|
Claims  |
|
|
What is claimed and desired to be secured by United States Letters Patent
is:
1. An adjustable saddle bridge for a stringed musical instrument,
comprising:
a main body having an elongate, upwardly opening, slot positioned
transversely to and below the string, said slot having a pair of parallel
opposed vertical side surfaces;
an individual saddle insert assembly at each string, each having;
a single-string saddle piece supporting the string at the bridge;
a mounting block carrying the saddle piece in unlimited selective position
over an increment along the length of the string, said block having a
downward facing surface configured to rest upon the uppermost surface of
the main body; and
means carried by the mounting block to engage the sides of the slot to
secure the insert assembly to the main body.
2. For a stringed musical instrument having a bridge with a main body
having a substantially flat upwardly facing surface and an elongate
upwardly opening slot having a pair of facing vertical sides and
positioned transversely to and below the strings, the improvement of an
individual saddle insert assembly at each string, said insert asembly
comprising:
a single-string saddle piece carried upon a thin, flat tray member;
a saddle mounting block having
an upper portion with a substantially flat downwardly facing surface
resting upon the upwardly facing surface of the main bridge body,
an upwardly faing flat surface upon which the tray member may be
selectively positioned,
a part of the upper portion overhanging a portion of the tray-carrying
surface and forming therewith a slot accepting a portion of the tray
member therewithin, and
a projection extending downwardly form the upper portion of the mounting
block to snugly engage the sides of the slot; and
set screw means carried by the overhanging part, so that
the saddle piece may be selectively positioned for individual string
intonation by positioning the tray upon the block and retaining it in
selected position by the set screw means.
3. The improvement of claim 2, wherein:
the saddle piece has a thin, uppermost ridge upon which the string is
supported, and which is dimensioned for removal of material therefrom to
adjust the height of the string above instrument.
4. The improvement of claim 2 wherein:
the mounting block, saddle piece and tray are individually constructed of
material selected from among bone, ivory, metals, alloys of metals,
plastic materials, reinforced plastic materials, and graphitic materials.
5. The improvement of claim 2, the bridge slot being angled from
perpendicular to the strings, wherein:
the saddle piece has a thin string-supporting ridge uppermost thereon; and
the downward projection is angled with respect to the upper portion of the
mounting block so that the ridge of the saddle piece is perpendicular to
the string. |
|
|
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
Description  |
|
|
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field
The invention relates to improved bridges for stringed instruments, and
with more particularity to such bridges providing for individual
adjustment of the vibrating length of each string for intonation purposes.
2. State of the Art
Some existing bridges for stringed instruments have string supporting
saddles which can be selectively positioned longitudinally to vary the
string's intonation. With some, it is also possible to adjust the height
of the bridge body and saddles above the instrument for proper string
height for comfortable fretting. See U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,334,454, 3,605,545,
2,786,382 and 2,491,788. All of these disclosed devices are unnecessarily
complex and expensive. The disclosed prior art bridges must be
incorporated into the instrument as original equipment. They can be
incorporated into existing instruments only by removal and replacement of
the complete original bridge assemblies, which is very hazardous to the
instrument. Damage to the sound box is a real concern, and serious change
of acoustic properties of the instrument is almost certain. Manufacturers'
guarantees are generally rendered void by such alterations. Further, any
value the altered instrument might have had by virtue of collectability is
very seriously impaired.
Precise intonation has recently become of increased concern because the
vary sensitive sound and recording devices being employed require the
truer tones to be had only by very precise individual string intonation.
Clearly, the presently available devices do not meet the need for
upgrading existing instruments to meet these requirements.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
With the foregoing in mind, the disadvantages and shortcomings of prior art
adjustable intonation bridges are eliminated or substantially alleviated
in the present invention. An individual, separate saddle insert assembly
is provided for each string, each including a string contacting saddle
piece which may be adjusted in position upon the instrument bridge to
provide precise desired tone and pitch of the string by precise adjustment
of its vibrating length. Neither the instrument nor the bridge bodies are
altered in any way. It is only necessary to lift the original saddle from
its slot in the bridge body. Each saddle insert may then be installed
engaging the portion of the slot under its string.
Each saddle insert includes a saddle piece for the individual string, and a
mounting block upon which the saddle piece is clamped in selected
position. Preferably, the block rests upon the top of the bridge body, and
has a downstanding projection which snugly engages the portion of the
saddle slot beneath the string. The saddle piece is secured upstanding
from a thin plate tray, which rests upon a horizontal surface provided
upon the mounting block. An overhang above a portion of the tray has a
pair of set screws for clamping the tray to the block to hold the saddle
piece in selected position. The height of the string above the insttument
may be adjusted by removing material from the top of the string-contacting
ridge of the saddle piece. The mounting blocks are sized to provide
sufficient room in the bridge slot to adjust the saddle transversely to
the strings. Each mounting block may, if desired, include a piezo-electric
sound pickup device as often used with amplification and speaker systems.
It is therefore the principal object of the invention to provide an
economical device for conversion of instruments having fixed saddle
bridges into adjustable saddle bridges for individual string intonation,
without destruction or alteration of any part of the original instrument.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
In the drawings, which represent the best mode presently contemplated for
carrying out the invention,
FIG. 1 is a plan view of a fragment of a guitar including the sound chamber
thereof, showing saddle inserts in accordance with the invention, drawn to
a reduced scale,
FIG. 2 is a plan view of another fragment of the guitar of FIG. 1,
including the peg head thereof, drawn to the same scale,
FIG. 3 is a plan view of a fragment of the guitar of FIG. 1 showing the
bridge thereof with the saddle insert assemblies, drawn to substantially
full scale,
FIG. 4 is an elevation view of the fragment of FIG. 3, taken along line
4--4 thereof, showing the bridge partially cut away to partially show the
saddle inserts, drawn to the same scale,
FIG. 5 is a vertical sectional view taken along line 5--5 of FIG. 3, drawn
to an enlarged scale,
FIG. 6 is a fragment of the view of FIG. 5, drawn to a further enlarged
scale,
FIG. 7 is a top plan view of the fragment of FIG. 6, taken along line 7--7
thereof, drawn to the same scale,
FIG. 8 is a vertical sectional view taken along line 8--8 of FIG. 5, drawn
to the same scale, and
FIG. 9 is a perspective view of a saddle insert, including the saddle tray
with attached saddle piece and the mounting block, drawn to the scale of
FIG. 8.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENTS
A set of six saddle insert assemblies 10 is illustrated in the drawings,
installed upon a bridge of an acoustic guitar 11, for example. Guitar 11
comprises a resonating chamber or sound box 12 secured to an elongate neck
13. (FIGS. 1 & 2) Neck 13 carries a fret board 14 with individual frets
15. Each string 16 of the set of six is secured at one end 17 to one of
the pegs 18 on a peg head 19 on the end of neck 13 distal from sound box
12. The strings are held spaced apart by a notched bar 20 called a "guitar
nut", mounted transversely to neck 13. The other ends 21 of the set of
strings 16 are secured to a bridge 22, the body 23 of which is secured to
the upper surface 24 of the top plate 25 of sound box 12, usually by
gluing. A stiffener plate 26 may be provided, similarly secured to the
undersurface 27 of plate 25. String ends 21 are anchored by bridge pins
28, installed within bores 29 through the bridge body 23, top plate 25 and
stiffener 26. (FIGS. 3-9) The saddle insert assembly 10 has an upwardly
located saddle piece 30, which supports a string 16 upon an upper elongate
ridge 31.
Ridge 31, with the above-mentioned guitar nut 20, defines the total
vibrating length of each string 16. The vibrating length, along with the
string tension, unit mass and resilience characteristics of the string
material, determines the basic pitch and tone of the string. Relatively
small variations in string length are quite important for precise
intonation (pitch adjustment). Accordingly, the heavier, lower pitch,
strings are typically slightly longer than those of smaller diameter and
higher pitch, to achieve correct scale pitch. The saddles of most
instruments are positioned accordingly. Note the slightly angled direction
of saddle slot 32. (FIG. 3) The saddle inserts 10 provide for individual
adjustment of the position of each saddle piece 30 back and forth along
each string 16, for precise intonation, as indicated by arrows 33. (FIGS.
6, 7 & 9)
Each insert 10 comprises the saddle piece 30, secured to a tray plate 34,
and a mounting block 35. Upper portion 36 of block 35 provides an upper
flat horizontal surface 37 upon which saddle tray 34 rests, and a lower
such surface 38, upon which block 35 is supported upon the top surface 39
of bridge body 23. An overhanging portion 40 forms a slot 41 into which
tray end portion 42 loosely fits. An elongate downstanding projection 43
is sized to fit closely within saddle slot 32, extending to near the
bottom 32b thereof. Block 35 may be positioned transversely in slot 32 so
that each string 16 rests centrally upon saddle ridge 31, or at such other
location the musician may prefer.
For intonation, the musician slides each tray 34 along its slot 41 to
locate attached saddle ridge 31 along each string 16 to a selected
position for precise pitch and tone. A pair of set screws 44 in threaded
bores 45 through overhang 40 are then tightened to retain each tray 34 and
attached saddle piece 30 firmly in the selected position. Since bridge
slot 32 is typically angled from the transverse of strings 16, ridge 31 of
each saddle piece 30 is similarly angled. Because the angle is slight,
this has had no significant affect upon intonation. However, projection 43
may, for example, be constructed angled to upper portion 36, to maintain
the ridges 31 precisely perpendicular to strings 16. Saddle piece 30 is,
preferably, originally constructed to place the saddle ridge 31 somewhat
higher than desired above the instrument. The height of each saddle is
then adjusted by the musician for the fretting height of his individual
choice, by removing an appropriate amount of material from the top of
ridge 31. Easily worked material is utilized for saddle piece 30 to
facilitate this material removal. Pyrolitic graphite, cured carbon
reinforced resins, wood, and the traditional bone and ivory are all easily
worked by planing, sanding, or grinding and may also be preferred for
their tonal characterisitcs. However, the softer metal alloys, such as of
copper, aluminum and tin, are also satisfactory. The thin saddle tray 34
must normally be of harder alloy, for strength and dimensional stability.
As indicated in FIG. 8, a peizo-electric sound pickup device 46 may be
incorporated into each block 35, for use with amplification and speaker
systems.
The inventin may be embodied in other specific forms without departing form
the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The present embodiments
are therfore to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive, the
scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than
by the foregoing descrpiton, and all changes that come within the meaning
and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be
embraced therein.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|