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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. In a musical instrument having a plurality of vibratable strings each in
magnetic relation with at least one polepiece of a magnetic pickup, the
provision of a magnetic pickup assembly comprising:
a plurality of magnetic pickups, one for each string, wherein the magnetic
circuit for each pickup includes a polepiece with a surface at one end in
magnetic relation with a string, the polepiece surface having an elongated
rectangular shape, the polepiece being rotatable to vary the angle formed
between the string and the elongated shape of the polepiece surface to
provide variation of the tonal quality of the transduced sound from the
string; and
adjusting means for varying the distance between all pickups and all
strings simultaneously.
2. The invention as defined in claim 1 wherein the polepiece has a second
end with a flat surface in close magnetic relation with a flat surface of
a magnetic poleface.
3. The invention as defined in claim 2 including means in frictional
contact with the polepiece for retaining it in its selected rotated
position.
4. In a musical instrument having a plurality of vibratable strings each in
magnetic relation with at least one polepiece of a magnetic pickup, the
provision of a magnetic pickup assembly comprising:
a plurality of magnetic pickups, one for each string, including means for
selectively varying the reluctance between a polepiece and its associated
string, and wherein the magnetic circuit of each pickup includes a magnet
having a poleface and a polepiece having a lower base portion in close
magnetic relation with the poleface but selectively movable relative
thereto
a generally rectangular casing for housing the pickups, a pair of leaf
springs, one at each end of the casing and extending transversely thereof,
for biasing the respective casing end away from the strings, and a
selectively adjustable threaded member at each end of the casing for
drawing the respective casing end toward the strings, each leaf spring
comprising a flat central part having a hole surrounding one of the
threaded members, the flat part bearing downward on a mating flat part of
the casing and two ends each bearing upward against a structural part of
the instrument, to form a balanced stabilizer to prevent canting of the
casing relative to the strings.
5. The invention as defined in claim 4 wherein said polepiece has an end
surface facing a string in magnetic relation therewith, the end surface
being elongated forming a polepiece substantially rectangular in shape,
having a length greater than its width.
6. The invention as defined in claim 5 wherein said polepiece has a second
end with a flat surface in close magnetic relation with a flat surface on
the poleface.
7. The invention as defined in claim 6 wherein said polepiece is
selectively rotatable about an axis perpendicular to the flat surface on
the poleface.
8. The invention as defined in claim 7 including means in frictional
contact with the polepiece for retaining the polepiece in its selected
rotated position.
9. The invention as defined in claim 8 wherein the end surface of the
polepiece facing the string has a minor dimension of the same order of
magnitude as the diameter of the string and a major dimension a least an
order to magnitude greater than the minor dimension. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to musical instruments having
magnetic pickups for amplification of sound produced by the instrument,
and more particularly to an assembly for use with such instruments as
pianos and guitars, and permitting the user to make infinitely variable
adjustments of components, by which to produce uniquely expressive musical
results.
Magnetic pickups for stringed instruments are well known in the art, as
exemplified for example by the construction shown in the Lover U.S. Pat.
No. 2,896,491, by which the vibrations of one or more tensioned strings
are converted into electrical signals carrying musical intelligence which
is a function of those vibrations. The electrical signals so produced may
then be amplified or modified in any of many ways well known in the art to
be eventually applied to a loudspeaker or other electroacoustic
transducer.
In accordance with the preferred form of the present invention as disclosed
herein, there is provided a magnet and coil assembly which is acoustically
insulated by which to minimize and virtually eliminate acoustic absorption
of stray acoustic fields, as from a loudspeaker and from vibrations of the
body itself of the musical instrument such as a guitar. Furthermore, each
of the individual polepieces are so constructed and mounted in the
assembly as to permit the user to adjust the effective reluctance of the
magnetic path between the polepiece and its associated string, so that the
user can thereby achieve uniquely individualized musical results. A
further feature of the invention lies in the fact that the magnetic pickup
assembly as a unit, including typically six individual polepieces, may be
incrementally raised and lowered relative to the strings, whereby again to
achieve uniquely individualized musical effects.
The principal object of the present invention is accordingly to provide and
disclose a novel magnetic pickup assembly for use with stringed
instruments. Additional objects and purposes of the invention are to
provide, in such an assembly, conveniently adjustable means for
incrementally positioning the assembly as a unit relative to the set of
strings of the instrument; to provide and disclose in such an assembly an
acoustic absorptive mounting whereby to substantially isolate the
polepieces and their associated windings from stray acoustic vibration in
the environment, including physical vibration of the instrument itself; to
provide and disclose in such an assembly individual polepieces whose
magnetic coupling with their associated strings may be infinitely
selectively variable by the user, by a simple rotation of a selected
polepiece; and for other and additional objects and purposes as will be
understood from a reading of the following description of a preferred
embodiment of the invention, taken in connection with the accompanying
drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a top plan view of a magnetic pickup assembly in accordance with
the present invention, together with, fragmentarily shown, a set of six
strings, such as those of an electric guitar.
FIG. 2 is a sectional view taken on the arrows II--II of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a sectional view taken on the arrows III--III of FIG. 2.
FIG. 4 is a sectional view taken on the arrows IV--IV of FIG. 2.
FIG. 5 is a fragmentary sectional view taken on the arrows V--V of FIG. 4,
including, diagrammatically shown, selectively varied positions of the
polepiece relative to its associated string.
FIG. 6 is a view looking downwardly on the arrows VI--VI of FIG. 5.
FIG. 7 is a view similar to FIG. 5, except showing the polepiece rotated
approximately 45.degree. about its axis from its position of FIG. 5.
FIG. 8 is a view looking downwardly on the arrows VIII--VIII of FIG. 7.
FIG. 9 is a fragmentary view similar to FIG. 5, except showing the
polepiece moved slightly laterally so that its axis is displaced from the
axis of its associated string.
FIG. 10 is a view similar to FIGS. 6 and 8, except showing the polepiece
rotated 90.degree. about its axis from its position of FIGS. 5 and 6.
FIG. 11 is a set of waveforms clarifying certain aspects of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Referring now in detail to the drawings, and first to FIG. 1 thereof, there
is indicated generally at 15 a portion of the body of a stringed
instrument, here exemplarily shown as a guitar. A magnetic pickup assembly
in accordance with the present invention is indicated generally at 20 and
includes a generally rectangular hollow frame 21 which is attached to body
15 by suitable attachment means such as screws 22. More particularly, the
operative magnetic components of the present pickup assembly are housed
within a metal casing indicated generally at 25 which, as best shown in
FIG. 2, is received in a generally rectangular recess 28 formed in body
15. With continued reference to FIG. 2, casing 25 includes an upper wall
30 and downwardly depending end walls 32 and 34, which terminate
downwardly in outwardly turned attachment flanges 33 and 35 respectively.
Casing 25 also has, as seen in FIG. 4, downwardly depending sidewalls 36
and 37.
Means are provided for selectively adjusting the vertical position of
casing 25, as seen in FIG. 2, relative to body 15 and frame 20. Such means
in the present form of the invention include a pair of adjustment screws
41 and 43, whose lower threaded portions are received in threaded openings
formed in flanges 33 and 35 respectively. Cooperating with screws 41 and
43, and constituting means for urging the casing 25 downwardly relative to
frame 20 is a pair of leaf springs, one at each end of the assembly as
seen in FIG. 2, and indicated generally therein at 46 and 48. The
construction of springs 46 and 48 will be best understood by the showing
of FIG. 3, wherein it will be seen that spring 46 has formed in its center
an opening 50 through which extends the lower threaded shank of screw 41,
and a pair of symmetrically disposed outwardly extending arms 51 and 52
terminating outwardly and upwardly in a pair of flattened feet 53 and 54
respectively, which slidably bear on the lower surface of frame 20. It
will be understood that spring 48 at the opposite end of the assembly is
similarly formed. It will accordingly be seen that, by rotation of screw
41 or screw 43, the respective end of casing 25 can be raised or lowered
relative to frame 20.
The open bottom of casing 25 is closed by a cover plate indicated generally
at 60, fixed to the casing as by being brazed or similarly attached at 61
and 62 to the casing flanges 33 and 35, the cover being desirably provided
with an opening 64 for receiving therethrough a cable indicated generally
at 65 including two or more electrical conductors connected to the
magnetic pickups in known manner. The upper wall 30 of casing 25 has
formed therein (see FIG. 1) a pair of longitudinally extending parallel
slots 70 and 71, and each of the slots is provided with an insulating
liner 72 and 73 respectively, made of resilient rubbery material and each
provided with an outwardly directed peripheral groove for receiving the
edges of slots 70 and 71, as will be particularly seen in FIGS. 2 and 4.
Within the housing formed by casing 25 and cover plate 60 there is disposed
a set of U-shaped magnets each having a winding on each of its two legs,
all as best seen in FIG. 4, and as is conventional in the art.
Specifically, in FIG. 4 a U-shaped magnet indicated generally at 80
includes a pair of upwardly extending legs 81 and 82, each of the legs
terminating upwardly in a flat poleface 83 and 84 respectively. Each leg
81, 82 has mounted thereon an electrical winding 85 and 86 respectively;
the details of wiring to the windings are not shown, since they are well
known in the art and form no part of the present invention as such.
With continued reference to FIG. 4, a pair of polepieces 91 and 92 are
carried above polefaces 83 and 84. Polepiece 91 includes a cylindrical
body portion 94 formed integrally with a lower cylindrical flange 95 whose
lower surface is in tight magnetic contact with poleface 83. The upper
portion of polepiece 91 is narrowed, terminating inwardly in a flat,
generally rectangular face 96. The other polepiece 92 seen in FIG. 4 is
similarly formed, having an upper generally rectangular face 97. The
cylindrical body portion 94 of polepiece 91 is in frictional contact with
the opposed inner faces of resilient liner 70, and the corresponding
cylindrical body portion of polepiece 92 is similarly in frictional
relation with the opposed inner faces of liner 71.
The exemplary form of the present invention contemplates the use of six
strings indicated generally at 100, and specifically identified as 101-106
inclusive. As is conventional, the string 106 of highest pitch may have a
diameter of approximately 0.25 mm, while the string 101 for the lowest
pitch may have a diameter of approximately 1.75 mm. The relationship
between strings 100 and the magnetic pickup assembly of the present
invention, and the variations of those relationships in accordance with
the invention, will be understood by reference to FIGS. 5-10, illustrating
certain of those relationships. More particularly, in FIG. 5, the upper
portion of polepiece 91 is shown in solid lines in an intermediate
position and, in dotted outline, is shown at 91a and 91b in an upper
position and a lower position respectively. As will be understood from the
previous description of FIG. 3, the several positions seen in FIG. 5 of
polepiece 91 correspond to an adjustment achieved by rotation of screw 41,
and the upward pressure of leaf spring 46, urging upwardly the set of
pickup units. As brought out in FIG. 6, the longer axis of upper
rectangular face 96 remains parallel to string 106 during these
adjustments.
In FIGS. 7 and 8 there is shown polepiece 91 in its position relative to
string 106 when the polepiece is rotated approximately 45.degree. about
its own axis. It will be recalled in this connection that the cylindrical
portion of each polepiece is in frictional contact with resilient liner 70
or 71, as the case may be, whereby that frictional relationship will
maintain the polepiece in whatever angular position the user may choose to
rotate it. In FIG. 10 is shown the relationship of the string and
polepiece when the user has rotated the polepiece about its own axis
through 90.degree. from its position seen in FIG. 6.
An additional capability of variation of the relationship between the
polepiece and its associated string in accordance with the invention is
illustrated in FIG. 9. In that showing, polepiece 91 is displaced
laterally from its associated string 106, by digital adjustment by the
user, to produce unique tonal modulations, as may be desired by the user.
In FIG. 11 there is shown a waveform 110 of the fundamental tone produced
by a particular string. Indicated at 112 is a waveform corresponding to
the first harmonic of such a tone, and indicated at 114 is a composite or
summing waveform of waveforms 110 and 112. In the relationship of the
parts seen in FIG. 9, it will be seen that, because of the lateral
displacement of the polepiece from its associated string, the components
of the fundamental tone produced by the string and the first harmonic (as
well as other harmonics) produced by the same string will be altered in
their instantaneous relationship with the polepiece. More specifically,
the instantaneous reluctance of the magnetic path will be different from
such reluctance when the parts are in their typical or neutral position
seen in FIG. 5, as indicated at 91.
Means are provided for acoustically isolating the magnetic pickups of the
present invention from the environment, and in the present illustrative
form of the invention such means are shown as including spongy material
indicated generally at 120, within the enclosure provided by casing 25 and
its lower cover plate 60, and surrounding the magnet 80 and its coils 85
and 86, as well as surrounding the lower portions of the polepieces whose
bases are in tight magnetic contact with the polefaces 83 and 84 of the
magnet. Thus environmental acoustic vibration, as from loudspeakers or the
like, as well as mechanical vibration of the guitar or other instrument
itself, is effectively shielded from reaching the magnetically sensitive
portions of the assembly.
It will accordingly be seen that there is here provided a magnetic pickup
assembly including constructions by which the user can incrementally vary
the magnetic reluctance, either of the assembly as a whole by adjustment
of screws 41, 43, or individually for each polepiece, by rotating it
angularly as previously described in connection with FIGS. 5-8; and
further variability of the reluctance of the magnetic path between a
polepiece and its associated string is afforded by the lateral
displaceability of the polepiece relative to the string illustrated in
FIG. 9. By these selectively adjustable variations, the individual
musician can achieve unique tonal effects not heretofore available.
Although a particular preferred embodiment of the invention has herein been
described and illustrated in detail, it will be understood that
modifications and changes from such embodiment may be made, and all such
modifications and inventions not departing from the spirit of the
invention are intended to be embraced within the scope of the appended
claims.
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Description  |
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