US2292063A - Muting control - Google Patents
Muting control Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US2292063A US2292063A US203936A US20393638A US2292063A US 2292063 A US2292063 A US 2292063A US 203936 A US203936 A US 203936A US 20393638 A US20393638 A US 20393638A US 2292063 A US2292063 A US 2292063A
- Authority
- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- motor
- condenser
- potential
- tuning
- receiver
- 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
Links
- 238000004804 winding Methods 0.000 description 28
- 239000004020 conductor Substances 0.000 description 10
- 230000003321 amplification Effects 0.000 description 8
- 238000003199 nucleic acid amplification method Methods 0.000 description 8
- 230000010355 oscillation Effects 0.000 description 8
- 230000030279 gene silencing Effects 0.000 description 7
- 230000004048 modification Effects 0.000 description 4
- 238000012986 modification Methods 0.000 description 4
- 230000007547 defect Effects 0.000 description 3
- 230000004044 response Effects 0.000 description 3
- 230000008901 benefit Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000007599 discharging Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000009977 dual effect Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000005284 excitation Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000002159 abnormal effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000009471 action Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000008859 change Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000007423 decrease Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000001914 filtration Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000007246 mechanism Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000007935 neutral effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000008520 organization Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000009467 reduction Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000035945 sensitivity Effects 0.000 description 1
Images
Classifications
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03G—CONTROL OF AMPLIFICATION
- H03G3/00—Gain control in amplifiers or frequency changers
- H03G3/20—Automatic control
- H03G3/22—Automatic control in amplifiers having discharge tubes
- H03G3/26—Muting amplifier when no signal is present or when only weak signals are present, or caused by the presence of noise, e.g. squelch systems
Definitions
- My invention relates to an improved amplification control for a thermionic signal amplifier and more particularly to an improved silent tuning control for a radio receiving apparatus.
- a further object of my invention is to provide a muting control which controls electronically the output of a signal amplifier and which therefore has an almost instantaneous muting characteristic though allowing for a desirable predetermined time delay between the deenergization of the muting control circuit and the reenergization of the signal amplifier.
- a further object of my invention is to provide an automatic silent tuning control energized at all times with the tuning motor and my invention contemplates that the muting control potential may be obtained directly from the potential drop impressed across or induced in a tuning motor winding.
- Another object of my invention is to provide a muting circuit in which the elements of the muting arrangement operate in the dual role of muting elements during periods when the receiver output is muted and as filtering elements, to filter alternating current variations from the biasing source for an electron discharge device, during the remaining time when the receiver output is not muted.
- Fig. 1 illustrates an embodiment of my invention in which a muting control potential is obtained directly from a tuning motor
- Fig. 2 illustrates a modification thereof and shows an arrangement wherein a muting control potential is obtained from the unbalance of a normally balanced resistive bridge.
- a radio frequency amplifier conventionally represented by the rectangle l8, which may comprise one or more stages of amplification, connected to receive energy from an antenna ground system I I, I2 and arranged to supply amplified signal energy through a transformer 13 to the diode elements l4, I5 of the electron discharge device is.
- the radio frequency amplifier IE] preferably consists of one or more stages of radio frequency amplification, of a converter to change the signal carrier oscillations to oscillations of intermediate frequency, and of one or more stages of amplification for the oscillations of intermediate frequency.
- the primary and secondary windings of the transformer l3 are tuned by the respective condensers I1, 18 to the intermediate frequency.
- a uni-directional potential appears across the resistor [9 as a result of the rectification of the signal oscillations by the diode elements I l, l5 and this potential is supplied through a filter comprised by resistor 20 and condenser 2
- the uni-directional potential appearing across the resistor 19 is modulated in accordance with the received signals.
- This potential in addition to being supplied to the automatic volume control circuit 22 is also coupled through a condenser 23 to a voltage divider Z4 and a portion thereof is coupled through a condenser 25 to the control grid 26 of an electron discharge signal amplifier 21.
- An anode potential for the electron discharge signal amplifier 21 is obtained from a power source 28 through a power transformer 29, a full wave rectifier 30, and a filter 3
- the cathode 36 of the amplifier 21 is connected through ground to the negative terminal of the anode sup-ply source.
- a normal operating bias for the grid 26 of the electron discharge signal amplifier 21 is obtained by inserting a resistance 38 in the negative lead of the anode supply source and by supplying the potential drop appearing across this resistor through the resistors 39 and 40 to the grid.
- the output transformer 34 is provided with a secondary 4
- the tunable elements 43 of the radio frequency amplifier I are mechanically connected through a suitable reduction drive mechanism to the armature 44 of a tuning motor which has, in addition to the armature 44, a main field winding 45 and direction controlling field windings 46, 41.
- the direction of rotation of the motor armature 44, and thereby the direction of adjustment of the adjustable elements 43 to efiect a tuning operation, is determined by a switch, which, on the drawing is represented as a singlepole double-throw switch 48. This switch controls the energization of the motor from the supply source 28 through a power transformer 49.
- the switch 48 is moved either to the upper or lower contact thereby to energize the motor winding 46 or 41 respectively with the motor winding 45.
- the motor armature 44 rotates in a direction depending upon which of the field windings 46, 41 was energized and drives the tunable elements 43 of the radio receiver to a position in which the receiver is accurately tuned to the frequency of a desired signal oscillation. Thereupon the motor is deenergized by manually moving the switch'48 to a neutral position intermediate the upper and lower switch contacts as shown in the drawing. It will, of course, be evident that the switch '48 may be replaced by or connected in parallel with other control circuits as of the manually-operated push-button type which suitably energize and control the direction of operation of the tuning motor. Representative of control circuits of the latter type is that shown in the United States Letters Patent No. 1,934,493 to Geyh.
- a silent tuning control circuit operates in an automatic manner to silence the receiver during the time when the motor armature 44 is rotating in effecting a desired adjustment of the tunable elements 43.
- a muting control potential provided by the voltage drop across the motor field winding 45, is supplied through a conductor 50 to a pair of diode elements 5
- the condenser 53 Upon opening the switch 46, the potential drop across the motor winding 45 disappears and the condenser 53 thereupon discharges through a circuit comprising the resistors 38 and 39 in series, the uni-directional conductivity of the diode elements 5
- My muting circuit arrangement has an additional advantage in that the resistors 39 and 40 are connected to the left-hand end of the biasing resistor 38 and therefore serve with the condenser 53 as a ripple filter for any slight ripple which may appear in the voltage drop across the biasing resistor 38.
- the resistors 39, 46 and the condenser 53 By utilizing the resistors 39, 46 and the condenser 53 in this dual function, a material saving results in the cost of component parts of the radio receiver.
- FIG. 2 A modification of my muting control circuit is illustrated in Fig. 2. In this arrangement, a
- muting potential is provided by the unbalance of the resistive bridge comprised by the resistors 54 and 55 which are connected through a switch 56 across the power supply source 51, 58.
- a plurality of switches 5963 are mechanically interlocked by an arrangement, not shown, which allows only one switch at a time to close and thereby establish an electrical connection between a conductor 64 and one of the movable contacts 65-69 provided on the resistor 55.
- a conductor I is connected to a movable contact II provided on the resistor 54.
- resistors and their cooperating adjustable contacts provides a resistive Wheatstone bridge which may be balanced after closure of a selected one of the switches 59-63 by suitable adjustment of the movable contact II along the resistor 54, the balanced condition of the bridge being indicated by an absence of potential between the conductors 64 and 10.
- any potential drop appearing across the con- A ductors 64, I0 is amplified by a suitable amplifier, represented conventionally by the rectangle l2, and the output of the amplifier is connected through an output transformer 13 to a field winding 14 of a tuning motor.
- the tuning motor has an armature I mechanically connected to the tuning elements of the radio receiver and also mechanically connected movably to position the contact II along the resistor 54.
- the tuning motor is further provided with a winding I6 arranged in electrically spaced position with relation to the winding I4.
- the winding 16 is connected by conductors I1, 18 with the respective power supply lines 51, 58.
- the switches 59-63 are preferably actuated by a manual push-button control, not shown, from the front of the radio receiver cabinet. Assume that the closing of a selected switch 59-63 unbalances the bridge circuit to produce a potential between the conductors 64, 10. This potential is amplified by the amplifier l2 and is supplied through the transformer 13 to the field winding 14 of the tuning motor. The armature E5 of the tuning motor moves under the combined influence of the field windings l4 and 16 to adjust the tuning elements of the radio receiver to a position predetermined by the setting of an adjustable contactor 65-69 corresponding to the switch that was closed.
- the armature 15 In moving, the armature 15 also drives the adjustable contact II to a new position on the resistor 54 at which the bridge is again balanced and the potential between the contactors 64, I6 disappears. When this condition occurs, the motor field winding 14 no longer has an excitation potential impressed thereacross and the motor armature 15 comes to rest. Should the armature I5 rotate too far, it will carry the movable contact II beyond a position on the resistor 54 at which the bridge is balanced and an excitation potential reversed in phase is thereupon impressed across the motor field winding I4 to cause the motor armature 15 to revolve in a reverse direction.
- a muting potential is obtained from the output of the amplifier I2 and is supplied through the condensers I9, to a diode rectifier 8
- That portion of the drop appearing across the resistor 83 is connected through a ripple filter comprised by a resistor 84 and condensers B5 and 86 to the grid of an electron discharge device, here shown by Way of illustration as the injector grid 81 of an electron discharge device 88 provided in an intermediate frequency stage of amplification.
- the electron discharge device 88 has a control grid 89 and a cathode 99 which are connected to the secondary 9i of an input intermediate frequency transformer 92.
- the transformer 92 is provided with a primary winding 9 3 and a secondary winding 9I respectively tuned by the condensers 95 and 96 to the input intermediate frequency.
- the electron discharge device 88 is also provided with an anode 9'! connected through the primary 98 of an output intermediate frequency transformer 99 to a source 905 of anode potential.
- the device 88 has a suppressor grid IEiI connected directly to the cathode and a screen grid I62 connected through a resistor 13 to the potential source I00, a condenser I64 maintaining the grid I62 at ground potential for currents of alternating frequency.
- a cathode biasing resistor I65 provides the control grid 89 with a normal operating bias.
- the low potential end of the secondary winding 9I of the transformer 92 is connected through a conductor I06 to an automatic volume control circuit, a condenser I0I being used to maintain the conductor I05 at ground potential for currents of alternating frequency,
- Fig. 2 muting control arrangement is similar to that of the Fig. 1 control circuit.
- a potential in the output circuit of the amplifier circuit I2 as a result of an unbalanced condition of the resistive bridge, a potential is developed across the resistors 82 and 83 and the potential drop across the resistor 83 is applied through the resistor 84 to the injector grid 81 of the discharge device 88 to drive this grid highly negative and thereby render the device 88 unresponsive to signal oscillations impressed on its control grid 89.
- the output of the device 88 is thereby effectively muted.
- the muting time response characteristic of this modified control circuit is determined by the value of the resistor 82, which is the limiting resistor in the charging circuit of the condenser 86, and that the time delay response, during which the receiver is maintained in muted condition after the tuning motor has come to rest, is determined by the time required for the condenser 86 to lose its charge, this time being determined by the value of the resistor 83 connected across the terminals of the condenser 86.
- 86 is given a value of 0.1 mfd.
- the resistors 82 and 83 may each have a value in the order of 1 megohm.
- a silent tuning control for a radio receiver, the combination of a circuit control element, a motor for actuating said element, means for amplifying received signals, a condenser, means responsive to the charge in said condenser for reducing the amplification of said means, means responsive to the energization of said motor for charging said condenser through a unilateral conducting charging path substantially instantly to said predetermined charge, discharge of said condenser through said charging path upon deenergization of said motor being prevented by the unilateral conducting property thereof, and a resistance connected across said condenser of substantially higher value than the resistance of said charging path in the conducting direction.
- a motor for actuating said element means including an electron discharge device having a grid for amplifying received signals, a condenser, means responsive to the energization of said motor for substantially instantly charging said condenser to a predetermined potential through a unilateral conducting charging path whereby discharge of said condenser through said charging path upon deenergization of said motor is prevented, means for supplying said potential as a bias to said grid to reduce the output of said amplifying means, and a discharge path for said condenser separate from said charging path and having resistance sufiiciently great to delay discharge of said condenser over a period substantially greater than the time required to charge said condenser.
- a tuning element an electric motor for actuating said tuning element, a source of alternating current potential for energizing said motor, means for amplifying received signal oscillations, said means including an electron discharge device having a grid and a cathode, a current conductive path of high impedance connected between said grid and said cathode, a condenser included in said path, and means for silencing the output of said amplifier, said last-named means including a rectifier connected to be energized from said source of potential during operation of said motor for charging said condenser to bias said grid through said current conductive path toward cut-off.
- a radio receiver the combination of motor operated means for tuning said receiver to any one of a plurality of predetermined signal frequencies, means for amplifying received signal oscillations, a condenser, means responsive to voltage on the motor of said motor-operated means for charging said condenser substantially instantly to a predetermined potential, means for supplying said potential to said amplifier to re turn the output of said amplifier, means operative upon interruption of the voltage on said motor to discharge said condenser, and means whereby the number of said predetermined signal frequencies to which said receiver may be tuned by said motor operating means and the time required for charge or discharge of said condenser are wholly independent of each other.
- motorized tuning means comprising motor means and a control circuit therefor, an automatic silencing means for said radio set during periods of operation of said motor means comprising a tube in the signal channel of said radio set, and means for applying a voltage, which is developed across said motor means when said control circuit is closed, to said tube to bias it to cut-off.
- a high frequency receiver having tuning means, of a motor to drive said tuning means, a source of alternating voltage, means to supply alternating voltage from said source to said motor thereby to operate said tuning means, and means to reduce the output of said receiver during operation of said tuning means, said last means including an electron discharge device in the signal channel of said receiver, means to rectify said alternating voltage supplied to said motor to produce a unidirectional potential, and means responsive to said unidirectional potential to reduce the output from said discharge device.
- a radio receiving set including an audio frequency tube having a grid, a tuning motor, and means for muting the set during operation of the tuning motor, including a winding on said tuning motor energized during the operation of the motor, means for rectifying the voltage on said winding, and means for applying the rectified voltage to said grid as a gain reducing bias.
Landscapes
- Amplifiers (AREA)
Description
Aug. 4, 1942. R. B. DOME I 2392,0613
MUTING CONTROL Filed April 23, 1938 Fig. 3.
AMPLIFIER AMPL lF/EF? 76 TUNING MOTOR h'wventor: Robert B. Dome, b9 WW 6 J Patented Aug. 4, 1942 MUTING CONTROL Robert B. Dome, Bridgeport, Conn, assignor to General Electric Company, a corporation of New York Application April 23, 1938, Serial No. 203,936
13 Claims.
My invention relates to an improved amplification control for a thermionic signal amplifier and more particularly to an improved silent tuning control for a radio receiving apparatus.
While tuning a radio receiver from one station to another, it is desirable that the output of the receiver shall be muted or silenced in order that intra-station noises of a disturbing and undesirable nature may not be audible. Previous attempts have been made to accomplish this result by manually-operated switching arrangements, or by electronic noise-suppressor arrangements which operate to silence the receiver output whenever a received signal carrier decreases in strength below a predetermined minimum value. Each of these methods for silencing the receiver have their serious limitations and defects which result in an operation that is not entirely satisfactory. Predominant among the defects of these prior arrangements is their inability rapidly and quietly to silence a receiver output in an automatic and reliable manner during a tuning or other adjusting operation. The very rapid silencing of receiver output in a quiet and efficient manner is especially necessary where a tuning operation, or similar adjusting operation of a circuit element is effected by an electric motor whose operation, beginning at the instant of energization, introduces into the receiver output a great multitude of loud and disturbing noises.
It is, therefore, an object of my invention to provide a muting or silencing control which overcomes the defects inherent in prior arrangements and one which has substantially an instantaneous control over the receiver output yet one which is quiet, reliable, and entirely automatic in its operation.
A further object of my invention is to provide a muting control which controls electronically the output of a signal amplifier and which therefore has an almost instantaneous muting characteristic though allowing for a desirable predetermined time delay between the deenergization of the muting control circuit and the reenergization of the signal amplifier.
A further object of my invention is to provide an automatic silent tuning control energized at all times with the tuning motor and my invention contemplates that the muting control potential may be obtained directly from the potential drop impressed across or induced in a tuning motor winding.
Another object of my invention is to provide a muting circuit in which the elements of the muting arrangement operate in the dual role of muting elements during periods when the receiver output is muted and as filtering elements, to filter alternating current variations from the biasing source for an electron discharge device, during the remaining time when the receiver output is not muted.
The novel features which I believe to be characteristic of my invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. My invention itself, however, both as to its organization and method of operation, together with further objects and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following description taken in connection with the accompanying drawing in which Fig. 1 illustrates an embodiment of my invention in which a muting control potential is obtained directly from a tuning motor, and Fig. 2 illustrates a modification thereof and shows an arrangement wherein a muting control potential is obtained from the unbalance of a normally balanced resistive bridge.
Referring to Fig. 1 of the drawing, I have illustrated my invention as embodied in a radio receiver provided with a radio frequency amplifier, conventionally represented by the rectangle l8, which may comprise one or more stages of amplification, connected to receive energy from an antenna ground system I I, I2 and arranged to supply amplified signal energy through a transformer 13 to the diode elements l4, I5 of the electron discharge device is. The radio frequency amplifier IE] preferably consists of one or more stages of radio frequency amplification, of a converter to change the signal carrier oscillations to oscillations of intermediate frequency, and of one or more stages of amplification for the oscillations of intermediate frequency. In the preferred embodiment, the primary and secondary windings of the transformer l3 are tuned by the respective condensers I1, 18 to the intermediate frequency.
A uni-directional potential appears across the resistor [9 as a result of the rectification of the signal oscillations by the diode elements I l, l5 and this potential is supplied through a filter comprised by resistor 20 and condenser 2| to an automatic volume control circuit 22 of the receiver which operates to control the amplification of the several amplifier stages It in a manner well known in the art. The uni-directional potential appearing across the resistor 19 is modulated in accordance with the received signals. This potential in addition to being supplied to the automatic volume control circuit 22 is also coupled through a condenser 23 to a voltage divider Z4 and a portion thereof is coupled through a condenser 25 to the control grid 26 of an electron discharge signal amplifier 21.
An anode potential for the electron discharge signal amplifier 21 is obtained from a power source 28 through a power transformer 29, a full wave rectifier 30, and a filter 3|. This anode potential is supplied through the conductor 32 and the primary 33 of an output transformer 34 to the anode 35 of the electron discharge signal amplifier 21. The cathode 36 of the amplifier 21 is connected through ground to the negative terminal of the anode sup-ply source. A normal operating bias for the grid 26 of the electron discharge signal amplifier 21 is obtained by inserting a resistance 38 in the negative lead of the anode supply source and by supplying the potential drop appearing across this resistor through the resistors 39 and 40 to the grid. The output transformer 34 is provided with a secondary 4| which is preferably connected to the input of an additional stage of audio frequency amplification but is here shown for purposes of simplicity as connected directly to a loud speaker 42 or other translating device.
The tunable elements 43 of the radio frequency amplifier I are mechanically connected through a suitable reduction drive mechanism to the armature 44 of a tuning motor which has, in addition to the armature 44, a main field winding 45 and direction controlling field windings 46, 41. The direction of rotation of the motor armature 44, and thereby the direction of adjustment of the adjustable elements 43 to efiect a tuning operation, is determined by a switch, which, on the drawing is represented as a singlepole double-throw switch 48. This switch controls the energization of the motor from the supply source 28 through a power transformer 49. The switch 48 is moved either to the upper or lower contact thereby to energize the motor winding 46 or 41 respectively with the motor winding 45. The motor armature 44 rotates in a direction depending upon which of the field windings 46, 41 was energized and drives the tunable elements 43 of the radio receiver to a position in which the receiver is accurately tuned to the frequency of a desired signal oscillation. Thereupon the motor is deenergized by manually moving the switch'48 to a neutral position intermediate the upper and lower switch contacts as shown in the drawing. It will, of course, be evident that the switch '48 may be replaced by or connected in parallel with other control circuits as of the manually-operated push-button type which suitably energize and control the direction of operation of the tuning motor. Representative of control circuits of the latter type is that shown in the United States Letters Patent No. 1,934,493 to Geyh.
Both the increase in sensitivity of the receiver under normal action of the automatic volume control and the electrical currents flowing in the tuning motor and associated circuits contribute to cause the receiver output to become very noisy during the operation of tuning from one signal frequency to another. Such noise is of a highly annoying and disturbing nature and is quite objectionable to a person operating the receiver. To overcome this objectionable condition of operation, a silent tuning control circuit is provided. This circuit operates in an automatic manner to silence the receiver during the time when the motor armature 44 is rotating in effecting a desired adjustment of the tunable elements 43.
A muting control potential, provided by the voltage drop across the motor field winding 45, is supplied through a conductor 50 to a pair of diode elements 5|, 52 contained in the electron discharge device I6 and, after rectification, is utilized to charge a condenser 53 connected between ground and the junction of the resistors 39, 40. It will be evident that as soon as the switch 48 is moved to energize either of the field windings 46 or 41, the potential drop appearing across the motor winding 45 is supplied through the conductor 50 to the diode elements 5|, 52 and the condenser 53 is almost instantly charged to a direct current potential substantially equal to the maximum instantaneous potential appearing across the motor winding 45, The potential across the condenser 53 is applied through the resistor 40 to the grid 26 of the amplifier 21 and biases the grid 26 beyond cut-off to silence the output of the receiver by making the signal amplifier 21 unresponsive to signal impulses impressed on the grid 26. Upon opening the switch 46, the potential drop across the motor winding 45 disappears and the condenser 53 thereupon discharges through a circuit comprising the resistors 38 and 39 in series, the uni-directional conductivity of the diode elements 5|, 52 of the electron discharge device l6 preventing the flow of current in the'circuit comprised by the diode elements 5|, 52 and the motor windings 45, 46 After a time interval, determined by the value: of the resistors 38, 39, the condenser 53 has'dis charged sufficiently for the grid 26 of the amplifier 21 once more to acquire a normal biasing potential whereupon the signal amplifier 21 operates with full output.
The time response which is characteristic'of this muting control is quite important in that it is desirable that the control shall instantaneously mute the receiver when the tuning motor is energized and shall delay for an appreciable time interval the restoration of the receiver output after the tuning motor is deenergized. It will be evident that my muting control arrangement has substantially an instantaneous muting characteristic since the condenser 53 is charged directly through the anode to cathode resistance of the diode elements 5|, 52. Thus the voltage across the condenser 53 is approximately:
E=peak A. C. voltage across the motor field winding 45 R=resistance of the anode to cathode path of the diode elements 5| 52 C=capacity of the condenser 53 If a 61-16 type of electron discharge device I6 be used, the anode to cathode resistance of the diode elements 5|, 52 is about 2,500 ohms. If the condenser 53 be given a value of 0.1 mfd., the voltage across the condenser 53 will be one half of the instantaneous maximum value of that across the motor field winding 45 in the time where where t 0.7 or
t=0.7 RC='0.7 2500 10 microseconds Now when the tuning motor is deenergized, the condenser 53 will discharge through the resistors 38, 39 in series. If the resistor 38 has the value of 10 ohms and the resistor 39 be given a value of 500,000 ohms, the voltage across the condenser 53 will be one half its initial value when t2=0.7 X500,000 X 10* =35,000 microseconds Thus the radio receiver is silenced practically instantaneously, but there is a time delay of appreciable magnitude before the output of the receiver becomes again audible after the motor is deenergized. The time delay in returning to audibility allows the tuning motor to come to a complete stop and to thereby become perfectly quiet from the standpoint of introducing any noise into the radio receiver by its operation.
My muting circuit arrangement has an additional advantage in that the resistors 39 and 40 are connected to the left-hand end of the biasing resistor 38 and therefore serve with the condenser 53 as a ripple filter for any slight ripple which may appear in the voltage drop across the biasing resistor 38. By utilizing the resistors 39, 46 and the condenser 53 in this dual function, a material saving results in the cost of component parts of the radio receiver.
A modification of my muting control circuit is illustrated in Fig. 2. In this arrangement, a
muting potential is provided by the unbalance of the resistive bridge comprised by the resistors 54 and 55 which are connected through a switch 56 across the power supply source 51, 58. A plurality of switches 5963 are mechanically interlocked by an arrangement, not shown, which allows only one switch at a time to close and thereby establish an electrical connection between a conductor 64 and one of the movable contacts 65-69 provided on the resistor 55. A conductor I is connected to a movable contact II provided on the resistor 54. It will be evident that this arrangement of resistors and their cooperating adjustable contacts provides a resistive Wheatstone bridge which may be balanced after closure of a selected one of the switches 59-63 by suitable adjustment of the movable contact II along the resistor 54, the balanced condition of the bridge being indicated by an absence of potential between the conductors 64 and 10.
Any potential drop appearing across the con- A ductors 64, I0 is amplified by a suitable amplifier, represented conventionally by the rectangle l2, and the output of the amplifier is connected through an output transformer 13 to a field winding 14 of a tuning motor. The tuning motor has an armature I mechanically connected to the tuning elements of the radio receiver and also mechanically connected movably to position the contact II along the resistor 54. The tuning motor is further provided with a winding I6 arranged in electrically spaced position with relation to the winding I4. The winding 16 is connected by conductors I1, 18 with the respective power supply lines 51, 58.
The switches 59-63 are preferably actuated by a manual push-button control, not shown, from the front of the radio receiver cabinet. Assume that the closing of a selected switch 59-63 unbalances the bridge circuit to produce a potential between the conductors 64, 10. This potential is amplified by the amplifier l2 and is supplied through the transformer 13 to the field winding 14 of the tuning motor. The armature E5 of the tuning motor moves under the combined influence of the field windings l4 and 16 to adjust the tuning elements of the radio receiver to a position predetermined by the setting of an adjustable contactor 65-69 corresponding to the switch that was closed. In moving, the armature 15 also drives the adjustable contact II to a new position on the resistor 54 at which the bridge is again balanced and the potential between the contactors 64, I6 disappears. When this condition occurs, the motor field winding 14 no longer has an excitation potential impressed thereacross and the motor armature 15 comes to rest. Should the armature I5 rotate too far, it will carry the movable contact II beyond a position on the resistor 54 at which the bridge is balanced and an excitation potential reversed in phase is thereupon impressed across the motor field winding I4 to cause the motor armature 15 to revolve in a reverse direction.
During the time when the tuning motor is driving the tuning elements of the receiver to effect a desired adjustment, it is desirable that the output of the receiver shall be silenced. A muting potential is obtained from the output of the amplifier I2 and is supplied through the condensers I9, to a diode rectifier 8| having a pair of resistors 82, 83 connected thereacross. A unidirectional potential resulting from rectification of the voltage supplied by amplifier I2 thus appears across these resistors. That portion of the drop appearing across the resistor 83 is connected through a ripple filter comprised by a resistor 84 and condensers B5 and 86 to the grid of an electron discharge device, here shown by Way of illustration as the injector grid 81 of an electron discharge device 88 provided in an intermediate frequency stage of amplification.
The electron discharge device 88 has a control grid 89 and a cathode 99 which are connected to the secondary 9i of an input intermediate frequency transformer 92. The transformer 92 is provided with a primary winding 9 3 and a secondary winding 9I respectively tuned by the condensers 95 and 96 to the input intermediate frequency. The electron discharge device 88 is also provided with an anode 9'! connected through the primary 98 of an output intermediate frequency transformer 99 to a source 905 of anode potential. The device 88 has a suppressor grid IEiI connected directly to the cathode and a screen grid I62 connected through a resistor 13 to the potential source I00, a condenser I64 maintaining the grid I62 at ground potential for currents of alternating frequency. A cathode biasing resistor I65 provides the control grid 89 with a normal operating bias. The low potential end of the secondary winding 9I of the transformer 92 is connected through a conductor I06 to an automatic volume control circuit, a condenser I0I being used to maintain the conductor I05 at ground potential for currents of alternating frequency,
The operation of the Fig. 2 muting control arrangement is similar to that of the Fig. 1 control circuit. Upon the appearance of a potential in the output circuit of the amplifier circuit I2 as a result of an unbalanced condition of the resistive bridge, a potential is developed across the resistors 82 and 83 and the potential drop across the resistor 83 is applied through the resistor 84 to the injector grid 81 of the discharge device 88 to drive this grid highly negative and thereby render the device 88 unresponsive to signal oscillations impressed on its control grid 89. The output of the device 88 is thereby effectively muted. As soon as the motor armature 15 has adjusted the adjustable contact H to a position on the resistor 54 at which the bridge is again balanced, no potential appears in the output circuit of the amplifier 12 and the potential drop across the resistor 83 disappears to permit, thereupon, the injector grid 81 of the device 88 once more to be biased to its normal potential determined by the potential drop across the biasing resistor I05. It will be evident that the muting time response characteristic of this modified control circuit is determined by the value of the resistor 82, which is the limiting resistor in the charging circuit of the condenser 86, and that the time delay response, during which the receiver is maintained in muted condition after the tuning motor has come to rest, is determined by the time required for the condenser 86 to lose its charge, this time being determined by the value of the resistor 83 connected across the terminals of the condenser 86. 86 is given a value of 0.1 mfd., the resistors 82 and 83 may each have a value in the order of 1 megohm.
While I have shown the muting control potential as applied to a control grid in the Fig, 1 circuit arrangement and as applied to the injector grid of an intermediate frequency amplifier in the Fig. 2 circuit arrangement, it will be evident that this control potential may be applied to other grids of electron discharge devices em- I ployed as radio or audio frequency amplifiers, detectors, or the like. Thus, while I have shown particular embodiments of my invention, it will of course be understood that I do not wish to be limited thereto since many modifications may be made both in mechanical arrangement and the instrumentalities employed, and I therefore contemplate by the appended claims to cover any such modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of my invention.
What I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States is:
1. The combination, in a radio receiver, of a tuning element, a motor for operating said tuning element, a condenser, means responsive to a predetermined charge in said condenser for silencing said receiver, and means responsive to the energization of said motor for charging said condenser through a unilateral conducting charging path substantially instantly to said predetermined charge, discharge of said condenser through said charging path upon deenergization of said motor being prevented by the unilateral conducting property thereof, and a resistance connected across said condenser of substantially higher value than the resistance of said charging path in the conducting direction.
2. In a silent tuning control for a radio receiver, the combination of a circuit control element, a motor for actuating said element, means for amplifying received signals, a condenser, means responsive to the charge in said condenser for reducing the amplification of said means, means responsive to the energization of said motor for charging said condenser through a unilateral conducting charging path substantially instantly to said predetermined charge, discharge of said condenser through said charging path upon deenergization of said motor being prevented by the unilateral conducting property thereof, and a resistance connected across said condenser of substantially higher value than the resistance of said charging path in the conducting direction.
If the condenser 3. The combination, in a radio receiver,'of a 75 circuit control element, a motor for actuating said element, means including an electron discharge device having a grid for amplifying received signals, a condenser, means responsive to the energization of said motor for substantially instantly charging said condenser to a predetermined potential through a unilateral conducting charging path whereby discharge of said condenser through said charging path upon deenergization of said motor is prevented, means for supplying said potential as a bias to said grid to reduce the output of said amplifying means, and a discharge path for said condenser separate from said charging path and having resistance sufiiciently great to delay discharge of said condenser over a period substantially greater than the time required to charge said condenser.
4. The combination, in a radio receiver having a tunable element, of an electron discharge signal amplifier having a grid and a cathode, a series connected condenser and resistor between said grid and said cathode, an electric motor for actuating said tunable element, a source of alternating current for energizing said motor, a rectifier, and means responsive to the energization of said motor for charging said condenser through said rectifier from said source in a circuit excluding said resistor, said condenser being charged with a polarity to bias said grid toward cut-off whereby the output of said signal amplifier is reduced.
5. In a tunable radio receiver, the combination of a tuning element, an electric motor for actuating said tuning element, a source of alternating current potential for energizing said motor, means for amplifying received signal oscillations, said means including an electron discharge device having a grid and a cathode, a current conductive path of high impedance connected between said grid and said cathode, a condenser included in said path, and means for silencing the output of said amplifier, said last-named means including a rectifier connected to be energized from said source of potential during operation of said motor for charging said condenser to bias said grid through said current conductive path toward cut-off.
6. The combination in a radio receiver having a tunable element, of an electron discharge signal amplifier having a grid and a cathode, an electric motor for actuating said tunable element, means including a source of alternating current for energizing said motor, a condenser and a high impedance serially connected between said grid and said cathode, a rectifier, means responsive to the energization of said motor for charging said condenser through said rectifier from said alternating current source to reduce the output of said amplifier by biasing said grid toward cut-ofi, a discharge path, and means responsive to the deenergization of said motor for discharging said condenser through said discharge path.
7. The combination, in a radio receiver having a tunable element, of an electron discharge signal amplifier having a grid, a source of potential having a small alternating current component and a relatively large direct current component, means for supplying said potential to said grid to provide said grid with a normal operating bias, said last-named means including resistors and a condenser arranged to filter from said potential said alternating current component, a motor for actuating said tunable element, and means responsive to the energization of said motor for charging said condenser substantially instantly to an abnormal potential whereby said grid is quickly biased toward cut-off to reduce the output of said receiver,
8. The combination, in a radio receiver, of a tuning element, an alternating current motor for operating said tuning element, a condenser, means responsive to a predetermined charge in said condenser for silencing said receiver, and means operative upon energization of said motor for rectifying the voltage thereon to charge said condenser substantially instantly to and maintaining said condenser charged at said predetermined charge, and means operative upon deenergization of said motor for discharging said condenser over a predetermined time interval, the rate of discharge of said condenser being Wholly independent of the resistance of the path through which the condenser is charged.
9. In a radio receiver, the combination of motor operated means for tuning said receiver to any one of a plurality of predetermined signal frequencies, means for amplifying received signal oscillations, a condenser, means responsive to voltage on the motor of said motor-operated means for charging said condenser substantially instantly to a predetermined potential, means for supplying said potential to said amplifier to re duce the output of said amplifier, means operative upon interruption of the voltage on said motor to discharge said condenser, and means whereby the number of said predetermined signal frequencies to which said receiver may be tuned by said motor operating means and the time required for charge or discharge of said condenser are wholly independent of each other.
10. In a radio set, motorized tuning means comprising motor means and a control circuit therefor, an automatic silencing means for said radio set during periods of operation of said motor means comprising a tube in the signal channel of said radio set, and means for applying a voltage, which is developed across said motor means when said control circuit is closed, to said tube to bias it to cut-off.
11. The combination in a high frequency receiver, of motorized tuning means comprising motor means and a control circuit therefor, means for automatically reducing the output from said receiver during periods of operation of said motor means, said means comprising an electron discharge device in the signal channel of said receiver, and means for applying a voltage, which is developed across said motor means when said control circuit is closed, to said discharge device to reduce the signal transmitted therethrough.
12. The combination, in a high frequency receiver having tuning means, of a motor to drive said tuning means, a source of alternating voltage, means to supply alternating voltage from said source to said motor thereby to operate said tuning means, and means to reduce the output of said receiver during operation of said tuning means, said last means including an electron discharge device in the signal channel of said receiver, means to rectify said alternating voltage supplied to said motor to produce a unidirectional potential, and means responsive to said unidirectional potential to reduce the output from said discharge device.
13. A radio receiving set including an audio frequency tube having a grid, a tuning motor, and means for muting the set during operation of the tuning motor, including a winding on said tuning motor energized during the operation of the motor, means for rectifying the voltage on said winding, and means for applying the rectified voltage to said grid as a gain reducing bias.
ROBERT E. DOME.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US203936A US2292063A (en) | 1938-04-23 | 1938-04-23 | Muting control |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US203936A US2292063A (en) | 1938-04-23 | 1938-04-23 | Muting control |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
US2292063A true US2292063A (en) | 1942-08-04 |
Family
ID=22755896
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US203936A Expired - Lifetime US2292063A (en) | 1938-04-23 | 1938-04-23 | Muting control |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US2292063A (en) |
Cited By (6)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2492392A (en) * | 1947-05-21 | 1949-12-27 | Collins Radio Co | Remotely tuned radio apparatus and the like |
US2494235A (en) * | 1946-11-01 | 1950-01-10 | Edward F Andrews | Stop-on-signal radio apparatus |
US2525094A (en) * | 1946-06-21 | 1950-10-10 | Honeywell Regulator Co | Recording instrument |
US2564284A (en) * | 1949-01-11 | 1951-08-14 | Electric Cortroller & Mfg Comp | Prepositioning motor control system |
US2693559A (en) * | 1951-05-21 | 1954-11-02 | Leeds And Northrop Company | Balance indicator for rebalanceable systems |
US2719219A (en) * | 1950-01-27 | 1955-09-27 | Sundial Broadcasting Corp | Radio receiver system |
-
1938
- 1938-04-23 US US203936A patent/US2292063A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Cited By (6)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2525094A (en) * | 1946-06-21 | 1950-10-10 | Honeywell Regulator Co | Recording instrument |
US2494235A (en) * | 1946-11-01 | 1950-01-10 | Edward F Andrews | Stop-on-signal radio apparatus |
US2492392A (en) * | 1947-05-21 | 1949-12-27 | Collins Radio Co | Remotely tuned radio apparatus and the like |
US2564284A (en) * | 1949-01-11 | 1951-08-14 | Electric Cortroller & Mfg Comp | Prepositioning motor control system |
US2719219A (en) * | 1950-01-27 | 1955-09-27 | Sundial Broadcasting Corp | Radio receiver system |
US2693559A (en) * | 1951-05-21 | 1954-11-02 | Leeds And Northrop Company | Balance indicator for rebalanceable systems |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
US2262218A (en) | Radio receiver | |
US2174566A (en) | Automatic tuning arrangement | |
US2186825A (en) | Amplifier muting circuit | |
US2231806A (en) | Radio apparatus | |
US2194559A (en) | Frequency responsive relay | |
US2292063A (en) | Muting control | |
US2002353A (en) | Remote control device | |
US2639373A (en) | Signal seeking receiver | |
US3320536A (en) | Method and apparatus for signal modulation control | |
US2499584A (en) | Signal-seeking tuner | |
US2341325A (en) | Diode rectifier circuit | |
US2088210A (en) | Interstation noise suppressor circuits | |
US2028859A (en) | Radioreceiver | |
US2216582A (en) | Automatic volume control with noise suppression | |
US2767310A (en) | Carrier operated squelch circuit | |
US2151773A (en) | Reduction of noise | |
US2472957A (en) | Tuning control system for signal seeking receivers | |
US2115876A (en) | Receiver noise limiter circuit | |
US2179974A (en) | Signal receiving system | |
US2037456A (en) | Automatic volume control | |
US2197933A (en) | Muting control system | |
US2059870A (en) | Protective means for radio receiving apparatus | |
US2054825A (en) | Automatic gain control circuits | |
US2843734A (en) | Signal seeking radio receiver | |
US3075171A (en) | Remote control receiver |