US2118626A - Method and apparatus for delaying electrical impulses - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for delaying electrical impulses Download PDF

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Publication number
US2118626A
US2118626A US61133A US6113336A US2118626A US 2118626 A US2118626 A US 2118626A US 61133 A US61133 A US 61133A US 6113336 A US6113336 A US 6113336A US 2118626 A US2118626 A US 2118626A
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impulse
wave
tube
circuit
narrowed
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US61133A
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John P Smith
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RCA Corp
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RCA Corp
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N5/00Details of television systems
    • H04N5/04Synchronising
    • H04N5/06Generation of synchronising signals
    • H04N5/067Arrangements or circuits at the transmitter end
    • H04N5/073Arrangements or circuits at the transmitter end for mutually locking plural sources of synchronising signals, e.g. studios or relay stations

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  • An object ofthe present invention is to provide an improved method of and means for delaying rectangular electrical impulses Without employinga' delay network of the above-mentioned type.
  • a further object of my invention is to provide an improved method of and means for delaying a rectangular electrical impulse without impairing its wave form.
  • a still further object of my invention is to provide an improved method of and means for both narrowing and delaying a rectangular electrical impulse.
  • a rectangular voltage impulse is produced by any suitable generator and supplied to two separate circuits or channels.
  • the impulse is narrowed to a width which is equal to the amount of delay desired.
  • the impulses appearing in the output circuits of the two channels are added in a common circuit, the impulse from one channel being of a polarity opposite to that of the impulse from the 'other channel.
  • the resulting impulse is then ⁇ passed through a clipping tube to remove the undesired part of the impulse whereby the desired delayed and narrowed impulse is obtained.
  • a 60 cycle vertical synchronizing impulse 5 may be supplied from a source comprising a frequency divider, indicated at I, which obtains comparatively high frequency impulses from a multivibrator or other electric discharge tube oscillator (not shown).
  • the voltage impulse is supplied through an amplifler tube 2 to two signal channels 3 and 4; the channel 3 including two amplifier tubes 6 and l connected in cascade whereby the amplified impulse appears in the output circuit of the amplifier tube 1 with a positive polarity, as indicated at 3.
  • the polarities of the impulses appearing in the plate circuits of tubes 2 and 6 are shown by the curves IIJ and I5, respectively.
  • the channel 4 includes three amplifier tubes II, I2 and I3 connected in cascade.
  • the input circuit of the amplifier tube II includes a coupling condenser Il having very small capacity and a grid resistor I6 of fairly low resistance whereby the condenser I4 and grid resistor I6 act as a differentiating circuit for narrowing the voltage impulse supplied thereto.
  • the character of the signal applied to the grid of the tube II is indicated at i1.
  • the grid of the tube I i is maintained at such a negative bias by means of the grid leak biasing ⁇ provided by the condenser I4 and resistor I6 that the signal applied to this grid is clipped at the level indicated on the drawings.
  • the resulting impulse which appears in the plate circuit of the tube Il is indicated at I8.
  • This impulse is clipped at the level indicated on the drawings by the amplier tube I2, this tube also being suitably biased by means of grid leak biasing.
  • the signal appearing in the output circuit of the tube i2 is a narrowed rectangular impulse, as indicated at I9. This impulse is passed through the third amplifier tube i3 to reverse its polarity as shown at 2i.
  • clipping a signal or impulse is meant removing an undesired portion thereof, as by so biasing a tube that only the more positive and desired portion of the signal can be passed therethrough, or as by saturating off the undesired portion in a vacuum tube driven beyond plate current saturation.
  • the plate circuit of the tube I3 is common to the plate circuit of the tube 1 in the channel 3 whereby the narrowed negative impulse 2
  • the signal 22 is then clipped at the level indicated on the drawings by the last'l tube 23 in the channel 3 and the resulting delayed and nar-- this tube.
  • the grid o! the tube 2l is maintained at the desired negative bias by means o! grid leak biasing. It will be understood that the grids of the several clipping tubes may be negatively biased in any other suitable way, as by means of self-bias resistors or biasing batteries.
  • the input circuit of the ampliiler tube 8 in the rst channel may be designed to act as a differentiating network to narrow the impulse a desired amount, as described in connection with the channel 4.
  • the tubes 6 and l will be adjusted to clip the impulse supplied thereto in the same manner as the ampliiier tubes il and I2 in the channel l.
  • a rectangular voltage wave may be delayed any amount up to the width of the impulse itself, without distorting the wave-shape oi the impulse.
  • the output of the circuit is also a rectangular impulse, andnot an impulse having sloping sides and rounded corners.
  • narrowed wave composite wave having a delayed wave portion
  • similar expressions have reference to the appearance of the wave on a cathode ray tube oscillograph.
  • the wave appears at various points in the circuit as illustrated in Fig. 2 where the abscissa for each curve is a time axis.
  • a wave of short duration looks narrow" and may be described as a narrow wave.
  • the portion of a wave which actuallyy is traced last on the viewing screen by the cathode ray is the "last occurring portion" as compared with the portion of thel wave traced earlier.
  • the last traced portion of a composite wave such as shown by curve 22 is referred to as a delayed wave portion.
  • Apparatus for delaying an electrical wave comprising means for removing the last occurring portion of said wave to produce a narrowed wave, and means for adding said first wave and said narrowed wave in polarity opposition whereby a composite wave having a delayed wave portion is produced.
  • Apparatus according to claim 1 characterized in that means is provided for separating said delayed portion from the remainder of said composite wave.
  • means for producing a rectangular electrical impulse means for producing a second rectangular electrical impulse which is narrower than said ilrst impulse and which starts at the same time as said rst impulise, means for adding said two impulses in polarity opposition whereby a resulting signal having a delayed portion portion is produced, and means for supplying only the delayed portion of the resulting signal to an output circuit.
  • a circuit for delaying a comparatively wide rectangular electrical impulse comprising a. channel which includes means for narrowing said impulse while keeping its starting time unchanged, means for passing said wide impulse through a second channel, means for addlng the outputs of said channels in polarity opposition, and means for clipping oif the portion of the resulting signal which represents said narrowed impulse and supplying the remaining portion of said resulting signal to an output circuit.
  • the method of delaying an electrical wave which comprises removing the last occurring portion of said wave to produce a narrowed wave, combining said rst wave and said narrowed wave in polarity opposition whereby a composite wave having a delayed wave portion is produced, and clipping off the undesired portion of said composite wave.
  • the method of delaying a rectangular electrical impulse which comprises passing said impulse through two channels, narrowing said impulse in one of said channels, said narrowing being done by eliminating the last occurring portion of said impulse whereby the starting time of the impulse is not changed, adding the outputs of said two channels in reverse polarity relation, and clipping off that portion of the resulting impulse which represents said narrowed impulse whereby the remaining portion is a delayed rectangular impulse.

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Description

May 24, 1938. J, P; SMITH METHOD AND APPARATUS Fon DLAYING ELECTRICAL IMPULsEs Filed Jan. 28, 1936 2 Sheets-Sheet l *Mullig- III INVENTOFI Jqhn R Smith WM m N H 0 T T H May 24, 1938.
J. P. SMITH METHOD vAND APPARATUS FOR DELAYING ELECTRICAL IMPULSES Filed Jan. 28, 1936 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 [ijs INVEN'T'GR JohnR Smith,
HT'T'OHNEY Patented May 2.4, 1938 PATENT OFFICE.f
METHOD AND APPARATUS FDR DELAYIN ELECTRICAL IMPULSES .101m r. smith, Erima, N. J., minor to Radio Corporation of America, a corporation of Dela- WIN Application January 2s, 193s, serial-No. 61,133
GClaims.
them occur in the proper time relation with respect to other voltage impulses. In the said application I described and claimed one method of delaying rectangular electrical impulses without resorting to the use of the usual delay networks comprising sections of inductance coils and capacitors.
An object ofthe present invention is to provide an improved method of and means for delaying rectangular electrical impulses Without employinga' delay network of the above-mentioned type.
A further object of my invention is to provide an improved method of and means for delaying a rectangular electrical impulse without impairing its wave form. I
A still further object of my invention is to provide an improved method of and means for both narrowing and delaying a rectangular electrical impulse. l
In practicing my invention a rectangular voltage impulse is produced by any suitable generator and supplied to two separate circuits or channels.
In one of Ithese channels the impulse is narrowed to a width which is equal to the amount of delay desired. The impulses appearing in the output circuits of the two channels are added in a common circuit, the impulse from one channel being of a polarity opposite to that of the impulse from the 'other channel. The resulting impulse is then` passed through a clipping tube to remove the undesired part of the impulse whereby the desired delayed and narrowed impulse is obtained.
Other objects, features and advantages of my invention will appear from the following description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which Figure 1 is a circuit diagram of one embodiment of my invention, and l Fig. 2 is a group of curves which are referred `to in explaining the invention.
Referring to Fig. 1, my invention is shown applied to a synchronizing impulse generator of the character described in my above-mentioned ap- 56 plication. -As indicated in Fig. 1, a 60 cycle vertical synchronizing impulse 5 may be supplied from a source comprising a frequency divider, indicated at I, which obtains comparatively high frequency impulses from a multivibrator or other electric discharge tube oscillator (not shown). The voltage impulse is supplied through an amplifler tube 2 to two signal channels 3 and 4; the channel 3 including two amplifier tubes 6 and l connected in cascade whereby the amplified impulse appears in the output circuit of the amplifier tube 1 with a positive polarity, as indicated at 3. The polarities of the impulses appearing in the plate circuits of tubes 2 and 6 are shown by the curves IIJ and I5, respectively.
The channel 4 includes three amplifier tubes II, I2 and I3 connected in cascade. The input circuit of the amplifier tube II includes a coupling condenser Il having very small capacity and a grid resistor I6 of fairly low resistance whereby the condenser I4 and grid resistor I6 act as a differentiating circuit for narrowing the voltage impulse supplied thereto. The character of the signal applied to the grid of the tube II is indicated at i1.
The grid of the tube I i is maintained at such a negative bias by means of the grid leak biasing` provided by the condenser I4 and resistor I6 that the signal applied to this grid is clipped at the level indicated on the drawings. The resulting impulse which appears in the plate circuit of the tube Il is indicated at I8. This impulse is clipped at the level indicated on the drawings by the amplier tube I2, this tube also being suitably biased by means of grid leak biasing. The signal appearing in the output circuit of the tube i2 is a narrowed rectangular impulse, as indicated at I9. This impulse is passed through the third amplifier tube i3 to reverse its polarity as shown at 2i.
It will vbe understood that by clipping a signal or impulse is meant removing an undesired portion thereof, as by so biasing a tube that only the more positive and desired portion of the signal can be passed therethrough, or as by saturating off the undesired portion in a vacuum tube driven beyond plate current saturation.
The plate circuit of the tube I3 is common to the plate circuit of the tube 1 in the channel 3 whereby the narrowed negative impulse 2| is added to the wide positive impulse 8 to produce a signal of the character indicated at 22.
The signal 22 is then clipped at the level indicated on the drawings by the last'l tube 23 in the channel 3 and the resulting delayed and nar-- this tube. In the circuit illustrated, the grid o! the tube 2l is maintained at the desired negative bias by means o! grid leak biasing. It will be understood that the grids of the several clipping tubes may be negatively biased in any other suitable way, as by means of self-bias resistors or biasing batteries.
The manner in which the rectangular impulse is delayed may be better understood by referring to the curves in Fig. 2. In Figs. 1 and 2, like curves .are indicated by the same reference numerals. It will be apparent that since the narrowed impulse 2| starts at the same time as the wider impulse I, the amount of delay depends entirely upon the width of the narrowed impulse. 'Ihis is made clear by the curve 22. If more delay is desired, the narrow impulse 2| from the channel 4 is made somewhat wider.
In the event that it is desired to narrow the impulse still further after the desired delay has been determined, the input circuit of the ampliiler tube 8 in the rst channel may be designed to act as a differentiating network to narrow the impulse a desired amount, as described in connection with the channel 4. In that case, the tubes 6 and l will be adjusted to clip the impulse supplied thereto in the same manner as the ampliiier tubes il and I2 in the channel l.
From the foregoing description it will be apparent that by employing my invention a rectangular voltage wave may be delayed any amount up to the width of the impulse itself, without distorting the wave-shape oi the impulse. In other words, if a rectangular impulse is put into the circuit, the output of the circuit is also a rectangular impulse, andnot an impulse having sloping sides and rounded corners.
It will be understood that in the claims the expressions last occurring portion of said wave,
narrowed wave", composite wave having a delayed wave portion", and similar expressions have reference to the appearance of the wave on a cathode ray tube oscillograph. On such an oscillograph, the wave appears at various points in the circuit as illustrated in Fig. 2 where the abscissa for each curve is a time axis. Obviously, a wave of short duration looks narrow" and may be described as a narrow wave. The portion of a wave which actuallyy is traced last on the viewing screen by the cathode ray is the "last occurring portion" as compared with the portion of thel wave traced earlier. Likewise, the last traced portion of a composite wave such as shown by curve 22 is referred to as a delayed wave portion.
Various modifications may be made in my invention without departing from the spirit and scope thereofand I desire, therefore, that only such limitations shall be imposed thereon as are necessitated by the prior art and are set forth in the appended claims.
I claim as my invention:
1. Apparatus for delaying an electrical wave, said apparatus comprising means for removing the last occurring portion of said wave to produce a narrowed wave, and means for adding said first wave and said narrowed wave in polarity opposition whereby a composite wave having a delayed wave portion is produced.
2. Apparatus according to claim 1 characterized in that means is provided for separating said delayed portion from the remainder of said composite wave.
3. In combination, means for producing a rectangular electrical impulse, means for producing a second rectangular electrical impulse which is narrower than said ilrst impulse and which starts at the same time as said rst impulise, means for adding said two impulses in polarity opposition whereby a resulting signal having a delayed portion portion is produced, and means for supplying only the delayed portion of the resulting signal to an output circuit.
4. A circuit for delaying a comparatively wide rectangular electrical impulse, said circuit comprising a. channel which includes means for narrowing said impulse while keeping its starting time unchanged, means for passing said wide impulse through a second channel, means for addlng the outputs of said channels in polarity opposition, and means for clipping oif the portion of the resulting signal which represents said narrowed impulse and supplying the remaining portion of said resulting signal to an output circuit.
5. The method of delaying an electrical wave which comprises removing the last occurring portion of said wave to produce a narrowed wave, combining said rst wave and said narrowed wave in polarity opposition whereby a composite wave having a delayed wave portion is produced, and clipping off the undesired portion of said composite wave.
6. The method of delaying a rectangular electrical impulse which comprises passing said impulse through two channels, narrowing said impulse in one of said channels, said narrowing being done by eliminating the last occurring portion of said impulse whereby the starting time of the impulse is not changed, adding the outputs of said two channels in reverse polarity relation, and clipping off that portion of the resulting impulse which represents said narrowed impulse whereby the remaining portion is a delayed rectangular impulse.
JOHN P. SMITH.
US61133A 1936-01-28 1936-01-28 Method and apparatus for delaying electrical impulses Expired - Lifetime US2118626A (en)

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Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2419546A (en) * 1942-03-20 1947-04-29 Standard Telephones Cables Ltd Delay circuit
US2429609A (en) * 1942-08-07 1947-10-28 Standard Telephones Cables Ltd Pulse modulated transmission system
US2433442A (en) * 1938-05-13 1947-12-30 Dodds John Mathieson Radio transmitter
US2479954A (en) * 1944-04-29 1949-08-23 Philco Corp Pulse delay system
US2483431A (en) * 1944-05-10 1949-10-04 Sperry Corp Blocking oscillator
US2514023A (en) * 1947-10-10 1950-07-04 Ibm Voltage generator
US2525102A (en) * 1947-07-01 1950-10-10 Rca Corp Television synchronizing signal generator
US2531830A (en) * 1944-08-16 1950-11-28 Albert R Simpson Voltage pulse generator
US2546981A (en) * 1945-06-15 1951-04-03 Collins Radio Co Pulsing circuit
US2559666A (en) * 1943-04-23 1951-07-10 Allen H Schooley Double aperture generator
US2577355A (en) * 1944-12-09 1951-12-04 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Pulse forming and shaping circuits
US2579071A (en) * 1947-07-16 1951-12-18 Rca Corp Time division multiplex system
US2616048A (en) * 1948-03-23 1952-10-28 Raytheon Mfg Co Relaxation oscillator circuits
US2617015A (en) * 1945-01-23 1952-11-04 Everard M Williams Panoramic system
DE893663C (en) * 1938-12-09 1953-10-19 Telefunken Gmbh Circuit arrangement for the phase shifting of pulses, in particular for television purposes
US2658998A (en) * 1950-08-22 1953-11-10 Hyman Abraham Means for comparing two voltages
US2692333A (en) * 1951-08-02 1954-10-19 Rca Corp Wave shaping circuit
US2716189A (en) * 1952-09-30 1955-08-23 Rca Corp Frequency selective circuit
US2716235A (en) * 1943-11-05 1955-08-23 Sperry Rand Corp Object detecting and locating systems
US2717992A (en) * 1951-10-20 1955-09-13 Itt Transient surge detector
US2729699A (en) * 1951-01-18 1956-01-03 Faximile Inc Facsimile system wherein the recording is a modification of the copy
US2786902A (en) * 1952-09-11 1957-03-26 Honeywell Regulator Co Automatic gain control circuits for pulse type receivers
US2806946A (en) * 1952-06-02 1957-09-17 Raytheon Mfg Co Pulse coincidence circuit
US2900532A (en) * 1957-04-15 1959-08-18 Burroughs Corp Compensating circuit
US2947945A (en) * 1954-11-05 1960-08-02 Burroughs Corp Time domain filter
US3011053A (en) * 1957-12-19 1961-11-28 Csf Pulse receivers
US3078456A (en) * 1951-06-12 1963-02-19 Frederick C Alpers Split signal tracking circuit

Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2433442A (en) * 1938-05-13 1947-12-30 Dodds John Mathieson Radio transmitter
DE893663C (en) * 1938-12-09 1953-10-19 Telefunken Gmbh Circuit arrangement for the phase shifting of pulses, in particular for television purposes
US2419546A (en) * 1942-03-20 1947-04-29 Standard Telephones Cables Ltd Delay circuit
US2429609A (en) * 1942-08-07 1947-10-28 Standard Telephones Cables Ltd Pulse modulated transmission system
US2559666A (en) * 1943-04-23 1951-07-10 Allen H Schooley Double aperture generator
US2716235A (en) * 1943-11-05 1955-08-23 Sperry Rand Corp Object detecting and locating systems
US2479954A (en) * 1944-04-29 1949-08-23 Philco Corp Pulse delay system
US2483431A (en) * 1944-05-10 1949-10-04 Sperry Corp Blocking oscillator
US2531830A (en) * 1944-08-16 1950-11-28 Albert R Simpson Voltage pulse generator
US2577355A (en) * 1944-12-09 1951-12-04 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Pulse forming and shaping circuits
US2617015A (en) * 1945-01-23 1952-11-04 Everard M Williams Panoramic system
US2546981A (en) * 1945-06-15 1951-04-03 Collins Radio Co Pulsing circuit
US2525102A (en) * 1947-07-01 1950-10-10 Rca Corp Television synchronizing signal generator
US2579071A (en) * 1947-07-16 1951-12-18 Rca Corp Time division multiplex system
US2514023A (en) * 1947-10-10 1950-07-04 Ibm Voltage generator
US2616048A (en) * 1948-03-23 1952-10-28 Raytheon Mfg Co Relaxation oscillator circuits
US2658998A (en) * 1950-08-22 1953-11-10 Hyman Abraham Means for comparing two voltages
US2729699A (en) * 1951-01-18 1956-01-03 Faximile Inc Facsimile system wherein the recording is a modification of the copy
US3078456A (en) * 1951-06-12 1963-02-19 Frederick C Alpers Split signal tracking circuit
US2692333A (en) * 1951-08-02 1954-10-19 Rca Corp Wave shaping circuit
US2717992A (en) * 1951-10-20 1955-09-13 Itt Transient surge detector
US2806946A (en) * 1952-06-02 1957-09-17 Raytheon Mfg Co Pulse coincidence circuit
US2786902A (en) * 1952-09-11 1957-03-26 Honeywell Regulator Co Automatic gain control circuits for pulse type receivers
US2716189A (en) * 1952-09-30 1955-08-23 Rca Corp Frequency selective circuit
US2947945A (en) * 1954-11-05 1960-08-02 Burroughs Corp Time domain filter
US2900532A (en) * 1957-04-15 1959-08-18 Burroughs Corp Compensating circuit
US3011053A (en) * 1957-12-19 1961-11-28 Csf Pulse receivers

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