US2430457A - Key control sender - Google Patents

Key control sender Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2430457A
US2430457A US61758545A US2430457A US 2430457 A US2430457 A US 2430457A US 61758545 A US61758545 A US 61758545A US 2430457 A US2430457 A US 2430457A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
section
core
information
magnetic
stored
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
Inventor
Thomas L Dimond
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc filed Critical Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority to US61758545 priority Critical patent/US2430457A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2430457A publication Critical patent/US2430457A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L13/00Details of the apparatus or circuits covered by groups H04L15/00 or H04L17/00
    • H04L13/02Details not particular to receiver or transmitter
    • H04L13/08Intermediate storage means
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11CSTATIC STORES
    • G11C11/00Digital stores characterised by the use of particular electric or magnetic storage elements; Storage elements therefor
    • G11C11/56Digital stores characterised by the use of particular electric or magnetic storage elements; Storage elements therefor using storage elements with more than two stable states represented by steps, e.g. of voltage, current, phase, frequency
    • G11C11/5607Digital stores characterised by the use of particular electric or magnetic storage elements; Storage elements therefor using storage elements with more than two stable states represented by steps, e.g. of voltage, current, phase, frequency using magnetic storage elements
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M1/00Substation equipment, e.g. for use by subscribers
    • H04M1/26Devices for calling a subscriber
    • H04M1/27Devices whereby a plurality of signals may be stored simultaneously
    • H04M1/272Devices whereby a plurality of signals may be stored simultaneously with provision for storing only one subscriber number at a time, e.g. by keyboard or dial
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03MCODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
    • H03M1/00Analogue/digital conversion; Digital/analogue conversion
    • H03M1/10Calibration or testing
    • H03M1/1009Calibration
    • H03M1/1014Calibration at one point of the transfer characteristic, i.e. by adjusting a single reference value, e.g. bias or gain error
    • H03M1/1019Calibration at one point of the transfer characteristic, i.e. by adjusting a single reference value, e.g. bias or gain error by storing a corrected or correction value in a digital look-up table

Definitions

  • This invention relates, broadly, to systems .for storing and subsequently reproducing information, represented by electrical current of characteristic value.
  • One. embodiment of the invention resides in a system .for storing what may be termed on-off information as to the occurrenceor non-occurrence of a predetermined effect, a simple example being the closure of a door, momentary overload of an electricpower circuit, and countless others, and subsequently determining and indicating the stored information.
  • Another embodiment resides in electrical systems, such as computing arrangements, machine switching telephone systems, and the like, in which information, such as numerical digits in the form of electrical current of characteristic value, is initially stored and later translated to efiect any desired control.
  • information such as numerical digits in the form of electrical current of characteristic value
  • senders are known in which the digits representing a called subscribers number are stored in condensers in which each digitis represented by the amount of charge built up therein as fully described in United States Patent 2,002,219,
  • An object of the invention is to simplify and improve arrangements for storing information of the foregoing character.
  • a feature of the invention resides in employing magnetic means for storing information represented by electrical current of characteristic value, said means comprising an electro-magnetic core having apair of series section, one of a material readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and of high permanent magnet qualities,.and another of high permeability and saturable at low flux densities, means for magnetizing the first or permanent magnet section in accordance with the value of the electrical current representing the information to be stored and to a degree sufiicient to more than saturate the second section, and. in employingmeans for applying another magnetizing force to the second section in opposition to the magnetic field created by the magnetic condition of the first section to reduce and reverse themagnetic field therein, and further in employing means to indicate the occurrence of such a reversal.
  • Another and more specific feature resides in an arrangement employing themagnetic means bemagnetizable, which core section is serially connected with the second core section which ishighly permeable and-saturable at low flux densities.
  • the stored information in the formof a magnetic condition of the core is determined and translated .to ontrol an automatic switch or other selective ,mechanism by applying current, which increases at successive intervals in uniform predeterminedsteps, to a windingon the secondor highly permeable sectionof the .core in sucha direction as to decreaseto zero, inequal steps, the magnetic field therein caused by magnetization of the first core section and in causing the immediately ensuing sharp .flux reversal therein to interrupt said applied current.
  • the number of current steps applied to the windingon the secondcore section to cause a flux reversal therein determines thenumerical value of the digit stored which steps can be counted to efiect controlof desired mechanism.
  • Figlof which shows in schematic form a portion of anoperators key-setfor recording digits of a wanted subscribers line number and means accordingto the present invention for storing and later translating the storedinformation into electrical impulses to control any desiredselective fore described for storing digital information in which the digital (current) value of a depressed key of a key-set is impressed onthe section of the magnetic corehavinghigh permanentmagnet properties and readily magnetizable and demechanism;
  • Fig. 2 is a typical B-I-I curve of the magnetic storing means and,
  • Fig. 3 shows an arrangement of the invention for storing and subsequently reproducing socalled on-off information.
  • FIG. 1 keys I to lil have digital values 1 to 0, respectively, accord ing to conventional practice, whichkeys are connected in series with individual resistances II to 29, respectively, between asource of direct current, i. e., batteryB and a .steering-in.switch 2!.
  • Resistances ll-2l] are of different values, resistance H having the greatest ,valuethereby restricting the-current therethroughto the lowest valueand resistance is of the least value thereby passing current of a predetermined maximum value.
  • the contact terminals of steering-in switch ,2! areconnected towindings WI of individual magnetic structures 22, 23, etc. therebeingone such structurefor each ,digit to be stored. For example, in anexchange wherea seven digitcode isemployed, seven such magnetic structures would be required.
  • Structures 22, 23, etc. comprise a composite core of magnetic material, one portion 24 of which is of material having high permanent magnet properties and capable of being readily magnetized and demagnetized, and another portion 25 in series with the first portion being composed of a material which has high permeability and saturates sharply at a low flux density.
  • the high permeability sections '25 of structures 22, 23, etc. each have two windings W2 and W3.
  • the W2 winding of structure 22 being connected to the first terminal of one bank of a steering-out switch 26 and the W2 winding of structure 23 being connected to the corresponding N o. 1 terminal of a second bank of the switch.
  • Other structures similar to 22 and 23 for storing other digits of the code would have the WI winding connected to other terminals of switch 2
  • the contact arms of switch 26 are connected to means, hereinafter described, for electrically determining and translating the code stored in the magnetic means 22, 23, etc.
  • the core portions 24 are first given an initial magnetization in a direction opposite to the direction caused by operation of one of the digit keys 1-10. This may be done by causing relay 36 to momentarily operate to apply a negative force 1/ (Fig. 2) to the cores 24 which i suificient to magnetize cores 25 to a point a beyond aturation (see curve to a).
  • relay 36 releases the flux density does not decrease to zero but returns to a point b which becomes the starting point for the first magnetization of the core by operation of a digit key which we may assume applies a positive force a: to extend the curve through c to d.
  • the curve descends to e which is the effective value of the stored digit.
  • means causes relay 2'! to periodically connect ground impulses over back contacts of relays 28 and 29 to relay 30 thus causing that relay to alternately operate and release.
  • condenser 3I is charged in an obvious circuit from battery B3 and when relay 3!] operates the charge on condenser 3
  • the means for recording and reproducing onoff information shown in Fig. 3 is merely a simplified arrangement of the foregoing described system for recording digital information shown in Fig. 1. Due to the fact however that the on information to be stored may be represented by current of a single predetermined value it is only necessary to apply a reversing current to the winding W2 of such a value as to reduce and reverse the flux in the core section 25 to fire the gas-filled device 34 to give any desired indication of the recorded effect.
  • a composite magnetic core comprising serially joined sections one being of high permanent magnet properties and another highly permeable and saturable at low flux densities, means for causing said information current to magnetize said core, magnetizing means for causing a flux reversal in the permeable material section, and means for measuring the value of the magnetizing force required to effect said reversal as an indication of the information stored.
  • Information storage and reproducing system comprising a composite magnetic core, serially including a section having high permanent magnetic properties and readily magnetizable and demagnetizable, and another section of highly permeable material capable of saturating at low flux density, means for characteristically magnetizing the first section in accordance with the information to be stored and to a greater degree than that necessary to cause magnetic saturation Of the second section, other magnetizing means for reducing and reversing the magnetic condition of the second section and means for indicating the magnetic force required to effect said reversal as a measure of the information stored.
  • means for storing said information comprising a composite magnetic core having serially joined sections one of readily magnetizable and demagnetizable material of highly permanent magnet properties and another of highly permeable properties and saturable at low flux densities, means for magnetizing the highly permanent section of said core, in accordance with the value of the current representing the information to be stored, to magnetize the highly permeable section beyond saturation means for applying a magnetizing force, which increases in value in successive steps of equal value, to the highly permeable section in opposition to the direction of the flux therein caused by the magnetized condition of the permanent magnet section and means responsive to a flux reversal in the permeable section to discontinue application thereto of said magnetizing force and to cause an indication of the number of steps required to cause said flux reversal.
  • storing means comprising a composite magnetic core having a section of high permanent magnet properties, readily magnetizable 6 and demagnetizable, in series with a highly permeable section saturable at low flux densities, means for magnetizing the first section to a degree characteristic of the information to be stored and sufiicient to more than cause saturation of the second section, and means for translating and indicating the stored information com-- prising means for magnetizing the second section in an opposite direction to the flux therein, to a degree sufiicient to cause a reversal of said flux, and means for measuring the magnetizing force applied to said second section to cause said reversal as an indication of the characteristic degree of magnetization of the first section.
  • a transformer having a composite magnetic core serially including material having high permanent magnetic properties and readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and highly permeable material which saturates at low flux density, means for applying said information impulse to magnetize the high permanent magnet portion of said core, means for applying electrical current in periodically increasing steps to create a magnetic condition in the permeable material portion of the core in opposition to the condition caused therein by magnetization of the permanent magnet portion, and means responsive to a reversal of flux in said permeable portion to discontinue application of said successively increasing current and to register the number of current steps required to cause said fiux reversal as an indication of the stored information.
  • a transformer having a core serially including magnetic material section of different characteristics, one being readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and having high permanent magnet properties and another saturable at low flux density and of high permeability, means for selectively magnetizing said first core section to an intensity which is a function of the desired switch setting to cause a magnetizing force to be applied to the second section which is greater than that required to cause saturation therein, step-by-step means for causing a flux reversal in the second section, means responsive to said flux reversal to stop said step-by-step means and means for controlling said selector switch in accordance with the number of steps required to cause said flux reversal.
  • a sender for controlling the setting of a selector switch, a plurality of keys each corresponding to a different setting of said switch, a transformer serving as a register and comprising a core serially including a first section of magnetic material having high permanent magnet properties and readily magnetizable and demagnetizable, and a second section of highly permeable material which saturates at low flux densities, windings on each of said sections, means responsive to operation of any one of said keys for energizing a winding on the first section of the core to magnetize said section to a degree which is a function of the key operated and more than sufiicient to saturate said second core section, means for applying a periodically increasing electric potential, in uniform step-by-step increments, to a first winding on the second core section in such a direction as to create an increasing magnetization effect therein in opposition to the effect therein due to the magnetization of the first core section to cause a flux reversal in the second core section, means including a
  • a system for storing and subsequently reproducing information represented by electric current whose value is a function of the information to be stored characterized by an electromagnet having a composite core of serially joined sections of different magnetic properties one section being of material readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and of high permanent magnet properties and another of highly permeable material saturable at low flux densities, by means of applying said information current to said core for establishing a magnetic condition therein of a degree characteristic of said current, by means for causing a flux reversal in said core, and by means responsive to said reversal for indicating the current value of the stored information.
  • a system for storing and subsequently reproducing information represented by electric current whose value is a function of the information to be stored characterized by an electromagnet having a composite core of serially joined sections of different magnetic properties, one section being of material readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and of high permanent magnet properties and another of highly permeable material saturable at low flux density, means for applying the information current to the first section to create a magnetic condition therein effective to cause a saturating condition in the second section, means for decreasing, step-by-step, the magnetic condition of the second section to cause a flux reversal therein, and means responsive to such flux reversal to stop and register said steps.
  • a sender for controlling the setting of a selector switch comprising means for storing information characteristic of the desired switch setting and means for subsequently reproducing and translating said stored information to control said switch, said storing means comprising an electromagnetic core having serially joined sections having diiferent magnetic properties, one section being of a material readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and of high permanent magnet properties and another of highly permeable material saturable at low flux densities.
  • an electromagnet having a core serially comprising a section of material of high permanent magnet properties and readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and another section highly permeable and saturable at low flux densities, means for magnetizing the permanent magnet section to a degree representing the information to be stored, means for magnetizing the highly permeable section in opposition to the magnetic force due to the permanent magnet section, means responsive to a flux reversal in the highly permeable section, and means for evaluating the opposing force required to elfect said reversal as a measure of the information stored.
  • a composite magnetic core comprising two serially joined sections one of high permanent magnet properties and readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and the other section highly permeable and saturable at low flux densities, means for causing said information current to magnetize the permanent magnet section to establish a saturated condition in the highly permeable section, means for applying a magnetizing force to the highly permeable section in opposition to the force due to the permanent magnet section to cause a flux reversal in the highly permeable section and means responsive to and controlled by said reversal of flux to evaluate the opposing force required to cause said reversal as a measure of the information stored.

Description

Nov. 11, 1947. T. L. DIMOND KEY CONTROL SENDER Filed Sept. 20, 1945 lNl/ENTOR By 2' L. D/MOND ATTORNEY Patented Nov. 11,1947
KEY CONTROL SENDER Thomas L. Dimond, Rutherford, N. ,J., assignor to Bell Telephone Laboratories,
Incorporated,
New York, N. Y., a corporation of New York Application September 20, 1945, 'Seria'lNo. 617,585
12 Claims.
This invention relates, broadly, to systems .for storing and subsequently reproducing information, represented by electrical current of characteristic value.
One. embodiment of the invention resides in a system .for storing what may be termed on-off information as to the occurrenceor non-occurrence of a predetermined effect, a simple example being the closure of a door, momentary overload of an electricpower circuit, and countless others, and subsequently determining and indicating the stored information.
Another embodiment resides in electrical systems, such as computing arrangements, machine switching telephone systems, and the like, in which information, such as numerical digits in the form of electrical current of characteristic value, is initially stored and later translated to efiect any desired control. Forexample, machine switching telephone systems having so-called senders, are known in which the digits representing a called subscribers number are stored in condensers in which each digitis represented by the amount of charge built up therein as fully described in United States Patent 2,002,219,
An object of the invention is to simplify and improve arrangements for storing information of the foregoing character.
A feature of the invention resides in employing magnetic means for storing information represented by electrical current of characteristic value, said means comprising an electro-magnetic core having apair of series section, one of a material readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and of high permanent magnet qualities,.and another of high permeability and saturable at low flux densities, means for magnetizing the first or permanent magnet section in accordance with the value of the electrical current representing the information to be stored and to a degree sufiicient to more than saturate the second section, and. in employingmeans for applying another magnetizing force to the second section in opposition to the magnetic field created by the magnetic condition of the first section to reduce and reverse themagnetic field therein, and further in employing means to indicate the occurrence of such a reversal.
Another and more specific feature resides in an arrangement employing themagnetic means bemagnetizable, which core section is serially connected with the second core section which ishighly permeable and-saturable at low flux densities. In this arrangement the stored information in the formof a magnetic condition of the core is determined and translated .to ontrol an automatic switch or other selective ,mechanism by applying current, which increases at successive intervals in uniform predeterminedsteps, to a windingon the secondor highly permeable sectionof the .core in sucha direction as to decreaseto zero, inequal steps, the magnetic field therein caused by magnetization of the first core section and in causing the immediately ensuing sharp .flux reversal therein to interrupt said applied current. The number of current steps applied to the windingon the secondcore section to cause a flux reversal therein determines thenumerical value of the digit stored which steps can be counted to efiect controlof desired mechanism.
fIheinvention willbe understoodfromthe followingdescription when readin connection with the accompanying drawings:
Figlof which shows in schematic form a portion of anoperators key-setfor recording digits of a wanted subscribers line number and means accordingto the present invention for storing and later translating the storedinformation into electrical impulses to control any desiredselective fore described for storing digital information in which the digital (current) value of a depressed key of a key-set is impressed onthe section of the magnetic corehavinghigh permanentmagnet properties and readily magnetizable and demechanism;
Fig. 2 is a typical B-I-I curve of the magnetic storing means and,
Fig. 3 shows an arrangement of the invention for storing and subsequently reproducing socalled on-off information.
Referring to the drawing,'Fig. 1 keys I to lil have digital values 1 to 0, respectively, accord ing to conventional practice, whichkeys are connected in series with individual resistances II to 29, respectively, between asource of direct current, i. e., batteryB and a .steering-in.switch 2!.
Resistances ll-2l] are of different values, resistance H having the greatest ,valuethereby restricting the-current therethroughto the lowest valueand resistance is of the least value thereby passing current of a predetermined maximum value.
The contact terminals of steering-in switch ,2! areconnected towindings WI of individual magnetic structures 22, 23, etc. therebeingone such structurefor each ,digit to be stored. For example, in anexchange wherea seven digitcode isemployed, seven such magnetic structures would be required.
Structures 22, 23, etc. comprise a composite core of magnetic material, one portion 24 of which is of material having high permanent magnet properties and capable of being readily magnetized and demagnetized, and another portion 25 in series with the first portion being composed of a material which has high permeability and saturates sharply at a low flux density.
The high permeability sections '25 of structures 22, 23, etc., each have two windings W2 and W3. The W2 winding of structure 22 being connected to the first terminal of one bank of a steering-out switch 26 and the W2 winding of structure 23 being connected to the corresponding N o. 1 terminal of a second bank of the switch. Other structures similar to 22 and 23 for storing other digits of the code would have the WI winding connected to other terminals of switch 2| and their W2 and W3 windings to succeeding terminals of switch 26.
The contact arms of switch 26 are connected to means, hereinafter described, for electrically determining and translating the code stored in the magnetic means 22, 23, etc.
Referring to Fig. l, the operation of the system according to the invention will now be described:
Before the system is placed in service the core portions 24 are first given an initial magnetization in a direction opposite to the direction caused by operation of one of the digit keys 1-10. This may be done by causing relay 36 to momentarily operate to apply a negative force 1/ (Fig. 2) to the cores 24 which i suificient to magnetize cores 25 to a point a beyond aturation (see curve to a). When relay 36 releases the flux density does not decrease to zero but returns to a point b which becomes the starting point for the first magnetization of the core by operation of a digit key which we may assume applies a positive force a: to extend the curve through c to d. When the key is released the curve descends to e which is the effective value of the stored digit. It will be assumed for purposes of description that the first two digits of the code required to establish the desired connection with a called subscriber is 29 and therefore an operator desiring to transmit this code will first depress key 2 whereupon current which is a function of the value of resistance i2 is applied by steering-in switch 2|, in its first position, to the winding WI of the magnetic structure 22 thereby magnetizing its core section 2 1 to a degree determined by the value of resistance I2, whereupon the core section 25 in series therewith will immediately become saturated.
When key 2 is released the steering-in switch 2! will advance, under control of means not shown to its second position. Operation of key 9 following operation and release of key 2 now applies current, which i a function of resistance 9, to the WI winding of magnetic structure 23 over switch 2| now standing in the second position, whereupon the magnetic core 24 of structure 23 will be magnetized to a degree determined by the current passing through resistance H! which will be considerably greater than that of the magnetization of core section 24 of structure 22 established by operation of key 2. Core section 25 of structure 23 now also becomes saturated due to the magnetization of its companion core section 24.
In case the called number code comprises further digits, additional magnetic structure simi lar to 22 and 23 are necessary and are connected in a like manner between switches 2I and 26 and magnetized in accordance with successive operations of the keys I to I 0.
When the desired digits are stored, 2 and 9 in the present example, means (not shown) causes relay 2'! to periodically connect ground impulses over back contacts of relays 28 and 29 to relay 30 thus causing that relay to alternately operate and release. During the released period of relay 30, condenser 3I is charged in an obvious circuit from battery B3 and when relay 3!] operates the charge on condenser 3| is transferred to condenser 32 thereby establishing a definite potential on the grid of vacuum tube 33 and causing plate current due to this grid potential, to flow in winding W2 on the saturated core section 25 of storage device 22 in a direction to create a magnetic field therein which is in opposition to the field due to the degree of magnetization stored in the corresponding core section 24. When relay 30 releases condenser 3I is disconnected from condenser 32 and reconnected to the charging source B3. The charge on condenser 32 however maintains the grid of tube 33 positive and the plate circuit continues to pass current through the winding of W2 during the interval relay 30 is released.
On the next operation of relay 30 the renewed charge on condenser 3I is transferred to condenser 32 thereby increasing its potential and that of the grid of tube 33 to cause an increase in the opposing fiux in core section 25 of the storage device 22, which it is assumed is now willcient to reduce the magnetic field therein, due to the magnetized section '24, to zero and to cause a sharp flux reversal to occur therein which is sufficient to induce a surge of current in the W3 winding which is applied to the control electrode of the gas-filled discharge device 34 to cause it to fire and operate relay 28 which now opens, at its back contacts, the circuit for relay 30 and stop its periodic operation.
It will be noted that two cycles of operation and release of relay 3!] were required to cause a flux reversal in core section 25 of the storage device 22 and operation of relay 2B, and consequently by means of the left-hand contacts of relay 30, two ground pulses were transmitted over conductor 35 to a counting or pulsing circuit. As soon as the information (digit 2) stored in magnetic structure 22 and translated into two ground pulses over conductor 35, means (not shown) advances steering-out switch 26 to its second position and momentarily operates relay 29 thus opening its right-hand contacts to insure against false operation of relay 30, closes its contacts 31, to completely discharge condenser 32 and opens its contacts 38 to restore tube 34 and release relay 28. When relay 29 releases and 21 again operates, the pulse operation of relay 30 and the step-by-step neutralization of the stored field in core 25 of magnetic structure 23 starts. Due to the fact that the core section 24 of this structure was magnetized to a greater degree than the corresponding section of structure 22 due to the lower values of resistance I9, nine successive operations of relay 30 are required to reduce and reverse the field in this section and therefore nine ground pulses are transmitted to the counting circuit over conductor 35.
The foregoing operational sequence continues until the entire stored code or number has been translated into ground pulses over conductor 35 whereupon the steering switches will be restored to their first position by means (not shown) and relay 36 will be momentarily operated to demagnetize all of the storage devices in readiness for further use. See joint I) in Fig. 2.
The means for recording and reproducing onoff information shown in Fig. 3 is merely a simplified arrangement of the foregoing described system for recording digital information shown in Fig. 1. Due to the fact however that the on information to be stored may be represented by current of a single predetermined value it is only necessary to apply a reversing current to the winding W2 of such a value as to reduce and reverse the flux in the core section 25 to fire the gas-filled device 34 to give any desired indication of the recorded effect.
In case there has been no occurrence (on information) recorded at the time the register winding W2 is energized there will be no flux reversal to fire the device 34 and hence no indi cation of an occurrence of the effect will be given.
What is claimed is:
1. In a system for storing and subsequently reproducing information represented by electrical current of characteristic value, a composite magnetic core comprising serially joined sections one being of high permanent magnet properties and another highly permeable and saturable at low flux densities, means for causing said information current to magnetize said core, magnetizing means for causing a flux reversal in the permeable material section, and means for measuring the value of the magnetizing force required to effect said reversal as an indication of the information stored.
2. Information storage and reproducing system comprising a composite magnetic core, serially including a section having high permanent magnetic properties and readily magnetizable and demagnetizable, and another section of highly permeable material capable of saturating at low flux density, means for characteristically magnetizing the first section in accordance with the information to be stored and to a greater degree than that necessary to cause magnetic saturation Of the second section, other magnetizing means for reducing and reversing the magnetic condition of the second section and means for indicating the magnetic force required to effect said reversal as a measure of the information stored.
3. In a system for storing and subsequently reproducing information represented by electrical current of characteristic value, means for storing said information comprising a composite magnetic core having serially joined sections one of readily magnetizable and demagnetizable material of highly permanent magnet properties and another of highly permeable properties and saturable at low flux densities, means for magnetizing the highly permanent section of said core, in accordance with the value of the current representing the information to be stored, to magnetize the highly permeable section beyond saturation means for applying a magnetizing force, which increases in value in successive steps of equal value, to the highly permeable section in opposition to the direction of the flux therein caused by the magnetized condition of the permanent magnet section and means responsive to a flux reversal in the permeable section to discontinue application thereto of said magnetizing force and to cause an indication of the number of steps required to cause said flux reversal.
4. In an information storing and reproducing system, storing means comprising a composite magnetic core having a section of high permanent magnet properties, readily magnetizable 6 and demagnetizable, in series with a highly permeable section saturable at low flux densities, means for magnetizing the first section to a degree characteristic of the information to be stored and sufiicient to more than cause saturation of the second section, and means for translating and indicating the stored information com-- prising means for magnetizing the second section in an opposite direction to the flux therein, to a degree sufiicient to cause a reversal of said flux, and means for measuring the magnetizing force applied to said second section to cause said reversal as an indication of the characteristic degree of magnetization of the first section.
5. In a system for storing and subsequently reproducing identifying information consisting of electrical impulses of characteristic strength, a transformer having a composite magnetic core serially including material having high permanent magnetic properties and readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and highly permeable material which saturates at low flux density, means for applying said information impulse to magnetize the high permanent magnet portion of said core, means for applying electrical current in periodically increasing steps to create a magnetic condition in the permeable material portion of the core in opposition to the condition caused therein by magnetization of the permanent magnet portion, and means responsive to a reversal of flux in said permeable portion to discontinue application of said successively increasing current and to register the number of current steps required to cause said fiux reversal as an indication of the stored information.
6. In a sender for controlling the setting of a selector switch, a transformer having a core serially including magnetic material section of different characteristics, one being readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and having high permanent magnet properties and another saturable at low flux density and of high permeability, means for selectively magnetizing said first core section to an intensity which is a function of the desired switch setting to cause a magnetizing force to be applied to the second section which is greater than that required to cause saturation therein, step-by-step means for causing a flux reversal in the second section, means responsive to said flux reversal to stop said step-by-step means and means for controlling said selector switch in accordance with the number of steps required to cause said flux reversal.
7. In a sender for controlling the setting of a selector switch, a plurality of keys each corresponding to a different setting of said switch, a transformer serving as a register and comprising a core serially including a first section of magnetic material having high permanent magnet properties and readily magnetizable and demagnetizable, and a second section of highly permeable material which saturates at low flux densities, windings on each of said sections, means responsive to operation of any one of said keys for energizing a winding on the first section of the core to magnetize said section to a degree which is a function of the key operated and more than sufiicient to saturate said second core section, means for applying a periodically increasing electric potential, in uniform step-by-step increments, to a first winding on the second core section in such a direction as to create an increasing magnetization effect therein in opposition to the effect therein due to the magnetization of the first core section to cause a flux reversal in the second core section, means including a second one of the windings on said second section responsive to a reversal of flux therein to discontinue application of said periodically increasing potential, and means for controlling the setting of said selector switch in accordance with the number of potential steps applied to the first Winding on the second core section.
8. A system for storing and subsequently reproducing information represented by electric current whose value is a function of the information to be stored, characterized by an electromagnet having a composite core of serially joined sections of different magnetic properties one section being of material readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and of high permanent magnet properties and another of highly permeable material saturable at low flux densities, by means of applying said information current to said core for establishing a magnetic condition therein of a degree characteristic of said current, by means for causing a flux reversal in said core, and by means responsive to said reversal for indicating the current value of the stored information.
9. A system for storing and subsequently reproducing information represented by electric current whose value is a function of the information to be stored, characterized by an electromagnet having a composite core of serially joined sections of different magnetic properties, one section being of material readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and of high permanent magnet properties and another of highly permeable material saturable at low flux density, means for applying the information current to the first section to create a magnetic condition therein effective to cause a saturating condition in the second section, means for decreasing, step-by-step, the magnetic condition of the second section to cause a flux reversal therein, and means responsive to such flux reversal to stop and register said steps.
10. In a machine switching telephone system, a sender for controlling the setting of a selector switch, comprising means for storing information characteristic of the desired switch setting and means for subsequently reproducing and translating said stored information to control said switch, said storing means comprising an electromagnetic core having serially joined sections having diiferent magnetic properties, one section being of a material readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and of high permanent magnet properties and another of highly permeable material saturable at low flux densities.
11. In an information storage and reproducing device, an electromagnet having a core serially comprising a section of material of high permanent magnet properties and readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and another section highly permeable and saturable at low flux densities, means for magnetizing the permanent magnet section to a degree representing the information to be stored, means for magnetizing the highly permeable section in opposition to the magnetic force due to the permanent magnet section, means responsive to a flux reversal in the highly permeable section, and means for evaluating the opposing force required to elfect said reversal as a measure of the information stored.
12. In a device for storing and subsequently translating information represented by electrical currents characteristic of the information to be stored, a composite magnetic core comprising two serially joined sections one of high permanent magnet properties and readily magnetizable and demagnetizable and the other section highly permeable and saturable at low flux densities, means for causing said information current to magnetize the permanent magnet section to establish a saturated condition in the highly permeable section, means for applying a magnetizing force to the highly permeable section in opposition to the force due to the permanent magnet section to cause a flux reversal in the highly permeable section and means responsive to and controlled by said reversal of flux to evaluate the opposing force required to cause said reversal as a measure of the information stored.
THOMAS L. DIMOND.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 1,169,475 Finnigan Jan. 25, 1916 2,114,016 Dimond Apr. 12, 1938
US61758545 1945-09-20 1945-09-20 Key control sender Expired - Lifetime US2430457A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US61758545 US2430457A (en) 1945-09-20 1945-09-20 Key control sender

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US61758545 US2430457A (en) 1945-09-20 1945-09-20 Key control sender

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2430457A true US2430457A (en) 1947-11-11

Family

ID=24474233

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US61758545 Expired - Lifetime US2430457A (en) 1945-09-20 1945-09-20 Key control sender

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2430457A (en)

Cited By (39)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2651684A (en) * 1948-04-09 1953-09-08 Int Standard Electric Corp Automatic signal attenuator
US2710928A (en) * 1953-08-25 1955-06-14 Ibm Magnetic control for scale of two devices
US2717372A (en) * 1951-11-01 1955-09-06 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Ferroelectric storage device and circuit
US2722603A (en) * 1951-11-03 1955-11-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Peak voltage limiter
US2736880A (en) * 1951-05-11 1956-02-28 Research Corp Multicoordinate digital information storage device
US2772370A (en) * 1953-12-31 1956-11-27 Ibm Binary trigger and counter circuits employing magnetic memory devices
US2777098A (en) * 1951-07-27 1957-01-08 Siemens Ag Magnetically controlled electric counting apparatus
US2781503A (en) * 1953-04-29 1957-02-12 American Mach & Foundry Magnetic memory circuits employing biased magnetic binary cores
US2786137A (en) * 1952-10-21 1957-03-19 Burroughs Corp Pulse standardizer circuit
US2792506A (en) * 1953-11-17 1957-05-14 Robert D Torrey Resettable delay flop
DE1011935B (en) * 1956-05-29 1957-07-11 Siemens Ag Circuit arrangement for the magnetic storage of electrical switching orders in saturation chokes
US2808578A (en) * 1951-03-16 1957-10-01 Librascope Inc Memory systems
US2809367A (en) * 1954-04-05 1957-10-08 Telemeter Magnetics And Electr Magnetic core memory system
US2809783A (en) * 1952-01-14 1957-10-15 Donald H Jacobs Magnetic storage device and storage units
US2824697A (en) * 1954-06-08 1958-02-25 Westinghouse Electric Corp Control apparatus
US2825891A (en) * 1953-09-09 1958-03-04 Philips Corp Magnetic memory device
US2825892A (en) * 1953-09-09 1958-03-04 Philips Corp Magnetic memory device
US2846593A (en) * 1953-01-30 1958-08-05 Eugene A Sands Logical computing element
US2875952A (en) * 1956-04-23 1959-03-03 Collins Radio Co Magnetic integrator
US2889472A (en) * 1957-12-10 1959-06-02 Thomas E Myers Pulse generating device
US2897352A (en) * 1954-08-16 1959-07-28 Cgs Lab Inc System using magnetized controllable inductor operated stepwise to control frequency and the like
US2901637A (en) * 1955-04-13 1959-08-25 Wang An Anti-coincidence circuit
US2902676A (en) * 1953-10-01 1959-09-01 Ibm Non-destructive sensing of magnetic cores
US2925958A (en) * 1955-10-25 1960-02-23 Kienzle Apparate Gmbh Method and apparatus for counting electrical impulses
US2967294A (en) * 1956-12-24 1961-01-03 Potter Instrument Co Inc Saturable reactor system for information storage, comparison and readout
US2967949A (en) * 1956-09-13 1961-01-10 North American Aviation Inc Saturable comparator
DE974727C (en) * 1954-02-27 1961-04-27 Siemens Ag Circuit arrangement for devices that are subject to the same temperature influence, for button-controlled selection in telecommunications, in particular telephone systems
US2991455A (en) * 1955-08-25 1961-07-04 Ibm Magnetic core logical devices
US3001067A (en) * 1958-01-23 1961-09-19 Gen Motors Corp Pulsed magnet saturation signal seeking tuner
US3016465A (en) * 1956-02-15 1962-01-09 George C Devol Coincidence detectors
US3041475A (en) * 1958-03-13 1962-06-26 Gen Dynamics Corp Electronic polar relay
US3118130A (en) * 1959-06-01 1964-01-14 Massachusetts Inst Technology Bilateral bistable semiconductor switching matrix
US3125748A (en) * 1959-07-13 1964-03-17 macroberts
US3162768A (en) * 1954-05-03 1964-12-22 Ibm Magnetic core deca-flip
US3238522A (en) * 1960-12-22 1966-03-01 Ht Res Inst Magnetic analog to digital converter
US3264621A (en) * 1963-03-25 1966-08-02 Burroughs Corp Magnetic data store
US3316541A (en) * 1959-06-30 1967-04-25 Sprague Electric Co Magnetic core memory device
US3504132A (en) * 1965-05-14 1970-03-31 Susquehanna Corp Memory unit for repertory dialler utilizing coded encapsulated resistors
US3631508A (en) * 1970-06-08 1971-12-28 Du Pont Thermomagnetic recording whereby image reversal is achieved magnetically

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1169475A (en) * 1914-03-26 1916-01-25 George P Finnigan Magnetic apparatus.
US2114016A (en) * 1934-01-20 1938-04-12 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Electrical counting system

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1169475A (en) * 1914-03-26 1916-01-25 George P Finnigan Magnetic apparatus.
US2114016A (en) * 1934-01-20 1938-04-12 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Electrical counting system

Cited By (39)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2651684A (en) * 1948-04-09 1953-09-08 Int Standard Electric Corp Automatic signal attenuator
US2808578A (en) * 1951-03-16 1957-10-01 Librascope Inc Memory systems
US2736880A (en) * 1951-05-11 1956-02-28 Research Corp Multicoordinate digital information storage device
US2777098A (en) * 1951-07-27 1957-01-08 Siemens Ag Magnetically controlled electric counting apparatus
US2717372A (en) * 1951-11-01 1955-09-06 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Ferroelectric storage device and circuit
US2722603A (en) * 1951-11-03 1955-11-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Peak voltage limiter
US2809783A (en) * 1952-01-14 1957-10-15 Donald H Jacobs Magnetic storage device and storage units
US2786137A (en) * 1952-10-21 1957-03-19 Burroughs Corp Pulse standardizer circuit
US2846593A (en) * 1953-01-30 1958-08-05 Eugene A Sands Logical computing element
US2781503A (en) * 1953-04-29 1957-02-12 American Mach & Foundry Magnetic memory circuits employing biased magnetic binary cores
US2710928A (en) * 1953-08-25 1955-06-14 Ibm Magnetic control for scale of two devices
US2825891A (en) * 1953-09-09 1958-03-04 Philips Corp Magnetic memory device
US2825892A (en) * 1953-09-09 1958-03-04 Philips Corp Magnetic memory device
US2902676A (en) * 1953-10-01 1959-09-01 Ibm Non-destructive sensing of magnetic cores
US2792506A (en) * 1953-11-17 1957-05-14 Robert D Torrey Resettable delay flop
US2772370A (en) * 1953-12-31 1956-11-27 Ibm Binary trigger and counter circuits employing magnetic memory devices
DE974727C (en) * 1954-02-27 1961-04-27 Siemens Ag Circuit arrangement for devices that are subject to the same temperature influence, for button-controlled selection in telecommunications, in particular telephone systems
US2809367A (en) * 1954-04-05 1957-10-08 Telemeter Magnetics And Electr Magnetic core memory system
US3162768A (en) * 1954-05-03 1964-12-22 Ibm Magnetic core deca-flip
US2824697A (en) * 1954-06-08 1958-02-25 Westinghouse Electric Corp Control apparatus
US2897352A (en) * 1954-08-16 1959-07-28 Cgs Lab Inc System using magnetized controllable inductor operated stepwise to control frequency and the like
US2901637A (en) * 1955-04-13 1959-08-25 Wang An Anti-coincidence circuit
US2991455A (en) * 1955-08-25 1961-07-04 Ibm Magnetic core logical devices
US2925958A (en) * 1955-10-25 1960-02-23 Kienzle Apparate Gmbh Method and apparatus for counting electrical impulses
US3016465A (en) * 1956-02-15 1962-01-09 George C Devol Coincidence detectors
US2875952A (en) * 1956-04-23 1959-03-03 Collins Radio Co Magnetic integrator
DE1011935B (en) * 1956-05-29 1957-07-11 Siemens Ag Circuit arrangement for the magnetic storage of electrical switching orders in saturation chokes
US2967949A (en) * 1956-09-13 1961-01-10 North American Aviation Inc Saturable comparator
US2967294A (en) * 1956-12-24 1961-01-03 Potter Instrument Co Inc Saturable reactor system for information storage, comparison and readout
US2889472A (en) * 1957-12-10 1959-06-02 Thomas E Myers Pulse generating device
US3001067A (en) * 1958-01-23 1961-09-19 Gen Motors Corp Pulsed magnet saturation signal seeking tuner
US3041475A (en) * 1958-03-13 1962-06-26 Gen Dynamics Corp Electronic polar relay
US3118130A (en) * 1959-06-01 1964-01-14 Massachusetts Inst Technology Bilateral bistable semiconductor switching matrix
US3316541A (en) * 1959-06-30 1967-04-25 Sprague Electric Co Magnetic core memory device
US3125748A (en) * 1959-07-13 1964-03-17 macroberts
US3238522A (en) * 1960-12-22 1966-03-01 Ht Res Inst Magnetic analog to digital converter
US3264621A (en) * 1963-03-25 1966-08-02 Burroughs Corp Magnetic data store
US3504132A (en) * 1965-05-14 1970-03-31 Susquehanna Corp Memory unit for repertory dialler utilizing coded encapsulated resistors
US3631508A (en) * 1970-06-08 1971-12-28 Du Pont Thermomagnetic recording whereby image reversal is achieved magnetically

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2430457A (en) Key control sender
US2995637A (en) Electrical switching devices
US2226692A (en) Control system
US3134908A (en) Magnetically controlled switching devices with non-destructive readout
US2319937A (en) Switching contact
US2740003A (en) Rotational use of register circuits in telephone switching systems
US2544330A (en) Selective signaling device
US2306087A (en) Key pulsing register circuit
US1968078A (en) Selective code receiver
US2926289A (en) Pulse counting circuit
US3011028A (en) Signaling system
US2958077A (en) Magnetic register circuit
US2449224A (en) Electrical circuit control
US3118090A (en) Reed relay transfer circuit
US2495769A (en) Dial impulse recorder
US3214522A (en) Relay arrangement for the reception and repetition of impulse trains
US2594923A (en) Call data recording telephone system
US2817481A (en) Electrical pulse counting circuits
US2299479A (en) Signaling system
US2022030A (en) Signaling system
US3004106A (en) Pulse transmitting and receiving circuit
US2971182A (en) Key senders
US1835737A (en) Electrical recorder
US2830235A (en) Intermittent-flow condenser-storage timer
US2071078A (en) Signaling system