Rotary actuator driven vibration isolation
US-9291300-B2 · Mar 22, 2016 · US
US11021033B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11021033-B2 |
| Application number | US-201816020668-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jun 27, 2018 |
| Priority date | Mar 15, 2013 |
| Publication date | Jun 1, 2021 |
| Grant date | Jun 1, 2021 |
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A method of on-demand energy delivery to an active suspension system comprising an actuator body, hydraulic pump, electric motor, plurality of sensors, energy storage facility, and controller is provided. The method comprises disposing an active suspension system in a vehicle between a wheel mount and a vehicle body, detecting a wheel event requiring control of the active suspension; and sourcing energy from the energy storage facility and delivering it to the electric motor in response to the wheel event.
Opening claim text (preview).
We claim: 1. A vehicle suspension system comprising: a hydraulic suspension system, wherein the hydraulic suspension system includes a hydraulic actuator including an electric motor; a hydraulic actuator controller adapted to control the electric motor; an air suspension system, wherein the air suspension system includes an air spring, and wherein the air spring is operatively coupled in parallel to the hydraulic actuator; and an air spring controller in communication with the hydraulic actuator controller, wherein the air spring controller is adapted to control an operating parameter of the air spring, wherein the operating parameter is a parameter selected from the group consisting of air pressure of the air spring and air volume of the air spring. 2. The vehicle suspension system of claim 1 , wherein a response time of the hydraulic actuator is less than a response time of the air spring. 3. The vehicle suspension system of claim 1 , wherein the hydraulic actuator comprises a hydraulic pump operatively coupled to the electric motor, and wherein the actuator controller is adapted to control a torque applied to the hydraulic pump by the electric motor. 4. The vehicle suspension system of claim 1 , wherein operation of the electric motor causes the hydraulic actuator to exert a force, and wherein the hydraulic actuator controller and the air spring controller cooperate such that control of the force exerted by the hydraulic actuator and control of the operating parameter of the air spring are coordinated. 5. The vehicle suspension system of claim 1 , wherein the air spring is co-located with at least a portion of the hydraulic actuator. 6. The vehicle suspension system of claim 5 , wherein the hydraulic actuator includes a cylindrical housing, and wherein the air spring is attached to a portion of the cylindrical housing. 7. The vehicle suspension system of claim 6 , wherein the air spring is mounted coaxially with respect to the cylindrical housing. 8. The vehicle suspension system of claim 1 , wherein the air spring controller and the actuator controller share a common processor. 9. The vehicle suspension system of claim 1 , further comprising: a pressure sensor arranged to detect the air pressure of the air spring, wherein the actuator controller is configured to control the electric motor based at least in part on an output of the pressure sensor. 10. The vehicle suspension system of claim 1 , wherein the air spring is adapted to adjust a ride height of the vehicle, and wherein the actuator controller is configured to control the electric motor based at least in part on the ride height of the vehicle. 11. The vehicle suspension system of claim 1 , wherein the air spring controller is configured to control the operating parameter of the air spring based at least in part on a force exerted by the hydraulic actuator. 12. A method of operating a suspension system of a vehicle having a hydraulic suspension system which includes a hydraulic actuator and an air suspension system which includes an air spring, the method comprising: (a) controlling the hydraulic actuator, with a first controller, to apply a first force on a portion of the vehicle in an extension direction, and (b) during step (a) controlling, with a second controller, a second force applied on the portion of the vehicle with the air spring. 13. The method of claim 12 , further comprising exchanging information between the first controller and the second controller. 14. A method of adjusting a ride height of a vehicle with a suspension system that includes an air suspension system with an air spring with a first response time and a hydraulic active suspension system with a hydraulic actuator with a second response time, the method comprising: (a) with the vehicle at a first ride height, applying a first vehicle lift force to a portion of the vehicle with the air spring; (b) subsequent to step (a) applying a second vehicle lift force to the portion of the vehicle with the hydraulic actuator; (c) during a period of time after (b), increasing the ride height by increasing a magnitude of the second vehicle lift force; and (d) with the vehicle at a second ride height greater than the first ride height during a period of time after step (c), increasing the magnitude of the first vehicle lift force and decreasing a magnitude of the second vehicle lift force; wherein the second response time is faster than the first response time. 15. The method of claim 14 , further comprising measuring an air pressure of the air spring with a pressure sensor, wherein the increasing of the magnitude of the first vehicle lift force in step (d) is based at least partially on the measurement. 16. The method of claim 14 , wherein the second vehicle lift force is greater than the first vehicle lift force during at least a portion of step (c). 17. The method of claim 16 , wherein the first vehicle lift force is greater than the second vehicle lift force during at least a portion of step (d). 18. The method of claim 16 , wherein the first vehicle lift force is a dominant vehicle lift force. 19. The method of claim 14 , wherein the second vehicle lift force is a dominant vehicle lift force.
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