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2. An Account of some Experiments on the Telephone and Microphone
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
Extract
Dr M'Kendrick stated, that by applying the microphone or carbon-interrupter of Hughes to the membrane of a phonograph, he had succeeded in using the latter as a transmitting instrument. With such an arrangement, speech could be heard in the distant telephone even after it had become inaudible near the phonograph. He also mentioned that a tambour of Marey, used in physiological experiments, spoke distinctly when the fine point at the end of the lever was applied to the marks on the tinfoil of the phonograph. When a tube was carried from the tambour to the ear, distinct speech could be obtained from phonographic tracings on copper foil, which were scarcely perceptible to the eye.
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- Proceedings 1877-78
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1878