Wash down sensor for electronic rodent traps and method of preventing false triggering using a wash down sensor

US11528900B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-11528900-B2
Application numberUS-201916456450-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateJun 28, 2019
Priority dateJul 6, 2018
Publication dateDec 20, 2022
Grant dateDec 20, 2022

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  5. First independent claim

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

An electronic rodent trap is provided that includes a microprocessor and a resistive sensor coupled to a high voltage killing circuit and to a wash down sensor. Upon detecting a resistance, the resistive sensor sends a detection signal to the microprocessor. The microprocessor activates the wash down sensor to determine whether the resistance is above a threshold value and/or shows variation characteristics consistent with the presence of a rodent and thus warranting activation of the killing circuit. Resistance that is below the threshold indicates the presence of water such that the killing circuit is not activated and false triggering of the electronic rodent trap is prevented. Animal traps and monitoring stations incorporating a wash down sensor for pest detection but without killing mechanisms are also provided.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. A rodent monitoring or killing mechanism comprising: a housing body having a power source and a resistive sensor including at least two plates; and a wash down sensor coupled to the resistive sensor and configured to prevent false detection of a rodent when the rodent monitoring or killing mechanism is exposed to water, the wash down sensor includes a capacitor, a low impedance load and a switching element that is activated upon detection of a resistance across the plates to close a path to ground through the low impedance load and discharge the capacitor, a level of resistance across the plates being measured based upon a delay time T d for capacitor recharge. 2. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 1 , wherein the mechanism is a rodent monitoring station. 3. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 1 , wherein the mechanism is an electronic rodent trap that includes a high voltage killing circuit coupled to the resistive sensor, the killing circuit activating in response to detection of a resistance consistent with a rodent being in contact with the resistive sensor, the resistive sensor including at least two plates that receive a high voltage pulse train when the killing circuit is activated. 4. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 1 , wherein the wash down sensor is configured to take a plurality of resistance measurements as a sample set over regular time intervals, T sample , variation in the resistance measurements across the sample set being used to distinguish between a water spray followed by a drying scenario and rodent presence on the plates. 5. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 4 , wherein resistance measurements that show a relatively linear decrease or a relatively linear increase in resistance over a set of samples taken at T sample intervals indicate the water spray followed by drying scenario. 6. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 5 , wherein variation in measured resistance is calculated using a variation of standard deviation measured against a linear fit using start and end points of the sample set of resistance measurements taken at time intervals T sample to calculate an Lsigma value, said Lsigma value being divided by a mean of the sample set and compared against a threshold, values below the threshold representing the presence of water. 7. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 4 , wherein resistance measurements that show a widely varying, non-linear variation in resistance levels indicate rodent presence. 8. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 7 , wherein variation in measured resistance is calculated using a variation of standard deviation measured against a linear fit using start and end points of the sample set of resistance measurements taken at T sample intervals to calculate an Lsigma value, said Lsigma value being compared against a threshold, values above the threshold indicating the non-linear variation in resistance levels that are consistent with the presence of a live animal. 9. A rodent monitoring or killing mechanism comprising: a housing body having a power source and a resistive sensor; and a wash down sensor operatively coupled to the resistive sensor and adapted to distinguish between the presence of water within the housing body and the presence of a rodent according to at least one measurement of resistance from the resistive sensor, the wash down sensor takes a plurality of resistance measurements as a sample set over regular time intervals, T sample , variation in the resistance measurements across the sample set being used by a processor of the rodent monitoring or killing mechanism to distinguish between a water and rodent presence. 10. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 9 , wherein the resistive sensor includes at least two plates and the wash down sensor includes a capacitor, a low impedance load and a switching element that is activated upon detection of a resistance across the plates to close a path to ground through the low impedance load and discharge the capacitor, a level of resistance across the plates being measured based upon a delay time T d for capacitor recharge. 11. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 9 , wherein the mechanism is an electronic rodent trap that includes a high voltage killing circuit coupled to the resistive sensor, the high voltage killing circuit activating in response to detection of a resistance consistent with a rodent being in contact with the resistive sensor, the resistive sensor including at least two conductors that receive a high voltage pulse train when the killing circuit is activated. 12. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 9 , wherein the processor determines that water is present if the plurality of resistance measurements increase or decrease relatively linearly over a set of samples taken at T sample intervals. 13. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 12 , wherein the processor calculates variation in measured resistance using a variation of standard deviation measured against a linear fit using start and end points of the sample set of resistance measurements taken at time intervals T sample to calculate an Lsigma value, the Lsigma value being divided by a mean of the sample set and compared against a threshold value, values below the threshold representing the presence of water. 14. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 9 , wherein the processor determines that a rodent is present if resistance measurements vary non-linearly. 15. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 14 , wherein the processor calculates variation in measured resistance using a variation of standard deviation measured against a linear fit using start and end points of the sample set of resistance measurements taken at T sample intervals to calculate an Lsigma value, the Lsigma value being compared against a threshold, values above the threshold indicating the non-linear variation in resistance levels that are consistent with the presence of a live animal. 16. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 9 , wherein the wash down sensor includes a processor responsive to the output of the resistive sensor for determining the presence or water or a rodent in the trap according to a measured change in the output of the resistive sensor. 17. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 16 , wherein the wash down sensor further comprises: a switching mechanism coupled to the processor; a high impedance load coupled between an output of the resistive sensor and a ground reference; a low impedance load coupled between the output of the resistive sensor and the switching element; and a capacitor coupled between the output of the resistive sensor and the ground reference. 18. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 17 , wherein the processor is operative coupled to an output of the switching mechanism and the output of the resistive sensor. 19. The rodent monitoring or killing mechanism as set forth in claim 9 , wherein the resistive sensor includes at first conductive element and a second conductive element electrically isolated from one another, the power source operatively coupled to the first conductive element and the wash down s

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • A01M23/38Primary

    Electric traps · CPC title

  • operating with propagation of electric current · CPC title

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What does patent US11528900B2 cover?
An electronic rodent trap is provided that includes a microprocessor and a resistive sensor coupled to a high voltage killing circuit and to a wash down sensor. Upon detecting a resistance, the resistive sensor sends a detection signal to the microprocessor. The microprocessor activates the wash down sensor to determine whether the resistance is above a threshold value and/or shows variation ch…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Woodstream Corp
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification A01M23/38. Mapped technology areas include Human Necessities.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Dec 20 2022 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 2 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).