Abstract:
A remote control arrangement uses pulse code modulation for transmission as in infrared remote control arrangements. A feature of the arrangement is that only one quartz oscillator is necessary and is used in the receiver part. The receiver measures the first pulse width transmitted and, dependent on that, defines the measured period of a control circuit. A primary feature is that the arrangement is provided with a prepulse having a threefold pulse width before the start pulse thereby allowing the preamplifier of the receiver to be in its normal operating area when the start pulse occurs.

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     This invention relates in general to a remote control arrangement as disclosed in related U.S. application Ser. No. 933,014, filed 11 Aug. 1978, and more particularly to a remote control arrangement with a prepulse having a three fold pulse width before the start pulse. 
     A remote control arrangement is known in principle from German Published patent application No. 2,503,083, where it is used for infrared remote control. 
     Apart from these known remote control techniques which are based on the principle of pulse-code modulation, remote control techniques are known in which the individual commands are characterized by signals whose frequencies differ by a constant amount. Such remote control techniques are used particularly for ultrasonic remote control, cf., for example, the periodical &#34;radio mentor electronic&#34;, 1975, pages 347 to 349. From that prior art it is known that both the oscillator serving as the time base for the transmitter and the oscillator serving as the time base for the receiver are crystal oscillators, i.e., both oscillators have a small relative frequency change. It is also known from that prior art to provide in the receiver a check circuit for the period of the received ultrasound signal, whereby interfering frequencies outside the frequency band occupied by the signal frequencies can be eliminated. 
     Since the compulsion to use two crystal oscillators in a remote control arrangement involves relatively great expense, even taking into account that use can be made of chrominance-subcarrier crystals, which are relatively low in cost because they are mass-produced, the object of the main application is to improve a remote control arrangement so as to eliminate the above-mentioned compulsion and nevertheless permit safe and simple interference- and error-pulse detection and suppression. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The object of the present invention is to further improve the interference suppression; in particular, the remote control arrangement, which includes a variable-gain preamplifier for the received signals, is to be insensitive to reflected signals or other remote control signals. 
     Another object of this invention is to provide a remote control arrangement with a prepulse having a threefold pulse width before the start pulse thereby allowing the preamplifier of the receiver to be in its normal operating area when the start pulse occurs. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     The remote control arrangement according to this invention will now be explained in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: 
     FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a remote control arrangement according to the above-noted related application; 
     FIG. 2 shows the pulse pattern of a control command used in the remote control arrangement of FIG. 1; 
     FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a preferred embodiment of the receiver according to the above-noted related application; 
     FIG. 4 is a block diagram of the remote control arrangement according to this invention; and 
     FIG. 5 shows the pulse pattern of a control command used in the remote control arrangement of FIG. 4. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     The block diagram of FIG. 1 illustrates the transmitter A, which consists of the first oscillator 1, the pulse-spacing modulator 2, which is controlled by the command input device 21, and of the output stage 3, at whose output appear the control commands in the form illustrated in FIG. 2, for example, which are transmitted to the receiver B by means of a suitable transmitting medium. A transmitting medium preferably used for the arrangement according to the invention are the known infrared waves, but it is also possible to choose other transmission techniques such as ultrasonic transmission or transmission over metallic circuits. 
     The receiver B includes a circuit 5 for measuring the spacing of the first two successive pulses of the control command. 
     Associated with this measuring circuit as a time base is the second oscillator 4, which determines the measuring accuracy in a known manner. The receiver B further includes the error-pulse detection and suppression circuit 6, which is fed with the received signal and through which this signal is also applied to the measuring circuit 5. The error-pulse detection and suppression circuit 6 controls the code converter 7, which converts the pulse-spacing-modulated control commands into binary information which is represented by two amplitude values and available at the converter output. 
     Since, according to the invention, the duration of the measured pulse spacing is used as the time base for the error-pulse detection and suppression circuit, the relative frequency change of the second oscillator 4 can be small compared to that of the first oscillator 1. This means that at least the first oscillator 1 need not be a crystal oscillator as is necessary in the above-mentioned ultrasonic remote control systems, but use can be made of simple oscillator circuits, such as LC, RD or LR oscillators. Because of the condition given for the relative frequency change of the two oscillators 1, 4, the second oscillator 4 need not necessarily be a crystal oscillator, either. If the frequency of this oscillator is chosen to be very high in view of the accuracy required, an oscillator without a crystal can be used. If, however, the choice of such high frequencies presents difficulties for other reasons, the second oscillator 4 may just as well be a crystal oscillator. In that case, therefore, only one crystal is needed in the invention, and this may be the chrominance-subcarrier crystal mentioned above. 
     FIG. 2 illustrates by way of example the control command of a practical remote control arrangement according to the invention. According to further features of the invention, the pulses, which contain the control command OLLOLLOOOL and are indicated by vertical strokes, are preceded by the start pulse x and followed by the end pulse y. It is important that the start pulse x be spaced from the first pulse of the control command the smaller of the two distances differing by a factor of 2, i.e., have the spacing T, while the end pulse y is spaced from the last pulse of the control command three times the distance, 3T. FIG. 2 also shows the assignment of the two binary states &#34;zero&#34;, &#34;one&#34; to the pulse spacings. The binary &#34;zero&#34; is assigned the spacing T, and the binary &#34;one&#34; the spacing 2T. 
     In the embodiment of FIG. 2, the control command consists of ten bits, which requires eleven pulses; thus, together with the start pulse and the end pulse, thirteen pulses are transmitted per control command. The minimum total duration of the transmitted information (i.e., when the control command only contains binary zeros) is 14T, and the maximum total duration (i.e., when the control command only contains binary ones) is 24T. 
     The above-mentioned control-command bits can be divided so as to serve partly as address bits and partly as actual control bits. In the above-mentioned example with ten bits, four bits are used as address bits, and the remaining six as control bits, so that a total of 2 4  ×2 6  =2 10  =16×64=1,024 different commands can be transmitted. 
     FIG. 3 illustrates a block diagram of the above-mentioned practical circuit. The measuring circuit 5 is implemented with the up-down preset counter 50, which has its counting input 51 connected to the output 49 of the second oscillator 4 and, thus, counts the output pulses of this oscillator. This counting takes place in the forward and backward direction, the direction of count being dependent on the signal appearing at the count direction input 53. The generation of this signal will be described hereinbelow. 
     Associated with the up-down preset counter 50 is the memory 61, in which the instantaneous count of the counter 50 is stored at given times and from which this count is read at other times and fed back into the counter 50 as a preset count. This functional relationship between the counter 50 and the memory 61 is indicated in FIG. 3 by the three arrows given for each signal direction between the count outputs 52 of the counter 50 and the parallel inputs 611 of the memory 61. 
     The first input 621 of the first NAND gate 62 is connected to the output 521 of a lower count range of the up-down preset counter 50, while the second input 622 is connected to the signal input 600. The output 629 of that NAND gate is coupled to the counting input 631 of the up-counter 63. The up-counter 63 thus counts the number of pulses contained in the input signal, while the up-down preset counter 50 measures the pulse spacing, i.e., the intervals between pulses. 
     The second NAND gate 64 has its first input 641 connected to the signal input 600, its second input 642 to the output 6321 for the count &#34;one&#34; of the preset counter 63, and its third input 643 to the output 529 of an upper count of the counter 50, while its output 649 is coupled to the write enable input 612 of memory 61. The number of counts covered by the upper count range is a multiple of the counts covered by the lower count range, which is associated with the output 521. The upper count range is chosen according to the relative frequency change Δf/f of the first oscillator 1, while the lower count range corresponds to the relative frequency change ΔF/F of the second oscillator 4. 
     As a result of the NAND operation performed by the second NAND gate 64, the counter 50 measures the distance between the first two pulses of each control command, i.e., the duration T between the start pulse x and the first control pulse. During the time T, a corresponding number of output pulses of the second oscillator 4 are counted forwards in the counter 50. At the end of this counting, i.e, on arrival of the first control pulse and only at that instant, the counter 50 has a count lying in the upper count range, and in response to the arrival of the pulse from the output 6321 for the count &#34;one&#34; of the up-counter 63, the write enable input 612 of the memory 61 is activated, so that this and only this count can reach the memory 61 via the parallel inputs 611. At the same time, since the signal from the output 6321 also activates the count direction input 53 of the counter 50, the latter is caused to count down. The counter 50 now counts the output pulses of the second oscillator 4 backwards, i.e., the duration T which is present at the beginning of each control command and depends on the instantaneous relative frequency change Δf/f of the first oscillator 1 is made the time base for the further processing of the pulses of the respective control command. 
     The inhibiting first input 651 of the first multiple gate 65 is connected to the output 6321 for the count &#34;one&#34; of the up-counter 63, the second input 652 to the output 521 of the lower count range of the counter 50, the third input 653 to the signal input 600, and the fourth input 654 to the zero count output 520 of the up-down preset counter 50. The output 659 of this multiple gate is coupled to the read enable input 613 of the memory 61. The first multiple gate 65 combines its four inputs in a special manner as follows. The second and third inputs 652, 653 are ANDed. The output of this AND element is ORed with the third input 653. The output of this OR element is NANDed with the inhibiting first input 651. 
     Thus, whenever the counter 50 passes through zero, i.e., when this counter has counted down to zero or when an input pulse falls within the lower count range, the count from the upper count range previously written into the memory 61 is written into the counter 50 again, i.e., this counter is preset to the previous count. Furthermore, as a result of the logic operations performed by the first multiple gate 65, the writing just described does not take place at the first pulse of each control command (because of the connection 651/6321). 
     The zero count output 520 of the up-down preset counter 50 is also coupled to the counting input 661 of the two-stage binary counter 66, whose reset input 660 is connected to the output 629 of the first NAND gate 62. 
     The first input 671 of the second multiple gate 67 is connected to that output 6329 of the up-counter 63 which corresponds to the number of bits contained in the control command, i.e., in the above-mentioned implemented embodiment, this is the number 10. The second input 672 of the second multiple gate is connected to the output 6692 of the second stage of the two-stage binary counter 66, the third input 673 and the fourth input 674 to the zero count output 520 of the up-down preset counter 50, and the fifth input 675 to the output 6691 of the first stage of the two-stage binary counter 66, while the output 679 of this second multiple gate is coupled to the reset input 630 of the up-counter 63. 
     The second multiple gate 67 interconnects the five inputs as follows. The first, second, and third inputs 671, 672, 673 are ANDed, and so are the fourth and fifth inputs 674, 675, while the outputs of these two AND elements are NORed. 
     The two-stage binary counter counts the zero transitions of the up-down preset counter 50 and is capable of assuming the decade counts one, two or three and the binary counts 00, 0L or L0, because it is reset, i.e., placed in its initial, or zero, state, on the occurrence of each input pulse. The two-stage binary counter 66 thus provides information as to whether a single, twofold or threefold pulse spacing T is contained in the control command. In the code converter 7, which will be described below, this information serves to derive the two amplitude values of the binary information. 
     As a result of the logic operations performed by the second multiple gate 67, the following errors in the control command, which may have developed on the transmission path, for example, are detected and suppressed: 
     (a) if no additional input pulse occurs after two zero transitions of the up-down preset counter 50; 
     (b) if, at the end of the control command, an input pulse occurs during the threefold time interval 3T after the single or twofold time interval, or 
     (c) if, at the end of the control command, no input pulse occurs during the threefold time interval 3T at the end thereof. 
     Since, with these logic operations, both the individual pulse spacings 2T and, in the cases b) and c), the desired number of pulses of each control command are monitored, all possible errors are detected except a double error formed by one additional pulse and one missing pulse which would have to lie between two L-bits. The occurrence of such an error results in the up-counter 63 and, hence, the other subcircuits being reset. To this end, the zero count output 6320 of the up-counter 63 is also coupled to the reset input 610 of the memory 61. 
     In the embodiment of FIG. 3, the code converter 7 contains the third NAND gate 71, the fourth NAND gate 72, and the shift register 73. The first input 711 of the third NAND gate 71 is connected to the output 6321 for the count &#34;one&#34; of the up-counter 63, while the second input 712 is connected to that output, 6329, of this up-counter which corresponds to the number of bits contained in the control command. The first input 721 of the fourth NAND gate 72 is connected to the output 719 of the third NAND gate 71, and the second input 722 to the output 629 of the first NAND gate 62, while the output 729 of this fourth NAND gate 72 is coupled to the shift-pulse input 735 of the shift register 73. 
     The information input 731 of the shift register 73 is connected to the output 6691 of the first stage of the two-stage binary counter 66, and the reset input 730 to the zero count output 6320 of the up-counter 63. The output 739 of the shift register 73 is coupled to the signal output 700, from which the binary code contained in the control command as the pulse spacing can be taken as the binary code of two different amplitude values. Thus, the shift register 73 is fed with the binary values corresponding to the two pulse spacings T, 2T differing from each other by a factor of 2, which binary values are shifted one place in the shift register on the occurrence of each regular input pulse. 
     The embodiment of FIG. 3 uses &#34;positive logic&#34;, i.e., the binary zero is represented by a low amplitude value, and the binary one by a high amplitude value. It is, of course, possible to use &#34;negative logic&#34;, where the binary zero is represented by a high amplitude value, and the binary one by a low amplitude value. In that case, the individual subcircuits must be correspondingly converted according to known rules. This applies in particular to the various gates contained in the embodiment of FIG. 3. 
     This invention is predicated, inter alia, on the discovery that for the duration of a control command, which is a maximum of about 2.5 ms (pulse spacing T about 100 μs) in the embodiment described, the relative frequency change Δf/f of the first oscillator is constant so that for each control command the first time interval T occurring at the beginning can, after its measurement, be taken as the time base for further evaluation, as is described above in detail. 
     One advantage of the invention is seen in the fact that both interference pulses contained in the received signal and falling within the lower count range of the up-down preset counter 50, and transmitted pulses not received by the receiver are detected and result in this control command being not evaluated. The remote control arrangement of the above illustrated embodiment cannot handle all possible cases of disturbances in an optimum manner. 
     The variable-gain preamplifier 8 (cf. FIG. 4) provided at the receiving end is operated at high gain during transmission intervals, and this gain is not decreased, with the usual delay until the start pulse x is received. Reflections of the start pulse or any other disturbance which occur during this delay, will therefore be amplified and may be evaluated by the measuring circuit 5. 
     According to a primary feature of the invention, the start pulse x is preceded by the prepulse z at a distance 3T (cf. FIG. 5), which has already decreased the gain of the preamplifier 8 when the start pulse x occurs. 
     With the error-pulse detection and suppression circuit 6 and the measuring circuit 5 operating as described above, the prepulse z does not interfere with the above-explained binary information processing sequence. 
     The receiver B&#39; of this invention can therefore be equal in design to the receiver B of the main application. In the embodiment of FIG. 4, the preamplifier is shown within the receiver B&#39; for simplicity. It may, of course, also be disposed outside the receiver B&#39;. 
     Since the prepulse z is located three distances T in front of the start pulse x, the subcircuits 5, 6 have already returned to their original states when the prepulse arrives, so that the above-described measuring and working phase can go off undisturbed by this prepulse. 
     The pulse pattern illustrated in FIG. 5 differs from the pulse pattern illustrated in FIG. 2 only in that the prepulse z has been added according to a primary feature of this invention. 
     While we have described above the principles of our invention in connection with specific apparatus it is to be clearly understood that this description is made only by way of example and not as a limitation to the scope of our invention as set forth in the objects thereof and in the accompanying claims.