US2628284A - Magnetic transducer - Google Patents

Magnetic transducer Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2628284A
US2628284A US124602A US12460249A US2628284A US 2628284 A US2628284 A US 2628284A US 124602 A US124602 A US 124602A US 12460249 A US12460249 A US 12460249A US 2628284 A US2628284 A US 2628284A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
magnetic
record
gap
transducer
core
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
US124602A
Inventor
Albert W Friend
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.)
RCA Corp
Original Assignee
RCA Corp
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 RCA Corp filed Critical RCA Corp
Priority to US124602A priority Critical patent/US2628284A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2628284A publication Critical patent/US2628284A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B5/00Recording by magnetisation or demagnetisation of a record carrier; Reproducing by magnetic means; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B5/127Structure or manufacture of heads, e.g. inductive
    • G11B5/147Structure or manufacture of heads, e.g. inductive with cores being composed of metal sheets, i.e. laminated cores with cores composed of isolated magnetic layers, e.g. sheets

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in ma netic transducers or sound-heads for use in conjunction with a sound-track of the type comprising a longitudinally extending magnetic trace applied, usually, to a wire or tape-like record.
  • the amplitude or sensitivity response-characteristic of a sound-head of the character described is a function of the quantity of fringing flux which can be concentrated in the vicinity of the non-magnetic gap or slit.
  • the conventional way of achieving a desired concentration of flux is to employ tapered pole-pieces arranged with their narrow ends on opposite sides of the gap. Since the rec- 0rd in moving over the gap subjects the tapered ends of the magnet to wear, one cannot, as a practical matter, make said tapered ends as thin as would be necessary to achieve the theoretically optimum sensitivity response-characteristic.
  • the principal object of the present invention is to obviate the above described difficulties in the manufacture, upon a commercial scale, of magnetic transducers having substantially duplicate, frequency and sensitivity response-characteristics.
  • Another and related object is to provide an improved magnetic transducer for use in connection with longitudinally magnetized (or magnetizable) sound-tracks and one which, by reason of the novel construction and processing of its parts, may be manufactured in commercial quantitles to exhibit standardized responsecharacteristics, irrespective of the number of units in said quantity, and thus to permit the standardization of other parts of the instruments which said sound-heads are designed to serve.
  • Fig. 1 is a plan View of a substantially rectangular-shaped magnetic transducer embodying the invention, and showing the path of a tapelike record on the surface of the core; the magnet coils of the transducer are omitted since they may be of conventional form and dimensions and form no part of the present invention, and
  • Fig. 2 is a sectional view taken on the line 22 of Fig. 1, showing the bi-part laminated structure of the magnetic core.
  • the removal of any of the magnetic metal from the tapered ends of the core necessarily increases the efiective area of said ends and thus alters the sensitivity responsecharacteristic of the core.
  • the present invention retains the advantage (1. e., high concentration of flux) of tapered cores but obviates its disadvantages by the provision of What may be designated as a finishing tip at the free end of the tape.
  • finishing tips which are designated TI, T2, T3 and T4 in the drawing, are of uniform cross-section, hence if the grinding and polishing operations employed in finishing the boundary surfaces of the flux gaps (Fl F2) is confined to said finishing tips, the extent and the angle of the tapered part of the core remain constant and the sensitivity response-characteristic of the number of units.
  • each of the lamina L1, L2 etc. are of substantially identical or duplicate size and shape.
  • the central or body portion a of each C-shape piece is of uniform width and the arms or pole pieces b and c of each part taper off in the direction of the ends of the C and terminate in the finishing tips Tl, T2, etc., dictated by the present invention.
  • the original length of the tips was approximately 0.007 of an inch
  • a satisfactorily smooth surface was achieved in grinding away approximately 0.005 of an inch of the tip.
  • the thickness dimension of the tips should be as small as practical, i. e., said dimensions should be so small that the enhanced sensitivityresponse incident to the taper, is not adversely affected, yet it should be large enough to allow for wear incident to the friction resulting from the movement of the record R in contact with the convex outer surface S of the core.
  • the magnetic laminations LI, L2, etc. (Fig. 2) of the desired form and dimensions are preferably provided with a number of holes for the reception of non-magnetic, press-fit, alignment pins P l, P2, etc. and, after being sprayed with a thermosetting cement, are stacked on the press-fit pins (or in a jig, not shown) and heat-treated to cure the cement.
  • the magnet coils (not shown) may then be wound upon the individual core stacks.
  • the next step in the assembly is the grinding and polishing of the polar extremities 0r finishing tips TI, T2, etc. to plane, smooth surfaces.
  • the quantity of tip material removed during the polishing operation is quite small so that, to a first order approximation, the reluctance of the gap or gaps between the polar extremities of the magnet is maintained constant on all units produced in accordance with the invention.
  • a transducer for a magnetic record comprising a magnetic structure having an outer surface-portion upon which said record moves during recording and reproducing intervals, said magnetic structure having a pair of polar extremities defining the boundaries of a non-magnetic gap in said surface adjacent to the path of said record, said polar extremities being tapered inwardly in the direction of said gap and terminating adjacent to said gap in projections of substantially uniform cross-section, said magnetic structure being of stacked laminated construction each lamina of which being of duplicate size and shape.
  • a transducer for a magnetic record comprising a magnetic structure having an outer surface-portion upon which said record moves during recording and reproducing intervals, said magnetic structure having a pair of pole pieces terminating in projections of substantially uniform cross-section, said projections defining the boundaries of a non-magnetic gap in said surface adjacent to the path of said record, said pole pieces being tapered divergently in directions away from their respective projections, and said magnetic structure being of stacked laminated construction, each lamina thereof being of duplicate size and shape.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Magnetic Heads (AREA)

Description

Feb. 10, 1953 A. w. FRIEND 2,628,284
MAGNETIC TRANSDUCER Filed Oct, 51, 1949 3nventor ALBERT W. FRIEND (Ittorneg Patented Feb. 10, 1953 UITED STATES ATENT OFFICE MAGNETIC TRANSDUCER of Delaware Application October 31, 1949, Serial No. 124,602
3 Claims.
This invention relates to improvements in ma netic transducers or sound-heads for use in conjunction with a sound-track of the type comprising a longitudinally extending magnetic trace applied, usually, to a wire or tape-like record.
It has long been known that the frequency response-characteristic of a sound-head of the type suitable for use in conjunction with longitudinally magnetized (or magnetizable) records is a function of the Width dimension of the nonmagnetic gap or slit over which the record travels during recording and reproducing intervals. The rule as to this is well stated in Elektrotechnische Zeitschrift No. 45, November, 1935, pages 12 9- 1221: The size of the magnetic slit, that is to say, the extent of the recording magnetic field in the feeding direction of the tape must be around 1 of the lowest half-wave-length, to make a sharply delimited magnetic slit of said size is the real and basic problem of magnetic sound recording. Obviously, to achieve a sharply delimited slit, the polar extremities which define the boundaries of the slit in the magnet must be ground and polished with extreme care.
It also has long been known that the amplitude or sensitivity response-characteristic of a sound-head of the character described is a function of the quantity of fringing flux which can be concentrated in the vicinity of the non-magnetic gap or slit. The conventional way of achieving a desired concentration of flux is to employ tapered pole-pieces arranged with their narrow ends on opposite sides of the gap. Since the rec- 0rd in moving over the gap subjects the tapered ends of the magnet to wear, one cannot, as a practical matter, make said tapered ends as thin as would be necessary to achieve the theoretically optimum sensitivity response-characteristic.
With the foregoing general rules of design in mind, it would appear that, given the necessary materials, a skilled technician could construct a magnetic transducer, of the longitudinal type, having frequency and sensitivity response-characteristics of any desired value. Such indeed is the fact. However, the same technician, following the same technique, would find it extremely diflicult, if not entirely impossible, to construct a multiplicity of sound-heads which would each possess the same response-characteristics. That i this is so will be apparent when it is appreciated (1) that the grinding and polishing operations required to achieve a sharply delimited magnetic slit, necessarily increase the effective crosssectional areas of these parts (i. e., the tapered ends) of the magnet which determine the sensitivity response-characteristic and (2) that in making a number of magnetic core pieces it is extremely unlikely that exactly the same amount of material would be removed in the grinding and polishing operations performed on each piece. Accordingly, the principal object of the present invention is to obviate the above described difficulties in the manufacture, upon a commercial scale, of magnetic transducers having substantially duplicate, frequency and sensitivity response-characteristics.
Another and related object is to provide an improved magnetic transducer for use in connection with longitudinally magnetized (or magnetizable) sound-tracks and one which, by reason of the novel construction and processing of its parts, may be manufactured in commercial quantitles to exhibit standardized responsecharacteristics, irrespective of the number of units in said quantity, and thus to permit the standardization of other parts of the instruments which said sound-heads are designed to serve.
In the drawing:
Fig. 1 is a plan View of a substantially rectangular-shaped magnetic transducer embodying the invention, and showing the path of a tapelike record on the surface of the core; the magnet coils of the transducer are omitted since they may be of conventional form and dimensions and form no part of the present invention, and
Fig. 2 is a sectional view taken on the line 22 of Fig. 1, showing the bi-part laminated structure of the magnetic core.
As previously set forth, in the manufacture of magnetic cores having conventionally tapered polar extremities, the removal of any of the magnetic metal from the tapered ends of the core (during the grinding operation necessary to provide a sharply delimited flux-gap between said ends), necessarily increases the efiective area of said ends and thus alters the sensitivity responsecharacteristic of the core. The present invention retains the advantage (1. e., high concentration of flux) of tapered cores but obviates its disadvantages by the provision of What may be designated as a finishing tip at the free end of the tape. These finishing tips, which are designated TI, T2, T3 and T4 in the drawing, are of uniform cross-section, hence if the grinding and polishing operations employed in finishing the boundary surfaces of the flux gaps (Fl F2) is confined to said finishing tips, the extent and the angle of the tapered part of the core remain constant and the sensitivity response-characteristic of the number of units.
In the drawing, the invention is shown as applied to a bi-part magnetic core structure consisting of two C-shape parts I and 2 of laminated construction (see Fig. 2). Each of the lamina L1, L2 etc. are of substantially identical or duplicate size and shape. The central or body portion a of each C-shape piece is of uniform width and the arms or pole pieces b and c of each part taper off in the direction of the ends of the C and terminate in the finishing tips Tl, T2, etc., dictated by the present invention. The original length of the tips Tl, etc., as measured from the end of the tapered portion of its pole piece to the end of the tip, need be no greater than is found necessary to permit the tips to be ground to the flatness and smoothness required in the formation of the adjacent gap (Fl or F2), and ordinarily need be no longer than, say 0.01 of an inch. In one practical embodiment of the invention wherein the original length of the tips was approximately 0.007 of an inch, a satisfactorily smooth surface was achieved in grinding away approximately 0.005 of an inch of the tip.
The thickness dimension of the tips should be as small as practical, i. e., said dimensions should be so small that the enhanced sensitivityresponse incident to the taper, is not adversely affected, yet it should be large enough to allow for wear incident to the friction resulting from the movement of the record R in contact with the convex outer surface S of the core. These requirements have been found to be met in a laminated core-structure made of mu-metal" (i. e., a nickel-iron alloy), when the thickness dimension of the tips was of the order of 0.02 or 0.03 of an inch.
In manufacturing the core of the invention, the magnetic laminations LI, L2, etc. (Fig. 2) of the desired form and dimensions are preferably provided with a number of holes for the reception of non-magnetic, press-fit, alignment pins P l, P2, etc. and, after being sprayed with a thermosetting cement, are stacked on the press-fit pins (or in a jig, not shown) and heat-treated to cure the cement. The magnet coils (not shown) may then be wound upon the individual core stacks.
The next step in the assembly is the grinding and polishing of the polar extremities 0r finishing tips TI, T2, etc. to plane, smooth surfaces. As above indicated, the quantity of tip material removed during the polishing operation is quite small so that, to a first order approximation, the reluctance of the gap or gaps between the polar extremities of the magnet is maintained constant on all units produced in accordance with the invention.
What i claimed is:
1. A transducer for a magnetic record, said transducer comprising a magnetic structure having an outer surface-portion upon which said record moves during recording and reproducing intervals, said magnetic structure having a pair of polar extremities defining the boundaries of a non-magnetic gap in said surface adjacent to the path of said record, said polar extremities being tapered inwardly in the direction of said gap and terminating adjacent to said gap in projections of substantially uniform cross-section, said magnetic structure being of stacked laminated construction each lamina of which being of duplicate size and shape.
2. A transducer for a magnetic record, said transducer comprising a magnetic structure having an outer surface-portion upon which said record moves during recording and reproducing intervals, said magnetic structure having a pair of pole pieces terminating in projections of substantially uniform cross-section, said projections defining the boundaries of a non-magnetic gap in said surface adjacent to the path of said record, said pole pieces being tapered divergently in directions away from their respective projections, and said magnetic structure being of stacked laminated construction, each lamina thereof being of duplicate size and shape.
3. The invention as set forth in claim 2 wherein the cross-section area of said projections is substantially equal to the minimum cross-section area of their associated pole pieces.
ALBERT W. FRIEND.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 2,306,162 Gipe Dec. 22, 1942 2,468,601 Long Apr. 29, 1949 2,536,260 Burns Jan. 2. 1951
US124602A 1949-10-31 1949-10-31 Magnetic transducer Expired - Lifetime US2628284A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US124602A US2628284A (en) 1949-10-31 1949-10-31 Magnetic transducer

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US124602A US2628284A (en) 1949-10-31 1949-10-31 Magnetic transducer

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2628284A true US2628284A (en) 1953-02-10

Family

ID=22415814

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US124602A Expired - Lifetime US2628284A (en) 1949-10-31 1949-10-31 Magnetic transducer

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2628284A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2786897A (en) * 1951-04-19 1957-03-26 Siemens Ag Magnetic recorder
DE1039249B (en) * 1953-10-09 1958-09-18 Siemens Ag Multiple magnetic head consisting of several individual magnetic heads for multi-track magnetic sound films or the like.
US2961495A (en) * 1957-01-28 1960-11-22 Gen Precision Inc Magnetic transducer head
US3454728A (en) * 1965-02-03 1969-07-08 Dual Gebrueder Steidinger Magnetic head having point-welded laminations and method of producing the same

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2306162A (en) * 1940-08-08 1942-12-22 Harrison S Gipe Sound device
US2468601A (en) * 1945-12-28 1949-04-26 Conn Ltd C G Head for magnetic recording machines
US2536260A (en) * 1948-12-30 1951-01-02 Rca Corp Device for reproducing magnetic records

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2306162A (en) * 1940-08-08 1942-12-22 Harrison S Gipe Sound device
US2468601A (en) * 1945-12-28 1949-04-26 Conn Ltd C G Head for magnetic recording machines
US2536260A (en) * 1948-12-30 1951-01-02 Rca Corp Device for reproducing magnetic records

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2786897A (en) * 1951-04-19 1957-03-26 Siemens Ag Magnetic recorder
DE1039249B (en) * 1953-10-09 1958-09-18 Siemens Ag Multiple magnetic head consisting of several individual magnetic heads for multi-track magnetic sound films or the like.
US2961495A (en) * 1957-01-28 1960-11-22 Gen Precision Inc Magnetic transducer head
US3454728A (en) * 1965-02-03 1969-07-08 Dual Gebrueder Steidinger Magnetic head having point-welded laminations and method of producing the same

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2711945A (en) Magnetic transducer head for high frequency signals
US2785038A (en) Magnetic transducer
US2493742A (en) Magnetic transducing core for magnetic record transducers
US2523576A (en) Ring-type magnetic recordtransducing head
US2535712A (en) Multiple gap erase head for magnetic recording
US3668775A (en) Method for manufacturing magnetic heads
US3000078A (en) Method of making magnetic transducer heads
US2706752A (en) Magnetic head
US3314056A (en) Gapless magnetic head
US3335412A (en) Abrasion resistant magnetic head
US3845503A (en) Flux scanning transducer having anisotropic soft magnetic inner pole piece
US2628284A (en) Magnetic transducer
US2513617A (en) Magnetic recording and reproducing
US3485958A (en) Composite magnetic recording and/or play-back head with two side erasing heads having electrically conductive strips
US2785232A (en) Electromagnetic head
US3975773A (en) Thin film magnetic heads
US2852618A (en) Electro-magnetic transducer
US3185971A (en) Double magnetic head
US2895015A (en) Magnetic record transducer
US3370282A (en) Abrasion resistant magnetic head
US3432837A (en) Sensor magnetic head with magnetic material as a gap bridge
US3341667A (en) Magnetic transducer with single piece core
US4264939A (en) Magnetic erasing head
US3485962A (en) Magnetic transducer head with remanent flux shunt gap spacer
US4300178A (en) Multichannel magnetic head