US17812A - Improvement in wrest-pins for pianos - Google Patents

Improvement in wrest-pins for pianos Download PDF

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Publication number
US17812A
US17812A US17812DA US17812A US 17812 A US17812 A US 17812A US 17812D A US17812D A US 17812DA US 17812 A US17812 A US 17812A
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screw
wrest
pins
pianos
improvement
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10CPIANOS, HARPSICHORDS, SPINETS OR SIMILAR STRINGED MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS WITH ONE OR MORE KEYBOARDS
    • G10C3/00Details or accessories
    • G10C3/10Tuning pins; Tensioning devices

Definitions

  • my invention consists in attaching the string to the end of an adjustable screw in such a manner that by raising or lowering the screw the straining or unstraining of the string is effected exactly in the same vertical direction with the axis of. the screw, by which arrangement all lateral pressure on the screw is avoided and all injury to the several parts of the wrest-pin as well as to the string is rendered impossible.
  • Figure l represents a front view of my wrest-pin; Fig. 2, a side view, and Fig. 3 a section.
  • Z is the frameconsisting of two parallel upright posts with an elongated slit between and united into the head-piece b.
  • This headpiece is perforated by a quadrangular hole of the shape as shown in the plan, Fig. et, and by the dotted lines in Fig. 2.
  • Letter c marks a male screw, the thread of which is taken oft' from two opposite sides, which must be perfectly parallel and fit closely to two parallel sides of the quadrangular hole in the head-piece ZJ.
  • the lower part of this screw ends in a hook d, which lies exactly in the direction of the axis of the screw.
  • f is a small roller with a guiding-groove turning on pivots within the frame and put up in such manner that its periphery is touched tangentially by a straight line drawn vertically through the axis of the screw or by the elongation of the axis.
  • g is a small hole just below the roller for entering the string, and 7L is a screw-nut, the turning of which causes the screw c to move up or downward, respectively.
  • this wrest-pin The use and operation of this wrest-pin are the following:
  • the pin is screwed on the wrest-board by screw a, with the hole g opposite to the string, (which is otherwise arranged in the piano in the usual manner.)
  • the end or' the string is put through g, passed through below the roller f, and fastened by a small loop or knot to the hook d of the screw c, which is brought down as near as possible to the roller.
  • the screw is then elevated by turning the screw-nut h.
  • the string is drawn upward and increasing the distance between the roller and hook the strain of the stringis effected true in the direction of the axis of the screw.
  • the screw itself is prevented from turning with the nut, as its parallel sides are guided bythe corresponding sides of the quadrangular hole in the head-piece b', which will allow no turning, but only an upward and downward sliding of the screw.
  • Turning the nut in the opposite direction will effect that the screw is drawn downward by the strain of the string itself, so the tuning is effected by turning the nut in one direction or in the other, and, further, without the use of a turnkey, as the force of the fingers is suiiicient to turn the screw-nut.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Acoustics & Sound (AREA)
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  • Baking, Grill, Roasting (AREA)

Description

UNITED STATES PATENT OEETCE.
GUSTAVE SClIlLLING, O F HOBOKE, NEU' JERSEY.
IMPROVEMENT lN WREST-PlNS FOR PLANOS.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. ll, dated July 14, i857.
To all whom t may concern:
Be it known that I, GUsTAvE ScHrLL1No,of the city of Hoboken, Hudson county, State of New Jersey, have invented a new and Improved Mode of Constructing Wrest- Pins for Pianos; and I do hereby declare that the following is a full and exact description thereof, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, and to the letters of reference marked thereon, which indicate the same parts in all the drawings, respectively.
The nature of my invention consists in attaching the string to the end of an adjustable screw in such a manner that by raising or lowering the screw the straining or unstraining of the string is effected exactly in the same vertical direction with the axis of. the screw, by which arrangement all lateral pressure on the screw is avoided and all injury to the several parts of the wrest-pin as well as to the string is rendered impossible.
Figure l represents a front view of my wrest-pin; Fig. 2, a side view, and Fig. 3 a section.
Letter' a marks a coarse screw, by which the pin is secured to the wrest-board.
Z) is the frameconsisting of two parallel upright posts with an elongated slit between and united into the head-piece b. This headpiece is perforated by a quadrangular hole of the shape as shown in the plan, Fig. et, and by the dotted lines in Fig. 2.
Letter c marks a male screw, the thread of which is taken oft' from two opposite sides, which must be perfectly parallel and fit closely to two parallel sides of the quadrangular hole in the head-piece ZJ. The lower part of this screw ends in a hook d, which lies exactly in the direction of the axis of the screw.
f is a small roller with a guiding-groove turning on pivots within the frame and put up in such manner that its periphery is touched tangentially by a straight line drawn vertically through the axis of the screw or by the elongation of the axis. g is a small hole just below the roller for entering the string, and 7L is a screw-nut, the turning of which causes the screw c to move up or downward, respectively.
The use and operation of this wrest-pin are the following: The pin is screwed on the wrest-board by screw a, with the hole g opposite to the string, (which is otherwise arranged in the piano in the usual manner.) The end or' the stringis put through g, passed through below the roller f, and fastened bya small loop or knot to the hook d of the screw c, which is brought down as near as possible to the roller. The screw is then elevated by turning the screw-nut h. The string is drawn upward and increasing the distance between the roller and hook the strain of the stringis effected true in the direction of the axis of the screw. The screw itself is prevented from turning with the nut, as its parallel sides are guided bythe corresponding sides of the quadrangular hole in the head-piece b', which will allow no turning, but only an upward and downward sliding of the screw. Turning the nut in the opposite direction will effect that the screw is drawn downward by the strain of the string itself, so the tuning is effected by turning the nut in one direction or in the other, and, further, without the use of a turnkey, as the force of the fingers is suiiicient to turn the screw-nut.
\Yhat I claim as my invention, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
Combining the heads of Test-pins with an adjustable screw to which the string is attached in such manner that the direction of the straining force is mathematically true in the direction ot' the axis of the adjustable screw by the means substantially as described and set forth.
GUSTAYE SCHILLING.
\\'itnesses:
JUL. G. ScHwaBE, Monats K. CRANE.
US17812D Improvement in wrest-pins for pianos Expired - Lifetime US17812A (en)

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1985000916A1 (en) * 1983-08-08 1985-02-28 John Caruth Tuning key
US4674387A (en) * 1983-08-08 1987-06-23 John Caruth Tuning key

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1985000916A1 (en) * 1983-08-08 1985-02-28 John Caruth Tuning key
GB2154358A (en) * 1983-08-08 1985-09-04 John Caruth Tuning key
US4674387A (en) * 1983-08-08 1987-06-23 John Caruth Tuning key

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