Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6271457
-
Patent Number
6,271,457
-
Date Filed
Friday, May 19, 200024 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, August 7, 200123 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- McCormock, Paulding & Huber LLP
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A bridge type piezoelectric pickup for guitars and other stringed instruments that has a flexible circuit board carrying a pair of transversely polarized piezoelectric crystals for each string, the two crystals of each string being closely spaced from one another along the length of the string and supporting a common saddle resting on both of the crystals and supportingly engaging the associated string.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention concerns a pickup or electro-mechanical transducer for converting the vibrations of one or more strings of a stringed musical instrument into electrical signals and of the type wherein the pickup has for each string at least one piezoelectric crystal forming part of the instrument bridge and arranged to be excited by the string vibration, and deals more particularly with such a bridge-type piezoelectric pickup having an improved construction and performance in comparison to previously proposed pickups of such type.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Although many different constructions of bridge-type piezoelectric pickups have been proposed and used in the past, such pickups have often been subject to one or more troubling deficiencies such as difficult and time-consuming assembly requirements, excessive weight or mass, susceptibility to the introduction of noise or interference into the signal transmission system, excessive cross-talk in signals from nearby strings, and weak output signals resulting in frequency response losses as the signals are transmitted to remote amplifying circuits. A further difficulty often is the inability to easily selectively adapt a given multiple string pickup to have either a single monaural output or a multiple channel output, or to be responsive to different modes of string vibration.
The object of the present invention is, therefore, to provide an improved bridge-type piezoelectric pickup which, among other desirable things, significantly reduces or overcomes the above-mentioned deficiencies of prior pickups.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention resides in a bridge-type piezoelectric pickup for use with a stringed musical instrument, such as a guitar, mandolin, lute, violin or the like, having a body with a top surface and at least one stretched string extending over the top surface and supported at one point by a bridge located between the top surface and the string with the bridge holding the string in a somewhat deflected condition so that the string presses downwardly on the bridge. An individual string-engaging saddle is provided for each string and at its lower end rests on a set of two piezoelectric crystals arranged at different locations along the length of the string so that the two crystals are excited in a common or in-phase way by the movement of the saddle, arising from vibration of the string in a plane perpendicular to the string, and are excited in a non-common or out-of-phase way by movement of the saddle arising from vibration of the string in the longitudinal direction of its length. The use of the pair of crystals and a separate saddle for each string minimizes cross talk between nearby strings. In addition, neighboring pairs of crystals are advantageously connected out of phase with one another to further reduce cross-talk signals from adjacent string excitation.
The invention also resides in the pickup having an active semiconductor circuit, such as an operational amplifier, located in close proximity to and electrically connected with the piezoelectric crystal set of each string to provide a high impedance input for the electrical signal produced by the crystal set, and some amplification may also be provided by the active semiconductor circuit or operational amplifier or by an associated amplification stage forming part of the pickup, so that the output signal can be transmitted efficiently from the pickup to a remotely located supporting circuitry without significant frequency response losses and/or the accumulation of significant amounts of hum or other noise or interference by the transmitted signal.
The invention also resides in the piezoelectric crystals, operational amplifiers and other electronic components of the pickup being carried by a circuit board, by the circuit board advantageously being a flexible one, and by the piezoelectric crystals and other electronic components being attached to the circuit board by surface mount technology techniques so as to facilitate the assembly of the pickup. In keeping with this, the two piezoelectric crystals of each set are advantageously “transversely-polarized” ones with each having two vertically spaced horizontal excitation faces between which the crystal is compressed by forces from the associated string and two horizontally spaced vertical voltage signal terminal faces, so that the two voltage signal terminal faces of each crystal can be directly connected to the upper surface of the circuit board, as by surface mount soldering. Also, the flexible circuit board preferably has an elongated tail portion, with electrical conductors, extending from the body of the pickup, which tail portion can be inserted through a hole in the top plate of the instrument for electrical connection to a power supply, preamplifier, and/or other module located within the instrument body.
A further feature of the invention is that the circuit board is thin and its bottom surface is exposed in relation to other parts of the pickup so as to directly engage the top surface of the instrument with which the pickup is used, to provide a beneficial direct and firm transmission of the vibratory forces of a string to the associated set of piezoelectric crystals, and through those crystals to the instrument top.
The pickup of the invention not only reduces cross-talk and frequency response losses and is of a simplified construction, but also when used to provide multiple independent signal channels, that is, one independent signal channel per string, also allows for individual tailoring of signal equalization as well as other individual signal processing, and provides the basis for multi-channel analog to digital conversion and attendant digital signal processing techniques and control functions afforded in the digital domain. For example, one or a selected set of strings can be selected for reproduction, different string signals can be amplified or otherwise modified in different ways, or different string signals can be amplified and sent to different speakers for reproduction.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention, and from the accompanying drawings and claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The drawings are:
FIG.
1
—A plan view of a guitar having a piezoelectric bridge-type pickup embodying the invention, with a portion of the top of the guitar being broken away to reveal further details.
FIG.
2
—An enlarged plan view of the piezoelectric bridge-type pickup of
FIG. 1
with the strings of the instrument being omitted for clarity.
FIG.
3
—A sectional view of the piezoelectric bridge-type pickup of
FIG. 1
taken on the line
3
—
3
of FIG.
2
and including a showing of the instrument strings.
FIG.
4
—An enlarged sectional view taken on the line
4
—
4
of FIG.
3
.
FIG.
5
—A plan view of the circuit board used in the piezoelectric bridgetype pickup of FIG.
1
.
FIG.
6
—A fragmentary perspective view of a portion of the circuit board of the piezoelectric bridge-type pickup of FIG.
1
and showing the soldering pads for receiving the two piezoelectric crystals associated with one of the strings of the instrument.
FIG.
7
—A view similar to
FIG. 6
but showing the two piezoelectric crystals attached to the soldering pads of FIG.
6
.
FIG.
8
—A view similar to
FIG. 7
but showing the associated saddle positioned on the two piezoelectric crystals and supporting the associated string.
FIG.
9
—A circuit diagram showing schematically the elements received on the circuit board of the piezoelectric bridge-type pickup of FIG.
1
and their electrical interconnections.
FIG.
10
—A sectional view similar to
FIG. 4
but showing an alternative embodiment of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring to
FIG. 1
, a piezoelectric bridge-type pickup
10
embodying the invention is shown in use with a stringed musical instrument in the form of a guitar
12
having a hollow body
14
with a top or soundboard
16
and a neck
18
. In the illustrated case, the bridge-type pickup (bridge)
10
also serves as an anchor or tail piece for the strings
20
of the guitar with the strings being stretched between the bridge
10
and machine heads
22
carried by a peghead
24
at the upper end of the neck
18
, and with the strings passing over a nut
26
at the upper end of the neck and individual saddles
28
forming part of the bridge
10
. The strings, as customary, are held in slightly bent conditions by the nut
26
and the saddles
28
, so that the stretched strings press downwardly both on the nut
26
and onto the saddles
28
.
As explained in more detail later, electrical signals delivered by the bridge
10
and excited by vibrations of the strings
20
may be, and in the illustrated case of
FIG. 1
are, transmitted to an electronic module
30
located within the guitar body
14
for amplification, tone control, mixing or other electronic processing, and the signals output from the module are then transmitted to a remote sound system for reproduction, recording and/or possible further modification or processing. The transmission to the remote system may be a wireless one or, as in the illustrated case, may take place through a cable
32
plugged into an outlet jack
34
on the guitar body
14
, the output signals of the module
30
being transmitted to the output jack by a suitable means, such as the illustrated flat flexible cable
36
attached to the inner surface of a sidewall portion
37
of the guitar body.
The electronic module
30
, or an associated separate holder located in the guitar body
14
, may also carry one or more batteries providing power for the active components of the module
30
and bridge
10
, with the guitar body including a normally closed opening or some other means providing an access needed for battery replacement. As an alternative to this, in cases where the output signals are transmitted to a remote system by a cable, such as the cable
32
, the needed power can be supplied to the guitar through the cable from the remote system.
Turning to
FIGS. 2-7
for a more detailed description of the bridge
10
, the bridge has a body
38
preferably made of a molded composite material such as one comprised of graphite fibers embedded in an epoxy resin matrix, and the body
38
is covered by a thin walled decorative plastic cap
40
, the cap
40
being preferably made of a molded layer of graphite fiber fabric embedded in an epoxy resin matrix. As seen in
FIGS. 1 and 2
, the body
38
and cap
40
have six openings
42
, one for each string, extending through the body and cap from front to rear with each opening
42
slidably receiving a respective one of the saddles
28
. The bridge body has a rear face
44
flatly engaging and bonded to the outer or top surface
17
of the soundboard
16
. The saddle
28
can be made of any suitable hard relatively non-vibration dampening material such as metal, plastic, wood, graphite/epoxy composite, or bone. As shown in
FIGS. 2 and 4
, the bridge body
38
and cap
40
also have six through slots
43
, each of which registers with a hole
45
in the top
16
, to receive the associated string
20
and to anchor the string to the guitar
10
in the manner shown in
FIG. 4
, each string
20
having a customary ball or bead
47
at its bridge end for this anchoring purpose.
Communicating with the rear face of
44
of the bridge body
38
, the body has a recess
46
extending forwardly and laterally across all six of the openings
42
and also extending some distance laterally outwardly beyond each of the two end openings
42
. In the back or rear portion of the recess
46
is a circuit board
48
having an exposed rear surface
50
which directly engages the top surface of the top
16
. The circuit board
48
is preferably made of a thin flexible material and includes a multiple conductor carrying ribbon-like tail portion
54
which extends through an opening
52
in the top
16
to the electronic module
30
inside the guitar body, the tail portion being secured by adhesive to the rear surface of the top
16
and the inner surface of the body side wall portion as shown in
FIGS. 1
,
2
and
3
.
In the embodiment of
FIGS. 3 and 4
, the circuit board
58
can be a member which is separate from and unattached to the bridge body
38
and which becomes attached to the guitar and to the bridge body
38
only upon the bridge body
38
being adhesively secured or otherwise bondingly to the guitar top
16
with the circuit board
48
being captured between the bridge body
38
and the top
16
. As an alternative to this, to keep the circuit board assembled with the bridge body
38
prior to attachment of the bridge to the guitar, the circuit board can be adhesively attached to the bridge body
38
at its ends, as indicated at
41
in FIG.
3
. In either case, the major portion of the circuit board
48
located in the recess
46
is in direct engagement with the top
16
, is held against the top
16
by the downward pressure of the saddles
28
, and is free to vibrate with the top
16
independently of the bridge body
38
.
The circuit board
38
carries at least one, and in the preferred and illustrated case a pair, of piezoelectric crystals
58
for each of the strings
20
. It also carries a number of electrical circuit components indicated in a suggestive way at C in
FIGS. 3
,
4
and
5
, these components C being the capacitors, resistors and operational amplifier modules of FIG.
9
. Preferably, the piezoelectric crystals
58
and the other components C carried by the circuit board
48
are ones which are adapted for surface mounting to the surface of the circuit board
48
and are so mounted to the circuit board by suitable and well-known surface mounting techniques such as wave soldering or infrared heating.
Referring to
FIGS. 4-8
, the two piezoelectric crystals
58
associated with each string are transversely polarized ones so, as indicated in
FIG. 7
, each crystal has two vertically spaced horizontal top and bottom faces
60
between which the crystal is pressed by the downward force exerted on it by the associated saddle
28
and also has two laterally spaced vertical signal faces
62
across which appears a voltage signal having an intensity related to the degree to which the crystal is compressed by the saddle
28
against the top
16
. As shown in
FIG. 6
, prior to the attachment of the piezoelectric crystals
58
to the circuit board, the circuit board has two soldering terminal pads
64
and
66
for each of the two crystals
58
. The crystals are then attached to the circuit board as shown in
FIG. 7
by small amounts of solder
68
connecting each one of the vertical faces
62
to an associated one of the soldering pads
64
or
66
. The two soldering pads
64
are connected to one another by a conductor path
70
on the circuit board and the two soldering pads
66
are connected to conductor paths or lines
72
and
74
. Therefore, after the crystals
58
are connected to the soldering pads
64
and
66
, as shown in
FIG. 7
, they become connected in series with one another between the lines
72
and
74
.
As shown in
FIG. 8
, the saddle
28
of each string
20
rests equally on its two associated piezoelectric crystals
58
with the crystals being spaced from one another in the longitudinal direction of the string
20
. When the string
20
is vibrated as a result of being plucked by a player, the string vibrates in all directions in a plane perpendicular to the string and also vibrates in the direction longitudinally of the string. The vibrations occurring in the plane perpendicular to the string are referred to as “in-plane” vibrations and the vibrations occurring along the length of the string are referred to as “longitudinal vibrations”. The in-plane vibrations can be resolved into vertical and horizontal components occurring in the directions of the arrows V and H of
FIG. 8
, and the longitudinal vibrations occur in the direction of the arrow L of FIG.
8
.
From a study of
FIG. 8
, it will be apparent that the vibrations occurring in the direction of the arrows V and H and transmitted to the two crystals
58
by the saddle
28
will have the same or common effect on each of the two crystals
58
. That is, the voltage signal appearing across the two faces
62
,
62
of one crystal will be substantially the same as that appearing across the faces
62
,
62
of the other crystal. On the other hand, the longitudinal string vibration occurring in the direction L will have a non-common effect on the two associated crystals
58
,
58
. That is, the longitudinal vibration tends to rock the top of the saddle
28
in the longitudinal direction of the string, and when this occurs, the pressure applied by the saddle
22
to one of the crystals increases while the pressure applied to the other crystal decreases, so that the signals appearing across the two faces
62
of one crystal will be essentially 180° out of phase with the signals appearing across the faces
62
of the other crystal.
The circuit diagram of
FIG. 9
shows the electrical interconnection of the piezoelectric crystals
58
and components C carried by the circuit board
48
. In addition to the piezoelectric crystals
58
, the circuit of
FIG. 9
includes capacitors
76
,
78
,
80
, resistors
82
,
84
,
86
,
88
, and operational amplifier modules
90
which constitute the components C of
FIGS. 3
,
4
and
5
, it being understood that the particular arrangement of the components C on the circuit board
48
may vary considerably depending on the shapes and packaging of the various components used. Further, in the circuit of
FIG. 9
, the components on the circuit board are arranged into a power supply sub-circuit
92
and six substantially identical signal circuits, the six signal circuits being designated respectively LO E, A, D, G, B and HI E. Each signal channel is associated with a respective one of the strings
20
of the instrument, and the designation given to the channel in
FIG. 9
corresponds to the musical tone to which the associated string is customarily tuned.
Referring to
FIG. 9
, the power supply circuit
92
is connected to a +5V line
94
and a ground line
96
both originating from the module
30
contained in the guitar body and reaching the circuit board through the flexible circuit board tail portion
54
. The two capacitors
78
and
80
filter out undesired noise, and the two resistors
86
and
88
provide a voltage signal on the line
98
of suitable positive voltage level for use with the active operational amplifiers
90
.
In each of the signal channels, the two crystals
58
of the channel are connected in voltage bucking relationship to one another. That is, the two output faces
62
connected by the conductor
70
are of the same polarity, the positive polarity face
62
of each crystal
58
being indicated by a +. Therefore, when the two crystals of each channel are excited in a common way, as by vibrations occurring in the direction of the arrow V of FIG.
8
and vibrations occurring in the direction of the arrow H of
FIG. 8
, the signals produced by the two crystals
58
essentially cancel one another to create little or no signal on the output line
74
. However, when the two crystals of a channel are excited in a non-common and 180° out of phase way as by longitudinal string vibrations occurring in the direction of the arrow L of
FIG. 8
, the signals produced by the two crystals
58
of each channel aid one another and create a significant output signal on the line
74
.
The signal appearing on the piezoelectric output line
74
of each channel is coupled to an associated active electronic circuit, preferably of semiconductor conduction and in the form of an operational amplifier
90
, located close to the associated peizoelectric crystals
58
, and with an input terminal
91
and an output terminal
93
, through the associated capacitor
76
and resistor
82
, and the operational amplifier is preferably conditioned by the associated resistor
84
and feedback line
92
to operate essentially as an emitter-follower so as to have a very high input impedance and a low output impedance as seen by the output line
94
on which the output signal from the operational amplifier
90
appears. The six output lines
94
convey the output signals of the six signal channels to the module
30
in the body of the guitar through the tail portion
54
of the flexible circuit board, and as mentioned, the module
30
may then further amplify or otherwise process the signals before transmission from the guitar to a remote signal utilizing system.
Instead of functioning solely as emitter-followers, the operational amplifiers
90
of
FIG. 9
may be conditioned to also provide a small degree of signal amplification so that the signals appearing on the output lines
94
are amplified versions of the signals appearing on the piezoelectric output lines
74
. As an alternative to this, each signal channel of the circuit shown in
FIG. 9
can also be designed to include a second active electronic circuit, such as a second operational amplifier following the first operational amplifier
90
, to provide relatively large amplification of the output signal from the operational amplifier
90
before its transmission to the output line
94
.
As shown in
FIG. 9
, each signal channel includes two terminal pads
100
on the circuit board
48
. These two terminal pads
100
are connected respectively to the two output faces
62
of one of the peizoelectric crystals
58
. Therefore, by connecting a conductor, such as shown by broken lines at
102
for the HI E signal channel, one of the piezoelectric crystals of a channel can be short circuited from the channel and so that the other piezoelectric crystal of the channel is then the only one supplying a signal to the output line
74
and to the associated operational amplifier
90
. If this is done, the involved channel will then essentially be responsive to the in-plane vibrations of the string and non-responsive to the longitudinal vibrations of the string. The two terminal pads
100
of each signal channel are made to be easily accessible on the circuit board
48
so that before installing the bridge pickup onto a guitar, the installer can easily short the two terminal pads
100
of each channel to one another to change the pickup from one responsive essentially to only longitudinal string vibrations to one responsive essentially to only in-plane string vibrations. Of course, if desired the two terminal pads
100
of less than all of the channels can also be shorted to have some channels responsive to in-plane string vibrations and other channels responsive to longitudinal string vibrations. In addition, remote electrical control of this shorting function may also be provided.
From
FIG. 9
, it should be noted that preferably the piezoelectric crystals
58
of the various signal channels are so arranged that in adjacent channels the connecting conductor
70
between the two crystals
58
connects faces
62
of different polarity. That is, if in one channel the conductor
70
connects faces of positive polarity then in an adjacent channel, the conductor
70
connects faces of negative polarity. This produces an out of phase relationship between the signals of adjacent channels and helps in reducing the likelihood of one signal channel picking up cross talk from an adjacent signal channel.
In the bridge
10
as shown in
FIG. 4
, the portion of the recess
46
which is not filled by the circuit board
48
and its carried components is left empty. As an alternative to this, and if desired, as shown in
FIG. 10
some or most all of this empty space of the recess
46
can be filled with a potting material
104
which entirely or partially embeds the components C, but which does not completely embed the peizoelectric crystals
58
so that the upper portions of the crystals
58
remain exposed to receive and engage the lower ends of their associated saddles
28
. In this construction, the potting material
104
adheres to both the circuit board
48
and the bridge body
38
so that the circuit board
48
is attached to the bridge body
38
by the potting material.
Claims
- 1. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup for a stringed musical instrument having a top surface and a plurality of generally parallel strings spaced from one another and extending over said top surface, said pickup comprising:a plurality of sets of two discrete piezoelectric crystals, the number of said sets being equal to the number of said strings and each of the sets being intended to be associated with a respective one of the strings, each set being adapted to be located between said top surface of the instrument and the associated string with the two discrete piezoelectric crystals of the set at different closely spaced positions along the length of the string, and a plurality of discrete saddles equal in number to the number of said strings and each of which saddles is intended to be associated with a respective one of the strings, each saddle being adapted to be located between the string associated with the saddle and the set of two discrete piezoelectric crystals associated with the same string so that said associated string presses down on said saddle and said saddle in turn presses down on both of said two piezoelectric crystals.
- 2. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 1 and further comprising:a plurality of active electronic circuits equal in number to said plurality of sets of discrete piezoelectric crystals and each located near a respectively associated one of said sets of two piezoelectric crystals, each of said active electronic circuits having a high impedance input terminal supplied with an input voltage signal produced by at least one of said two piezoelectric crystals of the associated set and having a low impedance output terminal at which appears an output voltage signal related to said input voltage signal for transmission from said electronic circuit.
- 3. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 2, wherein:each of said active electronic circuits also has some gain so that said output voltage signal is an amplified version of said input voltage signal.
- 4. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 3, wherein:each of said active electronic circuits includes at least one operational amplifier module.
- 5. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 1, wherein:each of said two piezoelectric crystals of each set has horizontal top and bottom faces between which the crystal is compressed by the associated saddle pressing downwardly on the crystal and also has two spaced vertical faces across which appears a voltage signal having an intensity related to the degree to which the crystal is compressed by the saddle.
- 6. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 2 and further comprising:a circuit board carrying all of said piezoelectric crystals and all of said active electronic circuits.
- 7. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 6 wherein:said circuit board is made of a flexible material.
- 8. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 1 and further comprising:a circuit board carrying all of said piezoelectric crystals, and electrical circuit components carried by said circuit board for conditioning voltage signals produced by said piezoelectric crystals.
- 9. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 8 and further comprising:said piezoelectric crystals and said electrical circuit components being connected to said circuit board by surface mount technology.
- 10. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 8 and further comprising:said circuit board being made of a flexible material.
- 11. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 7 for use with a stringed musical instrument having a hollow body including a top plate providing said top surface and having an electronic module located within said body for use with said bridge-type pickup, wherein:said flexible circuit board has one portion adapted to be positioned between said crystals and said top surface and another portion adapted to pass through an opening in said top plate and into said hollow body for connection with said electronic module.
- 12. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 8 and further comprising:a body of plastic material having a lower surface adapted to lie uniformly on said instrument top surface and having a recess receiving said circuit board and said piezoelectric crystals and said electrical circuit components carried by the circuit board.
- 13. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 12 and further comprising:said circuit board having a lower surface exposed relative to said plastic body and flush with said lower surface of said plastic body so that said lower surface of said circuit board directly engages said top surface of the instrument when said lower surface of said plastic body is in engagement with said top surface of the instrument.
- 14. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 13, wherein:at least a portion of said recess is filled with a potting material which embeds at least a portion of said circuit board and portions of said piezoelectric crystals and circuit components carried by the circuit board.
- 15. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 5 and further comprising:means defining a top surface of said pickup, and means defining a plurality of saddle recesses each receiving a respective one of said saddles, each of said saddle receiving recesses extending downwardly from said top surface of the pickup to the top faces of the two piezoelectric crystals associated with the received saddle so that the received saddle rests directly on said top faces of the two associated crystals.
- 16. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 1, wherein:each of said two piezoelectric crystals of each set has horizontal top and bottom excitation faces between which the crystal is compressed by the associated saddle pressing downwardly on the crystal and also has two spaced vertical voltage signal terminal faces across which appears a voltage signal having an intensity related to the degree to which the crystal is compressed by the saddle. the two voltage signal terminal faces of each of said piezoelectric crystals having respectively negative and positive voltage polarities, and the two piezoelectric crystals of each set being electrically connected in series with one another by having two voltage signal terminal faces of the same polarity directly electrically connected with one another.
- 17. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 16, wherein:said sets of piezoelectric crystals are arranged in spaced relationship to one another generally along a line adapted to be located parallel to said instrument top surface and in a vertical plane perpendicular to said plurality of strings of the instrument, and in adjacent ones of said sets of piezoelectric crystals the two crystals of each set are so connected in series with one another that in one of the adjacent sets the two crystals have their two voltage signal terminal faces of negative polarity connected directly to one another and in the other adjacent set the two crystals have their two voltage signal terminal faces of positive polarity connected directly to one another.
- 18. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 11 and further comprising:a decorative cap at least partially covering said plastic body.
- 19. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 18, wherein:said plastic body is one having been cast into said decorative cap.
- 20. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 16, wherein:a circuit board carries all of said piezoelectric crystals, and associated with each of said sets of crystals is a pair of accessible terminals on said circuit board connected respectively to the two voltage signal terminals faces of one of the crystals of the set and across which pair of accessible terminals an electrical conductor may be optionally connected to short out said one crystal.
- 21. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup for a stringed musical instrument having a top surface and a stretched string extending over said top surface, said pickup comprising:a piezoelectric crystal adapted to be located between said top surface of the instrument and the string, a saddle adapted to be located between said piezoelectric crystal and said string so that said string presses down on said saddle and said saddle in turn presses down on the piezoelectric crystal, a circuit board adapted to be located between said piezoelectric crystal and said top surface of a stringed musical instrument and carrying said piezoelectric crystal, and a first electronic circuit carried by said circuit board and connected with said piezoelectric crystal, said active electronic circuit having a high impedance input terminal for an input electrical signal produced at least in part by said piezoelectric crystal and having a low impedance output terminal at which appears an output electrical signal related to said input electrical signal.
- 22. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 21, wherein:said active electronic circuit includes at least one operational amplifier module.
- 23. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 21, wherein:said circuit board is made of a flexible material.
- 24. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 21 for use with a stringed musical instrument having a plurality of strings, wherein:a piezoelectric crystal such as aforesaid, a saddle such as aforesaid, and an active electronic circuit such as aforesaid is provided for each of said strings, and wherein said circuit board carries all of said piezoelectric crystals and active electronic circuits.
- 25. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 21, wherein:each of said active electronic circuits has some gain so that its output electrical signal is an amplified version of its input electrical signal.
- 26. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 21, wherein:each of said active electronic circuits includes at least one operational amplifier module.
- 27. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup as defined in claim 21, and further comprising:a second active electronic circuit carried by said circuit board and connected to said output terminal of said first electronic circuit so as to receive said output signal of said first electronic circuit.
- 28. A piezoelectric bridge-type pickup for a stringed musical instrument having a top surface and a string extending over said top surface, said pickup comprising:a circuit board adapted to be located between said top surface and said string, a piezoelectric crystal on said circuit board, and a saddle adapted to be located between said crystal and said string so that said string presses down on said saddle and said saddle in turn presses down on said crystal, said circuit board having two terminal pads for said crystal, said crystal being a transversely polarized one having two signal faces extending vertically of said circuit board and soldered respectively to said two terminal pads of the circuit board.
US Referenced Citations (14)