This subject invention relates to a musical instrument piston valve for wind instruments including, but not limited to, trumpets, comets, tenor horns, valve trombones, French horns, and tubas.
The piston valve in a musical instrument such as a trumpet is pushed down to change the note played. A typical trumpet has three valve casings each with a piston valve assembly. Each valve casing is connected to a valve slide. If the piston valve is in the up position, the air through the trumpet will take the shortest possible path through one port in the piston valve. When the piston valve is pushed down, the air is diverted through a different port in the piston valve, around the valve slide, and back out through another port in the piston valve.
A typical top spring piston valve assembly inserted into a valve casing includes a finger button on top of a valve stem the distal end of which is fastened to a valve barrel also called a spring barrel, sleeve, baluster, or spring case section. A separate piston with air ports is soldered to the valve barrel. A spring in the valve barrel in combination with a valve guide or “star” biases the entire piston valve assembly (and the finger button) in the up position.
Specifically, the valve guide, washer-like in construction, is adapted for sliding engagement with longitudinal opposing guide slots in the valve barrel as the spring in the valve barrel is compressed. Thus, when the finger button is pushed down, the stem, the valve barrel, and the piston move down as a unit. The valve guide remains stationary since it is fixed vertically with respect to a ridge (also called a seat, ledge, shelf, or shoulder) in the valve casing. The button, stem, valve barrel, and piston are biased upward due to the compression of the spring between the valve guide and the valve stem. The valve guide, by cooperating with grooves and the ridge in the valve casing, also orients the entire piston valve assembly both radially and longitudinally in the valve casing most notably to correctly orient the ports in the piston portion of the valve with the trumpet slides.
Those skilled in the art have attempted to provide tension adjustment for the spring in the valve barrel. See U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,149,714 and 1,367,386. U.S. Pat. No. 3,990,342 discusses up stroke and down stroke adjustment of a piston valve. U.S. Pat. No. 2,511,255 shows a self lubricating piston valve. All of these patents are incorporated herein by this reference.
The alignment of the valve piston ports to the slides, however, has always been problematic. Valves are not made to consistently high tolerances and often slides are not positioned to consistently high tolerances either. Valve radial position inaccuracy can also easily occur during the soldering operation when the valve barrel is soldered to the valve piston. If the tooling used is worn, or if the heat of the soldering operation causes part movement, the result can be an inaccurately placed valve. Indeed, many brass instrument owners send their instruments, both old and new, to specialists for a “valve alignment job”. These specialists attempt to determine by how much each valve is misaligned. To correct radial misalignment they then unsolder the valve barrel from the piston and solder the two parts back together in a position where the craftsman believes the alignment will be correct. Since there is no practical way to easily measure the precise amount of radial misalignment, the repositioning of the valve barrel to the piston is not always correct and the valve alignment process may need to be repeated. Vertical realignment is accomplished by changing rubber and felt washers.
Valves are also costly to make. In order to manufacture the valve, one machining operation has to be performed to make the valve barrel, and a separate machining operation has to be performed to make the piston. As indicated above, the two parts then have to be soldered together in what is typically a manual operation.
It is therefore an object of this invention to minimize the costs, assembly requirements, and machine operations associated with manufacturing a piston valve assembly for wind instruments such as trumpets.
It is a further object of this invention to better ensure constant and accurate location of the piston ports relative to the valve casing and the slide.
It is a further object of this invention to reduce the need for a valve alignment job.
It is a further object of this invention to provide an adjustable valve guide to account for any radial misalignment due to inaccuracy in slide positions.
The subject invention results from the realization that an easier to manufacture and more consistently accurate piston valve assembly is effected by machining both the valve head and the piston from one piece of stock material and that any radial misalignment due to slide inaccuracy can be accommodated by a novel adjustable valve guide.
The subject invention, however, in other embodiments, need not achieve all these objectives and the claims hereof should not be limited to structures or methods capable of achieving these objectives.
This subject invention features a musical instrument piston valve receivable in a valve casing. The typical valve includes a valve stem, a valve barrel connected to the valve stem, and a valve guide slidably disposed with respect to the valve barrel. A spring in the valve barrel extends between the valve stem and the valve guide. A piston extends from the valve barrel and includes one or more ports. There are also means for adjusting the angular orientation of the piston in the valve casing.
In one preferred embodiment, the piston and the valve barrel are monolithic in construction and the means for adjusting includes a novel adjustable valve guide.
One adjustable valve guide includes at least one valve casing key extending therefrom for setting the radial orientation of the piston in the valve casing and at least one extending stop member for setting the longitudinal orientation of the piston in the valve casing. Typically the casing key is adjustable with respect to the stop member.
In one example, the adjustable valve guide includes a first plate including the valve casing key and a second plate including the stop member and a fastener allowing adjustment of the first plate relative to the second plate and for fixing the first plate to the second plate when the piston is correctly aligned in the valve casing. Typically, the first plate includes a threaded hole therein, the second plate includes a clearance hole therethrough, and the fastener has a head seated on the second plate, and a shaft extending through the clearance hole and into the threaded hole of the first plate for tightening and untightening the fastener through the valve head.
In another example, the casing key includes a threaded hole therein, the stop member includes a clearance hole therethrough, and there is a fastener with a head seated on the stop member and a shaft extending through the clearance hole and into the threaded hole to adjust the key relative to the stop member.
In another example, the casing key is initially adjustable relative to the stop member and adhearable to the stop member after alignment of the piston in the casing. In another embodiment, the means for adjusting includes a valve guide with a width adjustable key. In one example, the key includes an adjustable fastener extending outward from the key. In another example, at least one shim can be disposed between the key and a key receiving slot in the valve casing.
In another embodiment, the means for adjusting includes a selection of valve guides each with a valve guide key oriented differently with respect to a stop member. Typically, one valve guide includes a key centered with respect to the stop member, one valve guide includes a key offset in one direction with respect to the stop member, and one valve guide includes a key offset in the opposite direction with respect to the stop member.
In another embodiment, the adjustable valve guide includes at least one casing key extendable and retractable radially.
In still another embodiment, the valve barrel is rotatable with respect to the piston. Typically, the valve barrel includes a clearance hole adjacent the piston, the piston includes a threaded hole adjacent the valve barrel, and the means for adjusting includes a fastener received through the clearance hole and into the threaded hole to secure the valve barrel to the piston in a predetermined angular orientation of the piston with respect to the valve barrel.
The subject invention also features a musical instrument piston valve with a valve barrel and a piston extending from the valve barrel including one or more ports. The piston and valve head are monolithic in construction and machined from one piece of stock material. There may optionally be means for adjusting the angular orientation of the piston in a valve casing such as an adjustable valve guide.
An adjustable valve guide for a musical instrument piston valve in accordance with the subject invention may include at least one casing key extending from the valve guide for setting the radial orientation of the piston in the valve casing and at least one extending stop member for setting the longitudinal orientation of the piston in the valve casing. There are means for adjusting the casing key adjustable relative to the stop member.
In one example, the means for adjusting includes a first plate including the valve casing key and a second plate including the stop member and a fastener allowing adjustment of the first plate relative to the second plate and for fixing the first plate to the second plate when the piston is correctly aligned in the valve casing. Typically, the first plate has threaded hole therein, the second plate includes a clearance hole therethrough, and the fastener has a head seated on the second plate, and a shaft extending through the clearance hole and into the threaded hole of the first plate for tightening and untightening the fastener through the valve head.
In another example, the means for adjusting includes a casing key with a threaded hole therein, the stop member includes a clearance hole therethrough, and there is a fastener with a head seated on the stop member and a shaft extending through the clearance hole and into the threaded hole to adjust the key relative to the stop member. In still another example, the casing key is initially adjustable relative to the stop member and adhearable to the stop member after alignment of the piston in the casing.
One embodiment of the means for adjusting is a valve guide with a width adjustable key. In one example, the key includes an adjustable fastener extending outward from the key. In another example, there is at least one shim to be disposed between the key and a key receiving slot in the valve casing.
In another embodiment, the means for adjusting includes a selection of valve guides each with a valve guide key oriented differently with respect to a stop member. Typically, one valve guide includes a key centered with respect to the stop member, one valve guide includes a key offset in one direction with respect to the stop member, and one valve guide includes a key offset in the opposite direction with respect to the stop member.
In another embodiment, the means for adjusting includes at least one casing key extendable and retractable radially.
One method of making a musical instrument piston valve in accordance with this invention features machining cylindrical tube stock to define a valve barrel and a piston including one or more ports resulting in a monolithic one piece valve barrel/piston assembly with the ports correctly aligned with respect to the valve head. The method may further include fabricating an adjustable valve guide and disposing said adjustable valve guide in the valve barrel of the piston valve.
Other objects, features and advantages will occur to those skilled in the art from the following description of a preferred embodiment and the accompanying drawings, in which:
Aside from the preferred embodiment or embodiments disclosed below, this invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or being carried out in various ways. Thus, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangements of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. If only one embodiment is described herein, the claims hereof are not to be limited to that embodiment. Specifically, the following disclosure relates to a trumpet valve but the subject invention has applicability to other wind instruments and other types of valves. Moreover, the claims hereof are not to be read restrictively unless there is clear and convincing evidence manifesting a certain exclusion, restriction, or disclaimer.
As explained in the background section above, valve guide 38,
As also noted in the background section above, the alignment of the valve piston ports to the slides has always been problematic. Valves are not made to consistently high tolerances and often the slides are not positioned to consistently high tolerances either. Valve radial position inaccuracy can also easily occur during the soldering operation when the valve barrel is soldered to the valve piston. If the tooling used is worn, or if the heat of the soldering operation causes part movement, the result can be an inaccurately placed valve. Indeed, many brass instrument owners send their instruments, both old and new, to specialists for a “valve alignment job”. These specialists attempt to determine by how much each valve is misaligned radially. They then unsolder the valve barrel from the piston as shown in
Valves are also costly to make. In order to manufacture the valve, one machining operation has to be performed to make the valve barrel, and a separate machining operation has to be performed to make the piston. As indicated above, the two parts then have to be soldered together in what is typically a manual operation.
In sharp contrast, in accordance with the subject invention, piston 30′,
For minor or even major radial alignment of this new valve assembly in the casing due to slide position errors or the like, the monolithic structure of
In one embodiment, the means for adjusting includes adjustable valve guide 50,
Preferably, the width of keys 54a and 54b,
In another embodiment, adjustable valve guide 50′,
In still another embodiment, there are a selection of valve guides 50a-50b,
Adjustable valve guide 50″,
In still another embodiment, adjustable valve guide 50′″,
In another embodiment, the monolithic valve barrel/piston assembly of
Although specific features of the invention are shown in some drawings and not in others, this is for convenience only as each feature may be combined with any or all of the other features in accordance with the invention. The words “including”, “comprising”, “having”, and “with” as used herein are to be interpreted broadly and comprehensively and are not limited to any physical interconnection. Moreover, any embodiments disclosed in the subject application are not to be taken as the only possible embodiments. Other embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art and are within the following claims.
In addition, any amendment presented during the prosecution of the patent application for this patent is not a disclaimer of any claim element presented in the application as filed: those skilled in the art cannot reasonably be expected to draft a claim that would literally encompass all possible equivalents, many equivalents will be unforeseeable at the time of the amendment and are beyond a fair interpretation of what is to be surrendered (if anything), the rationale underlying the amendment may bear no more than a tangential relation to many equivalents, and/or there are many other reasons the applicant can not be expected to describe certain insubstantial substitutes for any claim element amended.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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911637 | Adkins | Feb 1909 | A |
1367386 | Hawkins | Feb 1921 | A |
2149714 | Wornell | Mar 1939 | A |
2404818 | Swinehart | Jul 1946 | A |
2511255 | George | Jun 1950 | A |
3044339 | Greenleaf | Jul 1962 | A |
3911784 | Shiono | Oct 1975 | A |
3973464 | Novy | Aug 1976 | A |
3990342 | Reeves | Nov 1976 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060219083 A1 | Oct 2006 | US |