US3573790A - Solid state sign system - Google Patents

Solid state sign system Download PDF

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US3573790A
US3573790A US436469A US3573790DA US3573790A US 3573790 A US3573790 A US 3573790A US 436469 A US436469 A US 436469A US 3573790D A US3573790D A US 3573790DA US 3573790 A US3573790 A US 3573790A
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Prior art keywords
lamp
shift register
lamps
character
circuit
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US436469A
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Edward J Schulenburg Sr
Ervin M Ball
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Watchfire Signs LLC
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Watchfire Signs LLC
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G3/00Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes
    • G09G3/004Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes to give the appearance of moving signs
    • GPHYSICS
    • G05CONTROLLING; REGULATING
    • G05BCONTROL OR REGULATING SYSTEMS IN GENERAL; FUNCTIONAL ELEMENTS OF SUCH SYSTEMS; MONITORING OR TESTING ARRANGEMENTS FOR SUCH SYSTEMS OR ELEMENTS
    • G05B19/00Programme-control systems
    • G05B19/02Programme-control systems electric
    • G05B19/04Programme control other than numerical control, i.e. in sequence controllers or logic controllers
    • G05B19/12Programme control other than numerical control, i.e. in sequence controllers or logic controllers using record carriers
    • G05B19/124Programme control other than numerical control, i.e. in sequence controllers or logic controllers using record carriers using tapes, cards or discs with optically sensed marks or codes

Definitions

  • the sign information is fed to the control circuit from a tape reader which reads binary coded tape.
  • a binary decoder circuit responds to the binary information read by the tape reader and stores a pattern of lamp-energizing markers in the character memory circuits corresponding to the character involved which markers are sequentially fed to the inputs of the row shift register circuits.
  • the tape is shifted one code position each time the last lamp energizing marker of a pattern of such markers representing one character leaves the character memory circuits.
  • CIRCUIT 4a MEMORY mv/r 6c.
  • c l mineral smrr uue 17, J4 CAMAMTER J4 I j SI/IF! q 8540 mar/r01.
  • I PM GEM J5 -J 7b 15 l uMmcrER
  • IiPE l 5 J5 wum/ MATRIX J0 7e JO 1
  • the running sign with which the present invention has its most important application includes a lamp bank having a plurality of columns of lamps which are energized in sequence to produce a running sign message which moves across the sign from right to left.
  • the energization of the lamps of these signs has been commonly controlled through mechanical switches.
  • the present invention represents a substantial advance in the control of sign lamp banks by solid state logic circuits.
  • the present invention makes possible at modest cost and minimum circuit complexity the control of the energization of the lamps of a lamp bank by feeding coded tape into a tape reader.
  • a teletype or other binary code is arranged in columns across the tape, the binary code characters in each column of the tape representing an alphabet or numeral character.
  • the tape reader which is the slowest operating element of the running sign system, need readonly one column of coded characters at a time to transfer a single alphabet or numeral character tothe sign.
  • the tape reader which may include photocells or contacts, must scan a substantial area of the tape to transfer a complete character to the lamp bank. This severely limits the speed with which information can be read into the sign.
  • each alphabet or numerical character and the space between characters was necessary for each alphabet or numerical character and the space between characters to occupy a standard sized block. For example, a narrow letter (like I and T) and the spaces on the opposite sides thereof occupicdthe same sign area as a much wider letter and the associated spaces, with the result that the spacing between narrow letters was much greater than the spacing between wider letters. Because of the circuit logic and arrangement of the present invention, each letter or numeral and the spaces on the opposite sides thereof occupy a sign area proportional to the width of the letter or numeral so that the spacing between all letters of a word or number can be the same.
  • the running sign system is provided with means for stopping a running message in the lamp bank and for automatically reducing the overall intensity of the lamps when the message is stationary, so that the overall intensity of the sign is similar for the running and stationary messages.
  • FIG. I is a basic block diagram of one form of running sign system incorporating features of the present invention.
  • FIG. 1A is a fragmentary view of a portion of the tape fed to the equipment shown in FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 2 is a detailed block diagram disclosing a basic form of lamp control circuit and character memory unit forming part of the sign system of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 2A is a diagrammatic view of the various stages of the shift register circuits making up the character memory unit
  • FIG. 3 is a detailed block diagram illustrating a preferred lamp control circuit
  • FIG. 3A is a detailed block diagram of the A and B shift pulse generator circuit forming part of the sign system of FIG. I;
  • FIG. 4 is a detailed block diagram illustrating a preferred character read control circuit fonning part of the sign system of FIG. I;
  • FIG. 5 is a timing diagram illustrating the relative phases of various wavefonns in the circuits of FIGS. 3 and 4;
  • FIG. 6 shows the lamps which are energized to produce the character E when the lamp control circuit of FIG. 3 is util ized
  • FIG. 7 shows a modified lamp control circuit where alternate lamps are energized at a given time
  • FIG. 7A is a timing diagram illustrating the relative phase of various waveforms in the circuit of FIG. 7;
  • FIG. 8 shows the lamps which are energized to produce the character 13" for the lamp control circuit of FIG. 7;
  • FIG. 9 shows a modified lamp control circuit where successive lamps are energized at the same time
  • FIG. 10 shows an energizing circuit for the lamps of the lamp bank which provides for selective dimming of certain rows of the lamp banks and control over the intensity of the lamps in accordance with the ambient light conditions of the lamp bank;
  • FIG. 1 I shows the waveform of the current flow through the lamps of the lamp bank and the manner in which the average current flow therethrough is controlled
  • FIG. 12 illustrates a variable phase pulse circuit operated from a photocell which forms part of the circuit of FIG. 10;
  • FIG. 13 illustrates a basic modification of the circuit logic of the various shift register circuits shown in FIGS. 3 and 4;
  • FIG. 14 illustrates a block diagram of a combined running and stationary sign system with provision for controlling the average light intensity of the lamp bank in accordance with the ambient light conditions
  • FIG. 15 illustrates an exemplary circuit diagram of a binary to single output matrix and the character setup matrix forming a part of the circuits illustrated in FIGS. 1 and 14;
  • FIG. 16 is an exemplary circuit diagram of a portion of the lamp control circuit of the embodiment of the invention shown in FIG. 3 and illustrating the circuitry of the bistable circuits which control the gated diodes associated with the lamps in the lamp bank.
  • the corresponding lamps in each of the rows are preferably aligned in columns.
  • the lamp bank 2 is illustrated as being a horizontally elongated lamp bank capable of receiving relatively long running signs. (It should be recalled, however, that some aspects of the invention have application to stationary sign systems.)
  • the lamp bank 2 is controlled by a very unique static element logic control circuit including a lamp control circuit 4 which directly controls the energization of the various lamps in the bank.
  • the lamp control circuit 4 most advantageously comprises a number of individual shift register circuits to be described, one such circuit being provided for each row of lamps.
  • Lamp-energizing markers are sequentially fed into the stages of the shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit associated with the group of lamps at the right-hand of the lamp bank 2 and in a pattern corresponding with the particular alphabet or numerical character being first displayed on the lamp bank at a given moment.
  • the various patterns of lamp-energizing markers entered into the shift register circuits are sequentially advanced through the various stages of the shift register circuits. The presence of a lamp energizing marker in a stage of a shift register circuit associated with a particular lamp will result in the energization of that lamp.
  • the lamp-energizing markers are fed into the shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit 4 from a character memory unit 6.
  • the character memory unit 6 comprises a series of shift register circuits 6-1,
  • Each shift register circuit of the lamp control circuit has a number of stages a, b, c, d, e,f(a being the first stage at the right-hand end thereof) equal in number to the number of lamps which must be energized in a row of lamps for the widest alphabet or numerical character to be displayed on the lamp bank plus a number of stages g and h equal to the number of lamps which remain deenergized in the space between successive characters.
  • a pattern of lamp energizing markers (each identified by an x" in FIG. 2A) are first placed within the stages a through f of the various shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6 (the f" stage containing the marker forming the left-hand portion of the character involved) in' a pattern which corresponds to the particular alphabet or numerical character read by a tape reader 7 to which punched tape 7a (FIG. 1A) is fed.
  • any shift register circuit will be to the left and so as the lamp-energizing markers shown in FIG. 2A are shifted in the shift register circuit 6-1 through 67, the outline E of markers shown moves to the left and, as will be explained in more detail, will be transferred into the righthand stages of the corresponding shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit 4.
  • the number of shift operations required to empty the character memory unit of markers thus varies with the width of the character involved.
  • a six-element binary coded group of punched holes 7a (FIG. 1A) is utilized to indicate each alphabet or numerical character, the code occupying a single column extending transversely across the tape 7a.
  • the tape reader 7 reads one column of binary coded characters at a time.
  • the tape 7a is automatically advanced in accordance with well-established tape reader practice each time the tape reader receives an advance signal on an advance input line 7b.
  • the tape reader 7. has a number of output lines 7c corresponding to the number of binary coded characters in each code group on the tape 7a so that the voltage or current pattern on the output lines 7c duplicates the particular code being read by the tape reader.
  • the output lines 7c extend to a binary to single output matrix 8 which energizes one of a number of output lines collectively identified by reference 8a, the particular output line being energized corresponding to the alphabet or numerical character read by the tape reader 7a at a given instant.
  • the output lines 80 of the binary to single output matrix 8 are connected to a character setup matrix 10 and a character width matrix 15.
  • the character setup matrix 10 includes groups of diodes ll F IG. associated with each output line of the matrix 8 which extend to those stages of the various shift register circuits making up the character memory unit 6 which form the pattern of the character involved.
  • a pattern of lamp-energizing markers is set up in the stages of the character memory unit 6 corresponding to the alphabet or numerical character being read by the tape reader 7.
  • the shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit 4 and the character memory unit 6 associated with a given row of lamps in the lamp bank are connected in tandem so that the lamp-energizing markers are transferred one column of mar kers at a time from the left-hand stages h of the various shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6 to the righthand stages of the shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit 4.
  • the advancement of the lampenergizing markers in the circuits 4 and 6 are under control of output pulses from a shift pulse generator 13 of any well-known type which feeds shift pulses to shift input terminals 4a and 6a of the lamp control and character memory unit circuits 4 and 6.
  • thiscondition is sensed in any one of a number of ways, as by the provision of a character read control unit M which affects the feeding of an advance pulse to the advance input terminal 7b of the tape reader 7 so that the next column 7a of binary coded information on the tape 7a is fed to the tape reading position of the tape reader 7.
  • a character read control unit M which affects the feeding of an advance pulse to the advance input terminal 7b of the tape reader 7 so that the next column 7a of binary coded information on the tape 7a is fed to the tape reading position of the tape reader 7.
  • the character read control 14 may take a variety of forms.
  • the character read control unit comprises a single shift register circuit having the same number of stages as any one of shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6.
  • a character width matrix 15 is provided which may be a diode matrix which has a separate output 15a for each different character width. For example, if the widest character occupies six lamps on the lamp bank, the character width matrix 15 will have six output lines representing the six possible character widths.
  • the character width matrix 15 is coupled to the output lines 8a to energize the output 15a which identifies the width of the particular character being read by the tape reader 7.
  • a marker will be placed in the stage of the shift register circuit making up the character read control unit 14 which corresponds to the right-hand-most stage of the shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6 which contains a lamp-energizing marker.
  • the output of the shift pulse generator 13 is fed to a shift input terminal 14a of the character read control unit 14 so that the marker in the shift register circuit making up the character read control unit 14 will advance in synchronism with the advancement of the lamp-energizing markers in the character memory unit 6.
  • a signal is fed on a character shift line 17 to the advance input terminal 7b of the tape reader 7, bringing the next binary code group into reading position as above explained.
  • the provision of the character memory unit 6 as described above will effect a fixed spacing between all characters in a word or number group independently of the width of the character. This is a substantial improvement over the appearance of the usual running sign wherein the spaces between successive characters vary with the width of the character due to the fact that a given size character block is utilized for all characters displayed on the sign.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates a generalized form for the lamp control circuit 4 when using gated diodes for controlling the energization of the various lamps, the gated diodes being identified by reference 20 followed by an alphabet character identifying the row of lamps involved and a number identifying the column of lamps involved.
  • the anode electrode of each gated diode is connected to one of the lamps of the lamp bank, the lamps being identified by reference number 22 followed by an alphabet character identifying the row of lamps and a number identifying the column of lamps involved.
  • the lamps are connected to a common power bus 24 leading to the output of a full-wave rectifier circuit 26 which would normally be fed from a commercial source of 60 cycle alternating current.
  • the cathode electrodes of the gated diodes 20 are grounded and the control electrodes thereof are connected respectively to lamp control bistable or flip-flop circuits identified by reference 28 and an alphabet character identifying the associated row of lamps and a number identifying the associated column of lamps involved.
  • a direct current (DC) voltage is fed to the control terminal of the associated gated diode 20 to effect the firing thereof.
  • the gated diode continues in a highly conductive state for the remainder of the half cycle of the rectified current pulsation which flows through the gated diode and the lamp associated therewith independently of the voltage in the control electrode thereof.
  • the control electrode gains control over the conductive state of the gated diode when the current drops to near zero, that is below what is referred to as a holding current level.
  • the gated diode will again fire at the beginning of the next half cycle if the associated bistable circuit remains in the set state.
  • Each of the bistable circuits 28 forms part of a stage of a shift register circuit with the other bistable circuits associated with the lamps of the same row of lamps of the lamp bank 2.
  • any conventional shift register circuit may be utilized in the practice of the broad aspects of the present invention, certain aspects of the present invention deal with the nature of the shift register circuit which has particular advantages in a lamp control circuit of the type now being described. 7
  • the bistable circuits 28a-2, 28a3, etc. other than the righthandmost bistable circuit 28a-l, etc. of each shift register circuit of the lamp control circuit 4 is controlled by a condition sensing means generally indicated by reference number 30 followed by an alphabet character identifying the associated row of lamps and a number identifying the associated column of lamps.
  • the first bistable circuit 28a-1, etc. of each shift register circuit is set by a signal fed to a set input terminal S thereof from the last stage of the corresponding shift register circuit of the character memory unit 6. (Theaforementioned lamp-energizing marker is represented by a set state of a bistable circuit 28.)
  • the condition sensing 30 means associated with each bistable circuit determines whether the associated bistable circuit will be set or maintained in the reset state.
  • each condition sensing means 30 effects the setting of the associated bistable circuit 28 at a point in time coincident with the presence of an advance pulse on an ad vance signal line 33 if the bistable circuit 28 to the right of it is in a set state prior to the generation of the advance pulse. If, on the other hand, the latter bistable circuit is in a reset state, the condition sensing means 30 involved will either maintain or effect a resetting of the bistable circuit which it controls on the presence of the next advance pulse on the advance signal line 33.
  • the shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6 are, in most respects, similar to the shift register circuits just described in connection with the lamp control circuit 4, and, accordingly, except for the first stage of each of the shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6, includes a bistable circuit identified by reference 35 followed by an alphabet character identifying the associated row of lamps and a number identifying the associated column of lamps.
  • Each shift register circuit stage thereof except the first one includes a condition sensing means identified by reference number 37 followed by an alphabet character and a number respectively utilized to identify the associated row and column of lamps.
  • the first stage of each shift register circuit 6-1, or 6-2, or 6-3, etc. of the character memory unit comprises a bistable circuit 35a-l, or 35b-1, etc.
  • each of the shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6 has eight stages in the exemplary embodiment of the invention, only five of which appear in FIG. 2.
  • the shift register circuits associated with the character memory unit 6 are different from those of the lamp control circuit 4 in that the former are initially set in accordance with a given pattern corresponding to the associated alphabet character or number by set input lines identified by reference number 40 followed by an alphabet character and number identifying the associated row and column of lamps.
  • the various set lines 40 are the previously mentioned output lines 100 of the character setup matrix 10 described in connection with FIG. 1.
  • the subsequent presence of advance pulses on the advance signal line 33 will result in the sequential movement of the pattern of set states involved toward the left-hand end of each of the shift register circuits making up the character memory unit 6.
  • the set state of a last stage of the bistable circuits making up the character memory unit 6 will result in the setting of the first bistable circuit of the first stage of the associated shift register circuit of the lamp control circuit 4 upon the occurrence of the next advance pulse on the advance signal line 33.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates a specific lamp control circuit 4 wherein the condition sensing means 30 are bistable circuits (to be referred to as intermediate bistable control circuits) like the lamp control bistable circuits 28.
  • Each of the bistable circuits 28 and 30 has a set input terminal S and a reset terminal R for respectively setting and resetting the bistable circuit when signals of proper polarity (to be referred to as set and reset signals) are fed thereto.
  • the reset terminals of the lamp control bistable circuits 28 are connected by conductors 42 to an A signal bus 33' upon which pulses appear having the phase indicated by the waveform (b) shown in FIG. 5. It should be noted that these A pulses occur during alternate half cycles and a short time after the beginning of each half cycle of the AC rectified current fed to the lamps 22 from the output of the rectifier circuit 26.
  • the reset terminals of the intermediate bistable circuits 30 are connected to a B signal bus 33 on which pulses appear having the phase indicated by thewaveform (c) shown in FIG. 5.
  • the B pulses occur during the same half cycles as the A pulses and are delayed by a small angle from the A pulses.
  • Each of the lamp control bistable circuits 28 has an output line 41 and each of the intermediate bistable circuits has an output line 41. It will be assumed that each of these output lines will have applied thereto a negative or ground voltage when the bistable circuit is in a reset state and a positive voltage when the bistable circuit is in a set state.
  • the output line 41 is connected to the control electrode of the associated gated diode 20 to fire the same when the bistable circuit is in a set state.
  • the gated diode will continue in a conductive state independently of the voltage thereafter fed to the control electrode thereof for the remainder of the half cycle of current flow involved.
  • the current flowing through the gated diode will drop below what is referred to as a holding current level, wherein the control electrode thereof regains control.
  • the gated diode will continue to conduct in subsequent half cycles until the associated bistable circuit 28 is reset.
  • each lamp control bistable circuit 28 which is in a set state will be reset every other half cycle on the occurrence of an A pulse.
  • the setting of a bistable circuit 28 will have no effect on the control of the associated gated diode until the end of the half cycle of current flows through the gated diode involved.
  • Since the A pulses occur during alternate half cycles once a gated diode has become conductive it will remain conductive to energize the associated lamp for the remainder of the half cycle involved and for an added two full half cycles, which, when the source of energizing voltage for the lamps in a full wave rectified 60 cycle voltage source, provides an adequate warmup time for a bright running sign display.
  • the interconnections between the various bistable circuits 28 and 30 form a shift register circuit.
  • a capacitor 55 is connected between the output line 41 of each of the lamp control bistable circuits 28 and the set terminal of the intermediate bistable circuit 30 of the next stage of the shift register circuit.
  • the intermediate bistable circuits 30 are designed so that only a negative going pulse fed to the set terminals S thereof will effect the setting thereof. Such a negative going voltage occurs when a given lamp control bistable circuit 28 is switched from a set to a reset state by the feeding of an A pulse to the reset input R thereof.
  • the shift register. circuit operates in such a manner that when a given lamp control bistable circuit 28 is in a set state, this set state will be transferred to the next stage of the shift register circuit when advance pulses are fed to the shift register circuit.
  • the A and B pulses act as shift or advance pulses for the shift register circuit. Assuming that the first lamp control bistable circuit 28a-l is in a set state, upon the occurrence of the next A pulse on the line 33, the bistable circuit is reset which generates a negative going voltage on the output line 41 which is coupled through the capacitor 55 to the next intermediate bistable circuit 300-2 to set the same.
  • the bistable circuit 28a-1 was in a reset state during the occurrence of the A pulse, the state of the bistable circuit will not change and no signal voltage will be coupled through the capacitor 55, and the intermediate bistable circuit 3011-2 will remain in its reset state.
  • the intermediate bistable circuits act as memory units which memorize the last state of the preceding lamp control bistable circuit following the generation of each A pulse.
  • the bistable circuit 3011-2 In the case where the intermediate bistable circuit 3011-2 is triggered to a set state, the bistable circuit will immediately thereafter be reset upon the generation of the next B pulse coupled to the reset terminal R thereof.
  • the intermediate bistable circuit like 300-2 When the intermediate bistable circuit like 300-2 is reset, a negative going voltage will appear on the output line 41' thereof which is coupled by a capacitor 57 to the set input terminal of the lamp control bistable circuit 2811-2. If the intermediate bistable circuit 3011-2 had not been previously set, no signal will appear at the output line 41' or at the set input terminal S of the lamp control bistable circuit 28a-2 upon the occurrence of the B pulse. It is thus apparent that the arrangement of bistable circuits shown in FIG. 3 constitute a shift register circuit wherein a given pattern of set and reset states proceeds down the various stages of the shift register circuit at a rate depending upon the rate of the A and B pulses.
  • Each gated diode 20 has a control terminal connected to an output line 41 of a lamp control bistable circuit 28 and as a lamp control bistable circuit is triggered to a set state the associated gated diode will be fired into a conductive state. As previously indicated each such gated diode will continue to conduct for a full half cycle once it has been fired independently of the voltage on the control terminal thereof during which interval the associated lamp 22 will be energized. The gated diode will be refired at the beginning of the next two half cycles because the next A and B pulses will not recur until after the beginning of the last of the latter half cycles.
  • Each lamp will thus be energized for about three half cycles, giving adequate warmup time despite the fact that the A and B pulses are spaced only two half cycles (in a 60 cycle per second timing source). As one lamp becomes energized, the previous energized lamp remains energized until the end of the half cycle involved. This overlapping of the energization of successive lamps of the lamp bank allows the lamps to reach and remain at high intensity for a sufficient period to provide a proper average intensity of the sign despite the high pulse rate.
  • the A and B pulses are generated in a manner like that shown in FIG. 3A.
  • a source of commercial 60 cycle voltage is fed to a full wave rectifier circuit 60 which provides at the output thereof a full wave rectified waveform (a) such as shown in FIG. 5.
  • the rectifier circuit 60 may be at the same rectifier used to produce the energizing voltage waveform applied to the bus 24 extending to the lamps 22 of the lamp bank.
  • the full wave rectified voltage is fed to the input of a suitable clipper circuit 62 which produces a waveform W2 like that shown at the output of the clipper circuit 62 in FIG. 3A.
  • This waveform is fed to a conventional differentiating circuit 64 which produces positive and negative going pulses P1 centered about the sloping sides of the wavefonn W2. These pulses are fed through a rectifier 66 which removes pulses of one polarity to leave pulses of opposite polarity having a rate of I20 pulses per second. These pulses are fed directly to (or indirectly through an amplifier) to a divider circuit 68 which may have a manual control knob 70 providing for a selection of different division factors to produce a selection of pulse rates for the A and B pulses which varies the speed of the running sign.
  • the pulse rate illustrated in FIGv 5 is a 60 cycles per second rate which represents a divide by 2 operation of the divider circuit. By adjusting the manual control 70 to produce a division by 4, a pulse rate of 30 cycles per second is produced which produces a rate of advance of the running sign which is one-half that produced by a 60 cycle A and B pulse rate.
  • the output of the divider circuit 68 is split into two branches, one of which extends to an A terminal, representing the source of A pulses and the other of which extends through a suitable delay means 72 which produces a slight delay in the pulses, fed to a B terminal representing the source of B pulses.
  • the character memory unit 6 and the character read control circuit 14 comprises one or more shift register circuits. These shift register circuits are preferably similar to the shift register circuit just described in connection with FIG. 3 which controls one of the rows of lamps of the lamp bank.
  • the character read control circuit 14 comprises a series of bistable circuits forming the various stages of a shift register circuit as illustrated in FIG. 4, the stages being respectfully identified by reference numerals 14-1, 14-2, 14-3, through 14-8. Except for the first stage of the shift register circuit illustrated, which comprises only a single bistable circuit 77, each stage of the shift register circuit includes an intermediate or memory bistable circuit 74 having a set input terminal S coupled through a capacitor 75 to the output 76 of the bistable circuit 77 of the preceding stage.
  • Each bistable circuit 77 of the second and subsequent stages of the shift register circuit has a set terminal S coupled through a capacitor 79 to the output of the associated intermediate or memory bistable circuit 74.
  • Each of the memory bistable circuits 74 has a reset terminal R connected to the B signal bus 33 and each of the bistable circuits 77 has a reset terminal R connected to the A signal bus 33.
  • the shift register circuit making up the character read control circuit 14 has individual set lines 80-1, 80-2, 80-3, 80-4, 80-5, and 80-6, extending directly to the set terminals S of the bistable circuits 77 so as to preset simultaneously all of the stages to a given state of operation.
  • the set lines 80-1, 80-2, etc. represent the output lines of the character width matrix 15 which, as previously indicated, is a diode matrix including diodes 81 connected to the output lines 80 of the binary to single output matrix 8.
  • the latter matrix has a separate output line for each character which can be displayed on the lamp bank and energization of one of these output lines 8a indicates the character next to be fed to the righthand end of the lamp bank.
  • the set lines 80-6, 80-5, 80-4, 80-3, 80-2, and 80-1 of the character read control circuit 14 are respectively momentarily energized by a negative going voltage when the character read by the tape reader 7 is respectively l, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 lamps wide when displayed on the lamp bank 2. It is thus apparent that the various diodes 81 making up the character with matrix 15 associated with a given set input line 80 for the character read control unit 14 are connected to all of the output lines 8a of the binary to single output matrix 8 representing characters having the same width on the lamp bank.
  • the set line 80-2 will be energized at the instant tape reader 7 effects a readout operation so as to set the bistable circuit 77 associated with the second stage 14-2 of the shift register circuit 14.
  • the set state (constituting a shift register circuit marker) in the stage 14-2 will progress to the left, as viewed in FIG. 4.
  • the positive going voltage appearing at the output 82 thereof is coupled through the capacitor 79 to a line 83 which energizes the binary to single output matrix 8 which, in turn, energizes the character width matrix and the character setup matrix 10 to produce a set of new markers in the character memory unit 6 and the character readcontrol circuit 14 in accordance with the character then being read by the tape reader 7.
  • the bistable circuit 77 of the last stage 14-8 of the shift register circuit becomes set momentarily, the positive going voltage occurring at the output 76 of the bistable circuit 77 is coupled by an output line 86 to the shiff input terminal 7b of the tape reader 7 t0 rriove the next column 70' of coded information on the tape 7a into reading position in the tape reader.
  • the output line 86 is the character shift line 17 described in connection with FIG. 1.
  • the lamp control circuit 40 of FIG. 3 will produce a complete lamp-energizing pattern as, for example, illustrated for the letter E in FlG. 6.
  • letters like the letter E have relatively long horizontal upper, lower and intermediate horizontal legs.
  • the lamp rows 20, 2d and 2g of the lamp bank which reproduce these legs of the letter E produce a much higher average intensity of illumination because of the successive energization of these lamps as the letter E advances down the lamp bank than the lamp rows 2b, 2e, 2e, and 2g thereof.
  • thelamp control circuit 4b of FIG. 7 was developed.
  • This circuit is similar in many respects to the circuit of FIG. 3 and similar portions thereof have been given similar reference numerals.
  • the shift register circuit portion of the lamp control circuit 4b is identical to that shown in FIG. 3 except that it requires only half the number of stages. This is brought about by the fact that the lamp control bistable circuits 280-1, 280-2, etc. are associated with alternate lamps 220-1, 220-3, etc. of the lamp bank and the lamps 220-2, 220-4, etc. are controlled by the memory bistable units 300-2, 300-3, etc.
  • the gated diodes -2, 20-4, etc. associated with the lamps 220-2, 220-4 have control terminals respectively connected to the output lines 41' of the memory bistable circuits 300-2, 300-3, etc.
  • the length of time each of the memory bistable circuits 300-2, 300-3, etc. will be in the reset state depends upon the time delay between each A pulse and the next B pulse. If the A and B pulses occur during the same half cycle, the associated lamp will be energized for only one half cycle. Thus, when the lamp control circuit of FIG. 7 is used, the
  • a and B pulses are preferably separated by several half cycles as illustrated by waveforms (b) and (c) in FIG. 7A so the lamps will be energized for a number of half cycles. As there shown, the A pulses are separated four half cycles, the B pulses are separated four half cycles, and the A and B pulses are spaced two half cycles. This will result in the energization of the even numbered lamps 220-2, 220-4, etc. for about three half cycles since the memory bistable circuit 30 are set for the interval between each A pulse and the next B pulse.
  • the odd numbered lamps 220-1, 220-3 will also be energized for about three half cycles due to the fact that the spacing between each B pulse and the next A pulse determines the length of time the lamp control bistable circuits-28 remain set.
  • the speed of the sign progression is actually the same for the A and B pulse timing shown in FIG. 7A used in the lamp control circuit of FIG. 7 and the A and B pulses timing shown in FIG. 5, used in the lamp control circuit of FIG. 5.
  • FIG. 8 illustrates those lamps which are energized at the instant of the setting of the lamp control bistable circuits 280-1, 280-2, and 280-3.
  • the other lamps 280-2, 2 20-4 and 220-6 to the left of the lamps which were just energized become energized for three half cycles.
  • the circuit of FlG. 7 requires only one-half the shift register stages used in the circuit of FIG. 3.
  • FIG. 9 is a modification of the lamp control circuit shown in FIG. 3.
  • one of the problems in running signs is the problem of warmup time for the lamps.
  • FIG. 9 is an improvement over FIG. 3 by providing a longer energizing period and greater degree of overlap of the energization of the lamps without varying the phasing or rate of the A and B pulses.
  • each of the lamp-energizing bistable circuits 280-1, 280-2, etc. are bistable circuits of special design including two current control devices (only one of which is shown in FlG. 9 and identified by reference number wherein both devices are either in a nonconductive or a conductive state, so that low drain operation can be effected when the lamp bank is not energized.
  • the current control device 90 illustrated is a PNP transistor having an emitter electrode 91 connected by a conductor 92 to a positive direct current voltage bus 93, a collector electrode 96 connected through a resistor 98 to ground and a base electrode 100 which is connected to a part of the bistable circuit to be described later on in connection with the circuit of FIG. 16.
  • the current control device 90 When a lamp control bistable circuit 28 is in a set state, the current control device 90 will be in a conductive state, resulting in a positive voltage at the ungrounded end of the resistor 98.
  • a conductor 102 couples the ungrounded end of the resistor 98 to the anode side of an isolating rectifier 104 whose anode is connected to the control terminal of the associated gated diode 20. lt is thus apparent that when any of the bistable circuits 28 are energized, a positive voltage is coupled through the rectifier 104 to effect firing of the associated gated diode 20.
  • each bistable output conductor 102 is coupled to the anode side of another rectifier 107 whose cathode is connected directly to the control electrode of the gated-diode 20 associated with the lamp which, in the normal course of events, would be energized following the next shift operation of the shift register circuit controlling the row of lamps involved.
  • the rectifiers I04 serve the purpose of isolating or blocking the voltage fed to the control terminals of the gated diodes 20 through the rectifiers 107 from affecting the gated diodes associated with the next stage of the shift register circuit.
  • bistable circuit 28a-I when it is reset during the next shift operation, the associated lamp 22a-l will become deenergized at the end of the half cycle involved, and the simultaneously lit lamp 22a2 associated with the next stage of the shift register circuit will continue to be energized due to the transfer of the set state of the latter bistable circuit to the bistable circuit 28a-2 of the next stage of the shift register circuit.
  • each of the lamps to be energized is energized for a much greater period than the lamps in the circuit of FIGS. 3or7, thereby giving a greater time for the lamps to warrnup.
  • each of the bistable circuits 28 act as drivers for the gated diodes 20.
  • the gated diodes 20 and the bistable circuits 28 are most advantageously mounted upon or next to the lamp bank 2.
  • the positive voltage bus 93 would be connected to a long conductor connecting these circuit components to a remotely located source of positive direct-current voltage. Spurious voltage can be picked up in this line which could falsely trigger the bistable circuits.
  • PNP transistors 90 where the emitter electrodes 91 are connected by conductors 92 tothe bus 93 extending to the source of direct current voltage feeding this bus is an important feature of the circuit since the spurious voltage signals coupled by the conductors 92 to the emitter electrodes 91 of the bistable circuit transistors 90 are isolated to a great extent from the other electrodes of the transistors associated with sensitive portions of the bistable circuits relative to the case where NPN transistors are utilized for the transistors 90 requiring connections of their collector electrodes to the bus 93 which would then be connected to a grounded source of negative voltage.
  • FIG. 10 illustrates a circuit which has for its purpose the selective dimming of the upper, immediate and lower rows of lamps 2a, 2d and 2g in the lamp bank more nearly to equalize the average intensity of all the lamps energized to display a letter like the letter E having extensive upper, lower and intermediate horizontal legs.
  • This circuit thus represents an improvement to the circuit of FIG. 7.
  • the circuit of FIG. 10 also adjusts the average intensity of the lamps in the lamp bank in accordance with the ambient light conditions about the lamp bank. In other words, as the ambient lamp conditions about the lamp bank vary during weather conditions and the time of day, the average intensity of the light generated by the lights of the lamp bank will vary accordingly so that the sign will appear with the apparent sign brightness at all times and with use of minimum power.
  • the various rows of lamps 2a, 2b, 2c, 2d, 2e, 2f and 2g are respectively connected to associated buses 24a, 24b, 24c, 24d, 24e, 24f and 24g.
  • the buses 24b, 24c, Me and 24f are connected directly to a branch line 109 leading to a common conductor 110 connected to the cathode terminal 112 of a main gated diode 114.
  • the anode terminal 116 of the gated diode 114 is connected to the output of the aforementioned full wave rectifier circuit 60 (see FIG. 3A) fed from a commercial 60 cycle per second power system.
  • the upper, intermediate and lower buses 24a, 24d, and 24g are connected to the common conductor 110 through individual gated diodes 119a, 119d, and 119g.
  • the control terminals of the gated diodes 119a, 119d and 119g are connected to a common conductor 121 leading to the output of a suitable delay circuit 123.
  • variable phase pulse circuit 125 which produces at its output pulses which vary in phase with the degree of light striking a photocell 127, which is positioned to respond to the ambient light conditions of the lamp bank.
  • the input to the variable phase pulse generator circuit 125 is connected to the output of the aforementioned full wave rectifier circuit 60 so that the output thereof contains pulses at a rate of pulses per second.
  • the output of the variable phase pulse circuit is connected by a conductor 128 to the control electrode 129 of the gated diode 114.
  • the gated diode 114 will thus fire each half cycle at a phase angle which is a function of the ambient light condition striking photocell 127 and will remain in the conductive state for the remainder of the half cycle involved. Accordingly, the pulse width of the current flowing through the gated diode 114 is inversely proportional to the intensity of the light striking the photocell 127.
  • the phase angle of the pulses fed to the control electrodes of the gated diodes 119a, 119d and 119g, associated with the upper, intermediate and lower rows of lamps 2a, 2d and 2g in the lamp bank is delayed somewhat (such as 30 from the phase angle of the pulses which trigger the main gated diode 114, so that the width of the current pulses flowing through the gated diodes 119a, 119d and 1193 will be less than the current pulsations received by the lamps in the lamp rows 2b, 20, 2e and 2f.
  • the apparent intensity of the light generated by the lamps of all the rows of the lamp bank in the circuit arrangement of FIG. 10 will be fairly constant despite variations in ambient light conditions and despite the fact that the lamps in the uppermost intermediate and lower rows of the lamps in the lamp bank will be energized in time succession more frequently than the lamps of the other rows of lamps.
  • F IG. 12 illustrates an exemplary variable phase pulse circuit which is most advantageously used for the circuit 125 shown in box form in FIG. 10.
  • This circuit may include a clipper circuit 62' for clipping the full wave rectified waveform fed thereto from the full wave rectifier 60, a differentiating network 64' for differentiating the waveform at the output of the clipper circuit, and a rectifier 66 for passing pulses of only one polarity, such as positive pulses occurring at a rate of 120 pulses per second. It is apparent that the circuits 62' and 64 and the rectifier 66 may be the same corresponding by numbered elements as shown in FIG. 3A which form part of the shift pulse generator circuit 13.
  • the 120 pulse per second output of the rectifier 66 is fed to the set input S of a conventional bistable circuit 130.
  • the bistable circuit 130 illustrated has an output line 132 connected to a rectifier I34 arranged to pass a negative or ground voltage and to block a positive voltage.
  • the bistable circuit 130 is set, the upper line 132 has a positive voltage and when it is reset in a manner to be explained the voltage at the output line 132 is at ground potential.
  • the anode side of the rectifier 134 is connected to the ungrounded end of a grounded capacitor 136.
  • the unground end of the capacitor 136 is connected to the emitter electrode 136 of a double base diode 138 having one of its bases 140 connected to a positive bus 141 extending to the positive terminal of a source of positive direct-current voltage and another base 143 connected through a resistor to the ground.
  • the aforementioned photocell 127 is connected between the emitter electrode 136 and a resistor 144 connected to the positive bus 141.
  • the bistable circuit 130 when the bistable circuit 130 is in a set stage wherein the rectifier 134 blocks the resulting positive voltage on the output line 132, the double base diode 138 and the associated elements including the capacitor 136, photocell 127 and resistor 144 form a relaxation oscillator circuit of well-known design (except for the photocell) where the voltage across the capacitor 136 rises at a rate depending upon the intensity of the light striking the photocell 127. As a greater amount of light strikes the photocell 127, the impedance thereof decreases to increase the charging rate of the capacitor 135.
  • the voltage across the capacitor 136 will, therefore, reach the voltage which causes firing of the double base diode much sooner when the light striking the photocell 127 is at a high intensity than when it is at a lower intensity.
  • a voltage pulse will appear across resistor 145 as the capacitor 136 discharges. This pulse is fed through a resistor 147 to the control terminal of the main gated diode 114 controlling the flow of current to the buses of the lamps in the lamp bank.
  • the pulse appearing across the resistor 145 is also coupled by a conductor 150 to the reset input R of the bistable circuit 130 to reset the same.
  • the bistable circuit 130 is reset, as previously indicated, the voltage on the output line.132 thereof becomes grounded.
  • This ground potential is passed by the rectifier 134 to the ungrounded end of the capacitor 136, which is thereby maintained in a discharged state until the next pulse from the rectifier 66 is fed to the set input S of the bistable circuit 130. It is thus apparent that the ungrounded end of the resistor 145 has produced thereat pulses at a repetition rate of 120 cycles per second and'at a phase angle depending upon the intensity of the light striking the photocell 127.
  • each memory bistable circuit 30 can be replaced by a NOR- -AND gate circuit generally indicated by reference numeral 30 in FIG. 13.
  • Each of the circuits 30 has input terminals 152 and 153 and output terminals 154 and 155.
  • Input terminal 153 extends directly to the output line 41 of a bistable circuit 28 which may control the energization of one of the lamps of the lamp bank.
  • the other input terminal 152 extends to the B pulse bus 33.
  • each circuit 30 would feed a setting signal to the set terminal S of the bistable circuit 28 of the associated stage of the shift register circuit if the voltages on the input terminals 153 and 152 are both positive. (It will be recalled that, in the shift register circuits used particularly for the lamp control circuit, the voltage on the output lines 41 are positive during the set state of the associated bistable circuits.) This result can be accomplished by a well-known simple AND logic circuit.
  • the circuit of FIG. 14 has many of the components present in the simplified embodiment of the invention shown in FIG. I and in the dimming control circuit of FIGS. 10 and I2 and the same reference characters have been used therein to indicate corresponding elements.
  • the circuits previously described deal with a system for producing a running sign on a lamp bank.
  • the circuit of FIG. 14 accomplishes this result and, in addition, provides for stopping a running sign at a given point as determined by the presence of a stop code appearing in a column of the tape 7a read by the tape reader 7.
  • This stop code may be any suitable code which differs from the binary code groups identifying the alphabet and numerical characters displayed on the lamp bank.
  • a series of conductors 162 extend respectively from the various output lines 7c of the tape reader 7 to the input of a decoding matrix having separate output lines 164-1, 164-2, 164-6 representing stop codes for stopping the sign respectively for 6 difierent intervals (such as 5, 10, I5, 20, 25 and 30 seconds).
  • the decoder 160 is a conventional diode-type matrix which will energize the output line 164 which is associated with the time period identified by the binary code read by the tape reader 7 representing one of the stop codes referred to. It will be assumed that, when the output lines 164-1, 164-2, 164-6 are respectively energized, this represents respectively six progressively increasing time periods during which the sign then displayed on the lamp bank will be stopped on the lamp bank.
  • the various decoder output lines 164 are respectively connected to an OR circuit which is a well-known circuit which will produce a signal at the output terminal 166 thereof when a given signal appears on any one of the inputs thereto. It is thus apparent that the OR circuit 166 will provide an output signal if a stop code is sensed by the tape reader 7. When such a signal occurs, it is fed by conductor 168 to the set input terminal S of a control bistable circuit 168, to effect setting of the bistable circuit upon the presence of any stop code.
  • a subtract shift register 170 of any one of a number of different designs may be provided.
  • it may be a shift register with a number of stages corresponding to the number of different basic time periods.
  • the various output lines 164 of the decoder 160 may extend respectively to the set terminals S of the various stages of this shift register to set a marker in the stage of the shift register corresponding to the time period involved.
  • a source 172 of shift pulses for the shift register 170 is provided where the shift pulses may be separated, for example, 5 seconds apart. It is thus apparent that if there is a marker stored in the No. 6 stage of the shift register 170, the marker will be read out of the first stage of the shift register circuit approximately 30 seconds after the marker was initially placed into the shift register.
  • a voltage appears in an output line 174 which is fed to the reset input terminal R of the control bistable circuit 168 to reset the same.
  • the control bistable circuit 168 has a pair of output lines 171 and 173 which, during the set state of the bistable circuit, may, for example, respectively have a positive voltage and ground thereon and during the reset state of the bistable circuit respectively have ground and a positive voltage thereon.
  • the output line 171 extends to the input of the pair of gate circuits 174 and 176. The presence of a positive voltage on the line 171 results in the closing of the gate circuits 174 and 176 and the presence of a ground voltage thereon will result in the opening of the gate circuits.
  • the gate circuit 174 has input lines 180 extending from the A and B outputs of the shift pulse generator circuit 13 and output lines 182 extending to the A and B buses of the character read control circuit 14, the lamp control circuit 4 and the character memory unit 6.
  • the gate circuit 176 has a pair of input terminals 183183 respectively connected to the advance and read lines 86 and 83 of the character read control circuit 14 and output lines 185185' extending respectively to the advance and read terminals of the tape reader 7 and the matrix 8.
  • the particular circuit disclosed in FIG. 14 is one wherein the apparent intensity of the lamp bank 4 remains constant with variation of the ambient light conditions about the lamp bank 2 and also with the nature of the sign on the lamp bank.
  • the intensity of the light generator by the lamps is increased if the current flow through the lamps is not altered.
  • the sign on the lamp bank is stationary, the amount of current flow through the lamps thereof to produce a given light intensity is less than the current required by the lamps to produce the same light intensity in a running sign.
  • the circuit of FIG. 14 reduces the width of the current pulses fed to the lamps when a stationary sign is displayed on the lamp bank.
  • the time constant of the capacitor charge circuit of the double base diode relaxation oscillator circuit controlling the firing time of the main gated diode 114 is varied with the ambient light conditions of the lamp bank as well as the nature of the sign on the lamp bank 4.
  • the charge circuit for the capacitor 136 connected between the emitter electrode of the double base diode 138 and ground includes, in addition to the photocell 127, a pair of branch circuits extending respectively to the output lines 168 and 171 of the control bistable circuit 168.
  • One of the branch circuits in cludes an adjusting resistor 144 and a rectifier 186 extending to the output line 173 of the control bistable unit 168 which is positive during the reset state of the bistable circuit and ground during the set state of the bistable circuit.
  • the rectifier 186 is arranged to-pass a positive voltage on the output line 173 and block ground from the charge circuit of capacitor 136. Accordingly, when a running sign is displayed on the lamp bank, the time constant of the circuit which charges the capacitor 136 is determined by the value of the adjusting resistor 144.
  • the other branch circuit in the charge circuit of the capaci tor 136 includes an adjusting resistor 144' and a rectifier 186 connected to the other output line 171 of the control bistable circuit which is at ground during the reset state of the bistable circuit and positive during the set state of the bistable circuit.
  • the rectifier 186 blocks ground from and passes positive voltage to the charge circuit. Accordingly, when a stationary sign is displayed on the lamp bank, the time constant of the circuit which charges the capacitor 176 is determined by the value of resistor 144' which is larger than the resistor 144, to delay the firing time of the main gated diode 114.
  • FIG. 15 shows an exemplary circuit for the binary to single output matrix 8 and the input and output devices and circuitry associated therewith.
  • One of the input devices is the tape reader 7, which may be any one of a number of conventional tape readers.
  • the tape reader 7 has a set of six contacts 7d, each of which includes a spring urged movable contact 7d-l which is adapted to pass through a hole of the tape adapted a and a stationary contact 7d-2 which is engaged by the movable contact when the latter contact passes through the hole in the tape.
  • Each of the stationary contacts 7d-2 is connected to a common conductor 201 which is grounded.
  • the movable contacts id-1 are respectively connected to separate buses 204.
  • the buses 204 are connected through respective resistors 206 to a common conductor 207 leading to the positive terminal of a source of direct current voltage 208 whose negative terminal is grounded. It is thus apparent that when a movable contact 7d-1 of the tape reader 7 passes through a hole in tape 7a to engage the associated stationary contacts 7d-2 the associated bus 204 will be grounded and when the latter contacts are separated the associated bus 204 will be at a positive potential.
  • Each of the buses 204 are connected through a separate resistor 211 and a resistor 209 to the negative terminal of a source of negative voltage (not shown) whose positive terminal is grounded.
  • the juncture between each associated pair of resistors 207 and 209 is connected by a conductor 210 to the base electrode 212b of an NPN transistor 212.
  • the emitter electrode 212a of each transistor is grounded and the collector electrode 212C thereof is connected through a resistor 214 to the aforementioned bus 207 leading the positive terminal of the source of direct-current voltage 208.
  • the transistors 212 and associated circuits form part of the matrix 8.
  • the base electrode 21212 of the associated transistor 212 will have a negative potential thereon which will render the NPN transistor 212 involved nonconductive.
  • the ratio of the resistors 207 and 209 is such that when the associated bus 204 has a positive potential, the conductor 210 extending from the juncture of these resistors will be at a positive potential so as to render the associated transistors 212 conductive.
  • a conductor 220 extends from the end of each resistor 214 adjacent to the collector electrode 212C of the associated transistor 212 and a separate code bus 217.
  • the various code buses 217 are identified respectively by reference numerals 2170, 217b, 2170 and 217d, 217e and 2l7f. When a transistor 212 is conducting, the associated conductor 220 and bus 217 will be at groundpotential and when the transistor is nonconductive the conductor 220 and associated bus 217 will be at a positive potential.
  • the various code buses 217 are connected through respective rectifiers 219 to ground, the rectifiers being arranged to block positive voltage and pass ground or a negative voltage.
  • Each of the AND circuits 240 includes an NPN transistor 242 having an emitter electrode 242a which is grounded, a base electrode 24% which is coupled by a conductor 243 to one of the ends of a group of seven resistors 244-1, 244-2 244-7, and a collector electrode 2420 connected through a resistor 241 to the positive bus 207.
  • Each of the resistors 244 is assigned to one of the seven buses 220, 217a, 217b, 2170, 217e and 2171".
  • the resistors 244-7 are all permanently connected to the gating bus.
  • the other resistors of the group associated with each AND circuit are connected in different patterns to the various code buses 217a-2l7f so that the group of resistors associated with a given AND circuit will all be connected to ground bus only for the particular character involved. At all other times, at least all the other resistors 244-1 through 244-6 will be connected to a bus which is positive.
  • the conductor 243 associated with each of the AND circuits is also connected to one end of a resistor 248 whose opposite end is connected to the negative terminals of a source of direct current voltage (not shown) whose positive terminal is grounded.
  • the ratio of the resistors 248 to the resistors 244 is such that, when one of the resistors 244-1 through 244-7 of a group is connected to a positive bus, the potential on the conductor 243 leading to the base electrode 242b of the associated transistor 242 will be positive to render the same conductive and, when all of the resistors 244-1 through 244-7 of a group are connected to grounded buses, which occurs only momentarily when a gating pulse appears on the bus 220, the potential of the associated conductor 243 will be negative to render the associated transistor 242 nonconductive. Thus, a different one of the transistors 242 will be rendered nonconductive upon the appearance of a gating or read pulse on the input line 83 for a different character read by the tape reader 7.
  • each of the bistable circuits 28 and 30 of the shift register circuits constituting the lamp control circuit 4 comprise a pair of transistors 90 and 90' which are respectively in a highly conductive state during the set state of the bistable circuit and are both in a nonconductive state during the reset state of the bistable circuit.
  • One of the transistors 90 is a PNP transistor, and the transistor 90' is an NPN transistor.
  • the collector electrode 91 of the transistor 90 is connected by conductor 92 to a positive bus 93 leading to the positive terminal of the source of positive voltage (not shown) whose negative terminal is grounded.
  • the bus 93 for example, may be at a voltage of 18 volts.
  • the collector electrode 96 of the transistor 90 is connected through a resistor 98 to ground.
  • the transistor 90 has an emitter electrode 260 which is connected to the reset terminal R.
  • the reset terminal R is connected by a conductor 262 to the A bus 33'.
  • the collector electrode 264 of the transistor 90 is connected by a resistor 266 to a positive bus 93', which may have a positive voltage of 22 volts.
  • the collector electrode 264 of the transistor 90 is also connected through a resistor 270 to the base electrode 100 of the transistor 90.
  • the set terminal S of the bistable circuit is connected to the base electrode 100 of the transistor 90.
  • a resistor 272 is connected between the base electrode 274 of the transistor 90 and the ungrounded side of the resistor 98.
  • bistable circuits can be triggered from a reset state into a set state by the simple expedient of opening lines extending to the A and B buses 33 and 33'. This minimizes pulse distortion problems and the like which often occur when voltage control pulses are sent down long lines. (The various voltage sources which operate the bistable circuits shown in FIG. 16 are normally located a great distance from the lamp bank at which the bistable circuits are located.) To this end, the circuit shown in FIG. 3A is modified so that the pulses appearing at the A and B output terminals of the shift pulse generator circuit will be negative rather than positive pulses.
  • the A and B output terminals of the shift pulse generator circuit are respectively connected to the base electrodes 280 and 280' of a pair of NPN control transistors 282 and 282'.
  • the collector electrodes 283 and 283' of these transistors are respectively connected through resistors 286 and 286' to the aforementioned positive bus 93'.
  • the emitter electrodes 287-287 of these transistors are coupled through diodes 289-289 to ground, the diodes being arranged to pass normal collector to emitter current.
  • the base electrodes 280 and 280' of these transistors are coupled through resistors 290 and 290 to the positive terminal of a source of direct current voltage (not shown) which opposite terminal is grounded.
  • the collector electrodes 283 and 283 of the transistors 282 and 282 are connected by conductors 291 and 291 respectively to the A and B buses 33 and 33'.
  • control transistors 282 and 282' are in a conductive state due to the feeding of a positive voltage through the resistors 290 and 290' to the base electrodes 280 and 280 of the transistors 282 and 282'. Conduction of these transistors couples ground potential to the buses 33 and 33'.
  • the various bistable circuits 28 and 30 illustrated in FIG. 16 are normally in their reset state where the transistors and 90 are nonconductive. These transistors are maintained in a nonconductive state by virtue of the connection of the positive voltage on the bus 93' through the resistors 266 and 270 to the base electrodes of the transistors 90. As long as transistors 90 are nonconductive, ground potential is coupled through the associated resistors 282 to the base electrodes 274 of the associated transistors 90' which, since they are NPN transistors, render them nonconductive.
  • the bistable circuit is triggered into a set state by the feeding of a negative pulse to the set terminal S thereof connected to the base electrode 100 of the associated PNP transistor 90.
  • Each bistable circuit is reset by the simple expedient of momentarily opening the lines 291 and 291 leading to the buses 33 or 33. This interrupts flow of current to the transistor 90.
  • the transistor 90 is rendered nonconductive in this manner, the aforementioned ground potential fed through the resistor 270 to the base electrode 100 of the transistor 90 is removed and replaced by a positive voltage fed from the bus 93' which renders the transistor 90 nonconductive thereby reestablishing a stable nonconductive state for both transistors 90 and 90.
  • control means for the lamps comprising: input-reading means for reading columns of binary-coded information fed thereto one column at a time, each column of information representing a character to be displayed, a series of lamp control shift register circuits, there being one such shift register circuit for each row of lamps in the bank and each circuit having register stages positioned according to the position of the lamps in the associated row of lamps in the bank for effecting energization of the associated lamps when lamp-energizing markers appear therein, a series of character memory shift register circuits, there being one such circuit for each row of lamps in the bank, each of the latter circuits having a number of stages corresponding to the largest number of lamps in a row which are energized by the widest character to be displayed on the sign, decoding means coupled between said input-reading means and said character memory shift register circuits and responsive to the column of binary-coded characters being read by said input reading means for storing lamp-energizing markers in
  • said character read control means is a shift register circuit including a number of stages equal to the number of stages in each of the character memory shift register circuits and additional stages corresponding to the number of deenergized columns of lamp bank forming the space between successive character elements in a word or number grouping to be displayed on the lamp bank, decoding means responsive to the binary-coded character read by said input-reading means at any instant for storing a single marker in the stage of the character read shift register circuit which is spaced a number of stages from the last stage thereof proportional to the width of the character involved, and means shifting said latter marker one stage at a time toward the output thereof in synchronism with the feeding of lamp-energizing markers one column at a time from the character memory shift register circuits to the lamp control shift register circuits, and means for feeding a new column of coded information to said input-reading means as said single marker has been advanced through all of the stages of said character read shift register circuit.
  • control means for the lamp bank comprising input-reading means for reading information representing alphabet and/or numeral characters into the sign system, said input-reading means including character advance signal input terminal means for bringing a new character into a reading position when an advance signal is fed thereto; a light control circuit associated with each lamp in said bank, each light control circuit including a lamp-energizing bistable unit associated with each lamp in the bank operable in either of two states representing a set and a reset state, means for energizing each lamp when the associated bistable unit is in the reset state, means responsive to the information read by said input-reading means for operating the lamp-energizing bistable units associated with the group of lamps at the right end of the lamp bank in a pattern of conductive set states which will energize the group of lamps involved to reproduce the corresponding character, and bistable condition sensing means for each pair of bistable units associated with an adjacent pair of lamps of the bank, the bistable condition sensing means for each pair of bistable units associated with an adjacent pair of lamps of the bank, the bistable condition sensing

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Abstract

A solid state circuit controlled variable width character running sign lamp bank including a shift register circuit for each row of lamps in which shift register circuit a pattern of lamp-energizing markers are shifted in accordance with the running sign involved. The lamp energizing markers are fed to the first stages of the row shift register circuits from character memory circuits each constituting a shift register circuit with a number of stages equal to the number of lamps in a row required to display the widest character. The sign information is fed to the control circuit from a tape reader which reads binary coded tape. A binary decoder circuit responds to the binary information read by the tape reader and stores a pattern of lamp-energizing markers in the character memory circuits corresponding to the character involved which markers are sequentially fed to the inputs of the row shift register circuits. The tape is shifted one code position each time the last lamp energizing marker of a pattern of such markers representing one character leaves the character memory circuits.

Description

United States Patent [72] lnventors Edward J. Schulenburg, Sr.
Danville, lll.; Ervin M. Ball, Indianapolis, Ind. 2|] Appl. No. 436,469 [22] Filed Mar. 2, 1965 [45] Patented Apr. 6, 1971 [73] Assignee Time-O'Matic, lnc.
Danville, 111.
[54] SOLID STATE SIGN SYSTEM 10 Claims, 20 Drawing Figs.
[52] U.S. 340/334, 340/324, 340/339 [51] Int. Cl 609i 13/00 [50] Field of Search 340/154, 332, 334, 336, 339, 340, 343, 373, 378, 168 (SR), 172.5; 178/17 (A), 17 (B); 40/52, 53, 32, 33, 106.51, 106.52, 130, 130 (E); 235/92 (65). (68), 61.11, 151.1
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,225,342 12/1965 Clark Primary Examiner-Donald J. Yusko Assistant Examiner-Marshall M. Curtis Att0rneyWallenstein, Spangenberg & Hattrs ABSTRACT: A solid state circuit controlled variable width character running sign lamp bank including a shift register circuit for each row of lamps in which shift register circuit a pattern of lamp-energizing markers are shifted in accordance with the running sign involved. The lamp energizing markers are fed to the first stages of the row shift register circuits from character memory circuits each constituting a shift register circuit with a number of stages equal to the number of lamps in a row required to display the widest character. The sign information is fed to the control circuit from a tape reader which reads binary coded tape. A binary decoder circuit responds to the binary information read by the tape reader and stores a pattern of lamp-energizing markers in the character memory circuits corresponding to the character involved which markers are sequentially fed to the inputs of the row shift register circuits. The tape is shifted one code position each time the last lamp energizing marker of a pattern of such markers representing one character leaves the character memory circuits.
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CIRCUIT 4a MEMORY mv/r 6c. c l mineral: smrr uue 17, J4 CAMAMTER J4 I j SI/IF! q 8540 mar/r01. I PM GEM J5 -J 7b 15 l uMmcrER IiPE l 5 J5 wum/ MATRIX J0 7e JO 1 I Luvs P58 no: wswsus CHAR/refer? CHARACTER R5405? ourpwnn-mx JET-UP MdI'k/X l PATENTF I] APR 6 IHYI SHEET U [1F 9 Q O 6 Q 0 HQ m n mm Q mlemm Y mm flenffins Ward Jj ckamba PATI'ENTED m slsn SHEET 5 [IF 9 PATENTED APR 6197! SHEET 7 [IF 9 SOLID STATE SIGN SYSTEM The present invention relates to improvements in a running sign system, although some aspects of the invention have a broader application.
The running sign with which the present invention has its most important application includes a lamp bank having a plurality of columns of lamps which are energized in sequence to produce a running sign message which moves across the sign from right to left. The energization of the lamps of these signs has been commonly controlled through mechanical switches. In recent years some effort has been made by sign manufacturers to replace the mechanical switches with solid state switches, but the real potentialities of the solid state control of these lamps was not,'heretofore, realized. The present invention represents a substantial advance in the control of sign lamp banks by solid state logic circuits.
The present invention makes possible at modest cost and minimum circuit complexity the control of the energization of the lamps of a lamp bank by feeding coded tape into a tape reader. For example, a teletype or other binary code is arranged in columns across the tape, the binary code characters in each column of the tape representing an alphabet or numeral character. With this arrangement, the tape reader, which is the slowest operating element of the running sign system, need readonly one column of coded characters at a time to transfer a single alphabet or numeral character tothe sign. This is in contrast, for example, to some attempts heretofore made for controlling a running sign by feeding tape punched in patterns following the alphabet or numerical characters involved. In such case, the tape reader, which may include photocells or contacts, must scan a substantial area of the tape to transfer a complete character to the lamp bank. This severely limits the speed with which information can be read into the sign. I
Due to the manner in which running signs were heretofore operated, it was necessary for each alphabet or numerical character and the space between characters to occupy a standard sized block. For example, a narrow letter (like I and T) and the spaces on the opposite sides thereof occupicdthe same sign area as a much wider letter and the associated spaces, with the result that the spacing between narrow letters was much greater than the spacing between wider letters. Because of the circuit logic and arrangement of the present invention, each letter or numeral and the spaces on the opposite sides thereof occupy a sign area proportional to the width of the letter or numeral so that the spacing between all letters of a word or number can be the same.
From what' has been stated above, it is apparent that the overall intensity of a lamp bank having a stationary message thereon is greater than a lamp bank having a running message thereon (when the lamps are energized from identical voltage sources). In accordance with an aspect of the invention the running sign system is provided with means for stopping a running message in the lamp bank and for automatically reducing the overall intensity of the lamps when the message is stationary, so that the overall intensity of the sign is similar for the running and stationary messages.
Other aspects of the invention relate to various details of the circuitry which result in a minimum power drain, maximum reliability, and minimum circuit complexity.
The various features of the invention are disclosed in the specification to follow, the claims and the drawings wherein:
FIG. I is a basic block diagram of one form of running sign system incorporating features of the present invention;
FIG. 1A is a fragmentary view of a portion of the tape fed to the equipment shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 2 is a detailed block diagram disclosing a basic form of lamp control circuit and character memory unit forming part of the sign system of FIG. 1;
FIG. 2A is a diagrammatic view of the various stages of the shift register circuits making up the character memory unit;
FIG. 3 is a detailed block diagram illustrating a preferred lamp control circuit;
FIG. 3A is a detailed block diagram of the A and B shift pulse generator circuit forming part of the sign system of FIG. I;
FIG. 4 is a detailed block diagram illustrating a preferred character read control circuit fonning part of the sign system of FIG. I;
FIG. 5 is a timing diagram illustrating the relative phases of various wavefonns in the circuits of FIGS. 3 and 4;
FIG. 6 shows the lamps which are energized to produce the character E when the lamp control circuit of FIG. 3 is util ized;
FIG. 7 shows a modified lamp control circuit where alternate lamps are energized at a given time;
FIG. 7A is a timing diagram illustrating the relative phase of various waveforms in the circuit of FIG. 7;
FIG. 8 shows the lamps which are energized to produce the character 13" for the lamp control circuit of FIG. 7;
FIG. 9 shows a modified lamp control circuit where successive lamps are energized at the same time;
FIG. 10 shows an energizing circuit for the lamps of the lamp bank which provides for selective dimming of certain rows of the lamp banks and control over the intensity of the lamps in accordance with the ambient light conditions of the lamp bank;
FIG. 1 I shows the waveform of the current flow through the lamps of the lamp bank and the manner in which the average current flow therethrough is controlled;
FIG. 12 illustrates a variable phase pulse circuit operated from a photocell which forms part of the circuit of FIG. 10;
FIG. 13 illustrates a basic modification of the circuit logic of the various shift register circuits shown in FIGS. 3 and 4;
FIG. 14 illustrates a block diagram of a combined running and stationary sign system with provision for controlling the average light intensity of the lamp bank in accordance with the ambient light conditions;
FIG. 15 illustrates an exemplary circuit diagram of a binary to single output matrix and the character setup matrix forming a part of the circuits illustrated in FIGS. 1 and 14; and
FIG. 16 is an exemplary circuit diagram of a portion of the lamp control circuit of the embodiment of the invention shown in FIG. 3 and illustrating the circuitry of the bistable circuits which control the gated diodes associated with the lamps in the lamp bank.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION 2e, 2f, and 2g, The corresponding lamps in each of the rows are preferably aligned in columns. The lamp bank 2 is illustrated as being a horizontally elongated lamp bank capable of receiving relatively long running signs. (It should be recalled, however, that some aspects of the invention have application to stationary sign systems.)
The lamp bank 2 is controlled by a very unique static element logic control circuit including a lamp control circuit 4 which directly controls the energization of the various lamps in the bank. The lamp control circuit 4 most advantageously comprises a number of individual shift register circuits to be described, one such circuit being provided for each row of lamps. Lamp-energizing markers are sequentially fed into the stages of the shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit associated with the group of lamps at the right-hand of the lamp bank 2 and in a pattern corresponding with the particular alphabet or numerical character being first displayed on the lamp bank at a given moment. The various patterns of lamp-energizing markers entered into the shift register circuits are sequentially advanced through the various stages of the shift register circuits. The presence of a lamp energizing marker in a stage of a shift register circuit associated with a particular lamp will result in the energization of that lamp.
The lamp-energizing markers are fed into the shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit 4 from a character memory unit 6. In the preferred form of the invention, the character memory unit 6 comprises a series of shift register circuits 6-1,
6-2, 63, 6-4, 6-5, 6-6, and 67 (FIG. 2A), one such circuit being associated with each row of lamps in the lamp bank. Each shift register circuit of the lamp control circuit has a number of stages a, b, c, d, e,f(a being the first stage at the right-hand end thereof) equal in number to the number of lamps which must be energized in a row of lamps for the widest alphabet or numerical character to be displayed on the lamp bank plus a number of stages g and h equal to the number of lamps which remain deenergized in the space between successive characters. (It is assumed, for example, that the widest character to be displayed on the lamp will require energization of six lamps in a given row of lamps and that the space between successive characters will occupy two columns of lamps of the lamp bank.) A pattern of lamp energizing markers (each identified by an x" in FIG. 2A) are first placed within the stages a through f of the various shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6 (the f" stage containing the marker forming the left-hand portion of the character involved) in' a pattern which corresponds to the particular alphabet or numerical character read by a tape reader 7 to which punched tape 7a (FIG. 1A) is fed. The advancement of lamp-energizing markers in any shift register circuit will be to the left and so as the lamp-energizing markers shown in FIG. 2A are shifted in the shift register circuit 6-1 through 67, the outline E of markers shown moves to the left and, as will be explained in more detail, will be transferred into the righthand stages of the corresponding shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit 4. The number of shift operations required to empty the character memory unit of markers thus varies with the width of the character involved.
In the exemplary embodiment of the invention being described, it will be assumed that a six-element binary coded group of punched holes 7a (FIG. 1A) is utilized to indicate each alphabet or numerical character, the code occupying a single column extending transversely across the tape 7a. The tape reader 7 reads one column of binary coded characters at a time. The tape 7a is automatically advanced in accordance with well-established tape reader practice each time the tape reader receives an advance signal on an advance input line 7b. The tape reader 7. has a number of output lines 7c corresponding to the number of binary coded characters in each code group on the tape 7a so that the voltage or current pattern on the output lines 7c duplicates the particular code being read by the tape reader. The output lines 7c extend to a binary to single output matrix 8 which energizes one of a number of output lines collectively identified by reference 8a, the particular output line being energized corresponding to the alphabet or numerical character read by the tape reader 7a at a given instant.
The output lines 80 of the binary to single output matrix 8 are connected to a character setup matrix 10 and a character width matrix 15. The character setup matrix 10 includes groups of diodes ll F IG. associated with each output line of the matrix 8 which extend to those stages of the various shift register circuits making up the character memory unit 6 which form the pattern of the character involved. Thus, depending upon the particular output line 8a which is energized, a pattern of lamp-energizing markers is set up in the stages of the character memory unit 6 corresponding to the alphabet or numerical character being read by the tape reader 7.
The shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit 4 and the character memory unit 6 associated with a given row of lamps in the lamp bank are connected in tandem so that the lamp-energizing markers are transferred one column of mar kers at a time from the left-hand stages h of the various shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6 to the righthand stages of the shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit 4. The advancement of the lampenergizing markers in the circuits 4 and 6 are under control of output pulses from a shift pulse generator 13 of any well-known type which feeds shift pulses to shift input terminals 4a and 6a of the lamp control and character memory unit circuits 4 and 6.
When all of the lamp-energizing markers have been fed from the character memory unit 6, thiscondition is sensed in any one of a number of ways, as by the provision of a character read control unit M which affects the feeding of an advance pulse to the advance input terminal 7b of the tape reader 7 so that the next column 7a of binary coded information on the tape 7a is fed to the tape reading position of the tape reader 7. When this occurs, a new pattern of lamp-energizing markers are entered into the character memory unit 6.
The character read control 14 may take a variety of forms. In the preferred form of the invention, the character read control unit comprises a single shift register circuit having the same number of stages as any one of shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6. A character width matrix 15 is provided which may be a diode matrix which has a separate output 15a for each different character width. For example, if the widest character occupies six lamps on the lamp bank, the character width matrix 15 will have six output lines representing the six possible character widths. The character width matrix 15 is coupled to the output lines 8a to energize the output 15a which identifies the width of the particular character being read by the tape reader 7. A marker will be placed in the stage of the shift register circuit making up the character read control unit 14 which corresponds to the right-hand-most stage of the shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6 which contains a lamp-energizing marker.
The output of the shift pulse generator 13 is fed to a shift input terminal 14a of the character read control unit 14 so that the marker in the shift register circuit making up the character read control unit 14 will advance in synchronism with the advancement of the lamp-energizing markers in the character memory unit 6. As the marker leaves the left-handmost stage of the shift register circuit of the character read control 14, a signal is fed on a character shift line 17 to the advance input terminal 7b of the tape reader 7, bringing the next binary code group into reading position as above explained.
As previously indicated, the provision of the character memory unit 6 as described above will effect a fixed spacing between all characters in a word or number group independently of the width of the character. This is a substantial improvement over the appearance of the usual running sign wherein the spaces between successive characters vary with the width of the character due to the fact that a given size character block is utilized for all characters displayed on the sign.
LAMP CONTROL AND CHARACTER MEMORY CIRCUITS OF FIG. 2
FIG. 2 illustrates a generalized form for the lamp control circuit 4 when using gated diodes for controlling the energization of the various lamps, the gated diodes being identified by reference 20 followed by an alphabet character identifying the row of lamps involved and a number identifying the column of lamps involved. In the circuit illustrated, the anode electrode of each gated diode is connected to one of the lamps of the lamp bank, the lamps being identified by reference number 22 followed by an alphabet character identifying the row of lamps and a number identifying the column of lamps involved. The lamps, in turn, are connected to a common power bus 24 leading to the output of a full-wave rectifier circuit 26 which would normally be fed from a commercial source of 60 cycle alternating current.
The cathode electrodes of the gated diodes 20 are grounded and the control electrodes thereof are connected respectively to lamp control bistable or flip-flop circuits identified by reference 28 and an alphabet character identifying the associated row of lamps and a number identifying the associated column of lamps involved. when one of the bistable circuits 28 is triggered into a set state, a direct current (DC) voltage is fed to the control terminal of the associated gated diode 20 to effect the firing thereof. The gated diode continues in a highly conductive state for the remainder of the half cycle of the rectified current pulsation which flows through the gated diode and the lamp associated therewith independently of the voltage in the control electrode thereof. The control electrode gains control over the conductive state of the gated diode when the current drops to near zero, that is below what is referred to as a holding current level. The gated diode will again fire at the beginning of the next half cycle if the associated bistable circuit remains in the set state.
Each of the bistable circuits 28 forms part of a stage of a shift register circuit with the other bistable circuits associated with the lamps of the same row of lamps of the lamp bank 2. Although any conventional shift register circuit may be utilized in the practice of the broad aspects of the present invention, certain aspects of the present invention deal with the nature of the shift register circuit which has particular advantages in a lamp control circuit of the type now being described. 7
The bistable circuits 28a-2, 28a3, etc. other than the righthandmost bistable circuit 28a-l, etc. of each shift register circuit of the lamp control circuit 4 is controlled by a condition sensing means generally indicated by reference number 30 followed by an alphabet character identifying the associated row of lamps and a number identifying the associated column of lamps. The first bistable circuit 28a-1, etc. of each shift register circuit is set by a signal fed to a set input terminal S thereof from the last stage of the corresponding shift register circuit of the character memory unit 6. (Theaforementioned lamp-energizing marker is represented by a set state of a bistable circuit 28.) The condition sensing 30 means associated with each bistable circuit determines whether the associated bistable circuit will be set or maintained in the reset state. A number of different circuits for the condition sensing means 30 will be described. Suffice it to say at this point in the specification, each condition sensing means 30 effects the setting of the associated bistable circuit 28 at a point in time coincident with the presence of an advance pulse on an ad vance signal line 33 if the bistable circuit 28 to the right of it is in a set state prior to the generation of the advance pulse. If, on the other hand, the latter bistable circuit is in a reset state, the condition sensing means 30 involved will either maintain or effect a resetting of the bistable circuit which it controls on the presence of the next advance pulse on the advance signal line 33.
The shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6 are, in most respects, similar to the shift register circuits just described in connection with the lamp control circuit 4, and, accordingly, except for the first stage of each of the shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6, includes a bistable circuit identified by reference 35 followed by an alphabet character identifying the associated row of lamps and a number identifying the associated column of lamps. Each shift register circuit stage thereof except the first one includes a condition sensing means identified by reference number 37 followed by an alphabet character and a number respectively utilized to identify the associated row and column of lamps. The first stage of each shift register circuit 6-1, or 6-2, or 6-3, etc. of the character memory unit comprises a bistable circuit 35a-l, or 35b-1, etc. As previously indicated, each of the shift register circuits of the character memory unit 6 has eight stages in the exemplary embodiment of the invention, only five of which appear in FIG. 2. The shift register circuits associated with the character memory unit 6 are different from those of the lamp control circuit 4 in that the former are initially set in accordance with a given pattern corresponding to the associated alphabet character or number by set input lines identified by reference number 40 followed by an alphabet character and number identifying the associated row and column of lamps. The various set lines 40 are the previously mentioned output lines 100 of the character setup matrix 10 described in connection with FIG. 1.
Once the various bistable circuits 35 are set, the subsequent presence of advance pulses on the advance signal line 33 will result in the sequential movement of the pattern of set states involved toward the left-hand end of each of the shift register circuits making up the character memory unit 6. As previously indicated, the set state of a last stage of the bistable circuits making up the character memory unit 6 will result in the setting of the first bistable circuit of the first stage of the associated shift register circuit of the lamp control circuit 4 upon the occurrence of the next advance pulse on the advance signal line 33.
SPECIFIC LAMP CONTROL CIRCUIT OF FIG. 3
Refer now to FIG. 3 which illustrates a specific lamp control circuit 4 wherein the condition sensing means 30 are bistable circuits (to be referred to as intermediate bistable control circuits) like the lamp control bistable circuits 28.
Each of the bistable circuits 28 and 30 has a set input terminal S and a reset terminal R for respectively setting and resetting the bistable circuit when signals of proper polarity (to be referred to as set and reset signals) are fed thereto. The reset terminals of the lamp control bistable circuits 28 are connected by conductors 42 to an A signal bus 33' upon which pulses appear having the phase indicated by the waveform (b) shown in FIG. 5. It should be noted that these A pulses occur during alternate half cycles and a short time after the beginning of each half cycle of the AC rectified current fed to the lamps 22 from the output of the rectifier circuit 26. The reset terminals of the intermediate bistable circuits 30 are connected to a B signal bus 33 on which pulses appear having the phase indicated by thewaveform (c) shown in FIG. 5. The B pulses occur during the same half cycles as the A pulses and are delayed by a small angle from the A pulses.
Each of the lamp control bistable circuits 28 has an output line 41 and each of the intermediate bistable circuits has an output line 41. It will be assumed that each of these output lines will have applied thereto a negative or ground voltage when the bistable circuit is in a reset state and a positive voltage when the bistable circuit is in a set state. The output line 41 is connected to the control electrode of the associated gated diode 20 to fire the same when the bistable circuit is in a set state. The gated diode will continue in a conductive state independently of the voltage thereafter fed to the control electrode thereof for the remainder of the half cycle of current flow involved. Near the end of the half cycle, the current flowing through the gated diode will drop below what is referred to as a holding current level, wherein the control electrode thereof regains control. The gated diode will continue to conduct in subsequent half cycles until the associated bistable circuit 28 is reset.
As is apparent from waveform (b) in FIG. 5, each lamp control bistable circuit 28 which is in a set state will be reset every other half cycle on the occurrence of an A pulse. (As previously indicated, the setting of a bistable circuit 28 will have no effect on the control of the associated gated diode until the end of the half cycle of current flows through the gated diode involved.) Since the A pulses occur during alternate half cycles, once a gated diode has become conductive it will remain conductive to energize the associated lamp for the remainder of the half cycle involved and for an added two full half cycles, which, when the source of energizing voltage for the lamps in a full wave rectified 60 cycle voltage source, provides an adequate warmup time for a bright running sign display.
As previously indicated, the interconnections between the various bistable circuits 28 and 30 form a shift register circuit. To this end, a capacitor 55 is connected between the output line 41 of each of the lamp control bistable circuits 28 and the set terminal of the intermediate bistable circuit 30 of the next stage of the shift register circuit. The intermediate bistable circuits 30 are designed so that only a negative going pulse fed to the set terminals S thereof will effect the setting thereof. Such a negative going voltage occurs when a given lamp control bistable circuit 28 is switched from a set to a reset state by the feeding of an A pulse to the reset input R thereof.
The shift register. circuit operates in such a manner that when a given lamp control bistable circuit 28 is in a set state, this set state will be transferred to the next stage of the shift register circuit when advance pulses are fed to the shift register circuit. The A and B pulses, in the manner now to be explained, act as shift or advance pulses for the shift register circuit. Assuming that the first lamp control bistable circuit 28a-l is in a set state, upon the occurrence of the next A pulse on the line 33, the bistable circuit is reset which generates a negative going voltage on the output line 41 which is coupled through the capacitor 55 to the next intermediate bistable circuit 300-2 to set the same. If the bistable circuit 28a-1 was in a reset state during the occurrence of the A pulse, the state of the bistable circuit will not change and no signal voltage will be coupled through the capacitor 55, and the intermediate bistable circuit 3011-2 will remain in its reset state. In effect, the intermediate bistable circuits act as memory units which memorize the last state of the preceding lamp control bistable circuit following the generation of each A pulse.
In the case where the intermediate bistable circuit 3011-2 is triggered to a set state, the bistable circuit will immediately thereafter be reset upon the generation of the next B pulse coupled to the reset terminal R thereof. When the intermediate bistable circuit like 300-2 is reset, a negative going voltage will appear on the output line 41' thereof which is coupled by a capacitor 57 to the set input terminal of the lamp control bistable circuit 2811-2. If the intermediate bistable circuit 3011-2 had not been previously set, no signal will appear at the output line 41' or at the set input terminal S of the lamp control bistable circuit 28a-2 upon the occurrence of the B pulse. It is thus apparent that the arrangement of bistable circuits shown in FIG. 3 constitute a shift register circuit wherein a given pattern of set and reset states proceeds down the various stages of the shift register circuit at a rate depending upon the rate of the A and B pulses.
Each gated diode 20 has a control terminal connected to an output line 41 of a lamp control bistable circuit 28 and as a lamp control bistable circuit is triggered to a set state the associated gated diode will be fired into a conductive state. As previously indicated each such gated diode will continue to conduct for a full half cycle once it has been fired independently of the voltage on the control terminal thereof during which interval the associated lamp 22 will be energized. The gated diode will be refired at the beginning of the next two half cycles because the next A and B pulses will not recur until after the beginning of the last of the latter half cycles. Each lamp will thus be energized for about three half cycles, giving adequate warmup time despite the fact that the A and B pulses are spaced only two half cycles (in a 60 cycle per second timing source). As one lamp becomes energized, the previous energized lamp remains energized until the end of the half cycle involved. This overlapping of the energization of successive lamps of the lamp bank allows the lamps to reach and remain at high intensity for a sufficient period to provide a proper average intensity of the sign despite the high pulse rate.
A AND B SHIFT PULSE GENERATOR 13 OF FIG. 3A
In the preferred form of the invention, the A and B pulses are generated in a manner like that shown in FIG. 3A. To this end, a source of commercial 60 cycle voltage is fed to a full wave rectifier circuit 60 which provides at the output thereof a full wave rectified waveform (a) such as shown in FIG. 5. (The rectifier circuit 60 may be at the same rectifier used to produce the energizing voltage waveform applied to the bus 24 extending to the lamps 22 of the lamp bank.) The full wave rectified voltage is fed to the input of a suitable clipper circuit 62 which produces a waveform W2 like that shown at the output of the clipper circuit 62 in FIG. 3A. This waveform is fed to a conventional differentiating circuit 64 which produces positive and negative going pulses P1 centered about the sloping sides of the wavefonn W2. These pulses are fed through a rectifier 66 which removes pulses of one polarity to leave pulses of opposite polarity having a rate of I20 pulses per second. These pulses are fed directly to (or indirectly through an amplifier) to a divider circuit 68 which may have a manual control knob 70 providing for a selection of different division factors to produce a selection of pulse rates for the A and B pulses which varies the speed of the running sign. The pulse rate illustrated in FIGv 5 is a 60 cycles per second rate which represents a divide by 2 operation of the divider circuit. By adjusting the manual control 70 to produce a division by 4, a pulse rate of 30 cycles per second is produced which produces a rate of advance of the running sign which is one-half that produced by a 60 cycle A and B pulse rate.
The output of the divider circuit 68 is split into two branches, one of which extends to an A terminal, representing the source of A pulses and the other of which extends through a suitable delay means 72 which produces a slight delay in the pulses, fed to a B terminal representing the source of B pulses.
CHARACTER READ CONTROL CIRCUIT 14 OF FIG. 4
As previously indicated, the character memory unit 6 and the character read control circuit 14 comprises one or more shift register circuits. These shift register circuits are preferably similar to the shift register circuit just described in connection with FIG. 3 which controls one of the rows of lamps of the lamp bank. The character read control circuit 14 comprises a series of bistable circuits forming the various stages of a shift register circuit as illustrated in FIG. 4, the stages being respectfully identified by reference numerals 14-1, 14-2, 14-3, through 14-8. Except for the first stage of the shift register circuit illustrated, which comprises only a single bistable circuit 77, each stage of the shift register circuit includes an intermediate or memory bistable circuit 74 having a set input terminal S coupled through a capacitor 75 to the output 76 of the bistable circuit 77 of the preceding stage. Each bistable circuit 77 of the second and subsequent stages of the shift register circuit has a set terminal S coupled through a capacitor 79 to the output of the associated intermediate or memory bistable circuit 74. Each of the memory bistable circuits 74 has a reset terminal R connected to the B signal bus 33 and each of the bistable circuits 77 has a reset terminal R connected to the A signal bus 33.
Unlike the shift register circuits forming part of the lamp control circuit 4, the shift register circuit making up the character read control circuit 14 has individual set lines 80-1, 80-2, 80-3, 80-4, 80-5, and 80-6, extending directly to the set terminals S of the bistable circuits 77 so as to preset simultaneously all of the stages to a given state of operation. The set lines 80-1, 80-2, etc. represent the output lines of the character width matrix 15 which, as previously indicated, is a diode matrix including diodes 81 connected to the output lines 80 of the binary to single output matrix 8. The latter matrix has a separate output line for each character which can be displayed on the lamp bank and energization of one of these output lines 8a indicates the character next to be fed to the righthand end of the lamp bank. The set lines 80-6, 80-5, 80-4, 80-3, 80-2, and 80-1 of the character read control circuit 14 are respectively momentarily energized by a negative going voltage when the character read by the tape reader 7 is respectively l, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 lamps wide when displayed on the lamp bank 2. It is thus apparent that the various diodes 81 making up the character with matrix 15 associated with a given set input line 80 for the character read control unit 14 are connected to all of the output lines 8a of the binary to single output matrix 8 representing characters having the same width on the lamp bank.
Assuming, for example, that the character read by the tape reader 7 at a given instant is to be 5 lamps wide, the set line 80-2 will be energized at the instant tape reader 7 effects a readout operation so as to set the bistable circuit 77 associated with the second stage 14-2 of the shift register circuit 14. On
the occurrence of the various A and B pulses on the buses 33 and 33, the set state (constituting a shift register circuit marker) in the stage 14-2 will progress to the left, as viewed in FIG. 4.
As the memory bistable circuit 74 of shift register stage 14-8 is triggered into a set state, the positive going voltage appearing at the output 82 thereof is coupled through the capacitor 79 to a line 83 which energizes the binary to single output matrix 8 which, in turn, energizes the character width matrix and the character setup matrix 10 to produce a set of new markers in the character memory unit 6 and the character readcontrol circuit 14 in accordance with the character then being read by the tape reader 7.
As the bistable circuit 77 of the last stage 14-8 of the shift register circuit becomes set momentarily, the positive going voltage occurring at the output 76 of the bistable circuit 77 is coupled by an output line 86 to the shiff input terminal 7b of the tape reader 7 t0 rriove the next column 70' of coded information on the tape 7a into reading position in the tape reader. The output line 86 is the character shift line 17 described in connection with FIG. 1. The movement of a set marker completely through the various stages of the shift register circuit making up the character read control circuit 14 indicates that all of the set markers stored in the character memory unit 6 have been transferred to the shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit 4.
LAMP CONTROL CIRCUIT 4b OF FIG. 7
The lamp control circuit 40 of FIG. 3 will produce a complete lamp-energizing pattern as, for example, illustrated for the letter E in FlG. 6. As indicated in the introductory part of the specification, letters like the letter E have relatively long horizontal upper, lower and intermediate horizontal legs. The lamp rows 20, 2d and 2g of the lamp bank which reproduce these legs of the letter E produce a much higher average intensity of illumination because of the successive energization of these lamps as the letter E advances down the lamp bank than the lamp rows 2b, 2e, 2e, and 2g thereof. To minimize the difference in the average intensity of the lamps in the various lamp rows and to reduce the number of stages required in the shift register circuit forming part of the lamp control circuit 4, thelamp control circuit 4b of FIG. 7 was developed. This circuit is similar in many respects to the circuit of FIG. 3 and similar portions thereof have been given similar reference numerals. The shift register circuit portion of the lamp control circuit 4b is identical to that shown in FIG. 3 except that it requires only half the number of stages. This is brought about by the fact that the lamp control bistable circuits 280-1, 280-2, etc. are associated with alternate lamps 220-1, 220-3, etc. of the lamp bank and the lamps 220-2, 220-4, etc. are controlled by the memory bistable units 300-2, 300-3, etc. The gated diodes -2, 20-4, etc. associated with the lamps 220-2, 220-4, have control terminals respectively connected to the output lines 41' of the memory bistable circuits 300-2, 300-3, etc. It is thus apparent that when the memory bistable circuits 300-2, 300-3, etc. are in a set state, the resulting positive voltage occurring on the output lines 41' thereof will fire the associated gated diodes 20-2, 20-4, etc., which result in the energization of the associated lamps for the remainder of the half cycle involved. If the associated memory bistable circuits are immediately reset by the B pulses as in the case of the lamp control circuit 40 of F IG. 3, the gated diodes will not be fired again until the associated memory bistable circuits are again set, and so the lamps controlled by the memory bistable circuits will not have sufficient time to warmup and remain lighted for a while at a readily visible intensity. ln other words, the length of time each of the memory bistable circuits 300-2, 300-3, etc. will be in the reset state depends upon the time delay between each A pulse and the next B pulse. If the A and B pulses occur during the same half cycle, the associated lamp will be energized for only one half cycle. Thus, when the lamp control circuit of FIG. 7 is used, the
A and B pulses are preferably separated by several half cycles as illustrated by waveforms (b) and (c) in FIG. 7A so the lamps will be energized for a number of half cycles. As there shown, the A pulses are separated four half cycles, the B pulses are separated four half cycles, and the A and B pulses are spaced two half cycles. This will result in the energization of the even numbered lamps 220-2, 220-4, etc. for about three half cycles since the memory bistable circuit 30 are set for the interval between each A pulse and the next B pulse. The odd numbered lamps 220-1, 220-3 will also be energized for about three half cycles due to the fact that the spacing between each B pulse and the next A pulse determines the length of time the lamp control bistable circuits-28 remain set. The speed of the sign progression is actually the same for the A and B pulse timing shown in FIG. 7A used in the lamp control circuit of FIG. 7 and the A and B pulses timing shown in FIG. 5, used in the lamp control circuit of FIG. 5.
FIG. 8 illustrates those lamps which are energized at the instant of the setting of the lamp control bistable circuits 280-1, 280-2, and 280-3. When these lamp control bistable circuits become reset two half cycles later, the other lamps 280-2, 2 20-4 and 220-6 to the left of the lamps which were just energized become energized for three half cycles. Thus for a letter like the letter E, only half of the lamps in the row 20, 2d and 2g forming the horizontal legs of the letter in lamp control circuit of FlG. 3 will be energized with the circuit of FIG. 7, thereby making the average intensity of the lamps in all the lamp rows of more equal intensity. Also, the circuit of FlG. 7 requires only one-half the shift register stages used in the circuit of FIG. 3.
MODIFIED LAMP CONTROL ClRCUlT FOR 40 OF FIG. 9
Refer now to the lamp control circuit of FIG. 9 which is a modification of the lamp control circuit shown in FIG. 3. As previously indicated, one of the problems in running signs is the problem of warmup time for the lamps. When a running sign is advanced along a lamp bank at a fairly high running rate, it is frequently difficult to provide enough warmup time for the lamps. This problem is solved, in part, by the one cycle overlapping energization of the lamps previously described in connection with the circuit of FIG. 3. FIG. 9 is an improvement over FIG. 3 by providing a longer energizing period and greater degree of overlap of the energization of the lamps without varying the phasing or rate of the A and B pulses. in the preferred form of the invention, each of the lamp-energizing bistable circuits 280-1, 280-2, etc. are bistable circuits of special design including two current control devices (only one of which is shown in FlG. 9 and identified by reference number wherein both devices are either in a nonconductive or a conductive state, so that low drain operation can be effected when the lamp bank is not energized. The current control device 90 illustrated is a PNP transistor having an emitter electrode 91 connected by a conductor 92 to a positive direct current voltage bus 93, a collector electrode 96 connected through a resistor 98 to ground and a base electrode 100 which is connected to a part of the bistable circuit to be described later on in connection with the circuit of FIG. 16. When a lamp control bistable circuit 28 is in a set state, the current control device 90 will be in a conductive state, resulting in a positive voltage at the ungrounded end of the resistor 98. A conductor 102, couples the ungrounded end of the resistor 98 to the anode side of an isolating rectifier 104 whose anode is connected to the control terminal of the associated gated diode 20. lt is thus apparent that when any of the bistable circuits 28 are energized, a positive voltage is coupled through the rectifier 104 to effect firing of the associated gated diode 20.
The improvement in the circuit of P10. 9 over that of FIG. 3 is that each bistable output conductor 102 is coupled to the anode side of another rectifier 107 whose cathode is connected directly to the control electrode of the gated-diode 20 associated with the lamp which, in the normal course of events, would be energized following the next shift operation of the shift register circuit controlling the row of lamps involved. The rectifiers I04 serve the purpose of isolating or blocking the voltage fed to the control terminals of the gated diodes 20 through the rectifiers 107 from affecting the gated diodes associated with the next stage of the shift register circuit. Thus, whenever a lamp control bistable circuit 28 is in a set state, both the associated lamp and the lamp controlled by the next stage of the shift register circuit will also be energized. Assuming that the set bistable circuit referred to is bistable circuit 28a-I, when it is reset during the next shift operation, the associated lamp 22a-l will become deenergized at the end of the half cycle involved, and the simultaneously lit lamp 22a2 associated with the next stage of the shift register circuit will continue to be energized due to the transfer of the set state of the latter bistable circuit to the bistable circuit 28a-2 of the next stage of the shift register circuit. With this arrangement, each of the lamps to be energized is energized for a much greater period than the lamps in the circuit of FIGS. 3or7, thereby giving a greater time for the lamps to warrnup.
It should be noted that the transistors 90 forming part of each of the bistable circuits 28 act as drivers for the gated diodes 20. The gated diodes 20 and the bistable circuits 28 are most advantageously mounted upon or next to the lamp bank 2. In such case, the positive voltage bus 93 would be connected to a long conductor connecting these circuit components to a remotely located source of positive direct-current voltage. Spurious voltage can be picked up in this line which could falsely trigger the bistable circuits. The use of PNP transistors 90 where the emitter electrodes 91 are connected by conductors 92 tothe bus 93 extending to the source of direct current voltage feeding this bus is an important feature of the circuit since the spurious voltage signals coupled by the conductors 92 to the emitter electrodes 91 of the bistable circuit transistors 90 are isolated to a great extent from the other electrodes of the transistors associated with sensitive portions of the bistable circuits relative to the case where NPN transistors are utilized for the transistors 90 requiring connections of their collector electrodes to the bus 93 which would then be connected to a grounded source of negative voltage.
THE LAMP DIMMING CIRCUIT OF FIG.
FIG. 10 illustrates a circuit which has for its purpose the selective dimming of the upper, immediate and lower rows of lamps 2a, 2d and 2g in the lamp bank more nearly to equalize the average intensity of all the lamps energized to display a letter like the letter E having extensive upper, lower and intermediate horizontal legs. This circuit thus represents an improvement to the circuit of FIG. 7. The circuit of FIG. 10 also adjusts the average intensity of the lamps in the lamp bank in accordance with the ambient light conditions about the lamp bank. In other words, as the ambient lamp conditions about the lamp bank vary during weather conditions and the time of day, the average intensity of the light generated by the lights of the lamp bank will vary accordingly so that the sign will appear with the apparent sign brightness at all times and with use of minimum power.
The various rows of lamps 2a, 2b, 2c, 2d, 2e, 2f and 2g are respectively connected to associated buses 24a, 24b, 24c, 24d, 24e, 24f and 24g. The buses 24b, 24c, Me and 24f are connected directly to a branch line 109 leading to a common conductor 110 connected to the cathode terminal 112 of a main gated diode 114. The anode terminal 116 of the gated diode 114 is connected to the output of the aforementioned full wave rectifier circuit 60 (see FIG. 3A) fed from a commercial 60 cycle per second power system. The upper, intermediate and lower buses 24a, 24d, and 24g are connected to the common conductor 110 through individual gated diodes 119a, 119d, and 119g. The control terminals of the gated diodes 119a, 119d and 119g are connected to a common conductor 121 leading to the output of a suitable delay circuit 123. The
input to the delay circuit 123 is connected to the output of a variable phase pulse circuit 125 which produces at its output pulses which vary in phase with the degree of light striking a photocell 127, which is positioned to respond to the ambient light conditions of the lamp bank. The input to the variable phase pulse generator circuit 125 is connected to the output of the aforementioned full wave rectifier circuit 60 so that the output thereof contains pulses at a rate of pulses per second. The output of the variable phase pulse circuit is connected by a conductor 128 to the control electrode 129 of the gated diode 114. The gated diode 114 will thus fire each half cycle at a phase angle which is a function of the ambient light condition striking photocell 127 and will remain in the conductive state for the remainder of the half cycle involved. Accordingly, the pulse width of the current flowing through the gated diode 114 is inversely proportional to the intensity of the light striking the photocell 127.
The phase angle of the pulses fed to the control electrodes of the gated diodes 119a, 119d and 119g, associated with the upper, intermediate and lower rows of lamps 2a, 2d and 2g in the lamp bank is delayed somewhat (such as 30 from the phase angle of the pulses which trigger the main gated diode 114, so that the width of the current pulses flowing through the gated diodes 119a, 119d and 1193 will be less than the current pulsations received by the lamps in the lamp rows 2b, 20, 2e and 2f. Thus the apparent intensity of the light generated by the lamps of all the rows of the lamp bank in the circuit arrangement of FIG. 10 will be fairly constant despite variations in ambient light conditions and despite the fact that the lamps in the uppermost intermediate and lower rows of the lamps in the lamp bank will be energized in time succession more frequently than the lamps of the other rows of lamps.
THE VARIABLE PHASE PULSE CIRCUIT 125 OF FIG. 12
F IG. 12 illustrates an exemplary variable phase pulse circuit which is most advantageously used for the circuit 125 shown in box form in FIG. 10. This circuit may include a clipper circuit 62' for clipping the full wave rectified waveform fed thereto from the full wave rectifier 60, a differentiating network 64' for differentiating the waveform at the output of the clipper circuit, and a rectifier 66 for passing pulses of only one polarity, such as positive pulses occurring at a rate of 120 pulses per second. It is apparent that the circuits 62' and 64 and the rectifier 66 may be the same corresponding by numbered elements as shown in FIG. 3A which form part of the shift pulse generator circuit 13.
The 120 pulse per second output of the rectifier 66 is fed to the set input S of a conventional bistable circuit 130. The bistable circuit 130 illustrated has an output line 132 connected to a rectifier I34 arranged to pass a negative or ground voltage and to block a positive voltage. When the bistable circuit 130 is set, the upper line 132 has a positive voltage and when it is reset in a manner to be explained the voltage at the output line 132 is at ground potential.
The anode side of the rectifier 134 is connected to the ungrounded end of a grounded capacitor 136. The unground end of the capacitor 136 is connected to the emitter electrode 136 of a double base diode 138 having one of its bases 140 connected to a positive bus 141 extending to the positive terminal of a source of positive direct-current voltage and another base 143 connected through a resistor to the ground. The aforementioned photocell 127 is connected between the emitter electrode 136 and a resistor 144 connected to the positive bus 141. It should be thus apparent that when the bistable circuit 130 is in a set stage wherein the rectifier 134 blocks the resulting positive voltage on the output line 132, the double base diode 138 and the associated elements including the capacitor 136, photocell 127 and resistor 144 form a relaxation oscillator circuit of well-known design (except for the photocell) where the voltage across the capacitor 136 rises at a rate depending upon the intensity of the light striking the photocell 127. As a greater amount of light strikes the photocell 127, the impedance thereof decreases to increase the charging rate of the capacitor 135. The voltage across the capacitor 136 will, therefore, reach the voltage which causes firing of the double base diode much sooner when the light striking the photocell 127 is at a high intensity than when it is at a lower intensity. When the double base diode 138 fires, a voltage pulse will appear across resistor 145 as the capacitor 136 discharges. This pulse is fed through a resistor 147 to the control terminal of the main gated diode 114 controlling the flow of current to the buses of the lamps in the lamp bank.
The pulse appearing across the resistor 145 is also coupled by a conductor 150 to the reset input R of the bistable circuit 130 to reset the same. When the bistable circuit 130 is reset, as previously indicated, the voltage on the output line.132 thereof becomes grounded. This ground potential is passed by the rectifier 134 to the ungrounded end of the capacitor 136, which is thereby maintained in a discharged state until the next pulse from the rectifier 66 is fed to the set input S of the bistable circuit 130. It is thus apparent that the ungrounded end of the resistor 145 has produced thereat pulses at a repetition rate of 120 cycles per second and'at a phase angle depending upon the intensity of the light striking the photocell 127.
SHIFT REGISTER CIRCUIT OF FIG. 13
In the exemplary forms of the invention described above, the shift register circuits included intermediate or memory bistable circuits 30 which carry out the function of the condition sensing means shown in box form in the generalized disclosure of the invention of FIG. 1. Although less preferred, each memory bistable circuit 30 can be replaced by a NOR- -AND gate circuit generally indicated by reference numeral 30 in FIG. 13. Each of the circuits 30 has input terminals 152 and 153 and output terminals 154 and 155. Input terminal 153 extends directly to the output line 41 of a bistable circuit 28 which may control the energization of one of the lamps of the lamp bank. The other input terminal 152 extends to the B pulse bus 33.
Assuming that the B bus pulses are positive pulses, each circuit 30 would feed a setting signal to the set terminal S of the bistable circuit 28 of the associated stage of the shift register circuit if the voltages on the input terminals 153 and 152 are both positive. (It will be recalled that, in the shift register circuits used particularly for the lamp control circuit, the voltage on the output lines 41 are positive during the set state of the associated bistable circuits.) This result can be accomplished by a well-known simple AND logic circuit. If, on the other hand, the voltage on input terminal 153 is ground or negative while the voltage on the other input terminal 152 is positive (or vice versa), a reset signal will be generated at the output terminal 155 which is coupled by a conductor 158 to the reset terminal R of the bistable circuit 28. A NOR logic circuit will accomplish this function.
It can be seen that with the circuit arrangement just described, the arrangement of bistable circuits and the NOR- AND circuits just described that a shift register circuit is provided which carries out the same functions as the shift register circuit shown in FIGS. 3, 4 and 9 (although it could not perform the function of the circuit of FIG. 7).
COMBINED RUNNING AND STATIONARY SIGN SYSTEM OF FIG. 14
The circuit of FIG. 14 has many of the components present in the simplified embodiment of the invention shown in FIG. I and in the dimming control circuit of FIGS. 10 and I2 and the same reference characters have been used therein to indicate corresponding elements.
The circuits previously described deal with a system for producing a running sign on a lamp bank. The circuit of FIG. 14 accomplishes this result and, in addition, provides for stopping a running sign at a given point as determined by the presence of a stop code appearing in a column of the tape 7a read by the tape reader 7. This stop code may be any suitable code which differs from the binary code groups identifying the alphabet and numerical characters displayed on the lamp bank. A series of conductors 162 extend respectively from the various output lines 7c of the tape reader 7 to the input of a decoding matrix having separate output lines 164-1, 164-2, 164-6 representing stop codes for stopping the sign respectively for 6 difierent intervals (such as 5, 10, I5, 20, 25 and 30 seconds). Obviously a greater number of stop codes could be provided for giving a larger variety of stopping periods. The decoder 160 is a conventional diode-type matrix which will energize the output line 164 which is associated with the time period identified by the binary code read by the tape reader 7 representing one of the stop codes referred to. It will be assumed that, when the output lines 164-1, 164-2, 164-6 are respectively energized, this represents respectively six progressively increasing time periods during which the sign then displayed on the lamp bank will be stopped on the lamp bank.
The various decoder output lines 164 are respectively connected to an OR circuit which is a well-known circuit which will produce a signal at the output terminal 166 thereof when a given signal appears on any one of the inputs thereto. It is thus apparent that the OR circuit 166 will provide an output signal if a stop code is sensed by the tape reader 7. When such a signal occurs, it is fed by conductor 168 to the set input terminal S of a control bistable circuit 168, to effect setting of the bistable circuit upon the presence of any stop code.
A subtract shift register 170 of any one of a number of different designs may be provided. For example, it may be a shift register with a number of stages corresponding to the number of different basic time periods. In such case, the various output lines 164 of the decoder 160 may extend respectively to the set terminals S of the various stages of this shift register to set a marker in the stage of the shift register corresponding to the time period involved. A source 172 of shift pulses for the shift register 170 is provided where the shift pulses may be separated, for example, 5 seconds apart. It is thus apparent that if there is a marker stored in the No. 6 stage of the shift register 170, the marker will be read out of the first stage of the shift register circuit approximately 30 seconds after the marker was initially placed into the shift register. When the marker is shifted out of the No. 1 stage of the shift register circuit, a voltage appears in an output line 174 which is fed to the reset input terminal R of the control bistable circuit 168 to reset the same.
The control bistable circuit 168 has a pair of output lines 171 and 173 which, during the set state of the bistable circuit, may, for example, respectively have a positive voltage and ground thereon and during the reset state of the bistable circuit respectively have ground and a positive voltage thereon. The output line 171 extends to the input of the pair of gate circuits 174 and 176. The presence of a positive voltage on the line 171 results in the closing of the gate circuits 174 and 176 and the presence of a ground voltage thereon will result in the opening of the gate circuits.
The gate circuit 174 has input lines 180 extending from the A and B outputs of the shift pulse generator circuit 13 and output lines 182 extending to the A and B buses of the character read control circuit 14, the lamp control circuit 4 and the character memory unit 6. The gate circuit 176 has a pair of input terminals 183183 respectively connected to the advance and read lines 86 and 83 of the character read control circuit 14 and output lines 185185' extending respectively to the advance and read terminals of the tape reader 7 and the matrix 8.
It is thus apparent that when a stop code is being read by the tape reader 7, a set signal will appear on an output of the OR circuit 166 which will effect the setting of the control bistable circuit 168 which, in turn, results in the closing of the gate circuits 174 and 176 to stop the advancement of markers within the various shift register circuits of the lamp control circuit 4, the character memory unit 6 and the character read control circuit 14, and the stopping of the sign on the lamp bank 2 for a period determined by the duration the control bistable circuit 168 remains in a set state. As previously indicated, the control bistable unit 168 will be reset when the marker in the subtract register 170 is removed from the No. 1 stage of the register.
The particular circuit disclosed in FIG. 14 is one wherein the apparent intensity of the lamp bank 4 remains constant with variation of the ambient light conditions about the lamp bank 2 and also with the nature of the sign on the lamp bank. When a running sign is stopped, the intensity of the light generator by the lamps is increased if the current flow through the lamps is not altered. In other words, when the sign on the lamp bank is stationary, the amount of current flow through the lamps thereof to produce a given light intensity is less than the current required by the lamps to produce the same light intensity in a running sign. The circuit of FIG. 14 reduces the width of the current pulses fed to the lamps when a stationary sign is displayed on the lamp bank. To this end, the time constant of the capacitor charge circuit of the double base diode relaxation oscillator circuit controlling the firing time of the main gated diode 114 is varied with the ambient light conditions of the lamp bank as well as the nature of the sign on the lamp bank 4.
The charge circuit for the capacitor 136 connected between the emitter electrode of the double base diode 138 and ground includes, in addition to the photocell 127, a pair of branch circuits extending respectively to the output lines 168 and 171 of the control bistable circuit 168. One of the branch circuits in cludes an adjusting resistor 144 and a rectifier 186 extending to the output line 173 of the control bistable unit 168 which is positive during the reset state of the bistable circuit and ground during the set state of the bistable circuit. The rectifier 186 is arranged to-pass a positive voltage on the output line 173 and block ground from the charge circuit of capacitor 136. Accordingly, when a running sign is displayed on the lamp bank, the time constant of the circuit which charges the capacitor 136 is determined by the value of the adjusting resistor 144.
The other branch circuit in the charge circuit of the capaci tor 136 includes an adjusting resistor 144' and a rectifier 186 connected to the other output line 171 of the control bistable circuit which is at ground during the reset state of the bistable circuit and positive during the set state of the bistable circuit. The rectifier 186 blocks ground from and passes positive voltage to the charge circuit. Accordingly, when a stationary sign is displayed on the lamp bank, the time constant of the circuit which charges the capacitor 176 is determined by the value of resistor 144' which is larger than the resistor 144, to delay the firing time of the main gated diode 114.
EXEMPLARY BINARY TO SINGLE OUTPUT MATRIX 8 OF FIG. 15
FIG. 15 shows an exemplary circuit for the binary to single output matrix 8 and the input and output devices and circuitry associated therewith. One of the input devices is the tape reader 7, which may be any one of a number of conventional tape readers. As illustrated the tape reader 7 has a set of six contacts 7d, each of which includes a spring urged movable contact 7d-l which is adapted to pass through a hole of the tape adapted a and a stationary contact 7d-2 which is engaged by the movable contact when the latter contact passes through the hole in the tape.
Each of the stationary contacts 7d-2 is connected to a common conductor 201 which is grounded. The movable contacts id-1 are respectively connected to separate buses 204. The buses 204 are connected through respective resistors 206 to a common conductor 207 leading to the positive terminal of a source of direct current voltage 208 whose negative terminal is grounded. It is thus apparent that when a movable contact 7d-1 of the tape reader 7 passes through a hole in tape 7a to engage the associated stationary contacts 7d-2 the associated bus 204 will be grounded and when the latter contacts are separated the associated bus 204 will be at a positive potential.
Each of the buses 204 are connected through a separate resistor 211 and a resistor 209 to the negative terminal of a source of negative voltage (not shown) whose positive terminal is grounded. The juncture between each associated pair of resistors 207 and 209 is connected by a conductor 210 to the base electrode 212b of an NPN transistor 212. The emitter electrode 212a of each transistor is grounded and the collector electrode 212C thereof is connected through a resistor 214 to the aforementioned bus 207 leading the positive terminal of the source of direct-current voltage 208. The transistors 212 and associated circuits form part of the matrix 8. It is apparent that when a bus 204 is grounded the base electrode 21212 of the associated transistor 212 will have a negative potential thereon which will render the NPN transistor 212 involved nonconductive. The ratio of the resistors 207 and 209 is such that when the associated bus 204 has a positive potential, the conductor 210 extending from the juncture of these resistors will be at a positive potential so as to render the associated transistors 212 conductive.
A conductor 220 extends from the end of each resistor 214 adjacent to the collector electrode 212C of the associated transistor 212 and a separate code bus 217. The various code buses 217 are identified respectively by reference numerals 2170, 217b, 2170 and 217d, 217e and 2l7f. When a transistor 212 is conducting, the associated conductor 220 and bus 217 will be at groundpotential and when the transistor is nonconductive the conductor 220 and associated bus 217 will be at a positive potential. The various code buses 217 are connected through respective rectifiers 219 to ground, the rectifiers being arranged to block positive voltage and pass ground or a negative voltage.
A gating bus 220 is provided which is connected through a resistor 221 to the positive bus 207. The gating bus 220 is connected to the collector electrode 224c of an NPN transistor 224. The emitter electrode 2240 of the transistor 224 is grounded and the base electrode 224b thereof is connected through a resistor 226 to the negative terminal of the source of negative voltage 227 whose positive terminal is grounded, and through a resistor 228 to a coupling capacitor 230 connected to the line 83 extending from the character read control circuit 14. A positive pulse will appear on the line 83 when a marker is being removed from the last stage of the shift register circuit constituting the character read control circuit 14. Ground clamping diodes 231 and 232 are respectively connected between the input side of the resistor 228 and the collector electrode 2240 of transistor 224 and ground. These rectifiers bypass any negative voltage which may appear in the inputs to these rectifiers from the circuits coupled thereto.
When a positive pulse appears on the line 83 extending from the character read control circuit 14, this will render the transistor 224 conductive to couple ground potential to the gating bus 220. Normally, the gating bus 220 is positive due to the normal nonconductive state of transistor 224. The transistor 224 is rendered nonconductive by the connection of the base electrode 224b thereof through the resistor 226 to the negative terminal of the source of direct current voltage 227.
The potentials on the various code buses 217 and the gating bus 219 control the operation of AND circuits 240-1, 240-2, 240-3, 240-4, etc. there being one such AND circuit for each character to be displayed on the bank lamp. Each of the AND circuits 240 includes an NPN transistor 242 having an emitter electrode 242a which is grounded, a base electrode 24% which is coupled by a conductor 243 to one of the ends of a group of seven resistors 244-1, 244-2 244-7, and a collector electrode 2420 connected through a resistor 241 to the positive bus 207. Each of the resistors 244 is assigned to one of the seven buses 220, 217a, 217b, 2170, 217e and 2171". The resistors 244-7 are all permanently connected to the gating bus. The other resistors of the group associated with each AND circuit are connected in different patterns to the various code buses 217a-2l7f so that the group of resistors associated with a given AND circuit will all be connected to ground bus only for the particular character involved. At all other times, at least all the other resistors 244-1 through 244-6 will be connected to a bus which is positive.
The conductor 243 associated with each of the AND circuits is also connected to one end of a resistor 248 whose opposite end is connected to the negative terminals of a source of direct current voltage (not shown) whose positive terminal is grounded.
The ratio of the resistors 248 to the resistors 244 is such that, when one of the resistors 244-1 through 244-7 of a group is connected to a positive bus, the potential on the conductor 243 leading to the base electrode 242b of the associated transistor 242 will be positive to render the same conductive and, when all of the resistors 244-1 through 244-7 of a group are connected to grounded buses, which occurs only momentarily when a gating pulse appears on the bus 220, the potential of the associated conductor 243 will be negative to render the associated transistor 242 nonconductive. Thus, a different one of the transistors 242 will be rendered nonconductive upon the appearance of a gating or read pulse on the input line 83 for a different character read by the tape reader 7. As a transistor 242 becomes momentarily nonconductive, a positive going voltage will appear at the end of the associated resistor 241, connected to the collector electrode 242c thereof. This voltage is coupled through a capacitor 250 to a group of diodes 11 forming part of the character setup matrix 10. As previously indicated, the diodes 11 associated with a particular output of the matrix are connected to set various bistable circuits of the character memory unit 6.
EXEMPLARY SHIFT REGISTER BISTABLE CIRCUIT OF FIG. 16
The bistable circuit of the lamp control circuit 4 which control the gated diodes 20 draw a relatively large amount of current and it is, therefore, desirable that the current drain of the bistable circuits be relatively low when the lamps controlled thereby are in a deenergized state. To this end, each of the bistable circuits 28 and 30 of the shift register circuits constituting the lamp control circuit 4 comprise a pair of transistors 90 and 90' which are respectively in a highly conductive state during the set state of the bistable circuit and are both in a nonconductive state during the reset state of the bistable circuit. One of the transistors 90 is a PNP transistor, and the transistor 90' is an NPN transistor. (Since the circuitry for each bistable circuit is identical, only the circuit 280-1 of one of them will be described in detail.)
The collector electrode 91 of the transistor 90 is connected by conductor 92 to a positive bus 93 leading to the positive terminal of the source of positive voltage (not shown) whose negative terminal is grounded. (The bus 93, for example, may be at a voltage of 18 volts.) The collector electrode 96 of the transistor 90 is connected through a resistor 98 to ground.
The transistor 90 has an emitter electrode 260 which is connected to the reset terminal R. The reset terminal R is connected by a conductor 262 to the A bus 33'. The collector electrode 264 of the transistor 90 is connected by a resistor 266 to a positive bus 93', which may have a positive voltage of 22 volts. The collector electrode 264 of the transistor 90 is also connected through a resistor 270 to the base electrode 100 of the transistor 90. The set terminal S of the bistable circuit is connected to the base electrode 100 of the transistor 90. A resistor 272 is connected between the base electrode 274 of the transistor 90 and the ungrounded side of the resistor 98.
One of the advantages of the circuit shown in FIG. 16 is that the bistable circuits can be triggered from a reset state into a set state by the simple expedient of opening lines extending to the A and B buses 33 and 33'. This minimizes pulse distortion problems and the like which often occur when voltage control pulses are sent down long lines. (The various voltage sources which operate the bistable circuits shown in FIG. 16 are normally located a great distance from the lamp bank at which the bistable circuits are located.) To this end, the circuit shown in FIG. 3A is modified so that the pulses appearing at the A and B output terminals of the shift pulse generator circuit will be negative rather than positive pulses. The A and B output terminals of the shift pulse generator circuit are respectively connected to the base electrodes 280 and 280' of a pair of NPN control transistors 282 and 282'. The collector electrodes 283 and 283' of these transistors are respectively connected through resistors 286 and 286' to the aforementioned positive bus 93'. The emitter electrodes 287-287 of these transistors are coupled through diodes 289-289 to ground, the diodes being arranged to pass normal collector to emitter current. The base electrodes 280 and 280' of these transistors are coupled through resistors 290 and 290 to the positive terminal of a source of direct current voltage (not shown) which opposite terminal is grounded. The collector electrodes 283 and 283 of the transistors 282 and 282 are connected by conductors 291 and 291 respectively to the A and B buses 33 and 33'.
Normally, the control transistors 282 and 282' are in a conductive state due to the feeding of a positive voltage through the resistors 290 and 290' to the base electrodes 280 and 280 of the transistors 282 and 282'. Conduction of these transistors couples ground potential to the buses 33 and 33'.
The various bistable circuits 28 and 30 illustrated in FIG. 16 are normally in their reset state where the transistors and 90 are nonconductive. These transistors are maintained in a nonconductive state by virtue of the connection of the positive voltage on the bus 93' through the resistors 266 and 270 to the base electrodes of the transistors 90. As long as transistors 90 are nonconductive, ground potential is coupled through the associated resistors 282 to the base electrodes 274 of the associated transistors 90' which, since they are NPN transistors, render them nonconductive. The bistable circuit is triggered into a set state by the feeding of a negative pulse to the set terminal S thereof connected to the base electrode 100 of the associated PNP transistor 90. This renders the transistor 90 conductive which results in the voltage at the top of the associated resistor 98 being positive. This positive voltage is coupled through the resistor 272 to the base electrode 274 of the associated NPN transistor 90 to render the same conductive. When the transistor 90' becomes conductive, ground potential is coupled through the resistor 270, the base electrode 100, to the transistor 90 to maintain the same in a conductive state.
Each bistable circuit is reset by the simple expedient of momentarily opening the lines 291 and 291 leading to the buses 33 or 33. This interrupts flow of current to the transistor 90. As the transistor 90 is rendered nonconductive in this manner, the aforementioned ground potential fed through the resistor 270 to the base electrode 100 of the transistor 90 is removed and replaced by a positive voltage fed from the bus 93' which renders the transistor 90 nonconductive thereby reestablishing a stable nonconductive state for both transistors 90 and 90.
The ground potential is removed from the busses 33 and 33' by the presence of a negative pulse on the A and B terminals leading to the base electrodes 280 and 280 of the control transistors 282 and 282'. This negative pulse will momentarily render the NPN transistors 282 and 282' nonconductive, tzgereby disconnecting ground potential from the buses 33 and It should be understood that many modifications may be made in the various preferred forms of the invention described above without deviating from the broader aspects of the invention. For example, although the embodiment of FIG. 14 is applied to a combination running and stationary sign, many of the features therein are applicable to a nonrunning stationary sign system wherein the energization of the lamps is blocked out until the movement of the markers in the various shift regrsters 1s terminated.
We claim: 1. In a sign system including a lamp bank containing rows and columns of lamps to be energized, control means for the lamps comprising: tape-reading means for reading columns of binary-coded characters extending across a tape, a series of lamp control shift register circuits, there being one such shift register circuit for each row of lamps in the bank and each circuit having register stages positioned according to the position of the lamps in the associated row of lamps in the bank for effecting energization of the associated lamps when lamp-energizing markers appear therein, a series of character memory shift register circuits, there being one such circuit for each row of lamps in the bank, each of the latter circuits having a number of stages corresponding to the largest number of lamps in a row which are energized by the widest character to be displayed on the sign, decoding means coupled between said input reading means and said character memory shift register circuits and responsive to the column of binary-coded characters being read by said input-reading means for storing lamp-energizing markers in the stages of the various character memory shift register circuits in accordance with the pattern of lamps to be energized for the character involved, shift register advancing means for progressively advancing the pattern of lamp-energizing markers in the various character memory shift register circuits from the stages at the end associated with the right-hand group of lamps in the bank to the stages at the other end thereof, means interconnecting the corresponding character memory and lamp control shift register circuits so that the two circuits form a single overall shift register system for the lamp-energizing markers proceeding in columnar order from the character shift memory unit through the lamp control shift register circuits, and character read control means responsive to the removal of all the lamp-energizing markers from the character memory shift register circuits for effecting the reading and decoding of coded information of said tape representing the next character on the tape and the feeding of corresponding lamp-energizing markers into the empty stages of the character memory shift register circuits.
2. In a sign system including a lamp bank containing rows and columns of lamps to be energized, control means for the lamps comprising: input-reading means for reading columns of binary-coded information fed thereto one column at a time, each column of information representing a character to be displayed, a series of lamp control shift register circuits, there being one such shift register circuit for each row of lamps in the bank and each circuit having register stages positioned according to the position of the lamps in the associated row of lamps in the bank for effecting energization of the associated lamps when lamp-energizing markers appear therein, a series of character memory shift register circuits, there being one such circuit for each row of lamps in the bank, each of the latter circuits having a number of stages corresponding to the largest number of lamps in a row which are energized by the widest character to be displayed on the sign, decoding means coupled between said input-reading means and said character memory shift register circuits and responsive to the column of binary-coded characters being read by said input reading means for storing lamp-energizing markers in the stages of the various character memory shift register circuits in accordance with the pattern of lamps to be energized for the character involved, shift register advancing means for progressively advancing the pattern of lamp-energizing markers in the various character memory shift register circuits from the stages at the end associated with the right-hand group of lamps in the bank to the stages at the other end thereof, means interconnecting the corresponding character memory and lamp control shift register circuits so that the two circuits form a single overall shift register system for the lamp-energizing markers proceeding in columnar order from the character shift memory unit through the lamp control shift register circuits, and character read control means responsive to the removal of all the lampenergizing markers from the character memory shift register circuits for effecting the reading and decoding of a new column of coded information by said input reading means and decoding means and the feeding of corresponding lamp-energizing markers into the empty stages of the character memory shift register circuits.
3. The sign system of claim 2 wherein said character read control means is a shift register circuit including a number of stages equal to the number of stages in each of the character memory shift register circuits and additional stages corresponding to the number of deenergized columns of lamp bank forming the space between successive character elements in a word or number grouping to be displayed on the lamp bank, decoding means responsive to the binary-coded character read by said input-reading means at any instant for storing a single marker in the stage of the character read shift register circuit which is spaced a number of stages from the last stage thereof proportional to the width of the character involved, and means shifting said latter marker one stage at a time toward the output thereof in synchronism with the feeding of lamp-energizing markers one column at a time from the character memory shift register circuits to the lamp control shift register circuits, and means for feeding a new column of coded information to said input-reading means as said single marker has been advanced through all of the stages of said character read shift register circuit.
4. In a sign system including a lamp bank containing rows and columns of lamps to be energized to form a running sign, control means for the lamp bank comprising input-reading means for reading information representing alphabet and/or numeral characters into the sign system, said input-reading means including character advance signal input terminal means for bringing a new character into a reading position when an advance signal is fed thereto; a light control circuit associated with each lamp in said bank, each light control circuit including a lamp-energizing bistable unit associated with each lamp in the bank operable in either of two states representing a set and a reset state, means for energizing each lamp when the associated bistable unit is in the reset state, means responsive to the information read by said input-reading means for operating the lamp-energizing bistable units associated with the group of lamps at the right end of the lamp bank in a pattern of conductive set states which will energize the group of lamps involved to reproduce the corresponding character, and bistable condition sensing means for each pair of bistable units associated with an adjacent pair of lamps of the bank, the bistable units and bistable condition sensing means associated with each row of lamps in the bank constituting a shift register circuit, advance signal input terminal means for each shift register circuit, each bistable condition sensing means being responsive respectively to the set and reset states of the lamp-energizing bistable unit of the righthand lamp of each of said pairs of lamps by respectively setting and resetting the other bistable unit of the left-hand lamp of the pairs when an advance signal is fed to the advance signal input terminal means of the shift register circuit involved, each of said bistable condition sensing means being an intermediate bistable unit between each pair of lamp-energizing bistable units associated with an adjacent pair of lamps in a row of lamps in the bank and having a set and a reset state, means for periodically first resetting simultaneously all set lamp-energizing bistable units and thereafter simultaneously resetting all set intermediate bistable units, means responsive to the change of any light energizing bistable unit from a set to a reset state for setting the following intermediate bistable unit before the next resetting operation, means responsive to the change of an intermediate bistable unit from a set to a reset state by setting the associated following lamp-energizing bistable unit, wherein a shift register circuit is formed by all of the bistable units associated with the lamps in each row of the lamp bank and the set state of a lamp-energizing energizing bistable unit is transferred to the following lamp-energizing bistable unit each reset cycle, and means for feeding an advance signal to said advance input terminal means of said input-reading means during each reset cycle and to read

Claims (10)

1. In a sign system including a lamp bank containing rows and columns of lamps to be energized, control means for the lamps comprising: tape-reading means for reading columns of binarycoded characters extending across a tape, a series of lamp control shift register circuits, there being one such shift register circuit for each row of lamps in the bank and each circuit having register stages positioned according to the position of the lamps in the associated row of lamps in the bank for effecting energization of the associated lamps when lampenergizing markers appear therein, a series of character memory shift register circuits, there being one such circuit for each row of lamps in the bank, each of the latter circuits having a number of stages corresponding to the largest number of lamps in a row which are energized by the widest character to be displayed on the sign, decoding means coupled between said input reading means and said character memory shift register circuits and responsive to the column of binary-coded characters being read by said input-reading means for storing lamp-energizing markers in the stages of the various character memory shift register circuits in accordance with the pattern of lamps to be energized for the character involved, shift register advancing means for progressively advancing the pattern of lamp-energizing markers in the various character memory shift register circuits from the stages at the end associated with the right-hand group of lamps in the bank to the stages at the other end thereof, means interconnecting the corresponding character memory and lamp control shift register circuits so that the two circuits form a single overall shift register system for the lamp-energizing markers proceeding in columnar order from the character shift memory unit through the lamp control shift register circuits, and character read control means responsive to the removal of all the lamp-energizing markers from the character memory shift register circuits for effecting the reading and decoding of coded information of said tape representing the next character on the tape and the feeding of corresponding lamp-energizing markers into the empty stages of the character memory shift register circuits.
2. In a sign system including a lamp bank containing rows and columns of lamps to be energized, control means for the lamps comprising: input-reading means for reading columns of binary-coded information fed thereto one column at a time, each column of information representing a character to be displayed, a series of lamp control shift register circuits, there being one such shift register circuit for each row of lamps in the bank and each circuit having register stages positioned according to the position of the lamps in the associated row of lamps in the bank for effecting energization of the associated lamps when lamp-energizing markers appear therein, a series of character memory shift register circuits, there being one such circuit for each row of lamps in the bank, each of the latter circuits having a number of stages corresponding to the largest number of lamps in a row which are energized by the widest character to be displayed on the sign, decoding means coupled between said input-reading means and said character memory shift register circuits and responsive to the column of binary-coded characters being read by said input reading means for storing lamp-energizing markers in the stages of the various character memory shift register circuits in accordance with the pattern of lamps to be energized for the character involved, shift register advancing means for progressively advancing the pattern of lamp-energizing markers in the various character memory shift register circuits from the stAges at the end associated with the right-hand group of lamps in the bank to the stages at the other end thereof, means interconnecting the corresponding character memory and lamp control shift register circuits so that the two circuits form a single overall shift register system for the lamp-energizing markers proceeding in columnar order from the character shift memory unit through the lamp control shift register circuits, and character read control means responsive to the removal of all the lamp-energizing markers from the character memory shift register circuits for effecting the reading and decoding of a new column of coded information by said input reading means and decoding means and the feeding of corresponding lamp-energizing markers into the empty stages of the character memory shift register circuits.
3. The sign system of claim 2 wherein said character read control means is a shift register circuit including a number of stages equal to the number of stages in each of the character memory shift register circuits and additional stages corresponding to the number of deenergized columns of lamp bank forming the space between successive character elements in a word or number grouping to be displayed on the lamp bank, decoding means responsive to the binary-coded character read by said input-reading means at any instant for storing a single marker in the stage of the character read shift register circuit which is spaced a number of stages from the last stage thereof proportional to the width of the character involved, and means shifting said latter marker one stage at a time toward the output thereof in synchronism with the feeding of lamp-energizing markers one column at a time from the character memory shift register circuits to the lamp control shift register circuits, and means for feeding a new column of coded information to said input-reading means as said single marker has been advanced through all of the stages of said character read shift register circuit.
4. In a sign system including a lamp bank containing rows and columns of lamps to be energized to form a running sign, control means for the lamp bank comprising input-reading means for reading information representing alphabet and/or numeral characters into the sign system, said input-reading means including character advance signal input terminal means for bringing a new character into a reading position when an advance signal is fed thereto; a light control circuit associated with each lamp in said bank, each light control circuit including a lamp-energizing bistable unit associated with each lamp in the bank operable in either of two states representing a set and a reset state, means for energizing each lamp when the associated bistable unit is in the reset state, means responsive to the information read by said input-reading means for operating the lamp-energizing bistable units associated with the group of lamps at the right end of the lamp bank in a pattern of conductive set states which will energize the group of lamps involved to reproduce the corresponding character, and bistable condition sensing means for each pair of bistable units associated with an adjacent pair of lamps of the bank, the bistable units and bistable condition sensing means associated with each row of lamps in the bank constituting a shift register circuit, advance signal input terminal means for each shift register circuit, each bistable condition sensing means being responsive respectively to the set and reset states of the lamp-energizing bistable unit of the right-hand lamp of each of said pairs of lamps by respectively setting and resetting the other bistable unit of the left-hand lamp of the pairs when an advance signal is fed to the advance signal input terminal means of the shift register circuit involved, each of said bistable condition sensing means being an intermediate bistable unit between each pair of lamp-energizing bistable units associated with an adjacent pair of lamps in a row of lamps in the bank and having a set and a reset state, means for periodically first resetting simultaneously all set lamp-energizing bistable units and thereafter simultaneously resetting all set intermediate bistable units, means responsive to the change of any light energizing bistable unit from a set to a reset state for setting the following intermediate bistable unit before the next resetting operation, means responsive to the change of an intermediate bistable unit from a set to a reset state by setting the associated following lamp-energizing bistable unit, wherein a shift register circuit is formed by all of the bistable units associated with the lamps in each row of the lamp bank and the set state of a lamp-energizing energizing bistable unit is transferred to the following lamp-energizing bistable unit each reset cycle, and means for feeding an advance signal to said advance input terminal means of said input-reading means during each reset cycle and to read progressively new character information into said shift register circuits.
5. The sign system of claim 4 wherein there is provided a lamp between each of said adjacent pairs of lamps in each row of lamps in the lamp bank controlled by a pair of lamp-energizing bistable units, and means responsive to the setting and resetting of each intermediate bistable unit making up each shift register circuit for respectively energizing and deenergizing the lamp between the lamps controlled by the associated pair of lamp-energizing bistable units.
6. The sign system of claim 4 wherein the sign system is a running sign system and there is provided means responsive to the set state of each bistable unit of said shift register circuits associated with a given lamp for energizing in addition only the lamp to the left of the said given lamp for as long as said given bistable unit remains in a set state, whereby the latter lamp has additional time to warmup.
7. In a sign system including a lamp bank containing rows and columns of lamps to be energized to form a lighted sign, control means for the lamp bank comprising: input-reading means for reading sign information fed thereto; a series of lamp control shift register circuits, there being one such shift register circuit for each row of lamps in the bank and each shift register circuit having register stages each for energizing and deenergizing the correspondingly positioned lamp in the associated row of lamps when lamp-energizing markers are respectively present and absent therein; a lamp control circuit associated with each lamp in said bank, each lamp control circuit including a source of energizing voltage having the waveform of a rectified periodic AC voltage, a gated means having a control terminal for triggering the gated means into a conductive state to energize the associated lamp when a given control voltage is fed thereto and load terminals connected in series with said voltage source wherein the gated means is automatically returned to a controllable state at the end of each half cycle current pulsation passing therethrough; means responsive to the presence of a lamp-energizing marker in a stage of each shift register circuit for feeding said given control voltage to the control terminal of the associated dated means for as long as the marker remains therein, and for removing said control voltage therefrom as long as the lamp-energizing marker is absent from the associated shift state thereof remains; means responsive to the information read by said input-reading means for placing lamp-energizing markers in the shift register stages associated with the lamps at the right end of the lamp bank in a pattern corresponding to the particular character involved; and means for advancing the lamp-energizing markers in said shift register circuits and for feeding new information to said input-reading means, the advancement of said lamp-energizing markers in the shift register circuits occurring after the beginning of each half cycle current pulsation passing through said gated Means.
8. The sign system of claim 7 wherein said advancing means effects successive lamp-energizing marker advancement at instances spaced apart several half cycles of the current pulsations passing through said gated means, wherein the lamps have a chance to warmup to produce adequate light.
9. In a sign system including a lamp bank containing rows and columns of lamps to be energized to form a lighted sign, control means for the lamp bank comprising: input reading means for reading sign information fed thereto on a record medium and including information advance signal input terminal means for bringing new information on the record medium into reading position when an advance signal is fed thereto; a lamp control circuit associated with each lamp in said bank, each lamp control circuit including a source of energizing voltage have the waveform of a rectified periodic AC voltage, a gated means having a control terminal for triggering the gated means into a conducting state to energize the associated lamp when a given control voltage is fed thereto and load terminals connected in series with said voltage source wherein the gated means is automatically returned to a controllable state at the end of each half cycle current pulsation passing therethrough, a bistable unit including a pair of cross-coupled current control devices operable in either of two stable states of conduction where the devices are respectively both in a conducting and both in a nonconducting state and wherein a momentary change of state of either device will drive both devices to a stable condition in the new state, means responsive to the conductive state of the bistable unit for feeding said given control voltage to the control terminal of the associated gated diode for as long as the conductive state thereof remains, and means interconnecting all the bistable units associated with each row of lamps to form a separate shift register with advance signal input terminal means for advancing a given pattern of conductive and nonconductive states of the various bistable units in the shift register in a given direction therein when advance signals are fed to said terminal means; means responsive to the information read by said input-reading means for operating the bistable units in a pattern of conductive states which will energize the lamps to produce the corresponding information on the lamp bank; and means for feeding in synchronism periodically and at the same frequency information advance signals to said information advance signal input terminal of said input-reading means and shift register advance signals to said advance signal input terminal means of the shift register associated with the respective rows of lamps of the lamp bank, said shift register advance signals occurring after the beginning of each half cycle current pulsation passing through said gated means.
10. In a combined running and stationary sign system including a lamp bank containing the rows and columns of lamps to be energized, control means for the lamps comprising: input-reading means for reading sign information units fed thereto, a series of lamp control shift register circuits, there being one such shift register circuit for each row of lamps in the bank and each shift register circuit having register stages each for energizing and deenergizing the correspondingly positioned lamps in the associated row of lamps when lamp-energized markers are respectively present and absent therein, means for storing lamp-energizing markers in the stages of said shift register circuits associated with the group of lamps on the right side of the bank in a pattern corresponding to the sign information unit currently read by said input-reading means, shift register advancing means for normally advancing at a given rate lamp-energizing markers stored in the stages of said lamp control shift register circuits associated with the group of lamps on the right side of the bank toward the end thereof associated with the lamps at tHe left side of the bank, means for sequentially effecting readout of new sign information units by said input-reading means, means responsive to the reading by said input-reading means of information indicating that the running sign is to be stopped by momentarily terminating for a given predetermined period the advance of the lamp-energizing markers in said shift register circuits by said shift register advancing means and the feeding of new sign information units to said input-reading means, to provide a stationary sign on said lamp bank, and means responsive to the reading by said input-reading means of information indicating that the running sign is to be stopped for automatically reducing the average current flowing through the lamps of the lamp bank when a stationary sign is displayed on said lamp bank wherein the intensity of the light from the lamp is more nearly equal for the running and stationary signs on the lamp bank.
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US3671943A (en) * 1970-08-31 1972-06-20 Harold W Thompson Numbers symbology
US3696396A (en) * 1971-02-24 1972-10-03 Gulf Research Development Co Shifting data display
US3778676A (en) * 1971-06-07 1973-12-11 J Keller Control apparatus for selectively illuminating a group of lamps
US3879723A (en) * 1972-12-21 1975-04-22 Transign Inc Destination sign system using liquid crystal display devices
US4024531A (en) * 1974-03-05 1977-05-17 National Research Development Corporation Display devices
US4196413A (en) * 1977-11-29 1980-04-01 Nippon Soken, Inc. Dot-matrix type vehicle condition display apparatus
US4829493A (en) * 1985-06-14 1989-05-09 Techsonic Industries, Inc. Sonar fish and bottom finder and display
US4873676A (en) * 1985-06-14 1989-10-10 Techsonic Industries, Inc. Sonar depth sounder apparatus
US8214059B1 (en) * 1996-02-29 2012-07-03 Petrocy Richard J Self-addressing control units and modular sign including plurality of self-addressing control units
US20140333511A1 (en) * 2007-05-24 2014-11-13 Yazaki Corporation Moving image display apparatus

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Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3671943A (en) * 1970-08-31 1972-06-20 Harold W Thompson Numbers symbology
US3696396A (en) * 1971-02-24 1972-10-03 Gulf Research Development Co Shifting data display
US3778676A (en) * 1971-06-07 1973-12-11 J Keller Control apparatus for selectively illuminating a group of lamps
US3879723A (en) * 1972-12-21 1975-04-22 Transign Inc Destination sign system using liquid crystal display devices
US4024531A (en) * 1974-03-05 1977-05-17 National Research Development Corporation Display devices
US4196413A (en) * 1977-11-29 1980-04-01 Nippon Soken, Inc. Dot-matrix type vehicle condition display apparatus
US4829493A (en) * 1985-06-14 1989-05-09 Techsonic Industries, Inc. Sonar fish and bottom finder and display
US4873676A (en) * 1985-06-14 1989-10-10 Techsonic Industries, Inc. Sonar depth sounder apparatus
US8214059B1 (en) * 1996-02-29 2012-07-03 Petrocy Richard J Self-addressing control units and modular sign including plurality of self-addressing control units
US20140333511A1 (en) * 2007-05-24 2014-11-13 Yazaki Corporation Moving image display apparatus
US9601045B2 (en) * 2007-05-24 2017-03-21 Yazaki Corporation Moving image display apparatus
US10008147B2 (en) 2007-05-24 2018-06-26 Yazaki Corporation Moving image display apparatus

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