US2728876A - Magnetic deflection sweep circuit - Google Patents

Magnetic deflection sweep circuit Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2728876A
US2728876A US649442A US64944246A US2728876A US 2728876 A US2728876 A US 2728876A US 649442 A US649442 A US 649442A US 64944246 A US64944246 A US 64944246A US 2728876 A US2728876 A US 2728876A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
circuit
tube
voltage
wave
cathode
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
US649442A
Inventor
Arthur A Varela
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US649442A priority Critical patent/US2728876A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2728876A publication Critical patent/US2728876A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K4/00Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions
    • H03K4/06Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape
    • H03K4/08Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape having sawtooth shape
    • H03K4/10Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape having sawtooth shape using as active elements vacuum tubes only
    • H03K4/26Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape having sawtooth shape using as active elements vacuum tubes only in which a sawtooth current is produced through an inductor
    • H03K4/39Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape having sawtooth shape using as active elements vacuum tubes only in which a sawtooth current is produced through an inductor using a tube operating as an amplifier

Definitions

  • This invention relates to electronic circuits and more particularly to magnetic electron-beam deflecting circuits of the type employed in electronic television systems, cathode-ray Oscilloscopes, and cathode-ray tubes in general, wherein the electron beam is deflected by a varying magnetic field that builds up slowly at a uniform rate and decays suddenly, or vice versa.
  • the electron beam is moved across the cathode-ray tube, usually in a horizontal direction, at a constant rate of speed, the magnitude of the movement being proportional to the elapsed time from the beginning of that particular movement.
  • Such uniform deflection is obtained by permitting the beam of electrons in the cathoderay tube to traverse a region in which either an electric or magnetic field is caused to build up or to decay at a uniform rate.
  • electrostatic deflection is generally more conserving of energy than the magnetic method, unusually high voltages are required to obtain sufficient deflection and adequate focusing of the electron beam.
  • the magnetic deflection type of tube is commonly preferred.
  • a uniformly varying magnetic field may be obtained by establishing in a coil a current having a sawtooth wave form.
  • Several considerations are of primary importance in the design of a magnetic deflecting system with an output current wave form of the proper shape.
  • a second consideration is the use of electronic tubes which do not have as linear a plate current characteristic as is desirable. Since a uniformly varyingsawtooth voltage can rather easily be obtained from known circuits, the invention primarily concerns'itself with obtaining a linear current sawtooth wave form from a circuit with a linear sawtooth voltage input.
  • one object of the invention is to provide a means for producing a substantially linear sawtooth current in the deflecting coil of a magnetic deflecting system.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a high efliciency magnetic deflection system of the type actuated by a sawtooth voltage input wave, the circuit having compensation for the presence of fortuitous circuit elements and non-linear electronic tube characteristics.
  • Fig. 1 shows'diagrammatically the circuit of a fundamental magnetic deflection sweep system
  • Fig. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of an embodiment of the invention
  • Fig. 3 is a series of curves showing current-time relationships.
  • Fig. 1 which illustrates diagrammatically the circult of such a sweep system
  • a deflection coil 1 is connected in the plate circuit of a power or driver tube 4-, plate voltage being supplied to the circuit by the battery 6 or other direct current source, and the driver tube 4 being biased by the cathode biasing resistor 5.
  • the fortuitous circuit elements appearing in the deflection coil are shown dotted and are represented by the inherent resistance of the coil 3 and the distributed capacitance 2.
  • the wave shape of the ideal deflection current is a sawtooth 8.
  • T o produce this sawtooth current through a pure inductance, a rectangular voltage wave is required due to the charging effect of the inductance.
  • a voltage of sawtooth form is required.
  • the voltage across the deflection coil 1 in the plate circuit of the driver tube 4 must consist of a rectangular voltage plus a sawtooth voltage, or, in other words, a trapezoidal voltage.
  • This voltage consists of an initial jump proportional to the inductance in the circuit and the rate of change of the current and an ensuing linear rise of voltage at a rate proportional to the total resistance of the plate circuit and the rate of change of the current. Therefore, the voltage wave applied to the grid of the driver tube must also be of trapezoidal shape and in the same sense as the voltage rise, or drop, across the plate circuit load elements, but of a smaller magnitude depending on the amplification of the driver tube.
  • the deflection coil has distributed capacitance 2 associated with it, as has the circuit wiring. In effect, this capacitance will be in parallel with the deflection coil inductance. Since the voltage across a condenser in a series resistance-capacitance circuit cannotbe changed suddenly, the distributed capacitance will reduce the steepness of the voltage Wave front. This results in a reduced initial jump of the trapezoidal voltage, causing the wave form to approach the shape of a sawtooth. The application of a sawtooth voltage to a series resistanceinductance circuit results in a current that increases slowly at first and then gradually becomes linear with time. This characteristic is shown graphically by curve B of Fig. 3. The desired current-time characteristic is shown by curve A of the same figure. Therefore, it is observed that the distributed capacitance results in a non-linear deflection current, causing the cathode-ray scan to be.
  • a two-stage voltage amplifier is used, feeding into the driver stage. This embodiment is shown schematically in Fig. 2.
  • the circuit of the invention comprises three vacuum tube amplifiers 9, 12, and 16 arranged in cascade.
  • the final amplifier tube 16 serves as the driver stage for the magnetic deflection coils.
  • a trapezoidal voltage wave of a frequency equal to the desired sweep frequency is fed into the grid of the first amplifier tube 9.
  • This tube may now be assumed to conduct and amplify in the conventional manner, a change of current flow through the tube governed by the changing grid voltage causing an amplified but inverted voltage change to appear across the load resistor 10.
  • This inverted voltage is fed through the coupling condenser 11 to the grid of the second amplifier tube 12.
  • the grid leak resistor 13 for this tube is connected between the grid and the cathode of the tube, the cathode being connected to the negative side of the power supply, designated as B, and also being by-passed to ground potential through the bypass condenser 14.
  • the second amplifier tube 12 is so biased and connected that his conducting continuously.
  • the grid variation on this tube causes the current flow through the tube to vary so that the voltage variation across the load resistor 15 is of the same sense or polarity as the trapezoidal input voltage 7. Since B is of such a value that the plate of the second amplifier 12 rarely swings into the positive voltage values, the amplified trapezoidal wave form may be fed directly to the grid of the driver tube 16.
  • the plate load of this tube consists of the deflection coils 1', here shown as two coils which are wound on opposite sides of the circular iron yoke in order to give a uniform magnetic field across the cathode-ray tube, and the shunting resistor 17 used to limit the current through the deflection coils.
  • the screen grid receives voltage from the screen dropping resistor 18, which, with resistors 19 and 20, forms a voltage divider for biasing the amplifier tube 16.
  • the wave form of the current passing through the deflection coils 1 in the circuit of Fig. 2 has a non-linear rise or a curving rise corresponding to that shown in curve B of Fig. 3.
  • inverse feedback as taught by the invention is used.
  • the grid voltage of the driver tube 16 rises in accordance with the positive trapezoidal wave impressed on it, current flow through the tube causes a similar voltage to appear across the cathode resistor 20.
  • This resistor not being by-passed, provides a certain amount of feedback and hence linearity to the operation of tube 16.
  • This voltage 24 is fed back through a feedback resistor 21 to the cathode of the first amplifier tube 9 as shown schematically in Fig. 2.
  • this positive i voltage Wave form in eifect reduces the amplitude of the exciting wave form 7, providing inverse feedback
  • a desirable characteristic of inverse feedback is that it reduces non-linear distortion produced in the amplifier by controlling the overall amplification or gain of the amplifier.
  • the resistor 22 and the condenser 23 have a very small charging time constant; hence the voltage is decreased at the beginning of the feedback wave due to the lay-passed high frequencies while the condenser 23 is charging. Therefore, at the beginning of the trapezoidal input wave less voltage is fed back into the first amplifier stage, and the gain of that stage and, hence, of the system is a maximum. As the wave continues the condenser 23 becomes charged and less of the high frequency components are shunted to ground. As the voltage on the cathode of the first amplifier rises, the gain of the stage decreases until the nor mal gain is again reached. Increasing the amplification in the circuit has the effect of raising the current wave form, eliminating the delay at the start of the current sawtooth and making the current wave form more linear.
  • circuit constants of a generator such as illustrated in Fig. 2 which have proved highly successful in actual practice for amplifying sweep voltages and producing a linear current sweep at very high repetition rates are as follow:
  • Tubes 9 and 12 are triodes and may be in separate envelopes such as the 615 tubes, or they may be combined into a dual-triode such as the 6SN7 tube.
  • Tube 16 is of the 6L6 beam power type. +B is 300 volts direct current and B is approximately minus eighty (-80) volts direct current.
  • An electronic circuit for producing the flow of a linear current in the deflection coils of a magnetic deflection circuit in response to a trapezoidal input voltage wave comprising a vacuum tube amplifying means having an anode, grid and cathode elements, means connecting said trapezoidal input wave to said grid element, means for connecting the output of said amplifying means from said anode to said deflecting coils, and a degenerative feedback connection between said last named means and said cathode including a resistive-capacitive circuit connected between said cathode and ground operative to attenuate the higher frequencies in the feedback wave during at least the beginning of the waveform of said feedback wave.
  • An electronic circuit for producing the flow of a linear current in the deflection coils of a magentic deflection circuit in response to a trapezoidal input voltage wave comprising a first vacuum tube amplifying circuit means having an anode, grid and cathode elements, means connecting said trapezoidal input wave to said grid element, a second vacuum tube driver circuit having an anode, cathode and at least one grid element, means connecting the output of said first vacuum tube at said anode to the grid of said second vacuum tube, said deflecting coils connected as a load in the anod: circuit of said driver tube, and a degenerative feedback connection, between the cathodes of said first and second vacuum tubes, including a frequency sensitive network connecting the cathode of said amplifying vacuum tube means and ground operative to attenuate the higher frequencies in the feedback wave during at least the beginning of the waveform of said feedback wave.
  • An electronic circuit for producing the flow of a linear current in the deflection coils of a magnetic deflection circuit in response to a trapezoidal input voltage Wave comprising a first vacuum tube amplifying circuit means having an anode, grid and cathode elements, means connecting said trapezoidal input wave to said grid element, a second vacuum tube driver circuit means also having an anode, cathode and at least one grid element, means connecting the output of said first vacuum tube at said anode to the grid element of said second vacuum tube, said deflecting coils connected as a load in the anode circuit of said second vacuum tube, and a degenerative feedback circuit connecting the cathodes of said first and second vacuum tubes including a series resistive element and an unbypassed resistive element connected from the cathode of said second vacuum tube to ground and a resistive-capacitive circuit serially connected between the cathode of said first vacuum tube and ground, said resistive-capacitive circuit operative to attenuate the higher frequencies in the feedback wave during at least
  • An electronic circuit for producing the flow of a linear current in the deflection coils of a magnetic deflection circuit in response to a trapezoidal input voltage wave comprising a first vacuum tube amplifying circuit means having an anode, cathode and grid elements, means connecting said trapezoidal input wave to said grid element, a second vacuum tube amplifying means having an anode, cathode and grid elements, means connecting the anode of said first vacuum tube to the grid of said second vacuum tube, a third vacuum tube circuit operative as a driver stage having an anode, cathode and at least one grid electrode, means connecting the anode of said second vacuum tube to the grid of said driver vacuum tube, said deflecting coils connected as a load in the anode circuit of said driver tube, and a degenerative feedback connection between the cathodes of said first amplifying tube and said driver tube and including a frequency sensitive network connecting the cathode of said first amplifying means and ground operative to attenuate the higher frequencies in the feedback wave during
  • An electronic circuit for producing the flow of a linear current in the deflection coils of a magnetic deflection circuit in response to a trapezoidal input voltage wave comprising a first vacuum tube amplifying circuit means having an anode, cathode and grid elements, means connecting said trapezoidal input wave to said grid element, a second vacuum tube amplifying circuit means having an anode, cathode and grid elements, means connecting the anode of said first vacuum tube to the grid of said second vacuum tube, a third vacuum tube circuit means operative as a driver stage having an anode, cathode and at least one grid element, means connecting the anode of said second vacuum tube to the grid of said driver tube, said deflecting coils connected as a load in the anode circuit of said driver tube, and a degenerative feedback circuit connection between the cathodes of said first and third vacuum tubes including a series resistive element and an unbypassed resistive element connected from the cathode of said third vacuum tube to ground and a resistivecapacitive

Landscapes

  • Amplifiers (AREA)

Description

Dec. 27, 1955 VARELA 2,728,876
MAGNETIC DEFLECTION SWEEP CIRCUIT Filed Feb. 21, 1946 CURRENT TIME ARTHUR A. VARELA au'omuu United States Patent MAGNETIC DEFLECTION SWEEP CIRCUIT Arthur A. V-arela, Washington, D. C. Application February 21, 1946, Serial No. 649,442
Claims. (Cl. 315-27) (Granted under Title 35, U. S. Code (1952), see. 266) This invention relates to electronic circuits and more particularly to magnetic electron-beam deflecting circuits of the type employed in electronic television systems, cathode-ray Oscilloscopes, and cathode-ray tubes in general, wherein the electron beam is deflected by a varying magnetic field that builds up slowly at a uniform rate and decays suddenly, or vice versa.
As is well known, the electron beam is moved across the cathode-ray tube, usually in a horizontal direction, at a constant rate of speed, the magnitude of the movement being proportional to the elapsed time from the beginning of that particular movement. This movement is com= monly called the sweep. Such uniform deflection is obtained by permitting the beam of electrons in the cathoderay tube to traverse a region in which either an electric or magnetic field is caused to build up or to decay at a uniform rate. Although electrostatic deflection is generally more conserving of energy than the magnetic method, unusually high voltages are required to obtain sufficient deflection and adequate focusing of the electron beam. Hence, because of these and other reasons, the magnetic deflection type of tube is commonly preferred.
A uniformly varying magnetic field may be obtained by establishing in a coil a current having a sawtooth wave form. Several considerations are of primary importance in the design of a magnetic deflecting system with an output current wave form of the proper shape. One involves the production of a linear sweep current in the deflection coils despite the presence of undesirable and fortuitous circuit elements such as the distributed capacitance of the deflecting coil and of the circuit wiring. A second consideration is the use of electronic tubes which do not have as linear a plate current characteristic as is desirable. Since a uniformly varyingsawtooth voltage can rather easily be obtained from known circuits, the invention primarily concerns'itself with obtaining a linear current sawtooth wave form from a circuit with a linear sawtooth voltage input.
' Accordingly, one object of the invention is to provide a means for producing a substantially linear sawtooth current in the deflecting coil of a magnetic deflecting system.
Another object of the invention is to provide a high efliciency magnetic deflection system of the type actuated by a sawtooth voltage input wave, the circuit having compensation for the presence of fortuitous circuit elements and non-linear electronic tube characteristics.
The nature of the present invention together with other objects and features thereof will appear more fully in the following description, reference being made to the appended drawing, in which:
Fig. 1 shows'diagrammatically the circuit of a fundamental magnetic deflection sweep system;
Fig. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of an embodiment of the invention;
Fig. 3 is a series of curves showing current-time relationships.
' 'By way of introduction and before considering the methods and apparatus of the invention, it will be well to consider the operation of the fundamental magnetic deflection sweep circuit which is excited or triggered into operation by a sawtooth or trapezoidal voltage input. Referring now to Fig. 1, which illustrates diagrammatically the circult of such a sweep system, a deflection coil 1 is connected in the plate circuit of a power or driver tube 4-, plate voltage being supplied to the circuit by the battery 6 or other direct current source, and the driver tube 4 being biased by the cathode biasing resistor 5. The fortuitous circuit elements appearing in the deflection coil are shown dotted and are represented by the inherent resistance of the coil 3 and the distributed capacitance 2.
The wave shape of the ideal deflection current is a sawtooth 8. T o produce this sawtooth current through a pure inductance, a rectangular voltage wave is required due to the charging effect of the inductance. To maintain a sawtooth current in the inherent resistance of the coil, and also in any other resistance appearing in the driver tube plate circuit, a voltage of sawtooth form is required. Hence, the voltage across the deflection coil 1 in the plate circuit of the driver tube 4 must consist of a rectangular voltage plus a sawtooth voltage, or, in other words, a trapezoidal voltage. This voltage consists of an initial jump proportional to the inductance in the circuit and the rate of change of the current and an ensuing linear rise of voltage at a rate proportional to the total resistance of the plate circuit and the rate of change of the current. Therefore, the voltage wave applied to the grid of the driver tube must also be of trapezoidal shape and in the same sense as the voltage rise, or drop, across the plate circuit load elements, but of a smaller magnitude depending on the amplification of the driver tube.
There are a number of ways of generating the trapezoidal voltage for the input of the driver tube, but none of these are shown since they do not form any part of the invention and are well known in the art. The current in the deflection coil will not fall immediately to zero at the end of the sweep, but will fall in an exponential manner at a rate depending on the amount of resistance and inductance in the circuit. This decay will cause no trouble since the circuit elements are so chosen that the current will fall to zero before the start of the next sweep, this being the returner liyback time of the cathode-ray trace.
The deflection coil has distributed capacitance 2 associated with it, as has the circuit wiring. In effect, this capacitance will be in parallel with the deflection coil inductance. Since the voltage across a condenser in a series resistance-capacitance circuit cannotbe changed suddenly, the distributed capacitance will reduce the steepness of the voltage Wave front. This results in a reduced initial jump of the trapezoidal voltage, causing the wave form to approach the shape of a sawtooth. The application of a sawtooth voltage to a series resistanceinductance circuit results in a current that increases slowly at first and then gradually becomes linear with time. This characteristic is shown graphically by curve B of Fig. 3. The desired current-time characteristic is shown by curve A of the same figure. Therefore, it is observed that the distributed capacitance results in a non-linear deflection current, causing the cathode-ray scan to be.
. the effect of the distributed capacitance of the deflection coil and circuit wiring by varying the gain of the sweep zoidal wave.
system at the beginning of the sweep. To control these actions, a two-stage voltage amplifier is used, feeding into the driver stage. This embodiment is shown schematically in Fig. 2.
Referring now in particular to Fig. 2, the circuit of the invention comprises three vacuum tube amplifiers 9, 12, and 16 arranged in cascade. The final amplifier tube 16 serves as the driver stage for the magnetic deflection coils. A trapezoidal voltage wave of a frequency equal to the desired sweep frequency is fed into the grid of the first amplifier tube 9. This tube may now be assumed to conduct and amplify in the conventional manner, a change of current flow through the tube governed by the changing grid voltage causing an amplified but inverted voltage change to appear across the load resistor 10. This inverted voltage is fed through the coupling condenser 11 to the grid of the second amplifier tube 12. The grid leak resistor 13 for this tube is connected between the grid and the cathode of the tube, the cathode being connected to the negative side of the power supply, designated as B, and also being by-passed to ground potential through the bypass condenser 14. The second amplifier tube 12 is so biased and connected that his conducting continuously. The grid variation on this tube causes the current flow through the tube to vary so that the voltage variation across the load resistor 15 is of the same sense or polarity as the trapezoidal input voltage 7. Since B is of such a value that the plate of the second amplifier 12 rarely swings into the positive voltage values, the amplified trapezoidal wave form may be fed directly to the grid of the driver tube 16. The plate load of this tube consists of the deflection coils 1', here shown as two coils which are wound on opposite sides of the circular iron yoke in order to give a uniform magnetic field across the cathode-ray tube, and the shunting resistor 17 used to limit the current through the deflection coils. The screen grid receives voltage from the screen dropping resistor 18, which, with resistors 19 and 20, forms a voltage divider for biasing the amplifier tube 16.
As thus far described the wave form of the current passing through the deflection coils 1 in the circuit of Fig. 2 has a non-linear rise or a curving rise corresponding to that shown in curve B of Fig. 3. To compensate for the non-linearity caused by the characteristics of the driver tube 16, inverse feedback as taught by the invention is used. When the grid voltage of the driver tube 16 rises in accordance with the positive trapezoidal wave impressed on it, current flow through the tube causes a similar voltage to appear across the cathode resistor 20.
This resistor, not being by-passed, provides a certain amount of feedback and hence linearity to the operation of tube 16. This voltage 24 is fed back through a feedback resistor 21 to the cathode of the first amplifier tube 9 as shown schematically in Fig. 2. Thus this positive i voltage Wave form in eifect reduces the amplitude of the exciting wave form 7, providing inverse feedback, A desirable characteristic of inverse feedback is that it reduces non-linear distortion produced in the amplifier by controlling the overall amplification or gain of the amplifier.
There is, however, the effect caused by the charging of the distributed capacitances of the deflection coils and circuit wiring which must be compensated for if linearity is to be obtained. It is well known in the art that the steepness of a wave front depends upon the number of harmonics and higher frequencies appearing in the wave. Since the feedback voltage 24 has alrather sharp jump at the beginning of the Wave form, a large number of thesehighcr-frequency components comprise the trape- When the feedback wave reaches the cathode of the amplifier tube 9, the circuit comprising resistor 22 and condenser 23 appears as a short circuit to ground to the higher frequencies in the wave. The resistor 22 and the condenser 23 have a very small charging time constant; hence the voltage is decreased at the beginning of the feedback wave due to the lay-passed high frequencies while the condenser 23 is charging. Therefore, at the beginning of the trapezoidal input wave less voltage is fed back into the first amplifier stage, and the gain of that stage and, hence, of the system is a maximum. As the wave continues the condenser 23 becomes charged and less of the high frequency components are shunted to ground. As the voltage on the cathode of the first amplifier rises, the gain of the stage decreases until the nor mal gain is again reached. Increasing the amplification in the circuit has the effect of raising the current wave form, eliminating the delay at the start of the current sawtooth and making the current wave form more linear.
The circuit constants of a generator such as illustrated in Fig. 2 which have proved highly successful in actual practice for amplifying sweep voltages and producing a linear current sweep at very high repetition rates are as follow:
Resistor 10 ohms 27,000 Resistor 13 do 680,000 Resistor 15 do 270,000 Resistor 18 do 8,600 Resistor 19 do 22,000 Resistor 20 do 330 Resistor 21 do 2,700 Resistor 22 do 220 Condenser 11 microfarads 0.05 Condenser 14 do 1.0 Condenser 23 do 0.0015
Tubes 9 and 12 are triodes and may be in separate envelopes such as the 615 tubes, or they may be combined into a dual-triode such as the 6SN7 tube. Tube 16 is of the 6L6 beam power type. +B is 300 volts direct current and B is approximately minus eighty (-80) volts direct current.
Thus there has been described an amplifier and sweep generator for magnetic deflection sweep currents which is triggered by a trapezoidal input voltage wave form and which produces a linear deflection current of sawtooth wave form. The circuit of this invention is primarily for use with sweeps of high repetition rate, but by careful choice of circuit constants satisfactory operation may be obtained at other frequencies. It will be obvious to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications may be made therein without departing from the intent of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefor.
What is claimed is:
1. An electronic circuit for producing the flow of a linear current in the deflection coils of a magnetic deflection circuit in response to a trapezoidal input voltage wave, comprising a vacuum tube amplifying means having an anode, grid and cathode elements, means connecting said trapezoidal input wave to said grid element, means for connecting the output of said amplifying means from said anode to said deflecting coils, and a degenerative feedback connection between said last named means and said cathode including a resistive-capacitive circuit connected between said cathode and ground operative to attenuate the higher frequencies in the feedback wave during at least the beginning of the waveform of said feedback wave.
2. An electronic circuit for producing the flow of a linear current in the deflection coils of a magentic deflection circuit in response to a trapezoidal input voltage wave, comprising a first vacuum tube amplifying circuit means having an anode, grid and cathode elements, means connecting said trapezoidal input wave to said grid element, a second vacuum tube driver circuit having an anode, cathode and at least one grid element, means connecting the output of said first vacuum tube at said anode to the grid of said second vacuum tube, said deflecting coils connected as a load in the anod: circuit of said driver tube, and a degenerative feedback connection, between the cathodes of said first and second vacuum tubes, including a frequency sensitive network connecting the cathode of said amplifying vacuum tube means and ground operative to attenuate the higher frequencies in the feedback wave during at least the beginning of the waveform of said feedback wave.
3. An electronic circuit for producing the flow of a linear current in the deflection coils of a magnetic deflection circuit in response to a trapezoidal input voltage Wave, comprising a first vacuum tube amplifying circuit means having an anode, grid and cathode elements, means connecting said trapezoidal input wave to said grid element, a second vacuum tube driver circuit means also having an anode, cathode and at least one grid element, means connecting the output of said first vacuum tube at said anode to the grid element of said second vacuum tube, said deflecting coils connected as a load in the anode circuit of said second vacuum tube, and a degenerative feedback circuit connecting the cathodes of said first and second vacuum tubes including a series resistive element and an unbypassed resistive element connected from the cathode of said second vacuum tube to ground and a resistive-capacitive circuit serially connected between the cathode of said first vacuum tube and ground, said resistive-capacitive circuit operative to attenuate the higher frequencies in the feedback wave during at least the beginning of the waveform of said feedback wave.
4. An electronic circuit for producing the flow of a linear current in the deflection coils of a magnetic deflection circuit in response to a trapezoidal input voltage wave, comprising a first vacuum tube amplifying circuit means having an anode, cathode and grid elements, means connecting said trapezoidal input wave to said grid element, a second vacuum tube amplifying means having an anode, cathode and grid elements, means connecting the anode of said first vacuum tube to the grid of said second vacuum tube, a third vacuum tube circuit operative as a driver stage having an anode, cathode and at least one grid electrode, means connecting the anode of said second vacuum tube to the grid of said driver vacuum tube, said deflecting coils connected as a load in the anode circuit of said driver tube, and a degenerative feedback connection between the cathodes of said first amplifying tube and said driver tube and including a frequency sensitive network connecting the cathode of said first amplifying means and ground operative to attenuate the higher frequencies in the feedback wave during at least the beginning of the wave form of said feedback wave.
5. An electronic circuit for producing the flow of a linear current in the deflection coils of a magnetic deflection circuit in response to a trapezoidal input voltage wave, comprising a first vacuum tube amplifying circuit means having an anode, cathode and grid elements, means connecting said trapezoidal input wave to said grid element, a second vacuum tube amplifying circuit means having an anode, cathode and grid elements, means connecting the anode of said first vacuum tube to the grid of said second vacuum tube, a third vacuum tube circuit means operative as a driver stage having an anode, cathode and at least one grid element, means connecting the anode of said second vacuum tube to the grid of said driver tube, said deflecting coils connected as a load in the anode circuit of said driver tube, and a degenerative feedback circuit connection between the cathodes of said first and third vacuum tubes including a series resistive element and an unbypassed resistive element connected from the cathode of said third vacuum tube to ground and a resistivecapacitive network serially connected between the cathode of said first vacuum tube and ground, said resistive-capacitive circuit operative to attenuate the higher frequencies in the feedback wave during at least the beginning of the waveform of said feedback wave.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,085,409 Bedford June 29, 1937 2,284,378 Dome May 26, 1942 2,296,727 Moore Sept. 22, 1942 2,414,546 Nagel Jan. 21, 1947 2,436,447 Packard Feb. 24, 1948 2,440,786 Schade May 4, 1948 2,443,030 Foster June 8, 1948 2,445,017 Boadle July 13, 1948 2,466,537 De Vore Apr. 5, 1949 2,466,784 Schade Apr. 12, 1949 2,470,197 Torsch May 17, 1949 2,474,474 Friend June 28, 1949 2,482,150 Bocciarelli Sept. 20, 1949 2,482,737 Shaw Sept. 20, 1949 2,492,090 Bass Dec. 20, 1949 2,510,027 Torsch May 30, 1950 2,516,797 Oliver July 25, 1950 2,521,741 Parker Sept. 12, 1950 2,543,305 Schwarz Feb. 27, 1951 2,545,346 Edelsohn Mar. 13, 1951
US649442A 1946-02-21 1946-02-21 Magnetic deflection sweep circuit Expired - Lifetime US2728876A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US649442A US2728876A (en) 1946-02-21 1946-02-21 Magnetic deflection sweep circuit

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US649442A US2728876A (en) 1946-02-21 1946-02-21 Magnetic deflection sweep circuit

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2728876A true US2728876A (en) 1955-12-27

Family

ID=24604804

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US649442A Expired - Lifetime US2728876A (en) 1946-02-21 1946-02-21 Magnetic deflection sweep circuit

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2728876A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2802068A (en) * 1953-05-11 1957-08-06 Robert H Harwood System of impedance matching utilizing grounded-grid amplifier termination
US2911565A (en) * 1955-04-21 1959-11-03 Pye Ltd Current feedback circuit for balanced amplifiers
US2924744A (en) * 1955-09-08 1960-02-09 Gen Electric Deflection circuit
US2927165A (en) * 1955-01-25 1960-03-01 Fairstein Edward Non-blocking stabilized feed back amplifier
US3646393A (en) * 1969-09-10 1972-02-29 Sarkes Tarzian Linear sawtooth scan generator utilizing negative feedback and miller integration
FR2528588A1 (en) * 1982-06-11 1983-12-16 Elscint France METHOD AND DEVICE FOR COMPOSING AND RECAPING MULTIPLE ELECTRONIC IMAGES ON A PHOTOSENSITIVE SURFACE

Citations (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2085409A (en) * 1932-05-28 1937-06-29 Rca Corp Television system
US2284378A (en) * 1940-05-03 1942-05-26 Gen Electric Deflecting circuit
US2296727A (en) * 1939-09-18 1942-09-22 Philco Radio & Television Corp Deflecting output circuits for cathode ray tubes
US2414546A (en) * 1942-01-06 1947-01-21 Westinghouse Electric Corp Television sweep circuits
US2436447A (en) * 1944-05-23 1948-02-24 Colonial Radio Corp Sweep control for panoramic oscilloscopes
US2440786A (en) * 1943-06-30 1948-05-04 Rca Corp Cathode-ray beam deflecting circuits
US2443030A (en) * 1946-11-09 1948-06-08 Gen Electric Picture size control circuit for television receivers
US2445017A (en) * 1945-09-14 1948-07-13 Amalgamated Wireless Australas Deflecting circuit for cathoderay tubes
US2466537A (en) * 1947-02-28 1949-04-05 Remington Rand Inc Cathode-ray tube sweep circuit
US2466784A (en) * 1945-01-13 1949-04-12 Rca Corp Cathode-ray beam deflecting circuit
US2470197A (en) * 1946-09-25 1949-05-17 Rca Corp Electron beam deflection control system
US2474474A (en) * 1947-02-25 1949-06-28 Rca Corp Power recovery circuit for cathoderay apparatus deflection systems
US2482737A (en) * 1948-05-14 1949-09-20 Rca Corp Television receiver horizontal deflection
US2482150A (en) * 1948-06-02 1949-09-20 Philco Corp Sawtooth current linearizing system
US2492090A (en) * 1948-11-03 1949-12-20 Avco Mfg Corp Automatic frequency control circuit for television deflecting systems
US2510027A (en) * 1947-05-28 1950-05-30 Rca Corp Cathode-ray tube deflection system
US2516797A (en) * 1948-02-28 1950-07-25 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Amplifier circuit having reactive load
US2521741A (en) * 1950-09-12 Deflection circuit
US2543305A (en) * 1949-12-16 1951-02-27 Avco Mfg Corp Circuit for suppressing undesired oscillations in television receivers
US2545346A (en) * 1950-03-22 1951-03-13 Avco Mfg Corp Automatic frequency control for television receivers

Patent Citations (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2521741A (en) * 1950-09-12 Deflection circuit
US2085409A (en) * 1932-05-28 1937-06-29 Rca Corp Television system
US2296727A (en) * 1939-09-18 1942-09-22 Philco Radio & Television Corp Deflecting output circuits for cathode ray tubes
US2284378A (en) * 1940-05-03 1942-05-26 Gen Electric Deflecting circuit
US2414546A (en) * 1942-01-06 1947-01-21 Westinghouse Electric Corp Television sweep circuits
US2440786A (en) * 1943-06-30 1948-05-04 Rca Corp Cathode-ray beam deflecting circuits
US2436447A (en) * 1944-05-23 1948-02-24 Colonial Radio Corp Sweep control for panoramic oscilloscopes
US2466784A (en) * 1945-01-13 1949-04-12 Rca Corp Cathode-ray beam deflecting circuit
US2445017A (en) * 1945-09-14 1948-07-13 Amalgamated Wireless Australas Deflecting circuit for cathoderay tubes
US2470197A (en) * 1946-09-25 1949-05-17 Rca Corp Electron beam deflection control system
US2443030A (en) * 1946-11-09 1948-06-08 Gen Electric Picture size control circuit for television receivers
US2474474A (en) * 1947-02-25 1949-06-28 Rca Corp Power recovery circuit for cathoderay apparatus deflection systems
US2466537A (en) * 1947-02-28 1949-04-05 Remington Rand Inc Cathode-ray tube sweep circuit
US2510027A (en) * 1947-05-28 1950-05-30 Rca Corp Cathode-ray tube deflection system
US2516797A (en) * 1948-02-28 1950-07-25 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Amplifier circuit having reactive load
US2482737A (en) * 1948-05-14 1949-09-20 Rca Corp Television receiver horizontal deflection
US2482150A (en) * 1948-06-02 1949-09-20 Philco Corp Sawtooth current linearizing system
US2492090A (en) * 1948-11-03 1949-12-20 Avco Mfg Corp Automatic frequency control circuit for television deflecting systems
US2543305A (en) * 1949-12-16 1951-02-27 Avco Mfg Corp Circuit for suppressing undesired oscillations in television receivers
US2545346A (en) * 1950-03-22 1951-03-13 Avco Mfg Corp Automatic frequency control for television receivers

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2802068A (en) * 1953-05-11 1957-08-06 Robert H Harwood System of impedance matching utilizing grounded-grid amplifier termination
US2927165A (en) * 1955-01-25 1960-03-01 Fairstein Edward Non-blocking stabilized feed back amplifier
US2911565A (en) * 1955-04-21 1959-11-03 Pye Ltd Current feedback circuit for balanced amplifiers
US2924744A (en) * 1955-09-08 1960-02-09 Gen Electric Deflection circuit
US3646393A (en) * 1969-09-10 1972-02-29 Sarkes Tarzian Linear sawtooth scan generator utilizing negative feedback and miller integration
FR2528588A1 (en) * 1982-06-11 1983-12-16 Elscint France METHOD AND DEVICE FOR COMPOSING AND RECAPING MULTIPLE ELECTRONIC IMAGES ON A PHOTOSENSITIVE SURFACE
DE3320545A1 (en) * 1982-06-11 1983-12-29 Elscint Inc., 02215 Boston, Mass. METHOD AND DEVICE FOR FORMING A MULTIPLE NUMBER OF ELECTRONIC IMAGES ON A LIGHT-SENSITIVE SURFACE
US4575766A (en) * 1982-06-11 1986-03-11 Elscint, Inc. Process and apparatus for forming multiple electronic images on a photosensitive surface

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2594104A (en) Linear sweep circuits
US2414546A (en) Television sweep circuits
US2251851A (en) Electron-beam deflecting circuit
US2440786A (en) Cathode-ray beam deflecting circuits
US2466784A (en) Cathode-ray beam deflecting circuit
US2077574A (en) Television receiver
US2396439A (en) Electron tube circuits
US2230819A (en) Thermionic valve circuits
US2241762A (en) Thermionic valve circuit, particularly for use in television
US2382822A (en) Cathode ray beam deflecting circuits
US2728876A (en) Magnetic deflection sweep circuit
US2588659A (en) High-voltage supply
US2305919A (en) Deflection circuit
US2744169A (en) Pulse amplifier
US2521741A (en) Deflection circuit
US2743382A (en) Deflection circuits
US2448771A (en) Cathode-ray oscillograph circuit
US2548532A (en) Circuit for the generation of a linearly varying current
US2480511A (en) Scanning circuit
US2681411A (en) Linear sweep circuits
US3098171A (en) Transistor vertical deflection circuit
US2296727A (en) Deflecting output circuits for cathode ray tubes
US2644105A (en) Television circuit
US2698400A (en) Generator for dynamic focusing of cathode ray tubes
US2694161A (en) Linearity control for television receivers