Patents by Inventor Robert A. Moog
Robert A. Moog has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
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Patent number: 4778951Abstract: Selected touch point locating apparatus has an array of two or more electrical touch members constituted by impedance elements coupled to a circuit for causing electric current to flow through a selected touch point as the algebraic sum of separate currents through the electrical touch members. The relative amplitudes are translated into at least two signals corresponding to the location in two axes of the selected touch point.Type: GrantFiled: January 4, 1988Date of Patent: October 18, 1988Assignee: Peptek, Inc.Inventors: William Pepper, Jr., Robert A. Moog
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Patent number: 4280387Abstract: A plurality of a signal peak detection circuits connected in cascade for operation on a complex waveform input signal, for generating a reference signal having peaks occurring in time with the peaks of the fundamental frequency component of the input signal. The reference signal is processed for producing a voltage proportional to the period between successive signal peaks, which voltage is successively stored and monitored at select times for comparison of the relative magnitude changes in the voltage, for updating an output control voltage.Type: GrantFiled: February 26, 1979Date of Patent: July 28, 1981Assignee: Norlin Music, Inc.Inventor: Robert A. Moog
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Patent number: 4213367Abstract: A keyboard for a monophonic musical instrument has a plurality of touch sensitive keys which function as variable capacitors, the capacitance depending on the force applied to the keys. The variable capacitance is detected and used to produce a variable control voltage which is used to execute one or several of various control functions, such as controlling the volume of the sound produced by The instrument, controlling the cutoff frequency of a low pass filter in the output system of the instrument, controlling the amount of vibrato or other periodic modulation introduced into the sounds produced by the instrument, controlling the frequency of the vibrato or other periodic modulation, or controlling the amount of "bend" in the pitch of a sound produced by the instrument, i.e. shifting the pitch slightly from its nominal value. The variable capacitors employ a conductive elastomer which is deformed in response to the force applied to the keys.Type: GrantFiled: February 28, 1978Date of Patent: July 22, 1980Assignee: Norlin Music, Inc.Inventor: Robert A. Moog
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Patent number: 4202238Abstract: Electrical circuitry for varying the relative distinctiveness between the lead and rhythm audio signals produced by an electrical guitar, or the like, according to the strength with which the musician picks the guitar strings. The rhythm signal is compressed in response to how hard the player strums or picks the guitar, while the lead signal is expanded as a direct function of rhythm signal compression. An electrical signal is generated from the rhythm signal for controlling the extent of compression and expansion of the audio signals.Type: GrantFiled: June 1, 1978Date of Patent: May 13, 1980Assignee: Norlin Industries, Inc.Inventor: Robert A. Moog
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Patent number: 4180707Abstract: A distortion sound effects circuit producing an output signal corresponding to an input signal but containing one of four selected types of distortion. A compressor which includes a voltage-controlled amplifier first compresses the audio input signal within preselected limits, and the distortion operations are performed on the compressed audio signal to advantageously render the subsequent distortion operations insensitive to gross amplitude fluctuations of the input signal. The compressor includes means for full-wave rectifying the compressed audio signal. The full-wave rectified signal is provided as a distorted output signal containing hard-even distortion of the type commonly achieved by severely, asymmetrically clipping a signal. A distortion circuit includes single voltage controlled square-low amplifier to which the compressed audio signal is applied performs the other three types of distortion.Type: GrantFiled: June 21, 1977Date of Patent: December 25, 1979Assignee: Norlin Industries, Inc.Inventor: Robert A. Moog
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Patent number: 4166197Abstract: An improved frequency sensitive circuit capable of adjusting one or more of its parameters in order to shunt an adjustable amount of electrical signal to a current sink, thereby controlling the amplitude of the signal. The frequency sensitive circuit is connected to the wiper of a potentiometer that is placed across the inputs of a difference amplifier in order to control the peak value of the cut or boost in the signal. The frequency sensitive circuit includes a shunt impedance connected between the wiper of the potentiometer and the current sink. A resonant circuit is connected to the impedance and is tuned to an adjustable resonant frequency. A compensation circuit, such as a difference amplifier referenced to the wiper, couples the output of the resonant circuit to the shunt impedance so that the impedance of the frequency sensitive circuit approaches infinity as the frequency of the electrical signal is displaced from the resonant frequency.Type: GrantFiled: March 30, 1978Date of Patent: August 28, 1979Assignee: Norlin Music, Inc.Inventors: Robert A. Moog, Richard M. Walborn
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Patent number: 4117413Abstract: In an audio amplifier for amplifying signals from an electric guitar or the like having a conventional tone control circuit for selectively emphasizing input signals in the bass, middle and treble frequency ranges of the instrument, a multifilter circuit for emphasizing input signals with frequencies in selected, relatively narrow, frequency bands in the upper portion of the frequency spectrum to minimize aural fatigue. The multifilter circuit comprises a plurality of parallel connected, two-pole, resonant filter sections with different, relatively narrow, resonant frequency bands separated from one another by an amount on the order of 1/4 octave and forms a signal path that supplements the signal path provided by the conventional tone control circuit. The signals produced on the output of the tone control circuit are mixed with the multifilter output signals.Type: GrantFiled: June 21, 1977Date of Patent: September 26, 1978Assignee: Norlin Music, Inc.Inventor: Robert A. Moog
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Patent number: 4108041Abstract: A sound effect circuit with a phase shifter producing a signal shifted in phase with respect to an input signal, a combining circuit for arithmetically combining the input and phase shifted signals to produce an output signal, an oscillator for periodically modulating a characteristic frequency of the phase shifter and a modulation control circuit. The modulation control circuit causes the modulation rate to gradually increase when modulation is manually switched on and to gradually decrease when modulation is switched off. The modulation control also causes the characteristic frequency to vary inversely with the modulation rate.Type: GrantFiled: June 25, 1976Date of Patent: August 22, 1978Assignee: Norlin Music, Inc.Inventors: Robert A. Moog, Roger Flavius Cox
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Patent number: 4050343Abstract: An electronic music synthesizer is disclosed in which the sound producing chain includes a voltage-controlled oscillator, band-pass filter, low-pass filter, and amplifier in which selected control currents are supplied to low impedance points within the synthesizer circuit from a resistor matrix. The synthesizer produces sounds approximating different acoustic musical instruments or having different tonal qualities by the application of a predetermined voltage to one of fifteen input columns of the resistor matrix with selected other columns being grounded. The currents provided by the resistor matrix in combination with other externally generated currents control the center frequency and bandwidth of the band-pass filter, the cutoff frequency of the low-pass filter, the gain of the voltage-controlled amplifier, the time constants of transient contour currents used to control the filters and amplifier, and the waveform produced by the voltage-controlled oscillator.Type: GrantFiled: December 29, 1975Date of Patent: September 27, 1977Assignee: Norlin Music CompanyInventor: Robert A. Moog