US 12,462,623 B2
Systems and methods for fleet level mapping of fault code locations
Amanda Serrano, Bloomington, IL (US); and Shane McBride, Denver, CO (US)
Assigned to Caterpillar Inc., Peoria, IL (US)
Filed by Caterpillar Inc., Peoria, IL (US)
Filed on Jun. 1, 2023, as Appl. No. 18/327,627.
Claims priority of provisional application 63/489,967, filed on Mar. 13, 2023.
Prior Publication US 2024/0312265 A1, Sep. 19, 2024
Int. Cl. G07C 5/08 (2006.01); G07C 5/00 (2006.01)
CPC G07C 5/0816 (2013.01) [G07C 5/008 (2013.01)] 20 Claims
OG exemplary drawing
 
1. A method for earthmoving machine fault location mapping, the method comprising:
receiving, from a plurality of sensors associated with a plurality of earthmoving machines, fault event information for the plurality of earthmoving machines dispersed within a selected geographic region;
receiving location information corresponding to the received fault event information;
receiving severity information corresponding to the received fault event information, wherein the severity information comprises an indication of high, medium, or low severity; and
presenting on a display device a graphical user interface comprising:
a map representing at least a portion of a geographic region; and
at least one fault cluster indicator positioned on the map representing fault events that occurred on the plurality of earthmoving machines located within a selected cluster distance;
wherein the at least one fault cluster indicator indicates number of high severity events as a percentage of combined high and medium severity events as a corresponding portion of a ring and wherein the total number of fault events represented by the at least one fault cluster indicator is numerically indicated in a center of the ring;
receiving, by the graphical user interface (GUI), selection of the at least one fault cluster indicator presented on the map; and
based on the selection, generating a window overlaid on the map associated with the GUI displaying a date, a high severity percentage, a medium severity percentage, and a location associated with the fault event information of an earthmoving machine.