US3382604A - Toy phonographic telephone - Google Patents

Toy phonographic telephone Download PDF

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Publication number
US3382604A
US3382604A US412180A US41218064A US3382604A US 3382604 A US3382604 A US 3382604A US 412180 A US412180 A US 412180A US 41218064 A US41218064 A US 41218064A US 3382604 A US3382604 A US 3382604A
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United States
Prior art keywords
plate
telephone
record
arm
tone arm
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
US412180A
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English (en)
Inventor
John W Ryan
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.)
Mattel Inc
Original Assignee
Mattel Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Mattel Inc filed Critical Mattel Inc
Priority to US412180A priority Critical patent/US3382604A/en
Priority to NO156359A priority patent/NO120828B/no
Priority to DE19651797233 priority patent/DE1797233A1/de
Priority to DEM50534U priority patent/DE1932549U/de
Priority to DEM63895A priority patent/DE1283135B/de
Priority to ES0308971A priority patent/ES308971A1/es
Priority to FR7295A priority patent/FR1429561A/fr
Priority to GB9802/65A priority patent/GB1027100A/en
Priority to BE660894A priority patent/BE660894A/xx
Priority to NL6503396A priority patent/NL6503396A/xx
Priority to CH767665A priority patent/CH423583A/de
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3382604A publication Critical patent/US3382604A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B33/00Constructional parts, details or accessories not provided for in the other groups of this subclass
    • G11B33/02Cabinets; Cases; Stands; Disposition of apparatus therein or thereon
    • G11B33/06Cabinets; Cases; Stands; Disposition of apparatus therein or thereon combined with other apparatus having a different main function
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63HTOYS, e.g. TOPS, DOLLS, HOOPS OR BUILDING BLOCKS
    • A63H33/00Other toys
    • A63H33/30Imitations of miscellaneous apparatus not otherwise provided for, e.g. telephones, weighing-machines, cash-registers
    • A63H33/3016Telephones

Definitions

  • a toy phonographic telephone includes a housing simulating a real telephone.
  • a battery-operated turntable rotates a record carrying suitable messages reproduced by a tone arm carrying a needle and a speaker cone assembly which is connected by a hollow tube to the receiver portion of a hand set resembling a real telephone hand set.
  • a first button which actuates a mechanism energizing the turntable, is accessible only after the hand set has been removed and a second button automatically deenergizes the system when the hand set is returned.
  • This invention relates to a new and useful toy telephone and more particularly to a toy phonographic telephone.
  • Another disadvantage resides in the fact that it is usually necessa-ry to open a lid or the like so that direct access may be had to the phonograph turntable for the purpose of changing phonograph records.
  • tone arm positioning and controlling mechanism employed in some of these prior art toy telephones is designed along conventional phonograph lines not especially adapted for usage by children in active play simulating the use of a portable telephone.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide a toy telephone of the type described which includes a new and useful record changing means facilitating the accurate placement of records on a turntable within the toy telephone safely, efficiently and expeditiously.
  • Yet another object ofthe present invention is to provide a new and useful battery operated toy phonographic telephone.
  • a further object of the present invention is to provide a new and useful phonographic toy telephone having phonograph means incorporated therein which is espe- "ice cially designed for satisfactory operation as a phonograph without detracting from the simulation of a real telephone.
  • a toy phonograp-hic telephone which includes a housing simulating a real telephone.
  • the telephone includes a battery-opergraph playing mechanism by depressing a button mounted on the telephone.
  • the button actuates a mechanism which energizes the turntable and releases the tone arm so that it lowers onto the phonograph record. Should the chlid let the record play to the end of its message, the tone arm is automatically raised and reset.
  • a reset button is depressed by the hand set was ing the tone arm control mechanism to reposition the tone arm at its starting point above the phonograph record.
  • the tone arm conrtol mechanism also repositions the tone arm at its starting point automatically whenever an attempt is made to change records while the record in the telephone is being played. 2
  • the phonograph records are of the random message type and each record includes an eccentric cam or deep groove which is engaged by the phonograph needle at the end of the playing cycle to force the tone arm into engagement with a lever which actuates the tone arm reset mechanism.
  • FIGURE 1 is an exploded, perspective view of a toy telephone of the present invention, with parts broken away to show internal construction;
  • FIGURE '2 is an enlarged, plan view of the telephone of FIGURE 1 with its cover removed;
  • FIGURE 3 is a plan view, on an enlarged scale, of a portion of the device shown in FIGURE 2;
  • FIGURE 4 is an enlarged, partial cross-sectional view taken along the line 44 of FIGURE 2;
  • FIGURE 5 is an enlarged, partial cross-sectional view taken along the line of 55 of FIGURE 3;
  • FIGURE 6 is an enlarged, partial cross-sectional view taken along the line of 66 of FIGURE 2;
  • FIGURE 7 is an enlarged, partial cross-sectional view taken along line 7--7 of FIGURE 3;
  • FIGURE 8 is an enlarged, partial cross-sectional view taken along line 88 of FIGURE 2;
  • FIGURE 9 is an enlarged, partial cross-sectional view taken along line 99 of FIGURE 2;
  • FIGURE 10 is an enlarged, pantial cross-sectional view taken along line 10-10 of FIGURE 2;
  • FIGURE 11 is an enlarged, partial cross-sectional view taken along line 11-11 of FIGURE 2;
  • FIGURE 12 is a partial, enlarged cross-sectional view taken along line 1212 of FIGURE 1;
  • FIGURE 13 is a partial, enlarged cross-sectional view taken along line 1313 of FIGURE 12.
  • a toy telephone constituting a toy telephone constituting a presently preferred embodiment of the invention includes a housing assembly 12 comprising a base 14 and a cover 16 to which a hand set 18 is connected.
  • the cover or case 16 may be injection molded from a suitable material, such as a high impact styrene, and includes a top wall 19, an encompasing side wall 20 and open bottom 22.
  • First and second upstanding, spacedapart receiver cradles 24 and 26; first, second and third apertures 28, 30 and 32; a protuberance 34 and a fingerstop support 36 are provided on the top of wall 19.
  • the side wall 20 is provided with a U-shaped receiver-cord slot 38, a record-receiving slot 40 and an inverted, L- shaped slot 42.
  • a telephone dial 44 is rotatably mounted on the top wall 19 by a bolt 46 which clamps a bell assembly 48 to the dial 44 in such a manner that the bell assembly is supported subjacent the top wall 19 in a manner to be hereinafter more fully described.
  • a dial return spring 50 has one end connected to the dial 44 and has a hook 52 formed at its other end which is engagea-ble with the aperture 30 on top wall 19 to perform its conventional function of returning the dial to its normal position where a stop member 54 provided on dial 44 engages the protuberance 34 provided on the top wall 19.
  • a finger stop 55 may be attached to the finger stop support 36 by a rivet 56 in such a manner that the finger stop 54 extends above the dial 44.
  • the base 14 which may be made from an injection molded plastic, is provided with a cavity 58 in which a phonograph turntable 60 is rotatably mounted on a spindle 62 (FIGURE 9).
  • the turntable 60 includes a peripheral groove 63 about which a belt 64 is trained for rotating the turntable 60 at a suitable speed through power supplied by an electric motor 66 (FIGURE 11) carried in a housing 67 which is secured to the base 14 by screws 68.
  • the motor 66 is isolated by a suitable resilient motor mount 69 and pads 69a (FIGURE 11) which may, for example, be made of rubber. The isolation of the motor 66 in this manner is an important feature of the present invention because it minimizes the generation of undesirable noises and vibrations in the phonograph system.
  • the base 14 is also provided with a battery housing 70 having an upstanding back wall 72, a first end wall 74 and a second end wall 76.
  • a pair of dry cell batteries 78 I are mounted in the battery housing 70 and supply power to the motor 66 through a first electrical lead 80, a second electrical lead 82, a first post 83, a third lead 84, a second post 85, a first contact 86, a second contact 87 and a fourth lead 88.
  • a phonograph record 90 may, in a manner and by means similar to those disclosed in co-pending application Ser. No. 253,192 filed Jan. 22, 1963, by the applicant herein, now Patent No. 3,165,320, be quickly and easily positioned on the turntable 60 by lifting a record changing bar 92 by its record changing knob 94- which extends to the exterior of the housing 12, as shown in FIGURE 1.
  • the record changing bar 92 can be maintained in an elevated position by engaging the knob 94 with a shoulder 96 formed in the side wall 20 by the L- shaped slot 42.
  • the record 90 may then be inserted through the record-receiving slot 40 and slid along the upper face 98 of the base 14 into engagement with three upstanding, record-centering plates 100 which are affixed to the base 14 and which guide the record 90 into position on the turntable 60.
  • the record 90 may then be accurately centered on the turntable by releasing the knob 94 from shoulder 96 whereupon a leaf spring 102 biases the bar 92 downwardly passing a record-centering cup 164 (FIGURE 9) into engagement with an aperture 106 which is provided in the record 90.
  • the centering cup 104 is mounted in an aperture 92a provided in the bar 92 and is prevented from passing therethrough by a shoulder 1040.
  • a centering cone 108 is carried by the spring 102 and engages the cup 104 to maintain it in position in aperture 92a.
  • the cup 104 accurately centers the record 96 on turntable 60 by engaging a counterbore 110 provided in turntable 60 with its conical end 112.
  • the depth of penetration of the counterbore 110 by cup 104 is determined by knob 94 which engages base 14 to maintain bar 92 a suitable distance above record 90.
  • the lifting bar and the spring 102 are both swingably and pivotally connected to the base 14 by a connecting means 114 which permits the bar 92 to be lifted vertically and then pivoted into position adjacent the shoulder 96.
  • the connecting means 114 comprises an upstanding post 115 having a reduced-diameter portion 115a which is encompassed by an aperture 92a provided in bar 92.
  • the spring 102 is secured to the top of post 115 by a screw 102a, whereby the bar 92 is prevented from becoming disengaged from post 115 upon being elevated at its end remote from the post 115 by knob 94.
  • the phonograph record 90 may be of the random message type described in Patent No. 3,017,187 and is provided with suitable messages which are conveyed to a user of the telephone 10 through a hollow, flexible tube 116 having a first open end 118 mounted adjacent suitable apertures 120 provided in a simulated receiver 122 forming an integral part of the hand set 18.
  • the other end 124 of the tube 116 is connected to a sound pickup means indicated generally at 126 in FIGURE 2 and shown in detail in FIGURE 10.
  • the pickup means 126 includes a case 128 which may be conveniently made from an injection molded plastic material and which includes a hollow boss 130 into which the open end 124 of tube 116 is inserted.
  • a suitable resonator such as a vacuum-formed plastic cone 132 to which a plastic phonograph-needle chuck 134 may be sonically welded, is mounted in the case 123.
  • the chuck 134 carries a phonograph needle 136.which is engageable with the record 90.
  • '1 he assembly comprising case 128, resonator 132, chuck 134 and needle 136 is mounted in a circular member 138 formed on the end 140 of a tone arm 142.
  • the other end 144 of the tone arm 142 carries a flange or cam face 145 and a post 146 having a conical end 148 which tiltably and pivotally mounts the tone arm 142 on an upstanding boss 150 provided on the base 14, as shown in FIGURE 5.
  • a tone arm cont-r01 mechanism is mounted above the tone arm 142 on suitable posts, such as the one shown at 154 in FIGURE 5, which are mounted on the base 14.
  • the mechanism 152 includes a plate or deck 156 which is attached to the posts 154 by screws 158, 159 and 160.
  • the plate or deck 156 is provided with a first aperture 162 surrounded by a first upstanding boss 164 through which the screw passes; a second aperture 166 surrounded by a second upstanding boss 168 through which the screw 159 passes; a third aperture 170 surrounded by a boss 172; a fourth aperture 174 partially surrounded by a U-shaped upstanding guide member 176; and an elongated slot 178.
  • the end 1811 of tone arm post 146 extends up through the slot 178 to a point above the deck 156 for limited tilting movement from the end 182 of slot 178 toward the end 184 thereof.
  • the tone arm post 146 is normally biased toward the end 182 by a first arm 186 of a spring 188 which encompasses the boss 168 and includes a second arm 189 having a free end 190 engaging a pin 192 provided on the deck 156.
  • the tone arm 142 is elevated sufficiently that the needle 136 is held off the record 90.
  • the spring arm 186 bears against post 146 with sutficient force to engage a depending lug 145a with the cam face 145 causing the tone arm 142 to swing in a counter-clockwise direction, as viewed in FIG- URE 2, into engagement with a stop member 193 mounted on base 14.
  • the tone arm 142 has sufiicient weight to cause the post 146 to lean toward the end 184 of slot 178 when the arm 186 is moved toward the end 184 by an upstanding lug 194 (FIGURE 5) provided on a swingable plate 196.
  • the swingable plate 196 is pivotally mounted on the boss 164 and is provided with an aperture 198 which encompasses the boss 172.
  • the plate 196 includes a first arm 200 to which the contact 87 is affixed and a second arm 202 on the end of which is mounted an upstanding pin 204.
  • the plate 196 is provided with a beveled notch 206 which may be engaged by a beveled shoe 208 (FIGURE 8) provided on a push button mechanism 210.
  • the lower end 212 of the push button mechanism 210 is disposed within the aperture 174 within the U-shaped guide 176.
  • the push button 210 includes a stem 214 which extends up through the aperture 28 provided in the top wall 19 of the case 12 (FIGURE 1).
  • the button 210 is depressed by an operator of the telephone 10
  • the shoe 208 engages the beveled notch 206 causing the plate 196 to swing in a clockwise direction, as viewed in FIGURE 2, to the position shown in'FIG- URE 3.
  • the amount of movement of plate 196 in a clockwise direction is controlled by a stop member 216 which is mounted on the deck 156.
  • the plate 196 is maintained in its FIGURE 3 position by an arm 218 provided on a swingable lever 220 which is pivotally connected to the plate 156 by a pin 222 (FIGURE 7).
  • the lever 220 includes a leg 224 which depends through a slot 226 provided in the plate 156 and a second arm 228 which is formed integrally with the depending leg 224 in such a manner that it extends at right angles thereto to a point superjacent of, and in contact with, a lever 229 extending over the bar 92.
  • the lever 229 is connected intermediate its ends to the underside 230 of the plate 156 by a screw 232.
  • the end of the lever 229 which is remote from the arm 228 is connected to a stop or reset button 234 having an end 236 extending th ough an aperture 238 provided in the cradle 24 with which it is engageable by the hand set 18 when placed in position on the cradles 24 and 26.
  • the weight of the hand-set 18 is sufiicient to depress the button 234 causing the end of the lever 229 which is engaging the arm 228 to elevate it causing the lever 220 to rotate in a clockwise direction, as viewed in FIGURE 6, sufficiently for the arm 218 to become disengaged from the plate 196.
  • the safety hook 250 includes an end 252 which extends up through a slot 254 provided in the plate 156 to a position on the upper surface 256 thereof.
  • the end 252 includes gear teeth 258 which engage teeth 260 provided on plate 156.
  • the teeth 258 are carried by a hub 262, as is clearly shown in FIGURES 2-5.
  • the hub 262 is caged between triangular-shaped upstanding bosses 253.
  • the end 252 is carried by a first arm 264 provided on a spring 266 which extends beneath a cap member 268 supported above the plate 156, by suitable means including pin 192.
  • the spring 266 encompasses the pin 192 and includes a second arm 272 which extends into engagement with a stop pin 274 mounted on the plate 156.
  • the force exerted by the arms 264 and 272 biases the end 252 to the left, as viewed in FIGURE 3.
  • the pin 204 on arm 202 engages spring arm 264.
  • the pin 204 moves away from arm 264 so that the end 252 is moved to the left under the influence of the arm 264. This causes the safety hook 250 to pivot in a counter-clockwise direction (as viewed in FIGURE 5) out of engagement with the tone arm 142.
  • the end 252 is moved to the right, as viewed in FIGURE 3, to rotate the safety hook 250 back into engagement with the tone arm 142 when the arm 264 of spring 266 re-engages the pin 204 at the end of travel of the plate 196 in its counter-clockwise direction.
  • This re-engagement takes place after the arm 186 of spring 188 has moved the post 146 to its vertical position thereby elevating the tone arm 142 sufficiently that the safety hook will engage it when swung in a counter-clockwise direction by the spring arm 186.
  • a stop member 276 is pivotally mounted on the pin 222 and depends from plate 156 through a slot 277 provided therein.
  • the stop member 276 includes a sloping face 278 which is engaged by the tone arm 142 as it swings toward safety latch 250, thereby causing the member 276 to become elevated sufficiently to permit the tone arm 142 to pass thereunder. As the tone arm 142 passes the end 279 of member 276, the member 276 drops down so that end 279 holds tone arm 142 captive on hook 250.
  • the bell assembly 48 includes a metal bell 280 which is provided with an aperture 282 and in which a governor assembly 284 is mounted.
  • the governor 284 includes a hub portion 286 having a non-circular end 288 extending into a matching noncircular hub portion 290 provided on the dial 4 4.
  • the bolt 46 passes through the aperture 282, and
  • the governor 284 is provided with an annular step member 294 which cooperates with the hub 290 to form bearing surfaces on the top wall 19.
  • the governor 284 also includes a ratchet wheel 296 and an annular flywheel 298.
  • the escapement arm 300 also has a hub 310 which pivotally connects the arm 300 to a depending pin 312 provided on the top wall 19.
  • a projection or knob 314 is provided on the arm 300 and is engageable with the ratchet wheel 296 to rock the arm 300 about pin 312 when the governor 284 rotates with dial 44 and bell 280.
  • the rocking of arm 300 causes striker means 308 to be thrown cyclically into engagement with bell 280 causing it to ring in simulation of a ringing telephone.
  • a child may remove the hand set 18 from the cradles 24 and 26 and dial any desired number.
  • the child may then depress the button 210 causing the shoe 208 to move the plate 196 from the position shown in FIGURE 2 to the position shown in FIGURE 3.
  • This brings the pin 204 out of engagement with the arm 264 of the spring 266 causing the safety latch 250 to be moved from its FIGURE 4 position to its FIGURE 5 position.
  • the moving of plate 196 by the shoe 208 also causes the upstanding lug 194 to move the arm 186 of spring 188 away from the post 146 permitting it to tilt toward the end 184 of slot 178 so that the needle 136 is lowered into engagement with the record 90.
  • the movement of plate 196 also places the contact 87 into engagement with the contact 86 to energize the turntable 60.
  • a suitable random message provided on record is transmitted through the needle 136, cone 132, and tube 116 into the receiver 118.
  • the hand set 18 will depress the button 234 causing the lever 229 to elevate arm 228 of lever 22G thereby releasing the plate 196.
  • the tone arm 142 will then be automatically elevated and moved against the stop 193 where it is secured by the safety latch 250, in the manner previously described.
  • a toy phonographic telephone including a turntable rotatably mounted in a simulated telephone having a base, a cover and a hand set, said hand set being positionable on said cover and including a simulated receiver, the combination comprising:
  • a phonograph tone arm rotatably mounted in said telephone adjacent said turntable;
  • a sound-reproducing head attached to one end of said tone arm for engagement with a record placed on said turntable;
  • tone arm control means mounted on said base above said tone arm for controlling the tilting and pivoting thereof, said control means including a plate having a slot provided therein, said post having an upper end extending through said slot, said control means also including movable means for moving said upper end within said slot to cause said tone arm to be elevated to a first position when said upper end is moved to one end of said slot and to be lowered onto said record when said upper end is moved to the other end of said slot; said control means also including means responsive to movement of said post to said one end of said slot to pivotally swing said tone arm about the axis of said post, to a starting position.
  • a combination as defined in claim 1 including an upper surface on said turntable which is approximately flush with the upper surface of said base and an elongated, record-receiving slot provided in said cover superjacent said base for facilitating the positioning of a phonograph record on said turntable.
  • a combination as defined in claim 2 including a record positioning bar rotatably mounted in said housing above said record, said bar including a control knob extending through said slot in said cover, said bar including record centering means and being elevatable to a position where it actuates said spring means to move said post to said one end of said slot in said control means plate.
  • said means responsive to movement of said post comprises cam means on said tone arm adjacent said upper end of said post, said cam means being engageable by fixed means when said upper end is moved to said one end of said slot in said plate to cause said post to pivot while it is being moved toward said one end of said slot.
  • a toy phonographic telephone including a turntable rotatably mounted in a simulated telephone having a base, a cover and a hand set, said hand set being positionable on said cover and including a simulated receiver, the combination comprising:
  • tone arm control means mounted on said base above said tone arm for controlling the tilting and pivoting thereof, said control means comprising:
  • first spring means afiixed to said firs-t plate and having an end extending into engagement with said second plate for movement thereby across said slot in said first plate for controlling the movement of said upper end within said plate slot to cause said tone arm to be elevated to a first position when said second plate is in said first predetermined position causing said upper end to be engaged by said first spring means and to be lowered onto said record when said first spring means is moved away from said upper end by movement of said second plate to said second predetermined position;
  • control mechanism defined in claim 5 including first lever means pivotally mounted on said first plate, said first lever means being swingable to a first position to engage said second plate and retain it in said second predetermined position and being swingable to a second position to release said second plate, whereby said second spring means will return said second plate to said first predetermined position, said first lever means including a depending leg which is engageable by said tone arm to move said first lever means to said second position causing said second plate to be moved to its first predetermined position, thereby causing said first spring means to elevate said tone arm.
  • the combination of claim 7 including: hook means depending from said first plate adjacent said tone arm for engagement therewith when said tone arm is in its elevated position, said hook means being pivotally connected to said first plate; hook pivoting means mounted on the said first plate in engagement with said hook means for pivoting it into and out of engagement with said tone arm when actuated; and actuating means mounted on said second plate for controlling said hook pivoting means.
  • the combination of claim 8 including: a record centering bar pivotally mounted in said telephone above said record; and an elongated, record-receiving slot provided in said cover superjacent said base for facilitating the positioning of a phonograph record on said turntable, said bar including a knob portion extending through said record-receiving slot, said record centering bar extending beneath said second lever means, whereby said bar is engageable with said second lever means to move it into engagement with said first lever means and move it to said second position to release said second plate.
  • a toy phonographic telephone comprising: housing means; telephone hand-set means positionable on said housing means when not in use; sound-reproducing mean mounted in said housing means;
  • connection means connecting said sound-reproducing means to said hand-set means for transmitting recorded messages thereto;
  • recorded-message means connectable to said soundreproducing means for providing said recorded messages
  • control means connected to said sound-reproducing means for controlling the operation thereof;
  • a toy telephone as stated in claim 11 wherein said recorded-message means comprises a phonograph record having random messages provided thereon.
  • a toy telephone as stated in claim 11 including means mounted on said cradle for de-energizing said recorded-message means when said handset means is placed on said cradle.
  • a toy telephone as stated in claim 11 including simulated dialing means for said telephone.
  • a toy phonographic telephone comprising:
  • housing means for housing said record playing means

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  • Toys (AREA)
  • Telephone Set Structure (AREA)
US412180A 1964-11-18 1964-11-18 Toy phonographic telephone Expired - Lifetime US3382604A (en)

Priority Applications (11)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US412180A US3382604A (en) 1964-11-18 1964-11-18 Toy phonographic telephone
NO156359A NO120828B (ro) 1964-11-18 1965-01-14
DE19651797233 DE1797233A1 (de) 1964-11-18 1965-01-22 Steuerungsvorrichtung fuer einen in ein Spielzeugtelefon eingebauten Plattenspieler
DEM50534U DE1932549U (de) 1964-11-18 1965-01-22 Spielzeugtelephon.
DEM63895A DE1283135B (de) 1964-11-18 1965-01-22 Schallplatten-Sicherungsvorrichtung fuer ein Spielzeugtelefon
ES0308971A ES308971A1 (es) 1964-11-18 1965-02-04 Perfeccionamientos en el mecanismo de los telefonos de juguete.
FR7295A FR1429561A (fr) 1964-11-18 1965-02-26 Téléphone jouet
GB9802/65A GB1027100A (en) 1964-11-18 1965-03-08 Toy telephone
BE660894A BE660894A (ro) 1964-11-18 1965-03-10
NL6503396A NL6503396A (ro) 1964-11-18 1965-03-17
CH767665A CH423583A (de) 1964-11-18 1965-06-02 Spielzeugtelefon

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US412180A US3382604A (en) 1964-11-18 1964-11-18 Toy phonographic telephone

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3382604A true US3382604A (en) 1968-05-14

Family

ID=23631924

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US412180A Expired - Lifetime US3382604A (en) 1964-11-18 1964-11-18 Toy phonographic telephone

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Country Link
US (1) US3382604A (ro)
BE (1) BE660894A (ro)
CH (1) CH423583A (ro)
DE (3) DE1932549U (ro)
ES (1) ES308971A1 (ro)
FR (1) FR1429561A (ro)
GB (1) GB1027100A (ro)
NL (1) NL6503396A (ro)
NO (1) NO120828B (ro)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3533634A (en) * 1966-06-29 1970-10-13 Lorraine Ind Inc Phonograph record player
US4973285A (en) * 1989-10-05 1990-11-27 Diotte Manuel A Simulated car phone

Families Citing this family (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS53185Y2 (ro) * 1975-09-04 1978-01-06
DE3563689D1 (en) * 1985-01-03 1988-08-18 Johogakuen Kyoiku Jigyo K K Books

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1651508A (en) * 1926-02-24 1927-12-06 Bocchino Ernest Musical toy telephone
US2066065A (en) * 1936-04-29 1936-12-29 Steel Stamping Company Toy telephone
US2633769A (en) * 1949-11-12 1953-04-07 Saks David Toy telephone with music device
US2927794A (en) * 1954-09-01 1960-03-08 Rca Corp Single automatic slot record player

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1888802A (en) * 1931-05-02 1932-11-22 Martin S Hamm Toy telephone
US2265318A (en) * 1939-02-11 1941-12-09 Smuel S Sempre Sound reproducing apparatus
US2496666A (en) * 1945-06-09 1950-02-07 Nicholas C Heyman Phonographic toy telephone

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1651508A (en) * 1926-02-24 1927-12-06 Bocchino Ernest Musical toy telephone
US2066065A (en) * 1936-04-29 1936-12-29 Steel Stamping Company Toy telephone
US2633769A (en) * 1949-11-12 1953-04-07 Saks David Toy telephone with music device
US2927794A (en) * 1954-09-01 1960-03-08 Rca Corp Single automatic slot record player

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3533634A (en) * 1966-06-29 1970-10-13 Lorraine Ind Inc Phonograph record player
US4973285A (en) * 1989-10-05 1990-11-27 Diotte Manuel A Simulated car phone

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE1932549U (de) 1966-02-10
FR1429561A (fr) 1966-02-25
NL6503396A (ro) 1966-05-20
CH423583A (de) 1966-10-31
DE1283135B (de) 1968-11-14
BE660894A (ro) 1965-07-01
DE1797233C3 (ro) 1974-04-11
NO120828B (ro) 1970-12-07
ES308971A1 (es) 1965-06-16
GB1027100A (en) 1966-04-20
DE1797233A1 (de) 1971-07-29
DE1797233B2 (ro) 1973-09-13

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