In re Townsend

59 F.2d 230, 19 C.C.P.A. 1280, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 1932
DocketNo. 2973
StatusPublished

This text of 59 F.2d 230 (In re Townsend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Townsend, 59 F.2d 230, 19 C.C.P.A. 1280, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 165 (ccpa 1932).

Opinion

Lenroot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office, affirming that of the examiner, rejecting, for want of patentability over the prior art, claims 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 13, 14, and 15 of appellant’s application, filed December 29, 1924.

Claims 6, 9, and 13 are illustrative of the appealed claims and read as follows:

6. An arrangement for recording sound waves comprising a recording stylus adapted to impress sound wave undulations on a phonograph record blank,' means adapted to be actuated by an existing phonograph record for producing [1281]*1281electrical waves corresponding with the sound recorded on that existing record and for amplifying the same, an electrically operated device for actuating the recording stylus, said device being responsive to said electrical waves and adapted to be actuated thereby, and a microphone connected in circuit with said electrically operated devise and adapted to produce electrical current variations corresponding with sound waves impressed thereon, which current variations are impressed upon said electrically operated device.
9. The method of making a phonograph record which consists in transferring the music, speech or the like recorded on an existing record to a record blank and recording and amplifying supplemental sound waves on the same record blank in superposition to the sound wave record transferred and amplified from the said existing record.
13. A phonographic recording system comprising a pair of rotatable tables, a phonograph record mounted on one of the tables and rotatable therewith, -a record blank mounted on the other table and rotatable therewith, a stylus engaging the sound groove of the phonograph record, means. operable in response to vibrations imparted to the stylus to produce fluctuating electrical energy corresponding to said vibrations, a recording stylus engaging the record blank, an electrical actuating device for the recording stylus, circuit- connections for impressing said fluctuating electrical energy on said device, a vacuum tube amplifier included in said circuit connections, a microphone pick-up electrically connected with said actuating device whereby sound waves other than those recorded on the phonograph record must be impressed on the record blank, and a telephone receiver included in the circuit connections and interposed between the reproducing stylus and said vacuum tube amplifier for reproducing the sound waves from the original phonograph record without blending them with the waves transmitted through said microphone pick-up.

The references relied upon are:

De Forest, 1375447, April 19, 1921.
Yreeland et al., 1593735, July 27, 1926.
AVier, 1617428, February 15, 1927.
Craft et al., 1540317, June 2, 1925.

Appellant’s application relates to sound recording apparatus, the salient features of which may be summarized as follows: A phonograph record is placed upon a rotatable table and upon said record there is placed a stylus; said stylus is connected to an armature positioned between the poles of a magnet, the armature being surrounded by a coil of wire. This coil is connected in circuit with an amplifier, thence to a similar coil surrounding á second armature positioned between the poles of a second magnet. This latter armature is connected to a stylus, which rests upon a blank record, said record being also placed upon a rotatable table. The movement of the first stylus as it progresses in the sound groove of the phonograph record produces fluctuations in the circuit in which the coils and the amplifier are connected, said fluctuations corresponding to the vibrations produced in the stylus. The reverse action takes place on the second turntable, these fluctuations in electrical current being translated into mechanical vibrations of the stylus on the blank record, [1282]*1282thereby recording on said blank record a sound groove similar to that possessed by the playing record. Between the first-named stylus and the amplifier there is connected across this circuit a telephone receiver, which enables one to hear only the reproduction of the phonograph, record. Connected in circuit with the coil on the second armature is a microphone, the same being also connected through an amplifier; this microphone, employed by one utilizing said telephone receiver, enables him to produce on the receiving record sounds supplemental to the sounds reproduced thereon from the first record. There is also connected across this second coil another telephone receiver which enables one to hear both the sounds being transmitted from the playing record and also the sounds being impressed by the microphone, whereas, as stated with reference to the first telephone receiver, only the sounds produced by the playing record are audible through it. The object of the apparatus is to enable one to reproduce on a blank record the subject matter of an existing phonograph record, coincident with such other supplemental sounds as are desired. For example, a record playing the instrumental music of a song may be played; the operator may listen to this music through the first-named telephone receiver and, in time with the music, sing into the microphone. The result will be that the record on the second turntable will have impressed upon it a sound groove that will reproduce the instrumental music of the existing record, together with the vocal rendition of the operator.

The patent to De Forest discloses a method of amplifying currents in electrical sound recording and reproducing systems in which vacuum tube amplifiers are used.

The patent to Yreelant et al. relates to the art of recording-sounds upon records; it involves the use of a plurality of microphones at different points in a room, the circuits from which all feed into a common circuit which actuates the recorder magnet with an effect which is the result of all the microphones; there is also shown means by which the director may listen to the result of all the microphones and so be enabled to make adjustments in the position of one or all of the microphones, or of the performers, to bring about the best result. There is also provided means for controlling the amount of amplification secured.

The patent to Craft and the one to Weir are the principal references. Craft sought to overcome what he claimed was a deficiency in the method of recording sound from a plurality of microphones. He indicates that where two or more microphones are being used, the voice of the singer, for example, will register most strongly on the microphone nearest to him; however, it will also register in the other microphones. He states that there is a delay in the effect of [1283]*1283the more distant microphone reaching the actuating magnet for the recording stylus, due to its receiving the sound later, and that the impressions of the one voice on the two microphones would not register on the blank record at the same instant, resulting in an echo effect being produced when said record is played. He sought to overcome this by interposing between each microphone circuit and the common circuit what is referred to as an artificial line, the same being capable of adjustment in such a manner as to delay the transmission of current to the common circuit to any extent desired within certain limits.

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Bluebook (online)
59 F.2d 230, 19 C.C.P.A. 1280, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-townsend-ccpa-1932.