US533661A - mcchesney - Google Patents

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US533661A
US533661A US533661DA US533661A US 533661 A US533661 A US 533661A US 533661D A US533661D A US 533661DA US 533661 A US533661 A US 533661A
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piano
hammer
bar
arrest
hammers
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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
    • G10C3/26Pedals or pedal mechanisms; Manually operated sound modification means
    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10CPIANOS, HARPSICHORDS, SPINETS OR SIMILAR STRINGED MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS WITH ONE OR MORE KEYBOARDS
    • G10C3/00Details or accessories
    • G10C3/16Actions
    • G10C3/161Actions specially adapted for upright pianos
    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10CPIANOS, HARPSICHORDS, SPINETS OR SIMILAR STRINGED MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS WITH ONE OR MORE KEYBOARDS
    • G10C3/00Details or accessories
    • G10C3/16Actions
    • G10C3/18Hammers

Definitions

  • FIG. 1 represents a front elevation of our piano, with a portion of the front cut away, showing our invention attached.
  • Fig. 2 is a vertical, central view, taken at the line 22, Fig. 1, looking to the right.
  • Fig. 3 is a horizontal view, taken at the line 8-3 Fig. 2, looking down, showing our improvements detached.
  • Fig. 4 is an elevation, taken at the line 4-4, Fig. 2, looking to the right.
  • Fig. 5 is a perspective view of the two bracket pieces supporting the hammer arrester slide-bar.
  • Fig. 6 is a perspective view of the slide-bar, detached.
  • Fig. 7 is a perspective view of a rock-shaft having a single crank at one end, and a double crank at the other end, and showing a portion of the treadle rod and a spring.
  • Fig. 8 is a detail view of the tongues.
  • A represents the frame of an upright piano which is made in the usual manner.
  • F is an adjustable tongue-bar from which the tongues G and II are suspended.
  • bracket-irons secured to the standards E of the piano by means of a setscrew, L. These bracket-irons have slots in them by which they are adjustable vertically.
  • the slide-bar is caused to slidehorizontally by means of a bell-crank lever, Q, which is operated by the pedal-rod, B.
  • One arm of the bell-crank Q is forked or slotted at S, and there is a pin, T, which rests in this slot and passes into the slide-bar so that when the bell crank lever is vibrated, the slide-bar is moved horizontally, and at the same time the pins or upturned flanges P sliding in the slots 0 advance or retract the slide-bar toward or from the hammers, so as to arrest them at any desired point in their stroke and at the same time hold the slidebar firmly and rigidly in any desired place.
  • the flexible tongues which we suspend from the adjustable tongue-bar, F we make of a flexible material preferably of leather, and we find that instead of attaching to their lower ends on either side of them a metal striker, as shown in our previous application, it is preferable to fold the lower end of the flexible tongue around the metal striker, as clearly shown in Fig. 8, thereby securing the metal striker within the fold of the flexible tongue.
  • ⁇ Ve also find that it is desirable to make the strikers large that strike what are termed the bass strings of the piano, and that if they are made solid they are too heavy. We therefore make them out of short sections of metal tubes, as shown in the tongue H in Fig. 8, for the purpose of making them light and at the same time larger in diameter.
  • bracket-ironsI and J are slotted so that they can be raised and lowered on the standards E by loosening the set-screw, L, by which they are attached to the upper ends of the standardsEaud held rigidlyin place at any desired point of elevation to raise and lower the slide-bar N in front of the hammers.
  • the standards E with a recess M to admit of the hammer arrester slide-bar N to pro ect sufficiently far forward in front of the hammer stems to serve its purpose and also to admit of its adj ustment vertically, as above specified.
  • a hammer-arrest supported on guide-ways on which it slides; a mechanism by which it is held firmly at any point on the guide-ways; and hammers having such relation to the hammer arrest as to be arrested in their stroke thereby, substantially as shown and described.
  • a hammer arrest In a piano, a hammer arrest; an adjustable bracket which supports the hammer-arrest and in which it slides; the standards of the piano to which the brackets are attached; and hammers which the hammer-arrest may be adjusted to arrest, substantially as specified.
  • the sliding hammer-arrest having diagonal slots; bracket irons supporting said hammer-arrest, provided with pins or upturned flanges operating in said slots in the hammer-arrest to move it forward and hold it firmly at any desired position; and mechanisms connected with the pedal of the piano by which said slide-bar is brought into the position desired by the operator.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Acoustics & Sound (AREA)
  • Multimedia (AREA)
  • Stringed Musical Instruments (AREA)

Description

(No Model.) 4 v M. H. McOHESNEY & J. G. KUNZE.
PIANO.
Mmmuhuuu IHIHHIIIIHH III! UNITED STATES MARTIN H. MCCHESNEY AND JOSEPH G. KUNZE, OF CHICAGO, ILLINOIS PATENT OFFICE.
ASSIGNORS TO GEORGE P. BENT, OF SAME PLACE.
PIANO.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent NO. 533,661, dated February 5, 1895.
Application filed October 22, 1 89.
To all whom it may concern.-
Be itknown that we, MARTIN H. MCCHES- NEYand JOSEPH G. KUNZE, citizens of the United States, residing at Chicago, in the county of Cook and State of Illinois, have invented a certain new and useful Improvement in Pianos, which is fully set forth in the following specification, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, in which Figure 1 represents a front elevation of our piano, with a portion of the front cut away, showing our invention attached. Fig. 2 is a vertical, central view, taken at the line 22, Fig. 1, looking to the right. Fig. 3 is a horizontal view, taken at the line 8-3 Fig. 2, looking down, showing our improvements detached. Fig. 4 is an elevation, taken at the line 4-4, Fig. 2, looking to the right. Fig. 5 isa perspective view of the two bracket pieces supporting the hammer arrester slide-bar. Fig. 6 is a perspective view of the slide-bar, detached. Fig. 7 is a perspective view of a rock-shaft having a single crank at one end, and a double crank at the other end, and showing a portion of the treadle rod and a spring. Fig. 8 is a detail view of the tongues.
Our invention relates to improvements in the piano shown and described in our application for a patent, Serial No. 511,147, filed May 14, 1894:.
In the accompanying drawings, A represents the frame of an upright piano which is made in the usual manner.
B, represents the strings; D, the hammers E, one of the several standards usedin upright pianos.
F, is an adjustable tongue-bar from which the tongues G and II are suspended.
I and J are bracket-irons secured to the standards E of the piano by means of a setscrew, L. These bracket-irons have slots in them by which they are adjustable vertically. The bracket formed by the bracket-irons I and J when attached to the standards, project into a recess, M, made in the standards and carry the slide-bar, N, as clearly shown in Fig. 2. There are diagonal slots 0 in this slide-bar N through which the vertical flange or pin, P, rigidly connected with the bracketiron 1, passes, to cause the slide-bar to move Serial 110,526,633. (No model.)
forward and backward in front of the hammer, and at the same time hold it rigidly at any desired position to arrest the hammer in its stroke. The slide-bar is caused to slidehorizontally by means of a bell-crank lever, Q, which is operated by the pedal-rod, B. One arm of the bell-crank Q is forked or slotted at S, and there is a pin, T, which rests in this slot and passes into the slide-bar so that when the bell crank lever is vibrated, the slide-bar is moved horizontally, and at the same time the pins or upturned flanges P sliding in the slots 0 advance or retract the slide-bar toward or from the hammers, so as to arrest them at any desired point in their stroke and at the same time hold the slidebar firmly and rigidly in any desired place. This method of supporting and controlling the movement of the slide-bar which serves as a hammer-arrest, overcomes any tendency of the hammer-arrest to yield or vibrate as when hung on hinges or swinging on a pivot at each end, as shown in our previous application for a patent above referred to.
The flexible tongues which we suspend from the adjustable tongue-bar, F, we make of a flexible material preferably of leather, and we find that instead of attaching to their lower ends on either side of them a metal striker, as shown in our previous application, it is preferable to fold the lower end of the flexible tongue around the metal striker, as clearly shown in Fig. 8, thereby securing the metal striker within the fold of the flexible tongue. \Ve also find that it is desirable to make the strikers large that strike what are termed the bass strings of the piano, and that if they are made solid they are too heavy. We therefore make them out of short sections of metal tubes, as shown in the tongue H in Fig. 8, for the purpose of making them light and at the same time larger in diameter.
In all other respects than as above described, we construct our piano as shown and fully described in our previous application above referred to, with the exception that we make our rock-shaft, V, at the base of the piano with a single crank at one end and av double crank at the other end, as clearlyshown in Fig.7; it being connected to the pedal-bar X by the rod X. The rock-shaft is held in its normal position by the spring, a,which has one end attached to the frame of the piano, as clearly shown in Fig. 2.
With a piano constructed as above described, we are able to produce the tones of several different instruments. If we raise the tongues above the paths of the hammers, and withdraw the hammer arrest so as not to be touched by the hammers, or the hammer stems, we have the full and usual tone produced by pianos. By lowering the tongues so as to be struck by the hammers and carried against the springs of the piano, a differenttoneis produced. Byadvancingthehamiuer-arrest so that the hammers strike the tongues and do not follow the tongues, but simply swing them against the strings, still another tone is produced. Other tones still are produced by raising or lowering the tongues at different heights in front of the hammers so as to be struck by the hammer at different points on the tongue; also by raising the tongues above the paths of the hammers and advancing the hammer arrest to its forward point, there is no tone produced, and the piano becomes a silent or p ractice-piano. W'e can also partly withdraw the hammer-arrest and practice on the piano producing only a slight sound by making the hammers strike the strings slightly.
The bracket-ironsI and J are slotted so that they can be raised and lowered on the standards E by loosening the set-screw, L, by which they are attached to the upper ends of the standardsEaud held rigidlyin place at any desired point of elevation to raise and lower the slide-bar N in front of the hammers. To enable this adjustment of the slide-bar N which is used as a hammer-arrest, we have constructed the standards E with a recess M to admit of the hammer arrester slide-bar N to pro ect sufficiently far forward in front of the hammer stems to serve its purpose and also to admit of its adj ustment vertically, as above specified.
Having fully described the construction and operation of our invention, what we claim, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
1. In a piano, a hammer-arrest supported on guide-ways on which it slides; a mechanism by which it is held firmly at any point on the guide-ways; and hammers having such relation to the hammer arrest as to be arrested in their stroke thereby, substantially as shown and described.
2. In a piano, a hammer arrest; an adjustable bracket which supports the hammer-arrest and in which it slides; the standards of the piano to which the brackets are attached; and hammers which the hammer-arrest may be adjusted to arrest, substantially as specified.
3. In a piano, the sliding hammer-arrest having diagonal slots; bracket irons supporting said hammer-arrest, provided with pins or upturned flanges operating in said slots in the hammer-arrest to move it forward and hold it firmly at any desired position; and mechanisms connected with the pedal of the piano by which said slide-bar is brought into the position desired by the operator.
4. In a piano in combination with the ordinary strings and hammers, flexible tongues carried by an adjustable bar, the lower end of said tongue being folded upon itself and inclosing a hard core, the leather tongue contacting with the strings and with the the hammers on opposite sides of the core respectively when interposed between them, substantially as specified.
5. In a piano in combination with the ordinary strings and hammers, flexible tongues carried by an adjustable tongue bar, the lower end of said tongue being folded upon itself and inclosiug a hard hollow core, the leather tongue contacting with the strings and with the hammers respectively on opposite sides of the core when interposed between them, substantially as specified.
MARTIN H. MCCIIESNEY. JOS. G. KUNZE. Witnesses:
ALOYSIA IIELMICH, ALLAN A. MURRAY.
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Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2727420A (en) * 1953-06-19 1955-12-20 Norman W Welsh Silencer for use in practicing on an upright piano
US5386083A (en) * 1993-11-30 1995-01-31 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument having hammer stopper outwardly extending from hammer shank and method of remodeling piano into the keyboard instrument
US5428186A (en) * 1994-01-27 1995-06-27 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument selectively entering into acoustic sound mode and silent mode through angular motion of key bed structure
US5434349A (en) * 1993-03-22 1995-07-18 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument selectively entering into an acoustic mode and a silent mode through a sliding motion of a stopper
US5444181A (en) * 1993-03-24 1995-08-22 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument selectively entering into an acoustic sound mode and an electronic sound mode through a rotation of a stopper with a cushion sheet against damper wires
US5463184A (en) * 1993-06-03 1995-10-31 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument having a catcher stopper for silent operation on keyboard
US5483861A (en) * 1994-06-20 1996-01-16 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument equipped with durable hammer stopper for selectively producing acoustic sounds and synthesized sounds
US5542328A (en) * 1995-03-07 1996-08-06 Pimentel; Robert L. Piano hammer rail stop assembly
US5552559A (en) * 1994-03-31 1996-09-03 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard musical instrument equipped with hammer sensors changing position between recording mode and silent mode
US5583310A (en) * 1994-05-18 1996-12-10 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard musical instrument selectively introducing time delay into hammer detecting signal between acoustic sound mode and electronic sound mode
US5591927A (en) * 1993-09-17 1997-01-07 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard musical instrument having key action mechanisms movable to and from strings
US5594188A (en) * 1992-09-22 1997-01-14 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard musical instrument having key action mechanisms movable to and from strings
US5602351A (en) * 1993-11-30 1997-02-11 Yamaha Corporation Grand piano-like keyboard instrument for selectively producing acoustic sound and synthesized sound
US20120240743A1 (en) * 2009-04-24 2012-09-27 Steinway Musical Instruments, Inc. Hammer stoppers for pianos having acoustic and silent modes

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2727420A (en) * 1953-06-19 1955-12-20 Norman W Welsh Silencer for use in practicing on an upright piano
US5594188A (en) * 1992-09-22 1997-01-14 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard musical instrument having key action mechanisms movable to and from strings
US5434349A (en) * 1993-03-22 1995-07-18 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument selectively entering into an acoustic mode and a silent mode through a sliding motion of a stopper
US5444181A (en) * 1993-03-24 1995-08-22 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument selectively entering into an acoustic sound mode and an electronic sound mode through a rotation of a stopper with a cushion sheet against damper wires
US5463184A (en) * 1993-06-03 1995-10-31 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument having a catcher stopper for silent operation on keyboard
US5591927A (en) * 1993-09-17 1997-01-07 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard musical instrument having key action mechanisms movable to and from strings
US5386083A (en) * 1993-11-30 1995-01-31 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument having hammer stopper outwardly extending from hammer shank and method of remodeling piano into the keyboard instrument
US5602351A (en) * 1993-11-30 1997-02-11 Yamaha Corporation Grand piano-like keyboard instrument for selectively producing acoustic sound and synthesized sound
US5428186A (en) * 1994-01-27 1995-06-27 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument selectively entering into acoustic sound mode and silent mode through angular motion of key bed structure
US5552559A (en) * 1994-03-31 1996-09-03 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard musical instrument equipped with hammer sensors changing position between recording mode and silent mode
US5583310A (en) * 1994-05-18 1996-12-10 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard musical instrument selectively introducing time delay into hammer detecting signal between acoustic sound mode and electronic sound mode
US5483861A (en) * 1994-06-20 1996-01-16 Yamaha Corporation Keyboard instrument equipped with durable hammer stopper for selectively producing acoustic sounds and synthesized sounds
US5542328A (en) * 1995-03-07 1996-08-06 Pimentel; Robert L. Piano hammer rail stop assembly
US20120240743A1 (en) * 2009-04-24 2012-09-27 Steinway Musical Instruments, Inc. Hammer stoppers for pianos having acoustic and silent modes
US8541673B2 (en) * 2009-04-24 2013-09-24 Steinway Musical Instruments, Inc. Hammer stoppers for pianos having acoustic and silent modes

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