US3581296A - Shift register - Google Patents
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- US3581296A US3581296A US877069A US3581296DA US3581296A US 3581296 A US3581296 A US 3581296A US 877069 A US877069 A US 877069A US 3581296D A US3581296D A US 3581296DA US 3581296 A US3581296 A US 3581296A
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- 238000004804 winding Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 37
- XUIMIQQOPSSXEZ-UHFFFAOYSA-N Silicon Chemical compound [Si] XUIMIQQOPSSXEZ-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 claims abstract description 21
- 229910052710 silicon Inorganic materials 0.000 claims abstract description 21
- 239000010703 silicon Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 21
- 230000004907 flux Effects 0.000 description 9
- 230000000007 visual effect Effects 0.000 description 6
- 230000009471 action Effects 0.000 description 3
- 230000008901 benefit Effects 0.000 description 3
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 3
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 description 3
- 239000003990 capacitor Substances 0.000 description 2
- 238000009434 installation Methods 0.000 description 2
- 239000000696 magnetic material Substances 0.000 description 2
- 230000008859 change Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000004140 cleaning Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000003086 colorant Substances 0.000 description 1
- 150000001875 compounds Chemical class 0.000 description 1
- 238000010276 construction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000010586 diagram Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000011159 matrix material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000000203 mixture Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229920006395 saturated elastomer Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 239000004065 semiconductor Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000003068 static effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000001960 triggered effect Effects 0.000 description 1
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Classifications
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- G—PHYSICS
- G11—INFORMATION STORAGE
- G11C—STATIC STORES
- G11C19/00—Digital stores in which the information is moved stepwise, e.g. shift registers
- G11C19/02—Digital stores in which the information is moved stepwise, e.g. shift registers using magnetic elements
- G11C19/06—Digital stores in which the information is moved stepwise, e.g. shift registers using magnetic elements using structures with a number of apertures or magnetic loops, e.g. transfluxors laddic
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- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G3/00—Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes
- G09G3/04—Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of a single character by selection from a plurality of characters, or by composing the character by combination of individual elements, e.g. segments using a combination of such display devices for composing words, rows or the like, in a frame with fixed character positions
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- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G3/00—Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes
- G09G3/20—Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters
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- G—PHYSICS
- G11—INFORMATION STORAGE
- G11C—STATIC STORES
- G11C19/00—Digital stores in which the information is moved stepwise, e.g. shift registers
- G11C19/28—Digital stores in which the information is moved stepwise, e.g. shift registers using semiconductor elements
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- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G2310/00—Command of the display device
- G09G2310/02—Addressing, scanning or driving the display screen or processing steps related thereto
- G09G2310/0264—Details of driving circuits
- G09G2310/0275—Details of drivers for data electrodes, other than drivers for liquid crystal, plasma or OLED displays, not related to handling digital grey scale data or to communication of data to the pixels by means of a current
Definitions
- Each transfluxor has a core and a primary connected to an oscillator and actuated thereby, a secondary connected to the gate of its associated silicon controlled rectifier, and first and second windings; each transfluxor except the one at the last stage has a third winding connected to the second winding of the succeeding stage.
- a shift control switch is connected in series with each of the first windings, and data input means is connected to the second winding of the first stage for feeding binary data thereto.
- the connection between each third winding and its successive stage includes a rectifier, and a condenser lies across between the connection and a return line.
- This invention relates to improvements in electronic shift registers.
- An electronic shift register of this type may be used in such variable message displays as a sign made up of many electric lamps and alternating between displaying the time of day and the current temperature. This type of sign changes from one static display to another. Other examples of this type are travel departure and arrival boards at air, rail, and bus terminals, stock quotation boards, score boards at sporting events, and changing advertising signs.
- the invention may also be used in another type of variable message display, the continuously changing type, exemplified by a news dispatch sign in which a message begins at the right end and moves by small stages rapidly to the left end, giving the impression of a smoothly moving message.
- the present invention applies to both of these types of variable message displays, to mixtures of them, and to other types as well.
- the message may be given by words, letters, numbers, symbols, pictures, or geometrical elements. It also applies to other environments or devices requiring a shift register.
- variable message displays have used mechanical switching means, including complex electromechanical devices to operate mechanical switches, which in turn, were used to control lamps in the actual visual display board.
- the mechanical controls both limited the speed with which the messages could be changed and necessitated frequent adjustment and cleaning.
- these mechanical control systems have been expensive, and their installation has required a large number of control wires; furthermore, the enlargement or expansion of such a display board was complex and expensive.
- the extensive wiring between the control means and the actual display was a major cost feature, particularly when the control device was to be remote from the display; for a separate wire had to be run from each display lamp to the control device. Not only was this expensive, but the display itself was necessarily bulky,-it could not easily be made small.
- the present invention makes it possible to provide a less expensive, smaller, and simpler system for variable message displays, to impart a new flexibility to visual display, provide a visual display in which the control means is electronic instead of mechanical, and to enable remote control of display and multiple display spaces, in a system wherein the elements can be connected and controlled by a minimum of control wires.
- Displays may, by the present invention, be controlled remotely by radio or by telephone wires.
- shift registers are well known in the computer art, they have not, to my knowledge, heretofore been used in visual displays, and l have found that many important benefits may be obtained from their storage and transfer of information.
- a shift register I refer to a circuit in which information stored in a first element is transferred to a second adjacent element on each command shift.
- Such a shift register enables information to be received in serial form and loaded into the register so that at the conclusion of the serial input code, a meaningful message is stored in the register.
- the drawing is a fragmentary circuit diagram of a shift register embodying the principles of the invention.
- Shift registers using vacuum tubes or magnetic cores or transistors or other semiconductor compound elements are well known in the art and any true shift register having sufficient stages may be used in this invention. It may be remarked that some circuits which are called shift register in the literature are really nothing but ring counters, which transfer a count from stage to stage of each transfer command. Many of these ring counter circuits allow more than one stage to be on at any one time. However, such ring counters do not transfer a count when two successive stages are in the same stage whereas a true shift register will. Thus, while a large number of circuits have been published showing silicon controlled rectifiers in ring counters, and while some of these have mistakenly been called shift registers, they are not properly so termed.
- the drawing shows a preferred installation for a single figuregram with a novel shift register. Only three lamps 11, 12, and 17 are shown here, other lamps used in the figurcgram being omitted to save space. Between a top power line 51 and ground 52 the lamps ll, 12, and 17 are in series with respective silicon controlled rectifiers 61, 62,...67. In this instance I use a series of magnetic devices 71, 72,...77 known as transfluxors, which are multiaperture magnetic core transformers having the property of continuous readout of the state of the magnetic flux in the core without destroying the stored flux settings. (Transfluxors are described by .l. E. Rajchman et al. in an article entitled The Transfluxor" in Proc. IRE Volume 44, pp. 321-332, Mar. 1956.)
- the transfluxor cores are made of squareloop magnetic material, the magnetic flux of which is saturated at some value of drive.
- the core switches very rapidly. If a drive is applied which drives the magnetic flux down (negative) to a value A and is then removed, the core flux remains in its down" or negative position after the drive is removed, because of the memory property of the square loop material.
- a subsequent drive in the opposite direction first overcomes some reluctance and then switches quickly up to a point B, and, when that drive is removed, the flux in the core remains at point B.
- the shift line drives all cores to the low point A at every shift pulse. If any particular core is already at point A, no change of flux occurs; if it is at point B, it changes to point A and in so doing induces a voltage, which is used in this invention to perform the shift.
- Transfluxors give an advantage because the silicon controlled rectifiers then can be operated from raw unfiltered rectified alternating current. Each time the rectified voltage drops to zero, the silicon controlled rectifiers stop conducting, and in shift registers made up only of ordinary square-loop magnetic material, an output is obtained only when the shift line is energized; so with ordinary magnetic shift registers, the data must be read in each half cycle if the message is to remain in the visual display.
- a continuous output is available from an oscillator 70 to sense the states of the cores, and if the data in the shift register remains the same, the oscillator 60 retriggers the silicon controlled rectifiers on the next positive half cycle.
- each lamp l1, 12,...17 is connected to an anode 81 of its silicon-controlled rectifier 61, 62,...67.
- the cathodes 82 are connected to ground 52
- the oscillator 70 is connected to the transfluxors 7l, 72,...77 by a line 83, com prising the primary of the transformer action thereof.
- Each transfluxor 71, 72,...77 by a line 83 comprising the primary of the transformer action thereof.
- Each transfluxor 71, 72,...77 has a secondary 84 connected across between the cathode 82 (at ground 52) and the gate 85 of the respective silicon controlled rectifier 61, 62,...67.
- a single code input 86 is connected to a winding 87 of the first stage 71 only, and a single shift control 90 is connected to the windings 91 in each stage.
- a transfer winding 92 in each stage 71, 72,... except the last stage 77, is connected to the winding 95 of each stage 72,...77 except the first stage 71, through a rectifier 93, with a condenser 94 across the leads 96 and 97 for the windings 92 and 95.
- Typical values or types are as follows;
- lfa core such as that of the transfluxor 7] contains a "zero (is at point A as described a few paragraphs earlier), no volt ages are induced in the transfer winding 92 of that core when the shift line drives all the windings 91 to zero (or point A).
- the core contains a "one" (is at point B) and is driven to zero (point A) by the shift line, then a voltage is induced in the winding 92 so long as the flux is going from B to A.
- the induced voltage causes a current to flow through the rectifier 93 and be stored in the capacitor 94.
- the capacitor 94 discharges if it has a voltage and thereby drives the succeeding core (eg, in the transfluxor 72) to point B, the rectifier 93 causing this voltage pulse to affect only the succeeding transfluxor 72 and not the transfluxor 71 which was previously at point 87
- each data-set put into the first transfluxor 71 is transferred step by step to the succeeding transfluxors 72.077, one step at each shift.
- the data are loaded into the transfluxor shift register at the input 86.
- the input windings 87 on each core are driven unidirectionally to set the core in a given flux state. If the core is not already at that end of the hysteresis loop, then the set pulse drives the core through its loop and in so doing, couples a voltage into the transfer winding 92 for the next core. In this manner a datum is transferred from core to core, and when the set pulse finally sets the core, no transformer action can occur between the oscillator 70 and the output winding 84 to the silicon controlled rectifiers 61, 62,..67. Each half cycle the silicon controlled rectifiers 61, 62,...67 are triggered according to the serial code which is stored in the shift register transfluxors 71, 72,...77.
- the electronic shift of these shift registers is or can be quite rapid. it can be quite slow and steady, or it can be rapid and intermittent. Therefore, the message can be made to travel quickly to any portion of the sign and stop. During the rapid travel the display elements (the lamps) do not glow brightly enough for the eye to see them, so that the visual effect is that the message suddenly appears on the display. In this manner, variable message displays can be made to flash on and off. Similarly, cartoons can be created on the display with a rapid sequence of frames while the animation technique similar to that used in motion pictures creates the same general effect.
- Multicolor effects can be obtained by using three lamps (for example, blue, green, and red) at each lamp location, the three being located close to each other and rapidly scanning on the three colors in sequence with the brightness of each color adjusted so that the eye sees a hue which combines with the others.
- This technique is somewhat similar to that used in three-color printing sometimes called full-color halftone.
- An electronic shift register including in combination:
- a source of rectified alternating current having a positive bus and a ground
- each said silicon controlled rectifier having a cathode connected to ground, an anode, and a gate
- each said transfiuxor having a core and a primary connected to said oscillator in series with the primaries of the other transfluxors and actuated by said oscillator, a secondary connected to the gate of its associated said silicon controlled rectifier, and first and second windings, and all said transfluxors except the one at the last stage having a third winding, each said third winding being connected to the second winding of its succeeding stage by a main lead and a return lead,
- connection between each said third winding and its successive stage includes a rectifier in said main lead followed by a condenser across said main lead and return lead.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Computer Hardware Design (AREA)
- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
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- Control Of Indicators Other Than Cathode Ray Tubes (AREA)
- Control Of El Displays (AREA)
Abstract
An electronic shift register used with a source of rectified alternating current, having a positive bus and a ground. A series of shift register stages are serially arranged between a first stage and a last stage, each stage having a silicon controlled rectifier and a transfluxor core associated together. Each silicon controlled rectifier has its cathode connected to ground, and a load is connected between its anode and the positive bus. Each transfluxor has a core and a primary connected to an oscillator and actuated thereby, a secondary connected to the gate of its associated silicon controlled rectifier, and first and second windings; each transfluxor except the one at the last stage has a third winding connected to the second winding of the succeeding stage. A shift control switch is connected in series with each of the first windings, and data input means is connected to the second winding of the first stage for feeding binary data thereto. The connection between each third winding and its successive stage includes a rectifier, and a condenser lies across between the connection and a return line.
Description
United States Patent [72] inventor William Brooks I042 lnvernes Way, Sunnyvale, Calif. 94087 [21 I Appl. No. 877,069 [22] Filed Nov. 17, 1969 [45] Patented May 25, 197i Continuation-impart of application Ser. No. 810,434, Feb. 4, 1969, now Patent No. 3,493,933, which is a division of application Ser. No. 557,148, June 13, 1966, now Patent No. 3,493,957.
[54] SHIFT REGISTER 2 Claims, 1 Drawing Fig.
[52] US. Cl 340/174SR, 340/174CT, 307/221, 307/314 (51] Int. Gllc 11/08, 61 1c 19/00, H03k 23/32 [50] Field of Search 340/174 CT, 174 SR; 307/221, 252, 284, 305, 314
[56] Reterences Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,283,312 11/1966 Marcus et al. 340/174 Primary Examiner]ames W. Mot'fitt Attorney-Owen, Wickersham and Erickson ABSTRACT: An electronic shift register used with a source of rectified alternating current, having a positive bus and a ground. A series of shift register stages are serially arranged between a first stage and a last stage, each stage having a silicon controlled rectifier and a transfluxor core associated together. Each silicon controlled rectifier has its cathode connected to ground, and a load is connected between its anode and the positive bus. Each transfluxor has a core and a primary connected to an oscillator and actuated thereby, a secondary connected to the gate of its associated silicon controlled rectifier, and first and second windings; each transfluxor except the one at the last stage has a third winding connected to the second winding of the succeeding stage. A shift control switch is connected in series with each of the first windings, and data input means is connected to the second winding of the first stage for feeding binary data thereto. The connection between each third winding and its successive stage includes a rectifier, and a condenser lies across between the connection and a return line.
PATENTED M25 IHYI INVENTOR. WILLIAM BROOKS ATTORNEYS SHIFT REGISTER This application is a continuation-impart of application Ser. No. 8 l0,434 filed Feb. 4, l969 and now U.S. Pat. No. 3,493,933, which is a division of application Ser. No. S57,l4B filed June l3, i966 and nowUS. Pat. No. 3,493,957.
This invention relates to improvements in electronic shift registers.
An electronic shift register of this type may be used in such variable message displays as a sign made up of many electric lamps and alternating between displaying the time of day and the current temperature. This type of sign changes from one static display to another. Other examples of this type are travel departure and arrival boards at air, rail, and bus terminals, stock quotation boards, score boards at sporting events, and changing advertising signs.
The invention may also be used in another type of variable message display, the continuously changing type, exemplified by a news dispatch sign in which a message begins at the right end and moves by small stages rapidly to the left end, giving the impression of a smoothly moving message.
The present invention applies to both of these types of variable message displays, to mixtures of them, and to other types as well. The message may be given by words, letters, numbers, symbols, pictures, or geometrical elements. It also applies to other environments or devices requiring a shift register.
The invention enables control of such displays and simplification of the control systems. Heretofore, variable message displays have used mechanical switching means, including complex electromechanical devices to operate mechanical switches, which in turn, were used to control lamps in the actual visual display board. The mechanical controls both limited the speed with which the messages could be changed and necessitated frequent adjustment and cleaning. Moreover, these mechanical control systems have been expensive, and their installation has required a large number of control wires; furthermore, the enlargement or expansion of such a display board was complex and expensive. The extensive wiring between the control means and the actual display was a major cost feature, particularly when the control device was to be remote from the display; for a separate wire had to be run from each display lamp to the control device. Not only was this expensive, but the display itself was necessarily bulky,-it could not easily be made small.
The present invention makes it possible to provide a less expensive, smaller, and simpler system for variable message displays, to impart a new flexibility to visual display, provide a visual display in which the control means is electronic instead of mechanical, and to enable remote control of display and multiple display spaces, in a system wherein the elements can be connected and controlled by a minimum of control wires. Displays may, by the present invention, be controlled remotely by radio or by telephone wires.
While shift registers are well known in the computer art, they have not, to my knowledge, heretofore been used in visual displays, and l have found that many important benefits may be obtained from their storage and transfer of information. By a shift register, I refer to a circuit in which information stored in a first element is transferred to a second adjacent element on each command shift. Such a shift register enables information to be received in serial form and loaded into the register so that at the conclusion of the serial input code, a meaningful message is stored in the register.
Other objects, advantages, and features of the invention will become apparent from the following preferred example.
The drawing is a fragmentary circuit diagram of a shift register embodying the principles of the invention.
Shift registers using vacuum tubes or magnetic cores or transistors or other semiconductor compound elements are well known in the art and any true shift register having sufficient stages may be used in this invention. It may be remarked that some circuits which are called shift register in the literature are really nothing but ring counters, which transfer a count from stage to stage of each transfer command. Many of these ring counter circuits allow more than one stage to be on at any one time. However, such ring counters do not transfer a count when two successive stages are in the same stage whereas a true shift register will. Thus, while a large number of circuits have been published showing silicon controlled rectifiers in ring counters, and while some of these have mistakenly been called shift registers, they are not properly so termed.
The drawing shows a preferred installation for a single figuregram with a novel shift register. Only three lamps 11, 12, and 17 are shown here, other lamps used in the figurcgram being omitted to save space. Between a top power line 51 and ground 52 the lamps ll, 12, and 17 are in series with respective silicon controlled rectifiers 61, 62,...67. In this instance I use a series of magnetic devices 71, 72,...77 known as transfluxors, which are multiaperture magnetic core transformers having the property of continuous readout of the state of the magnetic flux in the core without destroying the stored flux settings. (Transfluxors are described by .l. E. Rajchman et al. in an article entitled The Transfluxor" in Proc. IRE Volume 44, pp. 321-332, Mar. 1956.)
The transfluxor cores are made of squareloop magnetic material, the magnetic flux of which is saturated at some value of drive. The core switches very rapidly. If a drive is applied which drives the magnetic flux down (negative) to a value A and is then removed, the core flux remains in its down" or negative position after the drive is removed, because of the memory property of the square loop material. A subsequent drive in the opposite direction first overcomes some reluctance and then switches quickly up to a point B, and, when that drive is removed, the flux in the core remains at point B. In the shift register of this invention, the shift line drives all cores to the low point A at every shift pulse. If any particular core is already at point A, no change of flux occurs; if it is at point B, it changes to point A and in so doing induces a voltage, which is used in this invention to perform the shift.
Transfluxors give an advantage because the silicon controlled rectifiers then can be operated from raw unfiltered rectified alternating current. Each time the rectified voltage drops to zero, the silicon controlled rectifiers stop conducting, and in shift registers made up only of ordinary square-loop magnetic material, an output is obtained only when the shift line is energized; so with ordinary magnetic shift registers, the data must be read in each half cycle if the message is to remain in the visual display. In the transfluxor shift register of this in vention, a continuous output is available from an oscillator 70 to sense the states of the cores, and if the data in the shift register remains the same, the oscillator 60 retriggers the silicon controlled rectifiers on the next positive half cycle.
In the figure, each lamp l1, 12,...17 is connected to an anode 81 of its silicon-controlled rectifier 61, 62,...67. The cathodes 82 are connected to ground 52, The oscillator 70 is connected to the transfluxors 7l, 72,...77 by a line 83, com prising the primary of the transformer action thereof. Each transfluxor 71, 72,...77 by a line 83, comprising the primary of the transformer action thereof. Each transfluxor 71, 72,...77 has a secondary 84 connected across between the cathode 82 (at ground 52) and the gate 85 of the respective silicon controlled rectifier 61, 62,...67. A single code input 86 is connected to a winding 87 of the first stage 71 only, and a single shift control 90 is connected to the windings 91 in each stage. A transfer winding 92 in each stage 71, 72,... except the last stage 77, is connected to the winding 95 of each stage 72,...77 except the first stage 71, through a rectifier 93, with a condenser 94 across the leads 96 and 97 for the windings 92 and 95.
Typical values or types are as follows;
Condenser 94 I... 0.01mieroiaracls.
lfa core such as that of the transfluxor 7] contains a "zero (is at point A as described a few paragraphs earlier), no volt ages are induced in the transfer winding 92 of that core when the shift line drives all the windings 91 to zero (or point A). However, if the core contains a "one" (is at point B) and is driven to zero (point A) by the shift line, then a voltage is induced in the winding 92 so long as the flux is going from B to A. The induced voltage causes a current to flow through the rectifier 93 and be stored in the capacitor 94. After the shift pulse has driven all cores to the zero or A position, the capacitor 94 discharges if it has a voltage and thereby drives the succeeding core (eg, in the transfluxor 72) to point B, the rectifier 93 causing this voltage pulse to affect only the succeeding transfluxor 72 and not the transfluxor 71 which was previously at point 87 Thereby, each data-set put into the first transfluxor 71 is transferred step by step to the succeeding transfluxors 72.077, one step at each shift.
Thus, in this device, the data are loaded into the transfluxor shift register at the input 86. At each shift pulse the input windings 87 on each core are driven unidirectionally to set the core in a given flux state. If the core is not already at that end of the hysteresis loop, then the set pulse drives the core through its loop and in so doing, couples a voltage into the transfer winding 92 for the next core. In this manner a datum is transferred from core to core, and when the set pulse finally sets the core, no transformer action can occur between the oscillator 70 and the output winding 84 to the silicon controlled rectifiers 61, 62,..67. Each half cycle the silicon controlled rectifiers 61, 62,...67 are triggered according to the serial code which is stored in the shift register transfluxors 71, 72,...77.
The electronic shift of these shift registers is or can be quite rapid. it can be quite slow and steady, or it can be rapid and intermittent. Therefore, the message can be made to travel quickly to any portion of the sign and stop. During the rapid travel the display elements (the lamps) do not glow brightly enough for the eye to see them, so that the visual effect is that the message suddenly appears on the display. In this manner, variable message displays can be made to flash on and off. Similarly, cartoons can be created on the display with a rapid sequence of frames while the animation technique similar to that used in motion pictures creates the same general effect. Multicolor effects can be obtained by using three lamps (for example, blue, green, and red) at each lamp location, the three being located close to each other and rapidly scanning on the three colors in sequence with the brightness of each color adjusted so that the eye sees a hue which combines with the others. This technique is somewhat similar to that used in three-color printing sometimes called full-color halftone.
The codes and examples described above are not to be construed as limits on the shift register technique of this invention. For example, certain types of display elements presently use a projection principle in which a single lamp selected from a matrix of lamps is made to illuminate a mask which acts like a film in a picture projector and throws an image onto the screen. A series of these units may be placed side by side to form lines of copy, and the shift register serial code, consisting of pulses, spaced so that one lamp per display element is selected, may be used to obtain the desired effect.
To those skilled in the art to which this invention relates, many changes in construction and widely differing embodiments and applications of the invention will suggest themselves without departing from the spirit and scope of the in vention. The disclosures and the description herein are purely illustrative and are not intended to be in any sense limiting.
lclaim:
1. An electronic shift register, including in combination:
a source of rectified alternating current, having a positive bus and a ground;
an oscillator,
21 series of shift register stages, serially arranged between a first stage and a last stage, each stage having a silicon controlled rectifier and a transfluxor core associated together,
each said silicon controlled rectifier having a cathode connected to ground, an anode, and a gate,
a load connected between each said anode and said positive bus,
each said transfiuxor having a core and a primary connected to said oscillator in series with the primaries of the other transfluxors and actuated by said oscillator, a secondary connected to the gate of its associated said silicon controlled rectifier, and first and second windings, and all said transfluxors except the one at the last stage having a third winding, each said third winding being connected to the second winding of its succeeding stage by a main lead and a return lead,
a shift control switch connected in series to each of said first windings, and
data input means connected to the second winding of said first stage for feeding binary data thereto.
2. The shift register of claim 1 wherein the connection between each said third winding and its successive stage includes a rectifier in said main lead followed by a condenser across said main lead and return lead.
Claims (2)
1. An electronic shift register, including in combination: a source of rectified alternating current, having a positive bus and a ground; an oscillator, a series of shift register stages, serially arranged between a first stage and a last stage, each stage having a silicon controlled rectifier and a transfluxor core associated together, each said silicon controlled rectifier having a cathode connected to ground, an anode, and a gate, a load connected between each said anode and said positive bus, each said transfluxor having a core and a primary connected to said oscillator in series with the primaries of the other transfluxors and actuated by said oscillator, a secondary connected to the gate of its associated said silicon controlled rectifier, and first and second windings, and all said transfluxors except the one at the last stage having a third winding, each said third winding being connected to the second winding of its succeeding stage by a main lead and a return lead, a shift control switch connected in series to each of said first windings, and data input means connected to the second winding of said first stage for feeding binary data thereto.
2. The shift register of claim 1 wherein the connection between each said third winding and its successive stage includes a rectifier in said main lead followed by a condenser across said main lead and return lead.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US55714866A | 1966-06-13 | 1966-06-13 | |
| US87706969A | 1969-11-17 | 1969-11-17 |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US3581296A true US3581296A (en) | 1971-05-25 |
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| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US557148A Expired - Lifetime US3493957A (en) | 1966-06-13 | 1966-06-13 | Variable message displays |
| US877069A Expired - Lifetime US3581296A (en) | 1966-06-13 | 1969-11-17 | Shift register |
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| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US557148A Expired - Lifetime US3493957A (en) | 1966-06-13 | 1966-06-13 | Variable message displays |
Country Status (2)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (2) | US3493957A (en) |
| GB (3) | GB1194042A (en) |
Cited By (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20030056044A1 (en) * | 2001-08-31 | 2003-03-20 | Kock Ernst Josef | Control register assembly |
Families Citing this family (19)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3573791A (en) * | 1969-01-07 | 1971-04-06 | Ibm | Miltiple use indicator |
| US3614773A (en) * | 1969-06-30 | 1971-10-19 | Gordon Eng Co | Indicator glow tube |
| JPS5028210B1 (en) * | 1969-08-19 | 1975-09-12 | ||
| US3651493A (en) * | 1969-11-20 | 1972-03-21 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Solid state traveling display circuit |
| US3631460A (en) * | 1970-01-07 | 1971-12-28 | Control Data Corp | Display apparatus |
| US3747063A (en) * | 1970-09-08 | 1973-07-17 | Simplec Mfg Co | Bistable circuit controlled sequential lamp indicator |
| US3710180A (en) * | 1970-09-18 | 1973-01-09 | Schjeldahl Co | Sequentially addressable display apparatus with means for reversing direction of transfer |
| US3696396A (en) * | 1971-02-24 | 1972-10-03 | Gulf Research Development Co | Shifting data display |
| US3728714A (en) * | 1971-03-11 | 1973-04-17 | Stewart Warner Corp | Non-flickering display system having multi-phase power source |
| US3727003A (en) * | 1971-03-18 | 1973-04-10 | Paraskevakos Elect & Comm | Decoding and display apparatus for groups of pulse trains |
| US3879723A (en) * | 1972-12-21 | 1975-04-22 | Transign Inc | Destination sign system using liquid crystal display devices |
| US3866209A (en) * | 1973-06-22 | 1975-02-11 | Rca Corp | Charge-transfer display system |
| US3925777A (en) * | 1974-09-23 | 1975-12-09 | Pressman D R | Electronic clock employing repeating sequential single digit display |
| US3938139A (en) * | 1974-12-30 | 1976-02-10 | Young Communications Corporation | Miniature display communicator |
| USRE32365E (en) * | 1975-05-22 | 1987-03-03 | Sanders Associates, Inc. | Precessing display pager |
| US4163228A (en) * | 1977-06-27 | 1979-07-31 | Sadjadi Kambiz M | Information display system having digital logic interconnections |
| US4139149A (en) * | 1977-08-31 | 1979-02-13 | Ncr Corporation | Display system |
| US4386351A (en) * | 1980-12-20 | 1983-05-31 | Timex Corporation | Method and system for two-dimensional traveling display and driver circuits therefor |
| US4750130A (en) * | 1985-03-20 | 1988-06-07 | Tokyo Tatsuno Co., Ltd. | Fuel delivery display and control system |
Citations (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3283312A (en) * | 1962-11-05 | 1966-11-01 | Ira R Marcus | Read-out circuit for static magnetic core devices |
Family Cites Families (6)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US2123459A (en) * | 1936-04-17 | 1938-07-12 | Andersen Johan Riberg | Electric sign system |
| GB663574A (en) * | 1949-03-04 | 1951-12-27 | Standard Telephones Cables Ltd | Improvements in or relating to electrical circuits employing static electrical switches |
| US3387269A (en) * | 1964-08-24 | 1968-06-04 | Ultronic Systems Corp | Information display system |
| US3384888A (en) * | 1964-12-30 | 1968-05-21 | Gen Electric | Optical apparatus |
| US3389389A (en) * | 1965-01-11 | 1968-06-18 | Neonix Inc | Moving message sign |
| US3432846A (en) * | 1965-04-19 | 1969-03-11 | Gen Electric | Traveling sign controlled by logic circuitry and providing a plurality of visual display effects |
-
1966
- 1966-06-13 US US557148A patent/US3493957A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
-
1967
- 1967-06-09 GB GB26772/67A patent/GB1194042A/en not_active Expired
- 1967-06-09 GB GB50007/68A patent/GB1194044A/en not_active Expired
- 1967-06-09 GB GB50006/68A patent/GB1194043A/en not_active Expired
-
1969
- 1969-11-17 US US877069A patent/US3581296A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Patent Citations (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3283312A (en) * | 1962-11-05 | 1966-11-01 | Ira R Marcus | Read-out circuit for static magnetic core devices |
Cited By (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20030056044A1 (en) * | 2001-08-31 | 2003-03-20 | Kock Ernst Josef | Control register assembly |
| US6985993B2 (en) * | 2001-08-31 | 2006-01-10 | Infineon Technologies Ag | Control register assembly |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| US3493957A (en) | 1970-02-03 |
| GB1194044A (en) | 1970-06-10 |
| GB1194043A (en) | 1970-06-10 |
| GB1194042A (en) | 1970-06-10 |
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