Manual electronic keyboard
The manual electronic keyboard was the first device that generated an electrical output after the keys were depressed. The keys had a plunger mounted in a piezoelectric or piezoresistive electro-mechanical transducer housing. Its patent 3,464,531 was filed on May 16, 1967 and issued on September 2, 1969. <ref>US patent 3464531, Edward R. Herr, "Manual electronic keyboard", issued 1969-9-2, assigned to Edward M. Fletcher Jr.</ref> <ref> Manual electronic keyboard </ref>
Description[edit | edit source]
Manual electronic keyboard
- Inventor: Edward R. Herr
- Inventor: George E. Sumrall
- Patent number: 3464531
- Filing date: May 16, 1967
- Issue date: September 2, 1969
Summary[edit | edit source]
The manual electronic keyboard has a plurality of electronic keys arranged throughout the housing. Each key has a plunger mounted in a housing which contains piezoelectric or piezoresistive eletro-mechanical transducer from which a pair of terminals connects to. The plunger in each key is designed to be depressed so it bends or compresses the transducer which in turn generates an electrical signal.
Abstract[edit | edit source]
Figure 1 shows an electronic keyboard (10) attached to a mounting plate (11) and a plurality of receptacles (12) in which a plug-in sensing key is inserted in each each of the receptacles. The key (13) has a pair of contact plugs (14) (15) which makes contact with a pair of conductors (16) that as a result extend each of the receptacles (12) to an amplifier circuit (17). The amplifiers (17) are connected to a coding circuit (18) such as a diode matrix which has a number of output terminals (19) that produce a coded output on the lines (19), after the amplifiers (17) detect the operation of the key (13) mounted on the flexible cover (20).
Referenced by Patents[edit | edit source]
- US 5560724, Seiichi Iwasa & Makoto Yoshioka, "Keyboard having improved keytop", issued 1996-10-1
Images[edit | edit source]
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Manual electronic keyboard
References[edit | edit source]
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