This application claims the benefit of Great Britain Patent Application No. GB 1500197.7, filed Jan. 7, 2015, and entitled, “USER INTERACTION DEVICE” which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The device relates to a user interaction device, particularly an electronic pen, for use with an interactive whiteboard or with a touch screen.
Some interactive whiteboards and touch screens require an electronic pen to act as a pointer, the pen serving a function analogous to that of a computer mouse. The pen may have an elongate body carrying one or more buttons for actuation by the user, equivalent to the buttons on a mouse. In the case of pens for some whiteboards, they may additionally comprise an LED located near the “nib”, i.e. the tip of the pen that contacts the whiteboard, and the nib may itself be translucent and incorporate a photo sensitive diode.
Such electronic pens, and similar user interactive devices, traditionally have a switch that is closed by depression of the nib. Normally, the switch mechanism employs several plastics material parts that connect together to translate linear force acting on the nib into displacement of a part of the switch mechanism to establish an electrical connection between two switch contacts. The nib is normally biased by a spring or other resilient element towards a position in which the switch is open.
A section through the tip of a known electronic pen is shown in
In the arrangement shown in
With a view to mitigating the foregoing disadvantages, the present system provides a user interaction device comprising, in various embodiments, an elongate outer casing having an axis, a chassis located within the outer casing, a switch having electrical contacts supported by the chassis, and a nib movable relative to the chassis and serving to close the switch when axially displaced towards the chassis, wherein the nib is attached to the chassis by means of an axially compressible resilient element of which a first end is anchored to the chassis and a second end is anchored to the nib, and wherein movement of the nib in a direction transverse to the axis of the outer casing is constrained by the resilient element.
In various embodiments, the nib need not be, and preferably is not, guided by any element that passes through a hole in the outer casing or the chassis. Instead, it is constrained to move generally axially, preferably solely, by the resilient element that biases the nib into the open position of the switch and that also serves to prevent the nib from separating from the chassis. This construction avoids the risk of the nib, or any part attached to it, becoming jammed against a surface intended to guide and constrain its axial movement.
In some embodiments, it is advantageous for the resilient element to be of a design that tends to centre the nib on the axis of the casing as the nib is depressed. A single helical spring does not fulfil this criterion as it tends to buckle while it is being compressed.
In preferred embodiments, the resilient element may be constructed as a wave spring. Alternative suitable resilient elements may be formed by resilient bellows or concentric oppositely-handed helical springs.
Conveniently, in various embodiments, the end of the resilient element may be integrally formed with a screw thread to engage with a mating thread in the nib in order to anchor the nib to the resilient element and allow removal of the nib.
In the case of an electronic pen requiring a photodiode within the nib, the photodiode may be mounted on the second end of the resilient element and connected to a circuit board supported on the chassis by means of a conductor passing axially through the resilient element.
In various embodiments, to enable the nib to close the electrical switch, it is convenient to provide a conductor on the axial end of the nib facing the chassis, to bridge across the electrical contacts supported by the chassis.
By locating one of the electrical contacts on the nib, the pen can be rendered more responsive because pressure on the nib results in direct closing of the switch.
The invention will now be described further, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
A first, cylindrical, section 142 of the element 140 is connected to, or forms part of the chassis 114. The section 142 terminates in a shoulder 143 that serves as an abutment for locating a small circuit board 150 carrying a pair of contacts 130 that face towards the nib 116.
The second section 144, contiguous with the first section 142, serves as an axially compressible resilient element and is constructed as a wave spring, as can best be seen in
The third section 146 is externally threaded and engages with a mating thread formed within the end of a cylindrical inner sleeve 152 of the nib 116. The sleeve 152 is designed to fit around the wave spring 144 with clearance.
The circuit board 150 also carries an LED 160 that is visible through a translucent section 112a of the outer casing and the element 140 also has a photodiode 164 mounted in its end which can respond to light passing through the nib 116. The LED 160 and the photodiode 164 are connected to the circuit board 117. A conductor 166 leading to the photodiode passes through the wave spring 144, as shown in
When the nib 116, which is itself made of a translucent material, is screwed directly onto the section 146 of the element 140, its inner sleeve 152 surrounds and protects the wave spring 144. The limited clearance between the two permits free axial movement of the nib 116 but only a limited degree of tilting away from the central axis of the tip of the pen. The design of the wave spring and its interaction with the sleeve 152 tends to centre the nib on the axis of the casing as the nib is depressed. The axial end surface of the sleeve 152 facing the contacts 130 carries a conductor that can bridge across the contacts 130 to allow current to flow between them when the nib is depressed against the action of the wave spring 144.
In a rest position of the nib 116, with no deformation of the wave spring 144, the conductor carried by the nib 116 is held away from the switch contacts 130 to maintain the switch in an open position. However, the mounting of the nib 116 directly on the element 140 allows all the parts of the switch to be held securely in close proximity to one another, so as to improve the sensitivity of the switch.
During use of the electronic pen 30, a user may press the nib 116 against the surface of an interactive whiteboard. Upon doing so, the elastically deformable wave spring 144 is compressed. Upon the nib 42 being depressed from its resting state, the conductor carried by the axial end surface of the sleeve 152 of the nib 116 is brought into contact with contacts 130 on the circuit board 150, thus completing a circuit within the pen (i.e., the switch is moved into a closed position). This connection indicates that the pen is being used and allows optics and an infrared system of the interactive whiteboard to recognise the pen, track it and show it as a pen, thereby displaying the strokes and movements undertaken by the user.
The electronic pen of the present system reduces the number of components required in the construction of the pen and provides a more reliable and responsive pen. The reduction in the number of components results in a more easily assembled pen that can be manufactured at a lower cost. Additionally, the use of a wave spring increases the responsiveness of the pen.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1500197.7 | Jan 2015 | GB | national |