallel to the axis of rotation 26 to allow the motion of the compressor's piston 52 to be orthogonal to the centrifugal force created by the rotation of the wheel 22. Each revolution of the wheel 22 causes one cycle of the compressor 32, forcing a tiny amount of air into the tire 14 when the tire pressure is below the desired inflation pressure. The compressor may be sized to overcome a nominal tire leakage rate of about 1 psi per month and a minimum number of miles a vehicle may travel monthly.
Although it is preferred that the magnetic element 30 drive the input stroke and the bias member 60 drive the output stroke, it is contemplated that the magnetic element 30 may drive the output stroke and that the bias force may drive the input stroke of the piston 52. The bias member 60 may be selected or adjusted to provide a fixed bias force at a selected temperature that determines the desired fixed pressure that the compressor 32 maintains in the tire 14 when warm (normally the MCRP plus 2 or 3 psi). Providing a calibrated adjustment to the bias force may permit manual change of the desired tire pressure to adapt to seasons, loads, or other conditions. If a tire is inadvertently filled with too much air the normal tire leak rate will gradually correct this without compressor operation.
Two alternative approaches to tire safety may be followed utilizing embodiments of the present invention. First, one may seek to fix the desired inflation pressure at the MRCP or other pressure as desired. As such, the compressor 32 may be required to add air to the tire 14 to compensate for pressure losses due to leaks or drops in the ambient temperature. As an alternative to the fixed pressure approach, one may seek to maintain constant the amount of air in the tire 14. Specifically, one may seek to maintain constant the number of air particles in the tire 14. For example, the compressor 32 may vary the bias force with temperature to make the desired inflation pressure approximate a selected PT line 92 in Figure 1. This is achieved by maintaining a constant ratio of absolute pressure to absolute temperature in the tire. This maintains the amount (mass) of air in the tire 14 constant at the amount of air that produces the MRCP at the chosen average ambient temperature. Each PT line 92 in Figure 1 represents the PT relationship of a specific amount of air in the tire 14 according to the ideal gas law (PV=nRT), assuming constant volume. For example, the compressor 32 may be configured to follow the PT line 92 that intersects the horizontal MRCP 32 psi line at 6O0F. That line becomes the desired PT line 92 for the compressor 32. To maintain the desired amount of air in the tire 14, the bias force is increased with temperature to increase the desired inflation pressure with temperature. The bias member's 60 mounting may be configured to vary the bias magnets' 60 position with temperature thereby changing the bias force with temperature to approximate the selected PT line. The compressor 32 adds air to the tire 14 when the pressure-temperature (PT point) of the air in the tire 14 is below the desired PT line 92.
During installation of the device 12, the bias force of the compressor 32 may be selected or adjusted to follow a desired PT line 92 ("compressor's PT line") that intersects the MRCP at an average ambient temperature for the area of use. The tire pressure normally stays on a PT line determined by the amount of air in the tire. Of course, occasional additions by the compressor 32 to the amount of air in the tire 14 will be required due to leakage in the tire 14. In other words, the compressor 32 maintains the amount of air in the tire 14 constant, and the pressure of the tire 14 may fluctuate with temperature. This fixed-amount-of-air alternative to fixed pressure, may be useful in many climates and may be safer than constantly filling the tire with more air in order to keep tire pressure constant. Thus, in the fixed-amount-of-air alternative, only when air is added or released (or escapes) will the tire move to a higher or lower PT line. If the tire's PT point is below the compressor's PT line 92, the compressor 32 pumps a small amount of air into the tire 14 each wheel 22 revolution. If the tire's PT point is above the compressor's PT line 92, no air is pumped into the tire 14 and normal leaks bring the tire's PT point down to the compressor's PT line 92. Using this fixed-amount-of-air paradigm, the compressor 32 replaces leakage air and maintains the amount of air in the tire 14 nearly constant, keeping it on the selected compressor PT line 92 and minimizing the amount of air that must be added to the tire 14.
The bias magnets 60 may be mounted at one end of temperature sensitive positioning rods 94 that establish the separation of the bias magnets 60 from the piston base 53 for three purposes: (1) to select the compressor's PT line 92; (2) to vary the desired inflation pressure with temperature to match the selected PT line 92; and (3) to offset the bias magnets' decreasing strength with increasing temperature. The positioning rods 94 establish the separation of the bias member 60 from the piston base 53 at the end of the output stroke. The positioning rod has a high thermal coefficient of expansion (TCE) and is mounted to provide good thermal communication with the air in the tire. By configuring the TCE materials, their exposure to the air in the tire, and the separation of the bias magnets from the piston base, the desired inflation pressure provided by the bias force may be established.
Figures 5, 9, and 1 1 illustrate other example mounting arrangements and Figures 6A, 6B, 7, and 8 illustrate other example embodiments of magnetic elements 30 and magnetically-driven compressors 32. These figures are generally schematic illustrations of concepts rather than realistic design illustrations. For simplicity, centrifugal valves, filters, and means to vary the desired inflation pressure with temperature are not shown in all cases, although they are contemplated. In most embodiments the compressor 32, 110 may be mounted to the wheel rim 28 as shown in Figures 2 and 3 or to a wheel spoke 96 as shown in Figures 9 and 1 1. Its output may be by a direct penetration of the rim 28 by attaching the output port 66 through a hole 64 in the rim as shown in Figures 2 and 3 or by pneumatic tube 70 to the wheel's valve stem 72. The magnetic element 30 may be attached to the brake housing 18 as shown in Figure 2 or any other stationary member 16 of the wheel assembly 10 where the compressor 32 can be mounted to pass close to it. The shapes and sizes of magnetic members may assume many varied configurations. Figures 7 and 10 illustrate different biasing means using centrifugal force or a spring for the biasing force.
Figure 5 shows an example mounting with an electromagnet 38 mounted on a drum brake backing plate 20 and the compressor 32 mounted on the wheel spoke 96 with a pneumatic tube 70 connecting the output port 66 of the compressor 32 to the valve stem 72. The central controller 100 directs current from the vehicle battery 42 to an electromagnet winding 1 16 to produce the magnetic field 36 only while the compressor 32 transits the magnetic field 36. It may determine the location and speed of the compressor on the wheel using a Hall Effect sensor to sense the passing of a small signal magnet mounted on the wheel a known angle from the compressor. It then determines the speed and position of the compressor and the time of its next transit.
Referring now to Figures 6A and 6B, the electromagnet 38 and magnetically- driven diaphragm compressor 32 embodiment whose intake position 56 is illustrated in Figure 6A and output position 58 is illustrated in Figure 6B may be used in the mounting configuration in Figure 5. In this embodiment, the actuator 35 is a ferromagnetic diaphragm 59. A short pneumatic tube attached to the port 66 conveys the output air to the tire 14 via its valve stem 72. The magnetic element 30 is shown as an electromagnet 38, although it may just as well be a permanent magnet 30, 37. The diaphragm 59 preferably comprises ferromagnetic particles embedded in a flexible diaphragm material. Figure 6A shows the compressor 32 adjacent the magnetic element 30, 38 where the flexible magnetic actuator 59 is magnetically drawn to the intake position 56 by the electromagnet 38, drawing air into the compression chamber 33 from the intake plenum 86 through the filter 80 and the intake check valve 46. Figure 6B shows the flexible magnetic diaphragm 59 held in the output position 58 by the bias magnet 60, forcing the compressed output air out of the compression chamber 33 through the output check valve 48. The compressor body 44 is mostly non-magnetic, but includes two ferromagnetic pole extenders 61 that effectively shorten the air gap between the magnetic element 30 and the flexible magnetic actuator 58.
Figure 7 illustrates an embodiment using centrifugal force on the piston 52 and piston base 53 as the bias force to drive the piston's output stroke. The compressor 32 is oriented such that the cylinder axis 54 is perpendicular to the axis of rotation 26 and parallel with the centrifugal force created by the rotation of the compressor 32 about the axis of rotation 26. As such, the centrifugal force acts as a continuous bias force on the piston base 53 and the piston 52 that drives the piston 52 toward the output position 58, compressing the volume of the compression chamber 33. The compressed air exits through the output valve 48 and the output port 66 that penetrates the wheel rim 28. The magnetic element 30 is shown as an electromagnet 38 but can alternatively be a permanent magnet. As the compressor 32 passes the electromagnet
38 the electromagnet 38 is pulsed by a central controller 100 creating the magnetic field 36 that draws the piston base 53 toward the intake position 56 on the intake stroke, overcoming the centrifugal bias force on the piston 52. Because the centrifugal bias force varies with vehicle speed, it is not usable to limit the pressure to the desired inflation pressure. Rather, a pressure limit valve 74 may be located in the piston 52 to release air from the compression chamber 33 to the intake plenum 86 when the pressure in the compression chamber 33 exceeds the desired tire inflation pressure, thereby limiting the output pressure to that at which the limit valve 74 opens. The ball and spring pressure limit valve 74 shown is oriented perpendicular to the cylinder axis 54 as shown in Figure 7 to prevent centrifugal force from affecting limit valve 74 operation. Alternatively, the pressure limit valve 74 may be placed at the output port 66 to release air to the atmosphere or to the intake plenum 86 when pressure in the output port 66 exceeds the desired tire inflation pressure. In this case, another check valve is placed between the tire 14 and the pressure limit valve 74 to prevent a failure of the pressure limit valve 74 from releasing air from the tire 14 to the atmosphere or intake plenum 86. The centrifugal valve 78 uses a disc spring 84 to continuously force the valve plug into the valve seat and uses centrifugal force to overcome the bias spring 84 force and open the centrifugal valve 78 at a predetermined vehicle speed.
The embodiments described above involve one compressor cycle of one intake stroke and one output stroke on each passage of the compressor 32 by the magnetic element 30. Such embodiments assume that one stroke, such as the intake stroke, occurs during the time period that the compressor is passing the magnetic element 30. The other stroke occurs during the balance of the wheel revolution. Other embodiments may reverse the input and output strokes. However, Figure 8 shows a magnetic configuration that may provide two compressor cycles on one transit of the magnet element 30, 38 by the compressor 32. The compressor 32 transits two separated poles 87 of the magnetic element 30, 38. Transit of each pole 87 initiates one of an intake stroke and an output stroke in the compressor 32. While the compressor 32 is passing between the two poles 87, the magnetic field 36 from the magnetic element 30, 38 falls off and the bias force initiates the other one of the input and output stroke. If the space between poles 87, the speed of rotation of the wheel
14, and the speed of the strokes are properly balanced, the first two strokes will end before the compressor 32 reaches the second pole 87 and initiates another intake stroke. Thus, with some configurations, more than one compressor cycle can be completed during one wheel revolution. Whereas magnetic fields of opposite polarity have the same attracting effect on non-magnetized ferromagnetic material, magnetic fields of opposite polarity will attract or repel a permanent magnet, depending on the arrangement of the magnetic poles 87. Unlike poles attract and like poles repel. Thus, if the actuator 35 is magnetic, such as if the piston base 53 is a permanent magnet, the compressor 32 may undergo alternating intake and output strokes upon passing two opposite poles 87 of the stationary magnetic element 30 separated in the direction of relative motion. This result may thus be accomplished without a bias force, and result in two strokes per wheel revolution. Embodiments without a bias force may use a pressure limit valve 74 as described above to establish and regulate the desired tire inflation pressure. AU of the embodiments described above use a magnetically-driven compressor. The following embodiments use an electric coil 104 to transit the magnetic field 36 of the magnetic element 30 and relay the induced electrical energy received by the coil 104 to an electrically-driven compressor 110. Figure 9 illustrates an example arrangement showing a coil 104 connected by wire 98 to an electrically- driven compressor 110 mounted over a wheel hub 99 and sending the output air through a pneumatic tube 70 to the valve stem 72. As the electrical coil 104 transits a magnetic field 36, a pulse of one polarity is induced as the coil 104 enters the magnetic field 36 and a pulse of opposite polarity is induced as the coil 104 leaves the magnetic field 36, if the field 36 is wider than the coil 104. Further, it is also possible that if the pulses are far enough apart, they may each drive an intake stroke and produce two compressor cycles in one wheel revolution, which may also work in previously discussed embodiments if the compressor 32, and not the coil 104 transits the magnetic field 36. Such electrical pulses may directly drive an electrically-driven compressor 1 10. Almost any magnetically-driven compressor configuration may be converted to an electrically-driven compressor by attaching an electromagnet 38 that produces the type of magnetic field needed by the magnetically-driven compressor 32.
Figure 10 illustrates an embodiment that uses the arrangement in Figure 9. The compressor 110 is shown using a compression spring 62 as the bias member 60 to provide the bias force that drives the output stroke. An alternative to using the bias force is to establish the desired inflation pressure using a pressure activated switch 76. The switch 76 may be activated by a sensor that senses the pressure in the output port 66 of the compressor 1 10 and open a circuit 1 1 1 from the coil 104 to the compressor 110 when the output pressure is higher than the desired tire inflation pressure, thereby causing the compressor 1 10 to stop operating. When the compressor 110 is mounted over the wheel hub 99, as shown in Figure 9, the centrifugal valve 78 may be located sufficiently off the axis of rotation 26 for proper operation and be in fluid communication with the intake port 88 of the compressor 110 by another pneumatic tube 70. The intake pneumatic tube 70 may be filled with a filter material as an added precaution.
An electronic power supply 1 12 may be provided to convert the electrical power received from the electrical coil 104 to a form best suited to drive any type of electrically-driven compressor 110. As mentioned, any of the magnetically-driven compressor 32 embodiments described above may be converted to an electrically- driven compressor 1 10 by attaching an electromagnet 38, as shown in Figure 10. Any type of electrically-driven compressor may be used, such as a diaphragm compressor, solenoid-driven compressor, stepping motor compressor, or a D.C. or A.C. motor- driven compressor. Electrical energy may be stored by a capacitor or by a small rechargeable battery 1 14 that is kept charged by rectified pulses from the coil 104.
Furthermore, the electromagnet 38 may be configured to change the polarity of its poles 87 by reversing the direction of current through the electromagnet's winding 116, permitting more configurations. An unmagnetized actuator 35 with a bias force and a magnetic element 30 with two wide poles 87 that are widely separated in the direction of relative motion may effect two compressor cycles during one complete transit of the magnetic element 30 by the compressor 32. If the output of the electrical coil 104 is sent to an electromagnet 38 driving a compressor 1 10, as shown in Figure 10, and if the piston base 53 is a permanent magnet, then the two pulses of alternating polarity would drive one compressor cycle from one transit of the coil 104 past the magnet 37, without a bias member 60. A direct electrical connection may be provided from the coil 104 to the compressor, as shown in Figure 10. With the magnetic element configuration in Figure 8, one transit produces the four induced pulses of opposite polarity that may effect two complete compressor cycles on one wheel revolution
In addition, any of the capabilities described above to augment the magnetically-driven compressors 32 may be added to electrically-driven compressors 110, including a centrifugal valve 78, pressure activated switch, and bias force pressure regulation. If the configuration in Figure 10 is used with a TPMS, a switch similar to switch 76 may be activated by the TPMS controller, enabling more sophisticated control of the pressure-temperature relationship.
Figures 11 and 12 illustrate another embodiment using an electromagnet 38 for the magnetic element 30, an electrical coil 104 to transit the magnetic field, and an electrically-driven compressor 110. The central controller 100 directs current pulses from the vehicle battery 42 to the electromagnets 38 on all wheels when the coil is passing the electromagnet 38. The combination of electromagnet 38 and electric coil 104 form an intermittent split pulse transformer 102 with a two-piece core. One core piece with the electromagnet winding 1 16 is stationary on the wheel assembly 10. The other core piece is part of the electrical coil 104 and rotates with the wheel 22, passing close to the stationary core piece once per wheel revolution. The split transformer 102 is operative during the time the coil 104 is passing the magnetic element 30. The electromagnet winding 116 is the primary winding of the split pulse transformer 102 and the electrical coil 104 is the secondary winding 1 18. While the electrical coil 104 transits the magnetic field caused by a current pulse in the primary winding 116, the voltage pulses induced in the secondary 1 18 is fed by wire to the electrically-driven compressor 110 to initiate one compressor cycle. A pressure activated switch 76, or pressure limit valve 74, or the bias force may limit the output pressure to the desired tire inflation pressure. The electrically-driven compressor 1 10 may be located anywhere on the wheel 22, preferably over the wheel hub 99.
Figure 13 expands on the embodiment in Figure 12 by adding an on-wheel controller 120, an on-wheel power supply 112, a simple driver display 128, and a small rechargeable battery 1 14. The power supply 112, as described above, permits use of any type of electrically-driven compressor and provides power for any on- wheel electronics. The on-wheel controller 120, typically a microprocessor, may control compressor operation and the two-way data communication capability provided by the intermittent transformer 102. The on-wheel controller may receive control instructions from the central controller 100. It sends data regarding at least one of the compressor 1 10 utilization and output flow rate. The flow rate derived from a sensor in the output port 66 is sent to the central controller 100. The central controller 100 sends an alert to the driver display 128 suggesting a possible leak when the utilization or flow rate of any wheel exceeds a predetermined threshold for a predetermined period. Similarly, it sends an alert to the driver display 128 when the utilization or low rate has been zero for a predetermined period, suggesting possible failure of the device 12. The alerts indicate the wheel involved and nature of the alert. The small rechargeable battery 1 14, illustrated in Figures 13 and 14, is kept charged by a charging circuit in the power supply 1 12, and adds two valuable features. It provides power storage and smoothing for any on-wheel electronics and provides emergency power for brief periods of maximum speed compressor operation for a tire suspected of having a leak. In normal operation, the low duty cycle of power transfer through the intermittent transformer 102 limits compressor operation to that adequate for replacing normal leakage. In an emergency, such as when the driver is notified of a suspected leak, the compressor is operated at its highest speed on continuous power from the battery 114 until the battery 114 is completely discharged. This may allow a driver more time to find a safe stopping place before a leaking tire goes flat. A TPMS may use the two-way communications between the wheel 22 and the vehicle and the rechargeable battery 1 14 to power the on-wheel electronics.
Addition of temperature and pressure sensors 90, 124 to tires in the Figure 13 embodiment allows adding the primary function of a TPMS, warning the driver when any tire 14 is significantly under-inflated. However, any value of such TPMS-like warnings is greatly reduced since significant under-inflation is unlikely to occur in this embodiment unless there is a significant leak in a tire or a device failure, which may be sensed and trigger alerts to the driver without in-tire sensors.
Figure 14 illustrates an embodiment with the same features as in the embodiment in Figure 13. However, the magnetically-driven compressor 32 and electrical coil 104 transit the magnetic field separately. Thus, a magnetically-driven compressor 32 is used instead of an electrically-driven compressor 1 10. The coil 104 and power supply 1 12 serves only the electronics and rechargeable battery 114 and not the compressor 32. As will be recognized by one of skill in the art, the aforementioned embodiments may be variously modified. For example, multiple pulses may be applied during one transit of a compressor 32 or a coil 104 past an electromagnetic 38; the magnetic element 30 may be mounted on any stationary member 16 (non- rotating part) of the wheel 22 assembly 10 from which it can be positioned close enough to the rotating compressor 32 or coil 104; the compressor 32 or electrical coil
104 may be located anywhere that rotates with the wheel 22 and passes near the magnetic element 30; any of the implementations described above can use multiple magnetic elements 30 and/or multiple compressors 32 or electrical coils 104 on one wheel assembly 10; the devices may be used on wheels of any type of vehicle with inflatable tires; different types and configurations of magnets 30, compressors 32, 1 10 and electrical coils 104 may be used; various combinations of magnets 30, compressors 32, 1 10 bias force means, pressure limit means, input and output means, check valves, element mounting means and configurations may be used.
Most of the above combinations of techniques are obviously still valid when some features are omitted. The means of driving a compressor 32, 1 10 is one of the important features of the present invention, not necessarily the nature of the compressor 32, 1 10 (therefore, diaphragm, compressors, motor-driven compressors, solenoid compressors, and other types of compressors may also be substituted as viable compressors in embodiments of the present invention).
The above description is given by way of example, and not limitation. Given the above disclosure, one skilled in the art could devise variations that are within the scope and spirit of the invention disclosed herein, including various ways of utilizing or modifying embodiments of the present invention. Further, the various features of the embodiments disclosed herein can be used alone, or in varying combinations with each other and are not intended to be limited to the specific combination described herein. Thus, the scope of the claims is not to be limited by the illustrated embodiments. Other modifications may be variously implemented utilizing the teachings found herein.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A device for maintaining a desired inflation pressure of an interior of a tire mounted on a wheel of a vehicle, the wheel being rotatably connected to a stationary member of a vehicle wheel assembly and defining an axis of rotation, the device comprising: at least one magnetic element being mounted on the stationary member at a radial distance from the axis of rotation, the magnetic element producing a magnetic field; a magnetically driven air compressor being mounted on the wheel and being radially disposed from the axis of rotation relative to the magnetic element to transit the magnetic field during each revolution of the wheel, the compressor being in fluid communication with the atmosphere and the interior of the tire, the compressor being operative to intake air from the atmosphere and to output compressed air to the interior of the tire in response to transiting the magnetic field; and means for regulating output pressure of the compressor to the desired inflation pressure without off-wheel aid.
2. The device of Claim 1 wherein the compressor further includes: a compression chamber defining a variable chamber volume; an actuator being operative to increase and decrease the chamber volume, the actuator being operative to effect an intake stroke to increase chamber volume and thereby intake air from the environment through an intake check valve, the actuator further being operative to effect an output stroke to decrease chamber volume and thereby expel air through an output check valve; and means for applying first and second opposing forces alternately to the actuator, one of the first and second opposing forces increasing the chamber volume and the other of the first and second opposing forces decreasing the chamber volume, at least one of the first and second opposing forces being produced upon transit of the compressor through the magnetic field.
3. The device of Claim 2 wherein the compressor further comprises a cylinder and a piston, the piston being slidably positionable within the cylinder, the piston being operative to move to an intake position within the cylinder during the intake stroke to increase the chamber volume thereby intaking air into the cylinder, the piston further being operative to move to an output position within the cylinder during the output stroke to decrease the chamber volume thereby outputting compressed air into the tire, one of the input stroke and output stroke being performed in response to the compressor transiting the magnetic field.
4. The device of Claim 2 wherein the compression chamber is bounded on one side by the actuator, the actuator being a flexible magnetically sensitive diaphragm, and being operative to increase the chamber volume to intake air into the compression chamber via the intake valve upon the actuator moving to an intake position during the intake stroke, the actuator further being operative to decrease the chamber volume and expel compressed air from the compression chamber via the output valve upon moving to an output position during the output stroke, one of the input stroke and output stroke being performed in response to the compressor transiting the magnetic field.
5. The device of Claim 2 including two magnetic elements and wherein the compressor transits through two magnetic fields produced by the magnetic elements during one revolution of the wheel, both magnetic fields exerting the first opposing force upon the actuator to perform one of the input and output strokes, the second opposing force being exerted upon the actuator to perform the other of the input and output strokes as the compressor moves intermediate the magnetic elements, the alternate exertion of the first and second opposing forces causing the chamber volume to increase and decrease twice during one wheel revolution.
6. The device of Claim 2 wherein a plurality of magnetic elements are configured to produce successive magnetic fields of opposite polarity through which the compressor transits during one revolution of the wheel, the input and output strokes being effected by the actuator in response to the magnetic fields of opposing polarity.
7. The device of Claim 2 wherein the second opposing force is a continuous bias force being produced by one or more permanent magnets, the second opposing force being configured to be overcome by the first opposing force produced when the compressor transits the magnetic field, the second opposing force causing the actuator to effect one of the input and output strokes after transiting the magnetic field.
8. The device of Claim 2 wherein the second opposing force is a bias force being produced by a spring biasing member, the second opposing force being configured to be overcome by the first opposing force produced when the compressor transits the magnetic field, the second opposing force causing the actuator to effect one of the input and output strokes after transiting the magnetic field.
9. The device of Claim 2 wherein the second opposing force is the centrifugal force being continuously exerted upon the actuator due to rotation of the compressor about the axis of rotation of the wheel, the second opposing force causing the actuator to effect one of the input and output strokes after transiting the magnetic field.
10. The device of Claim 2 wherein the second opposing force is configured to establish and regulate the desired inflation pressure of the tire.
1 1. The device of Claim 2 wherein the compressor further includes an output port and a pressure limit valve, the output port being in fluid communication with the compression chamber with the output valve being open, the pressure limit valve being in fluid communication with one of the output port and the compression chamber, the pressure limit valve being operative to reduce the output pressure of air within the respective one of the output port and the compression chamber to the desired inflation pressure by releasing air from the respective one of the output port and the compression chamber to the atmosphere when the output pressure exceeds the desired inflation pressure.
12. The device of Claim 1 wherein the means for regulating the output pressure of the compressor permits manual adjustment of the desired inflation pressure.
13. The device of Claim 1 wherein the means for regulating the output pressure of the compressor varies the desired inflation pressure as a function of pressure and temperature of the air in the tire.
14. The device of Claim 13 wherein the desired inflation pressure changes with the temperature of air in the tire tending to maintain a constant mass of air in the tire.
15. The device of Claim 2 wherein the compressor includes an intake port and a centrifugal valve, the intake port being in fluid communication with the atmosphere, the centrifugal valve being operative to shut off all air entry into the compressor via the intake port while the wheel is rotating below a predetermined speed.
16. The device of Claim 2 wherein the magnetic element is an electromagnet controlled by a central controller on the vehicle frame that receives electrical current from a vehicle battery and sends the current through the electromagnet winding to produce the magnetic field, the electromagnet being further operative to produce the current only during periods when the compressor is transiting the magnetic field.
17. The device of Claim 16 wherein the actuator is a permanent magnet and the electromagnet produces magnetic fields of opposite polarity at each pole of the electromagnet with successive transits of the compressor by the poles producing first and second opposing forces on the permanent magnet actuator, the first and second opposing forces being alternating attractive and repulsive forces upon the permanent magnetic actuator.
18. A device for maintaining a desired inflation pressure of an interior of a tire mounted on a wheel of a vehicle, the wheel being rotatably connected to a stationary member of a vehicle wheel assembly and defining an axis of rotation, the device comprising: at least one magnetic element being mounted on the stationary member at a radial distance from the axis of rotation, the magnetic element producing a magnetic field; an electrical coil being mounted on the wheel and being radially disposed from the axis of rotation relative to the magnetic element to pass through the magnetic field during each revolution of the wheel, the coil being operative to induce electrical voltage pulses in response to transiting the magnetic field and to output the electrical voltage pulses for powering at least a portion of the device; an air compressor mounted on the wheel being powered by one of transiting the magnetic field and electrical voltage pulses induced in the coil, the compressor being in fluid communication with the interior of the tire and being operative to output compressed air to the interior of the tire; and means for regulating output pressure of the compressor to the desired inflation pressure without off-wheel aid.
19. The device of Claim 18 wherein the air compressor is mounted on the wheel and is driven by electrical power derived from the output of the electrical coil.
20. The device of Claim 18 wherein the air compressor is mounted on the wheel and driven by transiting the magnetic field.
21. The device of Claim 18 further including a pressure limit switch being in electrical communication with the coil and the compressor, the pressure limit switch being operative to regulate the desired inflation pressure of the tire, the pressure limit switch being adjustable to alter the desired inflation pressure .
22. The device of Claim 18 wherein the means of regulating the output pressure of the compressor varies the desired inflation pressure as a function of the temperature of air in the tire.
23. The device of Claim 22 wherein the desired inflation pressure changes with the temperature of air in the tire tending to maintain a constant mass of air in the tire.
24. The device of Claim 18 wherein the magnetic element is an electromagnet operative to generate a current to produce the magnetic field only during periods when the electrical coil is transiting the magnetic field during the revolution of the wheel.
25. The device of claim 18 wherein an electronic power supply receives an output from the electrical coil and converts the coil output into the form of electrical power usable to power at least one of the compressor and on-wheel electronics.
26. The device of Claim 25 wherein the power supply recharges an on- wheel rechargeable battery to store electrical power usable to power at least one of the compressor and on-wheel electronics.
27. The device of Claim 18 wherein the device further includes an on- wheel controller and a central controller, the magnetic element being an electromagnet having an electromagnet winding and being operative to receive electrical power from a vehicle battery to produce the magnetic field as directed by the central controller, the electromagnet winding and the electrical coil forming an intermittent split pulse transformer while the electrical coil transits the magnetic field of the electromagnet, the electromagnet winding being a primary winding and the electrical coil being a secondary winding of the split pulse transformer, the split pulse transformer being operative to transfer electrical power from the vehicle to the wheel and to provide for two-way data communication between the on-wheel controller and the central controller.
28. The device of Claim 27 further including an on-wheel power supply, an on-wheel controller, a central controller, means for communicating pulse coded data between the vehicle frame and the wheel, and a driver display, the driver display being mounted on the vehicle to facilitate visual perception thereof by a driver of the vehicle, wherein: the secondary winding produces an electrical voltage pulse; the on-wheel power supply is operative to receive the electrical voltage pulse output from the secondary winding and to convert the electrical voltage pulse into electrical power usable by at least one of the compressor and on- wheel electronics; the central controller is disposed on the vehicle frame and has two-way pulse communication capability, the central controller being operative to activate a "leak suspected" indicator and a wheel identification on the driver display when at least one of the compressor utilization and flow rate exceeds a first predetermined value and a first predetermined duration, the central controller further being operative to activate a "failure suspected" indicator and a wheel identification on the driver display when at least one of the compressor utilization and flow rate falls below a second predetermined value for a second predetermined duration; and the on-wheel controller is operative to electronically manage compressor operation, collect data from the compressor regarding at least one of compressor utilization and output flow rate, and manage two-way communication between the wheel and the central controller via the intermittent split pulse transformer, including the transfer of at least one of the compressor utilization and flow rate data to the central controller.
29. The device of Claim 28 further including a rechargeable battery being in electrical communication with the power supply, the rechargeable battery being operative to store the electrical power and operate as a filter and D.C. source for on- wheel electronics, the rechargeable battery further providing reserve power to run the compressor at high speed when a suspected leak is detected.
30. The device of Claim 28 further including pressure and temperature sensors disposed in the tire and being in electrical communication with the on-wheel controller, the on-wheel controller being operative to manage compressor operation to vary the desired inflation pressure with tire temperature to maintain a constant amount of air in the tire and to send tire pressure and temperature data to the central controller to enable more detailed displays of tire data on the driver display.
PCT/US2005/041305 2004-11-12 2005-11-14 Tire pressure maintenance device WO2006053318A2 (en)

Priority Applications (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CN2005800451255A CN101111400B (en) 2004-11-12 2005-11-14 Tire pressure maintenance device
JP2007541431A JP2008519735A (en) 2004-11-12 2005-11-14 Tire pressure maintenance device
CA2586319A CA2586319C (en) 2004-11-12 2005-11-14 Tire pressure maintenance device
AT05849171T ATE520549T1 (en) 2004-11-12 2005-11-14 DEVICE FOR MAINTAINING TIRE PRESSURE
EP05849171A EP1817180B1 (en) 2004-11-12 2005-11-14 Tire pressure maintenance device

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US62725604P 2004-11-12 2004-11-12
US60/627,256 2004-11-12

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2006053318A2 true WO2006053318A2 (en) 2006-05-18
WO2006053318A3 WO2006053318A3 (en) 2007-03-01

Family

ID=36337316

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2005/041305 WO2006053318A2 (en) 2004-11-12 2005-11-14 Tire pressure maintenance device

Country Status (7)

Country Link
US (3) US7237590B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1817180B1 (en)
JP (1) JP2008519735A (en)
CN (1) CN101111400B (en)
AT (1) ATE520549T1 (en)
CA (1) CA2586319C (en)
WO (1) WO2006053318A2 (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1911609A2 (en) * 2006-10-12 2008-04-16 Daubner & Stommel GbR Bau-Werk-Planung Method and device for adjusting tyres of a transport medium to certain driving conditions
DE102008062071A1 (en) * 2008-12-12 2010-06-24 Knorr-Bremse Systeme für Nutzfahrzeuge GmbH Pneumatic tire pressure control system for e.g. three-axle trailer, has pressure distributor provided with switching valves and high pressure compressors that are symmetrically formed with electric drives and arranged in hubs of wheels
DE102017206643A1 (en) 2017-04-20 2018-10-25 Continental Reifen Deutschland Gmbh Wheel with a pressure regulator
DE102017206646A1 (en) 2017-04-20 2018-10-25 Continental Reifen Deutschland Gmbh Wheel with a pressure control system

Families Citing this family (53)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8955566B2 (en) * 2004-11-12 2015-02-17 Richard Loewe Tire pressure maintenance device
CN101111400B (en) * 2004-11-12 2011-01-12 理查德·洛伊 Tire pressure maintenance device
US7784513B2 (en) * 2004-11-12 2010-08-31 Richard Thomas Loewe Tire pressure maintenance device
JP4435114B2 (en) * 2006-05-31 2010-03-17 トヨタ自動車株式会社 Tire risk judgment device for vehicle wheels
JP4458127B2 (en) * 2006-09-29 2010-04-28 トヨタ自動車株式会社 Tire pressure control device
WO2009118574A2 (en) * 2008-03-24 2009-10-01 Ainsworth Lumber Co., Ltd. Methods of manufacturing engineered wood products
US8807182B2 (en) 2009-05-08 2014-08-19 Steven Jerome Kelly Automatic tire pressurizing and maintaining system and method
WO2010141638A1 (en) * 2009-06-02 2010-12-09 Czero, Inc. Systems and methods for tire inflation and pressure regulation
US8919402B2 (en) * 2009-11-23 2014-12-30 Anthony D. A. Hansen Automatic inflator for maintaining a tire pressure
US9322406B2 (en) * 2009-11-30 2016-04-26 Robert Stephen Potratz Lightweight inflation device
CN103402793B (en) 2010-07-21 2016-01-20 阿佩利亚科技公司 tire inflation system
US8747084B2 (en) 2010-07-21 2014-06-10 Aperia Technologies, Inc. Peristaltic pump
US8479791B2 (en) 2010-07-26 2013-07-09 The Brothers Company Automatic tire inflation system
US8726958B2 (en) 2011-05-31 2014-05-20 Compagnie Generale Des Etablissements Michelin Inertia-controlled tire isolation valve and methods of controlling tire inflation pressures
BR112014019427B1 (en) * 2012-02-07 2021-11-16 Equalaire Systems, Inc CENTRAL TIRE INFLATION SYSTEM TO MAINTAIN TIRE INFLATION IN A VEHICLE, AND METHOD TO ALERT AN OPERATOR TO FLOW AIR TO AT LEAST ONE TIRE IN A VEHICLE
EP2828103B1 (en) 2012-03-20 2017-02-22 Aperia Technologies Tire inflation system
US8818619B2 (en) * 2012-08-02 2014-08-26 Trw Automotive U.S. Llc Method and apparatus for determining tire condition using ideal gas law
US9588019B2 (en) 2012-11-06 2017-03-07 Texas Research International, Inc. Tire deformation sensor and tire inflation system
US9579936B2 (en) 2012-11-06 2017-02-28 Texas Research International, Inc. Tire deformation sensor and tire inflation system
US9604157B2 (en) 2013-03-12 2017-03-28 Aperia Technologies, Inc. Pump with water management
US10144254B2 (en) 2013-03-12 2018-12-04 Aperia Technologies, Inc. Tire inflation system
US11453258B2 (en) 2013-03-12 2022-09-27 Aperia Technologies, Inc. System for tire inflation
CN104340187B (en) * 2013-07-29 2018-03-13 比亚迪股份有限公司 Automobile and the tire pressure compensation device for automobile
EP3071428A4 (en) * 2013-11-22 2017-06-28 PressureRite (Pty) Ltd Device for controlling the pressure in a vehicle tyre
US9193226B2 (en) * 2013-12-09 2015-11-24 The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Compressor for a self-inflating pneumatic tire
DE102014117459A1 (en) * 2014-03-11 2015-09-17 Klemens Große-Vehne Pressure medium supply device, wheel unit with a pressure medium supply device and distributed system for pressure medium supply
US9327562B2 (en) 2014-05-05 2016-05-03 The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Air maintenance tire assembly
US9809066B2 (en) 2014-05-05 2017-11-07 The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company System for an air maintenance tire assembly
US9630461B2 (en) * 2014-06-27 2017-04-25 GM Global Technology Operations LLC Pressure system for a tire assembly of a vehicle
DE102014113064A1 (en) 2014-09-10 2016-03-10 Knorr-Bremse Systeme für Nutzfahrzeuge GmbH Mechanically driven tire pressure regulating device, in particular for a commercial vehicle trailer
US20160121667A1 (en) * 2014-10-31 2016-05-05 The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Vehicle tire management system
GB2535773B (en) * 2015-02-27 2019-10-30 Jaguar Land Rover Ltd Vehicle mass estimation
TWM510867U (en) * 2015-03-26 2015-10-21 Greencell Ind Co Ltd Movable vehicle tire inflation device
US10137745B2 (en) * 2015-07-14 2018-11-27 Intelliaire, Llc System and method for maintaining target pressure in conjunction with gravity-driven automatic tire pumping mechanisms
CN109952237B (en) 2016-09-06 2022-08-26 阿佩利亚科技公司 System for inflating a tire
DE102016122738A1 (en) 2016-11-24 2018-05-24 Kt Projektentwicklungs-Gmbh Compressor arrangement with radial piston
DE102016122736A1 (en) 2016-11-24 2018-05-24 Kt Projektentwicklungs-Gmbh Vehicle with compressor arrangement
DE102016122735A1 (en) * 2016-11-24 2018-05-24 Kt Projektentwicklungs-Gmbh Motor vehicle with a compressor arrangement
DE102016122739A1 (en) 2016-11-24 2018-05-24 Kt Projektentwicklungs-Gmbh Compressor arrangement with bead cylinder curve
DE102016122737A1 (en) 2016-11-24 2018-05-24 Kt Projektentwicklungs-Gmbh compressor assembly
US10322611B2 (en) 2016-12-16 2019-06-18 The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company System for an air maintenance tire assembly
CN110312623B (en) * 2016-12-23 2023-08-11 哈珀科技控股公司 Wheel, in particular bicycle wheel, hub for such a wheel and vehicle equipped with such a wheel
US10183535B1 (en) 2017-07-21 2019-01-22 Pygmalion Technologies LLC Air motion powered devices for vehicle wheels
DE102017106805A1 (en) 2017-03-03 2018-09-06 Kt Projektentwicklungs-Gmbh Compressor arrangement with magnetic coupling
CN107081844B (en) * 2017-05-05 2019-05-03 新昌县玮康电子科技有限公司 A kind of Production of Ceramics pressurizing device
US10406869B2 (en) 2017-11-10 2019-09-10 Aperia Technologies, Inc. Inflation system
DE102018214086A1 (en) * 2018-08-21 2020-02-27 Zf Friedrichshafen Ag Arrangement for regulating the air pressure and device for energy transmission
US11642920B2 (en) 2018-11-27 2023-05-09 Aperia Technologies, Inc. Hub-integrated inflation system
US11273801B2 (en) * 2018-12-18 2022-03-15 The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Control system for an air maintenance tire system
TW202100379A (en) * 2019-06-27 2021-01-01 王士榮 Tire pressure control device
WO2021133296A1 (en) * 2019-12-27 2021-07-01 Turkiye'nin Otomobili Girisim Grubu Sanayi Ve Ticaret A.S. Tyre pressure regulation system
US11560024B1 (en) 2020-08-21 2023-01-24 William Robert Hamilton, III System, apparatus and method for adjusting air pressure in a tire
WO2022060623A1 (en) * 2020-09-15 2022-03-24 Sensata Technologies, Inc. System and method for estimating tire fill percentage

Family Cites Families (49)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1128455A (en) 1914-03-19 1915-02-16 John Watchpocket Pressure-controller for tires.
US1254903A (en) 1917-02-09 1918-01-29 Chalmers G Hall Automatic tire-pump.
US1744405A (en) 1927-09-26 1930-01-21 Claude M Mccord Air pump
US1894908A (en) 1930-09-15 1933-01-17 Hopkins Eugene Automatic tire pump
US2084381A (en) 1935-09-11 1937-06-22 Campbell Nicholas Demarest Automatic inflater for vehicle wheel tires
US2211935A (en) 1937-12-15 1940-08-20 Clark W Parker Automatic tire inflater
US2415618A (en) 1945-05-21 1947-02-11 William S West Pump
DE1011756B (en) 1953-07-20 1957-07-04 Max Rodler Device for indicating the escape of air from a pneumatic tire
US3452801A (en) 1967-05-16 1969-07-01 George Warren Fletcher Air compressing automotive wheel
GB1469370A (en) 1974-09-06 1977-04-06 Tusruta Y Method and device for the automatic regulation of the internal pressure in a pneumatic tyre
US4157530A (en) 1975-12-18 1979-06-05 Merz Ernest J Automatic tire pressure monitoring system
US4061200A (en) 1976-01-12 1977-12-06 Thompson Joseph A Vehicular energy generation system
US4349064A (en) 1978-11-17 1982-09-14 Booth George R Inertial tire pressure regulators
US4269252A (en) 1979-07-16 1981-05-26 David Shapiro Tire pressure maintenance device
IT1193797B (en) * 1979-07-19 1988-08-24 Cremona Angelo EQUIPMENT SUITABLE FOR CUTTING WOODEN LOGS TO OBTAIN THIN SHEETS THROUGH CURVED CUTTING TRAJECTORIES, WITH ADJUSTABLE CURVATURE RADIUS AND VARIABLE AT WILL DURING THE WHOLE SHEAR OPERATION
JPS60148705A (en) 1984-01-13 1985-08-06 Hidenori Ishida Air pressure adjuster of tyre
US4570691A (en) 1984-05-03 1986-02-18 Martus Donald G Tire pressure regulation system
US4651792A (en) 1984-07-02 1987-03-24 Allen F. Ehle Automatic tire pressurizing system
US4742857A (en) 1986-10-07 1988-05-10 Techni Guidance, Inc. Tire pressure sensor and air supply to maintain desired tire pressure
IT1222907B (en) 1987-10-14 1990-09-12 Claudio Zarotti PNEUMATIC WHEEL FOR VEHICLES AND METHOD FOR ADJUSTING THE INFLATION PRESSURE OF THE PNEUMATIC WHEEL
JPH01172003A (en) * 1987-12-25 1989-07-06 Honda Motor Co Ltd Air pressure supplementary device for tire
JPH01120061U (en) 1988-02-05 1989-08-15
CN2033350U (en) * 1988-08-02 1989-03-01 张钱荣 Micro-inflator for motor driver tyre
US5231872A (en) 1991-02-21 1993-08-03 Ttc/Truck Tech Corp. Tire monitoring apparatus and method
JPH06510252A (en) * 1991-08-27 1994-11-17 サイクロイド カンパニー Tire pressure adjustment device
US5325902A (en) * 1992-06-19 1994-07-05 Loewe Richard T Automatic tire pressure monitor and inflation system
US5325901A (en) 1992-10-06 1994-07-05 Hughes Aircraft Company Vehicle wheel incorporating tire air pressure sensor
US5355924A (en) 1992-10-06 1994-10-18 Hughes Aircraft Company Vehicle wheel including self-inflating mechanism
US5452753A (en) * 1993-04-22 1995-09-26 Hughes Aircraft Company Vehicle tire management system including wheel with self-contained tire inflation/deflation apparatus
CN2173181Y (en) * 1993-10-14 1994-08-03 黄代强 Automatic inflating device
US5558730A (en) 1993-10-22 1996-09-24 Hughes Aircraft Company Vehicle wheel including self-inflating tire pump
US5556489A (en) 1994-01-14 1996-09-17 Pacific Aeromotive Corporation Wheel-mounted tire inflator
US5472032A (en) 1994-02-01 1995-12-05 Winston; Patrick H. Tire pressure maintenance system
US5505080A (en) 1994-05-12 1996-04-09 Tellair Corporation Tire pressure management system
US5928444A (en) 1995-06-07 1999-07-27 Loewe; Richard Thomas Battery-powered, wheel-mounted tire pressure monitor and inflation system
CA2226493A1 (en) * 1995-07-10 1997-01-30 Cycloid Company Tire pressurizing and regulating apparatus
US5591281A (en) 1995-08-09 1997-01-07 Loewe; Richard T. Flywheel tire inflation device
US5616196A (en) 1995-08-09 1997-04-01 Loewe; Richard T. Deformation-based tire inflation device
US5667606A (en) 1996-07-05 1997-09-16 Cycloid Company Tire pressurizing and regulating apparatus
DE10001348A1 (en) * 2000-01-14 2001-07-19 Paul Horlacher Electromechanical tire pressure regulating system transfers pressure measurement data and control commands via radio and produces electric energy from wheel rotation
US6742386B1 (en) * 2000-10-30 2004-06-01 International Truck Intellectual Property Company, Llc Wheel mounted power generator and wheel condition sensing apparatus
WO2003066354A1 (en) * 2002-02-05 2003-08-14 Nakano, Takaji Automatic air feeding mechanism for pneumatic tires, and pneumatic tire connecting device
JP3912184B2 (en) * 2002-05-27 2007-05-09 セイコーエプソン株式会社 Air supply device
US6744356B2 (en) 2002-07-11 2004-06-01 Autoliv Asp, Inc. Tire pressure maintenance and monitoring system
US6691754B1 (en) * 2002-07-24 2004-02-17 Daimlerchrysler Corporation Electromagnetically activated on-wheel air pump
SE526278C2 (en) * 2003-03-27 2005-08-16 Sven A Jansson Air pressure control system and air pump drive for vehicle tires
JP2006044313A (en) * 2004-07-30 2006-02-16 Ohashi Sangyo Kk On-board tire air filling device
US7784513B2 (en) * 2004-11-12 2010-08-31 Richard Thomas Loewe Tire pressure maintenance device
CN101111400B (en) * 2004-11-12 2011-01-12 理查德·洛伊 Tire pressure maintenance device

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
See references of EP1817180A4 *

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1911609A2 (en) * 2006-10-12 2008-04-16 Daubner & Stommel GbR Bau-Werk-Planung Method and device for adjusting tyres of a transport medium to certain driving conditions
EP1911609A3 (en) * 2006-10-12 2011-11-30 Daubner & Stommel GbR Bau-Werk-Planung Method and device for adjusting tyres of a transport medium to certain driving conditions
DE102008062071A1 (en) * 2008-12-12 2010-06-24 Knorr-Bremse Systeme für Nutzfahrzeuge GmbH Pneumatic tire pressure control system for e.g. three-axle trailer, has pressure distributor provided with switching valves and high pressure compressors that are symmetrically formed with electric drives and arranged in hubs of wheels
DE102008062071B4 (en) * 2008-12-12 2015-06-11 Knorr-Bremse Systeme für Nutzfahrzeuge GmbH Tire pressure control system and method for tire pressure regulation
DE102017206643A1 (en) 2017-04-20 2018-10-25 Continental Reifen Deutschland Gmbh Wheel with a pressure regulator
DE102017206646A1 (en) 2017-04-20 2018-10-25 Continental Reifen Deutschland Gmbh Wheel with a pressure control system

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US7237590B2 (en) 2007-07-03
CA2586319A1 (en) 2006-05-18
US7607465B2 (en) 2009-10-27
WO2006053318A3 (en) 2007-03-01
EP1817180B1 (en) 2011-08-17
CN101111400A (en) 2008-01-23
US20060102268A1 (en) 2006-05-18
CN101111400B (en) 2011-01-12
US7357164B2 (en) 2008-04-15
ATE520549T1 (en) 2011-09-15
EP1817180A2 (en) 2007-08-15
JP2008519735A (en) 2008-06-12
CA2586319C (en) 2015-01-13
US20080135151A1 (en) 2008-06-12
EP1817180A4 (en) 2008-01-23
US20070107822A1 (en) 2007-05-17

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7237590B2 (en) Tire pressure maintenance device
US7784513B2 (en) Tire pressure maintenance device
US8955566B2 (en) Tire pressure maintenance device
US20140096881A1 (en) Tire pressure maintenance device
US6691754B1 (en) Electromagnetically activated on-wheel air pump
US6744356B2 (en) Tire pressure maintenance and monitoring system
CN109952237B (en) System for inflating a tire
US20200130437A1 (en) Apparatus and method for automatic tire inflation system
US9434218B2 (en) Tire inflation apparatus
US9840117B2 (en) Device for controlling the pressure in a vehicle tyre
JP2015523273A (en) Device for controlling pressure in vehicle tires
WO2010141638A1 (en) Systems and methods for tire inflation and pressure regulation
KR20160090293A (en) Device for controlling the pressure in a vehicle tyre
US20200130436A1 (en) Apparatus and method for vehicle wheel-end fluid pumping
US20160288597A1 (en) Device for controlling the pressure in a vehicle tyre
EP3501861B1 (en) Pump assembly
EP3498502B1 (en) Pump assembly and wheel assembly
CZ21192U1 (en) Device to control pressure in vehicle pneumatic tyres
WO2021133296A1 (en) Tyre pressure regulation system
CZ2010179A3 (en) Device to control pressure in vehicle pneumatic tires
WO2014045043A2 (en) Wheel energy scavenging

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A2

Designated state(s): AE AG AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BW BY BZ CA CH CN CO CR CU CZ DE DK DM DZ EC EE EG ES FI GB GD GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IN IS JP KE KG KM KN KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV LY MA MD MG MK MN MW MX MZ NA NG NI NO NZ OM PG PH PL PT RO RU SC SD SE SG SK SL SM SY TJ TM TN TR TT TZ UA UG US UZ VC VN YU ZA ZM ZW

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A2

Designated state(s): GM KE LS MW MZ NA SD SL SZ TZ UG ZM ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE BG CH CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR HU IE IS IT LT LU LV MC NL PL PT RO SE SI SK TR BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GQ GW ML MR NE SN TD TG

DPE1 Request for preliminary examination filed after expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed from 20040101)
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2586319

Country of ref document: CA

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2005849171

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2007541431

Country of ref document: JP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 200580045125.5

Country of ref document: CN

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 2005849171

Country of ref document: EP