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| United States Patent | 4253373 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4253373.html |
| Inventor(s) | Foerst; Reiner (Gummersbach, DE) |
| Abstract | A device for the measurement of the number of cycles or half-cycles of a
tone by counting the cycles during a reference time which is proportional
to the cycle time of the tone to be measured, comprising a store for the
cycle times, a comparator, a subtraction device in which a constant value
is subtracted from the counted number of tone cycles, decoders, displaying
devices for the oscillation error and the polarity sign, a retriggerable
mono-flop for the oscillation existence signal, a flip-flop for a wait
signal, a mono-flop for a read signal and logic elements for enabling the
oscillation counter and the reference pulse counter. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4253373 |
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Tuning device for musical instruments |
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| Publication Date |
March 3, 1981 |
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| Filing Date |
November 6, 1978 |
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| Priority Data |
Nov 09, 1977[DE]2750121 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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What percentage of gross sales should the inventor or assignee be paid?
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What I claim is:
1. A device for the measurement of the number of cycles or half cycles of a
tone during a preset reference time including a microphone, an amplifier,
a filter for the prevention of zero transits extraneous to the fundamental
tone oscillation, a Schmitt-trigger for the conversion of the filtered
tone frequency voltage U.sub.F into a digital oscillation signal S.sub.R,
two mono-flops for the conversion of the digital tone oscillation signal
S.sub.R into a zero transit signal S.sub.N, a flip-flop for the
oscillation period signal S.sub.D which is set via a rectifier, a
smoothing device, and a Schmitt-trigger by the increasing amplitude of the
filtered tone frequency voltage U.sub.F and which is reset by an inverted
oscillation existance signal S.sub.SE, a synchronizing device, a reference
frequency source, a reference pulse counter, and an oscillation counter to
which the zero transit signal S.sub.N is supplied via an AND-gate, said
device comprising in combination therewith a tone store in which the
values for the tone cycle lengths B.sub.Sref are stored, and which is
addressable from a tone select switch via a decoder, and also comprising
in combination therewith a comparator supplying a counting period end
signal S.sub.E when the output B.sub.Tref of the reference pulse counter
and the stored cycle length value B.sub.Sref are equal, electronic
swtiches for the selection of the harmonics filters which are controlled
by the tone select switch and additionally by an octave select switch
according to the tone to be tuned, a display means for the symbol of the
selected octave which is controlled via a decoder by said octave select
switch, a smoothing device for the setting of the flip-flop for the
reference period signal by the increasing tone amplitude, the time
constant of said smoothing device being adjustable by said octave select
switch, a retriggerable mono-flop the input of which is the zero transit
signal S.sub.N of the tone oscillation and the output of which is the
oscillation existence signal S.sub.SE for the resetting of the flip-flop
for the oscillation period signal S.sub.D, a flip-flop supplying a wait
signal S.sub.W which is set by the counting period end signal S.sub.E and
reset by the output S.sub.DS of the synchronizing device, an AND-gate, one
input of which is the inverted wait signal S.sub.W, the second input of
which is the reference pulse signal S.sub.Ref and the output of which is
supplied to the reference pulse counter, and an AND-gate, one input of
which is the wait signal S.sub.W, the second input of which is the
synchronized oscillation period signal S.sub.DS, and the output of which
supplies a counting period signal S.sub.Z, a monoflop the input of which
is the wait signal S.sub.W and the output of which supplies a read signal
S.sub.L, an AND-gate, one input of which is the inverted read signal
S.sub.L, the other input of which is the zero transit signal S.sub.N and
the output of which is supplied to the input of the oscillation counter
and an OR-gate, one input of which is the read signal S.sub.L, the other
input of which is the counting period signal S.sub.Z, and the output of
which supplies an enable signal S.sub.F for the oscillation counter.
2. A device in combination according to claim 1 comprising a reference
value store for constant references bytes B.sub.Zref , and a subtraction
device the output of which supplies the oscillation difference B.sub.dZ
between the oscillation byte B.sub.Z and the reference byte B.sub.Zref .
3. A device in combination according to claim 2, comprising a display means
for the polarity sign the input of which is supplied from the highest
order bit S.sub.V of the oscillation byte via an AND-gate, the other input
of which is the read signal S.sub.L.
4. A device in combination according to claim 3, comprising an absolute
value converter the inputs of which are the polarity sign signal S.sub.V
and the oscillation difference byte B.sub.dZ and the output of which is
the byte for the absolute value B.sub.dZabs of the oscillation difference. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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The present invention relates to a device for the measurement of the number
of cycles or half cycles of a tone during a preset reference time period.
Tuning devices of the above mentioned kind or similar devices are already
known.
In the U.S. Pat. No. 3,144,802 "TUNING APPARATUS", a device is described by
which the tone oscillation is converted into a digital signal and supplied
to a counter and a display device via an AND-gate which is open during a
preset constant time period. Thereby it is assumed that the tone
oscillation is sufficiently long, so that the AND-gate can be opened and
closed periodically during the oscillation. During the closed period the
counter is reset.
One disadvantage of this performance is that fastly decaying tones can be
measured only with difficulty as the start of the counting period is not
coordinated with the increasing amplitude of the tone. Another
disadvantage is that the absolute value of the tone frequency is
displayed. Thus, the tuner needs a table from which he reads the reference
values of every individual tone.
In the U.S. Pat. No. 3,948,140 "PORTABLE DEVICE FOR GENERATING AND TUNING A
WHOLE TONE SCALE", a means is described which comprises a reference
oscillator. The tone oscillation is converted into a digital signal and
logically compared to the reference signal. With the instrument being out
of tune a phase movement is displayed. One disadvantage of this device is
that the frequency error is not displayed quantitatively as the
oscillations are not counted. Another disadvantage is that very high tones
cannot be measured as the display time is not sufficiently long for the
observer.
In the British Pat. No. 1,213,794 "TUNING OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS", a method
and a device are described with which in principle not the frequency but
the cycle time of the tone oscillation is measured. During a preset number
of cycles of the tone oscillation which is counted by a counter an
AND-gate is opened. Pulses of a high-frequency reference voltage source
pass this AND-gate and are counted behind the gate in a second counter.
This counter is a pre-select counter the pre-select number of which is
selected by a tone select switch and supplied from a store (diode matrix).
By this method it is achieved that the error, which is the deviation from
the in-tune value, is displayed. It is assumed that the tone oscillation
is kept in resonance by an electromagnetic stimulating device, long enough
that the AND-gate can be opened and closed periodically during the
oscillation. One disadvantage of this performance is the necessity for the
stimulating device. Another disadvantage is that the displayed error is
not a quantitatively usable measure for the relative error. Firstly this
renders the tuning process more difficult, and secondly it restricts the
tuning to standard pitch. Another disadvantage is that by inevitable phase
errors which will be produced in the harmonic filters in case of the
fundamental wave of the tone oscillation being small compared to its
maximum amplitude the measured cycle time and consequently the displayed
number is not accurate especially for low tones.
Another tuning device for musical instruments of copending application Ser.
No. 896,762-Foerst filed Apr. 17, 1978 (Monday), now U.S. Pat. No.
4,205,585-Foerst dated June 3, 1980 is known by which the tone oscillation
is converted into a digital signal and supplied to an AND-gate and a
counter. The AND-gate is opened when the amplitude of the tone oscillation
exceeds a preset threshold and closes after a preset reference time. The
display vanishes when the amplitude of the tone oscillation falls short of
another preset threshold. One disadvantage of this performance is that the
user needs a table for the correct oscillation figures. Another
disadvantage is that the frequency range of the tones to be measured is
limited at low frequencies by the accuracy of the display and at high
frequencies and at string instruments by the time constant of the damping
of the tone oscillation. Other disadvantages are that the display vanishes
fastly at short tones and that long tones have to be dampend before the
display vanishes. Therefore, that performance is suitable mainly for
guitars.
Therefore, it is an object of the present invention to exhibit a device
which meets requirements as follows. Fast fading tonew should also be
measurable. The counting process should start after the increasing of the
tone amplitude. The accuracy should be equal and as large as possible for
all tones. The counting period should be as short as possible. The reading
period should be constant. A table for comparison should not be necessary.
The error relative to the frequency of the tone to be measured should be
displayed together with the polarity sign.
The basic idea of the invention is that the measuring period within which
the tone cycles are counted is preset proportionally to the period of the
fundamental of the tone to be measured. This presetting is performed in
steps by the same switches by which the filters for filtering out the
fundamental or an harmonic of the order 2.sup.n of the tone to be measured
are switched in. Using this method, with correct tuning of the instrument,
the measuring device supplies a frequency value which is equal for all
tones. This number may be chosen following the laws of economical circuit
design or of the calibration of the display. The invention provides that
the chosen constant reference number is subtracted from the digital
measuring value of the oscillation or half oscillation frequency and that
only the error against standard pitch together with the polarity sign is
displayed.
In order to firstly guarantee a sufficiently long display duration at very
short tones and secondly not to hold up the tuning process by the inherent
damping of the oscillation of a string at long tones, the invention
provides a constant reading duration after the counting process in a way
that a new counting process can be started only when the display has
vanished. In case that the oscillation fades down to zero during the
reference period, it is provided that the display vanishes instantly.
The invention is illustrated by way of a block diagram in the accompanying
drawing.
Referring now to the drawing, first the known features may be described.
The output voltage U.sub.M of a microphone or a musical instrument with
electrical tone signal is amplified in an amplifier to the tone frequency
voltage U.sub.T. The tone frequency voltage U.sub.T affected with
harmonics is cleaned of its harmonics in a filter in a way that guarantees
only one zero transit per half wave. The filtered tone frequency voltage
U.sub.F is converted in a Schmitt-trigger 1 into a digital signal S.sub.R.
The length of this rectangle is reduced in a mono-flop 1 to a value which
is shorter than the half cycle of the maximum frequency to be measured. A
second mono-flop 2 generates the short pulse for the other zero transit of
the tone frequency voltage using the rectangular signal inverted in an
inverter 1. The short pulses S.sub.K1 and S.sub.K2 are added in an OR-gate
1. The sum is called zero transit signal S.sub.N. The filtered tone
frequency voltage U.sub.F is also rectified in a rectifier, smoothed in a
smoothing device, and converted in a Schmitt-trigger 2 into a digital
starting signal S.sub.S. The starting signal S.sub.S sets a flip-flot
determining the oscillation period signal S.sub.D. A reference frequency
voltage source generates a voltage which is converted by a Schmitt-trigger
3 and a divider into the digital reference pulse signal S.sub.Ref. The
signal S.sub.Ref is supplied to a synchronizing device to which also the
oscillation period signal S.sub.D from th flip-flop is supplied. The
synchronizing device supplies the synchronized oscillation period signal
S.sub.DS.
The new features are described as follows. In the example of the block
diagram an electronic switch is provided for the filter selection. The
switch positions of the octave select switch and the 12-pole tone select
switch create the binary words B.sub.o and B.sub.T. The binary word
B.sub.o selects the octave, the binary word B.sub.T the relative pitch of
the tone to be tuned in the filter. The octave symbol as well as the tone
symbol are displayed after conversion in suitable code-converters 4 and 1.
In the block diagram, a retriggerable mono-flop is provided for the
generation of the oscillation existence signal S.sub.SE which meets the
requirement to create a digital long-time signal using the periodical zero
transit signal S.sub.N. According to the invention the time delay is made
dependent on the position of the octave select switch. This long-time
signal inverted by the inverter 2 is called decay signal S.sub.Ab. It
resets the flip-flop for the oscillation period signal S.sub.D.
In the example of the block diagram a two-step accuracy select switch E is
provided. This one changes the dual divider ratio in the divider being
connected to the output of the reference voltage source. The dual divider
ratio is adjusted additionally by an electronic switch in conformity with
the position of the octave select switch in a way that the frequency of
the reference signal S.sub.Ref is doubled per octave.
The reference signal S.sub.Ref is supplied via an AND-gate 1 to the
reference pulse counter as long as the wait signal S.sub.W inverted in an
inverter 3 is positive. The intermediate outputs of the reference pulse
counter supply the reference time byte B.sub.tRef to a comparator. The
reference pulse counter is enabled by the enable signal S.sub.F.
The second input of the comparator is the store reference time byte
b.sub.SRef which is supplied by a store. For the addressing of this store
the binary tone byte B.sub.TBin is used which is coded in a decoder 2. The
comparator supplies the counting period end signal S.sub.E when the two
types B.sub.tRef and B.sub.SRef are equal. The signal S.sub.E sets the
flip-flop for the wait signal S.sub.W. This flip-flop is reset by the
output S.sub.DS (synchronized oscillation period signal) of the
synchronizing device.
The two signals S.sub.W and S.sub.DS are combined to the counting time
signal S.sub.Z via an AND-gate 2. The wait signal S.sub.W is converted
into the read signal S.sub.L by a mono-flop 3. The read signal S.sub.L and
the counting time signal S.sub.Z are combined to the enable signal S.sub.F
via an OR-gate 2. Additionally, the read signal S.sub.L is supplied via an
inverter 4 together with the zero transit signal S.sub.N to the AND-gate
3.
The output of this AND-gate 3 is supplied to the input of the oscillation
counter. The intermediate outputs of this counter are the counting byte
B.sub.Z. From this value the constant value B.sub.ZRef is subtracted in a
subtraction device. The constant value B.sub.ZRef is dependent on the
position of the accuracy select switch which works preferably in dual
steps.
The oscillation difference B.sub.dZ is supplied to an absolute value
converter, which passes it to its output positively or negatively
dependent on the polarity sign. The absolute value B.sub.dZabs of the
oscillation difference is supplied to the display device via a decoder 3.
The display is enabled by the enable signal S.sub.F.
The polarity signal S.sub.V is supplied by the highest order bit of the
oscillation counter depending on the selection E of the accuracy. It is
suppled to the display device together with the read signal S.sub.L via an
AND-gate 4. Additionally to the proper measuring device the invention
provides a display for the oscillation existence. A photo diode LD is
lightened when the oscillation existence signal S.sub.SE is positive.
It is, of course, to be understood that the present invention is, by no
means, limited to the specific showing in the drawing, but also comprises
any modifications within the scope of the appended claims.
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Description  |
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