GB2200787A - Method and apparatus for recording and loading tape cassette - Google Patents
Method and apparatus for recording and loading tape cassette Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- GB2200787A GB2200787A GB08727275A GB8727275A GB2200787A GB 2200787 A GB2200787 A GB 2200787A GB 08727275 A GB08727275 A GB 08727275A GB 8727275 A GB8727275 A GB 8727275A GB 2200787 A GB2200787 A GB 2200787A
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- tape
- recorded
- data
- programme
- recording
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- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 title claims description 49
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 58
- 238000004519 manufacturing process Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 25
- 235000012771 pancakes Nutrition 0.000 claims description 32
- 238000004804 winding Methods 0.000 claims description 18
- 238000006073 displacement reaction Methods 0.000 claims description 5
- 238000001514 detection method Methods 0.000 claims description 4
- 230000004044 response Effects 0.000 claims description 4
- 230000000977 initiatory effect Effects 0.000 claims description 2
- 238000003825 pressing Methods 0.000 claims description 2
- 238000007689 inspection Methods 0.000 claims 2
- 238000011835 investigation Methods 0.000 claims 1
- 238000005070 sampling Methods 0.000 claims 1
- 238000010586 diagram Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000005236 sound signal Effects 0.000 description 3
- 238000006243 chemical reaction Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000005520 cutting process Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000006870 function Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000005381 magnetic domain Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000003287 optical effect Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000008569 process Effects 0.000 description 2
- 235000014676 Phragmites communis Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 230000003466 anti-cipated effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000008901 benefit Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000005540 biological transmission Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000008859 change Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000012790 confirmation Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000010276 construction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000001747 exhibiting effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000007246 mechanism Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000012544 monitoring process Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000002035 prolonged effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000009467 reduction Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000000758 substrate Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000001960 triggered effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000012795 verification Methods 0.000 description 1
Classifications
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G11—INFORMATION STORAGE
- G11B—INFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
- G11B23/00—Record carriers not specific to the method of recording or reproducing; Accessories, e.g. containers, specially adapted for co-operation with the recording or reproducing apparatus ; Intermediate mediums; Apparatus or processes specially adapted for their manufacture
- G11B23/02—Containers; Storing means both adapted to cooperate with the recording or reproducing means
- G11B23/113—Apparatus or processes specially adapted for the manufacture of magazines or cassettes, e.g. initial loading into container
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G11—INFORMATION STORAGE
- G11B—INFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
- G11B23/00—Record carriers not specific to the method of recording or reproducing; Accessories, e.g. containers, specially adapted for co-operation with the recording or reproducing apparatus ; Intermediate mediums; Apparatus or processes specially adapted for their manufacture
- G11B23/38—Visual features other than those contained in record tracks or represented by sprocket holes the visual signals being auxiliary signals
- G11B23/40—Identifying or analogous means applied to or incorporated in the record carrier and not intended for visual display simultaneously with the playing-back of the record carrier, e.g. label, leader, photograph
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G11—INFORMATION STORAGE
- G11B—INFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
- G11B27/00—Editing; Indexing; Addressing; Timing or synchronising; Monitoring; Measuring tape travel
- G11B27/10—Indexing; Addressing; Timing or synchronising; Measuring tape travel
- G11B27/19—Indexing; Addressing; Timing or synchronising; Measuring tape travel by using information detectable on the record carrier
- G11B27/28—Indexing; Addressing; Timing or synchronising; Measuring tape travel by using information detectable on the record carrier by using information signals recorded by the same method as the main recording
- G11B27/32—Indexing; Addressing; Timing or synchronising; Measuring tape travel by using information detectable on the record carrier by using information signals recorded by the same method as the main recording on separate auxiliary tracks of the same or an auxiliary record carrier
- G11B27/322—Indexing; Addressing; Timing or synchronising; Measuring tape travel by using information detectable on the record carrier by using information signals recorded by the same method as the main recording on separate auxiliary tracks of the same or an auxiliary record carrier used signal is digitally coded
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G11—INFORMATION STORAGE
- G11B—INFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
- G11B5/00—Recording by magnetisation or demagnetisation of a record carrier; Reproducing by magnetic means; Record carriers therefor
- G11B5/86—Re-recording, i.e. transcribing information from one magnetisable record carrier on to one or more similar or dissimilar record carriers
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G11—INFORMATION STORAGE
- G11B—INFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
- G11B2220/00—Record carriers by type
- G11B2220/90—Tape-like record carriers
Landscapes
- Indexing, Searching, Synchronizing, And The Amount Of Synchronization Travel Of Record Carriers (AREA)
Abstract
Open spool reels 18 of magnetic tape 7 are recorded with a plurality of different programmes interspersed with recordings in a different form (typically as interruptions to the sync track), representing data information (6) concerning the programme material and production history of the recording. The data (6) recorded on the tape 7 is read by a transducer 39 on a cassette loading machine 30 and used to control the operation of the loading machine, identifying the length of tape and the position on the tape where splices between the magnetic tape 7 and leader tape in cassette shells is to be made. The data (6) also controls a label printer 46 to produce a printed label, typically in bar code form, carrying information representing the programme material on the tape loaded into the cassette. This label is automatically applied to the cassette shell as part of the cassette loading operation so that each cassette is securely provided with external easily read information identifying the program me content thereby avoiding the necessity for individual playback of a tape to identify its programme content. The data (6) may include date, time, and recording machine identity codes. <IMAGE>
Description
IMPROVED PRODUCTION OF PRE-RECORDED TAPE CASSETTES This invention relates to a method and apparatus for recording and loading magnetic tape cassettes.
As used in this specification the term 'magnetic tape cassettes will be understood to relate to an assembly comprising an enclosi##ng casing or shell housing two spools wound with a length of magnetic tape. Such cassettes are widely known for use with audio or video equipment and also as a recording store of data for computers.
Regardless of its intended function the magnetic tape carried on the spools is of substantially the same form, comprising a flexible supporting substrate on one face of which there is formed an oxide layer exhibiting specific magnetic properties. Currently, the most well known types of cassettes are the Philips "compact" cassette for audio and data information and the JVC VHSS cassette for video information.
Magnetic tape for use in such cassettes is manufactured in rolls many thousands of metres long sufficient to fill very many cassettes. This tape is wound into the plastic housings or shells to form cassettes using a special machine known as a cassette loader. The information to be stored on the magnetic tape may be recorded after the tape has been loaded into the cassettes ("in-cassette duplication') or may be recorded before loading into the cassettes ("reel-to-reel duplication"). If the tape is recorded before being loaded into cassettes this is usually achieved by recording the same programme repeatedly onto a length of tape sufficient to fill several cassettes, and then loading a length of the tape containing one programme into each of several cassettes sequentially.In order to ensure that the length of tape loaded into a cassette contains the whole of a programme (and in this context, the term "programme" will be understood to mean a complete set of use signals, be they video or audio signals for entertainment or education purposes, or data signals for operating a computer or serving as the working basis for computer operation) it is necessary to leave a certain unrecorded length of tape between the end of a recorded programme and the commencement of the next adjacent recorded programme. It has also been known to record identifiable queue tones at the beginning or end (or both) of the programme material so that the physical break in the tape can with certainty be made in such a way that it does not impinge on the recorded programme material. In this way, the loader can detect the correct point to complete one cassette and start the next.
In audio cassette production (and some data cassettes), programme material can be recorded at high speed in reel-to-reel recording machines having large-diameter reels of use tape, special machines having been developed for this purpose. Typically, magnetic use tape equivalent to about 30 to 40 ~ O cassettes is recorded in this way from a length of 'master" tape on which the programme information has been recorded with high fidelity.
This arrangement inevitably means that audio cassette reel-to-reel recording equipment is somewhat bulky, a recording deck having a relatively large surface area in order to accommodate the supply spool and take-up spool in side-by-side relationship. In practice, this is a relatively minor disadvantage in a conventional audio context because of the high speed at which recording is effected.
This is possible with audio signals because of their comparatively narrow band width. Recording can thus be carried out at a very high speed without loss of recording quality. For example, recording may be carried out at from 32 to 128 times playback speed. This enables highly productive audio cassette recording operations to be set up with relatively few copier machines so that the size of the machines themselves is at least tolerable.
In video recording, however, the recorded signals are of much higher bandwidth so that recording of such signals cannot be carried out at high speed without serious loss of recording quality. Even a recording speed 50 per cent higher than playback speed will normally result in an unacceptable reduction in quality and in most cases the recording speed has to be equal to the retrieval or playback speed. Because of this relatively slow speed of recording, many more copier machines are needed for video copying than for audio recording; indeed it is not unknown for a single establishment to have several-thousands of copiers operating at the same time. Video copiers having the same size as open reel audio copiers would require about 400 per cent more space than an in-cassette copier and this is totally unacceptable. The same applies to high bandwidth audio copying e.g.R-DAT and S-DAT format. Although there are the above described differences between the treatment of audio and video tape due to differences in the nature of the signals there is in practice no difference in the magnetic tape itself except that tape for audio signals is wider in order to accommodate the inclined recording stripes recorded by the rotating tape heads of a video recorder or playback machine. For the above reasons, in-cassette copying of video tapes remained customary practice for many years. However, the method has always been regarded as unsatisfactory for a number of reasons. First, the process is labour intensive due to the requirement to change the cassette after each recording had been completed.Secondly, the mechanisms which handle the slave cassettes in the players are inherently complex and sufficiently prone to unreliable performance that they can give significant practical problems after a prolonged period of heavy use. Thirdly, since the players have to start and stop between recording each cassette, and since each cassette contains tape which may have come from different reels of varying quality, it is necessary to sample each one after the recording has been completed in order to ensure the recording process has proceeded correctly.
Finding a solution to the problems of existing video copiers has been the subject of much activity in the industry and machines which eliminate many of the above-enumerated problems are now available.
The Sony Sprinter system, for example, passes a master tape carrying a mirror image" of the magnetic recording patterns in contact with a slave tape through a recording station at which the two tapes are pressed together with a magnetic field applied so that the mirror image magnetic pattern is transferred reversely.
The two tapes are stationary relative to each other and thus both may be transported at high speed through the recording station.
This speed facility reduces the space requirements for a particular production level relative t# the large space which would otherwise be needed. Quality recording requires a very strongly recorded master tape which is difficult to produce, production requiring
f specialist expensive recording techniques, and the print-through recorder is also itself expensive to produce since video copiers for commercial cassette production operations represent a small market, whose supply involves the economic disadvantages of small scale production operations. However, quality of recording is obtainable at high speed and in a labour-saving manner, thus making the machine commercially desirable and used increasingly. The Tape
Automation EVD system comprises a recording head for recording the programme material onto use tape, and a pair of independently operative stepper motors for effecting rim drive of each of two non-cassette (open) spools which are in use mounted to the apparatus for rotation about a common axis in parallel juxtaposed planes of rotation, one such spool serving as a supply spool which in use discharges use tape to the recording head and the other such spool serving as a take-up spool to take up recorded tape issuing from the recording head. The stepper motors are operable subject to control means for detecting changes in speed of tape supply and take-up whereby the relative speed of driven rotation of the spools can be adjusted to equalise tape supply to and tape take-up from the recording head.The space requirements of the machine are no more than about 25 per cent more than for conventional in-cassette mass copiers, an acceptable increase in practice. The spools of tape used in this system are very large diameter unbraced spools, that is the tape is wound on a core without the guiding discs conventionally used on open reels. By winding the tape at the correct high tension such open spools can be made hard and effectively self-supporting. They are known as pancake spools for obvious reasons.
Although the above machines largely deal with many of the above-outlined problems, without loss of recording quality, they do impose very severe logistic an-oreanisational problems in a manufacturing operation. In order to gain maximum benefit when using the pancake spools it is desirable to record the whole length of tape on a spool before removing it for winding. This is necessary in order to maintain an adequately light and sufficiently constant winding tension to keep the spool in shape. This can involve up to 48 hours between pancake spool changes.However, other constraints such as the ratio of playback machines (producing the recording signal from a master cassette) to video loaders and the average batch size required, mean that in order to fill a whole pancake spool with recorded programme material, it is sometimes necessary to record different programmes at different points along the length of tape on the pancake spool. For example, the situation may be as follows:
Ratio of playback machines to recording machines 500:1
Average programme length 90 minutes
Average batch required 1000
Length of tape in each pancake spool 4000 m
Programmes/pancake spool 29 approx.
It will be appreciated that all 500 recording machines will record the same programme material so that to produce a batch of 1000 will require a given programme to be played only twice by the master playback machine and recorded on two successive lengths of each spool. Since each pancake spool can record 29 programmes each will on average contain 14 or 15 different programmes, each recorded twice. It will be appreciated that this situation, after only a short period of cassette winding, results in a number and variety of recorded cassettes such that unacceptable levels of operator supervision and intervention are called for if uncertainty as to the identity of programme material recorded on the various individual cassettes (which all appear visually identical from the outside) is to be avoided, and indeed if winding operations are to be conducted efficiently at all.
In the case of the Sony Sprinter system, each of, for example, ten pancake spools is recorded from the same programme material.
However it is still very easy to lose track of the recording programme, which can lead to problems of identification similar to those just described. These problems often result in the necessity to play back each of a large number of recorded cassettes in order to establish what has been recorded on them.
The technical problem to which the present invention relates, therefore, is that of unambiguously and automatically identifying the programme material recorded on a length of tape to enable the programme content of a cassette containing such tape to be identified without the need to play back the tape.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of recording magnetic tape for subsequent loading into cassettes, in which between signals representing the programme material recorded along sections of the tape there are recorded signals representing data related to and/or identifying the programme material and which, upon playback of the tape act to control a cassette loading machine and/or apparatus associated therewith.
Conveniently, signals representing the programme material and the data are recorded onto the magnetic tape by transporting the tape past a recording head or transducer at a recording station and in any event the programme material is preferably recorded from a master recording#made on a recording medium (e.g. a master cassette) on which only the programme material is recorded (although, in fact, some of the data may also be recorded on the master). Alternatively, a master may first be sub-mastered to provide one or a plurality of sub-master recordings each used to record part of a very large number of programme copies onto magnetic tape on open or pancake spools, each sub-master having data encoded thereon to identify it as distinct from its parent and other sub-master(s).
Alternatively, the programme material may be recorded onto magnetic tape by transporting the said magnetic tape and a tape carrying a master recording of the programme material through a recording station including means for pressing the two tapes into close contact in an applied magnetic field to induce magnetic print through" of the recorded signal from the master recording tape onto the use tape.
In preferred embodiments of the invention, the magnetic tape is recorded with the programme material and data by transporting it through the recording station from an open supply spool to an open take-up spool.
According to a second aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of producing cassettes of magnetic tape recorded with programme material, comprising the steps of preparing a reel of tape having a plurality of lengths recorded with programme material intercalated with recorded signals representing data as claimed in claim 1, transferring the reel to a cassette loader having a transducer responsive to the said recorded data signals, transporting tape into a cassette past the said transducer, controlling the operation of the tape transport in dependence on signals generated by the said transducer, and further controlling means for forming visible indicia representing the identity of the programme material recorded on the tape for application to the shell of the cassette.
The means for forming the visible indicia may comprise a label printer and the method includes the step of automatically applying a label printed with indicia corresponding to the said data signals onto the shell of the cassette during winding of the length of tape recorded with the programme material to which the data relates or immediately thereafter.
In one embodiment the said means for forming visible indicia comprise means for directly marking or engraving the shell of the cassette being loaded during winding of the tape or immediately thereafter.
The data signals detected by the said transducer may include data representing the length of tape occupied by programme material to which the data relates, and the method includes the step of storing the data length signal after detection thereof, generating signals representing the displacement of tape during winding thereof, comparing the said displacement-representative signals with the said stored signals and initiating deceleration of the tape transport when there is a predetermined difference therebetween.
The present invention also comprehends magnetic tape recorded along successive lengths thereof with first signals representing programme material and second signals representing data identifying the recorded programme material and/or one or more characteristics of the recorded tape and/or its production, the said second signals acting to control the operation of a cassette loader and/or associated apparatus upon detection thereof by a transducer sensitive to the magnetic recording on the tape.
Preferably the said first signals are television signals and the said second signals are recorded on the tape in pulse code form.
These pulse code signals are preferably recorded on the tape as pulse width modulation of the signal recorded on the sync track of the video recording.
According to a further aspect, the present invention provides apparatus for producing recorded magnetic tape comprises means for generating programme signals, recording transducer means to which the said programme signals are fed, means for generating data signals to be supplied to the said recording transducer means, tape transport means for transporting the magnetic tape to be recorded past the said recording transducer means, and control means connected to the said programme signal generator and the said data signal generator and operative to control energisation of the transducer means such that data signals and related programme signals are recorded in sequence along the tape.
The said recording transducer means may comprise a simple recording transducer or two separate transducers spaced along the path of the magnetic tape, one for recording signals representing programme material and one for recording signals representing data.
In a further aspect of the invention there is provided apparatus for producing cassettes of recorded magnetic tape comprising apparatus as defined above for producing successive recordings of programme material and data onto a length of magnetic tape, means for winding the tape onto open spools after recording, a transducer sensitive to the recorded data signals and operative to generate electrical control signals in response thereto, a cassette loader having a drive spindle engageable with a spool of a cassette to be loaded, drive means for the spindle, a control circuit operative to control the spindle drive means in- accordance with electrical control signals received from the said sensor, and cassette identification means operative to provide visible indicia representative of the programme identified by the data signal.
In the preferred embodiment of the invention the said cassette identification means comprises a label printer operative to print labels bearing indicia determined by the said data signals, and there are further provided means for applying the labels to cassette shells before being ejected from the cassette loader.
The label printer may operate to produce indicia in the form of machine readable bar codes on the labels to be applied to the cassettes., in which case there are preferably provided means for reading the bar code labels and directing the cassettes to one of a plurality of label application stations at which preliminarily prepared labels from a stack thereof are applied to the cassettes.
One embodiment of the present invention will now be more particularly described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a diagram schematically showing apparatus for the production of recorded magnetic tape formed as an embodiment of the invention;
Figure 2 is another diagram schematically illustrating a machine for producing recorded cassettes of magnetic tape from open spools or pancake reels of tape produced by the apparatus of Figure 1; and
Figure 3 is a diagram illustrating a length of magnetic tape recorded with video programme material and data.
Referring now to Figure 1, magnetic tape is recorded by a programme duplication assembly comprising a master playback machine 11, a main recording controller 12 having a keyboard 13 for inputting information, and a bank of tape recorders for recording the video output of the master playback machine 11 and the data output of the main recording controller 12. As can be seen in Figure 1 the slave tape recorders, which are identified with the reference numeral 141 to 14 (where n, as mentioned above, may typically be 500 or in
n some cases may be 1000 or more) are equipped with drive means for carrying large open spools or pancake reels 15 from which tape is drawn over a capstan 16 past two spaced recording heads 16,17.onto a further open spool or pancake reel 18.The master playback machine is a conventional high quality video recorder, of the type generally available for domestic or professional use, modified so that video signals from a master programme cassette are output not to a VDU but to a programme output line 19 leading to the recording heads 16 of the recording machine 14. in parallel. The recording machines may have a construction and operation as described and illustrated in our co-pending UK Patent Application No. 86 21222.
As mentioned above, the bank of recorders 14 may comprise several hundred such recorders all receiving the same video signals derived from the master playback machine and the master cassette run thereon. Typically, about 500 recorders may be present in the bank. Each of the recording heads 17 is connected to a line 20 on which are applied data signals from the main recording controller 12, which in this embodiment comprises a suitably programmed interface computer.The computer also has a control output line 21 for conveying signals for controlling the production of local information derived directly from the individual recorders 14, such as a recorder identification code, which is thus recorded at appropriate points along the tape as controlled by the interface computer: this latter is also connected directly to the master playback machine 11 by a line 22 for the purpose of detecting the beginning and end of the programme material and for monitoring and/or controlling a pause period while the playback machine 11 rewinds for a subsequent run or while the cassette is replaced with another containing the same or a different programme.
The interface computer 12 links the master playback machine 11 to the bank of recorders 14 and controls each production run on the basis of a production plan input to the computer via the keyboard 13 before the run is started (or afterwards and prior to playback of the master cassette to the end of the first master programme).
Once a production run is complete, the computer prompts manual loading of the next master cassette and recycles. The single control line 20 transmits global information output of the interface computer 12 to each recorder 14 in the recorder bank, the second line 21 being used to transmit trigger signals as discussed above.
Turning now to Figure 2, the cassette loading station comprises at least one cassette loader generally indicated 30, which in this embodiment is of the type described and illustrated in our co-pending UK Patent Application No. 86 18119. The loader 30 is one of a plurality of such loaders the number of which will depend entirely on the number of recorders 14 in the bank of recorders, but due to the much faster speed of loading as compared to recording, the number of loaders 30 will be much less than the number of recorders 14 (typically one loader will be capable of loading the collective output of about 50 recorders). The loader 30 is adapted to receive an open spool or pancake reel 18 taken from a recorder 14 after having been recorded with a sequence of programme material and data signals in alternation in a pattern which will be more particularly described in relation to Figure 3.
This will include information for identifying the programme material recorded on the tape wound into the cassette and in practice certain other information. The data also includes an index 'mark" or wsue tones signifying one end of one set of signals representing programme material and the data signals.
Before proceeding to a detailed description of the loading station in Figure 2, the format of the recording on the tape wound on the open spool or pancake reel 18 will be discussed.
First, it will be appreciated that because of the relatively large number of recorders 14 all receiving signals from the master playback machine 11, it is possible to produce a large number of copies of an original master tape relatively quickly. For example, by playing the tape in the master playback machine 11 only twice there will have been produced 1000 copies of the programme recorded thereon.Since the length of tape wound on a pancake reel can take very much more than this (typically in the region of 30 programmes) and because it is inefficient to slow down and stop the pancake reels once they have been set in motion, and even more inefficient to remove these from the recorder, place them on a loader and load only a fraction of the tape contained thereon before replacing it on a recorder and recording further information, it is normal practice to record the whole length of a pancake reel with a number of different programmes. For this reason it is assumed here that each pancake reel 18 after having been recorded will contain a plurality of different programmes, some of them repeated several times along the length of the tape.
Because of slight differences between each of the recorders 14.
each pancake reel 18 so produced will have minor differences as concerns the precise physical length of tape used to record a given programme. In order to compensate this it is usual practice to leave a significant length of tape unrecorded in order to ensure that no programme from a relatively slow recorder 14. is "cropped" during loading. It must be emphasised here that the differences in speed between one recorder and another are very small, typically less than 1 per cent, but on the other hand it must also be appreciated that the lengths of recording tape are extremely great, running into thousands of metres, and therefore even a very small percentage variation can result in quite significant physical differences in the position of a given programme along the tape.
The present invention, however, overcomes this disadvantage by means of the data control signals which are recorded on the tape during recording. As can be seen from Figure 3 the tape of a recorded pancake has a number of programmes recorded thereon in sequence. The tape includes a short terminal length 1 used for threading the tape of the unrecorded pancake on the recorder. An index mark 2 recorded on the tape as an interruption in the video sync track after this length signifies the start of the tape carrying the first recorded programme. The following length of tape
P is recorded with the programme. This is terminated by a length of tape 3 recorded serially with pulse coded information represented as a sequence of interruptions in the sync track of the video recording.A very short length of tape 4 then separates the code signals from another index mark signifying the beginning of the next length of tape recorded with programme material. This very short length is determined by the type of mastering system used in the recording procedure. If a single shuttle master is used, the very short tape length 4 represents the period during which the recorder is paused for the master cassette to rewind. If an alternating master system is employed, length 4 signifies a period inserted into procedures by the control system of the recorder to ensure inter-programme stability.The sequence index-programme-code-very short length is repeated to the end of the tape (the programmes being the same or different and the codes recorded after each programme representing the details of the programme just recorded, then a final code block 6 at the end of the tape is followed by a short terminal length 5 inserted by the interface computer to allow for handling during winding. The length 5 is left at the leading end of the first cassette to be loaded from the recorded pancake reel 18.
The coded information in the code block 3 and generated by the interface computer 12 is referred to as global information. The code block 3 also includes 'local' information which is provided by the encoder forming part of the recorder 14 on which the particular pancake reel 18 has been recorded.
The index mark 2 and data 3 are recorded on the tape, as mentioned earlier, as pulses in the form of interruptions in the sync track of the video recording. The interruptions are caused by control line pulses of various length output from the interface computer.
The significance of the lengths of the pulses is as follows:
Short pulse (typically in the region of 1 sec) repre#sents binary 0 during serial encoding of global informatioon.
Long pulse (typically in the region of 2 secs) represents binary 1 during serial encoding of global information.
Very long pulse (4 secs) represents an index mark.
Computer-generated short and-long pulses are used to make up global information, and also Local Information Clocks (LIC) to which the individual recorders respond by encoding, with similar pulses, the required local information to be recorded onto the tape. Each LIC triggers the recorder to encode one bit of local information and record it onto the tape, and contains timing information which controls the period of recorder-generated long and short pulses making up the local information codes.
Global information is output directly from the interface computer 11 along the control line 20. The second control line 21 is held inactive during global output on line 20.-- The global information typically has the following composition:
Catalogue number (for programme identification)
Catalogue number range - 8 alpha/numeric characters
Character range - From Ascii 32 to Ascii 95
Coding method:
The character range is thus 63. The coded value is calculated by deducting 32 from the Ascii value. The resulting number can be represented by a 6 bit word. Thus, the complete catalogue number is coded into eight 6 bit words i.e. 48 bits.
Programme length
Length units - Metres
Length range - 0-511 Metres
Coding method:
The programme length is converted directly into a 9 bit binary number.
DATE
The date is coded in three parts:1 Day of month 2 Month in year 3 Year 1. Range of days: 0-31
Coding method:
The day number is converted directly into a 5 bit binary number.
2. Range of months: 1-12
Coding method:
The month number is converted directly into a 4 bit binary number.
3. Range of years: 1986-2017
Coding method:
An equivalent year number is calculated by subtracting 1986 from the actual year. The range is thus reduced to 0-31. This is converted directly to a 5 bit number.
Time
The time is coded in two parts:1. Hours 2. Minutes 1. Range of hours: 0-23
Coding method:
The hour number is converted directly into a 5 bit binary number.
2. Range of minutes: 0-59
Coding method:
The minutes number is converted directly into a 6 bit binary nmumber.
The global information code sequence is thus as follows:
Bit Count
l
Catalogue number 48
Programme length 9
Day 5
Month 4
Year 5
Hour 5
Minute 6
Note 1* 6 total 88 *Note 1 = Reserved for special use.
Local information is encoded onto the tape by the recorder in response to LIC (Local Information Clock) pulses from the interface computer 11. Each LIC pulse is the simultaneous transmission of a long pulse on the main control line 20 used for global ouutput (signifying binary 1) and a short pulse on the second control line 21 from the interface computer 11 (signifying binary 0). The leading edges of the pulses must be coincident to a tolerance of +5 ms.
Local information has the following composition:
EVD Number (Identifying the recorder)
Range of numbers: 0-1023
Coding method:
Direct conversion of EVD number to a 10 bit binary number.
Programme Number
Range of numbers 0-511
Coding method:
Direct Conversion to a 9 bit binary number.
The local information code sequence is thus as follows:
Bit Count
EVD number 10
Programme number 9
Note 1* 8
Total 27
Note 1* Reserved for special use.
The following tabulated sequence represents an entire code block as recorded on the tape. The loading machine will of course read the sequence in reverse.
BIT Function
1 Catalogue Number
(MSB 1st Character
48 Catalogue number
(LSB Last Character
BIT Function
49 Programme length (MSB) 57 Programme length
(LSB)
58 Day Number (MSB) 62 Day Number
(MSB) 63 Month Number
(MSB)
66 Month Number
(LSB)
67 Year Number
(MSB)
71 Year Number
(LSB)
72 Hours Number
(MSB)
76 Hours Number
(LSB)
Bit Function
77 Minutes Number
(MSB)
82 Minutes Number
(LSB)
83 Reserved
88 Reserved
89 EVD Number
(MSB)
98 EVD Number
(LSB)
99 Programme Number
(MSB)
107 Programme Number
(LSB)
108 Reserved
Referring back now to Figure 2 the tape loader 30 is illustrated only in very schematic form for the purpose of the present description. A main support panel 31 carries a spindle 32 driven by a drive motor 33 (shown in broken outline in Figure 2).
Energisation of the motor 33 causes rotation of the spindle 32 and thus of the pancake reel 18 carried thereon to discharge recorded magnetic tape 7 through a path defined by a series of rollers generally indicated 34, including a capstan 35 to the spindle of which is fixed an optical encoder (not illustrated) in the form of a disc having an annular array of apertures with a light source on one side and a photo detector on the other for encoding the displacement of the tape as it is loaded into a cassette.
Empty cassette shells are stored on a rack 36 from where they are transported into a loading station 37 at which the tape 7 is introduced and loaded, and from the loading station 37 the, now-filled, cassette is displaced to a discharge station 38. The manner in which the leader tape in the cassette shell is extracted, cut, spliced to the leading end of the magnetic tape 7, wound into the cassette shell, and the magnetic taps 7 cut and spliced to the free end of the leader tape, is described in our above-mentioned pending Patent application and these mechanical operations form no part of the present invention which is directed to the manner in which these individual operations are controlled.
The tape guide rollers 34 guide the tape 7 past a magnetic reed head or transducer 39 which is connected by a line 40 to a decoder 41 having output lines 42 and 43, the first of which leads to a central control panel 44 and the second of which leads to a bar code label printer 45.
The central control panel 44 has an output line 46 leading to the motor 33 driving the spindle 32 carrying the pancake reel 18, and an output line 47 leading to the motor 48 driving the capstan 35 which controls the displacement of the tape into the loading station 37 and is connected, as mentioned above, to the optical encoder for producing feedback signals representing the actual displacement of the tape.
The data signals recorded on the tape 7 thus control the operation of the machine loading the tape into the cassette shells and also the printing of bar code labels identifying the programme content and production history of the cassette itself. In operation, after the tape 7 has been threaded past the rollers 34 and the leading end placed on a splice block 50 at the loading station 37, the control unit 44 is operated, via a keyboard, to indicate to the system that a new pancake reel 18 has been placed in position and the capstan motor 48 and main reel drive motor 33 are placed on standby whilst the loader performs the first tape splicing operation, withdrawing a leader tape from the first cassette shell, cutting it, splicing one cut end to the leading end of the magnetic tape 7 and then passing a signal to the control unit 44 to indicate that the first splice has been successfully completed. The motors 48 and 33 are then energised, together with a further motor, not illustrated, which drives a spindle on which the hub of the spool within the cassette shell at the loading station is engaged so that magnetic tape 7 is unwound from the pancake reel 18 and wound onto the cassette at the loading station 37 after having passed the rollers 34. As the first code block 6 on the magnetic tape 7
rs, X passes the transducer 39 this reads the signals represented thereby and passes them along the line 40 to the decoder 41 which decodes the relevant sections and passes signals along the line 42 to the control unit 44 indicating the length of the programme recorded on the tape being wound into the cassette. The controller 44 compares this information with data coming from the encloder linked to the capstan 35 and, a predetermined time (or rather a predetermined distance) before the end of the programme starts to decelerate both the main reel drive motor 33 and the capstan 35 ready for the arrival of the first index mark 4 which will signify the end of the programme and, upon arrival, will cause the control unit 44 to stop the motors and initiate a tape splicing operation for cutting the tape at a point between the index mark 4 and the next code block 6 along the tape.
When the first code block 6 is read and the signals passed to the decoder 41 this also decodes the relevant information concerning the programme material and production history and signals representing these are passed along the line 43 to the label printer 45 which is thus energised to print a bar code label representing the data read from the tape. The label, after printing, is automatically passed to a label applicator 51 positioned closely adjacent the loading station 37, and is triggered to apply the label to the cassette shell either during loading of the tape 7 bearing the programme identified by the label just printed, or immediately after loading has been completed as the filled cassette is transferred from the loading station 37 to the discharge rack 38.Once the label has been successfully applied a signal is transmitted to the control unit 44 along a line (not illustrated) and the tape cassette loading cycle can recommence with the next length of tape 7.
Since the short length of blank- tape between each index mark 4 and code block 6 is very short the transducer 39 will, in practice, read the subsequent code block 6 immediately after the index mark 4 and the data represented thereby will be decoded by the decoder 41 and stored in the short term buffer memory of the control unit 44 so that the necessary information for control of the next tape loading operation is already present immediately the confirmation signals from the tape splicing unit 50 and the labeld applicator 51 are received to allow the motors 33 and 48 to be re-energised to commence the next loading cycle.
Loaded cassettes bearing the bar code label identifying the tape recording on the magnetic tape contained in the cassette shell are then removed from the discharge rack 38 and fed to a sort line where the bar code labels can be automatically read and the cassettes directed to label applicator stations at which printed labels identifying the programme and containing, for example, advertising and other normal label material can be applied.
The apparatus of the present invention also allows recordings to be made on a speculative basis since the data concerning the programme material recorded on a pancake reel 18 is carried on the tape itself and it is possible to keep the recorders operating fulltime recording those programmes which it is anticipated will be in demand. The pancake reels 18 can be stored without being put into cassettes and withdrawn from store and loaded into cassettes when demand requires.If the demand for any particular programme material does not arise it is a simple matter magnetically to wipe the recording from the tape 7 and rerecord a new programme something which is not convenient once the tape has been loaded into a cassette since this would require individual cassette recorders and, almost inevitably, either expensive automatic cassette recorder loading equipment or even more expensive labour.
Because of the nature of the data signals as interruptions in the video sync track the data recorded on each cassette cannot be copied by a conventional video cassette recorder and the presence of code blocks on a tape will therefore serve as a verification check on the authenticity of the programme recording.
It will be appreciated that data recorded on tape may be recorded as ordered magnetic domains or as randomised magnetic domains (e.g.
an interruption in a control signal) and the expression 'recorded" as used herein should be construed accordingly. The data will in general be provided by the interfaced computer linked to signal recording means but could merely be data recorded after completing the programme material recording of a pancake, for example, data encoded on the tape by a winding machine and representing any one or more of the identity of the winding machine, the date of winding, cassette or cassette batch identity and/or any one or more items of other information.
Claims (38)
1. A method of recording magnetic tape for subsequent loading into cassettes, in which between signals representing the programme material recorded along sections of the tape there are recorded signals representing data related to and/or identifying the programme material and which, upon playback of the tape act to control a cassette loading machine and/or apparatus associated therewith.
2. A method as claimed in Claim 1 wherein the signals representing the programme material and those representing the data are recorded onto the magnetic tape by transporting the tape over a recording head at a recording station and applying electrical signals to the recording head whereby to generate varying magnetic patterns on the tape.
3. A method as claimed in Claim 1 wherein the signals representing the programme material are recorded onto the magnetic tape by transporting the said tape and a tape carrying a mirror image master recording of the programme material through a recording station having means for pressing the two tapes into close contact in an applied magnetic field whereby to induce a reverse reproduction of the magnetic pattern on the master tape to be formed on the said magnetic tape, and the signals representing the data are recorded onto the magnetic tape by transporting the tape over a recording head and applying electrical signal thereto.
4. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the signals representing the said data are recorded on the magnetic tape in a digitally encoded recording pattern.
5. A method as claimed in Claim 4, wherein the signals representing the said data are recorded on the magnetic tape as pulse width modulation of a non-programme signal recorded on the tape.
6. A method as claimed in Claim 5 wherein the signals representing the said data are recorded as variable length absences in the video sync track.
7. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the signals representing the data are generated by a computer connected to signal recording means.
8. A method as claimed in claim 7 comprising recording the signals representing programme material onto the tape, detecting the end of the programme material, generating signals representing the said data and recording the said data signals onto the tape on a portion of the tape following that on which the programme material is recorded with reference to the direction of tape transport during recording.
9. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the data includes or comprises information signifying the identity of the programme and/or representing the length of tape occupied by the programme material to which it relates.
10. A method as claimed in any preceding claim further including the step of recording further signals on the tape in a code encoding information signifying the number of individual programmes recorded on the tape between a leading end of the tape and the location of the said further signals.
11. A method of producing cassettes of magnetic tape recorded with programme material, comprising the steps of preparing a reel of tape having a plurality of lengths recorded with programme material intercalated with recorded signals representing data as claimed in claim 1, transferring the reel to a cassette loader having a transducer responsive to the said recorded data signals, transporting tape into a cassette past the said transducer, controlling the operation of the tape transport in dependence on signals generated by the said transducer, and further controlling means for forming visible indicia representing the identity of the programme material recorded on the tape for application to the shell of the cassette.
12. A method as claimed in Claim 11, in which the said means for forming visible indicia comprise a label printer and the method includes the step of automatically applying a label printed with indicia corresponding to the said data signals onto the shell of the cassette during winding of the length of tape recorded with the programme material to which the data relates or immediately thereafter.
13. A method as claimed in Claim 11, in which the said means for forming visible indicia comprise means for directly marking or engraving the shell of the cassette being loaded during winding of the tape or immediately thereafter.
14. A method as claimed in any of Claims 11 to 13, in which the data signals detected by the said transducer include data representing the length of tape occupied by programme material to which the data relates, and the method includes the step of storing the data length signal after detection thereof, generating signals representing the displacement of tape during winding thereof, comparing the said displacement-representative signals with the said stored signals and initiating deceleration of the tape transport when there is a predetermined difference therebetween.
15. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein said data includes information identifying the recording means by which the said programme material is recorded onto said tape.
16. A method as claimed in any preceding claim further including the step of recording a cue signal on the tape immediately prior to recording a length of tape with programme material and detecting the cue signal as the tape is subsequently wound into a cassette to control stopping of the tape transport.
17. A method as claimed in any precedisng claim wherein at least some of the recorded data is machine read from the tape during a manufacturing operation performed in relation to the tape and signals generated as a response to the read data represent information signified by said data in a form other than the code of the data for operator use or determine characteristics of at least some aspects of said manufacturing operation or a subsequent manufacturing operation also Xrfbrmed in relation to the tape.
18. A method as claimed in Claim 17 wherein the manufacturing operation or said subsequent manufacturing operation is winding of the pre-recorded tape from an open spool or pancake reel into cassettes.
19. A method as claimed in Claim 14 wherein the manufacturing operation is a product sampling procedure in which a production batch is sampled, its quality assessed by testing and/or inspection and the history of the sample(s) determined from a display of information represented by the recorded data at least in the event of unsatisfactory results from the testing and/or inspection so as to determine a materials and/or equipment investigation.
20. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein at least some of the recorded data is machine read from the tape and the information signified by said data is represented in a form other than the code of the data on or otherwise in relation to the recording product.
21. A method of
magnetic tape substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to, and as illustrated in, the accompanying drawings.
22. Magnetic tape whenever recorded by a method as claimed in any preceding claim.
23. Magnetic tape recorded along successive lengths thereof with first signals representing programme material and second signals representing data identifying the recorded programme material and/or one or more characteristics of the recorded tape and/or its production, the said second signals acting to-control the operation of a cassette loader and/or associated apparatus upon detection thereof by a transducer sensitive to the magnetic recording on the tape.
24. Magnetic tape as claimed in Claim 23 wherein the said first signals are television signals and the said second signals are recorded on the tape in pulse code form.
25. Magnetic tape as claimed in Claim 24, in which the said second signals representing data is recorded in pulse code form on the tape as pulse width modulation of the signal recorded on the sync track of the video recording.
26. Apparatus for producing recorded magnetic tape as claimed in
Claim 23, comprising means for generating programme signals, recording transducer means to which the said programme signals are fed, means for generating data signals to be supplied to the said recording transducer means, tape transport means for transporting the magnetic tape to be recorded past the said recording transducer means, and control means connected to the said programme signal generator and the said data signal generator and operative to control energisation of the transducer means such that data signals and related programme signals are recorded in sequence along the tape.
27. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 26, in which the said recording transducer means is a single transducer to which both programme signals and data signals are supplied
28. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 26, in which the said recording transducer means comprise a programme transducer to which the said programme signals are supplied and a data transducer separate from the programme transducer, to which the said data signals are supplied, the said two transducers being spaced along the path of the magnetic tape.
29. Apparatus as claimed in Claims 26 to 28 wherein said data signal generator is operative to generate pulse coded digital information for recording on the said tape.
30. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 29, wherein the said second transducer is adapted to record along the video sync track of video tape.
31. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 29 wherein the code sequence output from the data signal generator supplied to said second transducer is recorded on the tape as serial interruptions in the video sync track.
32. Apparatus as claimed in any one of Claims 26 to 31 which includes means for mounting a non-cassette supply spool and a non-cassette take-up spool to the apparatus for rotation about a common axis in parallel juxtaposed planes of rotation, and means for effecting driven rotation of said spools so as in use to provide discharge of unrecorded use tape from the supply spool and take-up of recorded tape by the take-up spool.
33. Apparatus for producing cassettes of recorded tape, comprising apparatus as claimed in any of Claims 26 to 30 for producing recorded magnetic tape, means for winding the tape onto open spools after recording, a transducer sensitive to the recorded data signals and operative to generate electrical control signals in response thereto, a cassette loader having a drive spindle engageable with a spool of a cassette to be loaded, drive means for the spindle, a control circuit operative to control the spindle drive means in accordance with electrical control signals received from the said sensor, and cassette identification means operative to provide visible indicia representative of the programme identified by the data signal.
34. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 33, in which the said cassette identification means comprises a label printer operative to print labels bearing indicia determined by the said data signals, and there are further provided means for applying the labels to cassette shells before being ejected from the cassette loader.
35. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 34, in which the said label printer operates to produce indicia in the form of machine readable bar codes on the labels to be applied to the cassettes.
36. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 35, in which there are further provided means for reading the bar code labels and directing the cassettes to one Of a plurality of label appliCation stations at which prelIminarily prepared labels from a stack thereof are applied to the cassettes.
37. A method of producing a cassette or cartridge of prerecorded magnetic tape which method comprises preparing a reel of magnetic tape recorded wlth a plurality of sequential programmes alternating with recorded data representative of an attribute of a following programme recording and loading the magnetic tape from the reel to a cassette or cartridge so that each of the latter contains tape recorded with at least one programme and optionally also with its associated recorded data, the recorded data associated with a programme recorded on so-loaded tape being machine read and the so-read data being represented
In a form other than the code as a display carried upon the cassette or cartridge or as a remote display generated by remote display means.
38. A method as claimed In Claim 37 wherein the programme recording attribute is the programme identity, the programme production history and/or the programme composition and duration.
Priority Applications (11)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
EP88300752A EP0277778B1 (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1988-01-28 | Improved production of pre-recorded tape cassettes |
ES88300752T ES2047025T3 (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1988-01-28 | IMPROVED PRODUCTION OF PRE-RECORDED TAPE CASSETTES. |
EP19910120651 EP0476725A3 (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1988-01-28 | Production of pre-recorded tape and tape cassettes |
AT88300752T ATE99447T1 (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1988-01-28 | MANUFACTURE OF PRERECORDED TAPE CASSETTES. |
PCT/GB1988/000051 WO1988005955A2 (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1988-01-28 | Improved production of pre-recorded tape cassettes |
JP63501237A JPH07114036B2 (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1988-01-28 | Magnetic tape recording method |
GB8801929A GB2200493B (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1988-01-28 | Improved production of pre-recorded tape cassettes |
DE88300752T DE3886556T2 (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1988-01-28 | Manufacture of pre-recorded tape cassettes. |
AU11858/88A AU1185888A (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1988-01-28 | Improved production of pre-recorded tape cassettes |
CA000557687A CA1336205C (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1988-01-29 | Production of pre-recorded tape cassettes |
US07/731,290 US5148403A (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1991-07-16 | Production of prerecorded tape cassettes |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB878701983A GB8701983D0 (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1987-01-29 | Pre-recorded tape cassettes |
Publications (3)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
GB8727275D0 GB8727275D0 (en) | 1987-12-23 |
GB2200787A true GB2200787A (en) | 1988-08-10 |
GB2200787B GB2200787B (en) | 1991-10-09 |
Family
ID=10611406
Family Applications (2)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
GB878701983A Pending GB8701983D0 (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1987-01-29 | Pre-recorded tape cassettes |
GB8727275A Revoked GB2200787B (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1987-11-20 | Improved production of pre-recorded tape casssettes. |
Family Applications Before (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
GB878701983A Pending GB8701983D0 (en) | 1987-01-29 | 1987-01-29 | Pre-recorded tape cassettes |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
---|---|
GB (2) | GB8701983D0 (en) |
Citations (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
GB2146484A (en) * | 1983-07-21 | 1985-04-17 | Sony Corp | Method and apparatus for identifying recorded information segments on a record medium |
GB2150734A (en) * | 1983-11-17 | 1985-07-03 | Pioneer Electronic Corp | Inter-music interval detecting system and method |
Family Cites Families (7)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
GB1312977A (en) * | 1969-06-18 | 1973-04-11 | Ricoh Kk | Data processing arrangements |
JPS5353916A (en) * | 1976-10-27 | 1978-05-16 | Sony Corp | Recording unit for video signal |
US4663678A (en) * | 1984-06-18 | 1987-05-05 | Odetics, Inc. | System for writing and reading digital data interspersed with analog audio frequency data on magnetic recording tape |
JPS61187183A (en) * | 1985-02-15 | 1986-08-20 | Sony Corp | Recording system |
CA1324436C (en) * | 1986-08-08 | 1993-11-16 | John J. Dwyer | Display for modular dictation/transcription system |
US4794474A (en) * | 1986-08-08 | 1988-12-27 | Dictaphone Corporation | Cue signals and cue data block for use with recorded messages |
JP2653787B2 (en) * | 1987-01-28 | 1997-09-17 | ソニー株式会社 | Recording and playback device |
-
1987
- 1987-01-29 GB GB878701983A patent/GB8701983D0/en active Pending
- 1987-11-20 GB GB8727275A patent/GB2200787B/en not_active Revoked
Patent Citations (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
GB2146484A (en) * | 1983-07-21 | 1985-04-17 | Sony Corp | Method and apparatus for identifying recorded information segments on a record medium |
GB2150734A (en) * | 1983-11-17 | 1985-07-03 | Pioneer Electronic Corp | Inter-music interval detecting system and method |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
GB8727275D0 (en) | 1987-12-23 |
GB2200787B (en) | 1991-10-09 |
GB8701983D0 (en) | 1987-03-04 |
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Legal Events
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732 | Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977) | ||
732 | Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977) | ||
773H | Revocation action is not pursued (sect. 73(2)/1977) | ||
773K | Patent revoked under sect. 73(2)/1977 |