Enhanced coin discrimination systems and methods
First Claim
1. A coin discriminator system, comprising:
- optical detector elements positioned to ascertain the position of a coin in a coin chute;
a programmed logic element, connected to receive at least one position indicator output from said optical detector elements, and to access a memory which includes coin recognition data; and
an oscillator circuit which is electromagnetically coupled to the interior of said coin chute;
wherein said programmed logic element is programmed tosample a frequency measurement from said oscillator circuit at a position determined by said optical detector elements, andto look up coin identification data in said memory, using said frequency measurement as input, andto output coin identification data in dependence on data read from said memory.
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Accused Products
Abstract
A parking meter contains both optical detection elements, to detect the presence and the diameter of inserted coins, and conventional coils which are inductively coupled to a passing coin and which load a RF oscillator. The optical detection information is used to control the sampling of the frequency of the oscillators which are loaded by the metal in the falling coins. This provides a synergistic way to combine optical detection with electromagnetic detection to achieve compact recognition templates which readily perform difficult discrimination. Addition of a temperature compensation algorithm makes the resulting system extraordinarily insensitive to temperature-dependent variation in the permeability of a falling coin.
45 Citations
18 Claims
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1. A coin discriminator system, comprising:
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optical detector elements positioned to ascertain the position of a coin in a coin chute; a programmed logic element, connected to receive at least one position indicator output from said optical detector elements, and to access a memory which includes coin recognition data; and an oscillator circuit which is electromagnetically coupled to the interior of said coin chute; wherein said programmed logic element is programmed to sample a frequency measurement from said oscillator circuit at a position determined by said optical detector elements, and to look up coin identification data in said memory, using said frequency measurement as input, and to output coin identification data in dependence on data read from said memory. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3, 4)
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5. A parking meter system, comprising:
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a coin chute for reception of coins; optical detector elements positioned to ascertain the position of a coin in said coin chute; an oscillator circuit which is electromagnetically coupled to the interior of said coin chute; a programmed logic element, connected to sample a frequency measurement from said oscillator circuit at a time determined by said optical detector elements; and a display, connected to be controlled by said programmed logic element, which controllably indicates expired and unexpired status; wherein said programmed logic element is connected to compute available time in dependence on said frequency measurement, and to change said display between indication of expired and unexpired status accordingly.
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6. A method for coin discrimination, comprising the steps of:
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a) recognizing the presence of a coin in a coin chute; b) after said step a), recognizing, using one or more optical detector elements, the position of said coin in said coin chute; c) at a time determined by said position-recognizing step b), sampling a frequency measurement from a first oscillator circuit which is electromagnetically coupled to the interior of said coin chute; and d) using recognition parameters from one or more iterations of said steps b) and c), looking up said recognition parameters in a table that contains data on recognizable coin types; and e) outputting coin identification data in dependence on the result of said step d). - View Dependent Claims (7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12)
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13. A method for coin discrimination, comprising the steps of:
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a) recognizing, using one or more optical detector elements, the position of a coin in a free-fall coin chute; b) at a time determined by said recognizing step a), sampling an isolated frequency measurement from a first oscillator circuit which is electromagnetically coupled to the interior of said coin chute; and c) using recognition parameters from one or more iterations of said steps a) and b), looking up said recognition parameters in a table that contains data on recognizable coin types; and d) outputting coin identification data in dependence on the result of said step c). - View Dependent Claims (14, 15, 16, 17, 18)
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Specification