US2410883A - Frequency generating system - Google Patents

Frequency generating system Download PDF

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US2410883A
US2410883A US502762A US50276243A US2410883A US 2410883 A US2410883 A US 2410883A US 502762 A US502762 A US 502762A US 50276243 A US50276243 A US 50276243A US 2410883 A US2410883 A US 2410883A
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grid
stage
frequency
stages
plate
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Merwin J Larsen
Carl S Schjonberg
James A Oswald
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Central Commercial Co
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Central Commercial Co
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10HELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
    • G10H5/00Instruments in which the tones are generated by means of electronic generators
    • G10H5/02Instruments in which the tones are generated by means of electronic generators using generation of basic tones
    • G10H5/06Instruments in which the tones are generated by means of electronic generators using generation of basic tones tones generated by frequency multiplication or division of a basic tone

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  • This invention relates to frequency generators, the main objects of which are, as follows:
  • Figure 1 is a schematic View of our multivibrator submultiple frequency generating system.
  • Figure 2 is a view illustrating the potential waveforms of the various points in an unsymmetrical multivibrator operating at its own natural frequency, which is essentially the condition of the rst stage shown at Figure 1.
  • Figure 3 is a View illustrating the potential waveforms of a multivibrator which is locked by another multivibrator of twice the frequency
  • Figure 4 is a schematic view showing a modified form of our invention.
  • stage B In carrying the invention into practice six multivibrator stages A, B, C, D, E and F, connected in cascade are shown, such for example that the frequency of oscillation of stage B is the octave of the frequency of oscillation of stage A. Each successive stage oscillates at a frequency which is the octave of the next preceding stage. In like manner, all stages below stage B will similarly oscillate at a frequency which is onehalf the frequency of the preceding stage in said cascade.
  • Each of the multivibrator stages includes a twin triode, including two sets of electrodes consisting of a cathode, control. grid, and plate.
  • the multivibrator A for example, includes two sets of associated electrodes including grid I3 and plate I5, and grid I4 and plate I6.
  • the input circuit of the twin triodes are completed through high resistance paths of different effective resistances, constituted in the case of control grid I3, and its associated cathode by the resistances 4 and 5, and in the case of the control grid I4 and its associated cathode, by resistances 3.
  • the output circuit of the twin triode includes resistances I and 2 leading from plates I5 and I6, respectively, with variable condenser 8 connected between control grid I4 and a point intermediate resistances I and plate electrode I5, and xed condenser 9, connected between control grid I3 and a point intermediate plate I6 and resistance I2.
  • the dropping resistance 6 is connected to a point intermediate resistances 4 and 5 and leads to the playing key 52, movable between contacts and 6I.
  • Contact 60 returns to the common input circuit bus of the several multivibrators, while contact 6I leads through grid biasing resistance 56 to ground, thus returning to the common cathode bus.
  • the resistive multivibrator circuit constituting stage A is coupled to the succeeding stage B 3 through the coupling capacitance I having the value in the circuit illustrated of mmf. to the control grid I7 of one set of the electrodes of the twin triode in multivibrator stage B.
  • the twin triode in-multivibrator stage B includes two sets of electrodes constituted by control grid lIl and plate I9 with an associated cathode, and a control grid I8 and plate 20, with an associated cathode.
  • the control grid I'I which connects to the coupled capacitance I0 also completes an input circuit through resistors 23 and 22, returning to the associated cathode.
  • the input circuit for the opposite sets of electrodes is completedffrom con- 4,. resistance 50.
  • the waveform of voltage will be taken off of said stage through the potential dividing and dropping resistance 6a which is connected intermediatethe series resistances 22 and 23, the frequency of saidwaveform of voltage being a subto note that these resistances are high, in order that the average current drain upon any indiplate supply leads 'extends Lto the common plate supply bus.
  • Fixed condenser II is connected to a point intermediate resistance I I and plate I9 to control .grid I3, while fixed condenser I2Y is connected to a point intermediate resistance I2 and plate 20, and to the control grid I'I.
  • the controlgrid IB is connectedthrough coupling capacitance I0 whichV is of 40 mmf. to the control grid of the first set of electrodes of the twin triode constituting multivibrator stage C.
  • the circuits for the multivibrator stage C are similar to those described with respect to stages A and B except that the capacity values of condensers I I and I2 are'of greater value than the corresponding condensers inthe preceding stages, as will be hereinafter explained in detail.
  • the biasing circuit is represented as including playing key 52"Y connected to resistance 6b with an intermediate point in the lotv resistance grid circuit. rlhe contact system for 'the playing key is arranged in av manner similar to that hereinbefore described, where one of the contacts leads to bias resistor 56, returning through ground to the com-mon cathode bus.
  • resistance .fi is 10,000 ohms
  • the arrangement shown herein will therefore be considered merely as one optional method of obtaining substantially similar functional results, namely, to confine the output voltage from any multivibrator stage (to only a small fraction of the total produced voltage and thereby render the input impedance of said work circuit sufficiently low to prevent distortion and change in frequency of the waveform of voltage, and also to insure that the average plate and grid currents per individual multivibrator stage is so low that neither ⁇ stage nor component is abused, thereby increasing the operating life of said stages and reducing the cost of operation of the instrument as a whole.
  • capacitances 8 and 9 of the first stage A, Figure l are selected on the basis of an experimental curve of capacitance vs. frequency.
  • rI'he capacitances used at the locked or lower frequency stages are somewhat higher, say 25% or may even be higher as the locking pulse increases in magnitude as the stages progress toward the lower frequency end of the cascade.
  • condenser 8 in the circuit of stage A and that this may comprise any well known trimmer or padding condenser. All others of the condensers employed may be Xed and can be of any well known commercial type, but preferably of the type employing mica dielectrics.
  • the xed capacitances Ii' and I2 in the grid to plate circuits of stage B are functionally comparable to capacitances 8 and 9 in the corresponding circuits of stage A.
  • the plate resistances I I and I2 are comparable to resistances I and 2
  • stage A and the resistances 6a, 2i, 22 and 23 are comparable to corresponding resistances in the grid to ground circuits of said stage A.
  • Typical operating voltages of multivibrator A are shown at Figure 2. This may be considered as typical also of multivibrator B if it were not locked by multivibrator A. It is seen that one triode at a time is conducting and while that triode is conducting its-operating voltages are relatively constant. The transfer of conduction from one triode to the other is done during a very small portion of the cycle.
  • the operating sequence of multivibrator A is as follows: At time tl grid I4 has just gone slightly positive. This causes current to flow in plate resistance 2 and plate I5 consequently drops suddenly. The sudden drop of plate I6 throws grid I3 via capacitance 9 negative, thereby shutting off the plate current in grid I3. After this quick transfer, capacitance 9 discharges through the grid resistance, chiefly 5, and capacitance 8 charges through resistance I. During this portion of the cycle, between times tI and t2, grid resistance 3 and plate resistance 2 have but a minor effect on the charge or discharge time as grid I4 and plate I6 are essentially fixed in potential.
  • Multivibrator B is locked by a pulse through capacitance I9 from multivibrator A.
  • the manner in which this is accomplished is evident upon examining the wave forms shown in Figure 3.
  • the grid voltage from grid I4, multivibrator A is redravvn above the voltages of multivibrator B because the controlling voltage is taken from grid I4.
  • the transient dip in grid I4 occurs in such a short time that the pulse can be transmitted to grid I'I, multivibrator B, through a very small capacitance I.
  • the pulses transmitted are shown in the ligure.
  • a potential divider is formed between grid I4, grid I'I, and the cathode by means of coupling capacitance I8 and the tube input capacitance and resistance.
  • a coupling capacitance of a value ranging between 20 and 40 micro-microfarads was found adequate for the tube used, a 'TF7 duo triode.
  • the coupling capacitance I is relatively independent of the frequency concerned because the hair-line pulse occurs during approximately the same interval, regardless of the charge and discharge time for capacitances II and I2.
  • the coupling capacitance I0 can be the same whether the frequency is at the bottom or the top of the audio range used. This is contrary to heretofore known coupling systems where the object has always been to increase the capacitance ⁇ as the frequency lowers in order to maintain more or less constant reactance. In our system the capacitance must remain small. Should it be ltoo large the locked unit B will tend to follow A at the same frequency. Should the coupler be too small, on the other hand, then the locking range is reduced.
  • the tripping is accomplished as follows:
  • the negative pulse on grid I'I causes a positive pulse on grid I8. This is because the negative pulse on grid I1, assuming the triode associated with I1 is conducting, causes a momentary cut-off 5o that plate I9 starts to rise abruptly.L But this causes grid I8 to rise via the capacitance II and hence the righthand triode of B conducts.
  • the feed-back is small. Under test the feed-back has been found to be less than one percent. In this circuit, the use of a resistance in series with the coupling capacitance not only decreased the locking eifect, but also greatly increased the feed-back.
  • the first and last capacitances are each 20 micro- Inicrofarads and the intermediate capacitances, each 40 micromicrofarads.
  • the grid biasing resistance 55 for each stage in the cascade is considerably lower than the aforementioned dropping resistance, say, between 1,000 and 10,000 ohms.
  • stage A 125 micromicrofarads
  • stage B 300 micromicrofarads
  • stage C 680 micrornicrofarads
  • stage D 1,500 micromicrofarads
  • stage E 3,300 micromicrofarads
  • stage F 9,000 micromicrofarads.
  • a submultiple generating system as herein disclosed is designed primarily for the production of alternating voltages at the tone frequencies of different notes of the musical scale. It follows from this that the operation of a cascade of multivibrators must be so dependable at all times, that there shall be no change in the octave relation of the respective stages.
  • Figure 4 shows a multivibrator submultiple divider system under the control of a separate oscillator for cases where more precise control is desired.
  • a conventional electron-coupled oscillator such as a 7A7 vacuum tube is shown as an example of a moderately stable oscillator.
  • a sine wave may be produced at the adjustable output 3l by increasing the feedback resistance 3D until oscillations nearly cease.
  • the multivibrator to be locked may be considered the same as multivibrator A of Figure 1.
  • An optimum set of values for locking can be found by adjusting the voltage at 3
  • a typical set of valuesI for either same-frequency locking or sub-octave locking was found to be l0 volts and 100 micro-microfarads. In the system the range also was very nearly an octave.
  • the natural frequency of the multivator to be locked lies approximately midway between the upper and lower limits when locked. This is because both positive and negative portions of the locking cycle act upon the input grid. The positive portion will tend to cause the lefthand triode to trip while the negative portion will tend to cause the righthand triode to trip.
  • the output is rich in harmonics.
  • the taper as the harmonics increase is somewhat less than that of a saw-tooth wave.
  • the tenth harmonic had an amplitude of between 15 and 20 percent of the fundamental, whereas for a saw-tooth wave the tenth harmonic would have an amplitude of 10 percent of the fundamental.
  • the taper was smooth. ⁇ This gives an excellent source for tone production where naturalv harmonics are available for selective filterl u 9 ing and mixing to produce many of the desired tone qualities.
  • the voltage at source 50 is chosen arbitrarily, it having been found that the multivibrator stages of the respective stages will stay locked with a voltage variation of from 20 to more than 350 volts.
  • multivibrator stages connected in cascade and comprising duo-triode Vacuum tubes each having cathode, control grid, and plate electrodes, with grid circuits extending between said cathodes and control grids and plate circuits connected between said cathodes and plate electrodes including a first stage operating at a given audio frequency and other stages each adapted to be locked to operate at a frequency which is a submultiple of said given frequency, each of said stages having an output circuit including a low resistance path in the grid circuit of one triode of said stage, a high resistance path in the grid circuit of the other triode thereof, a keying circuit including a movable contactor and coacting fixed contacts associated therewith, one of said xed contacts being connected with the cathode of one of said triodes, and the other of said fixed contacts being connected to a work circuit, said movable contactor being connected with an intermediate point in the low resistance path in said rst-mentioned grid circuit
  • a submultiple generator comprising a plurality of multilever stages of the duo-triode vacuum tube type, each having cathode, control grid,
  • a submultiple generator comprising a plurality of multivibrator stages of the duo-triode 5 vacuum tube type, each having cathode, control grid, and plate electrodes, with grid circuits extending between said cathodes and control grids and plate circuits connected between said cathodes and plate electrodes said stages connected Y in cascade and including a first stage and at least a second stage; and resistive-capacitative means for fixing and maintaining the frequency of oscillation of each of said stages such that the frequency of oscillation of the second stage is a 15 submultiple of said rst stage, said means comprising a condenser coupling the grid circuit of one triode of the rst stage with the grid circuit of one triode or" said second stage for transmitting from the former to the latter a sharp controlling pulse wave; symmetrical resistive plate circuits and unsymmetrical resistive grid circuits for each of said stages, capacitances for each stage in which one each thereof connects the plate circuit of one triode of said stage in series with the
  • a frequency divider comprising twin triode multivibrator stages each having cathode, control grid, and plate electrodes, with grid circuits extending between said cathodes and control grids and plate circuits connected between said cathodes and plate electrodes connected in cascade and includinga first stage, operating at a given frequency, a last stage and a plurality of intermediate stages, said last stage and said intermediate stages each being adapted to be locked to operate at a frequency which is a submultiple of said rst stage, and capacitative circuits coupling said stages to each other, the capacitances in all of said coupling circuits being small as compared to the capacities of the grid circuits f the stages being locked and those in the circuits leading from the first stage and to Athe last stage being equal and those in the intermediate coupling circuits being likewise equal but higher than those in said rst and last coupling circuits, said twin triode multivibrator stages each having symmetrical high resistive plate circuits, unsymmetrical grid circuits and a dropping output
  • aplurality of generators of complex waves of alternating voltages which are rich in harmonics said generators comprising multivibrator stages connected in cascade and adapted to be locked for operation in a given sub-multiple frequency relation and each consisting of va duo-triode vacuum tube having sets of cathode, control grid and plate electrodes and providing a rst triodel and a second triode; grid and plate circuits for said electrodes extending respectively between said contro-l grid and cathode and between said cathode and plate electrode, an output means for said system, a potential divider for each stage land comprising series resistances in the grid circuit of the rst triode thereof and a dropping resistance, one terminal of which is connected to said grid circuit at the point between said series resistances, means for selectively connecting the other terminal of said dropping resistance to the associated cathode of said set of electrodes or to said output means, and a condenser coupling the grid of the second triode of any stage

Description

NOV. 12, 1946. M 1 LARSEN ETAL 2,410,883
FREQUENCY GENERATING SYSTEM' Filed Sept. 17, 1945 3 Sheets-Sheet l NOV. 12, 1946. M, J, LARSEN E -l-AL 2,410,883
FREQUENCY GENERATING SYSTEM FiledSept. 1'7, 1945 25 Sheets-Sheet 2 ffy-2- @fwd f4 Plate@ ..76
1 L zeq 7am@v NOV. M, 1 LARSEN ETAL FREQUENCY GENERATING SYSTEM Filed Sept. 17, 1943 3 Sheets-Sheet 3 l fg FZ@ fai@ --f o rf Y l s l l A L nu, Q@
Patented Nov. 12, 1946 FREQUENCY GENERATIN G SYSTEM Merwin J. Larsen, Carl S. Schjonberg, and James A. Oswald, Houghton, Mich., assignors to Central Commercial Company, Chicago, Ill., a corporation of Illinois Application September 17, 1943, Serial No. 502,762
(Cl. Z50- 36) 6 Claims.
This invention relates to frequency generators, the main objects of which are, as follows:
(1) The provision of a submultiple frequency generating system in which multivibrator stages are connected in cascade to produce tone frequencies which are accurately at octave separation.
(2) The provision of a highly effective and dependable capacitance potential dividing system in the cascade of multivibrator stages for insuring production of a sharp controlling pulse waveform into the multivibrator stage being locked.
(3) The provision of coupling means between the respective stages in a cascade of stages for reducing to a negligible amount feedback from a lower to a higher frequency stage.
(4) The provision of a frequency generating system in which the individual multivibrator stages, such as Radio Corporationl of America 'TF7 tubes or their equivalent, oscillate at submultiple frequencies and are productive of output waveforms which are rich in harmonics.
(5) The provision of -capacitative couplings between the respective stages of a chain of similar stages, the capacity of each of which is small and precalculated to insure absolute locking of said stages.
(6) The provision of a greatly simplified frequency generating system and means therein for insuring correct electrical coordination of the elements and components.
(7) The provision of a highly dependable method by which improved locking and stabili- Zation of coupled oscillators is effected, one such oscillator producing a sinusoidal waveform of locking voltage, which is used at the other oscillator, in a new and improved manner to control the frequency of oscillation of the other oscillator.
(8) The provision in a chain of oscillators, respectively tuned to oscillate exactly according to a predetermined pitch relation of musical tones of means actuable from a single one of said oscillators for causing like readjustment in tuning of all oscillators in said chain.
(9) The provision of a system wherein the electrical constants of the system, as a whole, are so correctly calculated and electrically interrelated that in the event that in the regular course Aof events it becomes necessary to substitute a new frequency generating stage for one that has outlived its usefulness, this can be done quickly and without any significant effect upon the system and without impairing operation of the system.
Other objects and advantages will appear from the following description and of the drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a schematic View of our multivibrator submultiple frequency generating system.
Figure 2 is a view illustrating the potential waveforms of the various points in an unsymmetrical multivibrator operating at its own natural frequency, which is essentially the condition of the rst stage shown at Figure 1.
Figure 3 is a View illustrating the potential waveforms of a multivibrator which is locked by another multivibrator of twice the frequency, and
Figure 4 is a schematic view showing a modified form of our invention.
In carrying the invention into practice six multivibrator stages A, B, C, D, E and F, connected in cascade are shown, such for example that the frequency of oscillation of stage B is the octave of the frequency of oscillation of stage A. Each successive stage oscillates at a frequency which is the octave of the next preceding stage. In like manner, all stages below stage B will similarly oscillate at a frequency which is onehalf the frequency of the preceding stage in said cascade.
Each of the multivibrator stages includes a twin triode, including two sets of electrodes consisting of a cathode, control. grid, and plate. The multivibrator A, for example, includes two sets of associated electrodes including grid I3 and plate I5, and grid I4 and plate I6. The input circuit of the twin triodes are completed through high resistance paths of different effective resistances, constituted in the case of control grid I3, and its associated cathode by the resistances 4 and 5, and in the case of the control grid I4 and its associated cathode, by resistances 3. The output circuit of the twin triode includes resistances I and 2 leading from plates I5 and I6, respectively, with variable condenser 8 connected between control grid I4 and a point intermediate resistances I and plate electrode I5, and xed condenser 9, connected between control grid I3 and a point intermediate plate I6 and resistance I2. The dropping resistance 6 is connected to a point intermediate resistances 4 and 5 and leads to the playing key 52, movable between contacts and 6I. Contact 60 returns to the common input circuit bus of the several multivibrators, while contact 6I leads through grid biasing resistance 56 to ground, thus returning to the common cathode bus.
The resistive multivibrator circuit constituting stage A is coupled to the succeeding stage B 3 through the coupling capacitance I having the value in the circuit illustrated of mmf. to the control grid I7 of one set of the electrodes of the twin triode in multivibrator stage B. The twin triode in-multivibrator stage B includes two sets of electrodes constituted by control grid lIl and plate I9 with an associated cathode, and a control grid I8 and plate 20, with an associated cathode. The control grid I'I, which connects to the coupled capacitance I0 also completes an input circuit through resistors 23 and 22, returning to the associated cathode. The input circuit for the opposite sets of electrodes is completedffrom con- 4,. resistance 50. Similarly, upon depressing playing-key 52 associated with multivibrator stage B, the waveform of voltage will be taken off of said stage through the potential dividing and dropping resistance 6a which is connected intermediatethe series resistances 22 and 23, the frequency of saidwaveform of voltage being a subto note that these resistances are high, in order that the average current drain upon any indiplate supply leads 'extends Lto the common plate supply bus. Fixed condenser II is connected to a point intermediate resistance I I and plate I9 to control .grid I3, while fixed condenser I2Y is connected to a point intermediate resistance I2 and plate 20, and to the control grid I'I. The controlgrid IB is connectedthrough coupling capacitance I0 whichV is of 40 mmf. to the control grid of the first set of electrodes of the twin triode constituting multivibrator stage C.
The circuits for the multivibrator stage C are similar to those described with respect to stages A and B except that the capacity values of condensers I I and I2 are'of greater value than the corresponding condensers inthe preceding stages, as will be hereinafter explained in detail. The biasing circuit is represented as including playing key 52"Y connected to resistance 6b with an intermediate point in the lotv resistance grid circuit. rlhe contact system for 'the playing key is arranged in av manner similar to that hereinbefore described, where one of the contacts leads to bias resistor 56, returning through ground to the com-mon cathode bus.
In a similar manner I arrange multivibrator stages D, E, and F, coupled through condensers I0", !0 and Illiv of 4.0 40 mmf., and 20 mmf., respectively. rThe biasing potential onV the grid circuits of each of the multivibrator stages D, E, and F is similarly controlled through playing key 52, 52W, and 52", respectively. instance it will be observed that the playing key is connected to an intermediate point in the 1ov\T resistive path of the unsymmetrical grid circuits of the multivibrator. The circuits heretofore described are also contained in the modified form of my invention, illustrated in Fig. 4, in. which the separate oscillator tube '7A7 is. coupled through output resistance 3l and the coupling capacity 32 to the twin triode 7F? corresponding to the tube of stage A illustrated in Fig. 1.
It further Will suflice to say that when moving key switch 52 associated with said stage .A` oi of contact 60 which is at ground potential, to and onto Contact 0I when the key is depressed, the output waveform of grid voltage from said stage is taken off from a high potential dividing and dropping resistance 6, the latter connected between the series resistances I and 5., as shown. When the circuit is thus completed, said waveform of voltage is impressed'upon a'respective circuit 52A connected, as shown, tothe grid bias In each vidual stage is the same and so slight as to insure' prolonging the life thereof. For example, all of the plate resistances I, 2, I I and I2, etc., arev each thereofr l megohm and therefore symmetrical while the resistances in the grid circuits are unsymmetrical. Various and extensive experiments seem clearly to indicate that by making Ythe grid resistances unsymmetrical, improved locking results are obtained, but, and in this respect, and as will appear presently,.this may be modified Without change in the functional result which these resistances contribute to the utility of our invention. j
Referring to, stageA in the dividing system shown at Figure 1, resistance .fi is 10,000 ohms;
resistance 5, 300,000 ohms; resistance 3, l megohm, and dropping resistance E, 50,000 ohms, thereby providing an input impedance to the work circuit of approximately 1000 ohms which is Ysuiciently low to prevent distortion of the waveform of voltage being transmitted in response to close circuiting of switch 52. It is not amiss to say that distortion, in the sense employed herein has reference to changes in the waveform of voltages which changes obviously Output (percent of fundamental) Harmonics While we have shown and described unsymmetrical grid circuits functioning' in the manner aforestated, it shall be noted that highly satisfactory results are had with grid resistances providing a symmetrical arrangement in which resistances v3 and 2l, etc., are approximately 1/3 megohm. The arrangement shown herein will therefore be considered merely as one optional method of obtaining substantially similar functional results, namely, to confine the output voltage from any multivibrator stage (to only a small fraction of the total produced voltage and thereby render the input impedance of said work circuit sufficiently low to prevent distortion and change in frequency of the waveform of voltage, and also to insure that the average plate and grid currents per individual multivibrator stage is so low that neither` stage nor component is abused, thereby increasing the operating life of said stages and reducing the cost of operation of the instrument as a whole.
To set the multivibrator stages of a common chain or cascade of stages at their proper frequency, capacitances 8 and 9 of the first stage A, Figure l, are selected on the basis of an experimental curve of capacitance vs. frequency. This curve may be expressed by a simple equation where the frequency is inversely proportional to the capacitance. That is, f=K/C where the constant K is determined by the tube itself, its circuits, resistances and operating voltages. rI'he capacitances used at the locked or lower frequency stages are somewhat higher, say 25% or may even be higher as the locking pulse increases in magnitude as the stages progress toward the lower frequency end of the cascade.
It follows, from what has been said, that in the entire chain or cascade of multivibrator stages there is b-ut one adjustable capacitance, this being condenser 8 in the circuit of stage A and that this may comprise any well known trimmer or padding condenser. All others of the condensers employed may be Xed and can be of any well known commercial type, but preferably of the type employing mica dielectrics.
In Figure l, the xed capacitances Ii' and I2 in the grid to plate circuits of stage B are functionally comparable to capacitances 8 and 9 in the corresponding circuits of stage A. The plate resistances I I and I2 are comparable to resistances I and 2, stage A and the resistances 6a, 2i, 22 and 23 are comparable to corresponding resistances in the grid to ground circuits of said stage A.
Typical operating voltages of multivibrator A are shown at Figure 2. This may be considered as typical also of multivibrator B if it were not locked by multivibrator A. It is seen that one triode at a time is conducting and while that triode is conducting its-operating voltages are relatively constant. The transfer of conduction from one triode to the other is done during a very small portion of the cycle.
Upon referring to Figures 2 and 3, the operating sequence of multivibrator A is as follows: At time tl grid I4 has just gone slightly positive. This causes current to flow in plate resistance 2 and plate I5 consequently drops suddenly. The sudden drop of plate I6 throws grid I3 via capacitance 9 negative, thereby shutting off the plate current in grid I3. After this quick transfer, capacitance 9 discharges through the grid resistance, chiefly 5, and capacitance 8 charges through resistance I. During this portion of the cycle, between times tI and t2, grid resistance 3 and plate resistance 2 have but a minor effect on the charge or discharge time as grid I4 and plate I6 are essentially fixed in potential. At time t2 grid I3 has risen sufficiently to cause grid I4 to become conductive whence the cycle is reversed. The discharge time of capacitance B through grid resistance 3 is longer because of the higher value of resistance 3. Hence a longer period between t2 land t3. During this period capacitance 9 charges through the plate resistance 2. The exact time at which transfer occurs depends upon the time to charge the capacitances associated with the plate resistances as well as upon the discharge time associated with the grid resistyances, and also, of course, upon the tube characteristics and supply voltages.
Multivibrator B is locked by a pulse through capacitance I9 from multivibrator A. The manner in which this is accomplished is evident upon examining the wave forms shown in Figure 3. Here the grid voltage from grid I4, multivibrator A, is redravvn above the voltages of multivibrator B because the controlling voltage is taken from grid I4. The transient dip in grid I4 occurs in such a short time that the pulse can be transmitted to grid I'I, multivibrator B, through a very small capacitance I. The pulses transmitted are shown in the ligure. A potential divider is formed between grid I4, grid I'I, and the cathode by means of coupling capacitance I8 and the tube input capacitance and resistance. A coupling capacitance of a value ranging between 20 and 40 micro-microfarads was found adequate for the tube used, a 'TF7 duo triode. The coupling capacitance I is relatively independent of the frequency concerned because the hair-line pulse occurs during approximately the same interval, regardless of the charge and discharge time for capacitances II and I2. Hence it has been found that the coupling capacitance I0 can be the same whether the frequency is at the bottom or the top of the audio range used. This is contrary to heretofore known coupling systems where the object has always been to increase the capacitance `as the frequency lowers in order to maintain more or less constant reactance. In our system the capacitance must remain small. Should it be ltoo large the locked unit B will tend to follow A at the same frequency. Should the coupler be too small, on the other hand, then the locking range is reduced.
The tripping is accomplished as follows: The negative pulse on grid I'I causes a positive pulse on grid I8. This is because the negative pulse on grid I1, assuming the triode associated with I1 is conducting, causes a momentary cut-off 5o that plate I9 starts to rise abruptly.L But this causes grid I8 to rise via the capacitance II and hence the righthand triode of B conducts.
The timing required is shown at Figure 3. rihe positive pulse on grid I8 Imust occur before capacitance II has discharged, that is, before the grid I8 becomes sufficiently above cut-off, or even positive, to cause the righthand triode to become conductive. In fact, the natural frequency must always be equal to, or lower than the locked frequency. In more detail, at time t4 grid I4 shoots negative, so also does grid I'I. This causes plate I9 to rise and also grid IS. If the pulse is great enough, tripping occurs. The next following pulse of grid I4 has no effect except to introduce a pulse such as that occurring at time t5. The leftha-nd triode of unit B seems to follow its own time constants, as is evident by the potential curve of grid I`I. Should the frequency of the control tube, A, be increased, then tripping would occur sooner at a time, say t6. Should the frequency of A be lowered, then tripping would occur later at some time as indicated by t'I. While the period between t4 and t5 would alter some with changes in frequency 0f the control tube, most of the altering is done during the time the righthand tube is non-conducting, time from t5 to t8. The longer time constant associated with the higher grid resistance 2l and capacitance II permits a greater portion of the total cycle to be under the influence of the locking pulse. This seems to account for the somewhat better control gained with an unsymmetrical circuit. Other unbalanced arrangements are possible, of course, such as increasing capacitance I I' and decreasing resistance 2l, but the arrangement eX- plained is simpler for construction purposes, where it is easier to employ like capacitances per multivibrator.
The total range .in locking extended by test over nearly an octave, from the lowest unlocked to the highestunlocked position. Upon unlocking, a slight return in frequency caused the tube concerned to lock again. In this system, as mentioned, locking does not occur unless the natural frequency is lower than the required locked frequency. While locking may be accomplished at any integral multiple of the locking frequency, up to a high ratio, stress is placed here on suboctave locking as that is the chief function for which the system is designed.
Because the transient of the lower stage occurs simultaneously with every other transient in the upper locking stage, the feed-back is small. Under test the feed-back has been found to be less than one percent. In this circuit, the use of a resistance in series with the coupling capacitance not only decreased the locking eifect, but also greatly increased the feed-back.
We particularly stress the fact that all plate resistances are each thereof high and the same as the grid resistances in the right hand triodes of therespective stages, namely, 1 megohm and that resistances 4, 5 and 6 and corresponding resistances in the grid and output circuits of the left hand triodes in Figure 1 are unequal, resista ance 4 being 10,000 ohms, resistance 5 being 300,000 ohms and resistance 6 being 50,000 ohms.
We stress also the importance of substantially like, small coupling capacitances between the respective stages and in the cascade herein shown the first and last capacitances are each 20 micro- Inicrofarads and the intermediate capacitances, each 40 micromicrofarads.
The grid biasing resistance 55 for each stage in the cascade is considerably lower than the aforementioned dropping resistance, say, between 1,000 and 10,000 ohms.
The capacitances in the plate to grid circuits are as follows: stage A, 125 micromicrofarads, stage B, 300 micromicrofarads; stage C, 680 micrornicrofarads; stage D, 1,500 micromicrofarads, stage E, 3,300 micromicrofarads and stage F, 9,000 micromicrofarads.
From the above it is observed that only the firs-t of the plate to grid capacitances is adjustable and that the capacitances in the plate and grid circuits of each individual stage are of the same value but different from the values of the capacitances in any other stage of said cascade of stages. l
Referring again to the coupling capacitances between the respective multivibrator stages it is important to note that as the rst and last stages have different output and/or input capacitances, the coupling condensers associated therewith are lower than the capacitances in the intermediate couplings. A capacitance potential divider system is thus formed between the output grid, the coupler and wiring capacitance of the locked stage, the same responding to therhigher har-v monies and insuring production of a sharp pulse wave which is impressed on the grid of the triode of said stage. It should be borne Vin mind that if the coupling condensers are too high, the stage will lock with the stage above it and if too low, the frequency tolerance will be poor. A submultiple generating system as herein disclosed is designed primarily for the production of alternating voltages at the tone frequencies of different notes of the musical scale. It follows from this that the operation of a cascade of multivibrators must be so dependable at all times, that there shall be no change in the octave relation of the respective stages.
In an application of Merwin L. Larsen, Ser. No. 554,837, filed September 19, 1944, twelve similar cascades of multivibrators are employed for the production of electric waves of the tone frequencies of the notes of the even tempered musical scale, such that a cascade of multivibrators as shown and described herein will produce output wave forms having the tone frequencies of all C notes, ranging from C2=65.4 cycles per second to C3=2093 cycles per second.
Figure 4 shows a multivibrator submultiple divider system under the control of a separate oscillator for cases where more precise control is desired. A conventional electron-coupled oscillator such as a 7A7 vacuum tube is shown as an example of a moderately stable oscillator. A sine wave may be produced at the adjustable output 3l by increasing the feedback resistance 3D until oscillations nearly cease. The multivibrator to be locked may be considered the same as multivibrator A of Figure 1. An optimum set of values for locking can be found by adjusting the voltage at 3| and the capacitance 32 which couples to the multivibrator. As an example for locking between a range of 2000 cycles and 4000 cycles, a typical set of valuesI for either same-frequency locking or sub-octave locking was found to be l0 volts and 100 micro-microfarads. In the system the range also was very nearly an octave.
When locking with a sine wave the natural frequency of the multivator to be locked lies approximately midway between the upper and lower limits when locked. This is because both positive and negative portions of the locking cycle act upon the input grid. The positive portion will tend to cause the lefthand triode to trip while the negative portion will tend to cause the righthand triode to trip.
These methods of locking lare considered practical and significant because they are simple in construction and reliable in operation. When using the stable master control, as shown in Figure 4, for example, tests show that locking throughout a 6-stage system is maintained even though the normal plate supply of 150 volts isA varied from 20 to over 350 volts. Very wide variations in heater current are also allowable.
In using the system without the separate master, changes in voltage produce changes in frequency, as the Whole system is locked together. Frequency risesl as the voltage lowers and conversely. However, locking is insured even though the voltage changes made are greater than those mentioned when using a master oscillator.
As can be inferred from the waveforms of the output grid, the output is rich in harmonics. The taper as the harmonics increase is somewhat less than that of a saw-tooth wave. For those tested the tenth harmonic had an amplitude of between 15 and 20 percent of the fundamental, whereas for a saw-tooth wave the tenth harmonic would have an amplitude of 10 percent of the fundamental. The taper was smooth.` This gives an excellent source for tone production where naturalv harmonics are available for selective filterl u 9 ing and mixing to produce many of the desired tone qualities.
In Figure 1, the voltage at source 50 is chosen arbitrarily, it having been found that the multivibrator stages of the respective stages will stay locked with a voltage variation of from 20 to more than 350 volts.
We particularly emphasize the feature of the invention which consists in our use of small coupling capacitances between the stages. The term small as used herein and applied to said coupling capacitances shall be construed to mean that said capacitances are of the order of magnitude of the input capacitances of the stages being locked. In this connection, we have taken into consideration the stage and wiring capacitance of the stage to which the locking pulse is being transmitted. Thus, in combination with small coupling capacitances the divider thus formed insures a sharp pulse waveform into the stage being locked as said divider responds only to the higher harmonics of the transmitted pulse waveform.
Having fully stated the purpose of our invention and the features constituting the gist thereof, the invention will be claimed in various combinations and subcombinations and while the invention is primarily designed, adapted and intended for use as a musical instrument employing twelve substantially identical cascades of multivibrator stages, we do not wish or intend to be limited in this respect and therefore reserve to ourselves the right to so modify the disclosed arrangement of elements as to render same useful in most any case where waveforms of voltage are desired to be produced and the frequncy maintained exactly as predetermined.
When twelve substantially similar sets of multivibrators were used with the invention set forth in the aforementioned application of Merwin J. Larsen same performed in a highly dependable manner over exceptionally long operating periods of time, even in the absence of master or controlling oscillators for the first stages and without any appreciable change in the pitch at which the instrument was first tuned and that a correct octave separation of the tone frequencies like- Wise remained invariable for all practical purposes.
What we claim as our invention and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States, is:
l. In a submultiple frequency generating system, multivibrator stages connected in cascade and comprising duo-triode Vacuum tubes each having cathode, control grid, and plate electrodes, with grid circuits extending between said cathodes and control grids and plate circuits connected between said cathodes and plate electrodes including a first stage operating at a given audio frequency and other stages each adapted to be locked to operate at a frequency which is a submultiple of said given frequency, each of said stages having an output circuit including a low resistance path in the grid circuit of one triode of said stage, a high resistance path in the grid circuit of the other triode thereof, a keying circuit including a movable contactor and coacting fixed contacts associated therewith, one of said xed contacts being connected with the cathode of one of said triodes, and the other of said fixed contacts being connected to a work circuit, said movable contactor being connected with an intermediate point in the low resistance path in said rst-mentioned grid circuit, and a condenser coupling said stage to the next succeeding stage `1o cathodes and control grids and plate circuits connected between said cathodes and plate electrodes including a first stage operating at a given audio frequency and other stages each operating at a frequency which is a submultiple of said given frequency, each of the aforementioned stages having symmetrical resistive plate circuits and unsymmetrical resistive grid circuits, capacitative circuits for each stage such that the plate circuit of one triode of said stage is connected in series with the grid circuit of the other triode thereof, a keying circuit including a movable contactor and coacting fixed contacts associated therewith, one of said iiXed contacts being connected with the cathode of one of said triodes,
and the other of said xed contacts being con nected to a work circuit, said movable contactor t being connected with an intermediate point in one of said unsymmetrical resistive grid circuits, and condenseres coupling said stages together all of which are small relative to the capacity of th grid circuits of said stages.v
3. A submultiple generator comprising a plurality of multilever stages of the duo-triode vacuum tube type, each having cathode, control grid,
and plate electrodes, with grid circuits extending between said cathodes and control grids and plate circuits connected between said cathodcs and plate electrodes said stages connected in cascade and including a iirst stage and at least a second stage and resistive-capacitative means for fixing and maintaining the frequency of oscillation of each of said stages such that the frequency of oscillation of the second stage is a sub- Inultiple of that of said first stage, said means comprising a condenser coupling the grid circuit of one triode of the first stage with the grid circuit of one triode of said second stage for transmitting from the former to the latter a sharp controlling pulse wave; symmetrical resistive plate circuits and unsymmetrical resistive grid circuits for each of said stages, capacitances for each stage in which one each thereof connects the plate circuit of one triode of said stage in series with the grid circuit of the other triode 5 thereof and a keying circuit including a movable contactor and coacting fixed contacts associated therewith, one of said xed contacts being connected with the cathode of one of said triodes, and the other of said fixed contacts being connected to a work circuit, said movable contactor being connected to an intermediate point in one of said unsymmetrical resistive grid circuits.
4. A submultiple generator comprising a plurality of multivibrator stages of the duo-triode 5 vacuum tube type, each having cathode, control grid, and plate electrodes, with grid circuits extending between said cathodes and control grids and plate circuits connected between said cathodes and plate electrodes said stages connected Y in cascade and including a first stage and at least a second stage; and resistive-capacitative means for fixing and maintaining the frequency of oscillation of each of said stages such that the frequency of oscillation of the second stage is a 15 submultiple of said rst stage, said means comprising a condenser coupling the grid circuit of one triode of the rst stage with the grid circuit of one triode or" said second stage for transmitting from the former to the latter a sharp controlling pulse wave; symmetrical resistive plate circuits and unsymmetrical resistive grid circuits for each of said stages, capacitances for each stage in which one each thereof connects the plate circuit of one triode of said stage in series with the grid circuit of the other triode thereof, the grid and plate capacitances for said first stage being of the same capacity and one thereof being variable and the grid and plate capacitances for the second stage being likewise ofthe same capacity but different from said rst stage capacitances and a keying circuit including a movable contacter and coacting Xed contacts associated therewith, one of said ilXed contacts being connected with the cathode of one of said triodes, and the other of said xed contacts being connected to a work circuit, said movable contactor being connected to an intermediate point in one of said unsymmetrical resistive grid circuits.
5. A frequency divider comprising twin triode multivibrator stages each having cathode, control grid, and plate electrodes, with grid circuits extending between said cathodes and control grids and plate circuits connected between said cathodes and plate electrodes connected in cascade and includinga first stage, operating at a given frequency, a last stage and a plurality of intermediate stages, said last stage and said intermediate stages each being adapted to be locked to operate at a frequency which is a submultiple of said rst stage, and capacitative circuits coupling said stages to each other, the capacitances in all of said coupling circuits being small as compared to the capacities of the grid circuits f the stages being locked and those in the circuits leading from the first stage and to Athe last stage being equal and those in the intermediate coupling circuits being likewise equal but higher than those in said rst and last coupling circuits, said twin triode multivibrator stages each having symmetrical high resistive plate circuits, unsymmetrical grid circuits and a dropping output resistance selectively connectible with the grid circuit of lowest resistance, and symmetrically disposed cap'acitances respectively connecting the plate circuit of one twin triode in series with the grid circuits of the other triode in; each of said stages.
6. In a frequency generating system, aplurality of generators of complex waves of alternating voltages which are rich in harmonics, said generators comprising multivibrator stages connected in cascade and adapted to be locked for operation in a given sub-multiple frequency relation and each consisting of va duo-triode vacuum tube having sets of cathode, control grid and plate electrodes and providing a rst triodel and a second triode; grid and plate circuits for said electrodes extending respectively between said contro-l grid and cathode and between said cathode and plate electrode, an output means for said system, a potential divider for each stage land comprising series resistances in the grid circuit of the rst triode thereof and a dropping resistance, one terminal of which is connected to said grid circuit at the point between said series resistances, means for selectively connecting the other terminal of said dropping resistance to the associated cathode of said set of electrodes or to said output means, and a condenser coupling the grid of the second triode of any stage to the grid of the rst triode of the neXt succeeding stage in said cascade the capacitance of which is less than the capacity of the grid circuit of the stage being locked, whereby a sharp control pulse wave consisting of only the higher harmonic components is injected into the grid of said second triode and to limit the output from the iirst triode to only a small fraction of the Voltage generated thereby and thereby prevent distortion of the output complexA wave.`
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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2486039A (en) * 1945-10-27 1949-10-25 Central Commercial Co Electrical musical instrument
US2486491A (en) * 1946-02-08 1949-11-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Gate distributor circuits
US2521405A (en) * 1945-02-21 1950-09-05 Ibm Oscillation generator for noisemaking devices
US2562908A (en) * 1949-04-16 1951-08-07 Hammond Instr Co Electrical musical instrument
US2611825A (en) * 1948-04-28 1952-09-23 Donald B Harris Multichannel transmission system
US2907244A (en) * 1955-05-09 1959-10-06 Werk Fur Fernmeldewesen Veb Electric musical instrument

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2521405A (en) * 1945-02-21 1950-09-05 Ibm Oscillation generator for noisemaking devices
US2486039A (en) * 1945-10-27 1949-10-25 Central Commercial Co Electrical musical instrument
US2486491A (en) * 1946-02-08 1949-11-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Gate distributor circuits
US2611825A (en) * 1948-04-28 1952-09-23 Donald B Harris Multichannel transmission system
US2562908A (en) * 1949-04-16 1951-08-07 Hammond Instr Co Electrical musical instrument
US2907244A (en) * 1955-05-09 1959-10-06 Werk Fur Fernmeldewesen Veb Electric musical instrument

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