GB2084370A - Electronic Coin Validator - Google Patents

Electronic Coin Validator Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2084370A
GB2084370A GB8126859A GB8126859A GB2084370A GB 2084370 A GB2084370 A GB 2084370A GB 8126859 A GB8126859 A GB 8126859A GB 8126859 A GB8126859 A GB 8126859A GB 2084370 A GB2084370 A GB 2084370A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
coin
validator
coil
electronic coin
signal
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB8126859A
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GB2084370B (en
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Plessey Co Ltd
Original Assignee
Plessey Co Ltd
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Plessey Co Ltd filed Critical Plessey Co Ltd
Priority to GB8126859A priority Critical patent/GB2084370B/en
Publication of GB2084370A publication Critical patent/GB2084370A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2084370B publication Critical patent/GB2084370B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G07CHECKING-DEVICES
    • G07DHANDLING OF COINS OR VALUABLE PAPERS, e.g. TESTING, SORTING BY DENOMINATIONS, COUNTING, DISPENSING, CHANGING OR DEPOSITING
    • G07D5/00Testing specially adapted to determine the identity or genuineness of coins, e.g. for segregating coins which are unacceptable or alien to a currency
    • G07D5/08Testing the magnetic or electric properties
    • GPHYSICS
    • G07CHECKING-DEVICES
    • G07DHANDLING OF COINS OR VALUABLE PAPERS, e.g. TESTING, SORTING BY DENOMINATIONS, COUNTING, DISPENSING, CHANGING OR DEPOSITING
    • G07D5/00Testing specially adapted to determine the identity or genuineness of coins, e.g. for segregating coins which are unacceptable or alien to a currency
    • G07D5/02Testing the dimensions, e.g. thickness, diameter; Testing the deformation

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Testing Of Coins (AREA)

Abstract

The validator has a transmit coil for creating a magnetic field and a receive coil for detecting changes in the field due to the presence of a coin adjacent to the coils. The validator performs a test on each coin to provide a first parameter which is a measure of coin face area, and a second parameter which is a measure of coin resistance. The parameters are utilised to establish the validity of the coin.

Description

SPECIFICATION Electronic Coin Validators The present invention relates to electronic coin validators. When a step change of magnetic flux is applied axially to a coin an eddy current is induced which flows in the periphery of the coin, the coin acts like a coil comprising a single shorted turn. The coin has an inductance Lc and an equivalent series resistance Rc, related to the resistivity of the coin and its resistance. The eddy current induced in the coin is also related to the current step I in the transmit coil that produces the step change of magnetic flux and the mutual coupling Mc between the coil and coin.
The current can be used to give an electronic signature that defines the coin type.
According to the present invention there is provided an electronic coin validator including a transmit coil for creating a magnetic field, a receive coil for detecting changes in the magnetic field due to the presence of a coin adjacent to the coils, and means whereby the validator operates to perform a test on the coin, to give a first parameter which is a measure of the coin face area, and a second parameter which is a measure of the coin resistance, said first and second parameters being used to establish the validity of the coin.
According to a further aspect of the invention there is provided an electronic coin validator including a transmit coil for creating a magnetic field and a receive coil for detecting the transmitted magnetic field, said receive coil being used to detect a compensation signal when the transmit coil is activated, which signal is unaffected by the coin to be validated.
The invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein; Figure 1 shows the circuit diagram of an electronic coin validator according to the present invention, Figure 2 shows a set of waveforms which are produced at various points in the circuitry of Figure 1, Figure 3 shows the output waveforms of the circuitry of Figure 1 for each coin denomination, Figure 4 shows a coin validator of another embodiment of the present invention, Figure 5 shows a graph of the normalised coil voltage against frequency with a coin present in the embodiment shown in Figure 4.
Referring to Figures 1, 2 and 3, an embodiment of the invention, an impulse test type validator, will now be described.
For impulse testing the magnetic field is larger than the largest coin to be tested and two parameters are measured, coin face area and coin resistance. The receive coil current waveform is shown in Figure 2. If the open circuit voltage in the coin, is detected, the peak voltage is a measure of a coin face area and the integrated voltage waveform has a time constant related to the coin resistance.
The circuit of Figure 1, produces the waveforms of Figure 2. It consists of a current switch CS which has a defined turn on time, and drives the transmit coil TC. The receive coil RC drives an amplifier which is connected to an integrator I and a peak detector PD. A comparator set at 90% of the integrator maximum output voltage gives a signal that allows t coin to be measured, where t coin is the time taken for the integrator output voltage to rise to the 90% level. A start pulse gates a 10 MHz clock into a counter chain CC via flip flop FF1 when the transmit current step is applied, and, the integrator output stops the count. The number in the counter is now a measure oft coin which relates to coin resistance, and may be applied to a microprocessor ,uP for evaluation.The peak detector holds the peak impulse shown in Figure 2 and can produce the set of output voltages shown in Figure 3 for the different coins. The peak detector drives four window gates WG, one of which is shown, whose thresholds are adjusted to each coin face area distribution. The window comparator outputs are gated into a 'D' type flip-flop FF2 that are clocked 5 ,u S after the start of the coin test, the effectively produces a peak detector output sample at 5 ,u S, as shown in Figure 3. The output of each flip-flop FF2 may be applied to the microprocessor ,uP for evaluation. Alternatively, the peak detector voltage may be entered into an analog-to-digital converter and the output applied to a microprocessor for evaluation.
Alternatively, the peak detector voltage may be entered into an analog-to-digital converter and the output applied to a microprocessor for evaluation.
The theory of operation of the impulse test type coin validator is as follows:- dl Direct flux linkage transmit to receive coil eoc=-M dt which for a current step of
where RT is the damping resistor across the receive coil and RT Rx.
If the step is of rise time T, this is modified to:
It can be shown that L is large and T small than the rise time variation does not have a great effect on eoc. The voltage in the receive coil due to the presence of the coin is modified to:
and this has to be added to the voltage due to the direct flux in order to give the complete receive waveform. It can be seen from the equations that if a test impulse is applied when no coin is present then this can be used to provide a reference ievel providing compensation for the effects of drift etc. The coin validator verifies two parameters of a coin before it is passed as genuine. Any disc of the correct size will meet the size parameter, but then has to have a time t coin inside the correct time distribution to meet the second parameter and be recognised as genuine.
The validator uses identical transmit and receive coils wound on the outside of a ferrite vinkor.
The area of the coil is quite critical and has to be such as to allow sufficient flux to pass around each coin and also produce an easily measurable t-coin period in excess of 10 ,uS.
Referring to Figures 4 and 5 an alternative embodiment of the invention will now be described.
The multi-frequency validator carries out a test to verify two parameters of the coin. The first parameter is of face area of the coin, and the second parameter is of the coin resistance.
A magnetic field larger than the largest coin face area is produced across the coin runway between the transmit and receive coils. The field can be either produced by an alternating current or a step change of current in the transmit coil.
The multi-frequency validator has a transmit coil TC which is driven by a coil drive circuit CD. The coil drive circuit CD is fed with a multi-frequency signal generated from oscillator OSC and divider circuit dv via a signal amplitude control circuit AC, filter circuits F1-F4 and summing and amplitude weighting circuit SW.
The receive coil RC drives a differential amplifier DA and filters F5-F8. The output of the filters is fed via respective rectifier circuits R1-R3 to detector circuits D1-D3 the outputs of which are selectively switched by switch S to analog-to-digital converter ADC to a microprocessor ,uP for evaluation.
Rectifier R4 feeds an automatic gain control circuit AGC which also receives a voltage reference signal from circuit VR. The output of the automatic gain control circuit AGC is used to modify the operation of signal amplitude control circuit AC to compensate for temperature changes in inductance, drift etc. The graph shown in Figure 5 shows the normalized receive coil voltage NCV against transmit current frequency f. At frequencies below 1 KHz the received signal amplitude is unaffected by the presence of the coin set of interest and so can be used for a continuous reference tone that compensates for variations in mutual inductance, temperature effects and component drift.At high frequencies the coin is opaque to the applied magnetic field and so the majority of the received signal is due to the field that gets round the edge of the coin, therefore the ratio of the amplitude of the received signal with and without the coin present gives a measure of the coin face area. If amplitude measurements are taken in the receive coil at two frequencies between 1 KHz and 1 OOKHz we can get a measure of the coin resistance. The open circuit receive coil voltage is:
The term A w cos wt gives a measure of coin face area at high frequency and the other terms at lower frequencies give a measure of coin resistance.
,uoyeNTNR (Area of receive coil) Mutual coupling between two coils M= distance between coils where NT is Number of turns on the transmit coil NR is Number of turns on the receive coil ye is the effective permeability The equation shows that Voc varies in amplitude with w and M. An accurately controlled frequency using a crystal master clock will prevent variations in w effecting Voc. However, coin face area is the ratio of the magnetic field passing round the coin to that when no coin is present and is directly proportional to the mechanical dimensions of the receive coil, which vary from coil to coil. As a result one absolute adjustment is needed to set up the validator in production and can be carried out with a disc of accurate proportions. The ratios from coin to coin will always be the same once the initial adjustment is made.

Claims (1)

  1. Claims
    1. An electronic coin validator including a transmit coil for creating a magnetic field, a receive coil for detecting changes in the magnetic field due to the presence of a coin adjacent to the coils, and means whereby the validator operates to perform a test on the coin, to give a first parameter which is a measure of the coin face area, and a second parameter which is a measure of the coin resistance, said first and second parameters being used to establish the validity of the coin.
    2. An electronic coin validator including a transmit coil for creating a magnetic field and a receive coil for detecting the created magnetic field, said receive coil being used to detect a compensation signal when the transmit coil is activated, which signal is unaffected by the coin to be validated.
    3. An electronic coin validator as claimed in claim 1 or 2 wherein the transmit coil is driven by a current switch having a defined turn on time, and the receive coil drives an amplifier which is connected to an integrator and peak detector.
    4. An electronic coin validator as claimed in claim 3 wherein the integrator is connected to a comparator set at a percentage of the integrator maximum output voltage to provide a control signal.
    5. An electronic coin validator as claimed in claim 4 wherein the control signal controls a counter which is started when the transmit coil is activated, the control signal being used as a stop signal for the counter in which the count is indicative of a measured value relating to the coin resistance.
    6. An electronic coin validator as claimed in claim 3 wherein the peak detector is connected to and drives a plurality of window gates having a respective threshold adjusted for a respective coin face area, and which provide respective output signals.
    7. An electronic coin validator as claimed in claims 5 and 6 wherein the count value and the output signals are applied to a microprocessor for evaluation.
    8. An electronic coin validator as claimed in claims 1 or 2 wherein the transmit coil is activated by a multi-frequency signal which is applied to the coil via a signal amplitude control circuit, filter circuits and a summing and an amplitude weighting circuit.
    9. An electronic coin validator as claimed in claim 8 wherein the receive coil is connected to and drives filter circuits, rectifier circuits, and detector circuits which provide output signals indicative of the detected coin which are selectively switched via an analog-to-digital converter to a microprocessor for evaluation.
    10. An electronic coin validator as claimed in claim 9 wherein the ratio of the amplitude of the signal received by the receive coil with and without a coin present gives a measure of coin face area.
    1 An electronic coin validator as claimed in claim 10 wherein amplitude measurements are taken in the receive coil at two frequencies to obtain a measure of coin resistance.
    1 2. An electronic coin validator as claimed in claim 11 wherein the measurements are taken at two frequencies between 1 KHz and 1 OOKHz.
    13. An electronic coin validator as claimed in claim 1 2 wherein one of the rectifier circuits drive an automatic gain control circuit which also receives a reference voltage, the output signal from which is used to modify the operation of the signal amplitude control circuit for compensation purposes.
    14. An electronic coin validator substantially as described with reference to the accompanying drawings. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GB8126859A 1980-09-19 1981-09-04 Electronic coin validator Expired GB2084370B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8126859A GB2084370B (en) 1980-09-19 1981-09-04 Electronic coin validator

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8030389 1980-09-19
GB8126859A GB2084370B (en) 1980-09-19 1981-09-04 Electronic coin validator

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2084370A true GB2084370A (en) 1982-04-07
GB2084370B GB2084370B (en) 1984-04-11

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2135492A (en) * 1983-02-09 1984-08-30 Chapman Cash Processing Limite Coin recognition
GB2160689A (en) * 1984-04-27 1985-12-24 Piper Instr Limited Coin detection

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2135492A (en) * 1983-02-09 1984-08-30 Chapman Cash Processing Limite Coin recognition
GB2160689A (en) * 1984-04-27 1985-12-24 Piper Instr Limited Coin detection

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2084370B (en) 1984-04-11

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Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19930904