The present invention relates to a portable mechanical support for a musical instrument. In particular, the invention relates to a structural system for a foot pedal actuator which maintains the position of the foot pedal with respect to the console of a portable musical instrument.
Large stage concert musical instruments such as a grand piano or an upright piano are heavy and difficult to move, and so are typically used in fixed locations. These instruments may be positioned on rolling casters which allow the feet of the piano to be lifted above the floor with the heavy duty casters actuated below to move the piano, after which the actuation mechanism lowers the feet of the instrument and lifts the rolling casters with the piano legs again resting on the floor. While a concert piano may be moved for short distances in this manner, this proves to be unwieldy for most performance venues where the equipment is brought in and removed afterwards. To address this need, a class of portable pianos have been developed which provide the rich sound of a piano, either by electronic synthesis, or by miniaturizing the mechanisms of the full-size concert version while maintaining the pitch and timbre, or the portable piano may have a completely new sound.
A concert piano typically has foot pedals which are an integral part of the piano mechanism, and may also be part of the support structure for the piano. For a concert piano, these pedals, from left to right, are the “soft pedal” (una corda), which reduces the sound amplitude by having the action of the keys strike only one string of the triad usually associated with each key, the “sostunado pedal”, which removes the damper from a struck key so the strings for that struck key continue to vibrate, and the “sustaining pedal” (or damper pedal), which raises the dampers from all of the strings so that all strings continue to vibrate after the struck keys are released.
Portable pianos use a foot operated actuator to perform these functions, and have a single operable pedal which typically performs the function of the sustain pedal, with the sustain pedal pushing an actuator rod upwards which raises the dampers from the strings or tines of the portable piano.
One examplar popular portable piano is the Rhodes piano, which comprises an elevated console part which contains the keyboard, hammers, wires or tines which vibrate in response to being struck by the hammer, electronic pickups for the tines, and a set of legs which elevate and support the console. The support legs are removable for quick setup, removal, and storage, and the sustain pedal function is performed by a foot pedal actuator which is placed on the floor. A recurring problem for musicians using portable pianos is the foot pedal actuator is not well supported, and may move during a musical performance, which effectively lengthens the actuator push rod and requiring greater pedal actuation distance, until the actuator pedal no longer provides enough displacement.
It is desired to provide an improved foot operated pedal actuator and support for use with a portable piano.
A first object of the invention is a foot pedal actuator support for mechanical connection to a foot pedal actuator, the foot pedal actuator support having four mechanical engagements arranged on the corners of the foot pedal actuator, the support capturing and engaging at least two legs supporting an elevated console, the support having:
a first elongate member positively engaged with a first corner of a foot pedal actuator on one end, and having an aperture for encircling a leg support on an opposite end;
a second elongate member positively engaged with an adjacent corner of a foot pedal actuator on one end, and having a rotatable attachment to a mid-span fastener of the first elongate member on an opposite end;
a third elongate member positively engaged with a third corner of a foot pedal actuator on one end, and having an aperture for encircling a support leg on an opposite end;
a fourth elongate member positively engaged with an adjacent corner of a foot pedal actuator on one end, and having a rotatable attachment to a mid-span fastener of the third elongate member on an opposite end.
A second object of the invention is a pedal actuator support comprising:
In one example of the invention, a foot pedal actuator support comprises a first elongate member and a second elongate member, the first and second elongate members having apertures on one end for engagement to a foot pedal actuator. The opposite end of the first elongate member has an aperture for encircling a support leg of a musical instrument such as a portable piano console. The opposite end of the second elongate member is engaged with a rotatable attachment along the span of the first elongate member.
In another example of the invention, a first and second elongate member have respective ends with apertures and fasteners which are engaged to two corners of a foot pedal actuator on one end, and a third and fourth elongate member with respective ends having apertures and fasteners which are engaged to the opposite two corners of a foot pedal actuator, the opposite ends of the first and third elongate members having an aperture for encircling or capturing a support leg of a musical instrument, and where the opposite ends of the second and fourth elongate members have a rotatable attachment along the span of the first and third elongate members, respectively.
In one example of the invention, elongate supports 106A, 106B are equal in length to each other and elongate supports 108A and 108B are of different but equal length to each other, thereby positioning the foot pedal actuator 104 below the midpoint of the centerline of the long axis of the console 102.
In another example of the invention, elongate supports 106A and 106B are different lengths to offset the foot pedal actuator 104 to one side or the other of the midpoint of the centerline of the long axis of the console 102, to comfortably position the foot pedal actuator for left or right foot operation.
Although the lengths of the elongate members need only be sufficient to satisfy the functional stability requirement for the foot pedal actuator, in another example of the invention, the range of lengths of the elongate members, measured from aperture center to aperture center are:
The elongate members 106A/106B may be attached to mid-span members 108A/108B using a screw and aircraft (locking) nut, or pressed-in fastener or stud, to provide rotatable attachment 206A/206B. Foot pedal actuator 104 may be attached to the elongate members at respective elongate member engagement apertures 204A, 204B, 208A, and 208B using a screw, or captured button fastener 304 with engagement barbs or engagement surfaces for insertion into the foot pedal 104 as shown in
The elongate member 106A and 106B may require additional fastening security with respect to the legs 120 of the musical instrument 102.
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