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US2519488A - Sound reproducing stylus - Google Patents

Sound reproducing stylus Download PDF

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Publication number
US2519488A
US2519488A US579745A US57974545A US2519488A US 2519488 A US2519488 A US 2519488A US 579745 A US579745 A US 579745A US 57974545 A US57974545 A US 57974545A US 2519488 A US2519488 A US 2519488A
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Prior art keywords
stylus
aluminum
tablet
sound reproducing
engaging end
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Expired - Lifetime
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US579745A
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Edward L Mack
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B3/00Recording by mechanical cutting, deforming or pressing, e.g. of grooves or pits; Reproducing by mechanical sensing; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B3/44Styli, e.g. sapphire, diamond
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/4957Sound device making
    • Y10T29/49577Phonograph component making

Definitions

  • This invention relates to sound reproducing styluses adapted for use in connection with tablet-and-stylus sound reproducing devices.
  • An object of my invention is to provide a sound reproducing stylus wherein at least the surface of the tablet-engaging end is of a hardness substantially greater than that of the basic material of the stylus.
  • a further object of my invention is to provide a sound reproducing stylus of aluminum wherein at least the surface of the tablet-engaging end is composed of an oxidation product of aluminum.
  • a further object of my invention is to provide a sound reproducing stylus basically made of relatively soft metal and having a hard, wearresistant surface developed by chemical means on at least the tablet-engaging end.
  • the stylus-and-tablet type of sound reproducing device it is desirable that the stylus be somewhat rounded on the end which makes contact with the tablet (the said end being sometimes herein referred to as the tablet-engaging end), a conventional radius of curvature commonly in use being .0025", and that the rounded surface be smooth and of extreme hardness in order to minimize change in the conformation thereof due to wear by frictional contact with the moving tablet.
  • Styluses have most commonly been made of steel but the tablet-engaging end of such styluses deteriorates rapidly through wear in contact with the tablet and the usual practice is to discard them after reproducing a single tablet or, at most, a few tablets.
  • styluses of a so-called semi-permanent character have been made and used, in which styluses a material harder than steel was used for either the entire stylus or for the tablet-engaging end which was frequently attached to or inserted in the tapered portion of the stylus.
  • Material such as sapphire or other jewels, rare metal carbides such as tungsten carbide, and
  • my invention provides a stylus of aluminum or of an alloy of high aluminum content, both of which are herein referred to and included within the term aluminum, on at least the tablet-engaging end of which stylus I cause to be formed an adherent surface layer of the oxidation product of aluminum.
  • a stylus of aluminum or of an alloy of high aluminum content both of which are herein referred to and included within the term aluminum
  • stylus I cause to be formed an adherent surface layer of the oxidation product of aluminum.
  • I subject at least the tablet-engaging end of the stylus to oxidation by chemical means or preferably by electrolytic means such as anodic oxidation, all according to procedures described in many reference books on electro-chemistry and on metallurgy.
  • I thus produce a stylus basically made of aluminum but having an authigenic adherent surface layer of oxidized aluminum or aluminum oxide, a substance which in the form thus obtained possesses great hardness and little ductility.
  • styluses of the semi-permanent type are considered worn out and normally are discarded when they have undergone sufiicient wear to alter the contour of the tablet-engaging end very slightly from its original value, but this small amount of wear is ordinarily less than the thickness of the oxidized aluminum layer which I apply to styluses made according to my invention.
  • the surface layer of aluminum oxidation product obtained as above described may tend to increase in hardness with increasing depth from the outer surface, I may remove, as by polishing, the outer layers thereof in order to expose the harder layers lying at a depth somewhat removed from the outer surface.
  • Fig. 1 represents diagrammatically a partial cross-sectional view of a stylus embodying my invention.
  • Fig. 2 represents a cross-sectional view taken along the line 22 of Fig. 1.
  • the stylus I is composed of a shank portion 2, a tapered end portion 3 terminating in a rounded tablet-engaging end 4, the surface of the stylus or at least the tablet-engaging end thereof being covered with an adherent layer of aluminum oxidation product or aluminum oxide 5.
  • the general contour of the tapered portion of the stylus 3 as well as that of the rounded tablet-engaging end 4 may be formed from the relatively soft metal aluminum
  • layer of aluminum oxidation product may subsequently be formed in place by a-nodic electrolytic treatment of the formed styluses in large quantities, in a single lot. If preferred, however, less than the entire surface of the stylus can be subjected to said treatment; for example; only the tapered portion or only the pointed tip of the stylus maybe subjected to the oxidizing treatment.
  • this may be accomplished by barrel tumbling of a quantity of the otherwise completed styluses either alone or with a finely divided abrasive, such as corundum, silicon car bide, boron carbide, or diamond.
  • a finely divided abrasive such as corundum, silicon car bide, boron carbide, or diamond.
  • the basic materialfor my stylus I prefer to use one of the hard alloys of aluminum, such as the alloy commonly known as Duralumin (but herein included in the term aluminum as above explained), and if a heat-treatable material is used, it is preferable to have it in its hardened condition.
  • the taper of the tapered end of the stylus is not critical but the rounded tablet-engaging end will ordinarily have a radius of about .0025", although lesser and greater radii may be used with success.
  • thickness of the layer of aluminum oxidation product necessary to attain the objects of my invention may be varied within wide limits but, in general, one one-thousandth of an inch is sufficient although less may be used and a greater thickness brings no appreciable disadvantage.
  • the stylus may be provided with a body or core of any other suitable metal that has aluminum appropriately attached thereto where the tabletengaging end of oxidized aluminum is to be produced in conformity with the present invention.
  • the stylus may be formed of steel and subsequently coated with aluminum by any one of including aluminizing and finally subjected to formation of the oxidized aluminum layer as herein previously described.
  • a sound reproducing stylus of the semipermanent type having at least its tablet engaging end provided with an aluminum surface that has at least its tablet engaging portion formed of authigenic anod ic oxidized. aluminum.
  • the method of making a sound reproducing stylus which includes forming a stylus with at least its tablet engaging end providing an aluminum surface, subjecting at least the .tip end of said aluminum surface to anodic oxidation and exposing a harder layer beneath the surface in said oxidized portion.

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Description

Aug. 22, 1950 E. L. MACK 2,519,438
SOUND REPRODUCING STYLUS Filed Feb. 26, 1945 INVENTOR ATTORNEYS Patented Aug. 22, 1950 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
2 Claims.
This invention relates to sound reproducing styluses adapted for use in connection with tablet-and-stylus sound reproducing devices.
An object of my invention is to provide a sound reproducing stylus wherein at least the surface of the tablet-engaging end is of a hardness substantially greater than that of the basic material of the stylus.
A further object of my invention is to provide a sound reproducing stylus of aluminum wherein at least the surface of the tablet-engaging end is composed of an oxidation product of aluminum.
A further object of my invention is to provide a sound reproducing stylus basically made of relatively soft metal and having a hard, wearresistant surface developed by chemical means on at least the tablet-engaging end.
scription of my invention, such as will enable any one skilled in the art to practice the same.
For use in the stylus-and-tablet type of sound reproducing device, it is desirable that the stylus be somewhat rounded on the end which makes contact with the tablet (the said end being sometimes herein referred to as the tablet-engaging end), a conventional radius of curvature commonly in use being .0025", and that the rounded surface be smooth and of extreme hardness in order to minimize change in the conformation thereof due to wear by frictional contact with the moving tablet. Styluses have most commonly been made of steel but the tablet-engaging end of such styluses deteriorates rapidly through wear in contact with the tablet and the usual practice is to discard them after reproducing a single tablet or, at most, a few tablets. Other styluses of a so-called semi-permanent character have been made and used, in which styluses a material harder than steel was used for either the entire stylus or for the tablet-engaging end which was frequently attached to or inserted in the tapered portion of the stylus. Material such as sapphire or other jewels, rare metal carbides such as tungsten carbide, and
other hard substances have been used in the tablet-engaging end of such semi-permanent styluses. The results have been reasonably satisfactory so far as concerns resistance to wear but such styluses in many cases are fragile as well as expensive to manufacture due to the fact that the tablet-engaging end must usually be formed from a baroque shape and attached in some manner to the stylus. By my invention I have provided a semi-permanent stylus which can be made at a cost comparing favorably with that of the ordinary steel stylus but capable of reproducing the sound from many more tablets before wear necessitates its replacement. In fact, the number of reproductions obtained from styluses made according to my invention compares favorably with that from semi-permanent styluses tipped with the hard materials hereinabove mentioned. I
In its simplest form my invention provides a stylus of aluminum or of an alloy of high aluminum content, both of which are herein referred to and included within the term aluminum, on at least the tablet-engaging end of which stylus I cause to be formed an adherent surface layer of the oxidation product of aluminum. In order to bring about the formation of the adherent surface layer of the oxidation product of aluminum, I subject at least the tablet-engaging end of the stylus to oxidation by chemical means or preferably by electrolytic means such as anodic oxidation, all according to procedures described in many reference books on electro-chemistry and on metallurgy. I thus produce a stylus basically made of aluminum but having an authigenic adherent surface layer of oxidized aluminum or aluminum oxide, a substance which in the form thus obtained possesses great hardness and little ductility.
Even styluses of the semi-permanent type are considered worn out and normally are discarded when they have undergone sufiicient wear to alter the contour of the tablet-engaging end very slightly from its original value, but this small amount of wear is ordinarily less than the thickness of the oxidized aluminum layer which I apply to styluses made according to my invention. In fact since the surface layer of aluminum oxidation product obtained as above described may tend to increase in hardness with increasing depth from the outer surface, I may remove, as by polishing, the outer layers thereof in order to expose the harder layers lying at a depth somewhat removed from the outer surface.
In the figures, Fig. 1 represents diagrammatically a partial cross-sectional view of a stylus embodying my invention; and
Fig. 2 represents a cross-sectional view taken along the line 22 of Fig. 1.
As shown, the stylus I is composed of a shank portion 2, a tapered end portion 3 terminating in a rounded tablet-engaging end 4, the surface of the stylus or at least the tablet-engaging end thereof being covered with an adherent layer of aluminum oxidation product or aluminum oxide 5.
It will be seen that one of the advantages of my invention is that the general contour of the tapered portion of the stylus 3 as well as that of the rounded tablet-engaging end 4 may be formed from the relatively soft metal aluminum,
thus adapting the production of the stylus tomodern manufacturing practices which may include turret lathe or multiple-spindle lathe pro- The surface duction, cold upsetting, or the like. layer of aluminum oxidation product may subsequently be formed in place by a-nodic electrolytic treatment of the formed styluses in large quantities, in a single lot. If preferred, however, less than the entire surface of the stylus can be subjected to said treatment; for example; only the tapered portion or only the pointed tip of the stylus maybe subjected to the oxidizing treatment. If it is desired to remove the outer layers of the oxidized aluminum layer as hereinabove described, this may be accomplished by barrel tumbling of a quantity of the otherwise completed styluses either alone or with a finely divided abrasive, such as corundum, silicon car bide, boron carbide, or diamond.
I thus use the extremely hard form of oxidized aluminum produced as herein specified to serve as the tablet-engaging end of my stylus in the form of a surface layer perhaps no more than .001" thick but supported and reinforced by more ductile, less brittle aluminum backing. As the basic materialfor my stylus I prefer to use one of the hard alloys of aluminum, such as the alloy commonly known as Duralumin (but herein included in the term aluminum as above explained), and if a heat-treatable material is used, it is preferable to have it in its hardened condition. I use the selected metal in the form of a wire or rod'of any appropriate dimension, as for example a rod approximately long and on the order of The" in diameter, or if preferred other diameters may be used. The taper of the tapered end of the stylus is not critical but the rounded tablet-engaging end will ordinarily have a radius of about .0025", although lesser and greater radii may be used with success. The
many known processes 4 thickness of the layer of aluminum oxidation product necessary to attain the objects of my invention may be varied within wide limits but, in general, one one-thousandth of an inch is sufficient although less may be used and a greater thickness brings no appreciable disadvantage.
While I have hereinbefore assumed an aluminum blank or core material in explaining my invention, it is to be expressly understood that the stylus may be provided with a body or core of any other suitable metal that has aluminum appropriately attached thereto where the tabletengaging end of oxidized aluminum is to be produced in conformity with the present invention. Thus the stylus may be formed of steel and subsequently coated with aluminum by any one of including aluminizing and finally subjected to formation of the oxidized aluminum layer as herein previously described.
What is claimed is:
1. A sound reproducing stylus of the semipermanent type having at least its tablet engaging end provided with an aluminum surface that has at least its tablet engaging portion formed of authigenic anod ic oxidized. aluminum.
2. The method of making a sound reproducing stylus which includes forming a stylus with at least its tablet engaging end providing an aluminum surface, subjecting at least the .tip end of said aluminum surface to anodic oxidation and exposing a harder layer beneath the surface in said oxidized portion.
EDWARD L. MACK.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 1,162,149 Eckhardt Nov. 30, 1915 1,162,285 Eckhardt Nov. 30, 1915 1,733,608 Knox Oct. 29, 1929 1,792,494 Harrison Feb. 17, 1931 2,010,867 Kubo Aug. 13, 1935 2,012,134 Kubo Aug. 20, 1935 2,085,741 Edwards July -6, 1937 2,092,428 Steuart Sept. 7, 1937 FOREIGN PATENTS Number Country Date 288,279 Great Britain July 5, 1928 291,755 Great Britain July 5, 1928 405,541 Great .Britain Feb. 8, 1934
US579745A 1945-02-26 1945-02-26 Sound reproducing stylus Expired - Lifetime US2519488A (en)

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2739931A (en) * 1952-02-26 1956-03-27 Rhondda Plating Works Ltd Anodizing metal articles
US2985566A (en) * 1957-04-05 1961-05-23 Pneumo Dynamics Corp Metering valve and method of making same
US3927887A (en) * 1972-12-28 1975-12-23 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co Ltd Record stylus

Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1162285A (en) * 1915-02-25 1915-11-30 Engelhardt A Eckhardt Coated phonograph-stylus and other article.
US1162149A (en) * 1914-10-22 1915-11-30 Engelhardt A Eckhardt Process of making wear-withstanding coat.
GB291755A (en) * 1927-06-08 1928-07-05 Walter Tuchmann An improved needle for talking machines
GB288279A (en) * 1927-04-06 1928-07-05 Erwin Richard Lauber Improvements in sound-box needles for talking machines
US1733608A (en) * 1928-08-08 1929-10-29 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Phonograph needle
US1792494A (en) * 1926-04-30 1931-02-17 Bell Telephone Lab Incorproate Phonographic needle
GB405541A (en) * 1932-07-07 1934-02-08 Philips Nv Improved method of manufacturing gramophone discs
US2010867A (en) * 1934-03-13 1935-08-13 Kubo Hisaji Postcard for phonographic recording
US2012134A (en) * 1933-08-22 1935-08-20 Kubo Hisaji Disk for phonographic recording
US2085741A (en) * 1935-05-31 1937-07-06 Aluminum Co Of America Aluminum sound record
US2092428A (en) * 1934-12-10 1937-09-07 Steuart Douglas Stuart Spens Apparatus for conducting sound

Patent Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1162149A (en) * 1914-10-22 1915-11-30 Engelhardt A Eckhardt Process of making wear-withstanding coat.
US1162285A (en) * 1915-02-25 1915-11-30 Engelhardt A Eckhardt Coated phonograph-stylus and other article.
US1792494A (en) * 1926-04-30 1931-02-17 Bell Telephone Lab Incorproate Phonographic needle
GB288279A (en) * 1927-04-06 1928-07-05 Erwin Richard Lauber Improvements in sound-box needles for talking machines
GB291755A (en) * 1927-06-08 1928-07-05 Walter Tuchmann An improved needle for talking machines
US1733608A (en) * 1928-08-08 1929-10-29 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Phonograph needle
GB405541A (en) * 1932-07-07 1934-02-08 Philips Nv Improved method of manufacturing gramophone discs
US2012134A (en) * 1933-08-22 1935-08-20 Kubo Hisaji Disk for phonographic recording
US2010867A (en) * 1934-03-13 1935-08-13 Kubo Hisaji Postcard for phonographic recording
US2092428A (en) * 1934-12-10 1937-09-07 Steuart Douglas Stuart Spens Apparatus for conducting sound
US2085741A (en) * 1935-05-31 1937-07-06 Aluminum Co Of America Aluminum sound record

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2739931A (en) * 1952-02-26 1956-03-27 Rhondda Plating Works Ltd Anodizing metal articles
US2985566A (en) * 1957-04-05 1961-05-23 Pneumo Dynamics Corp Metering valve and method of making same
US3927887A (en) * 1972-12-28 1975-12-23 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co Ltd Record stylus

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