US3196729A - Musical instruments - Google Patents

Musical instruments Download PDF

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US3196729A
US3196729A US256363A US25636363A US3196729A US 3196729 A US3196729 A US 3196729A US 256363 A US256363 A US 256363A US 25636363 A US25636363 A US 25636363A US 3196729 A US3196729 A US 3196729A
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Prior art keywords
string
strings
fret
frets
fingerboard
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US256363A
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Burns James Ormston
Chandler Gordon Spencer
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Ormston Burns Ltd
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Ormston Burns Ltd
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10HELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
    • G10H1/00Details of electrophonic musical instruments
    • G10H1/32Constructional details
    • G10H1/34Switch arrangements, e.g. keyboards or mechanical switches specially adapted for electrophonic musical instruments
    • G10H1/342Switch arrangements, e.g. keyboards or mechanical switches specially adapted for electrophonic musical instruments for guitar-like instruments with or without strings and with a neck on which switches or string-fret contacts are used to detect the notes being played
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S84/00Music
    • Y10S84/01Plural speakers
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S84/00Music
    • Y10S84/30Fret control

Definitions

  • FIG. 17 JAMEs ORms-ron BuRus Goloou J'Enc ER Cnnuufik BMW. suzn qmk I Z OQNELS y 27, 1965 o. BURNS ETAL 3,
  • the present invention relates to musical instruments and is more particularly concerned with stringed instruments especially those having a fretted finger board such as guitars.
  • the present invention envisages utilizing the strings and finger board as a selector switch for controlling the operation of one or more other musical instruments or sound-producing devices.
  • a stringed musical instrument such as a guitar, includes switching means adapted for selective operation upon the fiigering of one or more strings on the finger board for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device.
  • the switch means may be in the form of a plurality of switches having normally open contacts and each responsive to pressure applied to a particular fret when a particular string is stopped against the finger board adjacent thereto, or to the application of digital pressure to a particular string against a particular locality of the finger board.
  • switches can be used with either metallic or non-metallic strings, and moreover, the latter of such said arrangements can be utilized in a stringed instrument provided with a fingerboard having a continuous outer surface, that is to say a fingerboard on which no frets are provided.
  • each of the strings should be electrically insulated from the other strings, and this may readily be achieved either by providing the instrument with a bridge of non-conducting material or a bridge havin metallic stringengaging portions electrically insulated from one another, by anchoring the ends of the strings below the bridge either in an anchorage or in a tromulant device in such a manner that they are insulated from one another, and by electrically insulating from one another the spindles of the winding mechanisms for the strings at the machine head.
  • each fret in the finger boards should include a number of metallic string-engaging portions equal to the number of strings, the individual metallic string-engaging portions in each fret being insulated electrically from one another.
  • a fret may be in the form of a moulded base of a plastic material such as nylon and having at one edge a slot or groove to receive, at spaced intervals from one another, a series of metallic inserts of good electrically conducting material such as silver or nickel-silver to serve as string engaging portions. The separation between adjacent inserts in a fret base moulding can be maintained by the insertion of insulators therebetween.
  • Such a construction has the advanta e that it is possible to replace the string-engaging inserts without necessitating the replacement of the fret base moulding.
  • Electrical connections to the string-enportions of the frets may conveniently be made by means of a printed circuit board interposed between the neck of the instrument and the finger board.
  • Such printed circuit boards may be provided with miniature pin sockets to receive miniature pins projecting from the fret base moulmngs and connecting with the metallic inserts therein.
  • each fret comprises a plurality of fret segments, each formed such as by casting in a suitable electrically conducting material such as nickel silver and each having, at one end, a miniature pin for insertion in a miniature socket in the printed circuit board.
  • a suitable electrically conducting material such as nickel silver
  • fret segments are compression moulded in, for example, a phenolic resin, to form a unit wherein the segments are spaced from one another and insulated from one another.
  • t suitable bridge can be constructed in a somewhat r manner to a fret and can comprise a base moulding of a plastic material such as nylon and having at its upper edge a groove to receive a plurality of metal inserts in spaced relationship to one another.
  • a bridge constructed entirely of insulating material could be used, it is preferable for metallic string-engaging elements to be provided and an improvement in the tone and in the decay tim of oscillation of a string can be obtained by tensioning a string at a location as near as practical behind the bridge.
  • the bridge may be provided with a plurality of apertured plate units disposed at spaced a little from the side thereof remote from the finger board and having their apertures at localities nearer to the base of the bridge than its associated stringengaging metal inserts.
  • the ends of the strings behind the bridge may be anchored in a conventional anchoring plate and insulated therefrom and from one another by providing inserts of an insulating material in the normal string-receiving bores of the anchoring plate.
  • the ends of the strings may be anchored in a tremulant unit.
  • Such a trernulant unit is often provided with a metal spindle having a series of diametral bores therethrough, each string passing around a portion of the outer periphery of the spindle and then through a bore and being anchored by being wound around toggle element and twisted around itself.
  • the strings can conveniently be insulated from one another by providing the spindle with an external sheath of an insulating material such as nylon and by lining each of the bores with a sleeve of insulating material such as nylon and having at one end a recess to receive a toggle element. Electrical connections to the strings may convenientl be made by leads connecting with the metal string-engaging inserts on the bridge.
  • the stringed instrument has a single metallic string, or if mul-ti-stringed, has a single metallic string, the others being non-metallic. Electrical connection is made to the metallic string and to each of the frets, so that signals can be derived corresponding to the fingering of that string.
  • each fret can be a suitably shaped piece of metal.
  • the single string in combination with the frets can serve as a twenty-four way selector switch.
  • Signals derived therefrom may be used to control any other musical instrument capable of being ops ea /as erated by remote control or may be used to control an electronic sound-producing device.
  • the signals produced may thus be applied to part of the control circuitry of an organ having electric or electro-pneumatic action, or may be applied to a series of devices for operating a Vibraphone or a Xylophone, or yet again be applied to control the pitch or frequency of an electric oscillatory circuit system connected to an amplifier and loudspeaker system so that audible sounds having a fundamental pitch corresponding to the fundamental or a harmonic or a sub-harmonic of the note for which the string is fingered can be produced independently of vibration of the string.
  • auxiliary switch means may be provided in series with that fret to obivate the continuous production of a sound at a pitch corresponding thereto when the instrument is not being played or fingered.
  • Such auxiliary switch may conveniently be in the form of a foot switch.
  • signals derived from any or all of the pick-up units in response to vibration of the string or strings can also be applied to an amplifier and loudspeaker system in a conventional manner so that many combinations of sounds of differing tone, timbre and quality can be obtained.
  • the switches formed by the fret segments and the strings can be utilized in low voltage control circuits or for direct switching or may be utilized to control a bank of relays having contacts which can be connected in any desired manner to control other apparatus.
  • additional sound-producing apparatus may take the form of a number of variable frequency oscillators, each associated with an individual string and that the switches provided by that string and its associated fret segments be embodied in a frequency control circuit.
  • the switching network may be employed for controlling percussive operating mechanism for a Vibraphone.
  • FIGS. 1A and 1B are block schematic diagrams showing a guitar provided with a selector switch means responsive to fingering of the strings on the finger board for controlling another sound-producing device or devices,
  • FIG. 2 is a section along the line lIlI of FIG. 3 and is a detail view of the neck and finger board according to one embodiment in which fret segments are movable and have an individual switch associated therewith,
  • FIG. 3 is a section along the line Ill-4H of FIG. 2,
  • FIG. 4 is a section along the line IV-IV of FIG. 5 and is a detail view of the neck and finger board according to another embodiment in which finger board parts are movable and have individual switches associated with them,
  • FIG. 5 is a section along the line VV of FIG. 4,
  • FIG. 6 is a section along the line Vii-VI of FIG. 7 and is a detail view of the neck and finger boards according to another embodiment in which frets have metal string engaging covers,
  • FIG. 7 is a section along the line VIlVil of FIG. 6,
  • FIG. 8 is a section along the line VIII-Vll1 of FIG. 9 and is a detail view of the neck and finger board according to a further embodiment including a printed circuit board for connecting with the fret segments,
  • FIG. 9 is a section along the line IXIX of FIG. 8,
  • FIG. 10 is a detail section to an enlarged scale of one form of fret
  • FlG. 11 is a transverse section of another form of fret in which fret segments are moulded into a unit
  • PEG. 12 is a perspective view of one form of bridge
  • FIG. 13 is a transverse section of the bridge shown in FIG. 12,
  • FIG. 14 is a perspective view of one form of tremulant unit in which the strings can be insulated from one another
  • FIG. 15 is a detail sectional view of the spindle of the tremulant unit shown in FIG. 14,
  • FIG. 16 is a sectional view of a combined bridge and tremulant unit in which the strings can be insulated from one another
  • FIG. 17 is a block diagram of one arrangement in which an oscillator is associated with each string of a guitar and in which external connection is made with each string and fret segment.
  • a guitar 3! ⁇ comprises a body 31, a neck 32 having a finger board 33 and a ma chine head 34, a bridge 35, a tremulant unit 36, strings 38, and pick-up units 37.
  • the body 3 1 of an electric guitar is solid, and up to four sets of pick-up units 37 are provided, Signals from the pick-up units, selected and mixed at 41 as desired, are fed to an amplifier as and loudspeaker 49 for producing sounds derived from the vibrations of the strings.
  • a guitar according to the present invention is provided with a plurality of switching means indicated generally at 42 each associated with a particular string and a particular fret on the finger board.
  • the switching means may be in the form of small switches located below the finger board and mechanically operated either by movable portions or segments of the frets upon application of pressure thereto by a string or by movable portions of the finger board itself upon application of digital pressure thereto through a string, as will be hereinafter described.
  • a multi-core lead 43 connects the switching means to control the operation of one or more other sound-producing devices or instruments such as a Variable frequency oscillatory system it feeding an amplifier 45 and loudspeaker 46.
  • the system 44 may be a single oscillator or a plurality of oscillators and produce either a single note which corresponds to the highest or the lowest note fingered on the strings on the finger board, or a chord combination corresponding to all the notes fingered on all the strings, some or all of the notes being passed additionally or alternatively to a second amplifier 47 and loudspeaker
  • a switching network 4-9 such as a relay bank, may be interposed between the switching means 42 and any devices controlled thereby and arranged to provide signals in a form acceptable to the control system of any other electrically operated or controlled musical instrument such as an organ having electric or electropneurnatic action or a Vibraphone.
  • a lead 50 can extend from the switching network 49 to a control relay bank 511 between a console 52 and organ chamber 53.
  • Fingering the finger board 33 of the guitar can effectively be equivalent to playing upon one or more manuals of the organ which may be blown and have pipes or may be electric or electronic.
  • a lead 54 can be extended from the switching network 49 to a striking mechanism 55 for operating a Vibraphone 56.
  • frets of the finger board are provided with metal string-engaging portions and these in combination with metal strings serve as the switches of the switching means.
  • a multicore lead 57 connects the strings to the oscillatory system 44 directly or through the switching network 49.
  • Each fret 6d comprises a plurality of fret segments such as til-one for each string, slidably mounted in the finger board 33. Between the finger board and the neck is a set of small switches, one for each fret segment, such as switch 62 for the segment 61. When digital pressure is applied to a string adjacent a. selected fret, pressure of the string on the fret segment concerned displaces the fret segment and operates the switch associated therewith.
  • FIGS. 4 and 5 Adjacent each fret so the finger board is provided with a plurality of small displaceable sections such as 65, the number of sections being equal to the number of strings. Below each section is a small switch, such as 64 which is associated with the section 63. When digital pressure is applied to a string adjacent a selected fret, pressure is also applied to the relevant section which is thereby displaced and effects actuation of the associated switch.
  • each fret do is provided with a plurality of metal string engaging segments 65 of good electrical conductivity and with easy solderability. Silver and nickel-silver are suitable examples.
  • the segments may be electro-deposited, or in the form of films or thin sheets adhesively secured or moulded onto a base 66 of insulating material such as nylon. Connection is made to the segments by soldered leads, such as lead 67 soldered to the segment 65.
  • a printed circuit board 63 is interposed between the neck .32 and the finger board 33 and for each fret is provided with a number of miniature pin sockets 69 equal to the number of strings 37.
  • a fret so is provided with an equal number of moulded-in pins 7% which connect with metal string engaging segments and are receivable in the sockets
  • a fret can be constructed as illustrated in FIG. 10 with a base moulding 6d of an insulating material such as nylon embodying the requisite number of spaced pins 7t
  • the base has a dovetail groove 71 into which the pins project slightly: Wire-like se ments '72 can be slid into the grooves 71 to project slightly thereabove and at the same time engage the appropriate pin 75 ⁇ whilst the segments 72 can be separated from one another by inserting insulators between adjacent segments.
  • the base moulding 66 can be provided with a barbed projection "73 which can extend substantially throughout its length or be in the form of a series of rod-like sleeves enclosing parts of the pins to assist in retaining the fret in the fingerboard.
  • the string engaging segments 7 are constructed integrally with the pins lit and the requisite number of segments are assembled togcther into a composite moulding '75 such as of a phenolic resin or nylon.
  • bridge 35 is illustrated in FIGS. 12 and 13 and comprises a base moulding 76 of an insulating material having at its upper edge a number of metal string engaging portions '77 equal to the number of strings.
  • the portions '77 are of good electrically conducting material to which connections can readily be soldered, such as silver or nickel-silver, and are preferably notched for string location purposes. Connections such as 78 are soldered to the portions 77.
  • FIG. 14 Whilst the ends of the strings can be anchored in a conventional anchorage provided that they are insulated from one another, it is preferable for them to be anchored in a tremulant unit 36.
  • a tremulant unit 36 Whilst the ends of the strings can be anchored in a conventional anchorage provided that they are insulated from one another, it is preferable for them to be anchored in a tremulant unit 36.
  • a tremulant unit 36 One form of such unit is illustrated in FIG. 14 and comprises a spindle 79 journalled in bearings 8h, 81 carried on a base plate 82 which can be secured directly to the guitar body 31 or can be attached thereto by a flap 33 extending over the bottom edge of the body and secured to the bottom thereof.
  • the spindle 79 may be of an insulating material but is preferably of metal and is provided with an outer sleevetlike coating 35 of an insulating material.
  • Transverse bores as for receiving the strings are each lined with sleeves lid of insulating material, A string end passes around part of the periphery of the coated s indle 79, through a sleeve and is Wrapped around a toggle element 37 as illustrated in FIG. 15.
  • Spring 10% exerts on the spindle "/9 a torque to balance the torque exerted on the spindle by the strings 38 when tensioned and the spindle can be angularly displaced manually by handle till.
  • the bri go and tremulant unit can be combined together into a single composite unit as illustrated in PEG. 16.
  • the spindle 7% is journalled in side members 38 of which only one is shown and a carriage 89 is slidably mounted on rollers hi9, 91, between the side members.
  • the carriage as carrie for each string a bridge member 92 which is adjustable in position thereon in a longitudinal direction by means of an adiustment screw 93 and spring 94, and in an up-and-down direction by means of a pair of screws of which one K? is shown.
  • Each bridge member has a metal string engaging portion 96 insulated from the rest of the composite unit; this is conveniently achieved by constructing each bridge member of an insulating material such as nylon.
  • each bridge member and located on the tremulant spindle side thereof is an apertured plate 9'7 having an aperture 93 through which a string 37 passes, the apertured plate causing the string to be bent over the string engaging portion of the bridge unit at an angle greater than if it were to pass from the bridge unit directly to the spindle '79 or under a grooved roller 9% of insulating material or of metal and coated with an insulating material such as nylon.
  • Spring 1% xerts in the spindle '79 a torque to balance the torque exerted on it by the strings 33 when tensioned and the spindle can be angularly displaced manually by a handle in.
  • FIG. 17 illustrates in block form an arrangement including six oscillators 112, i 13, lid, lilo", lilo, 117, each associated one with each of the strings of a six stringed guitar. Connections to the string en aging portions of the bricge and to all the string engag g segments of the frets are extended to a frequency control system by a rnulticore lead 119 having a number of cores equal to the number of strings 37 multiplied by the number of frets The switches formed by the fret segments associated with any one string and that string cause the frequency control system 113 to select the frequency of the oscillator associated with that string in accordance with the fingering on the finger board an signals from all the oscillators are passed to a mixer 12d and thence to an amplifier i231 and loudspeaker 2122.
  • a stringed musical instrument comprising a fingerboard, a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard and normally spaced therefrom, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, eaci a base moulded or" a plastic rret cor 7 material and having at its outer edge a groove, a plurality of metall'c inserts received in said groove in spaced relationship to one another, the number of inserts in each fret corresponding to the number of strings and corresponding inserts in all the frets being associated with an individual string, the application of d ital pressure to any particular string at a region above a fret bringing that string into engagement with the associated insert on that fret, means for electrically insulating said strings from one another, electrical connecting means connected with each of said strings and electrical connecting deans extending through the frets and connected with each of said string-engaging inserts, said strings and said stringengaging inserts serving as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device.
  • a stringed musical instrument comprising a fingerboard, a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard and normally spaced therefrom, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret comprising a base moulded in a plastic material and having at its outer edge a groove, a plurality of metallic inserts received in said groove in spaced relationship with one another, the number of inserts corresponding to the number of strings and corresponding inserts in all said frets being associated with an individual string, the application of digital pressure to any particular string at a region above a fret bringing that string into engagement with the associated insert on that fret, and a plurality of spaced pins moulded into said base, one end of each pin extending into said groove to engage electrically with one of said inserts and the other end projecting from said base, means for electrically insulating said strings from one another, electrical connecting means connected with each of said strings individually and with the other ends of each of said pins individually, said strings and said string-engaging portions serving as switching means for
  • a stringed musical instrument comprising a neck, a fingerboard on said neck, a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard and normally spaced therefrom, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret having a plurality of electrically conducting string-engaging portions associated one with each string and a plurality of pins each connected electrically with an individual string-engaging portion and having one end projecting from said fret below said fingerboard, means for electrically insulating said strings from one another, electrical connecting means connected with each of said strings individually, and electrical connecting means connected with each of said string engaging portions, said last-mentioned connecting means comprising a printed circuit board in said neck adjacent said fingerboard and a plurality of sockets in said board for receiving ends of said pins for connecting with said string-engaging portions individually, said strings and said string-engaging portions serving as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device,
  • a stringed musical instrument comprising a neck, a fingerboard on said neck, a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard and normally spaced therefrom, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret comprising a plurality of fret segments assembled in spaced relationship to one another in a plastic moulding to form a composite unit, each segment being generally T-shaped including a bar serving as stringengaging portion and a shank projecting from said moulding to extend below said fingerboard and forming a connecting pin, means for electrically insulating said strings from one another, electrical connecting means connected with each of said strings individually, electrical connecting means connected with each of said string engaging portion, said last-mentioned connecting means comprising a printed circuit board in neck adjacent said fingerboard and a plurality of sockets on said board for receiving said connecting pins to make electrical connection with each of engaging portions individually, said strings and said string-engaging portions serving as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other soundproducing device.
  • a stringed musical instrument such as a guitar comprising a body, a neck connected to said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine head on said neck, a cor bridge and trernulant device on said body, said machine head and said device being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard in normal spaced relationship thereto, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret having a plurality of electrically conducing stringengaging portions for association one with each string, said device including a spindle, means for journalling said spindle, an outer coating of insulating material on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of stringreceiving bores, one for each string, a lining of insulating material within each bore, spring means for exerting a torque on said spindle, a handle for manually angularly displacing said spindle, a plurality of bridge members, one for each string, each bridge rncm er being
  • said other sound-producing device comprises an electric oscillatory circuit system and amplifier and loudspeaker system, said switching means controlling the pitch or frequency of said oscillatory circuit system.
  • said other sound-producing device comprises a plurality of variable frequency oscillators, each associated with an individual string and in which said switching means provided by each string and its associated fret string-engaging portions are embodied in a frequency control circuit for the oscillator associated with that string.
  • An instrument according to claim 5 in which said other sound-producing device is an organ having electric or electropneumatic action and in which said switching means is adapted to control a said organ through a switching network.
  • An instrument according to claim 5 including at least one pick-up for deriving electrical signals from vibrations of the strings and feeding signals to an amplifier and loudspeaker system.
  • a stringed musical instrument such as a guitar comprising a body, a neck connected to said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine head on said neck, a combined bridge and tremulant device on said body, said machane head and said device being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard in normal spaced relationship thereto, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret having a plurality of electrically conducting string-engaging portions for association one with each string, said device including a spindle, means for journalling said spindle, an outer coating of insulating material ti on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of stringreceiving bores, one for each string, a lining of insulating material Within each bore, spring means for exerting a torque on said spindle, a handle for manually angularly displacing said spindle, a plurality of bridge members, one for each string, each bridge member being of
  • a stringed musical instrument such as a guitar comprising a body, a neck connected to said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine head on said neck, a combined bridge and tremulant device on said body, said machine head and said device being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard in normal spaced relationship thereto, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret comprising a base moulded of a plastic material having at its outer edge a groove, a plurality of metallic inserts received in said groove in spaced relationship to one another, the of inserts in each i'ret corresponding to the number of strings and corresponding inserts in all the frets being associated with an individual string, said device including a spindle, means of journalling said s indie, an outer coating of insulating material on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of st ing-receiving bores, one for each string, a lining of insul
  • a stringed musical instrument such as a guitar comprising a body, a neck connected to said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine head on said neck, a combined bridge and tremulant device on said body, said machine head and said device being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending over said lingerboard in normal spaced rela ionship thereto, a plurality f spaced transversely extending frets along said lingerboard, each fret comprising a base moulded in a plastic material and having at its outer edge a groove, a plurality of metallic inserts received in said groove in spaced relationship with one another, the number of inserts corresponding to the number of strings and corresponding inserts in all said frets being associated with an individual string, the application of digital pressure to any particular string at a region above a fret bringing that string into engagement with the associated insert on that fret, and a plurality of spaced pins moulded into said base, one end of each pin extending into said groove to engage electrically With one of said insert
  • a stringed musical instrument such as a guitar comprising a body, a neck connected to said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine head on said neck, a combined bridge and tremulant device on said body, said machine bead and said device being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard in normal spaced relationship thereto, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each tret comprising a plurality of fret segments ssernbled in spaced relationship to one another in a plastic moulding to form a composite unit, each segment being generally T-shapd including a bar serving as string-engaging portion and a shank projecting from said moulding to extend below said fingerboard and forming a connecting pin, said device includin a spindle, means for journalling said spindle, an outer coating of insulating material on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of stringreceiving bores, one for each string, a lining of
  • a stringed musical instrument comprising a body, a tremulant device on said body, a neck connected to said body, a bridge on said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine cad on said neck, said instrument being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending from said machine head over said fingerboard in normal spaced relationship therefrom, over said bridge to said tremulant device, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret having a plurality of electrically conducting string-engaging portions associated one With each string, said bridge having 1 l a plurality of electrically conducting stringengaging portions each for engagement by an individual one of said strings, electrical connecting means connected With each of said string-engaging portions of said bridge individually, electrical connecting means extending through the frets and connecting With each of said string-engaging portions individually, said device including a spindle, means for journalling said spindle, an outer coating of insulating material on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of string-

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Description

J y 1965 J. o. BURNS ETAL 3, ,7
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Filed Feb. 5, 1963 5 Sheets-Sheet l INVENTORS: James ORMsrbn BuRuS 60!? non SF IVCER C HA NM :1!
A 1 To BNEYJ MUS I CAL INSTRUMENTS Filed Feb. 5, less 5 Sheets-Shet 2 INVENTORS. JA ms: 0 Rnsrau B W? as July 27, 1965 J. o. BURNS ETAL 3,196,729
v MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Filed Feb. 5, 1965 5 Sheets-Sheet 5 ung? 54 L -F/G.4.
INVENTORS: FIG. 17. JAMEs ORms-ron BuRus Goloou J'Enc ER Cnnuufik BMW. suzn qmk I Z OQNELS y 27, 1965 o. BURNS ETAL 3,
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Filed Feb. 5, 1963 5 Sheets-Sheet 4 INVENTORS: JAMES ORmsrou BuRNs Gokbou SE NcER CIIAuoLuz July 27; 1965 J. o. BURNS ETAL 3,
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Filed Feb. 5, 1963 5 Sheets-Sheet 5 INVENTORS: JAMES OR MSYON 8114' N s Sec 0 ON SPENCEQ Can u nuaf United States Patent 3,196,729 MUl CAL HIQSTRUMENTS llamas @rmston Burns, Buclrhurst Hill, and Gordon Spencer Qhandler, Frimley, near Aldershot, England, assignors to Ormston Burns Limited, London, England Filed Feb. 5, 1963, Ser. No. 256,363 Claims priority, application Great Britain, Feb. 5, ,1962,
is (Ilaiins. Yet. 84-171} The present invention relates to musical instruments and is more particularly concerned with stringed instruments especially those having a fretted finger board such as guitars.
The utility of a guitar as a solo instrument or in combination with other instruments is well known, and at the present time there is considerable demand for an electric guitar which customarily has a solid body carrying one or more pick-up units for deriving electrical signals from vibrations of the strings which are usually of metal, the signals from the pick-up units being applied to one or more amplifier and loudspeaker systems for the production of audible sounds.
The present invention envisages utilizing the strings and finger board as a selector switch for controlling the operation of one or more other musical instruments or sound-producing devices.
Thus according to one feature of the present invention a stringed musical instrument, such as a guitar, includes switching means adapted for selective operation upon the fiigering of one or more strings on the finger board for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device.
The switch means may be in the form of a plurality of switches having normally open contacts and each responsive to pressure applied to a particular fret when a particular string is stopped against the finger board adjacent thereto, or to the application of digital pressure to a particular string against a particular locality of the finger board. Either of such arrangements can be used with either metallic or non-metallic strings, and moreover, the latter of such said arrangements can be utilized in a stringed instrument provided with a fingerboard having a continuous outer surface, that is to say a fingerboard on which no frets are provided.
in a preferred arrangement, however, it is envisaged providing th frets with metal string-engaging portions and providing metal strings, so that each string and each of the frets with which it may come in contact serve as switching contacts.
in a multiple-stringed instrument it is necessary that each of the strings should be electrically insulated from the other strings, and this may readily be achieved either by providing the instrument with a bridge of non-conducting material or a bridge havin metallic stringengaging portions electrically insulated from one another, by anchoring the ends of the strings below the bridge either in an anchorage or in a tromulant device in such a manner that they are insulated from one another, and by electrically insulating from one another the spindles of the winding mechanisms for the strings at the machine head.
in order to avoid cross-feed from one st in to another, it is desirable that each fret in the finger boards should include a number of metallic string-engaging portions equal to the number of strings, the individual metallic string-engaging portions in each fret being insulated electrically from one another. For example, a fret may be in the form of a moulded base of a plastic material such as nylon and having at one edge a slot or groove to receive, at spaced intervals from one another, a series of metallic inserts of good electrically conducting material such as silver or nickel-silver to serve as string engaging portions. The separation between adjacent inserts in a fret base moulding can be maintained by the insertion of insulators therebetween. Such a construction has the advanta e that it is possible to replace the string-engaging inserts without necessitating the replacement of the fret base moulding. Electrical connections to the string-enportions of the frets may conveniently be made by means of a printed circuit board interposed between the neck of the instrument and the finger board. Such printed circuit boards may be provided with miniature pin sockets to receive miniature pins projecting from the fret base moulmngs and connecting with the metallic inserts therein.
in another envisaged construction, each fret comprises a plurality of fret segments, each formed such as by casting in a suitable electrically conducting material such as nickel silver and each having, at one end, a miniature pin for insertion in a miniature socket in the printed circuit board. To form a complete fret, the approprate number, for example four or six, fret segments are compression moulded in, for example, a phenolic resin, to form a unit wherein the segments are spaced from one another and insulated from one another.
t suitable bridge can be constructed in a somewhat r manner to a fret and can comprise a base moulding of a plastic material such as nylon and having at its upper edge a groove to receive a plurality of metal inserts in spaced relationship to one another. Whilst a bridge constructed entirely of insulating material could be used, it is preferable for metallic string-engaging elements to be provided and an improvement in the tone and in the decay tim of oscillation of a string can be obtained by tensioning a string at a location as near as practical behind the bridge. For this purpose the bridge may be provided with a plurality of apertured plate units disposed at spaced a little from the side thereof remote from the finger board and having their apertures at localities nearer to the base of the bridge than its associated stringengaging metal inserts.
The ends of the strings behind the bridge may be anchored in a conventional anchoring plate and insulated therefrom and from one another by providing inserts of an insulating material in the normal string-receiving bores of the anchoring plate. Alternatively the ends of the strings may be anchored in a tremulant unit. Such a trernulant unit is often provided with a metal spindle having a series of diametral bores therethrough, each string passing around a portion of the outer periphery of the spindle and then through a bore and being anchored by being wound around toggle element and twisted around itself. With such a tremulant unit the strings can conveniently be insulated from one another by providing the spindle with an external sheath of an insulating material such as nylon and by lining each of the bores with a sleeve of insulating material such as nylon and having at one end a recess to receive a toggle element. Electrical connections to the strings may convenientl be made by leads connecting with the metal string-engaging inserts on the bridge.
In a simple embodiment, the stringed instrument has a single metallic string, or if mul-ti-stringed, has a single metallic string, the others being non-metallic. Electrical connection is made to the metallic string and to each of the frets, so that signals can be derived corresponding to the fingering of that string. In such an arrangement it is not necessary for the frets to have a segmented construction and thus each fret can be a suitably shaped piece of metal. In an instrument provided conveniently with twenty-four frets, the single string in combination with the frets can serve as a twenty-four way selector switch. Signals derived therefrom may be used to control any other musical instrument capable of being ops ea /as erated by remote control or may be used to control an electronic sound-producing device. The signals produced may thus be applied to part of the control circuitry of an organ having electric or electro-pneumatic action, or may be applied to a series of devices for operating a Vibraphone or a Xylophone, or yet again be applied to control the pitch or frequency of an electric oscillatory circuit system connected to an amplifier and loudspeaker system so that audible sounds having a fundamental pitch corresponding to the fundamental or a harmonic or a sub-harmonic of the note for which the string is fingered can be produced independently of vibration of the string. Since, under conditions where a string is not fingered, i.e. where the string is used as an open string, the'st-ring would normally make contact with the fret nearest the machine head, auxiliary switch means may be provided in series with that fret to obivate the continuous production of a sound at a pitch corresponding thereto when the instrument is not being played or fingered. Such auxiliary switch may conveniently be in the form of a foot switch.
It will of course be understood that signals derived from any or all of the pick-up units in response to vibration of the string or strings can also be applied to an amplifier and loudspeaker system in a conventional manner so that many combinations of sounds of differing tone, timbre and quality can be obtained.
By employing more strings and providing metal stringengaging segments on the frets a greater number of switch signals can be derived; for example, with a six-stringed guitar provided with twenty-four frets, a maximum of six times twenty-four switches is available. Although in most cases such individual switches will be operated in chord combinations of six in dependence on the fingering of individual strings, in order to make full use of all such switches an external multi-core lead having a number of cores at least equal to the number of strings multiplied by one more than the number of frets, for example six multiplied by twenty-five which is equal to one hundred and fifty in the example selected, is required.
The switches formed by the fret segments and the strings can be utilized in low voltage control circuits or for direct switching or may be utilized to control a bank of relays having contacts which can be connected in any desired manner to control other apparatus. In one embodiment it is envisaged that additional sound-producing apparatus may take the form of a number of variable frequency oscillators, each associated with an individual string and that the switches provided by that string and its associated fret segments be embodied in a frequency control circuit.
There is at the present time some demand for a vibraphone in combination with a guitar and the present invent-ion envisages that the switching network may be employed for controlling percussive operating mechanism for a Vibraphone.
The invention will be further described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIGS. 1A and 1B are block schematic diagrams showing a guitar provided with a selector switch means responsive to fingering of the strings on the finger board for controlling another sound-producing device or devices,
FIG. 2 is a section along the line lIlI of FIG. 3 and is a detail view of the neck and finger board according to one embodiment in which fret segments are movable and have an individual switch associated therewith,
FIG. 3 is a section along the line Ill-4H of FIG. 2,
FIG. 4 is a section along the line IV-IV of FIG. 5 and is a detail view of the neck and finger board according to another embodiment in which finger board parts are movable and have individual switches associated with them,
FIG. 5 is a section along the line VV of FIG. 4,
FIG. 6 is a section along the line Vii-VI of FIG. 7 and is a detail view of the neck and finger boards according to another embodiment in which frets have metal string engaging covers,
FIG. 7 is a section along the line VIlVil of FIG. 6,
FIG. 8 is a section along the line VIII-Vll1 of FIG. 9 and is a detail view of the neck and finger board according to a further embodiment including a printed circuit board for connecting with the fret segments,
FIG. 9 is a section along the line IXIX of FIG. 8,
FIG. 10 is a detail section to an enlarged scale of one form of fret,
FlG. 11 is a transverse section of another form of fret in which fret segments are moulded into a unit,
PEG. 12 is a perspective view of one form of bridge,
FIG. 13 is a transverse section of the bridge shown in FIG. 12,
FIG. 14 is a perspective view of one form of tremulant unit in which the strings can be insulated from one another,
FIG. 15 is a detail sectional view of the spindle of the tremulant unit shown in FIG. 14,
FIG. 16 is a sectional view of a combined bridge and tremulant unit in which the strings can be insulated from one another,
FIG. 17 is a block diagram of one arrangement in which an oscillator is associated with each string of a guitar and in which external connection is made with each string and fret segment.
Referring initially to FIG. 1, a guitar 3!} comprises a body 31, a neck 32 having a finger board 33 and a ma chine head 34, a bridge 35, a tremulant unit 36, strings 38, and pick-up units 37. In a conventional construction the body 3 1 of an electric guitar is solid, and up to four sets of pick-up units 37 are provided, Signals from the pick-up units, selected and mixed at 41 as desired, are fed to an amplifier as and loudspeaker 49 for producing sounds derived from the vibrations of the strings.
A guitar according to the present invention is provided with a plurality of switching means indicated generally at 42 each associated with a particular string and a particular fret on the finger board. The switching means may be in the form of small switches located below the finger board and mechanically operated either by movable portions or segments of the frets upon application of pressure thereto by a string or by movable portions of the finger board itself upon application of digital pressure thereto through a string, as will be hereinafter described. A multi-core lead 43 connects the switching means to control the operation of one or more other sound-producing devices or instruments such as a Variable frequency oscillatory system it feeding an amplifier 45 and loudspeaker 46. The system 44 may be a single oscillator or a plurality of oscillators and produce either a single note which corresponds to the highest or the lowest note fingered on the strings on the finger board, or a chord combination corresponding to all the notes fingered on all the strings, some or all of the notes being passed additionally or alternatively to a second amplifier 47 and loudspeaker A switching network 4-9 such as a relay bank, may be interposed between the switching means 42 and any devices controlled thereby and arranged to provide signals in a form acceptable to the control system of any other electrically operated or controlled musical instrument such as an organ having electric or electropneurnatic action or a Vibraphone. A lead 50 can extend from the switching network 49 to a control relay bank 511 between a console 52 and organ chamber 53. Fingering the finger board 33 of the guitar can effectively be equivalent to playing upon one or more manuals of the organ which may be blown and have pipes or may be electric or electronic. A lead 54 can be extended from the switching network 49 to a striking mechanism 55 for operating a Vibraphone 56.
in another arrangement the frets of the finger board are provided with metal string-engaging portions and these in combination with metal strings serve as the switches of the switching means. A multicore lead 57 connects the strings to the oscillatory system 44 directly or through the switching network 49.
One arrangement of a guitar neck in which SV/liC1- are provided is illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3. Each fret 6d comprises a plurality of fret segments such as til-one for each string, slidably mounted in the finger board 33. Between the finger board and the neck is a set of small switches, one for each fret segment, such as switch 62 for the segment 61. When digital pressure is applied to a string adjacent a. selected fret, pressure of the string on the fret segment concerned displaces the fret segment and operates the switch associated therewith.
Another arrangement is illustrated in FIGS. 4 and 5. Adjacent each fret so the finger board is provided with a plurality of small displaceable sections such as 65, the number of sections being equal to the number of strings. Below each section is a small switch, such as 64 which is associated with the section 63. When digital pressure is applied to a string adjacent a selected fret, pressure is also applied to the relevant section which is thereby displaced and effects actuation of the associated switch.
Arrangements of the neck and finger board in which metal string engaging portions are provided are illustrated in FiGS. 6 and 7, 8 and 9, 10, and 11. In the construction shown in FIGS. 6 and 7 each fret do is provided with a plurality of metal string engaging segments 65 of good electrical conductivity and with easy solderability. Silver and nickel-silver are suitable examples. The segments may be electro-deposited, or in the form of films or thin sheets adhesively secured or moulded onto a base 66 of insulating material such as nylon. Connection is made to the segments by soldered leads, such as lead 67 soldered to the segment 65. When it is desired to replace a fret in the course of normal wear and tear it is necessary to unsolder the connections,'remove the existing fret, insert a fresh fret and solder the connections to the segments of the new fret. This is time consuming and involves the risk that connections may not be soldered to the correct segments. These difficulties can be obviated in the construction illustrated in FIGS. 8 and 9, or 10, or 11. A printed circuit board 63 is interposed between the neck .32 and the finger board 33 and for each fret is provided with a number of miniature pin sockets 69 equal to the number of strings 37. A fret so is provided with an equal number of moulded-in pins 7% which connect with metal string engaging segments and are receivable in the sockets To facilitate the replacement of the string enga ing segments 65 a fret can be constructed as illustrated in FIG. 10 with a base moulding 6d of an insulating material such as nylon embodying the requisite number of spaced pins 7t At its outer edge the base has a dovetail groove 71 into which the pins project slightly: Wire-like se ments '72 can be slid into the grooves 71 to project slightly thereabove and at the same time engage the appropriate pin 75} whilst the segments 72 can be separated from one another by inserting insulators between adjacent segments. The base moulding 66 can be provided with a barbed projection "73 which can extend substantially throughout its length or be in the form of a series of rod-like sleeves enclosing parts of the pins to assist in retaining the fret in the fingerboard. In the construction illustrated in FIG. 11 the string engaging segments 7 are constructed integrally with the pins lit and the requisite number of segments are assembled togcther into a composite moulding '75 such as of a phenolic resin or nylon.
When the strings themselves form part of the switches of the switching means in the guitar, it is necessary for the strings to be insulated from one another electrically and for connection to be made to each of them. Connection can be most conveniently made at the bridge. One form of bridge 35 is illustrated in FIGS. 12 and 13 and comprises a base moulding 76 of an insulating material having at its upper edge a number of metal string engaging portions '77 equal to the number of strings. The portions '77 are of good electrically conducting material to which connections can readily be soldered, such as silver or nickel-silver, and are preferably notched for string location purposes. Connections such as 78 are soldered to the portions 77.
Whilst the ends of the strings can be anchored in a conventional anchorage provided that they are insulated from one another, it is preferable for them to be anchored in a tremulant unit 36. One form of such unit is illustrated in FIG. 14 and comprises a spindle 79 journalled in bearings 8h, 81 carried on a base plate 82 which can be secured directly to the guitar body 31 or can be attached thereto by a flap 33 extending over the bottom edge of the body and secured to the bottom thereof. The spindle 79 may be of an insulating material but is preferably of metal and is provided with an outer sleevetlike coating 35 of an insulating material. Transverse bores as for receiving the strings are each lined with sleeves lid of insulating material, A string end passes around part of the periphery of the coated s indle 79, through a sleeve and is Wrapped around a toggle element 37 as illustrated in FIG. 15. Spring 10% exerts on the spindle "/9 a torque to balance the torque exerted on the spindle by the strings 38 when tensioned and the spindle can be angularly displaced manually by handle till.
The bri go and tremulant unit can be combined together into a single composite unit as illustrated in PEG. 16. The spindle 7% is journalled in side members 38 of which only one is shown and a carriage 89 is slidably mounted on rollers hi9, 91, between the side members. The carriage as carrie for each string a bridge member 92 which is adjustable in position thereon in a longitudinal direction by means of an adiustment screw 93 and spring 94, and in an up-and-down direction by means of a pair of screws of which one K? is shown. Each bridge member has a metal string engaging portion 96 insulated from the rest of the composite unit; this is conveniently achieved by constructing each bridge member of an insulating material such as nylon. Secured to each bridge member and located on the tremulant spindle side thereof is an apertured plate 9'7 having an aperture 93 through which a string 37 passes, the apertured plate causing the string to be bent over the string engaging portion of the bridge unit at an angle greater than if it were to pass from the bridge unit directly to the spindle '79 or under a grooved roller 9% of insulating material or of metal and coated with an insulating material such as nylon. Spring 1% xerts in the spindle '79 a torque to balance the torque exerted on it by the strings 33 when tensioned and the spindle can be angularly displaced manually by a handle in.
FIG. 17 illustrates in block form an arrangement including six oscillators 112, i 13, lid, lilo", lilo, 117, each associated one with each of the strings of a six stringed guitar. Connections to the string en aging portions of the bricge and to all the string engag g segments of the frets are extended to a frequency control system by a rnulticore lead 119 having a number of cores equal to the number of strings 37 multiplied by the number of frets The switches formed by the fret segments associated with any one string and that string cause the frequency control system 113 to select the frequency of the oscillator associated with that string in accordance with the fingering on the finger board an signals from all the oscillators are passed to a mixer 12d and thence to an amplifier i231 and loudspeaker 2122.
We claim:
1. A stringed musical instrument comprising a fingerboard, a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard and normally spaced therefrom, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, eaci a base moulded or" a plastic rret cor 7 material and having at its outer edge a groove, a plurality of metall'c inserts received in said groove in spaced relationship to one another, the number of inserts in each fret corresponding to the number of strings and corresponding inserts in all the frets being associated with an individual string, the application of d ital pressure to any particular string at a region above a fret bringing that string into engagement with the associated insert on that fret, means for electrically insulating said strings from one another, electrical connecting means connected with each of said strings and electrical connecting deans extending through the frets and connected with each of said string-engaging inserts, said strings and said stringengaging inserts serving as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device.
2. A stringed musical instrument comprising a fingerboard, a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard and normally spaced therefrom, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret comprising a base moulded in a plastic material and having at its outer edge a groove, a plurality of metallic inserts received in said groove in spaced relationship with one another, the number of inserts corresponding to the number of strings and corresponding inserts in all said frets being associated with an individual string, the application of digital pressure to any particular string at a region above a fret bringing that string into engagement with the associated insert on that fret, and a plurality of spaced pins moulded into said base, one end of each pin extending into said groove to engage electrically with one of said inserts and the other end projecting from said base, means for electrically insulating said strings from one another, electrical connecting means connected with each of said strings individually and with the other ends of each of said pins individually, said strings and said string-engaging portions serving as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device.
3. A stringed musical instrument comprising a neck, a fingerboard on said neck, a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard and normally spaced therefrom, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret having a plurality of electrically conducting string-engaging portions associated one with each string and a plurality of pins each connected electrically with an individual string-engaging portion and having one end projecting from said fret below said fingerboard, means for electrically insulating said strings from one another, electrical connecting means connected with each of said strings individually, and electrical connecting means connected with each of said string engaging portions, said last-mentioned connecting means comprising a printed circuit board in said neck adjacent said fingerboard and a plurality of sockets in said board for receiving ends of said pins for connecting with said string-engaging portions individually, said strings and said string-engaging portions serving as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device,
4. A stringed musical instrument comprising a neck, a fingerboard on said neck, a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard and normally spaced therefrom, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret comprising a plurality of fret segments assembled in spaced relationship to one another in a plastic moulding to form a composite unit, each segment being generally T-shaped including a bar serving as stringengaging portion and a shank projecting from said moulding to extend below said fingerboard and forming a connecting pin, means for electrically insulating said strings from one another, electrical connecting means connected with each of said strings individually, electrical connecting means connected with each of said string engaging portion, said last-mentioned connecting means comprising a printed circuit board in neck adjacent said fingerboard and a plurality of sockets on said board for receiving said connecting pins to make electrical connection with each of engaging portions individually, said strings and said string-engaging portions serving as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other soundproducing device.
5. A stringed musical instrument such as a guitar comprising a body, a neck connected to said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine head on said neck, a cor bridge and trernulant device on said body, said machine head and said device being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard in normal spaced relationship thereto, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret having a plurality of electrically conducing stringengaging portions for association one with each string, said device including a spindle, means for journalling said spindle, an outer coating of insulating material on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of stringreceiving bores, one for each string, a lining of insulating material within each bore, spring means for exerting a torque on said spindle, a handle for manually angularly displacing said spindle, a plurality of bridge members, one for each string, each bridge rncm er being of insulating material and each having a metal string-engaging portion, means for mounting all of said bridge members for longitudinal movement upon variation of tension in strings upon angular displacement of said spindle, electrical connecting means connected with the metal string-engaging portion of the bridge members individually, and electrical connecting means extending through said frets and connected with the metal string-engaging portions of said frets individually, the strings and string-engaging portions of the frets being adapted to serve as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device.
6. An instrument according to claim 5' in which said other sound-producing device comprises an electric oscillatory circuit system and amplifier and loudspeaker system, said switching means controlling the pitch or frequency of said oscillatory circuit system.
7. An instrument according to claim 5 in which said other sound-producing device comprises a plurality of variable frequency oscillators, each associated with an individual string and in which said switching means provided by each string and its associated fret string-engaging portions are embodied in a frequency control circuit for the oscillator associated with that string.
8.'An instrument according to claim 5 in which said other sound-producing device is a Vibraphone and in which said switching means is applied through a switching network to control percussive operating mechanism for such Vibraphone.
An instrument according to claim 5 in which said other sound-producing device is an organ having electric or electropneumatic action and in which said switching means is adapted to control a said organ through a switching network.
lltl. An instrument according to claim 5 including at least one pick-up for deriving electrical signals from vibrations of the strings and feeding signals to an amplifier and loudspeaker system.
Jill. A stringed musical instrument such as a guitar comprising a body, a neck connected to said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine head on said neck, a combined bridge and tremulant device on said body, said machane head and said device being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard in normal spaced relationship thereto, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret having a plurality of electrically conducting string-engaging portions for association one with each string, said device including a spindle, means for journalling said spindle, an outer coating of insulating material ti on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of stringreceiving bores, one for each string, a lining of insulating material Within each bore, spring means for exerting a torque on said spindle, a handle for manually angularly displacing said spindle, a plurality of bridge members, one for each string, each bridge member being of insulating material and each having a metal string-engaging portion, means for mountin all of said bridge members for longitudinal movement upon variation of tension in strings upon angular displacement of said spindle, electrical connecting means connected with the metal string-engaging portions of the bridge members individually, and electrical connecting means connected with each of said string engaging portions, said last-mentioned connecting means comprising a printed circuit board in said neck adjacent said fingerboard and pin-like connections extending from said printed circuit board through said frets and connect- With the metal string-engaging portions of said frets individually, the strings and string-engaging portions of the frets being adapted to serve as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device.
12. A stringed musical instrument such as a guitar comprising a body, a neck connected to said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine head on said neck, a combined bridge and tremulant device on said body, said machine head and said device being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard in normal spaced relationship thereto, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret comprising a base moulded of a plastic material having at its outer edge a groove, a plurality of metallic inserts received in said groove in spaced relationship to one another, the of inserts in each i'ret corresponding to the number of strings and corresponding inserts in all the frets being associated with an individual string, said device including a spindle, means of journalling said s indie, an outer coating of insulating material on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of st ing-receiving bores, one for each string, a lining of insul ating material with each bore, sp ing means for exerting a torque on said spindle, a handle for manually angularly displacing said spindle, a plurality of bridge members, one for each string, each bridge member being of insulating material and each having a metal string engaging portion, means for mounting all of said bridge members for longitudinal movement upon variation of tension in strings upon angular displacement of said spindle, trical connecting means connected with the metal stringengaging portions of the bridge members individually, and electrical connecting means extending through said frets and connected W' h the metal stringengaging portions of said frets individually, the strings and string-engaging portions of t e frets being adapted to serve as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device.
A stringed musical instrument such as a guitar comprising a body, a neck connected to said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine head on said neck, a combined bridge and tremulant device on said body, said machine head and said device being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending over said lingerboard in normal spaced rela ionship thereto, a plurality f spaced transversely extending frets along said lingerboard, each fret comprising a base moulded in a plastic material and having at its outer edge a groove, a plurality of metallic inserts received in said groove in spaced relationship with one another, the number of inserts corresponding to the number of strings and corresponding inserts in all said frets being associated with an individual string, the application of digital pressure to any particular string at a region above a fret bringing that string into engagement with the associated insert on that fret, and a plurality of spaced pins moulded into said base, one end of each pin extending into said groove to engage electrically With one of said inserts and the other end projecting from said base, said device including a spindle, means for journalling said spindle, an outer coating of insulating material on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of string-receiving bores, one for each string, a lining of insulating material Within each bore, spring means for exerting a torque on said spindle, a handle for manually angularly displacing said spindle, a plurality of bridge members, one for each string, each bridge member being of insulating material and each having a metal stringengaging portion, means for mounting all of said bridge members for longitudinal movement upon variation of tension in strings upon angular displacement of said spindle, electrical connecting means connected With the metal string-engaging portions of the bridge members individually, and electrical connecting means connected With each of said string-engaging portions, said last-mentioned connecting means comprising a printed circuit board in said neck adjacent said fingerboard and a plurality of sockets in said board for receiving the said projecting ends of said pins for connecting With said stringengaging portions individually, the strings and stringengaging portion of the frets being adapted to serve as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device.
14. A stringed musical instrument such as a guitar comprising a body, a neck connected to said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine head on said neck, a combined bridge and tremulant device on said body, said machine bead and said device being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending over said fingerboard in normal spaced relationship thereto, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each tret comprising a plurality of fret segments ssernbled in spaced relationship to one another in a plastic moulding to form a composite unit, each segment being generally T-shapd including a bar serving as string-engaging portion and a shank projecting from said moulding to extend below said fingerboard and forming a connecting pin, said device includin a spindle, means for journalling said spindle, an outer coating of insulating material on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of stringreceiving bores, one for each string, a lining of insulating material Within each bore, spring means for exerting a torque on said spindle, a handle for manually angularly displacing said spindle, a plurality of bridge members, one for each string, each bridge member being of insulating material and each having a metal string-engaging portion, means for mounting all of said bridge members for longitudinal movement upon variation of tension in strings upon angular displacement of said spindle, electrical con necting means connected With the metal string-engaging portions of the bridge members individually, and electrical connecting naeans connected with each or": said string-engaging portions, said last -mentioned connecting means comprising a printed circuit board in said neck adjacent said fingerboard and a plurality of sockets in said board for receiving ends of said pins for connecting with said string-engaging portions individually, the strings and string-engaging portions of the frets being adapted to serve as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other sound-producing device.
l5. A stringed musical instrument comprising a body, a tremulant device on said body, a neck connected to said body, a bridge on said body, a fingerboard on said neck, a machine cad on said neck, said instrument being adapted to receive a plurality of metallic strings extending from said machine head over said fingerboard in normal spaced relationship therefrom, over said bridge to said tremulant device, a plurality of spaced transversely extending frets along said fingerboard, each fret having a plurality of electrically conducting string-engaging portions associated one With each string, said bridge having 1 l a plurality of electrically conducting stringengaging portions each for engagement by an individual one of said strings, electrical connecting means connected With each of said string-engaging portions of said bridge individually, electrical connecting means extending through the frets and connecting With each of said string-engaging portions individually, said device including a spindle, means for journalling said spindle, an outer coating of insulating material on said spindle, said spindle having a plurality of string-receiving bores, one for each string, a lining of insulating material Within each bore, spring means for exerting a torque on said spindle, a handle for manually angularly displacing said spindle, said strings and said string-engaging portions of said frets being adapted to 12 serve as switching means for controlling the operation of at least one other soundproducing device.
References Cited lay the Examiner UNITED ST1- TIES PATENTS 496,358 1/93 Montanelli 84-171 1,384,843 7/21 Maxwell 84-171 2,912,894 11/59 Hess 84-471 FOREIGN PATENTS 562,119 7/30 Germany.
LEYLAND M. MARTIN, Primary Examiner.
LEO SlvfiLOW, Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. A STRINGED MUSICAL INSTRUMENT COMPRISING A FINGERBOARD A PLURALITY OF METALLIC STRING EXTENDING OVER SAID FINGERBOARD AND NORMALLY SPACED THEREFROM, A PLURALITY OF SPACED TRANSVERSELY EXTENDING FRETS ALONG SAID FINGERBOARD, EACH FRET COMPRISING A BASE MOULDED OF PLASTIC MATERIAL AND HAVING AT ITS OUTER EDGE A GROOVE, A PLURALITY OF METALLIC INSERTS RECEIVED IN SAID GROOVE IN SPACED RELATIONSHIP TO ONE ANOTHER, THE NUMBER OF INSERTS IN EACH FRET CORRESPONDING TO THE NUMBER OF STRINGS AND CORRESPONDING INSERTS IN ALL THE FRETS BEING ASSOCIATED WITH AN INDIVIDUAL STRING, THE APPLICATION OF DIGITAL PRESSURE TO ANY PARTICULAR STRING AT A REGION ABOVE A FRET BRINGING THAT STRING INTO ENGAGEMENT WITH THE ASSOCIATED INSERT ON THAT FRET, MEANS FOR ELECTRICALLY INSULATING SAID STRINGS FROM ONE ANOTHER, ELECTRICALLY CONNECTING MEANS CONNECTED WITH EACH OF SAID STRINGS AND ELECTRICAL CONNECTING MEANS EXTENDING THROUGH THE FRETS AND CONNECTED WITH EACH OF SAID STRING-ENGAGING INSERTS, SAID STRINGS AND SAID STRINGENGAGING INSERTS SERVING AS SWITCHING MEANS FOR CONTROLLING THE OPERATION OF AT LEAST ONE OTHER SOUND-PRODUCING DEVICE.
US256363A 1962-02-05 1963-02-05 Musical instruments Expired - Lifetime US3196729A (en)

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Cited By (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3270119A (en) * 1964-03-04 1966-08-30 Allen Organ Co Electric musical instrument for producing percussion type sound effects
US3388206A (en) * 1965-05-21 1968-06-11 Marvin Pope Guitar with remote control organ playing means
US3465086A (en) * 1965-12-06 1969-09-02 James J Borell Combining system for musical instruments
US3482028A (en) * 1966-08-15 1969-12-02 Ivan F Cox Guitar type keying system for other instruments
US3539699A (en) * 1967-01-26 1970-11-10 Richard A Johnson Two-in-one stringed electronic instrument with string pickup and tone generator
US3629483A (en) * 1968-11-21 1971-12-21 Ruel E Welch Multivocal music system
US3731582A (en) * 1970-07-14 1973-05-08 C Gullickson Sight and sound teaching aid for keyboard instruments
US3845686A (en) * 1973-08-01 1974-11-05 A Salvo Intonation guide for player of string instrument
US3902395A (en) * 1973-10-11 1975-09-02 William L Avant Stringed musical instrument with electronic time division multiplexing circuitry
US4030397A (en) * 1972-06-12 1977-06-21 Nelson Walter E Electrically amplified musical instrument control apparatus
JPS5283224A (en) * 1975-12-30 1977-07-12 Kawai Musical Instr Mfg Co Electric guitar
US4151776A (en) * 1975-06-20 1979-05-01 Norlin Industries, Inc. Electronic pickup system for stringed musical instrument
US4171661A (en) * 1977-01-03 1979-10-23 Rose Floyd D Guitar tremolo method and apparatus
WO1980001013A1 (en) * 1978-10-31 1980-05-15 S Ogata String tension adjustment apparatus for stringed musical instrument
US4549461A (en) * 1982-03-15 1985-10-29 Rose Floyd D Apparatus for restraining and fine tuning the strings of a musical instrument, particularly guitars
FR2592734A1 (en) * 1986-01-08 1987-07-10 Adm Electronic apparatus provided in order to serve as interface between an electric guitar and a synthesiser
US4987815A (en) * 1988-07-25 1991-01-29 Gary Shockley Acoustic and electric combination guitar
US5990411A (en) * 1998-05-04 1999-11-23 Kellar Bass Systems Methods for utilizing switches on the back of the neck of a musical instrument
US20090056520A1 (en) * 2007-08-30 2009-03-05 Rivera Humberto Jason E Fret and fingerboard for stringed instruments

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US490358A (en) * 1893-01-24 Electrical musical instrument
US1384843A (en) * 1920-08-12 1921-07-19 Jr William J Maxwell Musical instrument
DE502119C (en) * 1928-02-28 1930-07-11 Walter Rudolf Maas Violin teaching instrument
US2912894A (en) * 1957-05-20 1959-11-17 Hess Frank Multiple instrument playing device

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US490358A (en) * 1893-01-24 Electrical musical instrument
US1384843A (en) * 1920-08-12 1921-07-19 Jr William J Maxwell Musical instrument
DE502119C (en) * 1928-02-28 1930-07-11 Walter Rudolf Maas Violin teaching instrument
US2912894A (en) * 1957-05-20 1959-11-17 Hess Frank Multiple instrument playing device

Cited By (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3270119A (en) * 1964-03-04 1966-08-30 Allen Organ Co Electric musical instrument for producing percussion type sound effects
US3388206A (en) * 1965-05-21 1968-06-11 Marvin Pope Guitar with remote control organ playing means
US3465086A (en) * 1965-12-06 1969-09-02 James J Borell Combining system for musical instruments
US3482028A (en) * 1966-08-15 1969-12-02 Ivan F Cox Guitar type keying system for other instruments
US3539699A (en) * 1967-01-26 1970-11-10 Richard A Johnson Two-in-one stringed electronic instrument with string pickup and tone generator
US3629483A (en) * 1968-11-21 1971-12-21 Ruel E Welch Multivocal music system
US3731582A (en) * 1970-07-14 1973-05-08 C Gullickson Sight and sound teaching aid for keyboard instruments
US4030397A (en) * 1972-06-12 1977-06-21 Nelson Walter E Electrically amplified musical instrument control apparatus
US3845686A (en) * 1973-08-01 1974-11-05 A Salvo Intonation guide for player of string instrument
US3902395A (en) * 1973-10-11 1975-09-02 William L Avant Stringed musical instrument with electronic time division multiplexing circuitry
US4151776A (en) * 1975-06-20 1979-05-01 Norlin Industries, Inc. Electronic pickup system for stringed musical instrument
JPS5283224A (en) * 1975-12-30 1977-07-12 Kawai Musical Instr Mfg Co Electric guitar
US4171661A (en) * 1977-01-03 1979-10-23 Rose Floyd D Guitar tremolo method and apparatus
WO1980001013A1 (en) * 1978-10-31 1980-05-15 S Ogata String tension adjustment apparatus for stringed musical instrument
US4549461A (en) * 1982-03-15 1985-10-29 Rose Floyd D Apparatus for restraining and fine tuning the strings of a musical instrument, particularly guitars
FR2592734A1 (en) * 1986-01-08 1987-07-10 Adm Electronic apparatus provided in order to serve as interface between an electric guitar and a synthesiser
US4987815A (en) * 1988-07-25 1991-01-29 Gary Shockley Acoustic and electric combination guitar
US5990411A (en) * 1998-05-04 1999-11-23 Kellar Bass Systems Methods for utilizing switches on the back of the neck of a musical instrument
US20090056520A1 (en) * 2007-08-30 2009-03-05 Rivera Humberto Jason E Fret and fingerboard for stringed instruments
US7507888B2 (en) 2007-08-30 2009-03-24 Rivera Humberto Jason E Fret and fingerboard for stringed instruments

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