This invention relates generally to portable electronic devices and, in particular, to a wireless listening system and method that uses the standard FM band for transmission and reception.
Portable music players such as MP3 players have become very popular. One problem is that the cords going from the music player to the earbuds or headphones can get in the way or become tangled, especially with activities such as jogging.
There are wireless earbuds but they are expensive and limited in functionality. Sennhieser, for example, now offers a system called the MX W1 that retails for about $500 and uses a small transmitter to send modulated audio signals to wireless in-ear receivers. While the system is digital and no doubt offers high quality sound reproduction, the transmitter is somewhat large and the receivers can only be used with that transmitter.
This invention is directed to a personal listening system which, in the preferred embodiments, uses the standard FM band for transmission and reception. This offers significant advantages, including the fact that the earbuds or other listening units can be used as an independent FM stereo receiver without the need for the local transmitter, thereby freeing up the music player for other purposes such as book reading, video watching, telephonic communications, and so forth.
The system includes a base unit and physically separate, entirely self-contained, battery-operated right- and left-ear listening units. The base unit includes a source of an audio signal, a user control for selecting an FM frequency, and an output for outputting a signal representative of the selected FM frequency. The base unit further includes a modulator for modulating the audio signal onto the selected FM frequency as a stereo signal with encoded right and left channels, and an FM stereo transmitter for wirelessly transmitting the modulated audio signal over the selected FM frequency.
Each listening unit includes an input for receiving the signal representative of the selected FM frequency, an FM stereo tuner, and apparatus for tuning the FM tuner to the selected FM frequency of the base unit. Each listening unit further includes a demodulator for demodulating the audio signal from the selected FM frequency, an amplifier for amplifying the audio signal, and a transducer for converting the audio signal into sound to be heard by a listener. In accordance with the invention, however, the right-ear unit only amplifies the right channel of the FM stereo signal, and the left ear unit only amplifies the left channel of the stereo signal.
The base unit may be a digital music player, book reader, video player, smart cellular telephone, or any other portable device with a stereo sound generator. The base unit may further include a display for displaying the selected FM frequency. The base unit may be a self-contained or integrated unit or a device that couples to a digital music player, smart cellular telephone or other base unit to receive the audio signal therefrom.
The right- and left-ear listening units may be any type of on-ear, in-ear or around-ear sound delivery devices including “earbuds,” headphones or earphones. The right- and left-ear units may physically dock onto the base unit to receive the signal representative of the selected FM frequency from the base unit, in which case the base unit may recharge the batteries in the right and left ear units while docked. The right- and left-ear units may receive the signal representative of the selected FM frequency from the base unit through a wireless or wired connection such that the wires deliver the audio signal directly to the right and left ear units while interconnected. The wires may also recharge the batteries in the listening units while connected.
The right- and left-ear units may receive the signal representative of the selected FM frequency from the base unit through a wireless Bluetooth connection or other short-range broadcast at a frequency other than the selected FM frequency. Alternatively, the listening units may receive the signal representative of the selected FM frequency from the base unit through a radio frequency.
This invention resides in a wireless listening system which, in the preferred embodiments, uses the standard FM band for transmission and reception. This offers significant advantages, including the fact that the in- or on-ear units can be used as an independent FM stereo receiver without the need for the local transmitter, thereby freeing up the music player for other purposes such as book reading, video watching, telephonic communications, and so forth.
As used herein, “earbuds” should be taken to include any type of on-ear, in-ear or around-ear sound delivery devices including ‘headphones,’ ‘earphones,’ and the like, so long as the right- and left-ear components can be entirely wireless as described herein. Also “music player” should be understood to include any kind of portable electronic device that uses or would benefit from stereophonic listening, including radios, telephones, video players, book readers, and so forth. Further, although the preferred embodiments use FM stereo, the invention does not preclude over broadcasts, including AM, TV audio, shortwave, or satellite reception.
Each earbud may have nearly identical circuitry, preferably using a single-chip FM stereo circuit such as the TEA5990 FM-RDS chip set from NXP Semiconductors (The Netherlands), which offers reception over a wide tuning range (70 to 108 MHz, including the 70-MHz China band) with Stereo Noise Cancelling (SNC) as well as built-in Auto Search and Store for up to 32 channels with dynamic adjacent channel suppression. The chip also supports the I2C-bus and the SPI-bus (3- or 4-wire format), while a digitally controlled algorithm facilitates seamless coexistence with GSM, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and WiMAX. Although the TEA5990 chip outputs both right and left audio channels, each listening unit according to the invention would require only one audio amplifier, such the unit for the right ear only amplifies the right channel and the using for the left ear only amplifies the left channel.
In the preferred embodiments each listening unit also includes its own rechargeable battery to power operation. In the embodiments wherein the listening units are physically docked (
In some embodiments, the definition of “music player” includes a separate transmitter 202 used in conjunction with a non-FM-transmitting music player 200 shown in
As an alternative to user selection of an unused frequency, the base unit 102 (or 202) may automatically select a “best” unused frequency. For example, the base unit may store a list of unused frequencies as a function of geographical location, with the unit using GPS, WiFi, or cell phone infrastructure to determine location and choose a frequency. The base unit may also test frequencies to find a clear unused channel and use that frequency for programming. This approach offers the advantage of continuing to search for “better” unused frequencies in a background mode and automatically switch to a different frequency if noise is encountered on the currently selected frequency.
An advantage of the invention is that the user can also program the listening units to receive a desired, active station, in which case the base unit would not to transmit on the selected FM station. This allows a user to listen to an over-air broadcast, including an FM stereo station, without having to carry the base unit. As shown in
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/329,397, filed Dec. 19, 2011, which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/425,368, filed Dec. 21, 2010, the entire content of both of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61425368 | Dec 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13329397 | Dec 2011 | US |
Child | 14513611 | US |