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US1921168A - Apparatus for controlling transmitters - Google Patents

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US1921168A
US1921168A US479478A US47947830A US1921168A US 1921168 A US1921168 A US 1921168A US 479478 A US479478 A US 479478A US 47947830 A US47947830 A US 47947830A US 1921168 A US1921168 A US 1921168A
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frequency
oscillations
circuit
tube
oscillator
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George T Royden
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International Communications Laboratories Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03BGENERATION OF OSCILLATIONS, DIRECTLY OR BY FREQUENCY-CHANGING, BY CIRCUITS EMPLOYING ACTIVE ELEMENTS WHICH OPERATE IN A NON-SWITCHING MANNER; GENERATION OF NOISE BY SUCH CIRCUITS
    • H03B5/00Generation of oscillations using amplifier with regenerative feedback from output to input
    • H03B5/08Generation of oscillations using amplifier with regenerative feedback from output to input with frequency-determining element comprising lumped inductance and capacitance
    • H03B5/10Generation of oscillations using amplifier with regenerative feedback from output to input with frequency-determining element comprising lumped inductance and capacitance active element in amplifier being vacuum tube

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  • This invention relates to improvements in controlling apparatus for radio transmitters; and more particularly to apparatus by which the frequency of the electrical oscillations sent by the 5 transmitter is rendered substantially constant.
  • An object of the invention is to provide a controlling apparatus for automatically preventing in an effective, practical and inexpensive manner, material variations in the frequency of the electrical oscillations or waves radiated by the transmitter.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a controlling apparatus of simple construction for precluding an increase or a decrease in the frequency of the oscillations emitted by the transmitter, by means of appliances that are electrical in structure. and. comprise virtually no actuated movable parts; thus making the operation as certain as possible and obviating any possibility of the elements getting out of order or being deranged in function.
  • the invention is especially useful in connection with the transmitters designed to transmit oscillaticns at high frequency.
  • the devices employed are usually very sensitive, and changes in the rate of oscillation easily take place, due to body capacity and other causes, often producing serious disturbances and even interruptions of serv- 3o. ice.
  • This invention seeks to eliminate the tendency of a transmitter working on short .waves to drift off from the desired frequency, and thus maintains the apparatus at all times in the best operating condition.
  • An additional object of the inventioin is to provide a controlling apparatus which is responsive to the operation of the transmitter itself and which is designed so that its effect is either to decrease the number of oscillations when the 40 frequency tends to rise; or to increase the number of oscillations whenever the frequency of the oscillations sent by the transmitter tends to climinish.
  • Figure 1 presents one, form of controlling apparatus according to this invention
  • Figure 2 shows a modification thereof.
  • Fig. 1 shows a transmitter having an aerial or antenna 1 which is coupled by means of a secondary winding 2 with the primary winding 3 of a generator of oscillations in the form of a vacuum tube 4.
  • this tube 4 is in operation, rapid impulses of current between the anode and cathode thereof, cause the primary coil 3 to energize the secondary 2, and oscillations of a high frequency occur in the antenna 1.
  • oscillations are produced and radiated in the usual manner for the purpose of carrying messages.
  • the oscillator 5 Operatively associated with the antenna 1 and oscillator 4 is a second oscillator 5, connected so that it can control the oscillator 4 through intermediate circuits and electrical appliances to be described later.
  • the oscillator 5 has an anode circuit containing a loop 6 which acts as an aerial to pick up electrical energy radiated by the antenna i.
  • the oscillation generator 5 is designed to produce oscillations at a given frequency which are different from the frequency of the oscillations sent out by the antenna 1; and when the oscillation generator 5 is working and the coil 6 picks up electrical waves radiated from the antenna, beats are produced in the output circuit of the oscillator 5.
  • the oscillatoror, vacuum tube 5 has a plate or anode 7, connected by conductor 8 with one terminal of the coil 6.
  • the other terminal of this coil is connected to one end of a primary coil 9, the other end of which is connected to the positive terminal of the usual source of current 10.
  • the opposite terminal of this source 10 is joined by conductor 11 to thecircuit of the oath ode 12, which is provided with the usual heating battery 13 and a rheostat or adjustable resistance 14.
  • the tube 5 also contains a grid 15 connected to the cathode l2 and in the circuit with the grid and cathode are an inductance l6 and the adjustable condenser 17. Between the anode l and the coil 6 is a feed-back win 11g 18 inductively coupled to the coil 16.
  • This tube will operate in the usual manner to produce oscillations of a predetermined frequency according to the adjustment of the grid circuit and the characteristics of the tube, and when the, coil 6 picks up oscillations emitted from the antenna 1 or" diiierent frequency, the resultant or beat oscillations produced out by tube 5 will have a frequency which is, of course, the difference between the frequency generated by the tube 5 itself and that transmitted by the antenna 1.
  • the anode circuit of the tube 5 may include condenser shunting the primary 9, and the source of electrical energy 10.
  • the primary 9 is coupled to t secondary coil 20, one end of which is connected to a grid 21 in an amplifying vacuurn'tube 22.
  • This tube has a plate or anode 23 joined to one terminal of a primary winding 24, the opposite terminal of which is connected to a positive pole or" battery 16A; and the tube 22 also has a cathode 12A with beating battery 13A and rheostat 14A, a conductor 11A connecting the battery 10A to the cathode circuit as before.
  • the primary 2-1 is coupled to a tuned circuit 25 containing an adjustable condenser 26 and an adjustable resistance 2'7.
  • a secondary 28 couples one end of the circuit 25 to the primary 24 and a primary winding 29 at the other end of the circuit 25 couples this circuit to a secondary winding 30 connected at one end to the grid 31 of an amplifier tube 32, the other end of the sec-- ondary 30 being connected to the filament 12B of this tube.
  • the plate or anode 33 of this tube is connected to one end of a primary winding 34, the opposite end of which is connected to the positive terminal of an anode battery 10B; and a cathode 12B is provided as before with a heating battery 13B and rheostat 14B; a conductor 11B connects the battery 103 to the circuit of the cathodelZB so as to provide the usual for oscillations between the plate and filament of tube 32. 7
  • a filter circuit coupled to th primary 34 by means of a secondary winding 35.
  • One end of the secondary 35 is connected by conductor 36 with an inductance 3! and the other end of the secondary 35 is joined to the filament 12C of a rectifier tube 38.
  • the filament circuit has a heating battery 13C and rheostat 14C; and the rectifier tube 38 contains an anode 39 joined to a conductor 40.
  • These conductors 36 and 46 are shunted by condensers ll in parallel, joined to the conductor 40 and to the opposite terminals of the inductance 37.
  • the arrangement of inductance and capacity described of course acts to filter or smooth out the rectified pulsations of current produced by the tube 38.
  • the conductor 36 leads toe. grid 42in a regulating device or tube 43.
  • This tube has an anode 44 connected to a conductor 45 leading to the grid 46 of the oscillator e. and, between this anode A and grid 46 is a condenser 47.
  • the cathode or filament 12D, of this tube has a heating battery 13D and rlieostat 14D, with a conductor 11D connecting the other terminal oi the battery 101) or the like to the oathode circuit.
  • the grid 46 of the oscillator 4 is connected to the filament 12E of this oscillator through a parallel circuit containing inductance 49 and adjustable capacity 50.
  • the anode 51 of the oscillator 4 is connected to one terminal of the primary 3, the other terminal of which is connected to the positive terminal of the anode battery 10E.
  • the cathode 1213 has the usual heating battery 133 with rheostat 1413 and a conductor 11E joins theanode circuit to the cathode.
  • An additional conductor 52 connects the conductors 11D and 11E.
  • the ground for the antenna is shown at 53; and the conductors 11, 11A, 11B, 40, 111), 52'and 11E may be united to form a single conductor or bus bar 54 extending from the cathode of the oscillator 5 to the antenna .1, and connected to the various parts of the apparatus as shown in Figure 1.
  • This bus bar e'nables the various elements of the controlling device to be more conveniently connected to a shield (not shown) and to ground 53 so that external capacity and other outside factors will not dis: turb the operation.
  • the adjustable resistance 2'? has a movable contact to regulate it.
  • the tuned circuit 25 is adjusted so that the beat frequency is, for example, below resonant frequency, but such that it will fall upon the upward extending portion of the resonance curve in this circuit.
  • the frequency of the oscillations or waves radiated by the antenna is somewhat greater than the frequency of those generated by the oscillator 5.
  • the frequency of the beats emitted by the oscillator 5 through primary 9 will then be equal to the differ ence between the frequency of the oscillations emitted by the transmitterrand the pre-determined frequency of the oscillations generated by the oscillator 5; and these beats are transferred to the tube 22 wherein they are amplified and passed on to the tun d circuit 25.
  • the oscillations are then passed on to the tube 32; amplified by the tube 32; passed througi the transformer windings 34 and 35, and converted into unidirectional fluctuations by means of the rectifying tube 38.
  • Th se fluctuations are smoothed out more or less i the filter c' -cuit comprising the inductance 37 and condensers 41 and impressed upon the grid 42 of regulating tube 43, to give it a higher or lower positive pote .al;
  • the grid 42 thus controls the impedance of tube 43 and consequently connects in se. es with the condenser l? a greater or smaller impedance; regulating thereby the effectiveness of the con denser 47 on the 'reactance of the parallel circuit consisting of inductance 49 and condenser 50.
  • the frequency of the waves or oscillations emitted by the antenna becomes still grea or than the frequency of those generated by the oscillator 5, the beat frequency will increase and the voltage in the circuit 25 will have greater amplitude as the beats approach the resonance ire qu ncy of tuned circuit.
  • the grid 42 becomes positive and the impedance of tube 43 is lowered, and the effective capacity of condense-re? in se ..s with the impedance circuit on the input of the tube 43 becomes greater.
  • This incr ase in capacity tends to increase the wave length of the electro-magnetic radiations and thus lower the frequenoyof the oscillations generated by the oscillator 4.
  • the frequency of the oscillations emitted by the antenna decreases, the beat frequency will de-' crease accordingly and the amplitude of the beat frequency oscillations in the tuned circuit 25 will decrease.
  • the impedance of tube 43 will become greater through the positive potential of the grid 42 becoming lower, and the effective capacity of condenser 47 in series with this impedance becoming less, thus increasing the frequency of the waves generated by oscillator 4.
  • the purpose of the impedance 48 is to avoid the accumulation of a charge on the condenser 47 and thus keep the tube 43 from becoming inoperative, this impedance being connected to the positive pole of the battery or source of current 10D, which in turn has its negative pole joined to cathode 121).
  • the condenser 47, inductance 49, condenser 50, part of the cathode circuit 12E, conductor 52, battery 10D and resistance 48 thus form a circuit in which the capacity of the condenser 47 has the efiect desired in controlling oscillator 4.
  • the tuned circuit 25 is adjusted so that it becomes resonant at a frequency lower than the predetermined beat frequency, so that the controlling apparatus will have the same controlling effect as before.
  • the oscillator shown in Figure 2 may be employed in place of the oscillator 5 shown in Figure 1.
  • the oscillator of Figure 2 substitutes a piezo crystal 55 in place of the coil 16 and condenser 1'7 connected to the grid and cathode.
  • the coil 18 is omitted and the coil 6 is directly connected to the anode 7.
  • the crystal is disposed between plates 56 which may exert a pressure on the crystal, and this pressure can be varied. With this oscillator, the remaining connections to the other parts of the circuit will be the as before.
  • this modified oscillator produces oscillations of a frequency different from that radiated by the antenna 1 and picked up by coil 6. This difference produces beats in the output circuit of the oscillator which are transmitted through the circuits between the oscillators 5 and 4 in the previously described manner.
  • the apparatus acts very efficiently and requires practically no alteration of the antenna or other attention except to make the necessary adjustments, as there are no constantly moving parts to get out of order.
  • the frequency of the oscillations transmitted by the antenna can be automatically kept within the desired range and the commonly occurring wide variations or drifts in the frequency of the oscillations transmitted by antennae utilizing short waves are rendered impossible.
  • the beat frequency will, of course, be relatively low and for that reason all the transformers between the oscillators 4 and 5 may have iron cores and so may the inductance 37.
  • the resistance 2'7 and condenser 26 are utilized to control the resonating characteristics of the tuned circuit 25. For example, if the frequency of the waves radiated by the antenna should have a tendency to rise very rapidly, a broad resonance peak is desirable so that the beat frequency cannot rise so fast as to run over the apex of the peak and reach the descending portion of the curve, where it could no longer bring about constant frequency control of the oscillations generated by oscillator '4 and those transmitted by antenna 1; Under other conditions asharper peak for theresonance curve might be more 'desirable.
  • a 1 The combination of an antenna, a generator of oscillations therefor having a grid, a-condenser connected to the grid, a second generator having means for causing oscillations produced thereby to combine with oscillations of the first generator to produce electrical beats, a tuned circuit having a resonant frequency different from the frequency of said beats, a rectifying circuit and a regulating device connecting the tuned circuit to the condenser, and an impedance associated with said device to prevent electrical charges accumulating on the condenser and rendering said device inoperative.
  • a master oscillation generator for generating oscillations of a substantially fixed fre quency
  • a second oscillation generator having a frequency determining circuit and generating oscillations of a frequency differing from those produced by said first-named generator
  • a circuit for combining the oscillations produced by said oscillation generators to produce beats a variable impedance shunting the frequency determining circuit and a tuned circuit coupled to the im pedance, said tuned circuit being resonant to a predetermined beat frequency and responsive to any change in the frequency of said beats to cause a corresponding change in said impedance and thereby control the frequency of the oscillations produced by said second oscillation generator.
  • a second oscillation generator having a grid, an anode, and a cathode, and a frequency determining circuit connected between the grid and the cathode, said second generator producing oscillations differing in frequency from those produced by said master generator, a condenser and a. regulating device in series in a circuit shunting said frequency determining circuit, a circuit for combining the oscillations produced by said oscillation generators to produce beats, a circuit tuned to a resonant frequency different from the beat frequency, and a rectifying circuit connecting the tuned circuit to the regulating device and responsive to any variation in the beat frequency to control said regulating device.
  • a master oscillation generator for generating oscillations of a substantially fixed frequency
  • a second oscillation generator having a grid, an anode, a cathode, and a frequency determining circuit connected between the grid and the cathode, said second generator producing oscillations differing in frequency from those produced by said master generator, a condenser and a space charge regulating 'device in series in a circuit shunting said frequency determining circuit, a circuit for combining the oscillations produced by said oscillation generators to produce cuit shunting the frequency determining circuit, and a tuned circuit coupled to the impedance, said tuned circuit being resonant to a predetermined beat frequency and responsive to any change in the frequency of said beats to cause a corresponding change in said impedance and thereby control the frequency of the oscillations produced by said second oscillation generator.

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Description

3, 1933. e. T. ROYDEN 1,921,168
APPARATUS FOR CONTROLLING TRANSMITTERS Filed Sept. 3, 1930 l l l l P- FIG.2
lllll FIG.|
INVENTOR GEORGE T. ROYDEN ATTORNEY Patented Aug. 8, 1933 PATENT rsice APPARATUS FOR CONTROLLING TRANSNIITTERS George T. Royden, Pale Alto, Calif., assignor to International Communications Laboratories,
Inc, New York, N. Y., a Corporation of New York Application September 3, 1930. Serial No. 479,478
Claims.
This invention relates to improvements in controlling apparatus for radio transmitters; and more particularly to apparatus by which the frequency of the electrical oscillations sent by the 5 transmitter is rendered substantially constant.
An object of the invention is to provide a controlling apparatus for automatically preventing in an effective, practical and inexpensive manner, material variations in the frequency of the electrical oscillations or waves radiated by the transmitter.
Another object of the invention is to provide a controlling apparatus of simple construction for precluding an increase or a decrease in the frequency of the oscillations emitted by the transmitter, by means of appliances that are electrical in structure. and. comprise virtually no actuated movable parts; thus making the operation as certain as possible and obviating any possibility of the elements getting out of order or being deranged in function.
The invention is especially useful in connection with the transmitters designed to transmit oscillaticns at high frequency. In radio signaling by means of short waves the devices employed are usually very sensitive, and changes in the rate of oscillation easily take place, due to body capacity and other causes, often producing serious disturbances and even interruptions of serv- 3o. ice. This invention seeks to eliminate the tendency of a transmitter working on short .waves to drift off from the desired frequency, and thus maintains the apparatus at all times in the best operating condition.
An additional object of the inventioin is to provide a controlling apparatus which is responsive to the operation of the transmitter itself and which is designed so that its effect is either to decrease the number of oscillations when the 40 frequency tends to rise; or to increase the number of oscillations whenever the frequency of the oscillations sent by the transmitter tends to climinish.
The nature and advantages of the invention will be clearly set forth in the following description, when read together with the drawing on which one or more embodiments of my invention are illustrated. This disclosure, however, is illustrative only and changes may be made in the arrangement of the various parts and mode of proceeding without exceeding the principle of the invention, or exceeding the scope or meanings of the terms in which the appended claims are expressed.
In the drawing, Figure 1 presents one, form of controlling apparatus according to this invention; and Figure 2 shows a modification thereof.
The same numerals identify the same parts throughout. 1
Fig. 1 shows a transmitter having an aerial or antenna 1 which is coupled by means of a secondary winding 2 with the primary winding 3 of a generator of oscillations in the form of a vacuum tube 4. Whenever this tube 4 is in operation, rapid impulses of current between the anode and cathode thereof, cause the primary coil 3 to energize the secondary 2, and oscillations of a high frequency occur in the antenna 1. Thus oscillations are produced and radiated in the usual manner for the purpose of carrying messages.
Operatively associated with the antenna 1 and oscillator 4 is a second oscillator 5, connected so that it can control the oscillator 4 through intermediate circuits and electrical appliances to be described later. The oscillator 5 has an anode circuit containing a loop 6 which acts as an aerial to pick up electrical energy radiated by the antenna i. The oscillation generator 5 is designed to produce oscillations at a given frequency which are different from the frequency of the oscillations sent out by the antenna 1; and when the oscillation generator 5 is working and the coil 6 picks up electrical waves radiated from the antenna, beats are produced in the output circuit of the oscillator 5. These beats are transmitted through thecircuits between the oscillator 4 and the oscillator 5, and by these beats the oscillations transmitted by the antenna 1 and generated by the oscillator 4 are controlled g and regulated. As the frequency of the oscillations or waves emitted by the antenna tends to increase or decrease, the beat frequency of the oscillations produced by the combination of the frequency. of the oscillations emitted by the an- 5 tenna and that generated by the oscillator 5, of course varies accordingly; and this change, as is hereinbelow set forth, will make the frequency of the oscillations transmitted by the antenna decrease in case it tends to rise; or increase in case the frequency tends to drop, thus giving the desired result. 7
The oscillatoror, vacuum tube 5 has a plate or anode 7, connected by conductor 8 with one terminal of the coil 6. The other terminal of this coil is connected to one end of a primary coil 9, the other end of which is connected to the positive terminal of the usual source of current 10. The opposite terminal of this source 10 is joined by conductor 11 to thecircuit of the oath ode 12, which is provided with the usual heating battery 13 and a rheostat or adjustable resistance 14.
The tube 5 also contains a grid 15 connected to the cathode l2 and in the circuit with the grid and cathode are an inductance l6 and the adjustable condenser 17. Between the anode l and the coil 6 is a feed-back win 11g 18 inductively coupled to the coil 16. This tube will operate in the usual manner to produce oscillations of a predetermined frequency according to the adjustment of the grid circuit and the characteristics of the tube, and when the, coil 6 picks up oscillations emitted from the antenna 1 or" diiierent frequency, the resultant or beat oscillations produced out by tube 5 will have a frequency which is, of course, the difference between the frequency generated by the tube 5 itself and that transmitted by the antenna 1.
The anode circuit of the tube 5 may include condenser shunting the primary 9, and the source of electrical energy 10. The primary 9 is coupled to t secondary coil 20, one end of which is connected to a grid 21 in an amplifying vacuurn'tube 22. This tube has a plate or anode 23 joined to one terminal of a primary winding 24, the opposite terminal of which is connected to a positive pole or" battery 16A; and the tube 22 also has a cathode 12A with beating battery 13A and rheostat 14A, a conductor 11A connecting the battery 10A to the cathode circuit as before.
The primary 2-1 is coupled to a tuned circuit 25 containing an adjustable condenser 26 and an adjustable resistance 2'7. A secondary 28 couples one end of the circuit 25 to the primary 24 and a primary winding 29 at the other end of the circuit 25 couples this circuit to a secondary winding 30 connected at one end to the grid 31 of an amplifier tube 32, the other end of the sec-- ondary 30 being connected to the filament 12B of this tube. The plate or anode 33 of this tube is connected to one end of a primary winding 34, the opposite end of which is connected to the positive terminal of an anode battery 10B; and a cathode 12B is provided as before with a heating battery 13B and rheostat 14B; a conductor 11B connects the battery 103 to the circuit of the cathodelZB so as to provide the usual for oscillations between the plate and filament of tube 32. 7
Beyond the amplifier tube 32 is a filter circuit coupled to th primary 34 by means of a secondary winding 35. One end of the secondary 35 is connected by conductor 36 with an inductance 3! and the other end of the secondary 35 is joined to the filament 12C of a rectifier tube 38. The filament circuit has a heating battery 13C and rheostat 14C; and the rectifier tube 38 contains an anode 39 joined to a conductor 40. These conductors 36 and 46 are shunted by condensers ll in parallel, joined to the conductor 40 and to the opposite terminals of the inductance 37. The arrangement of inductance and capacity described of course acts to filter or smooth out the rectified pulsations of current produced by the tube 38.
' Beyond the inductance 3'7, the conductor 36 leads toe. grid 42in a regulating device or tube 43. This tube has an anode 44 connected to a conductor 45 leading to the grid 46 of the oscillator e. and, between this anode A and grid 46 is a condenser 47. An impedance, such as a high resistance 48, connected to the conductor 45 between this condenser and the plate 44. at one end, and is joined at its opposite end to the positive terminal of a source of direct current 10D. The cathode or filament 12D, of this tube, as before has a heating battery 13D and rlieostat 14D, with a conductor 11D connecting the other terminal oi the battery 101) or the like to the oathode circuit. The grid 46 of the oscillator 4 is connected to the filament 12E of this oscillator through a parallel circuit containing inductance 49 and adjustable capacity 50.. The anode 51 of the oscillator 4 is connected to one terminal of the primary 3, the other terminal of which is connected to the positive terminal of the anode battery 10E. The cathode 1213 has the usual heating battery 133 with rheostat 1413 and a conductor 11E joins theanode circuit to the cathode. An additional conductor 52 connects the conductors 11D and 11E. The ground for the antenna is shown at 53; and the conductors 11, 11A, 11B, 40, 111), 52'and 11E may be united to form a single conductor or bus bar 54 extending from the cathode of the oscillator 5 to the antenna .1, and connected to the various parts of the apparatus as shown in Figure 1. This bus bar e'nables the various elements of the controlling device to be more conveniently connected to a shield (not shown) and to ground 53 so that external capacity and other outside factors will not dis: turb the operation. The adjustable resistance 2'? has a movable contact to regulate it.
In operation, the tuned circuit 25 is adjusted so that the beat frequency is, for example, below resonant frequency, but such that it will fall upon the upward extending portion of the resonance curve in this circuit. Suppose now the frequency of the oscillations or waves radiated by the antenna is somewhat greater than the frequency of those generated by the oscillator 5. The frequency of the beats emitted by the oscillator 5 through primary 9 will then be equal to the differ ence between the frequency of the oscillations emitted by the transmitterrand the pre-determined frequency of the oscillations generated by the oscillator 5; and these beats are transferred to the tube 22 wherein they are amplified and passed on to the tun d circuit 25. From this cir-' cuit, the oscillations are then passed on to the tube 32; amplified by the tube 32; passed througi the transformer windings 34 and 35, and converted into unidirectional fluctuations by means of the rectifying tube 38. Th se fluctuations are smoothed out more or less i the filter c' -cuit comprising the inductance 37 and condensers 41 and impressed upon the grid 42 of regulating tube 43, to give it a higher or lower positive pote .al; The grid 42 thus controls the impedance of tube 43 and consequently connects in se. es with the condenser l? a greater or smaller impedance; regulating thereby the effectiveness of the con denser 47 on the 'reactance of the parallel circuit consisting of inductance 49 and condenser 50.
It, now, the frequency of the waves or oscillations emitted by the antenna becomes still grea or than the frequency of those generated by the oscillator 5, the beat frequency will increase and the voltage in the circuit 25 will have greater amplitude as the beats approach the resonance ire qu ncy of tuned circuit. Thus the grid 42 becomes positive and the impedance of tube 43 is lowered, and the effective capacity of condense-re? in se ..s with the impedance circuit on the input of the tube 43 becomes greater. This incr ase in capacity tends to increase the wave length of the electro-magnetic radiations and thus lower the frequenoyof the oscillations generated by the oscillator 4. If, on the other hand,
the frequency of the oscillations emitted by the antenna decreases, the beat frequency will de-' crease accordingly and the amplitude of the beat frequency oscillations in the tuned circuit 25 will decrease. Hence the impedance of tube 43 will become greater through the positive potential of the grid 42 becoming lower, and the effective capacity of condenser 47 in series with this impedance becoming less, thus increasing the frequency of the waves generated by oscillator 4.
The purpose of the impedance 48 is to avoid the accumulation of a charge on the condenser 47 and thus keep the tube 43 from becoming inoperative, this impedance being connected to the positive pole of the battery or source of current 10D, which in turn has its negative pole joined to cathode 121).
The condenser 47, inductance 49, condenser 50, part of the cathode circuit 12E, conductor 52, battery 10D and resistance 48 thus form a circuit in which the capacity of the condenser 47 has the efiect desired in controlling oscillator 4.
If the frequency of the oscillations generated by the tube 5 is higher than the frequency of the oscillations emitted by the transmitter, the tuned circuit 25 is adjusted so that it becomes resonant at a frequency lower than the predetermined beat frequency, so that the controlling apparatus will have the same controlling effect as before.
As a modification, the oscillator shown in Figure 2 may be employed in place of the oscillator 5 shown in Figure 1. The oscillator of Figure 2 substitutes a piezo crystal 55 in place of the coil 16 and condenser 1'7 connected to the grid and cathode. The coil 18 is omitted and the coil 6 is directly connected to the anode 7. The crystal is disposed between plates 56 which may exert a pressure on the crystal, and this pressure can be varied. With this oscillator, the remaining connections to the other parts of the circuit will be the as before.
As in the first case, with regard to the oscillation generator 5 of Fig. 1, this modified oscillator produces oscillations of a frequency different from that radiated by the antenna 1 and picked up by coil 6. This difference produces beats in the output circuit of the oscillator which are transmitted through the circuits between the oscillators 5 and 4 in the previously described manner.
The apparatus acts very efficiently and requires practically no alteration of the antenna or other attention except to make the necessary adjustments, as there are no constantly moving parts to get out of order. The frequency of the oscillations transmitted by the antenna can be automatically kept within the desired range and the commonly occurring wide variations or drifts in the frequency of the oscillations transmitted by antennae utilizing short waves are rendered impossible.
The beat frequency will, of course, be relatively low and for that reason all the transformers between the oscillators 4 and 5 may have iron cores and so may the inductance 37.
The resistance 2'7 and condenser 26 are utilized to control the resonating characteristics of the tuned circuit 25. For example, if the frequency of the waves radiated by the antenna should have a tendency to rise very rapidly, a broad resonance peak is desirable so that the beat frequency cannot rise so fast as to run over the apex of the peak and reach the descending portion of the curve, where it could no longer bring about constant frequency control of the oscillations generated by oscillator '4 and those transmitted by antenna 1; Under other conditions asharper peak for theresonance curve might be more 'desirable.
Having described my-invention, what I believe to be new and desire to secure and protect by Letters Patent of the United States, is: a 1. The combination of an antenna, a generator of oscillations therefor having a grid, a-condenser connected to the grid, a second generator having means for causing oscillations produced thereby to combine with oscillations of the first generator to produce electrical beats, a tuned circuit having a resonant frequency different from the frequency of said beats, a rectifying circuit and a regulating device connecting the tuned circuit to the condenser, and an impedance associated with said device to prevent electrical charges accumulating on the condenser and rendering said device inoperative.
2. In a frequency control system, the combination of a master oscillation generator for generating oscillations of a substantially fixed fre quency, a second oscillation generator having a frequency determining circuit and generating oscillations of a frequency differing from those produced by said first-named generator, a circuit for combining the oscillations produced by said oscillation generators to produce beats, a variable impedance shunting the frequency determining circuit and a tuned circuit coupled to the im pedance, said tuned circuit being resonant to a predetermined beat frequency and responsive to any change in the frequency of said beats to cause a corresponding change in said impedance and thereby control the frequency of the oscillations produced by said second oscillation generator.
3. In a frequency control system, the combination of a master oscillation generator for generating oscillations of a substantially fixed fre-.
quency, a second oscillation generator having a grid, an anode, and a cathode, and a frequency determining circuit connected between the grid and the cathode, said second generator producing oscillations differing in frequency from those produced by said master generator, a condenser and a. regulating device in series in a circuit shunting said frequency determining circuit, a circuit for combining the oscillations produced by said oscillation generators to produce beats, a circuit tuned to a resonant frequency different from the beat frequency, and a rectifying circuit connecting the tuned circuit to the regulating device and responsive to any variation in the beat frequency to control said regulating device.
4. In a frequency control system, the combination of a master oscillation generator for generating oscillations of a substantially fixed frequency, a second oscillation generator having a grid, an anode, a cathode, and a frequency determining circuit connected between the grid and the cathode, said second generator producing oscillations differing in frequency from those produced by said master generator, a condenser and a space charge regulating 'device in series in a circuit shunting said frequency determining circuit, a circuit for combining the oscillations produced by said oscillation generators to produce cuit shunting the frequency determining circuit, and a tuned circuit coupled to the impedance, said tuned circuit being resonant to a predetermined beat frequency and responsive to any change in the frequency of said beats to cause a corresponding change in said impedance and thereby control the frequency of the oscillations produced by said second oscillation generator.
GEORGE T. ROYDEN.
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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2425013A (en) * 1944-04-07 1947-08-05 Sperry Gyroscope Co Inc Frequency control system
US2475474A (en) * 1946-02-27 1949-07-05 Raytheon Mfg Co Radio communication system
US2510461A (en) * 1946-04-09 1950-06-06 Raytheon Mfg Co Multistation microwave communication system
US2604585A (en) * 1948-04-10 1952-07-22 Louis W Parker Frequency stabilized transmitter
US2746031A (en) * 1946-02-11 1956-05-15 Frank P Zaffarano Automatic frequency control aid
US2938171A (en) * 1957-07-19 1960-05-24 Mackay Radio & Telegraph Co Stabilized low frequency wave generating circuit

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2425013A (en) * 1944-04-07 1947-08-05 Sperry Gyroscope Co Inc Frequency control system
US2746031A (en) * 1946-02-11 1956-05-15 Frank P Zaffarano Automatic frequency control aid
US2475474A (en) * 1946-02-27 1949-07-05 Raytheon Mfg Co Radio communication system
US2510461A (en) * 1946-04-09 1950-06-06 Raytheon Mfg Co Multistation microwave communication system
US2604585A (en) * 1948-04-10 1952-07-22 Louis W Parker Frequency stabilized transmitter
US2938171A (en) * 1957-07-19 1960-05-24 Mackay Radio & Telegraph Co Stabilized low frequency wave generating circuit

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