The present invention relates to a main body fixing member and a fixing tool for an endpin used in a large musical instrument, and a musical instrument including the fixing tool.
Endpins are used for large musical instruments such as stringed instruments such as a contrabass and a cello and woodwind instruments such as a bass clarinet. For example, in a case of the contrabass, as illustrated in
There are two types of length-adjustable fixing tools for an endpin that have been conventionally provided. As illustrated in
Specifically, in one of the fixing tools, as illustrated in
However, the work of fitting the tip portion of the male screw member 128 into the annular recess 124 of the endpin 100 has to be dependent on the sense because the main body fixing member 104 is made of wood or the like and the annular recess 124 cannot be seen. Therefore, assuming that the tip portion of the male screw member 128 is fitted in the annular recess 124 of the endpin 100, there has been a problem that if the tip portion of the male screw member 128 hits a portion other than the annular recess 124 when the musical instrument is being performed on, slightly loosening the male screw member 128 due to vibration or the like causes the endpin 100 to be gradually slipped and to enter the inside of the musical instrument.
Furthermore, in the other of the fixing tools, as illustrated in
This fixing tool can fix the endpin 102 at any position, and the length of the endpin 102 can be easily adjusted. However, there is a problem that when a tightening force of the female screw member 138 is weak, the ductility of the male screw 132 is also added and the frictional force is weakened, the shaft portion 110 of the endpin 102 slips and enters the inside of the musical instrument.
Regarding such fixing tools, a fixing tool for an endpin as shown in Japanese Patent No. 6142972 has been proposed. This fixing tool includes a first member attached to a musical instrument and a second member provided with a cutout to reduce a diameter, and inserts the second member into the first member having an inclined surface to reduce the diameter of the second member, so that an endpin is crimped and fixed by the second member. In this fixing tool, when the engagement between the first member and the second member is loosened, the endpin cannot be crimped, and the endpin enters the inside of the musical instrument.
A performance of a musical instrument at a concert or the like is performed in front of a large number of spectators, and thus, even if a fixing position of an endpin is displaced during the performance, there is no choice but to perform as it is. Therefore, performers have wanted a reliable fixing tool for an endpin that does not change the fixing position of the endpin unintentionally.
Also, an end pin for a musical instrument has been proposed in Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2001-215953.
In view of the above-described problems, an object of the present invention is to make it possible to confirm that an endpin can be reliably fixed at a desired position when the endpin is fixed at the desired position by use of a fixing tool.
Furthermore, an object of the present invention is to provide such a fixing tool that, once the endpin is fixed at the desired position, the fixing position is not changed by displacement of the endpin even if a screw or the like of the fixing tool is loosened somewhat.
A main body fixing member according to the present invention is a main body fixing member that fixes an endpin including a shaft portion having one end housed in a musical instrument main body and another end stood on a floor, the shaft portion being provided with a recess. The main body fixing member includes a fitting portion that is fixed to the musical instrument main body, a through hole through which the shaft portion of the endpin extends, an opening that is provided on a side surface of the main body fixing member so as to be orthogonal to the through hole, and has a bottom surface, a columnar member that is slidably disposed in the opening, and is provided with a hole through which the shaft portion extends and an engagement protrusion that is engaged with the recess of the shaft portion, the engagement protrusion being formed on an inner surface of the hole, a biasing portion that is disposed between the bottom surface of the opening and an end surface of the columnar member, and a pressing portion that is provided on another end surface of the columnar member, and presses the shaft portion inserted into the through hole and the hole via the columnar member.
Furthermore, the main body fixing member according to the present invention is a main body fixing member that fixes an endpin including a shaft portion having one end housed in a musical instrument main body and another end stood on a floor, the shaft portion being provided with a recess. The main body fixing member includes a fitting portion that is fixed to the musical instrument main body, a through hole through which the shaft portion of the endpin extends, a lateral through hole that is provided on a side surface of the main body fixing member so as to be orthogonal to the through hole, a columnar member that is slidably disposed in the lateral through hole, and is provided with a hole through which the shaft portion extends and an engagement protrusion that is engaged with the recess of the shaft portion, the engagement protrusion being formed on an inner surface of the hole, a cover member that covers the lateral through hole, a biasing portion that is disposed between an inner surface of the cover member and an end surface of the columnar member, and a pressing portion that is provided on another end surface of the columnar member, and presses the shaft portion inserted into the through hole and the hole via the columnar member.
Furthermore, the main body fixing member according to the present invention is
a main body fixing member that fixes an endpin including a shaft portion having one end housed in a musical instrument main body and another end stood on a floor, the shaft portion being provided with a recess. The main body fixing member includes a fitting portion that is fixed to the musical instrument main body, a through hole through which the shaft portion of the endpin extends, a female screw that is provided on a side surface of the main body fixing member so as to reach the through hole, an engagement portion that has a U-shaped cross section and is inserted into the female screw, a pressing portion that is screwed to the female screw and abuts against an end surface of the engagement portion to press the shaft portion via the engagement portion, and a biasing portion in which one end is housed in an opening provided in the engagement portion having U-shaped cross section and the other end is in contact with an end surface of the pressing portion.
A fixing tool for an endpin according to the present invention includes an endpin including a shaft portion having one end housed in a musical instrument main body and another end stood on a floor, the shaft portion being provided with a recess, and any of the above-described main body fixing members.
A musical instrument according to the present invention uses the above-described fixing tool for an endpin.
A fastening portion according to the present invention is a fastening portion of a fixing tool for an endpin, the fixing tool including an endpin including a shaft portion having one end housed in a musical instrument main body and another end stood on a floor, the shaft portion being provided with a recess, and a main body fixing member including a fitting portion that is fixed to the musical instrument main body, a through hole through which the shaft portion of the endpin extends, and an opening that is provided on a side surface of the main body fixing member so as to be orthogonal to the through hole, and has a bottom surface. The fastening portion includes a columnar member that is slidably disposed in the opening, and is provided with a hole through which the endpin extends and an engagement protrusion that is engaged with the recess of the shaft portion, the engagement protrusion being formed on an inner surface of the hole, a biasing portion that is disposed between the bottom surface of the opening and an end surface of the columnar member, and a pressing portion that is provided on another end surface of the columnar member, and presses the shaft portion inserted into the through hole and the hole via the columnar member.
According to the main body fixing member and the fixing tool for an endpin according to the present invention, the engagement protrusion (engagement portion) biased by the biasing portion is engaged with the recess formed in the shaft portion of the endpin. When the shaft portion of the endpin is moved in an axial direction in the through hole of the main body fixing member, recesses of the shaft portion are sequentially engaged with the engagement protrusion, and a sound, a vibration, and the like are generated at the time of engagement, so that an operator can be notified. If it is known that the engagement protrusion is engaged with the recess of the shaft portion by the sound, the vibration, and the like, the shaft portion is pressed by the pressing portion having an axial center on the same plane including an axial center of the engagement protrusion, so that the pressing portion is engaged with the recess of the shaft portion without fail. Since the pressing portion is engaged with and presses the recess of the shaft portion, even if a pressing force of the pressing portion is loosened somewhat, the engagement is not easily released, and thus the shaft portion of the endpin is not displaced relative to the through hole of the main body fixing member.
A fixing tool 2 (hereinafter referred to as a “main fixing tool”) for an endpin according to the present invention includes an endpin 10 and a main body fixing member 12, as illustrated in
The endpin 10 includes a shaft portion 22 having one end 14 housed in a musical instrument main body 16 and another end 18 stood on a floor 20. A rubber cap 24 is covered on a tip portion of the shaft portion 22 on a side of the other end 18. When the rubber cap 24 is removed, a pointed tip formed integrally with the shaft portion 22 appears. Usually, the endpin 10 is used with the rubber cap 24 attached when a musical instrument is performed on. In the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10, annular recesses 26 are formed at substantially equal intervals in an axial direction. Each of the annular recesses 26 is formed in an arc shape in a circumferential direction of the shaft portion 22. That is, a central portion of each of the annular recesses 26 has the deepest recess, and both ends in the axial direction are gradually shallower and are connected to an outer diameter of the shaft portion 22. Each of the annular recesses 26 can be formed in an angular shape so as to form a groove, but a rounded shape is preferable from a viewpoint of preventing breakage due to stress concentration or the like.
A material of the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10 is preferably steel, carbon, titanium, brass, tungsten, or the like, or a combination thereof. The material of the shaft portion 22 also has a role of transmitting vibration of a sound from the musical instrument, affects acoustic effects including sound quality, resonance, timbre, volume, and the like, depending on what kind of material is selected, and thus is appropriately selected in consideration of the effect. A length, a shaft diameter, and the like of the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10 differ depending on a type of the musical instrument and are not limited. Shapes and intervals of the annular recesses 26 formed in the shaft portion 22 are not limited. Note that an enlarged diameter portion 19 having a diameter larger than the outer diameter of the shaft portion 22 is provided at the tip portion of the shaft portion 22 on the side of the other end 18. The enlarged diameter portion 19 is for preventing the endpin 10 from entering the inside of the musical instrument main body 16.
The main body fixing member 12 includes a fitting portion 28 that is detachably fitted to a lower portion of the musical instrument main body 16, and a through hole 30 through which the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10 extends. An inner diameter of the through hole 30 is set to be slightly larger than the outer diameter of the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10. An elastic member such as a cork material can be disposed on the entire surface or a part of both ends of an inner surface portion of the through hole 30. A length of the through hole 30 is only required to be long enough to support the endpin 10. A material of the main body fixing member 12 is usually wood, but the main body fixing member 12 can be formed of metal such as steel, titanium, or copper alloy. Furthermore, the main body fixing member 12 includes a fastening portion 32 that fastens the shaft portion 22 extending through the through hole 30. In the fastening portion 32, a columnar member 36 formed with a male screw 34 on an end surface is slidably inserted into an opening 33 opened in a side surface of the main body fixing member 12 so as to be orthogonal to the through hole 30, and a female screw 38 is screwed to the male screw 34. A hole 40 through which the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10 extends is opened in side surfaces of the columnar member 36.
As illustrated in an enlarged manner in
On an opposite end surface of two end surfaces of the columnar member 36, where the male screw 34 is not formed, an opening in which a coil spring 44 is disposed is provided. As illustrated in
The female screw 38 is screwed to the male screw 34 of the columnar member 36 via a cap 46. Therefore, in the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10 that extends through the through hole 30 of the main body fixing member 12 and the hole 40 of the columnar member 36 inserted into the opening 33 of the main body fixing member 12, the female screw 38 is rotated and the male screw 34 is tightened, so that the columnar member 36 is attracted toward the female screw 38. As a result, the shaft portion 22 extending through the hole 40 of the columnar member 36 is attracted toward the female screw 38, but the shaft portion 22 in a part of the through hole 30 cannot move in a direction orthogonal to the axis, so that the shaft portion 22 is firmly fixed. That is, the columnar member 36, the male screw 34, and the female screw 38 constitute a pressing portion. Here, since the engagement protrusion 42 formed on the side surface of the hole 40 of the columnar member 36 is engaged with the annular recess 26 of the shaft portion 22, the shaft portion 22 does not move in the axial direction. Even if the tightening force of the female screw 38 is loosened, the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10 does not move in the axial direction relative to the main body fixing member 12 unless the female screw 38 is loosened until the engagement protrusion 42 is disengaged from the annular recess 26, and a position of the endpin 10 relative to the main body fixing member 12 does not change.
In the above structure, the operation is as follows. First, the columnar member 36 with the coil spring 44 attached is inserted into the opening 33 of the main body fixing member 12, positions of the through hole 30 and the hole 40 of the columnar member 36 are aligned while the male screw 34 is slightly pushed, and then the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10 is inserted into the through hole 30 and the hole 40. When a force for pushing the male screw 34 is released, the flat surface 43 of the engagement protrusion 42 formed on the side surface of the hole 40 of the columnar member 36 biased by the coil spring 44 is brought into close contact with a surface of the shaft portion 22. Since the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10 is biased only by the biasing force of the coil spring 44, a force for fixing the shaft portion 22 is weak, and the shaft portion 22 can be slid in the axial direction relative to the through hole 30. At this time, when passing through the annular recess 26 formed in the shaft portion 22, the engagement protrusion 42 moves along the shape of the annular recess 26. As a result, vibration with a clicking sound is transmitted to an operator, and it can be seen that the engagement protrusion 42 is engaged with the annular recess 26. In this way, until the shaft portion 22 is moved to a desired position, engagement and disengagement (the engagement protrusion 42 is located at a position other than the annular recess 26 on the surface of the shaft portion 22) are observed by the sound and the vibration at the position of the annular recess 26. When the sound and the vibration are generated at the desired position, the slide of the shaft portion 22 is stopped, the female screw 38 is screwed to the male screw 34 via the cap 46, and is sufficiently tightened. Tightening and fixing is preferably performed by the engagement between the engagement protrusion 42 and the annular recess 26, but can be performed by a contact portion between the inner surface of the hole 40 of the columnar member 36 and an outer surface of the shaft portion 22 on condition that the engagement protrusion 42 is inserted into the annular recess 26.
By this operation, the engagement protrusion 42 of the columnar member 36 can be reliably engaged with the annular recess 26 of the shaft portion 22 by the sound and the vibration, and the shaft portion 22 can be sufficiently tightened and fixed at that position. Therefore, even if the female screw 38 is loosened when the musical instrument is being performed on, for example, a position of the shaft portion 22 is not displaced unless the female screw 38 is loosened until the engagement protrusion 42 and the annular recess 26 are disengaged.
Although one embodiment of the fixing tool for an endpin of the present invention has been described above in detail, the present invention is not limited to this embodiment. Next, other embodiments will be described. Note that the same parts and members as those in the above-described embodiment are designated by the same reference numerals and the description thereof will be omitted.
For example, as illustrated in
Furthermore, as illustrated in
Next, as illustrated in
The columnar member 36 inserted into the hole 57 formed on the straight side surface of the fixing member main body 55A has a hole 40 through which the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10 extends so as to penetrate side surfaces of the columnar member 36. The coil spring 44, which is a biasing portion that biases the columnar member 36 in an axial direction of the columnar member 36, is provided at one of both end portions of the columnar member 36, and a female screw 50 is formed in the other end portion in the axial direction. Furthermore, a linear or arcuate slope 65 is formed on an outer periphery of the end portion where the female screw 50 is formed. The slope 65 is for preventing the cover member 55B from being caught when the cover member 55B is covered, as described later. An engagement protrusion 42 is formed on a surface of the hole 40 that penetrates the side surfaces of the columnar member 36, on the side where the coil spring 44 is provided. A shape and the like of the engagement protrusion 42 are similar to those in the embodiment of
The cover member 55B is covered on the straight side surface of the fixing member main body 55A and the stepped portion 63. The cover member 55B is provided with a hole 67A that covers the straight side surface of the fixing member main body 55A in the axial direction, a small diameter hole 67B that is engaged with the stepped portion 63, and a hole 67C through which the male screw 52 extends in a direction orthogonal to the axial direction. A position of the hole 67C is formed so as to be substantially coaxial with the female screw 50 of the columnar member 36 when the cover member 55B is covered on the straight side surface of the fixing member main body 55A.
In the above structure, the cover member 55B is covered on the side surface of the fixing member main body 55A so as to compress the slope 65 and an end portion of the coil spring 44 of the columnar member 36 inserted into the hole 57 of the fixing member main body 55A. The male screw 52 is then inserted via the hole 67C of the cover member 55B and lightly screwed to the female screw 50 of the columnar member 36 (see
Next, another fixing tool 6 for an endpin according to the present invention can be an embodiment illustrated in
In the fixing tool 6, with the male screw 62 loosened, the shaft portion 22 of the endpin 10 is passed through the through hole 30 of the main body fixing member 66. The slide member 68 is pressed by the coil spring 44 and moves along a surface of the shaft portion 22. The slide member 68 is engaged at the annular recess 26 of the shaft portion 22 to generate sound and vibration. From these sound and vibration, it can be seen that the slide member 68 is located at the annular recess 26. After the shaft portion 22 is moved to a predetermined position relative to the main body fixing member 66 and it is confirmed that the slide member 68 is engaged with the annular recess 26 by the sound and the vibration, the male screw 62 is tightened and the shaft portion 22 is fixed.
Although various embodiments of the main body fixing member and the fixing tool for an endpin according to the present invention have been described above, the present invention is not limited to these embodiments. For example, the main body fixing member is usually made of wood, and in this case, when the female screw is formed on the side surface of the main body fixing member, it is preferable to embed metal in which the female screw is formed, instead of directly forming the female screw.
The shape of the annular recess formed in the shaft portion of the endpin can be formed with an inclined surface or can be a groove shape. Furthermore, the endpin can have a structure and shape suitable for the present invention, but a commercially available endpin can be used. When the commercially available endpin is used, it is not necessary to sell the endpin and the main body fixing member at the same time, and it is also possible to manufacture and sell only the main body fixing member.
It is preferable that the fixing tool for an endpin of the present invention includes the endpin and the main body fixing member and these are sold as one unit. However, since the commercially available endpin can be used, it is also possible to manufacture and sell only the main body fixing member. Furthermore, it is also possible to manufacture and sell only the fastening portion in the main body fixing member.
In addition, the present invention can be carried out in a mode in which various improvements, modifications, or changes are added based on knowledge of those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the present invention. Furthermore, within the scope of producing the same actions or effects, the present invention can be carried out in a mode in which any of the matters specifying the invention is replaced with another technique.
2, 3, 4, 6 Fixing tool
10 Endpin
12, 55, 66 Main body fixing member
22 Shaft portion
26 Annular recess (recess)
28 Fitting portion
30 Through hole
32 Fastening portion
34, 52 Male screw (pressing portion)
36, 48 Columnar member
40 Hole
42 Engagement protrusion (engagement portion)
44 Coil spring (biasing portion)
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2018-199005 | Oct 2018 | JP | national |
This application is the U.S. National Phase of International Application No. PCT/JP2019/041356, filed on Oct. 21, 2019. This application claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2018-199005, filed Oct. 23, 2018. The entire contents of those applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2019/041356 | 10/21/2019 | WO | 00 |