Hand played music box—like musical instrument

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6188006
  • Patent Number
    6,188,006
  • Date Filed
    Monday, April 26, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, February 13, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
An electrically Powered Hand Played Music Box has;a base frame that carries a plurality of 88 damped reed/plectrum tone producing assemblies that can be mechanically accessed in groups of 29 sequenced assemblies each, and placed in correspondence with the keys of a 29 key keyboard so that the player can flexibly select the key that a tune can be played in;an inclined face surface that carries a detachable tune board that carries, according to manufacture, a pre-set or moveable electrical contact for each assembly tone contained in a sequence of tune tones;an electromagnetically propelled switching mechanism that travels a track where it engages remote electrical lines to the tune board contacts and actuates the assemblies that produce the sequenced tones;a tone amplifying microphone, and a speaker;and a key on a single key keyboard that a player taps to actuate the switching mechanism and provide tempo and rhythm to the assembly produced tones.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




This invention relates to mechanical devices that are used to produce music, but more specifically it relates to devices that employ dampened reed/plectrum assemblies, to produce authentic musical notes.




2. Prior Art




It seems there is a latent desire, in music loving people to “play music” that is considered acceptable, but requires a very minimum expenditure of time and effort. And it seems that this hypothetical need has not been addressed by the Art.




SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT INVENTION




It is therefore a primary object of the present invention to provide an instrument that can be used to play a musical tune by rhythmically tapping on the instruments single tap key.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that produces authentic musical note sounds as opposed to producing imitation musical note sounds.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that produces music that sounds like the music that is produced by a music box.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that carries 88 individual dampened reed/plectrum shuttle mechanism assemblies that are capable of producing 88 chromatic musical note sounds.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that includes a means of accessing any 29 side-by-side musical note producing assemblies group for use in playing a given musical tune.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that can employ manufactured tune boards that carry a configuration of pre-set tune circuit contacts that can be switched on and off, in sequence, to provide tone sounds that constitute a musical tune.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that can employ tune boards that can carry moveable tone circuit contacts that can be moved into a composed tune configuration and switched on and off in sequence to play the tune.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that carries a 29 key board, the keys of which correspond to the 29 assemblies that are accessed, so that assembly tones can be sampled and selected for use in tune composition.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument with 29 fixed circuit lines in what is identified as a tune network base, the lines of which are an extension of, and correspond to, the 29 assemblies that have been made available, so that fixed or moveable contacts can be connected to them.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that employs a battery powered electrical current source.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that employs a battery powered, movable, track guided, pendulum paddle propelled, mechanism, to switch the assembly tune circuits of a given tune, on and off.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument with a switching mechanism that can be flexibly moved onor easily removed from its track.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that carries a microphone, a speaker, and a current controller, to suitably amplify the musical sounds produced by the instrument's assemblies.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument on which tune composing or tune transposing to accomodate a key requirement can be performed by simple recognition of the sound of the tunes first note, and location and placement of that note's circuit contact on the composers tune board.




Another object of the invention is to provide an instrument that carries an electrical power switch to turn the instrument on or off.




Other objects of the invebtion will become apparent as new insights are gained from the application and use of this new instrument.











DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a perspective view of a musical instrument that is played by rhythmically tapping the instrument's single tap key.





FIG. 2

is a side elevation view of the invention that shows tone producing apparatus, tone accessing apparatus, and keyboard apparatus, and the instrument's single tap key.





FIG. 3

is an enlarged sectional view of the instrument's mechanical tone assembly accessing system apparatus that shows the system body carrying a contact bearing leaf selectively into alignment with an 88 assembly contact plate.





FIG. 4

is an enlarged side elevation view of the instrument's tone group accessing stabelizing apparatus.





FIG. 5

is a top view of the instrument's tone group accessing apparatus that shows 29 tone circuits being accessed from an 88 tone assembly circuit plate.





FIG. 6

is an enlarged view of the instrument's 29 tone contact group sliding leaf embodiment.





FIG. 7

shows the copy that is to be printed on the instrument's top surface along and adjacent the tone group accessing stabelizing holding bar for reference in composing.





FIG. 8

is a perspective view of the tune network base—29 tone conductors—built into the face of the instrument.





FIG. 9

is a perspective view showing the components of an instrument keyboard key.





FIG. 10

is a simulated typical circuit for actuating a tone producing assembly by a keyboard key or by the instrument's tap key.





FIG. 11

is a circuit diagram for the invention.





FIG. 12

is a circuit trace of the invention's provision for reversing the direction of a tone producing assembly's damped reed/plectrum shuttle mechanism.





FIG. 13

is a perspective view of the bottom side of a tune board that is manufactured with a plurality of fixed tune circuit contacts that are pre-set in a “tune configuration” that can be played on the instrument.





FIG. 14

is an enlarged side elevation of a fixed tune circuit contact as shown in FIG.


13


.





FIG. 15

is a top view of a simulated tune circuit conductor line extension sheet.





FIG. 16

is a top view of a compliment to the

FIG. 15

extension sheet.





FIG. 17

is a side elevation view of a tune board that carries a plurality of moveable tune circuit contacts that can be moved into a “tune configuration” that can be played on the instrument of the invention.





FIG. 18

is a top view of a section of a composing tune board that shows how ribs that carry tune conductor lines are spaced apart by spacer pieces, in the construction of the board.





FIG. 19

is an elevation view of the moveable tune circuit contact that is referred to in FIG.


17


.





FIG. 20

is an end elevation view of the moveable tune circuit contact shown in the

FIG. 19

drawing.





FIG. 21

is a side elevation view of a tune circuit switching mechanism that is guided in a trackway from open tune circuit, to open tune circuit, to switch them on and off, and generate a tune from a sequence of tones.





FIG. 22

is an enlarged front elevation view of the instrument's circuit switching mechanism pendulum propeller.





FIG. 23

is an enlarged side elevation view of the propelling pendulum shown in FIG.


22


.





FIG. 24

is a partial elevation view of the opposite side of FIG.


23


.





FIG. 25

is a side elevation view showing the components of the instrument tap key.





FIG. 26

is a frontal elevation of the tap key shown in FIG.


25


.





FIG. 27

is a conceptual perspective drawing showing provision for removing the circuit switching mechanism shown in

FIG. 21

, from the mechanism trackway.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




A Mechanical electrically powered, hand played music box comprises and is provided with the following:




A. Instrument Enclosure Components (see

FIG. 1

)




a. Construct an enclosure for the instrument


1


.




b. Provide a rectangular base


2


, and a trapezoidal shaped top


3


made of panels such as


4


,


5


,


6


,


7


,


8


, and


9


, etc.




c. Structurally support the panels with structural angles such as


10


,


11


, and


12


, etc. to achieve the equivalent of a framed enclosure.




B. Assemblies that produce musical tones (see

FIG. 2

)




a. Provide 88 damped reed/plectrum musical tone producing shuttle mechanism assemblies


13


.




1) The 88 assemblies produce a chromatic scale of 88 tones.




2) The 88 assemblies are fastened side by side on the bottom surface of the trapezoidal enclosure


3


, and stabelized by elongated L bracket


258


.




b. Provide a trapezoidal shaped plastic cast frame


14


, to carry the apparatus of each assembly


13


.




1) The assembly shuttle mechanism


15


, provides back and forth reed


16


plucking motion by a plectrum


17


. It is fastened to the bottom horizontal member


18


of the frame


14


.




2) A shuttle body


19


resembles an inverter T. It can be slid back and forth, carried in a modified U shaped track


20


.




3) Each shuttle body


19


, carries a horizontal stabelizing rod


21


that passes through and is fastened in the body


19


. The ends of the rod


21


extend through the mechanism's left side attractor electromagnet


23


(a horizontal hole


24


is provided through each electromagnet) and into an elongated tube


25


and


26


, that is stationarily fastened to the assembly frame


14


. (cont. ref. to

FIG. 2

) Each tube


25


and


26


, contains a recoil spring


27


. Each rod


21


end carries a circular piece


28


that encounters and compresses the spring


27


, and eases stopping the shuttle body's


19


travel. The attractor magnets


22


and


23


, are fastened to the bottom horizontal member of the assembly frame


14


.




4) Shuttle body


19


left side travel limit bracket


29


, is fastened to the body's left side, while travel limit bracket


30


, is fastened to the body's right side.




c. Provide circuit apparatus for reversing the travel of the shuttle body


19


, so that its operation would be charachterized as a “rapid thrusting back and forth motion”. (see

FIG. 12

)




1) The shuttle body


19


carries two probe


31


supported, lift electromagnets


32


and


33


. Each probe


31


is fastened to a support angle bracket


34


, that is fastened to the top of the shuttle body


19


.




2) The shuttle body


19


also carries two flexible contact arms


35


and


36


. The contact arms


35


and


36


, are fastened to the body


19


so that each extends outward from the body


19


in parallel alignment with and spaced below its corresponding probe


31


supported electromagnet


32


and


33


. Two circuit continuation contacts,


247


and


248


, are provided.


247


is carried atop electromagnet


22


, and


248


is carried atop electromagnet


23


. These contacts facilitate reversing the directional pull on the shuttle mechanism's


15


shuttle body


19


. (see

FIG. 12

)




d. Provide each assembly


13


with tone producing apparatus.




1) An assembly reed


16


, while made of steel, is capable of producing a specific tone when it is plucked. Each assembly frame


14


carries a reed


16


. The reed


16


is held by an anchor post


37


. The post


37


is fastened to the underside of the frame's


14


top horizontal member


38


. The post


37


is hollow and could be part of the frame


14


casting. A reed clamp


39


, supports the reed


16


to the post. A reed clamp


39


consists of two concentric spaced apart rings,


40


and


41


, that are joined by an elongated arm


42


. Each ring


40


and


41


, is provided with a set screw


43


. The top ring


40


is fastened to the lower end of the anchor post


37


. The bottom ring


41


is fastened to the upper end of the reed


16


.




2) Each assembly frame


14


carries reed damping apparatus. Two damping shoes


44


and


45


, are each supported to an attitude of being in moveable contact with the musical tone producing reed


16


, by a corresponding reed damp shoe lever support arm


46


and


47


. The vertical member


48


, of each arm is flat and magnetically responsive. Shoe


44


is carried by arm


46


. Shoe


45


is carried by arm


47


. Each arm,


46


and


47


, is stabelized/supported on a pin


49


, to an attitude spaced out from the near vertical surface of the damping apparatus bracket


50


. (cont. ref. to

FIG. 2

) Each arm's pin


49


fastening includes a return spring


51


, that keeps the arm


46


and


47


, in contact with the reed


16


. Two damping electromagnets


52


and


53


are fastened, spaced out, blocking not shown, from bracket


50


, positioned as shown in FIG.


2


. On actuation of the shuttle mechanism


15


, magnets


52


and


53


become magnetized, and attract arms


46


and


47


, to remove the shoes,


44


and


45


from contact with the reed


16


.




Note 1:




1) Shoe


44


and


45


removal from contact with a reed


16


, occurs each time the shuttle body


19


is moved horizontally.




2) It is intended that the damping shoes


44


and


45


, are to be lifted from their damping attitude almost simultaneously with, but before the plectrum


17


plucks the reed


16


. It is anticipated that varying the factors that influence the comparative rate of speed of the plectrum


17


and arms


46


and


47


will govern timing an assembly


13


.




C. A chromatic musical tone group accessing system (see

FIGS. 3

,


4


,


5


, and


6


)




a) Provide system apparatus for accessing a given 29 successive chromatic musical assembly tones group to 29 exposed conducting wires


96


in the instrument face, so that these 29 tones can be used individually to play a given musical tune. (Refer to Invention Circuit

FIG. 11

)




1) An accessing system elongated individual assembly circuit contact plate


56


, is supported to an elongated rectangular structural shape


57


, by support bracket


58


. The plate


56


is fastened to the top surface of a trapezoidal shaped base


59


that is carried by the bracket


58


. The plate surface slopes down from the structural shape


57


. A circuit wire


60


from each of the 88 tone producing assemblies


13


, is connected to a corresponding contact


61


on the plate


56


. A travel stop bar


62


that is required for a complementing system element, the leaf,


63


, (see below), is provided at each end of the contact plate


56


. (see

FIG. 5

)




2) An accessing system slideable rectangular shaped body


64


that has extensions


65


along its sides, so that it resembles an inverted T, is carried in a modified U shaped slideway


66


, (see

FIG. 3

) that extends the full width of the instrument


1


. The body


64


carries a leaf


63


that is hinge


67


fastened to the side of the body. (see

FIG. 6

) The leaf


63


carries


29


elongated conducting contacts


68


that are fastened in parallel array along the underside of the leaf


63


. The contacts


68


project out from the hinge's pin


69


. A horizontal wire access hole


70


through the body


64


, is provided for each of the 29 contacts


68


. (Refer again to FIG.


3


and

FIG. 6

) A Contact plate


71


that has 29 contacts


72


that correspond to the 29 leaf contacts


68


, is fastened horizontally above the access holes


70


alignment, on the body


64


side opposite the leaf


63


. The hinge pin


69


carries a tension spring


73


that provides downward pressure by the leaf


63


on the contact surface of plate


56


.




3) A stationary contact plate


74


, is supported to a vertical member


75


of the rectangular base


2


by bracket


76


. The plate


74


is centered between the instrument


1


sides. A circuit wire


77


from each of the 29 leaf contacts


68


is extended through a corresponding access hole


70


, and connected to the corresponding contact


72


on plate


71


. Loosely hung wires


78


, one from each of the 29


72


contacts, is connected to a corresponding contact


79


on plate


74


. (cont. to refer to

FIG. 3

)




4) The accessing system body


64


is provided with a hand operated stabelizing mechanism


80


. (Refer again to

FIG. 4

) A mechanism


80


L shaped locking lever


81


is hinge


82


fastened to the side of the body


64


. The hinge pin


83


is horizontally disposed in its fastening and carries a tension spring


84


that provides counter clockwise pressure on the lever


81


, so that the lever's horizontal member, which carries a vertical tab


85


, will cause the tab to be seated in one of 60 vertical slots


86


cut in an elongated holding bar


87


fastened to the top surface of the instrument


1


. The elongated holding bar


87


, carries copy


246


, as shown in FIG.


7


. The letter C is displayed adjacent slot


40


. It is used as a reference mark to assist in conceptual placement, scale wise, of the 29 musical tones that are being accessed. The remainder of the copy identifies slots


1


to


39


, and


41


to


60


. The vertical tab


85


corresponds to musical tone #1 of the 29 accessed tones. A reference line marker


242


is printed above the tab


85


. C corresponds to the assembly


13


that produces a “middle C” tone. See

FIG. 4

Locking lever


81


is flexibly connected to displacement lever


92


. A rod


249


is crimped and hinged in a hole


251


at the top of


81


's vertical member and connected to hinge


252


mounted on the back of


92


. Spring


84


keeps counterclockwise pressure on lever


81


, and keeps tab


85


seated in a slot


86


. Lever


92


is hinge


250


fastened at the top of body


64


. When lever


92


is depressed,


81


is displaced, and tab


85


disengages from the slot


86


it is seated in, and the body can then be slid back and forth in the slideway


66


. (see

FIG. 3

) The #1 tone is sought and identified. The vertical member


92


is released so the vertical tab


85


seats in the tone slot


86


. And thusly, 29 chromatic tone circuits are accessed to the instrument face


55


. The 29 tone circuits carried in the face become identified by the numbers 1 to 29 printed at the left on the instrument face


55


. Two accessing system tune circuit contact plates,


88


and


89


, are fastened to the instrument face


55


. (see FIG.


8


and

FIG. 11

) Each plate carries 29 contacts that are in corresponding horizontal alignment, from plate to plate. The plates are parallel amd extend from the bottom to the top of the face


55


. Plates


88


and


89


carry contacts


90


and


91


and are disposed on the left side and right side of the instrument face


55


, respectively. A circuit wire


93


from each of stationary contact plate


74


's 29 contacts is connected to a corresponding contact


90


on plate


88


.




6) An accessing system tune network base


94


is provided. 29 semicircular grooves


95


are cut into the surface of the instrument face


55


. (see

FIG. 8

) The grooves


95


run horizontally and are parallel to the top and bottom edges of the face


55


. Each groove


95


carries a solid bare conducting wire


96


. In its placement, {fraction (1/2+L )} of the wire's diameter is set in a groove


95


, and the other {fraction (1/2+L )} of the wire's diameter extends above the surface of the face


55


. The base


94


compliment, designated a tune board


971


, to be specified, will be placed over the base, to constitute a tune network


98


. Each conductor wire


96


is a connector between a corresponding set of


90


and


91


, contacts.




Note 2:




1) An accessing system tune network reader, a 29 key


99


keyboard


100


is to be specified. (see

FIG. 1

) The keyboard


100


is not used to play a tune on the instrument


1


. It is intended as a means of identifying the tone sounds that are accessed.




2) The keyboard


100


keys are placed in correspondence with the 29 conductor wires


96


in the tune network base


94


in the face


55


of the instrument by providing a circuit wire


101


to connect each key


99


on the keyboard


100


to a corresponding face


55


contact


91


on plate


89


. (see

FIG. 11

)




3) Also in connection with accessing, tone contacts


128


, that can be moved by hand into a composed tune configuration on a composing type tune board


972


will be specified.




4)

FIG. 10

, a simulated typical circuit employed in actuating tone producing assemblies, either by keyboard key


99


, or by use of an instrument tap key


104


, provides insight into the operation of the accessing system.




D. A tune board circuit assembly contacting system (see

FIG. 13

)




a. Provide system apparatus for deploying in a configuration, a plurality of contacts that can be switched on and off, one at a time, by tapping a single key, to effect specific tones in a sequence that constitures a given musical tune.




1) Provide a structurally framed tune board


971


, comprised of a plurality of parallel ribs


105


that are equally spaced apart and joined at their ends by spacer plates


106


. Provide a tune board


971


base sheet


107


, that covers and is fastened to the bottom surface of the rib


105


framing. The ribs


105


, plates


106


, and base sheet


107


, could be fastened by gluing. Provide 4 corner slots


108


in the board


971


, oriented in a top of board to bottom of board direction. Provide, as complimentary to the tune board slots


108


, 4 alignment pins


109


, that are set in the face


55


of the instrument


1


. The pins are a locating guide in placing the board


971


on the instrument face


55


. (Refer again to

FIG. 1

) A typical tune board


971


fastening to the face


55


of the instrument


1


is as follows. The bottom horizontal side


110


of the board


971


is placed under the raised edge of two Z brackets


111


that are fastened, spaced apart, along the bottom of the instrument face


55


. The top horizontal side


112


of the board


971


is engaged and held by a pair of flaps


113


, that are mounted on a rotateable rod


114


. The flaps


113


could be made of clear plastic. The rod


114


is carried by a pair of sleeves


115


that are fastened along the top of the instrument face


55


. The rod


114


end carries a lightly weighted handle


116


, which can be used to rotate the rod so that its flaps


113


move against or away from the exposed surface of the board


971


. The rod assembly


114


serves to hold the tune board


971


in a fixed alignment with the instrument's tune network base


94


.




2) Provide a plurality of resiliant contacts


102


fastened in a specific configuration to the unfastened side of the tune board


971


base sheet


107


. (Refer again to

FIG. 13

, and see

FIG. 14

) A manufactured tune board


971


provides one of several possible tune contact configurations. The contact


102


could be made of spring steel. The contact


102


has a conducting surface coating. The contact


102


could be fastened by rivet. An insulated conducting line


118


is connected to each contact


102


and extends from the contact to the bottom horizontal side of the tune board


971


. (Refer again to

FIG. 3

, and see

FIG. 15

) The line


118


could be applied to the surface of the base sheet


107


by a screen process where a first printing would apply a conducting material, and a second overprinting would apply a non-conducting material. The ends of the conducting lines


118


, are exposed conducting surfaces. Placement of the tune board


971


on the instrument face


55


provides superimposing each line


118


end on a corresponding tune circuit extension line


119


A plurality of exposed circuit extension lines


119


are carried on a rectangular, plyable, extension line sheet,


120


. The sheet


120


is fastened to the face


55


and top surface of the instrument's rectangular enclosure


2


. The sheet


120


lines


119


provide circuit continuation from the tune network base


94


to the circuit switching mechanism


121


, that is to be specified.




3) Provide a tune board


972


, that is intended for use in composing a tune, and playing it on the instrument


1


. (see

FIG. 17

) Provide a structurally framed board


972


, comprised of a plurality of parallel ribs


122


, that are equally spaced apart and joined at their ends by rectangular spacing plates


123


. Each composing tune board


972


rib


122


, has a slot


124


that extends the full length of the rib


122


. (Cont ref. to

FIG. 17

, and see

FIGS. 18

,


19


, and


20


) The rib


122


resembles a modified, inverted U. The rib slot


124


carries a conducting rod


125


, fastened to the top interior horizontal surface of the slot. Each conducting rod


125


extends from the top end to the bottom end of the board


972


. Each rod


125


is wrapped around and folded under the lower end and over the upper end of the rib


122


it is carried in. A filler piece


126


, not shown, is proveded in the slot


124


, to support the rod


125


in its fastening. When the board


972


is placed on the instrument face


55


, the folded under rod


125


ends become superimposed on a corresponding extension line sheet


120


tune circuit extension line


119


. The


972


composers tune board carries 4 corner slots


108


that are compatable with the alignment pins


109


provided for the


971


tune board. Fastening the


972


tune board to the instrument face


55


, would be as specified for fastening the


971


tune board. Provide each rib


122


of the composing tune board


972


, with one or more slideable contact bodies


128


. In composing, more than one contact body can be deployed on each rib


122


in making a tune configuration. The contacts


128


are disposed along the top of the tune board


972


, until they are moved to a selected position on the board. (cont. ref. to

FIGS. 18

,


19


, and


20


)




4) In constructing a slideable contact


128


, provide two side pieces,


129


and


130


, that are joined by a flat center piece


131


, to form the contact body


128


. Fasten these 3 members by thru bolts and nuts


132


. Provide the body


128


with a flexible compressible conductor


133


. The conductor


133


is carried on a body thrubolt


132


, and is disposed with its top curved arm


134


, compressed against the bottom surface of the conducting rod


125


, while its bottom notched arm


135


engages either the face of the instrument


1


, or one of the 29 horizontal tune wires


96


, carried by the instrument face


55


.




5) (referring back to

FIGS. 13

, and


17


) The resiliant contact lines


118


, and the moveable contact 128 rods


125


, have identical near vertical spacing. Either tune board,


971


or


972


, therefore, is compatable with the spacing of the tune circuit lines


119


carried on extension sheet


120


. A plurality of contact lines


118


or contact rods


125


would be estimated to be 150 plus, to give the instrument sufficent tune capability.




6) Note in FIG.


2


and in

FIG. 3

that provision is made for extending the lower horizontal edge of the extension sheet


120


vertically down and fastened to the upper vertical face of one of the instrument's track and bridged circuit facings,


136


and


137


. The


120


sheet could be fastened by gluing. The lower vertical edge of the sheet


120


, carries each tune circuit line


119


. Each tune circuit line


119


, extends to and is connected electrically to stationary contact


138


on track


150


face


136


.




7) Note in

FIG. 16

that provision is made for continuation of the


119


circuit lines carried on sheet


120


, on a complementary sheet,


151


. Sheet


151


is fastened on track


150


vertical side face


137


. Hex shaped contact


139


, which corresponds to contact


138


, is stationarily fastened to the


137


vertical face opposite the


136


face. The


151


sheet carries


119


lines that correspond to the


120


sheet lines on the opposite side of the trackway


150


. The


151


sheet


119


lines extend electrically from each


139


hex contact vertically up the facing


137


, and then a nominal horizontal distance, to a common wire


152


. Hex contacts


138


and


139


are exposed contact surfaces. Circuit switching mechanism


121


, bridges circuit faces


136


and


137


, as it travels track


150


, the width of the instrument


1


. (cont. ref. to

FIG. 16

) The complimentary sheet


151


lines


119


, which are conductors covered with a non-conducting coating, could be applied to the


151


sheet by screen process, applying first a conducting material and overprinting with a non-conducting material. The common wire


152


, could merge at the sheet


151


edges, into an insulated copper connecting wire


153


. The sheet


151


could be fastened by gluing. (refer again to

FIG. 11

)




E. Tone verifying apparatus for an instrument


1


composing system




a) As a compliment to the specified 29 tone assembly


13


accessing apparatus, provide a keyboard means of actuating the sound producing assemblies. Provide the keyboard


100


with 29 white identical keys


99


. Number the keys from left to right, 1 to 29. The key numbers correspond to the numbers 1 to 29 printed along the left edge of the instrument face


55


that identify the exposed conductors


96


of the network base


94


. A key on the keyboard


100


is depressed, and the sound is listened to, when using the system. If the sound is acceptable, the line to the assembly that produces it is tapped by connecting a contact


128


to it, that connects it to a conductor rod


125


. (refer again to

FIGS. 1

,


3


, and


9


)




1) In making the keyboard


100


, fasten each key


99


, to the top of a vertically supported hingeboard


140


. The hingeboard


140


is supported to a vertical interior length member


75


, of the rectangular base


2


. Typically, provide each key


99


Of the keyboard


100


, with a return spring


142


, a hinge


143


, and an elongated vertical-rise-limit angle


144


. Provide the keyboard


100


with a down travel limit contact bar


145


that is supported to a base strip


146


that is fastened to the top surface of the base


2


bottom panel


147


, and that extends under all of the keyboard


100


keys


99


. Each keyboard key


99


is provided a set of contacts,


148


and


149


.




F. Apparatus for switching a plurality of tone providing assembly


13


circuits, on and off, one at a time, in given sequence. (cont. ref. to

FIG. 3

, and see

FIG. 21

)




a) Provide a circuit switching mechanism


121


that is propelled over an instrument trackway


150


.




Note 3:




See FIG.


11


and note that a battery


236


to assembly


13


circuit is open where the circuit encounters the switching mechanism


121


. The switching mechanism, which is on its own circuit, and which carries a conductor line segment


189


across its top surface, provides conductor bridging of each of the open assembly circuits as it travels the trackway


150


.




1) The trackway


150


could be a casting


156


made of plastic. Provide an elongated, unitized series of wedge recesses


157


that carries a channel trackway,


154


and


155


, along each of its top edges. (see

FIG. 3

) The trackway unit


150


is carried by the box shaped structural member


57


.




2) The switching mechanism


121


has a sled shaped base


159


that carries horizontally projecting runners,


160


and


161


, along each side. The runners,


160


and


161


, support the sled base


159


to the trackway channels


154


and


155


(cont ref. to

FIG. 21

, and see

FIGS. 22

,


23


, and


24


)




3) The mechanism


121


propulsion assembly


162


is supported to a base block


163


that is mounted on the front top surface of the sled base


159


. A horizontally forward projecting arm


164


, hinge


243


supports a pendulum shaped paddle


165


. The paddle


165


is supported to the underside of the arm


164


. The pin


244


of the paddle hinge


243


extends out of the sides of the paddle assembly. The pin


244


supports a spring


170


which maintains counter clockwise rotational tension on the paddle


165


. One end of the spring


170


is set in a horizontal hole in the side of the paddle, and its opposite end is stabelized by a rotational stop pin


171


.




4) At the lower end of the paddle


165


, fasten a short extension piece


168


, by hinge


169


. The pin


245


of hinge


169


extends out of the sides of the extension assembly. The pin


245


supports a spring


234


that provides counterclockwise rotational tension on the extension piece


168


. A lip bracket


235


limits the counterclockwise rotation of the extension piece


168


, to a maximum of 180° from the paddle


165


. Provide a retaining pin


216


at each end of pin


244


. Provide a retaining pin


221


at each end of pin


245


.




5) At the upper end of the paddle


165


, provide a magnetically attractive plate


172


, fastened parallel to and along the rear facing side of the paddle


165


. Provide a bracket


173


supported electromagnet


174


, adjacent the paddle hinge


243


. The magnet's


174


support angle


173


is fastened to the underside of support arm


164


. The magnet


174


driven paddle typically provides a step type propulsion of the switching mechanism


121


. (refer again to

FIG. 21

)




6) Additionally, provide the switching mechanism


121


with a vertical reciprocating sled base stabelizing assenbly


175


. A secondary rectangular base block


176


, is mounted on the top surface of the sled base


159


. A horizontally aft facing lower support arm


177


is supported by an angle bracket


178


, to the rear vertical surface of the secondary base block


176


. And a horizontally aft facing upper support arm


179


, is supported by its fastening to the aft top surface of the secondary base block


176


. The bar


179


is aligned directionally above the lower support arm


177


. (cont. ref. to

FIG. 21

)




7) A vertical elongated reciprocating wedge rod


180


is fastened in and extending out of the top surface of a wedge


181


. The wedge


181


has been modified by the removal of its bottom apex


182


. The rod


180


extends vertically through the lower arm


177


and the upper arm


179


. A rod retaining pin


183


is set horizontally through the top end of the rod


180


. A rectangular shaped electromagnet


185


is attached to the bottom surface of arm


179


. The electromagnet


185


has a vertical elongated hole through its center


257


. A recoil spring


186


, encompasses the rod


180


, and extends from the top of the wedge


181


, to the spacer plate


187


that is fastened to the bottom surface of lower arm


177


. A lower arm


177


length extending member


188


, which is made of non magnetically attractive material, is fastened to the top surface of the lower arm


177


, and extends in an aft direction. Rod


180


is stationarily fastened in a rectangular attractor block


184


. Block


184


carries bracket


254


, which is provided with a guide hole


253


. Line


204


extends from its slideable lever


196


fastening, over pulley


202


, down through hole


253


and is is fastened to horizontal stop pin


255


. Coil return spring


256


is fastened to the


204


line end. The unfastened end of the spring


256


is fastened to the top surface of arm extension


188


. The specified arrangement allows movement of the switching mechanism


121


, while line


204


remains stationary.




8) A wedge tune circuit extension conductor line


189


, is provided. The line


189


extends the circuit from wedge end surface


190


, over the top of the wedge


181


, to


191


, on the opposite side of the wedge. End surface


190


carries conducting contact


192


. End surface


191


carries conducting contact


193


. The line


189


connects contacts


192


and


193


. The line


189


is insulated, except for its points of contact.




9) When electromagnet


174


is actuated and the pendulum


165


is pulled in a clockwise direction, the pendulum engages the wall of a track wedge recess


157


, and causes the sled base


159


to travel forward a distance equivalent to the eidth of the top of the track wedge recess


157


. And since the pendulum electromagnet


174


and the reciprocating rod electromagnet


184


are actuated near simultaneously, while the sled base


159


is moved, the contact,


192


and


193


, bearing wedge, travels up and bridges circuit from hex shaped surface contact


138


to hex shaped surface contact


139


. This actuation sequence typically effects the production of a tone by an assembly


13


. The wedge then drops into the next subsequent track wedge recess


157


.




G. Apparatus for moving or disengaging the instrument


1


switching mechanism


121


.




a. Provide a system of pulleys, lines, and hand operated levers,


194


, for lifting the reciprocating wedge


181


, and diverting the pendulum


165


, so that the switching mechanism


121


, can be slid to the left on the trackway


150


, and removed from its track


150


engagement.




1) The system


194


includes a fixed lever


195


and a slideable lever


196


assembly


197


, that are carried by the upper arm


179


. The slideable lever


196


is connected to a plate


198


, not shown, that supports two channels so that they form a shoe


199


. The shoe


199


is slideable along upper arm


179


.




2) A pulley


200


is fastened by bracket


201


, not shown, to the slideable lever assembly


197


. (cont. ref. to

FIG. 21

) A pulley


202


is fastened by bracket


203


to the trailing end of the upper arm


179


. A pulley


206


, that is vertically aligned below the slideable lever pulley


200


, is mounted on an angle bracket


207


, that is mounted on the top surface of the lower arm


177


. A line


208


that is connected to the slideable lever


196


, extends over pulley


200


, drops vertically to pass under pulley


206


, and extends horizontally forward to a fastening point


209


on a slideable pendulum diverter bracket


210


base


211


. A base


211


track


217


, which resembles a short length of I beam, is mounted on top of arm


164


, and runs parallel to the arm. Base


211


holding spring


239


, holds the base against a stop pin


240


. The spring


239


and pin


240


are structurally supported to end post


241


.




3) The diverter bracket's


210


near vertical members


212


and


213


, engage the pendulum extension tab


214


, when the bracket base


211


is moved forward or backward on track


217


. Refer to FIG.


24


and note that the pendulum extension tab


214


does not engage the diverter bracket's near vertical members


212


and


213


, while the switching mechanism


121


is used in playing a tune. (cont. ref to

FIG. 21

)




4) When fixed lever


195


, and slideable lever


196


are grasped and the slideable lever is squeezed toward the fixed lever


195


, line


204


lifts the reciprocating wedge


180


out of the wedge recess


157


it is sitting in, and line


208


slides diverter bracket


211


rearward, causing the bracket to engage the pendulum tab


214


, and rotate the pendulum


165


counterclockwise, and cause it to move into a near horizontal attitude, and disengage from contact with the wedge recess


157


, it was sitting in. And when the hand operated lever system


194


has effected the actuation of these two assemblies,


162


and


175


, the switching mechanism


121


can be slid out of the trackway


150


via the instrument's


1


left side. (see

FIG. 27

) And, by the same token, the switching mechanism


121


can be disengaged, and moved to a previously played tone assembly


13


, line


119


, to simplify the composing process.




H. Apparatus for actuating the tune circuits of the instrument


1


by rythmically tapping a key


104


(refer back to FIG.


1


and

FIG. 2

)




a. Provide an instrument tap key


104


that on bottoming, when it is depressed, produces actuation of an instrument tone producing assembly


13


. The key would follow the up and down motion of an instrument


1


players tapping finger. Refer to FIG.


25


and

FIG. 26






1) Provide an elongated, wide key member


104


, hinge


223


fastened to the instrument hinge board


140


. Provide a U shaped key bottoming stop


224


. The recessed surface of the U shaped stop


224


, has a piece of felt


225


glued to it to soften tap key


104


bottoming. Provide a coiled compression key return spring


226


. The spring


226


is fasyened in a near vertical upward extending attitude, set on and fastened to a beveled base plate


227


. The base plate


227


is fastened to the upper surface of the instrument's


1


bottom panel, one of the (4-8) specified above.




I. Electrical apparatus for a mechanical electrically powered, hand played music box.




a. Provide electrical means specified and identified in the invention's electrical circuit diagram. (refer again to

FIG. 11

)




1) Provide sound amplification system elements including: a microphone


228


, a speaker


229


, and a rheostat


230


volume control. The microphone


228


and speaker


229


, could be located approximately as shown in FIG.


2


. Sound amplification would be controlled by the rheostat


230


.




2) Provide a sound system on/off switch


231


, located as shown in FIG.


1


. Provide a potentiometer


237


as shown in FIG.


11


. Provide an instrument on/off switch


238


, as shown in

FIG. 11

, and located as shown in FIG.


1


.




3) Provide battery


236


, noted above, as a power source for the invention.




4) Provide a keyboard on/off switch


232


.




Note 4:




Wire


260


connects key


99


contact


148


to sw.


232


.




Wire


261


connects sw.


232


to


236


(−).




wire


262


connects


236


(−) to electromagnet


174


.




Wire


263


connects electromagnet


174


to electromagnet


185


.




Wire


264


connects electromagnet


185


to (+) side of


104


.




Wire


265


connects (−) side of


104


to potentiometer


237


.




Wire


266


connects


237


to


238


.




Wire


267


connects


238


to


236


(+).




Wire


259


connects each assembly


13


to


237


.



Claims
  • 1. An electrically powered, hand played music box comprising:musical tone producing means including, 88 reed and plectrum shuttle mechanism assemblies, each assembly having a reed, a plectrum carrying shuttle body, and two electromagnets, each said electromagnet having a directionally opposite attracting effect on said shuttle body; means for accessing chromatic assembly tone circuits in groups of 29, said means comprising, an 88 chromatic assembly tone circuit plate having 88 electrical contacts, and a track supported slideable body having a leaf with 29 tone circuit electrical contacts; a stationary plate having 29 tone circuit contacts for connecting said 29 accessed circuits electrically to a tune network base that is built into the instrument face; tune network base means comprising, a set of parallel instrument face mounted tone circuit electrical contact plates, each said plate having 29 tone circuit electrical contacts, 29 semicircular horizontal and parallel grooves, said grooves cut into the surface of said instrument face, and 29 solid bare wire tone circuit electrical conductors, said conductors connecting corresponding electrical contacts on said parallel contact plates, each bare conducting wire is installed in said instrument's face surface so that its length is conductively exposed across said instrument's face surface; a structurally framed tune board for supporting a plurality of pre-set line bearing contacts to said tune network base; a structurally framed composing tune board for supporting a plurality of slideable contacts that serve as conductors between a composing board's conducting rods, and the instrument face bare conducting wires; a primary conductor line extension sheet for connecting each said tune board contact line electrically to a corresponding stationary hex shaped tone circuit switch contact; composing, tone verifying means, comprising, a 29 chromatic tone keyboard, said board having 29 identical white keys, said keys being numbered 1 to 29, said keys each being in circuit with and capable of actuating, on depression, a corresponding tone producing assembly among the said 29 accessed assemblies; assembly tone circuit switching means comprising a tune circuit switching mechanism, said mechanism having an electromagnetically actuated pendulum paddle propeller, a unitized mechanism trackway, a vertically reciprocating wedge stabelizer, and a tone circuit electrical extension conductor line; a secondary conductor line extension sheet for electrically connecting each said hex shaped tone circuit switch contact's corresponding stationary hex shaped tone circuit switch contact extension line, to a line end, common wire connected, copper connector; hand controlled switching mechanism track disengaging means, comprising, a pendulum diverter bracket, a sliding, moveable lever, a stationary lever, a pair of lever lines, and a set of pullies, for lifting a reciprocating wedge out of said track, and diverting a pendulum to a near horizontal attitude, to facilitate relocation or removal of said switching mechanism on or from said trackway; a tap key for electrically actuating said tone producing assemblies by rythmically tapping said key; electrical means comprising a microphone, a speaker, a speaker volume control, a keyboard on-off switch, an amplifying system on-off switch, a potentiometer, a battery, and an instrument on-off switch.
  • 2. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 1 wherein said musical tone producing means further comprises assembly elements that include a frame, said frames bottom horizontal member supporting a shuttle track, an elongated horizontal rod, said rod being fastened in said shuttle body, and passing through a horizontal hole in each said electromagnet, each rod unfastened end having a coiled rod restrainer spring fastened to it, each rod unfastened end having a circular piece attached to it, said frame's bottom horizontal member supporting a bracket supported, elongated, spring enclosing cylindrical tube, each shuttle body having a shuttle body travel limiting magnetic attractor bracket surface attached to each of its vertical leading surfaces, wherein the magnetic attraction of said bracket causes said rod to compress said spring and thereby ease said shuttle's travel limiting attractor bracket into the stopping attractor magnet.
  • 3. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 2 wherein said musical tone producing means further comprises circuit means that include a pair of complimentary latching and contacting switch units, each unit comprising a lift electromagnet that is supported to said shuttle body by a probe, said probe extending horizontally out from the top of said body, parallel to and spaced above a flexible arm supported latch-contact element, said complimentary switch unit probe being disposed dimetrically along said body's top surface, wherein the introduction of current to said instrument's circuit flows to the lift electromagnet of the switch unit that is disposed in a shuttle latching mode, unlatching said shuttle and then flowing to said shuttle's most remote said attractor electromagnet, causing said electromagnet to become energized and attract said shuttle to itself, and wherein said shuttle's travel causes said plectrum to pluck said reed and thereby produce a musical tone.
  • 4. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 3 wherein said musical tone producing means further comprise a pair of magnetically responsive damping shoes, each said shoe being flexibly supported by bracket to said assembly frame, a pair of damping shoe attractor electromagnets, each said damping shoe electromagnet being stationarily supported to said assembly frame, wherein said shoes are normally disposed on arms in a reed damping attitude, that is, resting lightly against said reed, while said shoe attractor electromagnets are disposed spaced away from said shoes, wherein said shuttle attractor electromagnet's energizing current simultaneously energizes said shoe attractor electromagnets causing said damping shoes to be lifted from their damping attitude before the encounter of said lagging plectrum with said reed.
  • 5. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 4 wherein said assembly tone group circuit accessing means further comprises a rectangular body holding bar, said bar having 60 slots, said slots corresponding to said tone circuit contacts 1 through 60, said individual slots being labeled 1 through 39, “C”, and 41 through 60, and a hand operated, tension spring offset, L shaped body holding lever with a tab extension on its horizontal member, wherein on actuation of said lever, said tab is lifted from its resident slot, said body can be freely slid to a selected assembly group's number 1 slot position, and said handle released, causing said tab to seat in the number 1 slot, thereby locking onto and accessing a 29 chromatic tone group contact segment of said 88 contacts.
  • 6. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 1 wherein said tune board means further comprise, a plurality of ribs, said ribs being disposed parallel and equally spaced apart by end spacer plates, said ribs and plates forming a structural frame, said frame having four corner pin slots, said slots providing alignment of said board on said instrument face tune network base, said board having a bottom base sheet, said base sheet having a plurality of resiliant contacts mounted on its unfastened surface, said contacts being preset and fastened in manufacture, in a configuration that represents a specific musical number.
  • 7. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 1 wherein said tune board means further comprise, a plurality of elongated contact conductor lines, each said contact having a conductor line connected to it, wherein the unconnected end of each conductor line is fastened to the edge surface of said tune board frame, and wherein said line ends constitute a horizontal array of assembly tone circuit lines that are parallel, equally spaced apart, electrical contact surfaces, said surfaces amounting to a sequenced placement of the tones of a musical number.
  • 8. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 1 wherein said composing tune board means further comprise, a plurality of ribs, each said rib having a slot through its length dimension and thus resembling an inverted U, said ribs being disposed parallel and equally spaced apart by end spacer plates, said ribs and plates forming a structural frame, said frame having four corner pin slots, said slots providing alignment of said board on said instrument face tune network base.
  • 9. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 8 wherein said composing tune board means further comprise, a plurality of conductor rods wherein each said rib carries a rod in its elongated slot, and each said rod's lower end segment is wrapped under the lower edge of said structural frame, and wherein said rod ends constitute a horizontal array of parallel, side by side, equally spaced apart, assembly tone circuit electrical contact surfaces, said surfaces amounting to a sequenced placement of the tones of a musical number.
  • 10. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 1 wherein said slideable contacts further comprise, a flat somewhat thicker center piece sandwiched and through bolted between two flat side pieces, said side pieces enclosing said rib, said center piece slideably engaging said rib's top surface, a flexible conductor, wherein said flexible conductor, carried on a body through bolt, extends up into said rib's slot, in compression contact with said conductor rod, wherein said body is disposed slideably stabelized to said rib, and movement of said body provides electrical contact between said flexible conductor's bottom member and any one of said tune network's 29 assembly tone conductors.
  • 11. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 1 wherein said assembly tone circuit switching means further comprise, a mechanism sled body, said body having a pair of elongated runners, said runners supporting said body to a pair of elongated channel trackways, wherein said unitized trackway further comprises a series of wedge shaped recesses, and wherein said electromagnetically actuated pendulum encounters the inclined side of a wedge to provide specific forward sled movement.
  • 12. The electrically powered, hand played music box of claim 8 wherein said assembly tone circuit switching means further comprise an elongated reciprocating rod, said rod having a wedge fastened to its lower end, said wedge having said tune circuit extension conductor line fitted to its top and sides, said rod having an attractor electromagnet stationarily fastened to it, said rod having an encompassing recoil spring wherein actuation of said attractor electromagnet causes said wedge fitted conductor line ends to encounter said stationary track face hex contacts and mechanically complete the electrical extension of an assembly tone circuit, thereby producing a musical tone.
US Referenced Citations (5)
Number Name Date Kind
3311010 Ward Mar 1967
3665092 Heiman May 1972
4275635 Maric Jun 1981
5070755 Carroll Dec 1991
5824927 Tonon Oct 1998