US1690147A - Electromagnet for sound-reproducing instruments - Google Patents

Electromagnet for sound-reproducing instruments Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1690147A
US1690147A US132384A US13238426A US1690147A US 1690147 A US1690147 A US 1690147A US 132384 A US132384 A US 132384A US 13238426 A US13238426 A US 13238426A US 1690147 A US1690147 A US 1690147A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
armature
reed
shoes
air
gap
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
US132384A
Inventor
Benson F Waddell
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US132384A priority Critical patent/US1690147A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1690147A publication Critical patent/US1690147A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04RLOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
    • H04R11/00Transducers of moving-armature or moving-core type

Definitions

  • This invention has reference to the art of V eectro-magnets and particularly relates to loud-speaker units which have usefulness in many branches of the art of sound reproduction and amplification
  • electro-magnetic units of the balanced armature type such as used to motivate radio loud-speakers and telephonic devices
  • electro-magnetic units of the balanced armature type such as used to motivate radio loud-speakers and telephonic devices
  • electro-magnetic units of the balanced armature type such as used to motivate radio loud-speakers and telephonic devices
  • it has been customary to employ four air-gaps in the permanent magnetic field in which the armature fluctuates, and also as part of the circuit for the electro-magnetic flux due to the telephonic currents.
  • it has been customary to employ four air-gaps in the permanent magnetic field in which the armature fluctuates, and also as part of the circuit for the electro-magnetic flux due to the telephonic currents.
  • the purpose of the present invention is to avoid the difiiculties ,and objections mentioned above, and also to attain further advantages, amon which are ease of assembly of the parts, su stantialness of construction, and a reduction of armature amplitude, without employing complicated lever and linkage mechanism.
  • one end of the armatlire is balanced between two air-gaps of the permanent magnetic field.
  • the armature ispivoted on, or so connected to,- a flexible member or reed of magnetic material as to be able to freely respond to variant influences of 'the magnetic field.
  • the stylus which transmits the motion to the loud speaker diaphragm, is attached to the end of the armature at a suitable distance from the reed, or the point of connection of the armature with the reed, so as to provide the correct reduction of amplitude, or the correct rounds the armature between the air-gaps and the reed, providing an eflicient disposition of wire with respect'to armature iron.
  • Figure 1 is a view in top plan of an electro-unit, embodying m invention, adapted for use in conection wlth loud speakers of radio-receivers, phonogra-phs, and talking moving picture apparatus;
  • Figure 2 is a'view in sectional elevation of Figure 1, the section being on the line 2-2 of said figure; v
  • Figure 3 is a horizontal sectional view taken on the line 3-3 of Figure 2
  • Figure 4 is a view similar to Figure 3 showing another form of my invention.
  • the numeral 1 indicates the U-shaped, or horse-shoe, magnet which acts as a supporting medium for the other elements of the unit.
  • a yoke 2 of non-magnetic material is supported, being held in fixed position by screws 3, passing through the ends of the yoke, the arms of the magnet, and spacing blocks 4, nuts 5, on the ends of the screws, in cooperation with the heads of the latter, operating to tightly clamp the parts together and hold them rigidly in cooperative relation.
  • the yoke has a curved center roviding a circular receptacle, the walls 0 which are extended laterally to form lugs 6, on which is clamped a bar 7, of non-ma etic material, by means of screws 8, sai bar bridging the space between the said lugs and closing the receptacle at that side.
  • a single coil of wire 9, is retained in the receptacle bythe bar 7, which prevents, lateral displacement.
  • Extending across the top of the yoke 2 are two pole-shoes 12, of-similar shape and size so asjto be'interchangeable.
  • the shoes are oblong bars secured to the blocks 4, by means of screws 13, passing through the shoes at their outer ends, and screws 14, passing through the shoes near their inner ends, said screws being threaded into the lugs 6, of the yoke near their base and extending into abutment, or very nearly so, with the screws 11, which hold the reed 10, in position.
  • the shoes at their inner ends are formed obtuse-angular on one face, said faces being opposed and spaced a predetermined distance to form a gap between the opposing, elongated ends 15.
  • the screws 14, hold the adjustment, or set, of the shoes in cooperative relation.
  • An armature16 is mounted centrally of the reed 10, being passed therethrough and soldered thereto in proper relation, the arrangement being such as to give the armature a vibratory action as the reed flexes.
  • the armature is the core of the coil and its outer end extends and terminates between the opposed ends 15, of the pole shoes, a slight air-gap existing between the armature and pole shoes on opposite sides of the former.
  • the armature has a stylus 17 secured thereon and extending at a right-angle thereto into the space, between the arms of the magnet, where it can be secured to the tympanum of a loud-speakerof suitable form, preferably a membrane of the form shown in my copendin application filed of even date, Serial I10. 132,385 said stylus being secured to the-apex, of large area, of said membrane either by washers and nuts screwed on the threaded end of the stylus, or by soldering to a sleeve or ferrule extending through'the apex of said membrane.
  • I may use any form of permanent magnet; the yoke is of non-magnetic material; the reed is of thin magnetic material having the correct torsional resilience and ability to flex easily. and readily respond vibratorily to the influences of the" armature.
  • the screws 11 and 14, are of iron and preferably abut, though it would not beamiss to have a slight air-gap between their adjacent ends.
  • the ole-shoes and blocks are of metal having igh permeability. Since the reed is held by the two screws 11, which .abut against, or are close to, the screws 14, which hold the shoes at the desired air-gap adjustment, there is a leakage of permanent magnetism from one pole-shoe to the other through said screws and the reed.
  • An electro-magnetic speaker unit comprising a permanent magnet and cooperating armature, and including a fixed means of leakage of magnetic flux, across the poles of the permanent ma et, and means for divertingsaid leakage throu h the armature, air-gap and pole-shoes un er the influence of the telephonic currents.
  • An electro-magnetic speaker unit comprising a permanent magnet and cooperating armature, and including a reed of magnetic material bridging the poles of the per manent magnet, shoes bridging the poles of said magnet having an air-gap at their cooperative ends, a single coil mounted between-the shoes and the reed, and an armature mounted on the reed and extending through the coil and within the gap between the shoes.
  • An electro-magnetic speaker unit of the balanced armature type including two poleshoes arranged with an air-gap between them, an armature mounted to operate in said air-gap, and means for completingthe electro-magnetic circuit through magnetic material leading to opposite sides of the airgap;
  • An electro-magnetic speaker unit of the balanced armature type including two poleshoes with an air-ga between them, a reed of magnetic materi bridging the poles of extending through the coil and into the'airgap between the shoes.
  • An electro-magnetic speaker unit of the balanced armature type including a permanent magnet, a yoke bridging the poles of the permanent magnet, pole-shoes mounted on the magnet and arranged to provide a gap between the pole-shoes, a reed mounted on the yoke in spaced relation to the shoes, a coil oused b the yoke between the shoes and the reed, an an armature mounted on the reed, extending through the coil and into the gap.
  • An electro-magnetic speaker unit holding two pole-shoes so as to provide an air-gap between them, a reed mounted adjacent the pole-shoes, a coil be tween said reed and pole-shoes, and an armature secured to said reed in such position as to ,form a long arm and a shortarm, the
  • An electro-magnetic speaker unit comprising a permanent magnet and cooperating armature, and having a member of non-magnetic material which holds the poles of the magnet at a definite distance apart to form an air-gap, means by which the armature is balanced in said air-gap, and means includ-' ing magnetic material for completing the electromagnetic circuit.
  • An electro-magnetic speaker unit comprising an electromagnet and cooperating armature, two pole-shoes connecting the poles of the magnet but separated to leave an air-gap, means for supporting the armature balanced in said air-gap, and means includ ing magnetic material for completing the electromagnetic circuit.
  • a polarized electromagnet the combination with a permanent magnet, of a pair of polar extensions separated by an air-ga an armature mounted operatively within said air-gap, a coil surrounding said armature, and a flexible member of magnetic material supporting the armature and bridging the poles of the magnet so as to form part of the electromagnetic circuit.
  • An electromagnetic speaker unit comprising a permanent magnet the two poles of which are'arranged to produce an air-gap
  • An electromagnetic speaker unit of the balanced armature type including two polar extensions, a flexible member, an armature fixidly supported thereon, and a-styl'us fixed to one,end of the armature at such a distance from its point of support as to obtain a pre determined reduction of motion between the stylus and the opposite end of the armature which is balanced between the polar exten sions.
  • An electromagnetic speaker unit of the balanced armature type including two polar extensions, :1 flexible reed, an armature fixedly attached to the reed between its ends, and a stylus fixed to the armature near one end thereofat such a distance from the reed as to obtain a predetermined reduction of motion between the stylus and the opposite end of the armature which is balanced between the polar extensions.
  • a magnet having polar extensions separated by an airgap an armature mounted in cooperative relation with said polar extensions, and additional means including magnetic material of comparatively low retentivity for conducting magnetic flux directly from the armature to the polar'extensions.

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Acoustics & Sound (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Audible-Bandwidth Dynamoelectric Transducers Other Than Pickups (AREA)

Description

Nov. 6, 1928. 1,690,147
B. F. WADDELL ELECTROMAGNET FOR SOUND REPRODUCING INSTRUMENTS Filed Aug. 30, 1926 5 9- 5 Na 3" 8 l7 7 2 i L II YI 3 INIENTOR. f 5 J JMM. flmcee Patented Nov. e, 1928.
UNITED STATES BENSON I. WADDELL, 01 NEW YORK, N. Y.
ELEGTBDIAGNET FOB SOUND-REPRODUCING INSTRUMENTS.
Application filed August 30, 1926; Serial No. 132,384.
This invention has reference to the art of V eectro-magnets and particularly relates to loud-speaker units which have usefulness in many branches of the art of sound reproduction and amplification In electro-magnetic units of the balanced armature type, such as used to motivate radio loud-speakers and telephonic devices, it has been customary to employ four air-gaps in the permanent magnetic field in which the armature fluctuates, and also as part of the circuit for the electro-magnetic flux due to the telephonic currents. In practice, it
has been found both diflicult and expensive to secure a proper and equal adjustment of all four air-gaps. The effort has included pivoting the armature either in the middle between the two pairs of air-gaps or at a comparative remote point outside the magnetic circuit. The former method necessi tates either two separate coils to provide room for the pivot between them, or a very delicate pivot around which the coil is wound, both of which methods are electrically inefficient and expensive. The other method, of pivoting the armature at a remote point, results in excessive inertia due to the lon radius of the armature movement and't 's causes distortion in reproduction.
The purpose of the present invention is to avoid the difiiculties ,and objections mentioned above, and also to attain further advantages, amon which are ease of assembly of the parts, su stantialness of construction, and a reduction of armature amplitude, without employing complicated lever and linkage mechanism. In carrying out the functional idea of means of my invention, one end of the armatlire is balanced between two air-gaps of the permanent magnetic field. Near the opposite end the armature ispivoted on, or so connected to,- a flexible member or reed of magnetic material as to be able to freely respond to variant influences of 'the magnetic field. The stylus, which transmits the motion to the loud speaker diaphragm, is attached to the end of the armature at a suitable distance from the reed, or the point of connection of the armature with the reed, so as to provide the correct reduction of amplitude, or the correct rounds the armature between the air-gaps and the reed, providing an eflicient disposition of wire with respect'to armature iron. These are the fundamentals of my invention and are worked out, as to details, as 1n the accompanying drawings, wherein Figure 1 is a view in top plan of an electro-unit, embodying m invention, adapted for use in conection wlth loud speakers of radio-receivers, phonogra-phs, and talking moving picture apparatus;
Figure 2 is a'view in sectional elevation of Figure 1, the section being on the line 2-2 of said figure; v
Figure 3 is a horizontal sectional view taken on the line 3-3 of Figure 2, and
Figure 4 is a view similar to Figure 3 showing another form of my invention.
In the drawings I have shown a certain design of unit merely for the purpose of illustrating a practical method of embodying the principles of my invention. There are numerous other forms or designs of units in which my invention can be embodied and, therefore, I do not wish to be understood as restricting my invention to any particular form or structure.
Referring to the drawings, the numeral 1 indicates the U-shaped, or horse-shoe, magnet which acts as a supporting medium for the other elements of the unit. At the terminals of the magnet and on one side thereof, a yoke 2, of non-magnetic material is supported, being held in fixed position by screws 3, passing through the ends of the yoke, the arms of the magnet, and spacing blocks 4, nuts 5, on the ends of the screws, in cooperation with the heads of the latter, operating to tightly clamp the parts together and hold them rigidly in cooperative relation. The yoke has a curved center roviding a circular receptacle, the walls 0 which are extended laterally to form lugs 6, on which is clamped a bar 7, of non-ma etic material, by means of screws 8, sai bar bridging the space between the said lugs and closing the receptacle at that side. A single coil of wire 9, is retained in the receptacle bythe bar 7, which prevents, lateral displacement. Extending across the top of the yoke 2, are two pole-shoes 12, of-similar shape and size so asjto be'interchangeable. The shoes are oblong bars secured to the blocks 4, by means of screws 13, passing through the shoes at their outer ends, and screws 14, passing through the shoes near their inner ends, said screws being threaded into the lugs 6, of the yoke near their base and extending into abutment, or very nearly so, with the screws 11, which hold the reed 10, in position. The shoes at their inner ends are formed obtuse-angular on one face, said faces being opposed and spaced a predetermined distance to form a gap between the opposing, elongated ends 15. The screws 14, hold the adjustment, or set, of the shoes in cooperative relation. An armature16, is mounted centrally of the reed 10, being passed therethrough and soldered thereto in proper relation, the arrangement being such as to give the armature a vibratory action as the reed flexes. The armature is the core of the coil and its outer end extends and terminates between the opposed ends 15, of the pole shoes, a slight air-gap existing between the armature and pole shoes on opposite sides of the former. Beyond the reed, near its inner end, the armature has a stylus 17 secured thereon and extending at a right-angle thereto into the space, between the arms of the magnet, where it can be secured to the tympanum of a loud-speakerof suitable form, preferably a membrane of the form shown in my copendin application filed of even date, Serial I10. 132,385 said stylus being secured to the-apex, of large area, of said membrane either by washers and nuts screwed on the threaded end of the stylus, or by soldering to a sleeve or ferrule extending through'the apex of said membrane.
I may use any form of permanent magnet; the yoke is of non-magnetic material; the reed is of thin magnetic material having the correct torsional resilience and ability to flex easily. and readily respond vibratorily to the influences of the" armature. The screws 11 and 14, are of iron and preferably abut, though it would not beamiss to have a slight air-gap between their adjacent ends. The ole-shoes and blocks are of metal having igh permeability. Since the reed is held by the two screws 11, which .abut against, or are close to, the screws 14, which hold the shoes at the desired air-gap adjustment, there is a leakage of permanent magnetism from one pole-shoe to the other through said screws and the reed. But since the reed is easily saturated this slight leakage is not objectionable. However, :these parts also form an efiicient path for the electro-magnetic flux due to the telephonic currents, that is, the circuit is completed through the armature, reed, screws, pole-shoes and air-gaps. When the telephonic current produces magnetic flux in one direction, the armature moves to reduce one aira and at the same time picks up some 0 t e permanent magnetism of the correct polarity from the reed, thus amplifying the magnetic flux in the armature. In other words, some of the magnetism which was flowing straight across the reed is now deviated to a path through the armature and the reduced air-gap. Therefore, in addition to its numerous physical advantages, due to structure, arrangement, and mode of operation, this construction also results in increased eflicienc due to a desirable-disposition of coil winding with respect to armature iron, an efficient electromagnetic circuit, and its faculty for magnetic, amplification.
In Figures 2 and 3, I have shown the reed 10 of a length to bridge the space between the'lugs 6 of the yoke at the base of the latter, and extend to the outer surface thereof so as to afford sufiicient material for clamping the same to the lugs. In Figure 4, however, I have shown an alternative form of my invention, consisting in extending the reed 10, to the outer sides of the magnet 1, and clamping the extensions to the blocks 4, by screws 18, having the same relation to the screws 13, as described with reference to the screws 11 and 14. This structure may be preferable when the relative strength of the permanent magnet is ample to warrant addlitional flux of magnetism through the ree Having thus described my invention what I claim and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:
1. An electro-magnetic speaker unit comprising a permanent magnet and cooperating armature, and including a fixed means of leakage of magnetic flux, across the poles of the permanent ma et, and means for divertingsaid leakage throu h the armature, air-gap and pole-shoes un er the influence of the telephonic currents.
2. An electro-magnetic speaker unit comprising a permanent magnet and cooperating armature, and including a reed of magnetic material bridging the poles of the per manent magnet, shoes bridging the poles of said magnet having an air-gap at their cooperative ends, a single coil mounted between-the shoes and the reed, and an armature mounted on the reed and extending through the coil and within the gap between the shoes.
3. An electro-magnetic speaker unit of the balanced armature type, including two poleshoes arranged with an air-gap between them, an armature mounted to operate in said air-gap, and means for completingthe electro-magnetic circuit through magnetic material leading to opposite sides of the airgap;
4. An electro-magnetic speaker unit of the balanced armature type, including two poleshoes with an air-ga between them, a reed of magnetic materi bridging the poles of extending through the coil and into the'airgap between the shoes.
6. An electro-magnetic speaker unit of the balanced armature type, including a permanent magnet, a yoke bridging the poles of the permanent magnet, pole-shoes mounted on the magnet and arranged to provide a gap between the pole-shoes, a reed mounted on the yoke in spaced relation to the shoes, a coil oused b the yoke between the shoes and the reed, an an armature mounted on the reed, extending through the coil and into the gap.
7. An electro-magnetic speaker unit,.ineluding means holding two pole-shoes so as to provide an air-gap between them, a reed mounted adjacent the pole-shoes, a coil be tween said reed and pole-shoes, and an armature secured to said reed in such position as to ,form a long arm and a shortarm, the
long arm of-the armature extending through the coil and into the air-gap, and a stylus attached to the short arm.
8. An electro-magnetic speaker unit comprising a permanent magnet and cooperating armature, and having a member of non-magnetic material which holds the poles of the magnet at a definite distance apart to form an air-gap, means by which the armature is balanced in said air-gap, and means includ-' ing magnetic material for completing the electromagnetic circuit.
9. An electro-magnetic speaker unit comprising an electromagnet and cooperating armature, two pole-shoes connecting the poles of the magnet but separated to leave an air-gap, means for supporting the armature balanced in said air-gap, and means includ ing magnetic material for completing the electromagnetic circuit.
10. In a polarized electromagnet, the combination with a permanent magnet, of a pair of polar extensions separated by an air-ga an armature mounted operatively within said air-gap, a coil surrounding said armature, and a flexible member of magnetic material supporting the armature and bridging the poles of the magnet so as to form part of the electromagnetic circuit.
11. An electromagnetic speaker unit comprising a permanent magnet the two poles of which are'arranged to produce an air-gap;
an armature cooperating with said magnet and a yoke bridging the poles of the permanent magnet, a reed of magnnetic material carried by the yoke and also bridging said poles, pole-shoes held by the yoke, and a coil encompassed by said yoke between the shoes and the reed.
12. An electromagnetic speaker unit of the balanced armature type, including two polar extensions, a flexible member, an armature fixidly supported thereon, and a-styl'us fixed to one,end of the armature at such a distance from its point of support as to obtain a pre determined reduction of motion between the stylus and the opposite end of the armature which is balanced between the polar exten sions.
13. An electromagnetic speaker unit of the balanced armature type, including two polar extensions, :1 flexible reed, an armature fixedly attached to the reed between its ends, and a stylus fixed to the armature near one end thereofat such a distance from the reed as to obtain a predetermined reduction of motion between the stylus and the opposite end of the armature which is balanced between the polar extensions.
14:. In telephonic apparatus, a magnet having polar extensions separated by an airgap, an armature mounted in cooperative relation with said polar extensions, and additional means including magnetic material of comparatively low retentivity for conducting magnetic flux directly from the armature to the polar'extensions.
BENSON F. WADDELL.
US132384A 1926-08-30 1926-08-30 Electromagnet for sound-reproducing instruments Expired - Lifetime US1690147A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US132384A US1690147A (en) 1926-08-30 1926-08-30 Electromagnet for sound-reproducing instruments

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US132384A US1690147A (en) 1926-08-30 1926-08-30 Electromagnet for sound-reproducing instruments

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1690147A true US1690147A (en) 1928-11-06

Family

ID=22453780

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US132384A Expired - Lifetime US1690147A (en) 1926-08-30 1926-08-30 Electromagnet for sound-reproducing instruments

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1690147A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8295536B2 (en) 2010-03-31 2012-10-23 Bose Corporation Moving magnet levered loudspeaker
US8295537B2 (en) 2010-03-31 2012-10-23 Bose Corporation Loudspeaker moment and torque balancing
US9055370B2 (en) 2012-08-31 2015-06-09 Bose Corporation Vibration-reducing passive radiators

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8295536B2 (en) 2010-03-31 2012-10-23 Bose Corporation Moving magnet levered loudspeaker
US8295537B2 (en) 2010-03-31 2012-10-23 Bose Corporation Loudspeaker moment and torque balancing
US9055370B2 (en) 2012-08-31 2015-06-09 Bose Corporation Vibration-reducing passive radiators

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2511114A (en) Polarized electromagnet
US2412123A (en) Electromagnetic device
US1568589A (en) Loud speaker
US1573739A (en) Telephonic device
US1690147A (en) Electromagnet for sound-reproducing instruments
US3062926A (en) Magnet with vibratable armature
GB212648A (en) Improvements in sound emitting apparatus, such as telephone receivers
US1579864A (en) Loud speaker
US1559158A (en) Sound-emitting device
US1731905A (en) Sound-reproducing device
US1866361A (en) Driving unit for loud-speakers
US1876164A (en) Magnetic device
US2270983A (en) Electromechanical amplifier
US1642124A (en) Push-pull reproducer
US1823603A (en) Sound reproducing apparatus
US1649483A (en) Phonograph reproducer
US1682866A (en) Electrical instrument of the telephone type
US1681161A (en) Telephone receiver
US2099727A (en) Telephone receiver
US1463372A (en) Ajsxgnoss
JPS5915398A (en) Speaker
US1180462A (en) Telephone-receiver.
US1661829A (en) Dynamo-electrical vibrating unit
US1689388A (en) Telephone receiver
US1771127A (en) Telephone magnet system