US3687255A - Multi-price, multi-channel coin control means - Google Patents
Multi-price, multi-channel coin control means Download PDFInfo
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- US3687255A US3687255A US29025A US3687255DA US3687255A US 3687255 A US3687255 A US 3687255A US 29025 A US29025 A US 29025A US 3687255D A US3687255D A US 3687255DA US 3687255 A US3687255 A US 3687255A
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- vend
- accumulator
- coin
- control
- price
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- G—PHYSICS
- G07—CHECKING-DEVICES
- G07F—COIN-FREED OR LIKE APPARATUS
- G07F5/00—Coin-actuated mechanisms; Interlocks
- G07F5/20—Coin-actuated mechanisms; Interlocks specially adapted for registering coins as credit, e.g. mechanically actuated
- G07F5/22—Coin-actuated mechanisms; Interlocks specially adapted for registering coins as credit, e.g. mechanically actuated electrically actuated
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G07—CHECKING-DEVICES
- G07F—COIN-FREED OR LIKE APPARATUS
- G07F5/00—Coin-actuated mechanisms; Interlocks
- G07F5/24—Coin-actuated mechanisms; Interlocks with change-giving
Definitions
- the subject means are preferably constructed UNITED STATES PATENTS using solid state components and may also include 7 anti-cheat and/or anti-malfunction devices to prevent 3,508,636 4/1970 Sh1r1ey.. "194/10 the vending of articles unless a proper amount of 3,482,670 12/ 1969 Yamashita ..194/1O money has been deposited 1 3,532,203 10/1970 Cllft ..194/l0 3,428,157 2/ 1969 Patterson ..194/2 20 Claims, 5 Drawing Figures PAIENTEDAHBZ m2 3,687,255
- FIG 2 L/wAKz/w M 770/P/V15 X MULTI-PRICE, MULTI-CHANNEL CQIN CONTROL MEANS
- Many electronic coin operated devices are in existence including some which perform vending, change making and other functions and combinations thereof.
- the known electronic coin operated devices are limited in their versatility and are constructed for specific limited applications such as applications where the price of the vend is relatively fixed.
- the previously known electronic coin operated devices are usually able to only make vends at a single price and are not adaptable to applications where the customer may select between two or more vends which may have differing prices.
- vending machines may be used to vend various different articles, the values of which may change from time to time, it is highly desirable that the price of the vend be easily adjustable over a wide range by the owner or operator of the machine.
- a change in vend price has been relatively difficult to make requiring either a substitution of coin control units or the extensive rewiring of the existing coin control unit.
- the present invention teaches the construction and operation of a novel, versatile and flexible electronic control circuit which utilizes accumulator means which not only can add or accumulate but also can subtract or count backwards.
- the present circuit is particularly well suited for use on vending machines which accumulate amounts deposited, allow for the selection of one of various vends at the same or at different prices, control the vending, make change appropriate to the price of the vend selected and perform the other functions of the vending machine.
- the present invention increases the versatility and utility of such vending machines by allowing them to be used for vending various types of merchandise at various preselected prices, which prices may be changed from time to time in accordance with market conditions and otherwise.
- the present invention also reduces the possibility of a customer being able to cheat the vending machine by providing means which prevent false signals from causing the circuits to malfunction such as false signals that might be caused by a customer repeatedly interrupting the external power to the circuit by jiggling the power cord or pushing more than one vend selector button or switch at a time.
- the subject device includes a control circuit which comprises means responsive to the deposit of coins of different denominations into a coin receiving unit, means for accumulating or counting the value of the coins deposited, means for determining when the value of coins deposited equals one of the vend prices, means for adjusting the vend prices as desired, means for allowing the vending of an item when the price thereof has been deposited, and means for causing a refunding operation when necessary.
- the present circuit also includes vend control means, refund control means and reset means as well as anti-cheat means.
- the subject circuit is preferably constructed employing solid state components to minimize its size, improve its reliability, reduce its maintenance and repair requirements and to enable it to be constructed and packaged as a relatively compact, preferably plug-in type unit which can easily and quickly be installed and/or removed and replaced in a vending or like machine. Being constructed insofar as possible of solid state components also makes the circuit relatively troublefree and easy to handle and maintain.
- a principal object of the present invention therefore is to provide improved and more versatile means for controlling, vending, refunding and other operations of coin controlled devices.
- Another object is to enlarge the functions and operations performed by vending and other like devices.
- Another object is to provide improved means for accumulating the value of monies deposited in vending machines, which means are also usedto determine and control the payback of money deposited in excess of the vend price.
- Another object is to protect vending machines from unscrupulous persons by preventing false signals from causing malfunctions.
- Another object is to provide improved means for determining amounts deposited in vending machines including amounts deposited in excess of the price of a selected vend and for determining and controlling the refunding of such excess amounts.
- Another object is to provide improved electronic control means which can be installed as original equipment or added as an improvement to an existing vending machine with a minimum of machine modification.
- Another object is to provide a packaged plug-in type control unit for quick and easy installation in vending machines and the like, especially vending machines which vend more than one kind and/or price of article, which articles and prices may be varied from time to time.
- Another object is to minimize maintenance and downtime of a vending machine and the like.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a control circuit constructed according to the present invention.
- FIGS. 2, 3, 4, and 5 together constitute a schematic circuit diagram showing the details of a particular embodiment of the control circuit of FIG. 1.
- number 10 in FIG. 1 refers generally to a control circuit constructed according to the present invention.
- the circuit 10 is constructed to control the various operations of vending machines and other money or coin control devices, and in particular those machines capable of vending more than one different kind of item at different costs, which costs can be selected by the one servicing the machine and not ordinarily by the customer.
- the present control means can also be used on those machines capable of refunding amounts deposited in excess of the cost of a selected item.
- the circuit operates in conjunction with and receives input signals from a coin unit 12 on the vending machine.
- the input signals produced in the coin unit 12 when coins are deposited therein are fed to an accumulator l4 identified in the drawing by the legend Forward-Back Accumulator which responds to the input signals it receives by accumulating therein an amount equal to the money value of the coins deposited.
- the subject circuit 10 will be conditioned to cause several different things to happen including the energizing of means to enable the customer to initiate a vend.
- the total amount of the monies deposited in the machine is accumulated in the accumulator 14 and upon initiation of a vend operation by the customer, actuating selection means to be described later, are set in motion which cause the vend to be made, the refunding of amounts accumulated in the accumulator 14 above the selected vend price, the resetting of the circuit 10 to some preestablished reset condition in readiness for the next vend operation, and the performing of other control functions as will be explained.
- forward-back accumulator means can be used for the accumulator 14 as will be described even though for purposes of this specification a particular preferred form will be described in detail. It is also preferred to construct the accumulator 14 as well as the other parts of the circuit 10 utilizing as far as possible solid state components for reliability and dependability, to minimize the size, weight, and bulkiness thereof, and to make the circuit as troublefree as possible.
- the size and bulk limitations are particularly important considerations in plug-in type controls especially where they are to be used in machines where there is relatively little available space. Also, the less space used for the controls in a vending machine the more space will be available for other things including particularly the products to be vended.
- the subject circuit 10 is designed to be used in conjunction with the coin receiving unit 12 of a vending machine as aforesaid, and the coin receiving unit 12 7 shown in FIG. 1 is shown in a simplified schematic form having provisions for receiving deposits of nickels, dimes and quarters into a coin path.
- the unit 12 has a nickel switch 18, a dime switch 20, and a quarter switch 22.
- the nickel switch 18 is constructed and positioned in the coin path to have its normally open contacts close once for the deposit of each nickel, dime or quarter, and to reopen its contacts as soon as the coin has passed out of engagement therewith.
- the dime switch 26 is constructed and positioned to have its normally open contacts close once for the deposit of each dime and each quarter, and to reopen when the coin has passed.
- the normally open contacts of the quarter switch 22 are constructed and positioned to close once only for the deposit of each quarter, and to reopen after the quarter has passed or moved out of contact therewith.
- the quarter switch 22 also has normally closed contacts which open and then reclose as the quarter passes therethrough.
- Coin units 12 having these general characteristics are known and available commercially.
- the normally open contacts of the nickel, dime and quarter switches 18, 20 and 22, respectively, are shown connected between an input voltage source labeled VDC and the input side of the accumulator 14 so that the accumulator 14 receives an input impulse whenever the normally open contacts of any one of the switches 18, 20 and 22 close. This means that a separate input impulse is sent to the accumulator 14 each time a coin moves past and operates one of the switches 18, 20 and 22.
- the output side of the normally open contacts of the quarter switch 22 are connected to a pair of serially connected one-shot multi-vibrator circuits 24 and 26 whose outputs are connected through a gate 27 to the input of the accumulator 14.
- the gate 27 also includes a control connection from the normally closed contacts of the quarter switch 22.
- a control signal is sent from the switch 22 to the gate 27 which causes the gate 27 to block any impulse that might be produced if the one-shot multi-vibrators 24 and 26 are undesirably triggered such as by a transient or other stray signal in the circuit 10.
- the accumulator 14 has two output connections, the first of which feeds information as to the count in the accumulator to price control means 28 and 30 which respectively are located in different vend channels labeled Channel A and Channel B in FIG. 1.
- Each of the price control means 28 and 30 include means to establish the acceptable vend price and means to produce an output therefrom only when the state of the accumulator 14 represents a value which is exactly the same as the vend price established therein.
- the second output connection from the accumulator 14 is connected to a safety clamp circuit 32.
- the safety clamp 32 is connected to sense when the accumulator 14 is in a zero or reset condition and it includes means to produce signals for various control functions throughout the circuit 10.
- the outputs of the price control means 28 and 30 are connected through gates 36 and 38, respectively, which gates also include input connections from the safety clamp 32.
- the safety clamp 32 When the safety clamp 32 is sensing a zero or reset condition of the accumulator 14, it causes the gates 36 and 33 to go into conditions where signals from the price control means 28 and 30 are blocked and therefore not conducted further.
- the price control means 28 and the gate 36 are both in the Channel A.
- the price control 28 will produce an output which passes through the gate 36 to a control circuit 40.
- the control circuit 40 has four output connections, two of which are connected to control gates 42 and 44, the functions of which will be discussed hereinafter, the third output being connected to another gate 46 whose function will also be discussed hereinafter, and the fourth output of the circuit 40 is connected to still another gate 48.
- the control circuit 40 produces an output signal to the gate 48 whenever it receives an input signal from the price control means 28.
- the gate 48 is also controlled in part by the output of the safety clamp 32 which closes the gate 48 under certain predetermined conditions including when the accumulator 14 is at a zero count.
- the gate 48 is normally open, however, and it passes the output signals it receives from the control circuit 40 to a credit flip-flop 50, which signals change the state thereof from a no-credit or reset condition to a credit condition.
- the credit flip-flop 50 when in its credit condition causes vend selector means 52 to be in an enabled condition so that the customer can energize a portion thereof to send a signal to vend control means 54 which in turn produce a vend at the Vend A output in FIG. 1.
- Channel B has components that correspond to the components of Channel A including a control circuit 60, which corresponds to the control circuit 40 and which has its input side connected to the output side of the price control 30 through gate 38.
- the control circuit 60 has outputs connected to gates 62, 64, 66 and 68 which correspond respectively, to gates 42, 44, 46 and 48 in Channel A.
- the control circuit 60 when energized by a signal from the price control 30 passes a signal through the gate 68 to a second credit flip-flop 70 which corresponds to the credit flip-flop 50 in Channel A.
- the credit flip-flop 70 is connected to another vend selector means 72 which when enabled by the changing of the credit flip-flop 70 from a no-credit to a credit condition allows the customer to energize second vend control means 74 to produce a vend at the output labeled Vend B in FIG. 1.
- the vend control means 54 and 74 each include an output that is connected to the vend selector means 72 and 52, respectively, associated with the other circuit channel. When one of the vend control means are energized by a customer selection, a signal is sent therefrom on the output connection to the vend selector means in the opposite channel to disable the opposite channel vend selector so that the customer cannot cheat the machine by inducing vends out of both channels simultaneously.
- the vend control means 54 and 74 also include outputs connected to both of the credit flip-flops 50 and to revert to or remain in their no-credit states so that an actuation of either of the vend selector means 52 or 72 thereafter will not produce a second vend.
- the vend control means 54 and 74 also include delayed control outputs connected to the gates 42 and 44 in case of vend control means 54 in Channel A and to the gates 62 and 64 in the case of vend control means 74 in Channel B.
- a delayed output signal is fed therefrom to the respectively connected gates, and this output signal is passed through one of the gates, depending upon their states.
- the states of the gates in turn depend on the state of the associated control circuit 40 or 60. The signal is delayed to assure that all deposited coins clear the coin unit 12 before a reset or refund operation is commenced, since otherwise it might be possible to lose money in the machine.
- the gate 42 will be in its closed condition while the gate 44 will be in an open condition, and therefore the output signal from the vend control means 54, upon deenergization thereof after the production of Vend A, will pass through gate 44 to energize reset means which in turn produce a reset signal which returns the accumulator 14 to its zero or reset condition.
- the reset signal fed to the accumulator 14 from the reset means 80 is also fed to both credit flip-flops 50 and 70 to assure that they have returned to their no-credit or reset conditions.
- the control circuit 40 will be in its normal state since it will be receiving no signal from the control 28, in which case the gate 42 will be in an open condition and the gate 44 will be in a closed condition. This causes the delayed output signal from the vend control means 54 to be blocked by the gate 44 but passed by the gate 42.
- the gate 42 is connected to conduct the delayed output signal to a refund flip-flop 82, instead of to the reset means 80, to change the state thereof from a reset to a set or refund condition.
- the refund flip-flop 82 When the refund flip-flop 82 changes from its reset to its set condition, it produces an output to the accumulator 14 which causes the accumulator 14 thereafter to subtract rather than add future input impulses fed thereto.
- the refund flip-flop 82 when in a set condition also produces an output to a payback control 84 which in turn energizes the payback motor 86 to operate to refund a coin of the lowest denomination acceptable in the machine which in the circuit described is a nickel.
- the payback motor 86 with the payback of each coin cycles a payback switch 88 to momentarily close its normally open contacts.
- the payback switch 88 is connected between the source labeled VDC, which is the same source that is connected to the coin switches 18, 20 and 22, and the accumulator 14.
- an input impulse is sent to the accumulator 14 in a manner similar to the way the input impulses are sent thereto by the coin switches 18, 20 and 22. Since the accumulator 14 is in its subtract rather than its add mode, however, due to the signal received thereat from the refund flip-flop 82, the accumulator 14 reduces its count by an amount representative of one nickel each time a nickel is refunded. The payback motor 86 will continue to refund nickels until the count in the accumulator 14 is reduced to the exact price set in the price control 28 or 30 in the channel in which the vend was initiated.
- the accumulator 14 When the correct amount has been refunded the accumulator 14 will be in a proper condition so that the price control 28 or 30 in the selected vending channel produces an output to its associated control circuit 40 or 60 to energize the same. For example, if the vend was made out of Channel A, the control circuit 40 will then cause an output signal to be sent through gate 46 to the refund flip-flop 82 resetting it to its reset condition which ceases theoperation of the payback control 84 and the payback motor 86.
- the payback control 84 includes a control output which is connected to control the gates 48 and 68 to prevent the last mentioned output signals from the control circuit 40 or 60 from passing to the associated credit flip-flop S or 70 when the payback control 84 is energized. Otherwise the gates 48 and 68 would pass output signals produced by the control circuits 40 and 60 to the associated credit flip-flops to reestablish a credit condition thereof which of course is undesirable.
- the circuit also includes a channel determining flip-flop 92 which controls which of the gates 46 or 66 is open so that it can pass the output signal from the connected control circuit 40 or 60 to reset the refund flip-flop 82 when the count of the accumulator 14 has been reduced to the vend price established in the associated price control circuit.
- the channel determining flip-flop 92 is connected to receive outputs of the vend selector means 52 and 72 caused when the vend selector is disabled by a vend in the opposite channel. When either one is disabled by the opposite vend control, the channel determining flip-flop 92 is maintained or switched to a state which is indicative of which channel, Channel A or Channel B, was the last to produce a vend.
- the channel determining flip-flop 92 has two control outputs which are connected respectively to the gates 46 and 66 to cause the associated gate in the last activated channel to be open or in a signal passing condition while simultaneously closing the other of said gates.
- the channel determining flip-flop 92 causes the gate 46 to be in a conducting condition and the gate 66 to be in a nonconducting condition so that if during a refund operation both control circuits 40 and 60 produce reset signals due to the prices in the respective channels being met, only the reset signal from control circuit 40 is able to be passed to the refund flip-flop 82 to reset it and thereby to cease the payback operation.
- the gate 46 or 66 may pass a reset signal to the refund flip-flop 82 when the control circuit 40 or 60 is first energized before a vend selection has been made. Since at this time the refund flip-flop is reset anyhow, the signal through the gate 46 or 66 has no effect.
- the forward-back accumulator 14 and both credit flip-flops 50 and if need be, are reset by the reset means 80 which are energized either by the aforementioned signal from one of the vend control means 54 or 74 through gate 44 or 64 respectively or by a signal from the refund flip-flop 82 which signal is sent when the refund flip-flop 82 is reset from its set to its reset condition.
- the circuit 10 is thereafter ready to accept more coinage for another vend.
- Channels A and B operate in a similar manner and even though one is picked in the examples, the other would also operate in the same way if selected.
- either channel may be set so its price is higher, lower or the same as the other and the circuit 10 will still operate properly.
- a power supply 94 for supplying the proper voltages to the circuit 10 by means of the terminals shown.
- the power supply 94 is also connected to the reset means 80. This connection is required since electronic counters and flip-flops when initially turned on must be driven to a predetermined condition or they will tend to come on in random conditions, which is undesirable.
- the reset means 80 includes voltage sensing means which sense when the power supply 94 has reached a certain level after being turned on. When the voltage level is reached a reset operation is commenced which in turn resets or assures that the accumulator 14, the refund flip-flop 82 and the credit flip-flops 50 and 70 are in the desired initial conditions.
- the voltage sensing means in the reset means 80 are also included as an anti'cheat feature so that customers will not be able to confuse the circuit 10 by interrupting the power supply thereto in the hopes that the accumulator 14, the credit flip-flops 50 and 70 and/or the refund flip-flop 82 will come on in some condition other than a zero or reset condition which might allow a vend and/or a refund after the insertion of little or no money.
- the power supply 94 itself may be of a well known construction and is shown connected to an AC. source.
- the relays and other operating components of the vending machines on which the subject control means are installed are not part of this invention and for the most part are also of known constructions.
- FIGS. 2, 3, 4 and 5 together are a schematic diagram showing the details of the circuit including the circuit connections and the circuit elements employed in the circuit 10.
- the circuit 10 is for use in a vending or like machine that has a coin unit 12 capable of accepting nickels, dimes and quarters.
- the circuit as shown is arbitrarily connected to be used to vend items costing up to cents in nickel increments. it will become apparent, however, that with slight modification, the coin unit may be made to accept other coin denominations including foreign and token coinage, and the circuit can also be made to control vends costing larger amounts and in different increment amounts as well.
- the circuit as shown is a dual channel device that is for use in vending machines which sell at least two different items and at vend prices which may also be different.
- the circuit 10 can also be modified according to the teachings of the present invention to have more or fewer channels as desired.
- the coins acceptable, the vend prices, and the number of channels used in the examples which follow are chosen to circuit but obviously are not limiting factors.
- the elements and connections of the circuit portion shown in FIGS. 2, 3, 4, and wherever possible are identified by the same numbers as used in FIG. 1. Also the lettered terminals of FIGS. 2, 3, 4, and 5 do not necessarily actually appear in circuit and are included primarily for convenience in following the circuit 10 from one drawing to another.
- the coin switches 18, and 22 as shown in FIG. 2 are located in the coin unit 12 as aforesaid, and are actuated or closed by movements of coins thereby to produce input signals that are used to control the various operations of the subject circuit 10 and of the vending machine on which it is used.
- a first input impulse is fed from a negative potential source through a surge limiting resistor 100 to a filter or pulse forming network 102 which includes a resistor 103 connected in series with a parallel combination of another resistor 104 and a capacitor 106.
- the pulse forming network 102 also includes a second capacitor 108 connected between ground and the junction between resistors 103 and 104, which capacitor 108 is included to absorb any stray transients such as might be produced by a bouncing switch and it also assists in shaping the input impulses.
- Each input impulse formed by the pulse forming network 102 then passes through a properly oriented diode 110 to a terminal A and from there to an input of the accumulator 14.
- the nickel switch 18 will be actuated as aforesaid in the case of a nickel deposit to produce the first input impulse to the accumulator 14, and the dime coin switch 20 will also be activated to produce a second accumulator input impulse in a similar manner.
- the dime coin switch 20 is connected to feed the second input impulse to the accumulator 14 through another pulse forming network 112, similar to the pulse forming network 102 associated with the nickel coin switch 18 and to a properly oriented diode 114 which is also connected to the terminal A.
- a third input impulse is fed to the terminal A to the accumulator 14 through a pulse forming network 116, which performs a function similar to the pulse forming networks 102 and 112 above.
- the pulse forming circuit 1 I6 is also connected to the terminal A through a properly oriented diode H8.
- the pulse forming network 116 includes a resistor 120 connected in series with parallel connected capacitor 122 and resistor 124.
- the pulse forming network 116 also includes another capacitor 126 which is connected to the junction between resistor 120 and the parallel combination of capacitor 122 and resistor 124 on one side thereof and ground.
- the input impulse generated by the closing of the quarter switch 22 when a quarter passes thereby is also fed to the first one shot circuit 24 through a capacitor connected on one side to the non-grounded side of the capacitor 126 which is also the junction between resistor 120 and the parallel con nected capacitor 122 and resistor 124.
- the opposite side of the capacitor 130 is connected to a junction between a non-grounded side of a resistor 132 and a diode 134 oriented as shown.
- the opposite side of the diode 134 is connected to a positive potential source through a resistor 136 and also through a series connected capacitor 139, a resistor and a diode 141.
- resistors 132 and 136 together form a voltage divider circuit which causes a positive potential to nonnally be present at the junction between the diode 134 and resistor 136, which junction is connected to the base of a normally conducting transistor 138 in the first one shot circuit 24.
- the quarter coin switch 22 is closed by the passing of a quarter thereby, the aforementioned negative input impulse is fed through capacitor 130 to negatively charge the capacitor 139 and reduce the positive base current of the transistor 138 thereby causing it to cease conducting.
- the emitter of the transistor 138 is grounded through a diode 142 which protects it from reverse voltage breakdown while the collector of transistor 138 is connected to the positive potential source through a load resistor 143.
- the transistor 138 When the transistor 138 is turned off its collector potential rises from ground to some positive potential which charges a capacitor 144 connected on one side to the collector of the transistor 138 and on the other side to ground through a resistor 146.
- the negative potential on the capacitor 139 is dissipated, the transistor 138 will again conduct and the charged capacitor 144 will quickly discharge which causes a negative impulse to appear across the resistor 146.
- This negative impulse is coupled through diodes 148 and 150 to the terminal A and to the input of the accumulator circuit 14 to form the fourth input impulse thereto.
- the second one shot multivibrator circuit 26 is similar to the first one-shot circuit 24 and includes transistors 162 and 164 which correspond respectively to the transistors 152 and 138 in the first one shot circuit 24.
- the transistor 162 is normally biased to a nonconducting condition and the aforesaid positive impulse from the first one-shot circuit 24 is applied directly to its base electrode to cause the transistor 162 to conduct.
- the emitter of the transistor 162 is grounded and its collector is connected to the positive potential source through a load resistor 165 so that when it conducts the potential on its collector falls from some positive value to ground.
- the negative impulse fed to the base of the transistor 164 causes it to go into a non-conducting condition and to remain in that condition until the negative potential on the capacitor 166 discharges to the positive potential source through the bias resistor 167.
- a negative impulse is produced through series connected capacitor 168, diode 170, diode 150 and terminal A to the accumulator 14 in a manner similar to the way the fourth negative impulse was produced from the first one shot circuit 24.
- This last impulse is the fifth input impulse generated by a deposit of a quarter in the coin unit 12, and as can be seen, the impulses are spaced in time by the action of the switches 18, 20, and 22 and by the actions of the one shots 2d and 26. This time spacing is important because otherwise the accumulator 14 might not be able to switch fast enough to accumulate the input impulses it receives.
- the quarter switch 22 When the quarter switch 22 is not being actuated by a quarter, its normally closed contacts connected the negative power source through a resistor 171 to the base of a transistor 172 in the gate 27. The base of the transistor 172 is also connected to a positive potential source through a biasing resistor 176. When the contacts of the quarter switch 22 are in their normally closed position, the base of the transistor 172 is held at a negative potential which causes it to be in a conducting condition.
- the gate 27 blocks any stray signals which might be generated in the one-shots 24 and 26 due to stray transients setting them off or otherwise.
- the accumulator circuit 14 may have several different constructions without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention and may include a binary type counter, a flip-flop counter, a ring counter, a shift register type accumulator, a magnetic core accumulator or any other equivalent accumulator.
- the accumulator 14 is preferably constructed using solid state elements for reliability and to minimize the size and weight of the circuitry and it includes the capability to controllably add or subtract input impulses fed thereto.
- the accumulator 14 is a binary type counter having four binary circuit stages 200, 202, 204 and 206. The number of circuit stages is chosen for convenience and more or less can be used as is desired.
- the circuit stages 200, 202, 204 and 206 are bistable circuit stages and each includes a pair of transistors which are properly connected so that one and only one of each pair can remain in a conducting condition at any time.
- an input impulse is sent to the accumulator circuit 14, it is fed to the input of the first bistable circuit 200 which includes opposite symmetrically connected transistors 208 and 210 connected as shown. Since the circuit 200 is bi-stable it must always be in one of two different operating states in which either the transistor 208 or the transistor 210 is conducting while the other is non-conducting.
- the initial or reset condition of the circuit 200 is arbitrarily predetermined for the circuit as shown to be the condition where the transistor 208 is noneonducting and the transistor 210 is conducting.
- This reset condition of the circuit is the condition obtained when the circuit is first energized and after each vend operation, and is also the condition produced upon the receipt of every other input signal from the coin unit 12 as will be explained.
- the circuit 200 as well as the circuits 202, 204 and 206 are reset initially or after a vend by means of the aforementioned reset means shown in FIGS. 1 and 4 which will be discussed in detail hereinafter.
- the first incoming input signal to the accumulator 14 which is a negatively going impulse will be fed through a capacitor 212 and a diode 214 in series therewith to the base element of the conducting transistor 210. This will cause the transistor 210 to turn off or become nonconducting.
- Another resistor 216 is connected on one side to the common junction of the elements 212 and 214 and on its other side to the collector electrode of the transistor 210. The resistor 216 provides a relatively high resistance connection between the aforementioned junction and collector to help in switching succeeding input signals from one transistor to the other. As soon as the transistor 210 turns off, its load resistor 218 passes a positive impulse through a resistor 220 which is connected to the base element of the transistor 208.
- This positive impulse causes the transistor 208 to turn on or to conduct thereby completing a reversal of the initial condition of the circuit 200.
- the circuit 200 in its reversed condition acts as a memory circuit to remember the fact that one nickel, in the present case, has been deposited or entered into the accumulator circuit 14. This condition remains until another incoming signal is received from the coin unit to cause the circuit 200 to flip back to its previous or reset condition. This can be brought about by the deposit of a second nickel or by the deposit of another coin which causes a second similar negative input signal to be fed to the circuit 200, or it can be accomplished by the action of the payback means as will be described hereinafter.
- the second input signal to the accumulator 14 instead of passing through the capacitor 212 and the diode 214, passes through a similar input circuit which includes series connected capacitor 222 and diode 224 to the base of the transistor 208.
- This second input signal operates in a manner similar to the first input signal but with respect to the transistor 208 which is now conducting instead of with respect to the transistor 210 which is now non-conducting.
- the second input therefore operates to turn the transistor 208 ofi and this in turn causes a positive impulse to pass through a load resistor 226 and another resistor 228 to the base of the transistor 210 which is turned on and caused to again conduct.
- the circuit 200 is now returned to its original reset condition which condition represents either no deposit or a deposit of an even number of nickels or other coins of the lowest acceptable denomination.
- the circuit of the transistor 208 is similar to the circuit for the transistor 210 and includes a switching resistor 230 connected as shown.
- the emitter elements of both transistors 208 and 210 are normally grounded and the base elements are shown biased to an operating condition by means of a balanced circuit which includes resistors 232 and 234, respectively, and a negative biasing source.
- the input A to the circuit 200 shown at terminal A is also shown connected to ground through parallel connected resistor 236 and capacitor 238 which operate to shape the input signals and to provide a discharge path for the capacitors 212 and 222.
- the circuit stage 200 is connected to the next binary circuit stage 202 through gates formed by series connected capacitor 240 and diode 242 which are connected on one side to the collector of transistor 208 and by similarly connected capacitor 244 and diode 246 connected to the collector of transistor 210.
- Control lines 248 and 250 are connected to the gate junction between the capacitor 240 and diode 242 and the gate junction between capacitor 244 and diode 246, respectively.
- the control lines 248 and 250 are connected to the aforementioned vend flip-flop 82 which, as will be described in detail later, causes one line to be connected to the positive potential source and the other to be grounded.
- the line 248 When the accumulator 14 is to be in its add or forward count condition, the line 248 is connected to the positive potential source and control line 250 is grounded, while the control line 250 is connected to the positive potential source and control line 248 is grounded when it is desired that the accumulator circuit 14 be in a subtract or backward counting condition.
- the control lines 248 or 250 When either of the control lines 248 or 250 is being maintained in a positive condition, it back biases its associated diode connecting the circuit stages, which back biased diode then prevents signals from passing from one stage to the other therethrough. Signals can, however, pass through the other connecting diode whose cathode is at ground potential.
- the accumulator 14 When the accumulator 14 is in its add or forward counting condition with the gate formed by the capacitor 240 and the diode 242 blocked by the presence of a positive potential on the control line 248, and the gate formed by the capacitor 244 and the diode 246 open 6 because of the ground condition of the control line 250, the following will happen. Everytime the transistor 210 is turned on, the voltage on its collector element will change from some positive value to a zero or near zero value, and when this occurs a negative going DC. signal is produced and fed through the open gate formed by the capacitor 244 and the diode 246 as an input to the second stage bi-stable circuit 202.
- the circuit stage 202 is similar in construction and operation to the circuit stage 200 and includes two oppositely connected transistors 252 and 254 connected as shown. In its reset condition, the transistor 252 is turned off or non-conducting and the transistor 254 is turned on.
- the circuit stage 202 is the ten cent reading circuit stage and receives an input signal for every two changes in the state of the first circuit stage 200 when the accumulator 14 is in its add condition. When the second input signal to the accumulator 14 causes the circuit stage 200 to return to its original or reset state, the negative going DC.
- the signal produced as aforesaid is fed through the capacitor 244 and diode 246 as an input to the second circuit stage 202 and is applied to the base of the transistor 254 in a manner similar to the way in which the first input signal to the circuit stage 200 was applied to the base of the transistor 210.
- This causes the transistor 254 to turn off or become nonconducting and at the same time produces a positive impulse which is applied to the base of the transistor 252 to turn it on.
- the first circuit stage 200 will be in its original or reset state and the second circuit stage 200 will be in its transferred state. This condition is sufficient to cause a vend signal to be produced if a ten cent vend is called for as will be explained.
- the other two circuit stages 204 and 206 of the accumulator 14 are also similar to circuit stages 200 and 202 and include pairs of oppositely connected transistors 256 and 258, and 260 and 262 respectively.
- the transistors 256 and 260 are non-conducting and the transistors 258 and 262 are conducting.
- the gate formed by the capacitor 240 and the diode 242 is open while the gate formed by the capacitor 244 and the diode 246 is closed.
- the first input impulse will cause the transistor 208 instead of the transistor 210 to turn on. This of course causes the voltage on its collector element to change from some positive value to a zero or near zero value. When this occurs, a negative going DC. signal is produced and fed through the open gate formed by the capacitor 240 and the diode 242 as an input signal to the second bi-stable circuit stage 202.
- the output signal causes the transistor 252 to change from its non-conducting to its conducting state and in so doing generates an input signal to the third stage 204 to change its state which in turn will send another input signal to the fourth counter stage 206 to change its state also. It can therefore be seen that if the accumulator 14 is in its reset or 0000 state, and if it is in its subtract or backward condition or mode, the first input signal there will cause changes that result in an overall accumulator state of 1111. Referring back to the above table, the states of the stages after a subtracted signal can be found by starting from a particular state of the stages and going up one line for each subtracted signal.
- the monetary equivalent of the binary code shown in the table goes up in S-cent increments for each input impulse which is fed to the accumulator M- when it is in its add or forward count condition and down in S-cent increments when it is in the backward or subtracting condition.
- the present device utilizes only one counting and memory means, the accumulator 14, to sense when the amount deposited in the vending machine equals or exceeds the price of a possible vend and also to count or determine the amount in excess of the price of the selected vend which is to be returned to the customer.
- circuit stages similar to the circuit stages 200, 202, 204 and 206 can be used depending on the desired accumulating capacity, the cost of the desired vends, and the coin demoninations that are acceptable. For example, a penny circuit, a SO-cent circuit, a dollar circuit or any number of circuits including duplications of the circuit already mentioned can be added.
- the subject circuit can be also be adapted for use with tokens and foreign coinage with minor modification.
- the circuits 200, 202, 204i and 206 in the embodiment of the device disclosed can accumulate input impulses representing the deposit of fifteen coins of the lowest acceptable coin denomination. If one more stage is added the capacity of the accumulator 14 is increased to the extent that it will accumulate a total deposit of 29 of the lowest denomination coins. if more or less similar circuits are included in the accumulator 14 the capacity thereof can be calculated using the expression 2*], where n equals the number of circuit stages.
- PRICE SELECTION SECTION The collector of each transistor in the circuit stages of accumulator 14 is connected as an input to the price controls 28 and 30 using the terminals 01 through Q8 as shown in FIGS. 3 and 4.
- the price controls 28 and 30 are similar to each other and each includes a single pole double throw switch corresponding to each circuit stage of the accumulator 14 which in the embodiment illustrated is four.
- the stationary contacts of the switches 300, 302, 304, and 306 in the price control 28 and of switches 308, 310, 312 and 314 in the price control 30 are connected to collectors of the opposite transistors in each of the circuit stages 200, 202, 204 and 206, respectively.
- the collectors of the transistors 208 and 210 in the first stage 200 are connected respectively to the two stationary contacts of the switches 300 and 308, the collectors of the second stage transistors 252 and 254 are connected to the stationary contactsof the switches 302 and 310 and so on for the other stages.
- the movable contacts of the 300-306 switches in. the price [control 208 are connected to the gate 36 while the movable contacts of the switches 308-314 in the price control 30 are connected to the gate 38.
- the gate 36 includes similarly oriented gate diodes 316, 318, 320 and 322 which are connected respectively to the movable contacts of the switches 300, 302, 304 and 306.
- the gate diodes 316, 318, 320 and 322 connect the respective collector potentials from the accumulator 14 to a voltage divider network 323 which is made up of a resistor 324 connected between the gate diodes and the positive potential source on one side and series connected resistors 326 and 328 connected between the gate diodes and the negative potential source on the other side.
- the voltage divider network 323 applies a negative potential to the control circuit 40 through terminal E which is connected to the junction between the series connected resistors 326 and 328.
- the collectors thereof When all the connected transistors are in a non-conducting condition, the collectors thereof will be at a positive potential and this will couple through the switches of the price control 28 and the gate diodes to cause a positive potential to appear on terminal E and to be fed to the control circuit 00.
- switch 300 is in the 5-cent position
- switch 302 is in the IO-cent position
- switches 304 and 306 are in their zero conditions, thus requiring the accumulator 14 to be in a condition of a l5-cent deposit to apply a positive potential through terminal E to the control circuit 40.
- the switches 304 and 306 were also in their alternate positions, which in the case of the switch 304 is indicated as 20 cents, and of the switch 306, 40 cents, the total accumulation that would be cents, or in other words, the sum of all of the values of the switches 300-306 as indicated in FIG. 4. The same is also true of price control 30 and its associated gate 38.
- the positions of the price control switches are predeterminately set by someone such as the service personnel or the owner of the vending machine, and by properly positioning the price switches, any price from to 75 cents, in nickel increments, can be set as the price required to open the gates 36 or 38 to enable a vend by means to be discussed in detail later.
- the two price controls 28 and 30 can be set with one having a higher setting than the other or they both can be set to the same price. It is undesirable, however, that either or both price controls 28 and 30 be set so that a zero condition of the accumulator 14 will satisfy the gate requirements and allow a positive potential to be sent to the control circuit 40 and/or 60 before the deposit of any money. For this reason, the safety clamp circuit 32 is provided.
- the safety clamp 32 is permanently connected to the collectors of the transistors 208, 252, 256 and 260 in the accumulator 14 through circuits which includes the terminals Q1, Q3, Q and Q7.
- the collectors of the said named transistors are coupled through diodes 334, 336, 338 and 340, respectively to a voltage divider network 341 which is similar to the voltage divider networks discussed above in connection with gates 36 and 38.
- the voltage divider network 341 includes series connected resistors 342, 344 and 346 connected between the positive potential source and the negative potential source with the collector potentials coupled to the junction between the resistors 342 and 344.
- the base of a transistor 348 which is also part of the safety clamp circuit 32 is connected to the junction between resistors 344 and 346. Only when a positive potential is being coupled through the diodes 334, 336, 338 and 340, which means the accumulator 14 is in a zero condition, will positive current appear on the base of transistor 348 to cause it to conduct.
- the emitter of transistor 348 is grounded while its collector is connected through a first diode 350 to the junction between the resistor 326 and 324 in the gate circuit 36 and through a second diode 352 to the corresponding junction in the gate circuit 38.
- transistor 348 When the transistor 348 is conducting, which is the case when there is a zero count in the accumulator 14, it grounds the two gates 36 and 38 and causes them to remain in a closed condition even if the switches in their respective price controls 28 and 30 are set to a zero condition.
- the safety clamp 32 When the transistor 348 is conducting the safety clamp 32 also applies a ground potential through a diode 354 to the refund flip-flop 82 to assure that it remains in in a reset condition.
- the safety clamp 32 at the same time also applies a ground potential through another diode 356 to the gates 48 and 68 the functions of which will be discussed hereafter.
- control circuit 40 in channel A and the control circuit 60 in channel B are similar circuits which respond to the outputs of the gates 36 and 38, respectively, on the terminals E and F.
- channel A for example, the normal negative potential output of the gate 36 is fed to the base element of a transistor 400 in control circuit 40 which causes the transistor 400 to remain in its normally non-conducting condition and to conduct only when the gate 36 is opened by the proper set up of positive potentials fed through the price switches connected thereto.
- the emitter of the transistor 400 is grounded and its collector is connected to a positive potential source through a load resistor 402. When the transistor 400 is turned on by a positive potential from the gate 36, its collector of course is reduced from positive potential to ground.
- the collector of transistor 400 is also connected to the gate 44 through a resistor 410 in such a manner that when transistor 400 is in its normally non-conducting condition, the gate 44 is closed and when transistor 400 is in its conducting condition indicating that the exact amount set in the price control 36 has been deposited in the accumulator 14, the gate 44 is opened.
- the collector of the transistor 400 is also connected to the base of a second transistor 412 through a resistor 414.
- the emitter of the transistor 412 is grounded and its collector is connected to a positive potential source through series connected resistors 415 and 416.
- the potential between the resistors 415 and 416 is appreciably reduced below that of the positive potential source and this reduced positive potential is fed to the gate 42 through another resistor 418 to maintain the gate 42 in a condition which is open only to relatively large negative impulses as will be described hereinafter.
- the transistor 412 is in its non-conducting state because transistor 400 is conducting a high positive potential is applied through the resistor 418 to the gate 42 which closes it to negative impulses whether they be large or small.
- control circuit 40 controls the condition of gates 42 and 44 so that normally the gate 42 is in an open or conducting condition and the gate 44 is in a closed or non-conducting condition which conditions are reversed when the accumulator 14 has an amount accumulated therein which is exactly the amount set in the price switches for the price control 28.
- the price control as aforesaid is similar to control circuit 40 and includes transistors 420 and 422 which correspond to the transistors 400 and 412 of the control circuit 40.
- the control circuit 60 operates in a manner similar to control circuit 40 and responds to signals passed by the gate 38 indicating that the B channel price has or has not been satisfied to normally maintain the gate 62 in an open or conducting condition to relatively large negative impulses and at the same time to maintain the gate 64 in a closed condition, which conditions are reversed whenever the gate 38 senses that the stages of the accumulator 14 are in the states equivalent to the exact price as established by the B channel price switches in the price control 38.
- the transistor 420 of the control circuit 60 When the transistor 420 of the control circuit 60 is turned on by a signal from the gate 38, it like the transistor 400, causes a negative going impulse to be generated through a capacitor 424 and a diode 426 of the gate circuit 66 and through the capacitor 408 and the terminal I to assure that the refund flip-flop 82 is in its reset condition when the gate 66 is in an open condition.
- the collector of the transistor 412 in the control circuit 40 is connected to another gate 48 through a gate capacitor 428.
- a positive potential impulse is generated by the transistor 412 when it is turned off, which impulses pass through the gate 48 to the channel A credit flip-flop 50 as long as the gate 48 is in an open condition which is always the case unless the safety clamp logic is satisfied or the payback control 84 is in a payback cycle.
- the gate 48 includes the gate capacitor 428 and a diode 430 which connects the gate 48 to the aforesaid safety clamp 32 through the terminal G and to the payback control 84 through terminal H for control purposes.
- the gate 48 also includes a connection to ground through a resistor 432 which is provided to ground out any negative potential which might otherwise build up in the gate 48.
- the diode 430 is not passing a ground potential into the gate 48 to close it, the impulse from the transistor 412 passes therethrough and through a properly oriented diode 434 to the A channel credit flip-flop 50. This impulse is applied to the base of a transistor 436 which along with an oppositely connected transistor 438 form the active elements of the credit flip-flop 50.
- the transistor 436 is in a non-conductive condition when the credit flip-flop 50 is in its reset state.
- the conditions of the transistors 436 and 438 are reversed when the impulse is sent through gate 48 to the base of the transistor 436 which causes it to turn on and which in turn causes the transistor 438 to turn off in conventional flip-flop fashion.
- the collector of the transistor 438 is connected to a positive potential source through load resistor 440, and its emitter is grounded so that when the credit flip-flop 50 goes from its reset to its set state at which time the transistor 438 turns off, the potential at the collector of the transistor 438 rises from ground potential to a positive potential.
- This positive potential is fed to the vend selector 52 to charge a capacitor 442 through a circuit which includes a resistor 444 to enable the vend selector 52.
- a resistor 444 In parallel with the resistor 444 are series connected a resistor 446 and a diode 448.
- the diode 448 is oriented so that the capacitor 442 is discharged to ground whenever transistor 438 of the credit flip-flop 50 returns to its conducting condition.
- An example of this happening would be when a vend is made in the B channel after the A channel credit flip-flop 50 is set by the deposit of an amount at least equal to the value set by the A channel price switches.
- both of the credit flip-flops S and 70 are reset and this in turn discharges capacitor 442 as described above. This is important since the capacitor 442 is the enabling device for the vend selector 52, and it is in an enabled condition when it is charged.
- the B channel includes the credit flip-flop 70 which is similar to the credit flip-flop and includes transistors 450 and 452 which correspond, respectively, to the transistors 436 and 438 of the A channel credit flip-flop 50.
- the B channel flip-flop 70 is connected to the B channel control circuit by means of the gate circuit 68 which includes a capacitor 454 and a diode 456.
- the control for the gate 68 is provided by means of a connection through a diode 458 to the safety clamp 32 and the payback control 84, and as in the case of the gate 48 only when the safety clamp 32 or the payback control 84 is energized and passing ground potential to the gate 68 will it block inputs from the collector of the transistor 422 in the control circuit 60 to the B channel credit flip-flop 70.
- the normally non-conducting transistor 452 of the B channel credit flip-flop 70 has its collector connected to an input circuit for the B channel vend selector 72 which includes a resistor 460 and a capacitor 462, which capacitor 462 is the enabling device for the B channel vend selector 72, and is caused to be in a charged condition whenever transistor 452 is in a conducting condition indicating that the B channel credit flip-flop 70 is in its set or credit condition. In this way the capacitor 462 functions in a manner similar to the vend selector enabling capacitor 442 in the A channel vend selector 52.
- the capacitor 442 or 462 when either the capacitor 442 or 462 is charged, it enables its respective vend selector 52 or 72, and thereby allows a customer to initiate a vend operation in that channel.
- the means by which the customer initiates a vend may include many suitable devices including the means shown in FIG. 5 as being normally open pushbutton switches 464 and 465.
- the customer depresses the vend selector pushbutton switch 464 which discharges capacitor 442 through relay contacts 466 and resistor 468 to ground. This causes a positive potential to appear across resistor 468, which positive potential is coupled through a series connected diode 470 and resistor 472 to the base of a transistor 474 in the vend control 54.
- the transistor 474 is normally non-conducting and the positive potential from the actuated vend selector 52 causes it to go into a conducting condition which energizes A channel vend relay 476 connected to the collector of the transistor 474 for actuating mechanical devices in the vending machine (not shown) which actually produce the A channel vend.
- the A channel vend relay 476 has two sets of contacts 478 and 480.
- the relay contacts 480 are part of the vend selector 72 and are used to control the channel determining flip-flop 92 and also to assist in preventing a double vend as will be described later.
- the contacts 478 In their normally closed condition, the contacts 478 connect a capacitor 482 to the source of positive potential through a resistor 484 to charge it positively.
- the relay 476 When the relay 476 is energized, the contacts 478 move from their closed to their open position and the positive charge on the capacitor 482 is applied through a resistor 486 to supply positive base current to the transistor 474 to maintain it in a conducting condition for a preselected time which is the time required by the vending machine to produce a vend.
- the vend relay 476 cannot be energized until after the last deposited coin has cleared the coin chute due to the fact that the capacitor 442 must charge to a predetermined value under control of a circuit time constant established by the resistors 444 and 440. This time constant is selected to be long enough to cover the time required for a coin to move completely through the coin unit. Should the customer have preselected a vend by pressing on the switch 464 before a credit condition has been established and should he hold the switch 464 closed while making additional deposits sufficient to complete the required credit condition or to produce an excess credit condition, the charging of the capacitor 442 in that case will be delayed due to the low impedance path provided by the closed selection switch 464 and resistor 472 and the low impedance of the base emitter junction of the transistor 474.
- the initial closing of the normally open contacts 478 also produces a positive impulse through a series connected capacitor 488 and a diode 490 which is applied to the bases of the transistors 438 and 452 in the A and B channel credit flip-flops 50 and 70, respectively, to return the flip-flops 50 and 70 to their reset or nocredit indicating conditions, thus assuring that one and only one vend will be made for each depression of the enabled vend selector switch 464 or 465.
- the now discharged capacitor 482 is reconnected through the resistor 484 to the positive potential source which immediately begins recharging the capacitor 482.
- This immediate recharging of the capacitor 482 abruptly lowers the potential on the side of the resistor 484 opposite from the positive potential source and generates a negative going impulse which is the delayed output signal from the vend control 54 discussed above.
- the delayed output signal is connected by a line 491 to the gates 42 and 44 either to be passed therethrough or be blocked depending upon the condition of the control circuit 40, as aforesaid.
- the gate 42 will be closed while the gate 44 will be open. This causes the negative impulse from the vend control 54 to be coupled through a capacitor 492 and a diode 494 of the gate 44 to the reset means 80 by means which include terminal J. This will cause resetting of the accumulator l4 and will assure that the refund flip-flop 80 and credit flip-flops 50 and 70 are in their reset conditions.
- the gate 42 would have been open and the gate 44 would have been closed to the aforementioned impulse from the vend control 54.
- the same impulse therefore would have been coupled through a capacitor 496 and a diode 498 of the gate 42 to the refund flip-flop 82 on a circuit which includes terminal K to cause the refund flip-flop 82 to change to its set or refund state to commence a payback cycle which, of course, will continue until the amount accumulated in the accumulator 14 is reduced to the exact amount as set in the price control switches, at which time the payback cycle will cease as will be explained hereinafter.
- vend selector pushbutton switch 465 which discharges the capacitor 462 through the relay contacts 480 and resistor 500 to ground. This causes a positive potential to appear across the resistor 500, which positive potential is coupled through series connected diode 502 and resistor 504 to provide positive current to the base of another transistor 506 in the vend control 74.
- the transistor 506 is normally non-conducting having its emitter element grounded and its collector element connected through a B channel vend relay 508 to the unregulated positive power source indicated by The positive base current from the actuated vend selector causes the transistor 506 to conduct which in turn energizes the B channel vend relay 508.
- the relay 508 when energized actuates the mechanical devices in the vending machine whose actions produce the B channel vend.
- the B channel vend relay 508 like the A channel vend relay 476, has two sets of relay contacts 466 and 510.
- the first set of relay contacts 466 are part of thc vend selector 52 and like relay contacts 480 are used to control the state of the channel determining flip-flop 92 and also to assist in preventing a double vend as will be discussed.
- the contacts 510 In their normally closed position the contacts 510 connect one side of a capacitor 512, whose opposite side is grounded, to the positive potential source through a resistor 514, thus charging the capacitor 512 positively.
- the contacts 510 move to their open position and the positive charge on the capacitor 512 is applied through a resistor 516 to supply positive current to the base of the transistor 506 to maintain it in a conducting condition for a preselected vend time required by the vending machine to produce a vend.
- the preselected time is also long enough to assure that any coin in the coin unit 12 completes the coin path before the vend time is over. This is important as stated previously, because otherwise it would be possible to lose money in the machine by pressing the vend selector pushbutton before the last deposited coin had cleared the coin path.
- the initial closing of the open contacts 510 also produces a positive impulse through series connected capacitor 518 and diode 520 to the bases of the transistors 438 and 452 in the A and B channel credit flip-flops 50 and 70, respectively, to maintain or return the flip-flops 50 and/or to their reset or no-credit conditions, thus assuring that one and only one vend will be made for each depression of the enabled vend selector switch 464 or 465. It should be recognized that this operation always happens when either an A or B channel vend is actuated.
- the A channel vend relay 476 when energized the A channel vend relay 476 immediately disables the vend selector 72 in the B channel and when the B channel vend relay 508 is energized it immediately disables the vend selector 52 in the A channel by interrupting circuit paths therethrough by opening relay contacts 480 and 466, respectively. It is therefore impossible to produce two vends out of the subject device by depressing both pushbutton vend selector switches 464 and 465 simultaneously even though enough money was deposited in the coin unit 12 to satisfy the logic for both. This is because, in the case of both sets of the relay contacts 466 and 480, there is a time period during which either the normally closed or the open contacts are in fact establishing a circuit.
- both vend relays 476 and 508 will energize and both sets of relay contacts 466 and 480 will try to go to their open positions.
- the instant either set of relay contacts 466 or 480 breaks its normally closed contact, however, which is in series with the opposite channel, that opposite channel vend control driver transistor 474 or 506 will lose the positive current supplied to its base and its associated relay will therefore be deenergized.
- the vend relay 476 or 508 that does manage to close its normally open contacts will reset both credit flip-flops 50 and 70 as aforesaid which immediately causes the enabling capacitors 442 and 462 in their respective vend selectors 52 and 72 to be rapidly discharged through the vend enabling transistors 438 and 452 of the credit flip-flops S and 70, respectively.
- the now discharged capacitor 512 is reconnected through the resistor 514 to the positive potential source which immediately begins recharging the capacitor 512.
- This relatively abrupt recharging of the capacitor 512 abruptly lowers the potential on the side of the resistor 514 opposite from the positive potential source to generate a negative going impulse which is the delayed output signal from the vend control 74 discussed above.
- the negative impulse is conducted on line 522 to gates 62 and 64 either to be passed therethrough or blocked depending upon the condition of the control 60 as aforesaid.
- gate 62 will be closed while gate 64 will be open and in a conducting condition. This causes the negative impulse from the vend control 74 to be coupled through a capacitor 524 and a diode 526 in the gate 64, to actuate the reset means 80 by way of a circuit which includes the terminal J. This causes a reset of the accumulator 14 and assures that the refund flip-flop 80 and the credit flip-flops 50 and 70 are in or are caused to go into their reset conditions.
- the gate 62 would have been open or in a conducting condition and the gate 64 would have been closed to the aforementioned negative impulse from the vend control 74.
- the negative impulse therefore would have passed through a capacitor 528 and a diode 530 of the gate 62 and through a circuit which includes the terminal K to the refund flip-flop 82 to cause it to change to its set or refund state to commence a payback cycle which, of course, will continue until the accumulator 14 is reduced to the exact amount as set in the price control 30 at which time the payback cycle will cease as will be explained.
- the channel determining flip-flop 92 is maintained or changed to a condition which indicates to the rest of the circuit which channel was the channel from which the last vend was made.
- the channel determining flipflop 92 is similar to the credit flip-flops 50 and and includes opposite symmetrically connected transistors 540 and 542.
- the channel determining flip-flop 92 is also bi-stable so that when power is being supplied to the circuit either the transistor 540 or 542 is in a conducting condition while the other or opposite transistor is in a non-conducting condition.
- one of the two transistors 540 or 542 When the circuit 10 is initially turned on, one of the two transistors 540 or 542 will assume a conducting condition and the other a non-conducting condition. Thereafter, when the first vend is made, as for example, if a channel A vend is made, the relay 476 will energize to close the normally open vend relay contacts 480 which connect the collector of the transistor 540 of the channel determining flip-flop 92 to ground, through a pulse forming circuit designated generally by 544 and through the resistor 500. If at this time, the transistor 540 is in a conducting condition nothing further will happen because a conducting condition of the transistor 540 is indicative that the A channel was the last channel in which a vend was made.
- a negative impulse is produced through the filter network 544 and is fed through a biasing resistor 546 to the base of the transistor 542 to cause it to go to a non-conducting condition which in turn causes the transistor 540 to go to a conducting condition thus indicating that the last vend was made out of the A channel.
- the impedances of the channel determining flip-flop 92, the pulse forming network 544, and the resistor 500 are chosen so that when the normally open contacts 480 close to change the state of the channel determining flip-flop 92, and thus impress a positive potential across resistor 500, that the potential thus impressed not be suffrciently high or of sufficient duration to cause transistor 506 in the B channel vend selector 74 to go into a conducting condition. This would be very undesirable if it occurred since it would result in a second or continuous vending out of the machine. The same is also true of the corresponding impedances in the A channel.
- the vend relay 508 in the B channel vend selector 74 is energized as aforesaid and closes its normally open contacts 466, which contacts operate in a manner similar to the contacts 480 of the relay 476, to apply a negative impulse to the base of the transistor 540 in the channel determining flip-flop 92. If the transistor 542 at this time is in a non-conducting condition this will operate to change its state and the state of the channel determining flipflop 92 so that the transistor 542 will go into a conducting condition and the transistor 540 into a non-conducting condition thereby indicating that the last vend was made under control of the B channel.
- the collectors of the transistors 540 and 542 in the channel determining flip-flop 92 are connected to control the operation of the gates 46 and 66, respectively.
- the channel determining flip-flop 92 When the channel determining flip-flop 92 is in its A channel determining position wherein the transistor 540 is conducting and the transistor 542 is non-conducting, a ground potential is fed to the gate 46 while a positive potential is fed to the gate 66.
- the gate 46 is therefore in an open condition able to pass signals therethrough whereas the gate 66 is closed and will not permit signals to pass.
- the channel determining flipflop 92 is in its opposite condition, that is where the transistor 542 is conducting and the transistor 540 is non-conducting, the opposite result happens so that the gate 66 is open or conducting and the gate 46 is closed.
- the gates 46 and 66 are important means for determining when a proper payback has been made as will be discussed hereinafter.
- the refund flip-flop 82 includes two opposite symmetrically connected transistors 560 and 562 (FIG. 4).
- the refund flip-flop 82 is a bi-stable circuit constructed so that when the transistor S62 is conducting the refund flip-flop is in its reset or no refund state.
- the collectors of the transistors 560 and 562 are connected to a positive potential source through load resistors 564 and 566, respectively, and the emitter of the transistor 562 is grounded directly and the emitter of the transistor 560 is grounded through the reset means 80.
- the collector of the transistor 560 is connected through a resistor 568 to the base of another transistor 570 which has its emitter grounded as shown and its collector connected to the positive potential source through load resistor 572.
- the refund flip-flop 82 When the refund flip-flop 82 is in its reset or no-refund state, the collector of the transistor 562 is at or near ground potential and the collector of the transistor 560 is at a positive potential.
- the positive potential condition of the collector of the transistor 560 causes the transistor 570 to be in a conducting condition which in turn causes its collector to be at ground potential. This ground is coupled to the forward count line 250 of the accumulator 14 (FIG. 3) through terminal D.
- a circuit similar to the circuit of the transistor 570 is connected to the collector of the transistor 562 and includes another transistor 574.
- the base of the transistor 574 is connected through a resistor 576 to the collector of the transistor 562. Since the transistor 562 is normally in a conducting condition when the refund flip-flop 82 is in its reset or non-refund state, its collector is at or near ground potential, which ground is applied through the resistor 576 to the base of the transistor 574 to cause it to be in a non-conducting condition.
- the refund flip-flop 82 When the refund flip-flop 82 is caused to go into its set or payback condition by means of an impulse received from the vend selector 54 or 74 through the associated gate 42 or 62, which impulse is applied to the base of the transistor 562 to cause it to go into a non-conducting condition thereby also causing the transistor 560 to go into conducting condition, the conditions of the transistors 570 and 574 reverse so that the transistor 570 is non-conducting and the transistor 574 is conducting. This causes a positive potential to be applied by way of terminal D to the forward count line 250 of the accumulator 14 and ground potential to be applied by way of terminal C to the backward count line 248 to cause the accumulator 14 to go into a back count or subtract counting condition.
- the transistor 560 When the transistor 560 goes into a conducting condition when the refund flip-flop 82 is set, its collector which is connected to the positive potential source through the load resistor 564 and is normally at a positive potential, drops to ground or near ground potential. This ground potential is applied through a series connected resistor 606 to the base of a transistor 608 in the refund control circuit 84.
- the transistor 608 is normally biased to a conducting condition by a voltage divider network made up of resistors 564, 606 and 610 with the resistor 610 connected between the base of the transistor 608 and ground.
- the collector of the transistor 608 is connected to the positive potential source through a load resistor 612 and its emitter element is grounded.
- the payback relay 618 in turn closes its relay contacts 620 in the payback motor circuit and in so doing applies line current indicated by 1.1 and L2 to the payback motor 86.
- the energized payback motor 86 thereafter pays back one coin of lowest acceptable denomination.
- other means are connected to the payback motor 86 shown by dotted line 622 and terminal P which cause the payback switch 88 (FIG. 2) to cycle.
- the payback switch 88 is connected in series with relay contacts 624 which are moved from the position shown in FIG. 2 to a closed condition when payback relay 618 is energized.
- the series combination of the switch 88 and contacts 624 when both in the energized or transferred condition are in parallel with the nickel coin switch 18 and produce an impulse which is fed to the accumulator 14 each time the payback switch 88 is cycled by the payback motor 86.
- Each of these impulses passes through the same pulse forming network 102 as do the input signals from the coin switch 18 to the accumulator 14.
- the contacts 624 are included in the circuit so that the payback motor 86 can be cycled to empty the coin tubes in the vending machine without causing an accumulation in the accumulator 14.
- the accumulator 14 which at this time is in its back count condition due to the conditioning thereof by the refund flip-flop 82 has its count reduced by one for each impulse produced when the payback switch 88 closes. Whenever the condition of the accumulator 14 has been reduced to a condition representing the exact amount as established by either the price control 28 or 30 the price control 28 or 30 produces an output signal. These output signals are fed through the appropriate gate 36 or 38 to the control circuit 40 or 60 to produce a reset signal which passes through the gates 46 or 66 to reset the refund flip-flop 82 if the signal which passes is from the proper channel. It should be obvious that either of the control circuits 40 or 60 may produce a reset signal under the proper circumstances whether or not it is in the channel of the last initiated vend.
- the channel determining flip-flop 92 and the gates 46 and 66 block any such reset signals if they are from the wrong channel. For example, if an A channel vend was last made, the channel determining flip-flop 92causes gate 46 to be open and the gate 66 to be closed. This means that a reset signal from a control circuit 60 such as might be produced when the count in the accumulator 14 is reduced to the setting of the price control 30 of the B channel, will be blocked but reset signals from the control circuit 40 will be allowed to pass therethrough to reset the refund flip-flop 82.
- the reset signals are negative impulses which pass through the diode 406 or 426 of the gate 46 or 66, respectively, and through the capacitor 408 and by way of terminal I to the base of the transistor 560 (FIG. 4) in the refund flip-flop 82.
- This negative impulse reset signal causes the transistor 562 in the vend flip-flop to return to its conducting condition. in this manner, the refund flip-flop 82 is reset or returned to its nonpayback condition thereby terminating the payback operation, and at the same time it returns the accumulator 14 to its forward count condition by causing the transistor 570 to again conduct and the transistor 574 to stop conducting.
- transistor 656 to cause it to normally be in a conducting condition.
- the negative impulse generated when the refund flip-flop 82 returns to its reset condition causes the transistor 656 to momentarily cease conducting.
- the emitter of the transistor 656 is connected through a resistor 662, a level sensing diode 664 and another resistor 666 to ground.
- the transistor 656 momentarily ceases conducting the level sensing diode 664 also ceases conducting and the potential on its sensing element rises from near ground potential to a positive value which is coupled through a resistor 668 and a properly oriented diode 670 to the base of another transistor 672.
- the junction between the level sensing diode 664 and the resistor 668 is biased positive by a connection to the positive potential source through a resistor 674 while the potential at the junction between the diode 670 and the base of the transistor 672 is negatively biased by means of a connection to the negative potential source through a resistor 676.
- the transistor 672 When the level sensing diode 664 is conducting the transistor 672 is held in a non-conducting condition by the negative potential which passes through resistor 676. When the level sensing diode 664 ceases conducting, however, the positive potential is fed through the resistors 674 and 668 and the diode 670 to the base of the transistor 672 to provide base current therefor to cause it to go into a conducting condition.
- the emitter of the transistor 672 is grounded and its collector is connected to the base of reset transistor 680 in the reset means 80 through a resistor 682.
- the reset transistor 680 is normally held in a conducting condition by positive current fed from the positive potential source through a current limiting resistor 684 which is connected in series with resistor 682. When the transistor 672 is caused to conduct, it shunts the base current of the reset transistor 680 which ceases conducting.
- the emitter of reset transistor 680 is grounded and its collector is connected to the positive potential source through a load resistor 686. When the reset transistor 680 ceases to conduct, its collector potential rises to a positive potential and this positive potential is applied through a circuit which includes terminal B to the accumulator 14 and to the credit flipflops 50 and to reset them.
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Abstract
Electronic control means for vending machines and other coin control devices which accept different denomination coins, are capable of making at least two different vends at preselected prices and perform other functions including change making, said control means including adding, subtracting and memory means, and means under the control thereof for producing vending, change making and other functions. The subject means are preferably constructed using solid state components and may also include anti-cheat and/or anti-malfunction devices to prevent the vending of articles unless a proper amount of money has been deposited.
Description
United States Patent Johnson, II Aug. 29, 1972 [54] MULTI-PRICE, MULTI-CHANNEL 3,367,467 2/1968 Ptacek ..l94/ 10 X COIN CONTROL MEANS I Primary Examiner-Robert B. Reeves [72] Inventora? G. J u, Klrkwood Assistant Examiner-Thomas E. Kocovsky Attorney-Charles B. Haverstock [73] Assignee: H. R. Electronics Company, High Ridge, 57 ABSTRACT Filed: April 1970 Electronic control means for vending machines and [21] APPLNQZ 29,025 other com control devices which accept different denomination coins, are capable, of making at least two difi'erent vends at preselected prices and perform [52] US. Cl. ..194/l N, 194/10 other functions including change making, i control [51] Ilit. Cl. "G071 11/00 means including adding subtracting and memory [58] held of Search ..194/1 M, l- N, 10, DIG. 14 means and means under the control thereof for a producing vending, change making and other func- [56] References cued tions. The subject means are preferably constructed UNITED STATES PATENTS using solid state components and may also include 7 anti-cheat and/or anti-malfunction devices to prevent 3,508,636 4/1970 Sh1r1ey.. "194/10 the vending of articles unless a proper amount of 3,482,670 12/ 1969 Yamashita ..194/1O money has been deposited 1 3,532,203 10/1970 Cllft ..194/l0 3,428,157 2/ 1969 Patterson ..194/2 20 Claims, 5 Drawing Figures PAIENTEDAHBZ m2 3,687,255
FIG 2 L/wAKz/w M 770/P/V15 X MULTI-PRICE, MULTI-CHANNEL CQIN CONTROL MEANS Many electronic coin operated devices are in existence including some which perform vending, change making and other functions and combinations thereof. For the most part, however, the known electronic coin operated devices are limited in their versatility and are constructed for specific limited applications such as applications where the price of the vend is relatively fixed. Also, the previously known electronic coin operated devices are usually able to only make vends at a single price and are not adaptable to applications where the customer may select between two or more vends which may have differing prices. Also, since vending machines may be used to vend various different articles, the values of which may change from time to time, it is highly desirable that the price of the vend be easily adjustable over a wide range by the owner or operator of the machine. In the previous vending devices a change in vend price has been relatively difficult to make requiring either a substitution of coin control units or the extensive rewiring of the existing coin control unit.
Electronic control means for vending machines such, for example, the control means described in Shirley US. Pat. No. 3,307,671, dated Mar. 7, 1967, and in copending Shirley US. application Ser. No. 708,140, filed Feb. 26, 1968, both of which are assigned to applicants assignee, have solved some of the above mentioned problems and have overcome some of the disadvantages and shortcomings of the prior art. The means disclosed herein represent still further improvements and expanded versatility in such control means.
The present invention teaches the construction and operation of a novel, versatile and flexible electronic control circuit which utilizes accumulator means which not only can add or accumulate but also can subtract or count backwards. The present circuit is particularly well suited for use on vending machines which accumulate amounts deposited, allow for the selection of one of various vends at the same or at different prices, control the vending, make change appropriate to the price of the vend selected and perform the other functions of the vending machine. The present invention increases the versatility and utility of such vending machines by allowing them to be used for vending various types of merchandise at various preselected prices, which prices may be changed from time to time in accordance with market conditions and otherwise. The present invention also reduces the possibility of a customer being able to cheat the vending machine by providing means which prevent false signals from causing the circuits to malfunction such as false signals that might be caused by a customer repeatedly interrupting the external power to the circuit by jiggling the power cord or pushing more than one vend selector button or switch at a time.
The subject device includes a control circuit which comprises means responsive to the deposit of coins of different denominations into a coin receiving unit, means for accumulating or counting the value of the coins deposited, means for determining when the value of coins deposited equals one of the vend prices, means for adjusting the vend prices as desired, means for allowing the vending of an item when the price thereof has been deposited, and means for causing a refunding operation when necessary. The present circuit also includes vend control means, refund control means and reset means as well as anti-cheat means. The subject circuit is preferably constructed employing solid state components to minimize its size, improve its reliability, reduce its maintenance and repair requirements and to enable it to be constructed and packaged as a relatively compact, preferably plug-in type unit which can easily and quickly be installed and/or removed and replaced in a vending or like machine. Being constructed insofar as possible of solid state components also makes the circuit relatively troublefree and easy to handle and maintain.
A principal object of the present invention therefore is to provide improved and more versatile means for controlling, vending, refunding and other operations of coin controlled devices.
Another object is to enlarge the functions and operations performed by vending and other like devices.
Another object is to provide improved means for accumulating the value of monies deposited in vending machines, which means are also usedto determine and control the payback of money deposited in excess of the vend price.
Another object is to protect vending machines from unscrupulous persons by preventing false signals from causing malfunctions.
Another object is to provide improved means for determining amounts deposited in vending machines including amounts deposited in excess of the price of a selected vend and for determining and controlling the refunding of such excess amounts.
Another object is to provide improved electronic control means which can be installed as original equipment or added as an improvement to an existing vending machine with a minimum of machine modification.
Another object is to provide a packaged plug-in type control unit for quick and easy installation in vending machines and the like, especially vending machines which vend more than one kind and/or price of article, which articles and prices may be varied from time to time.
Another object is to minimize maintenance and downtime of a vending machine and the like.
These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent after considering the following detailed specification which covers a preferred embodiment thereof in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a control circuit constructed according to the present invention; and,
FIGS. 2, 3, 4, and 5 together constitute a schematic circuit diagram showing the details of a particular embodiment of the control circuit of FIG. 1.
Referring to the drawings more particularly by reference numbers, number 10 in FIG. 1 refers generally to a control circuit constructed according to the present invention. The circuit 10 is constructed to control the various operations of vending machines and other money or coin control devices, and in particular those machines capable of vending more than one different kind of item at different costs, which costs can be selected by the one servicing the machine and not ordinarily by the customer. The present control means can also be used on those machines capable of refunding amounts deposited in excess of the cost of a selected item. The circuit operates in conjunction with and receives input signals from a coin unit 12 on the vending machine. The input signals produced in the coin unit 12 when coins are deposited therein are fed to an accumulator l4 identified in the drawing by the legend Forward-Back Accumulator which responds to the input signals it receives by accumulating therein an amount equal to the money value of the coins deposited. When the amount accumulated in the accumulator 14 equals or exceeds the price of the article selected, the subject circuit 10 will be conditioned to cause several different things to happen including the energizing of means to enable the customer to initiate a vend. The total amount of the monies deposited in the machine is accumulated in the accumulator 14 and upon initiation of a vend operation by the customer, actuating selection means to be described later, are set in motion which cause the vend to be made, the refunding of amounts accumulated in the accumulator 14 above the selected vend price, the resetting of the circuit 10 to some preestablished reset condition in readiness for the next vend operation, and the performing of other control functions as will be explained.
Several different types of forward-back accumulator means can be used for the accumulator 14 as will be described even though for purposes of this specification a particular preferred form will be described in detail. It is also preferred to construct the accumulator 14 as well as the other parts of the circuit 10 utilizing as far as possible solid state components for reliability and dependability, to minimize the size, weight, and bulkiness thereof, and to make the circuit as troublefree as possible. The size and bulk limitations are particularly important considerations in plug-in type controls especially where they are to be used in machines where there is relatively little available space. Also, the less space used for the controls in a vending machine the more space will be available for other things including particularly the products to be vended.
The subject circuit 10 is designed to be used in conjunction with the coin receiving unit 12 of a vending machine as aforesaid, and the coin receiving unit 12 7 shown in FIG. 1 is shown in a simplified schematic form having provisions for receiving deposits of nickels, dimes and quarters into a coin path. The unit 12 has a nickel switch 18, a dime switch 20, and a quarter switch 22. The nickel switch 18 is constructed and positioned in the coin path to have its normally open contacts close once for the deposit of each nickel, dime or quarter, and to reopen its contacts as soon as the coin has passed out of engagement therewith. The dime switch 26 is constructed and positioned to have its normally open contacts close once for the deposit of each dime and each quarter, and to reopen when the coin has passed. The normally open contacts of the quarter switch 22 are constructed and positioned to close once only for the deposit of each quarter, and to reopen after the quarter has passed or moved out of contact therewith. The quarter switch 22 also has normally closed contacts which open and then reclose as the quarter passes therethrough. Coin units 12 having these general characteristics are known and available commercially.
The normally open contacts of the nickel, dime and quarter switches 18, 20 and 22, respectively, are shown connected between an input voltage source labeled VDC and the input side of the accumulator 14 so that the accumulator 14 receives an input impulse whenever the normally open contacts of any one of the switches 18, 20 and 22 close. This means that a separate input impulse is sent to the accumulator 14 each time a coin moves past and operates one of the switches 18, 20 and 22. In addition, the output side of the normally open contacts of the quarter switch 22 are connected to a pair of serially connected one-shot multi-vibrator circuits 24 and 26 whose outputs are connected through a gate 27 to the input of the accumulator 14. This means that whenever the normally open contacts of the quarter switch 22 close an input impulse will be sent not only to the accumulator 14 but also to the first one-shot multi-vibrator 24 as well. This input impulse causes the multi-vibrator circuit 24 both to produce a second impulse and to energize the second one-shot multi-vibrator circuit 26 to produce a third impulse. The second and third impulses which are the outputs of the one-shot multi-vibrators 24 and 26 pass through the gate 27 to the accumulator 14 as aforesaid so that when a quarter is deposited in the coin unit 12 a total of five input impulses will be produced as follows, one from the nickel switch 18, one from the dime switch 20, one from the quarter switch 22 and two from the one- shots 24 and 26. Each of these five impulses represents the deposit of a nickel in the present embodiment although they could represent any other value of coin which is the lowest value coin acceptable by the coin unit 12.
The gate 27 also includes a control connection from the normally closed contacts of the quarter switch 22. When the normally closed quarter switch contacts are closed, which indicates that a quarter is not moving past the quarter coin switch 22, a control signal is sent from the switch 22 to the gate 27 which causes the gate 27 to block any impulse that might be produced if the one-shot multi-vibrators 24 and 26 are undesirably triggered such as by a transient or other stray signal in the circuit 10.
The accumulator 14 has two output connections, the first of which feeds information as to the count in the accumulator to price control means 28 and 30 which respectively are located in different vend channels labeled Channel A and Channel B in FIG. 1. Each of the price control means 28 and 30 include means to establish the acceptable vend price and means to produce an output therefrom only when the state of the accumulator 14 represents a value which is exactly the same as the vend price established therein.
The second output connection from the accumulator 14 is connected to a safety clamp circuit 32. The safety clamp 32 is connected to sense when the accumulator 14 is in a zero or reset condition and it includes means to produce signals for various control functions throughout the circuit 10. For example, the outputs of the price control means 28 and 30 are connected through gates 36 and 38, respectively, which gates also include input connections from the safety clamp 32. When the safety clamp 32 is sensing a zero or reset condition of the accumulator 14, it causes the gates 36 and 33 to go into conditions where signals from the price control means 28 and 30 are blocked and therefore not conducted further. This is required since in some arrangements it is possible to establish the price control means 28 and/or 30 to a zero price or in other words to a condition which would cause an output from the price control means when the accumulator 14 is in its zero or reset condition, an obviously undesirable result. Having the price control means 28 and/or 30 set to a zero price condition, of course, would only occur through an error by a service man in establishing the vend prices, and therefore the safety clamp 32 and the gates 36 and 38 prevent outputs from the price controls 28 and 30 only if they are improperly set.
The price control means 28 and the gate 36 are both in the Channel A. When the exact price other than zero established by the price control 28 has been accumulated in the accumulator 14, the price control 28 will produce an output which passes through the gate 36 to a control circuit 40. The control circuit 40 has four output connections, two of which are connected to control gates 42 and 44, the functions of which will be discussed hereinafter, the third output being connected to another gate 46 whose function will also be discussed hereinafter, and the fourth output of the circuit 40 is connected to still another gate 48. The control circuit 40 produces an output signal to the gate 48 whenever it receives an input signal from the price control means 28. The gate 48 is also controlled in part by the output of the safety clamp 32 which closes the gate 48 under certain predetermined conditions including when the accumulator 14 is at a zero count. The gate 48 is normally open, however, and it passes the output signals it receives from the control circuit 40 to a credit flip-flop 50, which signals change the state thereof from a no-credit or reset condition to a credit condition. The credit flip-flop 50 when in its credit condition causes vend selector means 52 to be in an enabled condition so that the customer can energize a portion thereof to send a signal to vend control means 54 which in turn produce a vend at the Vend A output in FIG. 1.
Channel B has components that correspond to the components of Channel A including a control circuit 60, which corresponds to the control circuit 40 and which has its input side connected to the output side of the price control 30 through gate 38. The control circuit 60 has outputs connected to gates 62, 64, 66 and 68 which correspond respectively, to gates 42, 44, 46 and 48 in Channel A. The control circuit 60 when energized by a signal from the price control 30 passes a signal through the gate 68 to a second credit flip-flop 70 which corresponds to the credit flip-flop 50 in Channel A. The credit flip-flop 70 is connected to another vend selector means 72 which when enabled by the changing of the credit flip-flop 70 from a no-credit to a credit condition allows the customer to energize second vend control means 74 to produce a vend at the output labeled Vend B in FIG. 1.
The vend control means 54 and 74 each include an output that is connected to the vend selector means 72 and 52, respectively, associated with the other circuit channel. When one of the vend control means are energized by a customer selection, a signal is sent therefrom on the output connection to the vend selector means in the opposite channel to disable the opposite channel vend selector so that the customer cannot cheat the machine by inducing vends out of both channels simultaneously. The vend control means 54 and 74 also include outputs connected to both of the credit flip-flops 50 and to revert to or remain in their no-credit states so that an actuation of either of the vend selector means 52 or 72 thereafter will not produce a second vend.
The vend control means 54 and 74 also include delayed control outputs connected to the gates 42 and 44 in case of vend control means 54 in Channel A and to the gates 62 and 64 in the case of vend control means 74 in Channel B. When either of the vend control means 54 or 74 is deenergized after a vend, a delayed output signal is fed therefrom to the respectively connected gates, and this output signal is passed through one of the gates, depending upon their states. The states of the gates in turn depend on the state of the associated control circuit 40 or 60. The signal is delayed to assure that all deposited coins clear the coin unit 12 before a reset or refund operation is commenced, since otherwise it might be possible to lose money in the machine.
If for instance the exact price set in price control 28 is accumulated in the accumulator 14 so that the price control 28 is producing an output signal to the control circuit 40, the gate 42 will be in its closed condition while the gate 44 will be in an open condition, and therefore the output signal from the vend control means 54, upon deenergization thereof after the production of Vend A, will pass through gate 44 to energize reset means which in turn produce a reset signal which returns the accumulator 14 to its zero or reset condition. The reset signal fed to the accumulator 14 from the reset means 80 is also fed to both credit flip- flops 50 and 70 to assure that they have returned to their no-credit or reset conditions.
If the accumulator l4 accumulates an amount greater than the amount set in the price control 28, thereafter when the Vend A selection is made in Channel A, the control circuit 40 will be in its normal state since it will be receiving no signal from the control 28, in which case the gate 42 will be in an open condition and the gate 44 will be in a closed condition. This causes the delayed output signal from the vend control means 54 to be blocked by the gate 44 but passed by the gate 42. The gate 42 is connected to conduct the delayed output signal to a refund flip-flop 82, instead of to the reset means 80, to change the state thereof from a reset to a set or refund condition.
When the refund flip-flop 82 changes from its reset to its set condition, it produces an output to the accumulator 14 which causes the accumulator 14 thereafter to subtract rather than add future input impulses fed thereto. The refund flip-flop 82 when in a set condition also produces an output to a payback control 84 which in turn energizes the payback motor 86 to operate to refund a coin of the lowest denomination acceptable in the machine which in the circuit described is a nickel. The payback motor 86 with the payback of each coin cycles a payback switch 88 to momentarily close its normally open contacts. The payback switch 88 is connected between the source labeled VDC, which is the same source that is connected to the coin switches 18, 20 and 22, and the accumulator 14. When the contacts of the payback switch 88 close, an input impulse is sent to the accumulator 14 in a manner similar to the way the input impulses are sent thereto by the coin switches 18, 20 and 22. Since the accumulator 14 is in its subtract rather than its add mode, however, due to the signal received thereat from the refund flip-flop 82, the accumulator 14 reduces its count by an amount representative of one nickel each time a nickel is refunded. The payback motor 86 will continue to refund nickels until the count in the accumulator 14 is reduced to the exact price set in the price control 28 or 30 in the channel in which the vend was initiated. When the correct amount has been refunded the accumulator 14 will be in a proper condition so that the price control 28 or 30 in the selected vending channel produces an output to its associated control circuit 40 or 60 to energize the same. For example, if the vend was made out of Channel A, the control circuit 40 will then cause an output signal to be sent through gate 46 to the refund flip-flop 82 resetting it to its reset condition which ceases theoperation of the payback control 84 and the payback motor 86. The payback control 84 includes a control output which is connected to control the gates 48 and 68 to prevent the last mentioned output signals from the control circuit 40 or 60 from passing to the associated credit flip-flop S or 70 when the payback control 84 is energized. Otherwise the gates 48 and 68 would pass output signals produced by the control circuits 40 and 60 to the associated credit flip-flops to reestablish a credit condition thereof which of course is undesirable.
The circuit also includes a channel determining flip-flop 92 which controls which of the gates 46 or 66 is open so that it can pass the output signal from the connected control circuit 40 or 60 to reset the refund flip-flop 82 when the count of the accumulator 14 has been reduced to the vend price established in the associated price control circuit. The channel determining flip-flop 92 is connected to receive outputs of the vend selector means 52 and 72 caused when the vend selector is disabled by a vend in the opposite channel. When either one is disabled by the opposite vend control, the channel determining flip-flop 92 is maintained or switched to a state which is indicative of which channel, Channel A or Channel B, was the last to produce a vend. The channel determining flip-flop 92 has two control outputs which are connected respectively to the gates 46 and 66 to cause the associated gate in the last activated channel to be open or in a signal passing condition while simultaneously closing the other of said gates. in the case of a Channel A vend, the channel determining flip-flop 92 causes the gate 46 to be in a conducting condition and the gate 66 to be in a nonconducting condition so that if during a refund operation both control circuits 40 and 60 produce reset signals due to the prices in the respective channels being met, only the reset signal from control circuit 40 is able to be passed to the refund flip-flop 82 to reset it and thereby to cease the payback operation. The gate 46 or 66, of course, may pass a reset signal to the refund flip-flop 82 when the control circuit 40 or 60 is first energized before a vend selection has been made. Since at this time the refund flip-flop is reset anyhow, the signal through the gate 46 or 66 has no effect.
When the proper monies have been paid back and the vend has been made, the forward-back accumulator 14 and both credit flip-flops 50 and if need be, are reset by the reset means 80 which are energized either by the aforementioned signal from one of the vend control means 54 or 74 through gate 44 or 64 respectively or by a signal from the refund flip-flop 82 which signal is sent when the refund flip-flop 82 is reset from its set to its reset condition. The circuit 10 is thereafter ready to accept more coinage for another vend.
It should be understood that the components of Channels A and B operate in a similar manner and even though one is picked in the examples, the other would also operate in the same way if selected. In this regard, either channel may be set so its price is higher, lower or the same as the other and the circuit 10 will still operate properly.
Also forming a part of the circuit 10 is a power supply 94 for supplying the proper voltages to the circuit 10 by means of the terminals shown. The power supply 94 is also connected to the reset means 80. This connection is required since electronic counters and flip-flops when initially turned on must be driven to a predetermined condition or they will tend to come on in random conditions, which is undesirable. The reset means 80 includes voltage sensing means which sense when the power supply 94 has reached a certain level after being turned on. When the voltage level is reached a reset operation is commenced which in turn resets or assures that the accumulator 14, the refund flip-flop 82 and the credit flip- flops 50 and 70 are in the desired initial conditions. The voltage sensing means in the reset means 80 are also included as an anti'cheat feature so that customers will not be able to confuse the circuit 10 by interrupting the power supply thereto in the hopes that the accumulator 14, the credit flip- flops 50 and 70 and/or the refund flip-flop 82 will come on in some condition other than a zero or reset condition which might allow a vend and/or a refund after the insertion of little or no money. The power supply 94 itself may be of a well known construction and is shown connected to an AC. source. The relays and other operating components of the vending machines on which the subject control means are installed are not part of this invention and for the most part are also of known constructions.
FIGS. 2, 3, 4 and 5 together are a schematic diagram showing the details of the circuit including the circuit connections and the circuit elements employed in the circuit 10. The circuit 10 is for use in a vending or like machine that has a coin unit 12 capable of accepting nickels, dimes and quarters. The circuit as shown is arbitrarily connected to be used to vend items costing up to cents in nickel increments. it will become apparent, however, that with slight modification, the coin unit may be made to accept other coin denominations including foreign and token coinage, and the circuit can also be made to control vends costing larger amounts and in different increment amounts as well. Furthermore, the circuit as shown is a dual channel device that is for use in vending machines which sell at least two different items and at vend prices which may also be different. The circuit 10 can also be modified according to the teachings of the present invention to have more or fewer channels as desired. The coins acceptable, the vend prices, and the number of channels used in the examples which follow are chosen to circuit but obviously are not limiting factors. The elements and connections of the circuit portion shown in FIGS. 2, 3, 4, and wherever possible are identified by the same numbers as used in FIG. 1. Also the lettered terminals of FIGS. 2, 3, 4, and 5 do not necessarily actually appear in circuit and are included primarily for convenience in following the circuit 10 from one drawing to another.
INPUT SECTION The coin switches 18, and 22 as shown in FIG. 2 are located in the coin unit 12 as aforesaid, and are actuated or closed by movements of coins thereby to produce input signals that are used to control the various operations of the subject circuit 10 and of the vending machine on which it is used. When the normally open contacts of the nickel switch 18 are closed by movement of a coin thereby a first input impulse is fed from a negative potential source through a surge limiting resistor 100 to a filter or pulse forming network 102 which includes a resistor 103 connected in series with a parallel combination of another resistor 104 and a capacitor 106. The pulse forming network 102 also includes a second capacitor 108 connected between ground and the junction between resistors 103 and 104, which capacitor 108 is included to absorb any stray transients such as might be produced by a bouncing switch and it also assists in shaping the input impulses. Each input impulse formed by the pulse forming network 102 then passes through a properly oriented diode 110 to a terminal A and from there to an input of the accumulator 14.
If a dime is deposited in the coin unit 12, the nickel switch 18 will be actuated as aforesaid in the case of a nickel deposit to produce the first input impulse to the accumulator 14, and the dime coin switch 20 will also be activated to produce a second accumulator input impulse in a similar manner. The dime coin switch 20 is connected to feed the second input impulse to the accumulator 14 through another pulse forming network 112, similar to the pulse forming network 102 associated with the nickel coin switch 18 and to a properly oriented diode 114 which is also connected to the terminal A. When the normally open contacts of the coin switch 20 are closed by the passage of a dime or a quarter thereby, a second input impulse is produced, which impulse is shaped by the pulse forming network 112 and is passed through the diode 114 to the accumulator 14.
When a quarter is deposited in the coin unit 12 it actuates the nickel switch 18, the dime switch 20 and the quarter switch 22 and in so doing produces five impulses all of which are fed through the terminal A to the accumulator 14. These five impulses are produced one each from switches 18 and 20, and three from the closing of the quarter switch 22 in the following manner.
When the coin switch 22 is closed by the passage of a quarter thereby, a third input impulse is fed to the terminal A to the accumulator 14 through a pulse forming network 116, which performs a function similar to the pulse forming networks 102 and 112 above. The pulse forming circuit 1 I6 is also connected to the terminal A through a properly oriented diode H8. The pulse forming network 116 includes a resistor 120 connected in series with parallel connected capacitor 122 and resistor 124. The pulse forming network 116 also includes another capacitor 126 which is connected to the junction between resistor 120 and the parallel combination of capacitor 122 and resistor 124 on one side thereof and ground. The input impulse generated by the closing of the quarter switch 22 when a quarter passes thereby is also fed to the first one shot circuit 24 through a capacitor connected on one side to the non-grounded side of the capacitor 126 which is also the junction between resistor 120 and the parallel con nected capacitor 122 and resistor 124. The opposite side of the capacitor 130 is connected to a junction between a non-grounded side of a resistor 132 and a diode 134 oriented as shown. The opposite side of the diode 134 is connected to a positive potential source through a resistor 136 and also through a series connected capacitor 139, a resistor and a diode 141. Since the resistor 132 is connected to ground and the diode 134 is properly oriented, resistors 132 and 136 together form a voltage divider circuit which causes a positive potential to nonnally be present at the junction between the diode 134 and resistor 136, which junction is connected to the base of a normally conducting transistor 138 in the first one shot circuit 24. When the quarter coin switch 22 is closed by the passing of a quarter thereby, the aforementioned negative input impulse is fed through capacitor 130 to negatively charge the capacitor 139 and reduce the positive base current of the transistor 138 thereby causing it to cease conducting.
The emitter of the transistor 138 is grounded through a diode 142 which protects it from reverse voltage breakdown while the collector of transistor 138 is connected to the positive potential source through a load resistor 143. When the transistor 138 is turned off its collector potential rises from ground to some positive potential which charges a capacitor 144 connected on one side to the collector of the transistor 138 and on the other side to ground through a resistor 146. When the negative potential on the capacitor 139 is dissipated, the transistor 138 will again conduct and the charged capacitor 144 will quickly discharge which causes a negative impulse to appear across the resistor 146. This negative impulse is coupled through diodes 148 and 150 to the terminal A and to the input of the accumulator circuit 14 to form the fourth input impulse thereto.
When the transistor 138 is turned off by the negative impulse from the quarter coin switch 22, a positive potential is applied to the base of another transistor 152 in the first one shot 24 through a resistor 154 to cause it to conduct. The transistor 152 is normally in non-conducting condition at the same time the fourth input impulse is sent from the positive potential source through a series connected diode 141 and resistor 140 to the collector electrode of the transistor 152. This positive impulse is coupled through another series connected capacitor 158 and diode 160 to the second one shot circuit 26.
The second one shot multivibrator circuit 26 is similar to the first one-shot circuit 24 and includes transistors 162 and 164 which correspond respectively to the transistors 152 and 138 in the first one shot circuit 24. The transistor 162 is normally biased to a nonconducting condition and the aforesaid positive impulse from the first one-shot circuit 24 is applied directly to its base electrode to cause the transistor 162 to conduct. The emitter of the transistor 162 is grounded and its collector is connected to the positive potential source through a load resistor 165 so that when it conducts the potential on its collector falls from some positive value to ground. This in turn generates a negative impulse through a capacitor 166 connected between the collector of the transistor 162 and the base of the transistor 164, which transistor 164 normally is biased to a conducting condition by a connection to the positive potential source through a bias resistor 167. The negative impulse fed to the base of the transistor 164 causes it to go into a non-conducting condition and to remain in that condition until the negative potential on the capacitor 166 discharges to the positive potential source through the bias resistor 167. When the transistor 164 returns to a conducting condition after the negative charge has dissipated, a negative impulse is produced through series connected capacitor 168, diode 170, diode 150 and terminal A to the accumulator 14 in a manner similar to the way the fourth negative impulse was produced from the first one shot circuit 24. This last impulse is the fifth input impulse generated by a deposit of a quarter in the coin unit 12, and as can be seen, the impulses are spaced in time by the action of the switches 18, 20, and 22 and by the actions of the one shots 2d and 26. This time spacing is important because otherwise the accumulator 14 might not be able to switch fast enough to accumulate the input impulses it receives.
. When the quarter switch 22 is not being actuated by a quarter, its normally closed contacts connected the negative power source through a resistor 171 to the base of a transistor 172 in the gate 27. The base of the transistor 172 is also connected to a positive potential source through a biasing resistor 176. When the contacts of the quarter switch 22 are in their normally closed position, the base of the transistor 172 is held at a negative potential which causes it to be in a conducting condition. Since the emitter of the transistor 172 is grounded and its collector is connected through a current Iirniting resistor 178 to the junction between diodes 160, 148 and 170, this causes the junction between the diodes 150, 148 and 170 to be grounded, and therefore no input impulse can pass from the oneshots 24 and 26 to the accumulator 14. In this manner, the gate 27 blocks any stray signals which might be generated in the one- shots 24 and 26 due to stray transients setting them off or otherwise. When the normally open contacts of the coin switch 22 close thus properly causing the one- shot circuits 24 and 26 to generate input impulses for the accumulator 1d, the negative potential is removed from the base of transistor 172 and it ceases to conduct, thereby removing the ground potential from the junction between the diodes 150, 140 and 170 and allowing the input impulses to pass therethrough to the accumulator circuit 14.
ACCUMULATOR SECTION A preferred embodiment of the forward-back counting accumulator circuit 14 is shown in detail in FIG. 3. The accumulator circuit 14 may have several different constructions without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention and may include a binary type counter, a flip-flop counter, a ring counter, a shift register type accumulator, a magnetic core accumulator or any other equivalent accumulator. The accumulator 14 is preferably constructed using solid state elements for reliability and to minimize the size and weight of the circuitry and it includes the capability to controllably add or subtract input impulses fed thereto. As shown in FIG. 3, the accumulator 14 is a binary type counter having four binary circuit stages 200, 202, 204 and 206. The number of circuit stages is chosen for convenience and more or less can be used as is desired.
The circuit stages 200, 202, 204 and 206 are bistable circuit stages and each includes a pair of transistors which are properly connected so that one and only one of each pair can remain in a conducting condition at any time. Whenever an input impulse is sent to the accumulator circuit 14, it is fed to the input of the first bistable circuit 200 which includes opposite symmetrically connected transistors 208 and 210 connected as shown. Since the circuit 200 is bi-stable it must always be in one of two different operating states in which either the transistor 208 or the transistor 210 is conducting while the other is non-conducting. The initial or reset condition of the circuit 200 is arbitrarily predetermined for the circuit as shown to be the condition where the transistor 208 is noneonducting and the transistor 210 is conducting. This reset condition of the circuit is the condition obtained when the circuit is first energized and after each vend operation, and is also the condition produced upon the receipt of every other input signal from the coin unit 12 as will be explained. The circuit 200 as well as the circuits 202, 204 and 206 are reset initially or after a vend by means of the aforementioned reset means shown in FIGS. 1 and 4 which will be discussed in detail hereinafter.
The first incoming input signal to the accumulator 14 which is a negatively going impulse will be fed through a capacitor 212 and a diode 214 in series therewith to the base element of the conducting transistor 210. This will cause the transistor 210 to turn off or become nonconducting. Another resistor 216 is connected on one side to the common junction of the elements 212 and 214 and on its other side to the collector electrode of the transistor 210. The resistor 216 provides a relatively high resistance connection between the aforementioned junction and collector to help in switching succeeding input signals from one transistor to the other. As soon as the transistor 210 turns off, its load resistor 218 passes a positive impulse through a resistor 220 which is connected to the base element of the transistor 208. This positive impulse causes the transistor 208 to turn on or to conduct thereby completing a reversal of the initial condition of the circuit 200. The circuit 200 in its reversed condition acts as a memory circuit to remember the fact that one nickel, in the present case, has been deposited or entered into the accumulator circuit 14. This condition remains until another incoming signal is received from the coin unit to cause the circuit 200 to flip back to its previous or reset condition. This can be brought about by the deposit of a second nickel or by the deposit of another coin which causes a second similar negative input signal to be fed to the circuit 200, or it can be accomplished by the action of the payback means as will be described hereinafter.
The second input signal to the accumulator 14 instead of passing through the capacitor 212 and the diode 214, passes through a similar input circuit which includes series connected capacitor 222 and diode 224 to the base of the transistor 208. This second input signal operates in a manner similar to the first input signal but with respect to the transistor 208 which is now conducting instead of with respect to the transistor 210 which is now non-conducting. The second input therefore operates to turn the transistor 208 ofi and this in turn causes a positive impulse to pass through a load resistor 226 and another resistor 228 to the base of the transistor 210 which is turned on and caused to again conduct. The circuit 200 is now returned to its original reset condition which condition represents either no deposit or a deposit of an even number of nickels or other coins of the lowest acceptable denomination.
The circuit of the transistor 208 is similar to the circuit for the transistor 210 and includes a switching resistor 230 connected as shown. The emitter elements of both transistors 208 and 210 are normally grounded and the base elements are shown biased to an operating condition by means of a balanced circuit which includes resistors 232 and 234, respectively, and a negative biasing source. The input A to the circuit 200 shown at terminal A is also shown connected to ground through parallel connected resistor 236 and capacitor 238 which operate to shape the input signals and to provide a discharge path for the capacitors 212 and 222.
The circuit stage 200 is connected to the next binary circuit stage 202 through gates formed by series connected capacitor 240 and diode 242 which are connected on one side to the collector of transistor 208 and by similarly connected capacitor 244 and diode 246 connected to the collector of transistor 210. Control lines 248 and 250 are connected to the gate junction between the capacitor 240 and diode 242 and the gate junction between capacitor 244 and diode 246, respectively. The control lines 248 and 250 are connected to the aforementioned vend flip-flop 82 which, as will be described in detail later, causes one line to be connected to the positive potential source and the other to be grounded. When the accumulator 14 is to be in its add or forward count condition, the line 248 is connected to the positive potential source and control line 250 is grounded, while the control line 250 is connected to the positive potential source and control line 248 is grounded when it is desired that the accumulator circuit 14 be in a subtract or backward counting condition. When either of the control lines 248 or 250 is being maintained in a positive condition, it back biases its associated diode connecting the circuit stages, which back biased diode then prevents signals from passing from one stage to the other therethrough. Signals can, however, pass through the other connecting diode whose cathode is at ground potential.
When the accumulator 14 is in its add or forward counting condition with the gate formed by the capacitor 240 and the diode 242 blocked by the presence of a positive potential on the control line 248, and the gate formed by the capacitor 244 and the diode 246 open 6 because of the ground condition of the control line 250, the following will happen. Everytime the transistor 210 is turned on, the voltage on its collector element will change from some positive value to a zero or near zero value, and when this occurs a negative going DC. signal is produced and fed through the open gate formed by the capacitor 244 and the diode 246 as an input to the second stage bi-stable circuit 202.
The circuit stage 202 is similar in construction and operation to the circuit stage 200 and includes two oppositely connected transistors 252 and 254 connected as shown. In its reset condition, the transistor 252 is turned off or non-conducting and the transistor 254 is turned on. The circuit stage 202 is the ten cent reading circuit stage and receives an input signal for every two changes in the state of the first circuit stage 200 when the accumulator 14 is in its add condition. When the second input signal to the accumulator 14 causes the circuit stage 200 to return to its original or reset state, the negative going DC. signal produced as aforesaid is fed through the capacitor 244 and diode 246 as an input to the second circuit stage 202 and is applied to the base of the transistor 254 in a manner similar to the way in which the first input signal to the circuit stage 200 was applied to the base of the transistor 210. This causes the transistor 254 to turn off or become nonconducting and at the same time produces a positive impulse which is applied to the base of the transistor 252 to turn it on. Hence, after two input signals are received representing the deposit of two nickels or one dime, the first circuit stage 200 will be in its original or reset state and the second circuit stage 200 will be in its transferred state. This condition is sufficient to cause a vend signal to be produced if a ten cent vend is called for as will be explained.
The other two circuit stages 204 and 206 of the accumulator 14 are also similar to circuit stages 200 and 202 and include pairs of oppositely connected transistors 256 and 258, and 260 and 262 respectively. When the accumulator 14 is in its reset condition the transistors 256 and 260 are non-conducting and the transistors 258 and 262 are conducting.
If a zero is assigned to an accumulator stage in a reset state and a one to a stage that is in a set -or transferred state the following table can be generated to equate the states of the accumulator stages with the amount deposited in the vending machine.
When the accumulator 14 is in its subtract or backward counting condition, however, the gate formed by the capacitor 240 and the diode 242 is open while the gate formed by the capacitor 244 and the diode 246 is closed. Under these condition when the accumulator 14 is in its reset condition, the first input impulse will cause the transistor 208 instead of the transistor 210 to turn on. This of course causes the voltage on its collector element to change from some positive value to a zero or near zero value. When this occurs, a negative going DC. signal is produced and fed through the open gate formed by the capacitor 240 and the diode 242 as an input signal to the second bi-stable circuit stage 202. The output signal causes the transistor 252 to change from its non-conducting to its conducting state and in so doing generates an input signal to the third stage 204 to change its state which in turn will send another input signal to the fourth counter stage 206 to change its state also. It can therefore be seen that if the accumulator 14 is in its reset or 0000 state, and if it is in its subtract or backward condition or mode, the first input signal there will cause changes that result in an overall accumulator state of 1111. Referring back to the above table, the states of the stages after a subtracted signal can be found by starting from a particular state of the stages and going up one line for each subtracted signal. For example, if 50 cents has been deposited, l impulses will have been fed to and added in the accumulator 14 to produce an overall state represented as 0101. If the vend price is 35 cents, then three subtract impulses representing a 15 cent payback will return the accumulator to a state of 1110 which represents 35 cents, or three lines up on the table.
It should be noted that the monetary equivalent of the binary code shown in the table goes up in S-cent increments for each input impulse which is fed to the accumulator M- when it is in its add or forward count condition and down in S-cent increments when it is in the backward or subtracting condition. This is very important to the present invention since the present device utilizes only one counting and memory means, the accumulator 14, to sense when the amount deposited in the vending machine equals or exceeds the price of a possible vend and also to count or determine the amount in excess of the price of the selected vend which is to be returned to the customer.
As indicated more or less circuit stages similar to the circuit stages 200, 202, 204 and 206 can be used depending on the desired accumulating capacity, the cost of the desired vends, and the coin demoninations that are acceptable. For example, a penny circuit, a SO-cent circuit, a dollar circuit or any number of circuits including duplications of the circuit already mentioned can be added. The subject circuit can be also be adapted for use with tokens and foreign coinage with minor modification. The circuits 200, 202, 204i and 206 in the embodiment of the device disclosed can accumulate input impulses representing the deposit of fifteen coins of the lowest acceptable coin denomination. If one more stage is added the capacity of the accumulator 14 is increased to the extent that it will accumulate a total deposit of 29 of the lowest denomination coins. if more or less similar circuits are included in the accumulator 14 the capacity thereof can be calculated using the expression 2*], where n equals the number of circuit stages.
PRICE SELECTION SECTION The collector of each transistor in the circuit stages of accumulator 14 is connected as an input to the price controls 28 and 30 using the terminals 01 through Q8 as shown in FIGS. 3 and 4. The price controls 28 and 30 are similar to each other and each includes a single pole double throw switch corresponding to each circuit stage of the accumulator 14 which in the embodiment illustrated is four. The stationary contacts of the switches 300, 302, 304, and 306 in the price control 28 and of switches 308, 310, 312 and 314 in the price control 30 are connected to collectors of the opposite transistors in each of the circuit stages 200, 202, 204 and 206, respectively. For example, the collectors of the transistors 208 and 210 in the first stage 200 are connected respectively to the two stationary contacts of the switches 300 and 308, the collectors of the second stage transistors 252 and 254 are connected to the stationary contactsof the switches 302 and 310 and so on for the other stages. The movable contacts of the 300-306 switches in. the price [control 208 are connected to the gate 36 while the movable contacts of the switches 308-314 in the price control 30 are connected to the gate 38. This means of course that the potential present on the collector of one of the opposite transistors in each of the accumulator circuit stages is always coupled to at least one and perhaps to both of the gates 36 and 38.
The gate 36 includes similarly oriented gate diodes 316, 318, 320 and 322 which are connected respectively to the movable contacts of the switches 300, 302, 304 and 306. The gate diodes 316, 318, 320 and 322 connect the respective collector potentials from the accumulator 14 to a voltage divider network 323 which is made up of a resistor 324 connected between the gate diodes and the positive potential source on one side and series connected resistors 326 and 328 connected between the gate diodes and the negative potential source on the other side. Whenever the collector of any accumulator transistor connected to the gate 36 by the price switches is at ground potential due to that particular transistor being in a conducting condition, the voltage divider network 323 applies a negative potential to the control circuit 40 through terminal E which is connected to the junction between the series connected resistors 326 and 328. When all the connected transistors are in a non-conducting condition, the collectors thereof will be at a positive potential and this will couple through the switches of the price control 28 and the gate diodes to cause a positive potential to appear on terminal E and to be fed to the control circuit 00. For the positions of the switches of the price control 20' as shown in FIG. 4, switch 300 is in the 5-cent position, switch 302 is in the IO-cent position, and switches 304 and 306 are in their zero conditions, thus requiring the accumulator 14 to be in a condition of a l5-cent deposit to apply a positive potential through terminal E to the control circuit 40. If the switches 304 and 306 were also in their alternate positions, which in the case of the switch 304 is indicated as 20 cents, and of the switch 306, 40 cents, the total accumulation that would be cents, or in other words, the sum of all of the values of the switches 300-306 as indicated in FIG. 4. The same is also true of price control 30 and its associated gate 38. When each of the switches 308 through 334 in the price control 30 is passing a positive potential from the connected collectors in the accumulator 14, the gate 38 is opened, at which time a positive potential is fed to the control circuit 60 (FIG. 5) through means which include the terminal F.
As aforesaid, the positions of the price control switches are predeterminately set by someone such as the service personnel or the owner of the vending machine, and by properly positioning the price switches, any price from to 75 cents, in nickel increments, can be set as the price required to open the gates 36 or 38 to enable a vend by means to be discussed in detail later. The two price controls 28 and 30 can be set with one having a higher setting than the other or they both can be set to the same price. It is undesirable, however, that either or both price controls 28 and 30 be set so that a zero condition of the accumulator 14 will satisfy the gate requirements and allow a positive potential to be sent to the control circuit 40 and/or 60 before the deposit of any money. For this reason, the safety clamp circuit 32 is provided.
The safety clamp 32 is permanently connected to the collectors of the transistors 208, 252, 256 and 260 in the accumulator 14 through circuits which includes the terminals Q1, Q3, Q and Q7. When all these transistors are in their non-conducting conditions so their collectors are at a positive potential, which is the reset condition of the accumulator 14 and represents a zero count therein, the collectors of the said named transistors are coupled through diodes 334, 336, 338 and 340, respectively to a voltage divider network 341 which is similar to the voltage divider networks discussed above in connection with gates 36 and 38. The voltage divider network 341 includes series connected resistors 342, 344 and 346 connected between the positive potential source and the negative potential source with the collector potentials coupled to the junction between the resistors 342 and 344. The base of a transistor 348 which is also part of the safety clamp circuit 32 is connected to the junction between resistors 344 and 346. Only when a positive potential is being coupled through the diodes 334, 336, 338 and 340, which means the accumulator 14 is in a zero condition, will positive current appear on the base of transistor 348 to cause it to conduct. The emitter of transistor 348 is grounded while its collector is connected through a first diode 350 to the junction between the resistor 326 and 324 in the gate circuit 36 and through a second diode 352 to the corresponding junction in the gate circuit 38. When the transistor 348 is conducting, which is the case when there is a zero count in the accumulator 14, it grounds the two gates 36 and 38 and causes them to remain in a closed condition even if the switches in their respective price controls 28 and 30 are set to a zero condition.
When the transistor 348 is conducting the safety clamp 32 also applies a ground potential through a diode 354 to the refund flip-flop 82 to assure that it remains in in a reset condition. The safety clamp 32 at the same time also applies a ground potential through another diode 356 to the gates 48 and 68 the functions of which will be discussed hereafter.
CONTROL SECTION Referring to FIG. 5, the control circuit 40 in channel A and the control circuit 60 in channel B are similar circuits which respond to the outputs of the gates 36 and 38, respectively, on the terminals E and F. In channel A, for example, the normal negative potential output of the gate 36 is fed to the base element of a transistor 400 in control circuit 40 which causes the transistor 400 to remain in its normally non-conducting condition and to conduct only when the gate 36 is opened by the proper set up of positive potentials fed through the price switches connected thereto. The emitter of the transistor 400 is grounded and its collector is connected to a positive potential source through a load resistor 402. When the transistor 400 is turned on by a positive potential from the gate 36, its collector of course is reduced from positive potential to ground. This generates a negative going pulse through a capacitor 404 connected to the collector of transistor 400 which is coupled through a series connected diode 406 and capacitor 408 and terminal I to the refund flip-flop 82. This resets the flip-flop and assures that it is in a reset condition. This function of the control circuit 40 is important to terminate a payback operation and will be discussed more in detail later.
The collector of transistor 400 is also connected to the gate 44 through a resistor 410 in such a manner that when transistor 400 is in its normally non-conducting condition, the gate 44 is closed and when transistor 400 is in its conducting condition indicating that the exact amount set in the price control 36 has been deposited in the accumulator 14, the gate 44 is opened.
The collector of the transistor 400 is also connected to the base of a second transistor 412 through a resistor 414. The emitter of the transistor 412 is grounded and its collector is connected to a positive potential source through series connected resistors 415 and 416. When the transistor 412 is in its normally conducting state due to the transistors 400 being in its normally nonconducting state the potential between the resistors 415 and 416 is appreciably reduced below that of the positive potential source and this reduced positive potential is fed to the gate 42 through another resistor 418 to maintain the gate 42 in a condition which is open only to relatively large negative impulses as will be described hereinafter. When the transistor 412 is in its non-conducting state because transistor 400 is conducting a high positive potential is applied through the resistor 418 to the gate 42 which closes it to negative impulses whether they be large or small.
As can be seen from the foregoing, the control circuit 40 controls the condition of gates 42 and 44 so that normally the gate 42 is in an open or conducting condition and the gate 44 is in a closed or non-conducting condition which conditions are reversed when the accumulator 14 has an amount accumulated therein which is exactly the amount set in the price switches for the price control 28.
The price control as aforesaid is similar to control circuit 40 and includes transistors 420 and 422 which correspond to the transistors 400 and 412 of the control circuit 40. The control circuit 60 operates in a manner similar to control circuit 40 and responds to signals passed by the gate 38 indicating that the B channel price has or has not been satisfied to normally maintain the gate 62 in an open or conducting condition to relatively large negative impulses and at the same time to maintain the gate 64 in a closed condition, which conditions are reversed whenever the gate 38 senses that the stages of the accumulator 14 are in the states equivalent to the exact price as established by the B channel price switches in the price control 38. When the transistor 420 of the control circuit 60 is turned on by a signal from the gate 38, it like the transistor 400, causes a negative going impulse to be generated through a capacitor 424 and a diode 426 of the gate circuit 66 and through the capacitor 408 and the terminal I to assure that the refund flip-flop 82 is in its reset condition when the gate 66 is in an open condition.
Referring again to channel A, the collector of the transistor 412 in the control circuit 40 is connected to another gate 48 through a gate capacitor 428. A positive potential impulse is generated by the transistor 412 when it is turned off, which impulses pass through the gate 48 to the channel A credit flip-flop 50 as long as the gate 48 is in an open condition which is always the case unless the safety clamp logic is satisfied or the payback control 84 is in a payback cycle.
The gate 48 includes the gate capacitor 428 and a diode 430 which connects the gate 48 to the aforesaid safety clamp 32 through the terminal G and to the payback control 84 through terminal H for control purposes. The gate 48 also includes a connection to ground through a resistor 432 which is provided to ground out any negative potential which might otherwise build up in the gate 48. As long as the diode 430 is not passing a ground potential into the gate 48 to close it, the impulse from the transistor 412 passes therethrough and through a properly oriented diode 434 to the A channel credit flip-flop 50. This impulse is applied to the base of a transistor 436 which along with an oppositely connected transistor 438 form the active elements of the credit flip-flop 50.
The transistor 436 is in a non-conductive condition when the credit flip-flop 50 is in its reset state. The conditions of the transistors 436 and 438 are reversed when the impulse is sent through gate 48 to the base of the transistor 436 which causes it to turn on and which in turn causes the transistor 438 to turn off in conventional flip-flop fashion. The collector of the transistor 438 is connected to a positive potential source through load resistor 440, and its emitter is grounded so that when the credit flip-flop 50 goes from its reset to its set state at which time the transistor 438 turns off, the potential at the collector of the transistor 438 rises from ground potential to a positive potential. This positive potential is fed to the vend selector 52 to charge a capacitor 442 through a circuit which includes a resistor 444 to enable the vend selector 52. In parallel with the resistor 444 are series connected a resistor 446 and a diode 448. The diode 448 is oriented so that the capacitor 442 is discharged to ground whenever transistor 438 of the credit flip-flop 50 returns to its conducting condition. An example of this happening would be when a vend is made in the B channel after the A channel credit flip-flop 50 is set by the deposit of an amount at least equal to the value set by the A channel price switches. When the vend is made both of the credit flip-flops S and 70 are reset and this in turn discharges capacitor 442 as described above. This is important since the capacitor 442 is the enabling device for the vend selector 52, and it is in an enabled condition when it is charged.
The B channel includes the credit flip-flop 70 which is similar to the credit flip-flop and includes transistors 450 and 452 which correspond, respectively, to the transistors 436 and 438 of the A channel credit flip-flop 50. The B channel flip-flop 70 is connected to the B channel control circuit by means of the gate circuit 68 which includes a capacitor 454 and a diode 456. The control for the gate 68 is provided by means of a connection through a diode 458 to the safety clamp 32 and the payback control 84, and as in the case of the gate 48 only when the safety clamp 32 or the payback control 84 is energized and passing ground potential to the gate 68 will it block inputs from the collector of the transistor 422 in the control circuit 60 to the B channel credit flip-flop 70. The normally non-conducting transistor 452 of the B channel credit flip-flop 70 has its collector connected to an input circuit for the B channel vend selector 72 which includes a resistor 460 and a capacitor 462, which capacitor 462 is the enabling device for the B channel vend selector 72, and is caused to be in a charged condition whenever transistor 452 is in a conducting condition indicating that the B channel credit flip-flop 70 is in its set or credit condition. In this way the capacitor 462 functions in a manner similar to the vend selector enabling capacitor 442 in the A channel vend selector 52.
As aforesaid, when either the capacitor 442 or 462 is charged, it enables its respective vend selector 52 or 72, and thereby allows a customer to initiate a vend operation in that channel. The means by which the customer initiates a vend may include many suitable devices including the means shown in FIG. 5 as being normally open pushbutton switches 464 and 465. In the case of a channel A vend, the customer depresses the vend selector pushbutton switch 464 which discharges capacitor 442 through relay contacts 466 and resistor 468 to ground. This causes a positive potential to appear across resistor 468, which positive potential is coupled through a series connected diode 470 and resistor 472 to the base of a transistor 474 in the vend control 54.
The transistor 474 is normally non-conducting and the positive potential from the actuated vend selector 52 causes it to go into a conducting condition which energizes A channel vend relay 476 connected to the collector of the transistor 474 for actuating mechanical devices in the vending machine (not shown) which actually produce the A channel vend.
The A channel vend relay 476 has two sets of contacts 478 and 480. The relay contacts 480 are part of the vend selector 72 and are used to control the channel determining flip-flop 92 and also to assist in preventing a double vend as will be described later. In their normally closed condition, the contacts 478 connect a capacitor 482 to the source of positive potential through a resistor 484 to charge it positively. When the relay 476 is energized, the contacts 478 move from their closed to their open position and the positive charge on the capacitor 482 is applied through a resistor 486 to supply positive base current to the transistor 474 to maintain it in a conducting condition for a preselected time which is the time required by the vending machine to produce a vend. The vend relay 476 cannot be energized until after the last deposited coin has cleared the coin chute due to the fact that the capacitor 442 must charge to a predetermined value under control of a circuit time constant established by the resistors 444 and 440. This time constant is selected to be long enough to cover the time required for a coin to move completely through the coin unit. Should the customer have preselected a vend by pressing on the switch 464 before a credit condition has been established and should he hold the switch 464 closed while making additional deposits sufficient to complete the required credit condition or to produce an excess credit condition, the charging of the capacitor 442 in that case will be delayed due to the low impedance path provided by the closed selection switch 464 and resistor 472 and the low impedance of the base emitter junction of the transistor 474. This condition will continue to exist until such time as the customer releases the switch 464. Once the capacitor 482 has discharged through resistor 486, and the base-emitter junction of the transistor 474, the transistor 474 returns to its normally non-conducting condition which deenergizes the A channel vend relay 476.
The initial closing of the normally open contacts 478 also produces a positive impulse through a series connected capacitor 488 and a diode 490 which is applied to the bases of the transistors 438 and 452 in the A and B channel credit flip- flops 50 and 70, respectively, to return the flip- flops 50 and 70 to their reset or nocredit indicating conditions, thus assuring that one and only one vend will be made for each depression of the enabled vend selector switch 464 or 465.
When the relay 476 deenergizes allowing its contacts 478 to return to their normally closed position, the now discharged capacitor 482 is reconnected through the resistor 484 to the positive potential source which immediately begins recharging the capacitor 482. This immediate recharging of the capacitor 482 abruptly lowers the potential on the side of the resistor 484 opposite from the positive potential source and generates a negative going impulse which is the delayed output signal from the vend control 54 discussed above. The delayed output signal is connected by a line 491 to the gates 42 and 44 either to be passed therethrough or be blocked depending upon the condition of the control circuit 40, as aforesaid.
If, for instance, the accumulator 14 is sensing the exact acmount of the A channel vend, the gate 42 will be closed while the gate 44 will be open. This causes the negative impulse from the vend control 54 to be coupled through a capacitor 492 and a diode 494 of the gate 44 to the reset means 80 by means which include terminal J. This will cause resetting of the accumulator l4 and will assure that the refund flip-flop 80 and credit flip- flops 50 and 70 are in their reset conditions.
If the amount deposited in the vending machine is in excess of the vend price as required by the setting of the price control switches in channel A, the gate 42 would have been open and the gate 44 would have been closed to the aforementioned impulse from the vend control 54. The same impulse therefore would have been coupled through a capacitor 496 and a diode 498 of the gate 42 to the refund flip-flop 82 on a circuit which includes terminal K to cause the refund flip-flop 82 to change to its set or refund state to commence a payback cycle which, of course, will continue until the amount accumulated in the accumulator 14 is reduced to the exact amount as set in the price control switches, at which time the payback cycle will cease as will be explained hereinafter.
if the customer desired a vend out of the B channel instead of out of the A channel, he depresses the vend selector pushbutton switch 465, which discharges the capacitor 462 through the relay contacts 480 and resistor 500 to ground. This causes a positive potential to appear across the resistor 500, which positive potential is coupled through series connected diode 502 and resistor 504 to provide positive current to the base of another transistor 506 in the vend control 74.
The transistor 506 is normally non-conducting having its emitter element grounded and its collector element connected through a B channel vend relay 508 to the unregulated positive power source indicated by The positive base current from the actuated vend selector causes the transistor 506 to conduct which in turn energizes the B channel vend relay 508. The relay 508 when energized actuates the mechanical devices in the vending machine whose actions produce the B channel vend.
The B channel vend relay 508, like the A channel vend relay 476, has two sets of relay contacts 466 and 510. The first set of relay contacts 466 are part of thc vend selector 52 and like relay contacts 480 are used to control the state of the channel determining flip-flop 92 and also to assist in preventing a double vend as will be discussed. In their normally closed position the contacts 510 connect one side of a capacitor 512, whose opposite side is grounded, to the positive potential source through a resistor 514, thus charging the capacitor 512 positively. When the vend relay 508 is energized to cause a B channel vend, the contacts 510 move to their open position and the positive charge on the capacitor 512 is applied through a resistor 516 to supply positive current to the base of the transistor 506 to maintain it in a conducting condition for a preselected vend time required by the vending machine to produce a vend. As in the A channel, the preselected time is also long enough to assure that any coin in the coin unit 12 completes the coin path before the vend time is over. This is important as stated previously, because otherwise it would be possible to lose money in the machine by pressing the vend selector pushbutton before the last deposited coin had cleared the coin path. Once the capacitor 512 has discharged through the resistor 516 and the base-emitter junction of the transistor 506, the transistor 506 no longer has positive current supplied to its base and it returns to its normally non-conducting condition to deenergize the B channel vend relay 508.
The initial closing of the open contacts 510 also produces a positive impulse through series connected capacitor 518 and diode 520 to the bases of the transistors 438 and 452 in the A and B channel credit flip- flops 50 and 70, respectively, to maintain or return the flip-flops 50 and/or to their reset or no-credit conditions, thus assuring that one and only one vend will be made for each depression of the enabled vend selector switch 464 or 465. It should be recognized that this operation always happens when either an A or B channel vend is actuated. It should also be noted that when energized the A channel vend relay 476 immediately disables the vend selector 72 in the B channel and when the B channel vend relay 508 is energized it immediately disables the vend selector 52 in the A channel by interrupting circuit paths therethrough by opening relay contacts 480 and 466, respectively. It is therefore impossible to produce two vends out of the subject device by depressing both pushbutton vend selector switches 464 and 465 simultaneously even though enough money was deposited in the coin unit 12 to satisfy the logic for both. This is because, in the case of both sets of the relay contacts 466 and 480, there is a time period during which either the normally closed or the open contacts are in fact establishing a circuit. For example, should both push button switches 464 and 465 be closed simultaneously, both vend relays 476 and 508 will energize and both sets of relay contacts 466 and 480 will try to go to their open positions. The instant either set of relay contacts 466 or 480 breaks its normally closed contact, however, which is in series with the opposite channel, that opposite channel vend control driver transistor 474 or 506 will lose the positive current supplied to its base and its associated relay will therefore be deenergized. As a further safeguard against a double vend, the vend relay 476 or 508 that does manage to close its normally open contacts will reset both credit flip- flops 50 and 70 as aforesaid which immediately causes the enabling capacitors 442 and 462 in their respective vend selectors 52 and 72 to be rapidly discharged through the vend enabling transistors 438 and 452 of the credit flip-flops S and 70, respectively.
Referring again to the conditions when a channel vend has been initiated, and when the vend relay 508 deenergizes allowing its relay contacts 510 to return to their normally closed position, the now discharged capacitor 512 is reconnected through the resistor 514 to the positive potential source which immediately begins recharging the capacitor 512. This relatively abrupt recharging of the capacitor 512 abruptly lowers the potential on the side of the resistor 514 opposite from the positive potential source to generate a negative going impulse which is the delayed output signal from the vend control 74 discussed above. The negative impulse is conducted on line 522 to gates 62 and 64 either to be passed therethrough or blocked depending upon the condition of the control 60 as aforesaid. If for instance the accumulator 14 is sensing the exact amount of the B channel vend, gate 62 will be closed while gate 64 will be open and in a conducting condition. This causes the negative impulse from the vend control 74 to be coupled through a capacitor 524 and a diode 526 in the gate 64, to actuate the reset means 80 by way of a circuit which includes the terminal J. This causes a reset of the accumulator 14 and assures that the refund flip-flop 80 and the credit flip- flops 50 and 70 are in or are caused to go into their reset conditions.
If the amount deposited in the vending machine is in excess of the vend price as required by the setting of the price control 30 in the B channel, the gate 62 would have been open or in a conducting condition and the gate 64 would have been closed to the aforementioned negative impulse from the vend control 74. The negative impulse therefore would have passed through a capacitor 528 and a diode 530 of the gate 62 and through a circuit which includes the terminal K to the refund flip-flop 82 to cause it to change to its set or refund state to commence a payback cycle which, of course, will continue until the accumulator 14 is reduced to the exact amount as set in the price control 30 at which time the payback cycle will cease as will be explained.
Whenever the A channel vend relay 476 or the B channel vend relay 508 is energized to close the normally open vend relay contacts 480 or 466, respectively, the channel determining flip-flop 92 is maintained or changed to a condition which indicates to the rest of the circuit which channel was the channel from which the last vend was made. The channel determining flipflop 92 is similar to the credit flip-flops 50 and and includes opposite symmetrically connected transistors 540 and 542. The channel determining flip-flop 92 is also bi-stable so that when power is being supplied to the circuit either the transistor 540 or 542 is in a conducting condition while the other or opposite transistor is in a non-conducting condition. When the circuit 10 is initially turned on, one of the two transistors 540 or 542 will assume a conducting condition and the other a non-conducting condition. Thereafter, when the first vend is made, as for example, if a channel A vend is made, the relay 476 will energize to close the normally open vend relay contacts 480 which connect the collector of the transistor 540 of the channel determining flip-flop 92 to ground, through a pulse forming circuit designated generally by 544 and through the resistor 500. If at this time, the transistor 540 is in a conducting condition nothing further will happen because a conducting condition of the transistor 540 is indicative that the A channel was the last channel in which a vend was made. If, however, the transistor 540 is non-conducting and therefore the transistor 542 is conducting, a negative impulse is produced through the filter network 544 and is fed through a biasing resistor 546 to the base of the transistor 542 to cause it to go to a non-conducting condition which in turn causes the transistor 540 to go to a conducting condition thus indicating that the last vend was made out of the A channel. The impedances of the channel determining flip-flop 92, the pulse forming network 544, and the resistor 500 are chosen so that when the normally open contacts 480 close to change the state of the channel determining flip-flop 92, and thus impress a positive potential across resistor 500, that the potential thus impressed not be suffrciently high or of sufficient duration to cause transistor 506 in the B channel vend selector 74 to go into a conducting condition. This would be very undesirable if it occurred since it would result in a second or continuous vending out of the machine. The same is also true of the corresponding impedances in the A channel.
When a vend is made in the B channel, the vend relay 508 in the B channel vend selector 74 is energized as aforesaid and closes its normally open contacts 466, which contacts operate in a manner similar to the contacts 480 of the relay 476, to apply a negative impulse to the base of the transistor 540 in the channel determining flip-flop 92. If the transistor 542 at this time is in a non-conducting condition this will operate to change its state and the state of the channel determining flipflop 92 so that the transistor 542 will go into a conducting condition and the transistor 540 into a non-conducting condition thereby indicating that the last vend was made under control of the B channel.
The collectors of the transistors 540 and 542 in the channel determining flip-flop 92 are connected to control the operation of the gates 46 and 66, respectively. When the channel determining flip-flop 92 is in its A channel determining position wherein the transistor 540 is conducting and the transistor 542 is non-conducting, a ground potential is fed to the gate 46 while a positive potential is fed to the gate 66. The gate 46 is therefore in an open condition able to pass signals therethrough whereas the gate 66 is closed and will not permit signals to pass. If the channel determining flipflop 92 is in its opposite condition, that is where the transistor 542 is conducting and the transistor 540 is non-conducting, the opposite result happens so that the gate 66 is open or conducting and the gate 46 is closed. The gates 46 and 66 are important means for determining when a proper payback has been made as will be discussed hereinafter.
When a vend is made under control of either channel in the present device and the amount thereof is less than the amount accumulated in the accumulator 14 an impulse is sent from the appropriate vend selector 52 or 72 through the gate 42 or 62 via terminal K to the refund flip-flop 82 to set it into a payback condition as aforesaid. The refund flip-flop 82 includes two opposite symmetrically connected transistors 560 and 562 (FIG. 4). The refund flip-flop 82 is a bi-stable circuit constructed so that when the transistor S62 is conducting the refund flip-flop is in its reset or no refund state. The collectors of the transistors 560 and 562 are connected to a positive potential source through load resistors 564 and 566, respectively, and the emitter of the transistor 562 is grounded directly and the emitter of the transistor 560 is grounded through the reset means 80. The collector of the transistor 560 is connected through a resistor 568 to the base of another transistor 570 which has its emitter grounded as shown and its collector connected to the positive potential source through load resistor 572. When the refund flip-flop 82 is in its reset or no-refund state, the collector of the transistor 562 is at or near ground potential and the collector of the transistor 560 is at a positive potential. The positive potential condition of the collector of the transistor 560 causes the transistor 570 to be in a conducting condition which in turn causes its collector to be at ground potential. This ground is coupled to the forward count line 250 of the accumulator 14 (FIG. 3) through terminal D.
A circuit similar to the circuit of the transistor 570 is connected to the collector of the transistor 562 and includes another transistor 574. The base of the transistor 574 is connected through a resistor 576 to the collector of the transistor 562. Since the transistor 562 is normally in a conducting condition when the refund flip-flop 82 is in its reset or non-refund state, its collector is at or near ground potential, which ground is applied through the resistor 576 to the base of the transistor 574 to cause it to be in a non-conducting condition. Since the emitter of the transistor 574 is grounded and its collector is connected to the positive potential source through a load resistor 578, a positive potential appears on the collector of the transistor 574 whenever it is in its non-conducting condition, and this positive potential is coupled by means including terminal to the count back line 248 of the accumulator 14 (FIG. 3). As aforesaid, when the lines 248 and 250 to the accumulator are respectively at positive and ground potentials the accumulator 14 is in its forward counting condition. Therefore, it can be seen that any time the refund flip-flop 82 is in its reset or non-refund condition the accumulator 14 will be in its forward counting condition.
When the refund flip-flop 82 is caused to go into its set or payback condition by means of an impulse received from the vend selector 54 or 74 through the associated gate 42 or 62, which impulse is applied to the base of the transistor 562 to cause it to go into a non-conducting condition thereby also causing the transistor 560 to go into conducting condition, the conditions of the transistors 570 and 574 reverse so that the transistor 570 is non-conducting and the transistor 574 is conducting. This causes a positive potential to be applied by way of terminal D to the forward count line 250 of the accumulator 14 and ground potential to be applied by way of terminal C to the backward count line 248 to cause the accumulator 14 to go into a back count or subtract counting condition.
When the transistor 560 goes into a conducting condition when the refund flip-flop 82 is set, its collector which is connected to the positive potential source through the load resistor 564 and is normally at a positive potential, drops to ground or near ground potential. This ground potential is applied through a series connected resistor 606 to the base of a transistor 608 in the refund control circuit 84. The transistor 608 is normally biased to a conducting condition by a voltage divider network made up of resistors 564, 606 and 610 with the resistor 610 connected between the base of the transistor 608 and ground. The collector of the transistor 608 is connected to the positive potential source through a load resistor 612 and its emitter element is grounded. Therefore, when there is ground potential on the collector of the transistor 560 it causes the transistor 608 to go into a non-conducting condition at which time the potential on its collector rises from ground potential to a positive potential. This positive collector potential is fed through resistors 613 and 614 to transistors 615 and 616, respectively in the payback control 84. The transistors 615 and 616 are normally non-conducting and their emitters are grounded as shown. The transistor 615 has its collector connected to the gates 48 and 68 (FIGS. 1 and 5) by means of terminal H while the collector of the transistor 616 is connected through a payback relay 618 to the unregulated positive potential source indicated by When the positive potential from the collector of the transistor 608 is applied through the resistors 613 and 614 to the transistors 615 and 616, respectively, both transistors conduct. When transistors 615 conducts it applies a ground potential through diodes 430 and 458 (FIG. 5) in the gates 48 and 68, respectively to cause them to be in a closed condition so that further outputs from the control circuits 40 and 60 will not establish an erroneous credit condition of the credit flip- flop circuits 50 and 70. When the transistor 616 conducts it energizes payback relay 618 as stated. The payback relay 618 in turn closes its relay contacts 620 in the payback motor circuit and in so doing applies line current indicated by 1.1 and L2 to the payback motor 86. The energized payback motor 86 thereafter pays back one coin of lowest acceptable denomination. As the payback motor 86 approaches the end of the payback cycle for each coin paid back, other means are connected to the payback motor 86 shown by dotted line 622 and terminal P which cause the payback switch 88 (FIG. 2) to cycle. The payback switch 88 is connected in series with relay contacts 624 which are moved from the position shown in FIG. 2 to a closed condition when payback relay 618 is energized. The series combination of the switch 88 and contacts 624 when both in the energized or transferred condition are in parallel with the nickel coin switch 18 and produce an impulse which is fed to the accumulator 14 each time the payback switch 88 is cycled by the payback motor 86. Each of these impulses passes through the same pulse forming network 102 as do the input signals from the coin switch 18 to the accumulator 14. The contacts 624 are included in the circuit so that the payback motor 86 can be cycled to empty the coin tubes in the vending machine without causing an accumulation in the accumulator 14.
The accumulator 14 which at this time is in its back count condition due to the conditioning thereof by the refund flip-flop 82 has its count reduced by one for each impulse produced when the payback switch 88 closes. Whenever the condition of the accumulator 14 has been reduced to a condition representing the exact amount as established by either the price control 28 or 30 the price control 28 or 30 produces an output signal. These output signals are fed through the appropriate gate 36 or 38 to the control circuit 40 or 60 to produce a reset signal which passes through the gates 46 or 66 to reset the refund flip-flop 82 if the signal which passes is from the proper channel. It should be obvious that either of the control circuits 40 or 60 may produce a reset signal under the proper circumstances whether or not it is in the channel of the last initiated vend. It is the function of the channel determining flip-flop 92 and the gates 46 and 66 to block any such reset signals if they are from the wrong channel. For example, if an A channel vend was last made, the channel determining flip-flop 92causes gate 46 to be open and the gate 66 to be closed. This means that a reset signal from a control circuit 60 such as might be produced when the count in the accumulator 14 is reduced to the setting of the price control 30 of the B channel, will be blocked but reset signals from the control circuit 40 will be allowed to pass therethrough to reset the refund flip-flop 82.
The reset signals are negative impulses which pass through the diode 406 or 426 of the gate 46 or 66, respectively, and through the capacitor 408 and by way of terminal I to the base of the transistor 560 (FIG. 4) in the refund flip-flop 82. This negative impulse reset signal causes the transistor 562 in the vend flip-flop to return to its conducting condition. in this manner, the refund flip-flop 82 is reset or returned to its nonpayback condition thereby terminating the payback operation, and at the same time it returns the accumulator 14 to its forward count condition by causing the transistor 570 to again conduct and the transistor 574 to stop conducting.
When the refund flip-flop 82 switches back from its set to its reset condition, the potential on the collector of the transistor 562 in the refund flip-flop 82 abruptly changes from a positive potential to a ground or near ground potential. This generates a negative impulse which is conducted to the reset means 80. This causes the reset means 80 to reset the circuit 10. This last mentioned negative impulse passes through series connected capacitor 650, diode 652 and resistor 654 to the base of a transistor 656 in the reset means 80. The junction between the diode 652 and the resistor 654 is held positive by means of a connection to the positive potential source through another resistor 658. The resistors 658, 654 and another resistor 660 are connected in series between the positive potential source and ground to form a voltage network to supply base current to the.
The emitter of the transistor 656 is connected through a resistor 662, a level sensing diode 664 and another resistor 666 to ground. When the transistor 656 momentarily ceases conducting the level sensing diode 664 also ceases conducting and the potential on its sensing element rises from near ground potential to a positive value which is coupled through a resistor 668 and a properly oriented diode 670 to the base of another transistor 672. The junction between the level sensing diode 664 and the resistor 668 is biased positive by a connection to the positive potential source through a resistor 674 while the potential at the junction between the diode 670 and the base of the transistor 672 is negatively biased by means of a connection to the negative potential source through a resistor 676. When the level sensing diode 664 is conducting the transistor 672 is held in a non-conducting condition by the negative potential which passes through resistor 676. When the level sensing diode 664 ceases conducting, however, the positive potential is fed through the resistors 674 and 668 and the diode 670 to the base of the transistor 672 to provide base current therefor to cause it to go into a conducting condition.
The emitter of the transistor 672 is grounded and its collector is connected to the base of reset transistor 680 in the reset means 80 through a resistor 682. The reset transistor 680 is normally held in a conducting condition by positive current fed from the positive potential source through a current limiting resistor 684 which is connected in series with resistor 682. When the transistor 672 is caused to conduct, it shunts the base current of the reset transistor 680 which ceases conducting. The emitter of reset transistor 680 is grounded and its collector is connected to the positive potential source through a load resistor 686. When the reset transistor 680 ceases to conduct, its collector potential rises to a positive potential and this positive potential is applied through a circuit which includes terminal B to the accumulator 14 and to the credit flipflops 50 and to reset them. In so doing, this momentarily interrupts the ground potential normally connected to the emitters of the transistors 436 and 450 in the credit flip- flops 50 and 70, respectively (FIG. 5) and removes the ground from the emitters of the transistors 208, 252, 256 and 260 in the accumulator H4 (H6. 3). The collector of the reset transistor 680 is also connected to the emitter of the transistor 560 in
Claims (20)
1. Means for establishing a vend price for a vending machine or the like, said machine having a coin receiving unit for receiving coins of selected denominations and capable of vending articles at different selectable prices, said coin receiving unit producing output signals representative of the value of each coin deposited therein, said vending machine including accumulator means having an input connected to the output of the coin receiving unit, said accumulator means having a plurality of bistable circuit stages the combined conditions of which represent the total amount of money deposited in the coin receiving unit during a vending operation, each stage of the accumulator means having a first output representing one state of said sTage and a second output representing the other state of said stage, and means by which a customer can initiate a vend operation whenever the amount accumulated in the accumulator means at least equals a selected vend price, the improvement comprising at least two similar vend and vend control channels each selectable and operable to the exclusion of the others and each having means for establishing a selectable vend price, means to control the refunding of amounts deposited in excess of its established vend price, and each including a two position switch corresponding to each respective stage of the accumulator means, each of said switches having a first contact connected to one of the outputs of the associated accumulator stage, a second contact connected to the other output of the associated accumulator stage, and a third contact selectively movable between positions making electrical contact with the first and second contacts, and means in each of said control channels connecting said associated third contacts to the means by which the customer can initiate a vending operation.
2. The means for establishing a vend price defined in claim 1 wherein said two position switches are slide switches, the switches corresponding to adjacent stages of the accumulator means representing money values in a ratio of 2 to 1.
3. A control circuit for a vending machine having a coin unit with a switch corresponding to the money value of each different coin denomination acceptable therein, each of said coin switches producing at least one output, at least one of said coin switches having means connected thereto to control the production of additional output signals sufficient in number so that the total number of output signals produced when said one switch is activated together with the actuations of the other coin switches by said coin corresponds to the number of times the value of the lowest acceptable coin is divisible into the value of said coin means adjustable to establish a vend price including at least two similar circuit channels each having price control means and means actuatable by a customer to select a particular one of said channels for operation to the exclusion of the other channel and initiate a particular vend under control of a selected one of the channels, means in each channel to prevent vend and refund operations until the amount deposited at least equals the price of the selected vend, said channels including coupling means which operate to inhibit operation of the non-selected channel, an accumulator circuit having an input connected to receive the output signals of said coin unit, means for controlling the operation of the accumulator circuit including first means to activate the accumulator circuit to additively accumulate the equivalent value of all coins deposited in the coin unit during each vending operation, other means responsive to the accumulation in the accumulator circuit of amounts in excess of the cost of a selected vend as determined by the selected channel, said other means including means to refund said excess accumulated amounts, said refund means including means to generate a refund signal every time a coin is refunded, means to apply said refund signals to the input of the accumulator circuit, and means to activate the accumulator circuit during refunding of said excess amounts to cause said accumulator circuit to subtract from the amount accumulated therein an amount equal to the value of each coin refunded until the amount in the accumulator equals the selected vend price.
4. The control circuit defined in claim 3 wherein said refund means includes means for effecting the refund of coins a coin at a time, said second means in the refund means including means to cause said accumulator circuit to go from an additive to a subtractive counting condition during refunding operations.
5. The control circuit defined in claim 3 wherein the coin unit in the vending machine includes a first switch activated once by the deposit of eAch coin in the coin unit to produce an output for applying to the input of the accumulator circuit, a second switch actuatable once by the deposit of each coin having a value equal at least to twice the value of the lowest coin denomination acceptable by the coin unit, a third coin switch actuatable once by the deposit of each coin having a value greater than twice the value of the lowest acceptable coin denomination, and means associated with the third coin switch for producing additional output signals for feeding to the input to the accumulator circuit for each additional time in excess of three that the value of a deposited coin is greater than the value of the lowest acceptable coin denomination.
6. The control circuit defined in claim 3 including means for adjusting the vend prices that can be selected.
7. Control means for vending and similar machines which have units for receiving coins of selected denominations and are capable of vending articles at one or more prices selectable by the customer, said control means comprising accumulator means having an input and an output, means connecting the accumulator input directly to the coin receiving unit to respond to outputs produced thereby when coins are deposited, accumulator control means operatively connected to the accumulator means and including means to cause said accumulator to accumulate additively in response to outputs received from the coin unit to accumulate the money value of all coins deposited therein during a vending operation, a set of similar control means associated with each selectable vend, each of said sets of controls including means to establish the vend price thereof and vend selecting means operable by the customer to select a particular one of the sets, of similar controls to the exclusion of the other similar sets other means to prevent vend and refund operations from taking place until the amount deposited at least equals the price of the selected vend as established by the particular selected set of controls, payback means operable under the control of the selected set of controls to payback amounts deposited in the coin unit and accumulated in the accumulator means in excess of the cost of the selected vend, said payback means including means to cause said accumulator means to accumulate in a subtractive direction to reduce the amount accumulated therein by the value of each coin paid back until the amount accumulated in the accumulator means equals the value of the selected vend, and means to reset the accumulator means and the payback means to a predetermined reset condition when the accumulator has an amount accumulated therein that exactly equals the vend price as established by the selected set of controls.
8. The control means defined in claim 7 wherein said sets of similar control means include two similar control channels each including price control means adjustable to control the vend price thereof, means for establishing a credit in said channel whenever the amount deposited at least equals the vend price established therefor, and switch means actuable by the customer to initiate a selected vend under control of the selected control channel.
9. The control means defined in claim 8 including means in each of said two similar control channels operable when one of said channels is selected by the customer to disable the non-selected channel.
10. The control means defined in claim 8 including means associated with the said two similar control channels to prevent operation thereof when the amount accumulated in the accumulator means is less than the cost of the selected vend.
11. The control means defined in claim 10 wherein said means associated with said two similar control channels includes circuit means to prevent initiation of a vend operation whenever the accumulator means are in their reset condition and the price control means associated with one of said two similar channels is in a zero vend price condition.
12. A control circuit for controlling tHe operations of coin operated machines having coin receiving units, means for making vends, and payback means for refunding amounts deposited in the coin receiving units in excess of the price of selected vends, said machines being capable of vending more than one different product and at selectable prices, said control circuit comprising accumulator means capable of being in an adding or a subtracting mode, and associated control means for selectively switching the accumulator means between the adding mode when coins are being deposited and a subtracting made when refunds of amounts deposited in excess of the selected vend price are refunded, a pair of similar vend control channels each including channel price control means which are adjustable to establish an associated vend price therefor, each channel also including means for establishing a credit condition therein whenever an amount deposited at least equals the established vend price, said credit establishing means preventing vend and refund operations from taking place until an amount deposited at least equals the price of the selected vend, vend selector means associated with each channel including means operable by a customer for initiating a vend operation from said channel, means under control of the vend selector means to enable a vend operation to taken place whenever the amount accumulated in the accumulator means at least equals the selected vend price, delay means under control of the vend means for energizing the payback means to initiate a payback operation including means to switch the accumulator means from its adding to its subtracting mode, said payback means including means for refunding a coin at a time, said refund means causing the accumulator means to subtract an amount therefrom equivalent to the value of each coin refunded, until the amount in the accumulator equals the vend price other means responsive to the accumulator means having an accumulation therein exactly equal to the value of the price of the selected vend, said last named means including means to terminate the refund operation, and means under control of the termination of the refund operation to reset the accumulator means and the channel credit means.
13. The control circuit defined in claim 12 including means responsive to the reset condition of the accumulator means to prevent the possibility of making a vend whenever the accumulator means are in their reset condition at a time when the channel price control means associated with either vend control channel is erroneously set in a zero price condition.
14. The control circuit defined in claim 12 including means associated with each channel and operable when the associated vend selector means are actuated by the customer at a time when the amount accumulated in the accumulator means at least equals the selected vend price of said selected channel to inhibit operation of the non-selected channel from initiating a refund or a vend operation.
15. The control circuit defined in claim 12 including a channel determining a bi-stable circuit having its inputs coupled between the vend selector means in said two similar circuit channels, a gate circuit in each of said channels having an input connected to the output of said bi-stable circuit, said bi-stable circuit producing an output for operating through a selected one of said gate circuits to terminate a refund operation whenever the amount accumulated in the accumulator means has been reduced during a payback operation to the exact vend price as established by the price control means in the channel selected for actuation by the customer.
16. The control circuit defined in claim 12 including power supply means having means for sensing a predetermined circuit voltage condition and means controlled by each occurrence of said predetermined voltage for resetting the accumulator means and the means in each channel for establishing a credit condition.
17. The control circuit defined in claim 12 wherein each of said similar chanNels includes means to delay a vend operation initiated by the customer who operates the vend selector means before the amount deposited is sufficient to equal the selected vend price, said customer continuing his initiation of the vend selector means until after the last coin deposited during a vend operation has cleared the coin receiving unit.
18. The control circuit defined in claim 12 including means for energizing the payback means without causing any accumulation to be made in the accumulator means.
19. The control circuit defined in claim 12 including a gate circuit associated with each of said channels, said gate circuit in each channel being connected between the vend selector means including the associated means under control of the vend selector means therein and the refund means to initiate a refund operation whenever the amount accumulated in the accumulator means exceeds the price of a selected vend.
20. The control circuit defined in claim 19 wherein each of said channels includes a second gate connected between the vend selector means and the reset means to initiate a reset operation whenever the amount accumulated in the accumulator means equals the price of a selected vend.
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US2902570A | 1970-04-16 | 1970-04-16 |
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US29025A Expired - Lifetime US3687255A (en) | 1970-04-16 | 1970-04-16 | Multi-price, multi-channel coin control means |
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Cited By (17)
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US3776339A (en) * | 1972-07-21 | 1973-12-04 | Cavalier Corp | Control apparatus for dual price vending machine |
US3777769A (en) * | 1972-02-12 | 1973-12-11 | Tokai Rika Co Ltd | Counting device having memory-readout and logic circuits |
US3791505A (en) * | 1972-06-14 | 1974-02-12 | Marrick Ind Inc | Solid state vend control means and process of operation |
US3815718A (en) * | 1972-11-27 | 1974-06-11 | Cincinnati Time Recorder Co | Automatic fee determining and receipt totalizing system for parking facilities |
US3848718A (en) * | 1973-11-12 | 1974-11-19 | Rock Ola Mfg Corp | Vending machine control circuit |
US3869032A (en) * | 1972-12-29 | 1975-03-04 | Wurlitzer Co | Solid state monetary accumulator, credit storage, and selector logic circuit |
US3894220A (en) * | 1974-04-25 | 1975-07-08 | H R Electronics Co | Vending control system |
US3896915A (en) * | 1973-01-17 | 1975-07-29 | Nippon Coinco Co Ltd | Vending machine |
US4359147A (en) * | 1979-08-06 | 1982-11-16 | H. R. Electronics Company | Means to control vending functions |
US4457321A (en) * | 1980-03-28 | 1984-07-03 | Laurel Bank Machine Co., Ltd. | Coin handling apparatus |
US4458187A (en) * | 1981-04-02 | 1984-07-03 | Mars, Inc. | Vending machine control and diagnostic apparatus |
US4712049A (en) * | 1986-08-22 | 1987-12-08 | Coin Acceptors, Inc. | Operation completion detection means |
US6473283B1 (en) * | 2000-01-12 | 2002-10-29 | Mp Electronics, Inc. | Voltage protection circuit for multi-drop bus of an automated coin vending machine |
US20040172334A1 (en) * | 2001-02-27 | 2004-09-02 | Whitten David Boyd | Method and system for accomplishing product detection |
US20040204791A1 (en) * | 1998-04-29 | 2004-10-14 | Hair James M. | Optical vend-sensing system for control of vending machine |
US20070213871A1 (en) * | 2001-08-23 | 2007-09-13 | Whitten David B | Optical vend sensing system for product delivery detection |
US7286901B2 (en) * | 2001-02-27 | 2007-10-23 | Crane Co. | Method and system for accomplishing product detection |
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Cited By (25)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3777769A (en) * | 1972-02-12 | 1973-12-11 | Tokai Rika Co Ltd | Counting device having memory-readout and logic circuits |
US3791505A (en) * | 1972-06-14 | 1974-02-12 | Marrick Ind Inc | Solid state vend control means and process of operation |
US3776339A (en) * | 1972-07-21 | 1973-12-04 | Cavalier Corp | Control apparatus for dual price vending machine |
US3815718A (en) * | 1972-11-27 | 1974-06-11 | Cincinnati Time Recorder Co | Automatic fee determining and receipt totalizing system for parking facilities |
US3869032A (en) * | 1972-12-29 | 1975-03-04 | Wurlitzer Co | Solid state monetary accumulator, credit storage, and selector logic circuit |
US3896915A (en) * | 1973-01-17 | 1975-07-29 | Nippon Coinco Co Ltd | Vending machine |
US3848718A (en) * | 1973-11-12 | 1974-11-19 | Rock Ola Mfg Corp | Vending machine control circuit |
US3894220A (en) * | 1974-04-25 | 1975-07-08 | H R Electronics Co | Vending control system |
US4359147A (en) * | 1979-08-06 | 1982-11-16 | H. R. Electronics Company | Means to control vending functions |
US4457321A (en) * | 1980-03-28 | 1984-07-03 | Laurel Bank Machine Co., Ltd. | Coin handling apparatus |
US4458187A (en) * | 1981-04-02 | 1984-07-03 | Mars, Inc. | Vending machine control and diagnostic apparatus |
US4712049A (en) * | 1986-08-22 | 1987-12-08 | Coin Acceptors, Inc. | Operation completion detection means |
US7343220B2 (en) | 1998-04-29 | 2008-03-11 | Automated Merchandising Systems Inc. | Optical vend-sensing system for control of vending machine |
US7742837B2 (en) | 1998-04-29 | 2010-06-22 | Automated Merchandising Systems Inc. | Optical vend-sensing system for control of vending machine |
US20040204791A1 (en) * | 1998-04-29 | 2004-10-14 | Hair James M. | Optical vend-sensing system for control of vending machine |
US20080121648A1 (en) * | 1998-04-29 | 2008-05-29 | Automated Merchandising Systems Inc. | Optical vend-sensing system for control of vending machine |
US7191915B2 (en) | 1998-04-29 | 2007-03-20 | Automated Merchandising Systems Inc. | Optical vend-sensing system for control of vending machine |
US6473283B1 (en) * | 2000-01-12 | 2002-10-29 | Mp Electronics, Inc. | Voltage protection circuit for multi-drop bus of an automated coin vending machine |
US20070219665A1 (en) * | 2001-02-27 | 2007-09-20 | Whitten David B | Method and system for accomplishing product detection |
US7286901B2 (en) * | 2001-02-27 | 2007-10-23 | Crane Co. | Method and system for accomplishing product detection |
US7191034B2 (en) | 2001-02-27 | 2007-03-13 | Crane Co. | Method and system for accomplishing product detection |
US20040172334A1 (en) * | 2001-02-27 | 2004-09-02 | Whitten David Boyd | Method and system for accomplishing product detection |
US8046100B2 (en) | 2001-02-27 | 2011-10-25 | Crane Merchandising Systems, Inc. | Method and system for accomplishing product detection |
US20070213871A1 (en) * | 2001-08-23 | 2007-09-13 | Whitten David B | Optical vend sensing system for product delivery detection |
US8548625B2 (en) | 2001-08-23 | 2013-10-01 | Crane Merchandising Systems, Inc. | Optical vend sensing system for product delivery detection |
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