Patent US 3843873A: Difference between revisions

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|Filing date=1972-09-19
|Filing date=1972-09-19
|Grant date=1974-10-22
|Grant date=1974-10-22
|Links=7D10;7D11;
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[[Bob Beville]] says in [[Media:Beville-Memoirs-02142019.pdf|his memoirs]]:
<blockquote>
In the [[7D11]], a novel control set the time delay or number of events desired.
This novel control was ‘Forward Reverse and Throttle’, a velocity and direction adjustment.
(Do you recall a control on the VCR-Video Cassette Recorder? You dialed fastforward, fast reverse, or slow motion.)
[[Bruce Hofer|Bruce]] designed the variable velocity circuit. [[Phil Lloyd]], Mechanical Engineer, did the front panel knob, a shaft and potentiometer suspended in mechanical as well as electrical center.
Off center was detected to determine the direction of the displayed count.
All these designs were submitted to the Tek Patent Office for review.
They became United States Patent Number 3,843,873, assigned to Tektronix, awarded to Bill Peek, Bruce Hofer and I.
Credits must go to the knob control creator, Phil Lloyd, ME, overlooked on the patent application. Sorry, Phil.
</blockquote>

Latest revision as of 14:16, 4 November 2024

Patent number US 3843873A (click link for details and documents via Google Patents)
Title Counter having selective direction and variable rate control
Inventors Bob Beville, Bruce Hofer, Bill Peek
Company Tektronix Inc
Filing date 1972-09-19
Grant date 1974-10-22


Related products:

Manufacturer Model Description Introduced Designers
Tektronix 7D10 digital events delay 1976 Carlo Infante Bob Beville Bruce Hofer Bill Peek Phil Lloyd
Tektronix 7D11 digital delay 1972 Carlo Infante Bob Beville Bruce Hofer Bill Peek Phil Lloyd

Bob Beville says in his memoirs:

In the 7D11, a novel control set the time delay or number of events desired. This novel control was ‘Forward Reverse and Throttle’, a velocity and direction adjustment. (Do you recall a control on the VCR-Video Cassette Recorder? You dialed fastforward, fast reverse, or slow motion.)

Bruce designed the variable velocity circuit. Phil Lloyd, Mechanical Engineer, did the front panel knob, a shaft and potentiometer suspended in mechanical as well as electrical center. Off center was detected to determine the direction of the displayed count. All these designs were submitted to the Tek Patent Office for review.

They became United States Patent Number 3,843,873, assigned to Tektronix, awarded to Bill Peek, Bruce Hofer and I.

Credits must go to the knob control creator, Phil Lloyd, ME, overlooked on the patent application. Sorry, Phil.