Embodiments of the present invention relate to a not and/or useful system and apparatus for tuning any acoustic drum. Drums are comprised of several simple components including a drum head, most commonly made of a plastic material called Mylar, which include a rigid rim, generally made of a metallic material. The drum shell; most often made of layers of laminated wood, acrylic, aluminum, fiberglass or carbon fiber and/or formed to a cylindrical shape with two open ends. The drum head is stretched over the drum shell by means of a multiplicity of evenly spaced bolts inserted through holes around the diameter of a ring often made of stamped steel, die cast zinc, aluminum or wood known as the hoop. These bolts are threaded into what are commonly referred to as lugs which are generally attached to the drum shell by bolts inserted through holes drilled into the drum shell. Evenly adjusting the tension of these individual bolts causes the drum head to be tuned either higher or lower in pitch.
The current and/or most commonly used standard far tuning drums is best depicted by U.S. Design Pat. No. Fuji D350,362, incorporated by reference herein. Referred to as the drum hoop, it includes a plurality of evenly spaced holes for bolts to be inserted through, in order to exert tension on the drum head, and having an overall shape designed to fit over the drum head. U.S. Design Pat. No. D339,818, incorporated by reference herein, is an example of lugs which are fastened to the drum shell and/or serve as anchors for the bolts inserted through the drum hoop previously described. Some of the earliest designs of this current hoop can be seen in U.S. Pat. No. 794,658 dated Jul. 11, 1905, incorporated by reference herein, which depicts a combination of L cross section or “angle iron” rings, one with the vertical with surface facing upward, the other overlapping the horizontal surface and/or its vertical surface facing downward with holes about the horizontal flange for clamping down the drumhead. Similarly, U.S. Pat. No. 899,488 dated Sep. 22, 1908 has an inverted U shaped Cross Section with evenly spaced holes around its perimeter. One of the first early modern designs is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 1,609,940 dated Dec. 7, 1926, which appears to feature a one piece counterhoop having an “L” cross section, the horizontal flange having evenly spaced holes for clamping the drum head to the open end of the drum shell. U.S. Pat. No. 6,166,311 describes an invention that was designed as an improvement to the traditional drum hoop, having an inward facing horizontal annular surface at the top of the hoop that provides protection to the bearing edge of the drum shell, and also increases rigidity of the drum hoop.
Using traditional drum hoops and methods, to evenly apply tension to the drum head to set the correct pitch takes a great amount of time and skill, often being time consuming and frustrating. To deal with this problem, systems for tuning drums have been proposed simplify this common task. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,218,952 is comprised of a large counter-hoop with a plurality of inward facing slides angled to act as ramps which ride on rollers or matching opposing slides fastened to the drum shell. It is tuned by rotating the counter-hoop clockwise or counterclockwise using a rack and pinion activation system. U.S. Pat. No. 5,739,448 is comprised of an inverted J-shaped counter-hoop, which engages an externally threaded, outwardly facing tuning rim surface on a tuning collar that is secured to the drum shell. Clockwise or counterclockwise rotation, of the counter-hoop is accomplished by a pair of gears, one for gross tuning, and/or one for fine timing.
US Patent describes the undersigned inventor's improvement over U.S. Pat. No. 4,218,952. The system and apparatus described U.S. Pat. No. 6,043,419 utilizes a V Clamping mechanism which engages a counter-hoop which has a downwardly and outwardly extending flange which bears on the drum head and a flanged ring fastened to the drum shell, its flange portion inclined upwards and outwards. The V clamp ring surrounds the drum shell and engages the outwardly extending portions of the counter-hoop, and the shell hoop. The V hoop contains a breach, tightening a holt connecting the breached area draws the two hoops together and applies tension to the drum head.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,777,112 uses an outer ring attached to the drum shell with threads on the inner diameter. An inner ring which has a thread on the outside diameter engages the outer ring's threads. A lower inner ring which is separated by ball bearings rides on the rim of the drum head. Rotating the inner ring increases or decreases the tension on the drum head.
The present applicant's first solution to simplifying tuning was described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,138,574, incorporated by reference herein. This '574 drum tuning system is comprised of three annular members o-rings. The first annular member is the cam ring which utilizes a single spiraling track or helical around its outside diameter starting at the top of the spiral cam ring spiraling down and exiting at the bottom and is fastened to the cylindrical drum shell in the vicinity near the opened end of the drum shell. The second ring is a smaller inner counter-hoop having vertical and horizontal surfaces which form an L cross section. The third ring is a larger outer rotating actuator ring has inward lacing horizontal surface atop the vertical surface forming an inverted L cross section and encompasses the spiral can ring parallel to the spiral track or helical at its outside diameter. Inward facing rollers or wheels mounted on its vertical surface of the inside diameter engages the track or helical of the cam ring. The rotating actuator's inverted L cross section overlaps the L cross section of the inner counter-hoop, and the two rings are separated by bearings of rollers to reduce friction while twisting the rotating actuator ring clockwise or counterclockwise. The camming effect increases or decreases the downward force on the inner counter-hoop which bears down on the outer rim of the drum head when fitted over the open end of the drum shell, thereby tuning the drum.
Embodiments of the invention described in '574 mainly focused on certain mechanical aspects of altering the tension of a drum head efficiently and/or accurately.
The present applicant's second U.S. Pat. No. 7,501,567, incorporated by reference herein, had many improvements which included a method for attaching the tuning system to a drum shell and used eccentrics on the lugs to raise and/or lower the cam ring. Another improvement was the addition of a horizontal radius plate with holes for a drum stick to engage and/or be used as a leverage point stationary in relation to the drum shell. A tool was devised which hooked on “cleats” mounted on the lower vertical walls of the rotation actuator ring. A drum stick can be used for leverage against the tool while engaging the holes in the stationary radius plate and thereby facilitates movement of the rotating actuator ring, which in turn tunes the drum. The inner hoop and rotating actuator ring are completely separate. The rotating actuator ring has vertical bosses with inward facing rim rollers which ride on the horizontal surface of the inner hoop. A mounting system for mounting the drum in a stand used horizontal bolts and/or rubber grommets to allow for maximum resonance.
Embodiments of the present invention include, inter alia, further improvements made to the present applicants's U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,138,574 and 7,501,567, based upon real world testing with professional touring drummers and/or continued R&D. Embodiments of the present invention address several key issues, including, by way of example only: adaptability or retrofitting to existing, drums, adjustability range the ease of use, simplicity, and or aesthetics.
This drum tuning system provides the user an extremely simple means of replacing drum heads and/or tuning a drum. The following steps to install a drum head and/or tune the drum illustrate the simplicity of using this device. The drum head is fit over the open end of the drum shell, below the drum head is the cam ring which encircles the vicinity of the open end of the drum shell which has a helical, the inner counter-hoop is set on the drum head at its outermost circumference at the rim, then the rotating actuator is fit over and encompasses and overlaps the inner counter-hoop. By rotating it clockwise the inner facing rollers projecting from the vertical surface of its lower inside diameter engage the spiral cam rings' helical track or tracks and spins freely downward onto the inner counter-hoop until the upper inward facing rollers mounted on the vertical bosses engage the horizontal surface of the inner counter-hoop. Continued clockwise rotation of the rotating actuator against the inner counter hoop and/or helical cam ring applies downward force on the drum head at its rim, which increases the tension of the drum head membrane and thereby tunes the drum. Subsequent clockwise author counterclockwise movement of the rotating actuator raises or towers the tension of the drum bead to the desired tonal pitch.
Because certain mechanical aspects of altering the tension of the drum head by means of a cam mechanism were summarized in the “Background of the Invention” and in patents incorporated by reference, reference can be made to a “camming” mechanism throughout this application, and focus can be on the enhancements and additional features of various components. Anywhere in this application where “camming” mechanism is mentioned, the description of “camming” in the inventor's previous U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,138,574 and 7,501,567 is intended to supplement this application, and is incorporated by reference herein.
In one embodiment, the new tuning system changes the means of grasping the rotating actuator ring by moving the “cleats” from the lower vertical wall to the upper vertical bosses. This rearrangement reduces the number of parts reduces the machining costs, provides a cleaner look, and has the cleats double as nuts for the rim roller axles. The cleats' outward facing knob-like protrusions have a groove cross section to serve as an anchor point for a tool having a keyhole and/or a knob for users to grasp with their fingers and/or a drum stick for leverage. A removable plate (generally referred to as the radius grip plate) is inserted into a socket below the rotating actuator ring attached either to the camming mechanism or a full floater ring or edge ring. It protrudes out from the drum shell so that it can be used as a leverage point. This radius grip plate has a multiplicity of evenly spaced holes radially around the size of most people's fingers in it so that at least one of the radial cleats can generally be lined up with one of them. Because the new rotating actuator now has far fewer cleats than the previous one in U.S. Pat. No. 7,501,567, an offset removable design for the plate is preferred. A drum stick is generally used as a lever in conjunction with the keyhole tool when inserted into one of the holes in the radius grip plate to provide additional mechanical advantage over what a person's hand cart exert to turn the rotating actuator ring. As the rotating actuator ring is moved clockwise or counterclockwise, another hole lines up to engage the drum stick. Once the users run out of holes in the radial plate, they simply flip it over so as to make available more holes within reach of their fingers or drum stick for leverage. The removable offset grip plate may have a magnet to keep it from falling out accidentally.
In one embodiment, because the cleats were moved from the lower vertical surface to the upper vertical bosses, the new rotating actuator ring has wider and or thicker bosses for greater strength. The profile of the boss is preferably much more angular and/or rigid. In addition to the wider and/or thicker vertical bosses, the lower profile of the vertical wall is tapered, being thinner at the bottom and gradually thickening towards the middle and top of the rotating actuator ring. This dramatically reduces flex of the ring during tuning, while still minimizing mass. One by-product of these changes is generally preferable aesthetics.
To address potential quality control issues with drum heads or drum shells, in one embodiment eccentric micro tuning rim roller axles are attached to the vertical bosses on the rotating actuator ring. By turning the micro tuner clockwise or counterclockwise, the eccentric shape of the axle shaft moves the roller up or down with respect to the horizontal surface of inner hoop. Preferably, there is a neutral position in the center, one direction moves the roller down, the other moves the roller up thereby altering the tension at that location of the inner hoop and/or rotating actuator to distribute and equilibrate the tension on the drum head.
Due to the cylindrical shape of the drum shell and/or its relatively thin all thickness, the common belief is the less mass or surface area touching it, the better the resonance. Free floating drums do not have airy hardware touching the drum shell, and have been around for many years. This configuration is well known for having a very loud or “open” sound. The most common use of these free floating drums is marching band snare drums, and/or standard snare drums. Manufacturers such as Pearl Ludwig, Yamaha and Sleishman have made full floating drums for many years. U.S. Pat. No. 7,501,567 mentions a full floating drum with the cam operated tuning system installed on it due to the simplicity of the design and/or the popularity of it.
Since then, several additional means of installing the cam operated tuning system on these type of drums have been developed and/or tested with professional drummers. One of these systems is referred to as the “Full Floater I” which employs a cam operated tuning s stem on one end of the drum, usually the top or batter side, and a standard hoop on opposite side, generally the bottom side, it does not matter which side the tuning system is on, but for ease of use the top is generally preferred. The cam operated tuning system may be connected to the other standard hoop via intermediate ring, or full floater ring, and/or pull rods. When the cam operated tuning system is rotated clockwise or counterclockwise, the tension of both heads is simultaneously adjusted. The overall length of the framework or skeleton which includes the cam ring, pull rods and or drum hoop must be set so that there is sufficient adjustment range of the cam operated tuning system. The cam ring must also be perpendicular to the edge of the drum shell once it is installed. For this purpose elevators have been developed as a means of raising and/or lowering the cam ring. There are several options of “elevators”. The first is a hollow tube nut with external threads used in conjunction with a shoulder bolt. The shoulder bolt is tightened down on the shoulder, and/or spinning the tube nut can adjust the cam ring up and/or down until perpendicular to the bearing edge of the drum shell. As the hollow nuts are rotated in the it ring or full floater ring, this raises and or lowers the cam ring. The second option employs a proprietary bolt which has a groove cut on the bolt's shaft below the head of the bolt. This bolt is installed through holes in the cam ring and/or a circlip is used to retain the bolt in the cam ring and/or allow the bolt to turn. By turning the bolt clockwise or counter clockwise, the cam ring is raised or lowered because the circlip contains the cam ring on the top and on the bottom, allowing the cam ring to be set perpendicular to the bearing edge of the drum shell.
The other full floating system is referred to as the “Full Floater II”. This is because there are two cam operated tuning systems installed, one on either end of the open end of the drum shell. In order to isolate the tuning of the opposite tuning systems, a separate bearing edge is preferred. Full floating marching band drums use edge rings for this purpose, they have an L cross section with both vertical and/or horizontal walls. The cam operated timing system is attached to the edge rim on the horizontal flange, and/or the cam ring is adjusted to be perpendicular to the bearing edge of the ring. There is an additional set of holes in the horizontal surface for attaching the pull rods which connect the lower tuning system. These rods need to be adjustable so that the cam operated tuning system opposite the one mounted to the edge ring can be set perpendicular to the bearing edge of the drum shell once installed. The “Full Floater II” system's adjustable pull rod uses a shoulder bolt and/or hollow tube type nut to lengthen and/or shorten the overall the pull rod. Because of the differences in drum heads at the crown, fine tuning of the overall length of the pull rods and/or overall distance between the bearing edge of the drum shell and/or cam ring preferably should be set. This type of full floating system uses the edge ring or flange as the main anchor point for BOTH tuning systems. Having two completely separate tuning zones allows the drummer to set the tone to exactly what they want.
To facilitate installing the cam operated tuning system on existing drums, or lugs attached to the body of the drum shell, a method to do so was devised and is herein described. Elevators bolts retained by circlips are used to raise and/or lower the cam ring until it is preferably approximately perpendicular to the bearing, edge of the drum shell.
To further simplify the tuning of the drum and/or provide for greater tuning range, a new cam ring with multiple helical tracks around the outside perimeter of the cam ring was designed and is herein described. U.S. Pat. No. 7,138,574 described a single spiral helical track which starts at the top of the cam ring and/or exits at the bottom. The new cam ring described herein preferably has multiple helical tracks which start preferably at the top of the cam ring and exit at the bottom. The previous single helical cam ring generally requires the rotating actuator ring to be rotated until all of the inward facing cam rollers engage the track, and at that point tuning starts. The new cam ring allows for aligning the inward facing cam rollers on the rotating actuator ring with the multiple helical tracks, at the point tuning starts. The previous single helical cam ring is very progressive with a shallow pitch, the new multiple helical cam ring is steeper and/or tuning more immediate. This is meant to save the drummer time and/or provide for a greater tuning range because the ring need not be rotated as far before tuning may start. Also, as drum heads stretch out, the extra tuning range allows the drummer to use the heads longer. In addition, because the requirement to spin the rotating actuator is lessened to begin tuning, a shorter profile may be used to lessen mass.
To further aid in retrofitability and/or adjustability, a new inner hoop was developed which has a lip on the underside of its horizontal surface. This is intended to allow the drum head's rim to drop further down into the inside diameter of the cam ring. This is generally preferred because some drums' lugs are mounted very close to the beating edge of the drum body, which in turn raises the height of the cam ring in relation to the bearing edge of the drum body and thereby limits adjustment. This lip sort of “buys back” space to install the cam operated tuning system. In addition, it also allows for more adjustment range as the drum bead stretches and/or wears over time.
The collective and individual embodiments of the inventions contained throughout this application effectively broaden the base of drum configurations that this cam operated drum tuning system, can be fit onto. Because the preferred embodiments of this tuning system does not rely on a multiplicity of tension rods to adjust the tension of the drum head, but rather a single clockwise or counterclockwise motion to tune the drum, the drum industry refers to this as a “One Touch Tuning System”. Throughout this document, “one touch tuning system” is generally synonymous with “cam operated tuning system”, or “tuning system”. The different configurations where this tuning system is installed on a drum are depicted in the following drawings;
Along with these adaptations, improvements were made to all 3 annular members that make up the tuning system. The annular members or rings used in this tuning system are generally made of metallic materials such as aluminum or steel, but could also be made of other rigid materials such as plastic or carbon fiber, or the like.
Preferably, the Rotating Actuator ring 3 is responsible for transferring the downward force created by the camming action during rotation directly to the Inner Hoop 2; it may also act as an interface for the drummer to tune the drum via rotation. Earlier versions of the Rotating Actuator ring displayed some torsional and/or linear flex under higher tensions, these being more evident as the size of the drum and/or the tuning system increased. In addition, the cleats which were previously mounted on the lower vertical wall of the Rotating Actuator caused some undesirable flex of the vertical wall. This occasionally affected the overall tunability of the drum. To address these problems, the preferred embodiment of the NEW Rotating Actuator ring
A NEW Cam Ring
A NEW Inner Hoop
The Full Floater I drum
The Full Floater II drum shown assembled in
The adjustable pull rods used with the Full Floater II framework are shown in
The preferred method of attachment of the cam operated “One Touch” drum tuning system 1, whether it be a full floating drum or a standard drum which has lugs (
Another Elevator system embodiment used on both Full floater drums and/or Lug Mount drums is shown in
There are literally millions of existing drum kits worldwide which could benefit from this cam operated one touch tuning system, therefore the ability to retrofit embodiments of this drum tuning system and apparatus 1 to any set of drums is advantageous. Several means for doing this were devised and tested on existing drums. The preferred embodiment in
Due to quality control issues with some drum heads 23 or drum shell bearing edges 12, a micro-tuning system 4 shown in
The NEW cleats 5 preferably also include a NEW tuning tool 11 shown in
A NEW offset radius grip plate
In summary embodiments of the amine system can provide one or more of the following exemplary advantages: a system that is more rigid, accurate, simpler to use, and/or less expensive to manufacture due to the improvements made to the NEW Rotating Actuator ring 3 described herein. There is also n ore tuning range with the NEW multiple helical Cam Ring 4 and the Inner Hoop 2. The NEW tuning tool 11 is easier to use due in part to the keyhole 42 and the handle with the radius 9 cut into it. The NEW radius grip plate 51 which is both removable and can be flipped over is more compact and lowers the cost of the system to the drummer due to less parts being attached to each drum. Retrofitability and adjustability have been enhanced with, inter alia, the addition of elevator systems 28. The ability to fine tune the drum has been enhanced with the addition of a micro-tuning axle 48 added to the Rotating Actuator ring 3. Full floating drums which are known to exhibit excellent sound quality and resonance. By incorporating adjustable pull rods 68 and/or non-adjustable pull rods 10, elevators 28 and or full floater flange rings 26 & 35, the one touch tuning systems can be mounted on these types of drums.
While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, as noted above, many changes can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, several of the described embodiments can be used alone or in combination with several of the other alternate embodiments described. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is not limited by the disclosure of the preferred embodiment. Instead, the invention should be determined entirely by reference to the claims that follow.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/541,783 entitled “ONE TOUCH DRUM TUNING SYSTEM” filed Nov. 14, 2014; this application also claims the benefit of the filing date of U.S. Patent Application No. 61/645,337, filed May 10, 2012, entitled “ROTATION ACTIVATED ACOUSTIC DRUM TUNING SYSTEM,” U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/890,189, filed May 8, 2013, entitled “ONE TOUCH DRUM TUNING SYSTEM,” and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/891,090, filed May 9, 2013, entitled “ONE TOUCH DRUM TUNING COMPONENTS,” each of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Child | 15616854 | US | |
Parent | 14541783 | Nov 2014 | US |
Child | 15075969 | US | |
Parent | 13891090 | May 2013 | US |
Child | 14541783 | US | |
Parent | 13890189 | May 2013 | US |
Child | 13891090 | US |