Coin discrimination apparatus and method

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6520308
  • Patent Number
    6,520,308
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, October 31, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, February 18, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
A coin discrimination apparatus and method is provided. Coins, preferably after cleaning, e.g. using a trommel, are singulated by a coin pickup assembly configured to reduce jamming. A coin rail assists in providing separation between coins as they travel past a sensor. The sensor provides an oscillating electromagnetic field generated on a single core. The oscillating electromagnetic field is composed of one or more frequency components. The electromagnetic field interacts with a coin, and these interactions are monitored and used to classify the coin according to its physical properties. All frequency components of the magnetic field are phase-locked to a common reference frequency. The phase relationships between the various frequencies are fixed, and the interaction of each frequency component with the coin can be accurately determined without the need for complicated electrical filters. In one embodiment, a sensor having a core, preferably ferrite, which is curved, such as in a U-shape or in the shape of a section of a torus, and defining a gap, is provided with a winding for excitation and/or detection. The sensor can be used for simultaneously obtaining data relating to two or more parameters of a coin or other object, such as a size and conductivity of the object. Two or more frequencies can be used to sense core and/or cladding properties. Objects recognized as acceptable coins, using the sensor data, are diverted by a controllable deflecting door, to tubes for delivery to acceptable coin bins.
Description




The present invention relates to an apparatus and method for sensing coins and other small discrete objects, and in particular to an apparatus which may be used in coin counting or handling.




BACKGROUND INFORMATION




A number of devices are intended to identify and/or discriminate coins or other small discrete objects. One example is coin counting or handling devices, (such as those described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/255,539, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,564,546, and its continuation application Ser. No. 08/689,826, 08/237,486, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,620,079 and its continuation Ser. No. 08/834,952, filed Apr. 7, 1997, and 08/431,070, all of which are incorporated herein by reference). Other examples include vending machines, gaming devices such as slot machines, bus or subway coin or token “fare boxes,” and the like. Preferably, for such purposes, the sensors provide information which can be used to discriminate coins from non-coin objects and/or which can discriminate among different coin denominations and/or discriminate coins of one country from those of another.




Previous coin handling devices, and sensors therein, however, have suffered from a number of deficiencies. Many previous sensors have resulted in an undesirably large proportion of discrimination errors. At least in some cases this is believed to arise from an undesirably small signal to noise ratio in the sensor output. Accordingly, it would be useful to provide coin discrimination sensors having improved signal to noise ratio.




Many previous coin handling devices, and associated sensors, were configured to receive only one coin at a time, such as a typical vending machine which receives a single coin at a time through a coin slot. These devices typically present an easier coin handling and sensing environment because there is a lower expectation for coin throughput, an avoidance of the deposit of foreign material, an avoidance of small inter-coin spacing (or coin overlap), and because the slot naturally defines maximum coin diameter and thickness. Coin handlers and sensors that might be operable for a one-at-a-time coin environment may not be satisfactory for an environment in which a mass or plurality of coins can be received in a single location, all at once (such as a tray for receiving a mass of coins, poured into the tray from, e.g., a coin jar). Accordingly it would be useful to provide a coin handler and/or sensor which, although it might be successfully employed in a one-coin-at-a-time environment, can also function satisfactorily in a device which receives a mass of coins.




Many previous sensors and associated circuitry used for coin discrimination were configured to sense characteristics or parameters of coins (or other objects) so as to provide data relating to an average value for a coin as a whole. Such sensors and circuitry were not able to provide information specific to certain regions or levels of the coin (such as core material vs. cladding material). In some currencies, two or more denominations may have average characteristics which are so similar that it is difficult to distinguish the coins. For example, it is difficult to distinguish U.S. dimes from pre-1982 U.S. pennies, based only on average differences, the main physical difference being the difference in cladding (or absence thereof). In some previous devices, inductive coin testing is used to detect the effect of a coin on an alternating electromagnetic field produced by a coil, and specifically the coin's effect upon the coil's impedance, e.g. related to one or more of the coin's diameter, thickness, conductivity and permeability. In general, when an alternating electromagnetic field is provided to such a coil, the field will penetrate a coin to an extent that decreases with increasing frequency. Properties near the surface of a coin have a greater effect on a higher frequency field, and interior material have a lesser effect. Because certain coins, such as the United States ten and twenty-five coins, are laminated, this frequency dependancy can be of use in coin discrimination, but, it is believed, has not previously been used in this manner. Accordingly, it would further be useful to provide a device which can provide information relating to different regions of coins or other objects.




Although there are a number of parameters which, at least theoretically, can be useful in discriminating coins and small objects (such as size, including diameter and thickness), mass density, conductivity, magnetic permeability, homogeneity or lack thereof (such as cladded or plated coins), and the like, many previous sensors were configured to detect only a single one of such parameters. In embodiments in which only a single parameter is used, discrimination among coins and other small objects was often inaccurate, yielding both misidentification of a coin denomination (false positives), and failure to recognize a coin denomination (false negatives). In some cases, two coins which are different may be identified as the same coin because a parameter which could serve to discriminate between the coins (such as presence or absence of plating, magnetic non-magnetic character of the coin, etc.) is not detected by the sensor. Thus, using such sensors, when it is desired to use several parameters to discriminate coins and other objects, it has been necessary to provide a plurality of sensors (if such sensors are available), typically one sensor for each parameter to be detected. Multiplying the number of sensors in device increases the cost of fabricating, designing, maintaining and repairing such apparatus. Furthermore, previous devices typically required that multiple sensors be spaced apart, usually along a linear track which the coins follow, and often the spacing must be relatively far apart in order to properly correlate sequential data from two sensors with a particular coin (and avoid attributing data from the two sensors to a single coin when the data was related, in fact, to two different coins). This spacing increases the physical size requirements for such a device, and may lead to an apparatus which is relatively slow since the path which the coins are required to traverse is longer.




Furthermore, when two or more sensors each output a single parameter, it is typically difficult or impossible to base discrimination on the relationship or profile of one parameter to a second parameter for a given coin, because of the difficulty in knowing which point in a first parameter profile corresponds to which point in a second parameter profile. If there are multiple sensors spaced along the coin path, the software for coin discrimination becomes more complicated, since it is necessary to keep track of when a coin passes by the various sensors. Timing is affected, e.g., by speed variations in the coins as they move the coin path, such as rolling down a rail.




Even in cases where a single core is used for two different frequencies or parameters, many previous devices take measurements at two different times, typically as the coin moves through different locations, in order to measure several different parameters. For example, in some devices, a core is arranged with two spaced-apart poles with a first measurement taken at a first time and location when a coin is adjacent a first pole, and a second measurement taken at a second, later time, when the coin has moved substantially toward the second pole. It is believed that, in general, providing two or more different measurement locations or times, in order to measure two or more parameters, or in order to use two or more frequencies, leads to undesirable loss of coin throughput, occupies undesirably extended space and requires relatively complicated circuits and/or algorithms (e.g. to match up sensor outputs as a particular coin moves to different measurement locations).




Some sensors relate to the electrical or magnetic properties of the coin or other object, and may involve creation of an electromagnetic field for application to the coin. With many previous sensors, the interaction of generated magnetic flux with the coin was too low to permit the desired efficiency and accuracy of coin discrimination, and resulted in an insufficient signal-to-noise ratio.




Many previous coin handling devices and sensors had characteristics which were undesirable, especially when the devices were for use by untrained users. Such previous devices had insufficient accuracy, short service life, had an undesirably high potential for causing user injuries, were difficult to use, requiring training or extensive instruction, failed, too often, to return unprocessed coins to the user, took too long to process coins, had an undesirably low throughput, were susceptible to frequent jamming, which could not be cleared without human intervention, often requiring intervention by trained personnel, could handle only a narrow range of coin types, a denominations, were overly sensitive to wet sticky coins or foreign or non-coin objects, either malfunctioning or placing the foreign objects in the coin bins, rejected an undesirably high portion of good coins, required frequent and/or complicated set-up, calibration or maintenance, required too large a volume or footprint were overly-sensitive to temperature variations, were undesirably loud, were hard to upgrade or retrofit to benefit from new technologies or ideas, and/or were difficult or expensive to design and manufacture.




Accordingly, it would be advantageous to provide a coin handler and/or sensor device having improved discrimination and accuracy, reduced costs or space requirements, which is faster than previous devices, easier or less expensive to design, construct, use and maintain, and/or results in improved signal-to-noise ratio.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention provides a device for processing and/or discriminating coins or other objects, such as discriminating among a plurality of coins or other objects received all at once, in a mass or pile, from the user, with the coins or objects being of many different sizes, types or denominations. The device has a high degree of automation and high tolerance for foreign objects and less-than-pristine objects (such as wet, sticky, coated, bent or misshapen coins), so that the device can be readily used by members of the general public, requiring little, if any, training or instruction and little or no human manipulation or intervention, other than inputting the mass of coins.




According to one embodiment of the invention, after input and, preferably, cleaning, coins are signulated and move past a sensor for discrimination, counting and/or sorting. In general, coin slowing or adhesion is reduced by avoiding avoiding extensive flat regions in surfaces which contact coins (such as making such surfaces curved, quilted or dimpled). Coin paths are configured to flare or widen in the direction of coin travel to avoid jamming.




A signulating coin pickup assembly is preferably provided with two or more concentrically-mounted disks, one of which includes an integrated exit ledge. Movable paddles flex to avoid creating or exacerbating jams and deflect over the coin exit ledge. Vertically stacked coins tip backwards into a recess and slide over supporting coins to facilitate singulation. At the end of a transaction, coins are forced along the coin path by a rake, and debris is removed through a trap door. Coins exiting the coin pickup assembly are tipped away from the face-support rail to minimize friction.




According to one embodiment of the present invention, a sensor is provided in which nearly all the magnetic field produced by the coil interacts with the coin providing a relatively intense electromagnetic field in the region traversed by a coin or other object. Preferably, the sensor can be used to obtain information on two different parameters of a coin or other object. In one embodiment, a single sensor provides information indicative of both size, (diameter) and conductivity. In one embodiment, the sensor includes a core, such as ferrite or other magnetically permeable material, in a curved (e.g., torroid or half-torroid) shape which defines a gap. The coin being sensed moves through the vicinity of the gap, in one embodiment, through the gap. In one embodiment, the core is shaped to reduce sensitivity of the sensor to slight deviations in the location of the coin within the gap (bounce or wobble). As a coin or the object passes through the field in the vicinity of the gap, data relating to coin parameters are sensed, such as changes in inductance (from which the diameter of the object or coin, or portions thereof, can be derived), and the quality factor (Q factor), related to the amount of energy dissipated (from which conductivity of the object or coin, or portions thereof, can be obtained).




In one embodiment, data relating to conductance of the coin (or portions thereof) as a function of diameter are analyzed (e.g. by comparing with conductance-diameter data for known coins) in order to discriminate the sensed coins. Preferably, the detection procedure uses several thresholds or window parameters to provide high recognition accuracy.




According to one aspect of the invention, a coin discrimination apparatus and method is provided in which an oscillating electromagnetic field is generated on a single sensing core. The oscillating electromagnetic field is composed of one or more frequency components. The electromagnetic field interacts with a coin, and these interactions are monitored and used to classify the coin according to its physical properties. All frequency components of the magnetic field are phase-locked to a common reference frequency. The phase relationship between the various frequencies are locked in order to avoid interference between frequencies and with any neighboring cores or sensors and to facilitate accurate determination of the interaction of each frequency component with the coin.




In one embodiment, low and high frequency coils on the core form a part of oscillator circuits. The circuits are configured to maintain oscillation of the signal through the coils at a substantially constant frequency, even as the effective inductance of the coil changes (e.g. in response to passage of a coin). The amount of change in other components of the circuit needed to offset the change in inductance (and thus maintain the frequency at a substantially constant value) is a measure of the magnitude of the change in the inductance caused by the passage of the coin, and indicative of coin diameter.




In addition to providing information related to coin diameter, the sensor can also be used to provide information related to coin conductance, preferably substantially simultaneously with providing the diameter information. As a coin moves past the coil, there will be an amount of energy loss and the amplitude of the signal in the coil will change in a manner related to the conductance of the coin (or portions thereof). For a given effective diameter of the coin, the energy loss in the eddy currents will be inversely related to the conductivity of the coin material penetrated by the magnetic field.




Preferably, the coin pickup assembly and sensor regions are configured for easy access for cleaning and maintenance, such as by providing a sensor block which slides away from the coin path and can be re-positioned without recalibration. In one embodiment, the diverter assembly is hinged to permit to be tipped outward for access. Preferably, coins which stray from the coin path are deflected, e.g. via a ramped sensor housing and/or bypass chutes, to a customer return area.




Coins which are recognized and properly positioned or spaced are deflected out of the default (gravity-fed) coin path into an acceptance bin or trolley. Any coins or other objects which are not thus actively accepted travel along a default path to the customer return area. Preferably, information is sensed which permits an estimate of coin velocity and/or acceleration so that the deflector mechanism can be timed to deflect coins even though different coins may be traveling at different velocities (e.g. owing to stickness or adhesion). In one embodiment, each object is individually analyzed to determine if it is a coin that should be accepted (i.e. is recognized as an acceptable coin denomination), and, if so, if it is possible to properly deflect the coin (e.g. it is sufficiently spaced from adjacent coins). By requiring that active steps be taken to accept a coin (i.e. by making the default path the “reject” path), it is more likely that all accepted objects will in fact be members of an acceptable class, and will be accurately counted.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1A

depicts a coin handling apparatus that may be used in connection with an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 1B

depicts a coin handling apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 2A

is a front elevational view of a sensor and adjacent coin, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIGS. 2B and 2C

are perspective views of sensors and coin-transport rail according to embodiments of the present invention;





FIG. 2D

depicts a two-core configuration according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 3

is a front elevational view of a sensor and adjacent coin, according to another embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 4

is a top plan view of the sensor of

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 5

is a block diagram of a discrimination device according to an embodiment of the present invention.





FIG. 6

is a block diagram of a discrimination device according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 7

depicts various signals that occur in the circuit of

FIGS. 8A-C

;





FIG. 8A-8D

are block and schematic diagrams of a circuit which may be used in connection with an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 9

depicts an example of output signals of a type output by the circuit of

FIGS. 8A-8D

as a coin passes the sensor;





FIGS. 10A and 10B

depict standard data and tolerance regions of a type that may be used for discriminating coins on the basis of data output by sensors of the present invention;





FIG. 11

is a block diagram of a discrimination device, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 11A

is a block diagram of a two-core discrimination device, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 12

is a schematic diagram and block diagram of a discrimination advice according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 13

depicts use of in-phase and delayed amplitude data for coin discriminating according to one embodiment;





FIG. 14

depicts use of in-phase and delayed amplitude data for coin discriminating according to another embodiment;





FIGS. 15A and 15B

are front elevational and top plan views of a sensor, coin path and coin, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIGS. 16A and 16B

are graphs showing D output from high and low frequency sensors, respectively, for eight copper and aluminum disk of various diameters, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 17

is a perspective view of a coin pickup assembly, rail, sensor and chute system, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 18

is an exploded view of the system of

FIG. 17

;





FIG. 19

depicts the system of

FIG. 17

with the front portion pivoted;





FIG. 20

is a cross-sectional view taken along line


20





20


of

FIG. 17

;





FIG. 21

is a front elevational view of the coin rail portion of

FIG. 17

;





FIG. 22

is a perspective view of the system of

FIG. 17

, showing an example of coin locations;





FIG. 22A

illustrates some coins which are horizontally partially overlapped and some coins which are stacked on top of one another vertically.





FIG. 23A through 23G

are cross sectional view taken along lines


23


A—


23


A through


23


G—


23


G, respectively, of

FIG. 21

;





FIG. 24

is a cross sectional view taken along line


24





24


of

FIG. 22

;





FIG. 25

is a rear elevational view of the system of

FIG. 17

;





FIG. 25A

is a partial view corresponding to

FIG. 25

, but showing the rake in the downstream position;





FIGS. 26 and 26A

are cross-sectional views taken along lines


26





16


and


26


A—


26


A of

FIGS. 25 and 25A

;





FIGS. 27A and 27B

are front and rear perspective view of a sensor and sensor board according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIGS. 28A-28I

are front, elevational and top views of sensor cores according to embodiments of the present invention;





FIG. 29

is a block diagram of functional components of a sensor board, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 30

is a graph of an example of sensor signals according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 31

is a schematic diagram of a sensor board, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 32

is a block diagram of hardware for a coin discrimination device, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 33

is a graph of hypothetical example of sensor signals, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 34

is a flow chart of a coin signature calculation process, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 35

is a state diagram for a coin discrimination process according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 36

is a state diagram for a categorization process according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 37

is a block diagram for a categorization process according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 38

is a state diagram of a Direct Memory Access process according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 39

is a timing diagram of a Direct Memory Access process according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 40

is a flowchart showing a coin discrimination process, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 41

is a block diagram showing components of a coin discrimination system according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 42

is a flowchart showing a leading and trailing gap verification procedure;





FIG. 43

is a partial perspective view showing a coin return path according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 43A

is a partial perspective view showing the diverter cover in a closed or normal position, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 44

is a partial perspective view, similar to the view of

FIG. 43

, but with the diverter cover in an open configuration;





FIG. 45

is a partial rear perspective view corresponding to

FIG. 43

;





FIG. 46

is a partial perspective view corresponding to

FIG. 44

but with the sensor retracted;





FIG. 47

is a partial rear perspective view corresponding to

FIG. 45

, but with the sensor retracted;





FIG. 48

is a partial perspective view showing the relative position of a trommel according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 49

is a partial perspective view corresponding to

FIG. 48

but with the trommel tilted downward;





FIG. 50

is a partial perspective view corresponding to

FIG. 49

but with the trommel partially retracted from the cradle;





FIG. 51

is a partial top plan view showing a trommel according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 52

is a partial rear elevational view showing a trommel release mechanism, according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 53

is a perspective view of a trommel with endcaps and cradle according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 54

is a perspective, partially exploded view of a trommel cradle according to an embodiment of the present invention;





FIGS. 55A-C

are block diagrams depicting signal generation and use according to embodiments of the present invention;





FIG. 55D

is a block diagram depicting use of a sensor current response to a square wave voltage; and





FIGS. 56A-H

are side views of sensor shapes according to embodiments of the present invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




The sensor and associated apparatus described can be used in connection with a number of devices and purposes. One device is illustrated in FIG.


1


A. In this device, coins are placed into a tray


120


, and fed to a sensor region


123


via a first ramp


230


and coin pickup assembly


280


. In the sensor region


123


, data is collected by which coins are discriminated from non-coin objects, and different denominations or countries of coins are discriminated. The data collected in the sensor area


123


is used by the computer at


290


to control movement of coins along a second ramp


125


in such a way as to route the coins into one of a plurality of bins


210


. The computer may output information such as the total value of the coins placed into the tray, via a printer


270


, screen


130


, or the like. In the depicted embodiment, the conveyance apparatus


230


,


280


which is upstream of the sensor region


123


provides the coins to the sensor area


123


serially, one at a time.




The embodiment depicted in

FIG. 1B

generally includes a coin counting/sorting portion


12


and a coupon/voucher dispensing portions


14




a,b.


In the depicted embodiment, the coin counting portion


12


includes an input tray


16


, a voucher dispensing region


18


, a coin return region


22


, and customer I/O devices, including a keyboard


24


, additional keys


26


, a speaker


28


and a video screen


32


. The apparatus can include various indicia, signs, displays, advertisement and the like on its external surfaces. A power cord


34


provides power to the mechanism as described below.




Preferably, when the doors


36




a,




36




b


are in the open position as shown, most or all of the components are accessible for cleaning and/or maintenance. In the depicted embodiment, a voucher printer


23


(

FIG. 41

) is mounted on the inside of the door


36




a.


A number of printers can be used for this purpose. In one embodiment, a model KLDS0503 printer, available from Axioh is used. The right-hand portion of the cabinet includes the coupon feeder


42


for dispensing, e.g., pre-printed manufacturer coupon sheets through a chute


44


to a coupon hopper on the outside portion of the door


36




b.


A computer


46


, in the depicted embodiment, is positioned at the top of the right hand portion of the cabinet in order to provide clean, location for the computer. An I/O board


48


is positioned adjacent the sheet feeder


42


.




The general coin path for the embodiment depicted in

FIG. 1B

is from the input tray


16


, down first and second chutes to a trommel


52


, to a coin pickup assembly


54


, along a coin rail


56


and past a sensor


58


. If, based on sensor data, it is determined that the coin can and should be accepted, a controllable deflector door


62


is activated to divert coins from their gravitational path to coin tubes


64




a,b


for delivery to coin trolleys


66




a, b.


If it has not been determined that a coin can and should be accepted, the door


62


is not activated and coins (or other objects) continue down their gravitational or default path to a reject chute


68


for delivery to a customer-accessible reject or return box


22


.




Devices that may be used in connection with the input tray are described in U.S. Ser. No. 08/255,539, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,564,546, Ser. No. 08/237,486, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,620,079, supra.




Devices that may be used in connection with the coin trolleys


66




a,




66




b


are described in Ser. No. 08/883,776, for COIN BIN WITH LOCKING LID, incorporated herein by reference.




Devices that may be used in connection with the coin chutes and the trommel


52


are described in PCT/US97/03136 Feb. 28, 1997 and its parent provisional application U.S. Ser. No. 60/012,964, both of which are incorporated by reference. In one embodiment, depicted in

FIGS. 51 and 53

, the trommel cage


5112


is configured to facilitate removal, e.g. for cleaning or maintenance purposes or the like. In the embodiment depicted in

FIGS. 48-54

, trommel removal can be accomplished with only one hand, particularly by pressing button


5212


(

FIGS. 52 and 54

) which moves socket


5414


(FIG. F


4


) out of engagement with cradle pin


5414


(

FIG. 54

) permitting the cradle


5416


which bears the trommel cage (as shown in

FIG. 53

) to pivot downward


5312


(

FIG. 53

) from the position


4812


shown in

FIG. 48

to the position


4912


shown in FIG.


49


. The cradle


5416


includes a telescoping section


5418




a,b


for permitting the trommel cage to be further retracted to the position


5012


shown in

FIG. 50

where it can be easily lifted from the cradle.




Briefly, and as described more thoroughly below and in the above-noted applications, a user is provided instructions such as on computer screen


32


. The user places a mass of coins, typically of a plurality of denominations (typically accompanied by dirt or other non-coin objects and/or foreign or otherwise non-acceptable coins) in the input tray


16


. The user is prompted to push a button to inform the machine that the user wishes to have coin discriminated. Thereupon, the computer causes an input age


17


(

FIG. 14

) to open and illuminates a signal to prompt the user to begin feeding coins. The gate may be controlled to open or close for a number of purposes, such as in response to sensing of a jam, sensing of load in the trommel or coin pickup assembly, and the like. In one embodiment, signal devices such as LEDs can provided a user with an indication of whether the gate is open or closed (or otherwise to prompt the user to feed or discontinue feeding coins or other objects). Although instructions to feed or discontinue may be provided on the computer screen


32


, indicator lights (although involving additional wiring and attendant difficulties) are believed useful since users often are watching the throat of the chute, rather than the computer screen, during the feeding of coins or other objects. When the gate is open, a motor


19


(

FIG. 41

) is activated to begin rotating the trommel assembly


52


. The user moves coins over the peaked output edge


72


of the input tray


16


, typically by lifting or pivoting the tray by handle


74


, and/or manually feeding coins over the peak


72


. The coins pass the gate (typically set to prevent passage of more than a predetermined number of stacked coins, such as by defining an opening equal to about 3.5 times a typical coin thickness). Instructions on the screen


32


may be used to tell the user to continue or discontinue feeding coins, can relay the status of the machine, the amount counted thus far, provide encouragement on advertising messages and the like.




First and second chutes (not shown in

FIG. 1B

) are positioned between the output edge


72


of the input tray


16


and the input to the trommel


52


. Preferably, the second chute provides a funneling effect by having a greater width at its upstream edge than its downstream edge. Preferably, the coins cascade or “waterfall” when passing from the first chute to the second chute. e.g. to increase momentum and tumbling of the coins.




Preferably, some or all of the surfaces that contact the coin along the coin path, including the chutes, have no flat region large enough for a coin to contact the surface over all or substantially all of one of the faces of the coin. Some such surfaces are curved to achieve this result, such that coins make contact on, at most, two points of such surfaces. Other surfaces may have depressions or protrusions such as being provided with dimples, quilting or other textures. Preferably, the surface of the second chute is constructed such that it has a finite radius of curvature along any plane normal to its longitudinal axis, and preferably with such radii of curvature increasing in the direction of coin flow.




In one embodiment, the chutes are formed from injected molded plastic such as an acetal resin e.g. Delrin®, available from E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., or a polyamide polymer, such as a nylon, and the like. Other materials that can be used for the chute include metals, ceramics, fiberglass, reinforced materials, epoxies, ceramic-coated or -reinforced materials and the like. The chutes may contain devices for performing additional functions such as stops or traps, e.g., for dealing with various types of elongate objects.




The trommel


52


, in the depicted embodiment is a perforated-wall, square cross-section, rotatably mounted container. Preferably, dimples protrude slightly into the region of the trommel to avoid adhesion and/or reduce friction between coins and the interior surface of the trommel. The trommel is rotated about its longitudinal axis. Preferably, operation of the device is monitored, such as by monitoring current draw for the trommel motor using a current sensor


21


. A sudden increase or spike in current draw may be considered indicative of an undesirable load and/or jam of the trommel. The system may be configured in various ways to respond to such as sensed jam such as by turning off the trommel motor to stop attempted trommel rotation and/or reviewing and/or reversing the motor, or altering motor direction periodically, to attempt to clear the jam. In one embodiment, when a jam or undesirable load is sensed, coin feed is stopped or discouraged, e.g., by cloning the gate and/or illuminating a “stop feed” indicator. As the trommel motor


19


rotates the trommel, one or more vanes protruding into the interior of the trommel assist in providing coin-lifting/free-fall and moving the coins in a direction towards the output region. Objects smaller than the smallest acceptable coin (about 17.5 mm, in one embodiment) pass through the perforated wall as the coins tumble. In one embodiment, the holes have a diameter of about 0.61 inches (about 1.55 cm) to prevent passage of U.S. dimes. An output chute directs the (at least partially) cleaned coins existing the trommel towards the coin pickup assembly


54


. The depicted horizontal disposition of the trommel, which relies on vanes rather than trommel inclination for longitudinal coin movements, achieves a relatively small vertically space requirement for the trommel. Preferably the trommel is mounted in such a way that it may be easily removed and/or opened or disassembled for cleaning and maintenance, as described, e.g., in PCT Application US97/03136, supra.




As depicted in

FIG. 17

, coin pickup assembly


54


includes a hopper


1702


for receiving coins output from the trommel


52


. The hopper


1702


may be made at relatively low cost such as by vacuum forming. In one embodiment, the hopper


1702


is formed of a plastic material, such as polyethylene, backed with sound-absorbing foam for reducing noise. Preferably, the hopper (or other components along the coin path) are configured to avoid slow-up, jams or other difficulties, such as may otherwise result particularly from wet or sticky coins. Without being bound by any theory, it is believed that polyethylene is useful to reduce coin sticking. Thus, it may be desirable to include a mechanical or other transducer for providing energy, in response to a sensed jam, slow-up or other abnormality. One configuration for providing energy is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,746,299 incorporated herein by reference. In one embodiment, slow or stuck coins are automatically provided with kinetic energy. In one embodiment, vibrational or other kinetic energy is imparted by pulsing, alternating, reversing or otherwise activating the hopper motor. Other features which may be provided for the hopper include shaping to provide a curvature sufficient to avoid face-to-face contact between coins and the hopper surface and/or providing surface texture (such as embossing, dimpling, faceting, quilting, ridging or ribbing) on the hopper interior surface. The hopper


1702


preferably has an amount of flexibility, rather than being rigid, which reduces the occurrence of jams and assists in clearing jams since coins are not forced against a solid, unyielding surface.




As described below, the coins move into an annular coin path defined, on the outside, by the edge of circular recess


1802


(

FIG. 18

) and, on the inside by a ledge


1804


formed on a rail disk


1806


. The coins are moved along the annular path by paddles


1704




a, b, c, d


for delivery to the coin rail


56


.




A circuit board


1744


for providing certain control functions, as described below, is preferably mounted on the generally accessible front surface of the chassis


1864


. An electromagnetic interference (EMI) safety shield


1746


normally covers the circuit board


1744


and swings open on hinges


1748




a,b


for easy service access.




In the embodiment depicted in

FIG. 17 and 18

, the coin rail


56


and the recess


1808


for the disks are formed as a single piece or block, such as the depicted base plate


1810


. In one embodiment, the base plate


1810


is formed from high density polyethylene (HDPE) and the recess


1808


and coin rail


56


, as well as the various openings depicted, are formed by machining a sheet or block of HDPE. HDPE is a useful material because, among other reasons, components may be mounted using self-tapping screws, reducing manufacturing costs. Furthermore, use of a non-metallic back plate is preferred in order to avoid interference with the sensor. In one embodiment, electrically conductive HDPE may be used, e.g. to dissipate static electricity.




The base plate


1810


is mounted on a chassis


1864


which is positioned within the cabinet (

FIG. 1B

) such that the base plate


1810


is disposed at an angle


1866


with respect to vertical


1868


of between 0° and about 45°, preferably between about 0° and about 15°, more preferably about 20°. Preferably, the diverter cover


1811


is pivotally coupled to the baseplate


1810


, e.g. by hinges


1872




a,




1872




b,


so that the diverter cover


1811


may be easily pivoted forward (FIG.


19


), e.g. for cleaning and maintenance.




A rotating main disk


1812


is configured for tight (small clearance) fit against the edge


1802


of recess


1808


. Finger holes


1813




a, b, c, d


facilitate removal of the disk for cleaning or maintenance. Relatively loose (large clearance) fit is provided between disk holes


1814




a, b, c, d


and hub pins


1816




a, b, c, d


and between central opening


1818


and motor hub


1820


. The loose fit of the holes and the tight fit of the edge of disk


1812


assist in reducing debris entrapment and motor jams. Because the main disk is received in recess


1802


, it is free to flex and/or tilt, to some degree, e.g. in order to react to coin jams.




A stationary rail disk


1806


is positioned adjacent the main disk


1812


and has a central opening


1824


fitting lossely with respect to the motor hub


1820


. In one embodiment, the rail disk is formed of graphite-filled phenolic.




The ledge


1804


defined by the rail disk


1806


is preferably configured so that the annular coin path flares or widens in the direction of coin travel such that spacing between the ledge and the recess edge near the bottom or beginning of the coin path (at the eight o'clock position


1876


) is smaller (such as about 0.25 inches, or about 6 mm smaller) than the corresponding distance


1827


at the twelve o'clock position


1828


. In one embodiment, the rail disk


1806


(and motor


2302


) are mounted at a slight angle to the plane formed by the attachment edge


2402


of the hopper


1702


such that, along the coin path, the coin channel generally increases in depth (i.e. in a direction perpendicular to the face of the rail disk).




As the coins travel counterclockwise from approximately a 12:00 position


1828


of the rail disk, the ledge is thereafter substantially linear along a portion


1834


(

FIG. 19

) extending to the periphery of the rail disk


1806


and ending adjacent the coin backplate


56


and rail tip


1836


. A tab-like protrusion


1838


is engaged by rail tip


1836


, holding the rail disk


1806


in position. The rail disk is believed to be more easily manufactured and constructed than previous designs, such as those using a coin knife. Furthermore, the present design avoids the problem, often found with a coin knife, in which the tip of the knife was susceptible to prying outward by debris accumulated behind the tip of the coin knife.




A tension disk


1838


is positioned adjacent the rail disk. The tension disk


1838


is mounted on the motor hub


1820


via central opening


1842


and threaded disk knob


1844


. As the knob


1844


is tightened, spring fingers


1846




a, b, c, d


apply force to keep the disks


1838


,


1806


,


1812


tightly together, reducing spaces or cracks in which debris could otherwise become entrapped. Preferably, the knob


1844


can be easily removed by hand, permitting removal of all the disks


1812


,


1806


,


1838


(e.g., for maintenance or cleaning) without the need for tools.




In one embodiment, the tension disk


1838


and main disk


1812


are formed of stainless steel while the rail disk


1806


is formed of a different material such as graphite-filled phenolic, which is believed to be helpful in reducing galling. The depicted coin disk configuration, using the described materials, can be manufactured relatively easily and inexpensively, compared to previous devices. Paddles


1704




a, b, c, d


are pivotally mounted on tension disk pins


1848




a, b, c, d


so as to permit the paddles to pivot in directions


1852




a,




1852




b


parallel to the tension disk plane


1838


. Such pivoting is useful in reducing the creation or exacerbation of coin jams since coins or other items which are stopped along the coin path will cause the paddles to flex, or to pivot around pins


1848




a, b, c, d,


rather than requiring the paddles to continue applying full motor-induced force on the stopped coins or other objects. Springs


1854




a, b, c, d


resist the pivoting


1852




a,




1852




b,


urging the paddles to a position oriented radially outward, in the absence of resistance e.g. from a stopped coin or other object.




Preferably, sharp or irregular surfaces which may stop or entrap coins are avoided. Thus, covers


1856




a, b, c, d


are placed over the springs


1854




a, b, c, d


and conically-shaped washers


1858




a, b, c, d


protect the pivot pins


1848




a, b, c, d.


In a similar spirit, the edge of the tension disk


1862


is angled or chamfered to avoid coins hanging on a disk edge, potentially causing jamming.




As depicted in

FIG. 25

, a number of components are mounted on the rear surface of the chassis


1864


. A motor, such as model


2032


drives the rotation of disks


1812


,


1838


via motor drive hub


1820


. An actuator such as solenoid


2014


controls movement of the trap door


1872


(described below). A sensor assembly, including sensor printed circuit board (PCB)


2512


is slidably mounted in a shield


2514


.




The lower edge of the recess


1808


is formed by a separate piece


1872


which is mounted to act as a trap door. The trap door


1872


is configured to be moved rearwardly


2012


(

FIG. 2D

) by actuator


2014


to a position


2016


to enable debris to fall into debris cup


2018


. Solenoid


2014


is actuated under control of a microcontroller as described below. Preferably, the trap door substantially no further than the front edge of the coin rail disk, to avoid catching, which could lead to a failure of the trap door to close. Preferably, a sensor switch provides a signal to the microcontroller indicating whether the trap door has completely shut. Preferably the trap door is resiliently held in the closed position in such a manner that it can be manually opened if desired.




Coins which fall into the hopper


1702


from the trommel


52


are directed by the curvature of the hopper towards the 6:00 position 1877 (

FIG. 19

) of the annular coin path. In general, coins traveling over the downward-turning edge


2024


of the hopper


1702


are tipped onto edge and, partially owing to the backward inclination


1866


of the apparatus, tend to fall into the annular space


1801


. Coins which are not positioned in the space


1801


with their faces adjacent the surface of the rail disk (such as coins that may be tipped outward


2026




a


or may be perpendicular to the rail disk


2026




b


) will be struck by the paddle


1704


as it rotates, agitating the coins and eventually correctly positioning coins in the annular space


1801


with their faces adjacent the face


1801


of the annular space defined by the rail disk


1806


. It is believed that the shape of the paddle head


2028




a,




2028




c,


in particular the rounded shape of the radially outmost portion


2206


of the head, assists in agitating or striking coins in such a manner that they will assume the desired position.




Once coins are positioned along the annular path, the leading edge of the paddle heads


2028


contact the trailing edge of the coins, forcing them along the coin path, e.g. as depicted in FIG.


17


. Preferably each paddle can move a plurality of coins, such as up to about 10 coins. The coins are thus eventually forced to travel onto and along the linear portion


1834


of the rail disk ledge


1804


and are pushed onto the coin rail tip


1836


. some previous devices were provided with an exit gate for coins existing the coin pickup assembly which, in some cases, was susceptible to jamming. According to an embodiment of the present invention, such jamming is eliminated because no coin pickup assembly exit gate is provided.




As the paddle heads


2028


continue to move along the circular path, they contact the linear portion


1834


(

FIG. 19

) of the ledge


1804


and flex axially outward


2032


, facilitated by a tapered shape of the radially inward portion of the paddle pad


2028


to ride over (i.e. in front of) a portion


1884


of the rail disk. In one embodiment, openings or holes


1708


are provided in this portion to reduce frictional drag and to receive e.g. trapped debris, which is thus cleared from the annular coin path.




As seen in

FIG. 21

, the ledge


1804


as defined by the rail disk


1806


is displaced upwardly


2102


with respect to the ledge


2104


of the coin rail tip


1836


. The distance


2102


may be, for example, about 0.1 inches (about 2.5 mm). The difference in height


2102


assists in gravitationally moving coins from the rail disk ledge


1804


over the upper portion of the “Y” gap (described below) and onto the ledge of coin rail tip


1836


.




The terminal point


2105


of the rail disk ledge is laterally spaced a distance


2107


from the initial edge of the coin rail ledge


2104


to define a “Y” gap therebetween. This gap, which extends a certain distance


2109


circumferentially, as seen in

FIG. 21

, receives debris which may be swept along by the coin paddles. The existence of the gap


2107


, and its placement, extending below the rail ledge, by providing a place for debris swept up by the paddles, avoids a problem found in certain previous devices in which debris tended to accumulate where a disk region met a linear region, sometimes accumulating to the point of creating a bump or obstruction which could cause coins to hop of fly off the ledge or rail.




The coin rail


56


functions to receive coins output by the coin pickup assembly


54


, and transports the coins in a signulated (one-at-a-time) fashion past the sensor


58


to the diverting door


62


. Singulation and separation of coins is of particular use in connection with the described sensor, although other types of sensors may also benefit from coin singulation and spacing. In general, coins are delivered to the coin rail


56


rolling or sliding on their edge or rim along the rail ledge


2104


. The face of the coins as they slide or roll down the coin rail are supported, during a portion of their travel, by rails or stringers


2106




a, b, c.


The stringers are positioned (FIG.


23


A), respectively, at heights


2108




a, b, c


(with respect to the height of the ledge


2104


) to provide support suitable for the range of coin sizes to be handled while providing a relatively small area or region of contact between the coin face and the stringers. Although some previous devices provide for flat-topped or rounded-profile rails or ridges, the present invention provides ridges or stringers which at least in the second portion,


2121




b,


have a triangular or peaked profile. This is believed to be easier to manufacture (such as by machining into the baseplate


1810


) and also maintains relatively small area of contact with the coin face despite stringer wear.




The position and shape of the stringers and the width of the rail


2104


are selected depending on the range of coin sizes to be handled by the device. In one embodiment, which is able to handle U.S. coins in the size range between a U.S. dime and a U.S. half-dollar, the ledge


2104


has a depth


2111


(from the backplate


2114


) of about 0.09 inches (about 2.3 mm). The top stringer


2106




a


is positioned at a height


2108




a


(above the ledge


2104


), of about 0.825 inches (about 20 mm), (the middle stringer


2106




b


is positioned at a height


2108




b


of about 0.49 inches (about 12.4 mm), and the bottom stringer


2106




c


is positioned at a height of about 0.175 inches (about 4.4 mm). In one embodiment, the stringers are about 0.8 inches (about 2 mm) wide


2109


(

FIG. 23C

) and protrude about 0.05 inches (about 1.3 mm)


2112


above the back plate


2114


of the coin rail.




As seen in

FIG. 22

, as the coins enter the coin rail


56


, the coins are typically horizontally signulated, i.e., coins are in single file, albeit possibly adjacent or touching one another. The signulated configuration of the coins can be contrasted with coins which are horizontally partially overlapped


2202




a,b


as shown in FIG.


22


A.

FIG. 22A

also illustrates a situation in which some coins are stacked on top of one another vertically


2202




c, d.


A number of features of the coin rail


56


contribute to changing the coins from the bunched configuration to a signulated, and eventually separated, series of coins by the time they move past the sensor


58


. One such feature is a cut-out or recess


2116


provided in or adjacent the top portion of the rail along a first portion of its extent. As seen in

FIG. 24

, when coins which are vertically stacked such as coins


2202




c, b,


illustrated in

FIG. 22

, reach the cut-out portion


2116


, the top coin, aided by the inclination


1866


of the rail, tips backward


2402


and amount sufficient that it will tend to slide forward


2404


in front of the lower coin


2202


, falling into the hopper extension


2204


which is positioned beneath the cut-out region


2116


, and sliding back into the main portion of the hopper


1702


to be conveyed back on to the coin trail.




Another feature contributing to singulation is the change in inclination of the coin rail from a first portion


2121




a


which is inclined, with respect to a horizontal plane


2124


at an angle


2126


of about 0° to about 30°, preferably about 0° to about 15° and more preferably about 10°, to a second opinion


2121




b


which is inclined with respect to a horizontal plane


2124


by an angle


2128


of about 30° to about 60°, preferably between about 40° and about 50° and more preferably about 45°. Preferably, the coin path in the transitional region


2121




c


between the first portion


2121




a


and second portion


2121




b


is smoothly curved, as shown. In one embodiment, the radius of curvature of the ledge


2104


in the transition region


2121




c


is about 1.5 inch (about 3.8 cm).




One feature of singulating coins, according to the depicted embodiment, is to primarily use gravitational forces for this purpose. Use of gravity force is believed to, in general, reduce system cost and complexity. This is accomplished by configuring the rail so that a given coin, as it approaches and then enters the second portion


2121




b,


will be gravitationally accelerated while the next (“following”) coin, on a shallower slope, is being accelerated to a much smaller degree, thus allowing the first coin to move away from the following coin, creating a space therebetween and effectively producing a gap between the signulated coins. Thereafter, the following coin moves into the region where it is, in turn, accelerated away from the successive coin. As a coin moves from the first region


2121




a


toward and into the second region


2121




b,


the change in rail inclination


2126


,


2318


(

FIG. 21

) causes the coin to accelerate, while the following coins, which are still positioned in the first region


2121




a,


have a relatively lower velocity.




In one embodiment, acceleration of a coin as it moves into the second rail region


2121




b


is also enhanced by placement of a short, relatively tall auxiliary stringer


2132


generally in the transition region


212




c.


The auxiliary stringer


2132


projects outwardly from the back surface


2114


of the coin rail, a distance


2134


(

FIG. 23B

) greater than the distance


2112


of projection of the normal stringers


2106




a, b, c.


Thus, as a coin moves into the transition region


2121




c,


the auxiliary stringer


2132


tips the coin top outward


2392


, away from contact with the normal stringers


2106




a, b, c


so that it tends to “fly” (roll or slide on its edge or rim along the coin rail ledge


2104


without contact with the normal stringers


2106




a, b, c


) and, for at least a time period following movement past the auxiliary stringer


2132


, continues to contact the coin rail only along the ledge


2104


, further minimizing or reducing friction and allowing the coin to accelerate along the second region


2121




b


of the coin rail. In one embodiment, the coin-contact portion of the stringers in the first portion


2121




a


are somewhat flattened (

FIG. 23A

) to increase friction and exaggerate the difference in coin acceleration between the first section


2121




a


and the second


2121




b,


where the stringer profiles are moved pointed, such as being substantially peaked (FIG.


23


C).




Another feature of the coin rail contributing to acceleration is the provision of one or more free-fall regions where coins will normally be out of contact with the stringers and thus will contact, at most, only the ledge portion


2104


of the rail. In the depicted embodiment, a first free-fall region is provided at the area


2136




a


wherein the auxiliary stringer


2132


terminates. As noted above, coins in this region will tend to contact the coin rail only along the ledge


2104


. Another free-fall region occurs just downstream of the upstream edge


2342


of the door


62


. As seen in

FIG. 23E

, the door


62


is preferably positioned a distance


2344


(such as about 0.02 inches, about 0.5 mm) from the surface


2114


of the rail region. This setback


2344


, combined with the termination of the stringers,


2106


, provides a free-fall region adjacent the door


62


. If desired, another free-fall region can be provided downstream from the door


62


, e.g., where the reject coin path


1921


meets the (preferably embossed) surface of the reject chute or reject chute entrance which may be set back a distance such as about ⅛ inch (about 3 mm).




Another free-fall region may be defined near the location


2103


where coins exit the disks


1812


,


1806


and enter the rail


56


, e.g., by positioning the disk


1812


to have its front surface in plane slightly forward (e.g., about 0.3 inches, or about 7.5 mm) of the plane defined by rail stringers


2106


. This free-fall region is useful not only to assist the transition from the disk onto the rail but makes it more likely that coins which may be slowed or stopped on the rail near the end of a transaction will be positioned downstream of the retract position (

FIG. 21

) of the rake


2152


such that when the rake operates (as described below), it is more likely to push slowed or stopped coins down the rail than to knock such coins off the rail. Providing periods of coin flying reduces friction, contributes to coin acceleration and also reduces variation in coin velocity since sticky or wet coins behave similarly to pristine coins when both are in a flying mode. Producing periods of flying is believed to be particularly useful in maintaining a desired acceleration and velocity of coins which may be wet or sticky.




The sensor


58


is positioned a distance


2304


(

FIG. 23D

) away from the surface of the stringers


2106




a, b, c


sufficient to accommodating passage of the thickest coin to be handled. Although certain preferred sensors, and their use, are described more thoroughly below, it is possible to use features of the present invention with other types of sensors which may be positioned in another fashion such as embedded in the coin rail


56


.




The leading surface of the sensor housing is preferably ramped


2306


such that coins or other objects which do not travel into the space


2304


(such as coins or other objects which are too large or have moved partially off the coin path) will be deflected by the ramp


2306


onto a bypass chute


1722


(FIG.


17


), having a deflector plane


1724


and a trough


1726


for delivery to the coin return or reject chute


68


where they may be returned to the user. The sensor housing also performs a spacer function, tending to hold any jams at least a minimum distance from the sensor core, preferably sufficiently far that the sensor reading is not affected (which could cause misdetection). If desired, the sensor housing can be configured such that jams may be permitted within the sensing range of the sensor (e.g., to assist in detecting jam occurrence).




In the depicted configuration, the sensor


58


is configured so that it can be moved to a position


2142


away from the coin rail


56


, for cleaning or maintenance, such as by sliding along slot


2144


. Preferably, the device is constructed with an interference fit so that the sensor


58


may be moved out of position only when the diverter cover


1811


has been pivoted forward


1902


(

FIG. 19

) and such that the diverter cover


1811


may not be repositioned


1904


to its operating configuration until the sensor


2142


has been properly positioned in its operating location (FIG.


21


). In another embodiment, depicted in

FIGS. 43A-47

, closing the diverter cover


1811


before the sensor


2142


has been properly positioned, is prevented by interference with a pin


4312


(rather than interference with the sensor itself, which could result in impact and/or damage to the sensor). In the depicted embodiment, the pin


4312


is registered with a hole


4313


in the diverter cover


1811


when the sensor


2412


is in the unretracted position shown in FIG.


43


A.

FIG. 44

shows the configuration with the diverter cover


1811


open. With the diverter cover


1811


in the open position, the sensor


2142


can be moved from the unretracted position (

FIGS. 43A

,


44


) to the retracted position (FIG.


46


), eg. For purposes of cleaning, maintenance and the like.

FIG. 45

is a rear view showing the bottom edge


4511


of the sensor assembly protruding from under a sensor cover


4512


. In the depicted embodiment, when the sensor is retracted the bottom edge


4511


moves from the position shown in

FIG. 45

to the position shown in FIG.


47


. (Although

FIG. 47

shows the cover


4512


moving with the sensor, it is also possible to configure the cover


4512


to be stationary while the sensor


2142


is retracted.) To avoid accidentally leaving the sensor in the retracted position when the cleaning and maintenance operations are completed, as the sensor is retracted, the bottom edge


4511


moves a pin


4515


, projecting rearwardly from a rotatably-mounted disk


4517


. Movement of the pin


4515


causes the disk


4517


to rotate


4519


, against the urging of spring


4521


, carrying the pin


4312


to the position shown in

FIG. 46

, out of registration with the hole


4313


. When thus moved, the pin


4312


is positioned such that, if an attempt is made to close


4612


the diverter cover


1811


while the sensor is retracted (

FIG. 46

) the rear surface of the diverter cover


1811


will strike the pin


4312


, preventing closure of the cover


1811


. By sliding the sensor to its unretracted position (

FIG. 44

) the spring


4521


rotates the disk


4517


to return the pin


4312


to the position in

FIG. 44

, registered with the hole


4313


, permitting closure of the cover


1811


. Preferably, the sensor apparatus is configured so that it will seat reliably and accurately in a desired position with respect to the coin rail such as by engagement of a retention clip


2704


(FIG.


21


). Such seating, preferably combined with a relatively high tolerance for positional variations of coins with respect to the sensor (described below), means that the sensor may be moved to the maintenance position


2142


and returned to the operating position repeatedly, without requiring recalibration of the device.




As noted above, in the depicted embodiment, a door


62


is used to selectively deflect coins or other objects so the coins ultimately travel to either an acceptable-object or coin bin or trolley, or a reject chute


68


.




In the embodiment depicted in

FIG. 43

, a coin return ramp


4312


extends from the coin return region


1921


, through the opening


1813


of the diverter cover


1811


and extends a distance


4314


outward and above the initial portion of the coin return chute


68


. Thus, coins which are not deflected by the door


62


travel down the ramp


4312


and fly off the end


4316


of the ramp in a “ski jump” fashion before landing on the coin return chute surface


68


. Even though preferably, coin contact surfaces such as the ramp


4312


and coin return chute


68


are embossed or otherwise reduce facial contact with coins, providing the “ski jump” flying region further reduces potential for slowing or adhesion of coins (or other objects) as they travel down the return chute towards the customer return box.




Preferably the device is configured such that activation of the door deflects coins to an acceptable coin bin and non-activation allows a coin to move along a default path to the reject chute


68


. Such “actuate-to-accept” technique non only avoids accumulation of debris in the exist bins but improves accuracy by accepting only coins that are recognized and, further, provides a configuration which is believed superior during power failure situations. The actuate-to-accept approach also has the advantage that the actuation mechanism will be operating on an object of known characteristics (e.g. known diameter, which may be used, e.g. in connection with determining velocity and/or acceleration, or known mass, which may be used, e.g. for adjustment of forces, such as deflection forces). This affords the opportunity to adjust e.g. the timing duration and/or strength of the deflection to the speed and/or mass of the coin. In a system in which items to be rejected are actively deflected, it would be necessary to actuate the deflection mechanism with respect to an object which may be unrecognized or have unknown characteristics.




Although in one embodiment the door


62


is separately actuated for each acceptable coin (thus reducing solenoid


2306


duty cycle and heat generation), it would also be possible to configure a device in which, when there are one or two or more sequential accepted coins, the door


62


is maintained in its flexed position continuously until the next non-accepted coin (or other objects) approaches the door


62


.




An embodiment for control and timing of the door


62


deflection will be described more thoroughly below. In the depicted embodiment, the door


62


is deflected by activation of a solenoid


2306


. The door


62


, in one embodiment, is made of a hard resilient material, such as


301


full hard stainless steel which may be provided in a channel stage as shown. In one embodiment, the back surface of the coin-contact region of the door


2308




a


is substantially covered with a sound-deadening material


2334


such as a foam tape (available from 3M Company). Preferably the foam tape has a hole


2335


adjacent the region where the solenoid


2306


strikes the door


62


.




In one embodiment, the door


62


is not hinged but moves outwardly from its rest position (

FIG. 23E

) to its deflected position (

FIG. 23F

) by bending or flexing, rather than pivoting. Door


62


, being formed of a resilient material, will then deflect back


2312


to its rest position once the solenoid


2306


is no longer activated. By relying on resiliency of an unhinged door for a return motion, there is no need to provide a door return spring. Furthermore, the resiliency of the door, in general, provides a force greater than the solenoid spring return force normally provided with a solenoid, so that the door


62


will force the solenoid back to its rest position (

FIG. 23E

) (after cessation of the activation pulse), more quickly than would have been possible if relying only on the force of the solenoid return spring. As a result, the effective cycle time for the solenoid system is reduced. In one embodiment, a solenoid is used which has a normal cycle time of about 24 milliseconds but which is able to achieve a cycle time of about 10 milliseconds when the resilient-door-closing feature is used for solenoid return, as described. In one embodiment, a solenoid is used which is rated at 12 volts but is activated using a 24-volt pulse.




In some situations, particularly at the end of a coin discrimination cycle or transaction, one or more coins, especially wet or sticky coins, may reside on the first portion


2121




a


of the rail such that they will not spontaneously (or will only slowly) move toward the sensor


58


. Thus, it may be desirable to include a mechanical or other transducer for providing energy, in response to as sensed jam, slow-up or other abnormality. Once configuration for providing energy is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,746,299, incorporated herein by reference. According to one embodiment for providing energy, a coin rake


2152


, normally retracted into a rake slot


2154


(FIG.


23


A), may be activated to extend outward


2156


from the slot


2154


and move lengthwise


2156


down the slot


2154


to push slow or stopped coins down the coin path, such as onto the second portion


2121




b


of the coin rail, or off the rail to be captured by the hopper extension


2204


. An embodiment for timing and control of the rake is described more thoroughly below. In one embodiment, rake movement is achieved by activating a rake motor


2502


(

FIG. 19

) coupled to a link arm


2504


(FIG.


25


). This link


2504


is movably mounted to the rear portion of the chasis


1864


by a pin and slot system


2506




a,b.


A plate section


2509


of the link


2504


is coupled via slot


2511


to eccentric pin of motor


2502


. A slot


2513


of the link arm


2504


engages a rear portion of the rake


2152


. Activation of the motor


2502


rotates eccentric pin


2515


and causes link


2504


to move longitudinally


2517


. A slot


2513


of the link arm


2504


, forces the rake


2512


to move


2519


along the inclined slot


2514


toward a downstream position


2510


(FIG.


26


A). The function of causing the rake to protrude or extend outward


2156


from the slot


2514


can be achieved in a number of fashions. In one embodiment, the link arm


2504


is shaped so that when the rake is positioned down the slot


2154


, the rake


2512


is urged outwardly


2156


but the shape of the resilient link arm


2504


. As the rake is moved upstream


2525


toward the normal operating location, a cam follower formed on the free and


2527


on the link arm is urged rearwardly by a cam


2529


carrying the rake


2152


with it, rearwardly to the retracted position

FIG. 23A

, FIG.


26


).




Preferably, the rake position is sensed or monitored, such as by sensing the position of the rake motor


2502


, in order to ensure proper rake operation. Preferably the system will detect (e.g. via activity sensor


1754


) if the coin rake knocked coins off the rail or, via coin sensor


58


, if the coin rake pushed coins down the coin rail to move past the sensor


58


. In one embodiment if activation of the coin rake results in coins being knocked off the rail or moved down the rail, the coin rake will be activated at least a second time and the system may be configured to output a message indicating that the system should be cleaned or requires maintenance.




Between the time that a coin passes beneath the sensor


58


and the time it reaches the deflection door


62


(typically a period of about 30 milliseconds), control apparatus and software (described below) determine whether the coin should be diverted by the door


62


. In general, it is preferred to make the time delay between sensing an object and deflecting the object (i.e., to make the distance between the sensor and the deflection door) as short as possible while still allowing sufficient time for the recognition and categorization processes to operate. The time requirements will be at least partially dependent on the speed of the processor which is used. In general, it is possible to shorten the delay by employing a higher-speed processor, albeit at increased expense. Shortening the path between the sensor and the deflector not only reduces the physical size of the device but also reduces the possibility that a coin or other object may become stuck or stray from the coin path after detection and before disposition (potentially resulting in errors, e.g. of a type in a coin is “credited” but not directed to a coin bin). Furthermore, shortening the separation reduces the chance that a faster following coin will “catch up” with a previous slow or sticky coin between the sensor and the deflector door. Shortening the separation additionally reduces the opportunity for coin acceleration or velocity to change to a significant degree between the sensor


58


and the door


62


. Since the door, in one embodiment, is controlled based on velocity or acceleration measured or (calculated using data measured) at the sensor, a large separation (and consequently larger rail length with potential variations is, e.g. friction) between the sensor


58


and the door


62


increases the potential for the measured or calculated coin velocity or acceleration to be in error (or misleading).




Because the coin deflector requires a certain minimum cycle time (i.e., the time from activation of the solenoid until the door has returned to a rest state and is capable of being reactivated), it is impossible to successfully deflect two coins which are too close together. Accordingly, when the system determines that two coins are too close together (e.g. by detecting successive “trail” times which are less than a minimum period apart), the system will refrain from activating the deflector door upon passage of one or both such coins, thus allowing one or both such coins to follow the default path to the reject chute, despite the fact that the coins may have been both successfully recognized as acceptable coins.




If a coin is to be diverted, when it reaches the door


62


, solenoid


2306


is activated. Typically, because of the step


2136




b


and/or other flying-inducing features, by the time a coin reaches door


62


it will be spaced a short distance


2307


(such as 0.08 inches, or about 2 mm) above the door plane


62


and the door, as it is deflected to its activated position (FIG.


23


F), will meet the flying coin and knock the coin in an outward direction


2323


to the common entrance


1728


of acceptable-coin tubes


64




a,




64




b.


Preferably all coin contact surfaces of the return chute and coin tube are provided with a surface texture such as an embossed surface which will reduce friction and/or adhesion. Additionally, such surface may be provided with a sound-deadening material and/or a kinetic energy-absorbing material (to help direction coins accurately into the accept bins).




In one embodiment, the timing of deflection of the door


62


is controlled to increase the likelihood that the door will strike the coin as desired in such a fashion as to divert it to entrance to the cointubes


1728


. The preferred striking position may be selected empirically, if desired, and may depend, at least partially, on the diameter and mass of the coins and the coin mix expected in the machine as well as the size and characteristics of the door


62


. In one embodiment, the machine is configured to, on average, strike the coin when the leading edge of the coin is approximately 3 mm upstream (“upstream” indicating a direction opposite the direction of coin flow


2332


) of the downstream edge


2334


of the actuator door


62


(FIG.


23


E). In one embodiment, this strike position is the preferred portion regardless of the diameter of the coin.




Preferably, there is a gap between coins as they stream past the door


62


. The preferred gap between adjacent coins which have different destinations (i.e., when adjacent coins include an accepted coin and a not-accepted coin) depends on whether the accepted coin is before or after the non-accepted coin (in which the “accepted coin” is a coin which will be diverted by the door and the not-accepted coin will travel past the door without being diverted). The gap behind a not-accepted coin (or other object) which reaches the door


62


before an accepted coin is referred to herein as a “leading gap”. The gap behind an accepted coin is referred to herein as a “trailing gap”. In one embodiment, the preferred leading gap is described by the following equation:






GAP


lead.min




=Δd




StoA.lead


+Error


Plus




+a


  (1)






where:




Δd


StoA.lead


represents the change in the actual inter-coin gap from the time the coins pass the sensor


58


to the time when the coins reach the door


62


(approximately 3 mm);




Error


Plus


represents the distance error due to compensation uncertainties, assuming leading gap worst conditions of maximum initial velocity and a frictionless rail (approximately 6 mm); and




a represents the dimension from the downstream edge of the actuator door


2334


to the leading edge of the coin at the preferred strike position (approximately 3 mm).




The preferred minimum leading gap of approximately 12 mm applies when a non-accepted coin (or other object) precedes an accepted coin. In the common case of a string of consecutive accepted coins, this constraint need not be enforced after the first coin in the stream.




In one embodiment, the preferred trailing gap is described by the following equation:






GAP


tr.min




=Δd




StoA.trail




Δd




ontime


+Error


minus




+b−a−D




coin.mi


  (2)






where:




Δd


StoA.trail


represents the change in actual inter-coin gap between the sensor


58


and the door


62


(approximately 2 mm);




Δd


ontime


represents the distance the coins travel during the time the actuator door is extended (approximately 5 mm);




Error


minus


represents the error due to compensation uncertainties, assuming trailing gap worst conditions of zero initial velocity and a sticky or high-friction rail (approximately 6 mm);




b represents the length 2336 of the door


62


; and




D


coin.mi


represents the diameter of the accepted coin (in the worst case for a common U.S. coin mix, 17.5 mm).




This results in a preferred minimum trailing gap of 5.2 mm.




A process for verifying the existence of preferred leading and trailing gaps, in appropriate situations, and/or selecting or controlling the activation of the door


62


to strike coins at the preferred position, is described below.




In the depicted embodiment, the region of the common entrance


1728


(

FIG. 17

) is provided with a flapper movable from a first position


1732




a


which guides the coins into the first coin tube


64




a


for delivery, ultimately, to a first coin trolley


66




a,


to a second position


1732




b


for deflection to the second coin tube


64




b


for delivery to the second coin trolley


66




b.


In one embodiment, the flapper


1732


is made of plastic to reduce noise and the tendency to bind during operation. A solenoid actuator


1734


, via link arm


1736


, is used to move the flapper between the positions


1732




a,




1732




b,


e.g. in response to control signals from a microcontroller (described below). The flapper


1732


may also be rapidly cycled between its extreme positions to self-clean material from the mechanism. In one embodiment, such self-cleaning is performed after each transaction. In one embodiment, coin detectors such as paired LEDs and optical detectors


1738




a, b


output signals to the microcontroller whenever passage of a coin is detected. These signals may be used for various purposes such as verifying that a coin deflected by the door


62


is delivered to a coin tube, verifying that the flapper


1732


is in the correct position, and detecting coin tube blockages such as may result from backup of coins from an over-filled coin bin. Thus, the sensor


1738




a,




1738




b


at the end of each tube, each provides data used for performing two or more functions, such as verifying accepted-coin delivery, verifying flapper placement, and verifying and detecting coin bin overfill.




As best seen in

FIGS. 27A and 27B

, the sensor


58


is preferably directly mounted on the sensor PCB


2512


and communicates, electrically, therewith via a heater


2702


with leads


2704


soldered onto the board


2512


. Providing the sensor and the sensor board as a single integrated unit reduces manufacturing costs and elminates cabling and associated signal noise. The sensor


58


is made of a core


2802


(

FIGS. 28A

,


28


B) with a lower-frequency


2804


and high frequency


2806


windings on the core. Polarity of the windings should be observed so that they are properly synchronized. Providing a winding in a reverse direction can cause signal cancellation.




The core


2802


, in the depicted embodiment, is generally U-shaped with a lower annular, semicircular, rectangular cross-sectioned portion


2808


and an upper portion defining two space-apart legs


2812




a,




2812




b.


The core


2802


, in the depicted embodiment, has a thickness


2814


or less than about 0.5 inches, preferably about 0.2 inches (about 5 mm), a height


2816


of about 2.09 inches (about 53 mm) and a width


2818


of about 1.44 inches (about 3.65 cm) although other dimensions can also be used, such as a thickness greater than about 0.5 inches.




Because the sensor


58


is preferably relatively thin,


2814


, the magnetic filed is relatively tightly focused in the longitudinal (streamwise) direction. As a result, the coin or other object must be relatively close to the sensor before the coin will have significant effect on sensor ouput. For this reason, it is possible to provide relatively close spacing of coins without substantial risk of undesirable influence of a leading or following coin or sensor output.




The facing surfaces


2822




a, b


of the legs


2812




a, b


are, in the depicted embodiment, substantially parallel and planar and are spaced apart a distance


2824


of about 0.3 inches (about 8 mm). The interior facing surfaces


2822




a, b


have a height at least equal to the width of the coin rail


2826


, such as about 1.3 inches (about 33 mm). With the sensor positioned as depicted in

FIG. 21

in the operating configuration, the upper leg


2812




a


of the core is spaced from the lower leg


2812




b


of the core (see

FIG. 23D

) by the inter-face gap


2824


to define a space


2304


for coin passage through the inter-leg gap. The core


2802


may be viewed as having the shape of a gapped torroid with extended legs


2812




a,




2812




b


with parallel faces


2822




a, b.


In one embodiment, the legs


2812




a,b


are substantially parallel. In another embodiment, the legs


2812




a, b


are slightly inclined with respect to one another to define a tapered gap. Without wishing to be bound by any theory, it is believed that, as depicted in

FIG. 28E

, extended faces which are inclined to define a gap which slightly tapers


2832


(taper exaggerated, for at least some embodiments in

FIG. 28E

) vertically downward yields somewhat greater sensitivity near the rail (where the majority of the coins or other items will be located) but is relatively intensive to the vertical


2828


or horizontal


2832


position of coins therein (so as to provide useful data regardless of moderate coin bounce and/or wobble) as a coin passes through the gap


2824


. In the embodiment of

FIG. 28F

, the extended faces taper in the opposite vertical direction


2834


. The faces may be configured at an angle


2836




a,b,c


to the lateral axis


2838


of the sensor, as depicted in FIGS.G, H, and I. By selecting the angle(s)


2836


ABC used, or otherwise selecting the shapes of the sensor faces, other tapered spaces between the legs can be provided. It is also possible to provide for changes in inter-leg spacing as a function of the distance along the longitudinal axis


2858


including changes which are non-linear, such as providing curved, angled, dog-legged or similar sensor face configuration.




In the depicted embodiment, the faces


2822




a,b


extend


2816


across the entire path width


2133


, to sense all metallic objects that move along the path in the region of the sensor. It is also possible to provide face extents which are larger or smaller than the path width, such as equal to the diameter of the largest acceptable coin.




It is believed that providing a core with a large gap (i.e. with more air volume) is partially responsible for decreasing the sensitivity to coin misalignments but tends to result in a somewhat magnetic sensitivity and an increase in cross-talk. In one embodiment, the sensor can provide reliable sensor output despite a vertical displacement (“bounce”) of about 0.1 inch (about 2.5 mm) or more, and a sideways (away from the stringers) displacement of “wobble” of up to 0.015 inches (about 0.4 mm).




In the depicted embodiment the low frequency winding


2804


is positioned at the bottom of the semicircular portion


2808


and the high frequency winding is positioned on each leg


2086




a, b


of the semicircular portion. In one embodiment the low frequency winding is configured to have an inductance (in the diving and detection circuitry described below) of about 4.0 millihenrys and the high frequency winding


2806




a, b


to have an inductance of about 40 microhenrys. These inductance values are measured in the low frequency winding with the high frequency winding open and measured in the high frequency winding with the low frequency winding shorted together. The signals on the windings are provided to printed circuit board via leads


2704


.




In the embodiment of

FIG. 28C

, the low frequency winding


2842


crosses over itself whereas in the embodiment of

FIG. 28D

, a single continuous winding


2844


is provided without cross-over or multiple layers, which is believed to improve the consistency and repeatability of sensor performance. Without wishing to be bound by any theory, this is believed to be due at least partially to increasing the self-resonant frequency of the low-frequency winding.




In the embodiment of

FIG. 28C

, the high frequency windings


2846


are positioned about midway up the bight


2846


of the sensor. In the embodiment of

FIG. 28D

, the high frequency windings


2852


are positioned farther towards the gapped end


2854


and, in the depicted embodiment, at a non-orthogonal angle


2856


with respect to the longitudinal axis


2858


of the sensor. The position of the high frequency winding shown in

FIG. 28D

is believed to provide improved coupling from the high frequency windings to the coin and less undesirable coupling between the high frequency and the low frequency windings. Further, it is believed that by decreasing the number of turns for the high frequency winding, a resultant decrease in the winding-to-coin leakage inductance improves coin coupling (while maintaining the high frequency winding inductance, as described above) and further improves high frequency performance of the sensor.




In addition to the toroid or torus-shaped sensors (

FIGS. 2A

,


2


B), extended-leg sensors (

FIGS. 28A-1

) and other depicted and described sensor shapes, other shapes for the magnetic core can be provided, such as a G-shape(


5612


, FIG.


56


A), a C-shape (


5614


, FIG.


56


B), a triangular shape (


5618


, FIG.


56


D), a square shape (


5616


, FIG.


56


C), a rectangular shape(


5622


, FIG.


56


E), a polygonal shape(


5624


, FIG.


56


F), a circular shape (


214


, FIG.


2


A), a V-shape (


5626


FIG.


56


G), and an oval or elliptical shape(


5628


,

FIG. 56H

, sections or portions thereof and the like. It is believed that alternative magnetic core shapes can be advantageously considered, despite effects such shape changes may have on sensor performance, at least partially because other shapes may be found to be more cost-effective to produce.




Although the depicted embodiments provide a sensor with a single magnetic core as a unitary piece, it is possible to configure a sensor with two spaced apart components such as providing the signal-generating magnetic means on one side of a coin and a signal-receiving magnetic means on the other side of a coin (as the coin moves past the center). It is believed, however, that such a multipart sensor will present alignment requirements and may prove to be relatively expensive or provide less uniform or reliable performance.





FIG. 29

depicts the major functional components of the sensor PCB


2512


. In general, the sensor or transducer


58


provides a portion of a phase locked loop which is maintained at a substantially constant frequency. Thus, the low frequency coil leds are provided to a low frequency PLL


2902




a


and the high frequency leads are provided to high frequency sensor PLL


2902




b.







FIG. 40

provides an overview of a typical transaction. The transaction begins when a user presses a “go” or start button


4012


. In response, the systems opens the gate, and begins the trommel and coin pickup assembly disk motors


4014


. As coins begin passing through the system, a sensor (not shown) is used to determine if the hopper is in an overfill condition, in which case the gate is closed


4018


. The system is continuously monitored for current peaks in the motors


4022


e.g. using current sensors


21


,


4121


(

FIG. 41

) so that corrective action such as reversing either or both of the motors for dejamming purposes


4024


can be implemented.




During normal counting operations, the system will sense that coins are streaming past the sensor


4026


. The system is able to determine


4028


whether coins are being sent to the reject chute or the coin trolley. In the latter case, the system proceeds normally if the sensor in the coin tube outputs an intermittent or flickering signal. However, if the coin tube sensor is stuck on or off, indicating a jam upstream or downstream (such as an overfilled bin), operations are suspended


4036


.




In one embodiment, the flow of coins through the system is managed and/or balanced. As shown in

FIG. 41

, coin flow can be managed by, e.g., controlling any or all of the state of the gate


17


, state or speed of the trommel motor


19


and/or state or speed of the coin pickup assembly motor


2032


e.g. to optimize or otherwise control the amount of coins residing in the trommel and/or coin pickup assembly. For example, if a sensor


1754


indicates that the coin pickup assembly


54


has become full, the microcontroller


3202


can turn off the trommel to stop feeding the coin pickup assembly. In one embodiment, a sensor


4112


, coupled to or adjacent the trommel


52


, senses the amount (and/or type) of debris falling out of the trommel during a particular transaction or time period and, in response, the microcontroller


3202


causes the coin pickup assembly motor


2302


to run in a different speed and/or movement pattern (e.g. to accommodate a particularly dirty batch of coins), possibly at the expense of a reduction in throughput.




When the coin sensor


58


(and associated circuitry and software) are used to measure or calculate coin speed, this information may be used not only to control the deflector door


62


as described herein, but to output an indication of a need for maintenance. For example as coin speeds decrease, a message (or series of messages) to that effect may be sent to the host computer


46


so that it can request preventive maintenance, potentially thereby avoiding a jam that might halt a transaction.




Once the system senses that coins are no longer streaming past the sensor, if desired a sensor may be used to determine whether coins are present e.g. near the bottom of the hopper


4042


. If coins are still present, the motors continue operating


4044


until coins are no longer detected near the bottom of the hopper. Once no more coins are detected near the bottom of the hopper


4046


, the system determines that the transaction is complete. The system will then activate the coin rake, and, if coins are sensed to move past the coin sensor


58


or into the hopper, the counting cycle is preferably repeated. Otherwise, the transaction will be considered finished


4028


, and the system will cycle the trap door and output e.g. a voucher of a type which may be exchanged for goods, services or cash.




The coin sensor phase locked loop (PLL), which includes the sensor or transducer


58


, maintains a constant frequency and responds to the presence of a coin in the gap


2824


by a change in the oscillator signal amplitude and a change in the PLL error voltage. The phase locked loop shown in the depicted embodiment requires no adjustment and typically settles in about 200 microseconds. The system is self-starting and begins oscillating and locks phase automatically. It is also possible to provide frequencies or signals for application to a sensor without using a phase lock. The winding signals (2 each for high frequency and low frequency channels) are conditioned


2904


as described below and sent to an analog-to-digital (A/D) converter


2906


. The A/D converter samples and digitizes the analog signals and passes the information to the microcontroller


3202


(

FIG. 32

) on the Control Printed Circuit Board Assembly (PCBA) (described below) for further manipulation to identify coins.




Although in one embodiment the signal or signals provided to the sensor are substantially sinusoidal, it is also possible to use configurations in which non-sinusoidal signals are provided to the sensor, such as (filtered or unfiltered) substantially square wave, pulse, triangle, or similar periodic signals. Such non-sinusoidal signals, in addition to offering system cost savings, for some configurations, also typically include various harmonics. A harmonic-rich signal, such as a square wave signal is believed to be affected differently for different coins, e.g. due to the interrelationships of the various harmonics' phase and amplitude. For example, in one embodiment, as depicted in

FIG. 55D

, application of a square wave voltage to a sensor winding may result in a harmonic-rich current flowing through the sensor winding


4552


. The sensor current can be analyzed as depicted


4552


or various components or bandwidths of the sensor current can be separated, e.g., using filters


4554




a,b,c


for analysis by, e.g., a microprocessor


2556


as described herein. In this way, it is possible to use one signal applied to a sensor coil in connection with two or more signal detecting means for distinguishing one coin from another. If desired, each signal detecting means can be used to provide information on one aspect of a coin's electrical properties. Alternatively, it is possible to obtain information on different aspects of a coin's electrical properties by providing different signals


4542




a,b,c,


applying different wave forms, frequencies, and the like


4544




a,b,c


to a coin, for detection by sensors


4546




a,b,c


as depicted in

FIG. 55



c.






Although a phase locked loop (PLL) approach to providing one or more constant frequencies is depicted in

FIG. 29

, other approaches can be used for achieving a relationship between a first and a second frequency. For example, as depicted in

FIG. 55A

, if a first frequency is provided


4512


, a frequency divided


4514


can be used to provide a second frequency


4516


in a known and stable relationship to the first frequency. In the embodiment of

FIG. 55B

, if a first frequency is provided


4522


, a second frequency,


4524


may be obtained by using a mixing


4526


to combine the first frequency


4522


with a third frequency


4528


, as will be clear to those who have skill in the art after understanding the present disclosure.




One approach provides a plurality of signals for distinguishing coin types (e.g., a different signal “tuned” for each anticipated or acceptable coin type. It is believed this approach may provide relatively high accuracy but may involve additional cost compared to providing a reduced number of signals.




Returning to the configuration of

FIG. 29

, as a coin passes through the transducer


58


, the amplitude of the PLL error voltage


2909




a,b


(sometimes referred to herein as a “D” signal) and the amplitude of the PLL sinusoidal oscillator signal (sometimes referred to as “Q” signal) decrease. The PLL error voltage is filtered and conditioned for conversion to digital data. The oscillator signal is filtered, demodulated, then conditioned for conversion to digital data. Since the signals are generated by two PLL circuits (high and low frequency), four signals result as the “signature” for identifying coins. Two of the signals (LF-D, LF-Q) are indicative of low-frequency, coin characteristics, and the remaining two signals (HF-D, HF-Q) are indicative of high-frequency coin characteristics.

FIG. 30

shows a four channel oscilloscope plot of the change in the four signals (LF-D


3002


, HF-D


3006


, and HF-Q


3008


) as a coin passes the sensor. Information about the coin is represented in the shape, timing and amplitude of the signal changes in the four signals. The Control PCBA, which receives a digitized data representation of these signals, performs a discrimination algorithm to categorize a coin and determine its speed through the transducer, as described below.




The coin sensor phase locked loop, according to one embodiment, consists of a voltage controlled oscillator, a phase comparator, amplifier/filter for the phase comparator output, and reference clock. The two PLL's operate at 200 KHz and 2.0 MHZ, with their reference clocks synchronized. The phase relationship between the two clock signals


3101




a, b


is maintained by using a divided-down clock rather than two independent clock sources


3102


. The 2 MHZ clock output


3101




a


is also used as the master clock for the A/D converter


2906


.




As a coin passes through the transducer's slot, there is a change in the magnetic circuit's reluctance. This is seen by circuitry as a decrease in the inductance value and results in a corresponding decrease in the amplitude of the PLL error voltage, providing a first coin-identifying factor. The passing coin also causes a decrease in the amplitude of the sinusoidal oscillator waveform, depending on its composition, e.g. due to an eddy current loss, and this is measured to provide a second coin-identifying factor.




The topology of the oscillators


2902




a, b


relies on a 180 degree phase shift for feedback to its drive circuitry and is classified as a Colpitts oscillator. The Colpitts oscillator is a symmetric topology and allows the oscillator to be isolated from ground. Drive for the oscillator is provided by a high speed comparator


3104




a, b.


The comparator has a fast propagation to minimize distortion due to phase delay, low input current to minimize loss, and remains stable while operating in its linear region. In the depicted embodiment, the plus and minus terminals of the inductors go directly to a high-speed comparator which autobiases the comparator so that signals convert quickly and are less susceptible to oscillation and so that there is no need to bias the comparator to a central voltage level. By tying the plus and minus terminals of the inductor to the plus and minus terminals of the comparator, the crossing of the terminals' voltage at any arbitrary point in the voltage spectrum will cause a switch in the comparator output voltage so that it is autobiasing. This achieves a more nearly even (50%) duty cycle.




The output of the comparator drives the oscillator through resistors


3106




a, b.


The amplitude of the oscillating signal varies and is correlated to the change in “Q” of the tuned circuit. Without wishing to be bound by any theory, the change is believed to be due to change in eddy current when a coin passes through the transducer gap. Resistors


3108




a, b, c, d


work with the input capacitance of the comparator


3104




a, b


to provide filtering of unwanted high frequency signal components.




Voltage control of the oscillator frequency is provided by way of the varactors


3112




a, b, c, d,


which act as voltage controlled capacitors (or tuning diodes). These varactors change the capacitive components of the oscillator. Use of two varactors maintains balanced capacitance on each leg of windings


2804


,


2806


. It is also possible to provide for tuning without using varactors such as by using variable inductance. As the reverse diode voltage increases, capacitance decreases. Thus by changing the Voltage Controlled Oscillator (VCO) input voltage in accordance with the change in inductance due to the presence of a coin, the frequency of oscillation can be maintained. This VCO input voltage is the signal used to indicate change of inductance in this circuit.




The phase/frequency detector


3114




a, b


performs certain control functions in this circuit. It compares the output frequency of the comparator


3106




a, b


to a synchronized reference clock signal and has an output data that varies as the two signals diverge. The output stage of the device amplifies and filters this phase comparator output signal. This amplified and filtered output provides the VCO control signal used to indicate change of inductance in this circuit.




In addition, the depicted device has an output


3116




a, b


which, when appropriately conditioned, can be used to determine whether the PLL is “in lock”. In one embodiment, a lock-fail signal is sent to the microprocessor on the Control PCBA as an error indication, and an LED is provided to indicate when both high and low frequency PLL are in a locked state.




Because the sensor


58


receives excitation at two frequencies through two coils wrapped on the same ferrite core, there is a potential for the coupling of signals which may result in undesired amplitude modulation on the individual signals that are being monitored. Filters


2912




a, b


remove the undesired spectral component while maintaining the desired signal, prior to amplitude measurement. In this way, the measured amplitude of each signal is not influenced by an independent change in the amplitude of the other oscillator circuit signals.




The filtered output signals are level-shifted to center them at 3.0 VDC in order to control the measurement of the signal amplitude by downstream circuitry.




In the depicted embodiment, the active highpass and lowpass filters are implemented as Sallen-Key Butterworth two-pole filter circuits


2916




a, b.


DC offset adjustment of the output signal is accomplished by using a buffered voltage divider as a reference. Input buffers


2914




a, b


are provided to minimize losses of the oscillator circuit by maintaining a high impedance to the filter stage.




The lowpass filter


2916




a


is designed to provide more than 30 dB of attenuation at 2 MHZ while maintaining integrity of the 200 KHz signal, with less that 0.5 dB of loss at that frequency. The cutoff frequency is 355 KHz. Highpass filtering of the output from the lowpass filter is provided


2918




a


with a cutoff frequency of 20 KHz. Tying to a DC reference


2922




a


provides an adjusted output that centers the 200 KHz signal at 3.0 VDC. This output offset adjustment is desired for subsequent amplitude measurement.




The highpass filter


2916




b


is designed to provide more than 30 dB of attenuation at 200 KHz while maintaining integrity of the 2.0 MHZ signal, with less than 0.5 dB of loss at that frequency. The cutoff frequency is 1.125 MHz.




Amplitude measurement of the sinusoidal oscillator waveform is accomplished by demodulating the signal with a negative peak detecting circuit, and measuring the difference between this value and the DC reference voltage at which the sinusoidal signal is centered. This comparison measurement is then scaled to utilize a significant portion of the A/D converter's input range. The input to the circuit is a filtered sinusoidal signal centered at a known DC reference voltage output of the highpass or lowpass active filter.




The input signal is demodulated by a closed-loop diode peak detector circuit. The time constant of the network, e.g. 20 msec, is long compared to the period of the sinusoidal input, but short when compared to the time elapsed as a coin passes through the sensor. The relationship allows the peak detector to react quickly to a change in amplitude caused by a coin event. The circuit is implemented as a negative peak detector rather than a positive peak detector because the comparator is more predictable in its ability to drive the signal to ground than to drive it high. Comparator


3126




a, b,


such as model LT016CS8, available from Linear Technology, provide a high slew rate and maintain stability while in the linear region. The analog closed-loop peak detector avoids the potential phase error problems that filter-stage phase lag and dynamic PLL phase shifts might create for a sample-and-hold implementation, and eliminates the need for a sampling clock.




The negative peak detector output is compared to the DC reference voltage, then scaled and filtered, by using an op amp 3124


a, b


implemented as a difference amplifier. The difference amp is configured to subtract the negative peak from the DC reference and multiply the difference by a scaling factor. In one embodiment, for the low frequency channel, the scaling factor is 4.02, and the high frequency channel scales the output by 5.11. The output of the difference amplifier has a lowpass filter on the feedback with a corner frequency at approximately 160 Hz. In the depicted embodiment, there is a snubber at the output to filter high frequency transients caused by switching the A/D converter.




The error voltage measurement, scaling and filtering circuit


3128




a, b


is designed to subtract 3.0 VDC from the PLL error voltage and amplify the resulting difference by a factor of 1.4. The PLL error voltage input signal will be in the 3.0-6.0 VDC range, and in order to maximize the use of the A/D converter's input range, the offset voltage is subtracted and the signal is amplified.




The input signal is pre-filtered with a lowpass corner frequency of 174 Hz, and the output is filtered in the feedback loop, with a cut-off frequency 340 Hz. A filter at the output filters high frequency transients caused by switching in the A/D converter.




In an interface circuit,


2922


data and control signals are pulled up and pass through series termination resistors. In addition, the data signals DATA-DATA


15


are buffered by bi-directional registers. These bidirectional buffers isolate the A/D converter from direct connection to the data bus and associated interconnect cabling.




The A/D converter


2906


is a single supply, 8-channel, 12-bit sampling converter (such as model AD7859AP available from Analog Devices). The A/D transactions are directly controlled by the microprocessor on the Control PCBA.




An overview of control provided for various hardware components is depicted in FIG.


32


. In

FIG. 32

, the control hardware is generally divided into the coin sensor hardware


3204


and the coin transport hardware


3206


. A number of aspects of hardware


3204


,


3206


are controlled via a microcontroller


3202


which may be any of a number of microcontrollers. In one embodiment, Model AM186ES, available from Advanced Micro Devices, is provided.




The microcontroller


3202


communicates with and is, to some degree, controlled by, the host computer


46


. The host computer


46


can be any of a number of computers. In one embodiment, computer


46


is a computer employing an Intel 486 or Premium® processor or equivalent. The host computer


46


and microcontroller


3202


communicate over serial line


3208


via respective serial ports


3212


,


3214


. The microcontroller


3202


, in the depicted embodiment, has a second serial port


3216


which may be used for purposes such as debugging, field service


3218


and the like.




During normal operation, programming and data for the microcontroller are stored in memory which may include normal random access memory (RAM)


3222


, non-volatile random access memory such as flash memory, static memory and the like


3224


, and read-only memory


3226


which may include programmable and/or electronically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM). In one embodiment, microprocessor firmware can be downloaded from a remote location via the host computer.




Applicants software


3228


for controlling operation of the host computer


46


may be stored in e.g., hard disk memory, nonvolatile RAM memory and the like.




Although a number of items are described as being implemented in software, in general it is also possible to provide a hardware implementation such as by using hard wired control logic and/or an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC).




An input/output (I/O) interface on the microcontroller


3232


facilitates communication such as bus communication, data I/O, interrupt request and/or direct memory access (DMA) requests. Since, as described more thoroughly below, DMA is used for much of the sensor communications, the coin sensor circuitry includes DMA logic circuitry


3234


as well as circuitry for status and control signals


3236


. Although, in the described embodiment, only a single sensor is provided for coin sensing, it is possible to configure an operable device having additional sensors


3238


.




In addition to the motors


2502


,


2032


, solenoids,


2014


,


1734


,


2306


and sensors


1738


,


1754


described above in connection with coin transport, controlling latches, gates and drivers of a type that will be understood by those of skill in the art, after understanding the present invention, are provided


3242


.




A method for deriving, from the four sensor signals (

FIG. 30

) a set of values or a “signature” indicative of a coin which has passed the sensor, is described in connection with the graphs of

FIG. 33

which show a hypothetical example of the four signals LFD


3302


, LFQ


3304


, HFD


3306


and HFQ


3308


during a period of time in which a coin passes through the arms of the sensors. Units of

FIG. 33

are arbitrary since

FIG. 33

is used to illustrate the principles behind this embodiment. A baseline value


3312


,


3314


,


3316


,


3318


is associated with each of the sensor signals, representing a value equal to the average or mean value for that signal when no coins are adjacent the sensor. Although, in the depicted embodiment, the LFD signal is used to define a window of time


3322


during which the minimum values for each of the four signals


3302


,


3304


,


3306


,


3308


will be determined and other threshold-crossing events (at least in part because the signal typically has the sharpest peak), it would be possible to use other signals to define any or all of the various crossing events, or it may be possible to define the window separately for each signal.




In the depicted embodiment, the base line value


3312


associated with the LFD signal


3302


is used to define a descent threshold


3324


(equal to the LFD baseline


3312


minus a predefined descent offset


3326


, and a predefined gap threshold


3328


equal to the LFD baseline


3312


minus a gap offset


3332


).




In one embodiment, the system will remain in an idle loop (

FIG. 34

) until the system is placed in a ready status (as described below)


3404


. Once the system is in ready status, it is ready to respond to passage of a coin past the sensor.




in the depicted embodiment, the beginning of a coin passage past the sensor is signaled by the LFD signal


3302


becoming less


4212


than the descent threshold


3324


(


3406


) which, in the embodiment of

FIG. 33

, occurs at time t,


3336


. When this event occurs


3338


, a number of values are initialized or stored


3408


. The status is set to a value indicating that the window


3322


is open


4214


. Both the “peak” time value and the “lead” time value are set equal to the clock value, i.e. equal to t,


3336


. Four variables LFDMIN


3342


, LFQMIN


3344


, HFDMIN


3346


and HFQMIN


3348


, are used to hold a value indicating the minimum signal values, for each of the signals


3302


,


3304


,


3306


,


3308


, thus-far achieved during the window


3322


and thus are initialized at the T, values for each of the variables


3302


,


3304


,


3306


,


3308


. In the illustration of

FIG. 33

, the running minimum values


3342


,


3344


,


3346


,


3348


are depicted as dotted lines, slightly offset vertically downward for clarity.




During the time that the window is open


3322


, the minimum-holding variables LFDMIN, LFQMIN, HFDMIN and HFQMIN will be updated, as needed, to reflect the minimum value thus-far achieved. In the depicted embodiment, the four values are updated serially and cyclically, once every clock signal. Updating of values can be distributed in a different fashion if it is desired, (or example, to provide greater time resolution for some variables than for others. It is believed that, by over sampling specific channels, recognition and accuracy an be improved. As the LFD value is being tested and, if necessary, updated, a value for an ascent threshold


3336


(which will be used to define the end of the window


3312


, as described below) is calculated or updated


3414


. The value for the ascent threshold


3336


is calculated are updated as a value equal to the current value for LFDMIN


3341


plus a predefined ascent hysteresis


3352


.




Whenever the LFDMIN value


3342


must be updated (i.e., when the value of LFD descends below the previously-scored minimum value


3412


), the “peak” time value is also updated by being made equal to the current clock value. In this way, at the end


4226


of the window


3322


, the “peak” variable will hold a value indicating the time at which LFD


3302


reached its minimum value within the window


3322


.




As a coin passes through the arms of a sensor, the four signal values


3302


,


3304


,


3306


,


3308


will, in general, reach a minimum value and then begin once more to ascend toward the baseline value


3312


,


3314


,


3316


,


3318


. In the depicted embodiment, the window


3322


is declared “closed” when the LFD value


3302


raises to a point that it equals the current value for the ascent value threshold


3336


. In the illustration of

FIG. 33

, this event


3354


occurs at time T


3




3356


. Upon detection


3418


of this event, the current value for the clock (i.e., the value indicating time T


3


) is stored in the “trail” variable. Thus, at this point, three times have been stored in three variables: “lead” holds a value indicating time T


1


, i.e., the time at which the window was opened; “peak” holds a value indicating time T


2


, i.e., the minimum value for variable LFD


3302


; and variable “tail” holds a value indicating time T


3


, i.e., the time when the window


3322


was closed.




The other portion of the signature for the coin which was just detected (in addition to the three time variables) are values indicating the minimum achieved, within the window


3332


, for each of the variables


3302


,


3304


,


3306


,


3308


. These values are calculated


3422


by subtracting the minimum values at time T


3




3342


,


3344


,


3346


,


3348


from the respective baseline values


3312


,


3314


,


3316


,


3318


to yield four difference or delta values, ΔLFD


3362


, ΔLFQ


3364


, ΔHFD


3366


and ΔHFQ


3368


. Providing output which is relative to the baseline value for each signal is useful in avoiding sensitivity to temperature changes.




Although, at time t


3




3356


, all the values required for the coin signature have been obtained, in the depicted embodiment, the system is not yet placed in a “ready” state. This is because it is desired to assure that there is at least a minimum gap between the coin which was just detected and any following coin. It is also desirable to maintain at least a minimum distance or gap from any preceding coin. In general, it is believed useful to provide at least some spacing between coins for accurate sensor reading, since coins which are touching can result in eddy current passing between coins. Maintaining a minimum gap at coins move toward the door


62


is useful in making sun that door


62


will strike the coin at the desired time and location. Striking too soon or too late may result in deflecting an accepted coin other than into the acceptance bin, degrading system accuracy.




Information gathered by the sensor


58


may also be used in connection with assuring the existence of a preferred minimum gap between coins. In this way, if coins are too closely spaced, one or more coins which might otherwise be an accepted coin, will not be deflected (and will not be “counted” as an accepted coin). Similarly, in one embodiment, a coin having an acceleration less than a threshold (such as less than half a maximum acceleration) will not be accepted.




Accordingly, in order to assure an adequate leading gap, the system is not placed in a “ready” state until the LFD signal


3301


has reached a value equal to the gap threshold


3328


. After the system verifies


3424


that this event


3372


has occurred, the status is set equal to “ready”


3326


and the system returns to an idle state


3401


to await passage of the next coin.




To provide for a minimum preferred trailing gap, in one embodiment, the software monitors the LFD signal


3302


for a short time after the ascending hysteresis criterion has been satisfied


4236


. If the signal has moved sufficiently back towards the baseline


3312


(measured either with respect to the baseline or with respect to the peak) after a predetermined time period, then an adequate tailing gap exists and the door, if the coin is an accepted coin, will be actuated


4244


. If the trailing gap is not achieved, the actuation pulse is canceled


4244


, and normally the coin will be returned to the user. In all cases, software thresholds are preferably calibrated using the smallest coins (e.g., a U.S. dime in the case of a U.S. coin mix).




Because the occurrence of events such as the crossing of thresholds


3338


,


3354


,


3372


are only tested at discreet time intervals


3411




a


,


3411




b


,


3411




c


,


3411




d


, in most cases the event will not be detected until some time after it has occurred. For example, it may happen that, with regard to the ascent-crossing event


3354


, the previous event-test at time T


4




3374


occurs before the crossing event


3354


and the next event-test occurs at time T


5


, a period of time


3378


after the crossing event


3354


. Accordingly, in one embodiment, once a test determines that a crossing event has occurred, interpolation such as linear interpolation, spline-fit interpolation or the like, is used to provide a more accurate estimate of the actual time of the event


3354


.




As noted above, by time t,


3356


, all the values required for the coin signature have been obtained. Also, by time t


3


, the information which can be used for calculating the time at which the door


62


should be activated (assuming the coin is identified as an accepted coin) is available. Because the distance from the sensor to the door is constant and known, the amount of time required for a coin to travel to the preferred position with respect to the door can be calculated exactly if the acceleration of the coin along the rail is known(and constant) and a velocity, such as the velocity at the sensor is known. According to one method, acceleration is calculated by comparing the velocity of the coin as it moves past the sensor


58


with the velocity of the coin as it passes over the “knee” in the transition region


2121


C. In one embodiment, the initial “knee” velocity is assumed to be a single value for all coins, in one case, 0.5 meters/second. Knowing the velocity at two locations (the knee


2121


C and the sensor location


58


) and knowing the distance from the knee


2121


C to the sensor location


58


, the acceleration experienced by the coin can be calculated. Based on this calculated acceleration it is then possible to calculate how long it will be, continuing at that acceleration, before the coin is positioned at the preferred location over the actuator. This system essentially operates on a principle of assuming an initial velocity and using measurements of the sensor to ultimately calculate how friction (or other factors such as surface tension) affects the acceleration being experienced by each coin. Another approach might be used in which an effective friction was assumed as a constant value and the data gathered at the sensor was used to calculate the initial (“knee”) velocity.




In any case, the calculation of the time when the coin will reach the preferred position can be expected to have some amount of error (i.e., difference between calculated position and actual position at the door activation time). The error can arise from a number of factors including departures from the assumption regarding the knee velocity, non-constant values for friction along the rail, and the like. In one embodiment it has been found that, using the described procedure, and for the depicted and described design, the worst-case error occurs with the smallest coin (e.g., amount 17.5 mm in diameter) and amounts to approximately 6 mm in either direction. It is believed that, in at least some environments, an error window of 6 mm is tolerable (i.e., results in a relatively low rate of misdirecting coins or other objects).




In order to implement this procedure, data obtained at the sensor


58


is used to calculate a velocity. According to one scheme, time t


1




3336


is taken as the time when the coin first enters the sensor and time t


2


(the “peak” time) is taken as the time when the coin is centered on the sensor, and thus has traveled a distance approximately equal to a coin radius. Because, once the coin has been recognized (e.g. as described below in connection with FIGS.


36


and


37


), the radius of the coin is known (e.g. using a lookup table), it is possible to calculate velocity as radius divided by the difference (t


2


−t


1


).




The procedure illustrated in

FIGS. 33 and 34

is an example of one embodiment of a detection process


3502


. As seen in

FIG. 35

, a number of processes, in addition to detection, should be performed between the time data is obtained by the sensor


58


and the time a coin reaches the door


62


. In general, processes can be considered as being either recognition processes


3504


relating to identifying and locating objects which pass the sensor, and disposition processes


3506


, relating to sending coins to desired destinations. Once the detection process has examined the stream of sensor readings and has generated signatures corresponding to the coin (or other object) passing the sensor, the signatures are passed


4228


to in categorization process


3508


. This process examines the signatures received from the detection process


3502


and determines, if possible, what coin or object has passed the sensor. Referring to

FIG. 32

, the recognition and disposition processes


3504


,


3506


are preferably performed by the microcontroller


3102


.





FIG. 36

provides an illustration of one embodiment of a categorization process. As shown in

FIG. 36

, in one embodiment a calibration mode may be provided in which a plurality of known types of coins are placed in the machine and these coins are used to define maximum and minimum LFD, LFQ, HFD and HFQ values for that particular category or denomination of coin. In one embodiment, timing parameters are also established and stored during the calibration process. According to the embodiment of

FIG. 36

, if the system is undergoing calibration


3602


, the system does not attempt to recognize or categorize the coins and, by convention, the coins used for calibration are categorized as “unrecognized”


3604


.




As illustrated in

FIG. 37

, in one embodiment, a coin signature


3702


is used to categorize an object by performing a comparison for each of a number of different potential categories, starting with the first category


3606


and stepping to each next category


3608


until a match is found


3612


or all categories are exhausted


3614


without finding a match


3616


, in which case the coin is categorized


4110


as unrecognized


3604


. During each test for a match


3618


, each of the four signal peaks


3362


,


3364


,


3366


,


3368


is compared, (successively (or each category


3104




a


,


3104




b


,


3104




n


) with minimum and maximum (“floor” and “ceiling”) values defining a “window” for each signature component


3712




a


,


3712




b


,


3714




a, b


,


3716




a, b


,


3118




a, b


. A match is declared


3612


for a given category only if all four components of the signature


3362


,


3364


,


3366


, and


3368


fall within the corresponding window for a particular category


3104




a, b, c, n.






In the embodiment of

FIG. 36

, the system may be configured to end the categorization process


3622


whenever the first category


3624


resulting in a match has been found, or to continue


3626


until all n categories have been tested. In normal operation, the first mode


3624


will typically be used. It is believed the latter mode will be useful principally for research and development purposes.




The results of the categorization


3508


are stored in a category buffer


3512


and art provided to the relegator process


3514


. The difference between categorization and relegation relates, in part, to the difference between a coin category and a coin denomination. Not all coins of a given denomination will have similar structure, and thus two coins of the same denomination may have substantially different signatures. For example, pennies minted before


1982


have a structure (copper core) substantially different from that of pennies minted after that date (zinc core). Some precious devices have attempted to define a coin discrimination based on coin denomination, which would thus require a device which recognizes two physically different types of penny at a single category.




According to one embodiment, coins or other objects are discriminated not necessarily on the basis of denomination but on the basis of coin categories (in which a single denomination may have two or more categories). Thus, according to one embodiment pennies minted before 1982 and pennies minted after 1982 belong to two different coin categories


3704


. This use of categories based on physical characteristics of coins (or other objects), rather than attempting to define on the basis of denominations, is advantageous since it is believed that this approach leads to better discrimination accuracy. In particular, by defining separate categories e.g. (or pre-types 1982 and post 1982 pennies, it becomes easier to discriminate all pennies from other objects, whereas if an attempt was made to define a single category embracing both types of pennies, it is believed that the recognition windows or thresholds would have to be so broadly defined that there would be a substantial risk of mis-discrimination By providing a system in which coin categories rather than coin denominations are recognized, coin destinations may be easily configured and changed.




Furthermore, in addition to improving discrimination accuracy, the present invention provides an opportunity to count coins and sort coins or other objects on a basis other than denomination. For example, if desired, the device could be configured to place “real silver” coins in a separate coin bin so that the machine operator can benefit from their potentially greater value.




Once a relegator process


3514


receives information from a category buffer regarding the category of a coin (or other object), the relegator outputs a destination indicator, corresponding to that coin, to a destination buffer


3516


. The data from the destination buffer is provided to a director process


3518


whose function is to provide appropriate control signals at the appropriate time in order to send the coin to a desired destination, e.g. to provide signals causing the deflector door to activate are the proper time if the coin is destined for an acceptance bin. In the embodiment of

FIG. 25

, the director procedure outputs information regarding the action to be taken and the time when it is to be taken to a control schedule process


3522


which generates a control bit image


3524


provided to microprocessor output ports


3526


for transmission to the coin transport hardware


3206


.




In one embodiment, the solenoid is controlled in such a manner as to not only control the time at which the door is activated


4234


,


4244


but also the amount of force to be used (such as the strength and/or duration of the solenoid activation Volts). In one embodiment, the amount of force is varied depending on the mass of the coin, which can be determined, e.g., from a look-up table, based on recognition of the coin category.




Preferably, information from the destination buffer


3516


is also provided to a counter


3528


which retains a tally of at least the number of coins of each denomination sent to the coin bins. It desired, a number of counters can be provided so that the system can keep track not only of each coin denomination, but at each coin category and/or, which coin bin the coin was destined for.




In general, the flow of data depicted in

FIG. 35

represents a narrowing bandwidth in which a relatively large amount of data is provided from the A/D converter which is used by the detects


3502


to output a smaller amount of data (as the coin signature), ultimately resulting in a single counter increment


3528


. According to one embodiment of the present invention, the system is configured to use the most rapid and efficient means of information transfer for those information or signal paths which have the greatest volume or bandwidth requirements. Accordingly, in one embodiment, a direct memory access (DMA) procedure is used in connection with transferring sensor data from the converter


2906


to the microcontroller reading buffer


3500


.




As depicted in

FIG. 38

, a two-channel DMA controller (providing channels DMA


0


and DMA


1


) is used


3802


. In the depicted embodiment, one of the DMA channels is used for uploading the program from one of the serial ports to memory. After this operation is completed, both DMA channels are used in implementing the DMA transfer. DMA


0


is used to write controller data


3804


to the A-to-D converter


2906


, via a control register image buffer


3806


. This operation selects the analog channel for the next read, starts the conversion and sets up the next read for the A-to-D converter output data register. DMA


1


then reads the output data register


3808


. DMA


0


will then write to the controller register


3806


and DMA


1


will read the next analog channel and so forth.




In the preferred embodiment, the DMA interface does not limit the ability of the software to independently read or write to the A-to-D converter. It is possible, however, that writing to the control register of the A-to-D converter in the middle of a DMA transfer may cause the wrong channel to be read.




Preferably the DMA process takes advantage of the DMA channels to configure a multiple word table in memory with the desired A-to-D controller register data. Preferably the table length (number of words in the table) is configurable, permitting a balance to be struck between reducing microcontroller overhead (by using a longer table), and reducing memory requirements (by using a shorter table). The DMA process sets up DMA


0


for writing these words to a fixed I/O address. Next, DMA


1


is set up for reading the same number at words from the same I/O address to a data buffer in memory. DMA


1


is preferably set up to interrupt the processor when all words have been read


3812


. Preferably hardware DMA decoder lope controls the timing between DMA


0


and DMA


1


.





FIG. 39

depicts timing for DMA transfer according to an embodiment of the present invention. In this embodiment, a P


10


pin will be used to enable or disable the timer output


3902


. If the timer enable signal


3904


is low, the hardware will block the timer output


3902


and conversions can only be started by setting the start conversion bit in the control register of the A-to-D converter


3906


. If the timer enable signal


3904


is high, the A/D conversions start at the rising edge of the timer output


3402


, and write cycles will be allowed only after the following edge of the timer output


3902


with read cycles only being allowed after the busy signal


3912


goes low while the timer output signal


3902


is high. The described design provides great flexibility with relatively small overhead. There is a single interrupt (DMA interrupt) event once the buffer is filled with data from the A-to-D converter are read and put into memory. Preferably, software tan be configured to change the DMA configuration to read any or all analog channels, do multiple reads in some channels, read the channels in any order and the like. Preferably, the A-to-D converter is directly linked to the microprocessor by a 16-bit data bus. The microprocessor is able to read or write to the A-to-D converter bus interface port as a single input a output instruction to a fixed I/O address. Data flow between the A-to-D converter and the microprocessor is controlled by the busy


3912


, chip select, read


3414


and write


3908


signals. A conversion clock


3902


and clerk enable


3904


signals provide control and flexibility over the A-to-D conversion rate.




Another embodiment of a gapped torroid sensor, and its use, is depicted in

FIGS. 2A through 16B

. As depicted in

FIG. 2A

, a sensor,


212


includes a core


214


having a generally curved shape and defining a gap


216


, having a first width


218


. In the depicted embodiment, the curved core is a torroidal section. Although “torroidal” includes a locus defined by rotating a circle about a non-intersecting coplanar line, as used herein, the term “torroidal” generally means a shape which is curved or otherwise non-linear. Examples include a ring shape, a U shape, a V shape or a polygon. In the depicted embodiment both the major cross section (of the shape as a whole) and the minor cross section (of the generating form) have a circular shape. However, other major and minor cross-sectional shapes can be used, including elliptical or oval shapes, partial ellipses, ovals or circles (such as a semi-circular shape), polygonal shapes (such as a regular or irregular hexagon/octagon, etc.), and the like.




The core


214


may be made from a number of materials provided that the material is capable of providing a substantial magnetic field in the gap


216


. In one embodiment, the core


214


consists of, or includes, a ferrite material, such as formed by fusing ferric oxide with another material such as a carbonate hydroxide or alkaline metal chloride, a ceramic ferrite, and the like. If the core is driven by an alternating current, the material chosen for the core of the inductor, should be normal-loss or low-loss at the frequency of oscillation such that the “no-coin” Q of the LC circuit is substantially higher than the Q of the LC circuit with a coin adjacent the sensor. This ratio determines, in part, the signal-to-noise ratio for the coin's conductivity measurement. The lower the losses in the core and the winding, the greater the change in eddy current losses, when the coin is placed in or passes by the gap, and thus the greater the sensitivity of the device. In the depicted embodiment, a conductive wire


220


is wound about a portion of the core


214


so as to form an inductive device. Although

FIG. 2A

depicts a single coil, in same embodiments, two or more coils may be used, e.g. as described below. In the depicted embodiment, the coin or other object to be discriminated is positioned in the vicinity of the gap (in the depicted embodiment, within the gap


216


). Thus, in the depicted embodiment the gap width


218


is somewhat larger than the thickness


222


of the thickest coin to be sensed by the sensor


212


, to allow for mis-alignment, movement, deformity, or dirtiness of the coin. Preferably, the gap


216


is as small as possible, consistent with practical passage of the coin. In one embodiment, the gap is about 4 mm.





FIG. 2B

depicts a sensor


212


′, positioned with respect to a coin conveying rail


232


, such that, as the coin


224


moves down the rail


234


, the rail guides the coin


214


through the gap


216


of the senor


212


′. Although

FIG. 2B

depicts the coin


214


traveling in a vertical (on-edge) orientation, the device could be configured so that the coin


224


travels in other orientations, such as in a latent (horizontal) configuration or angles therebetween. One of the advantages of the present invention is the ability to increase speed of coin movement (and thus throughput) since coin discrimination can be performed rapidly. This feature is particularly important in the present invention since coins which move very rapidly down a coin rail have a tendency to “fly” or move partially and/or momentarily away from the rail. The present invention tan be configured such that the sensor is relatively insensitive to such departures from the expected or nominal coin position. Thus, the present invention contributes to the ability to achieve rapid coin movement not only by providing rapid coin discrimination but insensitivity to coin “flying.” Although

FIG. 2B

depicts a configuration in which the coin


224


moves down the rail


232


in response to gravity, coin movement can be achieved by other unpowered or powered means such as a conveyor belt. Although passage of the coin through the gap


216


is depicted, in another embodiment the coin passes across, but not through the gap (e.g. as depicted with regard to the embodiment of FIG.


4


).





FIG. 3

depicts a second configuration of a sensor, in which the gap


316


, rather than being formed by opposed faces


242




a


,


242




b


, of the core


214


is, instead, formed between opposed edges of spared-apart plates (or “pole pieces”)


344




a


,


344




b


, which are coupled to the core


314


. In this configuration, the core


314


is a half-torus. The plates


344




a


,


344




b


, may be coupled to a torroid in a number of fashions, such as by using an adhesive, cement or glue, a pressfit, spot welding, or brazing, riveting, screwing, and the like. Although the embodiment depicted in

FIG. 3

shows the plates


344




a


,


344




b


attached to the torroid


314


, it is also possible for the plates and torroid to be formed integrally. As seen in

FIG. 4

, the plates


344




a


,


344




b


, may have half-oval shapes, but a number of other shapes are possible, including semi-circular, square, rectangular, polygonal, and the like. In the embodiment of

FIGS. 3 and 4

, the field-concentrating effect of ferrite can be used to produce a very localized field for interaction with a vein, thus reducing or eliminating the effect of a touching neighbor coin. The embodiment of

FIGS. 3 and 4

can also be configured to be relatively insensitive to the effects of coin “flying” and thus contribute to the ability to provide rapid coin movement and increase coin throughput. Although the percentage of the magnetic field which is affected by the presence at a coin will typically be less in the configuration of

FIGS. 3 and 4

, than in the configuration of

FIG. 2

, satisfactory results can be obtained if the field changes are sufficiently large to yield a consistently high signal-to-noise indication of coin parameters. Preferably the gap


316


is sufficiently small to product the desired magnetic field intensity in or adjacent to the coin, in order to expose the coin to an intense field as it passes by and/or through the gap


316


. In the embodiment of

FIG. 4

, the length of the gap


402


is large enough so that coins with different diameters corer different proportions of the gap.




The embodiment of

FIG. 3 and 4

is believed to be particularly useful in situations in which it is difficult or impossible to provide access to both faces of a coin at the same time. For example, if the coin is being conveyed on one of its faces rather than on an edge (e.g., being conveyed on a conveyor belt or a vacuum belt). Furthermore, in the embodiment of

FIGS. 3 and 4

, the gap


316


does not need to be wide enough to accommodate the thickness of the coin and can be made quite narrow such that the magnetic field to which the coin is exposed is also relatively narrow. This configuration can be useful in avoiding an adjacent or “touching” coin situation since, even if coins are touching, the magnetic field to which the coins are exposed will be too narrow to substantially influence more than one coin at a time (during most of a coin's passage past the sensor).




When an electrical potential or voltage is applied to the coil


220


, a magnetic field is treated in the vicinity of the gap


216


,


316


(i.e. created in and near the gap


216


,


316


). The interaction of the coin or other object with such a magnetic field (or lock thereof) yields data which provides information about parameters of the coin or object which can be used for discrimination, e.g. at described more thoroughly below.




In one embodiment, current in the form of a variable or alternating current (AC) is supplied to the coil


220


. Although the form of the current may be substantially sinusoidal as used herein “AC” is meant to include any variable (non-constant) wave form, including ramp, sawtooth, square waves, and complex waves such as wave forms which are the sum or two or more sinusoidal waves. Because of the configuration of the sensor, and the positional relationship of the coin or object to the gap, the coin can be exposed to a significant magnetic field, which can be significantly affected by the presence of the coin. The sensor can be used to detect these changes in the electromagnetic field, as the coin passes over or through the gap, preferably in such as way at to provide data indicative of at least two different parameters of the coin or object. In one embodiment, a parameter such as the size or diameter of the coin or abject is indicated by a change in inductance, due to the passage of the coin, and the conductivity of the coin are object is (inversely) related to the energy loss (which may be indicated by the quality factor or “Q.”)





FIGS. 15A and 15B

depict an embodiment which provides a capability for capacitive sensing, e.g. for detecting or compensating for coin relief and/or flying. In the embodiment of

FIGS. 15A and 15B

, a coin


224


is constrained to more along a substantially linen coin path


1502


defined by a rail derive such as a polystyrene rail


1504


. At feast a portion of the coin path is adjacent a two-layer structure having an upper layer which is substantially non-electrically conducting


150




b


such as fiberglass and a second layer


1508


which is substantially conductive such as copper. The two-layer structure


1506


,


1508


can be conveniently provided by ordinary circuit board material


1509


such as {fraction (1/23)} inch thick circuit board material with the fiberglass side contacting the coin at depicted. In the depicted embodiment, a rectangular window is formed in the copper cladding or layer


1508


to accommodate rectangular ferrite plates


1512




a


,


1512




b


which are coupled to faces


1514




a


,


1514




b


of the ferrite torroid core


1516


. A conductive structure such as a copper plate or shield is


1518


is positioned within the gap


1520


farmed between the ferrite plates


1512




a


,


1512




b


. The shield is useful for increasing the flux interacting with the coin. Without wishing to be bound by any theory, it is believed that such a shield


1518


has the effect of forcing the flux to go wound the shield and therefore to bulge out more into the coin path in the vicinity of the gap


1520


which is believed to provide more flux interacting with the coin than without the shield (for a better signal-to-noise ratio). The shield


1518


can also be used as one side of a capacitive sensor, with the other side being the copper backing/ground plane


1508


of the circuit bond structure


1509


. Capactive changes sensed between the shield


1518


and the ground plane


1508


are believed to be related to the relief of the coin adjacent the gap


1520


and the distance to the coin.




In the embodiment of

FIG. 5

, the output of signal


512


is related to change in inductance, and thus to coin diameter which is termed “D.” The configuration of

FIG. 6

results in the output of a signal


612


which is related to Q and thus to conductivity, termed, in

FIG. 6

, “Q.” Although the D signal is not purely proportional to diameter (being at least somewhat influenced by the value of Q) and Q is not strictly and linearly proportional to conductance (being somewhat influenced by coin diameter) there is a sufficient relationship between signal D


512


and coin diameter and between signal Q


612


and conductance that these signals, when properly analyzed, can serve as a basis for coin discrimination. Without wishing to be bound by any theory, it is believed that the interaction between Q and D is substantially predictable and is substantially linear over the range of interest for a coin-counting device.




Many methods and/or devices can be used for analyzing the signals


512


,


612


, including visual inspection of an oscilloscope tract or graph (e.g. as shown in FIG.


9


), automatic analysis using a digital or analog circuit and/or a computing device such as a microprocessor-based computer and/or using a digital signal processor (DSP). When it is desired to use a computer, it is useful to provide signal:


512


and


612


(or modify those signals) so as to have a voltage range and/or other parameter: compatible with input to a computer. In one embodiment, signals


512


and


612


will be voltage signals normally lying within the range 0 to +5 volts.




In some cases, it is desired to separately obtain information about coin parameters for the interior or core portion of the coin and the exterior or skin portion, particularly in cases where some or all of the coins to be discriminated may be cladded, plated or coated coins. For example, in some cases it may be that the most efficient and reliable way to discriminate between two types of coins is to determine the presence or absence of cladding or plating, or compare a skin or core parameter with a corresponding skin or core parameter of a known coin. In one embodiment, different frequencies are used to probe different depths in the thickness of the coin. This method is effective because in terms of the interaction between a coin and a magnetic field, the frequency of a variable magnetic field defines a “skin depth,” which is the effective depth of the portion of the coin or other object which interacts with the variable magnetic filed. Thus in this embodiment, a first frequency is provided which is relatively low to provide for a larger skin depth, and thus interaction with the core of the coin or other object, and a second, higher frequency is provided, high enough to result in a skin depth substantially less than the thickness of the coin. In this way, rather than a single sensor providing two parameters, the sensor is able to provide (our parameters: core conductivity; cladding are coating conductivity; core diameter, and cladding are coating diameter (although it is anticipated that, in many instances, the core and cladding diameters will be similar). Preferably, the low-frequency skin depth is greater than the thickness of the plating or lamination, and the high frequency skin depth is less than, or about equal to, the plating or lamination thickness (or the range of lamination depths, for the anticipated coin population). Thus the frequency which is chosen depends on the characteristics of the coins or other objects expected to be input. In one embodiment, the low frequency is between about 50 KHz and about 500 KHz, preferably about 200 KHz and the high frequency is between about 0.5 MHZ and about 10 MHZ, preferably about 2 MHZ.




In some situations, it may be necessary to provide a first driving signal frequency component in order to achieve a second, different frequency sensor signal component. In particular, it is found that if the sensor


212


(

FIG. 2

) is first driven at the high frequency using high frequency coil


242


and then the low frequency signal


220


is added, adding the low frequency signal will affect the frequency of the, high frequency signal


242


. Thus, the high frequency driving signal may need to be adjusted to drive at a nominal frequency which is different from the desired high frequency of the sensor such that when the low frequency is added, the high frequency is perturbed into the desired value by the addition of the low frequency.




Multiple frequencies can be provided in a number of ways. In one embodiment, a single continuous wave form


702


(FIG.


7


), which is the sum of two (or more) sinusoidal or periodic waveforms having different frequencies


704


,


706


, is provided to the sensor. As depicted in

FIG. 2C

, a sensor


214


is preferably configured with two different toils to be driven at two different frequencies. It is believed that, generally, the presence of a second coil can undesirably affect the inductance of the first coil, at the frequency of operation of the first coil. Generally, the number of turns of the first coil may be correspondingly adjusted so that the first coil has the desired inductance. In the embodiment of

FIG. 2C

, the sensor core


214


is wound in a lower portion with a first coil


220


for driving with a low frequency signal


106


and is wound in a second region by a second coil


242


for driving at a higher frequency


104


. In the depicted embodiment, the high frequency coil


242


has a smaller number of turns and uses a larger gauge wire than the first coil


220


. In the depicted embodiment, the high frequency coil


242


is spaced


242




a


,


242




b


from the first coil


220


and is positioned closer to the gap


216


. Providing some separation


242




a


,


242




b


is believed to help reduce the effect one coil has on the inductance of the other and may somewhat reduce direct coupling between the low frequency and high frequency signals.




As can be seen from

FIG. 1

, the phase relationship of the high frequency signal


104


and low frequency signal


106


will affect the particular shape of the composite wave form


702


. Signals


702


and


704


represent voltage at the terminals of the high and low frequency coils,


220


,


242


. If the phase relationship is not controlled, or at least known, output signals indicating, for example, amplitude and/or Q in the oscillator circuit as the coin passes the sensor may be such that it is difficult to determine how much of the change in amplitude or Q of the signal results from the passage of the coin and how much is attributable to the phase relationship of the two signals


104


and


706


in the particular cycle being analysed. Accordingly, in one embodiment, the phases of the low and high signals


704


,


706


art controlled such that sampling points along the composite signal


702


(described below) are taken at the same phase for both the low and high signals


704


,


706


. A number of ways of assuring the desired phase relationship can be used including generating both signals


704


,


706


from a common reference source (such as a crystal oscillator) and/or using a phase locked loop (PLL) to control the phase relationship of the signals


704


,


706


. By using a phase locked loop, the wave shape of the composite signal


702


will be the same during any cycle (i.e., during any low frequency cycle), or at least will change only very slowly and thus it is possible to determine the sampling points (described below) based on, e.g., a pre-defined position or phase within the (low frequency) cycle rather than based on detecting characteristics of the wave form


702


.





FIGS. 8A-8D

depict circuitry which can be used for driving the sensor of FIG.


2


C and obtaining signals useful in coin discrimination. The low frequency and high frequency coils


220


,


242


, form portions of a low frequency and high frequency phase locked loop, respectively


802




a


,


802




b


. Details of the clock circuits


808


are shown in FIG.


8


D. The details of the high frequency phase locked loop are depicted in

FIG. 8B and

, the low frequency phase locked loop


802




a


may be identical to that shown in

FIG. 8B

except that some components may be provided with different values, e.g., as discussed below. The output from the phase locked loop is provided to filters,


804


, shown in greater detail in FIG.


8


C. The remainder of the components of

FIG. 8A

are generally directed to providing reference and/or sampling pulses or signals for purposes described more fully below.




The crystal oscillator circuit


806


(

FIG. 8D

) provides a reference frequency


808


input to the clock pin of a counter


810


such as a Johnson “divide by 10” counter. The counter outputs a high frequency reference signal


812


and various outputs Q


0


-Q


9


define 10 different phase positions with respect to the reference signal


812


. In the depicted embodiment, two of these phase position pulses


816




a


,


816




b


are provided to the high frequency phase locked loop


802




b


for purposes described below. A second counter


810


′ receives its clock input from the reference signal


812


and outputs a low frequency reference signal


812


′ and first and second low frequency sample pulses


816




a





816




b


′which are used in a fashion analogous to the use of the high frequency pulses


816




a


and


816




b


described below.




The high frequency phase locked loop circuit


802




b


, depicted in

FIG. 8B

, contains five main sections. The core oscillator


822


provides a driving signal for the high frequency coil


242


. The positive and negative peak samplers


824


sample peak and trough voltages of the coil


242


which are provided to an output circuit


826


for outputting the high frequency Q output signal


612


. The high frequency reference signal


812


is converted to a triangle wave by a triangle wave generator


828


. The triangle wave is used, in a fashion discussed below, by a sampling phase detector


832


for providing an input to a difference amplifier


834


which outputs an error signal


512


, which is provided to the oscillator


822


(to maintain the frequency and phase of the oscillator substantially constant) and provides the high frequency D output signal


512


.




Low frequency phase locked loop circuit


802




a


is similar to that depicted in

FIG. 8B

except for the value of certain components which are different in order to provide appropriate low frequency response. In the high frequency circuit of

FIG. 8B

, an inductor


836


and capacitor


838


are provided to filter out low frequency, e.g. to avoid duty frequency cycling the comparator


842


(which has a low frequency component). This is useful to avoid driving low frequency and high frequency in else same oscillator


822


. As seen in

FIG. 8B

, the inductor and capacitor have values, respectively, of 82 microhenrys and 82 picofarads. The corresponding components in the low frequency circuit


802


A have values, respectively, of one microhenry and 0.1 microfarads, respectively (if such a filter is provided at all). In high frequency triangle wave generator capacitor


844


is shown with a value of 82 picofarads while the corresponding component in the low frequency circuit


802




a


has a value of 0.001 microfarads.




Considering the circuit of

FIG. 8B

in somewhat greater detail, it a desired to provide the oscillator


822


in such a fashion that the frequency remains substantially constant, despite changes in inductance of the coil


242


(such as may arise from passage of a coin put the sensor). In order to achieve this goal, the oscillator


822


is provided with a voltage controller capacitor (or varactor diode)


844


such that, as the inductance the coil


242


changes, the capacitance of the varactor diode


844


is adjusted, using the error signal


512


to compensate, so as to maintain the LC resonant frequency substantially constant. In the configuration of

FIG. 8B

, the capacitance determining the resonant frequency is a function of both the varactor diode capacitance and the capacitance of fixed capacitor


846


. Preferably, capacitor


846


and varactor diode


844


are selected so that the control voltage


512


can use the greater part of the dynamic range of the varactor diode and yet the control voltage


512


remains in a preferred range such as 0-5 volts (useful for outputting directly to a computer). Op amp


852


is a zero gain buffer amplifier (impedance isolator) whose output provides one input to comparator


842


which acts as a hard limiter and has relatively high gain. The hard-limited (square wave) output of comparator


842


is provided, across a high value resistor


844


to drive the coil


242


. The high value of the resistance


844


is selected such that nearly all the voltage of the square wave is dropped across this resistor and thus the resulting voltage on the coil


242


is a function of its Q. In summary, a sine wave oscillation in the LC circuit is converted to a constant amplitude square wave signal driving the LC circuit so that the amplitude of the oscillations in the LC circuit are directly a measure of the Q of the circuit.




In order to obtain a measure of the amplitude of the voltage, it is necessary to sample the voltage at a peak and a trough of the signal. In the embodiment of

FIG. 8B

, first and second switches


854




a


,


854




b


provide samples of the voltage value at times determined by the high frequency pulses


816




a


,


816




b


. In one embodiment the timing is determined empirically by selecting different outputs


814


from the counter


810


. As seen in

FIG. 8A

, the (empirically selected) outputs used for the high frequency circuit may be different from those used for the low frequency circuit, e.g., because of differing delays in the two circuits and the like. Switches


854


and capacitors


855


form a sample and hold circuit for sampling peak and trough voltages and these voltages are provided to differential amplifier


856


whose output


612


is thus proportional to the amplitude of the signal in the LT circuit and, accordingly is inversely proportional to Q (and thus related to conductance of the coin). Because the phase locked loops for the low and high frequency signals are locked to a common reference, the phase relationship between the two frequency components is fixed, and any interference between the two frequencies will be common mode (or nearly so), since the wave form will stay nearly the same from cycle to cycle, and the common mode component will be subtracted out by the differential amplifier


856


.




In addition to providing an output


612


which is related to coin conductance the same circuit


802




b


also provides an output


512


related to coin diameter. In the embodiment of

FIG. 8B

, the high frequency diameter signal HFD


512


is a signal which indicates the magnitude of the correction that must be applied to varactor diode


844


to correct for changes in inductance of the coil


242


as the coin passes the sensor

FIG. 7

illustrates signals which play a role in determining whether correction to the varactor diode


844


is needed. If there has been no change in the coil inductance


242


, the resonant frequency of the oscillator


822


will remain substantially constant and will have a substantially constant phase relationship with respect to the high frequency reference signal


812


. Thus, in the absence of the passage of a coin past the sensor (or any other disturbance of the inductance of the coil


242


) the square wave output signal


843


will have a phase which corresponds to the phase of the reference signal


812


such that at the time of each edge


712




a


,


712




b


,


712




c


of the oscillator square wave signal


843


, the reference signal


812


will be in a phase midway between the wave peak and wave trough. Any departure from this condition indicates there has been a change in the resonant frequency of the oscillator


822


(and consequent phase shift) which needs to be corrected. In the embodiment of

FIG. 8B

, in order to detect and correct such departures, the reference signal


812


is converted, via triangle wave generator


828


, to a triangle wave


862


having the same phase as the reference signal


812


. This triangle wave


862


is provided to an analog switch


864


which samples the triangle wave


862


at time: determined by pulses generated in response to edges of the oscillator square wave signal


843


, output over line


866


. The sampled signals are held by capacitor


868


. As can be seen from

FIG. 7

, if there has been no change in the frequency or phase relationship of the oscillator signal


843


, at the times of the square wave edges


712




a


,


712




b


,


712




c


, the value of the square wave signal


862


will be half way between the peak value and the trough value. In the depicted embodiment, the triangle wave


862


is configured to have an amplitude equal to the difference between VCC (typically 5 volts) and ground potential. Thus, difference amplifier


834


is configured to compare the sample values from the triangle wave


862


with one-half of VCC


872


. If the sampled values from the triangle wave


862


are half way between ground potential and VCC, output


512


from comparator


834


will be zero thus there will be no error signal-induced change to the capacitance of varactor diode


844


. However, if the sampled values from the triangle win


862


are not halfway between ground potential and VCC, difference amplifier


834


will output a voltage on line


512


which is sufficient to adjust the capacitance of varactor diode


844


in an amount and direction needed to correct the resonant frequency of the oscillator


822


to maintain the (frequency at the desired substantially constant value. Thus signal


512


is a measure of the magnitude of the changes in the effective inductance of the coil


242


, e.g., arising from passage of a coin past the sensor. As shown in

FIG. 8A

, outputs


612


,


512


from the high frequency PLL circuit as well as corresponding outputs


612





512


′ from the low frequency PLL are provided to filters


804


. The depicted filters


804


are low pass filters configured for noise rejection. The pass bands for the filters


804


are preferably selected to provide desirable signal to noise ratio characteristic for the output signals


882




a


,


882




b


,


882




a


′,


882




b


′. For example, the bandwidth which is provided for the filters


804


may depend upon the speed at which coins pass the sensors, and similar factors.




In one embodiment, the output signals


88




a


,


882




b


,


882




a


′,


882




b


′ are provided to a computer for coin discrimination or other analysis. Before describing examples of such analysis, it is believed useful to describe the typical profiles of the output signals


882




a


,


882




b


,


882




a


′,


882




b


′.

FIG. 9

is a graph depicting the output signals, e.g., as they might appear if the output signals were displayed on a properly configured oscilloscope. In the illustration of

FIG. 9

, the values of the high and low frequency Q signals


882




a


,


882




a


′ and the high and low frequency D signals


882




b


,


882




b


′ have values (depicted on the left of the graph of

FIG. 9

) prior to passage of a coin past the sensor, which change at indicated in

FIG. 9

as the coin moves toward the sensor, and is adjacent or centered within the gap of the sensor at time T


1


, returning to substantially the original values as the coin moves away from the sensor at time T


2


.




The signals


882




a


,


882




b


,


882




a


′,


882




b


′ can be used in a number of fashions to characterize coins or other objects as described below The magnitude of changes


902




a


,


902




a


′ of the low frequency and high frequency D values as the coin passes the sensor and the absolute values


904


,


904


′ of the low and high frequency Q signals


882




a


′,


882




a


, respectively, at the time t


1


when the coin or other object is most nearly aligned with the sensor (as determined e.g., by the time of the local maximum in the D signals


882




b


,


882




b


′) are useful in characterizing coins. Both the low and high frequency Q values are useful for discrimination. Laminated coins show significant differences in the Q reading for low vs. high frequency. The low and high frequency “D” values are also useful for discrimination. It has been found that some of all of these values are, at least for some coin populations, sufficiently characteristic of various coin denominations that coins on be discriminated with high accuracy.




In one embodiment, values


902




a


,


902




a


′,


904


,


904


′ are obtained for a large number of coins so as to define standard values characteristic of each coin denomination.

FIGS. 10A and 10B

depict high and low frequency Q and D data for different U.S. coins. The values for the data points in

FIGS. 10A and 10B

are in arbitrary units. A number of features of the data are apparent from

FIGS. 10A and 10B

. First, it is noted that the Q, D data points for different denominations of coins are clustered in the sense that a given Q, D data point for a coin tends to be closer to data points for the same denomination coin than for a different denomination coin. Second, it is noted that the relative position of the denominations for the low frequency data (

FIG. 10B

are different from the relative positions for corresponding denominations in the high frequency graph FIG.


10


A.




One method of using standard reference data of the type depicted in

FIGS. 10A and 10B

to determine the denomination of an unknown coin is to define Q, D regions on each of the high frequency and low frequency graphs in the vicinity of the data points. For example, in

FIGS. 10A and 10B

regions


1002




a


-


1002




e


,


1002




a


′-


1002




e


′ are depicted as rectangular areas encompassing the data points. According to one embodiment when low frequency and high frequency Q and D data are input to the computer in response to the coin moving past the sensor, the high frequency Q, D values for the unknown coin are compared to each of the regions


1002




a


-


1002




e


of the high frequency graph and the low frequency Q, D data is compared to each of the regions


1002




a


′-


1002




e


′ of the low frequency graph FIG.


10


B. If the unknown coin lies within the predefined regions corresponding to the same denomination for each of the two graphs

FIG. 10A



FIG. 10B

, the coin is indicated at having that denomination. If the Q, D data falls outside the regions


1002




a


-


1002




e


,


1002




a


′-


1002




e


′ on the two graphs are if the data point of the unknown coin or object falls inside a region corresponding to a first denomination with a high frequency graph but a different denomination with low frequency graph, the coin or other object is indicated as not corresponding to any of the denominations defined in the graphs of

FIGS. 10A and 10B

.




As will be apparent from the above discussion, the error rate that will occur in regard to such an analysis will partially depend on the size of the regions


1002




a


-


1002




e


,


1002




a


′-


1002




e


′ which are defined. Regions which are too large will tend to result in an unacceptably large number of false positives (i.e., identifying the coin as being a particular denomination when it is not) while defining regions which are too small will result in an unacceptably large number of false negatives (i.e., failing to identify a legitimate coin denomination). Thus the size and shape of the various regions may be defined or adjusted, e.g. empirically, to achieve error rates which are no greater than desired error rates. In one embodiment, the windows


2002




a


-


2002




e


,


2002




a


′-


2002




e


′ have a size and shape determined on the basis of a statistical analysis of the Q, D values for a standard or sample coin population, such as being equal to 2 or 3 standard deviations from the mean Q, D values for known coins. The size and shape of the regions


1002




a


-


1002




e


,


1002




a


′-


1002




e


′ may be different from one another, i.e., different for different denominations and/or different for the low frequency and high frequency graphs. Furthermore, the size and shape of the regions may be adjusted depending on the anticipated coin population (e.g., in regions near national borders, regions may need to be defined so as to discriminate foreign coins, even at the cost of raising the false negative error rate whereas such adjustment of the site or shape at the regions may not be necessary at locations in the interior of a country where foreign coins may be relatively rare).




If desired, the computer an be configured to obtain statistics regarding the Q, D values of the coins which are discriminated by the device in the field. This data can be useful to detect changes, e.g., changes in the coin population over time, or changes in the average Q, D values such as may result from aging or wear of the sensors or other components. Such information may be used to adjust the software or hardware, perform maintenance on the device and the like. In one embodiment, the apparatus in which the coin discrimination device is used may be provided with a communication device such as a modem


25


(

FIG. 41

) and maybe configured to permit the definition of the regions


1002




a


-


1002




e


,


1002




a


′-


1002




e


′ or other data are software to be modified remotely (i.e., to be downloaded to a field site from a central site). In another embodiment, the device is configured to automatically adjust the definitions of the regions


1002




a


-


1002




e


,


1002




a


′-


1002




e


′ in response to ongoing statistical analysis of the Q, D data for coins which are discriminated using the device, to provide a type of self calibration for the coin discriminator.




In light of the above description, a number advantages of the present invention can be seen. Embodiments of the present invention can provide a device with increased accuracy and service life, ease and safety of use, requiring little or no training and little are no instruction, which reliably returns unprocessed coins to the user, rapidly processes coins, has a high throughput, a reduced incidence of jamming, in which some or all jams can be reliably cleared without human intervention, which has reduced need for intervention by trained personnel, can handle a broad range of coin types, or denominations, can handle wet or sticky coins or foreign or non-coin objects, has reduced incidence of malfunctioning or placing foreign objects in the coin bins, has reduced incidence of rejecting good coins, has simplified and/or reduced requirements for set-up, calibration or maintenance, has relatively small volume or footprint requirements, is tolerant of temperature variations, is relatively quiet, and/or (shunted ease of upgrading are retrofitting.




In one embodiment, the apparatus achieves singulation of a randomly-oriented mass of coins with reduced jamming and high throughput. In one embodiment, coins are effectively separated from one another prior to sensing and/or deflection. In one embodiment, deflection parameters, such as force and/or timing of deflection can be adjusted to take into account characteristic of coins are other objects, such as mass, speed, and/or acceleration, to assist in accuracy of coin handling. In one embodiment, slow or stuck coins are automatically moved (such as by a pin or rake), or otherwise provided with kinetic energy. In one embodiment items including those which are not recognized at valuable, acceptable or desirable coins or other objects on allowed to follow a non-diverted, default path (preferably, under the force of gravity), while at least some recognized and/or accepted coins an diverted from the default path to move such items into an acceptance bin or other location.




In one embodiment, the device provides for ease of application (e.g. multiple measurements done simultaneously and/or at one location), increased performance, such as improved throughput and reduced jams (that prematurely end transactions and risk losing coins), more accurate discrimination, and reduced cost and/or size. One or more torroidal cores can be used for sensing properties of coins or other objects passing through a magnetic field, created in or adjacent a gap in the torroid, thus allowing coins, disks, spherical, round or other objects, to be measured for their physical, dimensional, or metallic properties (preferably two or more properties, in a single pass aver or through one sensor). The device facilitates rapid coin movement and high throughput. The device provides for better discrimination among coins and other objects than many previous devices, particularly with respect to U.S. dimes and pennies, while requiring fewer sensors and/or a smaller sensor region to achieve this result. Preferably, multiple parameters of a coin are measured substantially simultaneously and with the coin located in the same position, e.g., multiple sensors are co-located at a position on the coin path, such as on a rail. In a number of cases, components are provided which produce more than one function, in order to reduce part count and maintenance. For example, certain sensor, as described below, are used for sensing two or more items and/or provide data which are used for two or more functions. Coin handling apparatus having a lower cost of design, fabrication, shipping, maintenance or repair can be achieved. In one embodiment, a single sensor exposes a coin to two different electromagnetic frequencies substantially simultaneously, and substantially without the need to move the coin to achieve the desired two-frequency measurement. In this context, “substantially” means that, while there may be same minor departure from simultaneity or minor coin movement during the exposure to two different frequencies, the departure from simultaneity or movement is not so great as to interfere with certain purports of the invention such as reducing space requirements, increasing coin throughput and the like, as compared to previous devices. For example, preferably, during detection of the results of exposure to the two frequencies, a coin will move less than a diameter of the largest-diameter coin to be detected, more preferably less than about ¾ a largest-coin diameter and even more preferably less than about ½ of a coin diameter.




The present invention makes possible improved discrimination, lower cost, simpler circuit implementation, smaller site, and ease of use in a practical system. Preferably, all parameters needed to identify a coin are obtained at the same time and with the coin in the same physical location, so software and other discrimination algorithms are simplified.




Other door configurations than those depicted can be used. The door


62


may have a laminated structure, such as two steel or other sheets coupled by, e.g., adhesive foam tape.




A number of variations and modifications of the intention can be used. It is possible to use some aspects of the intention without using others. For example, the described techniques and devices for providing multiple frequencies at a single sensor location can be advantageously employed without necessarily using the sensor geometry depicted. It is possible to use the described torroid-core sensors, while using analysis, devices or techniques different from those described herein and vice versa. It is possible to cast the sensor and or coin rail configuration described herein without using the described coin pickup assembly for example it is possible to use the sensor described herein in connection with the coin pickup assembly described in Ser. No. 08/883,655, for POSITIVE DRIVE COIN DISCRIMINATING APPARATUS AND METHOD, and incorporated herein by reference. It is possible to use aspects of the singulation and/or discrimination portion of the apparatus without using a trommel. Although the invention has been described in the context of a machine which receives a plurality of coins in a mass, a number of features of the intention can be used in connection with devices which receive coins one at a time, such as through a coin slot.




Although the sensor have been described in connection with the coin counting or handling device, sensors an also be used in connection with coin activated devices, such as vending machines, telephones, gaming devices and the like. In addition to using information about discriminated coins for outputting a printed voucher, the information can be used in connection with making electronic funds transfers, e.g. to the bank account of the user (e.g. In accordance with information read from a bank card, credit card or the like) and/or to an account of a third party, such as the retail location where the apparatus is glued, to a utility company, to a government agency, such as the U.S. Postal Service, or to a charitable, non-profit or political organization (e.g. as described in U.S. application Ser. No. 08/852,328, filed May 1, 1997 for Donation Transaction method and apparatus, incorporated herein by reference. In addition to discriminating among coins, devices can be used for discriminating and/or quality control on other devices such as for shall, discrete metallic parts such as ball bearings, bolts and the like. Although the depicted embodiments show a single sensor, it is possible to provide adjacent or spaced multiple sensors (e.g., to detect one or more properties or parameters at different skin depths). The sensors at the present invention can be combined with other sensors, known in the art such as optical sensors, mass sensors, and the like. In the depicted embodiment, the coin


242


is positioned on both a first side


244




a


of the gap and a second side


244




b


of the gap. It is believed that at the coin


224


mores down the rail


232


, it will be typically positioned very close to the second portion


244




b


of the coil


242


. It is found that this close positioning results in an undesirably high sensitivity of the senior inductance to the coin position (e.g. an undesirably large variation in inductance when calm “fly” or are otherwise somewhat spaced from the back wall of the rail


232


), it may be desirable to plate the high frequency coil


242


only on the second portion


244




a


(

FIG. 2C

) which is believed to be normally somewhat farther spaced from the coin


242


and thus less sensitive to coin positional variations. The gap may be formed between opposed faces of a torroid section, or formed between the opposed and spaced edges of two plates, coupled (such as by adhesion) to faces of a section of a torroid. In either configuration, a single continuous non-linear core has first and second ends, with a gap therebetween.




Although it is possible to provide a sensor in which the core is driven by a direct current, preferably, the core is driven by on alternating or varying current.




In one embodiment two or more frequencies are used. Preferably, to reduce the number of sensors in the devices, bath frequencies drive a single core. In this way, a first frequency can be selected to obtain parameters relating to the core of a coin and a second frequency selected to obtain parameters relating to the skin region of the coin, e.g., to characterize plated or laminated coins. One difficulty is using two or more frequencies on a single core is the potential for interference. In one embodiment, to avoid such interference both frequencies are phase locked to a single reference frequency. In one approach, the sensor forms an inductor of an L-C oscillator, whose frequency is maintained by a phase-locked loop (PLL) to define an error signal (related to Q) and amplitude which change as the coin moves past the sensor.




As seen in

FIGS. 2A

,


2


B,


3


and


4


, the depicted sensor includes a coil which will provide a certain amount of inductance or inductive reactance in a circuit to which it is connected. The effective inductance of the coil will change as, e.g. a coin moves adjacent or through the gap and this change of inductance can be used to at least partially characterize the coin. Without wishing to be bound by any theory, it is believed the coin or other object affects inductance in the following manner. As the coin moves by or across the gap, the AC magnetic field lines are altered. If the frequency of the varying magnetic field is sufficiently high to define a “skin depth” which is less than about the thickness of the coin, no field lines will go through the coin as the coin moves across or through the gap. As the coin is moved across or into the gap, the inductance of a coil wound on the core decreases, because the magnetic field of the direct, short path is canceled (e.g., by eddy currents flowing in the coin). Since, under these conditions no flux goes through any coin having any substantial conductivity, the decrease in inductance due to the presence of the coin is primarily a function of the surface area (and thus diameter) of the coin.




A relatively straightforward approach would be to use the coil as an inductor in a resonant circuit such as an LC oscillator circuit and detect changes in the resonant frequency of the circuit as the coin moved past or through the gap. Although this approach has been found to be operable and to provide information which may be used to sense certain characteristics of the coin (such as its diameter) a more preferred embodiment is shown, in general form, in FIG.


5


and is described in greater detail below.




In the embodiment of

FIG. 5

, a phase detector


506


comports a signal indicative of the frequency in the oscillator


508


with a reference frequency


510


and outputs an error signal


511


which controls a frequency-varying component of the oscillator


514


(such as a variable capacitor). The magnitude of the error signal


512


is an indication of the magnitude of the change in the effective inductance of the coil


502


. The detection configuration shown in

FIG. 5

is thus capable of detecting changes in inductance (related to the coin diameter) while maintaining the frequency of the oscillator substantially constant. Providing a substantially consent frequency is useful because, among other reasons, the tensor will be less affected by interfering electromagnetic fields than a sensor that allows the frequency to shift would be. It will also be easier to prevent unwanted electromagnetic radiation from the sensor, since filtering or shielding would be provided only with respect to one frequency as opposed to a range of frequencies.




Without wishing to be bound by any theory, it is believed that the presence of the coin affects energy loss, as indicated by the Q factor in the following manner. As noted above, as the coin moves past or through the gap, eddy currents flow causing an energy loss, which is ref aced to both the amplitude of the current and the resistance of the coin. The amplitude of the current is substantially independent of coin conductivity (since the magnitude of the current is always enough to cancel the magnetic field that is prevented by the presence of the coin). Therefore, for a given effective diameter of the coin, the energy loss in the eddy currents will be inversely related to the conductivity of the coin. The relationship can be complicated by such factors as the skin depth, which affects the area of current flow with the skin depth being related to conductivity.




Thus, for a coil


502


driven at a first, e.g. sinusoidal, frequency, the amplitude can be determined by using timing signals


602


(

FIG. 6

) to sample the voltage at a time known to correspond to the peak voltage in the cycle, using a first sampler


606


and sampling at a second point in the cycle known to correspond to the trough using a second sampler


608


. The sampled (and held) peak and trough voltages can be provided to a differential amplifier


610


, the output of which


612


is related to the conductance. More precisely speaking, the output


612


will represent the Q of the circuit. In general, Q is a measure of the amount of energy loss in an oscillator. In a perfect oscillator circuit, there would be no energy loss (once started, the circuit would oscillate forever) and the Q value would be infinite. In a real circuit, the amplitude of oscillations will diminish and Q is a measure of the rate at which the amplitude diminishes. In another embodiment, data relating to changes in frequency as a function of changes in Q are analyzed (or correlated with data indicative of this functional relationship for various types of coins or other objects).




In one embodiment, the invention involves combining two or more frequencies on ant core by phase-locking all the frequencies to the same reference. Because the frequencies are phase-locked to each other, the interference effect of one frequency on the others becomes a common-made signal, which is removed, e.g., with a differential amplifier.




In one embodiment, a coin discrimination apparatus and method is provided in which an oscillating electromagnetic field is generated on a single sensing core. The oscillating electromagnetic field is composed of one or more frequency components. The electromagnetic field interacts with a coin, and these interactions are monitored and used to classify the coin according to its physical properties. All frequency components of the magnetic field are phase-locked to a common reference frequency. The phase relationships between the various frequencies are fixed, and the interaction of each frequency component with the coin can be accurately determined without the need for complicated electrical filters are special geometric shaping of the sensing core. In one embodiment, a sensor having a core, preferably ferrite, which is curved (or otherwise non-linear), such as in a U-shape or in the shape of a section of a torus, and defining a gap, is provided with a wire winding for excitation and/or detection. The sensor can be used for simultaneously obtaining data relating to two or more parameters of a coin are other object, such as size and conductivity of the object. Two or more frequencies can be used to sense core and/or cladding properties.




In the embodiment depicted in

FIGS. 8A-8C

, the apparatus can be constructed using parts which an all currently readily available and relatively low cost. As will be apparent to those of skill in the art, other circuits may be configured for performing functions useful in discriminating coins using the sensor of

FIGS. 2-4

. Some embodiments may be useful so select components to minimize the effects of temperature, drift, etc. In some situation, particularly high volume situations, some or all of the circuitry may be provided in an integrated fashion such as being provided on an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC). In some embodiments it may be desirable to switch the relative roles of the square wave


843


and triangle wave


862


. For example, rather than obtaining sample pulse based on a square want signal


843


, a circuit could be used which would provide a pulse reference that would go directly to the analog switch (without needing an edge detect). The square wave would be used to generate a triangular wave.




The phase locked loop circuits described above use very high (theoretically infinite) DC gain such as about 100 dB or more on the feedback path, so as to maintain a very small phase error. In some situations this may lead to difficulty in achieving phase lock up, upon initiating the circuits and thus it may be desirable to relax, somewhat, the small phase error requirements in order to achieve initial phase lock up more readily.




Although the embodiment of

FIGS. 8A-8C

provides for two frequencies, it is possible to design a detector using three or more frequencies, e.g. to provide for better coin discrimination.




Additionally, rather than providing two or more discrete frequencies, the apparatus could be configured to sweep or “chirp”through a frequency range. In one embodiment, in order to achieve swept-frequency data it would be useful to provide an extremely rapid frequency sweep (so that the coin does not move a large distance during the time required for the frequency to sweep) or to maintain the coin stationary during the frequency sweep.




In some embodiments in place of or in addition to analyzing values obtained at a single time (t


1



FIG. 9

) to characterize coins or other objects, it may be useful to use data from a variety different times to develop a Q vs. t profile or D vs. t profile (where t represents time) for detected objects. For example it a believed that larger coins such as quarters, tend to result in a Q vs. t profile which a flatter, compared to a D vst profile, than the profile for smaller coins. It is believed that some, mostly symmetric waveforms have dips in the middle due to an “annular” type coin where the Q of the inner radius of the can is different from the Q of the outer annulus. It is believed that in some cases, bumps on the leading and trailing edges of the Q waveforms may be related to the rim of the coin a the thickness of plating or lamination near the rim of the coin,




In some embodiments the output data is influenced by relatively small-scale coin characteristics such as plating thickness or surface relief. In some circumstances it is believed that surtax relief information can be used, e.g., distinguish the face of the coin, to distinguish “heads” from “tails”) to distinguish old coins from new coins of the same denomination and the like. In order to prevent rotational orientation of the coin from interfering with proper surface relief analysis, it is preferable to construct sensors to provide data which a averaged over annular regions such as a radially symmetric sensor are array of sensors configured to provide data averaged in annular regions centered on the coin face center.




Although

FIG. 5

depicts one fashion of obtaining a signal related to Q, other circuits an also be used. In the embodiment depicted in

FIG. 5

, a sinusoidal voltage is applied to the sensor coil


220


, e.g., using an oscillator


1102


. The waveform of the current in the coil


220


, will be affected by the presence of a coin or other object adjacent the gap


216


,


316


, at described above. Different phase components of the resulting current wave form can be used to obtain data related to inductance and Q respectively. In the depicted embodiment, the current in the coil


220


is decomposed into at least two components, a first component which is in-phase with the output of the oscillator


1102


, and a second component which is delayed by 90 degrees, with respect to the output of the oscillator


1102


. These components can be obtained using phase-sensitive amplifier


1104


,


1106


such as a phase locked loop device and, at needed, a phase shift or delay device of a type well known in the art. The in-phase component is related to Q, and the 90 degree lagging component is related to inductance. In one embodiment, the output from the phase discriminators


1104


,


1106


, is digitized by an analog-to-digital converter


1108


, and processed by a microprocessor


1110


. In one implementation of this technique, measurements are taken at many frequencies. Each frequency drives a resistor connected to the coil. The other end of the coil is grounded. For each frequency, there is a dedicated “receiver” that detects the I and Q signals. Alternatively, it is possible to analyze all frequencies simultaneously by employing, e.g., a fast Fourier transform (FFT) in the microprocessor. In another embodiment, it is possible to use an impedance analyzer to read the Q (or “loss tangent”) and inductance of a coil.




In another embodiment, depicted in

FIG. 12

, information regarding the coin parameter is obtained by using the sensor


1212


as an inductor in an LC oscillator


1202


. A number of types of LC if oscillators can be used as will be apparent to those of skill in the art, after understanding the present disclosure. Although a transistor


1204


has been depicted, other amplifiers such as op amps, can be used in different configurations. In the depicted embodiment, the sensor


1212


has been depicted as an inductor, since presense of a coin in the vicinity of the sensor gap will affect the inductance. Since the resonant frequency of the oscillator


1102


is related to the effective inductance (frequency varies at (I/LC)*): as the diameter of the coin increases, the frequency of the oscillator increases. The amplitude of the AC in the resonant LC circuit, is affected by the conductivity of objects in the vicinity of the sensor gap. The frequency is detected by frequency detector


1205


, and by amplitude detector


1206


, using well known electronic techniques with the results preferably being digitized


1208


, and processed by microprocessor


1210


. In one embodiment the oscillation loop is completed by amplifying the voltage using a hard-limiting amplifier (square wave output), which drives a resistor. Changes in the magnitude of the inductance caused the oscillator's frequency to change. As the diameter of the test coin increases, the frequency of the oscillator increases. As the conductivity of the test tea coin decreases, the amplitude of the AC voltage and the tuned circuit goes down. By having a hard-limiter, and having a current-limiting resister that is much larger than the resonant impedance of the tuned circuit, the amplitude of the signal at the resonant circuit substantially accurately indicates, in inverse relationship, the Q of the conductor.




Although one manner of analyzing D and Q signals using a microprocessor is described above, a microprocessor an use the data in a number of other ways. Although it would be possible to use formulas or statistical regressions to calculate or obtain the numerical values for diameter (e.g., in inches) and/or conductivity (e.g., in mhos), it is contemplated that a frequent use of the present invention will be in connection with a coin counter or handler, which is intended to 1) discriminate coins from non-coin objects, 2) discriminate domestic from foreign coins and/or 3) discriminate one coin denomination from another. Accordingly, in one embodiment, the microprocessor compares the diameter-indicting data, and conductivity-indicating data with standard data indicative of conductivity and diameter for various known coins. Although it would be possible to use the microprocessor to convert detected data to standard diameter and conductivity values are units (such as inches are mhos), and compare with data which is stored in memory in standard values or units, the conversion step can be avoided by storing in memory, data characteristic of various coins in the same values or units at the data received by the microprocessor. For example, when the detector of FIG.


5


and/or


6


outputs values in the range at e.g., 0 to +5 volts, the standard data characteristic of various known coins an be converted, prior to storage, to a scale of 0 to 5, and stored in that form so that the comparison can be made directly, without an additional step of conversion.




Although in one embodiment it is possible to use data from a single point in time, such at when the coin is centered on the gap


216


, (as indicated, e.g., by a relative maximum, or minimum, in a signal), in another embodiment a plurality of values or a continuous signal of the values obtained at the coin moves past or through the gap


216


is preferably used.




An example of a single point of comparison for each of the in-phase and delayed detector, is depicted in FIG.


13


. In this figure, standard data (stored in the computer), indicates the average and/or acceptance or tolerance range of in-phase amplitudes (indicative of conductivity), which has been found to be associated with U.S. pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters, respectively


1302


. Data is also stored, indicating the average and/or acceptance or tolerance range, of values output by the 90 degree delayed amplitude detector


406


(indicative of diameter) associated with the same coins


1304


. Preferably, the envelope or tolerance is sufficiently broad to lessen the occurrence of false negative results, (which can arise, e.g., from worn, misshapen, or dirty coins, electronic noise, and the like), but sufficiently narrow to avoid false positive results, and to avoid or reduce substantial overlap of the envelopes of two are more curves (in order to provide for discrimination between denominations). Although, in the figures, the data stored in the computer is shown in graphical form, for the sake of clarity of disclosure typically the data will be stored in digital form in a memory, in a manner well known in the computer art. In the embodiment in which only a single value is used for discrimination. The digitized single in-phase amplitude value, which is detected for a particular coin (in this example, a value of 3.5) (scaled to a range of 0 to 5 and digitized), is compared to the standard in-phase data, and the value of 3.5 is found (using programming techniques known in the art) to be consistent with either a quarter or a dime


1308


. Similarly, the 90-degree delayed amplitude value which is detected for this same coin


1310


(in this example, a value of 1.0), is compared to the standard in-phase data, and the value of 1.0 is found to be consistent with either a penny or a dime


1312


. Thus, although each test by itself would yield ambiguous results, since the single detector provides information on two parameters (one related to conductivity and one related to diameter), the discrimination can be made unambiguously since then is only one denomination (dime)


1314


which is consistent with both the conducting data and the diameter data.




As noted, rather than using single-point comparisons, it is possible to use multiple data points (or a continuous curve) generated as the coin moves put a through the gap


216


,


316


. Profiles of data of this type can be used in several different ways. In the example of FIG. l


4


, a plurality of known denominations of coins are sent through the discriminating device in order to accumulate standard data profiles for each of the denominations


1402




a, b, c, d


,


1404




a, b, c, d


. These represent the average change in output from the in-phase amplitude detector


1104


and a 90-degree delay detector for (shown on the vertical axes)


1403


and acceptance ranges or tolerances


1405


as the coins move past the detector over a period of time, (shown on the horizontal axis). In order to discriminate an unknown coin or other object, the object is passed through or across the detector, and each of the in-phase amplitude detector


1104


and 90-degree delayed amplitude detector


1106


, respectively, produce a curve or profile


1406


,


1410


, respectively. In the embodiment depicted in

FIG. 8

, the in-phase profile


1406


generated as a coin passes the detector


212


, is compared to the various standard profiles for different coins


1402




a


,


1401




b


,


1401




c


,


1402




d


. Comparison can be made in a number of ways. In one embodiment, the data is scaled so that a horizontal axis between initial and final threshold values


1406




a


equals a standard time, for better matching with the standard values


1402




a


through


1402




d


. The profile shown in


1406


is then compared with standard profiles stored in memory


1402




a


through


1402




d


, to determine whether the detected profile is within the acceptable envelopes defined in any of the curves


1402




a


through


1402




d


. Another method is to calculate a closeness of fit parameter using well known curve-fitting techniques, and select a denomination a several denominations, which most closely fit the sensed profile


1406


. Still another method is to select a plurality of points at predetermined (sealed) intervals along the time axis


1406




a


(


1408




a, b, c, d


) and compare these values with corresponding time points for each of the denominations. In this case, only the standard values and tolerances a envelopes at such predetermined times needs to be stored in the computer memory. Using any or all these methods, the comparison of the sensed data


1406


, with the stored standard data


1402




a


through


1402




d


indicates, in this example, that the in-phase sensed data is most in accord with standard data for quarters are dimes


1409


. A similar comparison of the 90-degree delayed data


1410


to stored standard 90-degree delayed data (


1404




a


through


1404




d


), indicates that the sensed coin was either a penny or a dime. As before, using both these results, it is possible to determine that the coin was a dime


1409


.




In one embodiment, the in-phase and out-of-phase data are correlated to provide a table a graph of in-phase amplitude versus 90-degree delayed amplitude for the sensed coin (similar to the Q versus D data depicted in FIGS.


10


A and


10


B), which can then be compared with standard in-phase versus delayed profiles obtained for various coin denominations in a manner simile to that discussed above in connection with FIGS.


10


A and


10


B),




Although coin acceptance regions are depicted (

FIGS. 10A

,


10


B), as rectangular they may have any shape.




In both the configuration of FIG.


2


and the configuration of

FIGS. 3 and 4

, the presence of the coin affects the magnetic field. It is believed that in some cases, eddy currents flowing in the coin, result in a smaller inductance as the coin diameter is larger, and also result in a lower Q of the inductor as the conductivity of the coin, is lower. As a result, data obtained from either the sensor of

FIGS. 2A and 2B

, or the sensor of

FIGS. 3 and 4

, can be gathered and analyzed by the apparatus depicted in

FIGS. 5 and 6

, even though the detected changes in the configuration of

FIGS. 3 and 4

will typically be smaller than the changes detected in the configuration of

FIGS. 2A and 2B

.




Although certain sensor shapes have been described herein, the techniques disclosed for applying multiple frequencies on a single core could be applied to and of a number of sensor shapes, or other means of forming an inductor to subject a coin to an alternating magnetic field.




Although an embodiment described above provides two AC frequencies to a single sensor core at the same time, other approaches art possible. One approach is a time division approach, in which different frequencies are generated during different, small time periods, as the coin moves past the sensor. This approach presents the difficulty of controlling the oscillator in a “time-slice” fashion, and correlating time periods with frequencies for achieving the desired analysis. Another potential problem with time-multiplexing is the inherent time it takes to accurately measure Q in a resonant circuit. The higher the Q, the longer it takes for the oscillator's amplitude to settle to a stable value. This will limit the rate of switching and ultimately the coin throughput. In another embodiment, two separate sensor cores (


1142




a, b



FIG. 11A

) can be provided, each with its own winding


1144




a, b


and each driven at a different frequency


1146




a, b


. This approach has not only the advantage of reducing or avoiding harmonic interference, but provides the opportunity of optimizing tin core materials or shape to provide the best results at the frequency for which that core is designed. When two or more frequencies are used, analysis of the data can be similar to that described above, with different sets of standard or reference data being provided for each frequency. In one embodiment, multiple cores, such as the two cores


1142




a, b


of

FIG. 11A

, along the coin path


1148


are driven by different frequencies


1146




a, b


that are phase-locked


1152




a, b


to the same reference


1154


, such at a crystal or other reference oscillator. In one embodiment, the oscillators


1154




a, b


that provide the core driving frequencies


1146




a, b


are phase-locked by varactor tuning (e.g., as described above) the oscillators


1154




a, b


using the sensing inductor


1154




a, b


as part of the frequency determination.




In one embodiment, a sensor includes first and second ferrite cores, each substantially in the shape of a section of a torus


282




a, b


(FIG.


2


D), said first core defining a first gap


284




a


, and said second core defining a second gap


284




b


, said core positioned with said gaps aligned


286


so that a coin conveyed by said counting device will more through aid first and second gaps; at least first and second coils


288




a, b


of conductive material wound about a first portion of each of said first and second cores, respectively; an oscillator


292




a


coupled to said first coil


288




a


configured to provide current defining at least a first frequency defining a first skin depth less than said cladding thickness and wherein, when a coin is conveyed past said first gap


282




a


, the signal in said coil undergoes at least a first change in inductance and a change in the quality factor of said inductor, an oscillator


292




b


coupled to said second coil


288




b


configured to provide current defining at least a second frequency defining a second skin depth greater than said first skin depth wherein, when said coin is conveyed past said second gap


284




b


, the signal is said coil undergoes at least a second change in inductance and a second change in the quality factor of said inductor; and a processor


294


configured to receive data indicative of said first and second changes in inductance sad changes in quality factor to permit separate characterization of said cladding and said core.




In another embodiment, current provided to the coil is a substantially constant or DC current. This configuration is useful for deterring magnetic (ferromagnetic) v. non-magnetic coins. As the coin moves through or past the gap, there will be eddy current effects, as well at permeability effects. As discussed above, there effects can be used to obtain, e.g., information regarding conductivity, such as core conductivity. Thus, is this configuration such a sensor can provide not only information about the ferromagnetic or non-magnetic nature of the coin, but also regarding the conductivity. Such a configuration can be combined with a high-frequency (skin effect) excitation of the core and, since there would be no low-frequency (and thus no low-frequency harmonics) interference problems would be avoided. It is also possible to use two (or more) cores, ant driven with DC, and another with AC. The DC-driven sensor provides another parameter for discrimination (permeability). Permeability measurement can be useful in, for example, discriminating between U.S. coins and certain foreign coins or slugs. Preferably, computer processing is performed in order to remove “speed effects.”




Although the invention has been described by way of a preferred embodiment and certain variations and modifications, other variations and modifications can also be used, the invention being defined by the following claims.



Claims
  • 1. A coin-handling apparatus comprising:a first region for receiving a plurality of coins of a plurality of denominations in random orientation; means for singulating at least some of said plurality of coins and transporting along a path toward at least a first sensing location; at least a first sensor for receiving at least first and second driving signals for driving said sensor and providing sensor output, said sensor output including at least a first signal, said output being indicative of at least a first low-frequency coin characteristic and a second high-frequency coin characteristic, said sensor further including a unitary magnetic core and first and second windings wrapped about said unitary magnetic core, wherein said first driving signal is provided to said first winding and said second driving signal is provided to said second winding, and wherein said first winding has a first axis and said second winding has a second axis different from said first axis; and circuitry coupled to said at least first sensor for receiving at least said sensor output and outputting at least a second signal indicative of whether a sensed object is an acceptable coin.
  • 2. An apparatus, as claimed in claim 1, wherein said driving signal is selected from the group consisting of:a sinusoidal signal; a triangle signal; a sawtooth signal; a pulse signal; and a squarewave signal.
  • 3. An apparatus, as claimed in claim 1, further comprising means for providing a second sensor driving signal in a predefined relationship with said first driving signal.
  • 4. An apparatus, as claimed in claim 3 wherein said means for providing a second sensor driving signal in a predefined relationship with said first driving signal is selected from the group consisting of:a phase locked loop circuit; a frequency divider circuit; and means for combining first and second frequencies.
  • 5. An apparatus as claimed in claim 1 further composing means for separating at least first and second components of said sensor output.
  • 6. An apparatus as claimed is claim 5 wherein said means for separating comprises at least first and second filters.
  • 7. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 wherein said first driving signal provides a signal at a first frequency to said first winding and further comprising means for providing a second driving signal at a second frequency to said second winding.
  • 8. Coin-handling apparatus comprising:an input tray for receiving a plurality of coins of a plurality of denominations in random orientations; means for transporting coins from the input tray to a coin pickup device, the coin pickup device having a hopper for receiving coins in a random orientation, at least a first rail for delivering coins at an exit region of the first rail in a substantially coplanar attitude and in single file, and a means for conveying coins from the hopper to the at least first rail; at least a first sensor, spaced from the exit region of the first rail, for providing at least a first signal indicative of a first coin characteristic; means for providing kinetic energy to the hopper to assist in movement of sticky coins; and at least one paddle pivotally and elastically interconnected to the means for conveying coins, wherein the at last one paddle is used to pick up at least one of the coins.
  • 9. Apparatus as claimed in claim 8 wherein the means for providing kinetic energy comprises means for providing vibration to the hopper.
  • 10. Apparatus, as claimed in claim 9 further comprising a motor for use in moving coins in the hopper and wherein the motor is controlled to provide the vibration.
Parent Case Info

The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/105,403 filed Jun. 26, 1998 (now U.S. Pat. No. 6,196,371), which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/883,780 filed Jun. 27, 1997 (now U.S. Pat. No. 5,988,348), which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/807,046 filed Feb. 24, 1997, now abandoned, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/672,639 filed Jun. 28, 1996, now abandoned, and incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.

US Referenced Citations (13)
Number Name Date Kind
4092990 Bayne Jun 1978 A
4148331 Nicolaus Apr 1979 A
4436103 Dick Mar 1984 A
4471864 Marshall Sep 1984 A
4558712 Sentoku et al. Dec 1985 A
4753625 Okada Jun 1988 A
5040657 Gunn et al. Aug 1991 A
5078252 Furuya et al. Jan 1992 A
5263566 Nara et al. Nov 1993 A
5323891 Waite Jun 1994 A
5351798 Hayes Oct 1994 A
5988348 Martin et al. Nov 1999 A
6196371 Martin et al. Mar 2001 B1
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number Date Country
0 724 237 Jul 1996 EP
WO 9302431 Feb 1993 WO
WO 9530215 Nov 1995 WO
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 09/105403 Jun 1998 US
Child 09/703946 US
Continuation in Parts (3)
Number Date Country
Parent 08/883780 Jun 1997 US
Child 09/105403 US
Parent 08/807046 Feb 1997 US
Child 08/883780 US
Parent 08/672639 Jun 1996 US
Child 08/807046 US