The present invention deals with electronic pianos and deals in particular with a foldable electronic piano with means to make the keyboard stiff.
A Piano is a music instrument with the characteristic of being very cumbersome and impossible to be carried by the pianist by opposition to most instruments, such as stringed instruments, that the player can easily carry around like a usual piece of luggage.
At present electronic keyboards are available that are easier to carry, but they are not foldable and hence are quite bulky when they have more than 5 octaves.
The keyboard of a foldable piano that is easily transportable is described in the European patent EP 0858649. The keyboard is composed of several modules linked together by a supple membrane, each module simulating a set of piano keys through a slightly raised design. This keyboard that can include up to seven octaves is of a book size when folded and it is an actual piano when unfolded, however the item presented in the present patent does not describe by any mean the ways to stiffen the keyboard.
In fact the keyboard described above needs to be laid on a stiff surface such as a table in order to make a stiff set so that the musician can play in the same fashion he would on an actual piano. Said differently, the keyboard does not include the means to make it stiff when the modules are deployed.
That is why the aim of the invention is to provide an electronic piano that is foldable and easy to carry and that includes means to stiffen the keyboard when unfolded.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,174,097 B1 mainly describes an electronic keyboard with means to lock the various modules of the keyboard but not to make it stiff.
The purpose of the invention is therefore a foldable and portable electronic piano composed of several modules constituted of a set of keys that can reproduce the notes of an actual piano thanks to its associated electronics, whose modules are linked together through a supple membrane that can withstand material working and allows the electronic piano to be folded and unfolded, the modules once folded being of the volume of a book and constituting the keyboard of an actual piano when unfolded. The piano includes in addition <<stiffening>> means (providing stiffness) that can be set in two positions once the modules have been deployed to make the keyboard, a first position allowing the keyboard to be folded and a second position making the keyboard stiff.
The aim, purpose and characteristics of the invention will appear more clearly when reading the description that follows with reference to the drawings:
A foldable piano that can exhibit the main inventive characteristic of this invention, i.e. the stiffening means, is described in the European patent EP 0858649. Such a piano is of course mainly composed of a keyboard. As illustrated on
The modules are linked together through a supple membrane that can withstand material working such as a rubber or latex membrane. When the keyboard is deployed and stiffened by the stiffening means described hereafter, it looks like illustrated on
The contactors used to measure the touch of the keys may be ink, capacitive, resistive or piezoelectric contactors. The mere fact of pressing one finger on one key of the keyboard does not generate sound, the note sound being generated only when the key is hit. It has to be noted that with piezoelectric contactors, the variable mechanical energy induces a correlated current able to generate a large number of nuances.
Each hitting of a key generates a signal which is transmitted to a wired logic circuit controlled by a microprocessor (not shown) located in one of the modules. The electronic circuits are powered through batteries or power supply plug by means of a transformer. This way, the sounds to be reproduced are digitised sounds from an actual piano recorded in a memory chip. It has to be noted that the sounds may be reproduced thanks to a synthesizer that can also reproduce a large number of sounds from other music instruments.
With reference to
The keyboard support 22 includes one hollow dovetail piece or structure 26 illustrated on
With reference to
A readily accessible string 36 is bound to the end of portion 28-1 of the stiffening structure, and the readily accessible string 38 is bound to the end of portion 28-4. In doing so, it is easy for the user who wants to fold the keyboard to grasp the string 36 in order to position the male stiffening structure in the position shown on
When the keyboard is unfolded, the user keeps it in the <<stiff position>> by pulling the string 38 so as to bring the male stiffening structure in the position shown on
It has to be noted that, due to the fact that the length of the portion of the male structure on the far right is smaller than the length of the corresponding module 16, the male structure 28 does not overhang on either end of the keyboard whether in the first position that allows folding or in the second position where the keyboard is stiffen.
If the keyboard has a number of modules different from four, for example n modules, the number of portions of the male adjacent structure whose length is equal to the length of the corresponding modules will be equal to n−1, only the nth portion being shorter than the module.
Due to the use of the supple membrane linking two adjacent modules, it might happen that the modules would not be properly aligned and as a result, there could be a gap between the keys of these two modules somewhat disturbing for the user, and also the male stiffening structure could not be moved as explained with reference to
According to another characteristic, the foldable piano according to the invention may include a pair of pedals that the user may connect when he wants to use the piano. When operated, the right pedal provides the usual pedal function for all pianos, i.e. to make the sound of the note or group of notes last longer. When activated, the left pedal may have the usual function of damping the played note or reproducing an innovative function which consists in amplifying the sound signal of the played notes. This application is useful when a non dynamic keyboard is used. These two connected pedals both include a stress gauge sensor for instance of the piezo-resistive type, which means that the pressure on such a sensor, induces a geometrical deformation which makes the characteristics of a resistor to vary.
The said variation of the resistance of the stress gauge sensor which is created by the foot pressure, transmits a correlated and calibrated analogue signal to an amplifier connected to the electronic circuits of the keyboard. As a result, the action of the left pedal induces variation of the notes volume that are played in order to simulate the nuances of the play. The higher the pressure on the pedal, the louder the volume of the notes will be played. This function may be inverted, so that the volume is at its maximum by default (fortissimo), and is gradually attenuated when the pressure on the pedal increases.
The mechanism of the pedals described above that uses stress gauge sensors may be integrated in a small volume with an oblong shape so that it can be inserted in one of the holes of the support 22 when the keyboard is folded (not shown).
In a more sophisticated version, the pedal mechanism described above is connected with the keyboard electronics via a short range wireless connection.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR06/00963 | 4/28/2006 | WO | 00 | 10/28/2008 |