More Embodiments for Common-Point Pickup Circuits in Musical Instruments
20200234685 ยท 2020-07-23
Inventors
Cpc classification
G10H2220/461
PHYSICS
G10H3/143
PHYSICS
G10H3/186
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
This invention derives directly from U.S. Pat. No. 10,380,986 (Baker, 2019). Primarily, it makes better use of the mode switches, SWa and SWb in
Claims
1. A sensor switching system for a musical instrument, comprised of: a. two or more matched vibration sensors, with two or more terminals, matched to produce: i. the same signal outputs to the same inputs of external interference, and ii. the same signal outputs to the same inputs of vibration, with one of two polarities, such that said vibration signal can be made or arranged to present either normal or opposite polarity, with respect to another of said matched sensors when placed in the same physical position, and b. a common connection point, to which all of all of said sensors are connected by their terminals which have the same phase of external interference signal, also known as hum, and c. a switching system, which i. is comprised of: 1. a sensor circuit connection switch of multiple poles and multiple throws, which: a. creates circuits of two or more of said sensors to produce output signals, and b. creates circuits of one or more passive components to modify said output signals, and 2. one or more mode switches, each of at least one pole and at least two throws, used to change the effective operation of said circuit connection switch and output signals, including to choose whether to short said common-point connection to the low output terminal of said switching system, so as to use only the sensors connected between it and the high output terminal of said switching system, wherein at least one mode switch either connects said common point to said low output terminal or does not, and ii. connects at least one of said sensors, by a terminal of said sensor not connected to said common point, to said high output terminal, and iii. connects at least one of another of said sensors, by a terminal of said sensor not connected to said common point, to said low output terminal, and iv. connects the system reference ground to either said common connection point or said low output terminal, but not both in normal operation, except for special cases of circuit testing, and d. other conventional circuits of ordinary design, connected between the output of said circuit connection switch and the system output, for the purposes of ordinary signal modification.
2. An embodiment of said switching system as recited in claim 1, wherein: a. said sensors are comprised of three single-coil electromagnetic guitar pickups, and b. there is one said mode switch which has 2 poles and 2 throws, of which: i. one pole either shorts said common point to said low output terminal, commonly the system ground, or does not, and ii. one pole chooses one of 2 tone capacitors for a standard tone pot, and c. said circuit connection switch has at least 3 poles and at least 5 throws, and: i. connects only single pickups between said common-point connection and said ground or said low output terminal, so that when said mode switch connects said common point to said ground, said single pickups are shorted out, and ii. connects 2 or more distinct single pickups to said high output terminal, and 2 or more distinct pairs of pickups without duplication of pairings, the individual pickups in each pair connected in parallel, to said high output terminal, so that when said mode switch does not short said common point to said ground, humbucking pairs and triples are connected between said low terminal and said high terminal.
3. An embodiment of said switching system as recited in claim 1, wherein: a. said sensors are comprised of three single-coil electromagnetic guitar pickups, with 2 pickups having the same magnetic poles toward the strings of said instrument, the instrument being a stringed instrument, and the 3.sup.rd pickup, having the opposite magnetic pole towards said strings, commonly but not necessarily placed in the middle, between the pickup closest to the neck of said instrument and the pickup closest to the bridge of said instrument, and b. there is one said mode switch which has 4 poles and 2 throws, of which: i. one pole either shorts said common point to said low output terminal or said ground of said circuit connection switch or does not, and ii. one pole chooses one of 2 tone capacitors for a standard tone pot, and iii. two poles reverse the connections of said 3rd pickup to said connection switch, such that when the mode switch shorts said common point to said ground, said pickup pairs connected to said output are all humbucking, and c. said circuit connection switch has at least 3 poles and at least 5 throws, and: i. connects only single pickups between said common-point connection and said ground or said low output terminal, so that when said mode switch connects said common point to said ground, said single pickups are shorted out, and ii. connects 2 or more distinct single pickups to said high output terminal, and 2 or more distinct pairs of pickups without duplication of pairings, the individual pickups in each pair connected in parallel, to said high output terminal, so that when said mode switch does not short said common point to said ground, humbucking pairs and triples are connected between said low terminal and said high terminal of said circuit connection switch output, and d. when the mode switch is in said common-point shorting position, the order of the first five of said pickup singles and pairs chosen by said connection switch duplicates the pickup switching order of a common 5-way guitar switch, namely, bridge, bridge plus middle, middle, middle plus neck, and neck, the last ordered position being neck plus bridge, if said circuit connection switch has 6 poles.
4. An embodiment of said switching system as recited in claim 1, wherein: a. said sensors are comprised of three dual-coil humbucking electromagnetic guitar pickups, and b. there is one said mode switch which has 2 poles and 2 throws, of which: i. one pole either shorts said common point to said ground or does not, and ii. one pole chooses one of 2 tone capacitors for a standard tone pot, and c. said circuit connection switch has at least 3 poles and at least 5 throws, and: i. connects only single pickups between said common-point connection and said ground or said low output terminal, so that when said mode switch connects said common point to said ground, said single pickups are shorted out, and ii. connects 2 or more distinct single pickups to said high output terminal, and 2 or more distinct pairs of pickups without duplication of pairings, the individual pickups in each pair connected in parallel, to said high output terminal, so that when said mode switch does not short said common point to said ground, humbucking pairs and triples are connected between said low terminal and said high terminal.
5. An embodiment of said switching system as recited in claim 1, wherein: a. said sensors are comprised of three dual-coil humbucking electromagnetic guitar pickups, in which each pickup has one coil with a North magnetic pole towards the strings of said instrument, the instrument being a string instrument, and the other coil has a South magnetic pole towards said strings, and said coils are matched in response to external hum, and said coils are connected in series, with the connection between them available as a center-tap output to the rest of the circuit, and b. has 5 mode switches, of which: i. one has 2 poles and 2 throws, and 1. one pole either shorts said common point to said low output terminal or said ground or does not, and 2. one pole connects 1 of 2 tone capacitors to a tone pot, and ii. one has 6 poles and 2 throws, said throws being associated with single-coil and dual-coil modes, and 1. three of said poles connect said common-point to said center taps of said dual coil pickups in said single-coil position, and connect said common point to the nominally low output terminal coil of each said dual-coil pickups to said common point in said dual-coil position, and 2. the other three of said poles connect 3 said poles of said connection switch to three 1P2T mode switches in said single-coil position, and connect the same 3 said poles of said connection switch to the nominally high output terminal of the same of each said dual coil pickups in said dual-coil position, and iii. three are 1P2T switches, the poles of which connect as said above to one throw of said three poles connected to said 6P2T mode switch, and the 2 throws of each of said 1P2T connect individually to either: a. said nominally high output coil of each of said dual-coil pickups, or b. said nominally low output coil of each of said dual coil pickups, and c. said circuit connection switch has at least 3 poles and at least 5 throws, and through said mode switches connects: i. connects only single pickups or coils, depending on said mode switches, between said common-point connection and said ground or said low output terminal, so that when said mode switch connects said common point to said ground, said single pickups or coils are shorted out, and ii. connects 2 or more distinct single pickups or coils, depending on said mode switches, to said high output terminal, and 2 or more distinct pairs of pickups without duplication of pairings, the individual pickups in each pair connected in parallel, to said high output terminal, so that when said mode switch does not short said common point to said ground, humbucking pairs and triples are connected between said low terminal and said high terminal, and
6. A modification or improvement to any embodiment of said switching system as recited in claim 1, wherein a 4.sup.th pole of said circuit connection switch, and one or more poles of said common-point shorting mode switch, are used to choose, with the throws of said switches, between sets of circuit elements used to modify the output signal of said switching system, with a circuit element for each throw of said circuit connection switch connected to an individual throw of said common-point shorting mode switch, said throw being associated with one pole of said common-point shorting mode switch not being used for any other purpose, the pole of said circuit connection switch being connected to one point in said system, and the pole or poles of said common-point shorting mode switch being connected to other points in said system.
7. A modification or improvement to any embodiment of said switching system as recited in claim 1, the modification or improvement being the addition of individual tone circuits to one or more of said sensors, said individual tone circuits being comprised of: a. a fixed reactive element, such as an inductor or capacitor, and b. a resistive element, preferably variable, connected: i. in series with said reactive element, if said tone circuit is connected in parallel with said sensor, or ii. in parallel with said reactive element, if said tone circuit is connected in series with said sensor, and c. a means of disabling each said tone circuit connected to each associated said sensor, such as a replaceable shorting link or an integral switch in said resistive element, which is: i. in series with said tone circuit, if it is in parallel with said sensor, or ii. in parallel with said tone circuit, if it is in series with said sensor.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0058] These embodiments derive directly from U.S. Pat. No. 10,380,986 (Baker, 2019). Primarily, they make better use of the mode switches, SWa and SWb in FIG. 17, and similar functions in SW1 to SWj+k in the same Figure to provide a better-organized and expanded set of outputs for sets of either 3 single-coil pickups or 3 dual-coil humbucker pickups. In addition, the expanded use of mode switches allow 3 dual-coil humbuckers to partially simulate 3 single-coil pickups with reversible magnets to see what kind of tonal options might result, and justify the inventions in NPPAs Ser. No. 15/917,389 (Baker, 2018), Ser. No. 16/752,670 (Baker, 2020) and Ser. No. 16/812,970 (Baker, 2020). Most of the embodiments use a 3P6T switch to make pickup circuit connections, to simplify the circuit. They are actually based on a common, inexpensive 4P6T rotary switch. The uses of the 4.sup.th pole were covered in FIG. 17 in U.S. Pat. No. 10,217,450 (Baker, 2019) and in FIGS. 7, 8, 10 & 11 in U.S. Pat. No. 10,380,986, and are discussed again in Embodiment 5 below. The more common 5-way switch used in electric guitars has an inexpensive 4P5T cousin, which can also be used, if one related set of humbucking/non-humbucking choices is eliminated.
[0059] In addition to the circuit connection switch, all of the embodiments use a main mode switch, of at least 1 pole and 2 throws. This switch chooses between 2 sets of 6 distinct circuits each, humbucking and non-humbucking for single-coil pickups, by either shorting or not shoring the common-point connection to ground. For circuits of matched, single-coil pickups, the non-shorting, or humbucking, position lets the connection switch choose between 3 humbucking pairs and 3 humbucking triples, in which all the pickups connected between the common point and ground are single pickups, and all those connected between the common point and the output high terminal are either single pickups or two pickups in parallel. The shorting or non-humbucking position shorts out all the single-pickup choices to ground, limiting the chosen circuit to distinct single-pickup circuits or two pickups in parallel.
[0060] This is modified in Embodiment 2, in which added poles on the mode switch change two of the pairs from non-humbucking to humbucking, at the expense of duplicating two tones in the non-shorting mode. In Embodiment 3, 3 dual-coil humbucking pickups are used, providing 12 all-humbucking choices for both positions of the mode switch. In Embodiment 4, additional mode switches allow the dual-coil humbuckers to act like single-coil pickups with either magnetic pole up.
Embodiment 1: 3-Coil Electric Guitar with Both Humbucking and Non-Humbucking Outputs, Ordered for Humbucking Outputs
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[0062] Now consider the three pickups represented by coils N1 (neck), S2 (middle) & N3 (bridge) in
[0063] A Windows program, SpecAn_3v97c.exe (Speer, 2001-2016), produces FFT spectra from an audio signal to the sound board mic input. These outputs were analyzed with this program with the following settings: 135 dB log audio scale; zero weighting; log frequency scale; display set to spectrograph w/ averaging; 8 kHz sample rate; 4096 FFT size (2 Hz wide bins); and the Hanning window. The program produces an output amplitude spectrum with 2048 values about 1.95 Hz apart, rounded to from 0 to 3998 Hz. The outputs were generated by strumming all six strings over the middle pickup five times at about once per second, with no fretting. When the signal had significantly decayed, the sampling process was stopped, and the data saved. It produced on the order of 50 FFT windows, all averaged together, lasting 12 to 15 seconds. Imported into a spreadsheet, the data was processed according to Math 8 in U.S. Pat. No. 10,380,986 (col. 20), reproduced here as Math 1, to give the relative signal amplitude and the mean frequency in Hertz.
[0064] Now suppose that we wire the throw connections of the unfinished switch, SW3, in
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Measured mean frequencies (Hz), according to the method described above, where Upper designates the pickup or pickups connected from the common-point connection to the upper voltage output for different SW3 throws; Lower designates the pickups connected from the common point to the lower voltage output; MF.sub.HB is the mean frequency (Hz) for the humbucking outputs, where the common point is unconnected to either output; MF.sub.UPPER designates the non-humbucking mean frequency for the common point connected to the lower output, shorting out the lower pickups; and MF.sub.LOWER is the non-humbucking mean frequency for the common point connected to the upper voltage output, shorting out the upper pickups. Some total signs have been reversed to keep the first sign positive. SW3 Throw A B C D E F MF.sub.HB 430 453 469 479 622 646 MF.sub.UPPER 615 486 569 486 615 486 Upper N3 N1 (N1 + N3)/2 N1 N3 N1 Lower S2 S2 S2 (S2 N3)/2 (S2 N1)/2 N3 MF.sub.LOWER 584 584 584 876 981 615
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Measured mean frequencies (Hz), according to the method described above, for a different set of connections, where Upper designates the pickup or pickups connected from the common-point connection to the upper voltage output for different SW3 throws; Lower designates the pickups connected from the common point to the lower voltage output; MF.sub.HB is the mean frequency (Hz) for the humbucking outputs, where the common point is unconnected to either output; and MF.sub.UPPER designates the non-humbucking mean frequency for the common point connected to the lower output, shorting out the lower pickups. Some total signs have been reversed to keep the first sign positive. SW3 Throw A B C D E F MF.sub.HB 430 453 469 479 622 645 MF.sub.UPPER 584 486 569 876 981 615 Upper S2 N1 (N1 + N3)/2 (S2 N3)/2 (S2 N1)/2 N3 Lower N3 S2 S2 N1 N3 N1
[0065] Table 2 shows a better result with 6 fewer outputs. It shows the same sequence of humbucking mean frequencies for SW3 Throws A-F, but with the circuit inverted at throws A, D, E & F, so that when the common point is connected to the lower voltage output, the non-humbucking combinations in the Upper set do not repeat. Note that a number of minus signs have been removed. For example, Throw A should show S2 and N3, but the inverse signal (S2+N3) is used, because no one has shown that human ears can tell the difference. But while the lower non-humbucking mean frequencies are generally to the left, with higher to the right, they are not in order. It is generally not possible to order both sets of frequencies with this kind of mechanical switching. You can order one or the other, but not both.
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[0067] As noted already, this use of mean frequency of the amplitude spectrum may not be the best measure of perceived tone. Human perception of tone is complex, being dependent upon both the frequency and amplitude of adjacent signals, as well as the harmonics present. But when a better measure becomes available, the ordering of tones can be easily redesigned or rewired on the switch.
Embodiment 2: 3-Coil Electric Guitar with Both Humbucking and Non-Humbucking Outputs, Ordered to Match a Standard 5-Way Switch
[0068] Note that in Table 2 and
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Embodiment 3: 3-Humbucker Electric Guitar with a Common-Point Connection Switching System
[0071] Suppose now that instead of 3 matched single-coil pickups,
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 The 12 possible common-point switched configurations of 3 humbuckers, with the relative amplitude (Rel Amp) and mean frequency (Mean Freq, Hz) calculated by an adjusted Math 1 from the sum of the linear sound board signal amplitudes of the spectra in the range of 70 fn 3998 Hz, from 6 strings picked five times. Rel Avg Sum Rel Avg Diff Rel Avg Rel Avg Single Amp Freq Pair Amp Freq Pair Amp Freq Triple Amp Freq N 0.65 506 (N + 0.95 526 N B 0.18 740 B + 0.33 553 M)/2 (N + M)/2 M 0.69 627 (M + 0.63 617 M B 0.15 954 N + 0.23 954 B)/2 (M + B)/2 B 0.43 809 (N + 0.75 620 N M 0.14 999 M + 0.21 1009 B)/2 (N + B)/2
[0072] Table 3 shows the possible connections of three humbuckers in a common-point switching system with a mode switch to short the common point to one of the outputs, along with the relative amplitude and mean frequency (Hz). The signal spectra were generated and calculated by the same methods as before, except that in this case, spectral outputs of less than 70 Hz were discarded by calculating Math 1 for 37n2048.
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[0075] Note that three of the mean frequencies, 617, 621 and 629 Hz, are very close together. When the prototype guitar switching circuit disclosed in Embodiment 2 was played, Not only were two nominally humbucking signals in the equivalent 5-way switch set, (S2+N3)/2 and (S2+N1)/2, duplicated in the humbucking set by (S2+N3) and (S2+N1), but two of the humbucking signals sounded a lot alike. This meant that there were only 9 or 10 distinct tones out of the 12 for Embodiment 2. Without further study, this could mean that those three tones for this embodiment are also very similar, dropping the number of distinct tones from 12 to 10. Note that the 1 to 1.99 spread of all-humbucking mean frequencies from 506 Hz to 1009 Hz in embodiment 3 compares roughly to the 1 to 2.28 spread of mean frequencies from 430 Hz to 981 Hz in embodiment 2, where three of the output signals are non-humbucking.
Embodiment 4: 3-Humbucker Common-Point Switching with Mode Switches Simulating Single-Coil Pickups with Reversible Magnets
[0076] The circuit in
[0077] Reconsidering
[0078] But 96 switch combinations are not 96 different coil combinations or tones. In the shorted mode of SW8 in
[0079] When (SW8) is in the up position, shorting the common point to ground, all the switch combinations can produce only 6 different single-pickup circuits: Ns, Nn, Ms, Mn, Bs and Bn. For the pickup pairs, NB, MN and BM, there are the same six choices for the first pickup, and four choices for the second pickup, less duplicates, as shown in Table 4. Half the 24 second choices for duplicates, leaving only 12 distinct combinations. The other 12 combinations are merely inverted, which the human ear cannot generally detect.
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Combinations of 2 of 3 single-coil pickups with reversible magnets. There are 6 first choices, 12 distinct second choices, and 12 choices where the combination is merely inverted. 1.sup.st choice Nn Ns Mn Ms Bn Bs 2.sup.nd choices Mn Mn
Ms Ms
Bn Bn Bn Bn
Bs Bs Bs Bs
[0080] Now consider the humbucking doubles and triples in
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[0082] All of the possible common-point switching single-coil single, double and triple coil circuits from single coils of each humbucker were measured in the manner previously described, by strumming 6 strings above the middle pickup 5 times, while taking audio samples for an FFT program. Here again, Math 1 was modified to drop all spectral results below 70 Hz from consideration.
[0083] This embodiment represents the current limits of what a mechanical common-point pickup switching system can do, with switches and controls which can fit under the soundboard or pickguard of a standard-sized electric guitar. With a digitally-controlled solid-state analog common point switching system (U.S. Pat. No. 10,380,986, Baker, 2019), 6 coils can produce 301 humbucking doubles, triples, quads, quints and hexes, ignoring whatever non-humbucking circuits can be produced by shorting the common point to one of the outputs (preferably the ground). But presumably it still beats a 3-way or 5-way switch.
Embodiment 5: Embodiment 1, Using the 4.SUP.th .Pole of a 4P6T Circuit Switch for Signal Strength Correction
[0084] The embodiments presented above all use a 3P6T switch to produce 6 different pickup circuits, when most such switches are actually 4P6T, and 6P6T switches are more expensive, but available. U.S. Pat. No. 10,380,986 effectively covers the use of the 4.sup.th pole as gain or tone correction in FIGS. 7, 8, 10 and 11; shows a 6PXT switch for all 6 coils of 3 humbuckers in FIG. 12; and shows a 6P6T switch used for both gain and tone correction in FIG. 13. U.S. Pat. No. 10,217,450 shows the 4.sup.th pole used for gain correction in FIG. 17, and shows concatenated switches in FIGS. 16 & 19.
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[0087] The resistors for humbucking pickup circuits, R.sub.G-BB A-F, are all on the left of the resistor pairs connected to the poles of SW15. The resistors for non-humbucking pickup circuits, R.sub.G-HUM A-F, all on the right. The gain of the amplifier made with U1 is Vo/Vi=Gx=(R.sub.F+R.sub.GX)/R.sub.GX, where Vi is the output of SW15. The gain is always greater than 1. The relative signal amplitudes of the pickup circuits run from 0.10 to 0.32. Say that Gmin=1.1 for a signal level of 0.32, and we want all the outputs to have the same level, Vomax. Then for each switch output signal Vix, R.sub.GX=Vix*R.sub.F/(VomaxVix). For Vix=0.32, R.sub.GX=10*R.sub.F, and Vomax=0.352. So for Vix=0.10, R.sub.GX=0.397*R.sub.F, and Vo=0.352. These R.sub.GX values are not likely to be common 10% resistor values, so either small multi-turn pots or resistors of higher precision will be needed. And these results can change with the distance between the poles and the strings.
[0088] The op-amp circuit isolates the output tone capacitor, C.sub.T, from the pickups, so that it cannot form any resonant peaks with the lumped circuit inductance. Therefore, if that high-frequency peaking effect is desired for tone, peaking capacitors and pots must be connected to the pickups individually, as shown by T.sub.N, T.sub.M and T.sub.B in