|
Description  |
|
|
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electric stringed instrument, e.g., an
electric guitar or an electric piano, and more particularly to an electric
stringed instrument having an electromagnetic force producing unit, e.g.,
an electromagnetic driver for sustaining the vibration of a string or a
loudspeaker for outputting an amplified sound converted from an electrical
signal produced by the vibration of a string, and further substantially
causing no high frequency noise produced by so-called "magnetic feedback".
2. Description of the Prior Art
Generally, an electric stringed instrument, e.g., an electric guitar or an
electric piano, has plural strings and a transducer, i.e., a pickup for
converting the vibration of a string to an electrical signal. There are
two well-known types of pickups. One is an electromagnetic type of pickup
and the other is a piezoelectric type of pickup. Particularly, in a case
of an electric guitar, the electromagnetic type of pickup has been used
since the introduction of electric guitars, because by using the
electromagnetic type of pickup it is easy to obtain a sound characteristic
that emphasizes a medium sound region, by mounting the electromagnetic
type of pickup on a body of an electric guitar and processing the
resultant electrical signal.
In recent years, an attempt to use an electromagnetic transducer for
exciting a string has been made and has actually been put into practice.
This transducer utilizes an inverse principle of operation of an
electromagnetic pickup which converts the vibration of a string to an
electrical signal. Namely, an electrical signal detected by a pickup is
amplified by an amplifier, and the amplified signal is applied to an
electromagnetic driver, and thereby the electromagnetic driver emits
magnetic energy to a string. By the magnetic energy emitted from the
electromagnetic driver the string is self-excited, and thereby the
vibration of the string is sustained for a long time.
However, in order to excite a string through an electromagnetic driver, the
electromagnetic driver, i.e., an electromagnetic force producing unit,
must emit a strong magnetic force in the vicinity of the string.
Therefore, there is a problem that the magnetic field generated by the
electromagnetic driver causes a so-called magnetic feedback which is
introduced by a leakage of flux fed back from the electromagnetic driver
to an electromagnetic pickup. The magnetic feedback causes an induced
electromotive force of no use in the electromagnetic pickup, and thereby
causes noise, e.g., an oscillation in a frequency range from about 1,000
Hz to 20,000 Hz.
Several prior arts disclose devices for reducing the magnetic feedback
described above and sustaining the vibration of a string in relation to an
electric stringed instrument. For example, Japanese Patent Publication No.
52-151022 and Japanese Utility Model Publication No. 53-139836 (Both filed
by Roland Ltd.) disclose an electric guitar in which the strings of the
guitar are connected to an electrical driving circuit mounted within the
guitar, and when detecting the vibration of the strings at a pickup on the
guitar, a positive feedback current output from the circuit flows through
the strings as a part of the circuit, and so the strings in which the
positive feedback current is flowing vibrate in cooperation with a magnet
attached to a surface of the guitar. This type of guitar does not use an
electromagnetic driver that converts an electrical signal detected by a
pickup into a magnetic driving force utilizing a variation of magnetic
flux corresponding to the signal and drives the metal string by the
driving force. Thus, this type of guitar has the advantage of not
generating the magnetic feedback described above. However, the guitar
requires an external power supply to provide power for the self-driving
strings, and further it must have a strong magnet to drive the strings in
which the positive feedback current flows. The system also becomes large
since the strings must be connected to the circuit. Therefore, the type of
electric guitar described above needs to be designed as an exclusive
instrument, and consequentially it is not practical to manufacture it on a
commercial basis.
Another disclosure is described in Japanese Utility Model Publication No.
55-152597 (YAMAHA Ltd.). Although there is no description of magnetic
feedback described above, a pickup shown in the specification and the
drawings uses a light-emitting element and a light-intercepting element,
and thus, there is no need to consider the magnetic feedback described
above. However, this type of electric guitar does not use an
electromagnetic pickup as described above so that a tone generated from
this guitar is different from the tone of an electric guitar having a
commonly used electromagnetic pickup.
Furthermore, U.S. Pat. No. 4,941,388 (Hoover, et al.) discloses a
constitution that has an electromagnetic pickup and an electromagnetic
driver in order to sustain the vibration of strings of an electric guitar
without using the arrangement described above. In this constitution, an
unbalancing device for putting a magnetic balance between the
electromagnetic pickup and the electromagnetic driver out of balance is
used to reduce the magnetic feedback described above, and as a
particularly effective method, an embodiment using a shunting plate is
disclosed. An electric guitar having a device for reducing the magnetic
feedback by using the shunting plate is put into practical use and a
device by the name of "Sustaniac" is available on the market. However,
even if the shunting plate is used, a part of the magnetic feedback that
cannot be completely absorbed into the shunting plate remains. In order to
reduce the magnetic flux from the electromagnetic driver to the
electromagnetic pickup as much as possible, the design of the shunting
plate is greatly limited to precisely match the shunting plate to magnetic
characteristics and winding orientation of pole pieces of the
electromagnetic pickup and the electromagnetic driver, and further in this
type of guitar using the shunting plate, only a humbucking type of pickup
can be utilized.
Furthermore, in recent years an electric stringed instrument having an
amplifier and a loudspeaker in a body thereof has been proposed. In the
electric stringed instrument described above, the vibration of a string is
converted to an electric signal by an electromagnetic pickup, and the
electric signal is amplified by an amplifier and then the amplified signal
is output as a guitar sound from a loudspeaker. Since this type of
electric stringed instrument that has an amplifier and a loudspeaker in
its body can output enough sound level without using an external
amplifier, it is very portable in that it can be played anywhere.
Therefore, the electric stringed instrument described above is very
convenient for playing music or enjoying the sound of the instrument
easily. However, in such an application of the electric stringed
instrument to an electric guitar, a distance between a loudspeaker and an
electromagnetic pickup in a guitar body must be short because of a limited
absolute size of the guitar body, and magnetic flux emitted from a voice
coil of the loudspeaker in use easily penetrates the electromagnetic
pickup as well as a leakage flux emitted from an electromagnetic driver
described above, and thereby the magnetic feedback described above is
caused so that a sound output from the loudspeaker involves a high
frequency noise as described above.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The purpose of the present invention is to provide an electric stringed
instrument that solves such problems as described above and prevents a
generation of noise due to the magnetic feedback described above even if
arranging an electromagnetic driver or a loudspeaker as an electromagnetic
force producing unit in the neighborhood of an electromagnetic pickup.
According to the present invention an electric stringed instrument
comprises an electromagnetic pickup having a permanent magnet and a string
signal detecting coil wound around the permanent magnet and magnetically
combined with the permanent magnet, an electromagnetic force producing
means having a driving coil to produce magnetic force and being placed in
the neighborhood of the electromagnetic pickup, and an adjusting means
provided with a part of a current flowing in the driving coil of the
electromagnetic force producing means and disposed at a place magnetically
combined with the string signal detecting coil of the electromagnetic
pickup.
In the electric stringed instrument described above according to the
present invention, one induced electromotive force caused by magnetic flux
from the adjusting means and another induced electromotive forces caused
by magnetic flux from the driving coil negate each other in the string
signal detecting coil. Also, according to the present invention, the
adjusting means alters a tone color output from the electric stringed
instrument by causing induced electromotive forces to be produced by the
adjusting means in the string signal detecting coil.
Further, in the electric stringed instrument described above according to
the present invention, the electromagnetic force producing means is an
electromagnetic driver for sustaining the vibration of a string or a
loudspeaker for outputting an amplified sound through an amplifier that
amplifies an output signal from the electromagnetic pickup. Also, the
adjusting means is placed at a peripheral portion or an inside boundary
portion or an inner portion of the string signal detecting coil wound in
the shape of concentric circles.
Also, in the electric stringed instrument described above according to the
present invention, the adjusting means is an adjusting wire that is a
nearly straight-line conductive wire placed in the neighborhood of the
string signal detecting coil, or a thin-film conductor having a conductive
unit on a base unit formed on a film, and a conductive grounding unit
placed between the base unit and the string signal detecting coil.
Furthermore, in the electric stringed instrument described above according
to the present invention, the adjusting means is attached to, e.g., a
cover of the string signal detecting coil, a bobbin of the string signal
detecting coil, a fixture of the electromagnetic pickup, a body of the
electric stringed instrument or a pick-guard placed in the neighborhood of
the electromagnetic pickup.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The present invention will be more clearly understood from the description
as set forth below with reference to the accompanying drawings.
FIG. 1 is a general schematic arrangement of an electric guitar having a
device for sustaining the vibration of strings.
FIG. 2(a) and FIG. 2(b) are cross-sectional views of two types of
electromagnetic pickups; one is a so-called single coil type pickup in
FIG. 2(a) and the other is a so-called double coil type pickup in FIG.
2(b).
FIG. 3 is a schematic view of a basic constitution of an electric guitar
according to the present invention.
FIG. 4 is a schematic view for explaining magnetic feedback in a case that
a magnetic flux producing unit is an electromagnetic driver.
FIG. 5 is a schematic view for explaining magnetic feedback in a case that
a magnetic flux producing unit is a loudspeaker.
FIG. 6 is a schematic cross-sectional view of an embodiment according to
the present invention using an adjusting coil as adjusting means placed at
a peripheral portion of a string signal detecting coil wound in the shape
of concentric circles.
FIG. 7 is a schematic cross-sectional view of an embodiment according to
the present invention using an adjusting coil as adjusting means placed at
an inside boundary portion of a string signal detecting coil wound in the
shape of concentric circles.
FIG. 8 is a schematic cross-sectional view of an embodiment according to
the present invention using an adjusting coil as adjusting means placed at
an inner portion of a string signal detecting coil wound in the shape of
concentric circles.
FIG. 9 is a schematic cross-sectional view of an embodiment according to
the present invention using an adjusting coil as adjusting means placed at
a position apart from a peripheral portion of a string signal detecting
coil wound in the shape of concentric circles.
FIG. 10 is a schematic view of an embodiment according to the present
invention using an adjusting wire forming a nearly straight-line as
adjusting means placed in the neighborhood of a string signal detecting
coil.
FIG. 11 is a schematic cross-sectional view of an embodiment according to
the present invention using a thin-film conductor as adjusting means
adhered to a peripheral portion of a string signal detecting coil.
FIG. 12 is a schematic top view of an embodiment according to the present
invention using a thin-film conductor as adjusting means adhered on top of
a string signal detecting coil.
FIG. 13 is a schematic cross-sectional view of an embodiment according to
the present invention using a thin-film conductor and a conductive
grounding unit as adjusting means adhered to a peripheral portion of a
string signal detecting coil.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Before describing the preferred embodiments according to the present
invention, examples of the related art are provided with reference to
accompanying drawings (FIG. 1 and FIG. 2(a), (b)).
FIG. 1 shows an electric guitar that has a so-called "sustainer" G for
sustaining the vibration of a string 51. In FIG. 1, an electric guitar 1
has a body 2 and a neck 3 combined with the body 2. Frets 9 are placed
side by side on the surface of the neck 3 and a head 4 is shaped at an
elongated end portion of the neck 3. A plurality of pegs 5 (string
winders) are attached to the head 4 and each peg 5 has a structure for
winding up one end of the string 51 made of a metal conductive wire. The
other end of the string 51 is fixed at a tailpiece 7 attached to the
surface of the body 2. Reference numeral 8 is an electromagnetic pickup.
There are two types of typical pickups 8 as shown in FIG. 2(a) and FIG.
2(b).
FIG. 2(a) is a so-called single coil type pickup 50 that comprises a
plurality of pole pieces 52 made of a cylindrical magnetic body, i.e., a
permanent magnet respectively disposed corresponding to each string 51, a
coil 53 wound around the pole pieces 52, a bobbin 58 with the coil 53
wound therearound and a cover 59. However, the constitution described
above is nearly the same as that of an antenna so that there is a defect
that the single coil type pickup 50 easily detects induced extraneous
noise in addition to a single of the vibration of a string 51. To solve
the detect described above, a hum-bucking type electromagnetic pickup
disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,894,491 is proposed by Seth E. Lover.
FIG. 2(b) is a so-called double coil type pickup or a hum-bucking pickup 54
that is basically formed with a parallel arrangement of two single coil
type of pickups 50 and comprises plural pairs of pole pieces 56, 57
respectively disposed corresponding to each string 51, which are made of a
pair of magnetic bodies 56, 57, i.e., a ferromagnetic material, so as to
emit magnetic flux to each string 51 by using a single permanent magnet 55
combined magnetically with each pole piece 56, 57, coils 53 respectively
wound around each pole piece 56, 57, bobbins 58 and covers 59. In FIG.
2(b), the pole pieces 57 are formed in the shape of a screw so as to
enable adjustment of the sensitivity of detection of the vibration of each
string 51.
An outline of the principle of operation of an electromagnetic pickup 8
(50, 54) as described above is as follows. The vibration of a conductive
metal string 51 in the magnetic field formed by a permanent magnet 52 or
55 causes a change in magnetic reluctance in the neighborhood of the
electromagnetic pickup 8, and thereby the magnetic flux density inside of
the circumference of the coil 53 varies in response to the vibration of
the string 51 so that an electric signal as induced electromotive force is
produced in the electromagnetic pickup 8.
Again in FIG. 1, a signal detected at the electromagnetic pickup 8 is
applied to a guitar amplifier 20 and the guitar amplifier 20 outputs a
sound. On the other hand, the signal detected in the electromagnetic
pickup 8 is also applied to a sustainer G. The sustainer G comprises the
electromagnetic pickup 8, an amplifier 18 and an electromagnetic driver
17. A signal of the vibration of a string 51 detected at the
electromagnetic pickup 8 is applied to the amplifier 18 within the guitar
body 2 and the amplified signal is applied to an electromagnetic driver
17. The electromagnetic driver 17 basically uses the inverse of the
principle of the electromagnetic pickup 8 as described above. The electric
signal detected at the electromagnetic pickup 8 is amplified by the
amplifier 18, and provided to the electromagnetic driver 17 which has the
same structure as the electromagnetic pickup 8 shown in FIG. 2(a) or FIG.
2(b), and the electromagnetic driver 17 causes the string 51 to maintain
the vibration of the string 51 by providing the flux emitted from the
electromagnetic driver 17. Incidentally, the coil portion of the
electromagnetic driver 17 is not the same as the electromagnetic pickup 8
because the electromagnetic driver 17 requires a lot of power to emit
enough magnetic flux to excite a string 51. Accordingly the coil of the
electromagnetic driver 17 uses a copper wire with a diameter 0.3 mm which
is larger than that used in the electromagnetic pickup 8 and the wire is
wound for about 200 turns. Therefore, the electromagnetic driver 17 has
little electrical resistance, about 7 ohms, and low power-loss
characteristics.
However, as described above there is a problem that magnetic feedback is
produced in the arrangement described above.
FIG. 3 shows a schematic view of a basic constitution of an electric guitar
according to the present invention.
In FIG. 3, an electric stringed instrument, i.e., an electric guitar 1,
according to the present invention has an electromagnetic pickup 8 formed
with a permanent magnet and a string signal detecting coil wound around
the permanent magnet and magnetically combined with the permanent magnet,
and an electromagnetic driver 17 placed in the neighborhood of the
electromagnetic pickup 8, that is an electromagnetic force producing unit,
for sustaining the vibration of a string. Further, in the electric guitar
1 and adjusting unit, e.g., an adjusting coil 30 in FIG. 3, provided with
a part of a current flowing in a driving coil of the electromagnetic force
producing unit is disposed at a place magnetically combined with a string
signal detecting coil of the electromagnetic pickup 8.
The adjusting unit is provided to reduce magnetic feedback by causing one
induced electromotive force produced by magnetic flux from the adjusting
unit and another induced electromotive force produced by magnetic flux
from the driving coil of the electromagnetic driver 17 to negate each
other in the string signal 10 detecting coil of the electromagnetic pickup
8. Also, the adjusting unit alters a tone color output from the electric
stringed instrument by intentionally causing induced electromotive forces
in the string signal detecting coil of the electromagnetic pickup 8 by
providing magnetic flux emitted from the adjusting unit.
An electromagnetic driver 17 for sustaining the vibration of a string or a
loudspeaker for outputting an amplified sound through an amplifier 18 that
amplifies an output signal of the electromagnetic pickup 8 is used as the
electromagnetic force producing unit. For example, an adjusting coil or an
adjusting wire is used as the adjusting unit. An adjusting coil 30 is
placed at a peripheral portion or an inside boundary portion or an inner
portion of the string signal detecting coil of the electromagnetic pickup
8 wound in the shape of concentric circles, and also a nearly
straight-line conductive wire is placed in the neighborhood of the string
signal detecting coil. Further, a thin-film conductor having conductive
unit on a base unit formed on a film can be used as the adjusting unit.
The adjusting unit is attached to, e.g., a cover of the string signal
detecting coil, a bobbin of the string signal detecting coil, a fixture of
the electromagnetic pickup, a body of the electric stringed instrument or
a pick-guard placed in the neighborhood of the electromagnetic pickup.
According to the present invention, a signal from the electromagnetic
pickup 8 is amplified by the amplifier 18 and thereafter flows through a
driving coil of the electromagnetic force producing unit, e.g., the
electromagnetic driver 17 in FIG. 3 for sustaining the vibration of a
string. A part of a current flowing through the driving coil is fed back
to the adjusting unit, e.g., an adjusting coil 30 in FIG. 3, and flux
emitted from the adjusting coil 30 by the feedback operation described
above and flux emitted from the 10 electromagnetic driver 17 negate each
other in the electromagnetic pickup 8, and thereby high frequency noise is
substantially eliminated.
In the following, a first preferred embodiment of an electric stringed
instrument according to the present invention applied to an electric
guitar is described with reference to accompanying drawings FIG. 3 and
FIG. 4. Reference numeral 1 is an electric guitar. The electric guitar 1
has plural strings 51 and an electromagnetic pickup 8 is mounted on a body
2 of the electric guitar 1. The electromagnetic pickup 8 has a permanent
magnet 21 and a pole piece 22 made of ferromagnetic material magnetically
combined with the magnet 21. The pole piece 22 is wound with a string
signal detecting coil 23 for detecting the vibration of a string 51. The
string signal detecting coil 23 is wound with about 7,000 turns using an
extra fine wire with a diameter of 0.06 mm. An output end of the string
signal detecting coil 23 is provided to an amplifier 18 mounted in a
guitar body 2 and an output terminal of the amplifier 18 is applied to an
electromagnetic driver 17 as an electromagnetic force producing unit.
The electromagnetic driver 17 has a permanent magnet 25 and a pole piece 26
made of ferromagnetic material magnetically combined with the magnet 25.
The pole piece 26 is wound with a driving coil 27 for emitting an
electromagnetic energy to excite a string 51. The driving coil 27 is wound
with about 200 turns, e.g., using a thick copper wire with a diameter of
about 0.3 mm. Reference numeral 30 is an adjusting coil as an adjusting
unit. The adjusting coil 30 is wound around the pole piece 22 of the
electromagnetic pickup 8, e.g., using a thick copper wire with a diameter
of about 0.3 mm. One end of the adjusting coil 30 is connected with the
amplifier 18 through a variable resistor 31 to feed a part of a current
flowing into a driving coil 27 of the electromagnetic driver 17 to the
amplifier. Therefore, although the adjusting coil 30 is magnetically
combined with the string signal detecting coil 23 by a coefficient of
mutual inductance, the adjusting coil 30 and the string signal detecting
coil 23 are electrically isolated from each other.
Next, the operation of the embodiment described above is explained.
Magnetic flux formed by a permanent magnet 21 of an electromagnetic pickup
8 and a pole piece 22 magnetically combined with the magnet 21 is varied
by plucking a string 51, the varied flux changes a magnetic flux density
inside of the pole piece 22, and thereby an induced electromotive force is
produced in the string signal detecting coil 23, and the induced
electromotive force becomes a vibration signal of the string 51. The
vibration signal of the string 51 is applied to the amplifier 18 and
amplified by the amplifier 18, and thereafter the amplified signal is
provided to an electromagnetic driver 17. The electromagnetic driver 17
emits magnetic energy, that is magnetic flux, from the driving coil 27 of
the electromagnetic driver 17 so as to excite the string 51. Since the
magnetic energy is too strong, a part of the magnetic energy is fed back
to the electromagnetic pickup 8 so that it causes an extraneous driving
signal in the electromagnetic pickup 8, that is, the so-called magnetic
feedback as described above.
The adjusting coil 30 is arranged such that one induced electromotive force
caused by magnetic flux from the adjusting coil 30 and another induced
electromotive force caused by magnetic flux from the driving coil 27
negate each other in the string signal detecting coil 23. The adjusting
coil 30 is connected to the amplifier 18 through a variable resistor 31
that feeds a part of a current flowing in the electromagnetic driver 17 to
the adjusting coil 30 as a driving current for the adjusting coil 30 to
emit magnetic flux when an amplified signal is provided to the
electromagnetic driver 17. A polarity of magnetic flux emitted from the
adjusting coil 30 is reversed from the polarity of the flux emitted from
the electromagnetic driver 17 so that they negate each other in the
electromagnetic pickup 8, and thereby the generation of noise by the
magnetic feedback is prevented.
Also, the variable resistor 31 is used to properly adjust a quantity of
magnetic flux emitted from the adjusting coil 30 so as to match the
magnetic flux fed back from the electromagnetic driver 17 with the
magnetic flux emitted from the adjusting coil 30. The resistance value of
the variable resistor 31 is very small, for example about 0.1.omega.,
relative to that of the electromagnetic driver 17, for example about
7.omega., and so operation of the electromagnetic driver 17 as described
above is not substantially affected by provision of the variable resistor
31. Further, since the adjusting coil 30 uses a relatively thick copper
wire with a diameter of about 0.3 mm and the adjusting coil 30 is wound
with about only one turn or a few turns, thus induced inductance and a
phase shift between an applied voltage and an applied current provided to
the adjusting coil 30 do not increase, and the variation of the current is
coincident with that of magnetic flux emitted from the adjusting coil 30.
Next, a second embodiment of the present invention applied to a loudspeaker
as an electromagnetic unit is explained briefly with reference to FIG. 5.
The same portions in FIG. 5 as in the first embodiment described above
have the same numerals as the first embodiment so a description of those
portions is omitted. In FIG. 5, reference numeral 35 is a loudspeaker. The
loudspeaker 35 has a voice coil 36 and the voice coil 36 is connected to
an amplifier 18.
The amplifier 18 outputs an amplified string vibration signal to the voice
coil 18, and thereby the loudspeaker 35 outputs a music sound in
accordance with an oscillation frequency of a string 51. However, at the
same time, the voice coil 18 emits magnetic flux in the neighborhood of
the voice coil 18 and the magnetic flux emitted from the voice coil 18
causes the magnetic feedback in an electromagnetic pickup 8 as described
above. The remaining explanation of the second embodiment is the same that
of the first embodiment as described above, and thus the explanation is
omitted.
Next, several embodiments regarding an adjusting unit, which is a main part
of an electric stringed instrument according to the present invention, are
explained using examples applied to an electric guitar.
FIG. 6 shows a schematic cross-sectional view of an embodiment using an
adjusting coil 30 as an adjusting unit placed at a peripheral portion of a
string signal detecting coil 23 of an electromagnetic pickup 8 wound in
the shape of concentric circles. Reference numeral 40 is a bobbin around
which is wound the string signal detecting coil 23.
FIG. 7 is an embodiment of an adjusting coil 30 placed at an inside
boundary portion of a string signal detecting coil 23 wound in the shape
of concentric circles.
FIG. 8 is an embodiment of an adjusting coil 30 placed at an inner portion
of a string signal detecting coil 23.
FIG. 9 is an embodiment of an adjusting coil 30 placed at a position apart
from a peripheral portion of a string signal detecting coil 23.
FIG. 10 is an embodiment using an adjusting wire forming nearly a
straight-line as an adjusting unit placed in the neighborhood of a string
signal detecting coil 23.
FIG. 11 is an embodiment using a thin-film conductor 47 as an adjusting
unit having conductive materials 46 on a base unit 45 adhered to a
peripheral portion of a string signal detecting coil 23.
FIG. 12 is an embodiment of the thin-film conductor 47 adhered on top of an
electromagnetic pickup 8.
FIG. 13 is an embodiment of the thin-film conductor 47 described above
further having a conductive grounding unit 48 that reduces an
electrostatic coupling between the conductive unit 46 on a base unit 45
and the string signal detecting coil 23 so that a leakage signal from the
conductive unit 46 in which a large signal flows to the string signal
detecting coil 23 through a parasitic capacitance between them is greatly
reduced. The conductive grounding unit 48 may be arranged between the
adjusting coil 30 described above and the string signal detecting coil 23.
In the embodiments as described above, as an example, an electromagnetic
pickup that has a magnet and a pole piece magnetically combined with the
magnet is shown, however the electromagnetic pickup in the present
invention is not limited by the type of electromagnetic pickup shown in
the drawings and thus the electromagnetic pickup may be a type using a
pole piece that is itself made of a magnet. Also, a single coil type
pickup as shown in FIG. 2(a) is used as an example in the embodiments, but
a double coil type pickup as shown in FIG. 2(b) may be used in the
embodiments, and in the latter case an adjusting unit as described above
may be placed around either of string signal detecting coils or both of
the string signal detecting coils, and either case described above
functions well as the adjusting unit. Further, regarding a variable
resistor for adjusting an emission of magnetic flux, a fixed resistor may
be used instead of the variable resistor if the value of resistance is
found in advance or the variable resistor may be omitted in certain cases,
and also the variable resistor may be formed by a selecting a type of
resistor that is used by selecting one resistor out of plural resistors.
As described above, in an electric stringed instrument according to the
present invention a polarity of magnetic flux emitted from an adjusting
coil is in reverse polarity of flux emitted from an electromagnetic driver
so that both negate each other in an electromagnetic pickup, and thereby
the generation of high frequency noise caused by magnetic feedback is
prevented, and the electric stringed instrument can be comfortably used.
Further, since an adjusting unit has a relatively thick copper wire and an
adjusting coil is wound with about only one turn or a few turns so that an
increase of induced inductance is prevented, magnetic flux can be produced
without a phase lag and waveform distortion by an applied voltage and
current provided to the adjusting unit so as to prevent the generation of
a high frequency noise caused by magnetic feedback. Also, since the
adjusting coil unit is wound with about only one turn or a few turns, a
conventional pickup can be used by adding only a simple process and almost
without alteration of a size and a shape of the pickup. The variable
resistor to properly adjust a quantity of magnetic flux emitted from the
adjusting unit can easily compensate for a difference in a distance
between an electromagnetic force producing unit and an electromagnetic
pickup, a quantity of magnetic flux emitted from the electromagnetic force
producing unit and can compensate for each individual product. Further, a
value of resistance of the variable resistor is very small, for example
about 0.1.omega., relative to that of an electromagnetic driver, for
example about 7-8 ohms, so that operation of the electromagnetic driver is
not substantially affected by provision of the variable resistor.
Also, the adjusting unit formed with a thin-film conductor having a
conductive unit on a base unit formed on a film as shown in FIG. 11 and
FIG. 12 is simply adhered to an electromagnetic pickup and so can be
easily applied to an electromagnetic pickup, and further a conductive
grounding unit as shown in FIG. 13 reduces an electrostatic coupling
between the conductive unit on a base unit and the string signal detecting
coil.
Furthermore, although not shown in the accompanying drawings, an electric
guitar can be provided with a housing for an electromagnetic pickup, a
cover or a bobbin for a string signal detecting coil, and a mount for
attaching a pickup or a pick-guard, etc. An adjusting unit according to
the present invention is formed by using a coil with very few windings or
a wire with a diameter of about 0.3 mm, therefore the adjusting unit can
be cheaply and inconspicuously arranged.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|