US3054855A - Audiometer - Google Patents

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US3054855A
US3054855A US664863A US66486357A US3054855A US 3054855 A US3054855 A US 3054855A US 664863 A US664863 A US 664863A US 66486357 A US66486357 A US 66486357A US 3054855 A US3054855 A US 3054855A
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/12Audiometering

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  • This invention relates to improvements in the art of audiometers and relates more specifically to a portable audiometer of the sweep-frequency type which employs an electrical circuit having a phase-shift oscillator including a frequency determining phase shifting network, audio signal attenuator means, automatic impedance matching network for each step of audio frequency of output signal, and a variable resistive calibrating means all energized by a circuit comprising a full wave rectifier joined by a double filter section to an output voltage regulation tube.
  • a phase-shift oscillator including a frequency determining phase shifting network, audio signal attenuator means, automatic impedance matching network for each step of audio frequency of output signal, and a variable resistive calibrating means all energized by a circuit comprising a full wave rectifier joined by a double filter section to an output voltage regulation tube.
  • a satisfactory audiometer must enable the physician to accurately and satisfactorily measure the hearing sensitivity and acuity of an individual patient over the principal frequency range of audible sound.
  • the frequency range which is important for hearing, and in which the range of hearing sensitivity is greatest lies between substantially 100 and 8000 cycles per second, and an audiometer for determining hearing impairments of deafened persons should be able to measure eighty percent loss of hearing for this range of frequency.
  • a satisfactory audiometer should be able to measure steps of audible or sound frequency within the testing range above a pure tone and the intensity of the tone should be accurately measurable.
  • a change of sound intensity by one decibel is substantially the minimum change detectible by the human ear.
  • the improvement of this invention over the prior art resides in the design of the new circuit configuration, the employment of a minimum of conventional tube circuit components, employment of a one tube phase-shift oscillator, means to vary the step frequency of the oscillator, automatic impedance matching means and means to quickly and reliably calibrate the device; a full-Wave rectifier power circuit properly filtered and controlled by a linear type of voltage regulator tube, the output of which energizes a phase-shift oscillator which in turn is coupled by a low impedance matching transformer and network selectively and variably coupled to a ladder type of sensitivity attenuator calibrated in decibels; capability of the device to be used selectively with air conduction or bone conduction receivers incorporated in an economical, easy to manufacture, and portable hearing testing device which produces reliable, stable, and critical end results in the examining and diagnosing of the impaired hearing of individual patients by a physician.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective exterior view of the housing enclosing the circuit and control means of instant device
  • FIG. 2 is a circuit diagram of the audiometer.
  • FIG. 1 shows a suitable housing for the apparatus comprising a portable cabinet 20 having a front panel 21 on which are mounted a power switch 22 pilot or telltale light assembly 23, frequency step control dial 24, audio signal attenuator or intensity dial 25 graduated in decibels, oscillator energizing switch 26 and selective earphone switch 27.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates the novel circuitry configuration of the present invention which is energized by an A.-C. plugin full-wave rectifier power unit consisting of a shielded power transformer 12, lead and plug-in 83 and complementary rectifiers 15 and '16; filter circuit comprising condensers 18 and 19, resistors 28 and 29 are operably connected by leads 32 and 84 to voltage regulator tube 30 and ground 31.
  • the primary winding of power transformer 12 consists of inductive coupling 12a with proper shielding and grounding as shown.
  • Rectifiers 15 and 16 and center-tapped lead 17 are operably connected to secondary inductive coupling 13, as shown, to obtain a fullwave form of current supply.
  • Rectifiers 15 and 16 may be of the selenium or other suitable type which require no filament voltage to energize them, are economical in cost, and occupy little space.
  • Secondary winding or inductive coupling 13a furnishes A.-C. current to energize pilot or telltale light 14 and furnish filament voltage to pentode tube 47.
  • the current and output voltage of the power unit is unidirectional containing a minimum of ripple voltage approximating a dependable A.-C.
  • phase-shift oscillator network A which is inductively coupled by transformer 35 to resistors 36 and 37 and connected by variable switch means 25 through resisbor 39 to signal attenuator network B and conductive receivers or earphones 81 and 82.
  • the output of VR (voltage regulator) tube 30 is operably connected by lead 34, as shown, through switch means 26 and resistor means 40 to lead 41 and primary winding means of shielded signal output transformer 35 connected by lead 83 to anode 51 of pentode tube 47 as plate voltage.
  • the fixed bias of cathode 48 of tube 47 is obtained by common lead connection 46 connecting in parallel circuit arrangement resistance 44 and condenser 45 between electrode means 48 and ground connection 42.
  • the frequency of audio signal output of oscillator A is varied in steps of fre quency by condensers C C and C and resistors R R and R having selected values as given in the following table:
  • phaseshift oscillator means A is particularly stable and suitable for operation at fixed frequency steps and probably represents the simplest satisfactory audio oscillator for use with an audiometer.
  • circuitry orientation of block diagrams b, c, d, e, f and g is as shown in enlarged block diagram a, which shows the resistance capacitance phaseshifting network comprising resistors R R and R and condensors C C and C
  • Each step of frequency of oscillator A has a separate network as designated by dotted block diagrams a, b, c, d, e, 1 and g in which each block diagram is selectively connected by manually operated and mechanically ganged switches as multi-decked switches comprising switch means 24a and 2412 connected to plate 51 and grid 49 of tube 47, as shown.
  • Grid 50 of tube 47 is operably connected by condenser 43 to ground terminal point 42.
  • Electronic tubes 30 and 47 are shielded to attenuate or eliminate radiation, hum, and noise pickup arising from causes external to the tubes which act either upon the tubes or upon the components of the circuit.
  • the output of oscillator network A is inductively coupled (to insure safety of patient from current shock) by transformer 35 to voltage divider and impedance matching circuit C comprising ground connection 38, resistances 36-, 37, 39, attenuator B and R
  • Each value of variable resistance R is manually preselected by switch 240 mechanically ganged to switches 24a and 24b.
  • Output transformer 35 inductively couples electrically the output signal of tube 47 to variable switch means 25 which may be selectively connected to the various sections of attenuator network B to selectively vary in decibel units the intensity of the audio signal to switch 27 which selectively connects the audio signal to receivers 81 and 82 during an auditory test for impairment of human hearing.
  • the circuit of this invention has a variable low impedance termination to effect broad-band response in audio signal output of transformer 35 to obtain optimum impedance match of output transformer 35 to attenuator B.
  • Transformer 35 may be of a shielded inexpensive type.
  • Variable resistances R and R are sub-miniature potentiometers and provide means for accurate and rapid calibration of frequency and threshold audio signal levels whereby an optimum impedance match of signal between networks A, B, and resistors 36, 37 and 39 is reflected to plate 51 of oscillator tube 47 for each step of frequency of the audio frequency signal.
  • Resistances 36 and 37 are part of a voltage divider and impedance matching network constituting resistances 36, 37, 39, R and attenuator B.
  • R consists of a plurality of step resistances, each of which are a sub-miniature potentiometer.
  • R is present in the calibration procedure to establish the threshold level for each frequency and manually varied by switch 240 for proper impedance match of coupling of oscillator A to attenuator network B for each frequency step of signal output of oscillator A by switch 24c being mechanically ganged to switch means 24a and 2417 as multideck switch 24 to insure that R, is preset in the calibration procedure to establish the threshold level for each frequency and manually and selectively varied for each proper threshold frequency level of signal without afiecting the matching of transformer 35 in the circuit.
  • the otentiometers R act as isolators between the load resistors 36, 37 and the attenuator network B and maintain stability of the oscillations as well as establishing levels above threshold of hearing.
  • resistances 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66 and 67 may have an ohmic value of 5.1 ohms; resistances 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79 and 80 may have an ohmic value of 15 ohms; condenser 43 has a capacitor value of 4 mfd.; resistance 44 has a resistive value of 220 ohms; condenser 45 has a capacitator value of 25 mfd.
  • resistor 36 has an ohmic value of 4.7 ohms
  • resistor 37 has an ohmic value of 4.7 ohms
  • resistor 39 may have an ohmic value of 2700 ohms
  • condensers 18 and 19 may each have a capacitator value of 40 mfd.
  • Audio signal receivers 81 and 82 may be either of the bone conducting or air conducting type.
  • Switches 24a, 24b and 240 are mechanically ganged together for manual operation with dial 24 shown in FIG. 1.
  • the aforementioned impedance matching circuit and rectifier circuit are shielded and grounded, as shown in FIG. 2, to reduce the harmful effect of external hum or interference in audio receivers 81 and 82.
  • An audiometer comprising energizing means, phase shift oscillator means connected to the output of said energizing means and including a plurality of frequency determining network circuits, each said network circuit having a variable adjusting means and variable switch means for selectively connecting a frequency determining network to said oscillator, audio transformer means connected to the oscillator means, a plurality of impedance matching network means selectively connected to the output of said transformer means including variable resistive adjusting means, a voltage divider means, and step attenuating resistive network means, switch means intercon meeting said frequency determining and impedance matching networks to selectively connect the necessary impedance matching network with a selected frequency determining network, said voltage divider means including series circuit means for interconnecting said attenuator means to said transformer output for substantially isolating varying attenuator load reflections from said oscillator transformer output, and earphone means connected to the output of said attenuation means for determining the hearing frequency of partially deaf individuals.
  • An audiometer for determining the hearing impairments of personnel comprising an energizing circuit, a phase-shift oscillator circuit including a separate frequency determining circuit for each frequency and having an audio signal output, said oscillator circuit being selectively and operably connected to the output of said energizing circuit, variable impedance matching means inductively coupled by transformer output means to the output of said oscillator circuit, adjusting means included in each frequency determining circuit for the oscillator circuit, said variable impedance matching means cooperating by mechanical coupling with said adjusting means of said oscillator circuit, a plurality of conductive earphone receivers, variable resistive type attenuation circuit means connecting said variable impedance means to said receivers, voltage divider means including series circuit means for interconnecting said attenuator circuit means to said transformer output for substantially isolating varying attenuator load reflections from said oscillator circuit and switch means selectively cooperating with said attenuator means to vary the intensity of said audio signal to said conductive earphone receivers.
  • An audiometer comprising an energizing circuit, phase-shift oscillator means including pentode tube means with RC network circuit means providing a plurality of variable frequency steps connected between the input electrode means and output electrode means of said pentode tube means, said network permitting energy feedback between the anode and gride terminals of said tube, said oscillation circuit being selectively and operably connected to the output of said energizing circuit, variable impedance matching means inductively coupled by transformer output means to the output of said oscillator circuit, a first adjusting means included in said RC network for adjusting the oscillator circuit, a second adjusting means in the impedance matching circuit being mechanically and selectively coupled to first adjusting means included in said RC network of said oscillator circuit, a plurality of conductive earphone receivers having selective switch means, variable resistive attenuation circuit means, voltage divider means including series circuit means for interconnecting said attenuator circuit means to said transformer output for substantially isolating varying attenuator load reflections from said oscillator
  • An audiometer comprising an energizing circuit, a phase-shift oscillator including pentode tube means hav ing connected thereto resistive-capacitive network circuit means comprising a plurality of frequency determining circuits selectively connected between the cathode electrode means and anode electrode means of said pentode tube means, said network permitting energy feedback be tween anode and grid terminals of said tube means in a predetermined phase relationship at the frequency of oscillation, said oscillator circuit being selectively and operably connected to the output of said energizing circuit, a first variable resistive adjusting means included in each of said frequency determining circuits selectively connected to said oscillator circuit, variable impedance matching network circuit means including a second variable resistive adjusting means, audio transformer coupled output means inductively connecting said impedance matching network to the output of said oscillator circuit means, variable resistance attenuation circuit means, voltage divider means including series circuit means for interconnecting said attenuator circuit means to said transformer coupled output means for substantially isolating

Description

Sept. 18, 1962 A. HYMAN 3,054,855
AUDIOMETER Filed June 10, 1957 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Fig. 1
I N V EN TOR. Abraham H man A. HYMAN AUDIOMETER Sept. 18, 1962 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Filed June 10, 1957 INVENTOR. AZraZm A man BYW Patented Sept. 18, 1952 f u I rate 1 3,054,855 AUDIGMETER Abraham Hyman, Queens Village, N.Y. (142 Claudy Lane, New Hyde Park, N .Y.) Filed June 10, 1957, Ser. No. 664,863 4 Claims. (Cl. 1791) (Granted under Title 35, US. Code (1952), sec. 266) The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government for governmental purposes without the payment of any royalty thereon.
This invention relates to improvements in the art of audiometers and relates more specifically to a portable audiometer of the sweep-frequency type which employs an electrical circuit having a phase-shift oscillator including a frequency determining phase shifting network, audio signal attenuator means, automatic impedance matching network for each step of audio frequency of output signal, and a variable resistive calibrating means all energized by a circuit comprising a full wave rectifier joined by a double filter section to an output voltage regulation tube.
A satisfactory audiometer must enable the physician to accurately and satisfactorily measure the hearing sensitivity and acuity of an individual patient over the principal frequency range of audible sound. The frequency range which is important for hearing, and in which the range of hearing sensitivity is greatest lies between substantially 100 and 8000 cycles per second, and an audiometer for determining hearing impairments of deafened persons should be able to measure eighty percent loss of hearing for this range of frequency. In addition, a satisfactory audiometer should be able to measure steps of audible or sound frequency within the testing range above a pure tone and the intensity of the tone should be accurately measurable. A change of sound intensity by one decibel is substantially the minimum change detectible by the human ear. However, because of the uncertainty of judgment of an average individual, one decibel (unit of hearing loss) change in sound intensity is of no great significance. However, for most practical purposes in testing the hearing of a deafened individual, it is sufiicient to test the individuals hearing with an audiometer capable of producing good tones at frequency steps of 250, 500, 1000, 2,000, 3000, 4000, and 7000 cycles per second. However, pure tones at frequency steps which are an octave apart and extend over a range from 128 to 8192 cycles per second and which are capable of determining ones hearing ability in steps of five decibels may be used if desired.
The improvement of this invention over the prior art resides in the design of the new circuit configuration, the employment of a minimum of conventional tube circuit components, employment of a one tube phase-shift oscillator, means to vary the step frequency of the oscillator, automatic impedance matching means and means to quickly and reliably calibrate the device; a full-Wave rectifier power circuit properly filtered and controlled by a linear type of voltage regulator tube, the output of which energizes a phase-shift oscillator which in turn is coupled by a low impedance matching transformer and network selectively and variably coupled to a ladder type of sensitivity attenuator calibrated in decibels; capability of the device to be used selectively with air conduction or bone conduction receivers incorporated in an economical, easy to manufacture, and portable hearing testing device which produces reliable, stable, and critical end results in the examining and diagnosing of the impaired hearing of individual patients by a physician.
It is a primary object of this invention to provide an audiometer embodying a phase-shift oscillator including a frequency determining phase-shift network suitable for diagnostic and screening purposes which may be 2 quickly and accurately attenuated within an audio threshold at a predetermined frequency by a multiple choice of values in a fixed calibrating circuit.
It is another object of this invention to provide a method of comparing the relative hearing acuity of a patient before and after being fitted with a hearing aid device under the same external conditions.
It is a still further object of this invention to provide an audiometer having excellent stability and wave shape.
It is another object of this invention to provide an audiometer of dependable, simple, and efiicient design having a unidirectional full-wave rectification means, voltage control means, and a stable one tube variable oscillator means which may be light, portable, and easy to manufacture at an economical cost.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a novel arrangement of network components and threshold level resistors on multi-deck switches for efiicient manufacture and utilization of space.
It is another object of this invention to provide a low impedance termination of the oscillator output circuit while the frequency of the oscillator is varied over a broad frequency range by termination of ganged voltage dividers of the attenuator at various frequency and audio threshold levels without substantially varying the inductive coupling during the attenuation of the phase-shift oscillator and the intensity of audio threshold in decibels at a given frequency.
The foregoing and other objects of the invention will be best understood from the following description of an exemplification thereof, reference being bad to the accompanying drawings, wherein FIG. 1 is a perspective exterior view of the housing enclosing the circuit and control means of instant device; and
FIG. 2 is a circuit diagram of the audiometer.
FIG. 1 shows a suitable housing for the apparatus comprising a portable cabinet 20 having a front panel 21 on which are mounted a power switch 22 pilot or telltale light assembly 23, frequency step control dial 24, audio signal attenuator or intensity dial 25 graduated in decibels, oscillator energizing switch 26 and selective earphone switch 27.
FIG. 2 illustrates the novel circuitry configuration of the present invention which is energized by an A.-C. plugin full-wave rectifier power unit consisting of a shielded power transformer 12, lead and plug-in 83 and complementary rectifiers 15 and '16; filter circuit comprising condensers 18 and 19, resistors 28 and 29 are operably connected by leads 32 and 84 to voltage regulator tube 30 and ground 31. The primary winding of power transformer 12 consists of inductive coupling 12a with proper shielding and grounding as shown.
Member 11 denotes a safety fuse and member 22 an onand-olf switch or circuit closing device. Rectifiers 15 and 16 and center-tapped lead 17 are operably connected to secondary inductive coupling 13, as shown, to obtain a fullwave form of current supply. Rectifiers 15 and 16 may be of the selenium or other suitable type which require no filament voltage to energize them, are economical in cost, and occupy little space. Secondary winding or inductive coupling 13a furnishes A.-C. current to energize pilot or telltale light 14 and furnish filament voltage to pentode tube 47. The current and output voltage of the power unit is unidirectional containing a minimum of ripple voltage approximating a dependable A.-C. current supply with a substantial constant voltage potential to the phase-shift oscillator network A which is inductively coupled by transformer 35 to resistors 36 and 37 and connected by variable switch means 25 through resisbor 39 to signal attenuator network B and conductive receivers or earphones 81 and 82. The output of VR (voltage regulator) tube 30 is operably connected by lead 34, as shown, through switch means 26 and resistor means 40 to lead 41 and primary winding means of shielded signal output transformer 35 connected by lead 83 to anode 51 of pentode tube 47 as plate voltage. The fixed bias of cathode 48 of tube 47 is obtained by common lead connection 46 connecting in parallel circuit arrangement resistance 44 and condenser 45 between electrode means 48 and ground connection 42. The frequency of audio signal output of oscillator A is varied in steps of fre quency by condensers C C and C and resistors R R and R having selected values as given in the following table:
It is to be understood that this invention is not limited to the frequencies shown in the above table, as it is Well within the ability of one skilled in the art to practice this invention by using other desirable frequencies. Dotted block diagrams a, b, c, d, e, f and g, as shown, illustrate a resistance capacitance phase-shifting network connected between the output and the input of the tube 47. The network is so proportioned that the feedback between the plate and grid terminals is in phase at the frequency of oscillation desired. An advantage of using this type of oscillator is that it is economical to manufacture, uses only one electronic tube, and results in a portable and compact instrument. When the gain of the pentode is adjusted either manually or by an automatic amplitudecontrol circuit, barely to maintain proper oscillations (not overloaded), almost a pure sine-wave output audio signal is obtained with good frequency stability. The phaseshift oscillator means A is particularly stable and suitable for operation at fixed frequency steps and probably represents the simplest satisfactory audio oscillator for use with an audiometer. The circuitry orientation of block diagrams b, c, d, e, f and g is as shown in enlarged block diagram a, which shows the resistance capacitance phaseshifting network comprising resistors R R and R and condensors C C and C Each step of frequency of oscillator A has a separate network as designated by dotted block diagrams a, b, c, d, e, 1 and g in which each block diagram is selectively connected by manually operated and mechanically ganged switches as multi-decked switches comprising switch means 24a and 2412 connected to plate 51 and grid 49 of tube 47, as shown. Grid 50 of tube 47 is operably connected by condenser 43 to ground terminal point 42. Electronic tubes 30 and 47 are shielded to attenuate or eliminate radiation, hum, and noise pickup arising from causes external to the tubes which act either upon the tubes or upon the components of the circuit. The output of oscillator network A is inductively coupled (to insure safety of patient from current shock) by transformer 35 to voltage divider and impedance matching circuit C comprising ground connection 38, resistances 36-, 37, 39, attenuator B and R Each value of variable resistance R, is manually preselected by switch 240 mechanically ganged to switches 24a and 24b. Output transformer 35 inductively couples electrically the output signal of tube 47 to variable switch means 25 which may be selectively connected to the various sections of attenuator network B to selectively vary in decibel units the intensity of the audio signal to switch 27 which selectively connects the audio signal to receivers 81 and 82 during an auditory test for impairment of human hearing.
The circuit of this invention has a variable low impedance termination to effect broad-band response in audio signal output of transformer 35 to obtain optimum impedance match of output transformer 35 to attenuator B. Transformer 35 may be of a shielded inexpensive type. Variable resistances R and R are sub-miniature potentiometers and provide means for accurate and rapid calibration of frequency and threshold audio signal levels whereby an optimum impedance match of signal between networks A, B, and resistors 36, 37 and 39 is reflected to plate 51 of oscillator tube 47 for each step of frequency of the audio frequency signal.
Resistances 36 and 37 are part of a voltage divider and impedance matching network constituting resistances 36, 37, 39, R and attenuator B. R; consists of a plurality of step resistances, each of which are a sub-miniature potentiometer. R is present in the calibration procedure to establish the threshold level for each frequency and manually varied by switch 240 for proper impedance match of coupling of oscillator A to attenuator network B for each frequency step of signal output of oscillator A by switch 24c being mechanically ganged to switch means 24a and 2417 as multideck switch 24 to insure that R, is preset in the calibration procedure to establish the threshold level for each frequency and manually and selectively varied for each proper threshold frequency level of signal without afiecting the matching of transformer 35 in the circuit. The otentiometers R act as isolators between the load resistors 36, 37 and the attenuator network B and maintain stability of the oscillations as well as establishing levels above threshold of hearing.
In the practice of this invention resistances 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66 and 67 may have an ohmic value of 5.1 ohms; resistances 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79 and 80 may have an ohmic value of 15 ohms; condenser 43 has a capacitor value of 4 mfd.; resistance 44 has a resistive value of 220 ohms; condenser 45 has a capacitator value of 25 mfd. with a working voltage of 25 volts; resistor 36 has an ohmic value of 4.7 ohms; resistor 37 has an ohmic value of 4.7 ohms; resistor 39 may have an ohmic value of 2700 ohms; condensers 18 and 19 may each have a capacitator value of 40 mfd. with a working voltage of 450 volts; resistance 28 may have an ohmic value of 750 ohms with a 10 watt output rating; resistance 29 may have an ohmic value of 3000 ohms with a 10 watt output rating; tube 30 may be a VR (voltage regulator) tube of type 0A2 and pentode tube 47 may be a beam power amplifier tube of type 6005. However, it is to be understood that this invention is not restricted to the above values as it is well within the ability of one skilled in the art to use other values without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Audio signal receivers 81 and 82 may be either of the bone conducting or air conducting type. Switches 24a, 24b and 240 are mechanically ganged together for manual operation with dial 24 shown in FIG. 1. The aforementioned impedance matching circuit and rectifier circuit are shielded and grounded, as shown in FIG. 2, to reduce the harmful effect of external hum or interference in audio receivers 81 and 82.
While there has been described what is at present considered to be the preferred embodiment of this invention, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications may be made therein without departing from the invention.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new and wish to secure by Letters Patent is:
1. An audiometer comprising energizing means, phase shift oscillator means connected to the output of said energizing means and including a plurality of frequency determining network circuits, each said network circuit having a variable adjusting means and variable switch means for selectively connecting a frequency determining network to said oscillator, audio transformer means connected to the oscillator means, a plurality of impedance matching network means selectively connected to the output of said transformer means including variable resistive adjusting means, a voltage divider means, and step attenuating resistive network means, switch means intercon meeting said frequency determining and impedance matching networks to selectively connect the necessary impedance matching network with a selected frequency determining network, said voltage divider means including series circuit means for interconnecting said attenuator means to said transformer output for substantially isolating varying attenuator load reflections from said oscillator transformer output, and earphone means connected to the output of said attenuation means for determining the hearing frequency of partially deaf individuals.
2. An audiometer for determining the hearing impairments of personnel comprising an energizing circuit, a phase-shift oscillator circuit including a separate frequency determining circuit for each frequency and having an audio signal output, said oscillator circuit being selectively and operably connected to the output of said energizing circuit, variable impedance matching means inductively coupled by transformer output means to the output of said oscillator circuit, adjusting means included in each frequency determining circuit for the oscillator circuit, said variable impedance matching means cooperating by mechanical coupling with said adjusting means of said oscillator circuit, a plurality of conductive earphone receivers, variable resistive type attenuation circuit means connecting said variable impedance means to said receivers, voltage divider means including series circuit means for interconnecting said attenuator circuit means to said transformer output for substantially isolating varying attenuator load reflections from said oscillator circuit and switch means selectively cooperating with said attenuator means to vary the intensity of said audio signal to said conductive earphone receivers.
3. An audiometer comprising an energizing circuit, phase-shift oscillator means including pentode tube means with RC network circuit means providing a plurality of variable frequency steps connected between the input electrode means and output electrode means of said pentode tube means, said network permitting energy feedback between the anode and gride terminals of said tube, said oscillation circuit being selectively and operably connected to the output of said energizing circuit, variable impedance matching means inductively coupled by transformer output means to the output of said oscillator circuit, a first adjusting means included in said RC network for adjusting the oscillator circuit, a second adjusting means in the impedance matching circuit being mechanically and selectively coupled to first adjusting means included in said RC network of said oscillator circuit, a plurality of conductive earphone receivers having selective switch means, variable resistive attenuation circuit means, voltage divider means including series circuit means for interconnecting said attenuator circuit means to said transformer output for substantially isolating varying attenuator load reflections from said oscillator circuit, said attenuator circuit means including means for selectively connecting said variable impedance matching means to said receivers to vary the intensity of said audio output signal in decibel units to said conductive earphone receivers.
4. An audiometer comprising an energizing circuit, a phase-shift oscillator including pentode tube means hav ing connected thereto resistive-capacitive network circuit means comprising a plurality of frequency determining circuits selectively connected between the cathode electrode means and anode electrode means of said pentode tube means, said network permitting energy feedback be tween anode and grid terminals of said tube means in a predetermined phase relationship at the frequency of oscillation, said oscillator circuit being selectively and operably connected to the output of said energizing circuit, a first variable resistive adjusting means included in each of said frequency determining circuits selectively connected to said oscillator circuit, variable impedance matching network circuit means including a second variable resistive adjusting means, audio transformer coupled output means inductively connecting said impedance matching network to the output of said oscillator circuit means, variable resistance attenuation circuit means, voltage divider means including series circuit means for interconnecting said attenuator circuit means to said transformer coupled output means for substantially isolating varying attenuator load reflections from said oscillator circuit, a plurality of conductive earphone receivers in cluding selective switch means, said variable: resistive attenuation circuit means including means for selectively connecting said variable impedance network to said audio receivers including switching means whereby the intensity of said audio signal is selectively varied in decibel units to said receivers.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,257,262 Koren Sept. 30, 1941 2,310,588 Mages Feb. 9, 1943 2,471,136 Allison May 24, 1949 2,537,911 Reger Jan. 9, 1951 2,586,803 Fleming Feb. 26, 1952 2,768,236 Allison Oct. 23, 1956 2,848,539 Allison Aug. 19, 1958
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Cited By (8)

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US3365544A (en) * 1964-04-14 1968-01-23 Cornett Richard Orin Diplacusimeter
US3858128A (en) * 1974-02-04 1974-12-31 Textron Inc 1 db step attenuator
US20040006283A1 (en) * 2002-05-23 2004-01-08 Tympany Automated diagnostic hearing test
US20050033193A1 (en) * 2003-05-15 2005-02-10 Wasden Christopher L. Computer-assisted diagnostic hearing test
US20090156959A1 (en) * 2002-05-23 2009-06-18 Tympany, Llc Stenger screening in automated diagnostic hearing test
US20090177113A1 (en) * 2002-05-23 2009-07-09 Tympany, Llc Interpretive report in automated diagnostic hearing test
US20110009770A1 (en) * 2009-07-13 2011-01-13 Margolis Robert H Audiometric Testing and Calibration Devices and Methods
EP1815712A4 (en) * 2004-10-15 2016-11-30 Mimosa Acoustics Inc System and method for automatically adjusting hearing aid based on acoustic reflectance

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US8394032B2 (en) 2002-05-23 2013-03-12 Tympany Llc Interpretive report in automated diagnostic hearing test
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US7695441B2 (en) 2002-05-23 2010-04-13 Tympany, Llc Automated diagnostic hearing test
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