Not applicable.
Not applicable.
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to devices for controlling electrical apparatus and more particularly to devices of his kind which are disposed at the face of an electronic display screen which displays changeable information pertinent to operation of the control device.
2. Description of Related Art
U.S. Pat. No. 6,642,919 discloses a control device for an electronic apparatus that is operatively connected to an electronic display, whereby the display delivers information to a user and interacts with a control device to enable user inputs to the electronic apparatus. The control device includes a fader having a tongue which slides along a channel formed in a plastic or glass sheet that overlays a portion of the display. It further describes a rotary gear attached to the tongue, and a motor that is attached to the rotary gear to drive the fader tongue in and out of the channel in the glass or plastic sheet. In this arrangement a fader cap projects upwardly from the channel at the distal end of the fader tongue, whereby a user may move the fader cap manually and change an input to the electronic apparatus. The motor may also be actuated by the electronic apparatus to drive the tongue reciprocally and selectively along the channel to port.
The present invention generally comprises control devices for use with an electronic device, and represent improvements to the technology shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,642,919, issued Nov. 4, 2003, and similar prior art. As in the prior art, the invention provides a transparent overlay for an electronic display, the overlay having at least one channel formed therein to accommodate a fader tongue that is translatable therealong. The channel extends to an edge of the overlay, where a sensor detects the length of fader tongue that has been extended into the channel, and generates a corresponding control signal to the electronic apparatus.
In one aspect, the channel is sealed within the overlay, and the control device includes a fader cap that is not physically connected to the fader tongue. Rather, the fader cap is provided with a magnet, and the fader tongue includes a distal end that is likewise provided with a magnet, whereby the fader and fader tongue may be coupled by magnetic attraction. As a result, a user may place the fader cap onto the outer surface of the overlay, in registration with the distal end of the fader tongue, and establish a magnetic coupling therebetween. Thereafter, the user may push the fader cap along the axis of the channel therebelow to urge the fader tongue to extend or retract and generate a changeable control signal in the electronic apparatus. The fader cap and the fader tongue may be provided with gliding surfaces to enhance ease of motion.
In another embodiment of this invention, the fader tongue moves below the overlay glass and is not inside the glass in a channel. The fader cap is magnetically coupled to the distal end of the fader cap which moves under the overlay glass as the fader cap is moved on top of the overlay glass.
The fact that the transparent overlay has a smooth continuous outer surface devoid of any channels or slots is a distinct advantage over the prior art, which required an open slot for the fader cap to be mechanically joined to the fader tongue. The smooth contiguous surface is easier to keep free of dust and dirt which would otherwise diminish the visualization of the electronic display through the transparent overlay. And the fader tongue mechanism is isolated from external sources of dirt and contamination, promising better performance and greater longevity.
In another aspect, the invention provides wheels for the fader cap to maximize the glide of the fader cap on the outer surface of the overlay. The wheels furthermore provide a monodirectional characteristic to the fader cap, so that when the axis of travel of the wheeled fader cap is aligned with the underlying channel, the fader cap will tend to translate along the channel axis and remain magnetically coupled to the distal end of the fader tongue. Likewise, the fader tongue may be provided with wheels at the distal end to support the magnet secured thereto, and to minimize gliding friction for the tongue.
To enhance the monodirectional effect, the outer surface of the overlay may be provided with shallow parallel grooves that are aligned with the underlying channel and are spaced apart to engage the wheels of the fader cap. The wheels of the fader cap may be shaped or inclined to optimize engagement in the grooves, whereby the fader cap is constricted to translate along the grooves and thus disposed to maintain magnetic alignment and coupling with the distal end of the fader tongue within the channel therebelow.
In any of the embodiments above (or those to be described below), the fader tongue may be driven by a motor located adjacent to the edge of the overlay assembly. The motor may be connected to a sprocket wheel or to pressure rollers or wheels that move the tongue by pressure engagement on the tongue's top surface, bottom surface or both. Either type of mechanical engagement moves the tongue, so that the electronic apparatus may position the fader tongue and the coupled fader cap that represents a current setting or stored setting for the respective control parameter. In addition, the sensors that detect the tongue extension in the channel may be shaft encoders connected to the sprocket wheel, pressure wheels, or optical sensors that detect angular displacement of the sprocket wheel or pressure wheel(s), or optical sensors that detect the linear translation of the tongue. Other sensor arrangements known in the prior art may also be used. Note: the pressure wheels may be fashioned like the capstan on a tape recording machine or be presented as one or more pressure rollers that are pressed against the fader tongue to enable a motor to move it.
A further aspect of the invention comprises methods for detecting a finger touch on a fader cap disposed on the upper surface of the overlay assembly. This touch detection may be used, for example, to activate or defeat the drive motor associated with the fader tongue. In one embodiment of this aspect the fader cap is provided with an RFID circuit that transmits a touch signal to a receiver associated with the electronic device. Likewise, a coil embedded in the fader cap may be activated by the user touching the fader cap, and a signal is transmitted to a similar coil in the fader tongue, which transmits the signal through a conductor in the tongue to the electronic apparatus to control the motor.
In either the RFID or coil embodiments above, a further function of the fader cap circuit comprises sensing the direction of push of the finger touch along the axis of the fader tongue. This directional signal (advance or retract tongue) may be used by the electronic apparatus to drive the motor to move the fader tongue (and the magnetically coupled fader cap) in the direction desired by the user. The advantage of this arrangement is that the user does not need to overcome the frictional and mechanical resistance of the fader tongue in its channel in the overlay assembly. Rather, the directional signal will drive the tongue in the direction indicated by the user's touch, making for a smoother and more intuitive operation of the fader cap.
In another embodiment an encoder senses very slight motion in the fader tongue. This may be as accurate as 20,000 points per inch. Thus a finger touch can be detected with no electronic devices in the fader cap. The detection is made by an encoder that reads incremental revolutions of the motor. When a finger touch is made on a moving fader, the motor's encoder detects a slight motion (or resistance) caused by the finger touch and releases the motor, thereby permitting the user to mechanically move the fader tongue without interference form the motor. When the finger is removed the motor's encoder senses no resistance to the motor's movement of the fader tongue and thereby re-engages the motor to control the motion of the fader tongue.
Another aspect of the invention involves enhanced magnetic coupling between the fader cap and the associated fader tongue within the channel in the transparent overlay. It is observed that a single magnet in the fader cap may engage the opposite pole(s) of a single magnet in the fader tongue, but the primary coupling is in the vertical direction (normal to the outer surface of the overlay). There is little coupling in the lateral (shear) direction, and thus there is a non-insignificant possibility that the fader cap will be moved laterally away from the axis of the fader tongue, resulting in decoupling of the magnetic adhesion therebetween. The signal input from the user is thus interrupted or is at least not consistent as a result of the fader tongue slipping against the fader cap.
The enhanced magnetic coupling includes a plurality of magnets disposed in the fader cap and forming a predetermined array of north and south poles. A similar array of magnets is disposed in the fader tongue, and provided with an inverse polar distribution, so that the fader magnets and fader tongue magnets are aligned in opposed confrontation when the fader is aligned with the distal end of the fader tongue. The individual magnets exert a strong tensile attraction, but more importantly they resist lateral misalignment of the fader and fader tongue by exerting a lateral repulsion force when the fader cap begins to move laterally off-axis. Thus the user is urged by the “feel” of the magnetic interaction to push the fader cap generally along the axis of the channel that encloses the fader tongue that is magnetically coupled to the fader cap.
The advantages of this approach include the following:
Furthermore, it should be noted that the distance between the magnets in each of the magnet arrays (that of the fader cap and that of the fader tongue) may be greater than the distance that the magnet array of the fader cap is from the magnet array of the fader tongue.
In all of the embodiments described above, the fader tongue may be fabricated of a thin, flexible belt formed of transparent plastic material, in order to maximize the visualization of the electronic display through the overlay assembly. The belt may be provided with rack teeth arrayed along one edge of the belt, and the drive motor is provided with a corresponding pinion gear to engage the rack teeth and drive the belt longitudinally. Or the belt may be engaged by pressure rollers either pressing on it top, top and bottom surfaces, or on its sides. By eliminating the teeth, the fader's operation may be smoother.
Alternatively, the tongue may be formed of a chain of links formed of transparent plastic material. In this case the motor is connected to a sprocket wheel, as described above, with sprocket teeth to engage the links of the chain, so that the motor may drive the tongue longitudinally in the channel. Note that the limited height of the channel prevents the chain from buckling or doubling, assuring linear longitudinal movement in the channel.
The present invention generally comprises improved control devices for use with electronic apparatus that provide a display screen for interaction with a user. The prior art is exemplified in U.S. Pat. No. 6,642,919, issued Nov. 4, 2003. With regard to
The display screen 14 of this example is situated within a housing 21 and the image display area of the screen is viewable through a window 22 in the housing. The control signal producing means 17 are situated within a portion of the housing 21 that is sufficiently extensive to accommodate to the outward travel of tongue 19 from the edge of display screen 14. The tongue 19 of this embodiment is formed of rigid or semi-rigid material. In an alternate embodiment to be hereinafter described the tongue is flexible and enables a reduction in the size of the housing 21. The control signal producing means 17 includes a signal varying component 23, which is a rotary potentiometer in this example, that outputs an electrical signal that is varied by turning of a rotary gear 24 which is coupled to the potentiometer by a shaft 26. Sliding movement of the tongue 19 turns the gear 24. The control devices 11 of this example are of the motorized fader type in which an electrical motor 27 is coupled to shaft 26. Fader motors 27 of the known kind can, reproduce a sequence of movements of the movable member 12 that is initially established by manual manipulation of the member. The motor 27 is an optional component that is not needed in many uses of the control devices 11.
In
With regard to
As shown in
Movement of the fader cap 56 along the axis of the channel 50 is coupled to the fader tongue 51, whereby manual movement of the cap 56 causes the tongue 51 to extend or retract in channel 50. This movement of the tongue is translated into control signals for the electronic apparatus, as will be detailed below.
It is necessary only for the tongue 51 to glide within the channel 50 with sufficient ease to enable the magnetic coupling force from the cap 56 to translate the tongue along the channel. The tip assembly 52 and various portions of the tongue 51 may be provided with fixed glide supports formed of low friction material such as PTFE, Delrin and the like. Likewise, the fader cap 56 may be provided with gliding surfaces or runners formed of low friction material. Alternatively, as shown in
With regard to
A further embodiment of the fader cap is designed to augment the lateral strength of the magnetic coupling between the fader cap and the fader tongue. Due to the fact that the single magnets described previously in the fader cap and fader tongue exert a primary coupling in the vertical direction (normal to the outer surface of the overlay), there is little coupling in the lateral (shear) direction. Thus there is a possibility that the fader cap will be moved laterally away from the axis of the fader tongue, resulting in decoupling of the magnetic adhesion therebetween and interruption of signal input from the user.
With reference to
Most significantly, the array of magnets resists lateral misalignment of the fader and fader tongue by exerting a lateral repulsion force when the fader cap begins to move laterally off-axis. If the fader cap begins to drift laterally away from the axis of the channel 50 while it is being translated therealong, the lateral movement will cause one row of the magnets of the fader cap to approach their same-polarity counterpart in the tip assembly 52′. The resulting repulsion force is strong enough to be palpable to the user. Thus the user is urged by the “feel” of the magnetic interaction to push the fader cap generally along the axis of the channel that encloses the fader tongue that is magnetically coupled to the fader cap.
With reference to
With regard to
The tip assembly 52″ of the fader tongue 51″ includes a pair of laterally opposed wheels 59″ spaced within the lateral confines of the closed channel 50, and a single front wheel 68. Magnet 53″ is secured within tip assembly 52″ to magnetically couple with magnet 58″ so that the fader cap and fader tongue move in concert. Alternatively, both the fader cap and tip assembly may be provided with any of the magnet arrays described herein. Fader tongue 51″ comprises a flexible belt having rack teeth 69 formed on at least one longitudinal side thereof, whereby a motor drive assembly may engage the fader tongue, as will be explained below.
It may be appreciated that the measures described herein for directing the fader cap to remain “tracking” the fader tongue may be employed as needed in designing the apparatus, taking into account the magnetic force of attraction between the fader cap and tongue, the drag caused by friction and other mechanical devices, and the control systems described herein. Likewise, the fader tongue may comprise a flexible belt, or a chain of links designed for easy rolling, such as roller chain or the like, which may be fabricated of transparent or translucent plastic material to maximize visualization of the image content of the electronic display associated with the control system of the invention.
With regard to
In addition, an encoder assembly 78 includes a magnet secured to the shaft of motor assembly 76 of the motor-pulley assembly and a fixed detector adjacent to the encoder magnet that reads the rotations and partial rotations of the motor shaft. In addition, an optical or magnetic linear encoder detects optical or magnetic coding on the belt or on the pulley as it moves to extend or retract the belt 71, and generates a position signal that is scalable to represent the position of the fader tip assembly in the channel 50, and does so with a high degree of resolution. Thus, for example, when the user pushes the fader cap and the magnetically coupled fader tongue is driven along the channel, a stream of position data signals may be generated by the shaft encoder and/or linear encoder. These data may be used by the electronic apparatus as control commands to increase or decrease a variable, such as an audio or video parameter, or a position of an onscreen object, or the like, and/or to alter the display presentation to portray the change in the variable. Likewise, the motor 76 may be driven by the electronic apparatus to move the fader tongue to a preset or memory position, and the fader cap will move with the tongue due to the magnetic coupling therebetween.
Pressure rollers may slip during rapid acceleration of the fader tongue or of the motor drive, and lose correspondence between the actual position of the tongue and the position as read by the shaft encoder of the motor. This problem can be corrected by using the signal of the linear encoder to correct the position data, as described below. The linear encoder may include sensor indicia along the surface of the fader tongue, such as a line array or a dot array or a bar code or a triangle that has its base at the start of the fader tongue and goes to a point at the distal end of the fader tongue. Furthermore, these indicia can be created with a material that is detectable by infrared light but invisible to the human eye so the fader tongue retains its invisible appearance to the naked eye. The linear encoder does not need to have the high resolution of the main fader (shaft) encoder. It may be much coarser, in the range of 250 or 512 points.
Each motorized fader has two encoders, a magnetic encoder and a linear encoder. If the fader is being moved very slowly, there will likely be little or no slippage, so the linear light encoder will not be very useful. However, if the fader is moved very fast or is accelerated rapidly, there may be slippage. In this case a reader can read the nearest position of the linear optical scale deposited along a surface of the fader tongue and use this positioning information to update or correct the positional data of the magnetic encoder which may have slipped a bit due to its pressure rollers losing positive engagement for a split second.
The invention further includes an electronic system that may track the fader tongue position of multiple devices, as well as interact with the fader caps in order to establish a fully functional, fully reconfigurable control system for multiple variables. With regard to
Alternatively, the switch 84 may provide a SPDT function in which touching one part of the fader cap indicates up/increase/positive, and the other part indicates down/decrease/negative. For example, as shown in
One embodiment of an electronic control system for the invention, shown in
The reader 92 receives the raw PN code burst from all the devices D1-Dn, and produces a baseband signal 104 that is fed to a CDMA processor 106. The CDMA processor compares the broadband signal to a filter bank of PN codes that contains all the codes of the devices D1-Dn. When code PN1 is fed to the filter bank having stored codes MF1 . . . MFn, it is compared with all the programmed codes until a match with MF1 is found, leading to device D1 being detected. The data content of D1, here termed S1 is derived from the burst. Likewise PN2 is matched against all codes until a match with MF2 is found leading to detection of D2 and derivation of data S2. This process is carried out until code PNn is matched with MFn, and the related data is read. The serial data D2S2 to DnSn is fed from the CDMA processor to the host computer 103, which typically also operates the electronic display associated with the fader controller system. Assuming that the data thus derived identifies all of the devices D1-Dn, the host computer may correlate each fader cap RFID device with a respective fader tongue to which it is magnetically coupled. The host computer 103 updates the display appropriately through the electronic display drive 107 to portray graphically the altered settings of the devices. The RFID data may include the touch signals from the switches 85A-85B, indicating to the host computer which direction the associated fader tongue will be moved. The respective motor assembly may be driven in the indicated direction by the host computer. The advantage of this arrangement is that the user does not need to overcome the resistance of the fader tongue in the covered channel 50 when manually moving the fader cap magnetically coupled to it. The motor overcomes any resistance of the fader tongue in its glass channel, therefore the amount of force that a user needs to assert on the fader cap tends to be constant. This makes for a smoother and more intuitive operation of the fader cap.
The electronic control system described above enables many possible modes of operation that may be programmed into the system and changed as desired by the user. For example, if a user touches a fader cap that is being moved by its magnetically coupled fader tongue and motor, and restrains movement of the fader cap and tongue, the system may detect the difference between where the fader tongue should be and where it actually is. If a user moves the fader cap from a stationary position, the same detection process is carried out by the software. This detection can be very fast, on the order of 1 ms or less. Note that the optical sensor or magnetic encoder described previously reads the movement of the fader tongue and determines there is a discrepancy between the actual fader cap position and the position of the fader tongue that is expected by the system. This “expected” position is the position that is currently saved in the memory of the host computer.
Automation of audio/video controllers is known in the prior art and typically includes a sub-system that is capable of memorizing positions and moves made on any motorized fader and then enabling the automatic playback of those moves. In the present invention, during the playback of these moves, a motor moves the fader tongue in and out of the channel in the cover sheet and this, in turn, moves the fader cap directly above the fader tongue tip assembly due to the magnetic coupling therebetween. When a user moves a fader cap in any direction, the system recognizes that the fader is being moved manually. At that point the system automatically switches to a mode that enables the manual movement of the fader cap and therefore its respective tongue. The system then records the user's manual movements of the fader cap or simply permits manual movements of the fader cap without recording them. Once the user breaks contact with the fader cap, the system again transfers control back to the motor for that fader cap/fader tongue coupled assembly.
Thus, the host computer may store previous controller configurations, such as audio or video mixing devices and settings, so that they may be recalled instantly; e.g., for the purposes of continuity in an editing project. The faders may be configured and labeled accordingly on the display 101, and the fader tongues may be advanced to the stored settings, translating their magnetically coupled fader caps as they advance. Thereafter, the user may manipulate the fader controllers by moving the fader caps on the overlay assembly, moving the fader tongues accordingly and changing the settings of the control functions assigned to the fader controllers. Reconfiguration of the controller setup may be carried out virtually instantaneously.
Thus it may be observed that the invention provides improvements over the state of the art in fader controller design, and exhibits the following advantages:
Although the electronic identification and touch recognition functions of the magnetically coupled fader cap have been described herein with reference to an RFID embodiment, it may be appreciated that other wireless communication technologies known in the prior art may be used, such as resonant EMF field transmission, and the like.
The foregoing description of the preferred embodiments of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching without deviating from the spirit and the scope of the invention. The embodiment described is selected to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as suited to the particular purpose contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto.
This application claims the priority benefit of the filing dates of the following Provisional Applications: 60/860,929, filed Nov. 24, 2006; 60/889,821, filed Feb. 5, 2007; 60/900,590, filed Feb. 9, 2007; and 60/963,939, filed Aug. 8, 2007.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60889821 | Feb 2007 | US | |
| 60900590 | Feb 2007 | US | |
| 60963939 | Aug 2007 | US |