US3359006A - Automatic trip mechanism for gramophones - Google Patents

Automatic trip mechanism for gramophones Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3359006A
US3359006A US432169A US43216965A US3359006A US 3359006 A US3359006 A US 3359006A US 432169 A US432169 A US 432169A US 43216965 A US43216965 A US 43216965A US 3359006 A US3359006 A US 3359006A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
abutment
turntable
axis
movement
arresting means
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
US432169A
Inventor
Mortimer Edmund Walter
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.)
GARRARD ENGINEERING Ltd
Original Assignee
GARRARD ENGINEERING Ltd
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 GARRARD ENGINEERING Ltd filed Critical GARRARD ENGINEERING Ltd
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3359006A publication Critical patent/US3359006A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B3/00Recording by mechanical cutting, deforming or pressing, e.g. of grooves or pits; Reproducing by mechanical sensing; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B3/02Arrangements of heads
    • G11B3/08Raising, lowering, traversing otherwise than for transducing, arresting, or holding-up heads against record carriers
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B19/00Driving, starting, stopping record carriers not specifically of filamentary or web form, or of supports therefor; Control thereof; Control of operating function ; Driving both disc and head
    • G11B19/02Control of operating function, e.g. switching from recording to reproducing

Description

Dec. 19, .1967 w. MORTIMER AUTOMATIC TRIP MECHANISM FOR GRAMOPHONES Filed Feb. 12, 1965 United States Patent Ofifice 3,35 9,006 Patented Dec. 19, 1967 3,359,006 AUTOMATIC TRIP MECHANISM FOR GRAMOPHONES Edmund Walter Mortimer, Swindon, England, assignor to Garrard Engineering Limited, Swindon, England, a British company Filed Feb. 12, 1965, Ser. No. 432,169 Claims priority, application Great Britain, Feb. 21, 1964, 7,357/ 64 3 Claims. (Cl. 2741.1]l)
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE In order to avoid the need for periodic mechanical contact between a trip-operating member of an automatic switch-off device for disc-record player and a cam repeltling the member against friction during the playing of each of the last few grooves of a record, a permanent magnet carried by the trip-operating member and a second permanet magnet rotatable with the turntable are provided which repel each other on mutual approach to restore the trip operating member to a predetermined position at the end of each revolution of the turntable during which the advance of the trip-operation member is insufiicient to produce tripping.
This invention relates to gramophones and has for an object to provide improved trip mechanism which becomes operative at the end of the play of a disc record to perform a function, such as the switching-off of a gramophone motor and/or the initiation of a so-called cycling operation for lifting the pick-up off the record and of other operations which may be desired in connection therewith such as the return of the pick-up arm onto a rest, or the initiation of a record-changer cycle or the like. It is usual to utilise for the actuation of the trip mechanism the fact that the run-out groove, which the stylus enters after completion of the play, has a considerably greater radial pitch than the maximum radial pitch employed in practice for playing grooves, and to provide for this purpose a tripcontrol member, generally a lever, which is frictionally coupled with the inward movement of the pick-up arm, at least towards the end of the play of a record, and which, when its resulting movement passes a predetermined position, engages an abutment which rotates round the turntable axis at a speed proportional to the speed of rotation of the record turntable, the mutual co-operation of this abutment and the trip-control member being utilised to trigger off the desired operation, while means are provided which when such co-operation is not produced by a predetermined amount of rotation, generally approximately one full revolution, of the turntable, return the trip-control member to a position at which its distance from the path of the abutment is greater than the amount of its feed produced by a recording groove of maximum pitch during such part of a revolution.
The present invention has for an object to provide a trip mechanism of the kind specified in which this periodic return movement of the trip-control member is effected without physical contact. According to the present invention the return movement of the first control member is effected by a magnetic circuit the flux-conducting path of which includes one element which participates in the rotation of the abutment and another element which is movable with the trip control member so that the magnetic circuit becomes operative periodically to remove the trip-control member by the desired amount from the position producing 'i ts tripping co-operation with the rotary abutment. Preferably magnetic repulsion is used for the purpose in question, and two permanent magnets are preferably used for the purpose, one of these magnets being carried by the trip-control member while the other rotates with the said abutment to become operative once during each revolution of the record turntable unless the trip-control member has previously come into tripping co-operation with the rotary abutment. The features of the invention can be incorporated, replacing the mechanical return means for the trip-control element, in the automatic trip mechanism described and claimed in our USA. Patent No. 2,757,006 or, in the case of a record player having no automatic record-changing mechanism, in the device described in our co-pending British patent application No. 24,738/63,
One embodiment of the invention is illustrated by Way of example in the accompanying drawing, in which FIGURE 1 is a plan view showing the trip mechanism as it would appear with the turntable removed,
FIGURE 2 is a fragmentary section on line 2-2 of FIGURE 1, and
FIGURE 3 is a fragmentary section on line 3-3 of FIGURE 1.
Referring now to the drawing, as the stylus of a gramophone disc-record player equipped with the trip mechanism moves inwardly of the record towards the end of its play, a trip-operating member, represented by a lever 1, is moved inwardly by a friction plate 2 which, by means of a pin 3, is coupled to the pick-up arm 19 of the disc record player, preferably through a lost-motion device so as to avoid imposing any restraint on the inward movement of the pick-up arm until the last few playing grooves of the record disc are reached. The trip-operating lever 1 is so connected to a pivot 10 as to be free not only to move about the pivot 10 in a horizontal plane but also to have its opposite end 1A lifted from its normal plane, thereby raising an arm 17 of a trip mechanism 18 pivoted in the stationary part of the record player or changer. Such upward movement of the arm 17 is utilised to initiate the next record-changing cycle, stop the player, or initiate some other desired operation. Normally the lever is held in its normal horizontal position, and is at the same time coupled with the friction plate 2 by a friction pad 12 which projects from the lower side of the lever 1 and is supported on the friction pad 2,. Lifting the lever 1 is effected at the end of the play of a record by a face cam 14 provided on a member 15 which projects from the spindle structure 7 of the gramophone turntable. The face cam 14 co-operates with a ramp 13 formed on a clip 4 which is riveted to the underside of the lever 1.
In order to prevent the lever 1 from moving towards the axis of the turntable spindle structure 7 sufiiciently to engage the face cam 14 until the pick-up stylus has reached the steep-pitch running-out groove of the record, a short bar magnet 5 is clamped to the arm 1 by the clip 4, and a second bar magnet 6 is similarly clamped to the spindle structure 7 by a clip bracket 8, the arrangement being such that the axes of the two magnets 5 and 6 lie in a common horizontal plane and that when, during the rotation of the turntable, the magnet 6 assumes the position illustrated in FIGURE 1, equal poles of the two magnets 5 and 6 face each other. A repulsion force is thus produced which moves the lever 1 away from the axis of the turntable to a distance at which the opposing faces of magnets 5 and 6 are spaced by more than the maximum amount of approach movement of the lever 1 produced by the advance of the pick-up arm when traversing a complete turn of a recording groove of maximum pitch. When however the stylus enters the running-out groove of a record, whose pitch is a multiple of the maximum pitch of a recording groove, the lever 1 approaches the spindle 7 sufliciently during a single revolution of the turntable to bring the ramp 13 into engagement with the face cam 14 on member 15 which, as can be seen in FIGURE 1, is displaced about the axis of spindle 7 relative to the magnet 6 in such direction that the face carn will engage the ramp 13, and thus lift the lever 1 and cause the trip mechanism 18 to be actuated by its arm 17, before the magnet 6 encounters the magnet of the arm.
Preferably the spindle structure also includes a striker cam 16 which is arranged above the magnet 5 and which, after the trip mechanism has been actuated, pushes the lever 1 back horizontally, out of engagement with the face cam 14, thus avoiding unnecessary repeated lifting and dropping of the trip-operating lever 1.
The trip mechanism 18 has only been illustrated symbolically, and it will be readily appreciated that it may assume a variety of conventional or convenient forms, including that illustrated in our above-mentioned U.S.A. Patent No. 2,757,006, and it will also be appreciated that the actual tripping operation may be carried out, iftdesired, without lifting of the trip operating member, for example in the manner described in our co-pending British patent application No. 24,738/ 63.
What I claim is:
1. In a disc-record player having a rotatable turntable for supporting a grooved disc record to be played, driving means for rotating said turntable about an axis, and a pickup device movable from a starting position towards the turntable axis in co-operation with the groove of such record, the combination comprising an abutment arranged for joint movement with the turntable about said axis and spaced from said axis, and means operable by said abutment to arrest said turntable-driving means, said arresting means being movable from a normal position clear of the path of said abutment into an operating position in the path of said abutment, frictional coupling means operative, at least during a terminal part of such movement of the pick-up device, to yieldingly move said arresting means towards its operative position, a first magnet element participating in such movement of the arresting means towards its operative position, and a second magnet element participating in the movement of the abutment about the turntable axis, said magnet elements being so arranged as to return by magnet repulsion, when meeting each other after the arresting means has approached the operative position beyond a predetermined distance, said arresting means to the said distance from the operative position, said distance being greater than the amount of the approach movement of the arresting means towards the operative position produced by one turn of a standard recording groove but less than that produced by a turn of a standard running-out groove, and the angular position of said second magnet element relative to said abutment means about the turntable axis being such as to ensure, when the arresting means is in its operative position, engagement thereof with said abutment to arrest the drive before the mutual approach of the magnet elements is sufficient to produce such repulsion of the arresting means.
2. The combination as claimed in claim 1, wherein each of said magnet elements includes a permanent magnet.
3. The combination as claimed in claim 2, wherein the record player includes a base plate relative to which the turntable is mounted for rotation about a vertical axis, and the pick-up element includes a pick-up arm mounted for pivotal movement about a vertical axis outside the turntable, the arresting means including a trip-control member in the form of a lever movable into engagement with said abutment member, said permanent magnets being respectively housed in said lever and in said abutment structure, said turntable being mounted on a spindle structure for common rotation with it, and said spindle structure including being equipped with abutment structure which includes said rotary abutment.
References Cited FOREIGN PATENTS 447,228 4/1949 Italy.
LEONARD FORMAN, Primary Examiner.
F. DAMBROSIO, Assistant Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. IN A DISC-RECORD PLAYER HAVING A ROTATABLE TURNTABLE FOR SUPPORTING A GROOVED DISC RECORD TO BE PLAYED, DRIVING MEANS FOR ROTATING SAID TURNABLE ABOUT AN AXIS, AND A PICKUP DEVICE MOVABLE FROM A STARTING POSITION TOWARDS THE TURNTABLE AXIS IN CO-OPERATION WITH THE GROOVE OF SUCH RECORD, THE COMBINATION COMPRISING AN ABUTMENT ARRANGED FOR JOINT MOVEMENT WITH THE TURNTABLE ABOUT SAID AXIS AND SPACED FROM SAID AXIS, AND MEANS OPERABLE BY SAID ABUTMENT TO ARREST SADI TURNTABLE-DRIVING MEANS, SAID ARRESTING MEANS BEING MOVABLE FROM A NORMAL POSITION CLEAR OF THE PATH OF SAID ABUTMENT INTO AN OPERATING POSITION IN THE PATH OF SAID ABUTMENT, FRICTIONAL COUPLING MEANS OPERATIVE, AT LEAST DURING A TERMINAL PART OF SUCH MOVEMENT OF THE PICK-UP DEVICE, TO YIELDINGLY MOVE SAID ARRESTING MEANS TOWARDS ITS OPERATIVE POSITION, A FIRST MAGNET ELEMENT PARTICIPATING IN SUCH MOVEMENT OF THE ARRESTING MEANS TOWARDS ITS OPERATIVE POSITION, AND A SECOND MAGNET ELEMENT PARTICIPATING IN THE MOVEMENT OF THE ABUTMENT ABOUT THE TURNTABLE AXIS, SAID MAGNET ELEMENTS BEING SO ARRANGED AS TO RETURN BY MAGNET REPULSION, WHEN MEETING EACH OTHER AFTER THE ARRESTING MEANS HAS APPROACHED THE OPERATIVE POSITION BEYOND A PREDETERMINED DISTANCE, SAID ARRESTING MEANS TO THE SAID DISTANCE FROM THE OPERATIVE POSITION, SAID DISTANCE BEING GREATER THAN THE AMOUNT OF THE APPROACH MOVEMENT OF THE ARRESTING MEANS TOWARDS THE OPERATIVE POSITION PRODUCED BY ONE TURN OF A STANDARD RECORDING GROOVE BUT LESS THAN THAT PRODUCED BY A TURN OF A STANDARD RUNNING-OUT GROOVE, AND THE ANGULAR POSITION OF SAID SECOND MAGNET ELEMENT RELATIVE TO SAID ABUTMENT MEANS ABOUT THE TURNTABLE AXIS BEING SUCH AS TO ENSURE, WHEN THE ARRESTING MEANS IS IN ITS OPERATIVE POSITION, ENGAGEMENT THEREOF WITH SAID ABUTMENT TO ARREST THE DRIVE BEFORE THE MUTUAL APPROACH OF THE MAGNET ELEMENTS IS SUFFICIENT TO PRODUCE SUCH REPULSION OF THE ARRESTING MEANS.
US432169A 1964-02-21 1965-02-12 Automatic trip mechanism for gramophones Expired - Lifetime US3359006A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7357/64A GB1085211A (en) 1964-02-21 1964-02-21 Improvements in or relating to automatic trip mechanism for gramophones

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3359006A true US3359006A (en) 1967-12-19

Family

ID=9831566

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US432169A Expired - Lifetime US3359006A (en) 1964-02-21 1965-02-12 Automatic trip mechanism for gramophones

Country Status (5)

Country Link
US (1) US3359006A (en)
CH (1) CH417995A (en)
DE (1) DE1943643U (en)
GB (1) GB1085211A (en)
NL (1) NL6501997A (en)

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB1085211A (en) 1967-09-27
CH417995A (en) 1966-07-31
NL6501997A (en) 1965-08-23
DE1943643U (en) 1966-08-04

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2426978A (en) Record changer for phonographs
US3359006A (en) Automatic trip mechanism for gramophones
US3305239A (en) Position trip
GB764490A (en) Improvements in automatic or magazine gramophone apparatus
US3941392A (en) Record player
US2919924A (en) Automatic record-changing phonograph
US2763487A (en) Stop means for record changers
US2287727A (en) Automatic phonograph
US3033576A (en) Record changer
US2300149A (en) Phonograph
US2743109A (en) Record storing and ejecting mechanism for a phonograph
US3243188A (en) Record changing mechanism
US3625521A (en) Record-changer gramophones
US2684248A (en) Record player with an automatic record changer
US3174754A (en) Tone arm brake assembly
US3545768A (en) Record players
US2511604A (en) Repeat device for automatic phonographs
US2965377A (en) Automatic phonograph tripping mechanism
US3963245A (en) Apparatus for automatically returning a pick-up arm in a record player
GB606458A (en) Improvements in and relating to gramophones
US2732212A (en) carson
US2392111A (en) Automatic record changer for phonographs
US3339928A (en) Velocity trip mechanism
GB748055A (en) Improvements in automatic phonographs
US3626504A (en) Record player