US2167459A - Phonograph - Google Patents

Phonograph Download PDF

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US2167459A
US2167459A US160386A US16038637A US2167459A US 2167459 A US2167459 A US 2167459A US 160386 A US160386 A US 160386A US 16038637 A US16038637 A US 16038637A US 2167459 A US2167459 A US 2167459A
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switch
film
head
dial
wire
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US160386A
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Long John Robert
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JOHN T REINSEL
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JOHN T REINSEL
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B7/00Recording or reproducing by optical means, e.g. recording using a thermal beam of optical radiation by modifying optical properties or the physical structure, reproducing using an optical beam at lower power by sensing optical properties; Record carriers therefor

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  • This invention relates to a phonograph having in place of the usual disk or cylinder record, a film with one or more sound tracks formed thereon. It is the primary object of the invention to provide a simplified structure permitting the selection of any one of the records as carried by the film in the form of a sound track to be reproduced audibly.
  • the entire dew vice is initially set in operation by means of a coin, although the invention is not necessarily limited to the use of the coin, since the coin switch may be manually operated in some cases where desired.
  • a further important object of the invention is to secure reproduction of sound with the greatest possible fidelity. Further important objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent to those versed in the art in the following 20 description of one particular form of the invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings,
  • Fig. l is a top plan view of the phonograph with the top cover broken away;
  • FIG. 3 a front elevation with the front wall partially removed
  • Fig. 4 a detail on enlarged scale in rear eleva- 30 tion of part of the selector mechanism
  • Fig. 5 a detail in vertical section on an enlarged scale through the dial selector
  • Fig. 7 a vertical section on the line 88 in Fig. 5;
  • Fig. 8 a detail in partial section of the coin actuated switch
  • Fig. 9 a detail in transverse section illustrating 40 the film driving motor stop switch
  • Fig. 10 a detail in vertical section showing a light-head motor lift switch
  • Fig. 11 a Wiring diagram.
  • a film may be carried in the phonograph in any suitable manner to permit the film to be carried past the photo-electric cell and exciter lamp, to permit the film to be rewound or therein carried so as to be presented again in the same direction of travel for the next reproduction.
  • a film I5 is shown in the 6 form of a continuous belt, looped around a plu rality of sprockets l6, sufiicient in number to carry the required length within a compact space.
  • the sprocket I1 is interposed and is mounted on a bar I8 sliding through a bracket l9 to have a spring 20 normally urge bar teeth 5 2
  • the bracket I 9 and the various sprockets 6 and H are carried on a floor 23 within the phonograph housing 24.
  • a head 25 is mounted to be retained between and guided in vertical travel by two posts 26 and 27 whereby the head is presented through an opening in the floor 23.
  • This head carries a photo-electric cell unit 28 and an exciter lamp housing 29. Across the opening in the floor is secured to the head a film plate 30.
  • This plate 30 is mounted so that the unit 28 will be on the forward side and the unit 29 on the rear side when the head 25 is raised and lowered.
  • This plate 30 is given a curved face over which the film I5 is drawn between the sprockets 3
  • the plate 30 further carries a slot 34, Fig. 3, through which light travels between units 29 and 28.
  • the shaft 33 carries some type of torsional damper, herein shown as 30 a fly wheel 35.
  • the shaft 33 extends downwardly to be driven through the worm drive 36 by a motor 31 mounted on a floor 38.
  • 5 carries a plurality of sound tracks 39, herein shown as four in number and it is therefore necessary to shift the head 25 to properly align the beam of light travelling between the units 29 and 28 in order to have that beam traverse the selected sound track.
  • the head 25 is retained in an upper position by means of a 40 pin 40 resting on a retractible latch pin 4
  • in the path of the head pin 40 are additional pins 42, 43, 44 and 45, pins 42, 43 and 44 being retractible by magnetic windings thereon and which pins normally are extended into the path of the pin 4
  • the pin 45 being the lowest pin, is fixed in position as a lower limit stop and is located to cause the head 25 to stop for reproduction from the lowest sound track on the film l5.
  • is initially shifted to drop the head 25 and have the head stopped by the pin 40 striking any one of the lower pins minal 63.
  • a cam 48 is mounted on the shaft 49 and revolved through the worm drive 59 by a motor 5I in the path of the head 25, herein shown as in the path of the roller 52 mounted on the underside of the head, whereby by the operation of the motor 5!, the cam 48 will push the head 25 to an upper position to have the pin 4!] push against the under sides of the various latch pins in its path and push them back out of the way by reason of the bevelled inner ends until the pin 40 is carried above the latch pin (H, at which point the cam 48 leaves contact with the roller 52 to allow the pin 49 to come down and rest upon the latch pin 4
  • the photo-electric cell unit 28 is in electric circuit with the usual amplifier 58, details of which do not form part of this present invention.
  • the out-put of the amplifier 53 is through a loud speaker unit 54, herein shown as mounted on a forward wall of the housing 24.
  • a switch 55 In order to set the phonograph into operation a switch 55, Figs. 8 and 11, is closed.
  • This switch may be either manually closed, or in the form herein shown, closed by dropping a coin I2 in a slot opening 56, Fig. 3, to have the coin fall down the chute 5?, Fig. 8, to overbalance a bar 58, so as to push a switch 55 into a closed position.
  • a circuit is at once established from a current source terminal 59, Fig. 11, through a wire 60, switch 55, exciter lamp 29, amplifier 53, wire BI and wire 62 back to the other current source terminal 63.
  • the current is supplied to warm up the amplifier and power tubes.
  • the film I5 has remained stationary and the head 25 has remained in its upper inoperative position.
  • the selection of the particular program desired may then be made by operating a selector to effect selective closing of circuits with the windings of the pins 42, 43, and 44 to cause the head 25 to drop down to the corresponding sound track 39.
  • This selection is made by inserting the operators finger in a hole I3 of a dial I4 and revolving that dial in a clockwise direction to bring the finger into abutment with a stop 15.
  • the dial is provided with a plurality of holes 13, one for each of the sound tracks 39 of the film it, four of such holes being provided in the present form. Back of each of these holes I3 is carried a number orsome indication of the program to be provided by the corresponding sound tracks. These numbers are placed on the front side of the cover I9 of the selector housing.
  • the dial 74 when turned by the finger as above indicated, is revolved in opposition to a torsional spring I5, having its outer end fixed to the selector housing and its inner end fixed to the shaft Ill, carrying the dial I4.
  • the finger tip will have come against the lever 11, presented between the dial I4 and the front face of the housing I9.
  • This lever TI is carried on the outer end of the shaft III which extends into the selector housing I9 to be rotatably carried thereby.
  • a contact disk 89 is fixed to the shaft IT! to turn therewith inside of the housing I9.
  • the outer edge of the contact disk is provided with a plurality of notches 8
  • a foot 82 is carried into one of these notches 8
  • this arm 83 Upon making this engagement, this arm 83 also closes a switch 86 which closes a circuit including the winding of the magnet so as to retain the engagement of the pin 85 with the arm 83 and thereby hold the contact disk 88 in position in opposition to the return pull of the spring 76.
  • the circuit closed by the switch 85 is indicated in Fig. 11 as being that circuit including switch 86, wire 81, transformer winding II, wire 88, wire 89, magnet winding 85, relay winding 99 and wire M.
  • the relay winding 90 included in this circuit closes the motor switch 92 in the circuit leading from the terminal 63 through the wire 52, wire 93, through the switch 92, wire 94, film driving motor 31, wire 95 and wire I0, to the other terminal 59.
  • the film I5 is then set in motion to be pulled over the plate 30, as above indicated. Going back to the selector op eration, when the dial I4 has been turned by bringing the finger into abutment with the stop l5, the contact disk 89 has carried a segment 96 into engagement with all of the contacts 91, other than the one which is interconnected with the latch pin on which the head pin 40 will rest in the position of the used sound track 39.
  • this segment 96 in the path of this segment 96 are carried a plurality of contacts 97, one for each of the windings surrounding the respective pins 42, 43 and 44. nect these windings with the respective contacts 9! as indicated in the diagram, Fig. 11.
  • latch windings designated respectively by the numbers IDI, I02 and IE3 are interconnected through the wire I04, with the wire 88 leading to the winding II, thence through the wire 81, switch 86, wire 9
  • the dial I4 is turned around by placing a finger in the hole I3 over the number 3 to bring the finger around to abut the stop I5, whereupon the third latch pin 44 remains in an extended position since the third winding I93 is left out of that circuit, whereas the windings IflI and I82 are energized to retract the pins 42 and 43 out of the path of the head pin 48, leaving the pin 44 in its path.
  • the upper pin 42 would not be retracted; for the second sound track, the pin 42 would be retracted, leaving the pin 43 extended; and for the fourth track, all three of the pins would be retracted.
  • the latch pin 4I must be retracted Wires 98, 99 and IUD interconw and this is accomplished by attaching a cable 7 I06 to the other end of the latch pin 4
  • This cable I06 is carried around the pulley I01 and tied by the other end to the lever I 08 rockably mounted on the bracket I09 extending from the rear side of the housing I9, Figs. 5 and '7.
  • This lever I08 is in the path of the arm IIO, which is fixed to the dial shaft I" so that when the dial I4 starts its initial rotation, the arm IIO will immediately push against the lever I08 and then pull on the cable I06 to retract the pin 4
  • Continuous rotation of the shaft I'I'I lets the arm IIO carry past the lever I08 so as to permit the pin 4
  • the arm I I is in two parts, the outer part being hinged so as to permit the lever III] to return to the opposite side of the lever I08 for return travel, the lever I08 then returning to abut a pin III.
  • a notch I52 is provided along the under edge of the film, Fig. 10, to operate the head lift motor 5I by permitting the switch M3 to close.
  • the film is carried through a locating box H4, surrounding the switch M3 to have a light spring I I5 in contact with the lower edge of the film. The free end of this spring II5 normally holds an arm of the switch H3 in open position so that when the arm i I5 drops into the notch IIZ, the switch II3 may close.
  • the hole I20 is preferably surrounded by a grommet of any material which will prevent the possible slight are occurring from causing an particular damage to the film.
  • the relay winding I 22 when thus energized, opens the switch 55 whereby the winding 85 is permitted to release the selector dial 80 to allow it to return to its initial position; de-energizing the Winding 90 to stop the film driving motor 31; de-energizing the Winding 55 to stop the flow of current through the transformer Winding 69 and cut off the current to the photo-electric cell, exciter lamp and amplifier, thereby returning all of the members to their initial condition, ready for a second oper ation, all as above described.
  • the film I5 will travel a slight distance after the switch II8 has been closed so as to carry the notch II2 on beyond the switch arm H5 and to again open the switch I It by carrying the film perforation therebeyond.
  • This over-travel is taken care of by use of a blank portion of film between the beginning and the ends of the sound tracks.
  • the head 25 lifts and drops while the blank portion of the film travels across the plate 30.
  • the switch 55 is opened by the magnet I22, the arm 58 is pulled out of the path of the coin I2 so that the coin may roll on down the chute.
  • a rotatable dial carrying a plurality of finger engagements for dial rotation, a stop against which the finger will abut to limit dial rotation, a member switch operating adjacent said stop and shifted as the finger comes to rest against the stop, a spring normally returning the dial to an initial position, latch means operated by said member holding said dial in its rotated position against the pull of said spring, and a plurality of electrical contacts interengaged in accordance with the degree of rotation of the dial.
  • a rotatable dial carrying a plurality of finger engagements for dial rotation, a stop against which the finger will abut to limit dial rotation, a member switch operating adjacent said stop and shifted as the finger comes to rest against the stop, a spring normally returning the dial to an initial position, latch means operated by said member holding said dial in its rotated position against the pull of said spring, and a plurality of electrical contacts interengaged in accordance with the degree of rotation of the dial, said latch means comprising an electro magnet having a latching armature interengaging with an arm connecting with said member, said member further effecting an interconnection with said dial in its latched position.
  • a rotatable dial carrying a plurality of finger engagements for dial rotation, a stop against which the finger will abut to limit dial rotation, a member adjacent said stop and shifted as the finger comes to rest against the stop, a spring normally returning the dial to an initial position, latch means operated by said member holding said dial in its rotated position against the pull of said spring, and a plurality of electrical contacts interengaged in accordance with the degree of rotation of the dial, said latch means comprising an electro-magnet having a latching armature interengaging with an arm connecting with said member, said member further effecting an interconnection with said dial in its latched position, a switch closed by travel of said member, an electrical circuit including said electro-magnet and said switch.
  • a plurality of sound records means electrically reproducing sound from the records including a head relatively shiftable with said records, electro-magnetic means, determining the relative location between said head and said records, and means selectively operating said electro-magnetic means, and location selecting means comprising a rotatable dial carrying finger abutments corresponding to the locations, a stop in the path of the finger to limit dial rotation, electrical switch means operated by dial rotation, and an electrical circuit including said electro-magnetic means and said switch means, an electro-magnetic stop for retaining'said dial in the selected position, switch means rendering said magnetic stop operative in each of the dial selected positions, and a switch actuated upon predetermined travel of said records rendering said magnetic stop means inactive.
  • a film carrying a plurality of sound tracks thereon, a motor moving said film in one direction, a sound reproducing head shiftable across the film for selective positioning at any one of the sound tracks, a master switch initiating phonograph operation, stops in the path of said head determining said positioning, a selector mechanism rendered operative by closing of said master switch, means controlled by said mechanism selectively shifting said stops, an electrical circuit including said film motor, a switch in said circuit closed by operation of said mechanism, means for shifting said head back to an initial position following the passage therepast of a predetermined length of film, means actuated by said passage for setting said shifting means into operation, and means also actuated by predetermined travel of said film for opening said master switch.
  • a film carrying a plurality of sound tracks thereon, a motor moving said film in one direction, a sound reproducing head sliiftable across the film for selective positioning at any one of the sound tracks, a master switch initiating phonograph operation, stops in the path of said head deter mining said positioning, a selectormechanism rendered operative by closing of said master switch, means controlled by said mechanism selectively shifting said stops, an electrical circuit including said film motor, a switch in said circuit closed by operation of said mechanism, means for shifting said head back to an initial position following the passage therepast of a predetermined length of film, means actuated by said passage for setting said shifting means into operation, and means also actuated by predetermined travel of said film for opening said master switch, said head being raised to an upper position as said initial position by said shifting means, and said head being allowed to drop by gravity therefrom against said stops.
  • a motor moving said film'in one direction a sound reproducing head shiftable across the film for selective positioning at any one of the sound tracks
  • a master switch initiating phonograph operation, stops in the path of said head determining said positioning
  • a selector mechanism rendered operative by closing of said master switch, means controlled by said mechanism selectiveiy shifting said stops, an electrical circuit including said film motor, a switch in said circuit closed by operation of said mechanism, means for shifting said head back to an initial position following the passage therepast of a predetermined length of film, means actuated by said passage for setting said shifting means into operation, and means also actuated by predetermined travel of said film for opening said master switch
  • said stop shifting means comprising electromagnets and said selector mechanism including switch means selectively brought into circuit with said magnets.

Description

July 25, 1939. J R LONG 2,167,459
PHONOGRAPH Filed Aug. 23, 1937 4 Sheets-Sheet 1 Z6 Z9 l5 3 26 27 5 /6 II lllllIlI COO QQOCQD I Hlllllllllllll Illlllll lllll //7I /7 for John Poker? 1 any J, R. LONG Jul 25, 1939.
PHONOC-RAPH Filed Aug. 23, 1937 4 Sheets-Sheet 4 MW 06 05%. a:
Q MQ //7 yen far John Faber) A any Patented July 25 1939 UNITED STATES PHONOGRAPH John Robert Long, Washington, Ind., assignor of forty-nine one-hundredths to John T. Reinsel, Washington, Ind.
Application August 23, 1937, Serial No. 160,386
8 Claims.
This invention relates to a phonograph having in place of the usual disk or cylinder record, a film with one or more sound tracks formed thereon. It is the primary object of the invention to provide a simplified structure permitting the selection of any one of the records as carried by the film in the form of a sound track to be reproduced audibly. In the form of the phonograph herein shown and described, the entire dew vice is initially set in operation by means of a coin, although the invention is not necessarily limited to the use of the coin, since the coin switch may be manually operated in some cases where desired.
15 A further important object of the invention is to secure reproduction of sound with the greatest possible fidelity. Further important objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent to those versed in the art in the following 20 description of one particular form of the invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings,
in which:
Fig. l is a top plan view of the phonograph with the top cover broken away;
Fig. 2, an end elevation with the end wall removed;
Fig. 3, a front elevation with the front wall partially removed;
Fig. 4, a detail on enlarged scale in rear eleva- 30 tion of part of the selector mechanism;
Fig. 5, a detail in vertical section on an enlarged scale through the dial selector;
Fig. 6, a vertical section on the line '|l in Fig.
Fig. 7, a vertical section on the line 88 in Fig. 5;
Fig. 8, a detail in partial section of the coin actuated switch;
Fig. 9, a detail in transverse section illustrating 40 the film driving motor stop switch;
Fig. 10, a detail in vertical section showing a light-head motor lift switch; and
Fig. 11, a Wiring diagram.
Like characters of references indicate like parts 45 throughout the various views in the drawings.
In order to supply a sufficient length of film to carry the sound track of the matter to be reproduced, a film may be carried in the phonograph in any suitable manner to permit the film to be carried past the photo-electric cell and exciter lamp, to permit the film to be rewound or therein carried so as to be presented again in the same direction of travel for the next reproduction. In the form herein shown a film I5 is shown in the 6 form of a continuous belt, looped around a plu rality of sprockets l6, sufiicient in number to carry the required length within a compact space. In this form the sprocket I1 is interposed and is mounted on a bar I8 sliding through a bracket l9 to have a spring 20 normally urge bar teeth 5 2| into engagement with the lip 22, whereby the bar l8 may be pulled through the bracket l9 and held in an extended position so as to apply tension on the film I5. The bracket I 9 and the various sprockets 6 and H are carried on a floor 23 within the phonograph housing 24. A head 25 is mounted to be retained between and guided in vertical travel by two posts 26 and 27 whereby the head is presented through an opening in the floor 23.
This head carries a photo-electric cell unit 28 and an exciter lamp housing 29. Across the opening in the floor is secured to the head a film plate 30. This plate 30 is mounted so that the unit 28 will be on the forward side and the unit 29 on the rear side when the head 25 is raised and lowered. This plate 30 is given a curved face over which the film I5 is drawn between the sprockets 3| and 32, the sprocket 32 being a driving sprocket mounted on a shaft 33 which extends down- 25 wardly through the floor 23. The plate 30 further carries a slot 34, Fig. 3, through which light travels between units 29 and 28.
Referring to Figs. 2 and 3, the shaft 33 carries some type of torsional damper, herein shown as 30 a fly wheel 35. The shaft 33 extends downwardly to be driven through the worm drive 36 by a motor 31 mounted on a floor 38.
The film |5 carries a plurality of sound tracks 39, herein shown as four in number and it is therefore necessary to shift the head 25 to properly align the beam of light travelling between the units 29 and 28 in order to have that beam traverse the selected sound track. Normally the head 25 is retained in an upper position by means of a 40 pin 40 resting on a retractible latch pin 4|, Fig. 2. Below the latch pin 4| in the path of the head pin 40 are additional pins 42, 43, 44 and 45, pins 42, 43 and 44 being retractible by magnetic windings thereon and which pins normally are extended into the path of the pin 4| by a spring 46 in each instance. The pin 45, being the lowest pin, is fixed in position as a lower limit stop and is located to cause the head 25 to stop for reproduction from the lowest sound track on the film l5.
Thus to select the desired sound track reproduction, the latch pin 4| is initially shifted to drop the head 25 and have the head stopped by the pin 40 striking any one of the lower pins minal 63.
i and wire it to the terminal 59.
which has not been withdrawn from the path of the head pin.
In order to return the head to its upper initial position, a cam 48 is mounted on the shaft 49 and revolved through the worm drive 59 by a motor 5I in the path of the head 25, herein shown as in the path of the roller 52 mounted on the underside of the head, whereby by the operation of the motor 5!, the cam 48 will push the head 25 to an upper position to have the pin 4!] push against the under sides of the various latch pins in its path and push them back out of the way by reason of the bevelled inner ends until the pin 40 is carried above the latch pin (H, at which point the cam 48 leaves contact with the roller 52 to allow the pin 49 to come down and rest upon the latch pin 4| as before.
The photo-electric cell unit 28 is in electric circuit with the usual amplifier 58, details of which do not form part of this present invention. The out-put of the amplifier 53 is through a loud speaker unit 54, herein shown as mounted on a forward wall of the housing 24.
In order to set the phonograph into operation a switch 55, Figs. 8 and 11, is closed. This switch may be either manually closed, or in the form herein shown, closed by dropping a coin I2 in a slot opening 56, Fig. 3, to have the coin fall down the chute 5?, Fig. 8, to overbalance a bar 58, so as to push a switch 55 into a closed position. Upon the closing of this switch 55 a circuit is at once established from a current source terminal 59, Fig. 11, through a wire 60, switch 55, exciter lamp 29, amplifier 53, wire BI and wire 62 back to the other current source terminal 63. Thus the current is supplied to warm up the amplifier and power tubes. Also upon the closing of the switch 55, a circuit is established from the terminal 59 through the wire 69, switch 55, wire 64, relay winding 65, wire 66 and wire 62 to the ter- Upon the current flow through the winding 55, a relay switch 61 is closed. The closing of this switch 6'! establishes a circuit from the terminal 93, through the wire 52, switch 61, wire 68, primary winding 69 of a transformer,
Thus the current from a secondary winding 'II is then made available.
During the preceding circuit closing operations, the film I5 has remained stationary and the head 25 has remained in its upper inoperative position. Following the deposit of the coin I2, the selection of the particular program desired may then be made by operating a selector to effect selective closing of circuits with the windings of the pins 42, 43, and 44 to cause the head 25 to drop down to the corresponding sound track 39. This selection is made by inserting the operators finger in a hole I3 of a dial I4 and revolving that dial in a clockwise direction to bring the finger into abutment with a stop 15. The dial is provided with a plurality of holes 13, one for each of the sound tracks 39 of the film it, four of such holes being provided in the present form. Back of each of these holes I3 is carried a number orsome indication of the program to be provided by the corresponding sound tracks. These numbers are placed on the front side of the cover I9 of the selector housing.
The dial 74, when turned by the finger as above indicated, is revolved in opposition to a torsional spring I5, having its outer end fixed to the selector housing and its inner end fixed to the shaft Ill, carrying the dial I4.
When the finger strikes the abutment I5, as
above indicated, the finger tip will have come against the lever 11, presented between the dial I4 and the front face of the housing I9. This lever TI is carried on the outer end of the shaft III which extends into the selector housing I9 to be rotatably carried thereby. A contact disk 89 is fixed to the shaft IT! to turn therewith inside of the housing I9. The outer edge of the contact disk is provided with a plurality of notches 8|, one for each of the holes 13 provided in the disk I4. Upon moving the lever II with the finger, a foot 82 is carried into one of these notches 8| and simultaneously another arm 83, on the shaft I8, is hooked into engagement with a pin 84 which forms the armature of a solenoid magnet 85. Upon making this engagement, this arm 83 also closes a switch 86 which closes a circuit including the winding of the magnet so as to retain the engagement of the pin 85 with the arm 83 and thereby hold the contact disk 88 in position in opposition to the return pull of the spring 76. The circuit closed by the switch 85 is indicated in Fig. 11 as being that circuit including switch 86, wire 81, transformer winding II, wire 88, wire 89, magnet winding 85, relay winding 99 and wire M.
The relay winding 90 included in this circuit, closes the motor switch 92 in the circuit leading from the terminal 63 through the wire 52, wire 93, through the switch 92, wire 94, film driving motor 31, wire 95 and wire I0, to the other terminal 59. Thus upon making the selection by turning the dial I4, the film I5 is then set in motion to be pulled over the plate 30, as above indicated. Going back to the selector op eration, when the dial I4 has been turned by bringing the finger into abutment with the stop l5, the contact disk 89 has carried a segment 96 into engagement with all of the contacts 91, other than the one which is interconnected with the latch pin on which the head pin 40 will rest in the position of the used sound track 39. In other words, in the path of this segment 96 are carried a plurality of contacts 97, one for each of the windings surrounding the respective pins 42, 43 and 44. nect these windings with the respective contacts 9! as indicated in the diagram, Fig. 11.
The other side of these latch windings, designated respectively by the numbers IDI, I02 and IE3, are interconnected through the wire I04, with the wire 88 leading to the winding II, thence through the wire 81, switch 86, wire 9|, and wire I95, connected with the segment 96 to complete the circuit. Supposing that the third sound track from the top is to be used, the dial I4 is turned around by placing a finger in the hole I3 over the number 3 to bring the finger around to abut the stop I5, whereupon the third latch pin 44 remains in an extended position since the third winding I93 is left out of that circuit, whereas the windings IflI and I82 are energized to retract the pins 42 and 43 out of the path of the head pin 48, leaving the pin 44 in its path. In other words, should the first'sound track be used, the upper pin 42 would not be retracted; for the second sound track, the pin 42 would be retracted, leaving the pin 43 extended; and for the fourth track, all three of the pins would be retracted.
One other operation remains to be accom plished before the head 25 may be moved even to the first sound track, to allow the pin 4I to rest on 42. The latch pin 4I must be retracted Wires 98, 99 and IUD interconw and this is accomplished by attaching a cable 7 I06 to the other end of the latch pin 4| to pull it in opposition to the return spring I01. This cable I06 is carried around the pulley I01 and tied by the other end to the lever I 08 rockably mounted on the bracket I09 extending from the rear side of the housing I9, Figs. 5 and '7. This lever I08 is in the path of the arm IIO, which is fixed to the dial shaft I" so that when the dial I4 starts its initial rotation, the arm IIO will immediately push against the lever I08 and then pull on the cable I06 to retract the pin 4| and let the head 25 drop at least as far as the first pin 42. Continuous rotation of the shaft I'I'I lets the arm IIO carry past the lever I08 so as to permit the pin 4| to return to its normal position. The arm I I is in two parts, the outer part being hinged so as to permit the lever III] to return to the opposite side of the lever I08 for return travel, the lever I08 then returning to abut a pin III.
Therefore, immediately the selection is made by the operator through the dial I4, the film I is set in operation and the head 25 dropped to a selected sound track position and the program is then reproduced without further attention. At the end of the sound track on the film I5, a notch I52 is provided along the under edge of the film, Fig. 10, to operate the head lift motor 5I by permitting the switch M3 to close. In the form herein shown, the film is carried through a locating box H4, surrounding the switch M3 to have a light spring I I5 in contact with the lower edge of the film. The free end of this spring II5 normally holds an arm of the switch H3 in open position so that when the arm i I5 drops into the notch IIZ, the switch II3 may close. The closing of this switch I I3 completes a circuit from the terminal 58 through the wire It, wire 95, wire I I 6, motor 5I, wire In, switch 61, and wire 55 and wire e2 back to terminal 63. Thus the motor 55 is set in operation to revolve the cam 38 and lift the head 25 back to its initial inoperative position with the pin 40 resting on the latch pin 4i. Immediately the cam 48 leaves the roller 52, a switch III carried in a locating box IIII, Figs. 1, 9 and ll, closes. This closure in the present form is obtained by permitting the contact to be made between the opposing arms of the switch H5 through the hole I20 in the film adjacent to notch I I2. The hole I20 is preferably surrounded by a grommet of any material which will prevent the possible slight are occurring from causing an particular damage to the film. The momentary closing of the switch II8, effected in the manner described by moving the film, closes a circuit from the winding II, through the switch I28, wire 'IZI, relay winding I22, wires I23 and 8'! back to the winding II. The relay winding I 22, when thus energized, opens the switch 55 whereby the winding 85 is permitted to release the selector dial 80 to allow it to return to its initial position; de-energizing the Winding 90 to stop the film driving motor 31; de-energizing the Winding 55 to stop the flow of current through the transformer Winding 69 and cut off the current to the photo-electric cell, exciter lamp and amplifier, thereby returning all of the members to their initial condition, ready for a second oper ation, all as above described.
It is understood that the film I5 will travel a slight distance after the switch II8 has been closed so as to carry the notch II2 on beyond the switch arm H5 and to again open the switch I It by carrying the film perforation therebeyond. This over-travel is taken care of by use of a blank portion of film between the beginning and the ends of the sound tracks. The head 25 lifts and drops while the blank portion of the film travels across the plate 30. As the switch 55 is opened by the magnet I22, the arm 58 is pulled out of the path of the coin I2 so that the coin may roll on down the chute.
While I have herein shown and described my invention in one particular form, it is obvious that structural changes may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention and I theretime do not desire to be limited to this precise form beyond the limitations as may be imposed by the following claims.
I claim:
1. In a selecting means, a rotatable dial carrying a plurality of finger engagements for dial rotation, a stop against which the finger will abut to limit dial rotation, a member switch operating adjacent said stop and shifted as the finger comes to rest against the stop, a spring normally returning the dial to an initial position, latch means operated by said member holding said dial in its rotated position against the pull of said spring, and a plurality of electrical contacts interengaged in accordance with the degree of rotation of the dial.
2. In a selecting means, a rotatable dial carrying a plurality of finger engagements for dial rotation, a stop against which the finger will abut to limit dial rotation, a member switch operating adjacent said stop and shifted as the finger comes to rest against the stop, a spring normally returning the dial to an initial position, latch means operated by said member holding said dial in its rotated position against the pull of said spring, and a plurality of electrical contacts interengaged in accordance with the degree of rotation of the dial, said latch means comprising an electro magnet having a latching armature interengaging with an arm connecting with said member, said member further effecting an interconnection with said dial in its latched position.
3. In a selecting means, a rotatable dial carrying a plurality of finger engagements for dial rotation, a stop against which the finger will abut to limit dial rotation, a member adjacent said stop and shifted as the finger comes to rest against the stop, a spring normally returning the dial to an initial position, latch means operated by said member holding said dial in its rotated position against the pull of said spring, and a plurality of electrical contacts interengaged in accordance with the degree of rotation of the dial, said latch means comprising an electro-magnet having a latching armature interengaging with an arm connecting with said member, said member further effecting an interconnection with said dial in its latched position, a switch closed by travel of said member, an electrical circuit including said electro-magnet and said switch.
4. In a phonograph, a plurality of sound records, means electrically reproducing sound from the records including a head relatively shiftable with said records, electro-magnetic means, determining the relative location between said head and said records, and means selectively operating said electro-magnetic means, and location selecting means comprising a rotatable dial carrying finger abutments corresponding to the locations, a stop in the path of the finger to limit dial rotation, electrical switch means operated by dial rotation, and an electrical circuit including said electro-magnetic means and said switch means, an electro-magnetic stop for retaining'said dial in the selected position, switch means rendering said magnetic stop operative in each of the dial selected positions, and a switch actuated upon predetermined travel of said records rendering said magnetic stop means inactive.
5. In an electrically operated phonograph, a film carrying a plurality of sound tracks thereon, a motor moving said film in one direction, a sound reproducing head shiftable across the film for selective positioning at any one of the sound tracks, a master switch initiating phonograph operation, stops in the path of said head determining said positioning, a selector mechanism rendered operative by closing of said master switch, means controlled by said mechanism selectively shifting said stops, an electrical circuit including said film motor, a switch in said circuit closed by operation of said mechanism, means for shifting said head back to an initial position following the passage therepast of a predetermined length of film, means actuated by said passage for setting said shifting means into operation, and means also actuated by predetermined travel of said film for opening said master switch.
6. In an electrically operated phonograph, a film carrying a plurality of sound tracks thereon, a motor moving said film in one direction, a sound reproducing head sliiftable across the film for selective positioning at any one of the sound tracks, a master switch initiating phonograph operation, stops in the path of said head deter mining said positioning, a selectormechanism rendered operative by closing of said master switch, means controlled by said mechanism selectively shifting said stops, an electrical circuit including said film motor, a switch in said circuit closed by operation of said mechanism, means for shifting said head back to an initial position following the passage therepast of a predetermined length of film, means actuated by said passage for setting said shifting means into operation, and means also actuated by predetermined travel of said film for opening said master switch, said head being raised to an upper position as said initial position by said shifting means, and said head being allowed to drop by gravity therefrom against said stops.
'7. In an electrically operated phonograph, a film carrying a plurality of sound tracks thereon,
a motor moving said film'in one direction, a sound reproducing head shiftable across the film for selective positioning at any one of the sound tracks, a master switch initiating phonograph operation, stops in the path of said head determining said positioning, a selector mechanism rendered operative by closing of said master switch, means controlled by said mechanism selectiveiy shifting said stops, an electrical circuit including said film motor, a switch in said circuit closed by operation of said mechanism, means for shifting said head back to an initial position following the passage therepast of a predetermined length of film, means actuated by said passage for setting said shifting means into operation, and means also actuated by predetermined travel of said film for opening said master switch, said stop shifting means comprising electromagnets and said selector mechanism including switch means selectively brought into circuit with said magnets.
8. In an electrically operated phonograph, a film carrying a plurality of sound tracks thereon, a motor moving said film in one direction, a sound reproducing head shiftable across the film for selective positioning at any one of the sound tracks, a master switch initiating phonograph operation, stops in the path of said head determining said positioning, a selector mechanism rendered operative by closing of said master switch, means controlled said mechanism selectively shifting said stops, an electrical circuit including said iiim motor, a switch in said circuit closed by operation of said mechanism, means for shifting said head back to an initial position following the passage therepast of a predetermined length of film, means actuated by said passage for setting s6 id shifting means into operation, and means also actuated by predetermined travel of said film for opening said master switch, said stop shifting means comprising electromagnets and said selector mechanism including switch means selectively brought into circuit with said magnets, an electro-magnetic lock in said mechanism retaining it in a selected position against normally returning spring means, said lock magnet being energized upon closing of said switch in said motor circuit.
JOHN ROBERT LONG.
US160386A 1937-08-23 1937-08-23 Phonograph Expired - Lifetime US2167459A (en)

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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2481398A (en) * 1945-06-29 1949-09-06 Armour Res Found Selector system for magnetic wire reproducers
US2500027A (en) * 1947-05-03 1950-03-07 Eastman Kodak Co Frame counter
US2554853A (en) * 1947-04-18 1951-05-29 George Gorton Machine Company Selection method and apparatus
US2572539A (en) * 1946-04-08 1951-10-23 Automatic Canteen Co Coin mechanism for vending machines
US2599953A (en) * 1949-07-23 1952-06-10 Royal Patent Corp Coin-actuated control switch
US2674728A (en) * 1949-04-26 1954-04-06 John T Potter Three-dimensional memory device
US3031055A (en) * 1958-09-18 1962-04-24 Charles W Soule Dispensing and vending machine
US3098119A (en) * 1959-01-12 1963-07-16 Jerome H Lemelson Information storage system
US3271525A (en) * 1961-08-22 1966-09-06 Lien Jorgen Sigurd Sound reproducer equipped cash register

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2481398A (en) * 1945-06-29 1949-09-06 Armour Res Found Selector system for magnetic wire reproducers
US2572539A (en) * 1946-04-08 1951-10-23 Automatic Canteen Co Coin mechanism for vending machines
US2554853A (en) * 1947-04-18 1951-05-29 George Gorton Machine Company Selection method and apparatus
US2500027A (en) * 1947-05-03 1950-03-07 Eastman Kodak Co Frame counter
US2674728A (en) * 1949-04-26 1954-04-06 John T Potter Three-dimensional memory device
US2599953A (en) * 1949-07-23 1952-06-10 Royal Patent Corp Coin-actuated control switch
US3031055A (en) * 1958-09-18 1962-04-24 Charles W Soule Dispensing and vending machine
US3098119A (en) * 1959-01-12 1963-07-16 Jerome H Lemelson Information storage system
US3271525A (en) * 1961-08-22 1966-09-06 Lien Jorgen Sigurd Sound reproducer equipped cash register

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