CA1249124A - Flux-gate sensor electrical drive method and circuit - Google Patents
Flux-gate sensor electrical drive method and circuitInfo
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- CA1249124A CA1249124A CA000492204A CA492204A CA1249124A CA 1249124 A CA1249124 A CA 1249124A CA 000492204 A CA000492204 A CA 000492204A CA 492204 A CA492204 A CA 492204A CA 1249124 A CA1249124 A CA 1249124A
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01R—MEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
- G01R33/00—Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables
- G01R33/02—Measuring direction or magnitude of magnetic fields or magnetic flux
- G01R33/04—Measuring direction or magnitude of magnetic fields or magnetic flux using the flux-gate principle
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01C—MEASURING DISTANCES, LEVELS OR BEARINGS; SURVEYING; NAVIGATION; GYROSCOPIC INSTRUMENTS; PHOTOGRAMMETRY OR VIDEOGRAMMETRY
- G01C17/00—Compasses; Devices for ascertaining true or magnetic north for navigation or surveying purposes
- G01C17/02—Magnetic compasses
- G01C17/28—Electromagnetic compasses
- G01C17/30—Earth-inductor compasses
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- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Radar, Positioning & Navigation (AREA)
- Remote Sensing (AREA)
- Condensed Matter Physics & Semiconductors (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
- General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Geology (AREA)
- Electromagnetism (AREA)
- Measuring Magnetic Variables (AREA)
Abstract
FLUX-GATE SENSOR ELECTRICAL DRIVE METHOD AND CIRCUIT
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
An electrical drive circuit for a flux-gate magnetic sensor used in a digital compass for a vehicle provides signals for application to the primary of a flux-gate sensor to assure the core is saturated at a predetermined time during each cycle of the drive signal.
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
An electrical drive circuit for a flux-gate magnetic sensor used in a digital compass for a vehicle provides signals for application to the primary of a flux-gate sensor to assure the core is saturated at a predetermined time during each cycle of the drive signal.
Description
:~2'~
1 FLUX-GA~E SENSOR ELECTRICAL DRIVE METHOD AND CIRCUIT
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to an electrical circuit and method for providing drive signals for a ~lux-gate magnetic sensor used in connection with an automotive or vehicle compass.
Typically, vehicle mounted compasse~ have been mechanical types with rotating compass cards mounted in a viscous damping media. An electrical compass has been described in a 19~0 SAE paper entitled Maqnetic Field Sensor and Iks ~p~lication to Automobiles by Hisatsugu Itoh, SAE/SP-~0/458. This compass employs a flux-gate sen~or and solid state circuits. Commonly owned European Application Serial No. 84301g88.6, Publication No. 0120691, published October 3, 1984 entitled ELECTRICAL COMPASS discloses an automotive compass in which a flux-gate sensor is employed and which employs digital bandpass filtration to proaess signals ~rom the sensor. The filter and compa~s system is al60 disclosed in commonly owned U.S. Patent No. 4,424,631 A ~lux-gate sensor, as is well known, is driv n by a fundamental ~requency, and information is obtained from the amplitude and polarity changes of the second harmonic frequency signals obtained from the sen~or~ In order to preclsely detect the second harmonic signals, it is necsssary to employ synchronous phase detectors to assure th~ in~ormation ~rom the two channsls i~ synchronized to provide the desired veatored output in~ormation corresponding to vehicle heading. In the past, either analog or digital ~iltering has been required to provide a sinusoidal second harmonic signal which can 1 be processed to supply khe necessary inEormation. The digital filtration system has proven successful in providing the desired information, however, only with the addition of significant circuit expense for the digital filter itself as well as associated circuit elements.
SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT IN;IENTION
It has been discovered that by electrically dxiving the primary coil of the flux-gate sensor such that its core reaches saturation at a predetermined time during each o~ the periodic drive si~nals, the resultant second harmonic output signal is aligned with respect to the reference drive signals and can be used to provide vehicle direction information without the need for expensive digital or analog filtration.
rrhe system of the present invention, therefore, provides an electrical drive circuit or a flux-gate magnetic sensor used in a digital compass for a vehicle and a method of driving a flux-gate sensor for such application. The electrical drive circuit provides signals for application to the primary of a flux-gate sensor to assure the core is saturated at a predetermined time during each cycle of the drive signal. Second harmonic signals from the secondary windings are then amplified and applied to a synchronous phase detector, actuated by phase related second harmonic frequency signals and subsequently integrated and applied to a microprocessor for providing signals representative of the vehicle direction and for actuating a display for displaying such information to the vehicle operator.
rrhus, the present invention embodies a method of assuring that signal information from a flux-gate se~nsor ~L~4~
1 is in predetermined phase relationship with respect to the drive frequency, and one which can be readily processed by subsequent electrical circuitry to provide the necessary vehicle direction information.
These and other features, advantages and objects of the present invention will become apparent upon reading the following description thereof together with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Fig. l is a fragmentary, perspective view of a display and control module embodying the present invention;
Fig. 2 is an electrical circuit diagram partially in block and schematic form, of the system embodying the present invention;
Fig. 3, including sub-figures 3A-3F, are waveform diagrams of the electrical voltage waveforms at various locations of the circuit shown in Fig. 2; and Fig. 4 is a plan view of the flux-yate sensor shown schematically in Fig. 2.
Referring initiaIly to Fig~ 1J there is shown a control and display module 10 which is adapted to be integrally included in a vehicle during ~anufacturing, although it could be separately added at a later time.
The module 10 is mounted to the roof 12 of a vehicle and centered near the top edge of windshield 14, typically above the rearview mirror. Module 10 includes a pair of map reading lamps 16 having switches 17 for operat1ng lamp means positioned behind lenses 18 which direct illumination into the lap area of either the driver or passenger side of the vehicle, depending on which switch . .
1 is actuatedO The center of the module includes a garage door opening transmitter 20 including a three-position switch 22 for actuating any one of three different garage door remote control units by the actuation of push-button S switch 24. Module 10 may also include an electrical sunroof control switch 25. The construction o~ the lamp modules 16 and garage door transmitter module 20 is generally disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,241r870, issued December 20, 1980 and assiyned to the present assignee.
Module 10 additionally includes a separate display panel 30 which includes display indicators 31, 329 33 and 34 for displaying vehicle operating parameters such as engine temperature, oil pressure, generator and fuel warnings or the like which can either be displayed in a digital alpha-numeric format or as warning lights. The center of display module 30 includes a digital display 35 providing, in one embodiment of the present invention, ar, octant display 36 of the vehicle heading in an alpha format, and on the left side of display 35, a te~perature display 37 providing fahrenheit or centigrade display of the exterior ambient temperature of the air near the vehicle as well as a warning signal when road conditions approach freezing. The temperature display circuit is actuated by a push-button temperature switch 38 while the compass circuit is actuated by a push-button switch 39O A
pair of apertures 40 and 41 provide limited access to calibrate and variation switches 42 and 44~ respectlvel,y (Fig. 2), which are only occasionally used are are push switches mounted to a circuit board 43 (Fig. 2~ posltioned behind panel 45 and are actuated by a pointed instrument such as a ball point pen.
--'L--.
~ L~
1 The compass system includes a flux-gate sensor 50, shown schematically in Fig. 2 and shown in Fig. 4.
Sensor 50 is preferably mounted to the circuit board 43 (shown schematically in Fig. 2) which also contains the remaining circuit elements, shown in Fig. 2. The circuit board preferably is mounted near the sheet metal roof of the vehicle to position the flux-gate sensor near the roof. ~he metal roof is believed to provide a flux-steering effect to the earth's magnetic field which results in improved performance of flux-gate sensors over possible other locations in a vehicle.
Sensor 50 includes an annular core 58 around which there is wound the helical primary winding 52, as shown in Fig. 4. The annular core 58 and winding 52 are mounted to a plastic support 51 which centers and holds the core in position with respect thereto and around which the east/west secondary winding 54 and the north/south secondary winding 56 are wound. Each oE the windings 52/
54 and 56 are of No. 36 gauge magnet wire suitably Z insulated. The primary winding 52 comprises approximately 250 equally spaced turns of such wire while the secondary windings 54 and 56 each comprise approximately 400 turns of such wire~ Support 51 includes notches 53 for holding the secondary windings in position with respect to the primary winding. Each of the windings is terminated at suitable terminal posts 55 embedded in support 51 for subsequent connection to the electrical circuit components, as shown in Fig. 2. The annular core is a tape wound core commercially available from The Magnetics Division o~ Spang Ind., Butler, PA, Part No.
80653-lD042 02. The outer and inner diameters o~ the core 1 are 15/16 inch and 3/4 inch, respectively, and the secondary windings 54 and 56 have outer diameters wound around support 51 of approximately l-l/B and 1-1/4 inches, respectively.
The electrical drive circuit 60 for supplying drive signals to the primary 52 of sensor 50 includes a pair of solid state switches 62 and 64 coupled in a push/pull configuration. Switches 62 and 64~ in the preferred embodiment of the invention, comprise transistors with transistor 62 being an NPN and transistor 64 bein~ a PNP type. Transistor 62 is a 2N4401 while transistor 64 is a 2N4403, both of which are commercially available. The emitter of transistor 64 is coupled to the +V supply, which, in the preferred embodiment of the invention, was 5 volt regulated DC while the collector is coupled to a 160 ohm current limiting resistor 66 which, in turn, is coupled to an input terminal 57 of the flux-gate primary winding 52. The base of transistor 64 is coupled to the outpu~ of a driver amplifier 70 by means of a 10 k-ohm resistor 68. Similarly, NPN transistor 62 has its emitter coupled to system ground (OV) while its collector is coupled to terminal 57 through a 160 ohm current limiting resistor 63. The base terminal of transistor 62 is coupled to the output of amplifier 70 by means of a 10 k-ohm resistor 65, The remaining terminal 59 of primary winding 52 of sensor 50 is coupled to a floating ground 61 which is 1/2 of the power supply ~V or +2~5 volts DC. Coupled in parallel with primary winding 52 and in the emitter-to-collector current paths of transistors 62 and 64 is a current controlling resistor 69, the value of which is selected to provide the desired ~LZ~
1 mid-point saturation of the core 58. In the preferred embodiment shown, the value of resistor 69 is 68 ohms.
The selected value may vary depending on circuit parameters of other embodiments to provide current flow through the primary winding 52, as described in greater detail below in connection with Fig. 3, to provide saturation of the core at a predetermined time, and in the preferred embodiment, at approximately the mid-point of the drive signal waveform for each half cycle.
The signal applied to circuit 60 is shown by waveform A and is a squarewave signal supplied through a buffer 70 of conventional design which, in turn, is driven by a 1500 Hz squarewave signal output from terminal 17 of a microprocessor 100. Microprocessor 100 is a Motorola 6~05 microprocessor which is programmed to supply a 1500 Hz output signal at its pin 17 which is applied to the input of amplifier 70 It is noted here that for purposes of simplifying the electrical schematic of Fig 2, the conventional buffer amplifies coupling output terminals of
1 FLUX-GA~E SENSOR ELECTRICAL DRIVE METHOD AND CIRCUIT
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to an electrical circuit and method for providing drive signals for a ~lux-gate magnetic sensor used in connection with an automotive or vehicle compass.
Typically, vehicle mounted compasse~ have been mechanical types with rotating compass cards mounted in a viscous damping media. An electrical compass has been described in a 19~0 SAE paper entitled Maqnetic Field Sensor and Iks ~p~lication to Automobiles by Hisatsugu Itoh, SAE/SP-~0/458. This compass employs a flux-gate sen~or and solid state circuits. Commonly owned European Application Serial No. 84301g88.6, Publication No. 0120691, published October 3, 1984 entitled ELECTRICAL COMPASS discloses an automotive compass in which a flux-gate sensor is employed and which employs digital bandpass filtration to proaess signals ~rom the sensor. The filter and compa~s system is al60 disclosed in commonly owned U.S. Patent No. 4,424,631 A ~lux-gate sensor, as is well known, is driv n by a fundamental ~requency, and information is obtained from the amplitude and polarity changes of the second harmonic frequency signals obtained from the sen~or~ In order to preclsely detect the second harmonic signals, it is necsssary to employ synchronous phase detectors to assure th~ in~ormation ~rom the two channsls i~ synchronized to provide the desired veatored output in~ormation corresponding to vehicle heading. In the past, either analog or digital ~iltering has been required to provide a sinusoidal second harmonic signal which can 1 be processed to supply khe necessary inEormation. The digital filtration system has proven successful in providing the desired information, however, only with the addition of significant circuit expense for the digital filter itself as well as associated circuit elements.
SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT IN;IENTION
It has been discovered that by electrically dxiving the primary coil of the flux-gate sensor such that its core reaches saturation at a predetermined time during each o~ the periodic drive si~nals, the resultant second harmonic output signal is aligned with respect to the reference drive signals and can be used to provide vehicle direction information without the need for expensive digital or analog filtration.
rrhe system of the present invention, therefore, provides an electrical drive circuit or a flux-gate magnetic sensor used in a digital compass for a vehicle and a method of driving a flux-gate sensor for such application. The electrical drive circuit provides signals for application to the primary of a flux-gate sensor to assure the core is saturated at a predetermined time during each cycle of the drive signal. Second harmonic signals from the secondary windings are then amplified and applied to a synchronous phase detector, actuated by phase related second harmonic frequency signals and subsequently integrated and applied to a microprocessor for providing signals representative of the vehicle direction and for actuating a display for displaying such information to the vehicle operator.
rrhus, the present invention embodies a method of assuring that signal information from a flux-gate se~nsor ~L~4~
1 is in predetermined phase relationship with respect to the drive frequency, and one which can be readily processed by subsequent electrical circuitry to provide the necessary vehicle direction information.
These and other features, advantages and objects of the present invention will become apparent upon reading the following description thereof together with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Fig. l is a fragmentary, perspective view of a display and control module embodying the present invention;
Fig. 2 is an electrical circuit diagram partially in block and schematic form, of the system embodying the present invention;
Fig. 3, including sub-figures 3A-3F, are waveform diagrams of the electrical voltage waveforms at various locations of the circuit shown in Fig. 2; and Fig. 4 is a plan view of the flux-yate sensor shown schematically in Fig. 2.
Referring initiaIly to Fig~ 1J there is shown a control and display module 10 which is adapted to be integrally included in a vehicle during ~anufacturing, although it could be separately added at a later time.
The module 10 is mounted to the roof 12 of a vehicle and centered near the top edge of windshield 14, typically above the rearview mirror. Module 10 includes a pair of map reading lamps 16 having switches 17 for operat1ng lamp means positioned behind lenses 18 which direct illumination into the lap area of either the driver or passenger side of the vehicle, depending on which switch . .
1 is actuatedO The center of the module includes a garage door opening transmitter 20 including a three-position switch 22 for actuating any one of three different garage door remote control units by the actuation of push-button S switch 24. Module 10 may also include an electrical sunroof control switch 25. The construction o~ the lamp modules 16 and garage door transmitter module 20 is generally disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,241r870, issued December 20, 1980 and assiyned to the present assignee.
Module 10 additionally includes a separate display panel 30 which includes display indicators 31, 329 33 and 34 for displaying vehicle operating parameters such as engine temperature, oil pressure, generator and fuel warnings or the like which can either be displayed in a digital alpha-numeric format or as warning lights. The center of display module 30 includes a digital display 35 providing, in one embodiment of the present invention, ar, octant display 36 of the vehicle heading in an alpha format, and on the left side of display 35, a te~perature display 37 providing fahrenheit or centigrade display of the exterior ambient temperature of the air near the vehicle as well as a warning signal when road conditions approach freezing. The temperature display circuit is actuated by a push-button temperature switch 38 while the compass circuit is actuated by a push-button switch 39O A
pair of apertures 40 and 41 provide limited access to calibrate and variation switches 42 and 44~ respectlvel,y (Fig. 2), which are only occasionally used are are push switches mounted to a circuit board 43 (Fig. 2~ posltioned behind panel 45 and are actuated by a pointed instrument such as a ball point pen.
--'L--.
~ L~
1 The compass system includes a flux-gate sensor 50, shown schematically in Fig. 2 and shown in Fig. 4.
Sensor 50 is preferably mounted to the circuit board 43 (shown schematically in Fig. 2) which also contains the remaining circuit elements, shown in Fig. 2. The circuit board preferably is mounted near the sheet metal roof of the vehicle to position the flux-gate sensor near the roof. ~he metal roof is believed to provide a flux-steering effect to the earth's magnetic field which results in improved performance of flux-gate sensors over possible other locations in a vehicle.
Sensor 50 includes an annular core 58 around which there is wound the helical primary winding 52, as shown in Fig. 4. The annular core 58 and winding 52 are mounted to a plastic support 51 which centers and holds the core in position with respect thereto and around which the east/west secondary winding 54 and the north/south secondary winding 56 are wound. Each oE the windings 52/
54 and 56 are of No. 36 gauge magnet wire suitably Z insulated. The primary winding 52 comprises approximately 250 equally spaced turns of such wire while the secondary windings 54 and 56 each comprise approximately 400 turns of such wire~ Support 51 includes notches 53 for holding the secondary windings in position with respect to the primary winding. Each of the windings is terminated at suitable terminal posts 55 embedded in support 51 for subsequent connection to the electrical circuit components, as shown in Fig. 2. The annular core is a tape wound core commercially available from The Magnetics Division o~ Spang Ind., Butler, PA, Part No.
80653-lD042 02. The outer and inner diameters o~ the core 1 are 15/16 inch and 3/4 inch, respectively, and the secondary windings 54 and 56 have outer diameters wound around support 51 of approximately l-l/B and 1-1/4 inches, respectively.
The electrical drive circuit 60 for supplying drive signals to the primary 52 of sensor 50 includes a pair of solid state switches 62 and 64 coupled in a push/pull configuration. Switches 62 and 64~ in the preferred embodiment of the invention, comprise transistors with transistor 62 being an NPN and transistor 64 bein~ a PNP type. Transistor 62 is a 2N4401 while transistor 64 is a 2N4403, both of which are commercially available. The emitter of transistor 64 is coupled to the +V supply, which, in the preferred embodiment of the invention, was 5 volt regulated DC while the collector is coupled to a 160 ohm current limiting resistor 66 which, in turn, is coupled to an input terminal 57 of the flux-gate primary winding 52. The base of transistor 64 is coupled to the outpu~ of a driver amplifier 70 by means of a 10 k-ohm resistor 68. Similarly, NPN transistor 62 has its emitter coupled to system ground (OV) while its collector is coupled to terminal 57 through a 160 ohm current limiting resistor 63. The base terminal of transistor 62 is coupled to the output of amplifier 70 by means of a 10 k-ohm resistor 65, The remaining terminal 59 of primary winding 52 of sensor 50 is coupled to a floating ground 61 which is 1/2 of the power supply ~V or +2~5 volts DC. Coupled in parallel with primary winding 52 and in the emitter-to-collector current paths of transistors 62 and 64 is a current controlling resistor 69, the value of which is selected to provide the desired ~LZ~
1 mid-point saturation of the core 58. In the preferred embodiment shown, the value of resistor 69 is 68 ohms.
The selected value may vary depending on circuit parameters of other embodiments to provide current flow through the primary winding 52, as described in greater detail below in connection with Fig. 3, to provide saturation of the core at a predetermined time, and in the preferred embodiment, at approximately the mid-point of the drive signal waveform for each half cycle.
The signal applied to circuit 60 is shown by waveform A and is a squarewave signal supplied through a buffer 70 of conventional design which, in turn, is driven by a 1500 Hz squarewave signal output from terminal 17 of a microprocessor 100. Microprocessor 100 is a Motorola 6~05 microprocessor which is programmed to supply a 1500 Hz output signal at its pin 17 which is applied to the input of amplifier 70 It is noted here that for purposes of simplifying the electrical schematic of Fig 2, the conventional buffer amplifies coupling output terminals of
2~ the microprocessor to the various interface circuits which are not shown, it being understood that amplifiers, such as a CD4050, will be used to interconnect each of the outputs of the microprocessor to associated circuits.
Similarly, in most cases, the conventional connection of the ~V and +~/2 source 67 to the integrated circuits of Fig. 2 is not shown. The microprocessor 100 also is programmed to supply a 3 kHz output signal at pins 18 and 19 which, as will be explained hereinafter, are related in phase to the drive signal at output terminal 17 to assure that the synchronous phase detector 80 processes the signals ~rorn the flux-gate sensor 50 as required.
1 The secondary windings 54 and 56 of the flux-gate sensor 50 are commonly coupled at terminal 71 which is coupled to the system floating ground 61, as shown.
Coupled across each of the secondary windings 54 and 56 is a one k-ohm dampiny resistor 72 and 73 to prevent oscillation of the output signals. The windings 54 and 56 corresponding to the east/west and north/south windings, respectively, are capacitively coupled to amplifiers 74 and 76, respectively, by means of coupling capacitors 75 and 77. Capacitors 75 and 77 are .1 Mfd 50 volt capacitors while amplifiers 74 and 76 include an LM2902 integrated circuit chip coupled in a conventional amplifier circuit configuration.
The output terminals of amplifiers 74 and 76 are coupled through resistors 78 and 79 to the inputs of an integrated circuit synchronous phase detector 80 comprising a National Semiconductor CD4016 integrated circuit chip~ Circuit 80 comprises four bilateral switches, two of which are associated with each of the secondary coils 54 and 56 of the 1ux-gate sensor to supply signal information at inputs 8, ll and l, 4 to output terminals 9, lO and 2, 3, respectively. The output terminals of circuit 80 are coupled to integrator circuits 82 and 84 through suitable integrating capacitors 81 and 83 associated with integrator 82, 85 and 86 associated with integrator 84, respectively. Integrators 82 and 84 thus receive alternate half cycle sinusoidal signals from the synchronous phase detector 80 to provide a time varying DC output signal at their output terminals representative of the direction sensed by coils 54 and 56 mounted to the vehicle, a~ described in greater detail in --8~
1 the above identified, co-pending application~ Serial No.
478,364~ the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. These signals are fed back to the output terminals of secondary windings 54 and 56 through feedback resistors 87 and 88, respectively. Compass compensation correction information similarly is supplied to the output terminals of secondary windings 54 and 56 through resistors 94 and 96 and D-to-A converters 90 and 92 having their input terminals coupled to output terminals 24 and 23, respectively, of microprocessor 100. The compensation correction system as well as the internally programmed compass variation correction technique is described in greater detail in the above i.dentified application.
The output signals of integrator 82 and 84 are coupled to signal input terminals 21 and 20 of microprocessor 100 through A-to-D converters 91 and 93 for converting the time varying DC input information lnto suitable digital signals compatihle with the microprocessor 100. The signal conversion, shown by the A-to-D converter blocks 91 and 93 can be microprocessor controlled, as described in the above identified patent application if desired. The microprocessor 100 is coupled to a non-volatile memory 110 forr in part, retaining compensation and variatior- correction information. Memory 110 can be a National Semiconductor NMC9306 integrated circuit and is coupled to the microprocessor through the terminals as shownO
The microprocessor 100 also includes output terminals 8 and 9 coupled to a suitable display dri.ver circuit lll for providing signals to the digital display 35. The display driver lll and display 35 can be any type _g _ 1 of desired digital, alpha-numeric or graphic display. In the preferred embodiment, the display 35 was a vacuum~flourescent alpha-type display, as shown in Fig. 1 The micropxocessor al50 recei.ves temperature input informakion from a thermistor 120 coupled to the +V supply in a voltage dividing network including serially coupled resistor 122. The analog varying DC voltage from thermistor 120 is supplied to the microprocessor 100 in a digital format through an A-to-D converter 124. Similarly, compass and thermometer control and compen~ation and variation control signal in~ormation is supplied to the microprocessor 100 through switches 38, 39, 42 and 44 each havlng one terminal commonly coupled to system ground and a remaining terminal coupled to an input terminal of the microprocessor and to ~V through a resistor network 130, a~ shown in Fig.
2. Thus, actuation of any of the ~witches 38~44 will cause one of the inputs of the microprocessor to go ~rom a logic "1" state to a logic "0" providing control information thereto. The programming of the microprocessor to provide the desired compass operation is disalosed in greater detail in the above identi~ied published European application No.
0120691, and forms no part of the present invention other than to provide the output drive ~rsquency Rignals supplied by the microprocessor as phase related clock pulses at output terminals 17, 1~ and 19. ~hese signals could also be independently generated by a separate oscillator and suitable counter circuits, as disclosed, for example, in U.S. Patent No. 4,424,631.
The flux-gate drive circuit operation aan best be understood with re~erence to the wav~orm diagrams of Fig.
1 3 in which the location of each of the waveforms A-F, inclusively, is shown on the schematic diagram of ~ig. 2 by the corresponding identification letter.
The squarewave drive 1500 Hz drive signal A is applied to the base terminals of transistors 62 and 64 and during the time period to-t2 the positive voltage applied to transistor 62 drives it into saturation whereupon current from the floating ground at ~2.5 volts flows downwardly through the parallel current path of resistor 69 and winding 52 through collector resistor 63 and transistor 62 to ground. During this time period, transistor 64 is cutoff. During the time period t2-t4, however, transistor 62 is rendered nonconductive and transistor 64 conducts with current flow from ~V through transistor 64, resistor 66 and the parallel current path of resistor 69 and winding 52 to the lower 2.5 volt floating ground. Thus, transistors 62 and 64 conduct alternatively to provide opposite direction current flow through primary winding 52. The voltage B is illustrated in Fig. 3B and is the voltage at terminal 57 of the primary winding. The waveorm diagram of Fig. 3B shows a 1500 Hz signal whlch is a pulse having duration of 1/2 of each half cycle of the pulses A, shown in Fig. 3A. At times tl and t3~ the voltage pulse returns to the reference level of about 2.5 volts. The time and amplitude voltage signal of waveform B indicates the saturation of the flux-gate sensor core 63 at the mid-point between to and t2 and again between t2 and t4 in the opposite field direction. The saturation at a predetermined time which is the mid-point of each half of the driving cycle is important inasmuch as the resultant ~2~
1 secondary waveform, shown in Fig. 3C, corresponding to the output signal of the north/south winding 56 results in sinusoidal half wave pulses which are of alternate polarity and which occur at tol tlr t2, t3 and t4 for each full cycle of drive waveform. The freq[uency of the sinusoidal 50 ~s duration pulses resulting from the drive waveform is 3 kHz since a pair oE alternate polarity pulses occurs at the output winding for each pulse supplied to the input.
The signals occuring at the output windings of the flux-gate sensors in the prior art system, for example that in the above identified patent application, Serial No. 478,364, are relatively high frequency dampecl oscillating pulses occuring at times to~ t2 and t4~ These ringing signals could not be readily demodulated to provide the necessary signal information for processing and therefore digital filtration was required to obtain sinewave second harmonic frequency informationO
Fig. 3D shows the amplified and inverted signal D
from amplifier 76, which signal is applied to the synchronous phase detector. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that a similar shaped waveform will be applied to the synchronous phase detector 80 through amplifier 74O The amplitude and polarity of the pulses shown in waveform D and those corresponding pulses from amplifier 74 will be directly related to the direction of travel of the vehicle in which the flux-gate sensor is mounted. Thus, for example, with the vehicle heading directly north, the waveform D may be at a maximum amplitude and the polarity shown, while when the vehlcle is heading directly south, the amplitude may be the same 1 but the polarity reversed. Si~ilarly, when the vehicle is moving in a directly east or west direction, the signal shown by wavefor~ D may be at approxi~ately 0 level, particularly when the system has been compensated for the local ~agnetic field disturbances caused by the vehicle.
The east/west coil 50 similarly provides a varying signal relating to the direction of orientation of the flux-gate sensor with xespect to the earth's magnetic field.
The synchronous phase detector 80 comprises pairs of bilateral switches with the signal of waveform D being applied through resistor 78 to inputs 1 and 4 corresponding to two separate switches. The associated signal from amplifier 74 is similarly applied to input terminals 8 and ll. The switches are driven by the 3 kHz pulses, shown as waveforms E and F, shown in Figs. 3E and 3F. The centers of these 3 kHz pulses align with the times to~ tl, t2, t3 and t4 for each cycle of operation.
The pulses shown as waveforms E and F are applied to circuit 80 to alternately turn on the pair of switches contained in the synchronous phase detector such that the alternaate pulses, for example of waveform D, will be applied to the input terminals of integrator 82.
Similarly, the other pair of switches contained in the synchronous phase detector will couple the similar waveform from amplifier 74 through resistor 79 and applied to input terminals 8 and ll to integrator 84 through output terminals 9 and lO ~uch that the integrators 82 and 84 will see only the resultant signal waveform and provide a DC varying output signal which is directly representative of the orientation of the flux-gate sensor and therefore the vehicle in which it is mounted with ,q y~,~
1 respect to the earth's magnetic field.
By providing mid-point saturation, l.e., at times tl and t3 of each cycle of applied drive signal, and by providing the clocking pulses E and F to the synchronous phase detector, which signals are phase shifted with respect to the drive signals A and B by 45 degrees~ the information carrying signals D are applied to the integrator 82 (and the corresponding signal applied to integrator 84) only during the window defined by the clocking pulses E and F. ~hUS, by assuring the mid-point saturation of the flux-gate core, information contained in the pulses occuring at times tl and t3 will not be lost or displaced from the remaining pulses at tol t2 and t4, and the resultant integrated information accurately represents the direction of travel of the vehicle without requiring sophisticated digital or analog filtering techniques as in the prior art.
Naturally, the selection of the value of resistor 69 to assure the mid-point saturation is essential.
Decreasing of the resistor size shunting more current from winding 52 causes saturation to occur at a later point in time and widens pulses B. Similarly, by increasing the ohmic value of resistor 69, saturation will occur at an earlier point in time and shorten pulses B. It is noted that the waveform diagrams of Figs. 3C and 3D are taken with the feedback loops including resistors 87, 88, 94 and 96 disconnected.
Various modifications to the preferred embodiment of the invention can be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Similarly, in most cases, the conventional connection of the ~V and +~/2 source 67 to the integrated circuits of Fig. 2 is not shown. The microprocessor 100 also is programmed to supply a 3 kHz output signal at pins 18 and 19 which, as will be explained hereinafter, are related in phase to the drive signal at output terminal 17 to assure that the synchronous phase detector 80 processes the signals ~rorn the flux-gate sensor 50 as required.
1 The secondary windings 54 and 56 of the flux-gate sensor 50 are commonly coupled at terminal 71 which is coupled to the system floating ground 61, as shown.
Coupled across each of the secondary windings 54 and 56 is a one k-ohm dampiny resistor 72 and 73 to prevent oscillation of the output signals. The windings 54 and 56 corresponding to the east/west and north/south windings, respectively, are capacitively coupled to amplifiers 74 and 76, respectively, by means of coupling capacitors 75 and 77. Capacitors 75 and 77 are .1 Mfd 50 volt capacitors while amplifiers 74 and 76 include an LM2902 integrated circuit chip coupled in a conventional amplifier circuit configuration.
The output terminals of amplifiers 74 and 76 are coupled through resistors 78 and 79 to the inputs of an integrated circuit synchronous phase detector 80 comprising a National Semiconductor CD4016 integrated circuit chip~ Circuit 80 comprises four bilateral switches, two of which are associated with each of the secondary coils 54 and 56 of the 1ux-gate sensor to supply signal information at inputs 8, ll and l, 4 to output terminals 9, lO and 2, 3, respectively. The output terminals of circuit 80 are coupled to integrator circuits 82 and 84 through suitable integrating capacitors 81 and 83 associated with integrator 82, 85 and 86 associated with integrator 84, respectively. Integrators 82 and 84 thus receive alternate half cycle sinusoidal signals from the synchronous phase detector 80 to provide a time varying DC output signal at their output terminals representative of the direction sensed by coils 54 and 56 mounted to the vehicle, a~ described in greater detail in --8~
1 the above identified, co-pending application~ Serial No.
478,364~ the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. These signals are fed back to the output terminals of secondary windings 54 and 56 through feedback resistors 87 and 88, respectively. Compass compensation correction information similarly is supplied to the output terminals of secondary windings 54 and 56 through resistors 94 and 96 and D-to-A converters 90 and 92 having their input terminals coupled to output terminals 24 and 23, respectively, of microprocessor 100. The compensation correction system as well as the internally programmed compass variation correction technique is described in greater detail in the above i.dentified application.
The output signals of integrator 82 and 84 are coupled to signal input terminals 21 and 20 of microprocessor 100 through A-to-D converters 91 and 93 for converting the time varying DC input information lnto suitable digital signals compatihle with the microprocessor 100. The signal conversion, shown by the A-to-D converter blocks 91 and 93 can be microprocessor controlled, as described in the above identified patent application if desired. The microprocessor 100 is coupled to a non-volatile memory 110 forr in part, retaining compensation and variatior- correction information. Memory 110 can be a National Semiconductor NMC9306 integrated circuit and is coupled to the microprocessor through the terminals as shownO
The microprocessor 100 also includes output terminals 8 and 9 coupled to a suitable display dri.ver circuit lll for providing signals to the digital display 35. The display driver lll and display 35 can be any type _g _ 1 of desired digital, alpha-numeric or graphic display. In the preferred embodiment, the display 35 was a vacuum~flourescent alpha-type display, as shown in Fig. 1 The micropxocessor al50 recei.ves temperature input informakion from a thermistor 120 coupled to the +V supply in a voltage dividing network including serially coupled resistor 122. The analog varying DC voltage from thermistor 120 is supplied to the microprocessor 100 in a digital format through an A-to-D converter 124. Similarly, compass and thermometer control and compen~ation and variation control signal in~ormation is supplied to the microprocessor 100 through switches 38, 39, 42 and 44 each havlng one terminal commonly coupled to system ground and a remaining terminal coupled to an input terminal of the microprocessor and to ~V through a resistor network 130, a~ shown in Fig.
2. Thus, actuation of any of the ~witches 38~44 will cause one of the inputs of the microprocessor to go ~rom a logic "1" state to a logic "0" providing control information thereto. The programming of the microprocessor to provide the desired compass operation is disalosed in greater detail in the above identi~ied published European application No.
0120691, and forms no part of the present invention other than to provide the output drive ~rsquency Rignals supplied by the microprocessor as phase related clock pulses at output terminals 17, 1~ and 19. ~hese signals could also be independently generated by a separate oscillator and suitable counter circuits, as disclosed, for example, in U.S. Patent No. 4,424,631.
The flux-gate drive circuit operation aan best be understood with re~erence to the wav~orm diagrams of Fig.
1 3 in which the location of each of the waveforms A-F, inclusively, is shown on the schematic diagram of ~ig. 2 by the corresponding identification letter.
The squarewave drive 1500 Hz drive signal A is applied to the base terminals of transistors 62 and 64 and during the time period to-t2 the positive voltage applied to transistor 62 drives it into saturation whereupon current from the floating ground at ~2.5 volts flows downwardly through the parallel current path of resistor 69 and winding 52 through collector resistor 63 and transistor 62 to ground. During this time period, transistor 64 is cutoff. During the time period t2-t4, however, transistor 62 is rendered nonconductive and transistor 64 conducts with current flow from ~V through transistor 64, resistor 66 and the parallel current path of resistor 69 and winding 52 to the lower 2.5 volt floating ground. Thus, transistors 62 and 64 conduct alternatively to provide opposite direction current flow through primary winding 52. The voltage B is illustrated in Fig. 3B and is the voltage at terminal 57 of the primary winding. The waveorm diagram of Fig. 3B shows a 1500 Hz signal whlch is a pulse having duration of 1/2 of each half cycle of the pulses A, shown in Fig. 3A. At times tl and t3~ the voltage pulse returns to the reference level of about 2.5 volts. The time and amplitude voltage signal of waveform B indicates the saturation of the flux-gate sensor core 63 at the mid-point between to and t2 and again between t2 and t4 in the opposite field direction. The saturation at a predetermined time which is the mid-point of each half of the driving cycle is important inasmuch as the resultant ~2~
1 secondary waveform, shown in Fig. 3C, corresponding to the output signal of the north/south winding 56 results in sinusoidal half wave pulses which are of alternate polarity and which occur at tol tlr t2, t3 and t4 for each full cycle of drive waveform. The freq[uency of the sinusoidal 50 ~s duration pulses resulting from the drive waveform is 3 kHz since a pair oE alternate polarity pulses occurs at the output winding for each pulse supplied to the input.
The signals occuring at the output windings of the flux-gate sensors in the prior art system, for example that in the above identified patent application, Serial No. 478,364, are relatively high frequency dampecl oscillating pulses occuring at times to~ t2 and t4~ These ringing signals could not be readily demodulated to provide the necessary signal information for processing and therefore digital filtration was required to obtain sinewave second harmonic frequency informationO
Fig. 3D shows the amplified and inverted signal D
from amplifier 76, which signal is applied to the synchronous phase detector. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that a similar shaped waveform will be applied to the synchronous phase detector 80 through amplifier 74O The amplitude and polarity of the pulses shown in waveform D and those corresponding pulses from amplifier 74 will be directly related to the direction of travel of the vehicle in which the flux-gate sensor is mounted. Thus, for example, with the vehicle heading directly north, the waveform D may be at a maximum amplitude and the polarity shown, while when the vehlcle is heading directly south, the amplitude may be the same 1 but the polarity reversed. Si~ilarly, when the vehicle is moving in a directly east or west direction, the signal shown by wavefor~ D may be at approxi~ately 0 level, particularly when the system has been compensated for the local ~agnetic field disturbances caused by the vehicle.
The east/west coil 50 similarly provides a varying signal relating to the direction of orientation of the flux-gate sensor with xespect to the earth's magnetic field.
The synchronous phase detector 80 comprises pairs of bilateral switches with the signal of waveform D being applied through resistor 78 to inputs 1 and 4 corresponding to two separate switches. The associated signal from amplifier 74 is similarly applied to input terminals 8 and ll. The switches are driven by the 3 kHz pulses, shown as waveforms E and F, shown in Figs. 3E and 3F. The centers of these 3 kHz pulses align with the times to~ tl, t2, t3 and t4 for each cycle of operation.
The pulses shown as waveforms E and F are applied to circuit 80 to alternately turn on the pair of switches contained in the synchronous phase detector such that the alternaate pulses, for example of waveform D, will be applied to the input terminals of integrator 82.
Similarly, the other pair of switches contained in the synchronous phase detector will couple the similar waveform from amplifier 74 through resistor 79 and applied to input terminals 8 and ll to integrator 84 through output terminals 9 and lO ~uch that the integrators 82 and 84 will see only the resultant signal waveform and provide a DC varying output signal which is directly representative of the orientation of the flux-gate sensor and therefore the vehicle in which it is mounted with ,q y~,~
1 respect to the earth's magnetic field.
By providing mid-point saturation, l.e., at times tl and t3 of each cycle of applied drive signal, and by providing the clocking pulses E and F to the synchronous phase detector, which signals are phase shifted with respect to the drive signals A and B by 45 degrees~ the information carrying signals D are applied to the integrator 82 (and the corresponding signal applied to integrator 84) only during the window defined by the clocking pulses E and F. ~hUS, by assuring the mid-point saturation of the flux-gate core, information contained in the pulses occuring at times tl and t3 will not be lost or displaced from the remaining pulses at tol t2 and t4, and the resultant integrated information accurately represents the direction of travel of the vehicle without requiring sophisticated digital or analog filtering techniques as in the prior art.
Naturally, the selection of the value of resistor 69 to assure the mid-point saturation is essential.
Decreasing of the resistor size shunting more current from winding 52 causes saturation to occur at a later point in time and widens pulses B. Similarly, by increasing the ohmic value of resistor 69, saturation will occur at an earlier point in time and shorten pulses B. It is noted that the waveform diagrams of Figs. 3C and 3D are taken with the feedback loops including resistors 87, 88, 94 and 96 disconnected.
Various modifications to the preferred embodiment of the invention can be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Claims
The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
A drive circuit for providing signals to a primary winding of a flux-gate-type magnetic sensor used in a vehicle compass system comprising:
a microprocessor for providing first and second frequency electrical drive signals having periodic waveforms wherein said second frequency signals are harmonically related to said first frequency signals;
an electrical circuit coupled to said microprocessor for receiving said first frequency signals and including means for coupling an output of said electrical circuit to the primary winding of a flux-gate sensor, said electrical circuit providing an output signal which when applied to the primary winding of a flux-gate sensor causes saturation of the core of the flux-gate sensor at about midway of at least one half cycle of each period of said first frequency signals; and detector means coupled to said microprocessor and to said sensor and responsive to said second frequency signals applied thereto from said microprocessor for detecting second frequency components of signals from said sensor which represents direction heading information for the compass.
The circuit as defined in claim 1 wherein said electrical circuit includes current shunting means selected for controlling the time of saturation of the flux-gate sensor core.
The circuit as defined in claim 2 wherein said electrical circuit provides output signals in response to said drive signals for causing saturation of the core of a flux-gate sensor at about midway in the half cycles of each period of said drive signals.
The circuit as defined in claim 3 wherein said electrical circuit includes a pair of solid state switches coupled in push/pull relationship and having control input terminals coupled to said squarewave generator for receiving said drive signals therefrom.
The circuit as defined in claim 4 wherein said current shunting means includes a resistor having a first terminal coupled to said solid state switches, said resistor coupled in parallel relationship with a primary winding of a flux-gate sensor.
The circuit as defined in claim 5 wherein said electrical circuit includes a power source for providing a first DC output voltage, a second DC output voltage having a level equal to one half of said first voltage and a ground reference and wherein said push/pull switches are coupled to said power source to receive said first output voltage and said ground reference, and wherein said resistor has a second terminal coupled to said power source to receive said second DC output voltage therefrom.
The circuit as defined in claim 6 wherein said switches comprise a pair of transistors.
The circuit as defined in claim 7 wherein a first one of said transistors is a PNP type and has an emitter coupled to said power source to receive said first voltage therefrom and a collector coupled to said resistor and wherein the second transistor of said pair is an NPN type having an emitter coupled to ground and having a collector coupled to said resistor.
The circuit as defined in claim 8 wherein said first voltage is about +5 VDC.
The circuit as defined in claim 9 wherein said resistor has a value of about 68 ohms for use with a primary winding have 250 turns of 36 gauge magnet wire.
An electrical drive circuit for a flux-gate sensor used in a vehicle compass system comprising:
a flux-gate sensor having a primary winding;
a current shunting resistor coupled in parallel with said primary winding;
a power supply having outputs providing a first output voltage, a second output voltage having a value less than said first voltage and a ground reference voltage, wherein one terminal of said primary winding is coupled to said voltage source to receive said second voltage therefrom;
a source of periodic electrical drive signals; and controlled switch means having a control input terminal coupled to said source and three switch terminals, with a first terminal coupled to said ground reference, a second terminal coupled to said power supply to receive said first output voltage, and a third terminal coupled to a terminal of said primary winding opposite said one terminal thereof, said switch means responsive to said drive signals to provide current flow in alternate directions through said primary winding.
The circuit as defined in claim 11 wherein current flows through said primary winding and through said switch in a first direction from said second voltage output to ground and in a second direction from said first voltage output to said second voltage output.
The circuit as defined in claim 12 wherein said controlled switch means comprises a pair of solid state switches.
The circuit as defined in claim 13 wherein said solid state switches are an NPN and a PNP transistor.
The circuit as defined in claim 14 wherein the value of said shunting resistor is selected to assure saturation of the flux-gate sensor core at about midway of each half cycle of operation.
An electrical compass system for a vehicle comprising:
a flux-gate sensor having a primary winding and a pair of orthogonally oriented secondary windings wound around a core;
a source of first and second frequency signals with said second frequency signals having a harmonic relationship to said first signals and phase shifted with respect thereto;
a drive circuit having an input coupled to said source and having an output coupled to said primary winding for providing periodic signals at said first frequency which saturate said core at about the mid-point of each half cycle of each period wherein said drive circuit comprises a current shunting resistor coupled in parallel with said primary winding, a power supply having outputs providing a first output voltage, a second output voltage having a value less than said first voltage and a ground reference voltage, wherein one terminal of said primary winding is coupled to said voltage source to receive said second voltage therefrom; and controlled switch means having a control input terminal coupled to said source and three switch terminals, with a first terminal coupled to said ground reference, a second terminal coupled to said power supply to receive said first output voltage, and a third terminal coupled to a terminal of said primary winding opposite said one terminal thereof, said switch means responsive to said drive signals to provide current flow in alternate directions through said winding:
circuit means coupled to said secondary windings and said source for processing signals from said secondary windings in predetermined timed relationship thereto to provide output signals representative of the direction of orientation of the flux-gate sensor with respect to the earth's magnetic field; and display means coupled to said circuit means for displaying the heading of the vehicle in response to signals from said circuit means.
The compass system as defined in claim 16 wherein current flows through said primary winding and through said switch in a first direction from said second voltage output to ground and in a second direction from said first voltage output to said second voltage output.
The compass system as defined in claim 17 wherein said controlled switch means comprises a pair of solid state switches.
The compass system as defined in claim 18 wherein said solid state switches are an NPN and a PNP transistor.
The compass system as defined in claim 19 wherein the value of said shunting resistor is selected to assure saturation of the flux-gate sensor core at about midway of each half cycle of operation.
The circuit as defined in claim 16 wherein said source of drive signals includes a microprocessor.
An electrical compass system for a vehicle comprising:
a flux-gate sensor having a primary winding and a pair of secondary windings;
a microprocessor for providing first and second frequency signals with said second frequency signals having a predetermined frequency relationship to said first signals;
a drive circuit having an input coupled to said microprocessor and having an output coupled to said primary winding for providing periodic drive signals to said primary winding at said first frequency;
detector means coupled to said secondary windings and to said microprocessor and responsive to second frequency signals from said microprocessor for processing signals from said secondary windings in predetermined timed relationship to said first frequency signals to provide signals to at least one input terminal of said microprocessor such that said microprocessor provides output signals representative of the direction of orientation of the flux-gate sensor with respect to the earth's magnetic field: and display means coupled to said microprocessor for displaying the heading of the vehicle in response to signals from said microprocessor.
The system as defined in claim 22 wherein said detector means comprises controlled switch means coupled to said microprocessor to receive said second frequency signals therefrom for selectively applying signals from said secondary windings to said at least one input terminal of said microprocessor.
The system as defined in claim 23 wherein said second frequency signals are twice the frequency of said first frequency signals.
The system as defined in claim 24 wherein said drive circuit responds to said first frequency signals to saturate the core of said flux-gate sensor at about midway of at least one half-cycle of each cycle of said first frequency signals.
A drive circuit for providing signals to a primary winding of a flux-gate-type magnetic sensor used in a vehicle compass system comprising:
a microprocessor for providing first and second frequency electrical drive signals having periodic waveforms wherein said second frequency signals are harmonically related to said first frequency signals;
an electrical circuit coupled to said microprocessor for receiving said first frequency signals and including means for coupling an output of said electrical circuit to the primary winding of a flux-gate sensor, said electrical circuit providing an output signal which when applied to the primary winding of a flux-gate sensor causes saturation of the core of the flux-gate sensor at about midway of at least one half cycle of each period of said first frequency signals; and detector means coupled to said microprocessor and to said sensor and responsive to said second frequency signals applied thereto from said microprocessor for detecting second frequency components of signals from said sensor which represents direction heading information for the compass.
The circuit as defined in claim 1 wherein said electrical circuit includes current shunting means selected for controlling the time of saturation of the flux-gate sensor core.
The circuit as defined in claim 2 wherein said electrical circuit provides output signals in response to said drive signals for causing saturation of the core of a flux-gate sensor at about midway in the half cycles of each period of said drive signals.
The circuit as defined in claim 3 wherein said electrical circuit includes a pair of solid state switches coupled in push/pull relationship and having control input terminals coupled to said squarewave generator for receiving said drive signals therefrom.
The circuit as defined in claim 4 wherein said current shunting means includes a resistor having a first terminal coupled to said solid state switches, said resistor coupled in parallel relationship with a primary winding of a flux-gate sensor.
The circuit as defined in claim 5 wherein said electrical circuit includes a power source for providing a first DC output voltage, a second DC output voltage having a level equal to one half of said first voltage and a ground reference and wherein said push/pull switches are coupled to said power source to receive said first output voltage and said ground reference, and wherein said resistor has a second terminal coupled to said power source to receive said second DC output voltage therefrom.
The circuit as defined in claim 6 wherein said switches comprise a pair of transistors.
The circuit as defined in claim 7 wherein a first one of said transistors is a PNP type and has an emitter coupled to said power source to receive said first voltage therefrom and a collector coupled to said resistor and wherein the second transistor of said pair is an NPN type having an emitter coupled to ground and having a collector coupled to said resistor.
The circuit as defined in claim 8 wherein said first voltage is about +5 VDC.
The circuit as defined in claim 9 wherein said resistor has a value of about 68 ohms for use with a primary winding have 250 turns of 36 gauge magnet wire.
An electrical drive circuit for a flux-gate sensor used in a vehicle compass system comprising:
a flux-gate sensor having a primary winding;
a current shunting resistor coupled in parallel with said primary winding;
a power supply having outputs providing a first output voltage, a second output voltage having a value less than said first voltage and a ground reference voltage, wherein one terminal of said primary winding is coupled to said voltage source to receive said second voltage therefrom;
a source of periodic electrical drive signals; and controlled switch means having a control input terminal coupled to said source and three switch terminals, with a first terminal coupled to said ground reference, a second terminal coupled to said power supply to receive said first output voltage, and a third terminal coupled to a terminal of said primary winding opposite said one terminal thereof, said switch means responsive to said drive signals to provide current flow in alternate directions through said primary winding.
The circuit as defined in claim 11 wherein current flows through said primary winding and through said switch in a first direction from said second voltage output to ground and in a second direction from said first voltage output to said second voltage output.
The circuit as defined in claim 12 wherein said controlled switch means comprises a pair of solid state switches.
The circuit as defined in claim 13 wherein said solid state switches are an NPN and a PNP transistor.
The circuit as defined in claim 14 wherein the value of said shunting resistor is selected to assure saturation of the flux-gate sensor core at about midway of each half cycle of operation.
An electrical compass system for a vehicle comprising:
a flux-gate sensor having a primary winding and a pair of orthogonally oriented secondary windings wound around a core;
a source of first and second frequency signals with said second frequency signals having a harmonic relationship to said first signals and phase shifted with respect thereto;
a drive circuit having an input coupled to said source and having an output coupled to said primary winding for providing periodic signals at said first frequency which saturate said core at about the mid-point of each half cycle of each period wherein said drive circuit comprises a current shunting resistor coupled in parallel with said primary winding, a power supply having outputs providing a first output voltage, a second output voltage having a value less than said first voltage and a ground reference voltage, wherein one terminal of said primary winding is coupled to said voltage source to receive said second voltage therefrom; and controlled switch means having a control input terminal coupled to said source and three switch terminals, with a first terminal coupled to said ground reference, a second terminal coupled to said power supply to receive said first output voltage, and a third terminal coupled to a terminal of said primary winding opposite said one terminal thereof, said switch means responsive to said drive signals to provide current flow in alternate directions through said winding:
circuit means coupled to said secondary windings and said source for processing signals from said secondary windings in predetermined timed relationship thereto to provide output signals representative of the direction of orientation of the flux-gate sensor with respect to the earth's magnetic field; and display means coupled to said circuit means for displaying the heading of the vehicle in response to signals from said circuit means.
The compass system as defined in claim 16 wherein current flows through said primary winding and through said switch in a first direction from said second voltage output to ground and in a second direction from said first voltage output to said second voltage output.
The compass system as defined in claim 17 wherein said controlled switch means comprises a pair of solid state switches.
The compass system as defined in claim 18 wherein said solid state switches are an NPN and a PNP transistor.
The compass system as defined in claim 19 wherein the value of said shunting resistor is selected to assure saturation of the flux-gate sensor core at about midway of each half cycle of operation.
The circuit as defined in claim 16 wherein said source of drive signals includes a microprocessor.
An electrical compass system for a vehicle comprising:
a flux-gate sensor having a primary winding and a pair of secondary windings;
a microprocessor for providing first and second frequency signals with said second frequency signals having a predetermined frequency relationship to said first signals;
a drive circuit having an input coupled to said microprocessor and having an output coupled to said primary winding for providing periodic drive signals to said primary winding at said first frequency;
detector means coupled to said secondary windings and to said microprocessor and responsive to second frequency signals from said microprocessor for processing signals from said secondary windings in predetermined timed relationship to said first frequency signals to provide signals to at least one input terminal of said microprocessor such that said microprocessor provides output signals representative of the direction of orientation of the flux-gate sensor with respect to the earth's magnetic field: and display means coupled to said microprocessor for displaying the heading of the vehicle in response to signals from said microprocessor.
The system as defined in claim 22 wherein said detector means comprises controlled switch means coupled to said microprocessor to receive said second frequency signals therefrom for selectively applying signals from said secondary windings to said at least one input terminal of said microprocessor.
The system as defined in claim 23 wherein said second frequency signals are twice the frequency of said first frequency signals.
The system as defined in claim 24 wherein said drive circuit responds to said first frequency signals to saturate the core of said flux-gate sensor at about midway of at least one half-cycle of each cycle of said first frequency signals.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US06/662,717 US4677381A (en) | 1984-10-19 | 1984-10-19 | Flux-gate sensor electrical drive method and circuit |
US662,717 | 1984-10-19 |
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CA1249124A true CA1249124A (en) | 1989-01-24 |
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Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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CA000492204A Expired CA1249124A (en) | 1984-10-19 | 1985-10-03 | Flux-gate sensor electrical drive method and circuit |
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EP (1) | EP0179634B1 (en) |
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US3991361A (en) * | 1975-03-27 | 1976-11-09 | Westinghouse Electric Corporation | Semi-automatic compass calibrator apparatus for a vehicle mounted flux gate compass system to cancel out effect of local magnetic disturbances |
US4024382A (en) * | 1975-09-08 | 1977-05-17 | The Laitram Corporation | Loran compensated magnetic compass |
IT1073691B (en) * | 1976-08-26 | 1985-04-17 | Importazioni Esportazioni Rapp | IMPROVEMENT IN STATIC COMPASSES |
US4112755A (en) * | 1976-12-20 | 1978-09-12 | Gerald Leslie Sullivan | "Strapdown" induction compass transmitter with means to compensate for heading errors during turns and during dives and climbs due to the vertical component of the Earth's magnetic field and due to two cycle error |
US4157619A (en) * | 1977-10-14 | 1979-06-12 | Scientific Drilling Controls | Inclination and direction responsive apparatus |
US4293815A (en) * | 1978-05-01 | 1981-10-06 | Century Geophysical Corporation | Fluxgate magnetometer circuit with earth's field elimination |
US4336596A (en) * | 1978-07-24 | 1982-06-22 | E-Systems, Inc. | Method and apparatus for electronically rotating a heading signal |
US4277751A (en) * | 1978-09-29 | 1981-07-07 | Neil Brown Instruments Systems, Inc. | Low-power magnetometer circuit with constant current drive |
FR2484079A1 (en) * | 1980-06-05 | 1981-12-11 | Crouzet Sa | METHOD FOR COMPENSATING MAGNETIC DISTURBANCES IN THE DETERMINATION OF A MAGNETIC CAP, AND DEVICE FOR IMPLEMENTING SAID METHOD |
JPS6212976Y2 (en) * | 1980-10-20 | 1987-04-03 | ||
JPS5784310A (en) * | 1980-11-13 | 1982-05-26 | Alps Electric Co Ltd | Direction sensing means |
US4373271A (en) * | 1980-12-11 | 1983-02-15 | General Motors Corporation | Solid state compass |
JPS57116211A (en) * | 1981-01-09 | 1982-07-20 | Mitsubishi Electric Corp | Measuring device for direction |
DE3123180A1 (en) * | 1981-06-11 | 1983-01-05 | Siemens AG, 1000 Berlin und 8000 München | CORRECTION METHOD AND DEVICE FOR A MAGNETIC PROBE |
JPS5828611A (en) * | 1981-08-13 | 1983-02-19 | Alps Electric Co Ltd | Magnetic type azimuth detector |
US4424631A (en) * | 1982-03-02 | 1984-01-10 | Prince Corporation | Electrical compass |
US4546551A (en) * | 1983-03-24 | 1985-10-15 | Prince Corporation | Electrical control system |
DE3312880A1 (en) * | 1983-04-11 | 1984-10-11 | Vdo Adolf Schindling Ag, 6000 Frankfurt | MAGNETIC EARTH DETECTOR, ESPECIALLY FOR VEHICLE DEVICE NAVIGATION DEVICES |
-
1984
- 1984-10-19 US US06/662,717 patent/US4677381A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
-
1985
- 1985-10-03 CA CA000492204A patent/CA1249124A/en not_active Expired
- 1985-10-17 JP JP60230072A patent/JPS61129523A/en active Granted
- 1985-10-18 EP EP85307554A patent/EP0179634B1/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1985-10-18 ES ES548030A patent/ES8801433A1/en not_active Expired
- 1985-10-18 DE DE8585307554T patent/DE3587014T2/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
DE3587014D1 (en) | 1993-03-04 |
EP0179634B1 (en) | 1993-01-20 |
ES548030A0 (en) | 1987-12-16 |
JPS61129523A (en) | 1986-06-17 |
EP0179634A2 (en) | 1986-04-30 |
ES8801433A1 (en) | 1987-12-16 |
DE3587014T2 (en) | 1993-05-13 |
JPH0548844B2 (en) | 1993-07-22 |
US4677381A (en) | 1987-06-30 |
EP0179634A3 (en) | 1988-07-20 |
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Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
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MKEX | Expiry |