摘要 |
872,134. Echo-sounders; pulse shaping circuits. ATLAS-WERKE A.G. July 25, 1957 [July 28, 1956], No. 23659/57. Classes 40(6) and 40(7) In a pulse-echo sounder producing recordings on electro-sensitive paper a first kind of rectified pulses obtained after limitation of received echoes and a second kind of pulses obtained by differentiation of rectified received echoes are combined and applied to the recorder, and the limiting level is such that the first kind of pulses use up only part of the response capacity of the paper. Fish near the sea bed are thereby distinguished. In the first embodiment the output of receiving transducer 1, Fig. 2, is fed via amplifier 3, exponential potentiometer 4 and amplifier 5 to demodulator 6 and appears after filtering as amplified negative pulses at the control grid of limiter valve 11. The voltage across resistor 18 when valve 15 is quiescent is below that which produces a recording. Rectifier 14 prevents the valve grid from going negative. A pre-set tap on exponential potentiometer 8 provides an input to a second channel II which provides an output positive pulse by differentiation of the input signal due to capacitor 24 the associated timeconstant being low compared with the input signal rise time, and diode 27 prevents negativegoing channel output pulses. Alternatively differentiation may be effected by feeding the pulse through a delay line the output from which is subtracted from the non-delayed pulse. The output amplitude from limiter 11 is arranged to produce a grey recording the shade of which is adjustable by resistor 12. It is stated that once potentiometer 8 has been set to intensify the recording to black, re-setting is unnecessary on variation of sensitivity potentiometer 4. Channel II output may be limited before combination with that of channel I. The shade of recording obtained from a typical received echo is illustrated, Figs. 3 and 6 (not shown) and the effect of potentiometer 8 adjustment is illustrated, Figs. 7 and 8 (not shown). The signal in channel I may be compressed logarithmically before or after limiting takes place; the nature of the ensuing recording is illustrated, Fig. 9 (not shown). In a further circuit arrangement Fig. 12 differentiation is effected on the limited pulses. Amplifier 34 output is logarithmically compressed by resistor 35 and rectifiers 36. The compressed R.F. pulses are limited by valve 37 the output of which is rectified and supplied to circuit 40, 41, 42 in which differentiation ensues. Limiting may be arranged after rectification. In a modification of circuit 40 . . . 42 the negative swing of the differentiation process is suppressed, Fig. 13 (not shown).
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