Associating a hand control unit

Communications: electrical – Selective – Interrogation response

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C340S870030, C340S870030, C340S010500

Reexamination Certificate

active

06570491

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a remote control system, in particular for adjustable articles of furniture and office, hospital and nursing home equipment, such as beds, chairs, tables, patient lifters, etc. The invention also relates to an adjustable article of furniture and to a power driven actuator.
2. The Prior Art
The description of the invention will be based on hospital beds, as these illustrate the problems underlying the invention quite well.
A hospital bed has an electrical appliance with a linear actuator for adjusting the backrest part of a hinged support section as well as an actuator for adjusting its legrest part. In addition, the support section as a whole may be raised and lowered, as well as be caused to assume a tilted position (Trendelenburg's or anti-Trendelenburg's position). Adjustment of the support section as a whole is performed by two actuators. Beds of this type are described e.g. in U.S. Pats. No. 5,161,274 and 5,205,004, both to J. Nesbit Evans & Co. Ltd.
The actuators are connected to a control box, which also contains a power supply. The actuators and the control box are positioned below the bottom of the bed. The control box is operated by a hand control connected to it by wire. The hand control must be capable of being operated by the patient himself and also by the hospital staff, such as patient care staff, nurses, orderlies, doctors, and cleaning staff.
The wire for the hand control constitutes a problem per se, and this is not lessened by the fact that it must be relatively long even though a helically twisted wire is used. Lying in bed, the patient must be able to reach and operate the hand control, while the staff must be able to operate it, standing at the foot end of the bed. Further, the wire must not be in the way when the patient goes to bed or is taken to bed by the staff, nor of course when the patient gets out of bed. This may take place from both the one and the other side of the bed. Of course, a hand control might be arranged at each end of the bed, but this is much too expensive. After each use, the bed must be washed, and here the helically twisted wire constitutes a problem since it is difficult to clean. Another drawback of the wire is that, because of its length and the movement of it from one end to the other, it will frequently get squeezed between the movable parts of the bed and thereby be damaged or even be cut completely.
To avoid the wire for the hand control, a wireless hand control might be considered, but this presents other problems. One of the problems is actually the storage of the hand control. It must be readily accessible for both patient and staff. In an emergency it is no good that the patient has packed the hand control away in a side table, if, e.g., the bed is to be placed in Trendelenburg's position immediately. At a hospital with several hundreds of beds it is altogether no good having a corresponding number of loose hand controls. Connecting these to the beds by a wire is no solution to the problems.
A hand control based on an infrared transmitter moreover involves a problem of mounting the receiver at a place accessible to all parties. Lying in bed, the patient will naturally direct the hand control toward the foot end, while the staff will direct it toward the head end, which is psychologically unfortunate for the patient.
The other common wireless option is a hand control based on radio communication. A problem of using such a solution where several beds are frequently placed in the same room, like at a hospital, is that the activation of a hand control must only cause a reaction from precisely the desired bed. Therefore, it is necessary to use hand controls which are dedicated to communicating precisely with a given bed, and this emphasizes the problem of keeping track of the individual hand controls. Now there must not only be one for each bed, but a quite specific hand control. One way of performing the dedication of the hand control is to mount a code recognition circuit in the individual receiver. This, however, involves the use of rather complicated electronics, and therefore adds to the costs, and radio communication per se is more expensive than infrared communication. Further, it gives rise to considerations that the allocated frequency ranges are crowded, involving risks of interference, and that radio communication per se presents a latent risk of operational disturbances of the often highly sensitive electronic equipment which is used at hospitals.
Considering the problems, it is thus not evident to change from a wired hand control to a wireless one, particularly not when the solution previously used is the absolutely cheapest one seen in relation to a wireless control.
The object of the invention is to provide a wireless remote control system in which a dedicated remote control for operating each individual unit is avoided, while ensuring that only one selected unit can be operated at a time.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, the invention provides a remote control system which is characterized by
utilizing at least one hand control and one or more control units,
the hand control and the control units comprising transmit and receive antennas,
the control units including a transmitter for transmitting a signal with a frequency which is unique to the individual control unit,
the remote control including a receiver for reception of this signal from the control unit from which the signal is strongest relative to the hand control, as well as a transmitter for transmitting a signal with a frequency which is a whole multiple of the received signal and, via a phase locking circuit, is in phase with the received signal, and means for coding the transmitted signal with instructions,
the control units including a receiver for receiving the signal from the hand control, as well as means for determining whether the received signal is in phase with the signal formed by the circuit of the control unit, and means for decoding and executing the instructions on the received signal.
With this embodiment of a remote control system, an arbitrary hand control in the system can adapt itself to the control unit from which the signal is strongest, and subsequently communicate with the control unit. Thus, there is no need for hand controls which are dedicated to the individual control unit, as an arbitrary control unit may be used in connection with all the control units. If it is desired to communicate with a specific control unit, then it is just necessary to assume a position where it is known with certainty that the signal from there is the strongest.
Taking hospital conditions as an example again, it is now possible to equip the patients with an arbitrary hand control for the control of the bed which they might be given, just as the staff may be equipped with a single remote control which can operate all the beds. In terms of organizing, there are substantially no limits to the administration of the hand controls, and, e.g., a remote control might conceivably be placed in a holder on each bed or the associated side table and one in a holder on the wall or the door to the ward for use by the staff.
The inventive concept provides several options of realizing the invention adapted to specific fields of use, and the invention may also be used where infrared communication has traditionally been used previously. The remote control may thus be us ed in connection with TV, video players, hi-fi systems, etc., it being ensured of course that the signal of the remote control does not interfere with the radio/television signal.
The remote control system may be constructed such that the control units constantly transmit signals, but where this is not desired for some reason, the system may be arranged so that the transmitters of the control units are normally turned off and are turned on only upon activation of a remote control, understood in the way that it is only the closest one or ones within a given radius from the remote control that

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