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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A string vibration detecting device for an electronic stringed
instrument, comprising:
a pair of string support units arranged on a body unit at a certain
interval;
at least one stringed member stretched between the pair of string support
units;
a cylindrical magnetic member into which said string member is passed, one
end of which is mounted removably to at least one of said pair of string
support units while the other end portion thereof covers the outer
periphery of the string member, the cylindrical magnetic member having
such flexibility as to follow any movement of said string member; and
string vibration detecting means of the electromagnetic type positioned
operatively to face the cylindrical magnetic member for detecting movement
of the cylindrical magnetic member.
2. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 1, wherein said
cylindrical magnetic member is made by turning a wire rod of magnetic
material in a coil shape.
3. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 1, wherein said
cylindrical magnetic member is a tube made of flexible magnetic material.
4. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 1, wherein said
cylindrical string member is made of either magnetic or non-magnetic
material.
5. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 1, wherein said
magnetic member has an engaging portion at its one end to engage with at
east one of the string support units.
6. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 5, wherein at
least one of said string support units to which said cylindrical magnetic
member is attached has a through-hole through which said magnetic member
is passed, and an engaged portion which is engaged with the engaging
portion of one end of said cylindrical magnetic member as passed through
the through-hole.
7. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 6, wherein the
outer diameter of the engaged portion of said cylindrical magnetic member
is larger than the inner diameter of the through-hole.
8. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 1, wherein at
least one of the string support units to which said cylindrical magnetic
member is attached has a body detachably attached to said body unit, a
string supporting portion formed on the body to support one end of the
string member and allowing the magnetic member to be detachably attached
thereon, a string guide having a fixing portion for cooperating with the
string supporting portion to fix the one end of the string member, and a
string guide member having a string guide hole for guiding the string
member into the inner hole of the cylindrical magnetic member to cause the
string member to pass through the cylindrical magnetic member.
9. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 8, wherein said
string guide member is detachable from the body of said string support
unit.
10. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 8, wherein the
string guide hole is formed in the string guide member so as to face a
cylindrical magnetic member attaching position in the string supporting
position.
11. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 8, wherein said
string guide member has a facing surface facing the string supporting
portion and an opposing surface oriented in the opposite direction of the
facing surface, and the string guide hole is a through-hole passing
through the string guide member from its facing surface to its opposing
surface.
12. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 11, wherein the
inner diameter of the string guide hole in the string guide member becomes
gradually larger and larger in a direction from the facing surface to the
opposing surface of the string guide member.
13. The electronic stringed instrument according to claim 1, wherein, at
least one of said string support units to which said cylindrical magnetic
member is attached has a string supporting portion facing said cylindrical
magnetic member and supporting one end of said string member, and said
string vibration detecting means is attached to the string supporting
portion.
14. A string vibration detecting device for an electronic stringed
instrument, comprising:
a string support unit arranged on an instrument body unit;
at least one string member supported by said string support unit;
a cylindrical member for covering at least a portion of an outer surface of
said string member to follow vibrating movement of said string member, one
end portion of said cylindrical member being detachably mounted to said
string support unit, and said cylindrical member being made of such a
material that its movement can be detected electro-magnetically and
string vibration detecting means arranged on said instrument body unit in
operative relation with the cylindrical member, for electro-magnetically
detecting vibration of said cylindrical member. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electronic stringed instrument capable
of detecting vibrations of strings by means of electromagnetic pickups to
electrically or electronically create sounds responsive to the detected
vibrations, and particularly to an electric guitar or a guitar synthesizer
2. Description of the Related Art
Various kinds of musical instrument have been developed in the past and
remarkable progress is now being made relating particularly to electric or
electronic stringed instruments.
Electronic stringed instruments which magnetically detect vibrations of
strings and create musical sounds responsive to the detected vibrations
are disclosed in the following documents.
U.S. Patent Application No. 478,759 filed Feb. 12, 1990 (continuation of
U.S. Pat. No. 112,780 filed Oct. 22, 1987, now abandoned); U.S. Pat. No.
184,099 filed Apr. 20, 1988 (now U.S. Pat. No. 4,817,484); and U.S. Pat.
No. 256,398 filed Oct. 7, 1988, all of which applications have been
assigned to the assignee of the present invention, disclose a guitar
synthesizer/electronic guitar using an electromagnetic type pickup device
for magnetically detecting vibrations of strings, a pitch extracting
device for extracting cycles (or pitches) of the string vibrations from
pickup signals generated by the pickup device responsive to the detected
vibrations of strings, and a sound-level specifying device for specifying
sound levels responsive to pitches extracted by the pitch extracting
device.
Further, Japanese Utility Model Disclosure No. 63-51395, the assignee of
which is the same as that of the present invention, discloses an
electronic stringed instrument using an electromagnetic type pickup device
for magnetically detecting vibrations of strings, an envelope detecting
device for detecting envelope signals from those pickup signals which are
generated by the pickup device responsive to the vibrations of detected
strings, and a peak measuring device for measuring peaks of the envelope
signals detected by the envelope detecting device. The peak of envelope
signal represents the strength of force by which the string is flipped,
and it is used to control the volume of musical sounds created by a sound
source in response to the vibration of strings.
Furthermore, U.S. Pat. No. 4,723,468 discloses an electronic guitar/guitar
synthesizer using an electromagnetic type pickup device for detecting
vibrations of strings, and a fret-position detecting device for detecting
a string-pressing position on a finger board by using ultrasonic signal
generated by the pickup device represents the state of the vibrating
string, and it is used to specify start and finish of musical sounds
created by a sound source in response to the vibration of strings and to
control the volume of the musical sounds.
Still further, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,372,187, 4,760,767 and 4,630,520 disclose
an electronic guitar using an electromagnetic type pickup device for
magnetically detecting vibrations of strings to output pickup signals
responsive to the vibrations of detected strings, and a fret-position
detecting device for electrically detecting contact positions of a pressed
conductive string at which the pressed string contacts a plurality of
frets on a finger board. A pickup signal generated by the pickup device
represents the state of the vibrating string, and it is used to specify
start and finish of musical sounds created by a sound source in response
to the vibration of strings and to control the volume of the musical
sounds.
Still further, U.S. Pat. No. 4,765,219 discloses an electronic violin using
a pickup device for magnetically detecting vibrations of strings to
generate pickup signals responsive to the vibrations of detected strings.
In the case of the above-mentioned electronic stringed instruments,
material of strings must have magnetism to enable the electromagnetic type
pickup device to detect vibrations of strings as electric signals, and
steel, for example, is used as the material of strings. In the case of
these stringed instrument, therefore, non-magnetic strings, such as silk,
nylon, gut or the like, used in acoustic guitars and being capable of
creating unique tone colors cannot be used.
Japanese Utility Model Disclosure No. 61-38697 discloses a proposal to
solve the above described problem. In this proposal, a magnetic paint made
by mixing a magnetic powder such as iron oxide powder or mixture of the
magnetic powder with a painting agent such as synthetic resin paint, is
painted on a part of the nonmagnetic string. This proposal, however, does
not make it possible to use those non-magnetic strings, which are not
coated with the magnetic paint but which are commonly on the market, when
any of the strings coated with the magnetic paint is broken. This makes it
necessary for players to carry the strings coated with the magnetic paint
as spares. When the special strings are not be carried, it will take much
time to get a string coated with the magnetic paint. In addition, since
the magnetic paint is only partially applied to the string, the string
must be stretched on the body unit of the instrument in such a way that
its magnetic-paint-coated area is opposed to the corresponding pickup,
thereby making the strings stretching operation troublesome. Further, the
magnetic paint is likely to peel off.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention has been made in consideration of the above situation
and has its first object to provide an electronic stringed instrument
capable of using various kinds of strings (including those of the
non-magnetic type) easily available and commonly used while making the
strings stretching operation easier and enhancing the durability of the
strings.
A second object of the present invention is to allow easy maintenance of a
construction of the electronic stringed instrument, constructed to achieve
the above first object.
The first object of the present invention can be achieved by an electronic
stringed instrument comprising a pair of string support units arranged on
a body unit at a certain interval; at least one string member stretched
between the paired string support units; a cylindrical magnetic member
into which said string member is passed, one end of which is detachably
attached to at least one of said paired string support units while the
other end portion thereof covers the string member, and which has such
flexibility as can follow any movement of said string member; and a string
vibration detecting means of the electromagnetic type positioned to face
the magnetic member.
Even if non-magnetic strings made of such as nylon or the like are used in
this electronic stringed instrument, vibrations of the non-magnetic
strings produced by flipping the strings can be picked up as electric
signals by the electromagnetic type string vibration detecting means
through the flexible cylindrical magnetic members.
In the electronic stringed instrument of the present invention, in order to
achieve the second object at least one of the string support units
described above includes a body detachably attached to said body unit, a
string supporting portion formed on the body to support one end of the
string member and allowing the magnetic member to be detachably attached
thereon, a fixing portion for cooperating with the string supporting
portion to fix the one end of the string member, and a string guide member
having a string guide hole for guiding the string member into the inner
hole of the cylindrical magnetic member.
These and other objects as well as merits of the present invention will
become apparent from the following detailed description with reference to
the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a perspective view schematically showing the whole of an
electronic guitar as an electronic stringed instrument to which the
present invention is applied;
FIG. 2 is an enlarged plan view schematically showing a string support unit
of the electronic guitar and its vicinity, magnetic members and a string
vibration detecting means being mounted on the unit;
FIG. 3 is a perspective view schematically showing the string support unit
in a dismantled state;
FIG. 4 is a vertically-sectional view schematically showing the string
support unit;
FIG. 5 is a lower side view schematically showing the lower surface of the
string support unit;
FIG. 6 is a lower side view schematically showing the lower surface of a
string guide member attached to the string support unit;
FIG. 7 is a perspective view schematically showing a lower surface of a
string stopper member attached to one end of the string;
FIG. 8 is a sectional view schematically showing the manner of attaching
one end of the string to the string stopper member;
FIG. 9 is a perspective view schematically showing an electromagnetic
pickup as the string vibration detecting means; and
FIG. 10 is a vertically-sectional view schematically showing another
example of the cylindrical magnetic member with the string passed through
in the magnetic member.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Various embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail
with reference to the accompanying drawings.
FIG. 1 shows an electronic stringed instrument of the string trigger type
to which the present invention is applied.
The electronic stringed instrument shown in FIG. 1 has a guitar shape. Body
unit 16 comprises body 10, neck 12, and head 14, and 6 nylon strings 18
are stretched along neck 12 to be parallel to one another on body unit 16
between body 10 and head 14. One end of each of nylon strings 18 located
on the body side is passed through the inner hole of coil spring 20 which
is a cylindrical magnetic member having a flexibility and then fixed on
string support unit 24 detachably attached on body 10 at the center but
rear side thereof by means of a plurality of bolts 22. The other end of
each of nylon strings 18 located on the head side is fixed to its
corresponding string-fixing pin 28 of string-tension adjusting system 26
which is fixed on an upper surface of head 14 to serve as another string
support unit.
Various kinds of switches such as power source on-off switch 30, volume
switch 32. mute switch 34, pat operating switch 36, rhythm selection
switch 38 and sound color selection switch 40 are arranged on the upper
surface of body 10, while a circuit board, speaker 42 and the like are
housed in body 10. A finger board 46 with which a plurality of frets 44
are integrally formed is mounted on an upper surface of neck 12.
Body unit 16 is constructed by combining of a plurality of components
formed of synthetic resin respectively. In this embodiment, body 10 and
neck 12 with head 14 are formed independently of each other. Body 10 is
further constructed by upper and lower halves 48 and 50 which are formed
independently of each other. These halves 48 and 50 are combined together
by means of bolts (not shown). Neck 12 including head 14 is combined with
body 10 by means of bolts (not shown) after its base 54 which is opposite
to its head 14 is fitted into groove 52 on the top of body 10
substantially at the center but front side thereof.
Strings support unit 24 is made of synthetic resin, and string supporting
portion 56, string fixing portion 58, string-guide-member attaching
portion 62 for string guide member 60, and electromagnetic pickup
attaching portion 66 for electromagnetic pickup 64 as a string vibration
detecting means are formed on the upper surface of string support unit 24,
as shown in FIGS. 2 through 6. As shown in FIGS. 4 and 5, a circuit-board
attaching indentation 68 for the circuit board (not shown) is formed on
the lower surface of string support unit 24.
Upwardly projecting table 70 is formed on the upper surface of string
support unit 24 so as to correspond to indentation 68 of the lower surface
of support unit 24. String supporting portions 56 are formed on the upper
surface of string support unit 24 at the center of table 70 in the
longitudinal direction of body unit 16, and under which space 68 is
defined, so as to correspond to a plurality of strings 18. Each of string
supporting portions 56 has a horizontally extending through-hole 72. Coil
spring 20 is inserted into each of through-holes 72, and string 18 is
passed through the inner hole of coil spring 20.
String fixing portion 58 is located at the rear end of table 70, and is
constructed by string guides 74 formed on the upper surface of table 70 so
as to correspond to a plurality of strings 18, and string hooks 76
continuously formed on the rear end of string guides 74. String hooks 76
are formed on a rising face of a rear end step of table 70 and these
string hooks 76 prevent strings support unit 24 made of synthetic resin
from being deformed by tension of strings. Substantially arc-like guide
groove 78 is formed on the upper surface of each of string guides 74, and
it guides string 18, which horizontally extends from through-hole 72 of
each of string supporting portion 56, downward by about 90.degree.. String
hooks 76 are used as engaged portions with which one end of nylon strings
18 are engaged, and they are also used to be engaged with string stopper
members 80 fixed to those ends of nylon strings 18. Each string hook 76
has at its side surface vertically extending groove 82 (see FIG. 4). Nylon
string 18 guided downward by string guide 74 extends in groove 82, and one
end of string 18 is guided out from the lower end of groove 82 to extend
along the rear end portion of the upper surface of string support unit 24.
String stopper members 80 are made of synthetic resin and each of them is
formed to have a plan shape substantially like a running track, as shown
in FIG. 7. Groove 84 is formed on the lower surface of string stopper
member 80 at the center thereof to extend along its longitudinal
direction, and two through-holes 86 and 88 are formed in groove 84 to be
parallel to each other and to extend to the upper surface of string
stopper member 80.
FIG. 8 shows a manner of fixing one or base end of nylon string 18 to
string stopper member 80. The other or free end of nylon string 18 on
which no ball end 90 is formed is passed through hole 86 from groove 84
and then is bent like the letter "U" to pass through the other hole 88
from the upper surface of string stopper member 80. The free end of nylon
string 18 which has been passed through holes 86 and 88 of string stopper
member 80 in this manner is pulled relative to string stopper member 80
until its ball end 90 is located in groove 84 of string stopper member 80.
When free-end extending portion 92 of nylon string 18 is bent to extend in
a direction along groove 84 as shown by two-dot chain line in FIG. 8,
string stopper member 80 is reliably fixed to ball end 90 of nylon string
18 by friction.
Even if a case where nylon string 18 has no ball end 90, string stopper
member 80 can be reliably fixed to the base end of string 18 the same as
in the case where string 18 has ball end 90, provided that the extending
distance of a ball-free base end 94 of string 18 from through-hole 86 into
groove 84 is increased, and longextended ball-free end 94 is bent to
extend along the bottom of groove 84 as shown by two-dot chain line in
FIG. 8.
A knot made on ball-free base end 94 of string 18 can function in the same
as ball end 90.
Free-end extending portion 92 of each of nylon strings 18 is passed upward
through vertical groove 82 of hook 76 and is caused to extend along guide
groove 78 of string guide 74. At this time, if free-end extending portion
92 of nylon string 18 is horizontally pulled, string stopper member 80 is
pressed against curved rear end surface 96 of string hook 76 at its
arc-like one end surface with its groove 84 directed downward. As apparent
from the above description, pulling force applied to free-end extending
portion 92 of nylon string 18 is resisted by the frictional force of nylon
string 18 against guide groove 78 of string guide 74 and the lower end of
vertical groove 82 of string hook 76 and also by the engagement of string
stopper member 80 with curved rear end surface 96 of string hook 76. This
is preferable because the force of fixing slippery nylon string 18 can be
increased.
String guide member 60 serves to fix coil springs 20 through which nylon
strings 18 are passed and which are supported in through-holes 72 of
string supporting portions 56, and it also serves as a string guide for
guiding free-end extending portion 92 of each of nylon strings 18 into
corresponding coil springs 20. String guide member 60 is made of synthetic
resin to have a rectangular pole shape, and is detachably attached to
string-guide-member attaching portion 62, which is positioned on table 70
of string support unit 24 between string supporting portions 56 and string
fixing portion 58, by means of a plurality of bolts 98.
Bolts 98 are screwed into screw holes 102 in bosses 100 formed at
string-guide-member attaching portion 62 while bosses 100 are engaged with
spot facings 104 (see FIG. 6) on the lower surface of string guide member
60 to cause string guide member 60 to be positioned at string-guide-member
attaching portion 62.
String guide member 60 which has been attached to attaching portion 62 at
its predetermined position fixes coil springs 20 to their corresponding
string supporting portions 56 in such a way that front end surface (facing
surface) 104 of string guide member 60 which faces string supporting
portions 56 presses largediameter engaging portions 106 of coil springs
20, which are formed at the projecting ends of coil springs 20 projected
from the string-fixing-side ends of through-holes 72 of string supporting
portions 56, against the rear end surfaces of string supporting portions
56, as shown in FIG. 4. String guide member 60 is provided with a
plurality of string guide holes 108 so as to be aligned with the center
lines of coil springs 20 which are passed through through-holes 72 of
string supporting portions 56 when string guide member 60 is attached on
corresponding attaching portions 62. Each of string guide holes 108 passes
through string guide member 60 from front end surface (facing surface) 104
to rear end surface (opposing surface) 110, and it is tapered to have a
large opening at rear end surface 110 the diameter of which is larger than
that of nylon string 18 and a small opening at front end surface 104 the
diameter of which is substantially the same as that of nylon string 18.
When free-end extending portion 92 of each of nylon strings 18 extending
from guide grooves 78 of string guides 74 of string fixing portion 58 is
inserted into string guide hole 108 of string guide member 60 from the
rear-end-surface side opening thereof, it can be quickly and easily
introduced into the inner hole of coil spring 20, although the inner hole
of coil spring 20 is extremely small in diameter, because string guide
hole 108 is tapered as described above. Free-end extending portion 92 of
each of nylon strings 18 passing through coil springs 20 extends toward
head 14 on finger board 46 of neck 12, and it is connected to its
corresponding string-fixing pin 28 of string-tension adjusting system 26
on head 14. The tension of each of strings 18 stretched between string
support unit 24 on body 10 of body unit 16 and system 26 as another string
support unit on head 14 can be adjusted by string-tension adjusting system
26 to create a desired musical interval.
Each of electromagnetic pickups 64 includes holder 114 having a plurality
of output terminals 112 projecting downward from the lower surface of
holder 114, iron core 116 attached to the upper surface of holder 114, and
coil bobbin 118 on which coil 117 is wound and which is mounted on iron
core 116, as shown in detail in FIG. 9. A plurality of attachment holes
120 are formed in table 70 of string support unit 24 at
electromagnetic-pickup attaching portion 66 so as to face a plurality of
coil springs 20 on the plurality of strings 18 stretched between string
support unit 24 and string tension adjusting system 26 on body unit 16.
Each of holes 120 is a stepped one having large-diameter portion 122
opened at the lower surface of string support unit 24 and small-diameter
portion 124 opened at the upper surface thereof, as shown in FIGS. 4 and
5. Each of electromagnetic pickups 64 is fitted into hole 120 from the
lower surface side of string support unit 24 with its electromagnet, which
consist of iron core 116 and coil bobbin 118, being positioned in upper
small-diameter portion 124 while holder 114 is positioned in lower
large-diameter portion 122. Since electromagnetic pickups 64 are attached
in a predetermined pattern on the circuit board (not shown) which is
housed in indentation 68 of the lower surface of string support unit 24
(see FIG. 5), electromagnetic pickups 64 are automatically fitted into
corresponding holes 120 when the circuit board is attached in indentation
68.
When vibrations of coil springs 20 caused by vibrations of flipped nylon
strings 18 change the strength of magnetic fluxes generated from
corresponding electromagnets of electromagnetic pickups 64, induced
electric potentials are caused by the change of the magnetic fluxes and
these potentials are detected as electric signals representing the
vibrations of strings 18. The circuit board (not shown) has electronic
parts for outputting the electric signals, which have voltage levels
larger than the predetermined value, as string triggers, to a musical
sound generating circuit as a sound source housed in body 10 to create
musical sound signals, when voltage levels of these electric signals
generated from electromagnetic pickups 64 are larger than a predetermined
value.
It should be understood that the above-described embodiment is intended
only to explain the present invention and that the present invention is
not limited to this embodiment. It should be understood therefore that
various changes and modifications can be made without departing from the
spirit and scope of the present invention.
For example, electromagnetic pickups 64 may be arranged directly on the
upper surface of body 10 of body unit 16.
Further, other non-magnetic strings such as ones made of silk, gut and the
like may be used instead of the nylon string, and magnetic strings such as
ones made of steel and the like can be used, as a matter of course.
Furthermore, a cylindrical magnetic tube 130 made by magnetic material,
which is a mixture of flexible plastics or rubber and magnetic powder, may
be used in stead of coil spring 20, as shown in FIG. 10. Each of magnetic
tubes 130 also has large-diameter portion 132 at one end thereof.
Still further, the present invention may be applied to electronic stringed
instruments of the pitch pickup and ultrasonic types.
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Description  |
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