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US3098127A - Hearing aid - Google Patents

Hearing aid
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US3098127A
US3098127AUS121747AUS12174761AUS3098127AUS 3098127 AUS3098127 AUS 3098127AUS 121747 AUS121747 AUS 121747AUS 12174761 AUS12174761 AUS 12174761AUS 3098127 AUS3098127 AUS 3098127A
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ear
plug
microphone
amplifier
sound
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US121747A
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Walter H Huth
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W. H. HUTH July 16, 1963 HEARING AID Filed July 3. 1961 INVENTOR: WALT ER H. H UTH ATT'YS United States Patent 3,098,127 HEARING AID Walter H. Huth, 315 W. Adams St., Chicago 6, I11. Filed July 3, 1961, Ser. No. 121,747 Claims. (Cl. 179107) This invention relates to hearing aids and particularly to improvements in such devices adapted to be worn on the ear in such a manner as to be substantially concealed.
Miniaturization of hearing aids to the point where all of the components, including the source of power, can be substantially hidden behind the human ear, and in some cases'entirely within the car, has now been accomplished. This, however, has been done by sacrifice of fidelity and sensitivity and in many cases, particularly when satisfactory amplification for ordinary sound reception is required, there is the added disadvantage of feed back to the microphone which causes distortion and other annoying sounds to be delivered by the speaker. Thus, it is the purpose of this invention to overcome these difiiculties and yet retain the advantages of small size and adaptability for concealment.
The main objects of this invention are to provide an improved form of hearing aid; to provide an improved structuring of a miniaturized hearing aid which eliminates mechanical, electrical, acoustical and magnetic feed back; to provide an improved hearing aid of this kind which receives and directs sound in substantially the natural manner in which they are received and directed in normal hearing; to provide an improved hearing aid of this kind in which the speaker and power unit may be combined with the temple bar of a pair of eye-glasses or suspended 0n and behind the ear; to provide such a device that can be substantially concealed on the wearers ear; and to provide an improved form of hearing aid of this kind which is of such simple construction as to make its manufacture exceedingly economical and its use very facile and highly gratifying.
- A specific embodiment of this invention is shown in the accompanying drawings in which:
FIGURE 1 is an outline of a side view of a normalshaped human ear showing suspended in position thereon an improved form of hearing aid constructed in accordance with this invention;
FIG. 2 is a view similar to FIG. 1 but showing in full outline this improved form of hearing aid and in broken outline the supporting ear;
FIG. 3 is a vertical sectional view of the microphone mounting ear plug and a somewhat enlarged and diagrammatic sectional view of the housing for the battery, speaker and amplifier, and the connection with the microphone and sound-conveying tube; and
FIG. 4 is a much-enlarged, diagrammatic sectional view of a human ear, indicating the tympanic membrane (ear drum) in association with an enlarged, diagrammatic sectional view of the connection of the microphone to the amplifier showing how the amplified sound waves generated by the speaker, are directed against the tympanic membrane quite as in the'case of normal hearing, and
FIG. 5 is a plan view of the microphone cover showing the opening therethrough for the sound tube.
The essential concept of this invention involves positioning the microphone in a molded ear-plug set into the ear opening, connecting the microphone with a remotely disposed speaker, and transmitting sound from the speaker to the ear by means of a sound tube connecting the speaker with the auditory canal of the ear directly behind the microphone.
In the form shown in the drawings, a hearing aid embodying the foregoing conceptcomprises a molded chan- 3,098,127 Patented July 16, 1963 ice neled ear-plug 5, amicrophone 6 mounted thereon, aninstrument housing 7 and an interconnectingsound tube 8 leading through the ear plug to the auditory canal of the ear.
The ear-plug 5 may be of any form that may be found expedient for positioning in the ear E to attend connection therewith of thesound tube 8 leading from theinstrument housing 7. Such an ear-plug 5 could be preformed of a molded substance and of a shape that would permit proper positioning within the average ear concha E to retain the plug in place. Preferably, however, for this term of hearing aid the ear-plug 5 would be molded item a plastic substance, made from a pattern of the ear concha E of the particular patient in a manner currently well known in the fitting of hearing aids to individual needs, or made directly from a plastic substance formed to shape in the patients ear and then cured or hardened. Such an ear-plug 5 would have an external contour and cross-sectional form approximating that shown in the drawings and would be made to fit the form of the concha so as to be wholly received therein. As FIG. 3 most clearly shows, such an ear-plug 5 would have anintegral stem 9 extending inwardly downward from a vertical body-part and thisstem 9, formed with a sound passage or channel 11, extends into the auditory canal E of the ear to insure a retention of the body-part 10 in the concha E of the ear E. The channel 11 conveys the amplified sound waves from the speaker to the tympanic membrane E or car drum as it is commonly called.
The body part .10, as shown in FIG. 3, is formed with an exteriorly-facing cavity 12 for seating themicrophone 6. This cavity is enclosed by acover 13 for retaining themicrophone 6, and, as indicated in FIG. 3, themicrophone 6 is floated or cushioned by a suitable softsponge rubber lining 14 applied to all fine surfaces of the cavity and the inner surfaces of the cover.
Themicrophone 6 is a miniature unit of the type generally used with conventional hearing aids and as indicated in 'FIG. 3, is rather thin and flat in formand is adapted to be removably mounted in the cavity 12.
The contour and dimension of the instrument housing 7 isdetermined to fit behind the ear so as to be substanan extension orfinger 15 adapted to seat over the top edge of the ear, where it joins the head, to suspend thehousing 7 behind the ear. In FIG. 3 thehousing 7 is shown schematically for convenience of illustration of the connection with thesound tube 8 and the leads from themicrophone 6.
Such ahousing 7, regardless of its contour, would be formed of light molded substance-as, for example, thermosetting plastic-in two pieces so that it could be easily assembled or disassembled for initially arranging therein or later replacing theconventional amplifier 16, aspeaker 17 and a battery (not here shown). This completed unit often is referred to as a power pack.
Thesound tube 8 is iormed of flexible plastic or rubberlike material such as is conventionally used for hearing aids and is of a length to permit one end to be secured to the ear-plug 5 in alignment with the channel 11 in thestem 9 and have the other end secured to thehousing 7 in alignment with thespeaker 17. It the housing .were desired. In the latter instance thetube 8 could replace thesuspension finger 15.
In the form shown, theWires 18, which lead from themicrophone 6 to the amplifier 16', are associated with thesound tube 8 so that thetube 8 serves the dual function of connecting the microphone with thepower unit 7 and conveying the sound waves from thespeaker 17 to the ear-plug 5. Thus, as shown, thewires 18 enter thetube 8 through its side wall directly behind anextension 19 of thecover 13, which has an opening therethrough to receive and hold thesound tube 8 on the eariplug with the end of the sound tube extending into the ear-plug channel 11. Preferably thewires 18 run through thetube 8 to thepower unit 7 so that they are enclosed and free from possible entanglement. Thesound tube 8 is preferably secured firmly in theextension 19, and the ends of thewires 18, after emerging from the tube, are soldered or otherwise fixed torespective terminals 20 on the inside of thecover 13 where they are disposed and arranged for frictional electrical contact engagement with corresponding contact elements on the sidewall of themicrophone 6.
In the form shown, the opposite end of thesound tube 8 is attached to, and extends through, aconnector plug 21 adapted for detachable, plug-in, connection with the power -unit 7. Preferably theconnector plug 21 is molded onto thetube 8 with a portion of the tube projecting beyond theplug 21 for reception in a suitable cushion means within the power unit housing. Also thewires 18 are lead through the wall of thetube 8, within the connector plug, and are connected to respective contact pins orterminals 22, also molded into theplug 21 so as to project therefrom for reception insuitable sockets 23 in the power unit housing end wall. Thesockets 23 are directly connected with theamplifier 16 bysuitable leads 24.
As shown, the projecting end of thesound tube 8, which connects with thehousing 7 is received in asoft rubber bushing 25 which also receives theoutput tube 26 of thespeaker 17 and provides an enclosed passage for the transmission of sound waves from the speaker to the tube 38. The speaker is thus insulated from thetube 8 to obviate the transmission of mechanical vibrations thereto and, as will be understood, the speaker itself is mounted in a suitable cushioning material to insulate it from thehousing 7.
Theconnector plug 21 thus serves as a detachable electrical and acoustical connecting means between the microphone-earplug and the amplifier-speaker power unit and, in the form shown, to obviate any inadvertent disconnect, theplug 21 is fastened to the power unit housing by means of ascrew 27 which has threaded engagement with a receptacle 28 molded into the end of the housing which serves as a terminal block for the electrical connections 22-23. The connector plug could also be attached by means of a pin and a frictional socket instead of thescrew 27 and receptacle 28.
It is intended that theearwplug 5 be a custom made article onto which the microphone cover-sound tube-connector plug assembly will be attached after the ear-plug has been made to fit the patients ear. Thus a soft mold or impression is first made directly on the patients ear and for such purposes a dummy microphone and cover unit is provided so that the soft impression can be formed and shaped to not only precisely fit the patients ear but also have a properly located cavity for the micro phone and cover with the sound tube outlet exactly in line with the channel 11 in ear-plug stem 9. When the soft impression is completed it may be cured to permanent form or, with the dummy microphone-cover unit removed, a mold of the impression may be made and a final ear- 'plug cast or otherwise formed from a suitable plastic material that will retain a permanent shape.
The power units will be standard factory assembled units as will be the microphone cover-sound tube-connector plug assemblies. The latter assemblies, however,
will be made with sound tubes of several lengths to accommodate patients having different requirements.
The hearing aid construction of the present invention has material advantages over prior hearing aid devices, wherein the microphone is incorporated in the same structure as the amplifier and battery, particularly in that locating the microphone remotely from the power unit serves to obviate all mechanical, electrical, acoustical and magnetic feed back problems usually present in the prior devices. Also by locating the microphone, remote from the power unit, in the concha of the wearers ear, all sound is received in the most natural manner at the acoustical focal point of the ear as nature has formed it. Thus the wearer is less conscious of the hearing aid and has a substantially normal sense of the direction from which the sound originates.
Other advantages of this invention reside in the fact that hearing in the substantially natural manner can be had with greater fidelity of sound and with greater volume due to utilization of the behind-the-ear space for the power unit and speaker whereby extreme miniaturization of these elements as has in some cases been done, is rendered unnecessary.
Although but one specific embodiment of this invention has been herein shown and described, it will be understood that details of the construction shown may be altered or omitted without departing from the spirit of the invention as defined by the following claims.
I claim:
1. A hearing aid comprising a sound channeled ear plug, an amplifier, a separate housing enclosing a receiver powered by the amplifier, means for operatively connecting the receiver and amplifier, a flexible sound tube connecting the receiver with the ear plug channel, a microphone mounted on the ear plug, and connecting wires extending along the sound tube for completing an operating circuit between said microphone and said receiver.
2. A hearing aid comprising, an ear plug having a sound channel therethrough, a separate housing enclosing an amplifier and a receiver powered by the amplifier, means operatively connecting the amplifier and receiver, a sound tube connecting the housed receiver with the ear plug channel, a microphone mounted on the ear plug, and connecting wires within the sound tube for completing an operating circuit between the microphone and the amplifier.
3. A hearing aid comprising, an ear plug having a sound channel therethrough and being recessed on its outer face to form a cavity, a separate housing enclosing an amplifier and a receiver and means operatively connecting the amplifier and receiver, a sound tube acoustically connecting the receiver with the ear plug channel, and a microphone seated in the ear plug cavity and having connecting wires leading therefrom into the sound tube and therealong to said housing for connection with said amplifier.
4. A hearing aid comprising an ear plug molded to fit "the wearers ear and having a centrally disposed cavity in its outer face, said ear plug having a channelled portion adapted to enter the auditory channel of the ear, a separate housing enclosing an amplifier and a receiver powered by said amplifier, means for operatively connecting said receiver and amplifier, a flexible sound tube leading from the receiver in said housing and connected directly to the channelled portion of the ear plug, a microphone seated in the ear plug cavity and cushioned from the walls thereof, and wires leading along the interior of said sound tube for completing an operating circuit between said microphone and said amplifier.
5. A hearing aid comprising a sound channelled ear plug, a separate housing enclosing an amplifier and a receiver powered by the amplifier, means for operatively connecting said receiver and amplifier, a sound tube connecting the receiver in said housing with the ear plug channel, a microphone mounted on the ear plug and having connecting wires leading [from the microphone along the sound tube to the said housing, and a connecting element on said sound tube adapted for separable connect-ion with said housing to provide acoustical con nection of said sound tube with said neoeiver and electrical connection of said wires with said amplifier.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,950,357 Mitchell et a1. Aug. 23, 1960 5 2,987,584 Webber et a1. June 6, 1961 FOREIGN PATENTS 1,078,175 Germany Mar. 24, 1960

Claims (1)

  1. 2. A HEARING AID COMPRISING, AN EAR PLUG HAVING A SOUND CHANNEL THERETHROUGH, A SEPARATE HOUSING ENCLOSING AN AMPLIFIER AND A RECEIVER POWERED BY THE AMPLIFIER, MEANS OPERATIVELY CONNECTING THE AMPLIFIER AND RECEIVER, A SOUND TUBE CONNECTING THE HOUSED RECEIVER WITH THE EAR PLUG CHANNEL, A MICROPHONE MOUNTED ON THE EAR PLUG, AND CONNECTING WIRES WITHIN THE SOUND TUBE FOR COMPLETING AND OPERATING CIRCUIT BETWEEN THE MICROPHONE AND THE AMPLIFIER.
US121747A1961-07-031961-07-03Hearing aidExpired - LifetimeUS3098127A (en)

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US121747AUS3098127A (en)1961-07-031961-07-03Hearing aid

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Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3787643A (en)*1972-11-071974-01-22American Danish OticonHearing aid device
US4291203A (en)*1979-09-111981-09-22Gaspare BellafioreHearing aid device
EP0158391A1 (en)*1984-03-231985-10-16Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V.Hearing-aid, in particular behind- the ear hearing aid
US4972468A (en)*1987-10-141990-11-20Sanshin Kogyo Kabushiki KaishaTransceiver for hanging on an ear
WO1996041496A1 (en)*1995-06-071996-12-19Interval Research CorporationWearable audio system with enhanced performance
WO1996041497A1 (en)*1995-06-071996-12-19Interval Research CorporationSampled chamber transducer with enhanced low frequency response
WO1997011573A1 (en)*1995-09-191997-03-27Interval Research CorporationAcoustically transparent earphones
US20040044389A1 (en)*2002-08-302004-03-04Crawford Scott A.Quick connect earhook system for BTE devices
US7106873B1 (en)*2001-08-102006-09-12Advanced Bionics CorporationIn the ear auxiliary microphone for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US7110562B1 (en)*2001-08-102006-09-19Hear-Wear Technologies, LlcBTE/CIC auditory device and modular connector system therefor
US20070064967A1 (en)*2001-08-102007-03-22Hear-Wear Technologies, LlcBTE/CIC auditory device and modular connector system therefor
WO2009123561A1 (en)*2008-03-312009-10-08Siemens Medical Instruments Pte. Ltd.Hearing aid
USD619561S1 (en)*2008-12-152010-07-13Plantronics, Inc.Communications headset
USD630186S1 (en)*2008-12-152011-01-04Plantronics, Inc.Communications headset
US20160112814A1 (en)*2013-05-212016-04-21Sonova AgMethod of fitting a hearing instrument, and impression tool
US20170311070A1 (en)*2014-10-302017-10-26Sony CorporationSound output device and sound guiding device

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
DE1078175B (en)*1958-08-081960-03-24Micro Technic Hueber & Co Hearing aid for the hard of hearing to be worn behind the auricle
US2950357A (en)*1956-05-011960-08-23Robert E MitchellElectronic sound transmitting device
US2987584A (en)*1958-11-281961-06-06Melvyn E WebberIn-ear hearing aid

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US2950357A (en)*1956-05-011960-08-23Robert E MitchellElectronic sound transmitting device
DE1078175B (en)*1958-08-081960-03-24Micro Technic Hueber & Co Hearing aid for the hard of hearing to be worn behind the auricle
US2987584A (en)*1958-11-281961-06-06Melvyn E WebberIn-ear hearing aid

Cited By (42)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3787643A (en)*1972-11-071974-01-22American Danish OticonHearing aid device
US4291203A (en)*1979-09-111981-09-22Gaspare BellafioreHearing aid device
EP0158391A1 (en)*1984-03-231985-10-16Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V.Hearing-aid, in particular behind- the ear hearing aid
US4972468A (en)*1987-10-141990-11-20Sanshin Kogyo Kabushiki KaishaTransceiver for hanging on an ear
WO1996041496A1 (en)*1995-06-071996-12-19Interval Research CorporationWearable audio system with enhanced performance
WO1996041497A1 (en)*1995-06-071996-12-19Interval Research CorporationSampled chamber transducer with enhanced low frequency response
US5682434A (en)*1995-06-071997-10-28Interval Research CorporationWearable audio system with enhanced performance
US5687245A (en)*1995-06-071997-11-11Interval Research CorporationSampled chamber transducer with enhanced low frequency response
AU701453B2 (en)*1995-06-071999-01-28Interval Research CorporationWearable audio system with enhanced performance
AU706208B2 (en)*1995-06-071999-06-10Interval Research CorporationSampled chamber transducer with enhanced low frequency response
WO1997011573A1 (en)*1995-09-191997-03-27Interval Research CorporationAcoustically transparent earphones
US5694475A (en)*1995-09-191997-12-02Interval Research CorporationAcoustically transparent earphones
US20070118011A1 (en)*2001-08-102007-05-24Advanced Bionics CorporationIn the ear auxiliary microphone system for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US20070173683A1 (en)*2001-08-102007-07-26Advanced Bionics CorporationIn the ear auxiliary microphone system for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US7110562B1 (en)*2001-08-102006-09-19Hear-Wear Technologies, LlcBTE/CIC auditory device and modular connector system therefor
US20070001552A1 (en)*2001-08-102007-01-04Advanced Bionics CorporationIn the ear auxiliary microphone for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US20070003089A1 (en)*2001-08-102007-01-04Advanced Bionics CorporationIn the ear auxiliary microphone for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US7167572B1 (en)*2001-08-102007-01-23Advanced Bionics CorporationIn the ear auxiliary microphone system for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US20070064967A1 (en)*2001-08-102007-03-22Hear-Wear Technologies, LlcBTE/CIC auditory device and modular connector system therefor
US20070064965A1 (en)*2001-08-102007-03-22Hear-Wear Technologies, LlcBTE/CIC auditory device and modular connector system therefor
US7106873B1 (en)*2001-08-102006-09-12Advanced Bionics CorporationIn the ear auxiliary microphone for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US8050437B2 (en)2001-08-102011-11-01Hear-Wear Technologies, LlcBTE/CIC auditory device and modular connector system therefor
US7526096B2 (en)2001-08-102009-04-28Advanced Bionics, LlcIn the ear auxiliary microphone for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US9591393B2 (en)2001-08-102017-03-07Hear-Wear Technologies, LlcBTE/CIC auditory device and modular connector system therefor
US7606382B2 (en)2001-08-102009-10-20Hear-Wear Technologies LLCBTE/CIC auditory device and modular connector system therefor
US8976991B2 (en)2001-08-102015-03-10Hear-Wear Technologies, LlcBTE/CIC auditory device and modular connector system therefor
US7769194B2 (en)2001-08-102010-08-03Advanced Bionics, LlcIn the ear auxiliary microphone for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US8094850B2 (en)2001-08-102012-01-10Hear-Wear Technologies, LlcBTE/CIC auditory device and modular connector system therefor
US7970157B2 (en)2001-08-102011-06-28Advanced Bionics, LlcIn the ear auxiliary microphone system for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US8023677B2 (en)2001-08-102011-09-20Advanced Bionics, LlcIn the ear auxiliary microphone system for behind the ear hearing prosthetic
US20040044389A1 (en)*2002-08-302004-03-04Crawford Scott A.Quick connect earhook system for BTE devices
WO2009123561A1 (en)*2008-03-312009-10-08Siemens Medical Instruments Pte. Ltd.Hearing aid
USD630186S1 (en)*2008-12-152011-01-04Plantronics, Inc.Communications headset
USD619561S1 (en)*2008-12-152010-07-13Plantronics, Inc.Communications headset
US20160112814A1 (en)*2013-05-212016-04-21Sonova AgMethod of fitting a hearing instrument, and impression tool
US9654884B2 (en)*2013-05-212017-05-16Sonova AgMethod of fitting a hearing instrument, and impression tool
US20170311070A1 (en)*2014-10-302017-10-26Sony CorporationSound output device and sound guiding device
US10182281B2 (en)*2014-10-302019-01-15Sony CorporationSound output device and sound guiding device
US10237641B2 (en)2014-10-302019-03-19Sony CorporationSound output device and sound guiding device
US20190158945A1 (en)*2014-10-302019-05-23Sony CorporationSound output device and sound guiding device
US10659863B2 (en)2014-10-302020-05-19Sony CorporationSound output device and sound guiding device
US11146877B2 (en)2014-10-302021-10-12Sony CorporationSound output device and sound guiding device

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