Patents Assigned to Tim Simon, Inc.
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Publication number: 20070221744Abstract: A water timer user interface has display areas for display of water timer status information, including watering zone and watering duration indicators, user input areas, and a touch-sensitive screen. At least one of the display areas may display a graphical representation of the watering duration indicators for the watering zone identifiers. All of the display and input areas may be single-function areas and may be simultaneously visible to and accessible by a user. The display areas may simultaneously display both graphical and numeric representations of the watering duration indicators. An ambient temperature sensor may be used to sense the ambient temperature and humidity and provide corresponding signals to the controller to permit the controller to modify the amount of water supplied.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 23, 2007Publication date: September 27, 2007Applicant: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy Simon, Matthew Fisher, Blaine Smith
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Publication number: 20060217845Abstract: A water timer user interface has display areas for display of water timer status information, including watering zone and watering duration indicators, user input areas, and a touch-sensitive screen. At least one of the display areas may display a graphical representation of the watering duration indicators for the watering zone identifiers. All of the display and input areas may be single-function areas and may be simultaneously visible to and accessible by a user. The display areas may simultaneously display both graphical and numeric representations of the watering duration indicators. An ambient temperature sensor may be used to sense the ambient temperature and humidity and provide corresponding signals to the controller to permit the controller to modify the amount of water supplied.Type: ApplicationFiled: January 5, 2006Publication date: September 28, 2006Applicant: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy Simon, Matthew Fisher, Blaine Smith
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Publication number: 20060196953Abstract: At least first and second thermostats may be operably coupled to one another and are capable of sharing their target temperatures and their temperature signals. The first thermostat may provide a thermostatic control signal to the air temperature control system. In some embodiments at least one thermostat further comprises a target-temperature-modifying occupant presence detector. Some embodiments further comprise first and second air movement control devices operably coupled to and controlled by the first and second thermostats, respectively. The operation of the stages of a multistage air temperature control system may be controlled.Type: ApplicationFiled: January 19, 2006Publication date: September 7, 2006Applicant: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy Simon, Blaine Smith, Matthew Fisher
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Publication number: 20060186214Abstract: A thermostat may be placed in a heating mode when the sensed temperature is less than the lowest of the heating and cooling target temperatures by a first amount and may be placed in a cooling mode when the sensed temperature is greater than the highest of the heating and cooling target temperatures by a second amount. The presence or absence of a user may be monitored. If the thermostat is in a user absent mode, a cool setback amount may be added to the cooling target temperature and a heat setback amount may be subtracted from the heating target temperature to arrive at setback cooling and setback heating target temperatures, respectively. The thermostat may comprise a touch-sensitive screen having various display areas.Type: ApplicationFiled: January 19, 2006Publication date: August 24, 2006Applicant: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy Simon, Blaine Smith, Matthew Fisher
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Publication number: 20060178781Abstract: A water timer comprises a user interface, having a user input region, and a controller, coupled to the user interface and programmed to provide flow control device control signals. The controller is programmed to permit the following steps by a user: (a) selecting a zone; (b) selecting a first watering duration for the zone; (c) selecting a first start time for the zone and the first watering duration; and (d) selecting a first day of the week for the first start time. The controller is also programmed to permit the above selecting steps (a), (b), (c) and (d) by a user in any order. The invention includes other aspects.Type: ApplicationFiled: January 5, 2006Publication date: August 10, 2006Applicant: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy Simon, Matthew Fisher, Blaine Smith
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Patent number: 6886754Abstract: A thermostat is operable from battery, common-wire (“C-wire”), or furnace relay power. The thermostat includes a power source selector, such as a jumper wire, that is set when the thermostat is installed in a heating system. In a gas millivolt heating system, the thermostat operates off of battery power. In heating systems having a C-wire, a diode bridge converter converts alternating-current voltage to direct-current voltage to provide operating power to the thermostat. In heating systems without a C-wire and having sufficient furnace relay current, a triac converter in series with the furnace relay provides voltage spikes to the diode bridge converter to provide operating power to the thermostat when the furnace is on, and the diode bridge converts AC to DC voltage when the furnace is not on. The thermostat can also be used in cooling systems and heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning systems. Thus, the thermostat can be used in a wide variety of applications.Type: GrantFiled: June 3, 2003Date of Patent: May 3, 2005Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Blaine M. Smith, Timothy M. Simon
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Patent number: 6856243Abstract: A pest deterrent device attracts the attention of a pest with ultrasonic noise and then produces a series of flashes to drive off the pest. In one embodiment, the device continuously produces ultrasound, changing the ultrasound when a pest is detected. In another embodiment, the device does not produce ultrasound until a pest is detected. In a further embodiment, the flash charging circuit is used to modulate the ultrasound while the flash is operated. In a particular embodiment, four ultrasonic speakers are arranged in a series-parallel configuration with a total capacitance of about 0.2 micro-Farads achieve 120 dB of sound output with a supply voltage of about 12-18 V.Type: GrantFiled: February 6, 2004Date of Patent: February 15, 2005Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Blaine M. Smith, Timothy M. Simon
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Publication number: 20040245349Abstract: A thermostat is operable from battery, common-wire (“C-wire”), or furnace relay power. The thermostat includes a power source selector, such as a jumper wire, that is set when the thermostat is installed in a heating system. In a gas millivolt heating system, the thermostat operates off of battery power. In heating systems having a C-wire, a diode bridge converter converts alternating-current voltage to direct-current voltage to provide operating power to the thermostat. In heating systems without a C-wire and having sufficient furnace relay current, a triac converter in series with the furnace relay provides voltage spikes to the diode bridge converter to provide operating power to the thermostat when the furnace is on, and the diode bridge converts AC to DC voltage when the furnace is not on. The thermostat can also be used in cooling systems and heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning systems. Thus, the thermostat can be used in a wide variety of applications.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 3, 2003Publication date: December 9, 2004Applicant: Tim Simon, Inc., a corporation of the State of CaliforniaInventor: Blaine M. Smith
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Publication number: 20040245352Abstract: A thermostat is programmable by entering input through a large-format touch-screen display. The touch-screen display displays different sets of icons depending on the mode the thermostat is in. A set of icons is displayed in one mode that allows the user to put the thermostat in a temporary operating mode. Another set of icons is displayed when programming the thermostat. Displaying several sets of icons at once allows a user to quickly and intuitively operate the thermostat, which in turn facilitates using energy-saving functions of the thermostat.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 3, 2003Publication date: December 9, 2004Applicant: Tim Simon, Inc., a corporation of the State of CaliforniaInventor: Blaine M. Smith
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Publication number: 20040169585Abstract: A pest deterrent device attracts the attention of a pest with ultrasonic noise and then produces a series of flashes to drive off the pest. In one embodiment, the device continuously produces ultrasound, changing the ultrasound when a pest is detected. In another embodiment, the device does not produce ultrasound until a pest is detected. In a further embodiment, the flash charging circuit is used to modulate the ultrasound while the flash is operated. In a particular embodiment, four ultrasonic speakers are arranged in a series-parallel configuration with a total capacitance of about 0.2 micro-Farads achieve 120 dB of sound output with a supply voltage of about 12-18 V.Type: ApplicationFiled: February 6, 2004Publication date: September 2, 2004Applicant: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Blaine M. Smith, Timothy M. Simon
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Patent number: 6784623Abstract: A direct-current dimmer switch with low noise. A direct-current switch is turned on relatively slowly to avoid noise generation. Input capacitance of the direct-current switch device works in conjunction with a switch input series resistor to avoid a sharp turn-on characteristic. A set-point is compared against a voltage ramp to generate a pulse provided to the switch input. Essentially the full voltage is supplied to the load during the pulse. In one embodiment, a field-effect transistor with a low series resistance is used as the direct-current switching device. The ramp is generated by an integrator that is turned off at zero crossings of the alternating input line voltage to re-set the integrator. In a further embodiment a detector, such as a passive infra-red detector, is used to turn on the dimmer switch at a pre-set level.Type: GrantFiled: November 1, 2002Date of Patent: August 31, 2004Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventor: Blaine M. Smith
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Patent number: 6710705Abstract: A pest deterrent device attracts the attention of a pest with ultrasonic noise and then produces a series of flashes to drive off the pest. In one embodiment, the device continuously produces ultrasound, changing the ultrasound when a pest is detected. In another embodiment, the device does not produce ultrasound until a pest is detected. In a further embodiment, the flash charging circuit is used to modulate the ultrasound while the flash is operated. In a particular embodiment, four ultrasonic speakers are arranged in a series-parallel configuration with a total capacitance of about 0.2 micro-Farads achieve 120 dB of sound output with a supply voltage of about 12-18 V.Type: GrantFiled: April 26, 2001Date of Patent: March 23, 2004Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Blaine M. Smith, Timothy M. Simon
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Publication number: 20030057864Abstract: A direct-current dimmer switch with low noise. A direct-current switch is turned on relatively slowly to avoid noise generation. Input capacitance of the direct-current switch device works in conjunction with a switch input series resistor to avoid a sharp turn-on characteristic. A set-point is compared against a voltage ramp to generate a pulse provided to the switch input. Essentially the full voltage is supplied to the load during the pulse. In one embodiment, a field-effect transistor with a low series resistance is used as the direct-current switching device. The ramp is generated by an integrator that is turned off at zero crossings of the alternating input line voltage to re-set the integrator. In a further embodiment a detector, such as a passive infra-red detector, is used to turn on the dimmer switch at a pre-set level.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 1, 2002Publication date: March 27, 2003Applicant: TIM SIMON, INC.Inventor: Blaine M. Smith
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Patent number: 6507775Abstract: An irrigation timer (2) includes a controller (8) coupleable to a power source (16), user inputs (12) coupled to the controller, controller output terminals (18) coupleable to an irrigation valve actuator (20) and an internal day-of-week and time-of-day clock. The controller may be pre-programmed with a predetermined, known initialization day-of-week and start time-of-day setting so that upon actuation, the clock automatically begins running at that setting, such as Sunday, 6:00 PM. The user inputs may have a single, preset function so that no user input is a multifunction input to help make programming essentially intuitive.Type: GrantFiled: November 17, 1999Date of Patent: January 14, 2003Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy M. Simon, Blaine M. Smith
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Patent number: 6501236Abstract: A direct-current dimmer switch with low noise. A direct-current switch is turned on relatively slowly to avoid noise generation. Input capacitance of the direct-current switch device works in conjunction with a switch input series resistor to avoid a sharp turn-on characteristic. A set-point is compared against a voltage ramp to generate a pulse provided to the switch input. Essentially the full voltage is supplied to the load during the pulse. In one embodiment, a field-effect transistor with a low series resistance is used as the direct-current switching device. The ramp is generated by an integrator that is turned off at zero crossings of the alternating input line voltage to re-set the integrator. In a further embodiment a detector, such as a passive infra-red detector, is used to turn on the dimmer switch at a pre-set level.Type: GrantFiled: September 28, 2000Date of Patent: December 31, 2002Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventor: Blaine M. Smith
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Patent number: 6490505Abstract: An irrigation timer (2) includes a controller (8), including output signal terminals (18) coupleable to irrigation valve actuators (20) and an internal clock, and user inputs (12). Each irrigation valve actuator is coupleable to an irrigation valve for a watering zone with a watering period setting for each of the watering zones during a watering cycle (96). The controller divides the watering period for each watering zone by an integer n greater than 1 to obtain fractional watering periods (98). This permits each zone to be watered for its fractional watering period during a first fractional watering cycle (100) prior to beginning a second fractional watering cycle n of the fractional watering cycles constitute the watering cycle. The use of fractional watering periods help to spread out watering over a long period of time in each zone.Type: GrantFiled: November 17, 1999Date of Patent: December 3, 2002Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy M. Simon, Blaine M. Smith
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Patent number: D520884Type: GrantFiled: October 28, 2004Date of Patent: May 16, 2006Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy M. Simon, Matthew T. Fisher
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Patent number: D535571Type: GrantFiled: December 8, 2005Date of Patent: January 23, 2007Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy M. Simon, Matthew T. Fisher
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Patent number: D535895Type: GrantFiled: December 8, 2005Date of Patent: January 30, 2007Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy M. Simon, Matthew T. Fisher
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Patent number: D535896Type: GrantFiled: December 8, 2005Date of Patent: January 30, 2007Assignee: Tim Simon, Inc.Inventors: Timothy M. Simon, Matthew T. Fisher