GB1574383A - Protective devies for record players - Google Patents
Protective devies for record players Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- GB1574383A GB1574383A GB126177A GB126177A GB1574383A GB 1574383 A GB1574383 A GB 1574383A GB 126177 A GB126177 A GB 126177A GB 126177 A GB126177 A GB 126177A GB 1574383 A GB1574383 A GB 1574383A
- Authority
- GB
- United Kingdom
- Prior art keywords
- protective device
- brush
- fibres
- record
- stylus
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Expired
Links
Classifications
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G11—INFORMATION STORAGE
- G11B—INFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
- G11B3/00—Recording by mechanical cutting, deforming or pressing, e.g. of grooves or pits; Reproducing by mechanical sensing; Record carriers therefor
- G11B3/58—Cleaning record carriers or styli, e.g. removing shavings or dust or electrostatic charges
- G11B3/5809—Cleaning record carriers or styli, e.g. removing shavings or dust or electrostatic charges during transducing operation
- G11B3/5881—Cleaning record carriers or styli, e.g. removing shavings or dust or electrostatic charges during transducing operation for styli or needles only
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G11—INFORMATION STORAGE
- G11B—INFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
- G11B3/00—Recording by mechanical cutting, deforming or pressing, e.g. of grooves or pits; Reproducing by mechanical sensing; Record carriers therefor
- G11B3/58—Cleaning record carriers or styli, e.g. removing shavings or dust or electrostatic charges
- G11B3/5809—Cleaning record carriers or styli, e.g. removing shavings or dust or electrostatic charges during transducing operation
- G11B3/5818—Cleaning record carriers or styli, e.g. removing shavings or dust or electrostatic charges during transducing operation for record carriers
- G11B3/5827—Cleaning record carriers or styli, e.g. removing shavings or dust or electrostatic charges during transducing operation for record carriers using means contacting the record carrier
- G11B3/5845—Cleaning record carriers or styli, e.g. removing shavings or dust or electrostatic charges during transducing operation for record carriers using means contacting the record carrier means connected to a separate arm
Description
(54) PROTECTIVE DEVICES FOR RECORD PLAYERS
(71) I, TRISTAN PETER COOPER, a
British subject, of 40a Monahan Avenue,
Purley, Surrey, do hereby declare the invention, for which I pray that a patent may be granted to me, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement:- This invention relates to protective devices for phonograph, or gramophone, record players with a pickup arm having a phonograph cartridge with a stylus.
As is well known, the stylus can pick up an accumulation of dirt, dust or fluff from the record and seriously affect the performance of the cartridge. Moreover, a frequent cause of damage to the stylus, and/or a record, is the accidental dropping of the pickup arm on to the record player turntable or a record mounted on it. The record may also become charged with static electricity, which may discharge through the reproducing equipment with undesirable effects, and a record charged with static electricity will be even more liable to attract particles of dust. It therefore desirable to provide protection for the stylus, cleaning of the record, removal of static electricity and cleaning of the stylus after use.
Individual means are known for preventing accumulation of static electricity on a record, for cleaning the record while it is being played, for cleaning the stylus when not in use. For this last-mentioned purpose some makes of cartridges are provided with a plastic guard to protect the stylus from accidental damage, but this protection is not really satisfactory. Frequently through oversight an attempt to play a record is made with the guard still in position, whilst in other circumstances it is after the guard has been moved out of position that the pickup arm is knocked off its stand.
An object of the present invention is to provide an improved protective device which serves for stylus protection and record cleaning and preferably also for stylus wiping.
According to the present invention, in one aspect, there is provided a protective device for a record player with a pickup arm having a phonograph cartridge with a stylus which projects downwards when in use to contact the groove of a record beneath it, the device comprising a pivotable member having means for pivotable attachment of the said member to mounting means on the cartridge or the pickup arm in such manner that, when the pickup arm is lowered to place the stylus on the moving record, the record will engage the said member and pivot it from a guard position in which it hangs with a protective element thereof below the stylus to a playing position in which the said element is clear of the stylus, the protective element comprising a resilient contact element which comprises a brush for engagement with the record when the lowering takes place and for consequently causing the pivoting movement as a result of the movement of the record, the said protective element also comprising a cleaning element which then contacts the groove of the record at a position trailing behind the stylus, raising the contact element clear of the record, the cleaning element comprising a brush.
The cleaning element brush preferably comprises conductive fibres, which are preferably carbon fibres, so that it may be earthed to conduct away static electricity from the record. The contact element brush preferably comprises similar fibres.
Preferably the pivotable member is a bracket freely suspended from the pickup arm to pivot about an axis which is horizontal in the normal working orientation of the cartridge. The bracket normally hangs freely with a lower member thereof below the stylus to act as a guard, this lower member comprising the said protective element having the said brushes.
In the guard position the contact element brush extends downwardly; if the pickup arm is dropped it falls on the contact element brush so that the stylus and any record beneath it are protected from damage. This brush contacts the record as the cartridge is lowered into the playing position, and movement of the record causes the protective element to be moved forwards and upwards clear of the stylus, bringing the cleaning brush into contact with the record and raising the contact brush clear of the record.
Preferably the protective element also comprises a wiping element, which is arranged to wipe the stylus as the pivotable member pivots between the guard position and the playing position. The wiping element also preferably comprises fibres similar to those of the other two brushes.
Thus, the protective element preferably comprises a body with guard or contact brush, cleaning brush and wiping brush, all conductive, projecting from it in three directions, Moreover, a fourth conductive brush may be provided for earthing purposes, this brush being cut off short so as to contact a conductive bar or strip constituting the lower member of the bracket.
According to the invention, in another aspect, there is provided a method of making a brush or an assembly of brushes for a protective device according to the first aspect. In this method brush fibres are placed between pieces of plastics material and the pieces are welded together by ultrasonic staking to form the body of the brush and trap the fibres in position.
Further features of the invention will be apparent from the following description.
The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: Figure 1 is a diagrammatic perspective view of a protective device embodying the invention;
Figure 2 is a diagrammatic perspective view of the device attached to a cartridge and in its guard position;
Figures 3 and 4 are diagrammatic side views of the device attached to the cartridge and respectively in the guard position and the record-cleaning position;
Figure 5 is a diagrammatic side view of a phonograph cartridge carrying a protective device;
Figure 6 is a plan view of the device of
Figure 5;
Figure 7 is a view in the direction of the arrow VII in Figure 6;
Figure 8 is a side view of another phonograph cartridge carrying a protective device and mounted on the head of a pickup arm;
Figures 9 and 10 are side and plan views of a mounting bracket shown in Figure 8:
Figures 11 to 14 illustrate various ways in which resilient damping material may be provided with such protective devices;
Figures 15 and 16 illustrate a method of making brushes; and
Figures 17 and 18 illustrate the method applied to the making of an assembly of brushes of the form employed in protective devices illustrated in the earlier Figures.
Referring first to Figures 1 to 4, these show a protective device for a record player. This comprises a rectangular U shaped bracket 12 the upper end of the side arms of which are pivotally attached to a phonograph cartridge 13 (on a pickup arm, not shown) so that the bracket can pivot about the axis X which in the normal position of the cartridge is horizontal. The lower member 14 of the device carries three brushes, a contact brush 15, a cleaning brush 16 and a stylus wiping brush 17 for wiping the stylus 18 of the cartridge. In the guard position of the device the bracket hangs freely downwardly with the contact brush 15 also pointing downwardly and extending below the stylus 18. It thus acts as a guard to protect the stylus and a record below from damage if the pickup arm is dropped.
When the cartridge is lowered by the pickup arm on to a moving record to start playing, the contact brush 15 contacts the record and the whole bracket is swept forward and upward, by the relative movement of the record and cartridge, to the position shown in Figure 4 in which, while the stylus contacts the record groove and plays as usual, the brush 16 trails behind the stylus and continuously cleans the groove. When the pickup arm is again raised the bracket 12 will swing back to its guard position. As the bracket swings between the guard position and the cleaning position the wiping brush 17 wipes the stylus 18.
The brushes are all made of conductive fibre (specifically, about 10,000 carbon fibres in each brush) and are earthed through the cartridge so that static electricity is conducted away from the record to earth without passing through the reproductive system. The diameter of each fibre is small enough to penetrate into the record groove. Arrangements can be made that, as the cartridge is returned from its playing position to its rest position, the cleaning brush is itself automatically cleaned by, for example, a rod or a flat plate (possibly with textile material on it) fixed to the record deck in such a position that the bristles of the cleaning brush are lightly stroked while the pickup arm is being placed on its stand, thus dispersing any dust or fluff which has adhered to the brush.
An alternative mounting and earthing arrangement is shown in Figures 5-7, in which a conventional phonograph cartridge is shown diagrammatically at 22, having four pins (three referenced 23 and one. an earthing pin, referenced 23a) by which it can be plugged into a socket at the end of the playing or pickup arm of a phonograph. A mounting bracket 24 is stamped and bent from a piece of conductive sheet metal, which may be a copper alloy giving the bracket a degree of resilience. The bracket comprises a plane portion 25 extending over the top of the cartridge and at the rear end having a tab 26 bent down to embrace the earthing pin 23a adjacent the rear face of the cartridge so that it forms electrical contact with the earthing pin 23a. At the front end the bracket has arms 27 extending downwardly and embracing the sides of the cartridge. The ends of the arms are turned outwardly and formed to provide pivot pins 28 which enter holes 29 near the ends of the arms of a protective device 30, generally similar to that of Figures 1--4, so that it can pivot about a horizontal axis, In this example, the protective device comprises a
U shaped member 31 of conductive material which may be aluminium or an alloy thereof. The base of the U shaped member carries and is in conductive connection with three brushes 32a, 32b, and 32c of conductive fibres. The device 30 is pivotable between a guard position shown in Figure 7 in which it extends below the stylus 33 and a working position shown in Figure 6 in which the brush 32b contacts a record to clean it.
The bracket 24 thus serves both as a mounting and as an earth connecting means for the cleaning device. The conductive connection with the brushes, mentioned above, could be effected by mounting the brushes in a conductive body carried by tie
U shaped member 31, but the body need not be conductive if the brushes include a fourth conductive brush (not shown) protruding from the body in the opposite direction to that of the cleaning brush 32b and making contact with the base of the U shaped member 31, the fourth brush being electrically connected to the other three brushes, preferably by being an integral extension of the cleaning brush 32b which is mounted in contact with an integral pair constituting the contact brush 32a and wiping brush 37c. This arrangement may be more clearly understood from the description hereinafter of a method of making such an assembly of brushes.
Another alternative mounting and earthing arrangement is shown in Figure 8, which shows the head of a pickup arm 40 having a cartridge 41 with a stylus 42 and four pins 43 receiving terminal clips 44 for the electrical connections 45 to the record player. The protective device 46 comprises a U shaped member 47 carrying brushes 48, generally similar to the device of Figures 5 to 7 but in this case having, for example, two alternative mounting holes 49. The mounting bracket 50 in this case has the form shown in side view in Figure 9 and plan view in Figure 10: no earthing tab (such as 26) is provided, the earthing connection being completed by means of the mounting bracket at a notch 51 therein and is taken to the earthed terminal clip (44) of the pickup.
The upper portion 52 of the mounting bracket 50 is pierced at 53 and is slightly bowed to enhance the security of clamping of this portion between the cartridge 41 and thc adjacent end portion of the pickup arm 40.
It may be desirable to provide resilient damping material in the arrangements hereinbefore described, in order to prevent the transmission of vibrations from the record disc to the phonograph cartridge through the means of the record cleaning device and mounting bracket. One such damping arrangement is shown in Figure 11 which shows a cartridge 22, protective device 30 and mounting bracket 24 similar to those of Figures 5 to 7. A flat sheet of resilient damping material RM (for example, high carbon rubber) is placed between the cartridge 22 and the upper portion 25 of the bracket 24.
Instead, or in addition, a small circular bush of resilient damping material RM may be fitted into each of the mounting holes 29 in the arms of the U shaped member of the protective device 30, as shown in Figure 12.
As another alternative or addition, a strip of resilient damping material RM may be installed between the U shaped member 31 and the brush block 32, as shown diagrammatically in Figure 13. A conductive path from the brushes 32a, 32b and 32c to the base of the U shaped member 31 (shown here in underneath view) may be provided through the resilient damping material RM if it is conductive.
Alternatively the fourth brush (previously mentioned) could be made to extend through an aperture in the resilient damping material so as to make direct contact with the U shaped member 31.
A further possibility, shown in Figure 14, is to make the brush block 32 itself of resilient material.
The provision of resilient damping material in any of the above positions prevents, or very substantially reduces, the transmission of vibrations from the record disc via the cleaning brush 32b, the brush block 32, the U shaped holder 31 and the mounting bracket 24 to the phonograph cartridge, while still permitting the conduction of static electricity away from the record disc to the earth connection of the cartridge.
Figure 15, illustrating the principles of the method of the present invention, shows two bodies 42, 43 of plastics material, e.g.
Polystyrene G P, formed in their facing surfaces 44 with grooves 45. A bundle of fibres 46 is located in the groove 45 of the lower block so that they project beyond the block; the upper block is then placed on top of the lower block to trap the fibres in position. The blocks are held together and ultrasonic vibrations are applied which generate sufficient heat at the interface to weld the faces 44 together. The finished article of Figure 16 is seen as comprising a brush 46 mounted in a mounting block 48 of plastics material, the welded joint being indicated at 49.
Figure 18 shows an assembly of brushes made by a similar technique but in this case comprising a block 50 of D shaped crosssection having conductive fibres protruding from it in four directions in the form of a cross and thus providing four conductive brushes 51, 51a. As seen in Figure 17 the fibres are placed in grooves on one surface of a plastics material piece 52, another plastics material piece 53 is placed on top of the fibres to clamp them between the pieces, and the pieces are welded together by ultrasonic technique as before. The brush 51a, which protrudes from the flat face 55 of the block, is subsequently cut off short to contact the conductive U shaped member such as 47 (Figure 8) of the protective device when the block is mounted thereon, for example, by means of an adhesive, with the flat face 55 against the surface of the strip constituting the base of the U shaped member.
WHAT I CLAIM IS:
1. A protective device for a record player with a pickup arm having a phonograph cartridge with a stylus which projects downwards when in use to contact the groove of a record beneath it, the device comprising a pivotable member having means for pivotable attachment of the said member to mounting means on the cartridge or the pickup arm in such manner that, when the pickup arm is lowered to place the stylus on the moving record, the record will engage the said member and pivot it from a guard position in which it hangs with a protective element thereof below the stylus to a playing position in which the said element is clear of the stylus, the protective element comprising a resilient contact element which comprises a brush for engagement with the record when the lowering takes place and for consequently causing the pivoting movement as a result of the movement of the record, the said protective element also comprising a cleaning element which then contacts the groove of the record at a position trailing behind the stylus, raising the contact element clear of the record, the cleaning element comprising a brush.
2. A protective device according to claim 1, wherein the cleaning element brush comprises conductive fibres.
3. A protective device according to claim 2, wherein the fibres are carbon fibres.
4. A protective device according to any one of claims 1--3, wherein the contact element brush comprises conductive fibres.
5. A protective device according to claim 4, wherein the said fibres of the contact element are carbon fibres.
6. A protective device according to any one of claims 1--5, wherein the protective element further comprises a wiping element which projects upwards towards the stylus when the said member is in the guard position and cooperates with the stylus to remove dust and fluff from the stylus when the pivotable member returns from the contact position to the guard position.
7. A protective device according to claim 6, wherein the wiping element comprises a brush.
8. A protective device according to claim 7, wherin the wiping element brush comprises conductive fibres.
9. A protective device according to claim 8, wherein the said fibres of the wiping element are carbon fibres.
10. A protective device according to any one of claims 1--9, wherein the pivotable member is U shaped, the arms of the U having means for pivotable attachment to the said mounting means.
11. A protective device according to claim 10, wherein the base of the U carries a block from which the said brushes protrude, at least the said cleaning brush being of conductive fibres, electrical connection from that brush to the pivotable member being provided by means of another conductive brush protruding from the block in the opposite direction.
12. A protective device according to any one of claims 1--11, wherein the said mounting means comprises a conductive mounting bracket having a tab for clamping between the cartridge and the head of the pickup arm.
13. A protective device according to claim 12, having a U shaped pivotable member, wherein the mounting bracket has arms providing the means for pivotable attachment of the said member.
14. A protective device according to claim 13, wherein the said tab is formed to make electrical contact with an earthing pin at the rear of the cartridge.
15. A protective device according to claim 14, wherein one of the arms of the mounting bracket has a notch for attachment of an earthing lead.
16. A protective device according to any
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.
Claims (19)
1. A protective device for a record player with a pickup arm having a phonograph cartridge with a stylus which projects downwards when in use to contact the groove of a record beneath it, the device comprising a pivotable member having means for pivotable attachment of the said member to mounting means on the cartridge or the pickup arm in such manner that, when the pickup arm is lowered to place the stylus on the moving record, the record will engage the said member and pivot it from a guard position in which it hangs with a protective element thereof below the stylus to a playing position in which the said element is clear of the stylus, the protective element comprising a resilient contact element which comprises a brush for engagement with the record when the lowering takes place and for consequently causing the pivoting movement as a result of the movement of the record, the said protective element also comprising a cleaning element which then contacts the groove of the record at a position trailing behind the stylus, raising the contact element clear of the record, the cleaning element comprising a brush.
2. A protective device according to claim 1, wherein the cleaning element brush comprises conductive fibres.
3. A protective device according to claim 2, wherein the fibres are carbon fibres.
4. A protective device according to any one of claims 1--3, wherein the contact element brush comprises conductive fibres.
5. A protective device according to claim 4, wherein the said fibres of the contact element are carbon fibres.
6. A protective device according to any one of claims 1--5, wherein the protective element further comprises a wiping element which projects upwards towards the stylus when the said member is in the guard position and cooperates with the stylus to remove dust and fluff from the stylus when the pivotable member returns from the contact position to the guard position.
7. A protective device according to claim 6, wherein the wiping element comprises a brush.
8. A protective device according to claim 7, wherin the wiping element brush comprises conductive fibres.
9. A protective device according to claim 8, wherein the said fibres of the wiping element are carbon fibres.
10. A protective device according to any one of claims 1--9, wherein the pivotable member is U shaped, the arms of the U having means for pivotable attachment to the said mounting means.
11. A protective device according to claim 10, wherein the base of the U carries a block from which the said brushes protrude, at least the said cleaning brush being of conductive fibres, electrical connection from that brush to the pivotable member being provided by means of another conductive brush protruding from the block in the opposite direction.
12. A protective device according to any one of claims 1--11, wherein the said mounting means comprises a conductive mounting bracket having a tab for clamping between the cartridge and the head of the pickup arm.
13. A protective device according to claim 12, having a U shaped pivotable member, wherein the mounting bracket has arms providing the means for pivotable attachment of the said member.
14. A protective device according to claim 13, wherein the said tab is formed to make electrical contact with an earthing pin at the rear of the cartridge.
15. A protective device according to claim 14, wherein one of the arms of the mounting bracket has a notch for attachment of an earthing lead.
16. A protective device according to any
one of claims 1--15, having resilient damping means for inhibiting the transmission of vibrations from the device to the cartridge during the playing of record.
17. A protective device according to claim 16, wherein the resilient damping means are substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of
Figures 11 to 14 of the accompanying drawings.
18. A protective device or a pickup arm with a cartridge having a protective device, substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to Figures 1 to 14 of the accompanying drawings.
19. A method of making a brush or an assembly of brushes for a protective device according to any one of the preceding claims, substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to Figures 15 to 18 of the accompanying drawings.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB126177A GB1574383A (en) | 1978-04-11 | 1978-04-11 | Protective devies for record players |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB126177A GB1574383A (en) | 1978-04-11 | 1978-04-11 | Protective devies for record players |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
GB1574383A true GB1574383A (en) | 1980-09-03 |
Family
ID=9718903
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
GB126177A Expired GB1574383A (en) | 1978-04-11 | 1978-04-11 | Protective devies for record players |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
---|---|
GB (1) | GB1574383A (en) |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5117411A (en) * | 1989-03-03 | 1992-05-26 | Hiromu Nakagawa | Lens cleaner for a compact disk player |
US5953301A (en) * | 1995-10-27 | 1999-09-14 | Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha | Lens-cleaning disc with angled brush with adhesive |
-
1978
- 1978-04-11 GB GB126177A patent/GB1574383A/en not_active Expired
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5117411A (en) * | 1989-03-03 | 1992-05-26 | Hiromu Nakagawa | Lens cleaner for a compact disk player |
US5953301A (en) * | 1995-10-27 | 1999-09-14 | Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha | Lens-cleaning disc with angled brush with adhesive |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
KR100259455B1 (en) | Oscillating magnetic head and stationary brush cleaning apparatus | |
US4198056A (en) | Protective device for record player | |
US6529350B1 (en) | Head assembly and suspension having a terminal section with a bend for contact | |
GB1574383A (en) | Protective devies for record players | |
EP0995237B1 (en) | Electrostatic discharge protection device | |
US5953301A (en) | Lens-cleaning disc with angled brush with adhesive | |
JP3069773U (en) | Optical disk drive | |
JP3303561B2 (en) | Earth spring device | |
US4449214A (en) | Record cleaning mechanism | |
US2744212A (en) | Phonograph attachment for eliminating static electricity from records | |
US4441177A (en) | Stylus protection mechanism | |
US3162445A (en) | Phonograph needle cleaning device | |
NL8801476A (en) | SWITCH FOR COOPERATION WITH A PROTECTION LIP AGAINST ERASION ERASING A TAPE CASSETTE. | |
US3572725A (en) | Phonographic pick-up and stylus assembly having removable attachment for cleaning record | |
US3387849A (en) | Tone arm and cartridge combination | |
US3189353A (en) | Record cleaning device for mounting on a record changer tone arm | |
US2569305A (en) | Phonograph pickup mounting | |
JP2569502Y2 (en) | Cleaning tool for optical head cleaning panel | |
JPS6144260Y2 (en) | ||
US4275888A (en) | Stabilizing and static removing attachment for phonograph pickup cartridge | |
CN217217092U (en) | Information technology service switch convenient to overhaul | |
CN217592272U (en) | Cleaning brush for vinyl record | |
FR2490413A1 (en) | Self-cleaning zero insertion force connector - has cleaning strip inlaid in sliding protective cover wiping contacts during each connection and disconnection | |
US1968149A (en) | Phonograph pick-up mechanism | |
JP2605756Y2 (en) | Trolley shoe structure |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
PS | Patent sealed | ||
PCNP | Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee |