VIBRATO CONTROL MECHANISM
20220293071 · 2022-09-15
Inventors
Cpc classification
G10H2220/521
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A vibrato control device for a guitar, including a body, a rotation mechanism within the body having an axis, and an arm connected to the body so as to allow rotation of the arm relative to the body about the axis. The arm is oriented so as to rotate generally parallel to the side of the body. The arm has particular application to a mechanically operated but electronically sensed vibrato control device.
Claims
1-9. (canceled)
10. A vibrato control device for a guitar, comprising a body, a rotation mechanism within the body having an axis, and an arm connected to the rotation mechanism, so that the arm can be rotated about the axis relative to the body, and wherein the arm is oriented so as to be adapted to rotate generally parallel to a side of the body.
11. A vibrato control device according to claim 10, wherein the device is adapted to electronically capture data about the position of the arm for transmission to an electronic pitch control device.
12. A vibrato control device according to claim 11, wherein the arm is adapted to rotate in both directions from a rest position, and the rotation mechanism includes a biased return to centre.
13. A vibrato control device according to claim 12, wherein the arm is shaped to provide convenient surfaces for selective control by different parts of a player's hand.
14. A vibrato control device according to claim 13, wherein the arm includes a palm cutaway on the arm end distant from the connection to the body.
15. A vibrato control device according to claim 13, wherein the arm includes a palm zone shaped to permit pushing and lifting of the arm.
16. A vibrato control device according to claim 13, wherein the arm includes, and finger grab zone adjacent to the connection to the body.
17. A vibrato control device according to claim 10, wherein the device is separate device adapted for connection to a guitar, and the body is a separate structure from the body or the guitar.
18. A vibrato control device for a guitar, including a body, a rotation mechanism within the body having an axis, and a connection for an arm to be connected to the body so as to allow rotation of the arm relative to the body about the axis, wherein the connection is such that in one form an arm can be connected which arm is free to rotate at the connection, and in another form the arm can be connected so that it cannot rotate at the connection.
19. A guitar having a vibrato control device according to claim 10.
20. A guitar according to claim 19, wherein the vibrato control device is located immediately behind a bridge or stud tail piece of the guitar.
21. A guitar according to claim 20, wherein the vibrato control device is oriented so that it is actuated by rotating the arm about an axis generally parallel to the plane of a front face of the guitar, and generally normal to the orientation of the strings.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] An illustrative implementation of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying figures, in which:
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0022] The present invention relates to a new geometry and arrangement for a vibrato arm, particularly one which operates mechanically to control vibrato (and optionally other features) to produce a control output for a pitch change processor and associated systems. It is capable of being implemented using any suitable mechanical system and electronic, sensor and software system, and is not specific to any particular implementation of such features. It will, however, be primarily described with reference to the system described in co-pending application WO2016149747, to which reference should be had for details of implementation.
[0023] Conventional whammy bars have a configuration with a relatively long lever, so that sufficient leverage can be obtained to overcome the string and spring tensions inherent in the mechanical design underlying prior art whammy bar systems. The inventor has recognised that in an arrangement in which the mechanical system is only required to sense electronic data for processing by a pitch change mechanism, there is an opportunity to provide a control arm which is more oriented to improving the playing convenience of the player.
[0024] The present invention departs from the long arm, which extends generally away from the surface of the guitar. In contrast, the implementation described extends generally parallel to the axis of rotation, and remains close to the surface of the guitar. As such, it can be positioned much more conveniently, for example directly behind the bridge (or stud tailpiece) of the guitar, which is impossible with a conventional arm because of the leverage required to overcome string/spring tension (˜70-80 Kgs).
[0025] Referring to
[0026] It will be appreciated that it would be possible for the axis of rotation of the arm to be somewhat off parallel to the axis of rotation of the knuckle, and still achieve an effective operation, and for this purpose the term generally parallel will be employed. For example, if the axis of rotation of the arm is less than 10° off the axis, the desired operation and advantages of the present invention can still be achieved. It may be that other values are also possible for practical use. It is preferred that the axis of the knuckle is parallel or very close to parallel to the axis of rotation of the arm.
[0027] It will be understood that body 40 is shown as rounded and without surface features, but in alternative implementations other shapes or features could be present on body 40.
[0028]
[0029] Palm cutaway 25 is provided so that arm 20 is out of the way when the palm of the player is resting on the top end of the bridge.
[0030] Palm push zone 24 is provided as a main push zone, for the palm of a player to push the arm down, typically to go down in pitch. As can be better seen in
[0031] Finger grab zone 26 is provided near to the attachment position, and provides a conveniently located surface for the third and fourth fingers to grab arm 20, in order to go up in pitch.
[0032]
[0033] From
[0034] A further aspect of the present invention is that the same body 40 may be used with a conventional whammy bar arm, as for example in the applicant's earlier referenced co-pending application. In this case the conventional arm attaches in the same way with a plate and screw, but there is no raised boss 29, so the keylock on the boss of knuckle 22 is not engaged, and the arm may rotate on knuckle 22.
[0035] Of course, alternative connection arrangements could be used for implementations of the present invention. For example, the arm could be made integral with the knuckle.
[0036] It will be understood that a particular advantage of some implementations of the present invention is that the player has full vibrato control without moving out of the small operating zone which a player's picking hand normally occupies. This means that the vibrato arm is readily available in the high-speed world of playing guitar, where milliseconds count.
[0037] The proximity and the ergonomic shape illustrated in the figures allow for ultra-rapid vibrato control, for example, ‘ducks’ and ‘pull-ups’ in pitch. These are much slower to perform with a prior art whammy arm which is further from the picking hand, which therefore requires a much larger hand movement to engage its arm, and also requires much greater force to manipulate.
[0038] The vibrato control device according to the present invention can be operated by any convenient action selected by the player, for example pressing down with fingers, palm, heel of the hand or forearm, pulling up with fingers or back of the palm, or holding and waggling with the hand. It will be appreciated that all functions of an existing, conventional whammy arm can be performed with the arm according to the present invention.
[0039]
[0040] The illustrative example is preferably implemented using the internal mechanisms of the device described in the applicant's earlier application, which has been incorporated by reference. For example, a mechanical return to centre mechanism, sensors for rotation and rotation direction, corresponding electronics and software, and a pitch change processor are required for a functioning system.
[0041] Referring to
[0042] At each end of the spindle, collars 7, 4 are disposed. These are free to rotate about the spindle, but limited in their maximum rotation by respective end stops 17, 19 (indicated but not visible) in the housing 8 and end chassis 2 respectively. Each collar has an associated torsion spring 3, 3A. The springs are connected at one end to their respective collar 4, 7 and at the other to mounting recesses 8, 18. The springs and collars are connected so that they resiliently resist rotation. They are installed during manufacturing under a degree of tension even when the mechanism is in its centre position.
[0043] Arm 20 is attached to the end of spindle 5. Arm 20 includes a pivot 21 to allow the angle of the arm to be adjusted to suit the player.
[0044] When assembled, the whole mechanism sits largely within chassis 8, with chassis support 2 at the same end as arm 20. It can be seen that PCB 9 and the associated sensor (not visible) sit orthogonal to the magnets 6, 6A in the assembled state, magnet 6 being visible in
[0045] The key mechanical requirement is that the arm 20 can be rotated smoothly to the desired position, and return to centre (RTC) with high reliability and accuracy. The centre is the point where there is no requested pitch change, and the guitar operates normally.
[0046] The shaping of the cam surfaces 14, 16 on spindle 5 is an important component of the operation of the RTC mechanism. The collars 4, 7 are co-axial and can rotate freely, but in opposite directions, when forced by the rotation of the spindle, transmitted by the spindle cams 14, 16. This collar rotation is limited by end stops 17, 19. Collars meanwhile, are under tension from torsion springs 3, 3A. These springs have a three-fold function:
[0047] They provide resistance for the user to move the arm ‘against’, providing haptic feedback. They enforce an accurate centre position when the vibrato arm is at rest and they return the spindle to the neutral, zero-pitch-change position (with high accuracy and repeatability) when released.
[0048] The resistance function is accomplished because the springs resist the rotation of collars 4, 7. Each cam surface 14, 16 of the spindle is intimately contacting a surface of the corresponding collar 4, 7(whether rotating clockwise or anticlockwise). The spindle therefore receives the same (bi-directional) rotational resistance as the collars.
[0049] Further, the shape of the cams 14, 16 provides an obstruction to prevent the collars 4, 7 rotating further than their respective neutral position at rest, and further than their maximum rotation by end stops 17, 19 in use. Positioning of these mechanical ‘end-stops’ can be accurately defined in manufacture so that both collets return to an invariant position.
[0050] The net effect is that the spindle 5 always returns to a fixed, neutral position with high precision and repeatability. The RTC process is not tolerance bound. The springs do not have to be perfectly matched (which is near impossible without being very costly) as the RTC factor is not reliant on that aspect. The springs are preferably “over-specified” so that they still maintain adequate torsional strength as they age.
[0051] Further, the pre-loading of the springs can be set in manufacturing to ensure it will overcome most hysteresis in the friction components inherent in any mechanical RTC mechanism.
[0052] It will be appreciated that the present invention may be implemented using any suitable materials. In order to allow for the operation of the Hall effect sensor arrangement, it is preferred that the materials are non-magnetic.
[0053] Illustratively, the shaft/spindle structure, arm and case are formed from machined aluminium. The collars are machined nylon. The chassis is formed from machined nylon composite. All metal components may be suitably produced by CNC machining and the plastics via machining or moulding.
[0054] The express focus on the return-to-centre (RTC) mechanism of the vibrato system is to meet the requirement of very high accuracy (ideally +/−0.5 cents) because even small pitch errors are detectable at the centre (or ‘null’) position by listeners. Any tuning discrepancy is particularly evident relative to other instruments in the performance who are still at the correct reference pitch.
[0055] It will be understood that although a specific mechanical and sensing structure is disclosed above, the present invention may be implemented using alternative mechanical and sensing structure.