Self-arming electronic rodent trap and system and method for use thereof
US-10842145-B2 · Nov 24, 2020 · US
US11564385B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11564385-B2 |
| Application number | US-202016951419-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Nov 18, 2020 |
| Priority date | Mar 2, 2017 |
| Publication date | Jan 31, 2023 |
| Grant date | Jan 31, 2023 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A rodent trap having a remote arming capability and a method of deploying a rodent trap in an unarmed state and then arming the trap after a wait period without the user having to again physically access the trap. The trap, preferably embodied as an electronic rodent trap, may be configured with wireless remote arming capability, timed arming functionality, activity based arming and the like. When in the unarmed state, the trap operates in a monitoring mode in which the trap can monitor and evaluate activity and/or interactions with the trap and can send and receive wireless communication signals.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A self-arming electronic rodent trap comprising: a killing mechanism including at least two killing plates operatively connected to a voltage source; a central processing unit for controlling the killing mechanism, the central processing unit being configured to change a state of the trap from an unarmed state wherein the killing mechanism is not automatically activated by a rodent, to an armed state wherein the killing mechanism remains inactive until it is activated by a rodent, in response to an arming event that occurs at a time subsequent to trap deployment and without the trap being previously armed by the user; and an activity sensor operatively coupled to the central processing unit, the central processing unit analyzing data received from the activity sensor to determine if a detected activity is consistent with rodent activity or consistent with non-rodent activity, the trap in the unarmed state uses the activity sensor to monitor activity in or adjacent the trap while the killing mechanism remains inactive, the killing mechanism is accessible and directly contactable by the rodent in the unarmed state and the killing mechanism is activatable to kill the rodent in the armed state in a same physical location that is accessible by the rodent in the unarmed state. 2. The self-arming electronic rodent trap as set forth in claim 1 , wherein the arming event includes detection of a threshold number of rodent interactions with the trap as detected by the activity sensor. 3. The self-arming electronic rodent trap as set forth in claim 2 , wherein the activity sensor further includes a motion detector and a temperature detector for monitoring a plurality of characteristics, wherein the central processing unit is further configured to analyze data received from the plurality of sensors to determine if the data is consistent with rodent activity or consistent with non-rodent activity. 4. The self-arming electronic rodent trap as set forth in claim 1 , wherein the central processing unit is further configured to monitor activity in or adjacent the trap with the trap in the unarmed state until the first of either a detection of the threshold number of rodent interactions, or the expiration of a predetermined time period independent of rodent interaction with the trap results in an arming event. 5. The self-arming electronic rodent trap as set forth in claim 1 , wherein the monitoring of activity by the activity sensor is initiated in response to an initiation of a timer by the user. 6. The self-arming electronic rodent trap as set forth in claim 1 , wherein the arming event occurs in response to a remotely generated arming signal. 7. The self-arming electronic rodent trap as set forth in claim 6 , wherein the arming signal is automatically generated in response to the expiration of a predetermined time period. 8. The self-arming electronic rodent trap as set forth in claim 6 , wherein the trap further comprises a communications chip that enables the central processing unit to be in wireless communication with a remote user, and wherein the arming event includes receipt of the arming signal from the remote user instructing the central processing unit to activate the trap to the armed state. 9. The self-arming electronic rodent trap system as set forth in claim 8 , wherein the trap is responsive to a cloud-based timer, the arming event including expiration of a time period set by the timer, and wherein the system is configured to enable the remote user to send the arming signal before expiration of the time period, the trap changing to the armed state in response to the receipt of the arming signal. 10. A self-arming electronic rodent trap system comprising: an electronic rodent trap having a killing mechanism including a pair of selectively electrified killing plates, a central processing unit for controlling the killing mechanism, and a communications chip, the central processing unit configured to change a state of the trap from an unarmed state wherein the killing mechanism is not automatically activated by a rodent, to an armed state wherein the killing mechanism remains inactive until it is activated by a rodent, in response to an arming event that occurs at a time subsequent to trap deployment, the change of state being effected in an absence of physical manipulation of the trap by a user and without the trap being previously armed by the user; an activity sensor operatively coupled to the central processing unit, the central processing unit analyzing data received from the activity sensor to determine if a detected activity is consistent with rodent activity or consistent with non-rodent activity, the trap in the unarmed state uses the activity sensor to monitor activity in or adjacent the trap while the killing mechanism remains inactive, the killing mechanism is accessible and directly contactable by the rodent in the unarmed state and the killing mechanism is activatable to kill the rodent in the armed state in a same physical location that is accessible by the rodent in the unarmed state; and a remote device enabling the user to wirelessly communicate with the trap central processing unit through the communications chip. 11. The self-arming electronic rodent trap system as set forth in claim 10 , wherein the communication by the remote user to the trap central processing unit serves as the arming event to change the state of the trap from the unarmed state to the armed state. 12. The self-arming electronic rodent trap system as set forth in claim 11 , wherein the trap is responsive to a timer, the arming event including expiration of a time period set by the timer, and wherein the system is configured to enable the remote user with the device to send an arming instruction before expiration of the time period, the trap changing to the armed state in response to the arming instruction. 13. The self-arming electronic rodent trap system as set forth in claim 10 , wherein the arming event includes detection of a threshold level of rodent activity in or adjacent to the trap by the activity sensor. 14. The self-arming electronic rodent trap system as set forth in claim 13 , wherein the system is configured to enable a remote user with the remote device to receive trap activity updates from the trap and to send an activation instruction to place the trap in the armed state before the threshold level of rodent activity has been detected. 15. The self-arming electronic rodent trap system as set forth in claim 13 , wherein the activity sensor further includes an infrared detector and a proximity detector for monitoring a plurality of characteristics, wherein the central processing unit is further configured to analyze data received from the plurality of sensors for determining if the data is consistent with rodent activity or consistent with non-rodent activity. 16. A method of operating an electronic rodent trap to enable rodents to become acclimated to the trap, the method comprising the steps of: placing an electronic rodent trap in a desired location in an unarmed state, the electronic rodent trap having a killing mechanism including a pair of killing plates, and a central processing unit for controlling the killing mechanism; with the trap in the unarmed state wherein the killing mechanism is not automatically activated by a rodent, operating in a monitoring mode that does not result in activation of the killing mechanism upon rodent interaction with the trap, in the monitoring mode the trap monitoring activity with an activity sensor operatively coupled to the central processing unit, t
Kind of animal · CPC title
in which an application is distributed across nodes in the network (software deployment G06F8/60; multiprogramming arrangements G06F9/46) · CPC title
Detecting animals in a given area · CPC title
Electric traps · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.