The present application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from the prior Japanese Patent Application No. 2014-058143 filed Mar. 20, 2014, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a keyboard apparatus which is used in musical instruments such as pianos, and relates to a keyboard instrument.
2. Description of the Related Art
In keyboard instruments such as conventional acoustic pianos, each of plural keys is provided with a mechanism which consists of a wippen which swings when a key is pressed, a jack driven in accordance with rotation of the wippen, and a hammer member driven by the jack to strike a string, as described in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 2002-258835.
In this mechanism, the keys are urged to swing upward by the total weight of the wippen, jack and hammer member, whereby the front ends of the keys are brought to the initial positions by initial loads. Therefore, the keyboard apparatus gives a player a constant initial load when he/she performs a key operation on the keyboard instrument.
But in the mechanism of the keyboard apparatus, when the weight of the hammer member is made heavier in a low-pitched tone side than in a high-pitched tone side to change a key load in performing a key operation between the low-pitched tone side and the high-pitched tone side, the key load at the initial position changes between the low-pitched tone side and the high-pitched tone side, giving the player something strange feeling when he/she plays the keyboard instrument. In the conventional acoustic piano, heavier weights are attached to the keys in the low-pitched tone side than in the high-pitched tone side, whereby the key loads of the keys in the initial positions are kept constant.
A key touch feeling similar to the key touch feeling given by the acoustic piano can be obtained with the above structure, but the additional weights to be attached on the keys already provided with the wippen, jack and hammer member will invite inconveniences including a high cost of the instrument and a complicated structure.
A keyboard apparatus is provided, which is simple in structure and gives a key touch feeling similar to key touch feeling given by acoustic pianos.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a keyboard apparatus which comprises plural keys, plural transmission members provided for the plural keys respectively, each having one of plural kinds of weights, each of which displaces, when a corresponding key is pressed by a user, and plural hammer members provided for the plural keys respectively, each having one of plural kinds of weights, each of which swings in accordance with displacement of the corresponding transmission member, when the corresponding key is pressed by the user, thereby applying an action load onto the pressed key.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a keyboard instrument which comprises plural keys, plural transmission members provided for the plural keys respectively, each having one of plural kinds of weights, each of which displaces, when a corresponding key is pressed by a user, plural hammer members provided for the plural keys respectively, each having one of plural kinds of weights, each of which swings in accordance with displacement of the corresponding transmission member, when the corresponding key is pressed by the user, thereby applying an action load onto the pressed key, plural switch units provided for the plural hammer members respectively, each of which generates an on-signal when pressed in response to swing of the corresponding hammer member, and a sound source which generates a musical signal in response to the on-signal generated by the switch unit.
A keyboard apparatus used in an electronic keyboard instrument according to the embodiments of the invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in detail.
As shown in
The plural keys 2 consist of white keys 2a and black keys 2b, as shown in
As shown in
An action mechanism 3 is provided with plural transmission members 10 and plural hammer members 11, as shown in
Further, as shown in
The plural supporting members 16 are attached to the base board 5 at plural positions predetermined along the direction in which the plural keys 2 are arranged, so as to stand up on the base board 5, as shown in
The supporting member 16 is made of a hard synthetic resin such as ABS resin, and has a fixing part 16a to be attached to the base board 5 and a bridge part 16b integrally formed on the fixing part 16a, as shown in
A rear-side rail-supporting part 16c is provided at the lower portion of the rear end of the bridge part 16b, (that is, the portion corresponding to the upper portion of the rear side of the fixing part 16a), as shown in
The transmission supporting rail 14 is composed of a tubular member having a rectangular cross section and a length extending over the overall length of the 88-key arrangement, as shown in
The plural transmission holding parts 12 and plural stopper supporting parts 17 are mounted on the transmission supporting rail 14 along the direction of the 88-key arrangement (the direction in which the keys 2 are arranged), as shown in
The transmission holding part 12 is made of a hard synthetic resin such as ABS resin, and integrally formed on a body plate 12a so as to face, for instance, about 10 keys 2 along the direction of the 88-key arrangement, as shown in
The shaft supporting part 18 has a pair of guide walls 20 formed on the rear end of the body plate 12a of the transmission holding part 12 (left end of the part 12 as seen in
The restricting part 19 consists of a pair of restricting walls formed on the front end of the body plate 12a of the transmission holding part 12 (right end of the part 12 as seen in
The transmission member 10 is made of a hard synthetic resin such as ABS resin. The transmission member 10 consists of a transmission body 22 and the transmission interlocking part 23, as shown in
The transmission body 22 is formed in a waffle-like shape, as shown in
The transmission interlocking part 23 is reverse C-shaped on the whole and formed on the rear end of the transmission body 22 so as to extend rearward, as shown in
The transmission interlocking part 23 is formed with an interlocking hole 23a at its center for interlocking the transmission holding shaft 21 of the transmission holding part 12, as shown in
When the transmission holding shaft 21 is inserted into the interlocking hole 23a through the insertion opening 23b, the transmission interlocking part 23 is vertically held on the transmission holding shaft 21 so as to make the insertion opening 23b face the transmission holding shaft 21 and then resiliently pressed against the transmission holding shaft 21, whereby the transmission holding shaft 21 is inserted into and interlocked by the interlocking hole 23a, as shown in
A thin engaging part 24 is provided at the rear bottom portion of the transmission body 22 of the transmission member 10, as shown in
Further, the transmission body 22 of the transmission member 10 is formed so as to extend its bottom portion toward the key 2, as shown in
In the mechanism described above, when the key 2 is pressed, the capstan 26 comes from beneath to contact with the first transmission felt 25, moving the transmission member 10 upward to swing the transmission member 10 counterclockwise about the transmission holding shaft 21. The transmission body 22 of the transmission member 10 is shaped higher at its front-end top than the rear-end top, and has a left-downward slope section on the top (for instance, as seen in
On the front-end top of the transmission body 22 is provided a second transmission felt 27, as shown in
Meanwhile, the hammer supporting rail 15 is composed of a tubular member having a rectangular cross section and a length extending over the overall length of the 88-key arrangement, like the transmission supporting rail 14 as shown in
The hammer holding part 13 is made of a hard synthetic resin such as ABS resin, and has a holding member integrally formed on the rear of its body plate 13a for holding the hammer members 11. The body plate 13a has the form of rails and the holding member faces, for instance, about 10 keys 2 along the direction of the 88-key arrangement, as shown in
More particularly, the hammer holding part 13 has a pair of guide walls 30 formed on the rear end portion (left end portion) of the body plate 13a so as to correspond to the transmission member 10 and a hammer holding shaft 31 held between the pair of guide walls 30, as shown in
The hammer member 11 is made of a hard synthetic resin such as ABS resin, and has a hammer 32 and a hammer arm 33, these elements being integrally formed, as shown in
The hammer arm 33 consists of a lateral plate part 33a having substantially the same length as the transmission member 10 with ribs 33b formed on its peripheral and on both surfaces, as shown in
The hammer interlocking part 34 is C-shaped on the whole and formed on the front end of the hammer arm 33 so as to project forward, as shown in
The hammer interlocking part 34 is formed with an interlocking hole 34a at its center for interlocking the hammer holding shaft 31 of the hammer holding part 13, as shown in
When the hammer holding shaft 31 is inserted into the interlocking hole 34a through the insertion opening 34b, the hammer member 11 is vertically held on the hammer holding shaft 31 so as to make the insertion opening 34b face the hammer holding shaft 31 and then resiliently pressed against the hammer holding shaft 31, whereby the hammer holding shaft 31 is inserted into and interlocked by the interlocking hole 34a, as shown in
The hammer arm 33 is provided with the hammer projection 28 at its front end bottom, as shown in
The hammer arm 33 comes to its initial position, that is, to its lower limit position, as shown in
When the rear-end top of the hammer arm 33 comes from beneath to contact with an upper limit stopper 37, an upper limit position of the hammer arm 33 is defined, as shown in
When the hammer arm 33 swings in the clockwise direction about the hammer holding shaft 31 of the hammer holding part 13, the rear-end top of the hammer arm 33 comes from beneath to contact with the upper limit stopper 37, whereby an upper limit position of the hammer member 11 is defined, as shown in
A switch pressing part 39 is provided on the front-end top of the hammer arm 33, as shown in
The horizontal portion of the substrate supporting rail 41 is fixed to the base-plate rail-supporting part 16f of the supporting member 16 at prescribed distance separated positions, as shown in
As shown in
When the hammer member 11 is turned clockwise about the hammer holding shaft 31 of the hammer holding part 13 and the gum switch 42 is pressed from beneath by the switch pressing part 39 of the hammer arm. 33, as shown in
The present keyboard apparatus 1 is arranged such that key-touch feeling stepwisely changes in the high-pitched tone side and the low-pitched tone side. More specifically, inertial moments of the hammer members 11 are set in the keyboard apparatus 1 such that the inertial moment stepwisely changes to reduce on the high-pitched tone side and to increase on the low-pitched tone side. Therefore, in the keyboard apparatus 1, the action load of key-pressing operation is reduced on the high-pitched tone side and is increased on the low-pitched tone side.
In the keyboard apparatus 1, the hammer members are made heavy in weight on the high-pitched tone side and are made light in weight on the low-pitched tone side, as shown in
Meanwhile, each of the plural transmission members 10 is made such that the total weight of its own weight and the weight of the corresponding hammer member 11 will be equivalent in the high-pitched tone side and the low-pitched tone side, as shown in
The plural transmission members 10 push up the plural keys 2 to the initial positions with their own weights and the weights of the plural hammer members 11, as shown in
The transmission body 22 of the transmission member 10 has the vertical plate 22a and the ribs 22b formed on the vertical plate 22a, as shown in
In the transmission body 22K (
In the transmission body 22T (
Now, the operation of the keyboard apparatus 1 of the electronic keyboard instrument will be described. In the keyboard apparatus 1, key operation is performed on the keys 2. When the key 2 is pressed as shown in
Since the transmission holding shaft 21 of the transmission holding part 12 is interlocked in the interlocking hole 23a of the transmission interlocking part 23 of the transmission member 10, the transmission member 10 does not displace on the key 2 and smoothly turns counterclockwise about the transmission holding shaft 21. Further, since the transmission interlocking part 23 of the transmission member 10 is slidably held between the pair of guide walls 20, the transmission member 10 turns smoothly without vibrating laterally.
When the transmission member 10 is pushed upward by the capstan 26 of the key 2, then the transmission member 10 turns counterclockwise and its second felt 27 pushes the hammer projection 28 of the hammer member 11 upward, whereby the hammer member 11 turns clockwise about the hammer holding shaft 31 of the hammer holding part 13, applying the action load to the key 2.
Since the hammer holding shaft 31 of the hammer holding part 13 is interlocked in the interlocking hole 34a of the hammer interlocking part 34 of the hammer member 11, the hammer member 11 does not displace on the key 2 and smoothly turns counterclockwise about the hammer holding shaft 31. Further, since the hammer interlocking part 34 of the hammer member 11 is slidably held between the pair of guide walls 30, the hammer member 11 turns smoothly without vibrating laterally.
When the hammer member 11 turns clockwise about the hammer holding shaft 31 of the hammer holding part 13, the inertial moment of the hammer member 11 applies the action load to the key 2. More specifically, the hammer arm 33 has substantially the same length as the length of the transmission member 10 in the direction of the key 2, and is formed with the hammer 32 at its rear portion of the hammer arm 33. The hammer interlocking part 34 of the hammer arm 33 with the hammer 32 formed at its rear end is rotatably interlocked to the hammer holding shaft 31.
When the hammer member 11 swings clockwise about the hammer holding shaft 31, an inertial moment is generated in the hammer member 11, applying the action load to the key 2, whereby a key touch feeling like a key touch feeling given by an acoustic piano is given.
When the hammer member 11 swings clockwise about the hammer holding shaft 31, the switch pressing part 39 of the hammer arm 33 presses from beneath the round-head projections 42a of the gum switches 42. Then, the round-head projections 42a are elastically deformed and after a while make the plural movable contacts 42b successively contact with the plural fixed contacts, whereby a switch signal depending on pressing force applied to the key 2 is output, and a musical tone is generated form a speaker (not shown).
Further, when the hammer member 11 swings clockwise about the hammer holding shaft 31, the rear-end top of the hammer arm 33 comes from beneath to the upper limit stopper 37 and the further rotation of the hammer member 11 is restricted. When the key 2 is released thereafter, the transmission member 10 turns clockwise under its own weight and returns to its initial position and at the same time the hammer member 11 turns counterclockwise under its own weight and returns to its initial position.
In the keyboard apparatus 1 according to the embodiment of the invention, the hammer member 11 is lighter in weight in the high-pitched tone side than in the low-pitched tone side and is lower in inertial moment on the high-pitched tone side than on the low-pitched tone side. Therefore, when the key 2 on the high-pitched tone side is pressed, a light action load is applied to the key 2 and a soft key touch feeling is given.
Since the hammer member 11 is heavier in weight in the low-pitched tone side than in the high-pitched tone side and is larger in inertial moment on the low-pitched tone side than on the high-pitched tone side. Therefore, when the key 2 on the low-pitched tone side is pressed, a heavy action load is applied to the key 2 and a heavy key touch feeling is given. Even though any of the keys 2 on the low-pitched tone side and on the high-pitched tone side should be pressed, a key touch feeling like the key touch feeling given by the acoustic piano will be obtained.
As described above, the keyboard apparatus 1 of the electronic keyboard instrument comprises the plural keys 2 disposes in parallel, the plural transmission members 10 corresponding respectively to the plural keys 2, and the plural hammer members 11 corresponding respectively to the plural transmission members 10. When the key 2 is pressed, the transmission member 10 corresponding to the pressed key 2 displaces and the weight of said transmission member 10 is determined on the basis of the pressed key 2. When the key 2 is pressed, the hammer member 11 turns in accordance with displacement of the transmission member 10, applying an action load to the pressed key 2. In the case where one of the plural transmission member 10 is heavier than others, the hammer member 11 corresponding to the one transmission member 10 is made lighter in weight than others, whereby a key touch feeling like the key touch feeling given by the acoustic piano can be obtained.
In the keyboard apparatus 1, even though the plural hammer members 11 are made different in weight, the plural transmission members 10 push the plural keys 2 up to their initial positions. Therefore, since the initial loads to be applied to the plural keys 2 can be adjusted on the basis of the respective weights of the plural hammer members 11, the initial loads applied to the keys 2 can be kept approximately constant, even though the weights of the plural hammer members 11 are made different between the high-pitched tone side and the low-pitched tone side. Further, the action load which is to be applied to the key 2 when the key 2 is pressed can be changed between the high-pitched tone side and the low-pitched tone side, whereby a key touch feeling like the key touch feeling given by the acoustic piano can be obtained.
Further, in the keyboard apparatus 1, the inertial moments corresponding respectively to the weights of the plural hammer members 11 are set low on the high-pitched tone side and are set large on the low-pitched tone side, and therefore, when the key 2 is pressed, a lighter action load can be applied to the key 2 on the high-pitched tone side than on the low-pitched tone side. As a result, a key touch feeling like the key touch feeling given by the acoustic piano can be obtained.
The plural hammer members 11 are made light in weight on the high-pitched tone side and are made heavy on the low-pitched tone side, and the plural transmission members 10 are made heavy on the high-pitched tone side and are made light in weight on the low-pitched tone side, compensating the difference in weights of the hammer members between the high-pitched tone side and the low-pitched tone side, whereby the initial loads of the keys 2 are kept approximately constant between the high-pitched tone side and the low-pitched tone side. As a result, a key touch feeling like the key touch feeling given by the acoustic piano can be obtained.
As described above, the hammer member 11 consists of the hammer 32 and the hammer arm 33, both being integrally formed from the synthetic resin. Therefore, the weight of the hammer member 11 can be changed to be used for the high-pitched tone side or for the low-pitched tone side without any restriction, whereby it is easy and simple to make the inertial moment of the hammer member 11 lower on the high-pitched tone side than on the low-pitched tone side.
In other words, the weight of the hammer member 11 is adjusted by the shape of the hammer 32. Therefore, it is possible to easily and simply reduce more weight of the hammer member 11 on the high-pitched tone side than on the low-pitched tone side by making the shape of the hammer member 11 smaller on the high-pitched tone side than on the low-pitched tone side. As a result, it is possible to reduce more inertial moment of the hammer member 11 on the high-pitched tone side than on the low-pitched tone side by setting the weights and lengths of the hammer arms 33 equivalent on the high-pitched tone side and on the low-pitched tone side.
The hammer 32 of the hammer member 11 has the ladle-shaped plate part 32a and the ribs 32b formed on the peripheral and the both surfaces of the plate part 32a. The hammer arm 33 of the hammer member 11 has the lateral plate part 33a and the ribs 33b formed on the peripheral and the both surfaces of the plate part 33a. Even though the plate parts 32a and 33a are made thin, it is possible to make these plates parts 32a and 33a strong enough with the ribs 32b and 33b formed thereon, and also when the hammer member 11 is formed, it is possible to prevent from producing shrinkage holes in the plates parts 32a and 33a with the ribs 32b and 33b and to form the hammer member 11 with high accuracy.
As described above, the transmission body 22 of the transmission member 10 has the vertical thin plate 22a and the ribs 22b formed on the peripheral portion and on the both surfaces of the vertical plate 22a, both being integrally formed from the synthetic resin. Therefore, when the transmission member 10 is formed, it is possible to change the weight of the transmission member 10 without any restriction to be used for the high-pitched tone side or for the low-pitched tone side.
It is possible to easily and simply make the transmission members 10 heavier for the high-pitched tone side than for the low-pitched tone side. Also, even though the vertical plate 22a is made thin, it is possible to make the transmission body 22 strong enough with the ribs 22b. Further, when the transmission member 10 is formed, it is possible to prevent from producing shrinkage holes in the vertical plate 22a with the ribs 22b and to form the transmission member 10 with high accuracy.
The weight of the transmission member 10 is adjusted depending on the shape of the transmission body 22 and the density of the ribs 22b. Therefore, it is possible to easily and simply increase more weight of the transmission member 10 for the high-pitched tone side than for the low-pitched tone side by making the shape of the transmission body 22 smaller in the high-pitched tone side than in the low-pitched tone side.
Even if the hammer members 11 are heavier in the high-pitched tone side than in the low-pitched tone side, and the different action loads should be applied to the key on the high-pitched tone side and to the key on the low-pitched tone side, respectively, the initial loads applied to the keys on the high-pitched tone side and on the low-pitched tone side can be kept approximately constant by increasing more weight of the transmission member 10 in the high-pitched tone side than in the low-pitched tone side.
In the above description, the embodiment has been described, in which the hammers 32 of the hammer member 11 are different in size between the high-pitched tone side and the low-pitched tone side. As in the modified embodiments shown in
The hammers 45K on the high-pitched tone side shown in
The hammers 45T in the low-pitched tone side shown in
The transmission members 10 are made heavier in the high-pitched tone side than in the low-pitched tone side to compensate the difference in weight of the hammer members 11 between on the high-pitched tone side and on the low-pitched tone side, keeping the initial loads of the plural keys 2 constant. Then, the plural transmission members 10 push up the plural keys 2 to their initial positions with their own weights and the weights of the plural hammer members 11, and the initial loads of the plural keys 2 are adjusted depending on the weights of the plural hammer members 11.
With the above arrangement, it is possible to easily and simply change the weight of the hammer 45K or 45T in the high-pitched tone side or in the low-pitched tone side by simply changing the size of the hole 45c to be made in the plate 45a of the hammer 45K or 45T, whereby the key touch feeling can be changed finely between the high-pitched tone side and the low-pitched tone side.
The embodiment has been described, in which the key touch feeling is set so as to change stepwisely throughout the high-pitched tone side and the low-pitched tone side. The arrangement of the key touch feeling is not restricted to the embodiment but it is possible to change the key touch feeling successively from the high-pitched tone side to the low-pitched tone side.
Although specific embodiments of the invention have been described in the foregoing detailed description, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to the particular embodiments described herein, but modifications and rearrangements may be made to the disclosed embodiments while remaining within the scope of the invention as defined by the following claims. It is intended to include all such modifications and rearrangements in the following claims and their equivalents.
In the modified embodiment shown in
In the embodiments, it is possible to adjust the features of the hammer member and the transmission member depending on materials to be used as the hammer member and the transmission member and sizes shapes thereof. It is not always required to use all the methods described herein to adjust the features of the hammer member and the transmission member, but it will be possible to use some of them to adjust them.
Further, as elements for transferring the key pressing power, mechanical elements can be used, which do not swing but displace (move) when the key is pressed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2014-058143 | Mar 2014 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1353646 | George | Sep 1920 | A |
2185734 | Loar | Jan 1940 | A |
5022302 | Guyon | Jun 1991 | A |
5585582 | Stanwood | Dec 1996 | A |
5796024 | Stanwood | Aug 1998 | A |
6054641 | Inoue | Apr 2000 | A |
6096959 | Davide | Aug 2000 | A |
6248943 | Inoue | Jun 2001 | B1 |
6452079 | Sugiyama | Sep 2002 | B2 |
6649821 | Inoue | Nov 2003 | B2 |
6683242 | Inoue et al. | Jan 2004 | B2 |
6965070 | Wenjun | Nov 2005 | B2 |
7193147 | Ishida | Mar 2007 | B2 |
7279627 | Tanaka | Oct 2007 | B2 |
7476788 | Yoshisue | Jan 2009 | B2 |
7633002 | Inouye | Dec 2009 | B2 |
8389833 | Muramatsu | Mar 2013 | B2 |
8513508 | Pancino | Aug 2013 | B2 |
9177535 | Suzuki | Nov 2015 | B2 |
20020035913 | Arimori | Mar 2002 | A1 |
20140083274 | Abe | Mar 2014 | A1 |
20150269916 | Taniguchi | Sep 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2002258835 | Sep 2002 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20150269916 A1 | Sep 2015 | US |