专利名称:PHASE SENSITIVE COIN DISTRIMINATION METHOD AND APPARATUS 申请号:JP11334273
申请日:19731011
公开号:JPS4995694A
公开日:
19740911
专利内容由知识产权出版社提供
摘要:1443945 Testing coins MARS Inc 8 Oct 1973 [12 Oct 1972] 47163/72 Heading
G4V A method of testing coins comprises subjecting one side of a coin to an alternating magnetic field, detecting the field on the other side of the coin and comparing the phase of the field on the one side with the phase of the detected field on the other side. In the embodiment shown a transmitting inductor 320 is fed with a sinewave signal derived from oscillator 330 via a ¸256 frequency divider 332, amplifier 338 and pulse shaper 339. The transmitter and receiving inductors 320, 340 are connected via respective squaring circuits 371, 373; 372, 374 to the clock inputs of respective flip-flops 375, 377 the outputs of which are connected to the reset inputs of the other. The Q output of flip-flop 377 is therefore a pulse train of duty cycle proportional to the phase difference between the transmitted and recieved fields and is applied to one input of an AND gate 379. The other input to AND gate 379 receives clock pulses from a ¸11 divider 334 connected to oscillator 330, and its output therefore comprises groups of clock pulses the number of pulses in each group being dependent upon the phase difference. A predetermined number of pulse groups are applied to counter 380 via an AND gate 376, the second input of which receives a timing pulse from a further divider 336, and the content of counter is then compared with predetermined limits for an acceptable coin stored in
memory 390. In a second embodiment (Fig. 7, not shown) the shaped signals from transmitter (720) a
nd receiver (740) are applied to an exclusive OR gate (775), the output of which, having a duty cycle dependent on the phase difference, is integrated and compared with a set reference level. The receiving inductor (140) may be wound on a ferrite core (141) and positioned inside a conductive cylindrical shield (142) having a hole (144) adjacent the coin passageway (Fig. 2, not shown).