The invention relates to a headset for a functional device, particularly a microphone.
Headsets are used particularly for fastening microphones to the head of the user. In this way, voice input by the user into the microphone can be performed without the user having to hold the microphone by his hands.
Headsets of this type typically include—similar to headphones—a clip that is placed over the head, the clip due to its elasticity tensioning and securing the headset against the head. They can be used, for example, by singers during live appearances or by task force members, for example the police, for communication purposes.
Headsets of this type, however, are expensive, bulky, and at times impair audio reception. Furthermore, they interfere with the visual appearance of the person and interfere with additional head gear the user may be wearing.
Locking a functional device in place to the outer ear by means of slings, suspension clips or the like in general does not guarantee stable, slip-free fastening, whereby the functional device can be positioned starting from the outer ear, for example, as a microphone in the mouth region of the user.
DE 102 27 450 B4 shows a headset for a functional device, particularly a microphone, wherein an insert body is inserted in the concha or auditory canal of the user and held by a retaining clip, which is braced against the concha. On the insert body, a holding device is provided, which carries the attached functional device, for example a rigid wire clip.
Headsets are furthermore used in the medical field to attach transmitters for cochlea implants. These headsets may include a bending element and an otoplasty element to be inserted in the patient's ear, as is described in DE 201 05 562 U1, for example.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,396,935 B1 shows a headset with a rigid, bendable retaining member, and at the ends of which a microphone and a speaker are provided. The retaining member is placed around the auricle of the user and on the inside includes a transceiver for reciprocal communication with a device, which is carried in the shirt pocket, for example.
An object of the invention is to overcome the drawbacks of the prior art.
Another object of the invention to create a headset, which guarantees secure positioning of a functional device in the head region of the user, and which is nevertheless small in size, and, to a great extent, is not considered to be interfering.
This object is achieved according to the invention with a headset which includes a signal interface configured for receiving and forwarding electrical signals, a bending-resistant, bendable retaining member, and a functional device attached to the retaining member. Retaining member being bendable and held in a bent position without a restoring force, and is connected to signal interface for positioning functional device. Electrical signal lines are provided in retaining member, and running between signal interface and functional device. There is a fixing element which can be placed on retaining member in various longitudinal positions to secure retaining member. A retaining clip, which can be bent into position, extends between signal interface and fixing element. A rear section of retaining member, the signal interface, the retaining clip, and the fixing element form a loop, and the size of the loop is adjustable and changeable by displacing fixing element along retaining member, in use, and loop being configured for receiving an auricle of a user and running at least partially behind auricle, is use.
The invention is based on the idea of achieving fastening by a loop placed around the outer ear or the auricle, including the earlobe, the loop being reliably adjustable in size by a fixing element. For this purpose, a retaining member extends from a signal interface under the auricle to the front and at the end carries the functional device to be positioned, namely the microphone, in particular.
According to the invention, the retaining clip extends from the fixing element to the back and upward, is placed over the auricle, and on the front, together with the fixing element, receives the retaining member, for example at an acute angle, namely an angle smaller than a right angle, or also at a substantially right angle.
The signal interface may be a control device, which receives, processes (for example amplifies) and forwards signals. For this purpose, the control device can be provided, for example, behind the auricle (which is to say completely or partially covered by the auricle) or also combined with the fixing element. The forwarding process can take place via an output line and/or via wireless signals.
Furthermore, the signal interface may serve only for routing the internal signal lines to the output lines. It is preferred if a powerful amplifier is provided in the microphone and if the signal lines are shielded from induction, for example as coaxial cables or twisted pair lines. For this, a combination of the signal interface with the fixing element is advantageous.
The fixing element can be particularly a clamping element, which receives the retaining member, for example, in a through-hole or an eye. Furthermore, different fixing actions are possible, for example in a form-fit manner or by means of a securing member, such as a screw or a pin.
According to the invention, a loop is formed in general by the rear section of the retaining member, the control device and the retaining clip to the clamping device. The length of the rear section of the retaining member included in the loop changes as the size of the loop is adjusted, and in the case of a large loop setting may disappear entirely, so that the loop is then formed solely by the retaining clip and the fixing element, optionally also by the signal interface. The loop has a certain amount of outwardly directed residual bias and therefore has no constricting effect. Advantageously, the loop forms an oval shape with a tip on the fixing element and as a result receives the auricle in an anatomically advantageous manner. The angle on the fixing element is advantageously acute, namely smaller than a right angle, so as to achieve a good tensioning or clamping effect, or also for example a right angle. Surprisingly, this configuration is self-correcting and self-centering.
According to the invention, it has been recognized that the elastic retaining clip, which is placed on top over the auricle, on the front extends downward and is rigid (which is to say it maintains a certain level of inherent rigidity in the bent positions and does not slacken), is subject to bending stress, which pulls the fixing element away to the front and upward. The fixing element can thus be configured as a simple eye, which the user can displace arbitrarily (i.e., in any desired manner) on the retaining member in the longitudinal direction with little effort, wherein due to the bending stress of the retaining clip tilting of the eye is achieved—without further locking elements—and the longitudinal position is secured. During the manual adjustment, the user will generally use one hand to grasp the retaining member in front of the fixing element and the other hand to grasp the retaining clip above the fixing element and displace it in the longitudinal direction, wherein the required force can also be applied by weaker persons.
A clamping action can already be achieved by a slight difference between the inside diameter of the eye and the outside diameter of the retaining member. The diameters may substantially correspond to each other such that displacement is possible due to the elasticity of the outer casing of the retaining member and the above-mentioned tilting brings about an additional securing effect. Furthermore, the control device may be a sliding stop against slippage of the clamping element toward the back, whereby a constriction of the auricle with grossly negligent adjustments is prevented.
According to a preferred embodiment, one or more individual wires run in the retaining member and the retaining clip, the wires being twisted or not twisted. Individual wires of this type with a surrounding outer casing enable a dimensionally stable adjustment with a certain level of elasticity and without requiring a restoring force when the elasticity is overcome. According to the invention, the one or more individual wires of the retaining member and retaining clip may be configured to be continuous, which is to say they extend from the functional device to the fixing element, wherein they can run in or next to the signal interface. As a result, the retaining member and the retaining clip may transition into one another according to the invention. They may also be configured as one piece; an embodiment of this type is particularly advantageous when combining or integrating the fixing element and signal interface, thus allowing a continuous clip to extend from the functional device to the signal interface. In the signal interface, the signal lines can, for example, be routed through, for example to a downwardly extending line.
When configuring the one or more individual wires through the retaining member and the retaining clip to be continuous, uniform rigidity and elasticity of the loop are guaranteed. It has been shown that precisely this configuration enables fastening that is secured against slippage and is perceived comfortable, non-interfering and non-constricting by the user.
The electrical lines running between the functional device and the signal interface can advantageously be received between the (for example twisted) individual wires of the retaining member. Additionally, a rounder shape of the bundle of individual wires and electrical lines is achieved, so that subsequently a uniform round shape is achieved after molding a thin outer casing made of plastic or rubber around, the shape being received without substantial clearance by an eye with a round cross-section.
The headset according to the invention does not block the auditory canal; since it is not attached in the auricle or outer ear, it is hygienically safe. Since it has no preferred left or right direction, it can be used equally for the left and right ear.
Alternatively to the configuration with rigid individual wires, the retaining member and/or the retaining clip can also be formed, for example, as injection molded parts, or the retaining member by molding material around the signal lines.
Relative terms such as left, right, up, and down are for convenience only and are not intended to be limiting.
The invention will be explained in more detail hereinafter with reference to the several embodiments that are schematically illustrated in the attached figures.
a is a detailed enlargement of the clamping element according to
A headset 1 according to the embodiment of
When configuring the fixing element 6 as a clamping element 6, the element is advantageously configured, for example, as a cylindrical, metallic body with an eye 8, the body being placed on the end of the retaining clip 5, and the retaining member 3 being inserted through the eye. The eye 8 has an inside diameter, which substantially corresponds to the outside diameter of the retaining member 3. As a result, a sliding displacement of the clamping element 6 with the eye 8 thereof on the retaining member 3 is possible, while maintaining a frictional engagement in the respective longitudinal positions.
The retaining member 3 and the retaining clip 5 are advantageously formed by twisted individual wires 10, a plastic casing 12 being molded around them. Additionally, in the retaining member 3 insulated electrical lines 14 are routed between the individual wires 10. Furthermore, according to
According to a preferred embodiment, the individual wires 10 of the retaining member 3 are further routed as individual wires 10 of the retaining clip 5 such that they extend from the microphone 4 to the clamping element 6; here, the control device 2 is inserted in a de-insulated (e.g., stripped) region and connected to the electrical lines 14 extending from the microphone.
For production, thus individual wires 10 can be twisted, the control unit 2 with the electrical lines 14 can be placed on a center region, and the electrical lines 14 can be routed between the twisted individual wires to the front end; thereafter, the plastic outer casing 12 is molded on, wherein a central region is omitted or subsequently bared for the control device 2, and end regions are omitted or subsequently bared for the microphone 4 and the clamping element 6. At the center, the control device 2 is installed; the lines 14 extend from the device as electrical connecting lines 20 and are connected to a plug contact 22; on the rear end, the clamping element 6 is attached to the individual wires 10 and pushed on the retaining member 3; at the front end, the microphone 4 is attached to the individual wires 10 and connected to the electrical lines 14. The single-piece or multiple-piece control device 2 can thus serve particularly for the reception, amplification and forwarding of the acoustic signals via the connecting line 20.
According to the detailed enlargement of
This attachment and orientation is performed the same on either of the user's side, which is to say for the left or right auricle 24. The plug 22 of the electrical line 20 can be inserted, for example, in a device attached to the user's belt.
Advantageously, the retaining member 3 and the retaining clip 5 have substantially equal rigidity or elasticity, resulting in a substantially equivalent curvature of these regions during the adjustment to the auricle 24; it is preferable if a substantially oval shape of the loop 7 is formed with an acute angle between the clamping element 6 and retaining member 3. Instead of the microphone 4, also a hearing aid, for example, or a cochlea transmitter, for example, or an external receiver, for example, may be provided as the functional device, wherein in such embodiments the retaining member 3 is shaped accordingly different for the positioning of the respective functional device.
The connection by laser weld points enables a cost-effective, fast and very durable connection in relation to the sometimes extremely high forces and bending torque occurring when bending the microphone 4.
The lines 114 here can be routed out of the retaining clip 5 in the fixing element 6 or also in front of the same and from there the lines run to the concha of the auricle 24. The earpiece 50 may be provided in the concha or also in the auditory canal of the auricle 24.
Alternatively to the illustrated embodiments, however, it is also possible to route the electrical lines 114 from the control device 2 directly to the earpiece 50 or partially along the retaining member 3 and from there to the earpiece 50.
Furthermore, according to
The transceiver device can in principle also be provided in a location that differs from the control device in the headset, for example in the fixing element 6.
Also in the embodiment according to
Alternatively, in
This embodiment according to
In principle, any arbitrary data communication from the headset 1 to external devices is possible. In addition to the medical field for hearing aids, also use in other applications is possible, for example voice input and voice output in the field of entertainment media or for telephone hotlines, for example call centers, as a hands-free device in motor vehicles, during television broadcasts or the like.
While this invention has been described as having a preferred design, it is understood that it is capable of further modifications, and uses and/or adaptations of the invention and following in general the principle of the invention and including such departures from the present disclosure as come within the known or customary practice in the art to which the invention pertains, and as may be applied to the central features hereinbefore set forth, and fall within the scope of the invention or limits of the claims appended hereto.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2005 002 482 | Jan 2005 | DE | national |
10 2005 021 012 | May 2005 | DE | national |
10 2005 055 762 | Nov 2005 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation of application no. PCT/DE2006/000063, filed Jan. 18, 2006, which claims the priority of German application no. 10 2005 055 762.7, filed Nov. 21, 2005, and which claims the priority of German application no. 10 2005 021 012.0, filed May 3, 2005, and which claims the priority of German application no. 10 2005 002 482.3, filed Jan. 18, 2005, and each of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2418120 | Hornickel | Apr 1947 | A |
4039765 | Tichy et al. | Aug 1977 | A |
4289938 | Zichy | Sep 1981 | A |
6097827 | Yang | Aug 2000 | A |
6233344 | Clegg | May 2001 | B1 |
6396935 | Makkonen | May 2002 | B1 |
6625293 | Nageno et al. | Sep 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
101 39 865 | Apr 2003 | DE |
10139865 | Apr 2003 | DE |
10 2005 021 012 | Nov 2006 | DE |
2 036 505 | Jun 1980 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070264850 A1 | Nov 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/DE2006/000063 | Jan 2006 | US |
Child | 11826774 | US |