Fluid-pressure and analogous brake systems – Pipeless valves
Patent
1991-06-14
1994-01-11
Oberleitner, Robert J.
Fluid-pressure and analogous brake systems
Pipeless valves
303100, 303111, 36442602, B60T 810
Patent
active
052774821
DESCRIPTION:
BRIEF SUMMARY
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
When a vehicle is driven using its spare wheel, or with widely varying tyre pressures, it is possible that the message given to the antilocking control system is an erroneous message of brake slip which either does not exist at all or is not to the extent indicated, which can lead to an unnecessary reduction of braking pressure, i.e. to insufficiently braked wheels.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Advantages of the Invention
The invention prevents such insufficient braking of the wheels by switching the controller off. Particular advantage is derived from linking the controller switch-off with a reduction of brake slip, which precedes the switch-off, by a specified value or increase of the threshold value with which the brake slip is compared, by a specified value.
The invention can be used in antilocking control systems in which the variable "brake slip" is compared with a threshold value and where, after exceeding the threshold, a signal for influencing the pressure is generated. In this case, the threshold value can be either increased, the determined slippage value can be reduced prior to the comparison, or the reference speed can be reduced. Using the brake slippage without comparing it directly with a threshold value (e.g. in accordance with DE-OS 36 14 770 or similar), allows only the three last mentioned methods of influencing.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of an embodiment
FIG. 2 shows an explanatory diagram
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
In FIG. 1, the speed sensors 1-4 allocated to the wheels of the vehicle feed their signals to an evaluation circuit 5, which uses these signals to generate control signals for 3/3 solenoids 6. It is of no importance here as to how these control signals are generated. What is of importance for the invention, is the fact that slippage signals are formed and included in the control. To generate slippage signals, the evaluation circuit 5 includes a block 51 for the generally known development of a reference speed which approaches that of the vehicle, from the wheel speed signals, and a block 52 to generate slippage signals from the reference speed and the individual wheel speeds.
In part 5a of the evaluation circuit 5, slippage of the individual wheels is again developed in a block 10. The amounts of these slip values are evaluated in comparators 11, with specified values, which are speed related. For this purpose, the reference speed is fed to the comparators. In their first position, the comparators 11 emit a signal when a first threshold, shown in FIG. 2 as a dotted line, is exceeded by the slippage signal .DELTA.V=.vertline.V.sub.Rad -V.sub.Ref .vertline.. This threshold remains constant (e.g. 4 Km/h) up to 80 km/h, for example, and after that, it is a specified percentage (e.g. 3%) of the reference speed. The comparison is made in the comparators 11 only when the vehicle is not braked (line 12). If the specified threshold is exceeded for a period (e.g. 20 sec.) specified by the delay time elements 13, then a signal develops at the output of an OR gate 14 which sets a bistable element 15. This emits an output signal which firstly makes a higher second threshold effective in the comparators 11 (e.g. 6 km/h and 6% of the reference)--shown in FIG. 2 as a continuous line--and secondly, activates a block 53 in the evaluation circuit 5, which reduces the reference speed for the brake slip development of block 52 by a specified value (in km/h). The controller is thus made insensitive to brake slippage.
If the new second thresholds are also exceeded for a time (time function element 13), then a switch-off signal for the controller is emitted at the output of an AND gate 16, since the bistable element 15 is set when the new output signal of the OR gate 14 occurs. A time element 17 with a short delay time prevents the AND gate 16 from becoming conductive, and from switching off, as soon as the low threshold in the comparator 11 is exceeded. Reset of the bistable element 15 is by a block 18 w
REFERENCES:
patent: 3609313 (1971-09-01), Lucien
patent: 3740103 (1973-06-01), Sweet et al.
patent: 3953080 (1976-04-01), Bromer
patent: 4316641 (1982-02-01), Weise et al.
patent: 4841446 (1989-06-01), Leiber et al.
patent: 4955671 (1990-09-01), Higashimura
Beyer Claus
Dominke Peter
Oberleitner Robert J.
Robert & Bosch GmbH
Young Lee W.
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