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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF INVENTION
The present invention relates to an electromagnetic pickup device for a
stringed musical instrument and the like wherein a vibrated string of
magnetizable material disturbs the magnetic field of a permanent magnet
which induces an electromotive force in a coil for later amplification and
acoustic transduction.
In known electromagnetic pickups, such as those disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos.
2,896,491, 2,909,092, 2,968,204, 2,976,755, 3,236,930, 3,290,424,
3,535,968, 3,588,311, 4,026,178 and 4,133,243, a plurality of coil pole
pieces, which are in contact with a permanent magnet, each have an end
portion facing one string of a musical instrument. The disadvantages of
this type of pickup device is that the magnetically active area for
coacting with the strings is very small and the output of the device is
extremely sensitive to the position thereof relative to the strings.
In U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,657,461 and 4,050,341, pickup devices are disclosed
wherein a simple pole piece is used which is surrounded by a coil and has
insulating layers thereover. The disadvantages of these types of devices
is that although they are less position sensitive, the magnetically active
area is still small, resulting in weak signals for amplification. Such
devices of the past have also been complex to construct and require the
labor and material necessary to provide the individual pole pieces. Where
longitudinal bars have been provided, they have been limited to sizes to
fit internal of the windings of the coils of the pick up.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The main object of the present invention is to eliminate the disadvantage
of the prior art electromagnetic pickup devices, and to provide a simple
magnetically sensitive plastic magnet on top of the coil which is
sensitive to the vibrating strings and yet inexpensive and simple to
manufacture.
This and other objects of the present invention are obtained by the
electromagnetic pickup device according to the present invention, which
comprises a planar permanent magnet having one of its two main faces
exposed for facing the instrument strings during use and means mounted on
the other main surface and coactive with the planar magnet for generating
an electromotive force in response to a distortion of the magnetic field
of the planar magnet by the strings.
In a preferred embodiment the planar magnet comprises non-metallic
material, preferably Plastiform.sup.tm, which is magnetized throughout the
thickness thereof between the two main surfaces. Moreover, the use of a
Plastiform.sup.tm planar magnet is particularly advantageous since it is
extremely cost efficient and is composed of non-strategic materials.
In another preferred embodiment the means includes a coil wound around a
plastic coil form which has a central axially extending slot therein,
which in a preferred embodiment has a magnetizable core element therein in
contact with the other main surface of the planar magnet. The function of
the core is to favorably direct the magnet field into a "W" shape, causing
a large part of the magnetic flux to pass through the coil, thereby
producing the maximum possible electromagnetic force in the windings due
to the interaction between them and the vibrating strings, to obtain a
more effective utilization thereof.
The advantages of the present invention result from the unique
juxtaposition of the permanent magnet with respect to the pickup coil,
which has heretofore never been suggested or disclosed and which enables
the use of a thin planar permanent magnet, something that was not thought
to be acceptable to those skilled in the art.
The most important advantage of the device of the present invention is its
insensitivity to positioning during use. It is well known that when a
pickup device is to be installed in a guitar, selecting the correct
position of the pickup device with respect to distance from the bridge is
extremely critical. This results from the fact that the vibratory nodes
and antinodes on the strings are highly localized because of the nature of
a vibrating string, when the string is acoustically and mechanically
coupled with a resonant body such as a modern guitar body, the vibratory
nodes and antinodes associated with the various resonances are many and
complex.
The typical modern guitar pickup device, because of its inherent design
limitations, has a very small magnetically active area, usually a total of
0.166 square inches or less. Thus, moving the typical guitar pickup device
slightly with respect to the bridge of the guitar has a pronounced effect
upon the overtones that are seen by the magnetically active area of the
device. In fact, there is a possibility of locating the device at a
vibrationally dead area under the strings.
In the pickup device of the present invention, there is a much larger
magnetically active area due to its unique design, i.e., approximately
1.970 square inches. Because of this larger area and the large uniform
magnetic field generated thereby, the placement of the pickup device with
respect to the guitar bridge is much less critical and the possibility of
locating the pickup device at a vibrationally dead area under the strings
is remote. Such a large and uniform magnetic field has only been
heretofore made possible by elaborate and expensive systems of magnets and
pole pieces.
Another advantage of the present invention is the versatility it allows the
musician. Much of modern guitar playing involves "bending" of notes, which
is accomplished by the musicians by applying force on a string at any
location long the fingerboard in a direction perpendicular to the axis of
the string and parallel to the frets. The desirable effect of this
procedure is an increase of the tension on the string with a concomitant
change in pitch. However, with a typical pickup device, when the string is
forced away from its normal resting axis, the string goes out of alignment
with the magnetic field, resulting in less effective inductive coupling
between the string and the pickup device and therefore an undesirable
decreased output from the pickup device.
This effect is nonexistent with the pickup device of the present invention
because the magnetic field over the pickup device does not vary in the
area of interest perpendicular to the axis of the strings and parallel to
the frets.
Finally, an important advantage obtained by the present invention is the
purity of sound reproduction obtained thereby. In a typical guitar pickup
device the magnetic field strength can exceed 1,000 gauss, since a high
field strength is considered necessary to achieve the required level of
induced EMF in the pickup coil. This is necessitated in part by the
arrangement of the magnetic material within the core of the coil in the
prior art devices. As a result, the windings near the core of the coil are
affected more by the magnetic field associated with the pickup
device/string system than are the windings toward the outside of the coil.
The strong magnetic field over the typical pickup device in the vicinity of
a string can have the effect of damping certain vibrational overtones of
the string in the vicinity of the pickup device through the hysteresis
effect. This is undesirable, since the resulting note sounds out of tune.
In the present invention, the maximum field strength is much less, i.e., on
the order of 250 gauss. Therefore, the damping effect on the strings
associated with the device of the present invention is much less and notes
have a greater tendency to sound in tune. Moreover, the induced EMF is not
significantly reduced from the reduced field strength, due to the novel
arrangement of the planar permanent magnetic perpendicular to the axis of
the coil and superposed on the coil, which results in an effective
utilization of all of the windings in the coil without regard to the
distance of the winding from the core of the coil. The device of the
present invention therefore produces a greater induced EMF per unit of
magnetic field strength than any other previously available pickup device.
Although such novel feature or features believed to be characteristic of
the invention are pointed out in the claims, the invention and the manner
in which it may be carried out, may be further understood by reference to
the description following and the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a side view of one embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a top view of the embodiment of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a bottom view of the embodiment of FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a sectional view along line IV--IV of FIG. 2. FIG. 5 is a
sectional view along line V--V of FIG. 2.
FIG. 6 is a perspective view of the embodiment of FIG. 1 showing lines of
magnetic force.
FIG. 7 is a perspective view of a prior art device showing lines of
magnetic force.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Referring now to the figures in greater detail, where like reference
numbers denote like parts in the various figures.
In FIGS. 1-5, the pickup device of the present invention is shown, by way
of example, including planar permanent magnet 1 and the means including
elements 4-13 coactive therewith for producing an amplifier EMF in
response to a vibration of a musical instrument string.
The planar permanent magnet 1 has two main surfaces 2, 3, of which surface
2 faces the instrument strings 15 during use and is fully exposed thereto.
On surface 3, the aforementioned means are mounted by a suitable adhesive
5 or the like, such as an epoxy resin.
The means as shown includes a coil form 4 having an axially extending body
portion 8 around which coil 13 of conductive wire is wound, having leads
11 and 12 extending therefrom.
The coil form 4 also advantageously includes radially extending flange
portions 6 and 7, portion 6 acting to separate the coil 13 from planar
magnet 1. Since the coil form comprises insulating material, preferably
plastic, and is preferably an integral body, the portion 6 also acts to
insulate the coil winding 13 from the planar magnet 1.
It can be clearly seen from the figures that the plane of magnet 1 is
disposed perpendicular to the axis of coil 13 and that the perimetric
extent of the planar magnet 1 is such to at least completely overlay the
circumferential extent of the coil 13.
It is also preferably advantageous to provide the body portion 8 with an
axial slot 9 centrally located therein for receiving a core element 10a,
10b therein. While it has been found that favorable results can be
obtained without the core element, the core element has been found to
influence results in shaping of the magnetic field pattern above the
surface 2 of planar magnet 1 and in influencing the induced EMF in the
coil 13.
In a particularly advantageous embodiment, shown in FIGS. 3-5, the core
element comprises two steel bars 10a, 10b which abut against surface 3 at
one side and terminate at or before the end of cavity 9, preferably at the
middle thereof. The core elements 10a, 10b are held in place by a suitable
adhesive such as an epoxy resin.
In an example of the device of the present invention, magnet 1 is
approximately 2.625 inches long, 0.750 inches wide and 0.090 inches thick
and is composed of Plastiform.sup.tm magnetized through its thickness and
commercially available from the 3M Company. The coil form 4 is
approximately 2.600 inches long, 0.685 inches wide and 0.375 inches thick.
The slot 9 measures approximately 2.095 inches long, 0.187 inches wide and
0.375 inches thick. The core elements 10a, 10b each measures approximately
2.015 inches long, 0.085 inches wide (for a total width of 0.170 inches)
and 0.200 inches thick.
Referring now to FIGS. 6 and 7, the above described exemplary device
according to the present invention has a total magnetically active area,
as shown in FIG. 6, of approximately 1.970 square inches, compared to a
total of 0.166 square inches for pole pieces P in the typical prior art
device shown in FIG. 7.
Also clearly shown in FIGS. 6 and 7 is the difference between the magnetic
fields created by the two devices. The magnetic field lines F of the prior
art are concentrated over the individual pole pieces P so that the
resultant overall magnetic field is not uniform. In the device according
to the present invention, the magnetic field lines H extend along the
entire length of the magnet and are uniformly disposed, resulting in the
many advantages set forth hereinbefore.
The terms and expressions which are employed are used as terms of
description; it is recognized, though, that various modifications are
possible.
It is also understood the following claims are intended to cover all of the
generic and specific features of the invention herein described, and all
statements of the scope of the invention which, as a matter of language,
might fall therebetween.
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Description  |
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