US1522949A - Method of making sound records - Google Patents

Method of making sound records Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1522949A
US1522949A US402874A US40287420A US1522949A US 1522949 A US1522949 A US 1522949A US 402874 A US402874 A US 402874A US 40287420 A US40287420 A US 40287420A US 1522949 A US1522949 A US 1522949A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
record
stylus
groove
produced
recording
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US402874A
Inventor
Victor H Emerson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Emerson Radio Corp
Original Assignee
Emerson Phonograph Inc
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 Emerson Phonograph Inc filed Critical Emerson Phonograph Inc
Priority to US402874A priority Critical patent/US1522949A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1522949A publication Critical patent/US1522949A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B3/00Recording by mechanical cutting, deforming or pressing, e.g. of grooves or pits; Reproducing by mechanical sensing; Record carriers therefor

Definitions

  • My invention relates to phonograph records and more particularly to methods for recording whereby a plurality of records may be made in the space heretofore occupied by a single record.
  • An object of my invention is to provide a sound record, the recording capacity of which, for any given size, is very greatly increased, which can be economically produced in quantities by the usual method of stamping the blanks with master record dies, and which can be played upon existing 1 reproducing or talking machines in common use.
  • a further object is to provide a novel recording method by which such records can be produced.
  • My invention contemplates the production of record disk having therein a record groove that simultaneously undulates in aplurality of different directions, such as for example both laterally lateral undulations in the example given constituting one recording, and the vertical undulations another and different recording.
  • These records can be reproduced independently by a machine having a sound box positioned to be actuated by either the lateral or by the vertical undulations, and the undulations other than those being reproduced at any time will be ineffective upon that and vertically, the
  • My invention further contemplatesa recording method for such recordswherein the recording stylus 1s concomitantly given movements in a plurality of different directions, such as both laterally and vertically undulating move ments, each representing and corresponding to different and independent selections.
  • Figure l is a schematic illustration of one form of apparatus by means of which my method may be practiced.
  • Fig. 2 is a schematic illustration of a modified form of apparatus.
  • Fig. 3 is a plan of a portion of a record prplduced by the practice of my invention.
  • I may provide two adjacent recording rooms A and B, having a' sound proof partition 1 between them.
  • A I provide a record turntable or support 2, which carries a record blank 3.
  • the table 2 is given and translatory movement by mechanism well known in the, art, and which for the purpose of explanation may be schematically illustrated as a motor 4.
  • a sound box cent the record blank, and is provided with a suitable diaphragm 6, and a recording stylus 7 carried by the diaphragm.
  • a horn or sound condensing or intensifying conduit 8 leads to the sound box 5 so that sound waves produced in the room A and entering the conduit or horn 8, will be intensified and conducted to the interior of the sound box where they will impinge upon and set into vibration the diaphragm 6.
  • the vibrations of the diaphragm will cause the recording stylus 7, attached thereto, to move vertically and a record groove will be cut in the record blank which will undulate vertically in' accordance with the sound waves impinging upon the diaphragm.
  • This groove is what is known as a vertically or perpendicularly undulating record groove, also often called a hill and dale record becauseof the miniature hills and dales formed in the bottom of the record groove.
  • connection 12 is disposed substantially at right angles to the stylus 7 and its normal direction of movement under the influence of the diaphragm 6.
  • the lateral vibrations of the stylus 7 can be produced by the connector 12 and diaphragm 10 irrespective of whether or not it is being concomitantly operated in a vertical direction by the .diaphragm 6 of the sound box 5. Likewise the stylus can be given its vertical vibrations regardless of whether or not it is being also vibrated laterally by connector 12 and diaphragm 10.- If the diaphragm 6 only is operating the stylus 7, a pure hill and dale or vertically undulating record groove will be produced in the record blank 3.
  • each groove will undulate to correspond to the sound vibrations or waves produced in the room B and the bottom wall will undulate to correspond to the sound waves produced in thejroom A.
  • the sound waves produced in room B may be, and preferably are, entirely unrelated or different from those produced in room A, so that each groove contains the record of two entirely different and distinct selections. If a record produced in this manner is played upon a machine designed to play laterally undulatory or zig-zag records, also called lateral cut records, the vertical undulations 'will be ineffective upon the diaphragm of the reproducing sound box and the box will merey float u and down.
  • the lateral undulations of t e groove Will be effective upon the reproducing stylus to vibrate it and the diaphragm to which it is connected, and the'sounds produced will correspond to those which were produced in tin; rd, um B during the recording operation.
  • the lateral undulations will merely oscillate the sound box laterally bodily and will be ineffective in producing movements of the diaphragm.
  • the vertical undulations of the grooves will produce vibrations of the reproducing stylus and diaphragm, and the sounds produced will correspond to those which were produced in the room A at the time the record was made.
  • the vertical undulations of the bottom wall 13 of the groove are illustrated in Fig. 4, and the lateral undulations of the side walls 14: of the groove are illustrated in Fig. 1
  • the tables may have no translatory -movement and the transfer mechanism can be given the translatory movement. It is only necessary that there be relative translatory movement between the record tables and the transfer mechanism where the record is to be spirally cut.
  • the table ma receive its rotary movement in any suita le manner and a source of ower for such movement is schematically designated as a motor 21.
  • a source of ower for such movement is schematically designated as a motor 21.
  • the box 22 Over the record blank 19 is disposed the box 22, the diaphragm 23 of which is provided with a recording stylus 24;.
  • the sound box 22 is disposed so that vibratory movement of the iaphragm 23 will cause a vertical movement of the recording stylus which will cut a vertically undulating record groove inthe record blank.
  • a bell crank lever 25 is pivoted at 26 to the sound box 22 and has one arm bearing upon the diaphragm to impart downward vibratory
  • the other arm of the bell crank 25 is connected by a connection 27 to the stylus arm 28, pivoted at 29 to a suitable support 30.
  • the stylus arm 28 carries at one end a removement thereto.
  • Aconnector 32 is attached to the stylus 2-1, and extends laterally thereof and is connected to an arm of a stylus bar 33 which is pivotally connected at 34 to a suitable support 35.
  • the bar 33 carries a reproducing stylus 36 at one end which is disposed to track in the record grooves of the record 15.
  • the two movements imparted to the stylus 24 will cause it to cut a record groove which is both laterally and vertically undulatory, being a combination of the two movements.
  • the groove so produced will correspond to that produced by the method explained in connection with Fig. 1.
  • the supports 30 and 35 and sound box 22 will be connected to move together if the transmitting parts are to move with respect to the record supports.
  • the record produced by this method may have substantially the same number of record grooves as those now commonly manufactured and each groove has two different and distinct selections therein which can be independently reproduced on existing machines now in common use whlch are adapted to selectively (zig-zag) records. 0rd, therefore. I have in my invention practlcally doubled its capacity for receiving and" without materially increasing the cost of manufacture.
  • the herein described method of making sound records which comprises producing relative movement between a record blank and recording stylus to form a record groove, imparting to the stylus a movement in one direction to cause undulations in the record groove corresponding to thoseof one pattern record, and concomitantly imparting to the same stylus a movement in another direction to cause undulations in the same record groove corresponding to those of another and different pattern record.

Landscapes

  • Toys (AREA)

Description

Jan. 13 1925. 1 1,522,949
V. H. EMERSON METHOD OF MAKING SOUND RECORDS Filed Aug 11, 1920 Mckov H. ersnom, awue/wboz @51 1 11 115 a t-tome 4 ords,
Patented Jan. 13, 1925.
l T E D VICTOR H.EMERSON, OF NEW YORK, N.
COMPANY, INC., 0] NEW YORK, N.
METHOD QF MAKING SOUND RECORDS.
Application filed August 11, 1920. Serial No. 402,874,
To all whom it may concern: I
Be it known that I, Vrcron H. EMERSON, a citizen of the United States, residing at the city, county, and State of New York, have invented new and useful Improvements in a Method of Making Sound Rec of which the following is a specificatlon. v
My invention relates to phonograph records and more particularly to methods for recording whereby a plurality of records may be made in the space heretofore occupied by a single record.
Various attempts have heretofore been made to increase the linear recording space availableon a given size of sound record disk so as to utilize more effectively the existing space, all of which attempts gave unsatisfactory results. The linear recording space at most could only be slighly increased by the methods of these attempts, and the increased utilization of existing space was only accomplished by means of complicated and expensive recording and reproducing machines, and the records so produced could not be played upon existing machines in common use. An object of my invention is to provide a sound record, the recording capacity of which, for any given size, is very greatly increased, which can be economically produced in quantities by the usual method of stamping the blanks with master record dies, and which can be played upon existing 1 reproducing or talking machines in common use. A further object is to provide a novel recording method by which such records can be produced. Other objects and advantages will be apparent from the following description and the novel features of my invention will be particularly pointed out in claims.
My invention contemplates the production of record disk having therein a record groove that simultaneously undulates in aplurality of different directions, such as for example both laterally lateral undulations in the example given constituting one recording, and the vertical undulations another and different recording. These records can be reproduced independently by a machine having a sound box positioned to be actuated by either the lateral or by the vertical undulations, and the undulations other than those being reproduced at any time will be ineffective upon that and vertically, the
particular reproduction. My invention further contemplatesa recording method for such recordswherein the recording stylus 1s concomitantly given movements in a plurality of different directions, such as both laterally and vertically undulating move ments, each representing and corresponding to different and independent selections.
In the accompanying drawings,
Figure l is a schematic illustration of one form of apparatus by means of which my method may be practiced.
Fig. 2 is a schematic illustration of a modified form of apparatus.
Fig. 3 is a plan of a portion of a record prplduced by the practice of my invention, an
4 is a sectional elevation taken along one of the record grooves in order to illustrate the vertical undulations therein.
Referring particularly to Fig. 1 of the drawing, I may provide two adjacent recording rooms A and B, having a' sound proof partition 1 between them. In one of the rooms, A, I provide a record turntable or support 2, which carries a record blank 3. The table 2 is given and translatory movement by mechanism well known in the, art, and which for the purpose of explanation may be schematically illustrated as a motor 4. A sound box cent the record blank, and is provided with a suitable diaphragm 6, and a recording stylus 7 carried by the diaphragm. A horn or sound condensing or intensifying conduit 8 leads to the sound box 5 so that sound waves produced in the room A and entering the conduit or horn 8, will be intensified and conducted to the interior of the sound box where they will impinge upon and set into vibration the diaphragm 6. The vibrations of the diaphragm will cause the recording stylus 7, attached thereto, to move vertically and a record groove will be cut in the record blank which will undulate vertically in' accordance with the sound waves impinging upon the diaphragm. This groove is what is known as a vertically or perpendicularly undulating record groove, also often called a hill and dale record becauseof the miniature hills and dales formed in the bottom of the record groove.
In the room B I mount in any suitable manner another sound box 9 carrying a via combined rotary the recording stylus 7 of the sound box 5 by a suitable connection 12, which passes through thesou'nd proof partition 1. The
connector 12 is disposed substantially at right angles to the stylus 7 and its normal direction of movement under the influence of the diaphragm 6. Thus the sound waves impinging upon the diaphragm 10 in the room B will be transmitted through the connection 12 to the stylus 7 and the latter will be given lateral vibrations or movements corresponding to the sound waves being produced in room B and, as the sound record blank moves under the stylus, the blank will have produced therein a zig-zag or laterally undulating groove, the undulations of which correspond to the sound waves produced in the room B. The lateral vibrations of the stylus 7 can be produced by the connector 12 and diaphragm 10 irrespective of whether or not it is being concomitantly operated in a vertical direction by the .diaphragm 6 of the sound box 5. Likewise the stylus can be given its vertical vibrations regardless of whether or not it is being also vibrated laterally by connector 12 and diaphragm 10.- If the diaphragm 6 only is operating the stylus 7, a pure hill and dale or vertically undulating record groove will be produced in the record blank 3. If the diaphragm 10 only is operating the stylus a pure z 'g-za or laterally undulatory record groove wil be produced in the b nk which partakes of the nature of both forms of rooves and will .undulate both vertically an laterally. The
side walls of the groove will undulate to correspond to the sound vibrations or waves produced in the room B and the bottom wall will undulate to correspond to the sound waves produced in thejroom A. The sound waves produced in room B may be, and preferably are, entirely unrelated or different from those produced in room A, so that each groove contains the record of two entirely different and distinct selections. If a record produced in this manner is played upon a machine designed to play laterally undulatory or zig-zag records, also called lateral cut records, the vertical undulations 'will be ineffective upon the diaphragm of the reproducing sound box and the box will merey float u and down. The lateral undulations of t e groove, however, Will be effective upon the reproducing stylus to vibrate it and the diaphragm to which it is connected, and the'sounds produced will correspond to those which were produced in tin; rd, um B during the recording operation. Likewise, if the record so produced is played upon the so-called hill and dale reproducing machine, the lateral undulations will merely oscillate the sound box laterally bodily and will be ineffective in producing movements of the diaphragm. whilethe vertical undulations of the grooves will produce vibrations of the reproducing stylus and diaphragm, and the sounds produced will correspond to those which were produced in the room A at the time the record was made. The vertical undulations of the bottom wall 13 of the groove are illustrated in Fig. 4, and the lateral undulations of the side walls 14: of the groove are illustrated in Fig. 1
I have thus far described in more or less detail the application, of my invention to original or first hand recording requiring separate sound isolated rooms.
In the practice of my invention therefore I prefer to first record each selection independently in the mannerrnow commonly employed, and these records are then trans ferred to the record having the combined groove. To accomplish this transfer (see Fig. 2) the individual records 15 and 16' having their one particular selection recorded thereon are mounted on record supports or tables 17 and 18, respectively, by which they are given a rotary and common translatory movement. Adjacent thereto, the record blank 19 which is to receive the combined record grooves is supported by a table 20, by means of which it is given a rotary movement and also a translatory movement similar and concomitantly to that given the tables 17, 18. Thus the three tables 17 18 .and 20 will rotate and also move in the same direction concomitantly. Or, if desired, the tables may have no translatory -movement and the transfer mechanism can be given the translatory movement. It is only necessary that there be relative translatory movement between the record tables and the transfer mechanism where the record is to be spirally cut. The table ma receive its rotary movement in any suita le manner and a source of ower for such movement is schematically designated as a motor 21. Over the record blank 19 is disposed the box 22, the diaphragm 23 of which is provided with a recording stylus 24;. The sound box 22 is disposed so that vibratory movement of the iaphragm 23 will cause a vertical movement of the recording stylus which will cut a vertically undulating record groove inthe record blank. A bell crank lever 25 is pivoted at 26 to the sound box 22 and has one arm bearing upon the diaphragm to impart downward vibratory The other arm of the bell crank 25 is connected by a connection 27 to the stylus arm 28, pivoted at 29 to a suitable support 30. The stylus arm 28 carries at one end a removement thereto.
producing stylus 31 which tracks in the record groove of the record 16. Thus, vibratory movement of the stylus 31 will be transmitted to the stylus 2-1 and impressed or cut into the record blank 19 as a 'hill and dale or vertically undulatory groove. Aconnector 32 is attached to the stylus 2-1, and extends laterally thereof and is connected to an arm of a stylus bar 33 which is pivotally connected at 34 to a suitable support 35. The bar 33 carries a reproducing stylus 36 at one end which is disposed to track in the record grooves of the record 15. Thus the vibrations of the bar 33, which it receives from the record 15, will be transmitted to the stylus 24: to cause lateral vibrations thereof and cause it to cut a zig-zag or laterally undulatory groove in the record blank 19. Thus the two movements imparted to the stylus 24 will cause it to cut a record groove which is both laterally and vertically undulatory, being a combination of the two movements. The groove so produced will correspond to that produced by the method explained in connection with Fig. 1. The supports 30 and 35 and sound box 22 will be connected to move together if the transmitting parts are to move with respect to the record supports.
It will beseen that the record produced by this method may have substantially the same number of record grooves as those now commonly manufactured and each groove has two different and distinct selections therein which can be independently reproduced on existing machines now in common use whlch are adapted to selectively (zig-zag) records. 0rd, therefore. I have in my invention practlcally doubled its capacity for receiving and" without materially increasing the cost of manufacture.
The herein described apparatus 'is'intend ed as illustrative only of one way in which my invention may be practiced. and it is ob-" vious that various changes in the details herein described and illustrated may be made within the principle and scope of the invention.
Having described my invention, what I ,7
claim is:
The herein described method of making sound records which comprises producing relative movement between a record blank and recording stylus to form a record groove, imparting to the stylus a movement in one direction to cause undulations in the record groove corresponding to thoseof one pattern record, and concomitantly imparting to the same stylus a movement in another direction to cause undulations in the same record groove corresponding to those of another and different pattern record.
In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand.
VICTOR H. EMERSON.
35' play v either hill and dale or laterally undulating For any given size rec-- recording any information .or selections
US402874A 1920-08-11 1920-08-11 Method of making sound records Expired - Lifetime US1522949A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US402874A US1522949A (en) 1920-08-11 1920-08-11 Method of making sound records

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US402874A US1522949A (en) 1920-08-11 1920-08-11 Method of making sound records

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1522949A true US1522949A (en) 1925-01-13

Family

ID=23593624

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US402874A Expired - Lifetime US1522949A (en) 1920-08-11 1920-08-11 Method of making sound records

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1522949A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2934610A (en) * 1958-06-09 1960-04-26 Sonotone Corp Sound-record transducing device for stereophonic and like recording systems

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2934610A (en) * 1958-06-09 1960-04-26 Sonotone Corp Sound-record transducing device for stereophonic and like recording systems

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2105916A (en) Sound reproducing system
GB1400274A (en) Recording supports and reproduction apparatus
US1522949A (en) Method of making sound records
US1520378A (en) Apparatus for recording and reproducing sound
US3118977A (en) Multi-groove stereophonic sound recording and reproducing system
US1776097A (en) Recording of views of objects or scenes or optical images or the like
US2931862A (en) Sound reproduction system
US3095482A (en) Method of and apparatus for signal reproduction
US2025388A (en) Sound reproducing system
US2743110A (en) Apparatus for producing one groove binaural records
US2517440A (en) Double-track recording system
US2126370A (en) Sound recording and sound reproducing and locating apparatus
US2668880A (en) Apparatus for stereophonic sound-recording
US2154093A (en) Phonograph
US1855150A (en) Reproduction of sound
US1645295A (en) Method and apparatus for plural recording and reproducing of sounds
US995680A (en) Sound recording and reproducing machine.
US4076256A (en) Stylus shift mechanism for a phonograph having two concentric records
US1833372A (en) Multiplex sound recording and reproducing system
GB191227042A (en) Improvements in Gramophones, Phonographs and like Instruments.
US1770326A (en) Reporting machine
US1383737A (en) Method of and apparatus for recording and reproducing sound
US341287A (en) taintee
US2994745A (en) Device producing artificial reverberation for use in sound-reproduction installations
US1355711A (en) Talking-machine apparatus