GB1596111A - Electronically controlled magnetic recording - Google Patents

Electronically controlled magnetic recording Download PDF

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Publication number
GB1596111A
GB1596111A GB12723/78A GB1272378A GB1596111A GB 1596111 A GB1596111 A GB 1596111A GB 12723/78 A GB12723/78 A GB 12723/78A GB 1272378 A GB1272378 A GB 1272378A GB 1596111 A GB1596111 A GB 1596111A
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Prior art keywords
magnetic
scanning
document
rotation
magnetic tape
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GB12723/78A
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Xerox Corp
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Xerox Corp
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Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B5/00Recording by magnetisation or demagnetisation of a record carrier; Reproducing by magnetic means; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B5/86Re-recording, i.e. transcribing information from one magnetisable record carrier on to one or more similar or dissimilar record carriers
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B27/00Editing; Indexing; Addressing; Timing or synchronising; Monitoring; Measuring tape travel
    • G11B27/10Indexing; Addressing; Timing or synchronising; Measuring tape travel
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B27/00Editing; Indexing; Addressing; Timing or synchronising; Monitoring; Measuring tape travel
    • G11B27/10Indexing; Addressing; Timing or synchronising; Measuring tape travel
    • G11B27/102Programmed access in sequence to addressed parts of tracks of operating record carriers
    • G11B27/107Programmed access in sequence to addressed parts of tracks of operating record carriers of operating tapes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N1/00Scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, e.g. facsimile transmission; Details thereof
    • H04N1/04Scanning arrangements, i.e. arrangements for the displacement of active reading or reproducing elements relative to the original or reproducing medium, or vice versa
    • H04N1/19Scanning arrangements, i.e. arrangements for the displacement of active reading or reproducing elements relative to the original or reproducing medium, or vice versa using multi-element arrays
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N1/00Scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, e.g. facsimile transmission; Details thereof
    • H04N1/04Scanning arrangements, i.e. arrangements for the displacement of active reading or reproducing elements relative to the original or reproducing medium, or vice versa
    • H04N1/207Simultaneous scanning of the original picture and the reproduced picture with a common scanning device
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N1/00Scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, e.g. facsimile transmission; Details thereof
    • H04N1/23Reproducing arrangements
    • H04N1/27Reproducing arrangements involving production of a magnetic intermediate picture
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B2220/00Record carriers by type
    • G11B2220/90Tape-like record carriers

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Multimedia (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Recording Or Reproducing By Magnetic Means (AREA)
  • Storing Facsimile Image Data (AREA)
  • Television Signal Processing For Recording (AREA)
  • Printers Or Recording Devices Using Electromagnetic And Radiation Means (AREA)
  • Facsimile Scanning Arrangements (AREA)

Description

(54) ELECTRONICALLY CONTROLLED MAGNETIC RECORDING (71) We, XEROX CORPORA TION of Xerox Square, Rochester, New York, United States of America, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York, United States of America, do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement: This invention relates to magnetic imaging, and more particularly to apparatus and processes for optically scanning an original document on a platen and for producing therefrom a latent magnetic image of said document on a magneticallysensitive recording medium.
The recording of magnetic signals upon a magnetizable member such as magnetic tape is known. Recorded magnetic signals are used extensively in audit tape recordings, and in magnetic video recording as indicated in U.S. patent No. 3,108,281 and U.S. Patent No. 3,862,355.
To obtain faster recording, it was found desirable to move the magnetic recording head and magnetizable medium relative to one another both circumferentially and axially during the writing process, as disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 2,850,348 for magnetic drum printing and as shown in U.S. Patent No. 3,845,500 for a rotating magnetic head about which a magnetic tape is helically wrapped during its path of travel.
The magnetic reproduction of hard copy original images has theretofore been limited substantially to rather cumbersome techniques involving intermediates such as the use of an optical mask for thermoremanent or Curie-point imaging; or the use of a xeroxgraphically formed intermediate image which is magnetized and used as a master for either direct development with magnetic toner or for transfer of its pattern of magnetization to a magnetic tape via Curie-point techniques.
Alternatively, rather cumbersome techniques requiring the mount of an original image onto a rotating mandrel such as is shown in U.S. Patent No. 2,826,634 have been required.
According to the present invention there is provided a magnetic image recorder comprising platen means for supporting a document to be recorded, a first rotational member having a radius R and a number n of scanning means thereon, the member being spaced from its axis of rotation to the platen means by a distance of about n times R to enable each scanning means to scan segments of a document on the platen means to generate a series of data signals representative of the optical density levels of segments on a ducument, first translation means for effecting relative movement between the platen means and the first rotation member in a direction generally normal to the scanned segment of a document to enable each of the n scanning means to scan adjacent, generally parallel, segments of a document, a second rotational member having n magnetic recording heads thereon, magnetic tape supporting means for supporting a magnetic tape adjacent the second rotation member to enable each recording head to record a series of magnetic transistions along a segment of a magnetic tape, second translation means for effecting relative movement between the magnetic tape supporting means and the second rotational member to enable each of the n recording heads to record on adjacent, generally parallel, segments of a magnetic tape, and synchronous means for effecting synchronous rotation of the first and second rotational members and synchronous movement of the first and second translation means, buffer means including n storage means each coupled to a corresponding scanning means and recording head, load means for loading data signals into a storage means during the generation thereof, and unload means for unloading data signals from a storage means to a recording head.
The present invention also provides a magnetic image recording process comprising rotation a number n of optical scanning elements about an axis of rotation at a distance R from the axis with the axis of rotation being about n times R from a document to be recorded moving the rotating scanning elements and a document to be recorded relative to each other in the direction of the axis of rotation for the scanning elements, enabling n generally parallel segments of the document to be scanned by the n scanning elements each revolution with each scanning element generating a series of data signals representative of optical density variations along the scanned segments of a document, rotating n magnetic recording heads about an axis of rotation moving the rotating recording heads and a magnetic tape on which a magnetic image is to be recorded relative to each other in the direction of the axis of rotation for the recording heads enabling n generally parallel segments of the magnetic tape to be recorded each revolution by the recording heads as a series of magnetic transitions created by reversals of current to the recording heads, synchronizing the rotation of the scanning elements with the rotation of the recording heads and the relative movement of the scanning means and document with the relative movement of the recording heads and magnetic tape, loading the data signals from the n scanning elements respectively into n storage devices during the generation of the data signals, and unloading the data signals from the n storage devices to corresponding recording heads after the generation of data signals by a scanning element and before the completion of the balance of the revolution by the scanning element, whereby a magnetic image of a document is recorded on the magnetic tape.
One embodiment of the invention will now be described, by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: Figure 1 is a schematic illustration of a part of said embodiment, which part includes a rotational member having at least one magnetic record (write) head disposed thereon together with an optical encoder utilized to generate timing signals; Figure 2 is a schematic illustration of the said embodiment showing a plurality of magnetic record (write) heads on a rotational member, means connecting the rotational members for synchronous rotation, an optical encoder from which system timing is derived, and an electronic interface therebetween.
Figure 3 is a block diagram of the electronic interface; Figure 4 is a block diagram of a phase locked loop circuit of the electronic interface.
Figure 5 is a circuit diagram of the phase locked loop circuit; Figure 6 is a system timing circuit diagram; Figure 7 is a timing diagram of memory load and unload cycles; Figure 8 is a diagram of an electronic half-toning circuit of the electronic interface; Figure 9 is a schematic illustration of the scanning electronics of said interface; Figure 10 is a circuit diagram for a comparator circuit of said interface which circuit compares the image data to the electronic halftoning level selected to determine if a pixel explained later should be written by the magnetic write heads; Figure 11 is a diagram of a memory input timing circuit of said interface; Figure 12 is a circuit diagram for a deskew circuit of said interface: Figure 13 is a diagram of a memory and output timing circuit of said interface: and Figure 14 is a diagram of a driver circuit for the magnetic write heads.
Referring now to Figure 1, the magnetic recording head 3 for direct recording rotating disc 2 is located on the outer circumference of disc 2. The optical encoder 6 comprises a three channel mask 8 having a multiplicity of alternating transparent and opaque portions in channel one, opaque and transparent portion in channel two and four transparent and opaque portions in channel 3. Stationary light emitting diodes 7, 7', and 7" are mounted adjacent the encoder and positioned to direct light upon mask 8 at channels one, two and three, respectively.
Phototransistors 9, 9' and 9" are mounted stationary within the recording device on the side of mask 8 opposite the side on which are mounted the light emitting diodes. Phototransistor 9 is positioned to receive light from light emitting diode 7 passing through transparent portions of channel one, and phototransistors 9' and 9" are similarly positioned but to receive light from light diodes 7' and 7" passing through the transparent region of channels two and three. Channel 3 is selected to have as many transparent and opaque portions as record heads 3 employed on magnetic recording member 2.
With respect to each channel of mask 8, light transmitted through transparent portions of mask 8 is chopped into pulses or bits of light having a frequency dependent upon the speed of rotation of the shaft upon which it is mounted and the number of transparent and opaque portions on the mask.
The number of opaque lines in channel one of mask 8 is chosen as some convenient, predetermined multiple of the desired recording frequency. The higher this multiple then the greater the number of starting points within a pixel length of time is provided. The channel two is used to produce the homing pulse described below.
Channel three contains one opaque and transparent portion for each record head mounted on rotating magnetic recording member 2.
Pixels 5 are shown in Figure 1 as recorded in tracks 4. Magnetic recording medium 1, such as a magnetic tape, is guided around rotating magnetic recording member 2 and held stationary while recording member 2 rotates in recording tracks from top to bottom of Figure 1 and translates from left to right or from right to left in recording the next succeeding track.
Phototransistors 9, 9' and 9" undergo a variation in voltage and current in their collector circuits when the phototransistors are struck by light. The collector circuit of phototransistor 9 undergoes such a variation at a frequency corresponding to the frequency of the bits of light passing through channel one. The collector circuit of phototransistor 9' undergoes such a change four time per revolution; going from low to high when using a transparent portion for signal generation and going from high to low when using an opaque portion for sign generation. In Figure 1, four recording heads are utilized and therefore four opaque lines in channel three of optical encoder are provided. Accordingly, phototransistor 9 provides a signal having a frequency which is some predetermined multiple of the desired recording frequency while phototransistor 9' provides a low, "notch" homing pulse signal indicative of the position of magnetic recording heads 3.
Referring now to Figure 2, in the embodiment there shown a plurality of recording heads 15, 15', 15" and 15"' (not shown) are equidistantly disposed about the circumference of rotational member 13 and in substantial alignment (within about 0.10 inch) with optical scanners 14, 14', 14" and 14"' (not shown) on rotational member 11.
Rotational members 11 and 13 are mounted on shaft 12 so as to provide synchronous rotation of the aligned pairs of magnetic write heads and optical scanners. While the axes of rotation of rotational members 11 and 13 are illustrated in Figure 2 as being in alignment upon a single shaft 12, it would be appreciated that other means for connecting rotational members 11 and 13 for synchronous rotation can be utilized.
For example, gears, chains, pulleys etc. may be utilized. Furthermore, rotational members 11 and 13 need not have their axes of rotation in alignment, but rather one of the rotational members can be located above, below or to either side of the other rotational member. In Figure 2, it can be seen that optical encoder 8 with the associated light diodes 7, 7' and 7" (not shown) and phototransistors 9, 9' and 9" (not shown) are mounted about the shaft 12.
Shaft 12 is rotated by a motor 31 which is mounted on a yoke 32 which is part of a carriage 30 causing axial translation of the rotational members 11 and 13.
The yoke 32 is coupled to the dual or oppositely threaded screw 33. When screw 33 is rotated, the yoke 32 moves from left to right until it reaches the end of the thread.
At that point, the yoke moves back from right to left because of the oppositely wound thread of the screw. Motor 34 mounted on frame 35 is coupled to the screw 33 to rotate it and thereby translate the carriage 30 in the direction of shaft 12. This in turn causes the scanning elements 14--14"' to translate relative to the platen 36 and the recording heads 15-15"' to translate relative to the magnetic tape wrapped about them (not shown in Figure 2).
It will be appreciated that when shaft 12 is not utilized as the means for connecting rotational members 11 and 13 for synchronous rotation, means must be provided to translate rotational members 11 and 13 synchronously in addition to the aforementioned alternate means for providing synchronous rotation. For this reason, the embodiment depicted in Figure 2 is particularly preferred. It provides synchronization of scanning and recording in the longitudinal axis (translational movement) because the distance between the two rotational members is fixed. Figure 2 also provides the additional advantage that all required triggering signals for the optical scanners can be obtained from the same optical encoder used for the magnetic write heads. Paired alignment of magnetic write heads and optical scanners results in simplified imaging synchronization because the same digital clock (derived from the optical encoder) is used for both rotation members. This simplification allows the system to work real time without the use of large memory storage and with a simplified electronic interface between the optical scanners and the magnetic write heads.
Two very desirable achievements are provided by the present invention. One is the ability to remove the original document away from the surface of the optical scanner to thereby allow copying of all original documents including hard bound copy. For scanners on a rotational member having a radius R and having n number of scanning elements thereof the original document platen is located at a distance of n.R from the center of the rotating member and thereby allows scanning a single line at a rate n times as fast as would be achieved when the original document were located at the periphery of the rotating member. For n number of scanners, each sequential scanner scans a complete line of the original each n of a revolution of the rotating member.
Each scanner scans one line per revolution of the rotating member 11. Four lines are scanned each revolution of member 11 when four scanners are used on rotating member 11. On the other hand, it is desirable to have the stationary magnetic tape 1 wrapped around about 75% of the rotating recording member 13. This leaves only 25% of the revolution time to load data from the optical scanner into memory.
The load time occurs simultaneously with the scan time; the unload time for data from memory to the appropriate write head occurs simultaneously with the record time.
Figure 9 schematically illustrates the scanning electronics mounted on the rotating member 11 and electrically connected between optical scanners 14, 14', 14", 14"' and the analog to digital converter. As seen in Figure 9, the voltage outputs of the photo-voltaic cells in optical scanners 1P14"' are summed by summing amplifier 741. The output of 741 passes through slip-rings on shaft 12 and is directed into the analog to digital converter.
Referring now to Figure 3, there is seen a block diagram of the electronic interface between the optical scanners and the magnetic write heads. The fundamental task of the electronic interface is to produce a current through the magnetic write heads and to alter the direction of the current at the precise time when a recorded dot is desired on the magnetic tape so that a latent magnetic image corresponding to the optically scanned original hard copy is produced. When the direction of the current is reversed from its previous direction of flow through the magnetic write heads, a magnetic field gradient is generated which is referred to herein as a pixel.
Precise timing is required in order to achieve proper phase alignment of pixels in adjacent record tracks on the magnetic tape in order to prevent cancellation of the magnetic field between the tracks.
Cancellation of the magnetic field between the tracks will result in deteriorated developed images when rendered visible with magnetic marking material commonly referred to as magnetic toner. In the discussion that follows, it is assumed that a maximum phase variation between pixels in adjacent record tracks are to be within plus or minus 90 , the recording wavelength is to be about 67.7 microns and the rotational speed of shaft 12 is such that the magnetic write head to magnetic tape speed is about 2327 centimeters per second. With these assumed values, as an example, the maximum cumulative error in timing between recorded tracks is plus or minus 727 nonoseconds. This amounts to a variation in timing of plus of minus .006 percent of one revolution.
The control circuitry gains all its timing information to synchronize the recording from the three channel optical encoder 8 which is arranged to provide 1000 bits/revolution in Channel One, one bit/revolution in Channel Two, and four bits/revolution in Channel Three. The outputs (TTL compatible) are a squarewave of frequency 1000 times the speed in revolutions per second of the head wheel 13 (hereinafter, the encoder clock), one pulse per revolution (hereinafter, the homing pulse), and four pulses per revolution (the head clock). Due to its sensitive threshold voltage the optical encoder 6 has separate 5V power supply to remove any noise generated by other equipment. The encoder ground is isolated from the system by coupling the outputs of the encoder through photon coupled isolators (GE-74A 1) to the Phase-Locked Loop circuit and system timing circuit.
The system clock is locked to the angular velocity of head wheel 13 by the Phase Locked Loop of Figures 4 and 5 (hereinafter, PLL). The PLL circuit is a feed back system comprised of a phase comparator, low pass filter, error amplifier, voltage-controlled oscillator (hereinafter, VCO) and divide-by-n circuit. The PLL's input is the encoder clock and its output is the system clock which is a multiple of the input signal. In short the basic operation of the system is that an input signal is applied to the phase comparator which compares the phase and frequency of the input with the VCO frequency divided by n. An error voltage is generated that is related to the phase and frequency difference between the two signals. This error voltage is then filtered, amplified and applied to the control terminal of the VCO. In this manner, the control voltage forces the VCO frequency to vary in a direction that reduces the frequency difference between the two frequencies. When the two frequencies are sufficiently close, the feedback nature of the PLL causes the two to be synchronized or locked. Once in lock the VCI frequency is identical to the input signal except that it is actually running at a multiple of the input frequency.
By dividing the system clock down by various values, all other frequencies for the image control system are obtained. Table I shows the different frequencies and the division factors.
TABLE I. Image Control System Frequencies Deskew Clock = System Clock (9.66 MHz) Erase Clock = 1/2 of System Clock (4.83 MHz) Load Ram Clock = 1/4 of System Clock (2.41 MHz) Unload Ram Clock = 1/16 of System Clock (604 KHz) Write Driver Clock = 1/32 of System Clock (302 KHz) Encoder Clock = 1/116 of System Clock (83.3 KHz) The multiplication factor of the PLL circuit is determined by the ratio required between the system and encoder clocks for a particular wavelength and this ratio can be varied. Two adjustments are to be made to the circuit: (1) the center frequency of the VCO is aligned near the new system clock center frequency by adjusting Cl with no input applied, and (2) N (an 8 bit binary number on switches S,LSB--S,MSB) must be set equal to: n N=256- 2 where n equals the desired multiplication factor of the PLL circuit.
The system timing circuit supplied the "enables" and "triggers" required to operate the remaining circuits of the electronic interface. It is shown in Figure 6.
It has four inputs and ten outputs. The stop button S30 ends the recording mode and sets the logic to its proper state to begin another recording. The start button S28 triggers flipflop A12 which resets the 'Q' output low enabling the next homing pulse to start a recording. The homing pulse which is a high going low (H-tL) rests the 'Q' output offal2 to a high. This enables the head clock to generate the track clock which begins the recording. The track clock goes to a binary counter chip A10 which is used to address a dual 2-line-to-4-line decoder. The decoder Al has two sets of outputs. Only the line selected by the applied address is able to go low when the enable is proper for that half of the decoder. The outputs 1YO--1Y3 are the enable lines for the memory input and output timing circuits with an enable being low during the load period and high during the unload period. The second halts outputs 2Y--2H3, which are only enabled during the All output pulse width, are used to start the de-skew circuits. Figure 7 shows the output levels of R/W enable lines with respect to load and unload times. Two other outputs come off this circuit. One is the preset for the system and the second is the track clock (TC) which is the output of A 11 and goes to the electronic halftoning circuit and memory input timing circuit.
The electronic halftoning circuit, shown in Figure 8, generates reference halftoning levels which are later compared with the desired image level to be recorded. The levels are set in PROM A4. The addresses of A4 have three input sources. Two (A2 and A3) are BCD counters which count the track and pixel clocks, respectively. The third is a switch which activates the electronic halftoning circuit.
The comparator circuit of Figure 10 with its inputs from the optical scanner and the electronic halftoning circuit (AQ--A3) determines if a pixel should be written in that area of the magnetic image. By changing the settings on S34 a positive or negative image can be recorded. The input data clocks, two clocks 1800 out of phase, and 1/2 the rate of the load clock are used to load the output of the comparator (Al) into data flip-flops A3.
The memory input timing circuit of Figure 11 generates the signals required to load the data output of the comparator into an 8K buffer memory. The circuit has 4 inputs and 6 sets of outputs. A preset is used to prepare the circuit to begin a load cycle in one of the 4 memory buffers. The memory buffer in which the load cycle is occurring is selected by a low level signal on its R/W enable line. A load cycle required 14 of a revolution of the head wheel and beings with buffer 1. The sequence of buffers followed is then 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, etc. until the recording is complete. A load cycle is begun by a high to low signal transition on the track clock delayed (TCd) which initiates pulse synchronizer A6. The input to A6 is the load clock which is 1/4 of the system clock. The output, the pixel clock, is counted up by A8, A9 and A17 and when binary 4095 is reached the circuit is reset by the reset load signal and awaits another high to low signal transistion on the TCd. The number (n) of pixels in each track is determined by 2x(4096-N) where N is the number preloaded into the counters by SA LSB-SL MSB. The remaining sets of outputs are generated by dividing the pixel clock by 2. The input data clocks go to the comparator circuit and load the data on data flip-flops. The memory chip enables (CEA l-CEA4, CEB 1--CEB4) are the chip enables for the 8 RAMs.
The de-skew logic provides the unload clock for the memory. The de-skew circuit is shown in Figure 12. The output trigger generates a delayed pulse which is used to initiate the unload or record cycle. Once begun, the de-skew frequency is passed by the pulse synchronizer (A5) with the output divided-by-16 by A4 to create the unload clock. The time between the output trigger and the initiation of the unload can be varied by the number set on the switches at the parallel data inputs of Al and A2. This variable delay allows greater tolerance on the exact location of the record heads around the outer circumference of the head wheel. The circuit is reset by a signal created in the memory and output timing circuit.
All of the inputs to the memory and output timing circuit have been discussed. The memory and output timing circuit itself is shown in Figure 13. Each buffer has two 4K RAMs (TMS 406W2). The buffer handles data as first-in-last-out. During loading and unloading the data is alternated between the two RAMs in each buffer which doubles the effective speed of the buffer. The unload chip enables and memory address clocks are generated from the unload clock just as the load signals are generated on the memory input timing circuit. The load and unload chip enables are then gated together and applied to their respected RAMs. The memory address clock for the load cycle (four times the unload clock) is applied to the count-up input of the binary counters (A3-A5) that address the RAMs. The memory address clock for the unload cycle is applied to the count-down input of the binary counters (A3--A5). When the address to the RAM is counted down to IFFY, the output of the 13 input NAND gate generates the reset output.that marks the end of the unload cycle and resets the circuits for the next load cycle. The unload clock is used to load the data flip-flop when the datais valid at the output of the RAMs.
The unload clock is also delayed and, with the data, is outputed to the write driver.
The write driver circuit of Figure 14 employs the AC bias method of recording.
The circuit gates the clock and data together and then sums the bias frequency.
The bias frequency will erase the magnetic tape when the data applied to the circuit is high. The circuit has three settings. Cl and Rl set the level of the data, and C2 sets the level of the bias frequency.
Optical encoder 6 can be obtained from Renco Corporation of Galeta, California.
The resistances depicted in the drawings are in ohms and the capacitances depicted in the drawings are in microfarads, unless otherwise noted. All integrated circuit components can be obtained under the item numbers indicated in the drawings from either Texas Instruments Corporation or Fairchild Corporation. Optical scanners 14, 14', 14" and 14"' can each comprise a lens and photovoltaic cell. Such optical scanners are well known in the art and need not be elaborated upon herein. Further, the analog to digital converter interfacing the optical scanner with the comparator (Figure 3) is well known in the art and need not be elaborated upon. The design and availability of such converters is well established as is evidenced from Fundamentals and Applications of Digitalogic Circuits, Sol Libes, Hayden Book Company, 1975, pages 138 et seq.
While the preferred embodiment described and shown in the Figures utilizes integrated circuitry, it will be appreciated that equivalent circuitry comprised of discrete components can be utilized.
Furthermore, it would be appreciated that while the preferred embodiments has been described with respect to four optical scanners and magnetic write (record) heads, the invention can be applied equally to any number of optical scanners and magnetic record heads by appropriately modifying the circuitry in accordance with the practice of the present invention.
Moreover, optical scanning wherein light sources are mounted on rotating member 11 in place of 14, 14', 14", 14"' and photocells are mounted below the documents platen and positioned to receive light reflected from the document can be employed.
The system can be automated by replacing the various switches in the system with a micro-processor such as an MC6800. A program loaded in a ROM can be used to control the micro-processor.
Information from the optical scanner could be inputted into a computor's memory for storage and retrieved for processing by the electronic interface at a later time. The tie point for the computer interface is the output line of the comparator.
The MC-6800 is a micro-processor marketed in the USA by the company 'Motorola Inc'.
For the sake of clarity, it should be stated in reference to the accompanying Figure 3 that the large, full-line, circuit blocks in the lower central part of the Figure (each of which feeds a record head) each comprise a circuit arrangement that is the same as that shown in the large, dotted-line, block that lies above those three blocks. Thus each such full-line block includes de-skew logic circuitry, memory and output timing circuitry, and a write driver.
WHAT WE CLAIM IS:- 1. A magnetic image recorder comprising platen means for supporting a document to be recorded, a first rotational member having a radius R and a number n of scanning means thereon, the member being spaced from its axis of rotation to the platen means by a distance of about n times R to enable each scanning means to scan segments of a document on the platen means to generate a series of data signals representative of the optical density levels of segments on a document, first translation means for effecting relative movement between the platen means and the first rotational member in a direction generally normal to the scanned segment of a document to enable each of the n scanning means to scan adjacent, generally parallel, segments of a document, a second rotational member having n magnetic recording heads thereon, magnetic tape supporting means for supporting a magnetic tape adjacent the second rotational member to enable each recording head to record a series of magnetic transitions along a segment of a magnetic tape, second translation means for effecting relative movement between the magnetic tape supporting means and the second rotational member to enable each of the n recording heads to record on adjacent, generally parallel, segments of a magnetic tape, and synchronous means for effecting synchronous rotation of the first and second rotational members and synchronous movement of the first and second translation means, buffer means including n storage means each coupled to a corresponding scanning means and recording head, load means for loading data signals into a storage means during the generation thereof, and unload means for unloading data signals from a storage means to a recording head.
2. The recorder of Claim 1 wherein said magnetic transitions recorded on a magnetic tape are generated by means for applying reversals of electric current flow within a fixed wave length to the recording heads.
3. The recorder of Claim I or Claim 2 wherein said synchronous means includes a single shaft mounted for rotation to which said first and second rotational means are coupled, and wherein said shaft is mounted for movement relative to stationary platen means and stationary magnetic tape support means.
4. The recorder of any one of Claims 1 to 3 further including half-toning circuit means for modifying data signals generated by the scanning means to represent a half-toned image.
5. A magnetic image recording process comprising rotating a number n of optical scanning elements about an axis of rotation at a distance R from the axis with the axis of rotation being about n times R from a document to be recorded, moving the rotating scanning elements and a document to be recorded relative to each other in the direction of the axis of rotation for the scanning elements, enabling n generally parallel segments of the documents to be scanned by the n scanning elements each revolution with each scanning element generating a series of data signals representative of optical density variations along the scanned segments of a document, rotating n magnetic recording heads about an axis of rotation, moving the rotating recording heads and a magnetic tape on which a magnetic image is to be recorded relative to each other in the direction of the axis of rotation for the recording heads enabling n generally parallel segments of the magnetic tape to be recorded each revolution by the recording heads as a series of magnetic transitions created by reversals of current to the recording heads, synchronizing the rotation of the scanning elements with the rotation of the recording heads and the relative movement of the scanning means and document with the relative movement of the recording heads and magnetic tape, loading the data signals from the n scanning elements respectively into n storage devices during the generation of the data signals, and unloading the data signals from the n storage devices to corresponding recording heads after the generation of data signals by a scanning element and before the completion of the balance of the revolution by the scanning element, whereby a magnetic image of a document is recorded on the magnetic tape.
6. A magnetic image recorder
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.

Claims (7)

**WARNING** start of CLMS field may overlap end of DESC **. For the sake of clarity, it should be stated in reference to the accompanying Figure 3 that the large, full-line, circuit blocks in the lower central part of the Figure (each of which feeds a record head) each comprise a circuit arrangement that is the same as that shown in the large, dotted-line, block that lies above those three blocks. Thus each such full-line block includes de-skew logic circuitry, memory and output timing circuitry, and a write driver. WHAT WE CLAIM IS:-
1. A magnetic image recorder comprising platen means for supporting a document to be recorded, a first rotational member having a radius R and a number n of scanning means thereon, the member being spaced from its axis of rotation to the platen means by a distance of about n times R to enable each scanning means to scan segments of a document on the platen means to generate a series of data signals representative of the optical density levels of segments on a document, first translation means for effecting relative movement between the platen means and the first rotational member in a direction generally normal to the scanned segment of a document to enable each of the n scanning means to scan adjacent, generally parallel, segments of a document, a second rotational member having n magnetic recording heads thereon, magnetic tape supporting means for supporting a magnetic tape adjacent the second rotational member to enable each recording head to record a series of magnetic transitions along a segment of a magnetic tape, second translation means for effecting relative movement between the magnetic tape supporting means and the second rotational member to enable each of the n recording heads to record on adjacent, generally parallel, segments of a magnetic tape, and synchronous means for effecting synchronous rotation of the first and second rotational members and synchronous movement of the first and second translation means, buffer means including n storage means each coupled to a corresponding scanning means and recording head, load means for loading data signals into a storage means during the generation thereof, and unload means for unloading data signals from a storage means to a recording head.
2. The recorder of Claim 1 wherein said magnetic transitions recorded on a magnetic tape are generated by means for applying reversals of electric current flow within a fixed wave length to the recording heads.
3. The recorder of Claim I or Claim 2 wherein said synchronous means includes a single shaft mounted for rotation to which said first and second rotational means are coupled, and wherein said shaft is mounted for movement relative to stationary platen means and stationary magnetic tape support means.
4. The recorder of any one of Claims 1 to 3 further including half-toning circuit means for modifying data signals generated by the scanning means to represent a half-toned image.
5. A magnetic image recording process comprising rotating a number n of optical scanning elements about an axis of rotation at a distance R from the axis with the axis of rotation being about n times R from a document to be recorded, moving the rotating scanning elements and a document to be recorded relative to each other in the direction of the axis of rotation for the scanning elements, enabling n generally parallel segments of the documents to be scanned by the n scanning elements each revolution with each scanning element generating a series of data signals representative of optical density variations along the scanned segments of a document, rotating n magnetic recording heads about an axis of rotation, moving the rotating recording heads and a magnetic tape on which a magnetic image is to be recorded relative to each other in the direction of the axis of rotation for the recording heads enabling n generally parallel segments of the magnetic tape to be recorded each revolution by the recording heads as a series of magnetic transitions created by reversals of current to the recording heads, synchronizing the rotation of the scanning elements with the rotation of the recording heads and the relative movement of the scanning means and document with the relative movement of the recording heads and magnetic tape, loading the data signals from the n scanning elements respectively into n storage devices during the generation of the data signals, and unloading the data signals from the n storage devices to corresponding recording heads after the generation of data signals by a scanning element and before the completion of the balance of the revolution by the scanning element, whereby a magnetic image of a document is recorded on the magnetic tape.
6. A magnetic image recorder
substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to Figure 1 to 14 of the accompanying drawings.
7. A magnetic image recording process substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the Figures I to 14 of the accompanying drawings.
GB12723/78A 1977-04-01 1978-03-31 Electronically controlled magnetic recording Expired GB1596111A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US78390977A 1977-04-01 1977-04-01

Publications (1)

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GB1596111A true GB1596111A (en) 1981-08-19

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GB12723/78A Expired GB1596111A (en) 1977-04-01 1978-03-31 Electronically controlled magnetic recording

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JP (1) JPS53136845A (en)
CA (1) CA1127303A (en)
DE (1) DE2813240A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2386099A1 (en)
GB (1) GB1596111A (en)
IT (1) IT1094310B (en)
NL (1) NL7803502A (en)

Family Cites Families (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3063052A (en) * 1955-03-14 1962-11-06 Ralph B Atkinson Ferographic recording head
US2996575A (en) * 1960-04-27 1961-08-15 Sperry Rand Corp Apparatus for magnetic printing
US3749833A (en) * 1972-02-14 1973-07-31 Pelorex Corp Facsimile transmission system
JPS5124147A (en) * 1974-08-22 1976-02-26 Comtec Kk

Also Published As

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JPH0123986B2 (en) 1989-05-09
DE2813240A1 (en) 1978-10-05
FR2386099A1 (en) 1978-10-27
NL7803502A (en) 1978-10-03
IT7821821A0 (en) 1978-03-30
IT1094310B (en) 1985-07-26
JPS53136845A (en) 1978-11-29
CA1127303A (en) 1982-07-06
FR2386099B1 (en) 1983-02-11

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PS Patent sealed [section 19, patents act 1949]
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee